THE HEAVENLY BIRTH AND ITS EARTHLY COUNTERFEITS
Preached on Lord's Day Evening,
July 23rd, 1843, at Zoar Chapel, Great Alie Street,
London.
by J. C. Philpot
(1802-1869)
"He came unto His own, and
His own received Him not. But as many as received Him, to them gave He power to
become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name; which were born,
not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of
God." - John i. 11-13.
HYPOCRISY and self-righteousness
never probably rose to such a height as at the period when the Lord of life and
glory was upon earth. The besetting sin of the Jewish nation before the
Babylonish captivity was idolatry, as we find recorded in the pages of the Old
Testament; but after their return from that captivity (more than five hundred
years before Christ came into the world), they never relapsed into open
idol-worship. The form of ungodliness in them was changed. The human heart,
ever "deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked," put on a
new mask; and though they no longer bowed down to gods of wood and stone, nor
went after the vain idols of their fathers, yet they prostituted the worship of
the only true God into lip-service and "bodily exercise". And thus,
though nominally worshippers of the only true God, yet they were as far from
Him in their hearts, though with their lips they drew nigh, as when their
forefathers bowed down before stocks and stones.
It was at this period, then, that
God sent His only begotten Son into the world; and chose at this time to fulfil
all those prophecies, which He before had given concerning the Messiah. Of this
period the apostle John speaks in the opening of this chapter. "That was
the true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. He was in
the world, and the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not. He came
unto His own, and His own received Him not. But as many as received Him, to
them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His
name; which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the
will of man, but of God" (John i. 9-13).
The text speaks of two entirely
distinct classes of characters-those who received Christ, and those who
received Him not: and it further tells us what was the happiness and blessed
privilege of those who received Him into their hearts and affections as the Son
of God.
I. Now, what was the reason of
this difference? How came it to pass that of men born in the same nation,
living in the same period of time, and placed in precisely similar
circumstances, some received Christ, and others received Him not? Must we not
trace it up to God's absolute sovereignty?-that the reason why some did not
receive Him was because God willed it so? And why others did receive Him was equally
because God willed it so? Can we admit any other final cause of this difference
than the sovereign will of God, determining rejection by one, and reception by
the other.
But when we come down from looking
at God's sovereignty to view the workings of the human heart, we see that there
were certain instrumental causes which operated on the minds of the one, as
there were certain instrumental causes which influenced the wills of the other.
Those that "received Him not" were under the influence of certain
workings. They knew nothing of divine sovereignty; they had no idea that what
they said and did was according to God's "determinate counsel" (Acts
ii. 23). In doing what they did, they followed the bent of their own minds; and
thus they were seemingly left to the exercise of their own will, whilst God
really ordered every action, that it might be to His own glory.
1. One cause, then, why those who
"received Him not" scornfully rejected Him, was the blindness and
ignorance of their heart. And this is one cause why men still to this day
reject the Lord of life and glory. As the apostle says, they were
"alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them,
because of the blindness of their heart" (Eph. iv. 18). And to this the prophet
alludes when he says, speaking in the name of the Jewish people, "He shall
grow up . . . as a root out of a dry ground; He hath no form nor comeliness;
and when we shall see Him, there is no beauty that we should desire Him"
(Isa. liii. 2). When the Jews looked upon the Man of sorrows, He was not what
their fancy had figured out-a conquering Messiah, who should come to deliver
them from the Roman yoke. And therefore, being spiritually ignorant of His
Person and work, they rejected Him, because their eyes were not opened to sec
the dignity of the Godhead under the veil of the suffering manhood.
2. Another reason was their
sell-righteousness. And this same cause operates in men's minds now. Until
self-righteousness is in a measure broken down in a man's heart, he never can
see any beauty nor comeliness in a bleeding Jesus. Being madly enamoured of his
own righteousness, and not seeing it in the light of God's countenance as
"filthy rags," (Isa. lxiv. 6) he has no eyes to see, no ears to hear,
no heart to receive that glorious robe of righteousness, which the Son of God
wrought out, and which is imputed to all that believe on His name.
3. Another cause was the
worldliness of their minds. They were buried in the world, in the poor
perishing things of time and sense. Being dead in sin, they had no spiritual
faculty, whereby eternal things were perceived; no spiritual appetite, whereby
heavenly food was relished; no spiritual birth, whereby they could enter into
the kingdom of heaven. When Nicodemus therefore came to Jesus by night, the
very first truth that the Lord laid before him was the new birth: "Except
a man be born again" he can neither "see," nor "enter into
the kingdom of God." (John iii. 3 and 5).
