Solomon’s advice that we should
do whatever our hand findeth to do with our might,
naturally directs our thoughts to that great work in
which all others are included, which will outlive
all other works, and for which alone we really are
placed here below the salvation of our
souls. And the consideration of this great work,
which must be done with all our might, and completed
before the grave, whither we go, presents itself to
our minds with especial force at the commencement of
a new year. We are now entering on a fresh stage
of our life’s journey; we know well how it will
end, and we see where we shall stop in the evening,
though we do not see the road. And we know in
what our business lies while we travel, and that it
is important for us to do it with our “might;
for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor
wisdom, in the grave.” This is so plain,
that nothing need be said in order to convince us
that it is true. We know it well; the very complaint
which numbers commonly make when told of it, is that
they know it already, that it is nothing new, that
they have no need to be told, and that it is tiresome
to hear the same thing said over and over again, and
impertinent in the person who repeats it. Yes;
thus it is that sinners silence their conscience,
by quarrelling with those who appeal to it; they defend
themselves, if it may be called a defence, by pleading
that they already know what they should do and do not,
that they know perfectly well that they are living
at a distance from God, and are in peril of eternal
ruin; that they know they are making themselves children
of Satan, and denying the Lord that bought them, and
want no one to tell them so. Thus they witness
against themselves.
However, though we already know well
enough that we have much to do before we die, yet
(if we will but attend) it may be of use to hear the
fact dwelt upon; because by thinking over it steadily
and seriously, we may possibly, through God’s
grace, gain some deep conviction of it; whereas while
we keep to general terms, and confess that this life
is important and is short, in the mere summary way
in which men commonly confess it, we have, properly
speaking, no knowledge of that great truth at all.
Consider, then, what it is to die;
“there is no work, device, knowledge, or wisdom,
in the grave.” Death puts an end absolutely
and irrevocably to all our plans and works, and it
is inevitable. The Psalmist speaks to “high
and low, rich and poor, one with another.”
“No man can deliver his brother, nor make agreement
unto God for him.” Even “wise men
die, as well as the ignorant and foolish, and leave
their riches for other.” Difficult as
we may find it to bring it home to ourselves, to realize
it, yet as surely as we are here assembled together,
so surely will every one of us, sooner or later, one
by one, be stretched on the bed of death. We
naturally shrink from the thought of death, and of
its attendant circumstances; but all that is hateful
and fearful about it will be fulfilled in our case,
one by one. But all this is nothing compared
with the consequences implied in it. Death stops
us; it stops our race. Men are engaged about
their work, or about their pleasure; they are in the
city, or the field; any how they are stopped; their
deeds are suddenly gathered in a reckoning
is made all is sealed up till the great
day. What a change is this! In the words
used familiarly in speaking of the dead, they are no
more. They were full of schemes and projects;
whether in a greater or humbler rank, they had their
hopes and fears, their prospects, their pursuits,
their rivalries; all these are now come to an end.
One builds a house, and its roof is not finished;
another buys merchandise, and it is not yet sold.
And all their virtues and pleasing qualities which
endeared them to their friends are, as far as this
world is concerned, vanished. Where are they
who were so active, so sanguine, so generous? the
amiable, the modest, and the kind? We were told
that they were dead; they suddenly disappeared; that
is all we know about it. They were silently
taken from us; they are not met in the seat of the
elders, nor in the assemblies of the people, in the
mixed concourse of men, nor in the domestic retirement
which they prized. As Scripture describes it,
“the wind has passed over them, and they are
gone, and their place shall know them no more.”
And they have burst the many ties which held them;
they were parents, brothers, sisters, children, and
friends; but the bond of kindred is broken, and the
silver cord of love is loosed. They have been
followed by the vehement grief of tears, and the long
sorrow of aching hearts; but they make no return, they
answer not; they do not even satisfy our wish to know
that they sorrow for us as we for them. We talk
about them thenceforth as if they were persons we do
not know; we talk about them as third persons; whereas
they used to be always with us, and every other thought
which was within us was shared by them. Or perhaps,
if our grief is too deep, we do not mention their
names at all. And their possessions, too, all
fall to others. The world goes on without them;
it forgets them. Yes, so it is; the world contrives
to forget that men have souls, it looks upon them all
as mere parts of some great visible system.
This continues to move on; to this the world ascribes
a sort of life and personality. When one or other
of its members die, it considers them only as falling
out of the system, and as come to nought. For
a minute, perhaps, it thinks of them in sorrow, then
leaves them leaves them for ever.
It keeps its eye on things seen and temporal.
