Upon our Lord’s Sermon on the Mount
Discourse 4
“Ye are the salt of the earth. But if the salt hath lost its
savour, wherewith shall it be salted? It is thenceforth good for nothing but to
be cast out, and trodden under foot of men.
“Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill
cannot be hid.
“Neither do men light a candle and put it under a bushel, but on
a candlestick; and it giveth light to all that are in the house.
“Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good
works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.”
Matt. 5:13–16
1. The beauty of holiness, of that inward man of the heart which
is renewed after the image of God, cannot but strike every eye which God hath
opened, — every enlightened understanding. The ornament of a meek, humble,
loving spirit, will at least excite the approbation of all those who are capable
in any degree, of discerning spiritual good and evil. From the hour men begin to
emerge out of the darkness which covers the giddy, unthinking world, they cannot
but perceive how desirable a thing it is to be thus transformed into the
likeness of him that created us. This inward religion bears the shape of God so
visibly impressed upon it, that a soul must be wholly immersed in flesh and
blood when he can doubt of its divine original. We may say of this, in a
secondary sense, even as of the Son of God himself, that it is the “brightness
of his glory, the express image of his person;” apaugasma tes doxe autou, the beaming forth of his eternal
glory; and yet so tempered and softened, that even the children of men may
herein see God and live; charakter tes
hupostaseos autou, the character, the stamp, the living impression, of
his person, who is the fountain of beauty and love, the original source of all
excellency and perfection.
2. If religion, therefore, were carried no farther than this,
they could have no doubt concerning it; they should have no objection against
pursuing it with the whole ardour of their souls. “But why,” say they, “is it
clogged with other things? What need of loading it with doing and
suffering? These are what damps the vigour of the soul, and sinks it down
to earth again. Is it not enough to follow after charity; to soar upon the wings
of love? Will it not suffice to worship God, who is a Spirit, with the spirit of
our minds, without encumbering ourselves with outward things, or even thinking
of them at all? Is it not better, that the whole extent of our thought should be
taken up with high and heavenly contemplation; and that instead of busying
ourselves at all about externals, we should only commune with God in our
hearts?”
3. Many eminent men have spoken thus; have advised us “to cease
from all outward action;” wholly to withdraw from the world; to leave the body
behind us; to abstract ourselves from all sensible things; to have no concern at
all about outward religion, but to work all virtues in the will; as the
far more excellent way, more perfective of the soul, as well as more acceptable
to God.
4. It needed not that any should tell our Lord of this
masterpiece of the wisdom from beneath, this fairest of all the devices
wherewith Satan hath ever perverted the right ways of the Lord! And o! what
instruments hath he found, from time to time, to employ in this his service, to
wield this grand engine of hell against some of the most important truths of
God! — men that would “deceive, if it were possible, the very elect,” the men of
faith and love; yea, that have for a season deceived and led away no
inconsiderable number of them, who have fallen in all ages into the gilded
snare, and hardly escaped with the skin of their teeth.
5. But has our Lord been wanting on his part? has he not
sufficiently guarded us against this pleasing delusion? has he not armed us here
with armour of proof against Satan “transformed into an angel of light?” Yea,
verily: he here defends, in the clearest and strongest manner, the active,
patient religion he had just described. What can be fuller and plainer, than the
words he immediately subjoins to what he had said of doing and suffering? “Ye
are the salt of the earth: But if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall
it be salted? It is thenceforth good for nothing but to be cast out, and trodden
under foot of men. Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill
cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle and put it under a bushel, but on a
candlestick; and it giveth light to all that are in the house. Let your light so
shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father
which is in heaven.”
In order fully to explain and enforce these important words, I
shall endeavour to show, First, that Christianity is essentially a social
religion; and that to turn it into a solitary one is to destroy it. Secondly,
that to conceal this religion is impossible, as well as utterly contrary to the
design of its Author. I shall, Thirdly, answer some objections; and conclude the
whole with a practical application.
I. 1. First, I shall endeavour to show, that Christianity is
essentially a social religion; and that to turn it into a solitary religion, is
indeed to destroy it.
By Christianity I mean that method of worshipping God which is
here revealed to man by Jesus Christ. When I say, This is essentially a social
religion, I mean not only that it cannot subsist so well, but that it cannot
subsist at all, without society, — without living and conversing with other men.
