The Arminian Magazine--Spring, 1986
THE NEW BIRTH
--John Fletcher
[The following is a sermon from The Works of the Reverend John Fletcher, 4 vols. (1833;
rpt. Salem, OH: Schmul Publishers, 1974), 4:95-117. The sermon is in four parts and due to
the length only the introduction, part four, and the conclusion is reprinted here. The
reader is urged to secure a copy and read the entire sermon.]
"Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man
be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God" (John 3:3).
The corruption of the Christian world, and the almost general lukewarmness of those who
have some respect for religion, render it impossible to preach openly and constantly the
deep truth of Christianity without giving general offence.
How naturally, having made some efforts toward salvation, do we repose ourselves as if
we were at the end of our career! Perhaps we even think ourselves sure of the prize before
we have begun the race! And if any one should venture to show us the folly and danger of
such conduct, we regard him as a melancholy person who considers only the dark side of
things, and who takes a sorrowful pleasure to make us view them in the same light with
himself.
This is one of the reasons why those who are commissioned to show us the way of
salvation, are afraid to dwell upon what Jesus Christ has said concerning the difficulties
of the way, and the small number of those that walk therein. Indeed, if we ourselves be in
the broad way that leadeth to destruction, it is not surprising that we should speak but
seldom of the unfrequented path that leads to life; and that we should but feebly and
sparingly press those truths by which at length worldlings must be either convinced or
confounded. But it is certain, that if we be more sincere, a thousand difficulties will
rise up to deter us, and shake the resolutions which we have formed to resist the torrent
of prejudice and ungodliness.
We fear being accused of want of charity if we declare as strongly as the Scripture
does, "That if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his." We are
afraid of being charged with preaching a new doctrine, if we declare boldly with St.
James, "That he who is the friend of the world is the enemy of God;" or with St.
Paul, "That she who liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth." And we find by
sorrowful experience that we must submit to be counted visionaries and enthusiasts, or
cease to declare, with the same apostle, that the true Christian is a man who
"glories only in the cross of Christ, who, being justified by faith, has really peace
with God;" that he feels the peace of God in his soul, as a seal of the pardon of his
sins; that he "rejoices in hope of the glory of God;' and that he "glories in
tribulation, because the love of God is shed abroad in his heart by the Holy Ghost given
unto him." For it is certain that the world is always the same, and that the doctrine
of Christ, as well as his cross, is still "to the Jews a stumbling block, and to the
Greeks foolishness:" that it still excites the indignation of those who falsely call
themselves children of God, and is ridiculed by those whom the foolish wisdom of this
world fills with presumption. Nevertheless, as among those who reject the counsel of God
in giving it the names of enthusiasm and dangerous reverie, there are some who are
distinguished by their good desires, and by some sparks of zeal for the religion of our
fathers: and as among those who fight against God, many do it in ignorance, believing that
they do him service; let us strive to explain, in this discourse, one of those essential
truths of Christianity upon which these half Christians meditate so rarely, and which they
decry so often; viz. the doctrine of our regeneration, or new birth in Jesus Christ.
And to sustain the attention by the order of the matter as well as by the importance of
the subject, let us examine;
FIRST, Upon what occasion our Lord Jesus Christ declared, that "Except a man be
born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God."
SECONDLY, What we are to understand by these expressions, "To be born again; to be
regenerated."
THIRDLY, What are the reasons upon which the absolute necessity of our regeneration is
founded; and how easy, and yet dangerous it is to take the reformation of our manners for
the regeneration of our souls.
LASTLY, How we may come to a true renovation, without which no man can see the kingdom
of God.
Reader, if you love the truth, and if you have respect to the eternal Son of God, whose
words we are now to consider, life up to him a mind disengaged from prejudice, and beseech
him to apply to your heart and mine, the profound truths of our text! He taught them
himself during the days of his flesh, and he still gives the knowledge of them by the
unction of his Spirit. Yes, Divine Redeemer! let thy grace teach us, and thy word shall be
in this hour also a light unto our feet! Deign to show us the path which conducts to thee,
and give us the will and the power to run therein and follow thee in the regeneration,
until we enter in by thee into thy kingdom: for thou art alone the path, the door, the
truth, and the life!
PART FOURTH
Divided Into Two Sections
Section I
How dangerous it is to take the regularity of our manners for the regeneration of our
souls.
