Upon our Lord’s Sermon on the Mount
Discourse 2
“Blessed are the meek: For they shall inherit the earth. Blessed
are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: For they shall be
filled. Blessed are the merciful: For they shall obtain mercy.”
Matt. 5:5–7
I. 1. When “the winter is past,” when “the time of singing is
come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in the land;” when He that comforts
the mourners is now returned, “that he may abide with them for ever;” when, at
the brightness of his presence, the clouds disperse, the dark clouds of doubt
and uncertainty, the storms of fear flee away, the waves of sorrow subside, and
their spirit again rejoiceth in God their Saviour; then is it that this word is
eminently fulfilled; then those whom he hath comforted can bear witness,
“Blessed,” or happy, “are the meek; for they shall inherit the earth.”
2. But who are “the meek?” Not those who grieve at nothing,
because they know nothing; who are not discomposed at the evils that occur,
because they discern not evil from good. Not those who are sheltered from the
shocks of life by a stupid insensibility; who have, either by nature or art, the
virtue of stocks and stones, and resent nothing, because they feel nothing.
Brute philosophers are wholly unconcerned in this matter. Apathy is as far from
meekness as from humanity. So that one would not easily conceive how any
Christians of the purer ages, especially any of the Fathers of the Church, could
confound these, and mistake one of the foulest errors of Heathenism for a branch
of true Christianity.
3. Nor does Christian meekness imply, the being without zeal for
God, any more than it does ignorance or insensibility. No; it keeps clear of
every extreme, whether in excess or defect. It does not destroy but balance the
affections, which the God of nature never designed should be rooted out by
grace, but only brought and kept under due regulations. It poises the mind
aright. It holds an even scale, with regard to anger, and sorrow, and fear;
preserving the mean in every circumstance of life, and not declining either to
the right hand or the left.
4. Meekness, therefore, seems properly to relate to ourselves[.]
But it may be referred either to God or our neighbour. When this due composure
of mind has reference to God, it is usually termed resignation; a calm
acquiescence in whatsoever is his will concerning us, even though it may not be
pleasing to nature; saying continually, “It is the Lord; let him do what seemeth
him good.” When we consider it more strictly with regard to ourselves, we style
it patience or contentedness. When it is exerted toward other men, then it is
mildness to the good, and gentleness to the evil.
5. They who are truly meek, can clearly discern what is evil;
and they can also suffer it. They are sensible of everything of this kind, but
still meekness holds the reins. They are exceeding “zealous for the Lord of
hosts;” but their zeal is always guided by knowledge, and tempered, in every
thought , and word, and work, with the love of man, as well as the love of God.
They do not desire to extinguish any of the passions which God has for wise ends
implanted in their nature; but they have the mastery of all: They hold them all
in subjection, and employ them only in subservience to those ends. And thus even
the harsher and more unpleasing passions are applicable to the noblest purposes;
even hatred, and anger, and fear, when engaged against sin, and regulated by
faith and love, are as walls and bulwarks to the soul, so that the wicked one
cannot approach to hurt it.
6. It is evident, this divine temper is not only to abide but to
increase in us day by day. Occasions of exercising, and thereby increasing it,
will never be wanting while we remain upon earth. “We have need of patience,
that after we have done” and suffered “the will of God, we may receive the
promise.” We have need of resignation, that we may in all circumstances say,
“Not as I will, but as thou wilt.” And we have need of “gentleness toward all
men;” but especially toward the evil and unthankful: Otherwise we shall be
overcome of evil, instead of overcoming evil with good.
7. Nor does meekness restrain only the outward act, as the
Scribes and Pharisees taught of old, and the miserable Teachers who are not
taught of God will not fail to do in all ages. Our Lord guards against this, and
shows the true extent of it, in the following words: “Ye have heard that it was
said by them of old time, Thou shalt not kill; and whosoever shall kill, shall
be in danger of the judgment:” (Matt.
