ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR.
If any uninspired writer has been entitled to the name of Boanerges, or a son of
thunder, it is the author of the following treatise. Here we have a most
searching and faithful display of the straitness or exact dimensions of that
all-important gate, which will not suffer many professors to pass into the
kingdom of heaven, encumbered as they are with fatal errors. Still "it is no
little pinching wicket, but wide enough for all the truly gracious and sincere
lovers of Jesus Christ; while it is so strait, that no others can by any means
enter in." This is a subject calculated to rouse and stimulate all genuine
professors to solemn inquiry; and it was peculiarly intended to dart at, and fix
convictions upon, the multitudes of hypocritical professors who abounded in
Bunyan's time, especially under the reigns of the later Stuarts.
During the Protectorate, wickedness was discountenanced, and skulked in the
holes and corners of Mansoul; but when a debauched monarch, who had taken refuge
in the most licentious court in Europe, was called to occupy the throne of his
fathers, the most abandoned profligacy and profaneness were let loose upon the
nation. Vice was openly patronized, while virtue and religion were as openly
treated with mockery and contempt. Bunyan justly says, "The text calls for
sharpness, so do the times." "With those whose religion lieth in some
circumstantials, the kingdom swarms at this day." When they stand at the gate,
they will "shake like a quagmire—their feigned faith, pretended love, shows of
gravity, and holiday words, will stand them in little stead; some professors do
with religion just as people do with their best apparel—hang it on the wall all
the week, and put it on on Sundays; they save it till they go to a meeting, or
meet with a godly chapman." This state of society called for peculiar sharpness,
and Bunyan preached and published, in 1676, this awful alarm to professors. No
subject could be more peculiarly applicable than "The Gate of heaven," and "the
difficulties of entering in thereat"; a subject of the deepest interest to all
mankind—to stimulate the careless to find, and to enter the gate of this the
only city of refuge from eternal misery—to fill the heart of God's children with
love and joy in their prospects of a blessed immortality—and to sting the
hypocrites with the awful thought of finding the gate shut against them for
ever. Their cries and tears will be too late; they will stand without and
vehemently cry, "Lord, Lord, open unto us"; in vain will be their outcry, "the
devils are coming; Lord, Lord, the pit opens her mouth upon us; Lord, Lord,
there is nothing but hell and damnation left us, if thou hast not mercy upon
us." These were professors who pretended to have found the gate and way to
heaven; who passed for pilgrims who were seeking a better, even a heavenly
country; such deluded victims must be, of all men, the most miserable.
Faithfulness becomes the ministers of Christ in dealing with the souls of men;
and pre-eminently faithful is John Bunyan in this treatise. Reader, he will be
clear of thy blood. Enter upon the solemn inquiry, Have I sought the gate? Shall
I be admitted into, or shut out from, that blessed kingdom? The openly profane
can have no hope. Are you a professor?—there is danger sill. In vain will it be
to urge, "We have prophesied in thy name, and in thy name cast out devils." To
the secretly profane, whatever may be their profession, there can be no
well-grounded hope of entrance in at this gate. Those only will be admitted whom
the Lord knows to be his—the sheep of his pasture, who have heard his voice, and
obeyed it. Against all others the door will be shut, and the awful words, "I
know you not—depart, ye cursed," will hurry them to eternal darkness. The
question, "Are there few that be saved?" will suggest itself to our minds; may
the answer fix upon our conscience, "STRIVE to enter in." It is very probable
that it was in preaching upon this text, Bunyan was assailed with a want of
charity.
The anecdote is thus narrated by Mr. Doe in The Struggler:—"As Mr. Bunyan was
preaching in a barn, and showing the fewness of those that should be saved,
there stood one of the learned to take advantage of his words; and having done
preaching, the schoolman said to him, You are a deceiver, a person of no
charity, and therefore not fit to preach; for he that [in effect] condemneth the
greatest part of his hearers hath no charity, and therefore is not fit to
preach. Then Mr. Bunyan answered, The Lord Jesus Christ preached in a ship to
his hearers on the shore (Mat 13), and showed that they were as four sorts of
ground, the highway, the stony, the thorny, and the good ground, but those
represented by the good ground were the only persons to be saved.
And your position is, That he that in effect condemneth the greatest part of his
hearers, hath no charity, and therefore is not fit to preach the gospel. But
here the Lord Jesus Christ did so, then your conclusion is, The Lord Jesus
Christ wanted charity, and therefore was not fit to preach the gospel. Horrid
blasphemy; away with your hellish logic, and speak Scripture." Of one thing we
are certain, that while hollow-hearted hypocritical professors will ever
complain of faithful dealing with their soul's eternal interests; the sincere
and humble Christina will be most thankful for searching inquiries, that, if
wrong, he may be set right before his final destiny is irrevocably fixed. May
our souls submit to a scriptural measurement of this gate, and the terms upon
which alone it can be opened unto us.
The difficulties that prevent "the many" from entering in are, 1. Forgetfulness
that we can only enter heaven by the permission of the law—every jot and tittle
must be fulfilled. Now, if we could live from our conversion to our death in the
holiest obedience to all its precepts, yet, having previously violated them, the
stain must not only be washed away in the blood of atonement, but we, as part of
the body of Christ, must, in him, render perfect obedience. 2. In addition to
the disinclination of our hearts to submit to this perfect righteousness, we
have outward storms of temptation and persecution. "The world will seek to keep
thee out of heaven with mocks, flouts, taunts, threats, jails, gibbets, halters,
burnings, and a thousand deaths; therefore strive! Again, if it cannot overcome
thee with these, it will flatter, promise, allure, entice, entreat, and use a
thousand tricks on this hand to destroy thee; and many that have been stout
against the threats of the world have yet been overcome with the bewitching
flatteries of the same. O that we may by grace escape all these enemies, and so
strive as to enter into the joy of our Lord."
GEO. OFFOR.
TO THE READER.
COURTEOUS READER,
God, I hope, hath put it into my heart to write unto thee another time, and that
about matters of greatest moment—for now we discourse not about things
controverted among the godly, but directly about the saving or damning of the
soul; yea, moreover, this discourse is about the fewness of them that shall be
saved, and it proves that many a high professor will come short of eternal life;
wherefore the matter must needs be sharp, and so disliked by some, but let it
not be rejected by thee. The text calls for sharpness, so do the times, yea, the
faithful discharge of my duty towards thee hath put me upon it.
I do not now pipe, but mourn; and it will be well for thee if thou canst
graciously lament. (Matt 11:17) Some, say they, make the gate of heaven too
wide, and some make it too narrow; for my part, I have here presented thee with
as true a measure of it as by the Word of God I can. Read me, therefore, yea,
read me, and compare me with the Bible; and if thou findest my doctrine and that
book of God concur, embrace it, as thou wilt answer the contrary in the day of
judgment. This awakening work—if God will make it so—was prepared for thee: if
there be need, and it wounds, get healing by blood: if it disquiets, get peace
by blood: if it takes away all thou hast, because it was naught (for this book
is not prepared to take away true grace from any), then buy of Christ "gold
tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich, and white raiment, that thou mayest
be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear, and anoint thine
eyes with eye-salve, that thou mayest see." (Rev 3:18) Self- flatteries,
self-deceivings, are easy and pleasant, but damnable. The Lord give thee a heart
to judge right of thyself, right of this book, and so to prepare for eternity,
that thou mayest not only expect entrance, but be received into the kingdom of
Christ and of God. Amen.
So prays thy Friend,
JOHN BUNYAN.
THE STRAIT GATE
"STRIVE TO ENTER IN AT THE STRAIT GATE; FOR MANY, I SAY UNTO YOU, WILL SEEK TO
ENTER IN, AND SHALL NOT BE ABLE."—LUKE 13:24
These are the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and are, therefore, in especial
manner to be heeded; besides, the subject matter of the words is the most
weighty, to wit, how we should attain salvation, and therefore also to be
heeded.
The occasion of the words was a question which one that was at this time in the
company of the disciples put to Jesus Christ; the question was this, "Lord, are
there few that be saved?" (verse 23) A serious question, not such as tended to
the subversion of the hearers, as too many now-a-days do; but such as in its own
nature tended to the awakening of the company to good, and that called for such
an answer that might profit the people also. This question also well pleased
Jesus Christ, and he prepareth and giveth such an answer as was without the
least retort, or show of distaste; such an answer, I say, as carried in it the
most full resolve to the question itself, and help to the persons questioning.
"And he said unto them, Strive to enter in," &c. The words are an answer, and an
instruction also. First. An answer, and that in the affirmative; the gate is
strait—many that seek will not be able, therefore but few shall be saved.
Second. The answer is an instruction also; "strive to enter in," &c., good
counsel and instruction; pray God help me, and my reader, and all that love
their own salvation, to take it.
My manner of handling the words will be—[FIRST], By way of explication; and then
[SECOND], By way of observation.
[FIRST. THE WORDS BY WAY OF EXPLICATION.]
The words are to be considered, [FIRST], with reference to their general scope;
and then [SECOND], with reference to their several phrases.
FIRST. The general scope of the text is to be considered, and that is that great
thing—salvation; for these words do immediately look at, point to, and give
directions about salvation: "Are there few that be saved? Strive to enter in at
the strait gate."
The words, I say, are to direct us not only to talk of, or to wish for, but to
understand how we shall, and to seek that we may be, effectually saved, and
therefore of the greatest importance. To be saved! what is like being saved? To
be saved from sin, from hell, from the wrath of God, from eternal damnation,
what is like it? To be made an heir of God, of his grace, of his kingdom, and
eternal glory, what is like it? and yet all this is included in this word saved,
and in the answer to that question, "Are there few that be saved?" Indeed this
word SAVED is but of little use in the world, save to them that are heartily
afraid of damning. This word lies in the Bible as excellent salves lie in some
men's houses, thrust into a hole, and not thought on for many months, because
the household people have no wounds nor sores. In time of sickness, what so set
by as the doctor's glasses and gally-pots full of his excellent things? but when
the person is grown well, the rest is thrown to the dunghill. [1]
O when men are sick of sin, and afraid of damning, what a text is that where
this word saved is found! Yea, what a word of worth, and goodness, and
blessedness, is it to him that lies continually upon the wrath of a guilty
conscience? "But the whole need not a physician"; he therefore, and he only,
knows what saved means, that knows what hell, and death, and damnation means.
"What shall I do to be saved?" is the language of the trembling sinner. "Lord
save me," is the language of the sinking sinner; and none admire the glory that
is in that word saved, but such as see, without being saved, all things in
heaven and earth are emptiness to them. They also that believe themselves
privileged in all the blessedness that is wrapt up in that word, bless and
admire God that hath saved them. Wherefore, since the thing intended, both in
the question and the answer, is no less than the salvation of the soul, I
beseech you to give the more earnest heed. (Heb 12) But,
SECOND. To come to the particular phrases in the words, and to handle them
orderly, in the words I find four things. First. An intimation of the kingdom of
heaven. Second. A description of the entrance into it. Third. An exhortation to
enter into it. And, Fourth, A motive to enforce that exhortation.
[AN INTIMATION OF THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN.]
First. An intimation of the kingdom of heaven; for when he saith, "Strive to
enter in," and in such phrases, there is supposed a place or state, or both, to
be enjoyed. "Enter in"; enter into what, or whither, but into a state or place,
or both? and therefore when you read this word, "enter in," you must say there
is certainly included in the text that good thing that yet is not expressed.
"Enter in"; into heaven, that is the meaning, where the saved are, and shall be;
into heaven, that place, that glorious place, where God, and Christ, and angels
are, and the souls or spirits of just men made perfect. "Enter in"; that thing
included, though not expressed in the words, is called in another place, the
Mount Zion, the heavenly Jerusalem, the general assembly and church of the
first-born which are written in heaven. (Heb 12:23) And therefore the words
signify unto us, that there is a state most glorious, and that when this world
is ended; and that this place and state are likewise to be enjoyed, and
inherited by a generation of men for ever.
Besides, this word, "enter in," signifieth that salvation to the full is to be
enjoyed only there, and that there only is eternal safety; all other places and
conditions are hazardous, dangerous, full of snares, imperfections, temptations,
and afflictions, but there all is well; there is no devil to tempt, no
desperately wicked heart to deliver us up, no deceitful lust to entangle, nor
any enchanting world to bewitch us. There all shall be well to all eternity.
Further, all the parts of, and circumstances that attend salvation, are only
there to be enjoyed; there only is immortality and eternal life; there is the
glory and fulness of joy, and the everlasting pleasures; there is God and Christ
to be enjoyed by open vision, and more; there are the angels and the saints;
further, there is no death, nor sickness, no sorrow nor sighing for ever; there
is no pain, nor persecutor, nor darkness, to eclipse our glory. O this Mount
Zion! O this heavenly Jerusalem! (2 Cor 5:1-4, Psa 16:11, Luke 20:35,36, Heb
12:22- 24)
Behold, therefore, what a great thing the Lord Jesus hath included by this
little word, "IN." In this word is wrapt up a whole heaven and eternal life;
even as there is also by other little words in the holy Scriptures of truth: as
where he saith, "Knock, and it shall be opened unto you," and "the election hath
obtained it." This should teach us, not only to read, but to attend in reading;
not only to read, but to lift up our hearts to God in reading; for if we be not
heedful, if he gives us not light and understanding, we may easily pass over,
without any great regard, such a word as may have a glorious kingdom and eternal
salvation in the bowels of it; yea, sometimes, as here, a whole heaven is
intimated, where it is not at all expressed. The apostles of old did use to
fetch great things out of the Scriptures, even out of the very order and timing
of the several things contained therein. See Romans 4:9-11, Galatians 3:16,17,
Hebrews 8:13. But,
[DESCRIPTION OF THE ENTRANCE INTO THIS KINGDOM.]
