On Mourning for the Dead
Preached at Epworth,
January 11, 1726, at the Funeral of John Griffith: A Hopeful Young Man.
“Now he is dead, wherefore should I fast? Can I bring him back
again? I shall go to him, but he shall not return to me.”
2 Sam. 12:23.
The resolution of a wise and good man, just recovering the use of
his reason and virtue, after the bitterness of soul he had tasted from the
hourly expectation of the death of a beloved son, is comprised in these few but
strong words. He had fasted and wept, and lay all night upon the earth, and
refused not only comfort, but even needful sustenance, whilst the child was
still alive, in hopes that God would be gracious, as well in that as in other
instances, and reverse the just sentence he had pronounced. When it was put in
execution, in the death of the child, he arose and changed his apparel, having
first paid his devotions to his great Master, acknowledging, no doubt, the
mildness of his severity, and owning, with gratitude and humility, the
obligation laid upon him, in that he was not consumed, as well as chastened, by
his heavy hand; he then came into his house, and behaved with his usual
composure and cheerfulness. The reason of this strange alteration in his
proceedings, as it appeared to those who were ignorant of the principles upon
which he acted, he here explains, with great brevity, but in the most beautiful
language, strength of thought, and energy of expression: “Now he is dead,
wherefore should I fast? Can I bring him back again? I shall go to him, but he
shall not return to me.”
“To what end,” saith the resigned mourner, “should I fast, now
the child is dead? Why should I add grief to grief; which, being a volunteer,
increases the affliction I already sustain? Would it not be equally useless to
him and me? Have my tears or complaints the power to refix his soul in her
decayed and forsaken mansion? Or, indeed, would he wish to change, though the
power were in his hands, the happy regions of which lie is now possessed, for
this land of care, pain, and misery? O vain thought! Never can he, never will
he, return to me: Be it my comfort, my constant comfort, when my sorrows bear
hard upon me, that I shall shortly, very shortly, go to him! that I shall soon
awake from this tedious dream of life, which will soon be at an end; and then
shall I gaze upon him; then shall I behold him again, and behold him with that
perfect love, that sincere and elevated affection, to which even the heart of a
parent is here a stranger! when the Lord God shall wipe away all tears from my
eyes; and the least part of my happiness shall be that the sorrow of absence
shall flee away!”
The unprofitable and bad consequences, the sinful nature, of
profuse sorrowing for the dead, are easily deduced from the former part of this
reflection; in the latter, we have the strongest motives to enforce our striving
against it, — a remedy exactly suited to the disease, — a consideration which,
duly applied, will not fail, either to prevent this sorrow, or rescue us from
this real misfortune.
Grief, in general, is the parent of so much evil, and the
occasion of so little good to mankind, that it may be justly wondered how it
found a place in our nature. It was, indeed, of man’s own, not of God’s
creation; who may permit, but never was the author of, evil. The same hour gave
birth to grief and sin, as the same moment will deliver us from both. For
neither did exist before human nature was corrupted, nor will it continue when
that is restored to its ancient perfection.
Indeed, in this present state of things, that wise Being, who
knows well how to extract good out of evil, has shown us one way of making this
universal frailty highly conducive both to our virtue and happiness. Even grief,
if it lead us to repentance, and proceed from a serious sense of our faults, is
not to be repented of; since those who thus sow in tears shall reap in joy. If
we confine it to this particular occasion, it does not impair, but greatly
assist, our imperfect reason; pain, either of body or mind, acting quicker than
reflection, and fixing more deeply in the memory any circumstance it
attends.
From the very nature of grief; which is an uneasiness in the mind
on the apprehension of some present evil, it appears, that its arising in us, on
any other occasion than that of sin, is entirely owing to our want of judgment.
Are any of those accidents, in the language of men termed misfortunes, such as
reproach, poverty, loss of life, or even of friends, real evils? So far from it,
that, if we dare believe our Creator, they are often positive blessings. They
all work together for our good. And our Lord accordingly commands us, even when
the severest loss, that of our reputation, befals us, if it is in a good cause,
as it must be our own fault if it be not, to “rejoice, and be exceeding
glad.”
But what fully proves the utter absurdity of almost all our
grief; except that for our own failings, is, that the occasion of it is always
past before it begins. To recal what has already been, is utterly impossible,
and beyond the reach of Omnipotence itself. Let those who are fond of misery, if
any such there be, indulge their minds in this fruitless inquietude. They who
desire happiness will have a care how they cherish such a passion, as is neither
desirable in itself; nor serves to any good purpose, present or future.
If any species of this unprofitable passion be more particularly
useless than the rest, it is that which we feel when we sorrow for the dead. We
destroy the health of our body, and impair the strength of our minds, and take
no price for those invaluable blessings; we give up our present, without any
prospect of future, advantage; without any probability of either recalling them
hither, or profiting them where they are.
As it is an indifferent proof of our wisdom, it is still a worse
of our affection for the dead. It is the property of envy, not of love, to
repine at another’s happiness; to weep, because all tears are wiped from their
eyes. Shall it disturb us, who call ourselves his friends, that a weary wanderer
has at length come to his wished-for home? Nay, weep we rather for ourselves,
who still want that happiness; even to whom that rest appeareth yet in
prospect.
