XIII.
That
the Law was Figurative.
To evince the
authority of both Testaments at once, we have only to observe,
whether
that which is prophesied in the one be accomplished in the other.
If we would effectually examine the
Prophecies, we ought first of all to be sure that we rightly understand them.
For, supposing them to have but one sense, it is certain that the MESSIAH
cannot yet be come; but, sup-posing them to have two senses, the MESSIAH is
certainly come, in the person of JESUS CHRIST.
All the question, therefore, is, whether they are indeed capable
of a double meaning?—whether they are figures or realities? that is, whether we ought not to seek some-thing farther in
them than what they immediately present? or whether
we ought to acquiesce in that construction which offers itself to us at the
first view?
If the Law and the Sacrifices are real, it is
necessary that they should please GOD, and on no account be displeasing to
him. If they are figurative, it is necessary that they should be pleasing
and displeasing to GOD, in different regards. But now, through the whole series
of Scripture, they are sometimes affirmed to please GOD, sometimes to displease
him; and, by consequence, they are only figurative.
"It is said, that the Law shall
be changed; that the Sacrifices shall cease; that the people shall continue
without a King, without a Prince, and without a Sacrifice; that a new Covenant
shall be established; that a reform shall be made in the law; that the JEWS
received commandments which were not good; and that their sacrifices were
abominations, and things which GOD required not at their hands.
It is said, again, that the Law shall
abide for ever; that the Covenant shall be eternal,
and the Sacrifices perpetual; and that the Sceptre
shall never depart from Judah, because
it is to continue till the everlasting King shall commence his reign. Do such
expressions evince all this to be real? No. Do they demonstrate it to be figurative?
No. They only show, that it must be either Reality
or Figure. But the former, compared with these latter, exclude the Reality,
and establish the figure.
All these passages taken together cannot be applied
to the reality, but they may be all applied to the Figure: therefore, they
were spoken in Figure, nbt in Reality.
* Would we know, whether the Law and the Sacrifices
are real or figurative, we ought to discover, whether the Prophets, in speaking
of these things, had their eyes and thoughts entirely fixed on them, so as
to look no farther than the old Covenant; or whether they did not carry their
intention to somewhat else, of which all this was but the shadow and semblance;
as in a picture we con-template the thing represented. And in order to this
discovery, we need only hear what they say.
Now when they speak of the Covenant, as being
ever-lasting, is it possible they should mean the same Covenant, which they
elsewhere testify shall be changed? The like may be observed of the Sacrifices.
We may illustrate this whole case
by the familiar in-stance of writing in cyphers.
Suppose we intercept a letter of importance, in which we discern one plain
and obvious meaning, and are told, at the same time, that the sense is yet
so obscured, as that we shall even see the words without seeing it, and understand
them without understanding it;—what are we to judge, but that the piece has
been penned in cyphers? and so much the rather,
the more apparent contrarieties we meet with in the literal construction?
How great esteem and veneraration ought we, therefore,
to express for those who decypher this writing to
us, and bring us acquainted with its secrets; especially if the key, which
they make use of, be easy, agreeable, and natural? This is what was per-formed
by our LORD and his Apostles: They have opened the seal, and rent the veil,
and rescued the spiritual sense from the literal disguise. They have taught
us, that our enemies are our own carnal affections; that our Redeemer is to
be a spiritual conqueror; and that he is to have a first and a second Coming,
the one in humility, to abase the proud, the other in glory, to exalt the
humble;—in a word, that JESUS CHRIST is to be GOD, as well as man.
It was our LORD'S chief employment
to inform men, that they were lovers of themselves; that they were sinners
and slaves, blind, distempered, and miserable; that hereupon it was needful
he should deliver and heal them; that all this was to be performed on their
renouncing themselves, and their taking up each his cross, and following
him.
" The
letter killeth.". It was necessary that CHRIST
should suffer; that GOD should humble himself; that there should be a circumcision
of the heart; a true fast, a true sacrifice, a true temple, a two-fold law,
(as well as a two-fold table of the law,) a two-fold temple, a two-fold captivity.
This was the difficult cypher presented to us.
We have, at length, been taught by our LORD to
unfold the intricacy of these figures: we have been informed what it is to
be truly free, to be a true Israelite; we have been shown the true Circumcision,
the true Bread of Heaven.
In the promises of the Old Testament
every one finds what he chiefly delights to seek, what is most agree-able
to his own heart and affections; spiritual goods or temporal, GOD or the Creatures;
but with this difference, that they who seek the creatures find them attended
with numerous contradictions, with a prohibition to love them, and with a
difficult injunction to love and worship GOD alone; whereas they who seek
GOD find him without the least repugnancy, and with a pleasing command to
admit no other object of worship or of love.
The main sources of verbal contrarieties
in the Scriptures are the mysteries of a GOD humbled to the death of the
cross; of a MESSIAS triumphing over death by dying himself; of the two natures in JESUS CHRIST; of his two-fold
Coming; of the two estates and conditions of human nature.
As we cannot justly compose a man's
character, but by accounting for all the contrarieties in his humor or conduct;
and as it is not enough to pursue a train of agreeable qualities, without
giving the resolution of those which appear to be opposite; so before we can
perfectly understand the sense of an Author, it is necessary that all the
contrary passages should be reconciled.
Wherefore in order to a right apprehension
of the Scripture, we ought to find out a sense in which all the seemingly
opposite places shall agree. Nor is it sufficient to have an interpretation
in which many consonant pas-sages shall be united; but we must have one in
which the most dissonant shall meet and conspire.
Every Author either has one principal aim and
purport, in which all the supposed differences will be found consistent,
or he has no meaning at all. The latter cannot be said of the Scriptures and
Prophecies. They unquestionably abound in good sense. Some one meaning then
they will afford us, by which the several repugnancies in style may be adjusted
and composed.
Their true sense therefore cannnot be that which is given them by the JEWS. But in JESUS
CHRIST all the various dissonancies are reduced
to perfect harmony.
The JEWS had not skill enough to
make the abrogation of the Royalty and Principality, foretold by HOSEA, accord
with the prophecy of JACOB.
If we take the Law, the Sacrifices, and the Kingdom,
for things really and ultimately designed, we shall not be able to reconcile
all the passages of the same Author, nor of the same Book, nor, in many times,
of the same Chapter;—which sufficiently discovers the intention of the writers.
The JEWS were not permitted to offer
Sacrifices, or so much as to eat the tenths, elsewhere than at Jerusalem only,
the place which the LORD had chosen.
HOSEA foretold; that the JEWS should be "
without a King, without a Prince, without Sacrifices, and without images;"
which prediction we now see fully accomplished, no sacrifice being legally
to be offered but at Jerusalem.
Whenever the Word of GOD, which is
eternally true, seems to be false in the literal construction, its truth is
preserved in the spiritual. " Sit you on my
right hand:" —this is false, if spoken literally; yet it is spiritually
true. Such expressions as these describe GOD after the manner of men: and
this, in particular, only implies, that the same honor which men intend in
setting others at their right hand, GOD will also confer, irr
the exaltation of the MESSIAS. It is, therefore, a note of the divine intention,
but affects not the precise manner of the execution.
Thus again, when it is said to the
Israelites, GOD has received the odour of your incense,
and will give you in recompence a fertile and plentiful
land;the meaning is no more than this, that the
same affection which men, delighted with your perfumes, would express by rewarding
you with a fruitful land, the same will GOD express towards you in his blessings;
because you also entertain the like grateful disposition towards GOD, as a
man does towards his superiors, when he thus presents them with sweet odors.
The sole aim and intention of the
whole Scripture is charity. All that tends not to this end,
is merely figure. For since there can be but one point and ultimate scope,
whatever is not directed thither in express terms, must, at least, be couched
under such as are ambiguous.
GOD, in compassion to our weakness, which variety
alone can please, has so varied this one precept of charity, as to conduct
us every way to our real interest. For one thing alone being strictly necessary,
and yet our hearts being set on divers things, GOD has provided for the satisfaction
of both these inclinations together, by giving us such a diversity as still
leads us forward to the one thing necessary.
There are, and always have been, men who rightly
apprehend, that the only enemy of human nature is concupiscence, which turns
us away from GOD; and that GOD himself, not a fruitful land, is our only good
and happiness. Those who fancy the good of man to consist in gratifying the
flesh, and his evil in the disappointment of sensual desire, let them wallow
in their pleasures, let them die in their enjoyments: but as for those who
seek Gan with their whole heart, whom nothing can
grieve but the being deprived of the light of his countenance, who have no
desire but to enjoy his favor, no enemies but such as divert or withold
them from him, and whose greatest affliction is to see themselves encompassed,
and even subdued, by such enemies, let them be comforted: for them there is
a Deliverer, for them there is a God.
A MESSIAS was promised, who should
rescue men from their enemies. A MESSIAS is come; but to rescue men from no
other enemies than their sins.
When DAVID says that the MESSIAS shall deliver
the people from their enemies, this, by a carnal expositor, may be applied
to the Egyptians: and then, I confess, I am at a loss to show him how the
prophecy has been fulfilled. Yet it may be likewise applied to men's iniquities;
since these, and not the Egyptians, are to be looked on as real enemies.