4. But the grand prevailing cause,
after all, was unbelief. It was not the determinate purpose of God to give them
faith; He left them therefore in their unbelief. Thus, having no spiritual
faith to believe the testimony of God concerning His dear Son, and being left
altogether to the power of unbelief, they first inwardly rejected, and then
openly crucified the Lord of life and glory. The same cause operates now. When
we consider Christ's miracles, we may look with astonishment upon the unbelief
of the Jews; but the same unbelief reigns by nature in the hearts of all; and
as long as men are blind, self-righteous, worldly, and unbelieving (and they
are all these until God "works in them to will and to do of His good
pleasure"), they will reject Jesus, and say secretly, "We will not
have this Man to reign over us," (Luke xix. 14) just as their forefathers
the Jews rejected Him openly when He stood at Pilate's tribunal.
II. But God's will was not to be
frustrated; the Almighty's purposes were not to be disappointed by the almost
universal rejection of Jesus by the Jews. He had from eternity "a peculiar
people," who had an everlasting and indissoluble union with His dear Son.
There was "a remnant according to the election of grace," (Rom. xi.
5) who stood eternally in Christ: for whom He gave Himself, shed His precious
blood, laid down His life, was entombed in the grave, rose on the third day,
and now sits at God's right hand, as their Intercessor and Mediator. And thus,
however far a man may be from God, however desperate his wickedness, however
thick his blindness, however powerful the unbelief of his heart, yet if he is a
vessel of mercy, the light and life of God's Spirit will penetrate through all,
and bring him into a knowledge, first of his ruin, and then of those blessings
which are stored up for him in his covenant Head. Though Christ "came to
His own, and His own received Him not" (that is not His own by election,
redemption, and regeneration, but His own nation, His own property as Lord of
heaven and earth), yet there was a people, who should receive Him by living
faith as their Lord and their God.
III. But as we have looked at
God's sovereignty in the way of rejection, and then endeavoured to trace out
the various causes by which the great mass of the Jewish nation rejected the
Lord of life and glory, so will we endeavour (having seen God's sovereignty in
choosing a peculiar people), to trace out also the secret causes which led some
to receive Him whom the others received not.
1. The first cause, then, was the
quickening life of God's Spirit put into their souls; according to those words:
"You hath He quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins." (Eph.
ii. 1). Until God by His Spirit quickens the soul into spiritual life, there
must be a determined rejection of Christ. However a man may receive Him into
his judgment, the inward bias of his heart and the secret speech of his soul
is, "Not this Man, but Barabbas" (Luke xviii, 40.) If, then, there be
any who do believe in Him, receive Him, love Him, and have a blessed union with
Him, it all springs from the quickening Spirit of God, working with power in
their souls.
Now this quickening work of God
the Spirit upon the heart is manifested by certain fruits and evidences, which
ever flow out of His blessed operations. For instance, wherever the quickening
power of God's Spirit has passed upon a man's conscience, he is invariably
brought to see and feel himself to be a sinner. This inward sight of self cuts
him off sooner or later from all legal hopes, all Pharisaic righteousness, all
false refuges, and all vain evidences, wherewith he may seek to prop up his
soul. In many cases the work may begin in a way scarcely perceptible, and in
other instances may go on very gradually, for we cannot lay down any precise
standard. But I am sure of this, that the Lord will "bring down the
hearts" of all His people "with labour;" will convince them all
of their lost state before Him, and cast them as ruined wretches into the dust
of death-without hope, strength, wisdom, help, or righteousness, save that
which is given to them, as a free gift, by distinguishing grace.
And when the soul is brought down
by the hand of God upon it to know the exceedingly heavy burden of sin, the
wretchedness of the malady with which we are infected, the holiness and justice
of God who cannot clear the guilty; and feels itself not only implicated in
Adam's transgression, but also condemned by actual commission of sin, it then
begins to find its need of such a Saviour as God has revealed in the
Scriptures. And this work of grace in the conscience, pulling down all a man's
false refuges, stripping him of every lying hope, and thrusting him down into
self-abasement and self-abhorrence, is indispensable to a true reception of
Christ. Whatever a man may have learned in his head, or however far he may be
informed in his judgment, he never will receive Christ spiritually into his
heart and affections, until he has been broken down by the hand of God in his
soul to be a ruined wretch.
