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[This was originally a sermon preached at Ferryden, during the awakening in the end of 1859. It was thought to be useful in disentangling the perplexities of some anxious souls; and this gave rise to the request for its publication. (This address was published by Messrs. Chas. Glass and Co., Glasgow.) It is very interesting to notice how, in such times of awakening, the spiritual instincts imparted to the new-born soul by the Holy Ghost seek out the truth. One day, in a fisherman's house, we found two females sitting together with the Assembly's Shorter Catechism in their hands. They were talking over the questions on 'Justification and 'Adoption,' and were comparing these with some of the 'benefits which accompany or flow from them,' namely, 'assurance of God's love, peace of conscience, and joy in the Holy Ghost.' They were themselves happy in the calm assurance of the love of God; but a neighbour had somewhat perplexed them by insisting that they had no right to assurance until they could point to sanctifcation showing itself in their after-lives. On the other hand, those two souls could not see why they should wait till then; for if they had been 'justified,' and had a 'right to all the privileges of the sons of God,' they might at once have 'assurance of God's love.' This incident falls in with the strain of the following discourse.]
Many are the persons who have envied Isaiah, to whom personally the messenger from the throne said, 'Thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin is purged' (Isaiah 6:7). They are ready to say, 'Oh, if we heard the same.' Many are the persons who have envied Daniel, to whom the Lord said, 'Thou shalt rest, and stand in thy lot at the end of the days' (Daniel 12:13). Daniel was thus assured of the future; with him it was to be rest at death, and a lot, or portion (Josh. 15:1; 16:1), in the inheritance of the saints on the morning of the resurrection of the just. And so also have such persons wished that their case were that of the man to whom, directly and personally, Jesus said, 'Son, thy sins are forgiven thee' (Mark 2: 5); and that of the woman in Simon's house, whose ear heard the blessed declaration, 'Thy sins are forgiven' (Luke 7:48); or even that of the thief 'To-day shalt thou be with Me in paradise' (Luke 23:43). These sinners were all of them personally certified of pardon and acceptance, and we are ready to think that it would be the height of happiness for ourselves to have, like them, a declaration of our personal forgiveness sounding in our ear.
Now, ere we have finished our subject, we may be able (if the Lord, the Spirit, lead us into the truth set forth in the Word) to see that, after all, we may be as sure and certain of our pardon and acceptance as any or all of these - as sure as Isaiah, Daniel, the palsied man, the woman-sinner, the dying thief, and, let us add, as sure of it as Paul was of Clement and other fellow-labourers having their names in the Book of Life (Phil. 4:3). Nay, we may even discover that our certainty is in all respects higher than theirs was, being founded on something far better than one single announcement, which, in the lapse of time, might lose very much of its distinctness and of its power.
Oh, how blessed to be able to point heavenward and say, 'It is mine ! ' - to point to the throne and say, 'He is mine who sitteth there ' - to look back and find your name in the Book of Everlasting Love ! - to look forward to the opening of the Book of Life, knowing that your name is in it ! - to be able to anticipate resurrection, and to sing
'I know that safe with Him remains,
Protected by His power,
What I've committed to His trust,
Till the
decisive hour.
Then will He own His servant's name
Before His Father's face,
And in the New Jerusalem
Appoint my soul a
place.'
We begin by noticing that Assurance is far oftener spoken of than
sought for.
Many may be said, in a vague sense, to wish for it, who,
after all, do not seek after it. Not a few of our communicants, men of
knowledge and good attainment, men of high Christian profession, are rather
disposed to evade the question, Are you sure of your salvation? They are
content to go on in uncertainty. Some of these even spurn from them the idea of
any one having full Assurance, branding the idea as Presumption.
They quite mistake the meaning of Presumption, which is claiming what we
have not been invited to, and are not warranted to take. They do not see that
there can be no presumption in our taking whatever our God has invited us to
accept; and that, on the other hand, if we decline taking what our God presents
to us, we are assuming to ourselves a right to judge of the fitness and wisdom
of His proceedings.