But if in other places he declares,
as he does, (together with ISAIAH, and others) that the MESSIAS shall deliver
his people from their sins; the ambiguity is taken off, and the double sense
of enemies reduced to the single meaning of iniquities. For if these latter
were chiefly in his thought, he might well express them by borrowing the name
of the former: but if his mind was wholly bent on the former, it was impossible
he should signify them under the appellation of the latter.
MOSES, DAVID, and ISAIAH, all speak of this victory
in the same terms. Must we not therefore acknowledge, that these terms have
the same sense; and that MOSES and DAVID had but one intention, while both
speak of men's enemies, and the latter visibly alludes to men's sins.
DANIEL, in his ninth Chapter, prays
that the people may be delivered from the captivity of their enemies; but
his eye was plainly fixed on their transgressions. And to show that it was
so, he proceeds to relate the sending of GABRIEL to him, with an assurance
that his prayer was heard; that after the seventy weeks, the people should
obtain deliverance from their iniquity; that transgressions should then have
an end, and the Redeemer, " the most holy," should " bring
in" (not legal, but) " everlasting righteousness."
When we are once let into these secrets,
it is impossible for us not to discern and apprehend them. Let us see whether
ABRAHAM'S lineage and descent were the real causes of his being styled "
the friend of Go])?" Whether the promised land
was the true seat of rest? Neither of these can be affirmed; therefore both
were symbolical. In a word, let us examine all the legal ceremonies, and all
the precepts which arc not of charity, and we shall find them composing one
general image, one uninterrupted allegory and prefiguration.
XIV. JESUS CHRIST.
THE infinite distance that there
is between Body and Spirit, does but imperfectly represent to us the distance
between Spirit and Charity, which being altogether super-natural, may be said
to be infinitely more infinite. All the splendor of outward greatness casts
no lustre towards the eyes of those who are engaged in the pursuits
of wit.
The greatness of wit and parts is
wholly indiscernible to the Rich, to Kings, and Conquerors, and to all the
great ones of the world.
The greatness of that wisdom which cometh from above is alike imperceptible
to the worldly, and to the witty. These are three orders of quite different
kinds.
Great geniuses have their kingdom and splendor,
their victory and glory; and want not carnal greatness, because it has no
relation to the grandeur which they pursue. This grandeur does not, indeed,
strike the eyes, but it is enough that it casts a distinguishable radiancy
on the soul.
The saints likewise have their empire,
their lustre, their greatness, and their triumphs;
and want not the pomp of honor, or the pride of genius, for these things are
quite out of their sphere and order, and such as neither increase nor diminish
the grandeur to which they aspire. These truly great ones are equally invisible
to bodily eyes, and to curious and subtle wits; but they are manifested to
GOD and Angels, and are not ambitious of other spectators.
ARCHIMEDES would have gained the same esteem,
without his relation to the Royal Blood of Sicily. It is true he won no battles;
but he has left to all the world the benefit of his
admirable inventions. O! how great, how bright does
he appear to the eyes of the mind!
JESUS CHRIST, without worldly riches,
without the exterior productions of science, was infinitely great in his sublime
order of holiness. He neither published inventions, nor possessed kingdoms;
but he was humble, patient, pure before GOD, terrible to evil Spirits, and
without spot of sin. O! with what illustrious pomp,
with what transcendent magnificence, did he come attended, to such as beheld
with the eyes of the heart, and with those faculties which are the judges
and discerners of true wisdom!
It had been needless for ARCHIMEDES,
though of princely descent, to have acted the Prince in his Book of Geometry.
It had been needless for our LORD JESUS CHRIST to have assumed the state of
an earthly King, for the illustration of his Kingdom of Holiness. But how
great, how excellent, did he appear in the brightness of his proper order!
It is most unreasonable to be scandalized at the mean condition of our LORD,
as if it were opposed, in the same order and kind, to the greatness which
he came to display. Let us consider this greatness in his life, in his sufferings,
in his solitude, in his death, in the choice of his attendants, in their act
of forsaking him, in the privacy of his resurrection, and in all the other
parts of his history; and we shall find it so truly elevated and noble, as
to leave no ground for our being offended at a meanness which was quite of
another order.
But there are some who can admire
only the greatness of this world, as if there were no proper greatness in
wit; and others who are charmed only with greatness of wit, as if there were
not still a more noble, a more sub-lime greatness in wisdom.
The whole system of bodies, the firmament,
the stars, the earth, and the kingdoms of it, are not fit to be opposed in
value to the lowest mind or spirit; because Spirit is endued with the knowledge
and apprehension of all this, whereas Body is utterly stupid and insensible.
Again, the whole united systems of Bodies and Spirits are not corn-parable
to the least motion of Charity, because this is still of an order infinitely
more exalted and divine.
From all Body together, we are not able to extract
one thought. This is impossible, and quite of another order. Again, all Body
and Spirit together are unable to produce one spark of Charity. This is likewise
impossible, and of an order above nature.
JESUS CHRIST lived in so much obscurity,
(as to what the world terms obscure,) that the Pagan historians, who were
wont to record only persons of eminence, and things of importance, have scarcely
afforded him a slender notice.
Who amongst men was ever arrayed
with so much splendor as our LORD? The whole Jewish
nation prophesied of him before his coming: the Gentile World adored him
at his coming: both JEWS and GENTILES regarded him as their common centre,
their expectation, and desire. And yet who had ever so little enjoyment of
so abundant glory? Of thirty-three years, thirty he spent in privacy, and
at a distance from the world. During the three which remained, he was censured
for an impostor, he was rejected by the priests and rulers of his nation,
despised by his kinsmen and friends, and, in conclusion, suffered a shameful
death, betrayed by one of his attendants, abjured by another, and deserted
by all.
What share then can he be supposed
to have borne in all this splendor? Never person
was in greater glory; never person was in deeper disgrace. His whole splendor,
therefore, was designed for our sakes, and to render him discernible to us;
but not the least ray was reflected back upon himself.
Our LORD discourseth of the sublimest subjects
in a phrase so plain and natural, as if it had not been deeply considered;
but withal so pure and exact, as to show that it proceeded from the greatest
depth of thought. The joining of this accuracy with this simplicity is admirable.
The Old and New Testament equally
regard JESUS CHRIST; the former as its hope and expectation; the latter as
its author and example; both as their common centre and aim. The Prophets
had the gift of foretelling; but never were foretold themselves: The Saints,
who followed, were foretold; but had not the power of foretelling: Our LORD,
as he was the great subject of prophecies, so he was himself the chief of
prophets.
The JEWS were blessed in ABRAHAM:
(" l will bless them that bless thee:")
but all the nations of the earth are blessed in ABRAHAM'S Seed: (" A
light to lighten the Gentiles," &c.) " He
has not done so to any nation," says DAVID, speaking of the Law: CG He
has clone so to all nations," we may say, speaking of the Gospel. Thus
is it the sole prerogative of JESUS CHRIST to be an
universal blessing. The sacraments and service of the Church have an effect
only on actual believers; the sacrifice of our LORD OH the cross extends
its meritorious influence to the whole world.
Let us then stretch out our arms
to embrace our merciful Deliverer; who, having been promised four thousand
years before, came at length to suffer and to die for us, at the same time
and with the circumstances of the promise: and waiting, by his gracious assistance,
till we shall die in peace, through the hope of being eternally united to
him, let us in the mean while live, with comfort; whether amongst the good
things which he so bountifully gives us to enjoy,—or amongst the evil things
which he shall please to bring on us for our soul's health, and which, by
his own example, he has taught us to sustain.
XV. The Evidences
of JESUS CHRIST from the Prophecies.
The noblest Evidences of our LORD
are the Prophecies which preceded him. And accordingly it has pleased GOD
to exercise a peculiar care in this behalf. For the full accomplishment of
them being a perpetual miracle, which reacheth from
the beginning to the end of the Church, sixteen hundred years together, GOD
raised up a succession of Prophets; and during the space of four hundred
years after, he dispersed these Prophecies, together with the JEWS that kept
them, through all nations of the world. See the wonderful preparation to our
LORD'S appearance! As his Gospel was to be embraced and believed by all nations,
there was a necessity not only of Prophecies to gain it this belief, but likewise
of diffusing these Prophecies to the same extent with the human race.
Supposing one single man to have
left a Book of Predictions concerning JESUS CHRIST, as to the time and manner
of his coming, and supposing him to have come agreeably to these predictions,
the argument would be of almost infinite force. Yet here the evidence is stronger,
beyond all comparison. A succession of men, for the space
of four thousand years, follow one another, without interruption or
variation, in foretelling the same great event. A whole people are the harbingers
of the MESSlAH; and such a people as subsisted four
thousand years, to testify in a general body their assured hope and expectation,
from which no severity of threats or persecutions could oblige them to depart.
This is a case which challengeth, in a far more
transcendent degree, our assent And wonder.
The Time of our LORD'S appearance
was signified by the state of the JEWS; by the condition of the Heathen World;
by the comparison between the two Temples; and even by the precise number
of years which should intervene.
The Prophets having given various
marks of the MESSIAS who was to come, it seemed necessary that these marks
should all concur at the same period. Thus it was necessary that the Fourth
Monarchy should be established before the expiration of DANIEL'S seventy weeks;
that the sceptre should then depart from Judah;
and that the MESSIAS should then immediately appear:—in pursuit of which predictions,
our LORD appeared at this juncture, and demonstrated his claim to the style
and character of the MESSIAS.
