Spiritual Worship
“This is the true God, and eternal life.”
1 John
5:20.
1. In this Epistle St. John speaks not to any particular
Church, but to all the Christians of that age; although more especially to them
among whom he then resided. And in them he speaks to the whole Christian Church
in all succeeding ages.
2. In this letter, or rather tract, (for he was present with
those to whom it was more immediately directed, probably being not able to
preach to them any longer, because of his extreme old age,) he does not treat
directly of faith, which St. Paul had done; neither of inward and outward
holiness, concerning which both St. Paul, St. James, and St. Peter, had spoken;
but of the foundation of all, — the happy and holy communion which the faithful
have with God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
3. In the preface he describes the authority by which he wrote
and spoke, (1 John 1:1–4, ) and
expressly points out the design of his present writing. To the preface exactly
answers the conclusion of the Epistle, more largely explaining the same design,
and recapitulating the marks of our communion with God, by,
“we know,”
thrice repeated. (1 John 5:18–20.)
4. The tract itself treats, First, severally, of communion with
the Father; (1 John 1:5–10; ) of
communion with the Son; (1 John 2 and 3; ) of communion with the Spirit. (1 John 4.)
Secondly, conjointly, of the testimony of the Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost; on which faith in Christ, the being born of God, love to God and his
children, the keeping his commandments, and victory over the world, are founded.
(1 John 5:1–12.)
5. The recapitulation begins, (1 John
5:18, ) “We know that he who is born of God,” who sees and loves God,
“sinneth not,” so long as this loving faith abideth in him. “We know we are of
God;” children of God, by the witness and the fruit of the Spirit; “and the
whole world,” all who have not the Spirit, “lieth in the wicked one.” They are,
and live, and dwell in him, as the children of God do in the Holy One. “We know
that the Son of God is come, and hath given us” a spiritual “understanding, that
we may know the true One,” the faithful and true witness. “And we are in the
true One,” as branches in the vine. “This is the true God, and eternal
life.”
In considering these important words, we may inquire,
I. How is he the true God?
II. How is he eternal life? I shall then,
III. Add a few inferences.
I. 1. And, First, we may inquire, How is he the true God? He
is “God over all, blessed for ever.” “He was with God,” with God the Father,
“from the beginning,” from eternity, “and was God. He and the Father are One;”
and, consequently, “he thought it not robbery to be equal with God.”
Accordingly, the inspired writers give him all the titles of the most high God.
They call him over and over, by the incommunicable name, JEHOVAH, — never given
to any creature. They ascribe to him all the attributes and all the works of
God. So that we need not scruple to pronounce him, “God of God, Light of Light,
very God of very God: In glory equal with the Father, in majesty
co-eternal.”
2. He is the true God, the only Cause, the sole Creator of all
things. “By him,” saith the Apostle Paul, “were created all things that are in
heaven, and that are on earth,” — yea, earth and heaven themselves; but the
inhabitants are named, because more noble than the house, — “visible and
invisible.” The several species of which are subjoined: “Whether they be
thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers.” So St. John: “All things
were made by him, and without him was not anything made that was made.” And,
accordingly, St. Paul applies to him those strong words of the Psalmist: “Thou,
Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth, and the heavens
are the work of thy hands.”
3 . And as the true God, he is also the Supporter of all the
things that he hath made. He beareth, upholdeth, sustaineth, all created things
by the word of his power, by the same powerful word which brought them out of
nothing. As this was absolutely necessary for the beginning of their existence,
it is equally so for the continuance of it: Were his almighty influence
withdrawn, they could not subsist a moment longer. Hold up a stone in the air;
the moment you withdraw your hand, it naturally falls to the ground. In like
manner, were he to withdraw his hand for a moment, the creation would fall into
nothing.
4. As the true God, he is likewise the Preserver of all
things. He not only keeps them in being, but preserves them in that degree of
well-being which is suitable to their several natures. He preserves them in
their several relations, connexions, and dependencies, so as to compose one
system of beings, to form one entire universe, according to the counsel of his
will. How strongly and beautifully is this expressed: Ta panta en autoi synesteke. By whom all things consist:
or, more literally, By and in him are all things compacted into one system. he
is not only the support, but also the cement, of the whole universe.