And in showing this, I shall confine myself to those considerations which will
arise from the very discourse before us. But if this be shown, then doubtless,
to turn this religion into a solitary one is to destroy it.
Not that we can in any wise condemn the intermixing solitude or
retirement with society. This is not only allowable but expedient; nay, it is
necessary, as daily experience shows, for everyone that either already is, or
desires to be, a real Christian. It can hardly be, that we should spend one
entire day in a continued intercourse with men, without suffering loss in our
soul, and in some measure grieving the Holy Spirit of God. We have need daily to
retire from the world, at least morning and evening, to converse with God, to
commune more freely with our Father which is in secret. Nor indeed can a man of
experience condemn even longer seasons of religious retirement, so they do not
imply any neglect of the worldly employ wherein the providence of God has placed
us.
2. Yet such retirement must not swallow up all our time; this
would be to destroy, not advance, true religion. For, that the religion
described by our Lord in the foregoing words cannot subsist without society,
without our living and conversing with other men, is manifest from hence, that
several of the most essential branches thereof can have no place if we have no
intercourse with the world.
3. There is no disposition, for instance, which is more
essential to Christianity than meekness. Now although this, as it implies
resignation to God, or patience in pain and sickness, may subsist in a desert,
in a hermits cell, in total solitude; yet as it implies (which it no less
necessarily does) mildness, gentleness, and long-suffering, it cannot possibly
have a being, it has no place under heaven, without an intercourse with other
men. So that to attempt turning this into a solitary virtue is to destroy it
from the face of the earth.
4. Another necessary branch of true Christianity is
peacemaking, or doing of good. That this is equally essential with any of the
other parts of the religion of Jesus Christ, there can be no stronger argument
to evince, (and therefore it would be absurd to allege any other,) than that it
is here inserted in the original plan he has laid down of the fundamentals of
his religion. Therefore, to set aside this is the same daring insult on the
authority of our Great Master as to set aside mercifulness, purity of heart, or
any other branch of his institution. But this is apparently set aside by all who
call us to the wilderness; who recommend entire solitude either to the babes, or
the young men, or the fathers in Christ. For will any man affirm that a solitary
Christian (so called, though it is little less than a contradiction in terms)
can be a merciful man, — that is, one that takes every opportunity of doing all
good to all men? What can be more plain, than that this fundamental branch of
the religion of Jesus Christ cannot possibly subsist without society, without
our living and conversing with other men?
5. “But is it not expedient, however,” one might naturally ask,
“to converse only with good men, — only with those whom we know to be meek and
merciful, — holy of heart and holy of life? Is it not expedient to refrain from
any conversation or intercourse with men of the opposite character, — men who do
not obey, perhaps do not believe, the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ? The
advice of St. Paul to the Christians at Corinth may seem to favour this: “I
wrote unto you in an epistle not to company with fornicators.” (1 Cor. 5:9) And it is certainly not advisable so to
company with them, or with any of the workers of iniquity, as to have any
particular familiarity, or any strictness of friendship with them. To contract
or continue an intimacy with any such is no way expedient for a Christian. It
must necessarily expose him to abundance of dangers and snares, out of which he
can have no reasonable hope of deliverance.
But the Apostle does not forbid us to have any intercourse at
all, even with the men that know not God: “For then,” says he, “ye must needs go
out of the world;” which he could never advise them to do. But, he subjoins, “If
any man that is called a brother,” that professes himself a Christian, “be a
fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater, or a railer, or a drunkard, or an
extortioner;” (1 Cor. 5:11; ) now I have
written unto you not to keep company’ with him; “with such an one, no not to
eat.” This must necessarily imply, that we break off all familiarity, all
intimacy of acquaintance with him. “Yet count him not,” saith the Apostle
elsewhere, “as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother;” (2 Thes. 3:15; ) plainly showing that even in such
a case as this we are not to renounce all fellowship with him. So that here is
no advice to separate wholly, even from wicked men. Yea, these very words teach
us quite the contrary.