Such persons are not in right earnest about salvation
and the favour of God. They take things easy. They admit that they may die
to-day or to-morrow, and that they do not certainly know what is to become of
them and yet they are making no effort to ascertain. They admit that the favour
of God is the soul's real portion, and that they, as yet, cannot speak of that
being their enjoyment; and yet they coolly go on day after day without anxious
inquiry regarding it.
There are others who, from a wrong religious
training, go on in a sort of doubt and fear, cherishing the idea that these
doubts and fears are salutary checks to pride, and that they are, on the whole,
as safe with the hope that all is right, as they would be with the
certainty.
We generally find that these persons are misled by
confounding things that differ. They perhaps quote to you, 'Happy is the man
that feareth always (Prov. 28:14), not perceiving that the fear there is
the 'fear of the Lord,' in which there is 'strong confidence
'(Prov. 14:26). Or, perhaps, they quote the unhappy experience of some godly
men who died without speaking anything about assurance - not knowing that those
godly men longed for certainty, and reckoned it so desirable that their very
estimate of its preciousness made them jealous of admitting that they
themselves might be partakers thereof.
But the truth is, in many cases,
these persons do not care for the close fellowship of God into which Assurance
leads the soul. They do not wish to bask in the beams of divine love. They wish
merely to be safe at last. But if you would see how entirely different is the
effect of a merely hoped-for impunity from that of certainty in regard to
divine favour, read these two passages, Deut. 29:19 and 1 John3:3. In the
former case the sinner says, 'I shall have peace, though I walk in the
imagination of mine heart, to add drunkenness to thirst;' in the latter he
says, 'Every man that hath this hope in Him purifieth himself, even as He is
pure.'
[Let it be observed that in the New Testament the
grace of hope does not imply doubt, but signifies the expectation of the things
yet future. Hence, the hope in I John 3:3 was thus stated in verse 2, ' We know
that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him. Old writers used to quote a
Latin saying, 'Hope, as used of earthly things, is a word for a good that is
uncertain; hope, as used of heavenly things, is a word for good that is most
sure.]
Once more, then, on this point let us ask attention to the
fact that in the New Testament we have no encouragement given to doubts and
uncertainties. The believers there are spoken of continually as having the joy
of knowing the Saviour as theirs. No doubt there were in those days some
believers who were not fully assured; but these were not meant to be any rule
to us, now that the Sun of Righteousness has risen so gloriously; and,
accordingly, no notice is taken of their case. On the other hand, we are ever
meeting with such words as these, spoken in the name of all disciples, 'We
know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a
building of God'(2 Cor.5:1). 'We know that we have passed from death
unto life.' 'We know that we are of God' (1 John 3:14 and 5:19). 'I
know whom I have believed' (2 Tim. 1:12).
[The late Dr.
Sievewright of Markinch, in a sermon upon Eph. 1: 53, has remarked: 'In those
primitive times an apostle could take for granted of a whole church that they
all trusted. For, in writing to the Ephesians, does Paul make a single
allusion to their unbelief? Or, does he employ a single exhortation in the
way of persuasion to believe? Or, from beginning to end of his Epistle, does he
hint at such a thing as prevailing distrust? No; in those days Christian men no
more thought of refusing to trust in the Saviour than of denying the Word of
Truth. But now, is it not a frequent case that a man shall go by a Christian
name, and practise Christian duties, and receive Christian privileges, for
years together, while he is so far from trusting in Christ with the confidence
of faith, that he shall not only confess himself destitute of truth, but often
express a fear lest full trust and confidence were an unwarranted and dangerous
presumption? How strange this would have sounded in the apostles time,
when to trust in Christ, and to trust fully and for all salvation, was the
very first exercise to which they called those who were awakened to seek in
earnest for eternal life, and received the record of God concerning the way.