Second. As we have here an intimation of the kingdom of heaven, so we have a
description of the entrance into it, and that by a double similitude: I. It is
called a gate; II. A strait gate— "Strive to enter in at the strait gate."
[It is called a gate.]
I. It is set forth by the similitude of a gate. A gate, you know, is of a double
use. It is to open and shut, and so, consequently, to let in or to keep out; and
to do both these at the season; as he said, "Let not the gates of Jerusalem be
opened until the sun be hot"; and again, "I commanded that the gates should be
shut, and charged that they should not be opened till after the Sabbath." (Neh
7:3, 13:19,20) And so you find of this gate of heaven, when the five wise
virgins came, the gate was opened; but afterwards came the other virgins, and
the door was shut. (Matt 25) So then, the entrance into heaven is called a gate,
to show there is a time when there may be entrance, and there will come a time
when there shall be none; and, indeed, this is a chief truth contained in the
text—"Strive to enter in at the strait gate; for many, I say unto you, will seek
to enter in, and shall not be able." I read in the Scriptures of two gates or
doors, through which they that go to heaven must enter. [2]
1. There is the door of faith, the door which the grace of God hath opened to
the Gentiles. This door is Jesus Christ, as also himself doth testify, saying,
"I am the door," &c. (John 10:9, Acts 14:27) By this door men enter into God's
favour and mercy, and find forgiveness through faith in his blood, and live in
hope of eternal life; and therefore himself also hath said, "I am the door; by
me if any man enter in, he shall be saved"; that is, received to mercy, and
inherit eternal life. But,
2. There is another door or gate—for that which is called in the text a gate, is
twice in the next verse called a door—there is, I say, another gate, and that is
the passage into the very heaven itself; the entrance into the celestial
mansion-house, and that is the gate mentioned in the text, [3] and the door
mentioned twice in the verse that follows. And this Jacob called it, when he
said, Bethel was the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven; that is, the
entrance, for he saw the entrance into heaven. One end of Jacob's ladder stands
in Bethel, God's house, and the other end reacheth up to the gate of heaven.
(Gen 28:10-17) Jacob's ladder was the figure of Christ, which ladder was not the
gate of heaven, but the way from the church to that gate which he saw above at
the top of the ladder. (Gen 28:12, John 1:51) But again, that the gate in the
text is the gate or entrance into heaven, consider—
(1.) It is that gate that letteth men into, or shutteth men out of that place or
kingdom where Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob is, which place is that paradise
where Christ promised the thief that he should be that day, that he asked to be
with him in his kingdom; it is that place into which Paul said he was caught,
when he heard words unlawful or impossible for a man to utter. (Luke 13:28,
23:42, 2 Cor 12:1-6)
Quest. But is not Christ the gate or entrance into this heavenly place?
Answ. He is he without whom no man can get thither, because by his merits men
obtain that world, and also because he, as the Father, is the donor and disposer
of that kingdom to whom he will. Further, this place is called his house, and
himself the Master of it—"When once the Master of the house is risen up, and
hath shut to the door." (Luke 13:25) But we use to say, that the master of the
house is not the door. Men enter into heaven, then, by him, not as he is the
gate, or door, or entrance, into the celestial mansion-house, but as he is the
giver and disposer of that kingdom to them whom he shall count worthy, because
he hath obtained it for them.
(2.) That this gate is the very passage into heaven, consider the text hath
special reference to the day of judgment, when Christ will have laid aside his
mediatory office, which before he exercised for the bringing to the faith his
own elect; and will then act, not as one that justifieth the ungodly, but as one
that judgeth sinners. He will now be risen up from the throne of grace, and shut
up the door against all the impenitent, and will be set upon the throne of
judgment, from thence to proceed with ungodly sinners.
Object. But Christ bids strive: "Strive" now "to enter in at the strait gate";
but if that gate be as you say, the gate or entrance into heaven, then it should
seem that we should not strive till the day of judgment, for we shall not come
at that gate till then.
Answ. Christ, by this exhortation, Strive, &c., doth not at all admit of, or
countenance delays, or that a man should neglect his own salvation; but putteth
poor creatures upon preparing for the judgment, and counselleth them now to get
those things that will then give them entrance into glory. This exhortation is
much like these: "Therefore be ye also ready, for in such an hour as ye think
not the Son of man cometh.—And they that were ready went in with him to the
marriage, and the door was shut." (Matt 24:44, 25:10)
So that when he saith, "Strive to enter in," it is as if he should say, Blessed
are they that shall be admitted another day to enter into the kingdom of heaven;
but they that shall be counted worthy of so unspeakable a favour, must be well
prepared and fitted for it beforehand. Now, the time to be fitted is not the day
of judgment, but the day of grace; not then, but now. Therefore, strive now for
those things that will then give you entrance into the heavenly kingdom. But,
[It is called a strait gate.]
II. As it is called a gate, so it is called a strait gate—"Strive to enter in at
the strait gate."
The straitness of this gate is not to be understood carnally, but mystically.
You are not to understand it, as if the entrance into heaven was some little
pinching wicket; no, the straitness of this gate is quite another thing. This
gate is wide enough for all them that are the truly gracious and sincere lovers
of Jesus Christ, but so strait, as that not one of the other can by any means
enter in: "Open to me the gates of righteousness: I will go into them, and I
will praise the Lord: this gate of the Lord, into which the righteous shall
enter." (Psa 118:19,20) By this word, therefore, Christ Jesus hath showed unto
us, that without due qualifications there is no possibility of entering into
heaven; the strait gate will keep all others out. When Christ spake this
parable, he had doubtless his eye upon some passage or passages of the Old
Testament, with which the Jews were well acquainted. I will mention two, and so
go on.
1. The place by which God turned Adam and his wife out of paradise. Possibly our
Lord might have his eye upon that; for though that was wide enough for them to
come out at, yet it was too strait for them to go in at. But what should be the
reason of that? Why, they had sinned; and therefore God "placed at the east of
that garden cherubims, and a flaming sword, which turned every way, to keep the
way of the tree of life." (Gen 3:24) The cherubims, and the flaming sword, they
made the entrance too strait for them to enter in. Souls, there are cherubims
and a flaming sword at the gates of heaven to keep the way of the tree of life;
therefore none but them that are duly fitted for heaven can enter in at this
strait gate; the flaming sword will keep all others out. "Know ye not that the
unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived, neither
fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of
themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers,
nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God." (1 Cor 6:9,10)
(2.) Perhaps our Lord might have his eye upon the gates of the temple when he
spoke this word unto the people; for though the gates of the temple were six
cubits wide, yet they were so strait, that none that were unclean in anything
might enter in thereat (Eze 40:48), because there were placed at these gates,
porters, whose office was to look that none but those that had right to enter
might go in thither. And so it is written, Jehoiada set "porters at the gates of
the house of the Lord, that none which was unclean in anything should enter in."
(2 Chron 23:19) Souls, God hath porters at the gates of the temple, at the gate
of heaven; porters, I say, placed there by God, to look that none that are
unclean in anything may come in thither. In at the gate of the church, none may
enter now that are openly profane, and scandalous to religion; no, though they
plead they are beloved of God: "What hath my beloved to do in mine house," saith
the Lord, "seeing she hath wrought lewdness with many?" (Jer 11:15)
I say, I am very apt to believe that our Lord Jesus Christ had his thoughts upon
these two texts, when he said the gate is strait: and that which confirms me the
more in the things is this, a little below the text he saith, "There shall be
weeping and gnashing of teeth, when ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob,
and all the prophets, in the kingdom of heaven, and you yourselves thrust out."
(Luke 13:28) Thrust out, which signifieth a violent act, resisting with striving
those that would—though unqualified—enter. The porters of the temple were, for
this very thing, to wear arms, if need were, and to be men of courage and
strength, lest the unsanctified or unprepared should by some means enter in. We
read, in the book of Revelations, of the holy city, and that it had twelve
gates, and at the gates twelve angels; but what did they do there? Why, amongst
the rest of their service, this was one thing, that there might "in no wise
enter in to it any thing that defileth, or worketh abomination, or that maketh a
lie." (Rev 21:27)
[Three things that make this gate so strait.]
But more particularly, to show what it is that maketh this gate so strait. There
are three things that make it strait—1. There is sin. 2. There is the word of
the law. 3. There are the angels of God.
1. There is sin; the sin of the profane, and the sin of the professor.
(1.) The sin of the profane. But this needs not be enlarged upon, because it is
concluded upon at all hands, where there is the common belief of the being of
God, and the judgment to come, that "the wicked shall be turned into hell, and
all the nations that forget God." (Psa 9:17)
(2.) But there is the sin of professors; or take it rather thus, there is a
profession that will stand with an unsanctified heart and life. The sin of such
will overpoise the salvation of their souls, the sin end being the heaviest end
of the scale; I say, that being the heaviest end which hath sin in it, they tilt
over, and so are, notwithstanding their glorious profession, drowned in
perdition and destruction; for none such hath any inheritance in the kingdom of
Christ and of God; therefore "let no man deceive you with vain words; for
because of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of
disobedience"; neither will a profession be able to excuse them. (Eph 5:3-6) The
gate will be too strait for such as these to enter in thereat. A man may partake
of salvation in part, but not of salvation in whole. God saved the children of
Israel out of Egypt, but overthrew them in the wilderness:—"I will therefore put
you in remembrance, though ye once knew this, how that the Lord, having saved
the people out of the land of Egypt, afterward destroyed them that believed
not." (Jude 5) So we see that, notwithstanding their beginning, "they could not
enter in, because of unbelief." (Heb 3:19)
2. There is the word of the law, and that will make the gate strait also. None
must go in thereat but those that can go in by the leave of the law; for though
no man be, or can be, justified by the works of the law, yet unless the
righteousness and holiness by which they attempt to enter into this kingdom be
justified by the law, it is in vain once to think of entering in at this strait
gate. Now the law justifieth not, but upon the account of Christ's
righteousness; if therefore thou be not indeed found in that righteousness, thou
wilt find the law lie just in the passage into heaven to keep thee out. Every
man's work must be tried by fire, that it may be manifest of what sort it is.
There are two errors in the world about the law; one is, when men think to enter
in at the strait gate by the righteousness of the law; the other is, when men
think they may enter into heaven without the leave of the law. Both these, I
say, are errors; for as by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified; so
without the consent of the law, no flesh shall be saved. "Heaven and earth shall
pass away, before one jot or tittle of the law shall fail, till all be
fulfilled." He therefore must be damned that cannot be saved by the consent of
the law. And, indeed, this law is the flaming sword that turneth every way; yea,
that lieth to this day in the way to heaven, for a bar to all unbelievers and
unsanctified professors; for it is taken out of the way for the truly gracious
only. It will be found as a roaring lion to devour all others. Because of the
law, therefore, the gate will be found too strait for the unsanctified to enter
in. When the apostle had told the Corinthians that "the unrighteous should not
inherit the kingdom of God," and that such were some of them, he adds, "But ye
are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified, in the name of the Lord
Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God." (1 Cor 6:9-11) Closely concluding, that
had they not been washed, and sanctified, and justified, in the name of the Lord
Jesus, the law, for their transgressions, would have kept them out; it would
have made the gate too strait for them to enter in.
3. There are also the angels of God, and by reason of them the gate is strait.
The Lord Jesus calleth the end of the world his harvest; and saith, moreover,
that the angels are his reapers. These angels are therefore to gather his wheat
into his barn, but to gather the ungodly into bundles to burn them. (Matt
13:39,41,49) Unless, therefore, the man that is unsanctified can master the law,
and conquer angels; unless he can, as I may say, pull them out of the gateway of
heaven, himself is not to come thither for ever. No man goeth to heaven but by
the help of the angels—I mean at the day of judgment. For the Son of man "shall
send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together
his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other." (Matt
24:31) If those that shall enter in at the strait gate shall enter in thither by
the conduct of the holy angels, pray when do you think those men will enter in
thither, concerning whom the angels are commanded to gather them, to "bind them
in bundles to burn them?" This, therefore, is a third difficulty. The angels
will make this entrance strait; yea, too strait for the unjustified and
unsanctified to enter in thither.
[AN EXHORTATION TO STRIVE TO ENTER INTO THIS KINGDOM.]
Third. I come not to the exhortation, which is, to strive to enter in. "Strive
to enter in at the strait gate." These words are fitly added; for since the gate
is strait, it follows that they that will enter in must strive.
"Strive." This word strive supposeth that great idleness is natural to
professors; they think to get to heaven by lying, as it were, on their elbows.
It also suggesteth that many will be the difficulties that professors will meet
with, before they get to heaven. It also concludeth that only the labouring
Christian, man or woman, will get in thither. "Strive," &c.
Three questions I will propound upon the word, an answer to which may give us
light into the meaning of it: I. What doth this word strive import? [4]
II. How should we strive? III. Why should we strive?
[Import of the word STRIVE.]
