THE WITNESS OF THE SPIRIT
Discourse I
“The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the
children of God.”
Rom. 8:16
1. How many vain men, not understanding what they spake, neither
whereof they affirmed, have wrested this Scripture to the great loss if not the
destruction of their souls! How many have mistaken the voice of their own
imagination for this witness of the Spirit of God, and thence idly presumed they
were the children of God while they were doing the works of the devil! These are
truly and properly enthusiasts; and, indeed, in the worst sense of the word. But
with what difficulty are they convinced thereof, especially if they have drank
deep into that spirit of error! All endeavours to bring them to the knowledge of
themselves they will then account fighting against God; and that vehemence and
impetuosity of spirit which they call “contending earnestly for the faith,” sets
them so far above all the usual methods of conviction that we may well say,
“With men it is impossible.”
2. Who can then be surprised if many reasonable men, seeing the
dreadful effects of this delusion, and labouring to keep at the utmost distance
from it, should sometimes lean toward another extreme? — if they are not forward
to believe any who speak of having this witness concerning which others have so
grievously erred? — if they are almost ready to set all down for enthusiasts,
who use the expressions which have been so terribly abused? — yea, if they
should question whether the witness or testimony here spoken of, be the
privilege of ordinary Christians, and not, rather, one of those
extraordinary gifts which they suppose belonged only to the apostolic
age?
3 . But is there any necessity laid upon us of running either into
one extreme or the other? May we not steer a middle course? — keep a sufficient
distance from that spirit of error and enthusiasm, without denying the gift of
God, and giving up the great privilege of his children? Surely we may. In order
thereto, let us consider, in the presence and fear of God,
First. What is this witness or testimony of our spirit; what is the
testimony of God’s Spirit; and, how does he “bear witness with our spirit that
we are the children of God?”
Secondly. How is this joint testimony of God’s Spirit and our own,
clearly and solidly distinguished from the presumption of a natural mind, and
from the delusion of the devil?
I. 1. Let us first consider, what is the witness or testimony of
our spirit. But here I cannot but desire all those who are for swallowing up the
testimony of the Spirit of God, in the rational testimony of our own spirit, to
observe, that in this text the Apostle is so far from speaking of the testimony
of our own spirit only, that it may be questioned whether he speaks of it
at all, — whether he does not speak only of the testimony of God’s
Spirit. It does not appear but the original text may fairly be understood thus.
The Apostle had just said, in the preceding verse, “Ye have received the Spirit
of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father;” and immediately subjoins, Auto to pneuma (some copies read to auto pneuma) symmartyrei toi pneumati hemon, hoti esmen tekna Theou, which
may be translated, The same Spirit beareth witness to our spirit that we are the
children of God (the preposition syn only denoting that he witnesses this at the same
time that he enables us to cry Abba, Father.) But I contend not; seeing so many
other texts, with the experience of all real Christians, sufficiently evince,
that there is in every believer, both the testimony of God’s Spirit, and the
testimony of his own, that he is a child of God.
2. With regard to the latter, the foundation thereof is laid in
those numerous texts of Scripture which describe the marks of the children of
God; and that so plain, that he which runneth may read them. These are also
collected together, and placed in the strongest light, by many both ancient and
modern writers. If any need farther light, he may receive it by attending on the
ministry of God’s Word; by meditating thereon before God in secret; and by
conversing with those who have the knowledge of his ways. And by the reason or
understanding that God has given him, which religion was designed not to
extinguish, but to perfect; — according to that of the Apostle, “Brethren, be
not children in understanding; in malice” or wickedness “be ye children; but in
understanding be ye men;” (1 Cor. 14:20; ) — every
man applying those scriptural marks to himself, may know whether he is a child
of God. Thus, if he know, First, “as many as are led by the Spirit of God,” into
all holy tempers and actions, “they are the sons of God;” (for which he has the
infallible assurance of holy writ;) Secondly, I am thus “led by the Spirit of
God;” he will easily conclude, — “Therefore I am a son of God.”