5:21.) “But I say unto you, That whosoever is angry with his brother
without a cause, shall be in danger of the judgment: And whosoever shall say to
his brother, Raca, shall be in danger of the council: But whosoever shall say,
Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell-fire.”
8. Our Lord here ranks under the head of murder, even that anger
which goes no farther than the heart; which does not show itself by an outward
unkindness, no, not so much as a passionate word. “Whosoever is angry with his
brother,” with any man living, seeing we are all brethren; whosoever feels any
unkindness in his heart, any temper contrary to love; whosoever is angry without
a cause, without a sufficient cause, or farther than that cause requires, “shall
be in danger of the judgment;” _enochos estai, shall, in that moment,
be obnoxious to the righteous judgment of God.
But would not one be inclined to prefer the reading of those
copies which omit the word eike, without a cause? Is it not entirely
superfluous? For if anger at persons be a temper contrary to love, how
can there be a cause, a sufficient cause for it, any that will justify it in the
sight of God?
Anger at sin we allow. In this sense we may be angry, and yet
we sin not. In this sense our Lord himself is once recorded to have been angry:
he looked round about upon them with anger, being grieved for the hardness of
their hearts. he was grieved at the sinners, and angry at the sin. And this is
undoubtedly right before God.
9. And whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca; whosoever
shall give way to anger, so as to utter any contemptuous word. It is observed by
commentators, that Raca is a Syriac word, which properly signifies, empty,
vain, foolish; so that it is as inoffensive an expression as can well be
used, toward one at whom we are displeased. And yet, whosoever shall use this,
as our Lord assures us, shall be in danger of the council; rather, shall be
obnoxious thereto: he shall be liable to a severer sentence from the Judge of
all the earth.
“But whosoever shall say, Thou fool;” — whosoever shall so give
place to the devil, as to break out into reviling, into designedly reproachful
and contumelious language, “shall be obnoxious to hell-fire;” shall, in that
instant, be liable to the highest condemnation. It should be observed, that our
Lord describes all these as obnoxious to capital punishment. The first, to
strangling, usually inflicted on those who were condemned in one of the inferior
courts; the second, to stoning, which was frequently inflicted on those who were
condemned by the great Council at Jerusalem; the third, to burning alive,
inflicted only on the highest offenders, in the “valley of the sons of Hinnom;”
Ge Hennon, from which that
word is evidently taken which we translate “hell.”
10. And whereas men naturally imagine, that God will excuse
their defect in some duties, for their exactness in others; our Lord next takes
care to cut off that vain, though common imagination. He shows, that it is
impossible for any sinner to commute with God; who will not accept one
duty for another, nor take a part of obedience for the whole. He warns us, that
the performing our duty to God will not excuse us from our duty to our
neighbour; that works of piety, as they are called, will be so far from
commending us to God, if we are wanting in charity, that, on the contrary, that
want of charity will make all those works an abomination to the Lord.
“Therefore, if thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there
rememberest that thy brother hath aught against thee,” — on account of thy
unkind behaviour toward him, of thy calling him “Raca,” or, “Thou fool;” think
not that thy gift will atone for thy anger; or that it will find any acceptance
with God, so long as thy conscience is defiled with the guilt of unrepented sin.
“Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to
thy brother,” (at least do all that in thee lies toward being reconciled,) “and
then come and offer thy gift.” (Matt.
5:23, 24.)
11. And let there be no delay in what so nearly concerneth thy
soul. “Agree with thine adversary quickly;” — now; upon the spot; “whiles thou
art in the way with him;” if it be possible, before he go out of thy sight;
“lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the judge;” lest he appeal to
God, the Judge of all; “and the judge deliver thee to the officer;” to Satan,
the executioner of the wrath of God; “and thou be cast into prison;” into hell,
there to be reserved to the judgment of the great day: “Verily, I say unto thee,
Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost
farthing.” But this it is impossible for thee ever to do; seeing thou hast
nothing to pay. Therefore, if thou art once in that prison, the smoke of thy
torment must “ascend up for ever and ever.”