I. What doth this word strive import? Answer,
1. When he saith, Strive, it is as much as to say, Bend yourselves to the work
with all your might. "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might;
for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the grave,
whither thou goest." (Eccl 9:10) Thus Samson did when he set himself to destroy
the Philistines; "He bowed himself with all his might." (Judg 16:30) Thus David
did also, when he made provision for the building and beautifying of the temple
of God. (1 Chron 29:2) And thus must thou do, if ever thou enterest into heaven.
2. When he saith, Strive, he calleth for the mind and will, that they should be
on his side, and on the side of the things of his kingdom; for none strive
indeed, but such as have given the Son of God their heart; of which the mind and
will are a principal part; for saving conversion lieth more in the turning of
the mind and will to Christ, and to the love of his heavenly things, than in all
knowledge and judgment. And this the apostle confirmeth, when he saith, "Stand
fast in one spirit, with one mind striving," &c. (Phil 1:27)
3. And, more particularly, this word strive is expressed by several other terms;
as, (1.) It is expressed by that word, "So run that ye may obtain." (1 Cor
9:24,25) (2.) It is expressed by that word, "Fight the good fight of faith, lay
hold on eternal life." (1 Tim 6:12) (3.) It is expressed by that word, "Labour
not for the meat which perisheth, but for that meat which endureth unto
everlasting life." (John 6:27) (4.) It is expressed by that word, "We wrestle -
with principalities and powers, and the rulers of the darkness of this world."
(Eph 6:12) Therefore, when he saith, Strive, it is as much as to say, Run for
heaven, Fight for heaven, Labour for heaven, Wrestle for heaven, or you are like
to go without it.
[How should we strive?]
II. The second question is, How should we strive?
Answ. The answer in general is, Thou must strive lawfully. "and if a man also
strive for masteries, yet is he not crowned, except he strive lawfully." (2 Tim
2:5) But you will say, What is it to strive lawfully? [I] answer—
1. To strive against the things which are abhorred by the Lord Jesus; yea, to
resist to the spilling of your blood, striving against sin. (Heb 12:4) To have
all those things that are condemned by the Word; yea, though they be thine own
right hand, right eye, or right foot, in abomination; and to seek by all godly
means the utter suppressing of them. (Mark 9:43,45,47)
2. To strive lawfully, is to strive for those things that are commanded in the
Word.—"But thou, O man of God, flee the world, and follow after," that is,
strive for, "righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness; fight
the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life," &c. (1 Tim 6:11,12)
3. He that striveth lawfully, must be therefore very temperate in all the good
and lawful things of this life. "And every man that striveth for the mastery is
temperate in all things. Now they do it to obtain a corruptible crown; but we an
incorruptible." (1 Cor 9:25) Most professors give leave to the world and the
vanity of their hearts, to close with them, and to hang about their necks, and
make their striving to stand rather in an outcry of words, than a hearty labour
against the lusts and love of the world, and their own corruptions; but this
kind of striving is but a beating of the air, and will come to just nothing at
last. (1 Cor 9:26)
4. He that striveth lawfully, must take God and Christ along with him to the
work, otherwise he will certainly be undone. "Whereunto," said Paul, "I also
labour, striving according to his working, which worketh in me mightily." (Col
1:29) And for the right performing of this, he must observe these following
particulars:—
(1.) He must take heed that he doth not strive about things, or words, to no
profit; for God will not then be with him. "Of these things," saith the apostle,
"put them in remembrance; charging them before the Lord, that they strive not
about words to no profit, but to the subverting of the hearers." (2 Tim 2:14)
But, alas! how many professors in our days are guilty of this transgression,
whose religion stands chiefly, if not only, in a few unprofitable questions and
vain wranglings about words and things to no profit, but to the destruction of
the hearers!
(2.) He must take heed that whilst he strives against one sin, he does not
harbour and shelter another; or that whilst he cries out against other men's
sin, he does not countenance his own.
(3.) In the striving, strive to believe, strive for the faith of the gospel; for
the more we believe the gospel, and the reality of the things of the world to
come, with the more stomach and courage shall we labour to possess the
blessedness. (Phil 1:27) "Let us labour therefore to enter into that rest, lest
any man fall after the same example of unbelief." (Heb 4:11)
(4.) As we should strive for, and by faith, so we should strive by prayer, by
fervent and effectual prayer. (Romans 15:30) O the swarms of our prayerless
professors! What do they think of themselves? Surely the gate of heaven was
heretofore as wide as in these our days; but what striving by prayer was there
then among Christians for the thing that gives admittance into this kingdom,
over [what] there is in these latter days!
(5.) We should also strive by mortifying our members that are upon the earth. "I
therefore so run," said Paul, "not as uncertainly; so fight I, not as one that
beateth the air; but I keep under my body, and bring it into subjection, lest
that by any means, when I have preached the gospel to others, I myself should be
a cast-away." (1 Cor 9:26,27) But all this is spoken principally to professors;
so I would be understood.
[Why should we strive?]
III. I come now to the third question, namely, But why should we strive? Answer—
1. Because the thing for which you are here exhorted to strive, it is worth the
striving for; it is for not less than for a whole heaven, and an eternity of
felicity there. How will men that have before them a little honour, a little
profit, a little pleasure, strive? I say again, how will they strive for this?
Now they do it for a corruptible crown, but we an incorruptible. Methinks this
word heaven, and this eternal life, ought verily to make us strive, for what is
there again either in heaven or earth like them to provoke a man to strive?
2. Strive, because otherwise the devil and hell will assuredly have thee. He
goes about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. (1 Peter 5:8) These
fallen angels, they are always watchful, diligent, unwearied; they are also
mighty, subtle, and malicious, seeking nothing more than the damnation of thy
soul. O thou that art like the artless dove, strive!
3. Strive, because every lust strives and wars against thy soul. "The flesh
lusteth against the Spirit." (Gal 5:17) "Dearly beloved, I beseech you," said
Peter, "as strangers and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against
the soul." (1 Peter 2:11) It is a rare thing to see or find out a Christian that
indeed can bridle his lusts; but no strange thing to see such professors that
are "not only bridled, but saddled too," yea, and ridden from lust to sin, from
one vanity to another, by the very devil himself, and the corruptions of their
hearts.
4. Strive, because thou hast a whole world against thee. The world hateth thee
if thou be a Christian; the men of the world hate thee; the things of the world
are snares for thee, even thy bed and table, thy wife and husband, yea, thy most
lawful enjoyments have that in them that will certainly sink thy soul to hell,
if thou dost not strive against the snares that are in them. (Rom 11:9)
The world will seek to keep thee out of heaven with mocks, flouts, taunts,
threatenings, jails, gibbets, halters, burnings, and a thousand deaths;
therefore strive! Again, if it cannot overcome thee with these, it will flatter,
promise, allure, entice, entreat, and use a thousand tricks on this hand to
destroy thee; and observe, many that have been stout against the threats of the
world, have yet been overcome with the bewitching flatteries of the same. [5]
There ever was enmity betwixt the devil and the church, and betwixt his seed and
her seed too; Michael and his angels, and the dragon and his angels, these make
war continually. (Gen 3, Rev 12) There hath been great desires and endeavours
among men to reconcile these two in one, to wit, the seed of the serpent and the
seed of the woman, but it could never yet be accomplished. The world says, they
will never come over to us; and we again say, by God's grace, we will never come
over to them. But the business hath not ended in words; both they and we have
also added our endeavours to make each other submit, but endeavours have proved
ineffectual too. They, for their part, have devised all manner of cruel torments
to make us submit, as slaying with the sword, stoning, sawing asunder, flames,
wild beasts, banishments, hunger, and a thousand miseries. We again, on the
other side, have laboured by prayers and tears, by patience and long- suffering,
by gentleness and love, by sound doctrine and faithful witness-bearing against
their enormities, to bring them over to us; but yet the enmity remains; so that
they must conquer us, or we must conquer them. One side must be overcome; but
the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God.
5. Strive, because there is nothing of Christianity got by idleness. Idleness
clothes a man with rags, and the vineyard of the slothful is grown over with
nettles. (Prov 23:21, 24:30-32) Profession that is not attended with spiritual
labour cannot bring the soul to heaven. The fathers before us were "not slothful
in business," but "fervent in spirit, serving the Lord." Therefore "be not
slothful, but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the
promises." (Rom 12:11, Heb 6:12)
"Strive to enter in." Methinks the words, at the first reading, do intimate to
us, that the Christian, in all that ever he does in this world, should carefully
heed and regard his soul—I say, in all that ever he does. Many are for their
souls by fits and starts; but a Christian indeed, in all his doing and designs
which he contriveth and manageth in this world, should have a special eye to his
own future and everlasting good; in all his labours he should strive to enter
in: "Wisdom [Christ] is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all
thy getting get understanding." (Prov 4:7) Get nothing, if thou canst not get
Christ and grace, and further hopes of heaven in that getting; get nothing with
a bad conscience, with the hazard of thy peace with God, and that in getting it
thou weakenest thy graces which God hath given thee; for this is not to strive
to enter in. Add grace to grace, both by religious and worldly duties; "For so
an entrance shall be ministered unto you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ." (2 Peter 1:8-11) Religious duties are not
the only striving times; he that thinks so is out. Thou mayest help thy faith
and thy hope in the godly management of thy calling, and mayest get further
footing in eternal life, by studying the glory of God in all thy worldly
employment. I am speaking now to Christians that are justified freely by grace,
and am encouraging, or rather counselling of them to strive to enter in; for
there is an entering in by faith and good conscience now, as well as our
entering in body and soul hereafter; and I must add, that the more common it is
to thy soul to enter in now by faith, the more steadfast hope shalt thou have of
entering in hereafter in body and soul.
"Strive to enter in." By these words also the Lord Jesus giveth sharp rebuke to
those professors that have not eternal glory, but other temporal things in their
eye, by all the bustle that they make in the world about religion. Some there
be, what a stir they make, what a noise and clamour, with their notions and
forms, and yet perhaps all is for the loaves; because they have eaten of the
loaves, and are filled. (John 6:26) These strive indeed to enter, but it is not
into heaven; they find religion hath a good trade at the end of it, or they find
that it is the way to credit, repute, preferment, and the like, and therefore
they strive to enter into these. But these have not the strait gate in their
eye, nor yet in themselves have they love to their poor and perishing souls;
wherefore this exhortation nippeth such, by predicting of their damnation.
"Strive to enter in." These words also sharply rebuke them who content
themselves as the angel of the church of Sardis, did, to wit, "to have a name to
live, and be dead" (Rev 3:1), or as they of the Laodiceans, who took their
religion upon trust, and were content with a poor, wretched, lukewarm
profession; for such as these do altogether unlike to the exhortation in the
text, that says, Strive, and they sit and sleep; that says, Strive to enter in,
and they content themselves with a profession that is never like to bring them
thither.
"Strive to enter in." Further, these words put us upon proving the truth of our
graces now; I say, they put us upon the proof of the truth of them now; for if
the strait gate be the gate of heaven, and yet we are to strive to enter into it
now, even while we live, and before we come thither, then doubtless Christ means
by this exhortation, that we should use all lawful means to prove our graces in
this world, whether they will stand in the judgment or no. Strive to enter in;
get those graces now that will prove true graces then, and therefore try those
you have; and if, upon trial, they prove not right, cast them away, and cry for
better, lest they cast thee away, when better are not to be had. "Buy of me gold
tried in the fire"; mark that. (Rev 3:18) Buy of me faith and grace that will
stand in the judgment; strive for that faith; buy of me that grace, and also
white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, that the shame of thy wickedness
doth not appear, and anoint thine eyes with eye-salve, that thou mayest see.
Mind you this advice; this is right striving to enter in.
But you will say, How should we try our graces? Would you have us run into
temptation, to try if they be sound or rotten? Answ. You need not run into
trials; God hath ordained that enough of them shall overtake thee to prove thy
graces either rotten or sound before the day of thy death; sufficient to the day
is the evil thereof, if thou hast but a sufficiency of grace to withstand. I
say, thou shalt have trials enough overtake thee, to prove thy grace sound or
rotten. Thou mayest, therefore, if God shall help thee, see how it is like to go
with thee before thou goest out of this world, to wit, whether thy graces be
such as will carry thee in at the gates of heaven or no.
But how should we try our graces now? Answ. (a.) How dost thou find them in
outward trials? See Hebrews 11:15,16. (b.) How dost thou find thyself in the
inward workings of sin? (Rom 7:24) (c.) How dost thou find thyself under the
most high enjoyment of grace in this world? (Phil 3:14)
But what do you mean by these three questions? I mean graces show themselves at
these their seasons, whether they be rotten or sound.
(a.) How do they show themselves to be true under the first of these? Answ. By
mistrusting our own sufficiency, by crying to God for help, by desiring rather
to die than to bring any dishonour to the name of God, and by counting that, if
God be honoured in the trial, thou hast gained more than all the world could
give thee. (2 Chron 20:12, 14:11, Acts 4, 20:22, 2 Cor 4:17,18, Heb 11:24,25)
(b.) How do they show themselves to be true under the second? Answ. By mourning,
and confessing, and striving, and praying, against them; by not being content,
shouldst thou have heaven, if they live, and defile thee; and by counting of
holiness the greatest beauty in the world; and by flying to Jesus Christ for
life. (Zech 12:10, John 19, Heb 12:14, Psa 19:12)
(c.) How do they show themselves to be true under the third? Answ. By prizing
the true graces above all the world, by praying heartily that God will give thee
more; by not being content with all the grace thou canst be capable of enjoying
on this side heaven and glory. (Psa 84:10, Luke 17:5, Phil 3)
"Strive to enter in." The reason why Christ addeth these words, "to enter in,"
is obvious, to wit, because there is no true and lasting happiness on this side
heaven; I say, none that is both true and lasting, I mean, as to our sense and
feeling as there shall [be]; "For here have we no continuing city, but we seek
one to come." (Heb 13:14) The heaven is within, strive therefore to enter in;
the glory is within, strive therefore to enter in; the Mount Zion is within,
strive therefore to enter in; the heavenly Jerusalem is within, strive therefore
to enter in; angels and saints are within, strive therefore to enter in; and, to
make up all, the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and that glorious
Redeemer, is within, strive therefore to enter in.
