The Scripture Way of Salvation
“Ye are saved through faith.”
Ephesians 2:8.
1. Nothing can be more intricate, complex, and hard to be
understood, than religion, as it has been often described. And this is not only
true concerning the religion of the Heathens, even many of the wisest of them,
but concerning the religion of those also who were, in some sense, Christians;
yea, and men of great name in the Christian world; men who seemed to be pillars
thereof. Yet how easy to be understood, how plain and simple a thing, is the
genuine religion of Jesus Christ; provided only that we take it in its native
form, just as it is described in the oracles of God! It is exactly suited, by
the wise Creator and Governor of the world, to the weak understanding and narrow
capacity of man in his present state. How observable is this, both with regard
to the end it proposes, and the means to attain that end! The end is, in one
word, salvation; the means to attain it, faith.
2. It is easily discerned, that these two little words, I mean
faith and salvation, include the substance of all the Bible, the marrow, as it
were, of the whole Scripture. So much the more should we take all possible care
to avoid all mistake concerning them, and to form a true and accurate judgement
concerning both the one and the other.
3. Let us then seriously inquire,
I. What is Salvation?
II. What is that faith whereby we are saved? And,
III. How are we saved by it?
1. I. And, first, let us inquire, What is salvation? The
salvation which is here spoken of is not what is frequently understood by that
word, the going to heaven, eternal happiness. It is not the soul’s going to
paradise, termed by our Lord, “Abraham’s bosom.” It is not a blessing which lies
on the other side death; or, as we usually speak, in the other world. The very
words of the text itself put this beyond all question: “Ye are saved.” It
is not something at a distance: it is a present thing; a blessing which, through
the free mercy of God, ye are now in possession of. Nay, the words may be
rendered, and that with equal propriety, “Ye have been saved”: so that
the salvation which is here spoken of might be extended to the entire work of
God, from the first dawning of grace in the soul, till it is consummated in
glory.
2. If we take this in its utmost extent, it will include all
that is wrought in the soul by what is frequently termed “natural conscience,”
but more properly, “preventing grace”; —all the drawings of the Father; the
desires after God, which, if we yield to them, increase more and more; —all that
light wherewith the Son of God “enlighteneth every one that cometh into the
world;” showing every man “to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with
his God”; —all the convictions which His Spirit, from time to time, works in
every child of man—although it is true, the generality of men stifle them as
soon as possible, and after a while forget, or at least deny, that they ever had
them at all.
3. But we are at present concerned only with that salvation
which the Apostle is directly speaking of. And this consists of two general
parts, justification and sanctification.
Justification is another word for pardon. It is the
forgiveness of all our sins; and , what is necessarily implied therein, our
acceptance with God. The price whereby this hath been procured for us (commonly
termed “the meritorious cause of our justification”), is the blood and
righteousness of Christ; or, to express it a little more clearly, all that
Christ hath done and suffered for us, till He “poured out His soul for the
transgressors.” The immediate effects of justification are, the peace of God, a
“peace that passeth all understanding,” and a “rejoicing in hope of the glory of
God” “with joy unspeakable and full of glory.”
4. And at the same time that we are justified, yea, in that
very moment, sanctification begins. In that instant we are born again, born from
above, born of the Spirit: there is a real as well as a relative
change. We are inwardly renewed by the power of God. We feel “the love of God
shed abroad in our heart by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us”; producing
love to all mankind, and more especially to the children of God; expelling the
love of the world, the love of pleasure, of ease, of honour, of money, together
with pride, anger, self-will, and every other evil temper; in a word, changing
the earthly, sensual, devilish mind, into “the mind which was in Christ
Jesus.”
5. How naturally do those who experience such a change imagine
that all sin is gone; that it is utterly rooted out of their heart, and has no
more any place therein! How easily do they draw that inference, “I feel
no sin; therefore, I have none: it does not stir; therefore it
does not exist: it has no motion; therefore, it has no
being!”
6. But it is seldom long before they are undeceived, finding
sin was only suspended, not destroyed. Temptations return, and sin revives;
showing it was but stunned before, not dead. They now feel two principles in
themselves, plainly contrary to each other; “the flesh lusting against the
Spirit”; nature opposing the grace of God. They cannot deny, that although they
still feel power to believe in Christ, and to love God; and although His
“Spirit” still “witnesses with their spirits, that they are children of God”;
yet they feel in themselves sometimes pride or self-will, sometimes anger or
unbelief. They find one or more of these frequently stirring in their
heart, though not conquering; yea, perhaps, “thrusting sore at them that
they may fall”; but the Lord is their help.
7. How exactly did Macarius, fourteen hundred years ago,
describe the present experience of the children of God: “The unskilful,” or
unexperienced, “when grace operates, presently imagine they have no more sin.
Whereas they that have discretion cannot deny, that even we who have the grace
of God may be molested again. For we have often had instances of some among the
brethren, who have experienced such grace as to affirm that they had no sin in
them; and yet, after all, when they thought themselves entirely freed from it,
the corruption that lurked within was stirred up anew, and they were wellnigh
burned up.”
8. From the time of our being born again, the gradual work of
sanctification takes place. We are enabled “by the Spirit” to “mortify the deeds
of the body,” of our evil nature; and as we are more and more dead to sin, we
are more and more alive to God. We so on from grace to grace, while we are
careful to “abstain from all appearance of evil,” and are “zealous of good
works,” as we have opportunity, doing good to all men; while we walk in all His
ordinances blameless, therein worshipping Him in spirit and in truth; while we
take up our cross, and deny ourselves every pleasure that does not lead us to
God.
9. It is thus that we wait for entire sanctification; for a
full salvation from all our sins, —from pride, self-will, anger, unbelief; or,
as the Apostle expresses it, “go unto perfection.” But what is perfection? The
word has various senses: here it means perfect love. It is love excluding sin;
love filling the heart, taking up the whole capacity of the soul. It is love
“rejoicing evermore, praying without ceasing, in everything giving thanks.”
II. But what is faith through which we are saved? This is the
second point to be considered.
1. Faith, in general, is defined by the Apostle, oprgmaton elegchos ou blepomenon.
An evidence, a divine evidence and conviction (the word means
both) of things not seen; not visible, not perceivable either by sight,
or by any other of the external senses. It implies both a supernatural
evidence of God, and of the things of God; a kind of spiritual
light exhibited to the soul, and a supernatural sight or
perception thereof. Accordingly, the Scripture speaks of Gods giving sometimes
light, sometimes a power of discerning it. So St. Paul: God, who commanded light
to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give us the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. And elsewhere the
same Apostle speaks of the eyes of our understanding being opened. By this
two-fold operation of the holy Spirit, having the eyes of our soul both
opened and enlightened, we see the things which the natural “eye
hath not seen, neither the ear heard.” We have a prospect of the invisible
things of God; we see the spiritual world, which is all round about us,
and yet no more discerned by our natural faculties than if it had no being. And
we see the eternal world; piercing through the veil which hangs between
time and eternity. Clouds and darkness then rest upon it no more, but we already
see the glory which shall be revealed.
2. Taking the word in a more particular sense, faith is a
divine evidence and conviction not only that “God was in Christ,
reconciling the world unto himself,” but also that Christ loved me, and
gave himself for me. It is by this faith (whether we term it the
essence, or rather a property thereof) that we receive
Christ; that we receive Him in all His offices, as our Prophet, Priest, and
King. It is by this that He is “made of God unto us wisdom, and righteousness,
and sanctification, and redemption.”
3. “But is this the faith of assurance, or faith of
adherence?” The Scripture mentions no such distinction. The Apostle says,
“There is one faith, and one hope of our calling”; one Christian, saving faith;
“as there is one Lord,” in whom we believe, and “one God and Father of us all.”
And it is certain, this faith necessarily implies an assurance (which is
here only another word for evidence, it being hard to tell the difference
between them) that Christ loved me, and gave Himself for me. For “he that
believeth” with the true living faith “hath the witness in himself”: “the Spirit
witnesseth with his spirit that he is a child of God.” “Because he is a son, God
hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into his heart, crying, Abba, Father”;
giving him an assurance that he is so, and a childlike confidence in Him. But
let it be observed, that, in the very nature of the thing, the assurance goes
before the confidence. For a man cannot have a childlike confidence in God till
he knows he is a child of God. Therefore, confidence, trust, reliance,
adherence, or whatever else it be called, is not the first, as some have
supposed, but the second, branch or act of faith.
4. It is by this faith we are saved, justified, and
sanctified; taking that word in its highest sense. But how are we justified and
sanctified by faith? This is our third head of inquiry. And this being the main
point in question, and a point of no ordinary importance, it will not be
improper to five it a more distinct and particular consideration.
III. 1. And, first, how are we justified by faith? In what
sense is this to be understood? I answer, Faith is the condition, and the only
condition, of justification. It is the condition: none is justified but
he that believes: without faith no man is justified. And it is the only
condition: this alone is sufficient for justification. every one that
believes is justified, whatever else he has or has not. In other words: no man
is justified till he believes; every man when he believes is justified.
2. “But does not God command us to repent also? Yea, and to
bring forth fruits meet for repentance’to cease, for instance, from doing evil,
and learn to do well? And is not both the one and the other of the utmost
necessity, insomuch that if we willingly neglect either, we cannot reasonably
expect to be justified at all? But if this be so, how can it be said that faith
is the only condition of justification?” God does undoubtedly command us both to
repent, and to bring forth fruits meet for repentance; which if we willingly
neglect, we cannot reasonably expect to be justified at all: therefore both
repentance, and fruits meet for repentance, are, in some sense, necessary to
justification. But they are not necessary in the same sense with faith,
nor in the same degree. Not in the same degree; for those fruits
are only necessary conditionally; if there be time and opportunity for
them. otherwise a man may be justified without them, as was the thief
upon the cross (if we may call him so; for a late writer has discovered that he
was no thief, but a very honest and respectable person!); but he cannot be
justified without faith; this is impossible. Likewise, let a man have ever so
much repentance, or ever so many of the fruits meet for repentance, yet all this
does not at all avail; he is not justified till he believes. But the moment he
believes, with or without those fruits, yea, with more or less repentance, he is
justified. Not in the same sense; for repentance and its fruits are only
remotely necessary; necessary in order to faith; whereas faith is
immediately necessary to justification. It remains, that faith is the
only condition, which is immediately and proximately necessary to
justification.
3. “But do you believe we are sanctified by faith? We know you
believe that we are justified by faith; but do not you believe, and accordingly
teach, that we are sanctified by our works?” So it has been roundly and
vehemently affirmed for these five-and-twenty years: but I have constantly
declared just the contrary; and that in all manner of ways. I have continually
testified in private and in public, that we are sanctified as well as justified
by faith. And indeed the one of those great truths does exceedingly illustrate
the other. exactly as we are justified by faith, so are we sanctified by faith.
Faith is the condition, and the only condition, of sanctification, exactly as it
is of justification. It is the condition: none is sanctified but he that
believes; with out faith no man is sanctified. And it is the only
condition: this alone is sufficient for sanctification. every one that
believes is sanctified, whatever else he has or has not. In other words, no man
is sanctified till he believes: every man when he believes is sanctified.
4. “But is there not a repentance consequent upon, as well as
a repentance previous to, justification? And is it not incumbent on all that are
justified to be zealous of good works’? Yea, are not these so necessary, that if
a man willingly neglect them he cannot reasonably expect that he shall ever be
sanctified in the full sense; that is, perfected in love? Nay, can he grow at
all in grace, in the loving knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ? Yea, can he
retain the grace which God has already given him? Can he continue in the faith
which he has received, or in the favour of God. Do not you yourself allow all
this, and continually assert it? But, if this be so, how can it be said that
faith is the only condition of sanctification?”
5. I do allow all this, and continually maintain it as the
truth of God. I allow there is a repentance consequent upon, as well as a
repentance previous to, justification. It is incumbent on all that are justified
to be zealous of good works. And there are so necessary, that if a man willingly
neglect them, he cannot reasonably expect that he shall ever be sanctified; he
cannot grow in grace, in the image of God, the mind which was in Christ Jesus;
nay, he cannot retain the grace he has received; he cannot continue in faith, or
in the favour of God. What is the inference we mist draw herefrom? Why, that
both repentance, rightly understood, and the practice of all good works, —works
of piety, as well as works of mercy (now properly so called, since they spring
from faith), are, in some sense, necessary to sanctification.
6. I say, “repentance rightly understood”; for this must not
be confounded with the former repentance. The repentance consequent upon
justification is widely different from that which is antecedent to it. This
implies no guilt, no sense of condemnation, no consciousness of the wrath of
God. It does not suppose any doubt of the favour of God, or any “fear that hath
torment.” It is properly a conviction, wrought by the Holy Ghost, of the
sin which still remains in our heart; of the phronema sarkos, the carnal mind, which
“does still remain” (as our Church speaks) “even in them that are
regenerate”; although it does no longer reign; it has not now dominion
over them. It is a conviction of our proneness to evil, of an heart bent to
backsliding, of the still continuing tendency of the flesh to lust against the
spirit. Sometimes, unless we continually watch and pray, it lusteth to pride,
sometimes to anger, sometimes to love of the world, love of ease, love of
honour, or love of pleasure more than of God. It is a conviction of the tendency
of our heart to self-will, to Atheism, or idolatry; and above all, to unbelief;
whereby, in a thousand ways, and under a thousand pretenses, we are ever
departing, more or less, from the living God.
7. With this conviction of the sin remaining in our hearts,
there is joined a clear conviction of the sin remaining in our lives; still
cleaving to all our words and actions. In the best of these we now
discern a mixture of evil, either in the spirit, the matter, or the manner of
them; something that could not endure the righteous judgement of God, were He
extreme to mark what is done amiss. Where we least suspected it, we find a taint
of pride or self-will, of unbelief or idolatry; so that we are now more ashamed
of our best duties than formerly of our worst sins: and hence we cannot but feel
that these are so far from having anything meritorious in them, yea, so far from
being able to stand in sight of the divine justice, that for those also we
should be guilty before God, were it not for the blood of the covenant.
8. Experience shows that, together with this conviction of sin
remaining in our hearts, and cleaving to all our words and
actions; as well as the guilt which on account thereof we should incur, were we
not continually sprinkled with the atoning blood; one thing more is implied in
this repentance; namely, a conviction of our helplessness, of our utter
inability to think one good thought, or to form one good desire; and much more
to speak one word aright, or to perform one good action, but through His free,
almighty grace, first preventing us, and then accompanying us every moment.
9. “But what good works are those, the practice of which you
affirm to be necessary to sanctification?” First, all works of piety; such as
public prayer, family prayer, and praying in our closet; receiving the supper of
the Lord; searching the Scriptures, by hearing, reading, meditating; and using
such a measure of fasting or abstinence as our bodily health allows.
10. Secondly, all works of mercy; whether they relate to the
bodies or souls of men; such as feeding the hungry, clothing the naked,
entertaining the stranger, visiting those that are in prison, or sick, or
variously afflicted; such as the endeavouring to instruct the ignorant, to
awaken the stupid sinner, to quicken the lukewarm, to confirm the wavering, to
comfort the feeble-minded, to succour the tempted, or contribute in any manner
to the saving of souls from death. This is the repentance, and these the “fruits
meet for repentance,” which are necessary to full sanctification. This is the
way wherein God hath appointed His children to wait for complete salvation.
11. Hence may appear the extreme mischievousness of that
seemingly innocent opinion, that there is no sin in a believer; that all sin is
destroyed, root and branch, the moment a man is justified. By totally preventing
that repentance, it quite blocks up the way to sanctification. There is no place
for repentance in him who believes there is no sin either in his life or heart:
consequently, there is no place for his being perfected in love, to which that
repentance is indispensably necessary.
12. Hence it may likewise appear, that there is no possible
danger in thus expecting full salvation. For suppose we were mistaken,
suppose no such blessing ever was or can be attained, yet we lose nothing: nay,
that very expectation quickens us in using all the talents which God has given
us; yea, in improving them all; so that when our Lord cometh, He will receive
His own with increase.
13. But to return. though it be allowed, that both this
repentance and its fruits are necessary to full salvation; yet they are not
necessary either in the same sense with faith, or in the same degree: —Not in
the same degree; for these fruits are only necessary
conditionally, if there be time and opportunity for them; otherwise a man
may be sanctified without them. But he cannot be sanctified without faith.
likewise, let a man have ever so much of this repentance, or ever so many good
works, yet all this does not at all avail: he is not sanctified till he
believes. But the moment he believes, with or without those fruits, yea, with
more or less of this repentance, he is sanctified. —Not in the same
sense; for this repentance and these fruits are only remotely
necessary, —necessary in order to the continuance of his faith, as well as the
increase of it; whereas faith is immediately and directly
necessary to sanctification. It remains, that faith is the only condition which
is immediately and proximately necessary to sanctification.
14. “But what is that faith whereby we are sanctified, —saved
from sin, and perfected in love?” It is a divine evidence and conviction, first,
that God hath promised it in the holy Scripture. Till we are thoroughly
satisfied of this, there in no moving one step further. And one would imagine
there needed not one word more to satisfy a reasonable man of this, than the
ancient promise, “Then will I circumcise thy heart, and the heart of thy seed,
to love the Lord they God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
all thy mind.” How clearly does this express the being perfected in love! —how
strongly imply the being saved from all sin! For as long as love takes up the
whole heart, what room is there for sin therein?
15. It is a divine evidence and conviction, secondly, that
what God hath promised He is able to perform. Admitting, therefore, that “with
men it is impossible” to “bring a clean thing out of an unclean,” to purify the
heart from all sin, and to till it with all holiness; yet this creates no
difficulty in the case, seeing “with God all things are possible.” And surely no
one ever imagined it was possible to any power less than that of the Almighty!
But if God speaks, it shall be done. God saith, “Let there be light; and there”
is “light”!
16. It is, thirdly, a divine evidence and conviction that He
is able and willing to do it now. And why not? Is not a moment to Him the same
as a thousand years? He cannot want more time to accomplish whatever is His
will. And He cannot want or stay for any more worthiness or
fitness in the persons He is pleased to honour. We may therefore boldly
say, at any point of time, “Now is the day of salvation!” “To-day, if ye will
hear His voice, harden not your hearts!” “Behold, all things are now ready; come
unto the marriage!”
17. To this confidence, that God is both able and willing to
sanctify us now, there needs to be added one thing more, —a divine evidence and
conviction that He doeth it. In that hour it is done: God says to the inmost
soul, “According to thy faith be it unto thee!” Then the soul is pure from every
spot of sin; it is clean “from all unrighteousness.” The believer then
experiences the deep meaning of those solemn words, “If we walk in the light as
He is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus
Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin.”
18. “But does God work this great work in the soul gradually
or instantaneously?” Perhaps it may be gradually wrought in some; I mean in this
sense, —they do not advert to the particular moment wherein sin ceases to be.
But it us infinitely desirable, were it the will of God, that it should be done
instantaneously; that the Lord should destroy sin “by the breath of His mouth,”
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye. And so He generally does; a plain fact,
of which there is evidence enough to satisfy any unprejudiced person.
Thou therefore look for it every moment! Look for it in the way above
described; in all those good works whereunto thou art “created anew in
Christ Jesus.” There in then no danger: you can be no worse, if you are no
better, for that expectation. For were you to be disappointed of your hope,
still you lose nothing. But you shall not be disappointed of your hope: it will
come, and will not tarry. Look for it then every day, every hour, every moment!
Why not this hour, this moment? Certainly you may look for it now, if you
believe it is by faith. And by this token you may surely know whether you seek
it by faith or by works. If by works, you want something to be done
first, before you are sanctified. You think, I must first
be or do thus or thus. Then you are seeking it by works unto this
day. If you seek it by faith, you may expect it as you are; and expect it
now. It is of importance to observe, that there is an inseparable
connexion between these three points, —expect it by faith; expect it
as you are; and expect it now! To deny one of them, is to deny
them all; to allow one, is to allow them all. Do you believe we are
sanctified by faith? Be true then to your principle; and look for this blessing
just as you are, neither better nor worse; as a poor sinner that has still
nothing to pay, nothing to plead, but “Christ died.” And if you look for
it as you are, then expect it now. Stay for nothing: why should you?
Christ is ready; and He is all you want. He is waiting for you: He is at the
door! Let your inmost soul cry out,
Come in, come in, thou heavenly Guest! Nor hence again
remove; But sup
with me, and let the feast Be everlasting love.