12. Meantime “the meek shall inherit the earth.” Such is the
foolishness of worldly wisdom! The wise of the world had warned them again and
again, — that if they did not resent such treatment, if they would tamely suffer
themselves to be thus abused, there would be no living for them upon earth; that
they would never be able to procure the common necessaries of life, nor to keep
even what they had; that they could expect no peace, no quiet possession, no
enjoyment of anything. Most true, — suppose there were no God in the world; or,
suppose he did not concern himself with the children of men: But, “when God
ariseth to judgment, and to help all the meek upon earth,” how doth he laugh all
this heathen wisdom to scorn, and turn the “fierceness of man to his praise!” He
takes a peculiar care to provide them with all things needful for life and
godliness; he secures to them the provision he hath made, in spite of the force,
fraud, or malice of men; and what he secures he gives them richly to enjoy. It
is sweet to them, be it little or much. As in patience they possess their souls,
so they truly possess whatever God hath given them. They are always content,
always pleased with what they have: It pleases them because it pleases God: So
that while their heart, their desire, their joy is in heaven, they may truly be
said to “inherit the earth.”
13. But there seems to be a yet farther meaning in these words,
even that they shall have a more eminent part in “the new earth, wherein
dwelleth righteousness;” in that inheritance, a general description of which
(and the particulars we shall know hereafter) St. John has given in the
twentieth chapter of the Revelation: “And I saw an angel come down from heaven,
— and he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, — and bound him a thousand
years. — And I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of
Jesus, and for the word of God, and of them which had not worshipped the Beast,
neither his image, neither had received his mark upon their foreheads or in
their hands; and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years. But the
rest of the dead lived not again, until the thousand years were finished. This
is the first resurrection. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be priests
of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years.” [Rev. 20:6]
II. 1. our Lord has hitherto been more immediately employed in
removing the hindrances of true religion: Such is pride, the first, grand
hindrance of all religion, which is taken away by poverty of spirit; levity and
thoughtlessness, which prevent any religion from taking root in the soul, till
they are removed by holy mourning; such are anger, impatience, discontent, which
are all healed by Christian meekness. And when once these hindrances are
removed, these evil diseases of the soul, which were continually raising false
cravings therein, and filling it with sickly appetites, the native appetite of a
heaven-born spirit returns; it hungers and thirsts after righteousness: And
“blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness; for they shall
be filled.”
2. Righteousness, as was observed before, is the image of God,
the mind which was in Christ Jesus. It is every holy and heavenly temper in one;
springing from, as well as terminating in, the love of God, as our Father and
Redeemer, and the love of all men for his sake.
3. “Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after” this: In
order fully to understand which expression, we should observe, First, that
hunger and thirst are the strongest of all our bodily appetites. In like manner
this hunger in the soul, this thirst after the image of God, is the strongest of
all our spiritual appetites, when it is once awakened in the heart: Yea, it
swallows up all the rest in that one great desire, — to be renewed after the
likeness of Him that created us. We should, Secondly, observe, that from the
time we begin to hunger and thirst, those appetites do not cease, but are more
and more craving and importunate, till we either eat and drink, or die. And even
so, from the time that we begin to hunger and thirst after the whole mind which
was in Christ, these spiritual appetites do not cease, but cry after their food
with more and more importunity; nor can they possibly cease, before they are
satisfied, while there is any spiritual life remaining. We may, Thirdly,
observe, that hunger and thirst are satisfied with nothing but meat and drink.
If you would give to him that is hungry all the world beside, all the elegance
of apparel, all the trappings of state, all the treasure upon earth, yea
thousands of gold and silver; if you would pay him ever so much honour; — he
regards it not: All these things are then of no account with him. He would still
say, “These are not the things I want; give me food, or else I die.” The very
same is the case with every soul that truly hungers and thirsts after
righteousness. He can find no comfort in anything but this: He can be satisfied
with nothing else. Whatever you offer besides, it is lightly esteemed: Whether
it be riches, or honour, or pleasure, he still says, “This is not the thing
which I want! Give me love, or else I die!”
