The Difference Between Walking by Sight, and Walking by
Faith
“We walk by faith, not by sight.”
2 Cor. 5:7.
1. How short is this description of real Christians! And yet how
exceeding full! It comprehends, it sums up, the whole experience of those that
are truly such, from the time they are born of God till they remove into
Abraham’s bosom. For, who are the we that are here spoken of? All that
are true Christian believers. I say Christian, not
Jewish,
believers. All that are not only
servants, but children, of
God. All that have “the Spirit of adoption, crying in their hearts, Abba,
Father.” All that have “the Spirit of God witnessing with their spirits, that
they are the sons of God.”
2. All these, and these alone, can say, “We walk by faith, and
not by sight.” But before we can possibly “walk by faith,” we must
live
by faith, and not by sight. And to all real Christians our Lord saith, “Because
I live, ye live also:” Ye live a life which the world, whether learned or
unlearned, “know not of.” “You that,” like the world, “were dead in trespasses
and sins, hath he quickened,” and made alive; given you new senses, — spiritual
senses, — “senses exercised to discern spiritual good and evil.”
3. In order thoroughly to understand this important truth, it may
be proper to consider the whole matter. All the children of men that are not
born of God “walk by sight,” having no higher principle. By
sight, that
is, by sense; a part being put for the whole; the sight for all the
senses; the rather, because it is more noble and more extensive than any, or all
the rest. There are but few objects which we can discern by the three inferior
senses of taste, smell, and feeling; and none of these can take any cognizance
of its object, unless it be brought into a direct contact with it. Hearing, it
is true, has a larger sphere of action, and gives us some knowledge of things
that are distant. But how small is that distance, suppose it were fifty or a
hundred miles, compared to that between the earth and the sun! And what is even
this in comparison of the distance of the sun and moon and the fixed stars! Yet
the sight continually takes knowledge of objects even at this amazing
distance.
4. By sight we take knowledge of the visible world, from the
surface of the earth to the region of the fixed stars. But what is the world
visible to us, but “a speck of creation,” compared to the whole universe? to the
invisible world? — that part of the creation which we cannot see at all, by
reason of its distance; in the place of which, through the imperfection of our
senses, we are presented with an universal blank. 5. But beside these
innumerable objects which we cannot see by reason of their distance, have we not
sufficient ground to believe that there are innumerable others of too delicate a
nature to be discerned by any of our senses? Do not all men of unprejudiced
reason allow the same thing, (the small number of Materialists, or Atheists, I
cannot term men of reason,) that there is an invisible world, naturally
such, as well as a visible one? But which of our senses is fine enough to take
the least knowledge of this? We can no more perceive any part of this by our
sight, than by our feeling. Should we allow, with the ancient poet
that,
Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth Unseen, both when we
wake, and when we sleep;
should we allow, that the great Spirit, the Father of all,
filleth both heaven and earth; yet is the finest of our senses utterly incapable
of perceiving either Him or them.
6. All our external senses are evidently adapted to this
external, visible world. They are designed to serve us only while we sojourn
here, — while we dwell in these houses of clay. They have nothing to do with the
invisible world; they are not adapted to it. And they can take no more
cognizance of the eternal, than of the invisible world; although we are as fully
assured of the existence of this, as of anything in the present world. We cannot
think death puts a period to our being. The body indeed returns to dust; but the
soul, being of a nobler nature, is not affected thereby. There is, therefore, an
eternal world, of what kind soever it be. But how shall we attain the knowledge
of this? What will teach us to draw aside the veil “that hangs ‘twixt mortal and
immortal being?” We all know, “the vast, the unbounded prospect lies before us;”
but we are not constrained to add, “Yet clouds, alas! and darkness rest upon
it.”
7. The most excellent of our senses, it is undeniably plain, can
give us no assistance herein. And what can our boasted reason do? It is now
universally allowed, Nihil est in intellectu quod
non fuit prius in sensu: “Nothing is in the understanding, which was not
first perceived by some of the senses.” Consequently, the understanding, having
here nothing to work upon, can afford us no help at all. So that, in spite of
all the information we can gain, either from sense or reason, both the invisible
and eternal world are unknown to all that “walk by sight.”
