Original Monthly Sermons from Living Ministers, Sermons XXVI. and
XXVII.
SERMON XXVI
In the Christian revelation, there
is an evident purpose of infinite wisdom, that in
all the provisions for man’s salvation, his moral
agency should be left free and uncontrolled.
Instead of accommodation to human prejudices, there
is ample scope for captious objections. And if
additional proof were needed, of the divine origin
of the Bible, it would be found in this characteristic.
Were it a system agreeable to the narrow views, in
unison with the selfish feelings, and gratifying to
the depraved taste of human nature, it would more
resemble the fabrication of man, than the workmanship
of God. But as the current of its doctrines is
so entirely opposed to our natural inclinations, as
to render a moral renovation indispensable to a perception
of the glory of revealed truth; all such ground of
skepticism is removed.
Thus the obscurities and difficulties
of revelation are admirably adapted to exhibit human
character, and constitute this state of existence
a real probation. For if the light of truth came
upon the mind with resistless energy, and the operations
of the divine government were clearly disclosed; if
the motives and designs of infinite wisdom were fully
explained, and the realities of the spiritual world
completely laid open to view; one principal aim of
this dispensation would be frustrated. On the
one hand, there would be no field for the exercise
of faith and humble confidence on the part of Christians;
and thus a precious test of their submission and obedience
would be destroyed. On the other, there could
not be a full disclosure of the true feelings of the
unrenewed heart. Because, as all would be evident
as the noon-day sun, there would remain no choice
in the matter of embracing the truth no
means of evincing whether its reception were cordial
or compulsory.
In this respect; there is displayed
a matchless skill, as well as a gracious condescension,
in adapting revelation to the actual character and
condition of our race. While sufficient light
is afforded to guide the sincere inquirer, there is
an obscurity to perplex and offend the proud and self-confident.
While the truth is accompanied by evidence abundantly
satisfactory to every mind open to conviction, enough
of mystery remains, to form an impassable barrier
to those who are inclined to disbelieve the testimony
of God. While to the eye of faith there appears
a glorious system of wisdom and mercy, depraved reason
and prejudice may discover little else than an assemblage
of inconsistencies and absurdities.
It is not without design, then, that
the great facts of revelation are made liable to misrepresentation;
that its essential principles are arrayed against
the pride of human wisdom; and that its blessed institutions
are so obnoxious to abuse and opposition. Such
a constitution of things is evidently intended to
furnish a decisive criterion of human character to
exhibit, in striking contrast, the humble votaries
of faith, who reverently bow to the authority of Scripture;
and the adherents of a haughty, self-confident rationality,
who will receive the testimony of God himself, no farther
than it accords with their opinions and prejudices and
thus to elicit a fair and full manifestation of every
man’s real disposition and feelings.
Such, uniformly, has been the effect
of the Bible, wherever its sacred contents have been
made known. To all who have received it with
penitence, humility, and confidence, as the infallible
word of God, it has proved their pleasure and delight their
fountain of consolation their guide to peace: while the self-righteous and
unbelieving have transformed it into a subject of perplexity and disputation a cause of deeper guilt and
more aggravated ruin. The Gospel has appeared
transcendently beautiful and glorious to all who have
been savingly enlightened by the Holy Spirit while,
to the impenitent and skeptical, it seems obscure,
irrational, and incomprehensible. The former
rejoice in the scriptures, just as they are, and willingly
yield to the obedience of faith: the latter are
ever anxious to lower the standard of divine truth
to the level of their views of fitness, and to mould
its materials into a form suited to their unholy inclinations.
On these principles it is easy to perceive the real nature and causes of the
insidious warfare, which is maintained, in various forms, against the essential
doctrines of the Gospel. It is just an effusion of the malignity of the
unsanctified heart. Its prevalence is an exact fulfilment of prophecy; and
therefore an irrefragable proof of the truth and divine authority of that system
which it is labouring to destroy. The emphatic declaration of the apostle,
in the text, strikingly describes the state of feeling which now actually
prevails, among many who enjoy all the external privileges of the Christian
dispensation The
preaching of the cross is, to them that perish, foolishness.
In illustration of this passage, it
will be attempted, to explain the import of the phrase,
the preaching of the cross to enumerate
some of the instances and causes of
such preaching being accounted foolishness and
to describe the fearful state and prospects
of those who hold it in such low estimation.
The preaching of the cross is a plain
and full announcement of all the essential truths
of that system which provides pardon and salvation
for the lost and guilty. The cross is the symbol
of that amazing expedient of infinite wisdom and mercy,
by which a treaty of reconciliation is offered to
convicted traitors against Jehovah’s government.
Its exhibition therefore must require a developement
of the principles, and a defence of the doctrines,
peculiar to this gracious dispensation.