Truly whenever a man dies, rich or poor, an immortal
soul passes to judgment; but somehow we read of the
deaths of persons we have seen or heard of, and this
reflection never comes across us. Thus does
the world really cast off men’s souls, and recognizing
only their bodies, it makes it appear as if “that
which befalleth the sons of men befalleth beasts,
even one thing befalleth them, as the one dieth so
dieth the other; yea, they have all one breath, so
that a man hath no pre-eminence over a beast, for all
is vanity.”
But let us follow the course of a
soul thus casting off the world, and cast off by it.
It goes forth as a stranger on a journey. Man
seems to die and to be no more, when he is but quitting
us, and is really beginning to live. Then he
sees sights which before it did not even enter into
his mind to conceive, and the world is even less to
him than he to the world. Just now he was lying
on the bed of sickness, but in that moment of death
what an awful change has come over him! What
a crisis for him! There is stillness in the
room that lately held him; nothing is doing there,
for he is gone, he now belongs to others; he now belongs
entirely to the Lord who bought him; to Him he returns;
but whether to be lodged safely in His place of hope,
or to be imprisoned against the great Day, that is
another matter, that depends on the deeds done in
the body, whether good or evil. And now what
are his thoughts? How infinitely important now
appears the value of time, now when it is nothing
to him! Nothing; for though he spend centuries
waiting for Christ, he cannot now alter his state from
bad to good, or from good to bad. What he dieth
that he must be for ever; as the tree falleth so must
it lie. This is the comfort of the true servant
of God, and the misery of the transgressor.
His lot is cast once and for all, and he can but wait
in hope or in dread. Men on their death-beds
have declared, that no one could form a right idea
of the value of time till he came to die; but if this
has truth in it, how much more truly can it be said
after death! What an estimate shall we form of
time while we are waiting for judgment! Yes,
it is we all this, I repeat, belongs to
us most intimately. It is not to be looked at
as a picture, as a man might read a light book in
a leisure hour. We must die, the youngest,
the healthiest, the most thoughtless; we must
be thus unnaturally torn in two, soul from body; and
only united again to be made more thoroughly happy
or to be miserable for ever.
Such is death considered in its inevitable
necessity, and its unspeakable importance nor
can we ensure to ourselves any certain interval before
its coming. The time may be long; but it may
also be short. It is plain, a man may die any
day; all we can say is, that it is unlikely that he
will die. But of this, at least, we are certain,
that, come it sooner or later, death is continually
on the move towards us. We are ever nearer and
nearer to it. Every morning we rise we are nearer
that grave in which there is no work, nor device, than
we were. We are now nearer the grave, than when
we entered this Church. Thus life is ever crumbling
away under us. What should we say to a man, who
was placed on some precipitous ground, which was ever
crumbling under his feet, and affording less and less
secure footing, yet was careless about it? Or
what should we say to one who suffered some precious
liquor to run from its receptacle into the thoroughfare
of men, without a thought to stop it? who carelessly
looked on and saw the waste of it, becoming greater
and greater every minute? But what treasure can
equal time? It is the seed of eternity:
yet we suffer ourselves to go on, year after year,
hardly using it at all in God’s service, or thinking
it enough to give Him at most a tithe or a seventh
of it, while we strenuously and heartily sow to the
flesh, that from the flesh we may reap corruption.
We try how little we can safely give to religion,
instead of having the grace to give abundantly.
“Rivers of water run down mine eyes, because
men keep not Thy law,” so says the holy Psalmist.
Doubtless an inspired prophet saw far more clearly
than we can see, the madness of men in squandering
that treasure upon sin, which is meant to buy their
chief good; but if so, what must this madness
appear in God’s sight! What an inveterate
malignant evil is it in the hearts of the sons of
men, that thus leads them to sit down to eat, and
drink, and rise up to play, when time is hurrying on
and judgment coming? We have been told what
He thinks of man’s unbelief, though we cannot
enter into the depths of His thoughts. He showed
it to us in act and deed, as far as we could receive
it, when He even sent His Only-begotten Son into the
world as at this time, to redeem us from the world, which,
most surely, was not lightly done; and we also learn
His thoughts about it from the words of that most merciful
Son, which most surely were not lightly
spoken, “The wicked,” He says, “shall
go into everlasting punishment.”
Oh that there were such a heart in
us that we would fear God and keep His commandments
always! But it is of no use to speak; men know
their duty they will not do it. They
say they do not need or wish to be told it, that it
is an intrusion, and a rudeness, to tell them of death
and judgment. So must it be, and we,
who have to speak to them, must submit to this.