4. And it is as impossible to satisfy such a soul, a soul that
is athirst for God, the living God, with what the world accounts religion, as
with what they account happiness. The religion of the world implies three
things: (1.) The doing no harm, the abstaining from outward sin; at least from
such as is scandalous, as robbery, theft, common swearing, drunkenness: (2.) The
doing good, the relieving the poor; the being charitable, as it is called: (3.)
The using the means of grace; at least the going to church and to the Lords
Supper. He in whom these three marks are found is termed by the world a
religious man. But will this satisfy him who hungers after God? No: It is not
food for his soul. He wants a religion of a nobler kind, a religion higher and
deeper than this. He can no more feed on this poor, shallow, formal thing, than
he can “fill his belly with the east wind.” True, he is careful to abstain from
the very appearance of evil; he is zealous of good works; he attends all the
ordinances of God: But all this is not what he longs for. This is only the
outside of that religion, which he insatiably hungers after. The knowledge of
God in Christ Jesus; “the life which is hid with Christ in God;” the being
“joined unto the Lord in one Spirit;” the having “fellowship with the Father and
the Son;” the “walking in the light as God is in the light;” the being “purified
even as He is pure;” — this is the religion, the righteousness, he thirsts
after: Nor can he rest, till he thus rests in God.
5. “Blessed are they who” thus “hunger and thirst after
righteousness; for they shall be filled.” They shall be filled with the things
which they long for; even with righteousness and true holiness. God shall
satisfy them with the blessings of his goodness, with the felicity of his
chosen. He shall feed them with the bread of heaven, with the manna of his love.
He shall give them to drink of his pleasures as out of the river, which he that
drinketh of shall never thirst, only for more and more of the water of life.
This thirst shall endure for ever.
The painful thirst, the fond desire, Thy joyous presence
shall remove; But my full soul shall still require A whole eternity of
love.
6. Whosoever then thou art, to whom God hath given to “hunger
and thirst after righteousness,” cry unto him that thou mayest never lose that
inestimable gift, — that this divine appetite may never cease. If many rebuke
thee, and bid thee hold thy peace, regard them not; yea, cry so much the more,
“Jesus, Master, have mercy on me!” “Let me not live, but to be holy as thou art
holy!” No more “spend thy money for that which is not bread, nor thy labour for
that which satisfieth not.” Canst thou hope to dig happiness out of the earth, —
to find it in the things of the world? o trample under foot all its pleasures,
despise its honours, count its riches as dung and dross, — yea, and all the
things which are beneath the sun, —“for the excellency of the knowledge of
Christ Jesus,” for the entire renewal of thy soul in that image of God wherein
it was originally created. Beware of quenching that blessed hunger and thirst,
by what the world calls religion; a religion of form, of outward show, which
leaves the heart as earthly and sensual as ever. Let nothing satisfy thee but
the power of godliness, but a religion that is spirit and life; thy dwelling in
God and God in thee, — the being an inhabitant of eternity; the entering in by
the blood of sprinkling “within the veil,” and sitting “in heavenly places with
Christ Jesus.”
III. 1. And the more they are filled with the life of God, the
more tenderly will they be concerned for those who are still without God in the
world, still dead in trespasses and sins. Nor shall this concern for others lose
its reward. “Blessed are the merciful; for they shall obtain mercy.”
The word used by our Lord more immediately implies the
compassionate, the tender-hearted; those who, far from despising, earnestly
grieve for, those that do not hunger after God.
This eminent part of brotherly love is here, by a common
figure, put for the whole; so that “the merciful,” in the full sense of the
term, are they who love their neighbours as themselves.”