The grand fact, which constitutes
the very essence and glory of the Gospel, and which
it is the leading object of the Christian ministry
to announce; is, that He, who took upon himself the
form of a servant, and offered up the sacrifice of
Calvary, is God over all, blessed for ever.
This gives to the cross all its glory and efficacy.
It is on the supreme Deity of Christ on
the expiation made for sin by the Maker and Sovereign
of worlds that the whole fabric of evangelical
truth rests. On any other supposition, the sacrifice
of the cross was a very ordinary affair. If the
Saviour of sinners be not God if he be a
created being, of whatever grade, where
is the mystery of Godliness? Where
those unfathomable depths of divine love, into
which the angels desire to look? If Christ
be only a servant of God, however exalted, what was
there, in his appearance on our world, to constitute
a new era in heaven, and to fill its inhabitants with
astonishment and ecstasy? Did the heavenly host
descend in rapture, and cause the mountains of Judea
to reecho with their acclamations, because a dependent
creature had consented to do his Maker’s
will? Whence the ascription of glory to God
in the highest, and why do the courts above resound
with a new song of praise to God for his redeeming
mercy, if this redemption was effected by the labours
and sufferings of one inferior to the Deity? Was
such a dispensation as that of Moses, designed simply
to prepare the way for a messenger of God to declare
his will, and to seal the testimony with his blood,
as many good men have done, both before and since?
Why did patriarchs and prophets foretell his coming,
and celebrate his praises? Why did the
continual offering of divinely appointed sacrifices,
for many centuries, typify his sufferings? And
why did nature shudder, and shroud herself in darkness,
at the consummation of those sufferings? All
these things are utterly inexplicable, on the supposition
that Christ is a created dependent being.
But view him as God manifest in
the flesh view him as voluntarily laying
aside his glory, and descending from the throne of
infinite majesty, to assume the nature, and expiate
the guilt of a ruined race; and we are
struck with the appropriateness of all the attending
circumstances. The splendid cérémonials of
the Jewish ritual, and the raptured songs of prophets
and of angels were well employed to prepare the way
for the visible manifestation of Deity among men.
The annunciation of the divine nature of the Redeemer
must, therefore, be an essential part of the preaching
of the cross.
Equally indispensable is a decided
testimony to that perfect atonement for sin,
which was made by this great offering. Here is
the only foundation of human hope. This was the
grand object accomplished by the Saviour’s sufferings.
Thus was completely solved the mysterious problem,
which all created intelligences had deemed inexplicable how
sin could be remitted, without infringing the rights
and tarnishing the honour of the divine government and
how the guilty could be rescued from wrath, without
a forfeiture of the divine veracity. Never indeed
was the divine law so completely vindicated, or the
claims of justice so awfully asserted, as when the
Lawgiver offered himself as a ransom. And no other
possible manifestation of the malignity and atrocity
of sin, of the divine abhorrence of all iniquity,
and, at the same time, of the exhaustless treasures
of redeeming mercy, could equal that which was witnessed
on Calvary. As, therefore, Moses lifted up the
serpent in the wilderness, so is the cross to be held
up now, by its heralds, to a perishing world.
Its atoning sacrifice is to be proclaimed, and its
purchased blessings offered to lost sinners, as their
only hope their only remedy.
Another important part of the preaching
of the cross consists in a full disclosure of
the entire depravity and helplessness of our fallen
nature. This doctrine lies at the foundation
of Christianity. It is from the corruption of
our race, the dominion of spiritual death, and the
actual sentence of condemnation, that the necessity
arises for so great salvation. If hope
could have been afforded from any other source, if
there had been any possibility of the sinner’s
expiating his own guilt, and restoring himself to
the divine favour, the great Sacrifice would never
have been offered. But until men are convinced
of their apostacy and corruption, they will never
be persuaded of the truth and necessity of the great
atonement. And until they feel themselves justly
condemned, and utterly helpless, they will never come
as humble suppliants to a Saviour’s feet.
The work of the Holy Spirit, in
enlightening and renewing the hearts of sinners,
and thus carrying on to their accomplishment the purposes
of divine mercy, forms also an important portion of
the message of the Gospel. It is the glorious
achievement of the cross, to slay the enmity and subdue
the stubbornness of the sinful heart: and the
infinite blessing purchased by the Saviour’s
blood, is the gift of the Holy Spirit, to effectuate
that transformation of character, that spiritual regeneration,
without which salvation is utterly impossible.
The preaching of the cross, therefore, must include
an unwavering declaration, that the working of
regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost
are indispensable to salvation.
It is moreover essential to a faithful
preaching of the cross, that justification
by faith in Christ, should be distinctly declared
as the only ground of a sinner’s hope.
