This notion may be sufficiently
established upon that account of bondage which the apostle gives us, Rom vii. where he represents it as
consisting in impotence or inability to do these things, which God commands and
reason
approves. For to will is present with me; but how to perform that which is good, I find not, Verse 18. Liberty
therefore must on the contrary conflict in being able, not only
to will, but to do good; in obeying these commandments, which we
cannot but acknowledge to be holy and just and
good. And this is the very notion which our Lord and Master gives us of it. John viii.
For when the Jews bragged of their freedom, He let them know, that
freedom
could not consist with subjection to sin. He that
committeth sin is the servant of sin, Verse 34. That if they would be free indeed, the
son must make them so, Verse 36. i.e. they must by
his spirit and doctrine be rescued from the
servitude of lust and error and be let at liberty to work righteousness. If ye continue in my
word, then are ye my disciples indeed; and ye shall know the
truth and the truth shall make you free, Verses
31, 32.
Finally, not to multiply proofs of a
truth that is scarce liable to be controverted, as the apostle describes the bondage of a
sinner in Rom. vii. so does he the liberty of a saint in Rom. viii. For there,
Verse 2 he tells us thatthe law of the spirit of life has set the Christian free from the law of sin and death. And then he lets us know wherein this liberty consists; in walking, not after the
flesh, but after the spirit; in the mortification of
the body of sin, and restitution of the mind to its just empire and authority. If Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin; but the spirit is life because of
righteousness, Verse 10. And all this
is the same thing with his description of liberty, Chap. vi. where it is nothing else, but to
be made free from sin, and become the servant of God.
Thus then we have a plain
account of
bondage and liberty. Yet for the clearer understanding of both, it will not be amiss to
observe that they are each capable of different degrees; and both the one and the other
may be more or less complete, according to the different progress of men in vice and
virtue. Thus, in some men, not their will only, but their very reason is enslaved. Their
understanding is so infatuated, their affections so captivated, that there is no
conflict between the mind and body. They commit sin without any
reluctancy beforehand, or any
remorse afterwards;
their feared conscience making no
remonstrance, inflicting no
wounds, nor denouncing any threats. This is the last degree of vassalage: Such are
said in scripture to be dead in trespasses and
sins. 0thers there are, in whom their
lust and
appetite prevails indeed, but not without opposition: They reason rightly and, which is
the natural result of this, have some desires of righteousness: But through the
prevalence
of the body, they are unable to act conformable to their reason: Their
understanding has indeed light but not authority: It consents to the law of God;
but it has no
power, nor force
to make it be obeyed: It produces some good inclinations, purposes and
efforts but they prove weak and ineffectual ones. And as bondage, so liberty is of
different degrees. For though liberty may in a measure subsist, where there is much
opposition from the body; yet it is plain, that liberty is most complete, where the
body is
reduced to an entire submission and the spirit reigns with an uncontrolled and unlimited
authority and this latter is that liberty which I speak of.
I know very well, it is taught by
some, that there is no such state. But this doctrine, if it be thoroughly considered
has neither scripture, reason, nor experience to support it. For as to those places, Rom. vii. and Gal. v. urged in
favor of an almost incessant and too frequently prevalent lusting of the flesh against the
spirit, it has been
often
answered and proved too that they are so far from belonging to the perfect, that they
belong not to the regenerate. But on the contrary, those texts that represent the
yoke of Christ easy, and his burden
light; which affirm the commandments of Christ not to be grievous to such as are made perfect in
love; do all bear witness to that liberty which I content for. Nor does reason
favor my opinion
less than scripture. For if the perfect man be a new
creature; if he be transformed into a new
nature; if his body be dead to sin and his spirit
live to righteousness; in one word, if
the world be as much
crucified to him, as he to it; I cannot see why
it should not be easy for
him to act consonant to his nature; why he should not with pleasure and
readiness follow that spirit, and obey those affections which reign in him.