2. Because of the vast importance of this love, — without
which, “though we spake with the tongues of men and angels, though we had the
gift of prophecy, and understood all mysteries, and all knowledge; though we had
all faith, so as to remove mountains; yea, though we gave all our goods to feed
the poor, and our very bodies to be burned, it would profit us nothing,” — the
wisdom of God has given us, by the Apostle Paul, a full and particular account
of it; by considering which we shall most clearly discern who are the merciful
that shall obtain mercy.
3. “Charity,” or love, (as it were to be wished it had been
rendered throughout, being a far plainer and less ambiguous word,) the love of
our neighbour as Christ hath loved us, “suffereth long;” is patient toward all
men: It suffers all the weakness, ignorance, errors, infirmities, all the
frowardness and littleness of faith, of the children of God; all the malice and
wickedness of the children of the world. And it suffers all this, not only for a
time, for a short season, but to the end; still feeding our enemy when he
hungers; if he thirst, still giving him drink; thus continually “heaping coals
of fire,” of melting love, “upon his head.”
4. And in every step toward this desirable end, the “overcoming
evil with good,” “love is kind:” (chresteuetai, a word not easily translated:) It is
soft, mild, benign. It stands at the utmost distance from moroseness,
from all harshness or sourness of spirit; and inspires the sufferer at once with
the most amiable sweetness, and the most fervent and tender affection.
5. Consequently, “love envieth not:” It is impossible it
should; it is directly opposite to that baneful temper. It cannot be, that he
who has this tender affection to all, who earnestly wishes all temporal and
spiritual blessings, all good things in this world and the world to come, to
every soul that God hath made, should be pained at his bestowing any good gift
on any child of man. If he has himself received the same, he does not grieve,
but rejoice, that another partakes of the common benefit. If he has not, he
blesses God that his brother at least has, and is herein happier than himself.
And the greater his love, the more does he rejoice in the blessings of all
mankind; the farther is he removed from every kind and degree of envy toward any
creature.
6. Love ou
perpereuetai, not vaunteth not itself; which coincides with the very next
words; but rather, (as the word likewise properly imports,) is not rash
or hasty in judging; it will not hastily condemn any one. It does not
pass a severe sentence, on a slight or sudden view of things: It first weighs
all the evidence, particularly that which is brought in favour of the accused. A
true lover of his neighbour is not like the generality of men, who, even in
cases of the nicest nature, see a little, presume a great deal, and so jump to
the conclusion. No: he proceeds with wariness and circumspection, taking heed to
every step; willingly subscribing to that rule of the ancient heathen, (o where
will the modern Christian appear!) I am so far from lightly believing what one
man says against another, that I will not easily believe what a man says against
himself. I will always allow him second thoughts, and many times counsel
too.
7. It follows, love “is not puffed up:” It does not incline or
suffer any man “to think more highly of himself than he ought to think;” but
rather to think soberly: Yea, it humbles the soul unto the dust. It destroys all
high conceits, engendering pride; and makes us rejoice to be as nothing, to be
little and vile, the lowest of all, the servant of all. They who are “kindly
affectioned one to another with brotherly love,” cannot but “in honour prefer
one another.” Those who, having the same love, are of one accord, do in
lowliness of mind “each esteem other better than themselves.”
8. “It doth not behave itself unseemly:” It is not rude, or
willingly offensive to any. It “renders to all their due; fear to whom fear,
honour to whom honour;” courtesy, civility, humanity to all the world; in their
several degrees “honouring all men.” A late writer defines good breeding, nay,
the highest degree of it, politeness, “A continual desire to please, appearing
in all the behaviour.” But if so, there is none so well-bred as a Christian, a
lover of all mankind. For he cannot but desire to “please all men for their good
to edification:” And this desire cannot be hid; it will necessarily appear in
all his intercourse with men. For his “love is without dissimulation:” It will
appear in all his actions and conversation; yea, and will constrain him, though
without guile, “to become all things to all men, if by any means he may save
some.”
