On Temptation
“There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to
man: And God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye
are able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be
able to bear it.”
1 Cor.
10:13.
1. In the foregoing part of the chapter, the Apostle has been
reciting, on the one hand, the unparalleled mercies of God to the Israelites;
and, on the other, the unparalleled ingratitude of that disobedient and
gainsaying people. [1 Cor. 10:1–10] And all these things, as the
Apostle observes, “were written for our ensample;” [1 Cor.
10:11] that we might take warning from them, so as to avoid their
grievous sins, and escape their terrible punishment. He then adds that solemn
and important caution, “Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he
fall.” [1 Cor. 10:12]
2. But if we observe these words attentively, will there not
appear a considerable difficulty in them? “Let him that thinketh he standeth
take heed lest he fall.” If a man only thinks he stands, he is in no
danger of falling. It is not possible that any one should fall, if he only
thinks he stands. The same difficulty occurs, according to our
translation, in those well-known words of our Lord, (the importance of which we
may easily learn from their being repeated in the Gospel no less than eight
times,) “To him that hath shall be given; but from that hath not, shall be taken
away even what he seemeth to have.” “That which he
seemeth to have!” Nay,
if he only seems to have it, it is impossible it should taken away. None
can take away from another what he only seems to have. What a man only
seems to have, he cannot possibly lose. This difficulty may, at first, appear
impossible to be surmounted. It is really so: It cannot be surmounted, if the
common translation be allowed. But if we observe the proper meaning of the
original word, the difficulty vanishes away. It may be allowed that the word
dokei does (sometimes at least,
in some authors) mean no more than to seem. But I much doubt whether it
ever bears that meaning in any part of the inspired writings. By a careful
consideration of every text in the New Testament wherein this word occurs, I am
fully convinced, that it nowhere lessens, but every where strengthens, the sense
of the word to which it is annexed. Accordingly ho dokei echein, does not mean,
what he seems to
have, but, on the contrary, what he assuredly hath. And so ho dokon estanai, not
he that
seemeth to stand, or he that thinketh he standeth, but
he that
assuredly standeth; he who standeth so fast, that he does not appear to be
in any danger of falling; he that saith, like David, I shall never be moved:
Thou, Lord, hast made my hill so strong. [Ps.
30:6, 7] Yet at that very time,
thus saith the Lord, Be not high-minded, but fear. else shalt thou be cut off:
[Rom. 11:20, 21] else shalt thou also be moved from thy
steadfastness. The strength which thou assuredly hast, shall be taken away. As
firmly as thou didst really stand, thou wilt fall into sin, if not into
hell.
3. But lest any should be discouraged by the consideration of
those who once ran well, and were afterwards overcome by temptation; lest the
fearful of heart should be utterly cast down, supposing it impossible for them
to stand; the Apostle subjoins to that serious exhortation, these comfortable
words: There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man: But God
is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but
will the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it.
[1 Cor. 10:13]
I. 1. Let us begin with the observation which ushers in this
comfortable promise: “There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common
to man.” our translators seem to have been sensible that this expression,
common to man, does by means reach the force of the original word. hence
they substitute another in the margin, moderate. But this seems to be
less significant than the other, and farther from the meaning of it. Indeed it
is not easy to find any word in the english tongue, which answers the word anthropinos. I believe the sense of
it can only be expressed by some such circumlocution as this: “Such as is suited
to the nature and circumstances of man; such as every man may reasonably expect,
if he considers the nature of his body and his soul, and his situation in the
present world.” If we duly consider these, we shall not be surprised at any
temptation that hath befallen us; seeing it is no other than such a creature, in
such a situation, has all reason to expect.
2. Consider, First, the nature of that body with which your
soul is connected. how many are the evils which it is every day, every hour,
liable to! Weakness, sickness and disorders of a thousand kinds are its natural
attendants. Consider the inconceivably minute fibres, threads, abundantly finer
than hair, (called from thence capillary vessels,) whereof every part of it is
composed; consider the innumerable multitude of equally fine pipes and
strainers, all filled with circulating juice! And will not the breach of a few
of these fibres, or the obstruction of a few of these tubes, particularly in the
brain, or heart, or lungs, destroy our ease, health, strength, if not life
itself? Now, if we observe that all pain implies temptation, how numberless must
the temptations be which will beset every man, more or less, sooner or later,
while he dwells in this corruptible body!
