On the Discoveries of Faith
“Now faith is the evidence of things not seen.”
Heb. 11:1.
1. For many ages it has been allowed by sensible men, Nihil est in intellectu quod non fuit prius in
sensu: That is, “There is nothing in the understanding which was not
first perceived by some of the senses.” All the knowledge which we naturally
have is originally derived from our senses. And therefore those who want any
sense cannot have the least knowledge or idea of the objects of that sense; as
they that never had sight have not the least knowledge or conception of light or
colours. Some indeed have of late years endeavoured to prove that we have innate
ideas, not derived from any of the senses, but coeval with the understanding.
But this point has been now thoroughly discussed by men of the most eminent
sense and learning. And it is agreed by all impartial persons that, although
some things are so plain and obvious that we can very hardly avoid knowing them
as soon as we come to the use of our understanding, yet the knowledge even of
these is not innate, but derived from some of our senses.
2. But there is a great difference between our senses,
considered as the avenues of our knowledge. Some of them have a very narrow
sphere of action, some a more extensive one. By feeling we discern only
those objects that touch some part of our body; and consequently this sense
extends only to a small number of objects. Our senses of
taste and
smell (which some count species of
feeling) extend to fewer still.
But on the other hand our nobler sense of hearing has an exceeding wide
sphere of action; especially in the case of loud sounds, as thunder, the roaring
of the sea, or the discharge of cannon; the last of which sounds has been
frequently heard at the distance of near an hundred miles. Yet the space to
which the hearing itself extends is small, compared to that through which
the sight extends. The
sight takes in at one view, not only the
most unbounded prospects on earth, but also the moon, and the other planets, the
sun, yea, the fixed stars; though at such an immeasurable distance, that they
appear no larger through our finest telescopes than they do to the naked
eye.
3. But still none of our senses, no, not the sight itself, can
reach beyond the bounds of this visible world. They supply us with such
knowledge of the material world as answers all the purposes of life. But as this
was the design for which they were given, beyond this they cannot go. They
furnish us with no information at all concerning the invisible world.
4. But the wise and gracious Governor of the worlds, both
visible and invisible, has prepared a remedy for this defect. He hath appointed
faith to supply the defect of sense; to take us up where sense sets us
down, and help us over the great gulf. Its office begins where that of sense
ends. Sense is an evidence of things that are seen; of the visible, the material
world, and the several parts of it. Faith, on the other hand, is the “evidence
of things not seen;” of the invisible world; of all those invisible things which
are revealed in the oracles of God. But indeed they reveal nothing, they are a
mere dead letter, if they are “not mixed with faith in those that hear
them.”
5. In particular, faith is an evidence to me of the existence of
that unseen thing, my own soul. Without this I should be in utter uncertainty
concerning it. I should be constrained to ask that melancholy question,
Hear’st thou
submissive; but a lowly birth, Some separate particles of finer earth?
But by faith I know it is an immortal spirit, made in the image
of God; in his natural and his moral image; “an incorruptible picture of the God
of glory.” By the same evidence I know that I am now fallen short of the
glorious image of God; yea, that I, as well as all mankind, am “dead in
trespasses and sins:” So utterly dead, that “in me dwelleth no good thing;” that
I am inclined to all evil, and totally unable to quicken my own soul.
6. By faith I know that, besides the souls of men there are
other orders of spirits; yea, I believe that
Millions of
creatures walk the earth, Unseen, whether we wake, or if we sleep.
These I term angels, and I believe part of them are holy and
happy, and the other part wicked and miserable. I believe the former of these,
the good angels, are continually sent of God “to minister to the heirs of
salvation;” who will be “equal to angels” by and by, although they are now a
little inferior to them. I believe the latter, the evil angels, called in
Scripture, devils, united under one head, (termed in Scripture, Satan;
emphatically, the enemy, the adversary both of God and man,) either range the
upper regions; whence they are called “princes of the power of the air;” or like
him, walk about the earth as “roaring lions, seeking whom they may devour.”
7. But I know by faith that, above all these, is the Lord
Jehovah, he that is, that was, and that is to come; that is God from
everlasting, and world without end; He that filleth heaven and earth; He that is
infinite in power, in wisdom, in justice, in mercy, and holiness; He that
created all things, visible and invisible, by the breath of his mouth, and still
“upholds” them all, preserves them in being, “by the word of his power;” and
that governs all things that are in heaven above, in earth beneath, and under
the earth. By faith I know “there are three that bear record in heaven, the
Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit,” and that “these Three are One;” that the
Word, God the Son, “was made flesh,” lived, and died for our salvation, rose
again, ascended into heaven, and now sitteth at the right hand of the Father. By
faith I know that the Holy Spirit is the giver of all spiritual life; of
righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost; of holiness and happiness, by
the restoration of that image of God wherein we are created. Of all these
things, faith is the evidence, the sole evidence, to the children of men.
