The Witness of our own Spirit
“This is our rejoicing, the testimony of out conscience, that in
simplicity and godly sincerity, not with fleshly wisdom, but by the grace of
God, we have had our conversation in the world.”
2 Cor. 1:12
1. Such is the voice of every true believer in Christ, so long as
he abides in faith and love. “He that followeth me,” saith our Lord, “walketh
not in darkness:” And while he hath the light, he rejoiceth therein. As he hath
“received the Lord Jesus Christ,” so he walketh in him; and while he walketh in
him, the exhortation of the Apostle takes place in his soul, day by day,
“Rejoice in the Lord always; and again I say, Rejoice.”
2. But that we may not build our house upon the sand, (lest when
the rains descend, and the winds blow, and the floods arise and beat up it, it
fall and great be the fall thereof,) I intend in the following discourse to
show, what is the nature and ground of a Christian’s joy. We know, in general,
it is that happy peace, that calm satisfaction of spirit, which arises from such
a testimony of his conscience, as is here described by the Apostle. But, in
order to understand this the more thoroughly, it will be requisite to weigh all
his words; whence will easily appear, both what we are to understand by
conscience, and what by the testimony thereof; and also, how he
that hath this testimony rejoiceth evermore.
3. And, First, what are we to understand by conscience?
What is the meaning of this word that is in every one’s mouth? One would imagine
it was an exceedingly difficult thing to discover this, when we consider how
large and numerous volumes have been from time to time wrote on this subject;
and how all the treasures of ancient and modern learning have been ransacked, in
order to explain it. And yet it is to be feared, it has not received much light
from all those elaborate inquiries. Rather, have not most of those writers
puzzled the cause; “darkening counsel by words without knowledge;” perplexing a
subject, plain in itself, and easy to be understood? For, set aside but hard
words, and every man of an honest heart will soon understand the thing.
4. God has made us thinking beings, capable of perceiving what is
present, and of reflecting or looking back on what is past. In particular, we
are capable of perceiving whatsoever passes in our own hearts or lives; of
knowing whatsoever we feel or do; and that either while it passes, or when it is
past. This we mean when we say, man is a conscious being: He hath a
consciousness, or inward perception, both of things present and past,
relating to himself, of his own tempers and outward behavior. But what we
usually term conscience, implies somewhat more than this. It is not
barely the knowledge of our present or the remembrance of our preceding life. To
remember, to bear witness either of past or present things, is only one, and the
least office of conscience: Its main business is to excuse or accuse, to approve
or disapprove, to acquit or condemn.
5. Some latter writers indeed have given a new name to this, and
have chose to style it a moral sense. But the old word seems preferable
to the new, were it only on this account, that it is more common and familiar
among men, and therefore easier to be understood. And to Christians it is
undeniably preferable, on another account also; namely, because it is
scriptural; because it is the word which the wisdom of God hath chose to use in
the inspired writings.
And according to the meaning wherein it is generally used there,
particularly in the Epistles of St. Paul, we may understand by conscience, a
faculty or power, implanted by God in every soul that comes into the world, of
perceiving what is right or wrong in his own heart or life, in his tempers,
thoughts, words, and actions.
6. But what is the rule whereby men are to judge of right and
wrong? Whereby their conscience is to be directed? The rule of Heathens, as the
Apostle teaches elsewhere is “the law written in their hearts;” by the finger of
God; “their conscience also bearing witness,” whether they walk by this rule or
not, “and their thoughts the mean while accusing, or even excusing,” acquitting,
defending them; he kai
apologoumenon. (Rom. 2:14, 15.) But the Christian rule of right and wrong is
the word of God, the writings of the old and New Testament; all that the
Prophets and holy men of old wrote as they were moved by the holy Ghost; all
that Scripture which was given by inspiration of God, and which is indeed
profitable for doctrine, or teaching the whole will of God; for reproof of what
is contrary thereto; for correction or error; and for instruction, or training
us up, in righteousness. (2 Tim. 3:16.)
