The Signs of the Times
“Ye can discern the face of the sky; but can ye not discern the
signs of the times?”
Matthew
16:3.
1. The entire passage runs thus: “The Pharisees also, with the
Sadducees, came, and tempting, desired him that he would show them a sign from
heaven. He answered and said, When it is evening, ye say, It will be fair
weather: for the sky is red. And in the morning, It will be foul weather to day:
for the sky is red and lowering. O ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the
sky; but can ye not discern the signs of the times?” [Matt. 16:1–3]
2. “The Pharisees also with the Sadducees came.” In general,
these were quite opposite to each other: but it is no uncommon thing for the
children of the world to lay aside their opposition to each other, (at least for
a season) and cordially to unite in opposing the children of God “And tempting;”
that is, making a trial whether he was indeed sent of God; “desired him that he
would show them a sign from heaven;” which they believed no false prophet was
able to do. It is not improbable, they imagined, this would convince them, that
he was really sent from God. “He answered and said unto them, When it is
evening, ye say, It will be fair weather: for the sky is red. And in the
morning, It will be foul weather today, for the sky is red and lowering.”
Probably there were more certain signs of fair and foul weather in their climate
than there are in ours. “O ye hypocrites;” making profession of love, while you
have enmity in your hearts; “ye can discern the face of the sky,” and judge
thereby what the weather will be; “but can ye not discern the signs of the
times,” when God brings his first begotten Son into the world?
3. Let us more particularly inquire, First, What were the
times, whereof our Lord here speaks; and what were the signs, whereby those
times were to be distinguished from all others? We may then inquire, Secondly,
What are the times which we have reason to believe are
now at hand; and
how is it, that all who are called Christians, do not discern the signs of
these times?
I. 1. Let us, in the First place, inquire, What times were
those concerning which our Lord is here speaking? It is easy to answer; the
times of the Messiah; the times ordained before the foundation of the world,
wherein it pleased God to give his only begotten Son, to take our nature upon
him, to be “found in fashion as a man,” to live a life of sorrow and pain, and,
at length, to be “obedient unto death, even the death of the cross,” to the end
that whosoever believeth on him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”
This was the important time the signs whereof the Pharisees and Sadducees could
not discern. Clear as they were in themselves, yet so thick a veil was upon the
heart of these men, that they did not discern the tokens of his coming, though
foretold so long before.
2. But what were those signs of the coming of that Just One,
which had been so long and so clearly foretold, and whereby they might easily
have discerned those times, had not the veil been on their heart? They are many
in number; but it may suffice to mention a few of them. One of the first is that
pointed out in the solemn words, spoken by Jacob a little before his death:
(Gen. 49:10:) “The sceptre shall not depart from
Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come.” All, both
ancient and modern Jews, agree, that by Shiloh we are to understand the Messiah;
who was therefore to come, according to the prophecy, “before the sceptre,” that
is, the sovereignty, “departed from Judah.” But it did, without controversy,
depart from Judah at this very time; — an infallible sign, that at this very
time Shiloh, that is, the Messiah, came.
3. A Second eminent sign of those times, the times of the
coming of the Messiah, is given us in the third chapter of the prophecy of
Malachi: “Behold, I send my messenger, and he shall prepare my way before me:
and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to his temple.” (Mal. 3:1). How manifestly was this fulfilled,
first, by the coming of John the Baptist; and then by our blessed Lord himself,
“coming suddenly to his temple!” And what sign could be clearer to those that
impartially considered the words of the prophet Isaiah (Isa. 40:3:) “The voice of him that crieth in the
wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight!”
4. But yet clearer signs than these, (if any could be clearer,)
were the mighty works that he wrought. Accordingly, he himself declares, “The
works which I do, they testify of me.” And to these he explicitly appeals in his
answer to the question of John the Baptist; (not proposed, as some have
strangely imagined, from any doubt which he had himself; but from a desire of
confirming his disciples, who might possibly waver, when their Master was taken
from their head: “Art thou he that should come,” the Messiah? “Or look we for
another?” No bare verbal answer could have been so convincing, as what they saw
with their own eyes. Jesus therefore referred them to this testimony: “He
answered and said unto them, Go and show John the things which ye hear and see;
the blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and
the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have the gospel preached
unto them.” (Matt. 11:4, 5.)