8. And as the information which we receive from our senses does
not extend to the invisible world, so neither does it extend to (what is nearly
related thereto) the eternal world. In spite of all the instruction which either
the sight or any of the senses can afford,
The vast, th’
unbounded prospect lies before us; But clouds, alas! and darkness rest upon it.
Sense does not let in one ray of light, to discover
“the secrets of the illimitable deep.” This, the eternal world,
commences at death, the death of every individual person. The moment the breath
of man goeth forth he is an inhabitant of eternity. Just then time vanishes
away, “like as a dream when one awaketh.” And here again faith supplies the
place of sense, and gives us a view of things to come: At once it draws aside
the veil which hangs between mortal and immortal being. Faith discovers to us
the souls of the righteous, immediately received by the holy angels, and carried
by those ministering spirits into Abraham’s bosom; into the delights of
paradise, the garden of God, where the light of his countenance perpetually
shines; where he converses, not only with his former relations, friends, and
fellow-soldiers, but with the saints of all nations and all ages, with the
glorious dead of ancient days, with the noble army of martyrs, the Apostles, the
Prophets, the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob: Yea, above all this, he
shall be with Christ, in a manner that could not be while he remained in the
body.
9. It discovers, likewise, the souls of unholy men; seized the
lo moment they depart from the quivering lips, by those ministers of vengeance,
the evil angels, and dragged away to their own place. It is true, this is not
the nethermost hell: they are not to be tormented there “before the time;”
before the end of the world, when everyone will receive his just recompense of
reward. Till then they will probably be employed by their bad master in
advancing his infernal kingdom, and in doing all the mischief that lies in their
power to the poor, feeble children of men. But still, wherever they seek rest,
they will find none. They carry with them their own hell, in the worm that never
dieth; in a consciousness of guilt, and of the wrath of God, which continually
drinks up their spirits; in diabolical, infernal tempers, which are essential
misery; and in what they cannot shake off, no, not for an hour, any more than
they can shake off their own being, — that “fearful looking for of fiery
indignation, which will devour God’s adversaries.”
10. Moreover, faith opens another scene in the eternal world;
namely, the coming of our Lord in the clouds of heaven to “judge both the quick
and the dead.” It enables us to see the “great white throne coming down from
heaven, and Him that sitteth thereon, from whose face the heavens and the earth
flee away, and there is found no place for them.” We see “the dead, small and
great, stand before God.” We see “the books opened, and the dead judged,
according to the things that are written in the books.” We see the earth and the
sea giving up their dead, and hell (that is, the invisible world)“giving up the
dead that were therein, and everyone judged according to his works.
11. By faith we are also shown the immediate consequences of
the general judgment. We see the execution of that happy sentence pronounced
upon those on the right hand, “Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the
kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world!” After which the holy
angels tune their harps, and sing, “Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye
lifted up, ye everlasting doors, that the heirs of glory may come in!” And then
shall they drink of the rivers of pleasure that are at God’s right hand for
evermore. We see, likewise, the execution of that dreadful sentence, pronounced
upon those on the left hand, “Depart, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared
for the devil and his angels.” And then shall the ministers of divine vengeance
plunge them into “the lake of fire burning with brimstone; where they have no
rest day or night, but the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and
ever.”
12. But beside the invisible and the eternal world, which are
not seen, which are discoverable only by faith, there is a whole system of
things which are not seen, which cannot be discerned by any of our outward
senses. I mean, the spiritual world, understanding thereby the kingdom of God in
the soul of man. “Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard this; neither can it enter
into the heart of man to conceive the things of” this interior kingdom, unless
God revealed them by his Spirit. The Holy Spirit prepares us for his inward
kingdom, by removing the veil from our heart, and enabling us to know ourselves
as we are known of him; by “convincing us of sin,” of our evil nature, our evil
tempers, and our evil words and actions; all of which cannot but partake of the
corruption of the heart from which they spring. He then convinces us of the
desert of our sins; so that our mouth is stopped, and we are constrained to
plead guilty before God. At the same time, we “receive the spirit of bondage
unto fear;” fear of the wrath God, fear of the punishment which we have
deserved; and, above all, fear of death, lest it should consign us over to
eternal death. Souls that are thus convinced feel they are so fast in prison
that they cannot get forth. They feel themselves at once altogether sinful,
altogether guilty, and altogether helpless. But all this conviction implies a
species of faith, being “an evidence of things not seen;” nor indeed possible to
be seen or known, till God reveals them unto us.