8. But is there no help? Must they remain in total darkness
concerning the invisible and the eternal world? We cannot affirm this: Even the
Heathens did not all remain in total darkness concerning them. Some few rays of
light have, in all ages and nations, gleamed through the shade. Some light they
derived from various fountains touching the invisible world. “The heavens
declared the glory of God,” though not to their outward sight: “The firmament
showed,” to the eyes of their understanding, the existence of their Maker. From
the creation they inferred the being of a Creator, powerful and wise, just and
merciful. And hence they concluded, there must be an eternal world, a future
state, to commence after the present; wherein the justice of God in punishing
wicked men, and his mercy in rewarding the righteous, will be openly and
undeniably displayed in the sight of all intelligent creatures.
9. We may likewise reasonably suppose, that some traces of
knowledge, both with regard to the invisible and the eternal world, were
delivered down from Noah and his children, both to their immediate and remote
descendants. And however these were obscured or disguised by the addition of
numberless fables,yet something of truth was still mingled with them, and these
streaks of light prevented utter darkness. Add to this, that God never, in any
age or nation, “left himself” quite “without a witness” in the hearts of men;
but while he “gave them rain and fruitful seasons,” imparted some imperfect
knowledge of the Giver. “He is the true Light that” still, in some degree,
“enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world.”
10. But all these lights put together availed no farther than to
produce a faint twilight. It gave them, even the most enlightened of them, no
elegchos, no
demonstration, no
demonstrative conviction, either of the
invisible or of the eternal world. Our philosophical poet justly terms Socrates,
“The wisest of all moral men;” that is, of all that were not favoured with
Divine Revelation. Yet what evidence had he of another world, when he addressed
those that had condemned him to death? — “And now, O ye judges, ye are going to
live, and I am going to die. Which of these is best, God knows; but I suppose no
man does.” Alas! What a confession is this! Is this all the evidence that poor
dying Socrates had either of an invisible or an eternal world? And yet even this
is preferable to the light of the great and good Emperor Adrian. Remember, ye
modern Heathens, and copy after his pathetic address to his parting soul. For
fear I should puzzle you with Latin, I give it you in Prior’s fine translation:
—
Poor,
little, pretty, fluttering thing, Must we no longer live together? And dost thou prune
thy trembling wing, To take the flight, thou know’st not whither? Thy pleasing vein,
thy humorous folly, Lies all neglected, all forgot! And pensive,
wavering, melancholy, Thou hop’st and fear’st, thou know’st not what.
11. “Thou know’st not what!” True, there was no knowledge of
what was to be hoped or feared after death, till “the Sun of Righteousness”
arose to dispel all their vain conjectures, and “brought life and immortality,”
that is, immortal life, “to light, through the Gospel.” Then (and not till then,
unless in some rare instances) God revealed, unveiled the invisible world. He
then revealed himself to the children of men. “The Father revealed the Son” in
their hearts; and the Son revealed the Father. He that of old time “commanded
light to shine out of darkness shined in their hearts, and enlightened them with
the knowledge of the glory of God, in the face of Jesus Christ.”
12. It is where sense can be of no farther use, that faith comes
in to our help; it is the grand desideratum;
it does what none of the senses can; no, not with all the helps that art hath
invented. All our instruments, however improved by the skill and labour of so
many succeeding ages, do not enable us to make the least discovery of these
unknown regions. They barely serve the occasions for which they were formed in
the present visible world.
13. How different is the case, how vast the pre-eminence, of
them that “walk by faith!” God, having “opened the eyes of their understanding,”
pours divine light into their soul; whereby they are enabled to “see Him that is
invisible,” to see God and the things of God. What their “eye had not seen, nor
their ear heard neither had it entered into their heart to conceive,” God from
time to time reveals to them, by the “unction of the Holy One, which teacheth
them of all things.” Having “entered into the holiest by the blood of Jesus,” by
that “new and living way,” and being joined unto “the general assembly and
church of the first-born, and unto God the Judge of all, and Jesus the Mediator
of the New Covenant,” — each of these can say, “I live not, but Christ liveth in
me;” [Gal. 2:20] I now live that life which “is hid with
Christ in God;” “and when Christ, who is my life, shall appear, then
I shall likewise appear with him in glory.”