9. And in becoming all things to all men, “love seeketh not her
own.” In striving to please all men, the lover of mankind has no eye at all to
his own temporal advantage. he covets no mans silver, or gold, or apparel: He
desires nothing but the salvation of their souls: Yea, in some sense, he may be
said, not to seek his own spiritual, any more than temporal, advantage;
for while he is on the full stretch to save their souls from death, he, as it
were, forgets himself. He does not think of himself, so long as that zeal for
the glory of God swallows him up. Nay, at some times he may almost seem, through
an excess of love, to give up himself, both his soul and his body; while he
cries out, with Moses, “o, this people have sinned a great sin; yet now, if thou
wilt forgive their sin ; and if not, blot me out of the book which thou hast
written;” (Exod. 32:31, 32; ) — or, with St. Paul, “I could wish that
myself were accursed from Christ, for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the
flesh!” (Rom. 9:3.)
10. No marvel that such “love is not provoked:” ou paroxynetai. Let it be observed,
the word easily, strangely inserted in the translation, is not in the
original: St. Pauls words are absolute. “Love is not provoked:” It is not
provoked to unkindness toward any one. occasions indeed will frequently occur;
outward provocations of various kinds; but love does not yield to provocation;
it triumphs over all. In all trials it looketh unto Jesus, and is more than
conqueror in his love.
It is not improbable that our translators inserted that word,
as it were, to excuse the Apostle; who, as they supposed, might otherwise
appear to be wanting in the very love which he so beautifully describes. They
seem to have supposed this from a phrase in the Acts of the Apostles; which is
likewise very inaccurately translated. When Paul and Barnabas disagreed
concerning John, the translation runs thus, “And the contention was so sharp
between them, that they departed asunder.” (Acts
15:39.) This naturally induces the reader to suppose, that they were
equally sharp therein; that St. Paul, who was undoubtedly right, with regard to
the point in question, (it being quite improper to take John with them again,
who had deserted them before,) was as much provoked as Barnabas, who gave such a
proof of his anger, as to leave the work for which he had been set apart by the
Holy Ghost. But the original imports no such thing; nor does it affirm that St.
Paul was provoked at all. It simply says, egeneto oun paroxysmos, And there was a sharpness, a
paroxysm of anger; in consequence of which Barnabas left St. Paul, took
John, and went his own way. Paul then chose Silas and departed, being
recommended by the brethren to the grace of God; (which is not said concerning
Barnabas;) and he went through Syria and Cilicia, as he had proposed,
“confirming the churches.” [Acts 15:39–41] But to return.
11. Love prevents a thousand provocations which would otherwise
arise, because it “thinketh no evil.” Indeed the merciful man cannot avoid
knowing many things that are evil, he cannot but see them with his own eyes, and
hear them with his own ears. For love does not put out his eyes, so that it is
impossible for him not to see that such things are done; neither does it take
away his understanding, any more than his senses, so that he cannot but know
that they are evil. For instance: When he sees a man strike his neighbour, or
hears him blaspheme God, he cannot either question the thing done, or the words
spoken, or doubt of their being evil. Yet, ou logizetai to kakon. The word logizetai, thinketh, does not refer either to our seeing
and hearing, or to the first and involuntary acts of our understanding; but to
our willingly thinking what we need not; our inferring evil, where
it does not appear; to our reasoning concerning things which we do not
see; our supposing what we have neither seen nor heard. This is what true
love absolutely destroys. It tears up, root and branch, all imagining
what we have not known. It casts out all jealousies, all evil surmisings, all
readiness to believe evil. It is frank, open, unsuspicious; and, as it cannot
design, so neither does it fear, evil.
12. It rejoiceth not in iniquity; common as this is, even among
those who bear the name of Christ, who scruple not to rejoice over their enemy,
when he falleth either into affliction, or error, or sin. Indeed, how hardly can
they avoid this, who are zealously attached to any party! how difficult is it
for them not to be pleased with any fault which they discover in those of the
opposite party, with any real or supposed blemish, either in their principles or
practice! What warm defender of any cause is clear of these? Yea, who is so calm
as to be altogether free? Who does not rejoice when his adversary makes a false
step, which he thinks will advantage his own cause? only a man of love. he alone
weeps over either the sin or folly of his enemy, takes no pleasure in hearing or
in repeating it, but rather desires that it may be forgotten for ever.