13. But still let it be carefully observed, (for it is a point
of no small importance,) that this faith is only the faith of a servant, and not
the faith of a son. Because this is a point which many do not clearly
understand, I will endeavour to make it a little plainer. The faith of a servant
implies a divine evidence of the invisible and the eternal world; yea, and an
evidence of the spiritual world, so far as it can exist without living
experience. Whoever has attained this, the faith of a servant, “feareth God and
escheweth evil;” or, as it is expressed by St. Peter, “feareth God and worketh
righteousness.” In consequence of which he is in a degree, as the Apostle
observes, “accepted with Him.” Elsewhere he is described in those words: “He
that feareth God, and keepeth his commandments.” Even one who has gone thus far
in religion, who obeys God out of fear, is not in any wise to be despised;
seeing “the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” Nevertheless he should
be exhorted not to stop there; not to rest till he attains the adoption of sons;
till he obeys out of love, which is the privilege of all the children of
God.
14. Exhort him to press on, by all possible means, till he
passes “from faith to faith;” from the faith of a servant to the faith of
a son; from the spirit of bondage unto fear, to the spirit of childlike
love: He will then have “Christ revealed in his heart,” enabling him to testify,
“The life that I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who
loved me, and gave himself for
me,” — the proper voice of a child
of God. He will then be “born of God,” inwardly changed by the mighty power of
God, from “an earthly, sensual, devilish” mind, to “the mind which was in Christ
Jesus.” He will experience what St. Paul means by those remarkable words to the
Galatians, “Ye are the sons of God by faith; and because ye are sons, God hath
sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father.” “He
that believeth,” as a son, (as St. John observes) “hath the witness in himself.”
“The Spirit itself witnesses with his spirit that he is a child of God.” “The
love of God is shed abroad in his heart by the Holy Ghost which is given unto
him.”
15. But many doubts and fears may still remain, even in a child
of God, while he is weak in faith; while he is in the number of those whom St.
Paul terms “babes in Christ.” But when his faith is strengthened, when he
receives faith’s abiding impression, realizing things to come; when he has
received the abiding witness of the Spirit, doubts and fears vanish away. He
then enjoys the plerophory, or “full assurance, of faith;” excluding all doubt,
and all “fear that hath torment.” To those whom he styles
young men, St.
John says, “I have written unto you, young men, because ye are strong, and the
word of God abideth in you, and ye have overcome the wicked one.” These, the
Apostle observes in the other verse, had “the word of God abiding in them.” It
may not improbably mean “the pardoning word,” the word which spake all their
sins forgiven. In consequence of which, they have the consciousness of the
divine favour, without any intermission.
16. To these more especially we may apply the exhortation of
the Apostle Paul: “Leaving the first principles of the doctrine of Christ,”
namely, repentance and faith, “let us go on unto perfection.” But in what sense
are we to “leave those principles? Not absolutely; for we are to retain both one
and the other, the knowledge of ourselves and the knowledge of God, unto our
lives’ end: But only comparatively; not fixing, as we did at first, our whole
attention upon them; thinking and talking perpetually of nothing else, but
either repentance or faith. But what is the “perfection” here spoken of? It is
not only a deliverance from doubts and fears, but from sin; from all inward as
well as outward sin; from evil desires and evil tempers, as well as from evil
words and works. Yea, and it is not only a negative blessing, a deliverance from
all evil dispositions implied in that expression, “I will circumcise thy heart;”
but a positive one likewise; even the planting all good dispositions in their
place; clearly implied in that other expression, “To love the Lord your God with
all your heart, and with all your soul.”
17. These are they to whom the Apostle John gives the venerable
title of Fathers, who “have known him that is from the beginning;” the
eternal Three-One God. One of these expresses himself thus: “I bear about with
me an experimental verity and a plenitude of the presence of the ever-blessed
Trinity.” And those who are fathers in Christ, generally, though I believe not
always, enjoy the plerophory, or “full assurance of hope;” having no more doubt
of reigning with him in glory than if they already saw him coming in the clouds
of heaven. But this does not prevent their continually increasing in the
knowledge and love of God. While they “rejoice evermore, pray without ceasing,
and in everything give thanks,” they pray in particular, that they may never
cease to watch, to deny themselves, to take up their cross daily, to fight the
good fight of faith; and against the world, the devil, and their own manifold
infirmities; till they are able to “comprehend, with all saints, what is the
length, and breadth, and height, and depth, and to know that love of Christ
which passeth knowledge;” yea, to “be filled with all the fullness of God.”
Yarm, June 11, 1788.