Perhaps some one will say, "I am convinced that perjured persons, debauchees,
murderers, and those who act unjustly, shall never see the kingdom of heave without being
born again. But I thank God I am not of this number. From my youth I have lived in the
practice of temperance and justice: and I flatter myself I am also no stranger to
religion. I constantly attend the Church: I read the word of God: I pray and communicate
regularly. Are not these indubitable marks of my regeneration? And was I not born again of
water, and of the Holy Spirit, in my baptism?
Before I answer this question, permit me to ask some which are not less important. Have
you peace with God? Have you the remission of your sins? Has God revealed his Son in you?
When you examine yourself, do you feel that Christ is in you the hope of glory? Have you
received the "Spirit of adoption, witnessing with your spirit, that you are a child
of God?" Have you ever beheld the light of God's countenance, and felt the powers of
the world to come? Do you taste the heaven which faithful souls enjoy even in this life,
"the love of God shed abroad in their hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto
them?" Is your soul athirst for the living God? Does it pant after him as the thirsty
hart after the brooks of water? Do you count all things as dung and dross for "the
excellence of the knowledge of Christ Jesus?" Are you no longer conformed to this
evil world, but do you live as a stranger and a pilgrim upon earth? Do you pres with joy
toward the heavenly Jerusalem in which are already your treasure and your heart? Does your
soul ascent to God, even as the flame toward heaven? Do you celebrate in all your
conversation the praises of him "who has called you out of darkness into his
marvelous light?" And do you find within you the humility, the patience, the
disinterestedness, the renunciation of the world, the holy joy, the tender zeal, the
constant sweetness, the desire to be with Christ, the modest gravity, the unfeigned love,
which characterizes true believers?
If these questions do not surprise you; if the Spirit of God has enabled you to sound
the depths which they contain; if your most lively concern be, that you experience those
heavenly dispositions only in a low degree; and if it be your most vehement desire that
you may grow in grace every moment, until you feel all the power of the resurrection of
Jesus, - you are a child of God, you are born again! Whether as Samuel you have walked in
the way of the Lord from your infancy, or like St. Paul, beheld the light of the Sun of
righteousness in the midst of your career, it imports not: "All is yours, for you are
Christ's, and Christ is God's."
But if, far from finding in your heart and in your conversation, these marks of a new
and spiritual birth, your conscience rises against you, and you are forced to confess that
you feel within you rather the natural than the spiritual man, being more occupied with
earth than with heaven; with yourself and the world, than with the love of Jesus, and the
glory to which he calls you; we should only lay a stumbling block in your way, if we did
not cry to you in the words of our Divine Master, "Ye must be born again, or you
cannot see the kingdom of God." We mean not by this, that you must reform your life
even as scandalous sinners. No, you live, it may be, according to the strict rules of
justice and temperance. You give alms, you fulfil the exterior duties of religion. We may
believe even that, with Nicodemus, you do all this in the integrity of your heart, and as
unto God. But the Lord declares that although you have the form of godliness, you have
hitherto denied its power. He declares that your righteousness, which does not exceed that
of the Pharisee, will never introduce you into the kingdom of God. Yes, where you a second
Cornelius, a devout man, fearing God with all your house, giving much alms to the people,
seeking God with fasting and continual prayer, if God hath not accepted you in the
Beloved; if by faith in the name of Jesus you have not received remission of your sins; if
the Holy Spirit have not descended upon you; if God, who knoweth the heart, beareth not
witness to you as to him, purifying your heart by faith; your baptism has not saved you.
And although you may not be far from the kingdom, you are not yet possessed of it, you are
not yet regenerated. You have the fear of the Lord, but not his love. You are not yet a
child of God. You still want the Spirit of adoption in order to be a Christian; for in
Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision availeth any thing, but a new
creation; an entire change of our soul, as well as of our life. In a word, "a new
heart, a right spirit: the kingdom of God within us."
If these things be so, (and they cannot be denied without trampling under foot the
truth as it is in Jesus,) suffer the word of God to penetrate into your soul. This day
hear the voice of God, and harden not your heart. the things which you read regard your
eternal peace. Ah! beware lest your unbelief hide them from your eyes for ever. Are you
one of those saints of the world who make a fair show in the flesh; and who, far from
suffering persecution for the cross of Christ, are honored of men because you still
conform to the present world? Who, content with your moral duties and exterior piety, do
not come to Jesus with the repentance and importunity of the publican? Suffer this
foolishness of preaching to pull off your mask. Renounce your own wisdom: tear off the
vain robe of your own righteousness: and smiting your breast, come to Christ with the
publicans and harlots, and groan for regeneration, without which you cannot see the
kingdom of heaven. Nicodemus has set you the example. He at length "received the
kingdom as a little child, and was more than conqueror through the blood of the
Lamb." Tread in his blessed footsteps. And if you also be a master in Israel, follow
his simplicity, and triumph like him over all your prejudices, your doubts, and the fear
of those who say, they are the Israel of God, and are not; and having followed him in the
regeneration, you shall soon follow him to glory.
