The Sermons of John Wesley
1872 Edition
(Thomas Jackson, editor)
SERMON ONE HUNDRED NINETEEN
On Worldly Folly
"But
God said unto him, Thou fool!" Luke 12:20.
But one of these fools is commonly wiser in his own eyes "than seven
men that can render a reason." If it were possible for a Christian, for
one that has the mind which was in Christ, to despise any one, he would cordially
despise those who suppose "they are the men, and wisdom shall die with
them." You may see one of these, painted to the life, in the verses preceding
the text. "The ground of a certain rich man," says our blessed Lord,
"brought forth plenteously." (Luke 12:16, &c.) "And he
reasoned within himself, saying, What shall I do? for I have no room where
to bestow my fruits. And he said, This will I do: I will pull down my barns,
and build greater; and there will I bestow all my fruits and my goods. And
I will say to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years;
take thy ease, eat, drink, and be merry. But God said unto him, Thou fool!"
I propose, by the assistance of God,
I. To open and explain these few full words; and,
II. To apply them to your conscience.
I. 1. To open and explain them. A little before, our Lord had been giving
a solemn caution to one who spoke to him about dividing his inheritance. "Beware
of covetousness; for the life a man," that is, the happiness of it, "does
not consist in the abundance of the things that he possesseth." To prove
and illustrate this weighty truth, our Lord relates this remarkable story.
It is not improbable, it was one that had lately occurred, and that was fresh
in the memory of some that were present. "The ground of a certain rich
man brought forth plenteously." The riches of the ancients consisted
chiefly in the fruits of the earth. "And he said within himself, What
shall I do?" The very language of want and distress! The voice of one
that is afflicted, and groaning under his burden. What shalt thou do? Why,
are not those at the door whom God hath appointed to receive what thou canst
spare? What shalt thou do? Why, disperse abroad, and give to the poor.
Feed the hungry. Clothe the naked. Be a father to the fatherless, and a husband
to the widow. Freely thou hast received; freely give. O no! He is wiser than
this comes to; he knows better than so.
2. "And he said, This will I do;" -- without asking God's leave,
or thinking about Him any more than if there were no God in heaven or on earth;
-- "I will pull down my barns, and build greater; and there will I bestow
all my goods and all my fruits." My fruits! They are as much thine
as the clouds that fly over thy head! As much as the winds that blow around
thee; which, doubtless, thou canst hold in thy fists! "And I will say
to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years!" "Soul,
thou hast much goods!" Are then corn, and wine, and oil, the goods of
an immortal spirit? "Laid up for many years!" Who told thee so?
Believe him not; he was a liar from the beginning. He could not prolong thy
life, if he would. (God alone is the giver of life and death.) And he would
not, if he could; but would immediately drag thee to his own sad abode. "Soul,
take thy ease; eat, drink, and be merry!" How replete with folly and
madness is every part of this wonderful soliloquy! "Eat and drink?"
Will thy spirit then eat and drink? Yea, but not of earthly food. Thou wilt
soon eat livid flame, and drink of the lake of fire burning with brimstone.
But wilt thou then drink and be merry? "Nay, there will be no mirth in
those horrid shades; those caverns will resound with no music, "but weeping,
and wailing, and gnashing of teeth!"
3. But while he was applauding his own wisdom, "God said unto him, Thou
fool! This night shall thy soul be required of thee. And then whose shall
those things be which thou hast prepared?"
4. Let us consider his words a little more attentively. He said within himself,
"What shall I do?" And is not the answer ready? Do good. Do all
the good thou canst. Let thy plenty supply thy neighbour's wants; and thou
wilt never want something to do. Canst thou find none that need the necessaries
of life, that are pinched with cold or hunger; none that have not raiment
to put on, or a place where to lay their head; none that are wasted with pining
sickness; none that are languishing in prison? If you duly considered our
Lord's words, "The poor have you always with you," you would no
more ask, "What shall I do?"
