Wandering Thoughts
“Bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of
Christ.”
2 Cor. 5:5.
1. But will God so “bring every thought into captivity to the
obedience of Christ,” that no wandering thought will find a place in the mind,
even while we remain in the body? So some have vehemently maintained; yea, have
affirmed that none are perfected in love unless they are so far perfected in
understanding, that all wandering thoughts are done away; unless not only every
affection and temper be holy and just and good, but every individual thought
which arises in the mind be wise and regular.
2. This is a question of no small importance. For how many of
those who fear God, yea, and love him, perhaps with all their heart, have been
greatly distressed on this account! How many, by not understanding it right,
have not only been distressed, but greatly hurt in their souls; — cast into
unprofitable, yea, mischievous reasonings, such as slackened their motion
towards God, and weakened them in running the race set before them! Nay, many,
through misapprehensions of this very thing, have cast away the precious gift of
God. They have been induced, first, to doubt of, and then to deny, the work God
had wrought in their souls; and hereby have grieved the Spirit of God, till he
withdrew and left them in utter darkness!
3. How is it then, that amidst the abundance of books which have
been lately published almost on all subjects, we should have none upon wandering
thoughts? at least none that will at all satisfy a calm and serious mind? In
order to do this in some degree, I purpose to inquire,
I. What are the several sorts of wandering thoughts?
II. What are the general occasions of them?
III. Which of them are sinful, and which not?
IV. Which of them we may expect and pray to be delivered
from?
I. 1. I purpose to inquire, First, What are the several sorts of
wandering thoughts? The particular sorts are innumerable; but, in general, they
are of two sorts: Thoughts that wander from God; and thoughts that wander from
the particular point we have in hand.
2. With regard to the former, all our thoughts are naturally of
this kind: For they are continually wandering from God: We think nothing about
him: God is not in all our thoughts: We are, one and all, as the Apostle
observes, “without God in the world.” We think of what we love; but we do not
love God; therefore, we think not of him. Or, if we are now and then constrained
to think of him for a time, yet as we have not pleasure therein, nay, rather, as
these thoughts are not only insipid, but distasteful and irksome to us, we drive
them out as soon as we can, and return to what we love to think of. So that the
world, and the things of the world, — what we shall eat, what we shall drink,
what we shall put on, — what we shall see, what we shall hear, what we shall
gain, — how we shall please our senses or our imagination, — takes up all our
time, and engrosses all our thought. So long, therefore, as we love the world;
that is, so long as we are in our natural state; all our thoughts, from morning
to evening, and from evening to morning, are no other than wandering
thoughts.
3. But many times we are not only “without God in the world,”
but also fighting against him; as there is in every man by nature a “carnal mind
which is enmity against God:” No wonder, therefore, that men abound with
unbelieving thoughts; either saying in their hearts, “There is no God,” or
questioning, if not denying, his power or wisdom, his mercy, or justice, or
holiness. No wonder that they so often doubt of his providence, at least, of its
extending to all events; or that, even though they allow it, they still
entertain murmuring or repining thoughts. Nearly related to these, and
frequently connected with them, are proud and vain imaginations. Again:
Sometimes they are taken up with angry, malicious, or revengeful thoughts; at
other times, with airy scenes of pleasure, whether of sense or imagination;
whereby the earthly, sensual mind becomes more earthy and sensual still. Now by
all these they make flat war with God: These are wandering thoughts of the
highest kind.
4. Widely different from these are the other sort of wandering
thoughts; in which the heart does not wander from God, but the understanding
wanders from the particular point it had then in view. For instance: I sit down
to consider those words in the verse preceding the text: “The weapons of our
warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God.” I think, “This ought to be the
case with all that are called Christians. But how far is it otherwise! Look
round into almost every part of what is termed the Christian world. What manner
of weapons are these using? In what kind of warfare are they engaged;
While men, like fiends, each other tear; In all the hellish
rage of war?
See how these Christians love one another! Wherein are
they preferable to Turks and Pagans? What abomination can be found among
Mahometans or Heathens which is not found among Christians also?” And thus my
mind runs off, before I am aware, from one circumstance to another. Now, all
these are, in some sense, wandering thoughts: For although they do not wander
from God, much less fight against him, yet they do wander from the particular
point I had in view.
II. Such is the nature, such are the sorts (to speak rather
usefully than philosophically) of wandering thoughts. But what are the general
occasions of them? This we are, in the Second place, to consider.