This is a lantern unto a Christians feet, and a light in all his
paths. This alone he receives as his rule of right or wrong, of whatever is
really good or evil. he esteems nothing good, but what is here enjoined, either
directly or by plain consequence, he accounts nothing evil but what is here
forbidden, either in terms, or by undeniable inference. Whatever the Scripture
neither forbids nor enjoins, either directly or by plain consequence, he
believes to be of an indifferent nature; to be in itself neither good nor evil;
this being the whole and sole outward rule whereby his conscience is to be
directed in all things.
7. And if it be directed thereby, in fact, then hath he the
answer of a good conscience toward God. “A good conscience is what is elsewhere
termed by the Apostle, “a conscience void of offense.” So, what he at one time
expresses thus, “I have lived in all good conscience before God until this day;”
(Acts 23:1; ) he denotes at another, by that
expression, “herein do I exercise myself, to have always a conscience void of
offense toward God, and toward men.” (Acts
24:16.) Now in order to this there is absolutely required, First, a
right understanding of the word of God, or his “holy, and acceptable, and
perfect will” concerning us, as it is revealed therein. For it is impossible we
should walk by a rule, if we do not know what it means. There is, Secondly,
required (which how few have attained!) a true knowledge of ourselves; a
knowledge both of our hearts and lives, or our inward tempers and outward
conversation: Seeing, if we know them not, it is not possible that we should
compare them with our rule. There is required, Thirdly, an agreement of our
hearts and lives, or our tempers and conversation, or our thoughts, and words,
and works, with that rule, with the written word of God. For, without this, if
we have any conscience at all, it can be only an evil conscience. There is,
Fourthly, required, an inward perception of this agreement with our rule: And
this habitual perception, this inward consciousness itself, is properly a
good conscience; or, in other phrase of the Apostle, “a conscience void of
offense, toward God, and toward men.”
8. But whoever desires to have a conscience thus void of
offence, let him see that he lay the right foundation. Let him remember, “other
foundation” of this “can no man lay, than that which is laid, even Jesus
Christ.” And let him also be mindful, that no man buildeth on him but by a
living faith; that no man is a partaker of Christ, until he can clearly testify,
“The life which I now live, I live by faith in the Son of God;” in him who is
now revealed in my heart; who “loved me, and gave himself for me.” Faith
alone is that evidence, that conviction, that demonstration of things invisible,
whereby the eyes of our understanding being opened, and divine light poured in
upon them, we “see the wondrous things of Gods law;” the excellency and purity
of it; the height, and depth, and length, and breadth thereof, and of every
commandment contained therein. It is by faith that, beholding “the light of the
glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ,” we perceive, as in a glass, all that
is in ourselves, yea, the inmost motions of our souls. And by this alone can
that blessed love of God be “shed abroad in our hearts,” which enables us so to
love one another as Christ loved us. By this is that gracious promise fulfilled
unto all the Israel of God, “I will put my laws into their mind, and write” (or
engrave) “them in their hearts;” (Heb.
8:10; ) hereby producing in their souls an entire agreement with his
holy and perfect law, and “bringing into captivity every thought to the
obedience of Christ.”
And, as an evil tree cannot bring forth good fruit, so a good
tree cannot bring forth evil fruit. As the heart therefore of a believer, so
likewise his life, is thoroughly conformed to the rule of Gods commandments; in
a consciousness whereof, he can give glory to God, and say with the Apostle,
“This is our rejoicing, the testimony of our conscience, that in simplicity and
godly sincerity, not with fleshly wisdom, but by the grace of God, we have had
our conversation in the world.”
9. “We have had our conversation:” The Apostle in the original
expresses this by one single word, anestaphemen, but the meaning thereof is exceeding broad,
taking in our whole deportment, yea, every inward as well as outward
circumstance, whether relating to our soul or body. It includes every motion of
our heart, of our tongue, or our hands, and bodily members. It extends to all
our actions and words; to the employment of all our powers and faculties; to the
manner of using every talent we have received, with respect either to God or
man.
