The Saint and the World
Do you love the world more than you
should? Here is an exhortation to be a better steward with your
life before God. By God's grace, give your life to Christ, not to
the world!
The
Saint and the World
Rev.
John
Arndt
"Ye
know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet
for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be
rich.-2 Cor. 8:9
Thou
art required, O man! to die to thyself, thy sin, and the world; and to
lead a holy, harmless life, according to the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
This thou art to do, not with a view to merit anything at the hands of
God, but from a principle of love to him, who performed and merited all
for thee, and died to save thee.
2.
Be not deceived: Jesus must be loved by thee, not in word and in tongue,
but in deed and truth. "If," says he (John 14:23), "a man
love me, he will keep my words;" and so St. John speaks: "This
is the love of God, that we keep his commandments: and his commandments
are not grievous." 1 John 5:3. And, again, the Saviour says:
"My yoke is easy, and my burden is light" (Matt. 11:30). To
him, indeed, who loves Christ with all his heart, it cannot but be easy
to sacrifice the pleasure which earthly vanities afford, and to do that
which is good, without constraint. Love renders every burden light that
is laid upon us by Jesus; whereas to him that is devoid of this heavenly
principle, every act which duty requires is grievous and oppressive. To
such a one, every religious exercise is painful and laborious; whereas
the man who sincerely loves the Lord Jesus Christ, esteems death itself
to be in nowise terrible, when submitted to for his sake. And,
therefore, the Apostle says: "Unto you it is given, in the behalf
of Christ, not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for his
sake" (Phil. 1:29): nay, to lay down life itself, whenever that
sacrifice is required of us.
3.
In order to confirm thy faith, consider the example of Moses, who,
"by faith, when he was come to years, refused to be called the son
of Pharoah's daughter; choosing rather to suffer affliction with the
people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season;
esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in
Egypt" (Heb. 11:24-26).
4.
Consider Daniel, who refused the luxuries of a court, and desired to be
fed with pulse and water, resolving "that he would not defile
himself with the portion of the king's meat, nor with the wine which he
drank" (Dan. 1:8, 12). He contemned the pleasures of Babylon, that
he might attain "the wisdom that is from above" (James 3:17),
which dwells only in a heart preserved pure from the pollutions of an
unholy world. So, if thou desires" that Christ, the eternal Wisdom,
should enter into thy soul, thou must abhor the pleasures of sin. For as
Daniel and his companions were made fairer by their sobriety and
abstemious life, so be thou firmly assured, that thy soul will appear
more beautiful and fair in the sight of God, even as "partaking of
the divine nature," if thou escape "the corruption that is in
the world through lust" (2 Pet. 1:4).
5.
Consider, further, the example of St. Paul, who says, "The world is
crucified unto me, and I unto the world" (Gal. 6:14); that is, I am
dead to the world, and the world is dead to me. Thus are all true
Christians in the world, yet not of it. Though they live in it, they do
not love it; for they view it as a transient shadow; and its pomps,
dignities, and lusts, as vanity and deceit, vexation and disappointment.
Hence, they are crucified to the world, though they remain in it; and
the world is crucified to them; that is, they desire no mere worldly
honor, wealth or joy.
6.
How happy is the man who is dead to earthly vanities, and alive to God;
separated from the world, and drawn into Christ! How blessed is he into
whose heart divine grace is so infused, as wholly to wean it from
inferior objects, and exalt it to the fruition of the light and glory of
heaven. Such a state is the effect of daily prayer and supplications,
without which a true Christian cannot possibly exist
7.
Agur prayed to the Lord thus: "Two things, have I required of thee;
deny me them not before I die. Give me neither poverty nor riches; feed
me with food convenient for me" (Prov. 30:7, 8). So let the
Christian pray: "Two things I desire of thee, O Lord, even these
two: that I may die to myself, and to the world." For without the
death, it is utterly impossible to be a true Christian. If thou, O Man!
thinkest otherwise, thou certainly deceives" thyself, and shalt at
last hear from the mouth of Christ that awful sentence, "I know you
not" (Matt. 7:23; 25:12).
8.