1. And it is easy to observe, that the occasion of the former
sort of thoughts, which oppose or wander from God, are, in general, sinful
tempers. For instance: Why is not God in all the thoughts, in any of the
thoughts of a natural man? For a plain reason: Be he rich or poor, learned or
unlearned, he is an Atheist; (though not vulgarly so called;) he neither knows
nor loves God. Why are his thoughts continually wandering after the world?
Because he is an idolater. He does not indeed worship an image, or bow down to
the stock of a tree; yet is he sunk into equally damnable idolatry: He loves,
that is worships, the world. He seeks happiness in the things that are seen, in
the pleasures that perish in the using. Why is it that his thoughts are
perpetually wandering from the very end of his being, the knowledge of God in
Christ? Because he is an unbeliever; because he has no faith; or at least, no
more than a devil. So all these wandering thoughts easily and naturally spring
from that evil root of unbelief.
2. The case is the same in other instances: Pride, anger,
revenge, vanity, lust, covetousness, every one of them occasions thoughts
suitable to its own nature. And so does every sinful temper of which the human
mind is capable. The particulars it is hardly possible, nor is it needful, to
enumerate: It suffices to observe, that as many evil tempers as find a place in
any soul, so many ways that soul will depart from God, by the worst kind of
wandering thoughts.
3. The occasions of the latter kind of wandering thoughts are
exceeding various. Multitudes of them are occasioned by the natural union
between the soul and body. How immediately and how deeply is the understanding
affected by a diseased body! Let but the blood move irregularly in the brain,
and all regular thinking is at an end. Raging madness ensues; and then farewell
to all evenness of thought. Yea, let only the spirits be hurried or agitated to
a certain degree, and a temporary madness, a delirium, prevents all settled
thought. And is not the same irregularity of thought, in a measure, occasioned
by every nervous disorder? So does the “corruptible body press down the soul,
and cause it to muse about many things.”
4. But does it only cause this in the time of sickness or
preternatural disorder? Nay, but more or less, at all times, even in a state of
perfect health. Let a man be ever so healthy, he will be more or less delirious
every four-and-twenty hours. For does he not sleep? And while he sleeps, is he
not liable to dream? And who then is master of his own thoughts, or able to
preserve the order and consistency of them? Who can then keep them fixed to any
one point, or prevent their wandering from pole to pole?
5. But suppose we are awake, are we always so awake that we can
steadily govern our thoughts? Are we not unavoidably exposed to contrary
extremes, by the very nature of this machine, the body? Sometimes we are too
heavy, too dull and languid, to pursue any chain of thought. Sometimes, on the
other hand, we are too lively. The imagination, without leave, starts to and
fro, and carries us away hither and thither, whether we will or no; and all this
from the merely natural motion of the spirits, or vibration of the nerves.
6. Farther: How many wanderings of thought may arise from those
various associations of our ideas which are made entirely without our knowledge,
and independently on our choice? How these connexions are formed, we cannot
tell; but they are formed in a thousand different manners. Nor is it in the
power of the wisest or holiest of men to break those associations, or prevent
what is the necessary consequences of them, and matter of daily observation. Let
the fire but touch one end of the train, and it immediately runs on to the
other.
7. Once more: Let us fix our attention as studiously as we are
able on any subject, yet let either pleasure or pain arise, especially if it be
intense, and it will demand our immediate attention, and attach our thought to
itself. It will interrupt the steadiest contemplation, and divert the mind from
its favourite subject.
8. These occasions of wandering thoughts lie within, are wrought
into our very nature. But they will likewise naturally and necessarily arise
from the various impulse of outward objects. Whatever strikes upon the organ of
sense, the eye or ear, will raise a perception in the mind. And, accordingly,
whatever we see or hear will break in upon our former train of thought. Every
man, therefore, that does anything in our sight, or speaks anything in our
hearing, occasions our mind to wander, more or less, from the point it was
thinking of before.
9. And there is no question but those evil spirits who are
continually seeking whom they may devour make use of all the foregoing occasions
to hurry and distract our minds. Sometimes by one, sometimes by another, of
these means, they will harass and perplex us, and, so far as God permits,
interrupt our thoughts, particularly when they are engaged on the best subjects.
Nor is this at all strange: They will understand the very springs of thought;
and know on which of the bodily organs the imagination, the understanding, and
every other faculty of the mind more immediately depends. And hereby they know
how, by affecting those organs, to affect the operations dependent on them. Add
to this, that they can inject a thousand thoughts, without any of the preceding
means; it being as natural for spirit to act upon spirit, as for matter to act
upon matter. These things being considered, we cannot admire that our thought so
often wanders from any point which we have in view.
