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Extracts From The Works of Thomas Manton

 

THE PREFACE

It may seem a just discouragement from publishing more sermons at this time, when there are such numbers abroad.  For the abundance of things useful is fatal to their value, and the rareness enhances their price. If men were truly wise, spiritual treasures should be excepted  from this common law, yet plenty even of them causes satiety.  But the following sermons have that peculiar excellence, that will make them valuable to all  that have discerning minds, and such a tincture of religion as makes them capable of tasting the goodness of divine things.

I shall say nothing here of the intellectual endowments of the author, in which he appeared eminent among the first nor of his graces to adorn his memory. For a saint that is crowned with eternal glory by the righteous judge, needs not the weak fading testimony of men. Besides that universal esteem he had from those who knew his ability, diligence, and fidelity in the work of God makes it unnecessary for them who are his admirers and friends. And for those who are unacquainted with his worth, if they take a view of his works, they will have the same opinion. I will give some account of the sermons themse1ves.

The main design of them is to represent the inseparable connection between Christian duties and privileges, wherein the essence of our religion consists.  The gospel is not a naked unconditioned offer of pardon and eternal life in favor of sinners, but upon most convenient terms for the glory of God and the good of men and enforced by the strongest obligations upon them. The promises are attended with commands, to repent, believe, and persevere in the uniform practice of obedience.  The Son of God came into the world, not to make God less holy but to make us holy, that we might please and enjoy Him. Not to vacate our duty and free us from the law as the rule of obedience,  (for that is both impossible and would be most infamous and reproachful to our savior. To challenge such an exemption in point of right is to make ourselves Gods, to usurp it in point of fact is to make ourselves devils.) But his end was to enable and induce us to return to God, as our rightful Lord and proper felicity, from whom we rebelliously and miserably fell by our disobedience, in seeking happiness out of Him. Accordingly the gospel is called the law of faith, as it commands those duties upon the motives of eternal hopes and fears, and as it will justify or condemn men with respect to their obedience or disobedience, which is the proper character of a law. These things are managed in the following sermons in that convincing persuasive manner, as makes them very necessary for these times, when some that esteemed themselves the favorites of heaven, yet woefully neglected the duties of the lower hemisphere, as righteousness, truth, and honesty, and when carnal Christians are so numerous, that despise serious Godliness, as solemn hypocrisy and live in an open violation of Christ's precepts, yet presume to be saved by Him. Though no age has been more enlightened with the knowledge of holy truths, yet none was ever more averse from obeying them.

I shall only add further, that they commend to our ardent affections and endeavors, true holiness as distinguished from the most refined, unregenerate morality. The Doctor saw the absolute necessity of this, and speaks with great jealousy of those who seem in their discourses to make it their highest aim to cultivate moral virtues, as justice, temperance, benignity, and the like by philosophic helps, representing them as becoming the dignity of the human nature, as agreeable to reason, as beneficial to societies  but transiently speak of the supernatural operation of the Holy Spirit, that is as requisite to free the soul from the chains of sin, as to release the body at the last day from the bands of death, that seldom preach of evangelical graces, faith in the redeemer, love to God for his admirable mercy in our salvation, zeal for his glory, humility in ascribing all that we can return in grateful obedience to the most free and powerful Grace of God in Christ, which are the vital principles of good works, and derive the noblest forms to all virtues.

 Indeed men may be composed and considerate in their words and actions, may abstain from gross enormities, and do many praiseworthy actions by the rules of moral prudence, yet without the infusion of divine grace to cleanse their stained natures, to renew them according to the image of God shining in the gospel to act them from motives superior to all that moral wisdom propounds, all their virtues of what elevation forever, cannot make them real saints. As the plant-animal has a faint resemblance of the sensitive life, but remains in the lower rank of vegetables, so these have a shadow, an appearance of the life of God, but continue in the corrupt state of nature. And the difference is greater between sanctifying graces wrought by the special power of the spirit, and the virtuous habits and actions that are the effects of moral counsel and constancy, than between true pearls produced by the beams of the sun, and counterfeit ones formed by the smoky heat of the fire.

In short, the Lord Jesus our savior and judge, who purchased the heavenly glory and has sole power to give the actual possession of it, assures us, that unless a man be born of the spirit, he can never enter into the kingdom of God.  The supernatural birth entitles to the supernatural inheritance.  Without this, how fair and specious forever the conversation of men appears, they must expect no other privilege at last, but a cooler place in hell and the coolest there is intolerable.

| Select Fruits From The Highlands Of Beulah - J. M. Humphrey

Home | Preface | Thomas Manton - Sermon 1

Sermon I | Thomas Manton - Sermon 2

Sermon II | Thomas Manton - Sermon 3

Sermon III | Thomas Manton - Sermon 4

Sermon IV | Thomas Manton - Sermon 5

Sermon V | |Thomas Manton - Sermon 6

Sermon VI | Thomas Manton - Sermon 7

Sermon VII |