On Patience
“Let patience have its perfect work, that ye may be perfect and
entire, wanting nothing.”
James 1:4.
1. “My brethren,” says the Apostle in the preceding verse,
“count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations.” At first view, this may
appear a strange direction; seeing most temptations are, “for the present, not
joyous, but grievous.” Nevertheless ye know by your own experience, that “the
trial of your faith worketh patience:” And if “patience have its perfect work,
ye shall be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.”
2. It is not to any particular person, or Church, that the
Apostle gives this instruction; but to all who are partakers of like precious
faith, and are seeking after that common salvation. For as long as any of us are
upon earth, we are in the region of temptation. He who came into the world to
save his people from their sins, did not come to save them from temptation. He
himself “knew no sin;” yet while he was in this vale of tears, “he suffered
being tempted;” and herein also “left us an example, that we should tread in his
steps.” We are liable to a thousand temptations, from the corruptible body
variously affecting the soul. The soul itself, encompassed as it is with
infirmities, exposes us to ten thousand more. And how many are the temptations
which we meet with even from the good men (such, at least, they are in part, in
their general character) with whom we are called to converse from day to day!
Yet what are these to the temptations we may expect to meet with from an evil
world? seeing we all, in effect, “dwell with Mesech, and have our habitation in
the tents of Kedar.” Add to this, that the most dangerous of our enemies are not
those that assault us openly. No:
Angels our march oppose, Who still in
strength excel: Our secret, sworn, eternal foes, Countless,
invisible!
For is not our “adversary the devil, as a roaring lion,” with
all his infernal legions, still going “about seeking whom he may devour?” This
is the case with all the children of men; yea, and with all the children of God,
as long as they sojourn in this strange land. Therefore, if we do not wilfully
and carelessly rush into them, yet we shall surely “fall into divers
temptations;” temptations innumerable as the stars of heaven; and those varied
and complicated a thousand ways. But, instead of counting this a loss, as
unbelievers would do, “count it all joy; knowing that the trial of your faith,”
even when it is “tried as by fire,” “worketh patience.” But “let patience have
its perfect work, and ye shall be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.”
3. But what is Patience? We do not now speak of a heathen
virtue; neither of a natural indolence; but of a gracious temper, wrought in the
heart of a believer, by the power of the Holy Ghost. It is a disposition to
suffer whatever pleases God, in the manner and for the time that pleases him. We
thereby hold the middle way, neither holigorountes, despising our sufferings,
making
little of them, passing over them lightly, as if they were owing to chance,
or second causes; nor, on the other hand, ekloumenoi, affected too much, unnerved, dissolved,
sinking under them. We may observe, the proper object of patience is
suffering, either in body or mind. Patience does not imply the not
feeling this: It is not apathy or insensibility. It is at the utmost
distance from stoical stupidity; yea, at an equal distance from fretfulness or
dejection. The patient believer is preserved from falling into either of these
extremes, by considering, Who is the Author of all his suffering? even God his
Father; What is the motive of his
giving us to suffer? Not so
properly his justice as his love; — and, What is the
end of it? our
profit, that we may be partakers of his holiness.
4. Very nearly related to patience is
meekness, if it be
not rather a species of it. For may it not be defined, patience of injuries;
particularly affronts, reproach, or unjust censure? This teaches not to return
evil for evil, or railing for railing; but contrariwise blessing. our blessed
Lord himself seems to place a peculiar value upon this temper. This he
peculiarly calls us to learn of him, if we would find rest for our souls.
5. But what may we understand by the
work of patience?
Let patience have its perfect work. It seems to mean, let it have its full fruit
or effect. And what is the fruit which the Spirit of God is accustomed to
produce hereby, in the heart of a believer? one immediate fruit of patience is
peace: A sweet tranquillity of mind; a serenity of spirit, which can never be
found, unless where patience reigns. And this peace often rises into joy. even
in the midst of various temptations, those that are enabled in patience to
possess their souls, can witness, not only quietness of spirit, but triumph and
exultation. This both
Lays the rough paths of peevish nature even, And opens in each
breast a little heaven.