14. They that live by faith,
walk by faith. But
what is implied in this? They regulate all their judgments concerning good and
evil, not with reference to visible and temporal things, but to things invisible
and eternal. They think visible things to be of small value, because they pass
away like a dream; but, on the contrary, they account invisible things to be of
high value, because they will never pass away. Whatever is invisible is eternal;
the things that are not seen, do not perish. So the Apostle: “The things that
are seen are temporal; but the things that are not seen are eternal.” Therefore,
they that “walk by faith” do not desire the “things which are seen;” neither are
they the object of their pursuit. They “set their affections on things above,
not on things on the earth.” They seek only the things which are “where Jesus
sitteth at the right hand of God.” Because they know, “the things that are seen
are temporal,” passing away like a shadow, therefore they “look not at them;”
they desire them not; they account them as nothing; but “they look at the things
which are not seen, that are eternal,” that never pass away. By these they form
their judgment of all things. They judge them to be good or evil, as they
promote or hinder their welfare, not in time, but in eternity. They weigh
whatever occurs in this balance: “What influence has it on my eternal state?”
They regulate all their tempers and passions, all their desires, joys, and
fears, by this standard. They regulate all their thoughts and designs, all their
words and actions, so as to prepare them for that invisible and eternal world to
which they are shortly going. They do not dwell, but only
sojourn
here; not looking upon earth as their home, but only
Travelling
through Immanuel’s ground, To fairer worlds on high.
15. Brethren, are you of this number, who are now here
before God? Do you see “Him that is invisible?” Have you faith, living
faith, the faith of a child? Can you say, “The life that I now live, I live by
faith in the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me”? Do you “walk by
faith?” Observe the question. I do not ask, whether you curse, or swear, or
profane the Sabbath, or live in any outward sin. I do not ask, whether you do
good, more or less; or attend all the ordinances of God. But, suppose you are
blameless in all these respects, I ask, in the name of God, by what standard do
you judge of the value of things? by the visible or the invisible world? Bring
the matter to an issue in a single instance. Which do you judge best, — that
your son should be a pious cobbler, or a profane lord? Which appears to you most
eligible, — that your daughter should be a child of God, and walk on foot, or a
child of the devil, and ride in a coach-and-six? When the question is concerning
marrying your daughter, if you consider her body more than her soul, take
knowledge of yourself: You are in the way to hell, and not to heaven; for you
walk by sight, and not by faith. I do not ask, whether you live in any outward
sin or neglect; but, do you seek in the general tenor of your life, “the
things that are above,” or the things that are below? Do you “set your affection
on things above,” or on “things of the earth?” If on the latter, you are as
surely in the way of destruction, as a thief or a common drunkard. My dear
friends, let every man, every woman among you, deal honestly with yourselves.
Ask your own heart, “What am I seeking day by day? What am I desiring? What am I
pursuing? earth or heaven? the things that are seen, or the things that are not
seen?” What is your object, God or the world? As the Lord liveth, if the world
is your object, still all your religion is vain.
16. See then, my dear brethren, that from this time, at least,
ye choose the better part. Let your judgment of all the things round about you
be according to the real value of things, with a reference to the invisible and
eternal world. See that ye judge everything fit to be pursued or shunned,
according to the influence it will have on your eternal state. See that your
affections, your desire, your joy, your hope, be set, not on transient objects,
not on things that fly as a shadow, that pass away like a dream; but on those
that are incapable of change, that are incorruptible and fade not away; those
that remain the same, when heaven and earth “flee away, and there is no place
found for them.” See that in all you think, speak, or do, the eye of your soul
be single, fixed on “Him that is invisible,” and “the glories that shall be
revealed.” Then shall “your whole body be full of light:” Your whole soul shall
enjoy the light of God’s countenance; and you shall continually see the light of
the glorious love of God “in the face of Jesus Christ.”