3. Agreeable to this are all those plain declarations of St. John,
in his First Epistle: “Hereby we know that we do know him, if we keep his
commandments.” (1 John 2:3.) “Whoso keepeth
his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected; Hereby know we that we are
in him;” that we are indeed the children of God. (1 John
2:5.) “If ye know that he is righteous, ye know that everyone that
doeth righteousness is born of him.” (1 John
2:29.) “We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we
love the brethren.” (1 John 3:14) “Hereby we
know that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before him;” namely,
because we “love one another not in word, neither in tongue, but in deed and in
truth.” “Hereby know we that we dwell in him, because he hath given us of his”
loving “Spirit.” (1 John 4:13.) And,
“hereby we know that he abideth in us, by the” obedient “spirit which he hath
given us.” (1 John 3:24.)
4. It is highly probable there never were any children of God,
from the beginning of the world unto this day, who were farther advanced in the
grace of God and the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ, than the Apostle John,
at the time when he wrote these words, and the fathers in Christ to whom he
wrote. Notwithstanding which, it is evident both the Apostle himself, and all
those pillars in God’s temple, were very far from despising these marks of their
being the children of God; and that they applied them to their own souls for the
confirmation of their faith. Yet all this is no other than rational evidence,
the witness of our spirit, our reason or understanding. It all resolves into
this: Those who have these marks are the children of God: But we have these
marks. Therefore we are children of God.
5. But how does it appear, that we have these marks? This is a
question which still remains. How does it appear, that we do love God and our
neighbour, and that we keep his commandments? Observe, that the meaning of the
question is, How does it appear to ourselves, not to others? I
would ask him, then, that proposes this question, How does it appear to you that
you are alive, and that you are now in ease, and not in pain? Are you not
immediately conscious of it? By the same immediate consciousness, you will know
if your soul is alive to God; if you are saved from the pain of proud wrath, and
have the ease of a meek and quiet spirit. By the same means you cannot but
perceive if you love, rejoice, and delight in God. By the same you must be
directly assured, if you love your neighbour as yourself; if you are kindly
affectioned to all mankind, and full of gentleness and longsuffering. And with
regard to the outward mark of the children of God, which is, according to St.
John, the keeping his commandments, you undoubtedly know in your own breast, if,
by the grace of God, it belongs to you. Your conscience informs you from day to
day, if you do not take the name of God within your lips unless with seriousness
and devotion, with reverence and godly fear; if you remember the Sabbath-day to
keep it holy; if you honour your father and mother; if you do to all as you
would they should do unto you; if you possess your body in sanctification and
honour; and if, whether you eat or drink, you are temperate therein, and do all
to the glory of God.
6. Now this is properly the testimony of our own spirit; even the
testimony of our conscience, that God hath given us to be holy of heart, and
holy in outward conversation. It is a consciousness of our having received, in
and by the Spirit of adoption, the tempers mentioned in the Word of God as
belonging to his adopted children; even a loving heart toward God and toward all
mankind; hanging with childlike confidence on God our Father, desiring nothing
but him, casting all our care upon him, and embracing every child of man with
earnest, tender affection: — A consciousness that we are inwardly conformed, by
the Spirit of God, to the image of his Son, and that we walk before him in
justice, mercy, and truth, doing the things which are pleasing in his sight.
7. But what is that testimony of God’s Spirit, which is superadded
to, and conjoined with, this? How does he “bear witness with our spirit that we
are the children of God?” It is hard to find words in the language of men to
explain “the deep things of God.” Indeed, there are none that will adequately
express what the children of God experience. But perhaps one might say,
(desiring any who are taught of God to correct, to soften or strengthen the
expression,) The testimony of the Spirit is an inward impression on the soul,
whereby the Spirit of God directly witnesses to my spirit, that I am a child of
God; that Jesus Christ hath loved me, and given himself for me; and that all my
sins are blotted out, and I, even I, am reconciled to God.