5. How different was the purpose of this poor madman! "I will pull down
my barns, and build greater; and there will I bestow all my goods." You
may just as well bury them in the earth, or cast them into the sea. This will
just as well answer the end for which God entrusted thee with them.
6. But let us examine a little farther the remaining part of his resolution.
"I will say to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years;
take thy ease, eat, drink, and be merry." What, are these the goods of
a never-dying spirit? As well may thy body feed on the fleeting breeze, as
thy soul on earthly fruits. Excellent counsel then to such a spirit, to eat
and drink! to a spirit made equal to angels, made an incorruptible picture
of the God of glory, to feed not on corruptible things, but on the fruit of
the tree of life, which grows in the midst of the paradise of God.
7. It is no marvel, then, that God should say unto him, "Thou fool!"
For this terrible reason, were there no other: "This night shall thy
soul be required of thee!"
And art thou born to die,
To lay this body down?
And must thy trembling spirit fly
Into a land unknown?
-- A land of deepest shade,
Unpierced by human thought;
The dreary regions of the dead,
Where all things are forgot?
"And whose then shall all the things be which thou hast provided?"
II. 1. The Second thing which I proposed was, to apply these considerations;
which, it is certain, are some of the most important that can enter into the
heart of man. In one sense, indeed, they have been applied already; for what
has been said has been all application. But I wish every one who reads or
hears these words, directly to apply them to his own soul.
2. Does it not concern every one that hears, -- "The ground of a certain
rich man brought forth plentifully," -- to inquire, "Was this ever
the case with me? Have I now, or have I ever heretofore had, more worldly
goods given than I wanted? And what were my thoughts upon the occasion? Did
I say in my heart, What shall I do? Was I distressed by my abundance? Did
I think, 'I have much goods laid up for many years?'" Many years! Alas!
What is thy life, if protracted to its utmost span? Is it not a vapour, that
just appeareth, and vanisheth away? Say not, then, I will pull down my barns;
but say to God, in the secret of thy heart, "'Lord, save, or I perish!'
See, my riches increase; let me not set my heart upon them! Thou seest I stand
upon slippery ground; do thou undertake for me!
Uphold me, Saviour, or I fall!
O reach me forth thy gracious hand!
Only for help on thee I call,
Only by faith in thee I stand.
See, Lord, how greatly my substance increases! Nothing less than thy almighty
power can prevent my setting my heart upon it, and being crushed lower than
the grave!"
3. "I ask thee, O Lord, 'What shall I do?'" First of all, endeavour
to be deeply sensible of thy danger; and make it matter of earnest and constant
prayer, that thou mayest never lose that sense of it. Pray that thou mayest
always feel thyself standing on the brink of a precipice. Meantime, let the
language of thy heart be, "Having more means, I will do more good, by
the grace of God, than ever I did before. All the additional goods which it
hath pleased God to put into my hands, I am resolved to lay out, with all
diligence, in additional works of mercy. And hereby I shall 'lay up for myself
a sure foundation, that I may attain eternal life.'"
4. Thou no longer talkest of thy goods, or thy fruits, knowing
they are not thine, but God's. The earth is the Lord's, and the fullness thereof:
He is the Proprietor of heaven and earth. He cannot divest himself of his
glory; he must be the Lord, the possessor, of all that is. Only he hath left
a portion of his goods in thy hands, for such uses as he has specified. How
long he will be pleased to lodge them with thee, thou dost not yet know; perhaps
only till to-morrow, or to-night. Therefore talk not, think not, of many years.
Knowest thou not, that thou art a creature of a day, that is crushed before
the moth; that the breath which is in thy nostrils may be taken away at a
moment's warning; that it may be resumed by him that gave it, at a time thou
thinkest not of it? How knowest thou but, the next time thou liest down on
thy bed, thou mayest hear, "This night shall thy soul be required of
thee?"