10. “We have had our conversation in the world;” even in the
world of the ungodly: Not only among the children of God; (that were
comparatively a little thing;) but among the children of the devil, among those
that lie in wickedness, en toi
poneroi, in the wicked one. What a world is this! how thoroughly
impregnated with the spirit it continually breathes. As our God is good, and
doeth good, so the god of this world and all his children, are evil, and do evil
(so far as they are suffered) to all the children of God. Like their father,
they are always lying in wait, or walking about, seeking whom they may devour;
using fraud or force, secret wiles or open violence, to destroy those who are
not of the world; continually warring against our souls, and, by old or new
weapons, and devices of every kind, labouring to bring them back into the snare
of the devil, into the broad road that leadeth to destruction.
11. We have had our whole conversation, in such a world, “in
simplicity and godly sincerity.” First, in simplicity: This is what our Lord
recommends, under the name of a “single eye.” “The light of the body,” saith he,
“is the eye. If therefore thine eye be single, the whole body shall be full of
light.” The meaning whereof is this: What the eye is to the body, that the
intention is to all the words and actions: If therefore this eye of thy soul be
single, all thy actions and conversation shall be “full of light,” of the light
of heaven, of love, and peace, and joy in the holy Ghost.
We are then simple of heart, when the eye of our mind is singly
fixed on God; when in all things we aim at God alone, as our God, our portion,
our strength, our happiness, our exceeding great reward, our all, in time and
eternity. This is simplicity; when a steady view, a single intention of
promoting his glory, of doing and suffering his blessed will, runs through our
whole soul, fills all our heart, and is the constant spring of all our thoughts,
desires, and purposes.
12. “We have had our conversation in the world,” Secondly, “in
godly sincerity.” the difference between simplicity and sincerity seems to be
chiefly this: Simplicity regards the intention itself, sincerity the execution
of it; and this sincerity relates not barely to our words, but to our whole
conversation, as described above. It is not here to be understood in that narrow
sense, wherein St. Paul himself sometimes uses it, for speaking the truth, or
abstaining from guile, from craft, and dissimulation; but in a more extensive
meaning, as actually hitting the mark, which we aim at by simplicity.
Accordingly, it implies in this place, that we do, in fact, speak and do all to
the glory of God; that all our words are not only pointed at this, but actually
conducive thereto; that all our actions flow on in an even stream, uniformly
subservient to this great end; and that, in our whole lives, we are moving
straight toward God, and that continually; walking steadily on in the highway of
holiness, in the paths of justice, mercy, and truth.
13. This sincerity is termed by the Apostle, godly sincerity, or
the sincerity of God; eilikrineiai
Theou, to prevent our mistaking or confounding it with the sincerity of
the Heathens; (for they had also a kind of sincerity among them, for which they
professed no small veneration;) likewise to denote the object and end of this,
as of every Christian virtue, seeing whatever does not ultimately tend to God,
sinks among “the beggarly elements of the world.” By styling it the sincerity of
God, he also points out the Author or it, the “Father of lights, from whom every
good and perfect gift descendeth;” which is still more clearly declared in the
following words, “Not with fleshly wisdom , but by the grace of God.”
14. “Not with fleshly wisdom:” As if he had said, “We cannot
thus converse in the world, by any natural strength of understanding, neither by
any naturally acquired knowledge or wisdom. We cannot gain this simplicity, or
practise this sincerity, by the force either of good sense, good nature, or good
breeding. It overshoots all our native courage and resolution, as well as all
our precepts of philosophy. The power of custom is not able to train us up to
this, nor the most exquisite rules of human education. Neither could I Paul ever
attain hereto, notwithstanding all the advantages I enjoyed, so long as I was
in the flesh, in my natural state, and pursued it only by fleshly,
natural wisdom.”