8. That this testimony of the Spirit of God must needs, in the
very nature of things, be antecedent to the testimony of our own spirit, may
appear from this single consideration: We must be holy of heart, and holy in
life before we can be conscious that we are so; before we can have the testimony
of our spirit, that we are inwardly and outwardly holy. But we must love God,
before we can be holy at all; this being the root of all holiness. Now we cannot
love God, till we know he loves us. “We love him, because he first loved us.”
And we cannot know his pardoning love to us, till his Spirit witnesses it to our
spirit. Since, therefore, this testimony of his Spirit must precede the love of
God and all holiness, of consequence it must precede our inward consciousness
thereof, or the testimony of our spirit concerning them.
9. Then, and not till then, — when the Spirit of God beareth that
witness to our spirit, “God hath loved thee, and given his own Son to be the
propitiation for thy sins; the Son of God hath loved thee, and hath washed thee
from thy sins in his blood,” — “we love God, because he first loved us;” and,
for his sake, we love our brother also. And of this we cannot but be conscious
to ourselves: We “know the things that are freely given to us of God.” We know
that we love God and keep his commandments; and “hereby also we know that we are
of God.” This is that testimony of our own spirit, which, so long as we continue
to love God and keep his commandments, continues joined with the testimony of
God’s Spirit, “that we are the children of God.”
10. Not that I would by any means be understood, by anything which
has been spoken concerning it, to exclude the operation of the Spirit of God,
even from the testimony of our own spirit. In no wise. It is he that not only
worketh in us every manner of thing that is good, but also shines upon his own
work, and clearly shows what he has wrought. Accordingly, this is spoken of by
St. Paul, as one great end of our receiving the Spirit, “that we may know the
things which are freely given to us of God:” That he may strengthen the
testimony of our conscience, touching our ‘simplicity and godly sincerity;” and
give us to discern, in a fuller and stronger light, that we now do the things
which please him.
11. Should it still be inquired, “How does the Spirit of God bear
witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God,’ so as to exclude all
doubt, and evince the reality of our sonship?” — the answer is clear from what
has been observed above. And, First, as to the witness of our spirit: The soul
as intimately and evidently perceives when it loves, delights, and rejoices in
God, as when it loves and delights in anything on earth. And it can no more
doubt, whether it loves, delights, and rejoices or no, than whether it exists or
no. If, therefore this be just reasoning,
He that now loves God, that delights and rejoices in him with an
humble joy, and holy delight, and an obedient love, is a child of God;
But I thus love, delight, and rejoice in God;
Therefore, I am a child of God: — Then a Christian can in no wise
doubt of his being a child of God. Of the former proposition he has as full an
assurance as he has that the Scriptures are of God; and of his thus loving God,
he has an inward proof, which is nothing short of self-evidence. Thus, the
testimony of our own spirit is with the most intimate conviction manifested to
our hearts, in such a manner, as beyond all reasonable doubt to evince the
reality of our sonship.
12. The manner how the divine testimony is manifested to
the heart, I do not take upon me to explain. Such knowledge is too wonderful and
excellent for me: I cannot attain unto it. The wind bloweth, and I hear the
sound thereof; but I cannot tell how it cometh, or whither it goeth. As no one
knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of a man that is in him; so the
manner of the things of God knoweth no one, save the Spirit of God. But
the fact we know; namely, that the Spirit of God does give a believer such a
testimony of his adoption that while it is present to the soul, he can no more
doubt the reality of his sonship, than he can doubt of the shining of the sun,
while he stands full blaze of his beams.
II. 1. How this joint testimony of God’s Spirit and our spirit may
be clearly and solidly distinguished from the presumption of a natural mind, and
from the delusion of the devil, is the next thing to be considered. And it
highly imports all who desire the salvation of God, to consider it with the
deepest attention, as they would not deceive their own souls. An error in this
is generally observed to have the most fatal consequences; the rather, because
he that errs, seldom discovers his mistake till it is too late to remedy it.