Though to die thus to self and to the world, is, to flesh and blood, a
grievous cross, yet will the spirit and the love of Christ eventually
triumph over every difficulty. So powerful indeed are these aids, that
they enable the true Christian to bear all things for the sake of the
Beloved, as a pleasant yoke and easy burden. And although he who lives a
life thus mortified, will be hated by the world, yet shall he be loved
of God; for the enmity of the world is friendship with him (James 4:4).
And the Lord hath himself declared, "If ye were of the world, the
world would love his own; but because ye are not of the world, but I
have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you"
(John 15:19).
9.
Those who are dead to the world for the testimony of Jesus, it casts
out; but it honors and applauds them who, living in the enjoyment of its
pomp and splendor, are its genuine offspring; because they live in the
world, and the world liveth in them;.
10.
In short, that man is not received and commended by the world, but is.
on the contrary. cast out of it. in whose heart. pride. covetousness.
lust. wrath, revenge, and the other corrupt passions of nature, are
mortified and restrained. Unto him the world is dead; and he again is
dead to the world; he begins to live in Christ, and Christ lives in him;
and he will be confessed by the Saviour, as one of his peculiar people,
in whom the great design of redemption has been effected. To others, on
the contrary, it will be said, "I know you not, as ye, in like
manner, knew me not." You have not confessed me before men, but
have been ashamed of my life, my meekness, humility, and patience; and I
will not confess you: you have despised the shame of my cross; and you
shall be with shame disowned by me (Mark 8:38). For whoever refuses to
live with Christ in time, cannot expect to live with him in eternity:
whoever has not the life of Christ here, shall never have it set forth
in him hereafter: and whoever disdains to follow Jesus in the present
world, shall never be glorified with him in the world to come.
11.
Therefore, O Man! strictly scrutinize thy life, and see whether thou
bearest a greater conformity to the life of Christ, or to the life of
the devil: for thou must inevitably be united to one or other of these
throughout all eternity.
12.
If thou art dead to thyself and to they depraved desires within thee,
thou wilt find it no hard task to die to the world and its vain
allurements which are without thee: and whoever is thus dead to the
world, will not love it or the things which it contains; for, "if
any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him" (1
John 2:15). Again, how shall his desires any more go out after the world
without him, when he is dead to it? Great indeed would be the loss
sustained by a lover of the blessed God, were he, in any degree, to
yield to the allurements of the world, and allow it to obtain a share in
that affection which should be fixed solely on the Supreme Good. A soul
so undecided would soon be entirely vanquished by the blandishments of
sin, as was Samson by the charms of Delilah (Judy. 16:6); and would
become subject to all that misery and vexation of heart, which
invariably attend the love of this world.
13.
The love of the world appertains not to the new creature, but to the
old: for the world has nothing to bestow but honor and vainglory,
riches, pleasures, and carnal desires; in these the "old man"
delights. The new man, on the other hand, has no peace except in Christ
who is his honor and glory, his riches and his heaven.
14.
And as nothing can be conceived of that is greater or more exalted than
the image of God renewed in Christ Jesus, so it should be our only
concern and care, to render ourselves partakers of this exalted honor;
remembering the worlds of Tauler, "What man, who is possessed of
reason, can doubt for a moment, that God can infinitely more rejoice and
delight the heart, than the corrupt and indigent creature is capable of
doing?"
15.
In addition to this, the Scriptures assures us that man was not created
for the world's sake, but the world for man's. It was not to pamper his
appetite, to heap up riches, or to extend his empire without limits,
that man was formed; it was not that he might acquire large estates and
possessions, erect palaces, or be gorgeously attired, that he was endued
with a soul intelligent and immortal: man was made to be lord of the
earth, and not its slave; to subdue, and not to be subdued. He was not
to seek his pleasure and enjoyment on earth, however fair and
fascinating it might be to a depraved taste: he was not destined to be
an heir of this inferior world, nor the possessor of terrestrial
treasures, nor to be actuated by any worldly motive whatsoever. Man is
to depart hence, as one that dwells on earth as a tenant at will. He was
not made for it, and cannot remain in it; he entered it naked, and naked
he must quit it again. Many, indeed, are born into the world at the same
time; but an equal number, on the other hand, are daily taken out by
death; nor can any carry with them even an atom of the treasures which
they had accumulated upon earth.