But if you are an open sinner, if you live in the practice of injustice, intemperance,
impurity, or falsehood; thirsting after gold or pleasure; despising the name of God and
his word; we need not attempt to prove that you are not regenerate. Your sins have a
voice, they cry as Jesus did to such gross offenders, "You are of your father the
devil, for his works you do." You know it is so; your own heart condemns you. Wonder
not then that we denounce your utter perdition, in the name of God, if you are not born
again. Strive to open your eyes, and behold the corruption of your heart, that depraved
source of your ungodly manners. Behold the destroying angel behind you, the eternal abyss
opened under your feet, and the Lord Jesus ready to take vengeance on you as his enemies.
O that the idea of these awful events may awaken, before their reality overwhelms you! O
may the fear of the Lord be in you the beginning of wisdom! This moment turn to your
gracious God; tomorrow may be too late. "This is the day of salvation" for you.
If you neglect it, the coming night may be the commencement of night eternal to your soul.
And will you trifle with a danger like this? Will you do nothing to escape the sword of
Divine justice? If your danger move you not, consider your interest. This would be
sufficient to produce an entire change in you, if you would consider it seriously. In this
world God offers you the pardon of your sins, and a happiness which can only be surpassed
by that of glorified saints; and after this life a kingdom - a kingdom in the heavens. And
will you carelessly renounce this because you cannot obtain it without pain? Rather than
be born again, do you resolve to lose a crown of eternal glory? To lose your God, your
Savior, your all? Yea, to destroy yourself? Be not deceived. If the kingdom of heaven be
shut against you, the kingdom of darkness, the second death, becomes your portion. If the
kingdom of God be not established within you; if the foundation be not laid in your soul
in this life, by the righteousness of Christ, the peace of God, and the joy of the Holy
Ghost, "the worm that dieth not, and the fire that is not quenched," shall
terribly revenge your contempt for the blood of the covenant in which your sins might have
been washed away, if you had implored the sacred sprinkling. Be not offended at our
freedom. God knows that if we spread before you the treasures of his wrath, which he
reserves for the day of wrath, it is that you may flee to those of his mercy. These are
still open. His great and precious promises are still for you. By these you may be made
partakers of the Divine nature in this life, and after death of the inheritance among the
saints in light.
Section II
The difference between the reformation of a Pharisee, and the regeneration of a Christian
more particularly considered.
To the preceding exhortation permit me to add an advice which is of the last
importance. Many sinners acknowledge the necessity of regeneration without being profited
thereby, because they confound it with reformation of life. Reader, beware of this error.
Remember, it is not sufficient to die to sin if we be not raised into newness of life. It
is a little thing to say, "By the grace of God I am not what I was," if we
cannot add, "by the same grace I am what I never have been." It is a little
thing to be able to say, "I am no swearer, drunkard, unclean person; I do not walk
after the flesh;" unless we feel at the same time that we walk in the strait path of
faith, hope and Divine love.
You are no longer unjust: well; but like Zaccheus, do you give the half of your goods
to feed the poor, and if you have wronged any man do you restore four-fold? You are no
longer sensual and voluptuous; but are your affections spiritual and Divine? You are not
longer enslaved to passion and anger; but does the peace of God, which passes all
understanding, keep your soul in the sweetness and patience of the Lamb of God? You are no
longer filled with that pride which made you hate your superiors, despise your inferiors,
and shun your equals; but in its place, do you feel in your heart the poverty of spirit,
and the humility of Jesus? Do you never indulge what one calls "a polite pride?"
Do you never pique yourselves upon your gentility, or upon any worldly distinction? You
are perhaps an eminent person, and you feel it is unworthy an honest man to lie or
calumniate; but do you always firmly take part with the truth? Do you comfort, reprove, or
exhort your brethren with the sweetness and zeal of a Christian? You no longer mock at the
word of God; but do you meditate upon it day and night? And is it as sweet to your soul as
honey to your palate?