It is foretold, that under the Fourth
Monarchy, before the destruction of the Second Temple, before the dominion
of the JEWS was taken away, and in the seventieth of DANIEL'S Weeks, the Heathens
should be led into the knowledge of the only true GOD, worshipped by the JEWS;
and that those who sincerely feared and loved him should be delivered from
their enemies, and should be replenished with higher degrees of his fear
and love.
We see the event answer in all points.
During the time of the Fourth Monarchy, before the destruction of the Second
Temple, the Pagans in multitudes adored the true GOD, and embraced a life
altogether spiritual and angelic; women consecrated to religion their virginity,
and their life; men voluntarily renounced all the enjoyments of sense. That
which PLATO was unable to effect upon a few persons, and those the wisest
and best Instituted of his time, a secret force, by the help only of a few
words, now wrought upon thousands of ignorant, uneducated men.
What means this prodigious change?
It is no other than was foretold so rnany ages since:
" I will pour out my SPIRIT upon all flesh."
The whole world, which lay enslaved to lust and unbelief, was now surprisingly
in-flamed with the fire of charity. Princes resigned their crowns; the rich
abandoned their possessions; the daughters, with an astonishing courage,
contended for the prize of martyrdom; the sons forsook their parents and habitations,
to embrace the solitude of deserts. Whence springs this unknown and invisible
force? The MESSIAH is arrived; behold the effects and the tokens of his coming!
For two thousand years together, the GOD of the
JEWS remained unknown to an infinite variety of nations, over-spread with
Paganism. Yet, at the precise time foretold, the Pagans in all nations adore
this only true GOD: the Idol-Temples are every where destroyed: Kings them-selves
submit their sceptres to the cross. What new thing
is this? It is the SPIRIT OF GOD poured out upon all the earth.
It was testified, That the MESSIAS
should come to establish a new covenant with his people; such as might make
them forget their departure out of Egypt, in comparison with this great deliverance:
That he would put his law and his fear into their hearts; both which rested
before in externals only:
That the JEWS should reject our LORD; and should
themselves be rejected of GOD;—" the beloved vine bringeth
forth only wild grapes:"—that the chosen people should prove disloyal,
ungrateful, and incredulous: that GOD should strike them with blindness; and
that, like blind men, they should stumble at noon-day:
That the Church should be narrow in its beginning,
and should afterwards diffuse itself to a prodigious extent:
That idolatry should then be extirpated:
that the MESSIAH should vanquish and expel the false deities, and reduce men
to the worship of the true God:
That the Idol-Temples should be cast down; and
that in all places of the world men should offer to GOD a pure, and holy,
and living sacrifice, in the room of the slain beasts: That the MESSIAH should
instruct men in the true and perfect way:
That he should reign
over the JEWS and GENTILES No person before, or since our LORD, has been known,
to teach any thing which bears the least affinity to these predictions.
'1' After
so many messengers sent to notify his coming, the MESSIAS was pleased himself
to appear, with all the assured Evidences of the Person, and all the concurring
Circumstances of the Time. He came to inform men, that they had properly no
other enemies than themselves, or than those passions which separated them
from God; and that his office was to set them free from these enemies, to
strengthen them with his grace, to unite them. all
in one holy CHURCH, and to reconcile JEWS and GENTILES, by destroying the
superstition of the former, and the idolatry of the latter.
And the issue of all this was, that the Apostles
accordingly pronounced the sentence of rejection on the JEWS, and declared
the glad tidings of acceptance and salvation to the GENTILES.
And yet, through the power of natural
concupiscence, was this most divine undertaking opposed by the united force
of mankind. This King of JEWS and GENTILES was denied, was oppressed, by both
equally conspiring against his life. Whatever is wont to style itself great,
in the world, attacked this religion in its very infancy,—the learned, the
wise, and the princes of the earth. The first persecuted it with their pen;
the second with their tongue; the last with their sword. But in spite of all
opposition, within how little a space do we behold our LORD reigning victoriously
over his enemies of every kind; and destroying as well the Jewish as the Gentile
worship, each in its chief scat and metropolis, JERUSALEM and ROME, planting
in one of them the first, in the other the greatest of churches?
Persons of mean endowments, and of no authority
or strength, such as were the Apostles and primitive Christians, bore up against
all the powers of the earth; over-came the learned, the wise, and the mighty;
and gave a total subversion to the Idol-Worship, which had so firmly established
itself in the world. And all this was brought to pass by the sole influence
of that divine Word which foretold our Bonn's appearance.
The JEWS, in putting to death JESUS
CHRIST, whom they believed not to be the MESSIAS, gave him the final mark
and assurance of the MESSLAS'S character. The more they persisted in denying
him, they still became the more infallible witnesses of his truth: for to
disown, and to slay him, was but to join their own testimony to that of the
Prophecies which they fulfilled.
Who is so ignorant, as not to distinguish
and ac-knowledge our LORD, after the numerous prophetical tokens and circumstances
of his history? Par it was expressly declared, That he should have one special
messenger and fore-runner: That he should be born an infant: That his birth-place
should be the City of BETHLEHEM; that he should spring from the Tribe of JUDAH,
and House of DAVID; that he should exhibit himself more especially at JERUSALEM:-‑
That he should veil the eyes of the wise and
learned, and preach the gospel to the poor; that he should restore sight to
the blind, health to the diseased, and light to those who languish under darkness:
That he should teach the true and perfect way, and should be the great Instructer
of the GENTILES: That he should offer himself as a sacrifice for the sins
of the whole world.
That he should be the chief corner-stone,
elect and precious: That he should, at the same time, be a stone of stumbling,
and rock of offence: That the JEWS should fall upon this rock:---‑ That
this stone should be rejected by the builders; should he made by GOD the head
of the corner; should grow into a great mountain, and fill the whole earth:
That the MESSIAS should be disowned, rejected, betrayed, sold, buffeted,
derided, and afflicted by a thousand different methods; that they should give
him gall to drink, should pierce his hands and his feet, should strike him
on the face, should kill him, and cast lots upon his vesture: That he should
rise again on the third day from the dead:
That he should ascend into heaven,
and sit at the right hand of GOD: That kings should arm themselves to oppose
his authority: That sitting at the right hand of the FATHER, he should triumph
over all his enemies; That the kings of the earth should fall down before
him, and all nations do him service: That the Jaws should still remain: That
they should remain in a wandering and desolate condition, without princes,
without sacrifices, without altars, without prophets; ever hoping for safety,
and ever disappointed of their hope.
It was necessary, according to the
prophetical descriptions, that the MESSIAS, by his own strength, should gather
to himself a numerous people, elect, sacred, and peculiar; should govern and
support them; should lead them into a place of rest and holiness; should present
them blameless before GoD; should make them temples
of the Divine Presence; should deliver them from the wrath of GOD, and restore
them to his favor; should rescue them from the tyranny of sin, which so visibly
reigned over ADAM'S. posterity; that he should give laws to his people, and
should grave these laws in their hearts, and write them in their minds; that
he should be at once a holy Priest, and a spotless Sacrifice; and that, while
he offered to GOD bread and wine, he should no less offer his own body and
blood.—Each of these particulars have we seen exactly performed by JESUS CHRIST.
Again, it was foretold, that he should
come as a mighty deliverer; that he should bruise SATAN'S head, and redeem
his people from their sins: that there should be a new and an eternal covenant,
and another priesthood for ever, after the order of MELCHISEDEC: that the
MESSIAS should be powerful, mighty, and glorious; and yet so weak, so miserable,
and so contemptible, as not to be distinguished or credited, but rejected
and slain: that the people who thus rejected him should be no more a people:
that the GENTILES should receive him, and trust in him: that he should remove
from the hill of SION, and reign in the chief seats of idolatrous worship:
that the Jaws should nevertheless continue for ever: and, lastly, that he
should arise out of JUDAH, and at the precise time when the sceptre was departed from them:
We have no King but CARSAR,"
said the JEWS. Therefore JESUS CHRIST was the MESSIAS; because their sceptre was departed to a stranger, and because they would
admit of no other King.
XVI. Divers Proofs
of JESUS CHRIST.
In refusing to give credit to the
Apostles, it is necessary we should suppose one of these two things, either
that they were deceived themselves, or that they had an intention of deceiving
others. As to the first, it seems next to impossible, that men should be abused
into a belief of a person's rising from the dead. And as for the other, the
supposition of their being impostors is loaded with absurdities of every
kind. Let us be at the pains of examining its process. We are, then, to conceive
these twelve men, after the death of their Master, combining to delude the
whole world with a report of his resurrection. As they could not embark in
this design, without bringing upon their heads all the opposition of united
strength and power; so the heart of man has a strange inclination towards
lightness and change, towards closing with the bribes of promises and rewards.
Now should so much as any one of them have been drawn from his resolution
by these charms, or have been shaken by prisons, by tortures, or by death
itself, all had been undone beyond recovery. This consideration, if pursued,
cannot fail of appearing with great weight and advantage.
While their LORD continued amongst
them, his presence might encourage and support them: but after-wards, what
Gould possibly encourage them to proceed, except his real appearance and return?
The style of the Gospel is admirable in a thousand different views; and in
this, amongst others, that we meet there with no invectives, on the part
of the Historians, against JUDAS, or PILATE, nor against any of the enemies,
or the very murderers, of their LORD.