That view of the Gospel which represents it as bestowing
upon man a power of fulfilling God’s holy law or
as so lowering its demands as to render his imperfect
obedience acceptable is most dishonourable
to God, and ruinous to the souls of men. No such
provisions are found in the treaty of reconciliation
sent from Heaven. So far from abrogating, the
Gospel exalts and honours the law. So far from
diminishing its strictness, it adds emphasis to its
claims, and fully meets its unmitigated requisitions.
Most gloriously has Christ vindicated the divine justice,
by receiving its avenging sword in his own bosom,
as the Substitute, or surety for sinners; and most
effectually has he provided for their salvation, by
rendering the exercise of pardoning mercy consistent
with the principles of the divine government, and
by working out for them a perfect righteousness, which
may render them just before God. By faith, the
penitent sinner receives all these blessings is
rescued from wrath, delivered from the guilt and bondage
of sin, and made a child of God, and an heir of eternal
life. Thus the triumph of the cross is complete,
the pride of human merit is humbled in the dust, and
all the glory of the salvation of sinners is rendered
to the riches of redeeming mercy.
In fine, the preaching of the cross
includes a faithful denunciation of eternal misery,
as the inevitable doom of all who pass from this state
of probation, unrenewed by the Spirit of grace, unwashed
in the blood of the Lamb.
Such are the essential principles
of that system of redemption, which engaged the counsels
of heaven from eternity; and which was carried into
effect, not like the work of creation, by a single
word of the Son of God, but by his assuming human
nature, enduring a long exile of toil and reproach,
and humbling himself unto death, even the death of
the cross.
With what gratitude, then, ought this
Gospel to be received by the guilty, perishing creatures,
for whose rescue from perdition it is designed.
How should this display of divine compassion melt and
captivate the hearts of those, whose sins have been
thus expiated, and for whom an offer of free pardon
and endless blessedness has been thus dearly purchased.
But be astonished, O heavens, at
this these tidings of salvation are
received by many with chilling indifference the
sufferings of the cross are regarded with unconcern the
treaty of reconciliation, written in atoning blood,
is by some contemptuously disregarded by
others repelled with determined opposition. These
appalling facts display more of the malignity of sin,
its blinding, deadening influence, and more of the
rancorous enmity of the carnal heart against God, than
all the other enormities which blacken the world’s
history. All other crimes appear less atrocious
than this scorn of a Saviour’s love this
trampling under foot the blood of the covenant.
While no finite mind could have conceived it possible,
that Almighty love should be so slighted, yet the
Spirit of prophecy announced this impious ingratitude,
long before the incarnation. When Isaiah saw
the glory of Christ, and spake of him, he also
saw that he would be despised and rejected of men.
And by all their hostility to the doctrines of grace,
sinners are only verifying the description, which
inspiration gave long ago, of their blindness and
perverseness. By all their vain reasonings and
presumptuous objections, they just corroborate revealed
truth, and evince the desperate wickedness of the
natural heart.
As in the days of the apostles, so
in this period of increased light, the preaching
of the cross is esteemed foolishness.
The message of redeeming mercy is often received with
utter listlessness often with an evident
disgust and sometimes with an openly avowed
hostility. In the apostolic age, it might be
supposed that the resistance, with which the Gospel
had to contend, arose from the prejudices of a Heathen
or Jewish education, and from a very imperfect knowledge
of Christianity. But, at the present period,
the undiminished hostility, which is displayed against
the pure doctrines of redemption, can be attributed
to nothing, but that hatred to the ways of God, which
the Scriptures represent as rankling in the natural
heart, and for which they contain the only remedy.
It requires but a transient view of
the religious state, even of enlightened and refined
society, to see that to very many, now, the preaching
of the cross is foolishness. While any temporal
interest excites feeling, this theme is listened to
with apathy. O, how often are those statements,
which fill heaven with ecstasy, rehearsed to vacant,
listless hearers! How many weep at fictitious
woes, who contemplate the bloody scene of Calvary
without a tear! How many hearts glow in admiration
of the benevolence or heroism of a fellow worm, while
entirely unaffected alike by the sacrifice or the triumph
of the Son of God! How often do men express sentiments
of the most fervent gratitude towards earthly benefactors,
who would be ashamed of uttering one emotion of thanks
to Him who gave himself to die for them!
And is not this treating the Gospel as foolishness?