2. And, First, how is this testimony to be distinguished from the
presumption of a natural mind? It is certain, one who was never convinced of
sin, is always ready to flatter himself, and to think of himself, especially in
spiritual things, more highly than he ought to think. And hence, it is in no
wise strange, if one who is vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind, when he hears
of this privilege of true Christians, among whom he undoubtedly ranks himself,
should soon work himself up into a persuasion that he is already possessed
thereof. Such instances now abound in the world, and have abounded in all ages.
How then may the real testimony of the Spirit with our spirit, be distinguished
from this damning presumption?
3. I answer, the Holy Scriptures abound with marks, whereby the
one may be distinguished from the other. They describe, in the plainest manner,
the circumstances which go before, which accompany, and which follow, the true,
genuine testimony of the Spirit of God with the spirit of a believer. Whoever
carefully weighs and attends to these will not need to put darkness for light.
He will perceive so wide a difference, with respect to all these, between the
real and the pretended witness of the Spirit, that there will be no danger, I
might say, no possibility, of confounding the one with the other.
4. By these, one who vainly presumes on the gift of God might
surely know, if he really desired it, that he hath been hitherto “given up to a
strong delusion,” and suffered to believe a lie. For the Scriptures lay down
those clear, obvious marks, as preceding, accompanying, and following that gift,
which a little reflection would convince him, beyond all doubt, were never found
in his soul. For instance: The Scripture describes repentance, or conviction of
sin, as constantly going before this witness of pardon. So, “Repent; for the
kingdom of heaven is at hand.” (Matt. 3:2.) “Repent ye, and
believe the gospel.” (Mark 1:15.) “Repent, and be
baptized every one of you for the remission of sins.” (Acts
2:38.) “Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be
blotted out.” (Acts 3:19.) In conformity
whereto, our Church also continually places repentance before pardon, or the
witness of it. “He pardoneth and absolveth all them that truly repent, and
unfeignedly believe his holy gospel.” “Almighty God — hath promised forgiveness
of sins to all them, who, with hearty repentance and true faith, turn unto him.”
But he is a stranger even to this repentance: He hath never known a broken and a
contrite heart: “The remembrance of his sins” was never “grievous unto him,” nor
“the burden of them intolerable.” In repeating those words, he never meant what
he said; he merely paid a compliment to God. And were it only from the want of
this previous work of God, he hath too great reason to believe that he hath
grasped a mere shadow, and never yet known the real privilege of the sons of
God.
5. Again, the Scriptures describe the being born of God, which
must precede the witness that we are his children, as a vast and mighty change;
a change “from darkness to light,” as well as “from the power of Satan unto
God;” as a “passing from death unto life,” a resurrection from the dead. Thus
the Apostle to the Ephesians: “You hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses
and sins.” (Eph. 2:1.) And again, “when we were dead in sins,
he hath quickened us together with Christ; and hath raised us up together, and
made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.” (Eph. 2:5, 6.)
But what knoweth he, concerning whom we now speak, of any such change as this?
He is altogether unacquainted with this whole matter. This is a language which
he does not understand. He tells you he always was a Christian. He knows no time
when he had need of such a change. By this also, if he give himself leave to
think, may he know, that he is not born of the Spirit; that he has never yet
known God; but has mistaken the voice of nature for the voice of God.
6. But waving the consideration of whatever he has or has not
experienced in time past; by the present marks may we easily distinguish a child
of God from a presumptuous self-deceiver. The Scriptures describe that joy in
the Lord which accompanies the witness of his Spirit, as a humble joy; a joy
that abases to the dust, that makes a pardoned sinner cry out, “I am vile! What
am I, or my father’s house? Now mine eye seeth thee, I abhor myself in dust and
ashes!” And wherever lowliness is, there is meekness, patience, gentleness,
long-suffering. There is a soft, yielding spirit; a mildness and sweetness, a
tenderness of soul, which words cannot express. But do these fruits attend that
supposed testimony of the Spirit in a presumptuous man? Just the reverse.