5. I would particularly remark, (what perhaps has not been
sufficiently observed,) that he is the true Author of all the
motion that
is in the universe. To spirits, indeed, he has given a small degree of
self-moving power, but not to matter. All matter, of whatever kind it be, is
absolutely and totally inert. It does not, cannot, in any case, move itself; and
whenever any part of it seems to move, it is in reality moved by something else.
See that log, which, vulgarly speaking, moves on the sea! It is in
reality moved by the water. The water is moved by the wind; that is, a
current of air. And the air itself owes all its motion to the ethereal fire, a
particle of which is attached to every particle of it. Deprive it of that fire,
and it moves no longer; it is fixed: It is as inert as sand. Remove fluidity
(owing to the ethereal fire intermixed with it) from water, and it has no more
motion than the log. Impact fire into iron, by hammering it when red hot, and it
has no more motion than fixed air, or frozen water. But when it is unfixed, when
it is in its most active state, what gives motion to fire? The very heathen will
tell you. It is,
Totam Mens agitans molem, et magno se corpore miscens.
[The general soul
Lives in the parts, and agitates the whole.
edit.]
6. To pursue this a little farther: We say, the moon moves
round the earth; the earth and the other planets move round the sun; the sun
moves round its own axis. But these are only vulgar expressions: For, if we
speak the truth, neither the sun, moon, nor stars move. None of these
move themselves: They are all moved every moment by the almighty hand
that made them.
“Yes,” says Sir Isaac [Newton], “the sun, moon, and all the
heavenly bodies, do move, do gravitate, toward each other.”
Gravitate.
What is that? “Why, they all attract each other, in proportion to the
quantity of matter they contain.” “Nonsense all over,” says Mr. hutchinson;
“jargon, self-contradiction! Can anything act where it is not? No; they
are continually impelled toward each other.”
Impelled! by what?
“By the subtle matter, the ether, or electric fire.” But remember! be it ever so
subtle, it is matter still: Consequently, it is as inert in itself as either
sand or marble. It cannot therefore move itself; but probably it is the first
material mover, the main spring whereby the Creator and Preserver of all things
is pleased to move the universe.
7. The true God is also the Redeemer of all the children of
men. It pleased the Father to lay upon him the iniquities of us all, that by the
one oblation of himself once offered, when he tasted death for every man, he
might make a full and sufficient sacrifice, oblation, and satisfaction for the
sins of the whole world.
8. Again: The True God is the Governor of all things: “His
kingdom ruleth over all.” The government rests upon his shoulder, throughout all
ages. He is the Lord and Disposer of the whole creation, and every part of it.
And in how astonishing a manner does he govern the world! How far are his ways
above human thought! How little do we know of his methods of government! only
this we know, Ita praesides singulis sicut
universis, et universis sicut singulis! “Thou presidest over each
creature, as if it were the universe, and over the universe, as over each
individual creature.” Dwell a little upon this sentiment: What a glorious
mystery does it contain! It is paraphrased in the words recited above:
FATHER, how wide
thy glories shine! Lord of the universe, and mine: Thy goodness watches
over the whole, As all the world were but one soul; Yet keeps my every
sacred hair, As
I remaind thy single care!
9. And yet there is a difference, as was said before, in his
providential government over the children of men. A pious writer observes, There
is a three-fold circle of divine providence. The outermost circle
includes all the sons of men; Heathens, Mahometans, Jews, and Christians. He
causeth his sun to rise upon all. He giveth them rain and fruitful seasons. He
pours ten thousand benefits upon them, and fills their hearts with food and
gladness. With an interior circle he encompasses the whole visible
Christian Church, all that name the name of Christ. He has an additional regard
to these, and a nearer attention to their welfare. But the
innermost
circle of his providence encloses only the invisible Church of Christ: all
real Christians, wherever dispersed in all corners of the earth; all that
worship God (whatever denomination they are of) in spirit and in truth. He keeps
these as the apple of an eye: He hides them under the shadow of his wings. And
it is to these in particular that our Lord says, “even the hairs of your head
are all numbered.”