6. how lively is the account which the Apostle Peter gives not
only of the peace and joy, but of the hope and love, which God works in those
patient sufferers “who are kept by the power of God through faith unto
salvation!” Indeed he appears herein to have an eye to this very passage of St.
James: “Though ye are grieved for a season, with manifold temptations,” (the
very word poikilois peirasmois,)
“that the trial of your faith” (the same expression which was used by St. James)
“may be found to praise, and honour, and glory, at the revelation of Jesus
Christ; whom, having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see him not, yet
believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory.” See here the
peace, the joy, and the love, which, through the mighty power of God, are the
fruit or “work of patience!”
7. And as peace, hope, joy, and love are the fruits of patience,
both springing from, and confirmed by it, so is also rational, genuine
courage, which indeed cannot subsist without patience. The brutal
courage, or rather fierceness, of a lion may probably spring from impatience;
but true fortitude, the courage of a man, springs from just the contrary temper.
Christian zeal is likewise confirmed and increased by patience, and so is
activity in every good work; the same Spirit inciting us to be
Patient in
bearing ill, and doing well;
making us equally willing to do and suffer the whole will of
God.
8. But what is the perfect work of patience? Is it
anything less than the “perfect love of God,” constraining us to love every soul
of man, “even as Christ loved us?” Is it not the whole of religion, the whole
“mind which was also in Christ Jesus?” Is it not “the renewal of our soul in the
image of God, after the likeness of him that created us?” And is not the fruit
of this, the constant resignation of ourselves, body and spirit, to God;
entirely giving up all we are, all we have, and all we love, as a holy
sacrifice, acceptable unto God through the Son of his love? It seems this is
“the perfect work of patience,” consequent upon the trial of our faith.
9. But how does this work differ from that gracious work which
is wrought in every believer, when he first finds redemption in the blood of
Jesus, even the remission of his sins? Many persons that are not only upright of
heart, but that fear, nay, and love God, have not spoken warily upon this head,
not according to the oracles of God. They have spoken of the work of
sanctification, taking the word in its full sense, as if it were quite of
another kind, as if it differed entirely from that which is wrought in
justification. But this is a great and dangerous mistake, and has a natural
tendency to make us undervalue that glorious work of God which was wrought in us
when we were justified: Whereas in that moment when we are justified freely by
his grace, when we are accepted through the Beloved, we are born again, born
from above, born of the Spirit. And there is as great a change wrought in our
souls when we are born of the Spirit, as was wrought in our bodies when we are
born of a woman. There is, in that hour, a general change from inward
sinfulness, to inward holiness. The love of the creature is changed to the love
of the Creator; the love of the world into the love of God. earthly desires, the
desire of the flesh, the desire of the eyes, and the pride of life, are, in that
instant, changed, by the mighty power of God, into heavenly desires. The
whirlwind of our will is stopped in its mid career, and sinks down into the will
of God. Pride and haughtiness subside into lowliness of heart; as do anger, with
all turbulent and unruly passions, into calmness, meekness, and gentleness. In a
word, the earthly, sensual, devilish mind, gives place to “the mind that was in
Christ Jesus.”
10. “Well, but what more than this can be implied in entire
sanctification?” It does not imply any new kind of holiness: Let no man
imagine this. From the moment we are justified, till we give up our spirits to
God, love is the fulfilling of the law; of the whole evangelical law, which took
place of the Adamic law, when the first promise of “the seed of the woman” was
made. Love is the sum of Christian sanctification; it is the one
kind of
holiness, which is found, only in various degrees, in the believers who
are distinguished by St. John into “little children, young men, and fathers.”
The difference between one and the other properly lies in the degree of love.