2. We cannot indeed tell how long
a man may be in coming here; some may be weeks, others may be months, and some
may be years; but when he is effectually brought here, the Lord is pleased, for
the most part, to open up to his astonished view, and to bring into his soul
some saving knowledge of the Lord of life and glory. And this He does in
various ways, for we cannot "limit the Holy One of Israel;" (Ps.
lxxviii, 41) sometimes by a secret light cast into the mind; sometimes by the
application of a passage of Scripture with power; sometimes alone in the secret
chamber; sometimes under the preached Word. In various ways, as God is pleased
Himself to choose, He casts into the mind a light, and He brings into the heart
a power, whereby the glorious Person of Christ, His atoning blood, dying love,
finished work, and justifying righteousness, are looked upon by spiritual eyes,
touched by spiritual hands, and received into a spiritual and believing heart.
3. But wherever faith is given to
the soul thus "to receive" Christ, there will be mingled with this
faith, and blessedly accompanying it, love to the Lord of life and glory; and
sometimes we may know the existence of faith when we cannot see it, by
discerning the secret workings and actings of love towards that Saviour, in
whom God has enabled us to believe. There will be from time to time, in living
souls, a flowing forth of affection towards Jesus. From time to time He gives
the soul a glimpse of His Person: He shows Himself, as the Scripture speaks,
"through the lattice" (Song ii. 9), passing, perhaps, hastily by, but
giving such a transient glimpse of the beauty of His Person, the excellency of
His finished work, dying love, and atoning blood as ravishes the heart, and
secretly draws forth the affections of the soul, so that there is a following
hard after Him, and a going out of the desires of the soul towards Him.
Thus, sometimes as we lie upon our
bed, as we are engaged in our business, as we are occupied in our several
pursuits of life; or at other times under the Word, or reading the Scriptures,
the Lord is pleased secretly to work in the heart, and there is a melting down
at the feet of Jesus, or a secret, soft, gentle going forth of love and
affection towards Him, whereby the soul prefers Him before thousands of gold
and silver, and desires nothing so much as the inward manifestations of His
love, grace, and blood.
And thus a living soul
"receives" Christ; not merely as driven by necessity, but also as
drawn by affection. He does not receive Christ merely as a way of escape from
"the wrath to come," merely as something to save a soul from
"the worm that dieth not, and the fire that is not quenched," but
mingled with necessity, sweetly and powerfully combined with it, and intimately
and intricately working with it, there is the flowing forth of genuine
affection and undissembled love, that goes out to Him as the only object really
worthy our heart's affection, our spirit's worship, and our soul's desire. And
we cannot say that less than this comes up to the meaning of the Scripture
expression-"to receive Christ." If we cannot, then, trace out in our
hearts more or less of this work, which I have attempted feebly to describe, we
cannot yet be said spiritually to have "received Christ."
This is a very different thing
from receiving Him into our judgment, or into our understanding in a doctrinal
manner. To receive Him in the depths of a broken heart, as the only Saviour for
our guilty soul, as our only hope for eternity, as the only Lord of our heart's
worship, and the only object of our pure affection; so that in secret, when no
eye sees but the eye of God, and only the ear of Jehovah hears the pantings of
our pleading heart, there is the breathing out of the spirit after the
enjoyment of His love, grace, and blood-to know and feel this stamps a man to
have "received" Christ into his heart by faith.
IV. But in the words of the text
we read of a peculiar privilege, a sacred blessing, which is connected with and
attached to the receiving of Christ. And perhaps you have been struck sometimes
with the words: "As many as received Him, to them gave He power to become
the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name." Did the word
become never strike you as a singular word? Does it not intimate a further
step? Does it not clearly imply that to "receive Christ," and to
"become a son of God" are two distinct things, and that one precedes
the other?"
It is so. For it is only to those
who "receive Christ," that the "power" (or "the
privilege," as we read in the margin), is given, "to become sons of
God."
What then is it to "become a
son of God?" For it is evidently not the same thing as "receiving
Christ," but a step that follows on after receiving Christ; a privilege
given to and reserved for those who do spiritually "receive Him." To
"become a son of God" is to become so experimentally; to receive the
Spirit of adoption, whereby the soul cries. "Abba, Father;" to have
that love which "casteth out all fear that hath torment;" and not
merely to receive Christ as our hope of salvation from eternal perdition, but
to be enabled by the witness and work of the Spirit in the soul to enjoy that
relationship.
V. But in speaking of these
"sons of God," the apostle describes them negatively as well as
positively; he tells us what they are not, and he tells us what they are. And
it is by contrasting what they are not with what they are, that we may arrive
at some spiritual knowledge of their real character and position.