5. But how then came it to pass, that those who were so
sharp-sighted in other things, who could “discern the face of the sky,” were not
able to discern those signs which indicated the coming of the Messiah They could
not discern them, not for want of evidence — this was full and clear, — but for
want of integrity in themselves; because they were a “wicked and adulterous
generation;” because the perverseness of their hearts spread a cloud over their
understanding. Therefore, although the Sun of Righteousness shone bright, yet
they were insensible of it. They were not willing to be convinced: Therefore
they remained in ignorance. The light was sufficient; but they shut their eyes,
that they might not see it: so that they were without excuse, till vengeance
came upon them to the uttermost.
II. 1. We are in the Second place, to consider what are the
times which we have reason to believe are now at hand? And how is it that
all who are called Christians, do not discern the signs of
these
times?
The times which we have reason to believe are at hand, (if
they are not already begun,) are what many pious men have termed, the time of
“the latter-day glory;” — meaning the time wherein God would gloriously display
his power and love, in the fulfilment of his gracious promise that “the
knowledge of the Lord shall cover the earth, as the waters cover the sea.”
2. “But are there in England, or in any part of the world, any
signs of such a time approaching?” It is not many years since, that a
person of considerable learning, as well as eminence in the Church, (then Bishop
of London,) in his pastoral letter, made this observation: “I cannot imagine
what persons mean, by talking of a great work of God at this time. I do
not see any work of God now, more than has been at any other time.” I believe: I
believe that great man did not see any extraordinary work of God. Neither he,
nor the generality of Christians, so called, saw any signs of the glorious day
that is approaching. But how is this to be accounted for? How is it that those
who can now “discern the face of the sky,” who are not only great philosophers,
but great divines, as eminent as ever the Sadducees, yea, or the Pharisees were,
do not discern the signs of those glorious times, which, if not begun, are nigh
even at the door?
3. We allow, indeed, that in every age of the Church, “the
kingdom of God came not with observation,” not with splendour and pomp, or with
any of those outward circumstances which usually attend the kingdoms of this
world. We allow this “kingdom of God is within us;” and that consequently, when
it begins either in an individual or in a nation, it “is like a grain of mustard
seed,” which at first “is the least of all seeds,” but nevertheless, gradually
increases, till “it becomes a great tree.” Or, to use the other comparison of
our Lord, it is like “a little leaven, which a woman took and hid in three
measures of meal, till the whole was leavened.”
4. But may it not be asked, “Are there now any signs that the
day of God’s power is approaching?” I appeal to every candid, unprejudiced
person, whether we may not, at this day, discern all those signs, (understanding
the words in a spiritual sense,) to which our Lord referred to John’s disciples?
“The blind receive their sight:” Those who were blind from their birth, unable
to see their own deplorable state, and much more to see God, and the remedy he
has prepared for them in the Son of his love, now see themselves, yea, and “the
light of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. “The eyes of their
understanding being now opened, they see all things clearly. — “The deaf hear:”
Those that were before utterly deaf, to all the outward and inward calls of God,
now hear, not only his providential calls, but also the whispers of his grace. —
“The lame walk:” Those who never before arose from the earth, or moved one step
toward heaven, are now walking in all the ways of God; yea, “running the race
that is set before them.” — “The lepers are cleansed:” The deadly leprosy of
sin, which they brought with them into the world, and which no art of man could
ever cure, is now clean departed from them. And surely never in any age or
nation, since the apostles, have those words been so eminently fulfilled, “The
poor have the gospel preached unto them,” as it is at this day. At this day the
gospel leaven, faith working by love, — inward and outward holiness, — or, (to
use the terms of St. Paul,) “righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy
Ghost” — hath so spread in various parts of Europe, particularly in England,
Scotland, Ireland, in the islands, in the north and south, from Georgia to
New-England and Newfoundland, that sinners have been truly converted to God,
throughly changed both in heart and in life; not by tens, or by hundreds only,
but by thousands, yea, by myriads! The fact cannot be denied: we can point out
the persons, with their names and places of abode. And yet the wise men of the
world, the men of eminence, the men of learning and renown, “cannot imagine what
we mean by talking of any extraordinary work of God!” They cannot discern the
signs of these times! They can see no sign at all of God’s arising to
maintain his own cause, and set up his kingdom over the earth!