But this heartless unconcern, criminal as it undoubtedly
is, in the sight of God, is not so fearfully impious affords
not so appalling a disclosure of depravity, as the
absolute disgust and contempt, with which the doctrines
of the cross are sometimes received. In almost
every community, there are those who utterly despise
the whole system who do not disguise their
abhorrence and who evidently hate the very
mention of the subject. How indignant are such
at any effort, in private conversation, to urge upon
their attention themes connected with the dying love
of Christ! How chilling is the effect, when such
discourse is attempted, in many circles of refinement
and elegance? And what a brand of infamy is affixed
to the human character, by the fact, that from most
such circles all these topics are absolutely excluded!
Let a man confine his conversation to such subjects
as engaged the attention of Christ and his apostles such
subjects as now employ the hosts of heaven, let
him be accustomed in company, to bring forward the
holy mysteries of redemption, and by how
many would he be shunned like a pestilence? And
with what scornful hatred are those churches avoided
by many, where nothing is heard but Jesus Christ
and him crucified? Such are the open, unequivocal
expressions of contempt and disgust, with which many
treat the doctrines of the cross. Do not they
esteem them foolishness?
But there is a class of the contemners
of evangelical truth, characterized by more active
zeal and decided measures. Far from the giddy
thoughtlessness of those who hardly reflect upon the
subject at all, and from the strange inconsistency
of such, as profess to respect what they really despise
and hate, these feel and express a deep
interest in religious opinions; devote time and attention
to theological studies; and, as the result of their
investigations, avow their utter disbelief of the
peculiar doctrines of the cross; and undertake to
demonstrate their falsehood and absurdity. They
tell you, they have maturely examined the whole subject that
they have brought to the investigation all the aid
that extensive reading and critical research can furnish that
they have carried the lights of science and philosophy
into the dark regions of fanaticism and
have become perfectly convinced, that the whole system
is an assemblage of the grossest errors. When,
however, the array of argument is produced, its force
seems to consist in the unwelcome impressions which
the pure Gospel itself makes upon their minds.
They can see no wisdom or fitness in such an atonement.
They see nothing so very terrible in sin, as to require
such an expiation. Pardoning mercy, say they,
is one of the natural attributes of Deity; and the
doctrine of eternal punishment seems to them too horribly
inconsistent with divine justice to bear reflection.
As for the substitution of the innocent for the guilty,
and satisfying the claims of law by the blood of a
sinless victim, they are amazed that any rational
man can credit such absurd notions. Tell them
of the maladies and wounds of the soul, which can
only be healed by the Physician of Calvary they
can hardly conceal their contempt. Tell them
plainly, as the Bible does, that they are lost, perishing
sinners that the wrath of God is revealed
against them that the avenging sword is
uplifted, and that, unless they fly to the cross and
embrace it by a living faith, they must sink to perdition and
you will witness the smile of derision or the frown
of indignation. They esteem the doctrine of the
Trinity as a monument of human credulity and folly.
Their feelings are shocked beyond measure, at the
incarnation of Deity, in the person of Jesus Christ.
The personality and direct influences of the Holy
Spirit appear useless and incredible; and the necessity
of a change of heart excites their utter scorn.
They cannot endure it. Their disgust is inexpressible.
Instead, therefore, of these offensive
principles, they substitute a system, not modelled
from the Bible, but from what they consider reason
and propriety. This they adorn with all that is
beautiful and attractive to the carnal eye. Before
this fair and flattering idol, of their own workmanship,
they bow down in delighted homage. This is a religion
they can love, for it flatters, exalts, and dignifies
human nature! But as for human depravity, and
other hated doctrines of the orthodox creed, they
want words to express their aversion. The simple
account of the matter is, that the preaching of
the cross, in their estimation, is foolishness.
Such are the various grades of hostility
to the vital principles of the Gospel, from contemptuous
indifference, to malignant and rancorous opposition.
We now proceed to enumerate some of
the causes, of this deplorable state of feeling towards
the truth as it is in Jesus.
The depravity the unholiness of
human nature, may be considered the grand cause of
all the enmity which has appeared against the doctrines
of grace. It is true, nevertheless, that the various
degrees and forms, in which this enmity is manifested,
depend upon the peculiarities of individual character
and situation.
Destitution of early religious instruction,
generally leads to an entire indifference to the whole
subject. Persons who are brought up in prayerless,
worldly families whose young minds are not
moulded by a pious influence are usually
found very insusceptible of religious impressions.
In such hearts the power of ungodliness reigns uncontrolled.
Uncultivated and waste, they produce nothing but thorns
and briers. Nor is it surprising, that this
numerous class of the hearers of the Gospel should
exhibit an utter disregard and contempt of its authority.
The preaching of the cross is foolishness to
them, because they do not understand it, and will
not take the trouble to examine it.
A similar apathy is frequently observed
in persons who have been well instructed, when their
whole souls have become engrossed in some worldly
pursuit. Their heads and hands are so entirely
occupied, that serious reflection is absolutely excluded.