Had the modesty and temper of the
Evangelical Writers been affected, like the many strokes of art which we admire
in vulgar history, and had they designed it only to be taken notice of, —either
they could not have forborne to give some insinuation of it themselves, or,
at least, they would have procured friends who should observe it to their
advantage and honor. But as they acted without any manner of affectation,
and with altogether disinterested motions, they never took care to provide
any person who should make these reflections in their favor. This, I believe,
is what no man has hitherto remarked, and yet what seems an admirable evidence
of the great simplicity used in this whole affair.
Another signal confirmation of our
faith, is the pre, sent condition of the JEWS. It is astonishing
to see this people, during so vast a course of years, never extinguished,
and yet ever miserable; it being alike necessary to the demonstration of the
MESSIAS, both that they should subsist to be his Witnesses, and should be
miserable as having been his Crucifiers. And though to subsist, and to be
miserable, are contrarieties ungrateful to nature, yet they fail not to maintain
their subsistence under all the power of their misery.
But were they not reduced to almost
the same extremities, during their captive estate? No: the sceptre, and regal line, were
not in the least interrupted by their captivity in BABYLON; because their
happy return was expressly promised and determined. When NEBUCHADNEZZAR
carried away the people, for fear they should imagine the sceptre to have then departed from JUDAH,
they were before-hand assured, that they should sojourn
but a few years, and at the end of them should certainly be re-established.
They were never without the comfort of their Prophets, or the presence of
-their Kings. But the second ruin of their city and polity is without promise
of a restoration,—without Prophets, without Kings, with-out comfort, or hopes,—the
sceptre being now for ever departed from them.
To be detained in an enemy's country, with an
assurance of being delivered after seventy years, can scarcely be looked
on as a state of captivity, in respect of a whole people. But their present
dispersion and banishment into strange lands is not only without assurance,
but without the least hope, of restitution.
The only argument of the JEWS, which
we find insisted on in their writings, the Talmud, and by the Robbins, is,
that JESUS CHRIST did not appear as a mighty prince and conqueror,—did not
subdue the nations by the force and terror of arms. JESUS CHRIST, say they,
suffered and died; he overcame not the Gentiles by martial power; he loaded
us not with their spoils; he neither enlarged our dominions, nor increased
our stores. And is this all they have to allege? This is what we have especially
to boast. It is in this that he appears so peculiarly amiable: I would not
wish for a MESSIAS of their description and character.
How lovely a sight is it, to behold
with the eye of faith, DARIUS, CYRUS, and ALEXANDER, the ROMANS, POMIEY, and
HEROD, all ignorantly conspiring to advance the triumphs of the Cross?
XVII. For what
reasons we may presume it has pleased GOD to hide himself from some,
and
to disclose himself to others.
It has been the gracious purpose
of GOD, to redeem mankind, and to open a door of salvation to those who diligently
seek him. But men have shown themselves so unworthy of this design, that he
justly denies to some, on account of their obstinacy, what he grants to others,
by a mercy which is not their due. Were it his pleasure to overbear the stubbornness
of the most hardened unbelievers, he could easily effect it by discovering
himself so manifestly to them, as to set the truth of his existence beyond
the possibility of their disputes. And it is in this manner that he will appear
at the last day; with such amazing terrors, and such a convulsion of all nature,
that the most blind shall behold, and shall confess him.
But this is not the way which he
has chosen for his first and milder coming: because, so many persons having
rendered themselves thus unworthy of his mercy, he has left them deprived
of a happiness which they vouchsafed not to desire. It had not, therefore,
been consistent with his justice, to assume an appearance every way great
and divine, and capable of working in all men an absolute and undistinguished
conviction; nor, on the other hand, would it have seemed more equitable to
have used so much privacy and concealment, as not to be discoverable by sincere
inquirers. So that intending no less to reveal himself to those who sought
him with their whole heart, than to hide himself from those who were alike
Industrious to fly and avoid him, he has so tempered the knowledge of himself,
as to exhibit bright and visible indications to those who seek him, and to
turn the pillar of a cloud towards those who seek him not.
There is a due proportion of light
for those who, above all things, wish that they may see; and a proper mixture
of shade for those who are of a contrary disposition. There is enough of
brightness to illuminate the elect; and enough of obscurity to humble them.
There is obscurity enough to blind the reprobates; and brightness enough to
condemn them, and render them without excuse.
Did the world subsist purely to inform
men of the being of GOD, his divinity would shine through it with irresistible
and uncontested rays. But, in as much as it subsists
only by JESUS CHRIST, and for JESUS CHRIST, and to inform men of their corruption
and redemption, we read these two lessons in every part of its frame. For
all the objects which we can survey are such as denote neither the total exclusion,
nor the manifest presence of a God; or they denote the presence of a GOD "
who hides himself." The face of nature bears this universal character
and language.
Had men never been honored with the
appearance of GOD, this eternal privation might have been the subject of dispute,
and as well have been interpreted of his utter absence from the world, as
of human incapacity to enjoy his presence. But by affording some, though not
continual appearances, he has taken away all ground of doubt and debate.
If he has appeared once, he exists for ever. So that we are obliged jointly
to conclude, from the whole, the being of GOD, and the unworthiness of Man.
It seems to be the divine intention,
to perfect the Will rather than the Understanding. But now, a convincing
light and a perfect brightness, while they assisted the understanding, would
forestall and defeat the will. Were there no. intermixture of darkness, man
would not be sensible of his disease; and were there no degree of light, man
would despair of a remedy. So that not only the divine justice, but human
interest and advantage seem concerned, that GOD should discover himself in
part; it being alike dangerous for us to know GOD, without apprehending our
own misery,—and to know our own misery, without the apprehension of GOD.
Every thing instructs man in his own condition;
but then this maxim ought rightly to be understood. For it is neither true,
that GOD altogether discovers himself, nor that he
remains altogether concealed. But these are most consistent truths, that he
hides himself from those who tempt him, and discloses himself to those who
seek him. For men, though unworthy of GOD, yet at the same time are capable
of Gov. They are unworthy of him by their corruption;
and they are capable of him by their original perfection.
There is no object upon earth which
does not speak and proclaim either divine mercy, or human misery; either the
impotence of man, unassisted by GOD, or the power of man with GOD's concurrence. The whole universe teaches man, either
that he is distempered and lapsed, or that he is recovered and redeemed. Every
thing informs him either' f his greatness, or of his misery. The just dereliction
of GOD, we may read in the Pagans: his merciful favor and protection, in
the ancient JEWS.
All things work together for good
to the elect; even the obscurities of Scripture, which these honor and reverence,
on account of that divine clearness and beauty which they understand. And
all things work together for evil to the reprobates; even the divine clearness
and beauty of Scripture, which these blaspheme, on account of the obscurities
which they understand not.
JESUS CHRIST is come, that those
who see not, may see; and that those who see, may be made blind. He is come
to heal the sick, and to give over the sound; to call sinners to repentance
and justification, and to leave those in their sins, who trusted in themselves
that they were saints; to fill the hungry with good things, and to send the
rich empty away.
It was to render the MESSIAS alike
the subject of knowledge to the good, and of error to the wicked, that it
pleased GOD so to dispose the predictions concerning him. For
had the manner of his appearance been expressly foretold, there would not
have been obscurity enough to mislead the worst of men. On the other
hand, had the time been signified obscurely, the best of men would have wanted
evidence. For instance, the integrity of their heart could never have assisted
them in expounding a single for the numeral of six hundred years. The Time,
therefore, was declared in positive words; but the Manner wrapt
up in shade and figure.
By this means the wicked, apprehending the promised
Goods to be temporal, deceived themselves, notwithstanding
the clear indications of the Time; while the righteous avoided this mistake.
For the construction of the promised Goods depended on the heart, which is
wont to apply the name of good to the object of its
love: whereas the construction of the promised Time has no dependence on the
heart or affections. And thus the plain discovery of the Time, and the obscure
description of the Goods, or happiness expected, could be the cause of error
only to the wicked.
Lrstead
of complaining that GOD is so far removed from our search, we ought to give
him thanks that he is so obvious to our discovery. Nor ought we less to thank
him, that he still hides himself from the wise and the lofty, from those who
are unworthy to know so pure and holy a Gov.
Let men, therefore, reproach us no
more with the want of perfect light; for we profess ourselves to want it.
But let them own the power and truth of Religion in its very obscurity, in
that mixture of darkness which surrounds is, and that indifference which
we find in our-selves towards the knowledge of our duty.
Were there but one Religion in the world, the
discoveries of the Divine Nature might seem too free and open, and with too
little distinction; and so likewise, if there were martyrs in no Religion
but the true.
If the mercy of GOD be so abundant,
as to afford us all saving knowledge, even while he hides himself; what immense
light may we, expect, when he shall please to unveil his perfections?
XVIII. That the
true Professors of Judaism and of
Christianity have ever been of one and the same Religion.
