You see by these words what love Almighty
God has towards us, and what claims He has upon our
love. He is the Most High, and All-Holy.
He inhabiteth eternity: we are but worms compared
with Him. He would not be less happy though
He had never created us; He would not be less happy
though we were all blotted out again from creation.
But He is the God of love; He brought us all into
existence, because He found satisfaction in surrounding
Himself with happy creatures: He made us innocent,
holy, upright, and happy. And when Adam fell
into sin and his descendants after him, then ever
since He has been imploring us to return to Him, the
Source of all good, by true repentance. “Turn
ye, turn ye,” He says, “why will ye die?
As I live I have no pleasure in the death of the
wicked.” “What could have been done
more to My vineyard that I have not done to it?”
And in the text He condescends to invite us to Him:
“O taste and see how gracious the Lord is:
blessed is the man that trusteth in Him.”
As if He said, “If you would but make trial,
one trial, if you would but be persuaded to taste
and judge for yourself, so excellent is His graciousness,
that you would never cease to desire, never cease
to approach Him:” according to the saying
of the wise man, “They that eat Me shall yet
be hungry, and they that drink Me shall yet be thirsty.”
This excellence and desirableness
of God’s gifts is a subject again and again
set before us in Holy Scripture. Thus the Prophet
Isaiah speaks of the “feast of fat things, a
feast of wines on the lees; of fat things full of
marrow, of wines on the lees well refined.”
And again, under images of another kind: “He
hath sent Me . . . to give . . . beauty for ashes,
the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise
for the spirit of heaviness, that they may be called
Trees of Righteousness.” Or again,
the Prophet Hosea: “I will be as the dew
unto Israel: he shall grow as the lily, and cast
forth his roots as Lebanon. His branches shall
spread, and his beauty shall be as the olive-tree,
and his smell as Lebanon. They that dwell under
his shadow shall return; they shall revive as the
corn, and grow as the vine: the scent thereof
shall be as the wine of Lebanon.” And
the Psalmist: “O that My people would have
hearkened unto Me . . . the haters of the Lord should
have been found liars, but their time should have endured
for ever. He should have fed them also with the
finest wheat flour, and with honey out of the stony
rock should I have satisfied thee.”
You see all images of what is pleasant and sweet in
nature are brought together to describe the pleasantness
and sweetness of the gifts which God gives us in grace.
As wine enlivens, and bread strengthens, and oil
is rich, and honey is sweet, and flowers are fragrant,
and dew is refreshing, and foliage is beautiful; so,
and much more, are God’s gifts in the Gospel
enlivening, and strengthening, and rich, and sweet,
and fragrant, and refreshing, and excellent.
And as it is natural to feel satisfaction and comfort
in these gifts of the visible world, so it is but
natural and necessary to be delighted and transported
with the gifts of the world invisible; and as the
visible gifts are objects of desire and search, so
much more is it, I do not merely say a duty, but a
privilege and blessedness to “taste and see how
gracious the Lord is.”
Other passages in the Psalms speak
of this blessedness, besides the text. “Thou
hast put gladness in my heart,” says the Psalmist,
“since the time that their corn and wine and
oil increased.” “The lot is fallen
unto me in a fair ground, yea, I have a goodly heritage.”
Again, “The statutes of the Lord are right, and
rejoice the heart, . . . more to be desired are they
than gold, yea, than much fine gold, sweeter also
than honey and the honeycomb.” “My
heart trusted in Him, and I am helped; therefore my
heart danceth for joy, and in my song will I praise
Him.” Once more: “Blessed
is the man whom Thou choosest and receivest unto Thee:
he shall dwell in Thy courts, and shall be satisfied
with the pleasures of Thy house, even of Thy holy
temple.”
I wish it were possible, my brethren,
to lead men to greater holiness and more faithful
obedience by setting before them the high and abundant
joys which they have who serve God: “In
His presence is fulness of joy,” “the
well of life,” and they are satisfied with “the
plenteousness of His house,” and “drink
of His pleasures as out of a river,” but this
is, I know, just what most persons will not believe.
They think that it is very right and proper to be religious,
they think that it would be better for themselves
in the world to come if they were religious now.
They do not at all deny either the duty or the expedience
of leading a new and holy life, but they cannot understand
how it can be pleasant: they cannot believe or
admit that it is more pleasant than a life of liberty,
laxity, and enjoyment. They, as it were, say,
“Keep within bounds, speak within probability,
and we will believe you; but do not shock our reason.