The remarkable trust of the first Christians gave a perfection to their
character we now seldom perceive.]
But it is time to speak of what gives Assurance. Of course, we
understand that this blessing, like the other blessings of salvation, every
one, is the free gift of a sovereign God. It is the 'God of hope' who gives it
'through the power of the Holy Ghost' (Romans 15:13). But our present point of
inquiry is, In what way does it please Him to give it to souls? All agree that
Christ's person and work furnish the materials and groundwork of a sinner's
acceptance, peace, assurance. 'Peace (says Isaiah 32:17) 'is the fabric reared
by righteousness; yea, the office of righteousness is to give quietness and
assurance for ever.' But there is a difference of opinion and practice as to
the way of using these ample materials. We begin with speaking of what we may
call,
First, The indirect or long way.
Those who try this
way set themselves to ascertain 'What am I?' They seek to make sure that
they have the marks and evidences of being new creatures in Christ, or at least
the marks and evidences of having, beyond doubt, believed in Him. Divines have
been wont to call this mode of Assurance 'the Assurance of sense,'
because in it the person points to sensible proofs of his new nature, and
thinks he may some time or other be able to show such an experience of divine
things as puts it beyond doubt that he has believed and has found Christ. It is
quite wrong, however, to apply the scriptural term 'Assurance of hope'
to this experimental sort of certainty; for Scripture means the assured
belief and expectation of things yet future, by that expression. We may
call it, for clearness sake, Assurance got by seeing effects produced.
Divines often describe it as Assurance derived from the reflex acts of the
soul.
(a) One form which this pursuit of Assurance in the
long or indirect way takes, is this, - it leads the person to put
much stress on his own act of believing. In this case the person being
much concerned about his state towards God, and fearful of mistaking the
matter, says to himself 'I know that all assurance of salvation depends on my
believing in Christ, and I think I believe; but what if I be deceiving myself
as to my supposed believing?' Haunted by this thought, he sets himself to
remedy the danger by trying to convince himself that he has believed. And in
order to make himself sure that he has faith, he resolves not to be satisfied
till he sees the full fruits of faith. He puts such stress on his own act of
believing, that he will not be content until he sees, by such effects as
hypocrites could not imitate, that his was genuine faith.
Now, we say to
such - You are not taking the best way to have real fruit; for you are
seeking fruit and effect from a selfish motive; you are not seeking holiness as
an end, and for its own sake, but in order to use it as an evidence in favour
of your sincerity. This kind of fruit is not likely to be the best, nor the
most satisfactory. We say again - You are putting Assurance far off. It
can only be at some distant future day that you arrive at any certainty by your
method; for such fruits as you seek cannot be visible very soon. But we say
again - You are by this method taking off your eye from Christ to a great
degree. For you try to believe, and then you look into yourself to see if
you have believed. You look up to the Brazen Serpent, and then you take off
your eye to examine your wound, and to see if the bites are really healing,
that so you may be sure you have looked aright! Would a bitten Israelite have
put such stress on his own poor act of looking? You are looking at Christ, and
then looking away from Him to yourself You are like a gardener who, after
planting a tree or flower in rich soil, might be foolish enough to uncover the
soil in order to see if the root had struck, and was really imbibing the
moisture. Surely, better far to let the root alone, having once ascertained the
richness of the soil, and allow the plant to spread out its leaves to the
warmth of the sun. Keep looking on Christ, and the effects cannot fait to
follow.
(b) Another form that this same indirect method takes is
somewhat similar. Those who adopt it do not expect Assurance at the outset, and
say that it is presumption and pride in young believers to speak of being sure
of their interest in Christ; for where is there time for them to have
experience, or exhibit fruits? Such persons think that ripe, mature fruits of
holiness alone entitle any one to say, 'I know that I am in Christ.' If we
might so speak, they do not allow the newly engrafted branch (though really
engrafted by the Heavenly Husbandman) to say, 'I am in the vine,' - no, they
say, wait till you have borne fruit, and then when the clusters appear on your
boughs, you may be entitled to say, 'I am in the vine.' But not till then.