III. 1. What kind of wandering thoughts are sinful, and what
not, is the Third thing to be inquired into. And, First, all those thoughts
which wander from God, which leave him no room in our minds, are undoubtedly
sinful. For all these imply practical Atheism; and by these we are without God
in the world. And so much more are all those which are contrary to God, which
imply opposition or enmity to him. Such are all murmuring, discontented
thoughts, which say, in effect, “We will not have thee to rule over us;” — all
unbelieving thoughts, whether with regard to his being, his attributes, or his
providence. I mean, his particular providence over all things, as well as all
persons, in the universe; that without which “not a sparrow falls to the
ground,” by which “the hairs of our head are all numbered;” for as to a general
providence, (vulgarly so called,) contradistinguished from a particular, it is
only a decent, well-sounding word, which means just nothing.
2. Again: All thoughts which spring from sinful tempers, are
undoubtedly sinful. Such, for instance, are those that spring from a revengeful
temper, from pride, or lust, or vanity. “An evil tree cannot bring forth good
fruit:” Therefore if the tree be evil, so must the fruit be also.
3. And so must those be which either produce or feed any sinful
temper; those which either give rise to pride or vanity, to anger or love of the
world, or confirm and increase these or any other unholy temper, passion, or
affection. For not only whatever flows from evil is evil; but also whatever
leads to it; whatever tends to alienate the soul from God, and to make or keep
it earthly, sensual, and devilish.
4. Hence, even those thoughts which are occasioned by weakness
or disease, by the natural mechanism of the body, or by the laws of vital union,
however innocent they may be in themselves, do nevertheless become sinful, when
they either produce or cherish and increase in us any sinful temper; suppose the
desire of the flesh, the desire of the eye, or the pride of life. In like
manner, the wandering thoughts which are occasioned by the words or actions of
other men, if they cause or feed any wrong disposition, then commence sinful.
And the same we may observe of those which are suggested or injected by the
devil. When they minister to any earthly or devilish temper, (which they do,
whenever we give place to them, and thereby make them our own,) then they are
equally sinful with the tempers to which they minister.
5. But, abstracting from these cases, wandering thoughts, in the
latter sense of the word, that is, thoughts wherein our understanding wanders
from the point it has in view, are no more sinful than the motion of the blood
in our veins, or of the spirits in our brain. If they arise from an infirm
constitution, or from some accidental weakness or distemper, they are as
innocent as it is to have a weak constitution or a distempered body. And surely
no one doubts but a bad state of nerves, a fever of any kind, and either a
transient or a lasting delirium, may consist with perfect innocence. And if they
should arise in a soul which is united to a healthful body, either from the
natural union between the body and soul, or from any of ten thousand changes
which may occur in those organs of the body that minister to thought; — in any
of these cases they are as perfectly innocent as the causes from which they
spring. And so they are when they spring from the casual, involuntary
associations of our ideas.
6. If our thoughts wander from the point we had in view, by
means of other men variously affecting our senses, they are equally innocent
still: For it is no more a sin to understand what I see and hear, and in many
cases cannot help seeing, hearing, and understanding, than it is to have eyes
and ears. “But if the devil injects wandering thoughts, are not those thoughts
evil?” They are troublesome, and in that sense evil; but they are not sinful. I
do not know that he spoke to our Lord with an audible voice; perhaps he spoke to
his heart only when he said, “All these things will I give thee, if thou wilt
fall down and worship me.” But whether he spoke inwardly or outwardly, our Lord
doubtless understood what he said. He had therefore a thought correspondent to
those words. But was it a sinful thought? We know it was not. In him was no sin,
either in action, or word, or thought. Nor is there any sin in a thousand
thoughts of the same kind, which Satan may inject into any of our Lord’s
followers.
7. It follows that none of these wandering thoughts (whatever
unwary persons have affirmed, thereby grieving whom the Lord had not grieved)
are inconsistent with perfect love. Indeed, if they were, then not only sharp
pain, but sleep itself, would be inconsistent with it: — Sharp pain; for
whenever this supervenes, whatever we were before thinking of, it will interrupt
our thinking, and of course draw our thoughts into another channel: — Yea, and
sleep itself; as it is a state of insensibility and stupidity; and such as is
generally mixed with thoughts wandering over the earth, loose, wild, and
incoherent. Yet certainly these are consistent with perfect love: So then are
all wandering thoughts of this kind.