5. But how may this be accounted for? How is it, that they
cannot discern the signs of these times? We may account for their want of
discernment on the same principle we accounted for that of the Pharisees and
Sadducees; namely, that they likewise are, what those were, an “adulterous and
sinful generation.” If their eye was single, their whole body would be full of
light: but suppose their eye be evil, their whole body must be full of darkness.
Every evil temper darkens the soul; every evil passion clouds the understanding.
How then can we expect, that those should be able to discern the signs of the
times who are full of all disorderly passions, and slaves to every evil temper?
But this is really the case. They are full of pride: They think of themselves
far more highly than they ought to think. They are vain: They “seek honour one
of another, and not the honour that cometh of God only.” They cherish hatred and
malice in their hearts: they give place to anger, to envy, to revenge: They
return evil for evil, and railing for railing. Instead of overcoming evil with
good, they make no scruple of demanding an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
tooth. They “savour not the things that are of God, but the things that are of
men.” They set their affections, not on things above, but on things that are of
the earth. They “love the creature more than the Creator:” They are “lovers of
pleasure more than lovers of God.” How then should they discern the signs of the
times? The god of this world, whom they serve, has blinded their hearts, and
covered their minds with a veil of thick darkness. Alas, what have these “souls
of flesh and blood,” (as one speaks) to do with God, or the things of God?
6. St. John assigns this very reason for the Jews not
understanding the things of God; namely, that in consequence of their preceding
sins, and wilful rejecting the light, God had now delivered them up to Satan,
who blinded them past recovery. Over and over, when they might have seen, they
would not; they shut their eyes against the light: And now they can not see, God
having given them up to an undiscerning mind : Therefore they do not believe,
because that Isaiah said, (that is, because of the reason given in that saying
of Isaiah,) “He hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their hearts, that they
should not see with their eyes, nor understand with their hearts, and be
converted, and I should heal them.” The plain meaning is, not that God did this
by his own immediate power; it would be flat blasphemy to say, that God, in this
sense, hardens any man; but his Spirit strives with them no longer, and then
Satan hardens them effectually.
7. And as it was with them in ancient times, so it is with the
present generation. Thousands of those who bear the name of Christ are now given
up to an undiscerning mind. The god of this world hath so blinded their eyes,
that the light cannot shine upon them; so that they can no more discern the
signs of the times, than the Pharisees and Sadducees could of old. A wonderful
instance of this spiritual blindness, this total inability to discern the signs
of the times mentioned in Scripture, is given us in the very celebrated work of
a late eminent writer; who supposes, the New Jerusalem came down from heaven,
when Constantine the Great called himself a Christian. I say,
called himself
a Christian; for I dare not affirm that he was one, any more than
Peter the Great. I cannot but believe, he would have come nearer the mark, if he
had said, that it was the time when a huge cloud of infernal brimstone and smoke
came up from the bottomless pit! For surely there never was a time wherein Satan
gained so fatal an advantage over the Church of Christ, as when such a flood of
riches, and honour, and power broke in upon it, particularly on the Clergy!
8. By the same rule, what signs would this writer have
expected of the approaching conversion of the Heathens? He would doubtless, have
expected a hero, like Charles of Sweden, or Frederick of Prussia, to carry fire,
and sword, and Christianity, through whole nations at once! And it cannot be
denied, that since the time of Constantine, many nations have been converted in
this way. But could it be said concerning such conversions as these; “The
kingdom of heaven cometh not with observation?” Surely every one must observe a
warrior rushing through the land, at the head of fifty or sixty thousand men!
But is this the way of spreading Christianity, which the author of it, the
Prince of Peace, has chosen? Nay, it is not in this manner that a grain of
mustard seed grows up into a great tree. It is not thus that a little leaven
leavens the whole lump. Rather, it spreads by degrees farther and farther, till
the whole is leavened. We may form a judgment of what will be hereafter, by what
we have seen already. And this is the way wherein true Christian religion, the
faith that worketh by love, has been spreading, particularly through Great
Britain and its dependencies, for half a century.