It is a favourite argument with such that in 1 John 3:14 the Apostle John says,
'We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love
the brethren. But this does not prove that this is the only way of
knowing that we are passed from death unto life. It only shows that an aged and
experienced saint like John thought it good sometimes to bring forward his own
and his fellow-believers brotherly love as a marked and unmistakable feature of
their Christian character. It is very much as if he had said, 'We believers
know each other, as having passed from death unto life, by the love that fills
our hearts toward each other.' He is not speaking to the question, 'Is this the
first, or is it the only trustworthy way by which you know your interest in
Christ?' Surely; so far from that being the case, John would at once have said
that he himself found rest in knowing the love of Him who begat before
he discerned in himself any love to those begotten of Him.
The truth is,
this long and indirect way is properly the way by which others ascertain
your standing in Christ. But there is another way for the person's self, of
which we are yet to speak. Also; this way is good even for the person's self
as confirmatory of the short and direct way, of which we are yet to speak.
But still we say, if it were the only way, then farewell to gospel-joy, except
in the very rarest cases. For, the more a soul grows in grace, the more that
the believing man rests in Christ and drinks into His spirit, just the more
dissatisfied does he become with all his fruits; his holiness does not please
him; he finds defects in it; he finds it mixed and impure; and the longer he
lives the life of faith, he gets more and more keen-sighted in detecting
blemishes in his graces.
[John Newton, in his sermon 'Of
the Assurance of Faith,' remarks: 'If inherent sanctification, or a
considerable increase of it, be considered as the proper ground of Assurance,
those who are most humble, sincere, and desirous of being conformed to the will
of God, will be the most perplexed and discouraged in their search after it.
For they, of all others, will be the least satisfied with themselves, and have
the quickest sense of innumerable defilements.]
So that it is
difficult indeed to say when a growing believer, ever jealous of himself; will
accumulate such a heap of this gold, such an amount of really holy living, as
will put beyond doubt, to his own mind, that he is a man between whom
and Christ there exists the bond of union. If good works or holiness must be
waited for ere faith can be known to be genuine, when are we to expect to
attain to an amount or quality sufficiently satisfying?
If this were the only way of Assurance, we could not wonder that many should speak of it as necessarily a very rare attainment, and even as all but impossible. This, however, is not the only way; and we now turn from this way to the other, quoting as we turn to it, the statement of the old Puritan writer, Brooks: 'Many of God's dear people are so taken up with their own hearts, and duties, and graces, that Christ is little regarded by them, or minded; and what is this but to be more taken up with the streams than with the fountain? with the bracelets, and ear-rings, and gold-chains, than with the husband? with the nobles than with the king?' [Brook's Cabinet, p.393.] And then he adds, 'Dear Christian, was it Christ or was it your graces, gracious evidences, gracious dispositions, gracious actings, that trod the wine-press of the Father's wrath?' And once more: 'These persons forget their grand work, which is immediate closing with Christ, immediate embracing of Christ, immediate relying, resting, staying upon Christ.'
Let us turn, then, to the Second, The direct or short
way.
They who take this way, set themselves to ascertain, 'Who and
what Christ is.' The Holy Spirit, we believe, delights very specially to
use this way, because it turns the eye of the sinner so completely away from
self to the Saviour.
What we call the direct and short way,
is that in which We are enabled by the Spirit at once to look up to Christ, the
Brazen Serpent, and to be satisfied in looking on Him. This simple, direct
Assurance is got by what we discern in Christ Himself; not by what we discover
about ourselves. It is got by what we believe about Christ; not by what we know
about our own act of faith. We may know nothing about our own soul's actings in
believing, and yet we may so know Him on whom we believe as to find ourselves
altogether at rest.