"Strive to enter in." "For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers,
and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie." Without
are also the devils, and hell, and death, and all damned souls; without is
howling, weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth; yea, without are all the
miseries, sorrows, and plagues that an infinite God can in justice and power
inflict upon an evil and wicked generation; "Strive therefore to enter in at the
strait gate." (Rev 22:15, Matt 25:41, Rev 12:9, Is 65:13,14, Matt 22:13, Deu
29:18-20)
"Strive to enter in at the strait gate; for many, I say unto you, will seek to
enter in, and shall not be able."
[MOTIVE TO STRIVE TO ENTER INTO THIS KINGDOM.]
Fourth. We are come now to the motive which our Lord urges to enforce his
exhortation.
He told us before that the gate was strait; he also exhorted us to strive to
enter in thereat, or to get those things now that will further our entrance
then, and to set ourselves against those things that will hinder our entering
in.
In this motive there are five things to be minded.
1. That there will be a disappointment to some at the day of judgment; they will
seek to enter in, and shall not be able.
2. That not a few, but many, will meet with this disappointment; "For many will
seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
3. This doctrine of the miscarriage of many then, it standeth upon the validity
of the word of Christ; "For many, I say, will seek to enter in, and shall not be
able."
4. Professors shall make a great heap among the many that shall fall short of
heaven; "For many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be
able."
5. Where grace and striving are wanting now, seeking and contending to enter in
will be unprofitable then; "For many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and
shall not be able."
But I will proceed in my former method, to wit, to open the words unto you.
[Import of the words FOR MANY.]
"For many," &c. If he had said, For some will fall short, it had been a sentence
to be minded; if he had said, For some that seek will fall short, it had been
very awakening; but when he saith, Many, many will fall short, yea, many among
professors will fall short, this is not only awakening, but dreadful!
[Various applications of the word MANY.]—"For many," &c. I find this word many
variously applied in Scripture.
1. Sometimes it intendeth the open profane, the wicked and ungodly world, as
where Christ saith, "Wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to
destruction, and many there be which go in thereat." (Matt 7:13) I say, by the
many here, he intends those chiefly that go on in the broad way of sin and
profaneness, bearing the "tokens" of their damnation in their foreheads, those
whose daily practice proclaims that their "feet go down to death, and their
steps take hold on hell." (Job 21:29,30, Isa 3:9, Prov 4)
2. Sometimes this word many intendeth those that cleave to the people of God
deceitfully, and in hypocrisy, or, as Daniel hath it, "Many shall cleave to them
with flatteries." (Dan 11:34) The word many in this text includeth all those who
feign themselves better than they are in religion; it includeth, I say, those
that have religion only for a holiday suit[6] to set them out at certain times,
and when they come among suitable company.
3. Sometimes this word many intendeth them that apostatize from Christ; such as
for a while believe, and in time of temptation fall away; as John saith of some
of Christ's disciples: "From that time many of his disciples went back, and
walked no more with him." (John 6:66)
4. Sometimes this word many intendeth them that make a great noise, and do many
great things in the church, and yet want saving grace: "Many," saith Christ,
"will say unto me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name?
and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful
works?" (Matt 7:22) Mark, there will be many of these.
5. Sometimes this word many intendeth those poor, ignorant, deluded souls that
are led away with every wind of doctrine; those who are caught with the cunning
and crafty deceiver, who lieth in wait to beguile unstable souls: "And many
shall follow their pernicious ways, by reason of whom the way of truth shall be
evil spoken of." (2 Peter 2:2)
6. Sometimes this word many includeth all the world, good and bad: "And many of
them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life,
and some to shame and everlasting contempt." (Dan 12:2) Compare with John
5:28,29.
7. Lastly. Sometimes this word many intendeth the good only, even them that
shall be saved. (Luke 1:16, 2:34)
[How MANY is applied in the text.] Since then that the word is so variously
applied, let us inquire how it must be taken in the text. And,
1. It must not be applied to the sincerely godly, for they shall never perish.
(John 10:27,28) 2. It cannot be applied to all the world, for then no flesh
should be saved. 3. Neither is it to be applied to the open profane only, for
then the hypocrite is by it excluded. 4. But by the many in the text our Lord
intendeth in special the professor; the professor, I say, how high soever he
seems to be now, that shall be found without saving grace in the day of
judgment.
Now that the professor is in special intended in this text, consider, so soon as
the Lord had said, "Many will seek to enter in, and shall not be able," he
pointeth, as with his finger, at the many that then he in special intendeth; to
wit, them among whom he had taught; them that had eat and drunken in his
presence; them that had prophesied, and cast out devils in his name, and in his
name had done many wonderful works. (Luke 13:26, Matt 7:22) These are the many
intended by the Lord in this text, though others also are included under the
sentence of damnation by his word in other places. "For many," &c. Matthew
saith, concerning this strait gate, that there are but few that find it. But it
seems the cast-always in my text did find it; for you read, that they knocked at
it, and cried, "Lord, open unto us." So then, the meaning may seem to be
this—many of the few that find it will seek to enter in, and shall not be able.
I find, at the day of judgment, some will be crying to the rocks to cover them,
and some at the gates of heaven for entrance. Suppose that those that cry to the
rocks to cover them, are they whose conscience will not suffer them once to look
God in the face, because they are fallen under present guilt, and the dreadful
fears of the wrath of the Lamb. (Rev 6:16) And that those that stand crying at
the gate of heaven, are those whose confidence holds out to the last,—even those
whose boldness will enable them to contend even with Jesus Christ for entrance;
them, I say, that will have profession, casting out of devils, and many
wonderful works, to plead; of this sort are the many in my text: "For many, I
say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be able." Could we compare
the professors of the times with the everlasting word of God, this doctrine
would more easily appear to the children of men. How few among the many, yea,
among the swarms of professors, have heart to make conscience of walking before
God in this world, and to study his glory among the children of men! How few, I
say, have his name lie nearer their hearts than their own carnal concerns! Nay,
do not many make his Word, and his name, and his ways, a stalking-horse to their
own worldly advantages? [7]
God calls for faith, good conscience, moderation, self-denial, humility,
heavenly-mindedness, love to saints, to enemies, and for conformity in heart, in
word, and life, to his will: but where is it? (Mark 11:22, 1 Peter 3:16, Heb
13:5, Phil 4:5, Matt 10:37- 39, Col 3:1- 4, Micah 6:8, Rev 2:10, John 15:17, 1
John 4:21, Matt 5:44, Prov 23:26, Col 4:6)
[Import of the words I SAY UNTO YOU.]
"For many, I say unto you." These latter words carry in them a double argument
to prove the truth asserted before: First, in that he directly pointeth at his
followers: "I say unto you": Many, I say unto you, even to you that are my
disciples, to you that have eat and drunk in my presence. I know that sometimes
Christ hath directed his speech to his disciples, not so much upon their
accounts, as upon the accounts of others; but here it is not so; the "I say unto
you," in this place, it immediately concerned some of themselves: I say unto
you, ye shall begin to stand without, and to knock, "saying, Lord, Lord, open
unto us, and he shall answer and say unto you, I know you not whence ye are;
then shall ye begin to say, We have eaten and drunk in thy presence, and thou
hast taught in our streets. But he shall say, I tell you, I know you not whence
ye are; depart from me, all ye workers of iniquity"; it is you, you, YOU, that I
mean! "I say unto you." It is common with a professing people, when they hear a
smart and a thundering sermon, to say, Now has the preacher paid off the
drunkard, the swearer, the liar, the covetous, and adulterer; forgetting that
these sins may be committed in a spiritual and mystical way. There is spiritual
drunkenness, spiritual adultery, and a man may be a liar that calls God his
Father when he is not, or that calls himself a Christian, and is not. [8]
Wherefore, perhaps all these thunders and lightnings in this terrible sermon may
more concern thee than thou art aware of: "I say unto you"; unto you,
professors, may be the application of all this thunder. (Rev 2:9, 3:9)
"I say unto you!" Had not the Lord Jesus designed by these words to show what an
overthrow will one day be made among professors, he needed not to have you'd it
at this rate, as in the text, and afterwards, he has done; the sentence had run
intelligible enough without it; I say, without his saying, "I say unto you." But
the truth is, the professor is in danger; the preacher and the hearer, the
workers of miracles, and workers of wonders, may all be in danger of damning,
notwithstanding all their attainments. And to awaken us all about this truth,
therefore, the text must run thus: "For many, I say unto YOU, shall seek to
enter in, and shall not be able."
See you not yet that the professor is in danger, and that those words, "I say
unto you," are a prophecy of the everlasting perdition of some that are famous
in the congregation of saints? I say, if you do not see it, pray God your eyes
may be opened, and beware that thy portion be not as the portion of one of those
that are wrapped up in the 28th verse of the chapter: "There shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth, when ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all
the prophets, in the kingdom of heaven, and you yourselves thrust out."
"For many, I say unto you." These words, I told you, carry in them a double
argument for confirmation of the truth asserted before: first, that professors
are here particularly pointed at; and, secondly, it is the saying of the Truth
himself: for these words, "I say," are words full of authority; I say it, I say
unto you, says Christ, as he saith in another place, "It is I that speak; behold
it is I!" The person whose words we have now under consideration was no
blundering raw- headed preacher, [9] but the very wisdom of God, his Son, and
him that hath lain in his bosom from everlasting, and consequently had the most
perfect knowledge of his Father's will, and how it would fare with professors at
the end of this world. And now hearken what himself doth say of the words which
he hath spoken; "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass
away." (Matt 24:35)
"I say unto you." The prophets used not to speak after this manner, nor yet the
holy apostles; for thus to speak, is to press things to be received upon their
own authority. They used to say, Thus saith the Lord, or Paul, or Peter, an
apostle, or a servant of God. But now we are dealing with the words of the Son
of God; it is HE that hath said it; wherefore we find the truth of the perishing
of many professors asserted, and confirmed by Christ's own mouth. This
consideration carrieth great awakening in it; but into such a fast sleep are
many now- a-days fallen, that nothing will awaken them but that shrill and
terrible cry, "Behold, the Bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him."
[Two things that befall Professors.]
"I SAY UNTO YOU." There are two things upon which this assertion may be
grounded—1. There is in the world a thing like grace, that is not. 2. There is a
sin called the sin against the Holy Ghost, from which there is no redemption.
And both these things befall professors.
1. There is in the world a thing like grace, that is not. (1.) This is evident,
because we read that there are some that not only "make a fair show in the
flesh," that "glory in appearance," that "appear beautiful outward," that do as
God's people, but have not the grace of God's people. (Gal 6:12, 2 Cor 5:12,
Matt 23:27, Isa 57:3,4) (2.) It is evident also from those frequent cautions
that are everywhere in the Scriptures given us about this thing: "Be not
deceived: Let a man examine himself: Examine yourselves whether ye be in the
faith." (Gal 6:7, 1 Cor 11:28, 2 Cor 13:5) All these expressions intimate to us
that there may be a show of, or a thing like grace, where there is no grace
indeed. (3.) This is evident from the conclusion made by the Holy Ghost upon
this very thing: "For if a man think himself to be something, when he is
nothing, he deceiveth himself." (Gal 6:3) The Holy Ghost here concludeth, that a
man may think himself to be something, may think he hath grace, when he hath
none; may think himself something for heaven and another world, when indeed he
is just nothing at all with reference thereto. The Holy Ghost also determines
upon this point, to wit, that they that do so deceive themselves: "For if a man
think himself to be something when he is nothing, he deceiveth himself"; he
deceiveth his own soul, he deceiveth himself of heaven and salvation. So again:
"Let no man beguile you of your reward." (Col 2:18) (4.) It is manifest from the
text; "For many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
Alas! great light, great parts, great works, and great confidence of heaven, may
be where there is no faith of God's elect, no love of the Spirit, no repentance
unto salvation, no sanctification of the Spirit, and so consequently no saving
grace. But,
2. As there is a thing like grace, which is not, so there is a sin, called the
sin against the Holy Ghost, from which there is no redemption; and this sin doth
more than ordinarily befall professors.