The Jewish Religion seems, at first
view, to consist, as to its very essence, in the Paternity of ABRAHAM, in
the rite of Circumcision, in Sacrifices, in Ceremonies, in the Ark, in the
Temple at JERUSALEM, or, briefly, in the Law and the Covenant of MOSES. But
we offer to maintain, That it consisted in none of
these, but purely in the Love of GOD; and that, besides this, nothing ever
obtained the divine approbation and acceptance:
That GOD bore no manner of regard
to " Israel after the Flesh," to those who proceeded out of the
loins of ABRAHAM: That the JEWS, if they transgressed, were to be punished
after the manner of strangers: " And it shall be, that if you do at all
forget the Lord your GOD, and walk after other gods, and serve them, and worship
them; I testify against you this day, that ye shall surely perish: as the
nations which the LORD destroyeth before your face,
so shall ye perish: That strangers, if they loved GOD, were to be received
by him on the same terms with the JEWS: That those who were JEWS in truth
and reality ascribed all their merit and pretentions
not to ABRAHAM, but to God: "Doubtless you art our Father, though ABRAHAM
be ignorant of us, and ISRAEL knows us not: You art our Father and our Redeemer:"
MOSES himself assured his nation,
that GOD was no excepter of persons; " the
Lord, your GOD," says he, " regardeth
not persons, nor taketh rewards:"
We affirm, That the circumcision enjoined was that of the Heart: "
Circumcise, therefore, the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiff-necked.
For the LORD your GOD is a great GOD, a mighty, and a terrible, who regardeth not persons:"
That GOD particularly promised to
bestow on them this grace of spiritual circumcision: "And the LORD thy
GOD will circumcise thy heart, and the heart of thy seed, to love the LORD
thy GOD with all thy heart:"
That the uncircumcised in heart shall
be judged of God: "For GOD will judge all the nations which are uncircumcised;
and all the people of ISRAEL, because
they are uncircumcised in heart:"
We say,
That Circumcision was purely a figure, instituted to distinguish the people
of the JEWS from all other nations: And this was the reason that they used
it not in the wilderness, because there was then no danger of their mixing
with strangers; as also that since the appearance of our LORD it is become
altogether unnecessary.
That the Love of GOD is, every where,
principally commanded and enforced " I call heaven and earth to record
this day against you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing
and cursing; therefore choose life, that both you and thy seed may live; that
you may love the LORD thy GOD, and that you may obey his voice, and that you
may cleave unto him, for he is thy life," &c.
It was declared, That
the JEWS, for want of this Love of GOD, should be abandoned to their sins,
and the Gen-tiles admitted in their stead: " I will hide my face from
them; I will see what their end shall be: for they are a very forward generation,
children in whom is no faith. They have moved me to jealousy with that which
is not GOD, they have provoked me to anger with their vanities; and I will
move them to jealousy with those which are not a people; I will provoke them
to anger with a foolish nation:
That temporal goods are false and vain; and that the only true
and lasting good is the divine acceptance and favor:
That the offerings of the Gentiles should be
received by God; and that he should withdraw his acceptance from the offerings
of the JEWS:
That GOD would make a new covenant by the MESSIAH;
and that the old covenant should be disannulled:
That the old things should be universally forgotten,
and should pass away:
That the Ark of the Covenant should come no more
to mind:
That the Temple should be given up and destroyed:
That the legal Sacrifices should be abolished;
and Sacrifices of a purer kind established in their room:
That the Aaronical order of Priesthood should be dissolved; and the
order of MELCHISEDEC be introduced by
the MESSIAS:
That this latter Priesthood should be an ordinance
for ever:
That JERUSALEM should be reprobated; and a new
Name given to the elect people:
That this new Name should be more excellent than that of the JEWS,
and of eternal duration.
XIX. That GOD
is not known to advantage, but through
JESUS CHRIST.
THE greatest part of those who attempt
to demonstrate the truth of the Divine Being to the profane, begin with the
Works of Nature; and in this method they rarely succeed. I would not seem
to impair the validity of these proofs, which have been consecrated by the
holy Scripture itself. They have, indeed, an undeniable
agreement with the principles of sound reason; but are very often not so well
proportioned to that disposition of spirit which is peculiar to the persons
here described.
For we must observe, that discourses
of this kind are not ordinarily addressed to men whose hearts abound with
a lively faith, and who immediately discern the whole system of things to
be no other than the workman-ship of that GOD whom they adore. To these " the heavens declare the glory of GOD," and all
Nature speaks in behalf of its Author. But as for those in whom this light
is extinct, and in whom we endeavor to revive it, persons who are destitute
of faith and charity, and who behold nothing but clouds and darkness on the
whole face of Nature, it seems not the most probable method of their conversion,
to offer them nothing more on a subject of the last importance, than the course
of the moon or planets, or than such arguments as they every day hear,. and every day despise. The hardness and obstinacy of their
temper have rendered them deaf to this voice of nature, which sounds continually
in their ears; and experience informs us, that instead of our gaining them
by such a process, there is nothing which, on the contrary, is so great a
discouragement, and so apt to make them despair of ever finding the truth,
as when we undertake to convince them by the way of reasoning, and pretend
to tell them that truth shines so bright, in these views, as to become really
irresistible.
The Holy Scripture, which knows so much better
than we the things which belong to GOD, never speaks of them in this manner.
It informs us, indeed, that the beauty of the creature leads to the knowledge
of the Creator; -but it does by no means assure us that the creatures produce
this effect indifferently in all persons. On the contrary, it declares, that
whenever they appear thus convincing, it is not by their own force, but by
means of that light which GOD diffuses into the hearts of those to whom he
is pleased to discover himself by their means and intervention: it teacheth,
in general, that our GOD is u a GOD who hided' himself;" and that since
the corruption of human nature, he has left men under such a blindness as
they can only be delivered from by JESUS CHRIST, without whom we are cut off
from all communication with the Divinity.
The Scripture gives us a farther
evidence of this truth, when it so often testifies, that GOD is found by those
who seek him; for it could never speak thus of a clear and certain light,
such as gives not men the trouble of searching after it, but freely diffuses
itself around, and prevents the observation of the beholders.
The metaphysical proofs of GOD are so very intricate,
and so far removed from the common reasonings of
men, that they strike with little force: or, at best, the impression continues
but a short space, and men, the very next hour, fall back into their old jealousies,
and their perpetual fear and suspicion of being deceived.
Again; all the arguments of this abstracted kind
are able to lead us no farther than to a speculative know-ledge of GOD; and
to know him only thus, is, in effect, not to know him at all.
The GOD of Christians is not barely
the supreme and infallible author of geometrical truths, or of the elementary
order and the disposition of nature; this is the Divinity of Philosophers
and Pagans:—nor barely the Providential Disposer of the lives and fortunes
of men, so as to crown his worshippers with a long and happy series of years;
this was the portion of the JEWS. But the GOD of ABRAHAM and of ISAAC, the
GOD of Christians, is a GOD of love and consolation; a GOD who possesseth
the hearts and souls of his servants; gives them an inward feeling of their
own misery, and of his infinite mercy; unites himself to their spirit, replenishing
it with humility and joy, with affiance and love; and renders them in-capable
of any prospect, any aim, but himself.
The GOD of Christians is a GOD who
makes the soul perceive and know that he is her only good, and that she can
find peace and repose in him alone;—no delight, no joy, but in his love;—and
who, at the same time, inspires her with an abhorrence of those obstacles
and impediments which withhold her from loving him with all her strength.
As her two principal hindrances, self love and concupiscence,
are grievous and insupportable to her; so it is this gracious GOD who makes
her know and feel that she has these fatal distempers rooted in her constitution,
and that his hand alone can expel or subdue them.
This is to know GOD as a Christian.
But to know him after this manner, we must, at the same time, know our own
misery and unworthiness, together with the need we have of a Mediator, in
order to our approaching his presence, or uniting ourselves to him. We ought
by no means to separate these parts of knowledge; because each alone is not
only unprofitable, but dangerous. The knowledge of GOD, without the knowledge
of our own misery, is the nurse of pride. The knowledge of our own misery,
without the knowledge of JESUS CHRIST, is the mother of despair. But the true
knowledge of JESUS CHRIST exempts us alike from pride and from despair; by
giving us, at once, a sight, not only of GOD, and of our misery, but also
of the mercy of GOD in the relief of our misery.
We may know GOD without knowing our own miseries;
or we may know our own miseries without knowing GOD; or we may know both,
without knowing the means of obtaining from GOD the relief of our miseries.
But we cannot know JESUS CHRIST without the knowledge of GOD, of our miseries,
and of their cure; inasmuch as JESUS CHRIST is not only GOD, but he is GOD
under this character, the Healer and Repairer of our miseries.
Thus all they who seek GOD without
JESUS CHRIST can never meet with such light in their enquiries as may afford
them true satisfaction, or solid use. For either they advance not so far as
to know that there is a GOD; or if they do, yet they arrive hereby but at
an unprofitable knowledge, because they frame to themselves method of communicating
with GOD, without a Mediator; as if without a Mediator they were capable
of knowing him: so that they unavoidably fall either into Atheism, or Deism,
things which the Christian Religion does almost equally detest and abhor.
We ought therefore wholly to direct our enquiries
to the knowledge of JESUS CHRIST; because it is by him alone that we can pretend
to know GOD, in such a manner as shall be really advantageous to us.
He alone is the true GOD to us men,
that is, to miser-able and sinful creatures: he is our chief centre and supreme
object, in respect of all that we can wish, and all that we can understand.
Whoever knows not him, knows nothing either in the order of the world, or
in his own nature and condition. For as we know GOD only
by JESUS CHRIST, SO it is by him alone that we know ourselves.
