To be dead with Christ, is to hate
and turn from sin; and to live with Him, is to have
our hearts and minds turned towards God and Heaven.
To be dead to sin, is to feel a disgust at it.
We know what is meant by disgust. Take, for
instance, the case of a sick man, when food of a certain
kind is presented to him, and there is no
doubt what is meant by disgust. Consider how
certain scents, which are too sweet or too strong,
or certain tastes, affect certain persons under certain
circumstances, or always, and you will be
at no loss to determine what is meant by disgust at
sin, or deadness to sin. On the other hand,
consider how pleasant a meal is to the hungry, or some
enlivening odour to the faint, how refreshing the
air is to the languid, or the brook to the weary and
thirsty, and you will understand the sort
of feeling which is implied in being alive with Christ,
alive to religion, alive to the thought of heaven.
Our animal powers cannot exist in all atmospheres;
certain airs are poisonous, others life-giving.
So is it with spirits and souls: an unrenewed
spirit could not live in heaven, he would die; an
Angel could not live in hell. The natural man
cannot live in heavenly company, and the angelic soul
would pine and waste away in the company of sinners,
unless God’s sacred presence were continued
to it. To be dead to sin, is to be so minded,
that the atmosphere of sin (if I may so speak) oppresses,
distresses, and stifles us, that it is
painful and unnatural to us to remain in it.
To be alive with Christ, is to be so minded, that the
atmosphere of heaven refreshes, enlivens, stimulates,
invigorates us. To be alive, is not merely to
bear the thought of religion, to assent to the truth
of religion, to wish to be religious; but to be drawn
towards it, to love it, to delight in it, to obey
it. Now I suppose most persons called Christians
do not go farther than this, to wish to
be religious, and to think it right to be religious,
and to feel a respect for religious men; they do not
get so far as to have any sort of love for religion.
So far, however, they do go; not,
indeed, to do their duty and to love it, but to have
a sort of wish that they did. I suppose there
are few persons but, at the very least, now and then
feel the wish to be holy and religious. They
bear witness to the excellence of virtuous and holy
living, they consent to all that their teachers tell
them, what they hear in church, and read in religious
books; but all this is a very different thing from
acting according to their knowledge. They confess
one thing, they do another.
Nay, they confess one thing while
they do another. Even sinners, wilful,
abandoned sinners, if they would be honest
enough to speak as they really in their hearts feel,
would own, while they are indulging in the pleasures
of sin, while they idle away the Lord’s Day,
or while they keep bad company, or while they lie or
cheat, or while they drink to excess, or do any other
bad thing, they would confess, I say, did
they speak their minds, that it is a far happier thing,
even at present, to live in obedience to God, than
in obedience to Satan. Not that sin has not its
pleasures, such as they are; I do not mean, of course,
to deny that, I do not deny that Satan is
able to give us something in exchange for future and
eternal happiness; I do not say that irreligious men
do not gain pleasures, which religious men are obliged
to lose. I know they do; if they did not, there
would be nothing to tempt and try us. But, after
all, the pleasures which the servants of Satan enjoy,
though pleasant, are always attended with pain too;
with a bitterness, which, though it does not destroy
the pleasure, yet is by itself sufficient to make
it far less pleasant, even while it lasts, than such
pleasures as are without such bitterness, viz.
the pleasures of religion. This, then, alas!
is the state of multitudes; not to be dead to sin
and alive to God, but, while they are alive to sin
and the world, to have just so much sense of heaven,
as not to be able to enjoy either.
I say, when any one, man or woman,
young or old, is conscious that he or she is going
wrong, whether in greater matter or less, whether in
not coming to church when there is no good excuse,
neglecting private prayer, living carelessly, or indulging
in known sin, this bad conscience is from
time to time a torment to such persons. For a
little while, perhaps, they do not feel it but then
the pain comes on again. It is a keen, harassing,
disquieting, hateful pain, which hinders sinners from
being happy. They may have pleasures,
but they cannot be happy. They know that
God is angry with them; and they know that, at some
time or other, He will visit, He will judge, He will
punish. They try to get this out of their minds,
but the arrow sticks fast there; it keeps its hold.
They try to laugh it off, or to be bold and daring,
or to be angry and violent. They are loud or
unkind in their answers to those, who remind them
of it either in set words, or by their example.
But it keeps its hold. And so it is, that all
men who are not very abandoned, bad men as well as
good, wish that they were holy as God is holy, pure
as Christ was pure, even though they do not try to
be, or pray to God to make them, holy and pure; not
that they like religion, but that they know,
they are convinced in their reason, they feel sure,
that religion alone is happiness.
Oh, what a dreadful state, to have
our desires one way, and our knowledge and conscience
another; to have our life, our breath and food, upon
the earth, and our eyes upon Him who died once and
now liveth; to look upon Him who once was pierced,
yet not to rise with Him and live with Him; to feel
that a holy life is our only happiness, yet to have
no heart to pursue it; to be certain that the wages
of sin is death, yet to practise sin; to confess that
the Angels alone are perfectly happy, for they do
God’s will perfectly, yet to prepare ourselves
for nothing else but the company of devils; to acknowledge
that Christ is our only hope, yet deliberately to let
that hope go! O miserable state! miserable they,
if any there are who now hear me, who are thus circumstanced!