Speak we must, as an act of duty to God, whether they
will hear, or not, and then must leave our words as
a witness. Other means for rousing them we have
none. We speak from Christ our gracious Lord,
their Redeemer, who has already pardoned them freely,
yet they will not follow Him with a true heart; and
what can be done more?
Another year is now opening upon us;
it speaks to the thoughtful, and is heard by those,
who have expectant ears, and watch for Christ’s
coming. The former year is gone, it is dead,
there it lies in the grave of past time, not to decay
however, and be forgotten, but kept in the view of
God’s omniscience, with all its sins and errors
irrevocably written, till, at length, it will be raised
again to testify about us at the last day; and who
among us can bear the thought of his own doings, in
the course of it? all that he has said and
done, all that has been conceived within his mind,
or been acted on, and all that he has not said and
done, which it was a duty to say or do. What
a dreary prospect seems to be before us, when we reflect
that we have the solemn word of truth pledged to us,
in the last and most awful revelation, which God has
made to us about the future, that in that day, the
books will be opened, “and another book opened,
which is the book of life, and the dead judged out
of those things which were written in the books according
to their works!” What would a man give, any
one of us, who has any real insight into his polluted
and miserable state, what would he give to tear away
some of the leaves there preserved! For how
heinous are the sins therein written! Think of
the multitude of sins done by us since we first knew
the difference between right and wrong. We have
forgotten them, but there we might read them clearly
recorded. Well may holy David exclaim, “Remember
not the sins of my youth nor my transgressions, according
to Thy mercy remember Thou me.” Conceive,
too, the multitude of sins which have so grown into
us as to become part of us, and in which we now live,
not knowing, or but partially knowing, that they are
sins, habits of pride, self-reliance, self-conceit,
sullenness, impurity, sloth, selfishness, worldliness.
The history of all these, their beginnings, and their
growth, is recorded in those dreadful books; and when
we look forward to the future, how many sins shall
we have committed by this time next year, though
we try ever so much to know our duty, and overcome
ourselves! Nay, or rather shall we have the opportunity
of obeying or disobeying God for a year longer?
Who knows whether by that time our account may not
be closed for ever?
“Remember me, O Lord, when Thou
comest into Thy kingdom.” Such was
the prayer of the penitent thief on the cross, such
must be our prayer. Who can do us any good, but
He, who shall also be our Judge? When shocking
thoughts about ourselves come across us and afflict
us, “Remember me,” this is all we have
to say. We have “no work, nor device,
nor knowledge, nor wisdom” of our own, to better
ourselves withal. We can say nothing to God
in defence of ourselves, we can but acknowledge
that we are grievous sinners, and addressing Him as
suppliants, merely beg Him to bear us in mind in mercy,
for His Son’s sake to do us some favour, not
according to our deserts, but for the love of Christ.
The more we try to serve Him here, the better; but
after all, so far do we fall short of what we should
be, that if we had but what we are in ourselves to
rely upon, wretched are we, and we are
forced out of ourselves by the very necessity of our
condition. To whom should we go? Who can
do us any good, but He who was born into this world
for our regeneration, was bruised for our iniquities,
and rose again for our justification? Even though
we have served Him from our youth up, though after
His pattern we have grown, as far as mere man can
grow, in wisdom as we grew in stature, though we ever
have had tender hearts, and a mortified will, and
a conscientious temper, and an obedient spirit; yet,
at the very best, how much have we left undone, how
much done, which ought to be otherwise! What
He can do for our nature, in the way of sanctifying
it, we know indeed in a measure; we know, in the case
of His saints; and we certainly do not know the limit
of His carrying forward in those objects of His special
favour the work of purification, and renewal through
His Spirit. But for ourselves, we know full
well that much as we may have attempted, we have done
very little, that our very best service is nothing
worth, and the more we attempt, the more
clearly we shall see how little we have hitherto attempted.
Those whom Christ saves are they who
at once attempt to save themselves, yet despair of
saving themselves; who aim to do all, and confess
they do nought; who are all love, and all fear, who
are the most holy, and yet confess themselves the
most sinful; who ever seek to please Him, yet feel
they never can; who are full of good works, yet of
works of penance. All this seems a contradiction
to the natural man, but it is not so to those whom
Christ enlightens. They understand in proportion
to their illumination, that it is possible to work
out their salvation, yet to have it wrought out for
them, to fear and tremble at the thought of judgment,
yet to rejoice always in the Lord, and hope and pray
for His coming.