You are convinced it is a great sin to "take the name of God in vain;" but do
you "rejoice with reverence" every time you pronounce or think of that sacred
name? You detest impiety, you cry out against that deluge of iniquity which threatens to
destroy us: but are you not either transported with bitter zeal, or lukewarm, and filled
with vain confidence? You lament over many that you see at church, and at the holy table;
but when you are there, do you rejoice as in the presence of the Lord? Does all that is
within you cry out by happy experience, "How dreadful is this place! It is the
dwelling of the mighty God!" Do you inwardly feed upon the bread of angels? Do you
drink of the waters that spring up into everlasting life? Do you taste that the Lord is
good?
You enter regularly into your closet, and you blame those who neglect to pray to their
Father who seeth in secret; but do you there seek your God with tears until he manifests
himself to you as he does not unto the world? Are you sick of love, (to use the expression
of Solomon,) feeling that your Beloved is yours, and that you are his; "that his left
hand is under your head," and that his "right hand embraces you?" In a
word, do you find there "the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the
communion of the Holy Ghost?"
You feel that the life of a Christian ought to be a constant preparation for death, and
as it is contrary to good sense to take those diversions in which we would not that death
should fin us; you therefore leave plays, useless visits, balls, finery, romances, cards,
&c, to those whom the God of this world blinds, lest they should see eternity ready to
swallow them up: but do you "redeem the time," that you may "walk in all
those good works which the Lord has prepared" for you? Does the "love of Christ
constrain you," so that your duty becomes your delight? Do you love to visit the Lord
Jesus Christ in prison, and in the abode of the widow and orphan? Do you seek the poor
that are despised? Are you merciful to the utmost of your power, both to the bodies and
the souls of men? And do you find more pleasure in administering to the afflicted, and
"weeping with those that weep," than the children of this world experience in
all their vain delights?
Your life is not irregular, thanks be to God! You do not live any longer in
presumptuous sins. but do you feel the sprinkling of the blood of Christ? Do you know that
you "have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of your sins?" In a
word, are you "crucified with Christ," living no longer to yourself, but to God?
Is "Christ your life?" Do you feel that "your life is hid with Christ in
God?"
Reader, behold in these questions the difference between the reformation of a Pharisee,
and the regeneration of a child of God. Some degrees of preventing grace, and of reason
and reflection, suffice for the first; but nothing less can effect the second than a
baptism of the Holy Ghost, and a real participation of the death and resurrection of
Jesus. Beware, if indeed you would "flee from the wrath to come, and see the kingdom
of God," beware that you rest not in the former state. If you do, "the publicans
and harlots shall go into the kingdom of heaven before you," or rather you shall
never enter therein. Christ himself has solemnly declared it, Matthew 5:20; 21:31. Accuse
us not of severity in thus following eternal Wisdom, and in not daring to make void any
words written in the book of life. To flatter you in this respect would be to lose our own
souls, and that without remedy.
We are not ignorant that the voice of worldlings, like "the sound of many
waters," lifts itself up on all sides, and drowns that of the Savior. In vain we
declare, that those who falsely "call him Lord, shall not enter into his
kingdom." In vain we cry to sinners to "strive to enter in at the strait
gate" of regeneration, because "many will seek to enter" by that of
reformation, "and shall not be able." Sinners, always incredulous and obstinate,
and ever carried away by the multitude, refuse to hear the voice of their Shepherd. Wolves
in sheep's clothing betray them. Death seizes them before they are born again, and chains
of darkness keep them bound to the judgment of the great day. Fools! to be blinded by that
which should open their eyes, viz. the multitude that are content to live without
regeneration. As if Christ had not expressly said, "Many are called, but few chosen;
that his flock is a little flock;" and that few walk in the narrow path that leads to
life.
Renounce, reader, renounce the presumptuous folly of worldlings, and if the charm be
not yet broken, suffer the grace of God to break it this moment! Say not, you "are
rich and need nothing." Depend not on your own works, your sincerity, your religious
duties, your own righteousness. Acknowledge, on the contrary, that as you are not born
again, you are yet in your sins; poor, and miserable, and blind, and naked. Feel the
necessity to "buy gold tried in the fire that you may be rich; and white clothing,
that the shame of your nakedness may not appear; and to anoint your eyes with eye salve,
that you may see." Cry out like the penitent publican, with a broken and contrite
heart, or as Saul, praying day and night for the Spirit of God, Lord, "be merciful to
me a sinner!" Lord, "who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"
Lord, "what shall I do to be born again?" If these be the desires of your soul,
attend to the conclusion of this discourse. There you shall see, that however dangerous
your case may be, it is not desperate; and you shall be convinced that there is balm in
Gilead. You shall confess that faith in the blood of Christ can, not only heal the wounds
of a dying soul, but raise to life one that is spiritually dead.