IV. 1. From what has been observed, it is easy to give a clear
answer to the last question, — What kind of wandering thoughts we may expect and
pray to be delivered from.
From the former sort of wandering thoughts, — those wherein the
heart wanders from God; from all that are contrary to his will, or that leave us
without God in the world; every one that is perfected in love is unquestionably
delivered. This deliverance, therefore, we may expect; this we may, we ought to
pray for. Wandering thoughts of this kind imply unbelief, if not enmity against
God; but both of these he will destroy, will bring utterly to an end. And
indeed, from all sinful wandering thoughts we shall be absolutely delivered. All
that are perfected in love are delivered from these; else they were not saved
from sin. Men and devils will tempt them all manner of ways; but they cannot
prevail over them.
2. With regard to the latter sort of wandering thoughts, the
case is widely different. Till the cause is removed, we cannot in reason expect
the effect should cease. But the causes or occasions of these will remain as
long as we remain in the body. So long, therefore, we have all reason to believe
the effects will remain also.
3. To be more particular: Suppose a soul, however holy, to dwell
in a distempered body; suppose the brain be so thoroughly disordered, as that
raging madness follows; will not all the thoughts be wild and unconnected as
long as that disorder continues? Suppose a fever occasions that temporary
madness which we term a delirium; can there be any just connexion of thought
till that delirium is removed? Yea, suppose what is called a nervous disorder to
rise to so high a degree as to occasion at least a partial madness; will there
not be a thousand wandering thoughts? And must not these irregular thoughts
continue as long as the disorder which occasions them?
4. Will not the case be the same with regard to those thoughts
that necessarily arise from violent pain? They will more or less continue, while
that pain continues, by the inviolable order of nature. This order, likewise,
will obtain, where the thoughts are disturbed, broken, or interrupted, by any
defect of the apprehension, judgement, or imagination, flowing from the natural
constitution of the body. And how many interruptions may spring from the
unaccountable and involuntary association of our ideas! Now, all these are
directly or indirectly caused by the corruptible body pressing down the mind.
Nor, therefore, can we expect them to be removed till “this corruptible shall
put on incorruption.”
5. And then only, when we lie down in the dust, shall we be
delivered from those wandering thoughts which are occasioned by what we see and
hear, among those by whom we are now surrounded. To avoid these, we must go out
of the world: For as long as we remain therein, as long as there are men and
women round about us, and we have eyes to see and ears to hear, the things which
we daily see and hear will certainly affect our mind, and will more or less
break in upon and interrupt our preceding thoughts.
6. And as long as evil spirits roam to and fro in a miserable,
disordered world, so long they will assault (whether they can prevail or no)
every inhabitant of flesh and blood. They will trouble even those whom they
cannot destroy: They will attack, if they cannot conquer. And from these attacks
of our restless, unwearied enemies, we must not look for an entire deliverance,
till we are lodged “where the wicked cease from troubling, and where the weary
are at rest.”
7. To sum up the whole: To expect deliverance from those
wandering thoughts which are occasioned by evil spirits is to expect that the
devil should die or fall asleep, or, at least, should no more go about as a
roaring lion. To expect deliverance from those which are occasioned by other men
is to expect either that men should cease from the earth, or that we should be
absolutely secluded from them, and have no intercourse with them; or that having
eyes we should see, neither hear with our ears, but be as senseless as stocks or
stones. And to pray for deliverance from those which are occasioned by the body
is, in effect, to pray that we may leave the body: Otherwise it is praying for
impossibilities and absurdities; praying that God would reconcile
contradictions, by continuing our union with a corruptible body without the
natural, necessary consequences of that union. It is as if we should pray to be
angels and men, mortal and immortal, at the same time. Nay! — but when that
which is immortal is come, mortality is done away.
8. Rather let us pray, both with the spirit and with the
understanding, that all these things may work together for our good; that we may
suffer all the infirmities of our nature, all the interruptions of men, all the
assaults and suggestions of evil spirits, and in all be “more than conquerors.”
Let us pray, that we may be delivered from all sin; that both the root and
branch may be destroyed; that we may be “cleansed from all pollution of flesh
and spirit,” from every evil temper, and word, and work; that we may “love the
Lord our God with all our heart, with all our mind, with all our soul, and with
all our strength;” that all the fruit of the Spirit may be found in us, — not
only love, joy, peace, but also “long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, fidelity,
meekness, temperance.” Pray that all these things may flourish and abound, may
increase in you more and more, till an abundant entrance be ministered unto you,
into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ!