The End of Christ’s Coming
“For this purpose was the Son of God manifested, that he might
destroy the works of the devil.”
1 John 3:8.
1. Many eminent writers, heathen as well as Christian, both in
earlier and later ages, have employed their utmost labour and art in painting
the beauty of virtue. And the same pains they have taken to describe, in the
liveliest colours, the deformity of vice; both of vice in general, and of those
particular vices which were most prevalent in their respective ages and
countries. With equal care they have placed in a strong light the happiness that
attends virtue, and the misery which usually accompanies vice, and always
follows it. And it may be acknowledged, that treatises of this kind are not
wholly without their use. Probably hereby some, on the one hand, have been
stirred up to desire and follow after virtue; and some, on the other hand,
checked in their career of vice, — perhaps reclaimed from it, at least for a
season. But the change effected in men by these means is seldom either deep or
universal: Much less is it durable; in a little space it vanishes away as the
morning cloud. Such motives are far too feeble to overcome the numberless
temptations that surround us. All that can be said of the beauty and advantage
of virtue, and the deformity and ill effects of vice, cannot resist, and much
less overcome and heal, one irregular appetite or passion.
All these fences
and their whole array, One cunning bosom-sin sweeps quite away.
2. There is, therefore, an absolute necessity, if ever we would
conquer vice, or steadily persevere in the practice of virtue, to have arms of a
better kind than these; otherwise, we may see what is right, but we
cannot attain it. Many of the men of reflection among the very Heathens were
deeply sensible of this. The language of their heart was that of Medea:
—
Video
meliora, proboque; Detertiora sequor:
How exactly agreeing with the words of the Apostle: (Personating
a man convinced of sin, but not yet conquering it:) “The good that I would, I do
not; but the evil I would not, that I do!” The impotence of the human mind, even
the Roman philosopher could discover: “There is in every man,” says he, “this
weakness;” (he might have said, this sore disease;) “gloriae sitis, — thirst for glory. Nature points out the
disease; but nature shows us no remedy.”
3. Nor is it strange, that though they sought for a remedy, yet
they found none. For they sought it where it never was and never will be found,
namely, in themselves; in reason, in philosophy: Broken reeds, bubbles, smoke!
They did not seek it in God, in whom alone it is possible to find it. In God!
No; they totally disclaim this; and that in the strongest terms. For although
Cicero, one of their oracles, once stumbled upon that strange truth, Nemo unquam vir magnus sine afflatu divino fuit, —
“There never was any great man who was not divinely inspired;” yet in the very
same tract he contradicts himself, and totally overthrows his own assertion, by
asking, Quis pro virtute aut sapientia gratias dedit
Deis unquam? — “Who ever returned thanks to God for his virtue or
wisdom?” The Roman poet is, if possible, more express still; who, after
mentioning several outward blessings, honestly adds, —
Haec satis est
orare Jovem, qui donat et aufert; Det vitam, det opes: aequum mi animum ipse
parabo.
We ask of
God, what he can give or take, — Life, wealth; but virtuous I myself will make.
4. The best of them either sought virtue partly from God and
partly from themselves, or sought it from those gods who were indeed but devils,
and so not likely to make their votaries better than themselves. So dim was the
light of the wisest of men, till “life and immortality were brought to light by
the gospel;” till “the Son of God was manifested to destroy the works of the
devil!”
But what are “the works of the devil,” here mentioned? How was
“the Son of God manifested” to destroy them? And how, in what manner, and by
what steps, does he actually “destroy” them? These three very important points
we may consider in their order.
I. 1. And, First, what these works of the devil are, we learn
from the words preceding and following the text: “We know that he was manifested
to take away our sins.” (1 John 3:5.) “Whosoever
abideth in him, sinneth not: Whosoever sinneth, seeth him not, neither knoweth
him.” (1 John 3:6.) “He that committeth sin is of the
devil; for the devil sinneth from the beginning. For this purpose was the Son of
God manifested, that he might destroy the works of the devil.” (1 John 3:8.) “Whosoever is born of God doth not
commit sin.” (1 John 3:9.) From the whole
of this it appears, that “the works of the devil,” here spoken of, are sin, and
the fruits of sin.
2. But since the wisdom of God has now dissipated the clouds
which so long covered the earth, and put an end to the childish conjectures of
men concerning these things, it may be of use to take a more distinct view of
these “works of the devil,” so far as the oracles of God instruct us. It is
true, the design of the Holy Spirit was to assist our faith, not gratify our
curiosity; and therefore the account he has given in the first chapters of
Genesis is exceeding short. Nevertheless, it is so clear that we may learn
therefrom whatsoever it concerns us to know.
3. To take the matter from the beginning: “The Lord God”
(literally, JEHOVAH, the GODS; that is, One and Three) “created man in his own
image;” — in his own natural image, as to his better part; that is, a
spirit, as God is a spirit; endued with understanding; which, if not the
essence, seems to be the most essential property, of a spirit. And probably the
human spirit, like the angelical, then discerned truth by intuition. Hence he
named every creature, as soon as he saw it, according to its inmost nature. Yet
his knowledge was limited, as he was a creature: Ignorance, therefore, was
inseparable from him; but error was not; it does not appear that he was mistaken
in any thing. But he was capable of mistaking, of being deceived, although not
necessitated to it.
4. He was endued also with a will, with various affections;
(which are only the will exerting itself various ways;) that he might love,
desire, and delight in that which is good: Otherwise his understanding had been
to no purpose. He was likewise endued with liberty; a power of choosing what was
good, and refusing what was not so. Without this, both the will and the
understanding would have been utterly useless. Indeed, without liberty, man had
been so far from being a free agent, that he could have been no
agent at all. For every
unfree being is purely passive; not active
in any degree. Have you a sword in your hand? Does a man, stronger than you,
seize your hand, and force you to wound a third person? In this you are no
agent, any more than the sword: The hand is as passive as the steel. So in every
possible case. He that is not free is not an agent, but a patient.
5. It seems, therefore, that every spirit in the universe, as
such, is endued with understanding, and, in consequence, with a
will, and with a measure of
liberty; and that these three are
inseparably united in every intelligent nature. And observe:
Liberty
necessitated, or over-ruled, is really no liberty at all. It is a
contradiction in terms. It is the same as unfree freedom; that is,
downright nonsense.
6. It may be farther observed, (and it is an important
observation,) that where there is no liberty, there can be no moral good or
evil, no virtue or vice. The fire warms us; yet it is not capable of virtue: It
burns us; yet this is no vice. There is no virtue, but where an intelligent
being knows, loves, and chooses what is good; nor is there any vice, but where
such a being knows, loves, and chooses what is evil.
7. And God created man, not only in his natural, but likewise in
his own moral, image. He created him not only “in knowledge,” but also in
righteousness and true holiness. As his understanding was without blemish,
perfect in its kind; so were all his affections. They were all set right, and
duly exercised on their proper objects. And as a free agent, he steadily chose
whatever was good, according to the direction of his understanding. In so doing,
he was unspeakably happy; dwelling in God, and God in him; having an
uninterrupted fellowship with the Father and the Son, through the eternal
Spirit; and the continual testimony of his conscience, that all his ways were
good and acceptable to God.
8. Yet his liberty (as was observed before) necessarily included
a power of choosing or refusing either good or evil. Indeed it has been doubted
whether man could then choose evil, knowing it to be such. But it cannot be
doubted, he might mistake evil for good. He was not infallible; therefore not
impeccable. And this unravels the whole difficulty of the grand question, Unde malum? “How came evil into the world?” It
came from “Lucifer, son of the morning.” It was the work of the devil. “For the
devil,” saith the Apostle, “sinneth from the beginning;” that is, was the first
sinner in the universe, the author of sin, the first being who, by the abuse of
his liberty, introduced evil into the creation. He,
— Of the
first, If not
the first archangel,
was self-tempted to think too highly of himself. He freely
yielded to the temptation; and gave way, first to pride, then to self-will. He
said, “I will sit upon the sides of the north: I will be like the Most High.” He
did not fall alone, but soon drew after him a third part of the stars of heaven;
in consequence of which they lost their glory and happiness, and were driven
from their former habitation.
9. “Having great wrath,” and perhaps envy, at the happiness of
the creatures whom God had newly created, it is not strange that he should
desire and endeavour to deprive them of it. In order to this, he concealed
himself in the serpent, who was the most subtle, or intelligent, of all the
brute creatures; and, on that account, the least liable to raise suspicion.
Indeed, some have (not improbably) supposed that the serpent was then endued
with reason and speech. Had not Eve known he was so, would she have admitted any
parley with him? Would she not have been frightened rather than deceived? as the
Apostle observes she was. To deceive her, Satan mingled truth with falsehood: —
“Hath God said, Ye may not eat of every tree of the garden?” — and soon after
persuaded her to disbelieve God, to suppose his threatening should not be
fulfilled. She then lay open to the whole temptation: — To “the desire of the
flesh;” for the tree was “good for food:” To “the desire of the eyes;” for it
was “pleasant to the eyes:” And to “the pride of life;” for it was “to be
desired to make one wise,” and consequently honoured. So unbelief begot pride:
She thought herself wiser than God; capable of finding a better way to happiness
than God had taught her. It begot self-will: She was determined to do her own
will, not the will of Him that made her. It begot foolish desires; and completed
all by outward sin: “She took of the fruit, and did eat.”
10. She then “gave to her husband, and he did eat.” And in that
day, yea, that moment, he died! The life of God was extinguished in his
soul. The glory departed from him. He lost the whole moral image of God, —
righteousness and true holiness. He was unholy; he was unhappy; he was full of
sin; full of guilt and tormenting fears. Being broke off from God, and looking
upon him now as an angry Judge, “he was afraid.” But how was his understanding
darkened, to think he could “hide himself from the presence of the Lord among
the trees of the garden!” Thus was his soul utterly dead to God! And in that day
his body likewise began to die, — became obnoxious to weakness, sickness, pain;
all preparatory to the death of the body, which naturally led to eternal
death.
II. Such are “the works of the devil;” sin and its fruits;
considered in their order and connexion. We are, in the Second place, to
consider how the Son of God was manifested in order to destroy them.
1. He was manifested as the only-begotten Son of God, in glory
equal with the Father, to the inhabitants of heaven before and at the foundation
of the world. These “morning stars sang together,” all these “sons of God
shouted for joy,” when they heard him pronounce, “Let there be light; and there
was light;” — when he “spread the north over the empty space,” and “stretched
out the heavens as a curtain.” Indeed, it was the universal belief of the
ancient Church, that God the Father none hath seen, nor can see; that from all
eternity He hath dwelt in light unapproachable; and it is only in and by the Son
of his love that he hath, at any time, revealed himself to his creatures.
2. How the Son of God was manifested to our first parents in
paradise it is not easy to determine. It is generally, and not improbably,
supposed that he appeared to them in the form of a man, and conversed with them
face to face. Not that I can at all believe the ingenious dream of Dr. Watts
concerning “the glorious humanity of Christ,” which he supposes to have existed
before the world began, and to have been endued with I know not what astonishing
powers. Nay, I look upon this to be an exceeding dangerous, yea, mischievous
hypothesis; as it quite excludes the force of very many scriptures which have
been hitherto thought to prove the Godhead of the Son. And I am afraid it was
the grand means of turning that great man aside from the faith once delivered to
the saints; — that is, if he was turned aside; if that beautiful soliloquy be
genuine which is printed among his Posthumous Works, wherein he so earnestly
beseeches the Son of God not to be displeased because he cannot believe him to
be co-equal and co-eternal with the Father.
3. May we not reasonably believe it was by similar appearances
that He was manifested, in succeeding ages, to Enoch, while he “walked with
God;” to Noah, before and after the deluge; to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, on
various occasions; and, to mention no more, to Moses? This seems to be the
natural meaning of the word: “My servant Moses is faithful in all my house. —
With him will I speak mouth to mouth, even apparently, and not in dark speeches;
and the similitude of Jehovah shall he behold;” namely, the Son of God.
4. But all these were only types of his grand manifestation. It
was in the fulness of time (in just the middle age of the world, as a great man
largely proves) that God “brought his first-begotten into the world, made of a
woman,” by the power of the Highest overshadowing her. He was afterwards
manifested to the shepherds; to devout Simeon; to Anna, the Prophetess; and to
“all that waited for redemption in Jerusalem.”
5. When he was of due age for executing his priestly office, he
was manifested to Israel; preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God in every
town and in every city. And for a time he was glorified by all, who acknowledged
that he “spake as never man spake;” that “he spake as one having authority,”
with all the wisdom of God and the power of God. He was manifested by numberless
“signs, and wonders, and mighty works which he did,” as well as by his whole
life; being the only one born of a woman “who knew no sin,” who, from his birth
to his death, did “all things well;” doing continually “not his own will, but
the will of Him that sent him.”
6. After all, “behold the Lamb of God, taking away the sin of
the world!” This was a more glorious manifestation of himself than any he had
made before. How wonderfully was he manifested to angels and men, when he “was
wounded for our transgressions;” when he “bore all our sins in his own body on
the tree;” when, having “by that one oblation of himself once offered, made a
full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice, oblation, and satisfaction for the sins
of the whole world,” he cried out, “It is finished; and bowed his head, and gave
up the ghost!” We need but just mention those farther manifestations, — his
resurrection from the dead; his ascension into heaven, into the glory which he
had before the world began; and his pouring out the Holy Ghost on the day of
Pentecost; both of which are beautifully described in those well-known words of
the Psalmist: “Thou art gone up on high, thou hast led captivity captive, and
hast received gifts for men; yea, even for thine enemies, that the Lord God
might dwell among” or in “them.”
7. “That the Lord God might dwell in them:” This refers to a yet
farther manifestation of the Son of God; even his inward manifestation of
himself. When he spoke of this to his Apostles but a little before his death,
one of them immediately asked, “Lord, how is it that thou wilt manifest thyself
to us, and not unto the world?” By enabling us to believe in his name. For he is
then inwardly manifested to us when we are enabled to say with confidence, “My
Lord, and my God!” Then each of us can boldly say, “The life which I now live, I
live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.”
[Gal. 2:20] And it is by thus manifesting himself in
our hearts that he effectually “destroys the works of the devil.”
III. 1. How he does this, in what manner, and by what steps, he
does actually destroy them, we are now to consider. And, First, as Satan began
his work in Eve by tainting her with unbelief, so the Son of God begins his work
in man by enabling us to believe in him. He both opens and enlightens the eyes
of our understanding. Out of darkness he commands light to shine, and takes away
the veil which the “god of this world” had spread over our hearts. And we then
see not by a chain of reasoning, but by a kind of
intuition, by a
direct view, that “God was in Christ, reconciling the world to himself, not
imputing to them their former trespasses;” not imputing them to me. In that day
“we know that we are of God,” children of God by faith; “having redemption
through the blood of Christ, even the forgiveness of sin.” “Being justified by
faith, we have peace with God, through our Lord Jesus Christ;” — that peace
which enables us in every state therewith to be content; which delivers us from
all perplexing doubts, from all tormenting fears; and in particular, from that
“fear of death whereby we were all our life-time subject to bondage.”
2. At the same time the Son of God strikes at the root of that
grand work of the devil, — pride; causing the sinner to humble himself before
the Lord, to abhor himself, as it were, in dust and ashes. He strikes at the
root of self-will; enabling the humbled sinner to say in all things, “Not as I
will, but as thou wilt.” He destroys the love of the world; delivering them that
believe in him from “every foolish and hurtful desire;” from the “desire of the
flesh, the desire of the eyes, and the pride of life.” He saves them from
seeking, or expecting to find, happiness in any creature. As Satan turned the
heart of man from the Creator to the creature; so the Son of God turns his heart
back again from the creature to the Creator. Thus it is, by manifesting himself,
he destroys the works of the devil; restoring the guilty outcast from God, to
his favour, to pardon and peace; the sinner in whom dwelleth no good thing, to
love and holiness; the burdened, miserable sinner, to joy unspeakable, to real,
substantial happiness.
3. But it may be observed, that the Son of God does not destroy
the whole work of the devil in man, as long as he remains in this life. He does
not yet destroy bodily weakness, sickness, pain, and a thousand infirmities
incident to flesh and blood. He does not destroy all that weakness of
understanding, which is the natural consequence of the soul’s dwelling in a
corruptible body; so that still,
Humanum est errare et nescire:
“Both ignorance and error belong to humanity.” He entrusts us
with only an exceeding small share of knowledge, in our present state; lest our
knowledge should interfere with our humility, and we should again affect to be
as gods. It is to remove from us all temptation to pride, and all thought of
independency, (which is the very thing that men in general so earnestly covet
under the name of liberty.) that he leaves us encompassed with all these
infirmities, particularly weakness of understanding; till the sentence takes
place, “Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return!”
4. Then error, pain, and all bodily infirmities cease: All these
are destroyed by death. And death itself, “the last enemy” of man, shall be
destroyed at the resurrection. The moment that we hear the voice of the
archangel and the trump of God, “then shall be fulfilled the saying that is
written, Death is swallowed up in victory.” “This corruptible” body “shall put
on incorruption; this mortal” body “shall put on immortality;” and the Son of
God, manifested in the clouds of heaven, shall destroy this last work of the
devil!
5. Here then we see in the clearest, strongest light, what is
real religion: A restoration of man by Him that bruises the serpent’s head
[Gen. 3:15], to all that the old serpent deprived
him of; a restoration not only to the favour but likewise to the image of God,
implying not barely deliverance from sin, but the being filled with the fullness
of God. It is plain, if we attend to the preceding considerations, that nothing
short of this is Christian religion. Every thing else, whether negative or
external, is utterly wide of the mark. But what a paradox is this! How little is
it understood in the Christian world; yea, in this enlightened age, wherein it
is taken for granted, the world is wiser than ever it was from the beginning!
Among all our discoveries, who has discovered this? How few either among the
learned or unlearned! And yet, if we believe the Bible, who can deny it? Who can
doubt of it? It runs through the Bible from the beginning to the end, in one
connected chain; and the agreement of every part of it, with every other, is,
properly, the analogy of faith. Beware of taking any thing else, or anything
less than this, for religion! Not any thing else: Do not imagine an
outward form, a round of duties, both in public and private, is religion! Do not
suppose that honesty, justice, and whatever is called
morality, (though
excellent in its place,) is religion! And least of all dream that orthodoxy,
right opinion, (vulgarly called faith,) is religion. Of all religious
dreams, this is the vainest; which takes hay and stubble for gold tried in the
fire!
6. O do not take any thing less than this for the
religion of Jesus Christ! Do not take part of it for the whole! What God hath
joined together, put not asunder! Take no less for his religion, than the “faith
that worketh by love;” all inward and outward holiness. Be not content with any
religion which does not imply the destruction of all the works of the devil;
that is, of all sin. We know, weakness of understanding, and a thousand
infirmities, will remain, while this corruptible body remains; but sin need not
remain: This is that work of the devil, eminently so called, which the Son of
God was manifested to destroy in this present life. He is able, he is willing,
to destroy it now, in all that believe in him. Only be not straitened in your
own bowels! Do not distrust his power, or his love! Put his promise to the
proof! He hath spoken: And is he not ready likewise to perform? Only “come
boldly to the throne of grace,” trusting in his mercy; and you shall find, “He
saveth to the uttermost all those that come to God through him!”