Lastly, how degenerate forever
ages past have been, or the present is, I dare not so far distrust the goodness
of my cause, or the virtue of mankind, as not to refer myself willingly, in this
point, to
the decision of experience. I am well assured, that truth and justice, devotion and
charity, honor and integrity, are to many so dear and delightful, that it is hard to determine, whether they are more strongly moved by a
sense of duty, or the instigations
of love and inclination. Nor is all this to be
wondered at, if we again reflect on what I just now intimated, that the perfect
man is a new creature, transformed daily from Glory to Glory: That
he is moved by new affections, raised and fortified by new
principles: That he is animated by a divine energy, and sees all
things by a truer and
brighter light; through which the things of God appear lovely and beautiful, the
things of
the world deformed and worthless. Just as to him who views them through a
microscope, the
works of God appear exact and elegant; but those of
man,
coarse and bungling, and ugly.
The absolute liberty of the perfect
man is then sufficiently proved
and if I thought it
were not, I could easily reinforce it with
fresh recruits. For the glorious characters that are given
us in scripture
of the liberty of the children of God, and the blessed fruit of it, peace and joy in the holy
ghost would easily furnish me with invincible
arguments. Nor would the contrary
opinion ever have been able to have kept the field so long as it has done, had it not been
favored by a weak and decayed piety; by the fondnesses of men for themselves, inspite of their
sins and
frailties and by many mistaken texts.
I have now sufficiently
stated the notion of true liberty. I proceed to the fruits of it, which will serve
for so many motives to its attainment.
Sec. 2. The
fruits of liberty may be reduced under four heads.
1.
Sin being a
great evil, deliverance from it is great happiness
2. A second
fruit of this liberty is good works.
3. The
great and last fruit of it is eternal life.
These are all comprised by the
apostle in Rom vi. 21, 22, 23. What fruit have ye then in those
things, whereof ye are now ashamed? For the end of these things is death.
But now being made
free from sin, and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto holiness and the
end everlasting life.
For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life, through
Jesus Christ
our Lord. And these are the great ends which
the Gospel, that perfect law of liberty, aims at
and for which it was preached to
the world as appears from those words of our Lord to St.
Paul,
Acts xxvi 17, 18. Unto whom now I send thee,
to open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God that they may receive
forgiveness of sins,
and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in me.
I will here insist
on these blessed effects of Christian
liberty; not only because the design of the chapter demands it, but also to prevent the being obliged to any tedious
repetition of them hereafter.
Sin is a great evil and therefore
the deliverance from the dominion of it is a great good. To make this evident, we need but reflect a little on the
nature and effects
of sin. If we enquire into the nature of sin, we shall find that it is founded in the
subversion of the dignity and defacing the beauty of human nature: And that it consists in the
darkness
of our understanding, the depravity of our
affections and the impotence of the will. The
understanding of a sinner is incapable of discerning
the certainty and force of divine truths, the loveliness of virtue, the unspeakable
pleasure which now flows from the great and
precious promises of the Gospel, and the incomparably greater which will one
day flow from the
accomplishment of them. His affections, which, if fixed and bent on virtue, had been
incentives, as they were designed by God, to noble and worthy actions, being
biased and
perverted, now hurry him on to lewd and wicked ones. And by these the mind, if at any
time
it chance to be awakened, is overpowered and oppressed.
It is true, all sinners are not
equally stupid or obdurate. But even in those in whom some sparks of understanding
and conscience remain unextinguished, how are the
weak desires of virtue baffled by the much stronger passions which they have for
the body and the world? Do they not find themselves reduced to that wretched state of
bondage wherein the good that they would do, that
they do not; but the evil that they would not do, that is present with them? It is plain then that
sin is a disease in our nature: That it not
only extinguishes the grace of the spirit and obliterates the image of God stamped on the
soul in its creation but also
diffuses I know not what venom through it, that makes it eagerly pursue its own
misery. It is a disease that produces more intolerable effects in the
soul, than any whatever can in the body. The predominancy of any noxious humor can breed
no pain no disturbance, equal to that of a predominant passion: No scars or ruins which
the worst disease leaves behind it, are half so loathsome as those of vice: Nay, that last
change, which
death itself produces, when it converts a beautiful body into dust and rottenness, is not half
so contemptible or hateful as that of sin, when it transforms man into a beast or
devil.