We will admit that we ought to be religious,
and that, when we come to die, we shall be very glad
to have led religious lives: but to tell us that
it is a pleasant thing to be religious, this
is too much: it is not true; we feel that it
is not true, all the world knows and feels it is not
true; religion is something unpleasant, gloomy, sad,
and troublesome. It imposes a number of restraints
on us; it keeps us from doing what we would; it will
not let us have our own way; it abridges our liberty;
it interferes with our enjoyments; it has fewer, far
fewer, joys at present than a worldly life, though
it gains for us more joys hereafter.”
This is what men say, or would say, if they understood
what they feel, and spoke their minds freely.
Alas! I cannot deny that this
is true in the case of most men. Most
men do not like the service of God, though it be perfect
freedom; they like to follow their own ways, and they
are only religious so far as their conscience obliges
them; they are like Balaam, desirous of “the
death of the righteous,” not of his life.
Indeed, this is the very thing I am lamenting and
deploring. I lament, my brethren, that so many
men, nay, I may say, that so many of you, do not
like religious service. I do not deny it; but
I lament it. I do not deny it: far from
it. I know quite well how many there are who
do not like coming to Church, and who make excuses
for keeping away at times when they might come.
I know how many there are who do not come to the Most
Holy Sacrament. I know that there are numbers
who do not say their prayers in private morning and
evening. I know how many there are who are ashamed
to be thought religious, who take God’s name
in vain, and live like the world. Alas! this
is the very thing I lament, that God’s
service is not pleasant to you. It is not pleasant
to those who do not like it: true; but it is
pleasant to those who do. Observe, this
is what I say; not that it is pleasant to those who
like it not, but that it is pleasant to those who
like it. Nay, what I say is, that it is much
more pleasant to those who like it, than any
thing of this world is pleasant to those who do not
like it. This is the point. I do not say
that it is pleasant to most men; but I say that it
is in itself the most pleasant thing in the world.
Nothing is so pleasant as God’s service to
those to whom it is pleasant. The pleasures
of sin are not to be compared in fulness and intensity
to the pleasures of holy living. The pleasures
of holiness are far more pleasant to the holy, than
the pleasures of sin to the sinner. O that I
could get you to believe this! O that you had
a heart to feel it and know it! O that you had
a heart to taste God’s pleasures and to make
proof of them; to taste and see how gracious the Lord
is!
None can know, however, the joys of
being holy and pure but the holy. If an Angel
were to come down from heaven, even he could not explain
them to you, nor could he in turn understand what the
pleasures of sin are. Do you think that an Angel
could be made to understand what are the pleasures
of sin? I trow not. You might as well attempt
to persuade him that there was pleasure in feasting
on dust and ashes. There are brute animals who
wallow in the mire and eat corruption. This seems
strange to us: much stranger to an Angel is it
how any one can take pleasure in any thing so filthy,
so odious, so loathsome as sin. Many men, as
I have been saying, wonder what possible pleasure
there can be in any thing so melancholy as religion.
Well: be sure of this, it is more
wonderful to an Angel, what possible pleasure there
can be in sinning. It is more wonderful,
I say. He would turn away with horror and disgust,
both because sin is so base a thing in itself, and
because it is so hateful in God’s sight.
Let no persons then be surprised that
religious obedience should really be so pleasant in
itself, when it seems to them so distasteful.
Let them not be surprised that what the pleasure
is cannot be explained to them. It is
a secret till they try to be religious. Men know
what sin is, by experience. They do not know
what holiness is; and they cannot obtain the knowledge
of its secret pleasure, till they join themselves
truly and heartily to Christ, and devote themselves
to His service, till they “taste,”
and thereby try. This pleasure is as hidden
from them, as the pleasures of sin are hidden from
the Angels. The Angels have never eaten the forbidden
fruit, and their eyes are not open to know good and
evil. And we have eaten the forbidden
fruit, at least Adam did, and we are his
descendants, and our eyes are open
to know evil. And, alas! on the other hand, they
have become blinded to good; they require opening
to see, to know, to understand good. And till
our eyes are opened spiritually, we shall
ever think religion distasteful and unpleasant, and
shall wonder how any one can like it. Such is
our miserable state, we are blind to the
highest and truest glories, and dead to the most lively
and wonderful of all pleasures; and no one
can describe them to us. None other than God
the Holy Spirit can help us in this matter, by enlightening
and changing our hearts. So it is; and yet I
will say one thing, by way of suggesting to you how
great and piercing the joys of religion are.