6. Much more the words of our Lord; who is so far from
directing us to break off all commerce with the world, that without it,
according to his account of Christianity, we cannot be Christians at all. It
would be easy to show, that some intercourse even with ungodly and unholy men is
absolutely needful, in order to the full exertion of every temper which he has
described as the way of the kingdom; that it is indispensably necessary, in
order to the complete exercise of poverty of spirit, of mourning, and of every
other disposition which has a place here, in the genuine religion of Jesus
Christ. Yea, it is necessary to the very being of several of them; of that
meekness, for example, which, instead of demanding “an eye for an eye, or a
tooth for a tooth,” doth “not resist evil,” but causes us rather, when smitten
“on the right cheek, to turn the other also;” — of that mercifulness, whereby
“we love our enemies, bless them that curse us, do good to them that hate us,
and pray for them which despitefully use us and persecute us;” — and of that
complication of love and all holy tempers which is exercised in suffering for
righteousness’ sake. Now all these, it is clear, could have no being, were we to
have no commerce with any but real Christians.
7. Indeed were we wholly to separate ourselves from sinners,
how could we possibly answer that character which our Lord gives us in these
very words? “Ye” (Christians, ye that are lowly, serious and meek; ye that
hunger after righteousness, that love God and man, that do good to all, and
therefore suffer evil; ye) “are the salt of the earth:” It is your very nature
to season whatever is round about you. It is the nature of the divine savour
which is in you, to spread to whatsoever you touch; to diffuse itself, on every
side, to all those among whom you are. This is the great reason why the
providence of God has so mingled you together with other men, that whatever
grace you have received of God may through you be communicated to others; that
every holy temper, and word, and work of yours, may have an influence on lo them
also. By this means a check will, in some measure, be given to the corruption
which is in the world; and a small part, at least, saved from the general
infection, and rendered holy and pure before God.
8. That we may the more diligently labour to season all we can
with every holy and heavenly temper, our Lord proceeds to show the desperate
state of those who do not impart the religion they have received; which indeed
they cannot possibly fail to do, so long as it remains in their own hearts. “If
the salt have lost its savour, wherewith shall it be salted? It is thenceforth
good for nothing but to be cast out, and trodden under foot of men:” If ye who
were holy and heavenly-minded, and consequently zealous of good works, have no
longer that savour in yourselves, and do therefore no longer season others; if
you are grown flat, insipid, dead, both careless of your own soul and useless to
the souls of other men; wherewith shall ye be salted? How shall ye be recovered?
What help? What hope? Can tasteless salt be restored to its savour? No; “it is
thenceforth good for nothing but to be cast out,” even as the mire in the
streets, “and to be trodden under foot of men,” to be overwhelmed with
everlasting contempt. If ye had never known the Lord, there might have been
hope, — if ye had never been “found in him:” But what can you now say to that,
his solemn declaration, just parallel to what he hath here spoken? “every branch
in me that beareth not fruit, he, the Father, “taketh away. He that abideth in
me, and I in him, bringeth forth much fruit.” “If a man abide not in me,” or do
not bring forth fruit.” “he is cast out as a branch, and withered; and men
gather them,” not to plant them again, but “to cast them into the fire.”
(John 15:2, 5, 6.)
9. Toward those who have never tasted of the good word, God is
indeed pitiful and of tender mercy. But justice takes place with regard to those
who have tasted that the Lord is gracious, and have afterwards turned back “from
the holy commandment” then “delivered to them.” “For it is impossible for those
who were once enlightened;” (Heb. 6:4) in whose hearts God
had once shined, to enlighten them with the knowledge of the glory of God in the
face of Jesus Christ; “who have tasted of the heavenly gift” of redemption in
his blood, the forgiveness of sins; “and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost,”
of lowliness, of meekness, and of the love of God and man shed abroad in their
hearts by the Holy Ghost which was given unto them; and “have fallen away,” —
kai parapesontas — (here is not
a supposition, but a flat declaration of matter of fact) “to renew them again
unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and
put him to an open shame.”
But that none may misunderstand these awful words, it should be
carefully observed, (1.) Who they are that are here spoken of; namely they, and
they only, who were once thus “enlightened;” they only, “who did taste of” that
“heavenly gift, and were” thus “‘made partakers of the Holy Ghost.” So that all
who have not experienced these things are wholly unconcerned in this Scripture.
(2.) What that falling away is which is, here spoken of: It is an absolute,
total apostasy. A believer may fall, and not fall away. He may fall and rise
again. And if he should fall, even into sin, yet this case, dreadful as it is,
is not desperate. For “we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous; and he is the propitiation for our sins.” But let him above all
things beware, lest his “heart be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin;” lest he
should sink lower and lower, till he wholly fall away, till he become as salt
that hath lost its savour: For if we thus sin wilfully, after we have received
the experimental “knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for
sins; but a certain, fearful looking for of fiery indignation, which shall
devour the adversaries.”