THE CONCLUSION
By what means a soul may be born again.
God takes the title of "slow to anger; abundant in goodness and truth." He
swears by himself that he has "no pleasure in the death of a sinner," but that
he should be converted and live; and the effects answer to those tender declarations. His
mercy has found a way to raise fallen man, (if he will yield,) and to place him again
among his children, without wounding his own justice. this way is astonishing, unthought
of, incomprehensible. It surpasses infinitely the conjectures of angels, and the desires
of men. And it is so infallible, that all who have a due sense of their miserable fall in
Adam, all those who feel that they can no more regenerate themselves than they can create
a new heaven and a new earth, may come to God, and receive regeneration freely by grace,
and a right to the kingdom of heaven.
Reader, you have heard of this remedy a thousand times. But, on the one hand, knowing
neither your indigence nor your malady, and on the other, having your understanding
darkened by your unbelief, you have neither, perhaps, considered nor apprehended as a
Christian "the things which belong to your peace." May you receive them now as
the Gospel of Christ, which is "the power of God unto salvation to everyone that
believeth?"
Know then that the regeneration which we preach is nothing else than the two great
operations of the Spirit of God upon a penitential soul. The first, called justification,
or the remission of sins, is that gratuitous act of the Divine mercy, by which God pardons
the sinner, who believes in Jesus, all his past sins, and "imputes his faith to him
for righteousness." Because, feeling that he has not righteousness, that he can do no
work that is good in the sight of God, he "submits to the righteousness of God."
He receives with his heart Jesus Christ as his Savior, his gratuitous Savor, his sole
Savior; and he knows that he has received him, because God "fills him with peace and
joy in believing," and because he receives dominion over all his sins.
This dominion over sin, which the believer receives with the remission of his past
sins, is the beginning or foundation of the second part of regeneration, called in the
Holy Scriptures sanctification. For in the same moment that "the Spirit of God
witnesses with his spirit that" his sins are pardoned, he receives the power to love
much, as he feels that he has much forgiven. "The love of God" being thus
"shed abroad in his heart," causes an extraordinary revolution in all the powers
of his soul, and makes him feel, though perhaps in a low degree, the effects of the new
birth, described in the second part of this discourse.
We are far from concluding that the body of sin is destroyed by this circumcision of
the heart, this first revelation of Christ in the soul of a sinner. No: "the old man
is only crucified with Christ;" and although he cannot act as before, he lives still,
and seeks occasion to disengage himself, and to exercise his tyranny with more rage than
ever. David and St. Peter had painful experience of this: and hence we see that
sanctification is not generally the work of a day nor of a year. For, although God can cut
short his work in righteousness, as the penitent thief found it aforetime, and as many
sinners called at the eleventh hour have found it ever since, it is nevertheless in
general a progressive work, and of long duration. We, therefore, define sanctification to
be that powerful work of the Holy Spirit upon the heart of a pardoned sinner, by which he
receives power to go on "from faith to faith;" by which, illuminated more and
more "to see the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ," and "renewed
day by day" in the image of his Savior, which he had lost in Adam, he feels himself
internally "changed from glory into glory," until he be "filled with all
the fullness of God;" until he "loves the Lord his God with all his heart, and
with all his soul, and with all his strength, and his neighbor as himself," even as
Christ loved him. This is the highest point of the sanctification of a believer, and
consequently his regeneration is complete.
Sanctification cannot, therefore, begin before justification; for, seeing that the
Spirit of God sanctifies the heart of a sinner, that Spirit must be received. But he is
not received but in the sinner's being pardoned. For, according to Scripture, the first
operation of the Spirit of adoption, is to cry "Abba, Father!" in the heart of
which he takes possession; to testify to the spirit of the believer that he is a child of
God, and to give him the foretaste of his heavenly inheritance. Beside, reason convinces
us that God cannot communicate his nature, and the graces of his Spirit to a man whose
sins he has not yet pardoned. A king is not bountiful to a rebellious subject before he
restores him to his favor.
Thus our Church declares in her thirteenth article, "That works done before the
grace of Christ and the inspiration of his Spirit, are not pleasant to God, forasmuch as
they spring not of faith in Jesus Christ: yea, rather for that they are not done as God
has willed and commanded them to be done, we doubt not but that they have the nature of
sin, however good they may appear to men."