Now if
sin is so great an evil,
hence it naturally follows that deliverance from it
is a great good; so great, that if we estimate it by the evil there is in sin, health to the
sick, liberty to the captive, day to the
benighted, weary, and wandering traveler; a calm, a port to passengers in a storm;
pardon
to men adjudged to death, are but weak and imperfect images or resemblances of it. A
disease will at worst terminate with the body, and life
and pain will have an end together: But the pain that sin causes will endure to all
eternity for the worm dies not, and the fire
will not be quenched.
The
error of the traveler will be corrected by the approaching day and his weariness
refreshed
at the next stage he comes to; but he then errs
impenitently from the path of life, is lost ever:
When the day of grace is once set upon him, no
light shall ever recall his wandering feet into the path of righteousness and peace; no
ease no refreshment shall ever relieve his toil and mystery. Whilst the feet of
the captive are loaded with fetters, his soul may enjoy its truest liberty and in the mist of
dangers and dungeons, like Paul and Silas, he may sing songs of praise and triumph.
But the captivity of sin
defiles, oppresses, and enslaves the mind and delivers up the miserable man to those
intolerable and endless evils, which inexorable justice and
almighty wrath inflicts upon ingratitude and obstinacy. A storm can but wreck the
body, a frail and
worthless bark; the soul will escape safe to show the blessed shore, where the happy
inhabitants enjoy an undisturbed, an everlasting calm: But sin makes
shipwreck of faith and a good conscience and he that perishes in it does but pass into a more miserable
state for on the wicked God will rain
snares, fire and brimstone, storm and tempest. This
shall be their portion for ever, Psalm xi. And, lastly, a pardon sends
back a condemned criminal to life, that is, to sins and sufferings, to toils and
troubles,
which death, if death were the utmost he had to
fear, would have freed him from: But he that is once
delivered from sin, is past from death to life, and
from this Life of faith, of Love, of hope, shall
soon pass to another of fruition and glory.
2. A second fruit of liberty is good works. Here I will shew two things:
-
And that but briefly, that the works of righteousness contribute
mightily to our happiness; and that immediately.
-
That deliverance from sin
removes the great impediments of righteousness and throws off that weight which would otherwise encumber and tire us in our
race.
Outward
holiness is no small pleasure, no small advantage, to him who is exercised
therein. When nature
is renewed and restored, the works of righteousness are properly and truly the works of
nature: And to do good to man, and offer up our praises and devotions to God is to gratify the strongest
and most delightful inclinations we have. These indeed are at first stiffed and oppressed
by original corruption, false principles and vicious customs: But when once they have
broken through these, like seeds through the earthy coats they are imprisoned in, and are
impregnated, warmed, and cherished by an heavenly influence, they naturally shoot up into good
works. Virtue has a celestial tendency: From God it comes, and towards God it moves:
And can it be otherwise than amiable and pleasant? Virtue is
all beauty, all harmony and order; and therefore we may view and review, consider and reflect upon it with
delight. It secures us the favor of God and man; it makes our affairs naturally run smoothly and calmly on; and fills our
minds with
courage, cheerfulness, and good hopes. In one word, diversion and amusements give us a fanciful
pleasure; an animal
sensitive life, a short and mean one: Sin, a deceitful, false, and fatal one: Only
virtue,
a pure, a rational, a glorious, and lasting one.