Without JESUS CHRIST man is, of necessity,
to be considered as lying in vice and misery: with JESUS CHRIST man appears
as released from vice, and redeemed from misery. In him consists all our happiness,
and all our virtue, our life and light, our hope and assurance: out of him
there is no prospect but of sins and miseries, of darkness and despair; nothing
to be beheld by us but obscurity and confusion in the Divine Nature, and in
our own.
XX. The strange
Contrarieties discoverable in Human
Nature.
NOTHING can be more astonishing in
the nature of man, than the Contrarieties which we there observe, with regard
to all things. He is made for the knowledge of truth; this is what he most
ardently desires, and most eagerly pursues; yet when he endeavors to lay hold
on it, he is so dazzled and confounded, as never to be secure of actual possession.
Hence the two sects of the Pyrrhonians and the
Dogmatists took their rise; of which the one would utterly deprive men of
all truth; the other would infallibly ensure their enquiries after it; but
each with so improbable reasons, as only to increase our con-fusion and perplexity,
while we are guided by no other lights than those which we find in our own
bosom.
The Sceptics,
who labor to bring all things to their own standard, are under a continual
disappointment. We may be very well assured of our being awake, though very
unable to demonstrate it by reason. This inability shows indeed the feebleness
of our rational powers, but not the general incertitude of our knowledge.
We apprehend with no less confidence that there are such things in the world
as space, time, motion, number, and matter, than the most regular and demonstrative
conclusions. Nay, it is upon this certainty of perception and intellection,
that reason ought to fix itself, and to found the whole method of its process.
We apprehend principles, and we conclude propositions; and both with the like
assurance, though by different ways. It were to be
wished that we had less occasion for rational deductions; and that we knew
all things by instinct and immediate view. But nature has denied us this favor,
and allows us but few notices of so easy a kind, leaving us to work out the
rest by laborious consequences, and a continued series of arguments.
We see here a universal war proclaimed
amongst man-kind. We must of necessity enlist ourselves on one side or on
the other: for he that pretends to stand neuter is most effectually of the
Pyrrhonian party: this neutrality constitutes the
very essence of Pyrrhonism; and he that is not against
the Sceptics, must be, in a superlative manner,
for them. What shall a man do under these circumstances? Shall he question
every thing? Shall he doubt whether he is awake, whether another pinches him,
or burns him? Shall he doubt whether he doubts? Shall he doubt whether he
exists? It seems impossible to come to this; and therefore, I believe, there
never was a finished Sceptic, a Pyrrhonian in perfection. There is a secret force in nature
which sustains the weakness of reason, and hinders it from losing itself in
such a degree of extravagance. Well, but shall a man join himself to the opposite
faction? Shall he boast that he is in sure possession of truth, when, if we
press him ever so little, he can produce no title, and must be obliged to
quit his hold?
What measures can suppress or compose
this embroilment? The Pyrrhonians, we see, are
confounded by Nature, and the Dogmatists by Reason..
To what a distracting misery will that man, therefore, be reduced, who shall
seek the knowledge of his own condition, by the bare light and guidance of
his own powers; it being alike impossible for him to avoid both these sects,
and to repose himself in either.
Such is the portrait of man, with
regard to Truth. Let us now behold him in respect of Felicity, which he prosecutes
with so much warmth through his whole course of action: for all desire to
be happy; this general rule is without exception. Whatever variety there may
be in the means employed, there is but one end universally pursued. The reason
why one man embraceth the hazard of war, and why
another declines it, is but the same desire, at-tended in each with a different
intermediate view. This is the sole motive to every action of every person;
and even of such as, most unnaturally, become their own executioners.
And yet, after the course of so many ages, no
person without Faith has ever arrived at this point, towards which all continually
tend. The whole world is busy in complaining: princes and subjects, nobles
and commons, old and young, the strong and the feeble, the learned and the
ignorant, the healthy and the diseased, of all countries, all times, all ages,
and all conditions.
So long, so constant, so regular,
and uniform a proof ought fully to convince us of the disability we lie under
towards the acquisition of happiness by our own strength. But example will
not serve for our instruction in this case; because there being no resemblance
so exact as not to admit some nicer difference, we are hence
disposed to think that our expectation is not so liable to be deceived on
one occasion as on another. Thus the present never satisfying us, the future
decoys and lures us on, till, from one misfortune to another, it leads us
into death, the sum and perfection of eternal, complicated misery.
This is nest to a miracle, that there
should not be any one thing in nature which has not been some time fixed,
as the last end and happiness of man; neither stars, nor elements, nor plants,
nor animals, nor insects, nor diseases, nor war, nor vices, nor sin. Man
being fallen from his natural estate, there is no object so extravagant as
not to be capable of attracting his desire. Ever since the time that he lost
his real good, every thing cheats him with the appearance of it; even his
own destruction, though the greatest contradiction to Reason and to Nature
at once.
Some have sought after Felicity in
honor and authority, others in curiosity and knowledge, and a third tribe
in the enjoyments of sense. These three leading desires have constituted as
many factions; and those, whom we compliment with the name of Philosophers,
have really done nothing else but resigned themselves up to one of the three.
Such amongst them as made the nearest approaches to Truth and Happiness well
considered, that it was necessary that the universal good, which all desire,
and in which each man ought to be allowed his portion, should not consist
in any of the private blessings of this world, which can be properly enjoyed
but by one alone, and which, if divided, do more grieve and afflict each possessor,
for want of the part which he has not, than they gratify him with the part
which he has. They rightly apprehended, that the
true good ought to be such as all may possess at once, without diminution,
and without contention; and such as no man can be deprived of against his
will. They apprehended this, but they were unable to attain it; and, instead
of a solid, substantial happiness, took up, at last, with the empty shadow
of a fantastic virtue.
Our instinct suggests to us, that
we ought to seek our Happiness within ourselves. Our passions hurry us abroad,
even when there are no objects to engage and incite them. The things without
are themselves our tempters, and charm and attract us, while we think of nothing
less. Therefore, the wisest Philosophers might weary them-selves with crying,
" Keep within yourselves, and your Felicity
is in your own gift and power." The generality never gave them credit;
and those who were so easy as to believe them, became only the more unsatisfied
and the more ridiculous. For is there any thing so
vain as the Stoics' Happiness, or so groundless as the reasons on which they
build it?
They conclude, that what has been
done once, may be done always; and that, because the desire of glory has sometimes
spurred on its votaries to great and worthy actions, all others may use it
with the same success. But these are the motions of fever and phrenzy,
which sound health and judgment can never imitate.
The civil war between Reason and Passion has
occasioned two opposite projects, for the restoring of peace to mankind:
the one, of those who were for renouncing their passions, and becoming Gods;
the other of those who were for renouncing their reason, and becoming Beasts.
But neither the one nor the other could take effect. Reason ever continues
to accuse the baseness and injustice of the passions, and to disturb the repose
of those who abandon themselves to their dominion: and, on the contrary, the
Passions remain lively and vigorous in the hearts of those, who talk the most
of their extirpation.
This is the just account of human
nature, and human strength, in respect of Truth and Happiness. We have an
idea of Truth, not to be effaced by all the wiles of the Sceptic;
we have an incapacity of argument, not to be rectified
by all the power of the Dogmatist. We wish for Truth, and find nothing in
ourselves, but uncertainty. We seek after Happiness, and are presented with
nothing but misery. Our double aim is, in effect, a double torture; while
we are alike unable to compass either, and to relinquish either. These desires
seem to have been left in us, partly as a punishment of our Fall,
and partly as an indication and remembrance whence we are fallen.
If man was not made for GOD, why
is GOD alone sufficient for human happiness? If man was made for GOD, why
is the human will, in all things, repugnant to the Divine?
Man is at a loss where to fix himself,
and how to recover his rank in the world. He is unquestionably out of his
way; he feels within himself the small remains of his once happy state, which
he is now unable to retrieve. And yet this is what he daily courts and follows
after, always with solicitude, and never with success; encompassed with darkness,
which he can neither escape nor penetrate.
Hence arose
the grand contention among the Philosophers; some of whom endeavored to raise
and exalt man, by displaying his greatness; others to depress and abase him,
by representing his misery. And what seems more strange,
is, that each party borrowed from the other the ground of their own opinion.
For the misery of man may be inferred from his greatness, as his greatness
is deducible from his misery. Thus the one sect, with more evidence,
demonstrated his misery in that they derived it from his greatness; and the
other more strongly concluded his greatness, because they founded it on his
misery. Whatever was offered to justify his greatness, in behalf of one tribe,
served only to evince his misery, in behalf of the other; it being more miserable
to have fallen from the greater height. And the same
proportion holds vice versa. So that in this endless circle of dispute, each
helped to advance his adversary's cause; for it is certain, that the more
degrees of light men enjoy, the more degrees they are able to discern of misery
and of greatness. In a word, man knows himself to be miser-able: he is therefore
exceedingly miserable, because he knows that he is so: but he likewise appears
to be eminently great,. from his very act of knowing himself to be miserable.
What a chimera then is Man! What
a surprising novelty! What a confused chaos! What a subject of contradiction!