16.
Man, then, is but as guest and a pilgrim below; and most obvious it is,
that he was not created for this temporal life, and that this world was
never designed to be the end of his being. That end is God, and the
image of God in Christ Jesus, unto which we are renewed by the Spirit;
and we are created for the kingdom of God and for eternal life. These
our blessed Redeemer purchased for us, when they had been forfeited by
us; and it is his Spirit that regenerates men who had been without God
in the world.
17.
How unreasonable, therefore, is it in man to fix his affections on
temporal objects, when we are assured that the soul is infinitely more
noble and more precious than the whole world! How preposterous is it,
that he should lavish his time in the pursuit of earthly things, when he
is conscious that he was created to bear the image of God in Christ,
though the Holy Spirit! Therefore, let us now solemnly repeat what has
been before affirmed, namely, that man was not made for the world, but
the world for man. The excellency of the image of God in Christ Jesus,
is inconceivably great and glorious: so that were all mankind to unite
their labor and might, their wealth, their honors, and their all, they
could not succeed in restoring even one soul to the possession of this
image. It became requisite that Christ himself should die, in order that
this divine image which had been utterly defaced by sin, might, through
His Spirit, be revived; and that man might again become the temple and
house of God through all eternity.
18.
This being duly considered, as certainly it ought to be, how is it that
man so thoroughly debases his soul as to seek after the things of this
world, its honors, its pleasures, lusts, and wealth? He should surely
reason with himself, and say: "Shall I, for the sake of a little
gold, or for this fading world, or for all the honors and pleasures it
can afford me-shall I, for the sake of these, sacrifice my immortal
soul, which Christ has redeemed at so infinite a price? God
forbid." "What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole
world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for
his soul?" (Matt. 16:26). Alas! the "whole world," with
all its power and glory, could not avail to rescue one soul from eternal
destruction; for the soul is immortal, while the world passeth away with
all that it contains (1 Cor. 7:31; 1 John 2:17).
The
true Christian, who imitates Christ, hates his own life in this world,
and forsakes the world.
In
order that a man may hate himself, he must, in the first place, cease to
love himself; secondly, he must daily die to sin; and, thirdly, maintain
a continual warfare with his corrupt nature, or the flesh.
2.
There is nothing that more obstructs the everlasting salvation of
mankind than self-love. This is not to be understood of that natural
love which excites to a due regard to self-preservation, but of that
carnal and inordinate affection which influences man to be wholly
concerned about himself, without any reference to the Supreme Being, the
great Author of life. In this sense the term is used in the present
Book. Man was created to love God alone; and since God only is to be
loved, it follows that he who loves himself is an idolater, and makes of
himself a god. The heart of man rejoices and rests in the object of his
affection; and, whatever this be, he is brought by it into bondage, and
is devoted to it. Man, in this state, is become a servant, and is
deprived of that genuine liberty in the enjoyment of which he was
originally created; and in this lapsed and divided state he must serve
as many masters as there are objects upon which his affections are
placed. But if thy love, O man! be sincerely and simply fixed on God,
then thou art subject to no lord but Him; and thou preserves" thy
liberty with all the privileges appertaining to it. It becometh thee,
therefore, to be very circumspect in thy life and conduct, lest thou
shouldst in any degree obstruct the progress of divine love to thy soul.
If ever thou desires" to possess God alone, thou must make a
surrender of thyself solely to him. If thou lovest and pleases"
thyself, instead of loving and pleasing God, then sorrow and fear,
sadness and anxiety, will inevitably attend thee; whereas, if thou
wholly yieldest thyself unto God, cleaving to him and delighting thyself
in him alone, then he will never leave thee nor forsake thee, but remove
by his gracious presence all fear and anxiety from thy mind. He, on the
other hand, who seeks himself in all situations and in every
circumstance, and who incessantly pursues after profit, praise, and
lust, can never attain to serenity and peace of mind; for some
circumstance there always will be to cross his desires and to disturb
his rest. Never, therefore, yield to the belief that an accession of
fame, wealth, or honor in this world, is always good and profitable for
thee; when, on the contrary, a righteous contempt of all such transient
objects, nay, an utter extirpation of our love of them, would be
attended with an infinite blessing and advantage.