13. But he rejoiceth in the truth, wheresoever it is found; in
“the truth which is after godliness;” bringing forth its proper fruit, holiness
of heart, and holiness of conversation. he rejoices to find that even those who
oppose him, whether with regard to opinions, or some points of practice, are
nevertheless lovers of God, and in other respects unreprovable. He is glad to
hear good of them, and to speak all he can consistently with truth and justice.
Indeed, good in general is his glory and joy, wherever diffused throughout the
race of mankind. As a citizen of the world, he claims a share in the happiness
of all the inhabitants of it. Because he is a man, he is not unconcerned in the
welfare of any man; but enjoys whatsoever brings glory to God, and promotes
peace and good-will among men.
14. This “love covereth all things:” (So, without all doubt,
panta stegei should be
translated; for otherwise it would be the very same with panta hypomenei, “endureth all things:”) Because
the merciful man rejoiceth not in iniquity, neither does he willingly make
mention of it. Whatever evil he sees, hears, or knows, he nevertheless conceals,
so far as he can without making himself “partaker of other men’s sins.”
Wheresoever or with whomsoever he is, if he sees anything which he approves not,
it goes not out of his lips, unless to the person concerned, if haply he may
gain his brother. So far is he from making the faults or failures of others the
matter of his conversation, that of the absent he never does speak at all,
unless he can speak well. A tale-bearer, a backbiter, a whisperer, an
evil-speaker, is to him all one as a murderer. He would just as soon cut his
neighbour’s throat, as thus murder his reputation. Just as soon would he think
of diverting himself by setting fire to his neighbour’s house, as of thus
“scattering abroad arrows, fire-brands, and death,” and saying, “Am I not in
sport?”
He makes one only exception. Sometimes he is convinced that it
is for the glory of God, or (which comes to the same) the good of his neighbour,
that an evil should not be covered. In this case, for the benefit of the
innocent, he is constrained to declare the guilty. But even here, (1.) He will
not speak at all, till love, superior love, constrains him. (2.) He cannot do it
from a general confused view of doing good, or promoting the glory of God, but
from a clear sight of some particular end, some determinate good which he
pursues. (3.) Still he cannot speak, unless he be fully convinced that this very
means is necessary to that end; that the end cannot be answered, at least not so
effectually, by any other way. (4.) He then doeth it with the utmost sorrow and
reluctance; using it as the last and worst medicine, a desperate remedy in a
desperate case, a kind of poison never to be used but to expel poison.
Consequently, (5.) He uses it as sparingly as possible. And this he does with
fear and trembling, lest he should transgress the law of love by speaking too
much, more than he would have done by not speaking at all.
15. Love “believeth all things.” It is always willing to think
the best; to put the most favourable construction on everything. It is ever
ready to believe whatever may tend to the advantage of any one’s character. It
is easily convinced of (what it earnestly desires) the innocence or integrity of
any man; or, at least, of the sincerity of his repentance, if he had once erred
from the way. It is glad to excuse whatever is amiss; to condemn the offender as
little as possible; and to make all the allowance for human weakness which can
be done without betraying the truth of God.
16. And when it can no longer believe, then love “hopeth all
things.” Is any evil related of any man? Love hopes that the relation is not
true, that the thing related was never done. Is it certain it was? — “But
perhaps it was not done with such circumstances as are related; so that,
allowing the fact, there is room to hope it was not so ill as it is
represented.” Was the action apparently undeniably evil? Love hopes the
intention was not so. Is it clear, the design was evil too? — “Yet might it not
spring from the settled temper of the heart, but from a start of passion, or
from some vehement temptation, which hurried the man beyond himself.” And even
when it cannot be doubted, but all the actions, designs, and tempers are equally
evil; still love hopes that God will at last make bare his arm, and get himself
the victory; and that there shall be “joy in heaven over” this “one sinner that
repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons that need no
repentance.”