A professed judge of all things, and yet a feeble worm of the earth! The great
depositary and guardian of Truth, and yet a mere huddle of uncertainty; the
glory and the scandal of the universe! If he is too aspiring and lofty, we
can lower and humble him; if too mean and little, we can raise and swell him.—To conclude: we can bait him with repugnancies and contradictions,
till at length, he apprehends himself to be a monster, even beyond apprehension.
XXI. The General
Knowledge of Man.
THE first thing which offers itself
to Man, when reflecting on himself, is his Body, or a certain portion of matter
allotted and appropriated to him. And yet to understand what this portion
is, he must be obliged to compare it with all things that are above or below
him, ere he can determine and adjust its bounds. Let him not therefore content
himself with the sight of those objects, which immediately surround him. Let
him contemplate all nature, in its height of perfection, and fullness of majesty.
Let him consider the great body of the Sun, set up as an eternal lamp to enlighten
the universe. Let him suppose the Earth to be only a point, in respect of
the vast circuit which this luminary describes. And, for his greater astonishment,
let him observe, that even this vast circuit is but a point itself, compared
with the Firmament and the orb of the fixed Stars. If his sight be limited
here, let hia imagination, at least, pass beyond.
He may sooner exhaust the power of conceiving, than nature can want a new
store to furnish out his conceptions. The whole extent of visible things is
but one line or stroke in the ample bosom of nature. No idea can reach the
immeasurable compass of her space. We may grow as big as we please with notion;
but we shall bring forth mere atoms, instead of real and solid discoveries.
This is an infinite sphere, the centre of which is every where, and the circumference
no where. In a word, it is the greatest amongst all the sensible marks and
characters of the almighty power of GOD. And let our imagination lose itself
in this reflection.
If a man can recover himself from
such a prospect, let him consider what he himself is, if compared with the
whole expansion of Being. Let him conclude that he
is accidentally strayed into this blind corner of nature; and from what he
finds of his present dungeon, let him learn to set the proper value on the
earth, on kingdoms, on cities, and on himself.
What is Man with regard to this Infinity
about him? Who can fix his distance, or comprehend his proportion? But to
show him another prodigy no less astonishing, let him turn, his thoughts on
the smallest of those things which fall within his knowledge. Let a mite,
for instance, in the contemptible minuteness of its body, present him with
parts incomparably more minute; with jointed legs, with veins in those legs,
blood in those veins, humors in that blood, drops in those humors, vapours
in those drops. Let him still apply all his force, and strain his utmost conception,
to divide the least of those particulars which we have mentioned; and when
he has gone as far as his mind can reach, let the concluding atom be the subject
of our discourse. He will probably suppose that this is the remotest extreme,
the last diminutive in nature: but even in this, where he finds himself obliged
to stop, I shall undertake still to open before him a new abyss of wonders.
Let him conceive me delineating to him on the surface of this imperceptible
atom, not only the visible world, but whatsoever he is able to comprehend
of the immensity of all things. Let him here behold an infinity of worlds, each with its firmament, its planets,
its earth, under the same proportions, as in the natural system. Let him still
imagine every such earth to be stored with all living things, and even with
his mites; and let him consider that it is possible each of these mites may
again present him with such a painted world as he admired in the first, and
that the show may still be repeated, without end, and without rest.
Let him again lose himself in these
wonders, no less surprising for their minuteness than the former for their
vastness and extent. And who will not be confounded to reflect that our body,
which before was judged imperceptible, in respect of the world, which world
is itself imperceptible in the bosom of Universal Being, should now become
a Colossus, a world, or rather an Universality of Being, in respect of that
exquisite diminution at which our last refinement of thought may by this artifice
arrive.
He that shall take this survey of
his own nature, will, no doubt, be under the greatest consternation to find
himself hanging, as it were, in his material scale, between the two vast abysses
of infinite and nothing; from which he is equally removed. He will tremble
at the sight of so many prodigies; and turning his curiosity into admiration,
will, I believe, be more inclined silently to contemplate them, than presumptuously
to search their depths.
For what is Man amongst the natures which encompass
him? In one view he appears as unity to infinity, in another, as all to nothing;
and must therefore be the medium between these extremes; alike distant from
that nothing whence he was taken, and from that infinity in which he is swallowed
up.
His Understanding holds the same rank in the
order of beings as his body in the material system; and all the knowledge
he can reach is only to discern somewhat of the middle of things, under an
eternal despair of comprehending either their beginning or their end. All
things arise from nothing, and proceed to infinity. Who can keep pace with
these steps? Who can follow such an amazing progress? None but the AUTHOR
of these wonders is able to explain or understand them.
This middle state and condition is common to
all our faculties. Our senses can bear no extremes: too much noise or too
much light are equally fatal, and make us either deaf or blind; too great
distance or too great nearness do alike hinder a prospect; too much prolixity
or too much brevity darken and perplex a discourse; too intense a pleasure
becomes incommodious; too uniform a symphony has no power to affect and move;
our body is utterly indisposed for the last degrees of heat and cold; qualities
in excess are enemies to our nature; we do not properly feel but suffer them;
the weakness of childhood and old age alike incapacitate the mind; too much
or too little food disturbs it in its actions; too much or too little study
renders it extravagant and unruly. Things in extreme are of no use or account,
with respect to our nature; and our nature is of as little with respect to
theirs; either we shun and avoid them, or they miss and escape us.
This is our real estate; and it is
this which fixeth and confines all our attainments
within certain limits, which we can never pass, being equally unable either
to know all things, or to remain ignorant of all things. We are placed here
in a vast and uncertain medium, ever floating between ignorance and knowledge;
and if we endeavor to step beyond our bounds, the object which we should seize
doth, with a violent shock, wrest itself (as it were) from our hold, and vanisheth by an eternal flight, which no force may control
or stay.
This is the true condition of nature,
and yet the most opposite to our inclination. We are inflamed with a desire
of piercing through all things, and of building a tower, the top of which
shall reach even to infinity. But our feeble edifice cracks and falls; the
earth opens, with-out bottom, under us, and buries our devices in its gulf.
XXII. The Greatness
of Man.
I can easily conceive a man without
hands and without feet; and I could conceive him too without an
head, if I did not learn from experience, that it is by the help of this he
thinks. It is Thought, therefore, which constitutes
the essence of Man, and without which he is altogether unconceivable.
What is that which has a sense of Pleasure in
our frame? Is it our hand? is it our arm? is
it the flesh? is it the blood? Do we not find it
absolutely necessary to have recourse to somewhat of an Immaterial Nature
for this service?
Man has such a stock of real greatness,
that he is great even in knowing himself to be miserable. A tree is no more
sensible of misery than of felicity. It is true, the knowing himself to be
miserable is an addition to man's misery'; but then it is no less a demonstration
of his greatness. Thus his greatness is shown by his miseries, as by its ruins.
They are the miseries of a mighty Statesman in disgrace, of a Prince dispossessed
and dethroned.
We have so great an idea of the human
soul in any person, that we cannot bear the thought of wanting its regard
and esteem; and it is this united esteem which composeth
all the happiness of man. If the false glory which men pursue,
is on the one side a proof of their misery, it is on the other side an attestation
of their excellence: for whatever degree of riches, health, and other benefits
men enjoy, they are still dissatisfied, unless they find themselves in the
good opinion of their own kind. Human reason challengeth
so much esteem and reverence from us, that under the most advantageous circumstances
of life we think our-selves unhappy, if we are not placed to an equal advantage
in men's judgments. This we look on as the fairest post that can be attained:
nothing is able to divert us from so passionate a desire; and it is the most
indelible characterin the heart of man: insomuch, that those who-think
so contemptuously of mankind as to make the very beasts their equals, do yet
contradict their own hypothesis by the motions which they feel in their own
souls. Nature, which is stronger than all their reason, convinceth
them more powerfully of man's greatness, than reason can persuade them of
his meanness.
Man is a reed,
and the weakest reed in nature; but then he is a thinking reed. There is no
occasion that the whole universe should arm itself for his defeat; a vapor,
a drop of water, is sufficient to dispatch him. And yet, should the world
oppress and crush him with ruin, he would still be more noble than that by
which he fell, because he would be sensible of his fate, while the universe
would be insensible of its victory.
Thus our whole worth and perfection consist in
Thought: it is hence we are to raise ourselves, and not from the empty ideas
of space and duration. Let us study the art of thinking well: this is the
rule of life, and the fountain of morals.
* It is dangerous to inform man how near he stands
to the beasts, without showing him, at the same time, how infinitely he shines
above them. Again, it is dangerous to let him see his excellence, without
making him acquainted with his infirmity. And the greatest danger of all is,
to leave him in utter ignorance of one and of the other. But to have a just
representation of both, is his greatest interest and happiness.
Let man be allowed to know his own value. Let
him love himself, because he has a nature capable of good; but let him not
be in love with the weaknesses and diseases of that nature. Let him despise
himself, because this capacity within him is altogether empty and void; but
let him not hence entertain a dislike of so natural, so noble a capacity.
Let him hate his being, and let him love it too, because he is framed for
the possession of truth, (and consequently of happiness,) and yet can find
no truth that is permanent or satisfactory. I would therefore move him to
entertain a desire, at least, of finding it, and to yield himself disengaged
and ready to follow where he shall find it. And because I am not insensible
how much the light of human knowledge is obscured by human passion, I would
prescribe to him, above all things, the detestation of his own concupiscence,
which is so fatal a bias on his own judgment; so that it may neither bind
him while he is making his choice, nor divert or obstruct him from pursuing
what be has chosen.