3.
As then, on the one hand, the things of this life, such as praise,
riches, and pleasure, are frail, and pass away with the world that
supplies them, while, on the other, the love of God endureth forever, it
is evident that no satisfaction can be durable that is founded upon the
love of self and of earthly objects. Such peace would be interrupted by
every trivial circumstance that occurred; whereas, when the mind is
firmly set upon God and upon his love, it cannot fail to be preserved in
perfect peace and perpetual serenity amid all the changes of this life.
Forsake thou, therefore, all things, and thou shalt, by faith, recover
all things again; for never can the lover of himself and of the world
find the blessed God.
4.
Inordinate self-love is begotten of the world, and not of God; it is
earthly, and the chief enemy to "the wisdom which is from
above" (James 3:17). This wisdom does not seek the praise and the
applause of men; and though in itself "a pearl of great price"
(Matt. 13:46), yet appearing with no other recommendation than its own
native simplicity, it is but little valued in the world, and, with but
few exceptions, is entirely neglected and forgotten; and though there
are many who make a boast of this wisdom, yet the gem conceals itself
from all who do not desire to apply it in their practice. If, therefore,
thou desires" to be possessed of it, O man! lay aside all that
human wisdom which "puffeth up" (1 Cor. 8:1), together with
thy self-love and self-applause, and then shalt thou exchange thy
earthly wisdom, which the world admires, for that which is heavenly and
divine. Then, instead of the wisdom of this world, which in its nature
is elevated and seeks the applause of men, thou shalt be put in
possession of a wisdom which, far from attracting the notice of the
world, is despised and rejected by it, but which is, nevertheless, of a
divine origin, and of everlasting continuance.
5.
It is impossible to love God, until thou abhorrest thyself; that is,
until thou art heartily displeased with thyself and with thy sins; until
thy own carnal nature is crucified, together with the evil propensities
of thy self-will. For the more a man strives to love God, the more he
labors to subdue the lusts of the flesh and his sensual appetites; and
the more he departs from self and from self-love, by the power of the
Spirit of God, the more nearly he approaches, by faith, unto God, and to
his divine love. For as inward peace depends on a freedom from desires
after the things of this world; so when this peace is once settled in
the soul, and the heart has disengaged itself from the ties which bound
it to the creature, it returns freely into God, and rests in him alone.
6.
Now he who is sincerely disposed to deny himself, must follow, not his
own will, but the will of Christ, who has declared, "I am the way,
and the truth, and the life" (John 14:6). As though he had said:
"Without the way, no man walketh; without the truth, nothing is
known; and without life, no man liveth: therefore, look upon me, who am
the way in which it is thy duty to walk, the truth in which thou art
called to believe, and the life in which thou art bound to live. I am
the unerring way, the infallible truth, and the everlasting life: the
way to immortality is through my merit; the truth itself is in my word;
and life is through the efficacy of my death; and, therefore, if thou
continues" in the way, the truth will guide thee unto eternal life.
If thou desires" not to go astray, follow me; if thou wilt know the
truth, believe in me; and if thou wouldst possess life everlasting, put
thy whole trust in me, who for thy sake have endured the death of the
cross."
7.
What, indeed, is the safe way, the infallible truth, and the endless
life? What, the way, truth, and life, that are more excellent than every
other? Surely there is no way, but the holy and precious merits of
Christ; no truth, but his eternal word; no life, but a blissful
immortality in heaven. If, therefore, O Christian! thou desires" to
be raised up into heaven with Christ Jesus, believe in him here, and
tread in the footsteps of his humility; this is the safe Way to
everlasting glory. If thou wouldst escape the snares of the world, take
hold of his Word by faith, and follow the example which he has left for
thy imitation; because this is the infallible Truth. And if it be thy
wish to live with Christ, then die thou with him and in him unto sin,
and become a new creature; for this is Life. Thus Christ is the way, the
truth, and the life; and he is so, both by his example and by his merit.