There is a sin, called the sin against the Holy Ghost, from which there is no
redemption. This is evident both from Matthew and Mark: "But whosoever speaketh
against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world,
neither in the world to come." "But he that shall blaspheme against the Holy
Ghost hath never forgiveness, but is in danger of eternal damnation." (Matt
12:32, Mark 3:29) Wherefore, when we know that a man hath sinned this sin, we
are not to pray for him, or to have compassion on him. (1 John 5:16, Jude 22)
This sin doth most ordinarily befall professors; for there are few, if any, that
are not professors, that are at present capable of sinning this sin. They which
"were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made
partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God, and the
powers of the world to come," of this sort are they that commit this sin. (Heb
6:4,5) Peter also describes them to be such, that sin the unpardonable sin. "For
if, after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of
the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein, and
overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning." (2 Peter 2:20)
The other passage in the tenth of Hebrews holdeth forth the same thing. "For if
we sin willfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there
remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of
judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries." (Heb
10:26,27) THESE, therefore, are the persons that are the prey for this sin; this
sin feedeth upon PROFESSORS, and they that are such do very often fall into the
mouth of this eater. Some fall into the mouth of the sin by delusions and
doctrines of devils; and some fall into the mouth of it by returning with the
dog to his own vomit again, and with the sow that was washed to her wallowing in
the mire. (2 Peter 2:22) I shall not here give you a particular description of
this sin—that I have done elsewhere; [10] but such a sin there is, and they that
commit it shall never have forgiveness. And I say again, there be professors
that commit this unpardonable sin, yea, more than most are aware of. Let all,
therefore, look about them. The Lord awaken them that they may so do; for what
with a profession without grace, and by the venom of the sin against the Holy
Ghost, many will seek to enter in, and shall not be able.
[Import of the words WILL SEEK TO ENTER IN.]
"Will seek to enter in." This kingdom, at the gate of which the reprobate will
be stopped, will be, at the last judgment, the desire of all the world; and
they, especially THEY in my text, will seek to enter in; for then they will see
that the blessedness is to those that shall get into this kingdom, according to
that which is written, "Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may
have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the
city." (Rev 21:14) To prove that they will seek, although I have done it
already, yet read these texts at your leisure—Matthew 25:11, 7:22, Luke 13:28.
And, in a word, to give you the reason why they will seek to enter in.
[Why they will seek to enter in.]
1. Now they will see what a kingdom it is, what glory there is in it, and now
they shall also see the blessedness which they shall have that shall then be
counted worthy to enter in. The reason why this kingdom is so little regarded,
it is because it is not seen; the glory of it is hid from the eyes of the world.
"Their eye hath not seen, nor their ear heard," &c. Aye, but then they shall
hear and see too; and when this comes to pass, then, even then, he that now most
seldom thinks thereof will seek to enter in.
2. They will now see what hell is, and what damnation in hell is, more clear
than ever. They will also see how the breath of the Lord, like a stream of
brimstone, doth kindle it. O the sight of the burning fiery furnace, which is
prepared for the devil and his angels! This, this will make work in the souls of
cast-always at that day of God Almighty, and then they will seek to enter in.
3. Now they will see what the meaning of such words as these are, hell-fire,
everlasting fire, devouring fire, fire that never shall be quenched. Now they
will see what "for ever" means, what eternity means; now they will see what this
word means, "the bottomless pit"; now they will hear roaring of sinners in this
place, howling in that, some crying to the mountains to fall upon them, and
others to the rocks to cover them; now they will see blessedness is nowhere but
within!
4. Now they will see what glory the godly are possessed with; how they rest in
Abraham's bosom, how they enjoy eternal glory, how they walk in their white
robes, and are equal to the angels. O the favour, and blessedness, and
unspeakable happiness that now God's people shall have! and this shall be seen
by them that are shut out, by them that God hath rejected for ever; and this
will make them seek to enter in. (Luke 16:22,23, 13:28)
[How will they seek to enter in.]
"Will seek to enter in." Quest. But some may say, How will they seek to enter
in? [I] answer,
1. They will put on all the confidence they can, they will trick and trim up
their profession, and adorn it with what bravery they can. Thus the foolish
virgins sought to enter in; they did trim up their lamps, made themselves as
fine as they could. They made shift to make their lamps to shine awhile; but the
Son of God discovering himself, their confidence failed, their lamps went out,
the door was shut upon them, and they were kept out. (Matt 25:1-12)
2. They will seek to enter in by crowding themselves in among the godly. Thus
the man without the wedding garment sought to enter in. He goes to the wedding,
gets into the wedding chamber, sits close among the guests, and then, without
doubt, concluded he should escape damnation. But, you know, one black sheep is
soon seen, though it be among a hundred white ones. Why, even thus it fared with
this poor man. "And when the king came in to see the guests, he saw there a man
that had not on a wedding garment." He spied him presently, and before one word
was spoken to any of the others, he had this dreadful salutation, "Friend, how
camest thou in hither, not having on a wedding garment? [11]
And he was speechless"; though he could swagger it out among the guests, yet the
master of the feast, at first coming in, strikes him dumb; and having nothing to
say for himself, the king had something to say against him. "Then the king said
to the servants," the angels, "Bind him hand and foot, and take him away, and
cast him into outer darkness; there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth."
(Matt 22:11-13)
3. They will seek to enter in by pleading their profession and admittance to the
Lord's ordinances when they were in the world. "Lord, we have eaten and drunk in
thy presence, and thou hast taught in our streets"; we sat at thy table, and
used to frequent sermons and Christian assemblies; we were well thought of by
thy saints, and were admitted into thy churches; we professed the same faith as
they did; "Lord, Lord, open unto us."
4. They will seek to enter in by pleading their virtues; how they subjected
[themselves] to this ministry, how they wrought for him, what good they did in
the world, and the like, but neither will this help them; the same answer that
the two former had, the same have these—"Depart from me, ye that work iniquity."
(Matt 7:22)
5. They will seek to enter in by pleading excuses where they cannot evade
conviction. The slothful servant went this way to work, when he was called to
account for not improving his Lord's money. "Lord," says he, "I knew thee that
thou art an hard man, reaping where thou hast not sown, and gathering where thou
hast not strawed, and I was afraid," &c., either that I should not please in
laying out thy money, or that I should put it into hands out of which I should
not get it again at thy need, "and I went a hid thy talent in the earth; lo,
there thou hast that is thine"; as if he had said, True, Lord, I have not
improved, I have not got; but consider also I have not embezzled, I have not
spent nor lost thy money; lo, there thou hast what is thine. (Matt 25:24-28)
There are but few will be able to say these last words at the day of judgment.
The most of professors are for embezzling, misspending, and slothing away their
time, their talents, their opportunities to do good in. But, I say, if he that
can make so good an excuse as to say, Lo, there thou hast that is thine; I say,
if such an one shall be called a wicked and slothful servant, if such an one
shall be put to shame at the day of judgment, yea, if such an one shall,
notwithstanding this care to save his Lord's money, be cast as unprofitable into
outer darkness, where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth, what will they do
that have neither taken care to lay out, nor care to keep what was committed to
their trust?
6. They will seek to enter in by pleading that ignorance was the ground of their
miscarrying in the things wherein they offended. Wherefore, when Christ charges
them with want of love to him, and with want of those fruits that should prove
their love to be true—as, that they did not feed him, did not give him drink,
did not take him in, did not clothe him, visit him, come unto him, and the
like—they readily reply, "Lord, when saw we thee an hungered, or athirst, or a
stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister unto thee?"
(Matt 25:44) As who should say, Lord, we are not conscious to ourselves that
this charge is worthily laid at our door! God forbid that we should have been
such sinners. But, Lord, give an instance; when was it, or where? True, there
was a company of poor sorry people in the world, very inconsiderable, set by
with nobody; but for thyself, we professed thee, we loved thee, and hadst thou
been with us in the world, wouldst thou have worn gold, wouldst thou have eaten
the sweetest of the world, we would have provided it for thee; and therefore,
Lord, Lord, open to us! But will the plea do? No. Then shall he answer them,
"Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these" my brethren, "ye did it
not to me." This plea, then, though grounded upon ignorance, which is one of the
strangest pleas for neglect of duty, would not give them admittance into the
kingdom. "These shall go away into everlasting punishment, but the righteous
into life eternal."
I might add other things by which it will appear how they will seek to enter in.
As,
1. They will make a stop at this gate, this beautiful gate of heaven. They will
begin to stand without at the gate, as being loath to go any further. Never did
malefactor so unwillingly turn off the ladder when the rope was about his neck,
as these will turn away in that day from the gates of heaven to hell.
2. They will not only make a stop at the gate; but there they will knock and
call. This also argueth them willing to enter. They will begin to stand without,
and to knock at the gate, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us. This word, Lord, being
doubled, shows the vehemency of their desires, "Lord, Lord, open unto us." The
devils are coming; Lord, Lord, the pit opens her mouth upon us; Lord, Lord,
there is nothing but hell and damnation left us, if, Lord, Lord, thou hast not
mercy upon us; "Lord, Lord, open unto us!"
3. Their last argument for entrance is their tears, when groundless confidence,
pleading of virtues, excuses, and ignorance, will not do; when standing at the
gate, knocking, and calling, "Lord, Lord, open unto us," will not do, then they
betake themselves to their tears. Tears are sometimes the most powerful
arguments, but they are nothing worth here. Esau also sought it carefully with
tears, but it helped him nothing at all. (Heb 12:17) There shall be weeping and
gnashing of teeth; for the gate is shut for ever, mercy is gone for ever, Christ
hath rejected them for ever. All their pleas, excuses, and tears will not make
them able to enter into this kingdom. "For many, I say unto you, will seek to
enter in, and shall not be able."
[Import of the words SHALL NOT BE ABLE.]
I come now to the latter part of the words, which closely show us the reason of
the rejection of these many that must be damned; "They will seek to enter in,
and shall not be able."
A hypocrite, a false professor, may go a great way; they may pass through the
first and second watch, to wit, may be approved of Christians and churches; but
what will they do when they come at this iron gate that leadeth into the city?
"There the workers of iniquity are fallen, they are cast down, and shall not be
able to rise!" (Psa 36:12)
"And shall not be able." The time, as I have already hinted, which my text
respecteth, it is the day of judgment, a day when all masks and vizards shall be
taken off from all faces. It is a day wherein God "will bring to light the
hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsel of the hearts." (1
Cor 4:5) It is also the day of his wrath, the day in which he will pay
vengeance, even a recompence to his adversaries.
At this day, those things that now these "many" count sound and good, will then
shake like a quagmire, even all their naked knowledge, their feigned faith,
pretended love, glorious shows of gravity in the face, their holiday words and
specious carriages, will stand them in little stead. I call them holiday ones,
for I perceive that some professors do with religion just as people do with
their best apparel—hang it against the wall all the week, and put it on on
Sundays. For as some scarce ever put on a suit but when they go to a fair or a
market, so little house religion will do with some; they save religion till they
go to a meeting, or till they meet with a godly chapman. O poor religion! O poor
professor! What wilt thou do at this day, and the day of thy trial and judgment?
Cover thyself thou canst not; go for a Christian thou canst not; stand against
the Judge thou canst not! What wilt thou do? "The ungodly shall not stand in the
judgment, nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous." [12] "And shall not
be able." The ability here intended is not that which standeth in carnal power
or fleshly subtlety, but in the truth and simplicity of those things for the
sake of which God giveth the kingdom of heaven to his people.
There are five things, for the want of which this people will not be able to
enter.
1. This kingdom belongs to the elect, to those for whom it was prepared from the
foundation of the world. (Matt 25:34) Hence Christ saith, when he comes, he will
send forth his angels with a great sound of trumpet, and they shall gather
together his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to another. (Matt
24:31) And hence he saith again, "I will bring forth a seed out of Jacob, and
out of Judah an inheritor of my mountains, and mine elect shall inherit it, and
my servants shall dwell there." "They shall deceive, if it were possible, the
very elect." "But the election hath obtained it, and the rest were blinded."
(Rom 11:7)
2. They will not be able to enter, because they will want the birthright. The
kingdom of heaven is for the heirs—and if children, then heirs; if born again,
then heirs. Wherefore it is said expressly, "Except a man be born again, he
cannot see the kingdom of God." By this one word, down goes all carnal privilege
of being born of flesh and blood, and of the will of man. Canst thou produce the
birthright? But art thou sure thou canst? For it will little profit thee to
think of the blessed kingdom of heaven, if thou wantest a birthright to give
thee inheritance there. Esau did despise his birthright, saying, What good will
this birthright do me? And there are many in the world of his mind to this day.
"Tush," say they, "they talk of being born again; what good shall a man get by
that? They say, no going to heaven without being born again. But God is
merciful; Christ died for sinners; and we will turn when we can tend it, [13]
and doubt not but all will be well at last." But I will answer thee, thou child
of Esau, that the birthright and blessing go together; miss of one, and thou
shalt never have the other! Esau found this true; for, having first despised the
birthright, when he would afterwards "have inherited the blessing, he was
rejected; for he found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully
with tears." (Gen 25, Heb 12:16,17)
3. They shall not be able to enter in who have not believed with the faith of
God's operation; the faith that is most holy, even the faith of God's elect. "He
that believeth on the Son of God hath everlasting life; and he that believeth
not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him." (John
3:36) But now this faith is the effect of electing love, and of a new birth.
(John 1:11-13) Therefore, all the professors that have not faith which floweth
from being born of God, will seek to enter in, and shall not be able.
4. They shall not be able to enter in that have not gospel- holiness. Holiness
that is the effect of faith is that which admits into the presence of God, and
into his kingdom too. "Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
resurrection, on such the second death," that is, hell and eternal damnation,
"hath no power." (Rev 20:6,14) Blessed and holy, with the holiness that flows
from faith which is in Christ; for to these the inheritance belongs. "That they
may receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance among them which are
sanctified, by faith," saith Christ, "that is in me." (Acts 26:18) This
holiness, which is the natural effect of faith in the Son of God, Christ Jesus
the Lord will, at this day of judgment, distinguish from all other shows of
holiness and sanctity, be they what they will, and will admit the soul that hath
this holiness into his kingdom, when the rest will seek to enter in, and shall
not be able.