And yet surely, if any man could, Paul himself might have
attained thereto by that wisdom: For we can hardly conceive any who was more
highly favoured with all the gifts both of nature and education. Besides his
natural abilities, probably not inferior to those of any person then up the
earth, he had all the benefits of learning, studying at the University of
Tarsus, afterwards brought up at the feet of Gamaliel, a person of the greatest
account, both for knowledge and integrity, that was then in the whole Jewish
nation. And he had all the possible advantages of religious education, being a
Pharisee, the son of a Pharisee, trained up in the very straitest sect or
profession, distinguished from all others by a more eminent strictness. And
herein he had “profited above many” others, “who were his equals” in years,
“being more abundantly zealous” of whatever he thought would please God, and “as
touching the righteousness of the law, blameless.” But it could not be, that he
should hereby attain this simplicity and godly sincerity. It was all but lost
labour; in a deep, piercing sense of which he was at length constrained to cry
out, “The things which were gain to me, those I counted loss, for the excellency
of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord.” (Phil.
3:7, 8.)
15. It could not be that ever he should attain to this but by
the “excellent knowledge of Jesus Christ” our Lord; or, “by the grace of God,” —
another expression of nearly the same import. By “the grace of God” is sometimes
to be understood that free love, that unmerited mercy, by which I a sinner,
through the merits of Christ, am now reconciled to God. But in this place it
rather means that power of God the Holy Ghost, which “worketh in us both to will
and to do of his good pleasure.” As soon as ever the grace of God in the former
sense, his pardoning love, is manifested to our souls, the grace of God in the
latter sense, the power of his Spirit, takes place therein. And now we can
perform, through God, what to man was impossible. Now we can order our
conversation aright. We can do all things in the light and power of that love,
through Christ which strengtheneth us. We now have “the testimony of our
conscience,” which we could never have by fleshly wisdom, “that in simplicity
and godly sincerity, we have our conversation in the world.”
16. This is properly the ground of a Christian’s joy. We may now
therefore readily conceive, how he that hath this testimony in himself rejoiceth
evermore. “My soul,” may he say, “doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit rejoiceth
in God my Saviour.” I rejoice in him, who, of his own unmerited love, of his own
free and tender mercy, “hath called me into this state of salvation,” wherein,
through his power, I now stand. I rejoice, because his spirit beareth witness to
my spirit, that I am bought with the blood of the Lamb; and that, believing in
him, “I am a member of Christ, a child of God, and an inheritor of the kingdom
of heaven.” I rejoice, because the sense of God’s love to me hath, by the same
Spirit, wrought in me to love him, and to love for his sake every child of man,
every soul that hath made. I rejoice, because he gives me to feel in myself “the
mind that was in Christ:” — Simplicity, a single eye to him, in every motion of
my heart; power always to fix the loving eye of my soul on Him who “loved me,
and gave himself for me;” to aim at him alone, at his glorious will, in all I
think, or speak, or do: — Purity, desiring nothing more but God; “crucifying the
flesh with its affections and lusts;” “setting my affections on things above,
not on things of the earth:” — Holiness, a recovery of the image of God, a
renewal of soul “after his likeness:” — And Godly Sincerity, directing all my
words and works, so as to conduce to his glory. In this I likewise rejoice, yea,
and will rejoice, because my conscience beareth me witness in the Holy Ghost, by
the light he continually pours in upon it, that “walk worthy of the vocation
wherewith I am called;” that I “abstain from all appearance of evil,” fleeing
from sin as from the face of a serpent; that as I have opportunity I do all
possible good, in every kind, to all men; that I follow my Lord in all my steps,
and do what is acceptable in his sight. I rejoice, because I both see and feel,
through the inspiration of God’s Holy Spirit, that all my works are wrought in
him, yea, and that it is He who worketh all my works in me. I rejoice in seeing
through the light of God, which shines in my heart, that I have power to walk in
his ways; and that, through his grace, I turn not therefrom, to the right hand
or to the left.