This being admitted, it is evident that for a sinner to know how he is to be
regenerated, he is to consider how he may be justified and sanctified. Upon this the
Scripture is clear. "By grace ye are saved," says St. Paul, "through faith;
and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not of works, lest any man should
boast, being created anew in Christ Jesus unto good works." As if the apostle had
said, By the faith God has freely given you, you are saved from your sins; delivered from
the punishment which they deserve by justification, and from their dominion over you by
sanctification. Hence you are regenerated and new creatures. Thus St. Paul declares that a
living faith is the gate of salvation, and all the Scripture declares it with him.
"He who believeth shall be saved, "says Jesus Christ; "he who believeth
hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation, but is passed from death unto
life." And St. John shows us that "this passing from death unto life," and
regeneration, are the same thing. "He who believeth is born of God," says he, in
his first epistle; and in his Gospel he declares, that "those who receive Christ, to
them he gives power to become the sons of God, even to those who believe on his name, who
are born not of the will of man, but of God."
Our Church declares the same thing. In her homilies she teaches, that the only
instrument necessary to salvation is faith, which is there defined, "A sure and firm
confidence, that through the merits of Christ our sins are forgiven, and we reconciled to
God."
Observe here, reader, with respect to faith, none can enjoy it but those who have felt
their need of it. Jesus Christ never gives this sweet assurance, this testimony of his
Spirit, but to those whose hearts are really contrite. "Come to me," says he,
"all ye who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." He invites no
others, he comforts no others. Before the Spirit of God "convinces the world of
righteousness, he convinces of sin, because they believe not in Jesus." None can come
to the Son for justifying faith, unless the "father draw him" by a sense of his
sins, and by the fear of that punishment which he merits.
If these truths have dissipated your doubts: if you no longer halt between God and
Baal: if you are convinced that you can never see the "kingdom of God" without
being "born again," and that the sole means which is "the power of God unto
salvation;" a faith which is "the substance of things hoped for, and the
evidence of things not seen;" which points, like John the Baptist, to "the Lamb
of God who taketh away the sins of the world," and who freely and graciously gives
this faith to those who earnestly seek it: come then, dear reader, come then to the throne
of grace, but come condemned by your conscience, burdened by the weight of your
iniquities, and pierced with a sense of your unbelief and hardness of heart. Implore the
mercy of your Judge until he shows himself your Father in giving you the Spirit of
adoption; your Jesus in saving you from your sins; your Christ in giving you the unction
of the Holy Spirit; your Emmanuel in revealing himself in you, and dwelling in your heart
by faith.
He invites you himself. "Ho! every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters! Ye
who have no money, who are poor in spirit, who tremble at my word, come, buy wine and milk
without money and without price. Why do ye spend your money for that which is not bread,
and your labor for that which satisfieth not? Hearken diligently unto me, and eat that
which is good, and let your soul delight itself in fatness. Come to me! hearken! and I
will make an everlasting covenant with you, even the sure mercies of David, and your soul
shall live. In the great day of the feast, Jesus cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him
come to me and drink. He who believeth in me, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living
water." And this, says St. John, "spake he of the Spirit, which they who
believed on him should receive; for the Spirit was not yet given, because that Jesus was
not yet glorified."
But Jesus is glorified! He is ascended to his Father and to our Father, to his God and
to our God! And from the throne of his glory he sends every day into contrite hearts the
Comforter, whom the world cannot receive, because it desires not to know him. But you,
afflicted soul, shall receive him, if indeed you pant after him, and refuse to be
comforted until he comes. The time cometh, yea, is now come, that you shall "worship
the Father in spirit and in truth:" and filled with the Spirit of truth, you also
shall cry out, "I know in whom I have believed! Lord, now let thy servant go in
peace, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation!" Yes, you shall be baptized by the Holy
Ghost for the remission of sins, and justified freely by faith. You "shall have peace
with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, and rejoice in God your Savior with joy
unspeakable and full of glory." "Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye
shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." "If ye, being evil, know
how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give
his Holy Spirit to them that ask him?" Doubt not the fidelity of God! Consider,
"the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all who are afar off, whom the
Lord your God shall call." The God of truth has made this glorious promise - pray
that it may be sealed upon your heart! But "pray with all prayer and supplication at
all times; watching thereunto with all perseverance. And remember, that when your prayer
is granted, you shall be "in Christ a new creature." "The Spirit of God
shall bear witness to your spirit that you are a child of God," and that your faith
is really that which justifies and regenerates.