5. They shall not be able to enter in that do not persevere in this blessed
faith and holiness; not that they that have them indeed can finally fall away,
and everlastingly perish; but it hath pleased Jesus Christ to bid them that have
the right to hold fast that they have: to endure to the end; and then tells them
they shall be saved—though it is as true that none is of power to keep himself;
but God worketh together with his children, and they are "kept by the power of
God, through faith unto salvation," which is also laid up in heaven for them. (1
Peter 1:3-5)
"The foolish shall not stand in thy sight; thou hatest all workers of iniquity."
(Psa 5:5) The foolish are the unholy ones, that neither have faith, nor
holiness, nor perseverance in godliness, and yet lay claim to the kingdom of
heaven; but "better is a little with righteousness, than great revenues without
right." (Prov 16:8) What is it for me to claim a house, or a farm, without
right? or to say, all this is mine, but have nothing to show for it? This is but
like the revenues of the foolish; his estate lieth in his conceit. He hath
nothing by birthright and law, and therefore shall not be able to inherit the
possession. "For many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be
able."
Thus you see, that the non-elect shall not be able to enter, that he that is not
born again shall not be able to enter, that he that hath not saving faith, with
holiness and perseverance flowing therefrom, shall not be able to enter;
wherefore consider of what I have said.
[SECOND. THE WORDS BY WAY OF OBSERVATION.]
I come now to give you some observations from the words, and they may be three.
FIRST. When men have put in all the claim they can for heaven, but few will have
it for their inheritance. "For many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and
shall not be able." SECOND. Great, therefore, will be the disappointment that
many will meet with at the day of judgment: "For many will seek to enter in, and
shall not be able." THIRD. Going to heaven, therefore, will be no trivial
business; salvation is not got by a dream; they that would then have that
kingdom must now strive lawfully to enter: "For many, I say unto you, will seek
to enter in, and shall not be able."
FIRST. I shall speak chiefly, and yet but briefly, to the first of these
observations; to wit, That when men have put in all the claim they can to the
kingdom of heaven, but few will have it for their inheritance. The observation
standeth of two parts. First. That the time is coming, when every man will put
in whatever claim they can to the kingdom of heaven. Second. There will be but
few of them that put in claim thereto, that shall enjoy it for their
inheritance.
[First. ALL WILL PUT IN WHAT CLAIM THEY CAN TO THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN.]
I shall speak but a word or two to the first part of the observation, because I
have prevented my enlargement thereon by my explication upon the words; but you
find in the 25th of Matthew, that all they on the left hand of the Judge did put
in all the claim they could for this blessed kingdom of heaven. If you should
take them on the left hand as most do, for all the sinners that shall be damned,
then that completely proveth the first part of the observation; for it is
expressly said, "Then shall they," all of them jointly, and every one apart,
"also answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thus and thus, and did not minister
unto thee?" (Matt 25:44) I could here bring you in the plea of the slothful
servant, the cry of the foolish virgins; I could also here enlarge upon that
passage, "Lord, Lord, have we not eaten and drunk in thy presence, and thou hast
taught in our streets?" But these things are handled already in the handling of
which this first part of the observation is proved; wherefore, without more
words, I will, God assisting by his grace, descend to the second part thereof,
to wit,
[Second. THERE WILL BE BUT FEW OF THEM THAT PUT IN CLAIM THERETO THAT WILL ENJOY
IT FOR THEIR INHERITANCE.]
I shall speak distinctly to this part of the observation, and shall first
confirm it by a Scripture or two. "Strait is the gate, and narrow is the way,
which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it." (Matt 7:14) "Fear not,
little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom."
(Luke 12:32) By these two texts, and by many more that will be urged anon, you
may see the truth of what I have said.
To enlarge, therefore, upon the truth; and, First, more generally; Second, more
particularly. More generally, I shall prove that in all ages but few have been
saved. More particularly, I shall prove but few of them that profess have been
saved.
[First, Generally—in all ages but few have been saved.]
1. In the old world, when it was most populous, even in the days of Noah, we
read but of eight persons that were saved out of it; well, therefore, might
Peter call them but few; but how few? why, but eight souls; "wherein few, that
is, eight souls, were saved by water." (1 Peter 3:20) He touches a second time
upon this truth, saying, He "spared not the old world, but saved Noah the eighth
person, a preacher of righteousness, bringing in the flood upon the world of the
ungodly." (2 Peter 2:5) Mark, all the rest are called the ungodly, and there
were also a world of them. These are also taken notice of in Job, and go there
also by the name of wicked men: "Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men
have trodden? which were cut down out of time, whose foundation was overflown
with a flood, which said unto God, Depart from us, and what can the Almighty do
for them?" (Job 22:15-17)
There were therefore but eight persons that escaped the wrath of God, in the day
that the flood came upon the earth; the rest were ungodly; there was also a
world of them, and they are to this day in the prison of hell. (Heb 11:7, 1
Peter 3:19,20) Nay, I must correct my pen, there were but seven of the eight
that were good; for Ham, though he escaped the judgment of the water, yet the
curse of God overtook him to his damnation. 2. When the world began again to be
replenished, and people began to multiply therein: how few, even in all ages, do
we read of that were saved from the damnation of the world!
(1.) One Abraham and his wife, God called out of the land of the Chaldeans; "I
called," said God, "Abraham alone." (Isa 51:2)
(2.) One Lot out of Sodom and Gomorrah, out of Admah and Zeboim; one Lot out of
four cities! Indeed his wife and two daughters went out of Sodom with him; but
they all three proved naught, as you may see in the 19th of Genesis. Wherefore
Peter observes, that Lot only was saved: "He turned the cities of Sodom and
Gomorrah into ashes, condemning them with an overthrow, making them an example
unto those that after should live ungodly, and delivered just Lot, that
righteous man." (Read 2 Peter 2:6-8) Jude says, that in this condemnation God
overthrew not only Sodom and Gomorrah, but the cities about them also; and yet
you find none but Lot could be found that was righteous, either in Sodom or
Gomorrah, or the cities about them; wherefore they, all of them, suffer the
vengeance of eternal fire. (verse 7)
(3.) Come we now to the time of the Judges, how few then were godly, even then
when the inhabitants of the villages ceased, they ceased in Israel! "the
highways" of God "were" then "unoccupied." (Judg 5:6,7)
(4.) There were but few in the days of David: "Help, Lord," says he, "for the
godly man ceaseth, for the faithful fail from among the children of men." (Psa
12:1)
(5.) In Isaiah's time the saved were come to such a few, that he positively says
that there were a very small number left: "God had made them like Sodom, and
they had been like unto Gomorrah." (Isa 1:8,9)
(6.) It was cried unto them in the time of Jeremiah, that they should "run to
and fro through the streets of Jerusalem, and see now, and know, and seek in the
broad places thereof, if ye can find a man, if there be any that executeth
judgment, that seeketh the truth, and I will pardon it." (Jer 5:1)
(7.) God showed his servant Ezekiel how few there would be saved in his day, by
the vision of a few hairs saved out of the midst of a few hairs; for the saved
were a few saved out of a few. (Eze 5:5)
(8.) You find in the time of the prophet Micah, how the godly complain, that as
to number they then were so few, that he compares them to those that are left
behind when they had gathered the summer- fruit. (Micah 7:1)
(9.) When Christ was come, how did he confirm this truth, that but few of them
that put in claim for heaven will have it for their inheritance! But the common
people could not hear it, and therefore, upon a time when he did but a little
hint at this truth, the people, even all in the synagogue where he preached it,
"were filled with wrath, rose up, thrust him out of the city, and led him unto
the brow of the hill," whereon their city was built, "that they might cast him
down headlong." (Luke 4:24-29)
(10.) John, who was after Christ, saith, "The whole world lieth in wickedness;
that all the world wondered after the beast; and that power was given to the
beast over all kindreds, tongues, and nations." Power to do what? Why, to cause
all, both great and small, rich and poor, bond and free, to receive his mark,
and to be branded for him. (1 John 5:10, Rev 13:3,7,16)
(11.) Should we come to observation and experience, the show of the countenance
of the bulk of men doth witness against them; "they declare their sin as Sodom,
they hide it not." (Isa 3:9) Where is the man that maketh the Almighty God his
delight, and that designeth his glory in the world? Do not even almost all
pursue this world, their lusts and pleasures? and so, consequently, say unto
God, "Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways; or, What is
the Almighty that we should serve him? It is in vain to serve God," &c.
So that without doubt it will appear a truth in the day of God, that but few of
them that shall put in their claim to heaven will have it for their inheritance.
Before I pass this head, I will show you to what the saved are compared in the
Scriptures.
[To what the saved are compared in Scripture.]
1. They are compared to a handful: "There shall be a handful of corn in the
earth upon the top of the mountains," &c. (Psa 72:16) This corn is nothing else
but them that shall be saved. (Matt 3:12, 13:30) But mark, "There shall be a
handful": What is a handful, when compared with the whole heap? or, what is a
handful out of the rest of the world?
2. As they are compared to a handful, so they are compared to a lily among the
thorns, which is rare, and not so commonly seen: "As the lily among thorns,"
saith Christ, "so is my love among the daughters." (Cant 2:2) By thorns, we
understand the worst and best of men, even all that are destitute of the grace
of God, for "the best of them is a brier, the most upright" of them "as a thorn-
hedge." (Micah 7:4, 2 Sam 23:6) I know that she may be called a lily amongst
thorns also, because she meets with the pricks of persecution. (Eze 2:6, 28:24)
She may also be thus termed, to show the disparity that is betwixt hypocrites
and the church. (Luke 8:14, Heb 8) But this is not all; the saved are compared
to a lily among thorns, to show you that they are but few in the world; to show
you that they are but few and rare; for as Christ compares her to a lily among
thorns, so she compares him to an apple-tree among the trees of the wood, which
is rare and scarce; not common.
3. They that are saved are called but one of many; for though there be
"threescore queens, and fourscore concubines, and virgins without number," yet
my love, saith Christ, is but one, my undefiled is but one. (Cant 6:8,9)
According to that of Jeremiah, "I will take you one of a city." (Jer 3:14) That
saying of Paul is much like this, "Know ye not that they which run in a race run
all, but one receiveth the prize?" (1 Cor 9:24) But one, that is, few of many,
few of them that run; for he is not here comparing them that run with them that
sit still, but with them that run, some run and lose, some run and win; they
that run and win are few in comparison with them that run and lose: "They that
run in a race run all, but one receives the prize"; let there then be
"threescore queens, and fourscore concubines, and virgins without number," yet
the saved are but few.
4. They that are saved are compared to the gleaning after the vintage is in:
"Woe is me," said the church, "for I am as when they have gathered the
summer-fruits, as the grape-gleanings" after the vintage is in. (Micah 7:1) The
gleanings! What are the gleanings to the whole crop? and yet you here see, to
the gleanings are the saved compared. It is the devil and sin that carry away
the cartloads, while Christ and his ministers come after a gleaning. But the
gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim are better than the vintage of Abiezer. (Judg
8:2) Them that Christ and his ministers glean up and bind up in the bundle of
life, are better than the loads that go the other way. You know it is often the
cry of the poor in harvest, Poor gleaning, poor gleaning. And the ministers of
the gospel they also cry, Lord, "who hath believed our report? and to whom is
the arm of the Lord revealed?" (Isa 53:1) When the prophet speaks of the saved
under this metaphor of gleaning, how doth he amplify the matter?
"Gleaning-grapes shall be left," says he, "two or three berries in the top of
the uppermost bough, four or five in the outmost fruitful branches thereof,
saith the Lord." (Isa 17:6) Thus you see what gleaning is left in the vineyard,
after the vintage is in; two or three here, four or five there. Alas! they that
shall be saved when the devil and hell have had their due, they will be but as
the gleaning, they will be but few; they that go to hell, go thither in
clusters, but the saved go not so to heaven. (Matt 13:30, Micah 7) Wherefore
when the prophet speaketh of the saved, he saith there is no cluster; but when
he speaketh of the damned, he saith they are gathered by clusters. (Rev
14:18,19) O sinners! but few will be saved! O professors! but few will be saved!
5. They that shall be saved are compared to jewels: "and they shall be mine,
saith the Lord of hosts, in that day when I make up my jewels." (Mal 3:17)
Jewels, you know, are rare things, things that are not found in every house.
Jewels will lie in little room, being few and small, though lumber takes up
much. In almost every house, you may find brass, and iron, and lead; and in
every place you may find hypocritical professors, but the saved are not these
common things; they are God's peculiar treasure. (Psa 135:4) Wherefore Paul
distinguisheth betwixt the lumber and the treasure in the house. There is, saith
he, in a great house, not only vessels of gold and silver, but also of wood and
of earth, and some to honour, and some to dishonour. (2 Tim 2:20) Here is a word
for wooden and earthy professors; the jewels and treasures are vessels to
honour, they of wood and earth are vessels of dishonour, that is, vessels for
destruction. (Rom 9:21) 6. They that shall be saved are compared to a remnant:
"Except the Lord of hosts had left unto us a very small remnant, we should have
been as Sodom, and we should have been like unto Gomorrah." (Isa 1:9) A remnant,
a small remnant, a very small remnant! O how doth the Holy Ghost word it! and
all to show you how few shall be saved. Every one knows what a remnant is, but
this is a small remnant, a very small remnant. So again, "Sing with gladness for
Jacob, and shout among the chief of the nations: publish ye, praise ye, and say,
O Lord, save thy people, the remnant of Israel." (Jer 31:7) What shall I say?
the saved are often in Scripture called a remnant. (Eze 9:4,8, Isa 10:20-22,
11:11,16, Jer 23:3, Joel 2:32) But what is a remnant to the whole piece? What is
a remnant of people to the whole kingdom? or what is a remnant of wheat to the
whole harvest?