At first sight, it might seem impossible
that any such persons could be found in church.
At first sight, one might be tempted to say, “All
who come to church, at least, are in earnest, and
have given up sin; they are imperfect indeed, as all
Christians are at best, but they do not fall into
wilful sin.” I should be very glad, my
Brethren, to believe this were the case, but I cannot
indulge so pleasant a hope. No; I think it quite
certain that some persons at least, I do not say how
many, to whom I am speaking, have not made up their
minds fully to lead a religious life. They come
to church because they think it right, or from other
cause. It is very right that they should come;
I am glad they do. This is good, as far as it
goes; but it is not all. They are not so far
advanced in the kingdom of God, as to resist the devil,
or to flee from him. They cannot command themselves.
They act rightly one day, and wrongly the next.
They are afraid of being laughed at. They are
attracted by bad company. They put off religion
to a future day. They think a religious life
dull and unpleasant. Yet they have a certain
sense of religion; and they come to church in order
to satisfy this sense. Now, I say it is right
to come to church; but, O that they could be persuaded
of the simple truth of St. Paul’s words, “He
is not a Jew which is one outwardly, but he is a Jew
which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of
the heart in the spirit, and not in the letter, whose
praise is not of men, but of God;” which may
be taken to mean: He is not a Christian
who is one outwardly, who merely comes to church,
and professes to desire to be saved by Christ.
It is very right that he should do so, but it is
not enough. He is not a Christian who merely
has not cast off religion, but he is the true Christian,
who, while he is a Christian outwardly, is one inwardly
also; who lives to God; whose secret life is hid with
Christ in God; whose heart is religious; who not only
knows and feels that a religious life is true happiness,
but loves religion, wishes, tries, prays to be religious,
begs God Almighty to give him the will and the power
to be religious; and, as time goes on, grows more
and more religious, more fit for heaven.
We can do nothing right, unless God
gives us the will and the power; we cannot please
Him without the aid of His Holy Spirit. If any
one does not deeply feel this as a first truth in
religion, he is preparing for himself a dreadful fall.
He will attempt, and he will fail signally, utterly.
His own miserable experience will make him sure of
it, if he will not believe it, as Scripture declares
it. But it is not unlikely that some persons,
perhaps some who now hear me, may fall into an opposite
mistake. They may attempt to excuse their lukewarmness
and sinfulness, on the plea that God does not inwardly
move them; and they may argue that those holy men
whom they so much admire, those saints who are to
sit on Christ’s right and left, are of different
nature from themselves, sanctified from their mother’s
womb, visited, guarded, renewed, strengthened, enlightened
in a peculiar way, so as to make it no wonder that
they are saints, and no fault that they themselves
are not. But this is not so; let us not thus
miserably deceive ourselves. St. Paul says expressly
of himself and the other Apostles, that they were
“men of like passions” with the poor ignorant
heathen to whom they preached. And does not
his history show this? Do you not recollect
what he was before his conversion? Did he not
rage like a beast of prey against the disciples of
Christ? and how was he converted? by the vision of
our Lord? Yes, in one sense, but not by it alone;
hear his own words, “Whereupon, O King Agrippa,
I was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision.”
His obedience was necessary for his conversion; he
could not obey without grace; but he would have received
grace in vain, had he not obeyed. And, afterwards,
was he at once perfect? No; for he says expressly,
“not as though I had already attained, either
were already perfect;” and elsewhere he tells
us that he had a “thorn in the flesh, the messenger
of Satan to buffet him,” and he was obliged to
“bruise his body and bring it into subjection,
lest, after he had preached to others, he should be
himself a castaway.” St. Paul conquered,
as any one of us must conquer, by “striving,”
struggling, “to enter in at the strait gate;”
he “wrought out his salvation with fear and
trembling,” as we must do.
This is a point which must be insisted
on for the encouragement of the fearful, the confutation
of the hypocritical, and the abasement of the holy.
In this world, even the best of men, though they are
dead to sin, and have put sin to death, yet have that
dead and corrupt thing within them, though they live
to God; they have still an enemy of God remaining
in their hearts, though they keep it in subjection.
This, indeed, is what all men now have in common,
a root of evil in them, a principle of sin, or what
may become such; what they differ in is
this, not that one man has it, another not; but that
one lives in and to it, another not; one subdues it,
another not. A holy man is by nature subject
to sin equally with others; but he is holy because
he subdues, tramples on, chains up, imprisons, puts
out of the way this law of sin, and is ruled by religious
and spiritual motives. Of Christ alone can it
be said that He “did no sin, neither was guile
found in His mouth.” The prince of this
world came and found nothing in Him. He had no
root of sin in His heart; He was not born in Adam’s
sin. Far different are we. He was thus
pure, because He was the Son of God, and born of a
Virgin. But we are conceived in sin and shapen
in iniquity. And since that which is born of
the flesh, is flesh, we are sinful and corrupt because
we are sinfully begotten of sinners. Even those
then who in the end turn out to be saints and attain
to life eternal, yet are not born saints, but have
with God’s regenerating and renewing grace to
make themselves saints. It is nothing but the
Cross of Christ, without us and within us, which changes
any one of us from being (as I may say) a devil, into
an Angel. We are all by birth children of wrath.