XXIII. The Vanity
of Man.
We are, not satisfied with that life
which we possess in ourselves, and in our own proper being; we are fond of
leading an imaginary life in the ideas of others. And it is hence that we
are so eager to show ourselves to the world. We labor indefatigably to retain,
improve, and adorn this fictitious being, while we stupidly neglect the true.
And if we happen to be masters of any noble endowment of tranquility, generosity,
or fidelity of mind, we press with all vigor to make them known, that we may
transfer and engraft these excellencies on that fantastic
existence. Nay, we had rather part with them, than not apply them to so vain
a use; and would gladly commence cowards to purchase the reputation of valor—a
great indication this of the meanness of our genuine being, not to rest satisfied
in it without its shadow, and very often to renounce the former for the latter.
Pride has so natural a possession
of us, in the midst of our misery and error, that
we can lose even our lives with joy, upon the terms of being celebrated for
the act.
Vanity has taken so firm hold in
the heart of man, that a Porter, a Hodman,
a Turnspit, can talk greatly of himself, and is for having his admirers. Philosophers
do but refine upon the same ambition. Those who write of the contempt of glory,
do yet desire the glory of writing well; and those who read their compositions
would not lose the glory of having read them. Perhaps I myself, who am now
making these reflections, am now sensible of this glory; and perhaps my reader
is not proof against the charm.
We are so presumptuous, that we desire
to be known to all the world; and even to those who
are not to come into the world till we have left it. And, at the same time,
we are so little and vain, as that the esteem of five or six persons about
us is enough to content and amuse us.
Curiosity is little better than mere
vanity. For the most part we desire to know things, purely
that we may talk of them. Few would undertake so dangerous Voyages
and Travels, for the bare pleasure of entertaining their sight, if they were
bound to secrecy at their return, or for ever cloistered from conversation.
We never think of raising a name
and repute in places through which we only pass; but where we fix our residence
for any time, there we eagerly admit, and industriously pursue this thought.
What time is requisite for the purpose? Such as bears a
proportion to our short and miserable life.
We can never keep close to the present.
We anticipate the time to come as too slow, in order to the making it mend
its pace; or we call back the time that is past as too swift, in order to
the stopping its flight. Such is our folly, that we ramble through those times
in which we have no concern, and utterly forget that on which our whole fortune
and interest depend; such our vanity, that we dream of those which are not,
and let that which alone subsists pass by us without notice or reflection.
The reason of all which is this, because the present generally gives us some
uneasiness, we are willing to hide it from our sight, as being grievous to
us; but if it happen to be agreeable, we are in no less pain to see it slide
so fast away. Hence we tack the future to it, to strengthen and support it,
and pretend to dispose of things not in our power, for a tune at which we
have no assurance ever to arrive.
Let a man examine his own thoughts,
and he will always find them employed about the time past, or to come. We
scarce bestow a glance upon the present; or if we do, it is only that we may
borrow light from hence, to manage and direct the future. The present is never
the mark of our designs. We use both past and present as our means and instruments,
but the future only as our object and aim. Thus we never live, but we ever
hope to live; and under this continual disposition and preparation to happiness,
it is certain we can never be actually happy, if our hopes are terminated
with the scene of this life.
Our fancy so much enlargeth
and swells this temporal duration, by reflecting perpetually on it, and so
far extenuates and contracts our eternal state, by seldom taking it into
thought, that we make a nothing of eternity, and an eternity of nothing. And
the springs of this whole proceeding are so vigorous An
us, that all our reason is too weak to suppress or over-rule them.
XXIV. The Weakness
of Man.
There is nothing which more astonishes
me than that the whole world should not be astonished at their own infirmity.
Men proceed seriously to action, and every one follows the way of life he
has embraced, not as if it were really good in being the mode, but as if each
man were exactly acquainted with the measures of reason and justice.
We are disappointed every moment;
and by a very pleasant humility, we imagine that the fault is in our-selves,
and not in the art which we all profess to under-stand. It is fit there should
be many persons of this complexion in the world, to demonstrate that man is
capable of the most extravagant opinions, because he is capable of believing
that the weakness he feels is not general and inevitable, but that he is naturally
endued with true judgment and infallible wisdom.
While we are too young, our judgment is in immaturity;
and when we are too old, it is in decay. If we think too little of a thing,
or too much, our head turns giddy, and we are at a loss to find out our way
to truth.
He that views his own work just as
it comes out of his hands, is too much prepossessed in its favor; and he that
lets it he too long unsurvcyed, forgets the niceness
of its contexture, and the model by which it was wrought. There is but one
precise point which is the true place of showing a picture: all others are
either too near, or too distant; too high, or too low. Perspective assigns
this point in the art of Painting, but who has skill enough to fix it in Truth
and Morals?
That mistress of mistake, which we call fancy
or opinion, is therefore the greater cheat, because she does not cheat constantly,
and by rule. Always to he would be always to tell the truth; whereas being
deceitful only for the most part, she gives us no marks of her character,
but stamps truth and falsehood with the very same impression.
This proud princess and potentate,
the sworn enemy of reason, so ambitious to rule and domineer, has, that she
may show her absolute power over the world, established in man a second nature.
She has her rich and her poor, her happy and her miserable, her sick and her
sound, her fools and her wise; and nothing grieves us so much as to see that
she fills her votaries with a satisfaction more large and entire than reason
pretends to give. The imaginary wise men feel another sort of complacency
within themselves than the masters of true wisdom can regularly find. Those
look on the world with an air of authority, and discourse with assurance,
while these never express themselves without diffidence and concern. And that
gaiety of countenance often gives the former such an advantage in the minds
of their hearers, that when they meet with judges of their own standard, they
seldom fail to please. Opinion cannot, indeed, make a fool wise, but it makes
him contented, and so triumphs over reason, which seems only to
render its friends and followers more sensibly miserable. This punisheth us with infamy, while that rewards us with glory.
Look upon that venerable Magistrate,
whose age and ability command the reverence of the whole nation. Would you not suppose that he governs himself by the purest and sublimest Wisdom, and judged' of things according to their
real nature, without being moved by those trifling accidents and circumstances
which disorder only weak and little people? But behold him entering
the court; see him placed on the bench, and prepared with exemplary gravity
for a formal hearing: let one of the counsel have
an untunable voice, or a singular aspect, let him have been ill-treated
by his barber, or disobliged by the roads and weather, and I will wager against
the countenance of your Chief Justice.
The soul of the greatest man living
is not so free and independent but that it is subject to disturbance at the
least noise about him. You need not let off a cannon to break his train of
thought; the creaking of a weather-cock, or of a pulley, will do it effectually.
Do not be surprised that you hear him argue a little incoherently at present.
He has a fly buzzing at his ears, and that is enough to make him a stranger
to good counsel, Would you have him rightly apprized of the truth, you must
take off this untoward animal, which holds his reason at bay, and discomposeth that sovereign understanding which gives laws
to towns and kingdoms.
Diseases are another principle of
error. They impair our judgment and our senses. And if those which are most
violent produce a very visible change, those which have less strength do yet
leave a proportionable impression. Again, interest
must be acknowledged to have a singular art in agreeably putting out our eyes.
Affection or dislike quite invert the rules of justice. A counsellor, retained with a large fee, grows clear-sighted
to admiration, and finds the cause immediately improve
upon his hands.
Not only does a
veneration for antiquity abuse and enslave our mind,—the charms of
novelty have the same ascendant over us: and hence arise all the disputes
amongst men, who charge each other either with sticking to the false impressions
of their childhood, or with running, at all adventures, into every new fancy.
Who is the man that keeps the just medium between
these extremes? Let him appear, and make good his pretensions. There is no
principle, how natural soever it may seem, and though
even sucked in with our first milk, but may be made to pass for a false impression,
either of education or of sense. Because (says one,) you have been wont, ever
since your infancy, to suppose a vessel empty when you saw nothing in it;
hence you come to believe the possibility of a Vacuum: Why, this is only a
strong delusion of your senses, strengthened by custom, which science and
demonstration ought to correct. By your leave, (says the other,) you have
been positively told in the schools, that a Vacuum was impossible; and thus
your senses were corrupted, which easily and naturally allowed it before this
ill impression: this, therefore, you ought to deface, by returning to your
primitive nature. And now we have heard both sides, where shall we fix the
cheat,--in our senses, or in our education?
The whole employment of men's lives
is to improve their fortunes; and yet the title by
which they hold all, if traced to its origin, is no more than the pure fancy
of the legislators: but their possession is still more precarious than their
right, and at the mercy of a thousand accidents. Nor are the treasures of
the mind better insured, while a fall or a fit of sickness may bankrupt the
ablest under-standing.
Abstracting from a state of Grace,
man is nothing but the continual subject of insuperable errors. He can purchase
no certain information: every thing in the world abuses his curiosity. His
two Criterions of truth, Reason and Sense, (besides that they are not always
faithful to themselves,) are wont reciprocally to mock and delude each other.
Our senses beguile our reason with false appearances; and our reason has likewise
its false consequences wherewith to return and revenge the cheat. The passions
discompose the senses, and strike upon them the wrong way. They lie, and forge,
and misrepresent, with a sort of vicious emulation.