Take heed, in the meantime, that impatience and unbelief mingle not with the sense of
the number and greatness of your sins, and so plunge you into discouraging and excessive
sorrow. Are you tempted to doubt the mercy of God? Reanimate your hope by meditating on
the invitations of "the God of all grace;" and the promises of the God of truth.
Is your soul spiritually sick, yea, dying? Consider that Jesus has said, "The whole
have no need of a physician, but those who are sick!" Is it spiritually dead? Hearken
"to God manifest in the flesh:" "I am the resurrection and the life; he
that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live; and he who liveth and
believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live; and he who liveth and believeth
in me shall never die!" You feel that you are lost. Jesus says expressly, "I am
not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel." "The Son of man is come
to seek and to save that which was lost." Do you doubt if he will receive you? He
says himself he will not "break a bruised reed, not quench the smoking flax."
"He that cometh unto me, I will in no wise cast out." Do you feel that it is
impossible such a corrupt soul as yours should be regenerated? Jesus says to you,
"Believe, and you shall see the glory of God: all things are possible to him that
believeth." Do you say you have no power? Remember, "power belongeth unto
God." "I will put my laws," says he, "in your mind, and write them in
your heart." "I will be to you a God, and you shall be to me a people." Do
you doubt if God can with justice pardon sins as great as yours? "Come," says
he, "let us reason together; though your sins were as scarlet, they shall be white as
snow; though red as crimson, yet shall they be as wool." Yes, says St. John, "if
we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us or sins, and to cleanse us from
all unrighteousness."
Immortal spirit, who readest these promises, "why tarriest thou?" Why do you
not cry out with transport, The Lord is faithful to pardon my sins! He has promised, and
he will do it. I will then confess them to him day and night with tears; I will not give
rest to my eyes, till they have seen the salvation of God. Consider! It is because the
Almighty is just, that he will cleanse you from all sin. Yes, his Son, his only Son, has
satisfied Divine justice for you. The stroke aimed at you has fallen upon his innocent
head. The heavenly victim stretched upon the cross has been devoured by the fire of that
eternal vengeance which flamed against you. The odor of this all-perfect sacrifice has
reconciled that God who is a consuming fire to the sinner. The blood of the new covenant
has flowed: it has made a propitiation for your sins. This blood, far from crying for
vengeance, like that of Abel, merits, demands, obtains for you repentance, faith,
regeneration, and eternal life. The paschal Lamb, the Lamb without spot or blemish, is
sacrificed for you. God withholds the arm of the destroying angel, until this precious
blood shall be sprinkled upon your soul; until you are born again. The holy Jesus, who
fears lest you should perish in your impenitence, hastens to offer you life eternal.
"Behold," says he, "I stand at the door and knock. If any man hear my voice
and open the door, I will come in to him, and sup with him, and he with me." He says
to you by the mouth of the apostle, that "he who hath the Son, hath life, and he who
hath not the Son of God, hath not life, but the wrath of God abideth on him." He
exhorts you by his servant David, "to kiss the Son lest he be angry, and you perish
from the way, if his wrath be kindled but a little." O! reader, gratefully accept
those kind invitations; prostrate yourself at the feet of the Son of God, open the door of
your heart to him, and cry incessantly, Come in, Lord Jesus, come in! Confess your
poverty, your sins, your misery, until the "kingdom of God is within you." Mourn
till you are comforted; hunger and thirst after righteousness till you are satisfied; and
travail in birth till Christ be formed within you; till, being born of God, you bear the
image of the heavenly Adam, as you have borne the image of the earthly.
I conjure you by the majesty of that God before whom angels rejoice with trembling! By
the terror of the Lord, who may speak to you in thunder, and this instant require your
soul of you! By the tender mercies, the bowels of compassion of your Father, which are
moved in your favor, all ungrateful as you are! I conjure you by the incarnation of the
eternal Word by whom you were created! By the humiliation, the pains, the temptations, the
tears, the bloody sweat, the agony, the cries of "our great God and Savior, Jesus
Christ!" I conjure you by the bonds, the insults, the scourging, the robes of
derision, the crown of thorns, the ponderous cross, the nails, the instruments of death
which pierced his torn body! By the arrows of the Almighty, the poison of which drank up
his spirit! By that mysterious stroke of wrath Divine, and by those unknown terrors which
forced him to cry out, "My God! My God! Why hast thou forsaken me?" I conjure
you by the interests of your immortal soul, and by the unseen accidents which may
precipitate you into eternity! By the bed of death upon which you will soon be stretched,
and by the useless sighs which you will then pour out, if your peace be not made with God!