Gracious is our God and merciful, who, knowing what is in man,
that passion, when it has conquered reason, always takes the appearance
of it, lest we should be misled by this appearance, adds the sanction of his
unerring commands to the natural dictates of our own understanding. The
judgment, perhaps, might be so clouded by passion, as to think it reasonable to
be profuse in our sorrow at parting from a beloved object; but Revelation tells
us, that all occurrences of life must be borne with patience and moderation, —
otherwise we lay a greater weight on our own souls than external accidents can
do without our concurrence, with humility, — because from the offended justice
of God we might well have expected he would have inflicted much worse, and with
resignation, — because we know, whatsoever happens is for our good; and although
it were not, we are not able to contend with, and should not therefore provoke,
Him that is stronger than we.
Against this fault, which is inconsistent with those virtues,
and, therefore, tacitly forbidden in the precepts that enjoin them, St. Paul
warns us in express words: “I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren,
concerning them which are asleep; that ye sorrow not, even as others who have no
hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also who
sleep in Jesus will God bring with him: — Wherefore, comfort one another with
these words.” (1 Thess. 4:13, 14, 18.) And these, indeed, are the only words which
can give lasting comfort to a spirit whom such an occasion hath wounded. Why
should I be so unreasonable, so unkind, as to desire the return of a soul now in
happiness to me, — to this habitation of sin and misery; since I know that the
time will come, yea, is now at hand, when, in spite of the great gulf fixed
between us, I shall shake off these chains and go to him?
What he was, I am both unable to paint in suitable colours, and
unwilling to attempt it. Although the chief; at least the most common, argument
for those laboured encomiums on the dead, which for many years have so much
prevailed among us, is, that there can be no suspicion of flattery; yet we all
know, that the pulpit, on those occasions, has been so frequently prostituted to
those servile ends, that it is now no longer capable of serving them. Men take
it for granted, that what is there said are words of course; that the business
of the speaker is to describe the beauty, not the likeness, of the picture; and,
so it be only well drawn, he cares not whom it resembles: In a word, that his
business is to show his own wit, not the generosity of his friend, by giving him
all the virtues he can think on.
This, indeed, is an end that is visibly served in those
ill-timed commendations; of what other use they are, it is hard to say. It is of
no service to the dead to celebrate his actions; since he has the applause of
God and his holy angels, and also that of his own conscience. And it is of very
little use to the living; since he who desires a pattern may find enough
proposed as such in the sacred writings. What! must one be raised from the dead
to instruct him, whilst Moses, the Prophets, and the blessed Jesus are still
presented to his view in those everlasting tables? Certain it is, that he who
will not imitate these, would not be converted, though one literally rose from
the dead.
Let it suffice to have paid my last duty to him, (whether he is
now hovering over these lower regions, or retired already to the mansions of
eternal glory,) by saying, in a few plain words, such as were his own, and were
always agreeable to him, that he was to his parents an affectionate, dutiful
son; to his acquaintance, an ingenuous, cheerful, good-natured companion; and to
me, a well-tried, sincere friend.
At such a loss, if considered without the alleviating
circumstances, who can blame him that drops a tear? The tender meltings of a
heart dissolved with fondness, when it reflects on the several agreeable moments
which have now taken their flight never to return, give an authority to some
degree of sorrow. Nor will human frailty permit an ordinary acquaintance to take
his last leave of them without it. Who then can conceive, much less describe,
the strong emotion, the secret workings of soul which a parent feels on such an
occasion? None, surely, but those who are parents themselves; unless those few
who have experienced the power of friendship; than which human nature, on this
side of the grave, knows no closer, no softer, no stronger tie!
At the tearing asunder of these sacred bands, well may we allow,
without blame, some parting pangs; but the difficulty is, to put as speedy a
period to them as reason and religion command us. What can give us sufficient
ease after that rupture, which has left such an aching void in our breasts?
What, indeed, but the reflection already mentioned, which can never be
inculcated too often, — that we are hastening to him ourselves; that, pass but a
few years, perhaps hours, which will soon be over, and not only this, but all
other desires will be satisfied; when we shall exchange the gaudy shadow of
pleasure we have enjoyed, for sincere, substantial, untransitory happiness?
With this consideration well imprinted in our minds, it is far
better, as Solomon observes, to go to the house of mourning, than to the house
of feasting The one embraces the soul, disarms our resolution, and lays us open
to an attack: The other cautions us to recollect our reason, and stand upon our
guard and infuses that noble steadiness, and seriousness of temper, which it is
not in the power of an ordinary stroke to discompose. Such objects naturally
induce us to lay it to heart, that the next summons may be our own; and that
since death is the end of all men without exception, it is high time for the
living to lay it to heart.
If we are, at any time, in danger of being overcome by dwelling
too long on the gloomy side of this prospect, to the giving us pain, the making
us unfit for the duties and offices of life, impairing our faculties of body or
mind, — which proceedings, as has been already shown, are both absurd,
unprofitable, and sinful; let us immediately recur to the bright side, and
reflect, with gratitude as well as humility, that our time passeth away like a
shadow; and that, when we awake from this momentary dream, we shall then have a
clearer view of that latter day in which our Redeemer shall stand upon the
earth; when this corruptible shall put on incorruption, and this mortal shall be
clothed with immortality; and when we shall sing, with the united choirs of men
and angels, “O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?”