8.
"Be ye followers of God as dear children" (Eph. 5:1). Let us
labor and strive after this one thing; that our lives may resemble the
life of Christ. Were there nothing else to confound the false Christian,
the example of Christ might effectually and abundantly do it. When we
consider that Christ our Lord passed his life in grief and pain, we
ought to be ashamed to spend our lives in ease and pleasures. If the
soldier forgets his own ease and comfort when he beholds his captain
fighting unto death, shalt thou pursue after worldly pleasures and
honors, when thy Prince was so ignominiously treated, and, for thy sake,
nailed to the cross? Is it not a sign that then thou cost not, in fact,
fight under his banner?
9.
It is true that, in our day, every one desires to be considered a
Christian; but how few are they who imitate the life and deportment of
Christ. Had it been the character of a follower of Christ, to aim at the
acquisition of honors and possessions, our Lord would never have taught
that these are not worthy to be compared with heavenly treasures.
Contemplate the life and doctrine of the blessed Jesus, and thou shalt
own that nothing can be more opposed than he and the world. Behold that
manger and that stable! do they not forcibly evidence a contempt of
worldly things? And will the example of Christ lead thee to err from the
right way? No! he is the way, and he is the truth; and his life,
compared with his doctrine, is the only means to preserve thee from
mistake, and to guard thee from the delusions and errors of the world.
Since then the Lord bath chosen to enter into his glory by the way of
suffering and reproach, why shouldst thou labor to make thy way to hell,
through the pomps and vanities of the world? Return, then, O deluded
soul! escape from the broad way that leadeth unto death, and in which
thy only enjoyment is "the pleasures of sin for a season"
(Heb. 11:25); enter into this safe Way, in which the wayfaring man shall
not stray: cordially embrace that Truth which never can deceive: and
live in Him who is Life itself. This way is the truth, and this truth is
the way. Awful blindness! a worm of the earth would make himself great
in the world, when the Lord of glory abased himself to the very dust. O
faithful soul! when thy bridegroom moves to meet thee, clothed with
humility, come down from the elevation of thy pride and ambition, and
descend into the vale of humiliation to meet him, and he will embrace
and receive thee with joy.
10.
As Abraham quitted his father's house, to go into a land which the Lord
was to show him (Gen. 12:1), so quit thou, as a true child of Abraham,
the pleasure-house of self-will and self-love, that thou mayest obtain
the divine blessing. Self-love biases the judgment, blinds the
understanding, disturbs the reason, seduces the will, corrupts the
conscience, closes the gates of life, and acknowledges neither God nor
neighbor. It banishes virtue; seeks after honors, riches, and pleasures;
and, in a word, prefers earth to heaven. He, therefore, who thus
"loveth his life, shall lose it; but he that hateth his life"
(that is, resists this principle of self-love), "shall keep it unto
life eternal" (John 12:25). Self-love is the root of impenitence,
and the cause of damnation. They who are controlled by self-love and
self-honor are destitute of humility and a knowledge of sin;
consequently, they never can obtain the remission of sin, though they
seek it with tears; their tears not being shed because they have
offended God, but merely on account of the personal loss which they have
sustained.
11.
the kingdom of heaven is compared in Scripture to "a pearl of great
price;" in order to obtain which, a man sold all that he had (Matt.
13:45, 46). This pearl is God himself, and that eternal life which he
has promised, and for the attainment of which every other object must be
forsaken. We have an example of this in our Lord Jesus Christ, who
descended from heaven not for his own sake, but for thy sake; not for
his own profit and advantage, but for shine (Luke 19:10). And wilt thou
yet delay to love him who gave himself up unto death for thee?
12.
It doutless is the part of a faithful spouse, to please her husband
alone: and art thou desirous of pleasing the world, when thou mayest be
espoused unto Christ, the great lover of souls? Forsake therefore and
sincerely despise all this is in the world, in order that thou mayest
become worthy of the eminent dignity of this spiritual marriage: for if
thy love cleave not solely to Christ, it is a corrupt and adulterous
love, and not that which a Christian should bear to the Redeemer. For
the Christian's love to the Redeemer must possess virgin purity.