7. The saved are compared to the tithe or tenth part; wherefore when God sendeth
the prophet to make the hearts of the people fat, their ears dull, and to shut
their eyes, the prophet asketh, "How long?" to which God answereth, "Until the
cities be wasted without inhabitant, and the houses without man, and the land be
utterly desolate, and the Lord have removed men far away, and there be a great
forsaking in the midst of the land. But yet," as God saith in another place, "I
will not make a full end," "in it shall be a tenth, - so the holy seed shall be
the substance thereof." (Isa 6:10-13) But what is a tenth? What is one in ten?
And yet so speaks the Holy Ghost, when he speaks of the holy seed, of those that
were to be reserved from the judgment. And observe it, the fattening and
blinding of the rest, it was to their everlasting destruction; and so both
Christ and Paul expounds it often in the New Testament. (Matt 13:14,15, Mark
4:12, Luke 8:10, John 12:40, Acts 28:26, Rom 11:8) So that those that are
reserved from them that perish will be very few, one in ten: "A tenth shall
return, so the holy seed shall be the substance thereof." [14]
I shall not add more generals at this time. I pray God that the world be not
offended at these. But without doubt, but few of them that shall put in their
claim for heaven will have it for their inheritance; which will yet further
appear in the reading of that which follows.
[Second. Particularly—but few of them that profess have been saved.]
Therefore I come more particularly to show you that but few shall be saved. I
say, but few of professors themselves will be saved; for that is the truth that
the text doth more directly look at and defend. Give me, therefore, thy hand,
good reader, and let us soberly walk through the rest of what shall be said; and
let us compare as we go each particular with the holy Scripture.
1. It is said, "The daughter of Zion is left as a cottage in a vineyard, as a
lodge in a garden of cucumbers, as a besieged city." (Isa 1:8) The vineyard was
the church of Israel, the cottage in that vineyard was the daughter of Zion, or
the truly gracious amongst, or in that church. (Isa 5:1) A cottage; God had but
a cottage there, but a little habitation in the church, a very few that were
truly gracious amongst that great multitude that professed; and had it not been
for these, for this cottage, the rest had been ruined as Sodom: "Except the Lord
of hosts had left unto us," in the church, a very few, they had been as Sodom.
(Isa 1:9) Wherefore, among the multitude of them that shall be damned,
professors will make a considerable party.
2. "For though thy people Israel be as the sand of the sea, a remnant of them
shall return," "a remnant shall be saved." (Isa 10:22, Rom 9:27) For though thy
people Israel, whom thou broughtest out of Egypt, to whom thou hast given
church- constitution, holy laws, holy ordinances, holy prophets, and holy
covenants; thy people by separation from all people, and thy people by
profession; though this thy people be as the sand of the sea, "a remnant shall
be saved"; wherefore, among the multitude of them that shall be damned,
professors will make a considerable party.
3. "Reprobate silver shall men call them, because the Lord hath rejected them."
(Jer 6:30) The people here under consideration are called, in verse 27, God's
people, his people by profession: "I have set thee for a tower and a fortress
among my people, that thou mayest know, and try their way." What follows? They
are all grievous revolters, walking with slanders, reprobate silver; the Lord
hath rejected them. In chapter 7, verse 29, they are called also the generation
of his wrath: "For the Lord hath rejected and forsaken the generation of his
wrath." This, therefore, I gather out of these holy Scriptures,—that with
reference to profession and church-constitution, a people may be called the
people of God; but, with reference to the event and final conclusion that God
will make with some of them, they may be truly the generation of his wrath.
4. In the fifth of Isaiah, you read again of the vineyard of God, and that it
was planted on a very fruitful hill, planted with the choicest vines, had a
wall, a tower, a wine-press belonging to it, and all things that could put it
into right order and good government, as a church; but this vineyard of the Lord
of hosts brought forth wild grapes, fruits unbecoming her constitution and
government, wherefore the Lord takes from her his hedge and wall, and lets her
be trodden down. Read Christ's exposition upon it in Matthew 21:33, &c. Look to
it, professors, these are the words of the text, "For many, I say unto you, will
seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
5. "Son of man," said God to the prophet, "the house of Israel is to me become
dross, all they are brass and tin, and iron and lead, in the midst of the
furnace they even are the dross of silver." (Eze 22:18) God had silver there,
some silver, but it was but little; the bulk of that people was but the dross of
the church, though they were the members of it. But what doth he mean by the
dross? why, he looked upon them as no better, notwithstanding their
church-membership, than the rabble of the world, that is, with respect to their
latter end; for to be called dross, it is to be put amongst the rest of the
sinners of the world, in the judgment of God, though at present they abide in
his house: "Thou puttest away all the wicked of the earth like dross; therefore
I love thy testimonies." (Psa 119:119)
God saith of his saved ones, "He hath chosen them in the furnace of affliction."
The refiner, when he putteth his silver into his furnace, he puts lead in also
among it; now this lead being ordered as he knows how, works up the dross from
the silver, which dross, still as it riseth, he putteth by, or taketh away with
an instrument. And thus deals God with his church; there is silver in his
church, aye, and there is also dross: now the dross are the hypocrites and
graceless ones that are got into the church, and these will God discover, and
afterwards put away as dross. So that it will without doubt prove a truth of
God, that many of their professors that shall put in claim for heaven, will not
have it for their inheritance.
6. It is said of Christ, his "fan is in his hand, and he will thoroughly purge
his floor, and will gather his wheat into the garner, but he will burn up the
chaff with unquenchable fire." (Matt 3:12) The floor is the church of God: "O my
threshing, and the corn of my floor!" said God by the prophet, to his people.
(Isa 21:10) The wheat are these good ones in his church that shall be
undoubtedly saved; therefore he saith, "Gather my wheat into my garner." The
chaff groweth upon the same stalk and ear, and so is in the same visible body
with the wheat, but there is not substance in it: wherefore in time they must be
severed one from the other; the wheat must be gathered into the garner, which is
heaven; and the chaff, or professors that want true grace, must be gathered into
hell, that they may be burned up with unquenchable fire. Therefore let
professors look to it! [15]
7. Christ Jesus casts away two of the three grounds that are said to receive the
word. (Luke 8)
The stony ground received it with joy, and the thorny ground brought forth fruit
almost to perfection. Indeed the highway ground was to show us that the carnal,
whilst such, receive not the word at all; but here is the pinch, two of the
three that received it, fell short of the kingdom of heaven; for but one of the
three received it so as to bring forth fruit to perfection. Look to it,
professors!
8. The parable of the unprofitable servant, the parable of the man without a
wedding garment, and the parable of the unsavoury salt, do each of them justify
this for truth. (Matt 25:24,29, 22:11-13, 5:13) That of the unprofitable servant
is to show us the sloth and idleness of some professors; that of the man without
a wedding garment is to show us how some professors have the shame of their
wickedness seen by God, even when they are among the children of the bridegroom;
and that parable of the unsavoury salt is to show, that as the salt that hath
lost its savour is fit for nothing, no, not for the dunghill, but to be trodden
under foot of men; so some professors, yea, and great ones too, for this parable
reached one of the apostles, will in God's day be counted fit for nothing but to
be trodden down as the mire in the streets. O the slothful, the naked, and
unsavoury professors, how will they be rejected of God and his Christ in the
judgment! Look to it, professors!
9. The parable of the tares also giveth countenance to this truth: for though it
be said the field is the world, yet it is said, the tares were sown even in the
church. "And while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat,
and went his way." (Matt 13:24,25) Object. But some may object, The tares might
be sown in the world among the wheat, though not in the churches. Answ. But
Christ, by expounding this parable, tells us the tares were sown in his kingdom;
the tares, that is, the children of the devil. "As therefore the tares are
gathered and burned in the fire; so shall it be in the end of this world. The
Son of man shall send forth his angels, and they shall gather out of his kingdom
all things that offend, and them which do iniquity, and shall cast them into a
furnace of fire; there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth." (verse 30,39-
43) Look to it, professors!
10. The parable of the ten virgins also suiteth our purpose; these ten are
called the kingdom of heaven, that is, the church of Christ, the visible
rightly-constituted church of Christ; for they went all out of the world, had
all lamps, and all went forth to meet the bridegroom; yet behold what an
overthrow the one- half of them met with at the gate of heaven; they were shut
out, bid to depart, and Christ told them he did not know them. (Matt 25:1-13)
Tremble, professors! Pray, professors!
11. The parable of the net that was cast into the sea, that also countenanceth
this truth. The substance of that parable is to show that souls may be gathered
by the gospel—there compared to a net—may be kept in that net, drawn to shore,
to the world's end, by that net, and yet may then prove bad fishes, and be cast
away. The parable runs thus:—"The kingdom of heaven," the gospel, "is like unto
a net which was cast into the sea," the world, "and gathered of every kind,"
good and bad, "which when it was full, they drew to shore," to the end of the
world, "and sat down," in judgment, "and gathered the good into vessels, but
cast the bad away." Some bad fishes, nay, I doubt a great many, will be found in
the net of the gospel, at the day of judgment. (Matt 13:47,49) Watch and be
sober, professors!
12. "And - many shall come from the east and from the west, and shall sit down
with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven. But the children
of the kingdom shall be cast out." (Matt 8:11,12) The children of the kingdom,
whose privileges were said to be these, "to whom pertaineth the adoption, and
the glory, and the covenants, and the giving of the law, and the service of God,
and the promises." (Rom 9:4) I take liberty to harp the more upon the first
church, because that that happened to them, happened as types and examples,
intimating, there is ground to think, that things of as dreadful a nature are to
happen among the church of the Gentiles. (1 Cor 10:11,12) Neither, indeed, have
the Gentile churches security from God that there shall not as dreadful things
happen to them. And concerning this very thing, sufficient caution is given to
us also. (1 Cor 6:9,10, Gal 5:19-21, Eph 5:3-6, Phil 3:17,19, 2 Thess 2:11,12, 2
Tim 2:20,21, Heb 6:4-8, 10:26-28, 2 Peter 2, 3, 1 John 5:10, Rev 2:20-22)
13. The parable of the true vine and its branches confirm what I have said. By
the vine there I understand Christ, Christ as head; by the branches, I
understand this church. Some of these branches proved fruitless cast-always,
were in time cast out of the church, were gathered by men, and burned. (John
15:1-6)
14. Lastly, I will come to particular instances.
(1.) The twelve had a devil among them. (John 6:70) (2.) Ananias and Sapphira
were in the church of Jerusalem. (Acts 5) (3.) Simon Magus was among them at
Samaria. (Acts 8) (4.) Among the church of Corinth were them that had not the
knowledge of God. (1 Cor 15:34) (5.) Paul tells the Galatians that false
brethren crept in unawares; and so does the apostle Jude, and yet they were as
quick-sighted to see as any now-a- days. (Gal 2:4, Jude 4) (6.) The church in
Sardis had but a few names in her, to whom the kingdom of heaven belonged. "Thou
hast a few names, even in Sardis, which have not defiled their garments, and
they shall walk with me in white, for they are worthy." (Rev 3:4) (7.) As for
the church of the Laodiceans, it is called "wretched, and miserable, and poor,
and blind, and naked." (Rev 3:17) So that put all things together, and I may
boldly say, as I also have said already, that among the multitude of them that
shall be damned, professors will make a considerable party; or, to speak in the
words of the observation, "when men have put in all the claim they can for
heaven, but few will have it for their inheritance."
[REASONS WHY FEW ARE SAVED.]
I will show you some reasons of the point, besides those five that I showed you
before. And, First, I will show you why the poor, carnal, ignorant world miss of
heaven; and then, Second, why the knowing professors miss of it also.
[First, Why the poor, carnal, ignorant world miss heaven.]
1. The poor, carnal, ignorant world miss of heaven even because they love their
sins, and cannot part with them. "Men loved darkness rather than light, because
their deeds were evil." (John 3:19) The poor ignorant world miss of heaven,
because they are enemies in their minds to God, his Word, and holiness; they
must be all damned who take pleasure in unrighteousness. (2 Thess 2:10-12) The
poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because they stop their ears against
convictions, and refuse to come when God calls. "Because I have called, and ye
refused, I have stretched out my hand, and no man regarded, but ye have set at
nought all my counsel, and would none of my reproof; I also will laugh at your
calamity; I will mock when your fear cometh - as desolation, and your
destruction - as a whirlwind, when distress and anguish cometh upon you; then
shall they call upon me, but I will not answer; they shall seek me early, but
they shall not find me." (Prov 1:24-29)
2. The poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because the god of this world hath
blinded their eyes, that they can neither see the evil and damnable state they
are in at present, nor the way to get out of it; neither do they see the beauty
of Jesus Christ, nor how willing he is to save poor sinners. (2 Cor 4:2,3)
3. The poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because they put off and defer coming
to Christ, until the time of God's patience and grace is over. Some, indeed, are
resolved never to come; but some, again, say, We will come hereafter; and so it
comes to pass, that because God called, and they did not hear; so they shall
cry, and I will not hear, saith the Lord. (Zech 7:11-13)
4. The poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because they have false apprehensions
of God's mercy. They say in their hearts, We shall have peace, though we walk in
the imagination of our heart, to add drunkenness to thirst. But what saith the
Word? "The Lord will not spare him; but then the anger of the Lord, and his
jealousy, shall smoke against that man, and all the curses that are written in
this book shall lie upon him, and the Lord shall blot out his name from under
heaven." (Deu 29:19- 21)
5. The poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because they make light of the gospel
that offereth mercy to them freely, and because they lean upon their own good
meanings, and thinkings, and doings. (Matt 22:1-5, Rom 9:30,31)
6. The poor carnal world miss of heaven because by unbelief, which reigns in
them, they are kept for ever from being clothed with Christ's righteousness, and
from washing in his blood, without which there is neither remission of sin, nor
justification. But to pass these till anon.