3. Consider, Secondly, the present state of the soul, as long
as it inhabits the house of clay. I do not mean in its unregenerate state; while
it lies in darkness and the shadow of death; under the dominion of the prince of
darkness, without hope and without God in the world: No; look upon men who are
raised above that deplorable state. See those who have tasted that the Lord is
gracious. Yet still how weak is their understanding! how limited its extent! How
confused, how inaccurate, are our apprehensions of even the things that are
round about us. How liable are the wisest of men to mistake! to inform false
judgments; to take falsehood for truth, and truth for falsehood; evil for good,
and good for evil! What starts, what wanderings of imagination, are we
continually subject to! And how many are the temptations which we have to expect
even from these innocent infirmities!
4. Consider, Thirdly, what is the present situation of even
those that fear God. They dwell in the ruins of a disordered world, among men
that know not God, that care not for him, and whose heart is fully set in them
to do evil. How many are forced to cry out, “Woe is me, that I am constrained to
dwell with Mesech; to have my habitations among the tents of Kedar!” among the
enemies of God and man. How immensely out-numbered are those that would do well,
by them that neither fear God nor regard man! And how striking is Cowleys
observation: “If a man that was armed cap-a-pie was closed in by a thousand
naked Indians, their number would have them such advantage over him that it
would be scarce possible for him to escape. What hope then would there be for a
naked, unarmed man to escape, who was surrounded by a thousand armed men?” Now,
this is the case of every good man. He is not armed either with force or fraud,
and is turned out, naked as he is, among thousands that are armed with the whole
armour of Satan, and provided with all the weapons which the prince of this
world can supply out of the armory of hell. If then he is not destroyed, yet how
must a good man be tempted in the midst of this evil world!
5. But is it only from wicked men that temptations arise to
them that fear God? It is very natural to imagine this; and almost every one
thinks so. Hence how many of us have said in our hearts, “o if my lot were but
cast among good men, among those that loved or even feared God, I should be free
from all these temptations!” Perhaps you would: Probably you would not find the
same sort of temptations which you have now to encounter. But you would surely
meet with temptations of some other kind, which you would find equally hard to
bear. For even good men, in general, though sin has not dominion over the, yet
are not freed from the remains of it. They have still the remains of an evil
heart, ever prone to “depart from the living God.” They have the seeds of pride,
of anger, of foolish desire; indeed, of every unholy temper. And any of these,
if they do not continually watch and pray, may, and naturally will, spring up,
and trouble, not themselves only, but all that are round about them. We must not
therefore depend upon finding no temptation from those that fear, yea, in a
measure love, God. Much less must we be surprised, if some of those who once
loved God in sincerity, should lay greater temptations in our way than many of
those that never knew him.
6. “But can we expect to find any temptation from those that
are perfected in love?” This is an important question, and deserves a
particular consideration. I answer, First, You may find every kind of temptation
from those who suppose they are perfected when indeed they are not: And
so you may, Secondly, from those who once really were so, but are now moved from
their steadfastness. And if you are not aware of this, if you think they are
still what they were once, the temptation will be harder to bear. Nay, Thirdly,
even those who “stand fast in liberty wherewith Christ has made them free,”
[Gal. 5:1] who are now really perfect in love, may
still be an occasion of temptation to you; for they are still encompassed
with infirmities. They may be dull of apprehension; they may have natural
heedlessness, or a treacherous memory; they may have too lively an imagination:
And any of these may cause little improprieties, either in speech or behaviour,
which, though not sinful in themselves, may try all the grace you have:
especially if you impute to perverseness of will (as it is very natural to do)
what is really owing to defect of memory, or weakness of understanding; if these
appear to you to be voluntary mistakes, which are really involuntary. So proper
was the answer which a saint of God (now in Abrahams bosom) gave me some years
ago, when I said, “Jenny, surely now your mistress and you can neither of you of
you be a trial to the other, as God has saved you both from sin!” “o, Sir,” said
she, “if we are saved from sin, we still have infirmities enough to try all the
grace that God has given us!”
7. But besides evil men, do not evil spirits also continually
surround us on every side? Do not Satan and his angels continually go about
seeking whom they may devour? Who is out of reach of their malice and subtlety?
Not the wisest or the best of the children of men. “The servant is not above his
Master.” If then they tempted him, will not they tempt us also? Yea, it may be,
should God see good to permit, more or less, to the end of our lives. “No
temptation,” therefore, “hath taken us,” which we had not reason to expect,
either from our body or soul; either from evil spirits or evil men; yea, or even
from good men, till our spirits return to God that gave them.