13.
The law of Moses required that the priest should marry a virgin (Lev.
21:13, 14); and Christ, our High Priest, will espouse only a
virgin-soul; one that is attached to nothing that the world can offer,
but solely to himself; nay, one that loves not even herself, in
comparison with Christ. "If any man come to me," he says,
"and hate not his own life, he cannot be my disciple" (Luke
14:26).
14.
In order to understand what is meant by hating ourselves, we are to
remember that we carry about with us "the old man," and are
indeed the old man himself; whose nature is to hasten from one sin to
another, to love himself, to pursue his own profit and honor, and to
indulge his own will and carnal appetite. For the flesh is at all times
the same; always considering itself, easily grieved, envious, bitter,
covetous, and revengeful. This, O Man! is what thou doest: these sinful
motions proceed from thy heart; this is thy very life, even the life of
the old man in thee: and therefore thou must of necessity hate thyself,
and shine own natural life, if ever thou desires" to be a disciple
of Christ. Whoever loves himself, must love his own pride and avarice,
his own wrath and hatred, envy and lying, faithlessness and
unrighteousness; and, in short, he must love all the progeny of unholy
desires, and a corrupt heart. But if thou desires" to be a
Christian indeed, thou must not love, nor excuse, nor palliate thy sins,
but thou must hate them, forsake them, and subdue them.
The
Inheritance and possessions of Christians are not of this world; they
should, therefore, regard themselves as strangers in it, while they make
use of earthly things.
"We
brought nothing into this world, and it is certain we can carry nothing
out. And having food and raiment, let us be therewith content." -1
Timothy 6:7, 8
The
design of the blessed God in creating temporal things, was that they
might supply man's bodily wants; and it is right that they should be
used for such a purpose, and be received at the hands of God with
gratitude, attended with fear and trembling. In regard to those things
which are not absolutely necessary, whether gold and silver, food and
raiment, etc., they are left to man in order to prove him; so that from
the manner in which he employs these objects, it may be discovered how
he stands affected towards God, while possessed of the goods of this
world: whether, on the one hand, he will still cleave to God, and in the
midst of earthly possessions, keep his eye constantly fixed on those
which are to come; or whether, withdrawing his love from God, he will
attach himself to this fleeting world, and prefer a fading earthly
paradise, to that which is permanent and heavenly.
2.
Man is therefore left to his own liberty and choice, in order that he
may be judged hereafter according to that which he has chosen here, and
thus be without excuse in that day. Agreeably to this principle, it was
the solemn declaration of Moses to the people of Israel: "I call
heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set before
you life and death, blessing and cursing: therefore choose life, that
both thou and thy seed may live" (Deut. 30:19).
3.
The things of this world are then designed, not to kill us with earthly
delight and pleasures, but to be tests and trials of our fidelity. In
these trials the fall is very easy, when once we begin to withdraw from
God. The pleasures of this world are the fruits of a forbidden tree; of
which we are warned by God not to eat, lest our minds going out after
them should eventually take delight in them, after the manner of those
who know no other pleasures, but such as are derived from earthly
objects. These persons, by indulging the flesh, convert meat, drink, and
apparel into snares by which they are turned away from God.
4.
It certainly is the duty of every true Christian, to esteem himself a
stranger and pilgrim in this world; and as bound to use earthly
blessings, not as means of satisfying lust or gratifying wantonness, but
of supplying his absolute wants and necessities. We ought not to set our
affections on these inferior objects, but on Him alone who is able to
satisfy them. To do otherwise, is to expose ourselves to dangerous
temptations, and with Eve, to eat daily of the forbidden tree. The real
Christian is not intent upon worldly concerns, or delicious fare; for
his interior eye is directed to that bread which endureth unto eternal
life. Nor is he solicitous about fine and fashionable apparel; aspiring
rather after robes of divine light, and the raiment of glorified bodies.