1. Those then that have
"received Christ," and by receiving Christ have "become the sons
of God" manifestively, are said "not to have been born of
blood." The Jews, we know, laid great stress upon their lineal descent
from Abraham. "We be Abraham's seed," they said to the Lord on one
occasion, "and were never in bondage to any man; how sayest Thou, Ye shall
be made free?" "Art Thou greater," asked they, "than our
father Abraham?" (John viii. 33, 53). Their lineal descent from Abraham
was the ground of their hope; and they believed that, being his children, they
were interested in all the promises which were made to him. They saw no distinction
betwixt the children of Abraham literally and the children of Abraham
spiritually; and those promises which were made to the spiritual seed of
Abraham, as "the father of all them that believe" (Rom. iv. 11), they
appropriated to themselves as his lineal and literal descendants. Now the
apostle in the text demolishes that false idea, cuts from under their feet the
ground on which their vain hopes rested, and declares that those who are so
highly favoured as to "become the sons of God" had something more
than being "born of blood."
If you look at the word
"born," it implies some change. Birth is a transition from a state of
almost non-existence into existence-a coming from darkness to light. When the
apostle then says of them, that they were "born not of blood," he
implies that a change of some kind might take place, analogous to the natural
birth, and yet not be such a change as makes a man become a child of God. Is
there not such a false birth frequently now? Are there not what are called
"pious children of pious parents?" And could you trace their religion
to the very source and run it up to its first origin, you would find that it
had no better beginning than parental piety; that the religious father taught
religion to his child, and by dint of admonition and instruction made him just
as religious as himself. So that a change may have taken place; seriousness may
have taken the place of trifling, religious books may have been taken up
instead of novels, and hymns be sung instead of songs; but after all, the change
is a mere birth "of blood." There has been no spiritual change, no
almighty work of the Holy Ghost in the soul; but the religion has been handed
down from parent to chi]d, and stands upon no better footing than a mother's
instruction or a father's tuition. Those who were "born of God" had
something better than this to stand upon.
2. But the apostle, in tracing out
the character of those who were "the sons of God," brings forward
another imitation of a spiritual birth; he says they were not born " of
the will of the flesh." Has "the flesh," then, a will to be
religious? Aye, surely; we have a religious "old man," as well as an
irreligious "old man." Nature is not confined to one garb; she wears
many masks, and can put on various appearances. Thus there is a will in man-at
least in many men-to be religious, and, if possible, save themselves. But those
who were "born of God," and had "power given to them to become
the sons of God," had experienced a deeper, higher, because a spiritual
and supernatural work upon their consciences, than any such birth "after
the will of the flesh."
The flesh, however high it may
rise, can never rise above itself. It begins in hypocrisy, it goes on in
hypocrisy, and it never can end but in hypocrisy. Whatever various shapes it
puts on-and it may wear the highest Calvinistic garb, as well as assume the
lowest Arminian dress-a fleshly religion never can rise above itself. There is
no brokenness of heart, no contrition of spirit, no godly sorrow, no genuine
humility, no living faith, no spiritual hope, no heavenly love, "shed
abroad in the heart by the Holy Ghost," in those that are "born after
the will of the flesh." No abasing views of self, no tender feelings of
reverence towards God, no filial fear of His great name, no melting of heart,
no softening of spirit, no deadness to the world, no sweet communion with the
Lord of life and glory, ever dwelt in their breasts. The flesh, with all its
workings, and all its subtle deceit and hypocrisy, never sank so low as
self-abhorrence and godly sorrow, and never mounted so high as into communion
with the Three-One God. The depth of the one is too deep, and the height of the
other too high for any but those who are "born of God."
3. We read, however, in the text,
of another birth still, which is, " of the will of man." Man then it
appears has a will to become religious; and as the birth according to "the
will of the flesh" pointed out a religion taken up by ourselves, so the
birth after "the will of man" shadows forth a religion put upon us by
others. And to what does the great mass of the religion of the present day
amount? If we gauge it by the scriptural standard, if we look at it with a
spiritual eye, if we examine it in its beatings God-ward, what must we say of
the vast bulk of religion current in this professing day? Must we not say that
it is according to "the will of man?" Eloquent exhortations to
"flee from the wrath to come," thundering denunciations of God's
vengeance against the world, working upon the natural feelings, wooing men into
a profession of religion, drawing into churches boys and girls just out of the
Sunday school, and persuading all from infancy to grey-hairs to become
religious-this is the way in which is brought about the birth after "the
will of man." And what is the end of it all? It leaves the soul under
"the wrath to come." There is in all this religion no deliverance
from the law, no pardon of sin, no separation from the world, no salvation from
death and hell. These various births, be they "of blood, or of the will of
the flesh, or of the will of man," leave a man just where they found
him-dead in sin, destitute of the fear of God, and utterly ignorant of that
divine teaching, which alone can save his soul from eternal wrath.