10. Lastly, being the true God, he is the end of all things;
according to that solemn declaration of the Apostle: (Rom.
11:36:) “of him, and through him, and to him, are all things:
“of
him, as the Creator, — through him, as the Sustainer and Preserver;
and to him, as the ultimate end of all.
II. In all these senses Jesus Christ is the true God. But how
is he eternal life?
1. The thing directly intended in this expression is not, that
he will be eternal life: Although this is a great and important truth,
and never to be forgotten. “He is the Author of eternal salvation to all them
that obey him.” He is the Purchaser of that “crown of life” which will be given
to all that are “faithful unto death;” and he will be the soul of all their joys
to all the saints in glory.
The flame of angelical love Is kindled at Jesuss
face; And all
the enjoyment above Consists in the rapturous gaze!
2. The thing directly intended is not, that he is the
resurrection; although this also is true, according to his own declaration, “I
am the resurrection and the life:” Agreeable to which are St. Pauls words: “As
in Adam all died, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.” So that we may
well say, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who... hath
begotten us again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Christ from the
dead, to an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not
away.”
3. But waiving what he will be hereafter, we are here
called to consider what he is now. He is now the life of everything that
lives, in any kind or degree. He is the Source of the lowest species of life,
that of vegetables, as being the Source of all the motion on which
vegetation depends. He is the Fountain of the life of
animals; the Power
by which the heart beats, and the circulating juices flow. He is the Fountain of
all the life which man possesses in common with other animals. And if we
distinguish the rational from the animal life, he is the Source of this
also.
4. But how infinitely short does all this fall of the life
which is here directly intended, and of which the Apostle speaks so explicitly
in the preceding verses! (1 John 5:11, 12:) “This is the testimony, that God hath given
us eternal life; and this life is in his Son. He that hath the Son hath life,” —
the eternal life here spoken of, — “and he that hath not the Son” of God “hath
not” this “life.” As if he had said, “This is the sum of the testimony which God
hath testified of his Son, that God hath given us, not only a title to, but the
real beginning of, eternal life: And this life is purchased by, and treasured up
in, his Son; who has all the springs and the fullness of it in himself, to
communicate to his body, the Church.”
5. This eternal life then commences when it pleases the Father
to reveal his Son in our hearts; when we first know Christ, being enabled “to
call him Lord by the Holy Ghost;” when we can testify, our conscience bearing us
witness in the Holy Ghost, “the life which I now live, I live by faith in the
Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.” And then it is that
happiness begins; happiness real, solid, substantial. Then it is that heaven is
opened in the soul, that the proper, heavenly state commences, while the love of
God, as loving us, is shed abroad in the heart, instantly producing love to all
mankind; general, pure benevolence, together with its genuine fruits, lowliness,
meekness, patience, contentedness in every state; an entire, clear, full
acquiescence in the whole will of God; enabling us to “rejoice evermore, and in
everything to give thanks.”
6. As our knowledge and our love of him increase, by the same
degrees, and in the same proportion, the kingdom of an inward heaven must
necessarily increase also; while we “grow up in all things into Him who is our
Head.” And when we are en autoi
peplerOmenoi, complete in him, as our translators render it; but
more properly when we are filled with him; when “Christ in us, the hope
of glory,” is our God and our All; when he has taken the full possession of our
heart; when he reigns therein without a rival, the Lord of every motion there;
when we dwell in Christ, and Christ in us, we are one with Christ, and Christ
with us; then we are completely happy; then we live “all the life that is hid
with Christ in God;” then, and not till then, we properly experience what that
word meaneth, “God is love; and whosoever dwelleth in love, dwelleth in God, and
God in him.”
III. I have now only to add a few inferences from the
preceding observations.