Contempt of evangelical religion is
sure to be exhibited in places where its professors
are asleep or dead. In communities where real
religion flourishes, where its power is felt, and
its votaries are consistent and decided; whatever
hatred may rankle in the breasts of opposers, they
are not apt to indulge in contemptuous derision.
But where formality and worldliness prevail, and no
conspicuous standard of Christian character is visible the
hearts of sinners will be manifested. They will,
without hesitation, avow, in how low and degrading
a light they regard the doctrines of the cross.
Their contempt and loathing are wholly irrepressible.
In many instances, the pride of rank
and intellect is the cause why the preaching of
the cross is utterly despised and accounted foolishness.
The lofty speculations of an aspiring intellect can
with difficulty come down to the simplicity of the
Gospel. The command, to come to the Saviour’s
feet with the humility of a little child, fills the
proud heart of those who are wise in their own
eyes, with indignation. They cannot endure
doctrines, which level all vain distinctions, and require
the noble, the affluent, and the learned, to assume
the same station of penitence and contrition, with
the lowliest peasant. They cannot consent to
lay their honours in the dust, and address themselves
only to sovereign mercies. It is beyond endurance,
that the messages of grace should come to them,
as condemned, guilty, and perishing sinners; and that
as such they should be invited to the cross. Hence
the scornful air, the undissembled disgust, with which
so many, in high life, turn their backs upon the
preaching of the cross. And hence, encouraged
by their example, multitudes cluster round the standard
of a haughty and malignant opposition to the Gospel.
While thus so many regard the preaching
of the cross as foolishness, and earnestly wish
it were utterly false; it is not wonderful, that efforts
should be made to prove that it actually is so.
Probably some, engaged in this opposition, are perfectly
sincere, and actually suppose, as Saul of Tarsus did,
that they are doing God service, by combating
the doctrines of the cross. But whoever obeys
the natural dictates of his own heart, and submits
himself to the guidance of his own perverted, blinded
reason, refusing to supplicate the illuminations of
divine grace, will be likely to come under the power
of strong delusion to believe a lie.
One other cause of opposition to the
Gospel is found in the absolute contrariety of its
requisitions, to the habits of life, which men have
contracted, and which they are resolved not to abandon.
While the preaching of the cross prescribes,
as indispensable to salvation, conditions with which
many, who have no doubt of being saved, wholly refuse
to comply; and while it declares that eternal perdition
will be the result of a course, which they are determined
to pursue; it must be the object of their settled
detestation. Hence the love of sinful pursuits
and gratifications, and an invincible repugnance to
a life of devotion, are the true reasons why many
esteem the preaching of the cross foolishness.
It ought, however, to be kept in mind,
while these causes are recounted, that the operation
of each of them is rendered more efficacious, by the
agency of that spirit of darkness, that worketh
in the children of disobedience. To increase
disgust against the plan of redemption, to exasperate
the natural enmity of the carnal heart, to give a specious
appearance to objections, and to enforce, with seductive
arguments, the cause of unbelief, is the untiring
employment of the grand foe of God and man. It
is indeed the darling achievement of infernal skill,
to inflate a poor worm with pride of talent, and fill
his heart with hatred to the Gospel, and then persuade
him that his hatred arises from its falsehood and
absurdity. No event can afford the tempter greater
joy, than success in persuading perishing sinners
to reject the only possible way of escape from eternal
death, and to contemn, as foolishness, that doctrine
which is the wisdom of God and the power of God
to salvation to every one that believeth.
It only remains, that we briefly describe
the fearful condition and prospects of all to whom
the preaching of the cross is foolishness.
And here we have only to repeat the
decision of the Searcher of hearts the
Judge of the quick and dead. His infallible Spirit
has, in our text, divulged the tremendous fact, that
the indifference, contempt, and disgust, which have
now been described, are characteristics of THEM THAT
PERISH. This authority, as well as the nature
of the case, renders it certain, that all, who indulge
such feelings, are in the gall of bitterness and
under the bond of iniquity dead in
trespasses and sins treasuring up
wrath against the day of wrath. Nothing short
of utter blindness of mind can be insensible to the
glory of the Gospel nothing but entire
depravity of heart can render its doctrines offensive and
nothing but the most obdurate impenitency can resist
the melting influence of a Saviour’s dying love.
It is utterly impossible, that a scornful neglect
or disregard of the preaching of the cross should
exist, without fearful guilt and imminent danger.
All those, among the hearers of the gospel, who will
finally be children of wrath, are now characterized
by such guilt. And all the lost spirits in the
world of wo, who once enjoyed the offers of mercy,
cherished the same fatal feelings towards the plan
of redemption. It was foolishness to them.