We are at best like good olive trees, which have
become good by being grafted on a good tree.
By nature we are like wild trees, bearing sour and
bitter fruit, and so we should remain, were we not
grafted upon Christ, the good olive tree, made members
of Christ, the righteous and holy and well-beloved
Son of God. Hence it is that there is such a
change in a saint of God from what he was at the first.
Consider what a different man St. Paul was after his
conversion and before, raging, as I just
now said, like some wild beast, with persecuting fury
against the Church, before Christ appeared to him,
and meekly suffering persecution and glorying in it
afterwards. Think of St. Peter denying Christ
before the resurrection, and confessing, suffering,
and dying for Him afterwards. And so now many
an aged saint, who has good hope of heaven, may recollect
things of himself when young, which fill him with
dismay. I do not speak as if God’s saints
led vicious and immoral lives when young; but I mean
that their lower and evil nature was not subdued,
and perhaps from time to time broke out and betrayed
them into deeds and words so very different from what
is seen in them at present, that did their friends
know of them what they themselves know, they would
not think them the same persons, and would be quite
overpowered with astonishment. We never can
guess what a man is by nature, by seeing what self-discipline
has made him. Yet if we do become thereby changed
and prepared for heaven, it is no praise or merit
to us. It is God’s doing glory
be to Him, who has wrought so wonderfully with us!
Yet in this life, even to the end, there will be
enough evil in us to humble us; even to the end, the
holiest men have remains and stains of sin which they
would fain get rid of, if they could, and which keep
this life from being to them, for all God’s
grace, a heaven upon earth. No, the Christian
life is but a shadow of heaven. Its festal and
holy days are but shadows of eternity. But hereafter
it will be otherwise. In heaven, sin will be
utterly destroyed in every elect soul. We shall
have no earthly wishes, no tendencies to disobedience
or irreligion, no love of the world or the flesh,
to draw us off from supreme devotion to God.
We shall have our Saviour’s holiness fulfilled
in us, and be able to love God without drawback or
infirmity.
That indeed will be a full reward
of all our longings here, to praise and serve God
eternally with a single and perfect heart in the midst
of His Temple. What a time will that be, when
all will be perfected in us which at present is but
feebly begun! Then we shall see how the Angels
worship God. We shall see the calmness, the intenseness,
the purity, of their worship. We shall see that
awful sight, the Throne of God, and the Seraphim before
and around it, crying, “Holy!” We attempt
now to imitate in church what there is performed,
as in the beginning, and ever shall be. In the
Te Deum, day by day we say, “Holy, Holy, Holy,
Lord God of Sabaoth.” In the Creed, we
recount God’s mercies to us sinners. And
we say and sing Psalms and Hymns, to come as near heaven
as we can. May these attempts of ours be blest
by Almighty God, to prepare us for Him! may they be,
not dead forms, but living services, living with life
from God the Holy Ghost, in those who are dead to sin
and who live with Christ! I dare say some of
you have heard persons, who dissent from the Church,
say (at any rate, they do say), that our Prayers and
Services, and Holy days, are only forms, dead forms,
which can do us no good. Yes, they are dead
forms to those who are dead, but they are living forms
to those who are living. If you come here in
a dead way, not in faith, not coming for a blessing,
without your hearts being in the service, you will
get no benefit from it. But if you come in a
living way, in faith, and hope, and reverence, and
with holy expectant hearts, then all that takes place
will be a living service and full of heaven.
Make use, then, of this Holy Easter
Season, which lasts forty to fifty days, to become
more like Him who died for you, and who now liveth
for evermore. He promises us, “Because
I live, ye shall live also.” He, by dying
on the Cross, opened the Kingdom of Heaven to all believers.
He first died, and then He opened heaven. We,
therefore, first commemorate His death, and then,
for some weeks in succession, we commemorate and show
forth the joys of heaven. They who do not rejoice
in the weeks after Easter, would not rejoice in heaven
itself. These weeks are a sort of beginning
of heaven. Pray God to enable you to rejoice;
to enable you to keep the Feast duly. Pray God
to make you better Christians. This world is
a dream, you will get no good from it.
Perhaps you find this difficult to believe; but be
sure so it is. Depend upon it, at the last, you
will confess it. Young people expect good from
the world, and people of middle age devote themselves
to it, and even old people do not like to give it
up. But the world is your enemy, and the flesh
is your enemy. Come to God, and beg of Him grace
to devote yourselves to Him. Beg of Him the will
to follow Him; beg of Him the power to obey Him.
O how comfortable, pleasant, sweet, soothing, and
satisfying is it to lead a holy life, the
life of Angels! It is difficult at first; but
with God’s grace, all things are possible.
O how pleasant to have done with sin! how good and
joyful to flee temptation and to resist evil! how
meet, and worthy, and fitting, and right, to die unto
sin, and to live unto righteousness!