5. Is not thy life as unstable as a cloud; fluctuating as a bubble on the
water? It fleeth as it were a shadow, and never continueth in one stay. "Many
years!" Who is sure of one day? And is it not an instance both of the
wisdom and goodness of God, that he holds thy breath in his own hand, and
deals it out from moment to moment; that thou mayest always remember, to "live
each day as if it were the last?" And after the few days thou shalt have
spent under the sun, how soon will it be said,
A heap of dust is all remains of thee;
'Tis all thou art, and all the proud shall be!
6. Consider, again, the exquisite folly of that saying, "Soul, thou
hast much goods." Are, then, the products of the earth food for a heaven-born
spirit? Is there any composition of earth and water, yea, though air and fire
be added thereto, which can feed those beings of a higher order? What similitude
is there between those ethereal spirits, and these base-born clods of earth?
Examine the rest of this wise soliloquy, and see how it will apply to yourself.
"Soul, take thy ease!" O vain hope! Can ease to a spirit spring
out of the ground? Suppose the soil were ever so improved, can it yield such
a harvest? "Eat, drink, and be merry!" What! can thy soul eat and
drink? Yea,
Manna such as angels eat,
Pure delights for spirits fit.
But these do not grow on earthly ground; they are only found in the Paradise
of God.
7. But suppose the voice which commands life and death pronounce, "This
night thy soul shall be required of thee; then whose are all those things
thou hast provided?" Alas, they are not thine! Thou hast no longer any
part or lot in any of the things that are under the sun. Thou hast then no
more share in any of these things of earth, than if the earth and the works
of it were burnt up. Naked thou camest out of thy mother's womb, and naked
shalt thou return. Thou hast heaped up many things; but for what end? To leave
them all behind thee! Poor shade! Thou art now stripped of all: Not even hope
is left.
8. Observe the remark which our Lord has left upon the whole occurrence:
"So is every one who layeth up treasure for himself, and is not
rich toward God," -- such a fool, such an egregious madman, as it is
beyond the power of language to express! However wise he may be in his own
eyes, and perhaps in those of his neighbour, he is in reality the greatest
fool under heaven, who heapeth up things from which he must soon be separated
for ever: And whoever is seeking happiness in the things that perish is laying
up treasure for himself. This is absolutely inconsistent with being
"rich" (or rather, growing) "toward God;" with
obeying that scriptural command, -- "My son, give me thy heart."
He who is child of God can truly say. --
All my riches are above;
All my treasure is thy love:
He can testify, "All my desire is unto thee, and to the remembrance
of thy name!"
9. Let every one who readeth these words, narrowly search his own heart.
Where hast thou laid up thy treasure hitherto? Where art thou laying it up
now? Art thou labouring to be rich toward God, or to lay up earthly goods?
which takes up the greater part of thy thoughts? Thou that art careful for
outward things, diligent in doing good, and exact in outward duties, -- beware
of covetousness; of decent, honourable love of money; and of a desire to lay
up treasures on earth. Lay up treasure in heaven! A few days hence, thou wilt
step into a land of darkness; where earthly fruits will be of no avail; where
thou wilt not be capable of eating and drinking, or gratifying any of thy
senses. What benefit wilt thou then receive from all thou hast laid up in
this world? What satisfaction in all which thou hast treasured up, -- all
thou hast left behind thee? Left behind thee! What! couldest thou then take
nothing with thee into the everlasting habitations? Nay then, lay up treasure,
before thou go hence, which fadeth not away. Preached at Balham, February
19, 1790
Edited by Anita Maendl with corrections by Ryan Danker and
George Lyons of Northwest Nazarene University (Nampa, ID) for the Wesley Center
for Applied Theology.
Copyright © 1999 by
the Wesley Center for Applied Theology. Text may be freely used for personal
or scholarly purposes or mirrored on other web sites, provided this notice
is left intact. Any use of this material for commercial purposes of any kind
is strictly forbidden without the express permission of the Wesley Center
at Northwest Nazarene University, Nampa, ID 83686. Contact webmaster for permission.