I conjure you by the sword of Divine justice, and by the scepter of grace! By the sound of
the last trumpet, and by the sudden appearance of the Lord Jesus Christ, with ten
thousands of his holy angels! By that august tribunal, at which you will appear with me,
and which shall decide our lot for ever! By the vain despair of hardened sinners, and by
the unknown transport of regenerated souls! I conjure you from this instant, "work
out your salvation with fear and trembling." "Enter by the door into the sheep
fold:" sell all to purchase the pearl of great price: "count all things dung and
dross in comparison of the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ!" Let him not
go till he blesses you with that faith which justifies, and that sanctification without
which no man shall see the Lord. And soon, transported from this vale of tears, into the
mansion of "the just made perfect," you shall cast your crown of immortal glory
"at the feet of Him that sitteth upon the throne," and before the Lamb,"
who has redeemed us by his blood: to whom be the blessing, and the honor, and the glory,
and the power, for ever and ever! Amen."
THE ANTITHESIS OF LAW IS NOT GRACE, BUT LAWLESSNESS
--Robert L. Brush
"He that turneth away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer shall be
abomination" (Proverbs 28:9).
If there is one thing that characterizes the Christianity of this age, it is
lawlessness. It seems everyone is a law unto himself. Lawlessness is when a
"Christian" sets aside the law of God for one of his own making or one someone
else has made. Many "Christians" do this.
Usually among the Wesleyan-Arminians, we think of Calvinists as antinomians or lawless
ones. But a true Calvinist has great respect for the law of God. It is this new antinomian
form of Calvinism that has disregarded the law.
But they are not the only ones! Many Wesleyans, Pentecostals, and a wide variety of
Christians do the same. In reference to the modern antinomians, many are found among the
Baptists which make up the bulk of the fundamentalist camp.
Many fundamentalists today have completely disregarded God's law. I have heard
prominent radio preachers tell of everything from drug abuse, fornication, incest, and
hatred for fellow Christians, all under the name of Christianity. They teach sins do not
affect one's Christianity! Such are surely under a delusion. The Scriptures are clear on
the subject. "All liars shall have their part in the lake of fire" (Revelation
21:8). "He that saith he is in the light and hateth his brother is in darkness even
until now" (1 John 2:9). "Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer, and you
know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him" (1 John 3:15). "He that
saith I know Him and keepeth not His commandments is a liar" (1 John 2:4).
This type of "Christian" completely disregards regeneration. They speak of
justification, but say little about regeneration; about having the "mind of
Christ" or "Christ being formed in you." This antinomian form of
Christianity is false, unscriptural, and is no doubt, leading many to destruction.
This is caused in part by putting radical and absolute meanings to words like
"grace" (undeserved favor) and "gift" an unconditional gift as well as
unconditional forgiveness. Even Wesleyans are about to give up the conditions for
forgiveness, namely repentance and scriptural faith. The Scriptures are clear that
repentance must precede true faith. To be sure, there is a superficial faith that can
exist without repentance, but there is no assurance or confidence that goes with such
faith. It is a dead faith as opposed to the lively or living faith of true Christians.
There are some areas of concern to me among the Wesleyan Arminian people. The law is
disregarded when it comes to evil speaking and gossip. "Speak evil of no man"
the law says. Yet how easily this is laid aside. Bossy wives rule their husbands and in
many cases run the churches. This is lawlessness also. Many are opposed to capital
punishment and substitute a law of their own for God's law. This is a form of
antinomianism. Many hate their brothers and work hard against them. They break fellowship
over the slightest differences of doctrine.
The Scripture tells us to cease to hear instructions that cause us to err from words of
knowledge (Proverbs 19:27). Yet many continue to send their children to heathen schools to
be taught heathen philosophy. Sleeve lengths is by far a great issue to some than abortion
or Christian education. Many laymen do not obey their pastors and have very little respect
for them, while the Scriptures command us to obey those over us in the Lord. Many pay him
as little as they dare for his labors, and if he doesn't do just to suit them, they will
start a campaign to vote him out - all of which is as unscriptural as it is sinful.
In short, all of us need to study the Scriptures honestly and sincerely to see just
what the Scriptures teach and how much of our beliefs are mere tradition and how many are
truly scriptural, and then let us earnestly contend for the Scriptures. "For he that
turneth away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer shall be abomination"
(Proverbs 28:9).
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