II. 1. Meantime, what a comfort it is to know, with the utmost
certainty, that “God is faithful, who will not suffer us to be tempted above
what we are able.” He knoweth what our ability is, and cannot be mistaken. “He
knoweth” precisely “whereof we are made: He remembereth that we are but dust.”
[Ps. 103:14] And we will suffer no temptation to
befal us but such as is proportioned to our strength. Not only his justice
requires this, which could not punish us for not resisting any temptation if it
were so disproportioned to our strength that it was impossible for us to resist
it; not only his mercy, — that tender mercy which is over us, as well as over
all his works, — but, above all, his faithfulness: Seeing all his words are
faithful and true: and the whole tenor of his promises altogether agrees with
that declaration, “As thy days, so thy strength shall be.” [Deut. 33:25]
2. In that execrable slaughter-house, the Romish Inquisition,
(most unfortunately called, The House of Mercy!) it is the custom of those holy
butchers, while they are tearing a mans sinews upon the rack, to have the
physician of the house standing by. His business is, from time to time, to
observe the eyes, the pulse, and other circumstances of the sufferer, and to
give notice when the torture has continued so long as it can without putting an
end to his life; that it may be preserved long enough for him to undergo the
residue of their tortures. But notwithstanding all the physician’s care, he is
sometimes mistaken; and death puts a period to the sufferings of the patient
before his tormentors are aware. We may observe something like this in our own
case. In whatever sufferings or temptations we are, our great Physician never
departs from us. He is about our bed, and about our path. He observes every
symptom of our distress, that it may not rise above our strength. And he cannot
be mistaken concerning us. He sees exactly how much we can endure with our
present degree of strength. And if this is not sufficient, he can increase it to
whatever degree it pleases him. Nothing, therefore, is more certain, than that,
in consequence of his wisdom, as well as his justice, mercy, and faithfulness,
he never will, he never can, suffer us to be tempted above that we are able:
Above the strength which he either hath given already, or will give as soon as
we need it.
III. 1. “He will with the temptation also” (this is the Third
point we are to consider) “make a way to escape, that we may be able to bear
it.”
The word ekbasin, which we render a way of to escape, is
extremely significant. The meaning of it is nearly expressed by the English word
out-let; but more exact by the old word
out-gate, still frequently
used by the Scottish writers. It literally means a way out. And this God
will either find our make; which He that hath all wisdom, as well as all power
in heaven and earth, can never be at a loss how to do.
2. Either he makes a way to escape out of the
temptation, by removing the occasion of it, or in the temptation; that
is, the occasion remaining as it was, it is a temptation no longer. First, He
makes a way to escape out of the temptation, by removing the occasion of it. The
histories of mankind, of the Church in particular, afford us numberless
instances of this. And many have occurred in our own memory, and within the
little circle of our acquaintance. One of many I think it worth while to relate,
as a memorable instance of the faithfulness of God, in making a way to escape
out of temptation: — Elizabeth Chadsey, then living in London, (whose daughter
is living at this day, and is no dishonour to her parent,) was advised to
administer to her husband, who was supposed to leave much substance behind him.
But when a full inquiry into his circumstances was made, it appeared that this
supposition was utterly destitute of foundation; and that he not only left
nothing at all behind him, but also was very considerably in debt. It was not
long after his burial, that a person came to her house, and said, “Mrs. Chadsey,
you are much indebted to your landlord, and he has sent me to demand the rent
that is due to him.” She answered, “Sir, I have not so much money in the world:
Indeed I have none at all!” “But,” said he, “have you nothing that will fetch
money?” She replied, “Sir, you see all that I have. I have nothing in the house
by these six little children.” “Then,” said he, “I must execute my writ, and
carry you to Newgate. But it is a hard case. I will leave you here till
to-morrow, and will go and try if I cannot persuade your landlord to give you
time.” He returned the next morning, and said, “I have done all I can, I have
used all the arguments I could think of, but your landlord is not to be moved.
He vows, if I do not carry you to prison without delay, I shall go thither
myself.” She answered, “You have done your part. The will of the Lord be
done!” He said, “I will venture to make one trial more, and will come again in
the morning.” He came in the morning, and said, “Mrs. Chadsey, God has
undertaken your cause. None can give you any trouble now; for your landlord died
last night. But he has left no will; and no one knows who is heir to the
estate.”