In short, all things that please the natural man in this world, are, to
a true Christian, only so many crosses and temptations, allurements of
sin and snares of death, that continually exercise his virtue. Whatever
man uses without the fear of God, whatever he applies to the mere
gratifying of his flesh, cannot fail to operate as a poison to the soul,
however pleasant and salutary it may appear to be to the body. Yet, so
far from laboring to know the forbidden tree of worldly pleasures and
its various fruits, man gives himself up to a careless and thoughtless
state of life, and yields to the lust of the flesh, not considering that
this lust is really the forbidden tree.
5.
The Christian, on the other hand, uses all things in the fear of God,
and as a stranger and pilgrim on the earth; avoiding every kind of
excess in meat, drink, apparel, houses, and the other things of this
life, lest, by an improper use of them, he should offend both his Father
in heaven, and his fellow-Christians upon earth. He will not so much as
gaze on the forbidden tree, in order that he may not be ensnared; but
with the eye of faith, he steadfastly beholds the future felicity of the
soul, and for the sake of this felicity, refuses to yield to the
cravings of corrupt nature. What does it profit the body that in this
world it swims in lusts and pleasures, when, after a short period, it
must be devoured by worms, and stripped of all its enjoyments!
"Naked," says Job, "came I out of my mother's womb, and
naked shall I return thither" (Job 1:21). We bring into the world a
naked and infirm, a poor and indigent body; and even this is the spoil
of death; for when we pass out off this world we leave it behind us
forever.
6.
Whatever we enjoy from the time of our birth to the period of our
dissolution, is all the bread of mercy and affliction, and designed to
supply the bare wants of this mortal life. At the approach of death all
is taken from us again, and we depart out of the world poorer than when
we entered it. When man enters the world, he brings with him life and a
body, and finds the necessary shelter, meat, and drink provided for him;
but, after existing a short time, he is, in a moment, bereft of all, and
leaves behind him even his body and his life. Consider then, O man!
whether there can be anything more wretched and poor, more naked and
miserable, than man when he dies, if he be not clothed with Christ's
righteousness, and enriched in his God.
7.
As, therefore, we are confessedly strangers and pilgrims here, and the
hour of dissolution must leave behind us every earthly enjoyment, let us
at least, cease to encumber our souls with things which we cannot carry
out of this world, and the use of which is restricted to this life only.
Is it not a species of madness to heap up riches for a frail body, for a
body which we must leave behind us, and which cannot possibly enjoy
wealth hereafter? (Luke 12:20,21). Are we ignorant that there is another
and a better world, another body and another life, and that, whatever we
may appear in the sight of men, we are in the eye of God only strangers
and sojourners on the earth? (Psa. 39:12; Lev. 25:23). "Ye
are," saith the Lord, "strangers and sojourners with me,"
that is, "before my eyes, although ye may not remember it."
8.
If, then, we are strangers and sojourners, it follows that our country
and our home must be elsewhere. This will be most evident to us, if we
compare time with eternity, the visible with the invisible world, the
earthly tabernacle with the heavenly, and things that are frail and
perishing, with those that are lasting and eternal. Such a comparison
will afford us a due insight into time and eternity, and lead us to
behold with the eye of faith, such things as remain altogether unknown
to the unthinking multitude. It is from the want of this consideration,
that so many become lax and disorderly in their manners, wallow in the
mire of earthly pleasures, and drown themselves in avarice and worldly
cares. It is from the want of this reflection, that the major part of
mankind, however keen and shrewd in the pursuits of this world, are
blind and insensible to the concerns of the immortal soul. They addict
themselves so much to this life, as to esteem it to be the most
delightful, the best and noblest of all; while the true Christian, on
the contrary, accounts it an exile, a vale of tears, a place of misery,
a deep and dark prison.
9.
Hence it is that those who love this world, and seek their happiness in
it, do not excel even the brute creation in wisdom or understanding; and
as they live, so they die like beasts (Psa. 49:12, 20). They are totally
blind as it respects the inward man; they do not even think of heavenly
and eternal things; they never rejoice in God, but only in the low and
sordid pleasures afforded by this world. It is in earthly things that
they seek their rest and their enjoyment; and having obtained their
object after much labor and toil, they sit quietly down and congratulate
themselves on their possessions. Wretched, miserable men! blind and
insensible to the tremendous concerns of their eternal salvation! here,
they lie contentedly in the darkness of ignorance, soon to remove hence
to that of death and damnation (Luke 1:79).