The more confident he is of the favour of God, the more is he lifted up; the
more does he exalt himself, the more haughty and assuming is his whole
behaviour. The stronger witness he imagines himself to have, the more
overbearing is he to all around him; the more incapable of receiving any
reproof; the more impatient of contradiction. Instead of being more meek, and
gentle, and teachable, more “swift to hear, and slow to speak,” he is more slow
to hear, and swift to speak; more unready to learn of anyone; more fiery and
vehement in his temper, and eager in his conversation. Yea, perhaps, there will
sometimes appear a kind of fierceness in his air, his manner of speaking, his
whole deportment, as if he were just going to take the matter out of God’s
hands, and himself to “devour the adversaries.”
7. Once more: the Scriptures teach, “This is the love of God,” the
sure mark thereof, “that we keep his commandments.” (1 John
5:3.) And our Lord himself saith, “He that keepeth my commandments,
he it is that loveth me.” (John 14:21.) Love
rejoices to obey; to do, in every point whatever is acceptable to the beloved. A
true lover of God hastens to do his will on earth as it is done in heaven. But
is this the character of the presumptuous pretender to the love of God? Nay, but
his love gives him a liberty to disobey, to break, not keep, the commandments of
God. Perhaps, when he was in fear of the wrath of God, he did labour to do his
will. But now, looking on himself as “not under the law,” he thinks he is no
longer obliged to observe it. He is therefore less zealous of good works: less
careful to abstain from evil; less watchful over his own heart; less jealous
over his tongue. He is less earnest to deny himself, and to take up his cross
daily. In a word, the whole form of his life is changed since he has fancied
himself to be at liberty. He is no longer “exercising himself unto
godliness;” “wrestling not only with flesh and blood, but with principalities
and powers,” enduring hardships, “agonizing to enter in at the strait gate.” No;
he has found an easier way to heaven; a broad, smooth flowery path, in which he
can say to his soul, “Soul, take thy ease; eat, drink, and be merry.” It
follows, with undeniable evidence, that he has not the true testimony of his own
spirit. He cannot be conscious of having those marks which he hath not; that
lowliness, meekness, and obedience: Nor yet can the Spirit of the God of truth
bear witness to a lie; or testify that he is a child of God when he is
manifestly a child of the devil.
8. Discover thyself, thou poor self-deceiver! — thou who art
confident of being a child of God; thou who sayest, “I have the witness in
myself,” and therefore defiest all thy enemies. Thou art weighed in the balance
and found wanting; even in the balance of the sanctuary. The word of the Lord
hath tried thy soul, and proved thee to be reprobate silver. Thou art not lowly
of heart; therefore thou hast not received the Spirit of Jesus unto this day.
Thou art not gentle and meek; therefore thy joy is nothing worth: It is not joy
in the Lord. Thou dost not keep his commandments; therefore thou lovest him not,
neither art thou partaker of the Holy Ghost. It is consequently as certain and
as evident, as the Oracles of God can make it, his Spirit doth not bear witness
with thy spirit that thou art a child of God. O cry unto him, that the scales
may fall off thine eyes; that thou mayst know thyself as thou art known; that
thou mayest receive the sentence of death in thyself, till thou hear the voice
that raises the dead, saying, “Be of good cheer: Thy sins are forgiven; thy
faith hath made thee whole.”
9. “But how may one who has the real witness in himself
distinguish it from presumption?” How, I pray, do you distinguish day from
night? How do you distinguish light from darkness; or the light of a star, or
glimmering taper, from the light of the noonday sun? Is there not an inherent,
obvious, essential difference between the one and the other? And do you not
immediately and directly perceive that difference, provided your senses are
rightly disposed? In like manner, there is an inherent, essential difference
between spiritual light and spiritual darkness; and between the light wherewith
the Sun of righteousness shines upon our heart, and that glimmering light which
arises only from “sparks of our own kindling:” And this difference also is
immediately and directly perceived, if our spiritual senses are rightly
disposed.