In a word, this direct and immediate Assurance is found
by my discovering that Christ, God-man, is the very Saviour for my needs and
wants, my sins and corruptions; while all the time I may never be once troubled
about the question, Am I sure that I believe, and that my act of faith
possesses the right quality.
I find it when the Spirit is taking the things
of Christ, and showing them to my soul; and I do not need to wait till He next
shows me what is in me. Let us explain the matter more fully.
I have
Assurance that God accepts me the moment I see the fulness and freeness of
Christ's work. My soul is enabled to see all the claims of justice
satisfied at the cross; for there is complete obedience, there is the full
penalty paid. At the cross there is room for any sinner, and the gospel invites
me as a sinner among the rest to hear what the cross says. Does it not say to
me, 'God-man has provided an infinitely perfect righteousness, and made it
honourable for the holy God to embrace the Prodigal Son. Yonder, in the work of
God-man, is a rock for the sinner's feet to stand upon - and this not a mere
narrow point, hardly sufficient, but rather a wide continent, stretching out on
every side.' Surely there is room for me there? I feel it is enough! Self is
forgotten in presence of this marvellous scene. What could satisfy the
conscience better! What could speak peace like this! This is faith rising into
Assurance while simply continuing to behold its glorious object.
And now,
if any one try to disturb me by this suggestion, 'How do you know that you are
really believing what you recognise as so suited to your need ?' - my reply is
simply this, 'How do I know that I see the sun when I am in the act of gazing
upon him in the splendour of his setting?' That glowing sky, and that globe of
mild but ineffable glory cannot be mistaken, if anything is sure to the human
vision.
The believer's own consciousness (quickened of course by the
Spirit) is sufficient, in presence of the cross, to assure him that he a
sinner, is most certainly welcome to the bosom of the Holy One, who, pointing
to the 'It is finished, cries, 'Return to me, for I have redeemed thee.
[ Samuel Rutherford, in a sermon on Luke 8:22, says 'When I
believe in Christ, that instinct of the grace of God, stirred up by the Spirit
of God, maketh me know that I know God, and that I believe, and so that I am in
Christ, to my own certain apprehension. He then adds, that 'this does not
hinder other inferior evidences.']
Just look at it again. Your soul
hears that the Father is well pleased with the full atonement of the Lord Jesus
Christ, His Son. He condemns and rejects all your works, all your efforts, and
your guilty person; but when his Son, our Substitute, appears, then His
obedience and His suffering unto death are found -~ most glorifying to the Holy
One and His holy law. While you are pondering the Father's delighted rest in
Christ, who thus wrought all for us, your soul is 'like the chariots of
Amminadib;' in a moment, you feel your conscience has got rest, as if a voice
from that atoning work had said, 'Peace, be still.' Your sins, placed in God's
balance, were outweighed by Christ's infinite merit; and if so, your sins in
your own balance are no less surely outweighed by the same weight of immense
merit. What satisfies God, satisfies you.
Thus faith, as it gazes on its
object, passes on to full Assurance. And if now, again, any one seek to disturb
your calm rest by asking, 'Are you quite sure that you do really believe what
is giving you such rest ?' - what other reply could you give but this, 'As well
ask me, when I am enjoying and revelling in the glories of the setting sun, Are
you sure your eye really sees that sun which you so admire?'
I sit down and
meditate on such a passage as John 3:16, 'God so loved the world, that He gave
his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but
have everlasting life.' The Spirit enables me to see in these words God
testifying that no more is needed for my acceptance with God than what is found
in Christ: and all that Christ has done becomes mine upon my believing in Him.
Relying on God's testimony, I ask no questions, I wait for nothing in myself
(such as love, sorrow, or other feeling), but I think on what is in Christ, as
the ground of my peace. And when I so muse, the fire burns - my soul is at
rest.
[Halyburton (Mem, chap.2. p.3) says: 'A sweet
and comfortable hope and persuasion of my own salvation was answerable to the
clearness of the discovery of the way of salvation. The hope rose in strength,
or grew weak, as the discoveries of the way of salvation were more or less
clear and strong.]