Many, even in this land of light, seem to be ripening
for the same tremendous doom. Whether in the
ranks of open opposition, or under the false colours
of pretended regard, the deadly symptom is upon them a
settled disgust and aversion to the preaching of
the cross.
Say not, ‘It is no matter what
a man believes, provided he is sincere.’
God has settled this question. Because
they received not the love of the truth, that
they might be saved; God shall send them strong
delusion, that they should believe a lie; that
they all might be damned, who believed not the truth,
but had pleasure in unrighteousness.”
Is there not then, appalling evidence, that those,
who hold such preaching in contempt, occupy very perilous
ground, and exhibit fearful tokens of the divine abandonment?
And especially might not the angels in heaven tremble
for those, who have enjoyed great light and privileges have
witnessed rich displays of divine grace and
have once felt a deep solicitude for their own souls but
who now despise and hate those truths, and that cause,
which they were once almost persuaded to embrace?
How clearly and terribly, my hearers,
does this subject discover the ungodliness of the
unrenewed heart. Those feelings of contempt and
hostility, towards what is most precious and glorious
in the view of God, constitute the summit of human
guilt. That feeble worms of the dust should thus
dare to sit in judgment on the divine administration,
and pronounce that needless which God has declared
indispensable, and call that folly which God esteems
the highest wisdom, is not merely presumptuous; it
is inexpressibly impious.
How resistless is the evidence, hence
arising, of the necessity of an entire change of heart an
entire change of feeling to prepare men
to dwell with God. No wonder then, that our Lord
should declare with such emphasis, Ye must be born
again, or ye cannot see the kingdom of God.
I beseech you, fellow sinners, lay
these things seriously to heart. Do any of you
habitually hear the preaching of the cross with heartless
indifference with a light and trifling temper?
Beware, lest your heart become fatally hardened through
the deceitfulness of sin.
Are any of you conscious of disgust
and aversion, produced by such doctrines? O,
beware, lest that come upon you which is spoken in
the prophets, Behold, ye dispisers, and wonder, and
perish: Beware lest you convert the bread of
life into the poison of death!
Have any of you already attained such
a degree of blindness and perversity, as to persuade
yourselves that the doctrines of the cross are really
irrational and absurd, and that you are doing right
in opposing and deriding them? Recollect, I pray
you, with whose word you are contending; whose
wisdom you are despising! Let the chaff contend
with the tempest, and the stubble with the devouring
flame; let the glow-worm despise all the lamps of
heaven; but Oh, let not a worm contend
with Omnipotence; let not dim reason reject all the
splendours of the Sun of righteousness. The redemption
of the soul is precious Its rescue
from perdition, and elevation to God’s right
hand, are objects too momentous, to be sacrificed
to the pride of intellect, or to the fashion of a
world which passeth away. Receive, then, with
meekness the ingrafted word, which is able to save
your souls. But be ye doers of the word, and
not hearers only, deceiving your own selves.
SERMON XXVII
Whilst another year is ending, and
time itself, as it respects us, is fast hastening
to its close, the question very naturally arises, What
shall come after death? The voice of inspiration
replies, After this the Judgment. There
is no need of entering upon a laboured proof of the
doctrine so plainly declared, That there will be
a day of Judgment for mankind. It is what
seems written by the finger of God himself upon the
consciences of men. The impression is nearly universal,
with Pagans and Mahomedans, as well as Jews and Christians,
that every one of us shall give account of himself
to God. This impression is strengthened by
a view of the very unequal and indiscriminate allotments
of the present life. Here the virtuous are often
the objects of hatred and relentless persecution.
Here the man of ambition and dark intrigue, circumvents
and treads down his more honest rivals. Here
Providence often afflicts even the most pious; while
the licentious, and proud, and oppressive, are, perhaps,
suffered to enjoy uninterrupted prosperity. Now
we believe, assuredly, that “God is just;”
and we infer, that he will so exhibit himself by another
and more equal distribution of his favours and frowns.
We conclude with the wise man, “that God shall
judge both the righteous and the wicked.”
Conscience and reason, then, unite with revelation,
in saying, that “God hath appointed a day, in
which he will judge the world in righteousness.”
No language can be plainer, and no event more reasonably
anticipated.
With this absolute certainty before
us, then, of a judgment for all mankind, it would
be unnatural it would betray awful insensibility
to eternal concerns, not to inquire with all seriousness When
will this universal judgment take place? What
objects is it designed to accomplish? What connexion
will it have with our future and eternal condition?