10.
In order to our better acquaintance with the nature of our pilgrimage
here, we should unceasingly consider the example left us by the
Redeemer, and earnestly follow him both in his life and doctrine. He
hath set us an unerring pattern of universal holiness. He is our captain
and our guide; and to his life and manners, our lives and our manners
should be conformed. Go thou, therefore, and look unto him; unto him
who, when the greatest of all men, voluntarily chose that life in which
nothing of greatness appeared; a life of meanness, poverty, and contempt
of honor, wealth, and pleasure, the threefold deity of this world. All
these things, to which the world offers sacrifice, the Lord contemned;
for he himself said, "He had not where to lay his head" (Matt.
8:20).
11.
Such, likewise, was the character of David; who, before his exaltation
to the throne, was poor and despised; and who, when created king,
accounted all his regal splendor as nothing compared with eternal life,
and the kingdom of God,, to which he was called. "How
amiable," says he, "are thy tabernacles, O Lord of hosts! My
soul longeth, yea, even fainteth for the courts of the Lord; my heart
and my flesh crieth out for the living God."-"A day in thy
courts is better than a thousand" (Psa. 84). As if he had said, I
possess a kingdom, and have people subject to my sway; I possess kingly
palaces, and the strong hold of Zion; but what are all these in
comparison of thy tabernacle, O Lord of hosts? So, too, Job found
comfort in his Redeemer" (Job 19:25).
12.
Neither Peter, nor Paul, nor any of the apostles, sought the riches of
this life, but directed their attention to those which were laid up in
another and better world. Hence they freely espoused the despised life
of Christ, walking in his charity, lowliness, and patience; contemning
the earth, and triumphing over the world, its snares, and its
allurements. They prayed for those who cursed them; they thanked those
who reproached them; they blessed those who reviled them (1 Cor. 4:12;
Acts 5:41). When they were persecuted, they glorified God; when
scourged, they were immovably patient, professing that "through
much tribulation they must enter into the kingdom of God" (Acts
14:22); and when slaughtered, they prayed (with Christ their Head),
"Father, forgive them" (Luke 23:34); "lay not this sin to
their charge" (Acts 7:60). Thus were they, on the one hand, dead to
all wrath and revenge; to bitterness, ambition, and pride; to the love
of the world, and of their own life also; while, on the other, they
lived in Christ and in his love, in his meekness and humility, his
patience and his resignation. They are, indeed, made alive in Christ by
faith, who thus live.
13.
To a lover of the world, this excellent way of life is unknown; for with
regard to those who do not live in Christ, nor know that the truth is in
him, these are still dead in their sins; dead in wrath and hatred, in
envy and avarice, in pride and revenge; and as long as they so continue,
they are in a state of impenitence, and have not been quickened by faith
in Jesus, be their boasting what it may. But the genuine disciples of
Christ know it to be a duty to follow the steps of their divine Master
(1 Pet. 2:21), and to be conformed to his life, as the supreme and
original pattern of all virtue and goodness. In a word, the life of
Christ is their exemplar; he himself is their book, whence they derive
all solid and substantial learning, as it respects both life and
doctrine. Such persons declare with the apostle, "We look not at
the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the
things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not seen
are eternal" (2 Cor. 4:8). And with holy men of old they unite in
saying, "Here have we no continuing city, but we seek one to
come" Heb. 13:14).
14.
If, then, from a review of all these considerations, it evidently
appear, as it surely does, that in this world we are strangers and have
no abiding place, it follows that we were not created for the sake of
earthly things as the ultimate end of our being; but that there remain
for us another country and other dwellings, to gain which we ought not
to hesitate to sacrifice a hundred worlds, or even life itself. These
are subjects upon which the true Christian continually meditates with
pleasure; and it is his joy that here he has no continuing city, but is
created for life eternal. But how sad is the state of those who,
occupied wholly in pursuing the things of this life, lade their souls
with a crushing weight of worldly vanities, and thereby expose them to
endless perdition. |
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