17. Lastly. It “endureth all things.” This completes the
character of him that is truly merciful. He endureth not some, not many, things
only; not most, but absolutely all things. Whatever the injustice, the
malice, the cruelty of men can inflict, he is able to suffer. He calls nothing
intolerable; he never says of anything, “This is not to be borne.” No; he can
not only do, but suffer, all things through Christ which strengtheneth him. And
all he suffers does not destroy his love, nor impair it in the least. It is
proof against all. It is a flame that burns even in the midst of the great deep.
“Many waters cannot quench” his “love, neither can the floods drown it.” It
triumphs over all. It “never faileth,” either in time or in eternity.
In obedience to
what heaven decrees, Knowledge shall fail, and prophecy shall cease; But lasting
charity’s more ample sway, Nor bound by time, nor subject to decay, In happy triumph
shall for ever live, And endless good diffuse, and endless praise
receive.
So shall “the merciful obtain mercy;” not only by the blessing
of God upon all their ways, by his now repaying the love they bear to their
brethren a thousand fold into their own bosom; but likewise by “an exceeding and
eternal weight of glory,” in the “kingdom prepared for them from the beginning
of the world.”
18. For a little while you may say, “Woe is me, that I” am
constrained to “dwell with Mesech, and to have my habitation among the tents of
Kedar!” You may pour out your soul, and bemoan the loss of true, genuine love in
the earth: Lost indeed! You may well say, (but not in the ancient sense,) “See
how these Christians love one another!” these Christian kingdoms, that
are tearing out each other’s bowels, desolating one another with fire and sword!
these Christian armies, that are sending each by thousands, by ten thousands,
quick into hell! these Christian nations, that are all on fire with intestine
broils, party against party, faction against faction! these Christian cities,
where deceit and fraud, oppression and wrong, yea, robbery and murder, go not
out of their streets! these Christian families, torn asunder with envy,
jealousy, anger, domestic jars, without number, without end! yea, what is most
dreadful, most to be lamented of all, these Christian Churches! —Churches (“tell
it not in Gath,” — but, alas! how can we hide it, either from Jews, Turks, or
Pagans?) that bear the name of Christ, the Prince of Peace, and wage continual
war with each other! that convert sinners by burning them alive! that are “drunk
with the blood of the saints!” — Does this praise belong only to “Babylon the
Great, the mother of harlots and abominations of the earth?” Nay, verily; but
Reformed Churches (so called) have fairly learned to tread in her steps.
Protestant Churches too know to persecute, when they have power in their hands,
even unto blood. And, meanwhile, how do they also anathematize each other!
devote each other to the nethermost hell! What wrath, what contention, what
malice, what bitterness, is everywhere found among them, even where they agree
in essentials, and only differ in opinions, or in the circumstantials of
religion! Who follows after only the “things that make for peace, and
things wherewith one may edify another?” O God! how long? Shall thy promise
fail? Fear it not, ye little flock! Against hope, believe in hope! It is your
Father’s good pleasure yet to renew the face of the earth. Surely all these
things shall come to an end, and the inhabitants of the earth shall learn
righteousness. “Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall
they know war any more.” “The mountains of the Lord’s house shall be established
on the top of the mountains;” and “all the kingdoms of the earth shall become
the kingdoms of our God.” “They shall not” then “hurt or destroy in all his holy
mountain;” but they shall call their “walls salvation, and their gates praise.”
They shall all be without spot or blemish, loving one another, even as Christ
hath loved us. — Be thou part of the first-fruits, if the harvest is not yet. Do
thou love thy neighbor as thyself. The Lord God fill thy heart with such a love
to every soul, that thou mayest be ready to lay down thy life for his sake! May
thy soul continually overflow with love, swallowing up every unkind and unholy
temper, till he calleth thee up into the region of love, there to reign with him
for ever and ever!