10. To require a more minute and philosophical account of the
manner whereby we distinguish these, and of the criteria, or intrinsic
marks, whereby we know the voice of God, is to make a demand which can never be
answered; no, not by one who has the deepest knowledge of God. Suppose when Paul
answered before Agrippa, the wise Roman had said, “Thou talkest of hearing the
voice of the Son of God. How dost thou know it was his voice? By what
criteria, what intrinsic marks, dost thou know the voice of God? Explain
to me the manner of distinguishing this from a human or angelic voice.”
Can you believe the Apostle himself would have once attempted to answer so idle
a demand? And yet, doubtless, the moment he heard that voice he knew it was the
voice of God. But how he knew this, who is able to explain? Perhaps
neither man nor angel.
11. To come yet closer: Suppose God were now to speak to any soul,
“Thy sins are forgiven thee,” — he must be willing that soul should know his
voice; otherwise he would speak in vain. And he is able to effect this; for,
whenever he wills, to do is present with him. And he does effect it: That soul
is absolutely assured, “this voice is the voice of God.” But yet he who hath
that witness in himself, cannot explain it to one who hath it not: Nor indeed is
it to be expected that he should. Were there any natural medium to prove, or
natural method to explain, the things of God to unexperienced men, then the
natural man might discern and know the things of the Spirit of God. But this is
utterly contrary to the assertion of the Apostle, that “he cannot know them,
because they are spiritually discerned;” [1 Cor.
2:14] even by spiritual senses, which the natural man hath not.
12. “But how shall I know that my spiritual senses are rightly
disposed?” This also is a question of vast importance; for if a man mistake in
this, he may run on in endless error and delusion. “And how am I assured that
this is not my case; and that I do not mistake the voice of the Spirit?” Even by
the testimony of your own spirit; by “the answer of a good conscience toward
God.” [Acts 23:1] By the fruits which he hath wrought in
your spirit, you shall know the testimony of the Spirit of God. Hereby you shall
know, that you are in no delusion, that you have not deceived your own soul. The
immediate fruits of the Spirit ruling in the heart, are “love, joy, peace,
bowels of mercies, humbleness of mind, meekness, gentleness, long-suffering.”
[Gal. 5:22, 23]
And the outward fruits are, the doing good to all men; the doing no evil to any;
and the walking in the light, [1 John 1:7] — a zealous,
uniform obedience to all the commandments of God.
13. By the same fruits shall you distinguish this voice of God,
from any delusion of the devil. That proud spirit cannot humble thee before God.
He neither can nor would soften thy heart, and melt it first into earnest
mourning after God, and then into filial love. It is not the adversary of God
and man that enables thee to love thy neighbour; or to put on meekness,
gentleness, patience, temperance, and the whole armour of God. [see Col. 3:12–14; Eph.
6:11] He is not divided against himself, or a destroyer of sin, his
own work. No; it is none but the Son of God who cometh to “destroy the works of
the devil.” [1 John 3:8] As surely
therefore as holiness is of God, and as sin is the work of the devil, so surely
the witness thou hast in thyself is not of Satan, but of God.
14. Well then mayst thou say, “Thanks be unto God for his
unspeakable gift!” [2 Cor. 9:15] Thanks be
unto God, who giveth me to “know in whom I have believed;” [2 Tim. 1:12] who hath “sent forth the Spirit of
his Son into my heart, crying, Abba, Father,” [Gal.
4:6] and even now, “bearing witness with my spirit that I am a child
of God!” [Rom. 8:16] And see, that not only thy lips, but thy
life show forth his praise. He hath sealed thee for his own; glorify him then in
thy body and thy spirit, which are his. [1 Cor.
6:20] Beloved, if thou hast this hope in thyself, purify thyself as
he is pure. While thou beholdest what manner of love the Father hath given thee,
that thou shouldst be called a child of God; [1 John
3:1] cleanse thyself “from all filthiness of flesh and Spirit,
perfecting holiness in the fear of God;” [2 Cor.
7:1] and let all thy thoughts, words, and works be a spiritual
sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God through Christ Jesus! [Rom.
12:1, 2]