We inquire then,
I. When will the universal Judgment take place?
The precise time, God has wisely concealed
from every intelligent creature. “Of that
day and that hour knoweth no man. No; not the
angels that are in heaven.” But the text
speaks of it, in general terms, as that which is to
take place after our death. Other passages
are somewhat more explicit, as to the time. The
apostle Peter declares, “The heavens and the
earth which now are, by the same word are kept in store,
reserved unto fire, against the day of judgment,
and perdition of ungodly men.” According
to this account of the judgment, it will occur at
the same time with the destruction of the world; “when,”
as the same apostle declares, “the heavens shall
pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall
melt with fervent heat, the earth, also, and the works
that are therein shall be burnt up.” Paul
gives a similar account of the time, as he
comforts the church at Thessalonica, under persecution,
with the prospect of the judgment, “when the
Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his
mighty angels, in flaming fire, taking vengeance on
them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel
of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Indeed, if God
is to “judge the whole world in righteousness,”
what other occasion would seem so proper, as when the
last of our race have finished their work on the earth,
and the world itself is about to be destroyed?
Would it not appear most suitable, that the public
and final decision of our destiny, should immediately
succeed the winding up of this world’s drama? the
termination of all earthly allotments? When,
if not at that deeply interesting crisis, will all
things be ready for the great trial? The final judgment,
then, will take place after our death, and at the
end of the world. We next inquire,
II. What are the objects, which the Judgment is designed to
accomplish?
On this point, it becomes creatures
of yesterday to speak with profound humility, and
especially to beware of contradicting what is revealed.
The objects which Jéhovah will accomplish by the universal
judgment, are unquestionably vast and momentous, beyond
all conception. Yet some of them are obvious
to reason, or are plainly revealed.
Every person has experienced inconvenience
and perplexity from the circumstance, that the real
characters of men, in the present life, are but partially
disclosed. Much the larger portion of human actions
pass unobserved by the world; or the motives which
prompt them are concealed. One design of the
judgment, then, is to uncover these hidden springs,
and lay open every dark retreat of human conduct.
We are told, “there is nothing hid which shall
not be revealed;” that “God shall bring
every work into judgment, with every secret thing,
whether it be good or whether it be evil;” that
he “will both bring to light the hidden things
of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels the
heart.”
Another design of the judgment, is
publicly to assign to men their proper deserts.
This, we have before suggested, is not done on the
earth. “All things here come alike to all.”
“There is one event to the righteous and to
the wicked.” But the future judgment is
characterized, as the day of “revelation of
the righteous judgment of God;” “in the
which he will judge the world in righteousness;”
and will “render to every man according to his
deeds.” The mystery involved in the prosperity
of the wicked, and in the unequal allotments, which
have here marked the dispensations of Providence,
will then cease for ever; and it will then be seen
and felt, that every one is treated according to the
strictest principles of wisdom and justice.
Another special design of the judgment,
is to manifest and gloriously exalt the perfections
of Jéhovah. Revelation has indeed proclaimed his
perfections, in language which need not be misunderstood.
But his providence has often interposed a cloud between
them and the eyes of men. We do not comprehend
the wisdom of present occurrences. We see not
the end from the beginning. A complete disclosure
of both, will show to the universe the deep counsels
of God, and the consistent and benevolent character
of all his operations. He will then appear in
the greatness of his power, and majesty as
he summons the dead from their graves, and folds up
the earth and the heavens, like a decayed garment,
to be laid aside. He will then appear in the
glory of his justice, his holiness,
and his truth, while he examines,
before his dread tribunal, the risen and assembled
millions of our race, and renders to every one according
to his works. All his perfections will then be
illustriously displayed; for, says the apostle, “He
shall come to be glorified in his saints, and to be
admired in all them that believe.”
But this glory of the Divinity is
specially to shine forth in the person of the Son.
He it was, that “being found in fashion as a
man, humbled himself, and became obedient unto death,
even the death of the cross. Wherefore God hath
highly exalted him, and given him a name, which is
above every name: that at the name of Jesus every
knee should bow, of things in heaven and things in
earth, and things under the earth; and that every
tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to
the glory of God the Father.” Accordingly,
“the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed
all judgment unto the Son.” It is the Son
who will come “in the clouds of heaven, with
power and great glory”; whom “every eye
shall see;” and who, “in his own glory,
and in the glory of the Father, and of the holy angels,”
shall “judge the world in righteousness.”
Then will he who humbled himself, and “became
obedient unto death,” be publicly recognised
as “the Mighty God,” “by whom, and
for whose pleasure, all things are, and were created.”
Then will “every tongue confess that he is Lord.”
The conviction will then be universal, “that
all men should honour the Son even as they honour
the Father.” This leads us to inquire,
III. What connexion will the Judgment have with our future and eternal
condition?