17. See, in particular, that all your “desire be unto him, and
unto the remembrance of his name.” Beware of “foolish and hurtful desires;” such
as arise from any visible or temporal thing. All these St. John warns us of,
under that general term “love of the world.” [1 John
2:15] It is not so much to men of the world, as to the children of
God, he gives that important direction: “Love not the world, neither the things
of the world.” Give no place to “the desire of the flesh,” — the gratification
of the outward senses, whether of the taste, or any other. Give no place to “the
desire of the eye,” — the internal sense, or imagination, — by gratifying it,
either by grand things, or beautiful, or uncommon. Give no place to “the pride
of life,” — the desire of wealth, of pomp, or of the honour that cometh of men.
St. John confirms this advice by a consideration parallel to that observation
which St. Paul had made to the Corinthians: “For the world and the fashion of it
passeth away.” [1 John 2:16, 17] “The fashion of it” — all worldly objects,
business, pleasures, cares, whatever now attracts our regard or attention —
“passeth away,” — is in the very act of passing, and will return no more.
Therefore desire none of these fleeting things, but that glory which “abideth
for ever.”
18. Observe well: This is religion, and this alone; this alone
is true Christian religion; not this or that opinion, or system of opinions, be
they ever so true, ever so scriptural. It is true, this is commonly called
faith. But those who suppose it to be religion are given up to a strong delusion
to believe a lie, and if they suppose it to be a sure passport to heaven are in
the high road to hell. Observe well: Religion is not harmlessness; which a
careful observer of mankind properly terms hellish harmlessness, as it
sends thousands to the bottomless pit. It is not morality; excellent as
that is, when it is built on a right foundation, — loving faith; but when
otherwise, it is of no value in the sight of God. It is not
formality, —
the most exact observance of all the ordinances of God. This, too, unless it be
built on the right foundation, is no more pleasing to God, than “the cutting off
a dog’s neck.” No: Religion is no less than living in eternity, and walking in
eternity; and hereby walking in the love of God and man, in lowliness, meekness,
and resignation. This, and this alone, is that “life which is hid with Christ in
God.” He alone who experiences this “dwells in God, and God in him.” This alone
is setting the crown upon Christ’s head, and doing his “will on earth as it is
done in heaven.”
19. It will easily be observed, that this is the very thing that
men of the world call enthusiasm, — a word just fit for their purpose, because
no man can tell either the meaning or even the derivation of it. If it has any
determinate sense, it means a species of religious madness. Hence, when you
speak your experience, they immediately cry out, “Much religion hath made thee
mad.” And all that you experience, either of the invisible or of the eternal
world, they suppose to be only the waking dreams of a heated imagination. It
cannot be otherwise, when men born blind take upon them to reason concerning
light and colours. They will readily pronounce those to be insane who affirm the
existence of those things whereof they have no conception.
20. From all that has been said, it may be seen, with the utmost
clearness, what is the nature of that fashionable thing called
dissipation. He that hath ears to hear, let him hear! It is the very
quintessence of Atheism; it is artificial, added to natural, ungodliness. It is
the art of forgetting God, of being altogether “without God in the world;” the
art of excluding him, if not out of the world he has created, yet out of the
minds of all his intelligent creatures. It is a total studied inattention to the
whole invisible and eternal world; more especially to death, the gate of
eternity, and to the important consequences of death, — heaven and hell!
21. This is the real nature of dissipation. And is it so
harmless a thing as it is usually thought? It is one of the choicest instruments
of destroying immortal spirits that was ever forged in the magazines of hell. It
has been the means of plunging myriads of souls, that might have enjoyed the
glory of God, into the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels.
It blots out all religion at one stroke, and levels man with the beasts that
perish. All ye that fear God, flee from dissipation! Dread and abhor the very
name of it! Labour to have God in all your thoughts, to have eternity ever in
your eye! “Look” continually, “not at the things that are seen, but at the
things which are not seen.” Let your hearts be fixed there, where “Christ
sitteth at the right hand of God!” that whensoever he calleth you, “an entrance
may be ministered unto you abundantly into his everlasting kingdom!”
London, December 30, 1788