And if now, any one disturbs, or threatens to
disturb, my calm enjoyment of my Father's love by hinting, 'You should first,
ere ever you venture to rest, be sure that you are really believing the things
that are making you so glad;' my reply to such an unseasonable interruption
might be somewhat in the style of a writer who uses the following illustration
: - Suppose a nobleman condemned for high treason, and the day has come when he
must die. But that morning a document is put into his hand; it is a pardon from
the king, on no other terms than that he accept it. He reads; as he reads, his
countenance is flushed, his eye glistens, and in a moment he is full of joy.
What think you of any one arresting the current of his joy by the suggestion,
'Are you quite sure you are accepting the pardon? Is your act of acceptance
complete and thorough?' No; the man is engrossed with the certainties presented
to his thoughts, viz., what the king freely gives to him; and these certainties
convey their own impression to his soul - to wit, the certainty of his
pardon.
Such is the direct way of Assurance. We called it a short
and an immediate way. Is it not so? We said, too, at the beginning, that it
might turn out that, after all, we had a way of knowing our pardon and
acceptance, superior in many respects to that by which on one occasion it was
conveyed to Isaiah, and on another to Daniel, and on another to the palsied
man, and to the woman-sinner, and to the thief. We still adhere to our
statement. For our way of knowing our acceptance, you see, is one that rests on
unalterable facts, the significance of which cannot pass away or decay.
If it decay from our souls for a time, we can revive it again by a renewed
study of the facts that produced it at the first. Whereas the one utterance
that assured Isaiah, Daniel, and those others mentioned, might in process of
time be found to fade somewhat in its vividness; and then the individual might
say to himself; 'Ah, what if I have over-estimated the meaning of the
utterance! or what if I have forgot it in part? or what if my subsequent
unworthiness have cancelled the promise?' In a dull, self-reproaching mood of
mind, such a partial obliteration from the mind or memory of a single, solitary
announcement is quite a possible occurrence; not to refer to other abatements,
such as that the person in a case like Isaiah's might say to himself; 'What if
it referred only to the past, but does not include what has happened since
then?' But, on the other hand, our way of ascertaining now our pardon and
acceptance rests on unchanging and unchangeable facts - facts for ever
illustrious, facts for ever rich in meaning, facts for ever uttering the same
loud, distinct, full testimony to the sinner's soul. Yes, we have an altar, and
the voice from that altar and its four horns may be heard distinctly from day
to day as at first. Our altar is Christ; and this Christ died, rose again, went
back to the Father, is interceding for us. These are the four horns of our
altar! Let us take hold of any one of them, and lo! we see an accepted
sacrifice before us, a sacrifice that speaks peace, that leads our conscience
to rest, and makes our hearts leap for joy; for God is well pleased. We have
God's Word reiterating in manifold ways a testimony to be believed; and so we
find security against Satan's whispered suspicions.
And should any one
object, 'Surely there have been many, very many good men and eminent men of God
who did not take this short and direct way;' let us remind such as may
stumble at this fact (for it is a fact) of an anecdote which good old Brooks
has recorded.{Cabinet, p.115] A minister, who had great joy in Christ,
said on his death~bed regarding his peace and quietness of soul, 'That he
enjoyed these not from having a greater measure of grace than other
Christians had, nor from any special immediate witness of the Spirit, but
because he had more clear understanding of the covenant of grace.' O
Spirit of truth, give all Thy servants this clear understanding of the
covenant of grace!
Nor must we fail to notice that this immediate,
direct way is that which specially honours God and His beloved Son, inasmuch as
it magnifies free grace. Here is the Lord's free love manifesting itself as so
exceedingly free that he will not ask the price of one moment's waiting or
delay. Behold the cross, and at once be at rest! The excuses of the delaying
sinner are swept away. Why wait, since all is ready? and where is there room
for the plea that God's time for favour, and so great a favour as that of
making you sure of acceptance, may not have come? God in Christ waits for you,
presenting and proffering to you an immediate welcome, immediate peace.