II. 1. “But although we may not wholly separate ourselves from
mankind, although it be granted we ought to season them with the religion which
God has wrought in our hearts, yet may not this be done insensibly? May we not
convey this into others in a secret and almost imperceptible manner, so that
scarce anyone shall be able to observe how or when it is done? — even as salt
conveys its own savour into that which is seasoned thereby, without any noise,
and without being liable to any outward observation. And if so, although we do
not go out of the world, yet we may lie hid in it. We may thus far keep our
religion to ourselves; and not offend lo those whom we cannot help.”
2. Of this plausible reasoning of flesh and blood our Lord was
well aware also. And he has given a full answer to it in those words which come
now to be considered; in explaining which, I shall endeavour to show, as I
proposed to do in the Second place, that so long as true religion abides in our
hearts, it is impossible to conceal it, as well as absolutely contrary to the
design of its great Author.
And, First, it is impossible for any that have it, to conceal
the religion of Jesus Christ. This our Lord makes plain beyond all
contradiction, by a two-fold comparison: “Ye are the light of the world: A city
set upon an hill cannot be hid.” Ye Christians “are the light of the world,”
with regard both to your tempers and actions. Your holiness makes you as
conspicuous as the sun in the midst of heaven. As ye cannot go out of the world,
so neither can ye stay in it without appearing to all mankind. Ye may not flee
from men; and while ye are among them, it is impossible to hide your lowliness
and meekness, and those other dispositions whereby ye aspire to be perfect as
your Father which is in heaven is perfect. Love cannot be hid any more than
light; and least of all, when it shines forth in action, when ye exercise
yourselves in the labour of love, in beneficence of every kind. As well may men
think to hide a city, as to hide a Christian; yea, as well may they conceal a
city set upon a hill, as a holy, zealous, active lover of God and man.
3. It is true, men who love darkness rather than light, because
their deeds are evil, will take all possible pains to prove, that the light
which is in you is darkness. They will say evil, all manner of evil, falsely, of
the good which is in you; they will lay to your charge that which is farthest
from your thoughts, which is the very reverse of all you are, and all you do.
And your patient continuance in well-doing, your meek suffering all things for
the Lord’s sake, your calm, humble joy in the midst of persecution, your
unwearied labour to overcome evil with good, will make you still more visible
and conspicuous than ye were before.
4. So impossible it is, to keep our religion from being seen,
unless we cast it away; so vain is the thought of hiding the light, unless by
putting it out! Sure it is, that a secret, unobserved religion, cannot be the
religion of Jesus Christ. Whatever religion can be concealed, is not
Christianity. If a Christian could be hid, he could not be compared to a city
set upon an hill; to the light of the world, the sun shining from heaven, and
seen by all the world below. Never, therefore, let it enter into the heart of
him whom God hath renewed in the spirit of his mind, to hide that light, to keep
his religion to himself; especially considering it is not only impossible to
conceal true Christianity, but likewise absolutely contrary to the design of the
great Author of it.
5. This plainly appears from the following words: “Neither do
men light a candle, to put it under a bushel.” As if he had said, As men do not
light a candle, only to cover and conceal it, so neither does God enlighten any
soul with his glorious knowledge and love, to have it covered or concealed,
either by prudence, falsely so called, or shame, or voluntary humility; to have
it hid either in a desert, or in the world; either by avoiding men, or in
conversing with them. “But they put it on a candlestick, and it giveth light to
all that are in the house:” In like manner, it is the design of God that every
Christian should be in an open point of view; that he may give light to all
around, that he may visibly express the religion of Jesus Christ.
6. Thus hath God in all ages spoken to the world, not only by
precept, but by example also. He hath “not left himself without witness,” in any
nation where the sound of the gospel hath gone forth, without a few who
testified his truth by their lives as well as their words. These have been “as
lights shining in a dark place.” And from time to time they have been the means
of enlightening some, of preserving a remnant, a little seed which was “counted
unto the Lord for a generation.” They have led a few poor sheep out of the
darkness of the world, and guided their feet into the way of peace.