And herein there is as great a difference in the spiritual, as in the natural
sense, between fathers, young men, and babes.
every one that is born of God, though he be as yet only a “babe
in Christ,” has the love of God in his heart; the love of his neighbour;
together with lowliness, meekness, and resignation. But all of these are then in
a low degree, in proportion to the degree of his faith. The faith of a babe in
Christ is weak, generally mingled with doubts or fears; with doubts, whether he
has not deceived himself; or fear, that he shall not endure to the end. And if,
in order to prevent those perplexing doubts, or to remove those tormenting
fears, he catches hold of the opinion that a true believer cannot make shipwreck
of the faith, experience will sooner or later show that it is merely the staff
of a broken reed, which will be so far from sustaining him, that it will only
enter into his hand and pierce it. But to return: In the same proportion as he
grows in faith, he grows in holiness; he increases in love, lowliness, meekness,
in every part of the image of God; till it pleases God, after he is thoroughly
convinced of inbred sin, of the total corruption of his nature, to take it all
away; to purify his heart and cleanse him from all unrighteousness; to fulfil
that promise which he make first to his ancient people, and in them to the
Israel of God in all ages: “I will circumcise thy heart, and the heart of thy
seed, to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul.”
It is not easy to conceive what a difference there is, between
that which he experiences now, and that which he experienced before. Till this
universal change was wrought in his soul, all his holiness was
mixed. he
was humble, but not entirely; his humility was mixed with pride: he was meek;
but his meekness was frequently interrupted by anger, or some uneasy and
turbulent passion. His love of God was frequently damped, by the love of some
creature; the love of his neighbour, by evil surmising, or some thought, if not
temper, contrary to love. His will was not wholly melted down into the will of
God: But although in general he could say, “I come ‘not to do my own will, but
the will of him that sent me;” yet now and then nature rebelled, and he could
not clearly say, “Lord, not as I will, but as thou wilt.” His whole soul is now
consistent with itself; there is no jarring string. All his passions flow in a
continual stream, with an even tenor to God. To him that is entered into this
rest, you may truly say,
Calm thou ever art within, All unruffled, all
serene!
There is no mixture of any contrary affections: All is peace
and harmony after. Being filled with love, there is no more interruption of it,
than of the beating of his heart; and continual love bringing continual joy in
the Lord, he rejoices evermore. He converses continually with the God whom he
loves, unto whom in everything he gives thanks. And as he now loves God with all
his heart, and with all his soul, and with all his mind, and with all his
strenght; so Jesus now reigns alone in his heart, the Lord of every motion
there.
11. But it may be inquired, In what manner does God work this
entire, this universal change in the soul of a believer? this strange work,
which so many will not believe, though we declare it unto them? Does he work it
gradually, by slow degrees; or instantaneously, in a moment? How many are the
disputes upon this head, even among the children of God! And so there will be,
after all that ever was, or ever can be said upon it. For many will still say,
with the famous Jew, Non persuadebis, etiamsi
persuaseris: That is, “Thou shalt not persuade me, though thou dost
persuade me.” And they will be the more resolute herein, because the Scriptures
are silent upon the subject; because the point is not determined, at least not
in express terms, in any part of the oracles of God. every man therefore may
abound in his own sense, provided he will allow the same liberty to his
neighbour; provided he will not be angry at those who differ from his opinion,
nor entertain hard thoughts concerning them. Permit me likewise to add one thing
more: Be the change instantaneous or gradual, see that you never rest till it is
wrought in your own soul, if you desire to dwell with God in glory.
12. This premised, in order to throw what light I can upon this
interesting question, I will simply relate what I have seen myself in the course
of many years. Four or five and forty years ago, when I had no distinct views of
what the Apostle meant by exhorting us to “leave the principles of the doctrine
of Christ, and go on to perfection,” two or three persons in London, whom I knew
to be truly sincere, desired to give me an account of their experience. It
appeared exceeding strange, being different from any that I had heard before;
but exactly similar to the preceding account of entire sanctification. The next
year, two or three more persons at Bristol, and two or three in Kingswood,
coming to me severally, gave me exactly the same account of their experience. A
few years after, I desired all those in London who made the same profession, to
come to me all together at the Foundery, that I might be thoroughly satisfied. I
desired that man of God, Thomas Walsh, to give us the meeting there. When we
met, first one of us, and the the other, asked them the most searching questions
we could devise. They answered every one without hesitation, and with the utmost
simplicity, so that we were fully persuaded, they did not deceive themselves. In
the years 1759, 1760, 1761, and 1762, their numbers multiplied exceedingly, not
only in London and Bristol, but in various parts of Ireland as well as england.