9. In the same manner it continues to spread at the present
time also, as may easily appear to all those whose eyes are not blinded. All
those that experience in their own hearts the power of God unto salvation will
readily perceive how the same religion which they enjoy, is still spreading from
heart to heart. They take knowledge of the same grace of God, strongly and
sweetly working on every side; and rejoice to find another and another sinner,
first inquiring, “What must I do to be saved?” — and then testifying, “My soul
doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit doth rejoice in God my Saviour.” Upon a
fair and candid inquiry, they find more and more, not only of those who had some
form of religion, but of those who had no form at all, who were profligate,
abandoned sinners, now entirely changed, truly fearing God and working
righteousness. They observe more and more, even of these poor outcasts of men,
who are inwardly and outwardly changed; loving God and their neighbour; living
in the uniform practice of justice, mercy, and truth; as they have time, doing
good to all men; easy and happy in their lives, and triumphant in their
death.
10. What excuse, then, have any that believe the Scriptures to
be the Word of God, for not discerning the signs of these times, as preparatory
to the general call of the Heathens? What could God have done which he hath not
done, to convince you that the day is coming, that the time is at hand, when he
will fulfil his glorious promises; when he will arise to maintain his own cause,
and to set up his kingdom over all the earth? What, indeed, unless he had
forced you to believe? And this he could not do, without destroying the
nature which he had given you: For he made you free agents; having an inward
power of self-determination, which is essential to your nature. And he deals
with you as free agents from first to last. As such, you may shut or open your
eyes, as you please. You have sufficient light shining all around you; yet you
need not see it unless you will. But be assured God is not well pleased with
your shutting your eyes and then saying, “I cannot see.” I counsel you to bestow
an impartial examination upon the whole affair. After a candid inquiry into
matter of fact, consider deeply, “What hath God wrought?” “Who hath seen such a
thing? Who hath heard such a thing?” Hath not a nation, as it were, been “born
in a day?” How swift, as well as how deep, and how extensive a work has been
wrought in the present age! And certainly, “not by might, neither by power, but
by the Spirit of the Lord.” For how utterly inadequate were the means! how
insufficient were the instruments to work any such effect; — at least, those of
which it has pleased God to make use of in the British dominions and in America!
By how unlikely instruments has God been pleased to work from the beginning! “A
few young raw heads,” said the bishop of London, “what can they pretend to do?”
They pretended to be that in the hand of God, that a pen is in the hand
of a man. They pretended, (and do so at this day,) to do the work whereunto they
are sent; to do just what the Lord pleases. And if it be his pleasure, to throw
down the walls of Jericho, the strong-holds of Satan, not by the engines of war,
but by the blasts of rams’ horns, who shall say unto him, “What dost thou!”
11. Meantime, “blessed are your eyes, for they see: many
prophets and righteous men have desired to see the things you see, and have not
seen them, and to hear the things that you hear, and have not heard them.” You
see and acknowledge the day of your visitation; such a visitation as neither you
nor your fathers had known. You may well say, “This is the day which the Lord
hath made; we will rejoice and be glad therein.” You see the dawn of that
glorious day, whereof all the prophets have spoken. And how shall you most
effectually improve this day of your visitation?
12. The first point is, see that you yourselves receive not
the blessing of God in vain. Begin at the root, if you have not already. Now
repent and believe the gospel! If you have believed, “look to yourselves, that
ye lose not what you have wrought, but that ye receive a full reward!” Stir up
the gift of God that is in you! Walk in the light, as he is in the light. And
while you “hold fast that which you have attained, go on unto perfection.” Yea,
and when you are “made perfect in love,” still, “forgetting the that are behind,
press on to the mark, for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ
Jesus.”
13. It behoves you, in the next place to help your neighbours.
“Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and
glorify your Father which is in heaven.” As you have time, do good unto all men,
but especially unto them that are of the household of faith. Proclaim the glad
tidings of salvation ready to be revealed, not only to those of your own
household, not only to your relations, friends, and acquaintance, but to all
whom God providentially delivers into your hands! “Ye,” who already know in whom
you have believed, “are the salt of the earth.” Labour to season, with the
knowledge and love of God, all that you have any intercourse with! “Ye are as a
city set upon a hill;” ye cannot, ye ought not to be hid. “Ye are the light of
the world: men do not light a candle, and put it under a bushel;” how much less
the all wise God! No; let it shine to all that are in the house; all that are
witnesses of your life and conversation. Above all, continue instant in prayer,
both for yourselves, for all the Church of God, and for all the children of men,
that they may remember themselves, and be turned unto our God, that they
likewise may enjoy the gospel blessing on earth, and the glory of God in
heaven!