7. One might imagine that, where both Scripture and the reason
of things speak so clearly and expressly, there could not be much advanced on
the other side, at least not with any appearance of truth. But they who imagine
thus know little of the depths of Satan. After all that Scripture and reason
have said, so exceeding plausible are the pretences for solitary religion, for a
Christian’s going out of the world, or at least hiding himself in it, that we
need all the wisdom of God to see through the snare, and all the power of God to
escape it; so many and strong are the objections which have been brought against
being social, open, active Christians.
III. 1. To answer these, was the Third thing which I proposed.
And, First, it has been often objected, that religion does not lie in outward
things, but in the heart, the inmost soul; that it is the union of the soul with
God, the life of God in the soul of man; that outside religion is nothing worth;
seeing God “delighteth not in burnt-offerings,” in outward services, but a pure
and holy heart is “the sacrifice he will not despise.”
I answer, It is most true that the root of religion lies in the
heart, in the inmost soul; that this is the union of the soul with God, the life
of God in the soul of man. But if this root be really in the heart, it cannot
but put forth branches. And these are the several instances of outward
obedience, which partake of the same nature with the root; and consequently, are
not only marks or signs, but substantial parts of religion.
It is also true, that bare outside religion, which has no root
in the heart, is nothing worth; that God delighteth not in such outward
services, no more than in Jewish burnt-offerings; and that a pure and holy heart
is a sacrifice with which he is always well pleased. But he is also well pleased
with all that outward service which arises from the heart; with the sacrifice of
our prayers (whether public or private,) of our praises and thanksgivings; with
the sacrifice of our goods, humbly devoted to him, and employed wholly to his
glory; and with that of our bodies, which he peculiarly claims, which the
Apostle beseeches us, “by the mercies of God, to present unto him, a living
sacrifice, holy acceptable to God.”
2. A Second objection, nearly related to this, is that love is
all in all; that it is “the fulfilling of the law,” “the end of the
commandment,” of every commandment of God; that all we do, and all we suffer, if
we have not charity or love, profiteth us nothing; and therefore the Apostle
directs us to “follow after charity,” and terms this “the more excellent
way.”
I answer, It is granted, that the love of God and man, arising
from faith unfeigned, is all in all, the fulfilling of the law, the end of every
commandment of God. It is true, that without this, whatever we do, whatever we
suffer, profits us nothing. But it does not follow, that love is all in such a
sense as to supersede either faith or good works. It is “the fulfilling of the
law,” not by releasing us from, but by constraining us to obey it. It is “the
end of the commandment,” as every commandment leads to and centres in it. It is
allowed, that whatever we do or suffer without love, profits us nothing. But
withal, whatever we do or suffer in love, though it were only the suffering
reproach for Christ, or the giving a cup of cold water in his name, it shall in
no wise lose its reward.
3. “But does not the Apostle direct us to ‘follow after
charity?’ And does he not term it ‘a more excellent way?’” — He does direct us
to “follow after charity;” but not after that alone. His words are, “follow
after charity;” and desire spiritual gifts.” (1 Cor.
14:1) Yea, “follow after charity;” and desire to spend and to be
spent for your brethren. “Follow after charity;” and as you have opportunity do
good to all men.
In the same verse also wherein he terms this, the way of love,
“a more excellent way,” he directs the Corinthians to desire other gifts besides
it; yea, to desire them earnestly. “Covet earnestly,” saith he, “the best gifts;
and yet I show unto you a more excellent way.” (1 Cor.
12:31.) More excellent than what? Than the gifts of healing, of
speaking with tongues, and of interpreting, mentioned in the preceding verse;
but not more excellent than the way of obedience. Of this the Apostle is not
speaking; neither is he speaking of outward religion at all: So that this text
is quite wide of the present question.
But suppose the Apostle had been speaking of outward as well as
inward religion, and comparing them together; suppose, in the comparison, he had
given the preference ever so much to the latter; suppose he had preferred (as he
justly might) a loving heart, before all outward works whatever; yet it would
not follow that we were to reject either one or the other. No; God hath joined
them together from the beginning of the world; and let not man put them
asunder.
4. “But ‘God is a Spirit; and they that worship him, must
worship him in spirit and in truth.’ And is not this enough? Nay, ought we not
to employ the whole strength of our mind herein? Does not attending to outward
things clog the soul, that it cannot soar aloft in holy contemplation? Does it
not damp the vigour of our thought? Has it not a natural tendency to encumber
and distract the mind? Whereas St. Paul would have us to be ‘without
carefulness’, and to ‘wait upon the Lord without distraction.’”