Not trusting to the testimony of others, I carefully examined most of these
myself; and in London alone I found six hundred and fifty-two members of our
society who were exceedingly clear in their experience, and of whose testimony I
could see no reason to doubt. I believe no year has passed since that time
wherein God has not wrought the same work in many others; but sometimes in one
part of England or Ireland, sometimes in another; — as “the wind bloweth where
it listeth;” — and every one of these (after the most careful inquiry, I have
not found one exception either in Great Britain or Ireland) has declared that
his deliverance from sin was instantaneous; that the change was wrought
in a moment. Had half of these, or one third, or one in twenty, declared it was
gradually wrought in
them, I should have believed this, with
regard to them, and thought that
some were gradually sanctified
and some instantaneously. But as I have not found, in so long a space of time, a
single person speaking thus; as all who believe they are sanctified, declare
with one voice, that the change was wrought in a moment, I cannot but believe
that sanctification is commonly, if not always, an
instantaneous
work.
13. But however that question be decided, whether
sanctification, in the full sense of the word, be wrought instantaneously or
gradually, how my we attain to it? “What shall we do,” said the Jews to
our Lord, “that we may work the works of God?” His answer will suit those that
ask, What shall we do, that this work of God may be wrought in us? “This is the
work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent.” on this one work all the
others depend. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and all has wisdom, and power,
and faithfulness are engaged on thy side. In this, as in all other instances,
“by grace we are saved through faith.” Sanctification too is “not of works, lest
any man should boast.” “It is the gift of God,” and is to be received by plain,
simple faith. Suppose you are now labouring to “abstain from all appearance of
evil,” “zealous of good works,” and walking diligently and carefully in all the
ordinances of God; there is then only one point remaining: The voice of God to
your soul is, “Believe, and be saved.” [See the Sermon on “The Scripture Way of
Salvation.” (editors note)] First, believe that God has
promised to save
you from all sin, and to fill you with all holiness. Secondly, believe that he
is able thus “to save to the uttermost all that come unto God through
him.” Thirdly, believe that he is willing, as well as able, to save
you to the uttermost; to purify you from all sin, and fill up all your
heart with love. Believe, Fourthly, that he is not only able, but willing to do
it now. Not when you come to die; not at any distant time; not to-morrow,
but to-day. He will then enable you to believe,
it is done,
according to his word: And then “patience shall have its perfect work; that ye
may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.”
14. Ye shall then be perfect. The Apostle seems to mean by this
expression, teleioi, ye shall
be wholly delivered from every evil work; from every evil word; from every
sinful thought; yea, from every evil desire, passion, temper; from all inbred
corruption, from all remains of the carnal mind, from the body of sin; and ye
shall be renewed in the spirit of your mind, in every right temper, after the
image of him that created you, in righteousness and true holiness. Ye shall be
entire, holokleroi, (The
same word which the Apostle uses to the Christians in Thessalonica: [1 Thess. 5:23]) This seems to refer, not so much
to the kind as to the degree of holiness; as if he had said, “Ye shall enjoy as
high a degree of holiness as is consistent with your present state of
pilgrimage;” — and ye shall want nothing; the Lord being your Shepherd,
your Father, your Redeemer, your Sanctifier, your God, and your all, will feed
you with the bread of heaven, and give you meat enough. He will lead you forth
beside the waters of comfort, and keep you every moment: So that loving him with
all your heart, (which is the sum of all perfection,) you will “rejoice
evermore, pray without ceasing, and in everything give thanks,” till “an
abundant entrance is ministered unto you into his everlasting kingdom!