17. Such is the ground and the nature of that joy whereby an
adult Christian rejoiceth evermore. And from all this we may easily infer,
First, that this is not a natural joy. It does not arise from any natural
cause: Not from any sudden flow of spirits. This may give a transient start of
joy; but the Christian rejoiceth always. It cannot be owing to bodily
health or ease; to strength and soundness of constitution: For it is equally
strong in sickness and pain; yea, perhaps far stronger than before. Many
Christians have never experienced any joy, to be compared with that which then
filled their soul, when the body was well nigh worn out with pain, or consumed
away with pining sickness. Least of all can it be ascribed to outward
prosperity, to the favour of men, or plenty of worldly goods; for then, chiefly,
when their faith has been tried as with fire, by all manner of outward
afflictions, have the children of God rejoiced in Him, whom unseen they loved,
even with joy unspeakable. And never surely did men rejoice like those who were
used as “the filth and off scouring of the world;” who wandered to and fro,
being in want of all things; in hunger, in cold, in nakedness; who had trials,
not only of “cruel mockings,” but, “moreover of bonds and imprisonments;” yea,
who, at last, “counted not their lives dear unto themselves, so they might
finish their course with joy.”
18. From the preceding considerations, we may Secondly, infer,
that the joy of a Christian does not arise from any blindness of conscience,
from his not being able to discern good from evil. So far from it, that he was
an utter stranger to this joy, till the eyes of his understanding were opened;
that he knew it not, until he had spiritual senses, fitted to discern spiritual
good and evil. And now the eye of his soul waxeth not dim: He was never so
sharp-sighted before: He has so quick a perception of the smallest things, as is
quite amazing to the natural man. As a mote is visible in the sun-beam, so to
him who is walking in the light, in the beams of the uncreated Sun, every mote
of sin is visible. Nor does he close the eyes of his conscience any more: That
sleep is departed from him. His soul is always broad awake: No more slumber or
folding of the hands to rest! He is always standing on the tower, and hearkening
what his lord will say concerning him; and always rejoicing in this very thing,
in “seeing him that is invisible.”
19. Neither does the joy of a Christian arise, Thirdly, from any
dulness or callousness of conscience. A kind of joy, it is true, may arise from
this, in those whose “foolish hearts are darkened;” whose heart is callous,
unfeeling, dull of sense, and, consequently, without spiritual understanding.
Because of their senseless, unfeeling hearts, they may rejoice even in
committing sin; and this they may probably call liberty! — which is
indeed mere drunkenness of soul, a fatal numbness of spirit, the stupid
insensibility of a sacred conscience. On the contrary, a Christian has the most
exquisite sensibility; such as he could not have conceived before. He never had
such a tenderness of conscience as he has had, since the love of God has reigned
in his heart. And this also is his glory and joy, that God hath heard his daily
prayer: —
O that my tender soul might fly The first abhorr’d
approach of ill; Quick, as the apple of an eye, The slightest touch
of sin to feel.
20. To conclude. Christian joy is joy in obedience; joy in
loving God and keeping his commandments: And yet not in keeping them, as if we
were thereby to fulfil the terms of the covenant of works; as if by any works or
righteousness of ours, we were to procure pardon and acceptance with God. Not
so: We are already pardoned and accepted through the mercy of God in Christ
Jesus. Not as if we were by our own obedience to procure life, life from the
death of sin: This also we have already through the grace of God. Us “hath he
quickened, who were dead in sins;” and now we are “alive to God, through Jesus
Christ our Lord.” But we rejoice in walking according to the covenant of grace,
in holy love and happy obedience. We rejoice in knowing that, “being justified
through his grace,” we have “not received that grace of God in vain: “that God
having freely (not for the sake of our willing or running, but through the blood
of the Lamb) reconciled us to himself, we run, in the strength which he hath
given us, the way of his commandments. He hath “girded us with strength unto the
war,” and we gladly “fight the good fight of faith.” We rejoice through him who
liveth in our hearts by faith, to “lay hold of eternal life.” This is our
rejoicing, that as our “Father worketh hitherto,” so (not by our own might or
wisdom, but through the power of his Spirit, freely given in Christ Jesus) we
also work the works of God. And may he work in us whatsoever is well-pleasing in
his sight! To whom be the praise for ever and ever!
[It may easily be observed, that the preceding discourse
describes the experience of those that are strong in faith: But hereby
those that are weak in faith may be discouraged; to prevent which, the
following discourse may be of use.]