I answer, “God is a Spirit; and they that worship him, must
worship him in spirit and in truth.” Yea, and this is enough: We ought to employ
the whole strength of our mind therein. But then I would ask, What is it to
worship God, a Spirit, in spirit and in truth?’ Why, it is to worship him with
our spirit; to worship him in that manner which none but spirits are capable of.
It is to believe in him as a wise, just, holy Being, of purer eyes than to
behold iniquity; and yet merciful, gracious, and long-suffering; forgiving
iniquity, and transgression and sin; casting all our sins behind his back, and
accepting us in the Beloved. It is, to love him, to delight in him, to desire
him, with all our heart, and mind, and soul, and strength; to imitate him we
love, by purifying ourselves, even as he is pure; and to obey him whom we love,
and in whom we believe, both in thought, and word, and work. Consequently, one
branch of the worshipping God in spirit and in truth is, the keeping his outward
commandments. To glorify him, therefore with our bodies, as well as with our
spirits; to go through outward work with hearts lifted up to him; to make our
daily employment a sacrifice to God; to buy and sell, to eat and drink, to his
glory; — this is worshipping God in spirit and in truth, as much as the praying
to him in a wilderness.
5. But if so, then contemplation is only one way of worshipping
God in spirit and in truth. Therefore to give ourselves up entirely to this,
would be to destroy many branches of spiritual worship, all equally acceptable
to God and equally profitable, not hurtful, to the soul. For it is a great
mistake, to suppose that an attention to those outward things, whereto the
providence of God hath called us, is any clog to a Christian, or any hindrance
at all to his always seeing Him that is invisible. It does not at all damp the
ardour of his thought; it does not encumber or distract his mind; it gives him
no uneasy or hurtful care, who does it all as unto the Lord; who hath learned
whatsoever he doth, in word or deed, to do all in the name of the Lord Jesus;
having only one eye of the soul, which moves round on outward things, and one
immovably fixed on God. Learn what this meaneth, ye poor recluses, that you may
clearly discern your own littleness of faith: Yea, that you may no longer judge
others by yourselves, go and learn what that meaneth: —
Thou, O Lord, in
tender love Dost all my burdens bear; Lift my heart to
things above, And fix it ever there. Calm on tumult’s
wheel I sit; Midst busy multitudes alone; Sweetly waiting at
thy feet Till
all thy will he done.
6. But the grand objection is still behind. “We appeal,” say
they, “to experience. Our light did shine; we used outward things many years;
and yet they profited nothing. We attended on all the ordinances; but we were no
better for it; nor indeed anyone else; Nay, we were the worse; for we fancied
ourselves Christians for so doing, when we knew not what Christianity
meant.”
I allow the fact: I allow that you and ten thousand more, have
thus abused the ordinances of God; mistaking the means for the end; supposing
that the doing these, or some other outward works either was the religion of
Jesus Christ, or would be accepted in the place of it. But let the abuse be
taken away, and the use remain. Now use all outward things, but use them with a
constant eye to the renewal of your soul in righteousness and true holiness.
7. But this is not all: They affirm, “Experience likewise
shows, that the trying to do good is but lost labour. What does it avail to feed
or clothe men’s bodies, if they are just dropping into everlasting fire? And
what good can any man do to their souls? If these are changed, God doth it
himself. Besides, all men are either good, at least desirous so to be, or
obstinately evil. Now the former have no need of us; let them ask help of God,
and it shall be given them: And the latter will receive no help from us. Nay,
and our Lord forbids to ‘cast our pearls before swine.’”
I answer, (1.) Whether they will finally be lost or saved, you
are expressly commanded to feed the hungry, and clothe the naked. If you can,
and do not, whatever becomes of them, you shall go away into everlasting fire.
(2.) Though it is God only changes hearts, yet he generally doth it by man. It
is our part to do all that in us lies, as diligently as if we could change them
ourselves, and then to leave the event to him. (3.) God, in answer to their
prayers, builds up his children by each other in every good gift; nourishing and
strengthening the whole “body by that which every joint supplieth.” So that “the
eye cannot say to the hand, I have no need of thee;” no, nor even “the head to
the feet, I have no need of you.” Lastly, How are you assured, that the persons
before you are dogs or swine? Judge them not, until you have tried. “How knowest
thou, O man, but thou mayst gain thy brother,” — but thou mayst, under God, save
his soul from death? When he spurns thy love, and blasphemes the good word, then
it is time to give him up to God.