[It is a very common mistake to allege that God sometimes
counsels us to wait. But, if wait be used in the sense of delay, or
putting off immediate decision, we assert there is no passage in the Bible to
countenance such an idea. Some quote Ps.40:1, 'I waited patiently - for
the Lord, which is (see the margin), 'In waiting, I waited,' or 'I eagerly
waited.' Now, not to insist on the fact that here the speaker is Christ our
surety, we must remember that the Old Testament use of 'wait' has
not in it anything of the idea of procrastination, or delay, or contented
waiting in our sense of the term. It always means eager looking, as when
a dog looks up to his master's table for the crumbs, or as when the people
waited for the priest coming out of the Holy Place, or as in Job 29: 23, the
anxious, intensely anxious, looking out for rain in sultry weather. This is the
meaning, Micah 7:8, 'I will wait for the God of my salvation.' This is the
meaning, Hab. 2:3, 'Though it tarry, wait for it;' that is, if you do not see
these things come to pass at once, if you do not see at once the Lord appear in
His glory to overthrow His foes, yet look out for it anxiously! eagerly hasten
on to that day. This is the way in which God's people 'wait,' spoken of
in Ps. 130:6; Isa. 11:31. And so Lament. 3:26 is the case of the desolate soul
in affliction, earnestly looking up and looking out for deliverance, though
calm and resigned. Scriptural waiting is not in the least like that of
the careless, easy-minded soul, that pretends it is unwilling to anticipate
sovereign grace. And when God himself, in Isa.30:58, is said to 'wait to be
gracious,' the same idea of eager, earnest looking is implied. It is the
intensely anxious waiting of the Prodigal's Father for the return of his son,
for whose coming He is ever on the outlook. Most certainly, there is nothing in
Scripture that countenances an unbelieving waiting for faith.]
What say you then, unassured soul? Are you still content?
Assurance may be got in beholding steadfastly the Lamb of God and is there no
sin in your refusing to behold Him steadfastly?
Want of Assurance leaves
you in the awful position of being, on your own showing, possibly still a child
of Satan! And can you remain thus without alarm? And the world is passing away.
You are dying men. Christ is coming quickly, coming as a thief in the night,
coming in an hour that you think not; and you are not ready to meet Him at His
coming. There are not less than 8o,ooo of our fellow-men dying every day;
8o,ooo have died today, 8o,ooo more shall die to-morrow, and you may be one of
that number whom the scythe of death shall cut down as grass - and yet you are
content to have only a vague hope! Content to be without Assurance! You are
like the unhappy philosopher who said, 'I have lived uncertain, I die doubtful,
I know not whither I am going.' Are things to continue thus with you any
longer? Do the visions of an eternal hell never rise up before you? Are you
never struck with cold fear lest hell be waiting for you? Mirth is most
unsuitable for you; laughter is out of season; peace cannot take up her abode
under your roof, for you are all at sea about your eternal interests! Yes, you
may be almost past all the joy that you are ever to find! Will you not now
stand still, and once more examine Christ crucified, Christ's finished work, to
see if that cannot yield you the present and eternal peace which alone can
satisfy the soul? We have sought to set all before you; and now we leave you,
praying that the Holy Spirit may give efficacy to our words, knowing well that
otherwise all is vain :
'Let all the promises before him stand,
And set a Barnabas at his right hand,
These in themselves no comfort
can afford;
'Tis Christ, and none but Christ, can speak the word.'
Transcribed from Reminiscences of Andrew A.Bonar D.D.
first published
LONDON, HODDER AND STOUGHTON,
27 Paternoster
Row
1895
HTML transcription files copyright © 2001-2006.
Jane Newble
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This sermon added 18 July 2001