1. And we may learn from hence, First, that as there is but
one God in heaven above and in the earth beneath; so there is only one happiness
for created spirits, either in heaven or earth. This one God made our heart for
himself; and it cannot rest till it resteth in him. It is true, that while we
are in the vigour of youth and health; while our blood dances in our veins;
while the world smiles upon us, and we have all the conveniences, yea, and
superfluities of life, we frequently have pleasing dreams, and enjoy a kind of
happiness. But it cannot continue; it flies away like a shadow; and even while
it does, it is not solid or substantial; it does not satisfy the soul. We still
pant after something else, something which we have not. Give a man everything
that this world can give, still, as Horace observed near two thousand years ago,
—
Curtae
nescio quid semper abest rei.
Still, —
Amidst our plenty something still, To me, to thee, to
him is wanting!
That something is neither more nor less than the
knowledge and love of God; without which no spirit can be happy either in heaven
or earth.
2. Permit me to recite my own experience, in confirmation of
this: — I distinctly remember, that, even in my childhood, even when I was at
school, I have often said, “They say the life of a schoolboy is the happiest in
the world; but I am sure I am not happy; for I am not content, and so cannot be
happy.” When I had lived a few years longer, being in the vigour of youth, a
stranger to pain and sickness, and particularly to lowness of spirits; (which I
do not remember to have felt one quarter of an hour since I was born;) having
plenty of all things, in the midst of sensible and amiable friends who loved me,
and I loved them; and being in the way of life which, of all others, suited my
inclinations; still I was not happy. I wondered why I was not, and could not
imagine what the reason was. The reason certainly was, I did not know God; the
Source of present as well as eternal happiness. What is a clear proof that I was
not then happy is, that, upon the coolest reflection, I knew not one week which
I would have thought it worth while to have lived over again; taking it with
every inward and outward sensation, without any variation at all.
3. But a pious man affirms, “When I was young, I was happy;
though I was utterly without God in the world.” I do not believe you; Though I
doubt not but you believe yourself. But you are deceived, as I have been over
and over. Such is the condition of human life!
Flowerets and
myrtles fragrant seem to rise: All is at distance fair; but near at hand, The gay deceit mocks
the desiring eyes With thorns, and desert heath, and barren sand.
Look forward on any distant prospect: How beautiful does it
appear! Come up to it; and the beauty vanishes away, and it is rough and
disagreeable. Just so is life. But when the scene is past, it resumes its former
appearance; and we seriously believe, that we were then very happy, though, in
reality, we were far otherwise. For as none is now, so none ever was, happy,
without the loving knowledge of the true God.
4. We may learn hence, Secondly, that this happy knowledge of
the true God is only another name for religion; I mean Christian religion;
which, indeed, is the only one that deserves the name. Religion, as to the
nature or essence of it, does not lie in this or that set of notions, vulgarly
called faith; nor in a round of duties, however carefully
reformed
from error and superstition. It does not consist in any number of outward
actions. No: it properly and directly consists in the knowledge and love of God,
as manifested in the Son of his love, through the eternal Spirit. And this
naturally leads to every heavenly temper, and to every good word and work.
5. We learn hence, Thirdly, that none but a Christian is
happy; none but a real inward Christian. A glutton, a drunkard, a gamester may
be merry; but he cannot be happy. The beau, the belle, may eat and drink,
and rise up to play; but still they feel they are not happy. Men or women may
adorn their own dear persons with all the colours of the rainbow. They may
dance, and sing, and hurry to and fro, and flutter hither and thither. They may
roll up and down in their splendid carriages, and talk insipidly to each other.
They may hasten from one diversion to another: But happiness is not there. They
are still “walking in a vain shadow, and disquieting themselves in vain.” One of
their own poets has truly pronounced, concerning the whole life of these sons of
pleasure,
‘Tis a dull farce, and empty show: Powder, and
pocket-glass, and beau.