2. I am next to shew, that deliverance from sin removes the
impediments of virtue. This will easily be made out, by examining what influence
selfishness,
sensuality and the love of this world which are the three great principles of
wickedness, have upon the several parts of evangelic righteousness. The first part is that, which contains those
duties that more
immediately relate to ourselves. These are especially two, Sobriety and
temperance. By Sobriety, I mean a serious and impartial examination of things; or such
state of mind as qualifies us for it. By temperance, I mean the moderation of our
affection and enjoyments, even in lawful and allowed instances. From these
proceed vigilance, industry, prudence, fortitude or patience and steadiness of
mind
in the prosecution of what is best. Without these it is in vain to expect, either
devotion
towards God or justice and charity toward man. Nay, nothing good or great can
be accomplished without them: Since without them we have no ground to hope for, either the
assistance of divine Grace, or the protection and concurrence of divine providence. Only
the pure and chaste soul is a fit temple for the residence of the spirit and the
providence of God watches over none or at least none have reason to expect it
should but such as are themselves vigilant and industrious.
But now, how repugnant to, how
inconsistent with those virtues, is that infatuation of mind, and that debauchery of
affections, wherein sin consists? How incapable either of sobriety or temperance do
selfishness, sensuality, and the love of this world render us? What a false
estimate of things do they cause us to form? How insatiable do they render us in our
desire of such things, as have but empty
appearances of good? And how imperiously do they precipitate us into these sins, which are the
pollution and
dishonor of our nature? On the contrary, let him but once come to believe, that his
soul is himself, that he is a stranger and pilgrim upon
earth, that heaven is his country and that
to do good works is to lay up his treasure in it; let him, I say, but once believe
this, and then, how sober, how temperate, how wise how vigilant, and industrious
will he grow. A second part of holiness regards God as
its immediate object, and consists in the fear and
love of Him, in dependence and self resignation, in contemplation and devotion. As to
this, it is
plain, that whoever is under the dominion of any sin, must be an enemy, or at least
a stranger to it. The inside knows no God and the
wicked will not, or dares not approach
one. Their guilt or their aversion keeps them from it. Selfishness, sensuality, and the love of the
world, are inconsistent with the Love of the
father, and all the several duties we
owe Him.
They alienate the minds of
men from
Him, and set up other Gods in his room. But as soon as a
man discerns that he has set his heart
upon false goods; as soon as he finds himself cheated and deceived in all his expectations
by the world, and is convinced that God is his proper and his sovereign
good; he will certainly make the
Worship of God a great part, at least, of the business and employment of life. With this
he will begin, and with this he will end the day: Nor will he rest here; his soul will be
ever and a non mounting towards heaven, and there will be scarce any action, any
event, that will not excite him to praise and adore God, or engage him in some
wise reflections
on his attributes.
The third part of
holiness regards
our neighbor and consists in the exercise of truth, justice,
and charity. And no where is the ill influence of selfishness, sensuality, and the
love of
the world, more notorious than here: For the rendering us impatient and
insatiable in our
desires, violent in the prosecution of them, extravagant and excessive in our enjoyments
and things of this world being few and finite and
unable to satisfy such inordinate appetites; we stand in one anothers light, in one
another's way to profit and pleasures, or too often at least to do so, and this must
unavoidably produce a thousand miserable consequences. Accordingly, we daily feel that
these passions, are the parents of envy and emulation, avarice, ambition,
strife and
contention, hypocrisy and corruption lewdness, luxury and prodigality; but are utter
enemies to honor, truth and integrity; to generosity
and charity. To obviate therefore the mischievous
effects of these vicious principles religion implants in the world others of a benign and beneficent
nature; opposing
against the love of the world, hope; against selfishness, charity and against sensuality
and faith.
3. The last fruit of Christian liberty, is Heaven which will consist of all the
blessings of all the enjoyments that human nature when raised to an equality with
angels, is capable of beauties and glories, joys and pleasures, will as it were like a
fruitful and ripe harvest here, grow up there in all the utmost plenty and perfection that
omnipotence itself will ever produce. Heaven is the masterpiece of God, the accomplishment and
consummation of
all his wonderful designs, the last and most endearing expression of boundless love. And
hence it is that the holy spirit scripture
describes it by the most taking things upon earth; and
yet we cannot but think that this image, though drawn by a divine pencil, must fall
infinitely short of it: For what temporal things can yield colors or metaphors strong
enough to paint heaven to the life? One thing there is indeed, which seems to point us to a just and adequate
notion of Heaven; it seems to excite us to attempt
conceptions of what we cannot grasp, we cannot comprehend; and the laboring mind the more it discovers, concludes still the more behind; and that is, the
beatific vision. This is that which, as divines generally teach,
constitutes heaven, and scripture seems to teach so
too.