But those who were so highly privileged
and so spiritually blessed as to "receive Christ," and by receiving
Christ to "become the sons of God," were partakers of another birth
than .these false ones, and had received another teaching, another gospel, and
another Jesus. And these, and these only, were "born of God." The
Lord Himself had quickened their souls, and brought them out of nature's
darkness into His own marvellous light; the Lord Himself, by His secret work
upon their consciences, had cast them down and lifted them up, had brought them
to the birth and had also brought them forth; and .thus they were "born of
God," and had received the kingdom of God with power into their hearts, so
as to become "new creatures," and to "pass from death unto
life."
We see then the steps that the
Spirit of God has here been pleased to trace out. We see that He has drawn a
separating line betwixt those who had nothing but nature, and those who had
something more than nature-even the grace and Spirit of God; and we see that
the Lord with decisive hand sets aside every profession but that which springs
out of His own divine teaching; and will have no subjects of His sceptre and no
inmates of His kingdom but those in whose hearts He Himself has begun, and is
carrying on His own "work of faith with power."
Now I believe that for the most
part, those who have nothing else but a birth "of blood, or of the will of
the flesh, or of the will of man," have no doubts nor fears, no strong
exercises nor sharp temptations as to their eternal state before God: whilst,
on the other hand, those whom the Lord is teaching by the blessed Spirit, are
often tried and exercised in their minds whether the feelings which they from
time to time inwardly experience spring from a real work of God upon their
souls, or whether they are mere counterfeits and imitations of a work of grace.
Thus, in God's mysterious
providence, those who have every reason to fear have for the most part no fear
at all, and those who have no reason whatever to fear, but stand complete in
Christ, the objects of God's eternal love, and the sheep for whom Jesus died,
are the only persons who are plagued and pestered with the fears that spring
from their own unbelieving hearts, and the temptations with which Satan is
continually distressing their minds. It is the object of Satan to keep those
secure who are safe in his hands; nor does God see fit to disturb their quiet.
He has no purpose of mercy towards them; they are not subjects of His kingdom:
they are not objects of His love. He therefore leaves them carnally secure; in
a dream, from which they will not awake till God "despises their
image" (Ps. lxxiii. 20).
But on the other hand, where Satan
perceives a work of grace going on; where he sees the eyes sometimes filled
with tears, where he hears the sobs heaving from the contrite heart, where he
observes the knees often bent in secret prayer, where his listening ear often
hears the poor penitent confess his sins, weaknesses, and backslidings before
God (for by these observations, we have reason to believe, Satan gains his
intelligence), wherever he sees this secret work going on in the soul, mad with
wrath and filled with malice, he vents his hellish spleen against the objects
of God's love. Sometimes he tries to ensnare them into sin, sometimes to harass
them with temptation, sometimes to stir up their wicked heart into desperate
rebellion, sometimes to work upon their natural infidelity, and sometimes to
plague them with many groundless doubts and fears as to their reality and
sincerity before a heart-searching God.
So that whilst those who have no
work of grace upon their hearts at all are left secure, and free from doubt and
fear, those in whom God is at work are exercised and troubled in their minds,
and often cannot really believe that they are the people in whom God takes
delight. The depths of human hypocrisy, the awful lengths to which profession
may go, the deceit of the carnal heart, the snares spread for the unwary feet,
the fearful danger of being deceived at the last-these traps and pitfalls are
not objects of anxiety to those dead in sin. As long as they can pacify natural
conscience, and do something to soothe any transient conviction, they are glad
to be deceived.
But, on the other hand, he that
has a conscience tender in God's fear knows what an awful thing it is to be a
hypocrite before God, to have "a lie in his right hand," and be
deluded by the prince of darkness; and therefore, until God Himself assures him
with His own blessed lips, speaks with power to his conscience, and establishes
him in a blessed assurance of his interest in Christ by "shedding abroad
His love in his heart," he must be exercised and tried in his mind, he
must have these various tossings to and fro, for this simple reason-because he
cannot rest satisfied except in the personal manifestations of the mercy of
God.