Here let us not indulge in vain speculations,
but examine simply the word of God. According
to the Scriptures, the judgment will result in assigning
to men very different allotments. It will
recognise among them two entirely different and opposite
classes of character. One of these classes, which
the Bible denominates “the righteous,”
will be graciously acquitted by the Judge, and publicly
treated as his friends. The other, comprising
all the impenitent, will be as publicly condemned,
and driven from his presence. They “will
have judgment without mercy.” Such is plainly
the account which Christ and the sacred writers have
given of the final awards to the righteous and the
wicked. We have the account in detail. Says
the Saviour himself, “When the Son of Man shall
come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him,
then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory:
and before him shall be gathered all nations; and
he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd
divideth his sheep from the goats; and he shall set
the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on the
left. Then shall the King say unto them on his
right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit
the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of
the world.” “Then shall he say also
unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye cursed,
into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and
his angels.” And again; “The hour
is coming, in the which all that are in the graves
shall hear his voice, and shall come forth; they
that have done good, unto the resurrection of
life; and they that have done evil, unto
the resurrection of damnation”.
Thus broad and fearful is the discrimination which
the great day will make between the righteous and
the wicked. So entirely different are the awards
in reserve for the two different classes of mankind.
The difference will be great, as between holiness
and sin; between cheerful submission to the will and
providence of God, and unyielding rebellion against
him; between cordial faith in the Lord Jesus Christ,
and wilful rejection of the only Saviour; between
the splendour and joy of the celestial Paradise, and
the gloominess and misery of hell. No wonder,
then, that “as Paul reasoned of righteousness,
temperance, and judgment to come, Felix trembled.”
There will, indeed, be fearful reason for “weeping
and wailing and gnashing of teeth,” with those
who shall then “see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob,
and all the prophets in the kingdom of God, and themselves
thrust out.”
We are not to forget, my hearers,
that these different awards of the judgment day will
be irreversible and literally endless.
All admit this conclusion, with respect to the righteous.
But if the righteous are finally acquitted
at the judgment, so are the wicked finally condemned.
If the righteous are said to enter into “life
eternal,” so are the wicked to “go
away into everlasting punishment.”
The Scriptures say not one word of any reprieve from
this condemnation, or of any other period of merciful
visitation. But they close with the most solemn
assurance, that, from that awful day, he that is unjust
shall be unjust still; and he that is filthy shall
be filthy still; and he that is righteous shall be
righteous still; and he that is holy shall be holy
still. Other passages, of similar import, might
be quoted: but if men will pour contempt on a
single declaration of Jéhovah if they will
make God a liar they would not be
persuaded, though his voice from the heavens were
a thousand times repeated. And because they
receive not the love of the truth, that they
might be saved, most justly may he send them
strong delusion, that they should believe a
lie, and be damned.
I have thus endeavoured, with much
brevity, to give a scriptural view of the final Judgment.
On a subject so tremendously awful, I have chosen to
present simply God’s testimony. A practical
inference from the whole is, that the present
life must be regarded as probationary. We are
living here as responsible agents, continually adding
to the number of actions, for which we must give account
to God. How solemnly interesting, then, is this
scene of our earthly pilgrimage! How inexpressibly
valuable is time! How infinitely precious are
the means of grace! particularly those
invitations of mercy, which meet us in the word of
God, and address us from the sacred desk.
You, my fellow sinners, are the very
individuals who must stand at the judgment-seat of
Christ. You must mingle in that vast multitude,
which the voice of the archangel and the trump of
God shall assemble. And when your characters
are all laid open, you must pass off to the right hand,
or to the left, accordingly as it shall appear, that
you have repented, and believed on the Son of God,
or have neglected this great salvation. And are
you diligently preparing for that day? Are you
working out your salvation with fear and trembling?
Are you agonizing to enter in at the strait
gate? Are you escaping for your life?
Fellow mortals, your time of preparation
may be far more brief than you now think. A few,
very few more opportunities for prayer, and
reconciliation with God, and your account is sealed
up. While you hesitate, the recording angel may
be writing your condemnation. In such circumstances,
what are worldly honours, or wealth, or all your hopes
of enjoyment here? The life, the eternal life
of the soul, is the one thing needful the
only thing really important. You will realize
this truth, when the last trumpet is sounding through
the universe, and, with increasing agony or ecstasy,
millions of ages after the final sentence is pronounced.
O, then, consider it now. Prepare for that
judgment, now. To-morrow! where is it?
Repent to-morrow! You may have far other
work to do. God, and conscience, and your immortal
interests plead, “To-day, if you will
hear his voice, harden not your heart.”
“Behold, now is the accepted time; behold,
now is the day of salvation.” Kiss
the Son, lest he be angry, and ye perish from the way,
when his wrath is kindled but a little. For he
cometh, for he cometh, to judge the world, in righteousness
to judge the earth, and the people with his truth.