We, who love and adore God
here, shall, when we enter into his presence, admire and love Him infinitely more. For God being infinitely amiable, the more we contemplate, the more clearly we discern his divine
perfections and beauties, the more must our souls be inflamed with a passion for Him:
And God will make us the most gracious returns of our
love, and express
his affections for us, in such condescensions, in
such communications of Himself, as will
transport us to the utmost degree that created beings are capable of. Will not God, that
sheds abroad his love in our hearts by his spirit here, fully satisfy it hereafter? Will
not God who fills us here with the Joy of his spirit, by I know not what
inconceivable ways, communicate Himself in a more
ravishing and ecstatic Manner to us, when we behold
Him as He is, and live for ever encircled in the arms
of his love and glory? Doubtless then, the beatific Vision will be the supreme pleasure of Heaven; yet I do not think that this is
to exclude those of an inferior nature. God will be there, not only all, but in all. We shall see Him as He is; and we shall see Him reflected, in Angels, and all the
Inhabitants of Heaven; nay, in all the various treasures that happy
place: But in far more bright and love characters
than in his works here below.
This is a state that answers all ends.
Temporal good, nay a state accumulated with all temporal
goods, has still something defective, something
empty in it that which is
crooked cannot be made straight, and that which is wanting cannot be numbered. And therefore the
eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear with hearing; but all things are full of
labor;
man cannot utter it. And
if this were not the state of temporal things yet that one thought of Solomon that he must
leave them, makes good the charge of vanity and vexation: And the contrary is that which
completes Heaven; namely, that it is eternal.
I will close
this chapter here; with a brief exhortation to labor after deliverance from sin. How
many and powerful motives have we to it? Would we free ourselves from the
evils of this life? Let us dam
up the source of them, which is sin. Would we perfect and accomplish our natures with excellent qualities?
It is righteousness
wherein consists the image of God, and participation of the divine nature: It is the cleansing ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and
spirit and the perfecting holiness in
the fear of God that must transform us from Glory to Glory. Would we be masters
of the most glorious fortunes? It is righteousness that will make us heirs of God and
joint-heirs with Christ: It is conquest of our sins and the abounding in good
works that will make us rich towards God and lay up for us a good
foundation for the life to come. Are we ambitious of honor?
Let us free ourselves from the
servitude of sin. It is virtue only, that is truly
honorable and nothing surely can entitle us to so noble a relation
for this allies us to God. For, as our savior speaks, they only are the children of Abraham, who do the
works of Abraham; the children of God, who do the works of God. These are they, who
are born again; not of the will of the flesh, or of the
will of man; but of God. These are they, who are incorporated into the body of Christ; and
being ruled and animated by his spirit, are entitled to all the blessed effects of his
merit and intercession. These are they, in a word, who have overcome, and will, one
day,
sit down with Christ in his throne; even as He also overcame, and is sat down with his Father in
his throne, Rev. iii. 21. Good God, how absurd and perverse our desires and
Projects are! We
complain of the evils of the world and yet we hug the causes of them and cherish those
vices, whose fatal wombs are ever big with numerous and
intolerable plagues. We fear death, and would get rid of this fear; not by disarming, but
sharpening its sting; not by subduing, but forgetting it. We love wealth and treasure; but it is that which is
temporal, not eternal. We receive honor
one of another; but we seek not that which comes from God only. But it is in Christian
liberty that makes us truly great, and truly
glorious: For this alone renders us serviceable to others, and easy to ourselves;
benefactors to the world and delightsome at home: It is Christian, liberty makes us truly
prosperous, truly fortunate; because it makes us truly happy, filling us with joy and
peace, and making us abound in Hope, through the power of the Holy Ghost.