3. Thus God is able to deliver out of temptations, by removing
the occasion of them. But are there not temptations, the occasions of which
cannot be taken away? Is it not a striking instance of this kind, which we have
in a late publication? “I was walking,” says the writer of the letter, “over
Dover cliffs, in a calm, pleasant evening with a person whom I tenderly loved,
and to whom I was to be married in a few days. While we were engaged in earnest
conversation, her foot slipped, she fell down, and I saw her dashed to pieces of
the beach. I lifted up my hands, and cried out. ‘This evil admits of no remedy.
I must now go mourning all my days! My wound is incurable. It is impossible I
should ever find such another woman! One so every way fitted for me.’ I added in
an agony, ‘This is such an affliction as even God himself cannot redress!’ And
just as I uttered the words, I awoke: For it was a dream!” Just so can God
remove any possible temptation; making it like a dream when one waketh!
4. Thus is God able to deliver out of temptation, by taking
away the very ground of it. And he is equally able to deliver in the temptation;
which, perhaps, is the greatest deliverance of all. I mean, suffering the
occasion to remain as it was, he will take away the bitterness of it; so that it
shall not be a temptation at all, but only an occasion of thanksgiving. How many
proofs of this have the children of God, even in their daily experience! How
frequently are they encompassed with trouble, or visited with pain or sickness!
And when they cry unto the Lord, at some times he takes away the cup from them:
He removes the trouble, or sickness, or pain; and it is as though it never had
been: At other times he does not make any outward change; outward trouble, or
pain, or sickness continues; but the consolations of the Holy One so increase,
as to over-balance them all; and they can boldly declare,
Labour is rest,
and pain is sweet, When thou, my God, art near.
5. An eminent instance of this kind of deliverance is that
which occurs in the Life of that excellent man, the Marquis de Renty. When he
was in a violent fit of the rheumatism, a friend asked him, “Sir, are you in
much pain?” He answered, “My pains are extreme: But through the mercy of God, I
give myself up, not to them, but to him.” It was in the same spirit that my own
father answered, though exhausted with a severe illness, (an ulcer in the
bowels, which had given him little rest day or night, for upwards of seven
months.) when I asked, “Sir, are you in pain now?” He answered, with a strong
and loud voice, “God does indeed chasten me with pain; yea, all my bones with
strong pain. But I thank him for all; I bless him for all; I love him for
all.”
6. We may observe one more instance of a somewhat similar
kind, in the Life of the Marquis de Renty. When his wife, whom he very tenderly
loved, was exceeding ill, and supposed to be near death, a friend took the
liberty to inquire how he felt himself on the occasion. He replied, “I cannot
but say, that this trial affects me in the most tender part. I am exquisitely
sensible of my loss. I feel more than it is possible to express. And yet I am so
satisfied, that the will of God is done, and not the will of a vile sinner,
that, were it not for fear of giving offence to others, I could dance and sing!”
Thus the merciful, the just, the faithful God, will, in one way or other, “in
every temptation make a way to escape, that we may be able to bear it.”
7. This whole passage is fruitful of instruction. Some of the
lessons which we may learn from it are,
First, “Let him that most assuredly standeth, take heed lest
he fall” into murmuring; lest he say in his hear, “Surely no one’s case
is like mine; no one was ever tried like me.” Yea, ten thousand. “There
was no temptation taken you,” but such as is “common to man;” such as you might
reasonably expect, if you considered what you are; a sinner born to die;
a sinful inhabitant of a mortal body, liable to numberless inward and outward
sufferings; — and where you are; in a shattered, disordered world.
surrounded by evil men, and evil spirits. Consider this, and you will not repine
at the common lot, the general condition of humanity.
8. Secondly. “Let him that standeth, take heed lest he fall;”
lest he tempt God, by thinking or saying, “This is insupportable; this is
too hard; I can never get through it; my burden is heavier that I can bear.” Not
so; unless something is too hard for God. He will not suffer you to be “tempted
above that ye are able.” He proportions the burden to your strength. If you want
more strength, “ask, and it shall be given you.”
9. Thirdly. “Let him that standeth, take heed lest he fall;”
lest he tempt God by unbelief; by distrusting his faithfulness. Hath he
said, “in every temptation he will make a way to escape?” And shall he not do
it? Yea, verily;
And far above thy thought His counsel shall
appear, When
fully he the work hath wrought That caused they needless fear.
10. Let us then receive every trial with calm resignation, and
with humble confidence that He who hath all power, all wisdom, all mercy, and
all faithfulness, will first support us in every temptation, and then deliver us
out of all: So that in the end all things shall work together for good, and we
shall happily experience, that all these things were for our profit, that we
“might be partakers of his holiness.”