8. “We have tried; we have laboured to reform sinners; and what
did it avail? On many we could make no impression at all. And if some were
changed for a while, yet their goodness was but as the morning dew, and they
were soon as bad, nay, worse than ever: So that we only hurt them, and ourselves
too; for our minds were hurried and discomposed, — perhaps filled with anger
instead of love: Therefore, we had better have kept our religion to
ourselves.”
It is very possible this fact also may be true; that you have
tried to do good, and have not succeeded; yea, that those who seemed reformed,
relapsed into sin, and their last state was worse than the first. And what
marvel? Is the servant above his master? But how often did He strive to save
sinners, and they would not hear; or when they had followed him awhile, they
turned back as a dog to his vomit! But he did not therefore desist from striving
to do good: No more should you, whatever your success be. It is your part to do
as you are commanded: The event is in the hand of God. You are not accountable
for this. Leave it to him, who orders all things well. “In the morning sow thy
seed, and in the evening withhold not thy hand: for thou knowest not whether
shall prosper.” (Eccles. 11:6)
But the trial hurries and frets your own soul. Perhaps it did
so for this very reason, because you thought you was accountable for the event,
which no man is, nor indeed can be; — or perhaps, because you was off your
guard; you was not watchful over your own spirit. But this is no reason for
disobeying God. Try again; but try more warily than before. Do good (as you
forgive) “not seven times only, but until seventy times seven.” Only be wiser by
experience: Attempt it every time more cautiously than before. Be more humbled
before God, more deeply convinced that of yourself you can do nothing. Be more
jealous over your own spirit; more gentle, and watchful unto prayer. Thus “cast
your bread upon the waters, and you shall find it again after many days.”
IV. 1. Notwithstanding all these plausible pretences for hiding
it, “let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and
glorify your Father which is in heaven.” This is the practical application which
our Lord himself makes of the foregoing considerations.
“Let your light so shine:” — Your lowliness of heart; your
gentleness, and meekness of wisdom; your serious, weighty concern for the things
of eternity, and sorrow for the sins and miseries of men; your earnest desire of
universal holiness, and full happiness in God; your tender good-will to all
mankind, and fervent love to your supreme Benefactor. Endeavour not to conceal
this light, wherewith God hath enlightened your soul; but let it shine before
men, before all with whom you are, in the whole tenor of your conversation. Let
it shine still more eminently in your actions, in your doing all possible good
to all men; and in your suffering for righteousness’ sake, while you “rejoice
and are exceeding glad, knowing that great is your reward in heaven.”
2. “Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your
good works:” — So far let a Christian be from ever designing or desiring to
conceal his religion! On the contrary, let it be your desire, not to conceal it;
not to put the light under a bushel. Let it be your care to place it “on a
candlestick, that it may give light to all that are in the house.” Only take
heed, not to seek your own praise herein, not to desire any honour to
yourselves. But let it be your sole aim, that all who see your good works may
“glorify your Father which is in heaven.”
3. Be this your one ultimate end in all things. With this view,
be plain, open, undisguised. Let your love be without dissimulation: Why should
you hide fair, disinterested love? Let there be no guile found in your mouth:
Let your words be the genuine picture of your heart. Let there be no darkness or
reservedness in your conversation, no disguise in your behaviour. Leave this to
those who have other designs in view; designs which will not bear the light. Be
ye artless and simple to all mankind; that all may see the grace of God which is
in you. And although some will harden their hearts, yet others will take
knowledge that ye have been with Jesus, and, by returning themselves ‘to the
great Bishop of their souls, “glorify your Father which is in heaven.”
4. With this one design, that men may glorify God in you, go on
in his name, and in the power of his might. Be not ashamed even to stand alone,
so it be in the ways of God. Let the light which is in your heart shine in all
good works both works of piety and works of mercy. And in order to enlarge your
ability of doing good, renounce all superfluities. Cut off all unnecessary
expense in food, in furniture, in apparel. Be a good steward of every gift of
God, even of these his lowest gifts. Cut off all unnecessary expense of time,
all needless or useless employments; and “whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do
it with thy might.” In a word, be thou full of faith and love; do good; suffer
evil. And herein be thou “steadfast, unmovable;” yea, “always abounding in the
work of the Lord; forasmuch as thou knowest that thy labour is not in vain in
the Lord.”