Think of this. Is there any one who does not
know how very painful the feeling of a bad conscience
is? Do not you recollect, my Brethren, some
time or other, having done something you knew to be
wrong? and do you not remember afterwards what a piercing
bitter feeling came on you? Is not the feeling
of a bad conscience different from any other feeling,
and more distressing than any other, till we have
accustomed ourselves to it? Persons do accustom
themselves and lose this feeling; but till we blunt
our conscience, it is very painful. And why?
It is the feeling of God’s displeasure, and
therefore it is so painful. Consider then:
if God’s displeasure is so distressing to us,
must not God’s approval and favour be just the
reverse; like life from the dead, most exceedingly
joyful and transporting? And this is what it
is to be holy and religious. It is to have God’s
favour. And, as it is a great misery to be under
God’s wrath, so it is a great and wonderful
joy to be in God’s favour, and those who know
what a misery the former is, may fancy, though they
do not know, how high a blessing the latter is.
From what you know, then, judge of what you do not
know. From the miseries of guilt, which, alas!
you have experienced, conjecture the blessedness of
holiness and purity which you have not experienced.
From the pain of a bad conscience, believe in the
unspeakable joy and gladness of a good conscience.
I have been addressing those who do
not know what religious peace and Divine pleasures
are, but there are those present, I hope, who in a
measure are not strangers to them. I know that
none of us gain all the pleasure from God’s
service which it might afford us; still some of us,
I hope, gain some pleasure. I hope there are
some of those who hear me, who take a pleasure in
coming to Church, in saying their prayers, in thinking
of God, in singing Psalms, in blessing Him for the
mercies of the Gospel, and in celebrating Christ’s
death and resurrection, as at this season of the year.
These persons have “tasted” and tried.
I trust they find the taste so heavenly, that they
will not need any proof that religion is a pleasant
thing; nay, more pleasant than any thing else, worth
the following above all other things, and unpleasant
only to those who are not religious.
Let such persons then think of this,
that if a religious life is pleasant here, in spite
of the old Adam interrupting the pleasure and defiling
them, what a glorious day it will be, if it is granted
to us hereafter to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven!
None of us, even the holiest, can guess how
happy we shall be; for St. John says, “We know
not what we shall be;” and St. Paul, “Now
we see in a glass darkly, but then face to face.”
Yet in proportion to our present holiness and virtue,
we have some faint ideas of what will then be our blessedness.
And in Scripture various descriptions of heaven are
given us, in order to arrest, encourage, and humble
us. We are told that the Angels of God are very
bright, and clad in white robes. The Saints and
Martyrs too are clad in white robes, with palms in
their hands; and they sing praises unto Him that sitteth
upon the Throne, and to the Lamb. When our Lord
was transfigured, He showed us what Heaven is.
His raiment became white as snow, white and glistening.
Again, at one time He appeared to St. John, and then,
“His head and His hairs were white like wool,
as white as snow; and His eyes were as a flame of fire;
and His feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned
in a furnace; and His countenance was as the sun shineth
in his strength.” And what Christ
is, such do His Saints become hereafter. Here
below they are clad in a garment of sinful flesh;
but when the end comes, and they rise from the grave,
they shall inherit glory, and shall be ever young
and ever shining. In that day, all men will see
and be convinced, even bad men, that God’s servants
are really happy, and only they. In that day,
even lost souls, though they will not be able to understand
the blessedness of religion, will have no doubt at
all of what they now doubt, or pretend to doubt, that
religion is blessed. They laugh at religion,
think strictness to be narrowness of mind, and regularity
to be dulness; and give bad names to religious men.
They will not be able to do so then. They think
themselves the great men of the earth now, and look
down upon the religious; but then, who would not have
been a religious man, to have so great a reward? who
will then have any heart to speak against religion,
even though he has not “a heart to fear God
and keep all His commandments always?” In that
day, they will look upon the righteous man, and “be
amazed at the strangeness of his salvation, so far
beyond all that they looked for. And they, repenting
and groaning for anguish of spirit, shall say within
themselves, This was he, whom we had sometimes in
derision, and a proverb of reproach. We fools
accounted his life madness, and his end to be without
honour; how is he numbered among the children of God,
and his lot is among the saints!”
Think of all this, my Brethren, and
rouse yourselves, and run forward with a good courage
on your way towards heaven. Be not weary in
well-doing, for in due season we shall reap, if we
faint not. Strive to enter in at the strait
gate. Strive to get holier and holier every
day, that you may be worthy to stand before the Son
of Man. Pray God to teach you His will, and
to lead you forth in the right way, because of your
enemies. Submit yourselves to His guidance, and
you will have comfort given you, according to your
day, and peace at the last.