In this congregation, doubtless,
there are living souls who are thus exercised. When you feel how carnal you
have been-and how often are you carnal!-how your mind has been buried in the
things of time and sense, how little prayer has been flowing out of your heart,
how eternal things have been hid from your view-when you awake as out of a
dream, and find all your evidences beclouded, and all your past experience
covered with a thick veil of darkness, then these painful fears begin to rise
in your mind-lest with all your profession you should be deceived at the last.
But what do you under such
circumstances? Do you fly to man? No; for you are taught to see that
"miserable comforters are ye all" (Job vi. 2). Do you fly back to
past experiences? As you endeavour to pursue them, they more and more recede
from your view. Do you endeavour to gather up your former comforts? They slip
out of your fingers, and you have no solid grasp of them. Do you go to
ministers, that they may speak a flattering word? If they do speak to you words
of encouragement, you cannot receive it. And thus, driven out of all creature
hopes, your whole refuge and sole resource is the Lord Himself. To Him you go
with a contrite heart, with a troubled mind, with an exercised soul; at His
feet you bend with holy reverence, and cast yourself as a poor guilty wretch at
His footstool. And when, in sweet and blessed answer to the cry of your soul,
He drops in a word to raise up your drooping spirit, then you receive that
which no human hand could minister; you have a balm which no human physician
could give; and your soul for a time feels satisfied with a sense and testimony
of the Lord's goodness.
Shall we quarrel, then, with these
doubts and exercises, these temptations and trials, these assaults from Satan,
these workings up of inward corruption, when they are, in God's mercy and in
God's providence, such blessed helpers? If they drive us to a throne of grace
to receive answers of mercy there; if by them we are brought out of lying
refuges; if by them all false hopes are stripped off from us; if by them we are
made honest and sincere before God; if by them we turn away from all human
help, and come wholly and solely to the Lord that He alone may speak peace to
us, and bless us; shall we quarrel with these things, which are-if I may use
the expression-such friendly enemies, that are so outwitted, that are so-in
God's divine alembic-changed from curses into blessings, that in God's
overruling providence are made so mysteriously to work for our good?
Shall we not rather bless God for
every exercise that brings us to His footstool? for every temptation that has
stripped away creature-righteousness; for every blow that has cut us off from
the world; for every affliction that has embittered the things of time and
sense; for everything, however painful to the flesh, which has brought us
nearer to Himself, and made us feel more love towards Him, and more desire
after Him? Sure I am, .that when we sum up God's mercies, we must include in
the number, things painful to the flesh, and which at one time we could only
look upon as miseries; nay, in summing up the rich total, we must catalogue in
the list every pang of guilt, every stroke of conviction, every agonizing
doubt, every painful fear, every secret temptation, everything that has most
disturbed us.
And could we among God's mercies
assign a more prominent place to one than to another, we should give the most
distinguished to the deepest trial. We should say-"Of all mercies, next to
manifested mercies (for we must put them at the head of the list), the greatest
have been troubles, trials, exercises, and temptations; for we now see that
their blessed effect has been to cut us clean out of fleshly religion, and out
of those delusions which, had we continued in them, would have been our
destruction, and thus eventually to bring us into nearer union, and to more
sweet and special communion with God Himself."
God leads all His people
"forth by the right way;" but the right way is to them as God leads
them, a mysterious one, for He "brings the blind by a way that they knew
not" (Isa. xlii. 16). Could you and I, by the eye of faith, retrace the
whole path that God has been pleased to lead us in, from the time He was pleased
to quicken our souls. or I might go further back than that-from the time that
we came into existence; could we accurately and believingly trace out all the
path, we should come to this sweet conclusion in our minds: It has all been a
path of undeserved and unmingled mercy; His dealings with us, however painful
they may have been, yet have all guided us "by the right way, that we
might go to a city of habitation" (Ps. cvii. 7).
And what is our present condition?
Some of us perhaps are passing through severe trials, walking in "darkness
that may be felt," labouring under heavy burdens, and not seeing the sun
behind the cloud. But may we not judge from the past, what is the use of the
present, and what will be the issue of the future? Has the Lord ever disappointed
your expectations? Has He ever been to you less than you have hoped, or other
than you wished? Oh that the Lord would enable each of us to trust Him even
now! However dark the path He may call us to walk in, may the Lord give us this
blessed confidence, that He is still leading us, still guiding us, and will
lead us and guide us, until He brings us to "see Him as He is," to
enjoy His presence, and to sit down in His glorious and eternal kingdom.