I cannot but observe of that fine writer, that he came near
the mark, and yet fell short of it. In his “Solomon” (one of the noblest poems
in the English tongue) he clearly shows where happiness
is not; that it
is not to be found in natural knowledge, in power, or in the pleasures of sense
or imagination. But he does not show where it is to be found. He could not; for
he did not know it himself. Yet he came near it when he said,
Restore, Great
Father, thy instructed son; And in my act may thy great will be done!
6. We learn hence, Fourthly, that every Christian is happy;
and that he who is not happy is not a Christian. If, as was observed above,
religion is happiness, everyone that has it must be happy. This appears from the
very nature of the thing: For if religion and happiness are in fact the same, it
is impossible that any man can possess the former, without possessing the latter
also. He cannot have religion without having happiness; seeing they are utterly
inseparable.
And it is equally certain, on the other hand, that he who is
not happy is not a Christian; Seeing if he was a real Christian, he could not
but be happy. But I allow an exception here in favour of those who are under
violent temptation; yea, and of those who are under deep nervous disorders,
which are, indeed, a species of insanity. The clouds and darkness which then
overwhelm the soul suspend its happiness; especially if Satan is permitted to
second those disorders by pouring in his fiery darts. But, excepting these
cases, the observation will hold, and it should be well attended to, — Whoever
is not happy, yea, happy in God, is not a Christian.
7. Are not you a living proof of this? Do not you still
wander to and fro, seeking rest, but finding none? — pursuing happiness, but
never overtaking it? And who can blame you for pursuing it? It is the very end
of your being. The great Creator made nothing to be miserable, but every
creature to be happy in its kind. And upon a general review of the works of his
hands he pronounced them all very good; which they would not have been,
had not every intelligent creature, yea, everyone capable of pleasure and pain,
been happy in answering the end of its creation. If
you are now unhappy,
it is because you are in an unnatural state: And shall you not sigh for
deliverance from it? “The whole creation,” being now “subject to vanity,”
“groaneth and travaileth in pain together.” I blame you only, or pity you
rather, for taking a wrong way to a right end; for seeking happiness where it
never was, and never can be, found. You seek happiness in your fellow-creatures,
instead of your Creator. But these can no more make you happy than they can make
you immortal. If you have ears to hear, every creature cries aloud, “Happiness
is not in me.” All these are, in truth, “broken cisterns, that can hold no
water.” O turn unto your rest! Turn to Him in whom are hid all the treasures of
happiness! Turn unto him “who giveth liberally unto all men;” and he will give
you “to drink of the water of life freely.”
8. You cannot find your long-sought happiness in all the
pleasures of the world. Are they not “deceitful upon the weights?” Are they not
lighter than vanity itself? How long will ye “feed upon that which is not
bread?” — which may amuse, but cannot satisfy? You cannot find it in the
religion of the world; either in opinions or a mere round of outward duties.
Vain labour! Is not God a spirit, and therefore to be “worshipped in spirit and
in truth?” In this alone can you find the happiness you seek; in the union of
your spirit with the Father of spirits; in the knowledge and love of Him who is
the fountain of happiness, sufficient for all the souls he has made.
9. But where is He to be found? Shall we go up into heaven, or
down into hell, to seek him? Shall we “take the wings of the morning” and search
for him “in the uttermost parts of the sea?” Nay, quod petis, hic est! What a strange word to fall from
the pen of a Heathen! “What you seek is here!” He is “about your bed.” He is
“about your path” He “besets you behind and before.” He “lays his hand upon
you.” Lo! God is here! not afar off. Now believe and feel him near! May he now
reveal himself in your heart! Know him, love him, And you are happy!.
10. Are you already happy in him? Then see that you “hold fast
whereunto ye have attained!” “Watch and pray,” that you may never be “moved from
your steadfastness.” “Look unto yourselves, that ye lose not what you have
gained, but that ye receive a full reward.” In so doing, expect a continual
growth in grace, in the loving knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. Expect that
the power of the Highest shall suddenly overshadow you, that all sin may be
destroyed, and nothing may remain in your heart, but holiness unto the Lord. And
this moment, and every moment, “present yourselves a living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable to God,” and “glorify him with your body and with your spirit which
are God’s!”