[Second.] I come, in the next place, to show you some reasons why the professor
falls short of heaven.
First. In the general, they rest in things below special grace; as in awakenings
that are not special, in faith[16] that is not special, &c.; and, a little to
run a parallel betwixt the one and the other, that, if God will, you may see and
escape.
1. Have they that shall be saved, awakenings about their state by nature? So
have they that shall be damned. They that never go to heaven may see much of
sin, and of the wrath of God due thereto. This had Cain and Judas, and yet they
came short of the kingdom. (Gen 4, Matt 27:4) The saved have convictions, in
order to their eternal life; but the others" convictions are not so. The
convictions of the one doth drive them sincerely to Christ; the convictions of
the other doth drive them to the law, and the law to desperation at last.
2. There is a repentance that will not save, a repentance to be repented of; and
a repentance to salvation, not to be repented of. (2 Cor 7:10) Yet so great a
similitude and likeness there is betwixt the one and the other, that most times
the wrong is taken for the right, and through this mistake professors perish.
As, (1.) In saving repentance there will be an acknowledgment of sin; and one
that hath the other repentance may acknowledge his sins also. (Matt 27:4) (2.)
In saving repentance there is a crying out under sin; but one that hath the
other repentance may cry out under sin also. (Gen 4:13) (3.) In saving
repentance there will be humiliation for sin; and one that hath the other
repentance may humble himself also. (1 Kings 21:29) (4.) Saving repentance is
attended with self-loathing; but he that hath the other repentance may have
loathing of sin too; a loathing of sin, because it is sin, that he cannot have;
but a loathing of sin, because it is offensive to him, that he may have. The dog
doth not loath that which troubleth his stomach because it is there, but because
it troubleth him; when it has done troubling of him, he can turn to it again,
and lick it up as before it troubled him. (2 Peter 2:22) (5.) Saving repentance
is attended with prayers and tears; but he that hath none but the other
repentance, may have prayers and tears also. (Gen 27:34,35, Heb 12:16,17) (6.)
In saving repentance there is fear and reverence of the Word and ministers that
bring it; but this may be also where there is none but the repentance that is
not saving; for Herod feared John, knowing that he was a just man and holy, and
observed him; when he heard him, he did many things, and heard him gladly. (Mark
6:20) (7.) Saving repentance makes a man's heart very tender of doing anything
against the Word of God. But Balaam could say, "If Balak would give me his house
full of silver and gold, I cannot go beyond the commandment of the Lord." (Num
24:13)
Behold, then, how far a man may go in repentance, and yet be short of that which
is called, "Repentance unto salvation, not to be repented of." (a.) He may be
awakened; (b.) He may acknowledge his sin; (c.) He may cry out under the burden
of sin; (d.) He may have humility for it; (e.) He may loath it; (f.) May have
prayers and tears against it; (g.) may delight to do many things of God; (h.)
May be afraid of sinning against him—and, after all this, may perish, for want
of saving repentance.
Second. Have they that shall be saved, faith? Why, they that shall not be saved
may have faith also; yea, a faith in many things so like the faith that saveth,
that they can hardly be distinguished, though they differ both in root and
branch. To come to particulars.
1. Saving faith hath Christ for its object, and so may the faith have that is
not saving. Those very Jews of whom it is said they believed on Christ, Christ
tells them, and that after their believing, "Ye are of your father the devil,
and the lusts of your father ye will do." (John 8:30-44) 2. Saving faith is
wrought by the Word of God, and so may the faith be that is not saving. (Luke
8:13) 3. Saving faith looks for justification without works, and so may a faith
do that is not saving. (James 2:18) 4. Saving faith will sanctify and purify the
heart, and the faith that is not saving may work a man off from the pollutions
of the world, as it did Judas, Demas, and others. (2 Peter 2) 5. Saving faith
will give a man tastes of the world to come, and also joy by those tastes, and
so will the faith do that is not saving. (Heb 6:4,5, Luke 8:13) 6. Saving faith
will help a man, if called thereto, to give his body to be burned for his
religion, and so will the faith do that is not saving. (1 Cor 13:1-5) 7. Saving
faith will help a man to look for an inheritance in the world to come, and that
may the faith do that is not saving. All those virgins "took their lamps, and
went forth to meet the bridegroom." (Matt 25:1) 8. Saving faith will not only
make a man look for, but prepare to meet the bridegroom, and so may the faith do
that is not saving. "Then all those virgins arose, and trimmed their lamps."
(Matt 25:7) 9. Saving faith will make a man look for an interest in the kingdom
of heaven with confidence, and the faith that is not saving will even demand
entrance of the Lord. "Lord, Lord, open to us." (Matt 25:11) 10. Saving faith
will have good works follow it into heaven, and the faith that is not saving may
have great works follow it, as far as to heaven gates. "Lord, have we not
prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name
done many wonderful works?" (Matt 7:22)
Now, then, if the faith that is not saving may have Christ for its object, be
wrought by the Word, look for justification without works, work men off from the
pollutions of the world, and give men tastes of, and joy in the things of
another world—I say again, if it will help a man to burn for his judgment, and
to look for an inheritance in another world; yea, if it will help a man to
prepare for it, claim interest in it; and if it can carry great works, many
great and glorious works, as far as heaven gates, then no marvel if abundance of
people take this faith for the saving faith, and so fall short of heaven
thereby. Alas, friends! There are but few that can produce such [works] for
repentance; and such faith, as yet you see I have proved even reprobates have
had in several ages of the church. [17]
But,
Third. They that go to heaven are a praying people; but a man may pray that
shall not be saved. Pray! He may pray, pray daily; yea, he may ask of God the
ordinances of justice, and may take delight in approaching to God; nay, further,
such souls may, as it were, cover the altar of the Lord with tears, with weeping
and crying out. (Isa 28:2, Mal 2:13)
Fourth. Do God's people keep holy fasts? They that are not his people may keep
fasts also—may keep fasts often—even twice a week. "The Pharisee stood, and
prayed thus with himself: God, I thank thee that I am not as other men are,
extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this publican. I fast twice in the
week, I give tithes of all that I possess." (Luke 18:11,12) I might enlarge upon
things, but I intend but a little book. I do not question but many Balaamites
will appear before the judgment-seat to condemnation; men that have had visions
of God, and that knew the knowledge of the Most High; men that have had the
Spirit of God come upon them, and that have by that been made other men; yet
these shall go to the generations of their fathers, they shall never see light.
(Num 24:2,4,16, 1 Sam 10:6,10, Psa 49:19)
I read of some men whose excellency in religion mounts up to the heavens, and
their heads reach unto the clouds, who yet shall perish for ever like their own
dung; and he that in this world hath seen them, shall say at the judgment, Where
are they? (Job 20:5-7) There will be many a one, that were gallant professors in
this world, be wanting among the saved in the day of Christ's coming; yea, many
whose damnation was never dreamed of. Which of the twelve ever thought that
Judas would have proved a devil? Nay, when Christ suggested that one among them
was naught, they each were more afraid of themselves than of him. (Matt
26:21-23) Who questioned the salvation of the foolish virgins? The wise ones did
not; they gave them the privilege of communion with themselves. (Matt 25) The
discerning of the heart, and the infallible proof of the truth of saving grace,
is reserved to the judgment of Jesus Christ at his coming. The church and best
of saints sometimes hit, and sometimes miss in their judgments about this
matter; and the cause of our missing in our judgment is, 1. Partly because we
cannot infallibly, at all times, distinguish grace that saveth from that which
doth but appear to do so. 2. Partly also because some men have the art to give
right names to wrong things. 3. And partly because we, being commanded to
receive him that is weak, are afraid to exclude the least Christian. By a hid
means hypocrites creep into the churches. But what saith the Scripture? "I the
Lord search the heart, I try the reins." And again, "All the churches shall know
that I am he which searcheth the reins and hearts; and I will give unto every
one of you according to your works." (Jer 11:20, 17:10, Rev 2:23) To this
Searcher of hearts is the time of infallible discerning reserved, and then you
shall see how far grace that is not saving hath gone; and also how few will be
saved indeed. The Lord awaken poor sinners by my little book.
[USE AND APPLICATION OF THE WHOLE.]
I come now to make some brief use and application of the whole: and
[USE FIRST.]—My first word shall be to the open profane. Poor sinner, thou
readest here that but a few will be saved; that many that expect heaven will go
without heaven. What sayest thou to this, poor sinner? Let me say it over again.
There are but few to be saved, but very few. Let me add, but few professors— but
few eminent professors. What sayest thou now, sinner? If judgment begins at the
house of God, what will the end of them be that obey not the gospel of God? This
is Peter's question. Canst thou answer it, sinner? Yea, I say again, if judgment
must begin at them, will it not make thee think, What shall become of me? And I
add, when thou shalt see the stars of heaven to tumble down to hell, canst thou
think that such a muck-heap of sin as thou art shall be lifted up to heaven?
Peter asks thee another question, to wit, "If the righteous scarcely be saved,
where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" (1 Peter 4:18) Canst thou answer
this question, sinner? Stand among the righteous thou mayest not: "The ungodly
shall not stand in the judgment, nor sinners in the congregation of the
righteous." (Psa 1:5) Stand among the wicked thou then wilt not dare to do.
Where wilt thou appear, sinner? To stand among the hypocrites will avail thee
nothing. The hypocrite "shall not come before him," that is, with acceptance,
but shall perish. (Job 13:16) Because it concerns thee much, let me over with it
again! When thou shalt see less sinners than thou art, bound up by angels in
bundles, to burn them, where wilt thou appear, sinner? Thou mayest wish thyself
another man, but that will not help thee, sinner. Thou mayest wish, Would I had
been converted in time; but that will not help thee either. And if, like the
wife of Jeroboam, thou shouldst feign thyself to be another woman, the Prophet,
the Lord Jesus, would soon find thee out! What wilt thou do, poor sinner? Heavy
tidings, heavy tidings, will attend thee, except thou repent, poor sinner! (1
Kings 14:2,5,6, Luke 13:3,5) O the dreadful state of a poor sinner, of an open
profane sinner! Everybody that hath but common sense knows that this man is in
the broad way to death, yet he laughs at his own damnation.
Shall I come to particulars with thee?
1. Poor unclean sinner, the "harlot's house is the way to hell, going down to
the chambers of death." (Prov 2:18, 5:5, 7:27)
2. Poor swearing and thievish sinner, God hath prepared the curse, that "every
one that stealeth shall be cut off as on this side according to it; and every
one that sweareth shall be cut off as on that side, according to it." (Zech 5:3)
3. Poor drunken sinner, what shall I say to thee? "Woe to the drunkards of
Ephraim," "woe unto them that are mighty to drink wine, and men of - strong
drink; they shall not inherit the kingdom of heaven." (Isa 28:1, 5:22, 1 Cor
6:9,10)
4. Poor covetous worldly man, God's Word says, that "the covetous the Lord
abhorreth"; that the "covetous man is an idolater"; and that the covetous "shall
not inherit the kingdom of God." (Psa 10:3, Eph 5:5, John 2:15, 1 Cor 6:9,10)
5. And thou liar, what wilt thou do? "All liars shall have their part in the
lake which burneth with fire and brimstone." (Rev 21:8,27)
I shall not enlarge, poor sinner, let no man deceive thee; "for because of these
things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience." (Eph 5:6) I
will therefore give thee a short call, and so leave thee.
Sinner, awake: yea, I say unto thee, awake! Sin lieth at thy door, and God's axe
lieth at thy root, and hell-fire is right underneath thee. (Gen 4:7) I say
again, Awake! "Therefore every tree which bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn
down, and cast into the fire." (Matt 3:10)
Poor sinner, awake; eternity is coming, and HIS SON, they are both coming to
judge the world; awake, art yet asleep, poor sinner? let me set the trumpet to
thine ear once again! The heavens will be shortly on a burning flame; the earth,
and the works thereof, shall be burned up, and then wicked men shall go into
perdition; dost thou hear this, sinner? (2 Peter 3) Hark again, the sweet
morsels of sin will then be fled and gone, and the bitter burning fruits of them
only left. What sayest thou now, sinner? Canst thou drink hell-fire? Will the
wrath of God be a pleasant dish to thy taste? This must be thine every day's
meat and drink in hell, sinner!
I will yet propound to thee God's ponderous question, and then for this time
leave thee: "Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days
that I shall deal with thee?" saith the Lord. (Eze 22:14) What sayest thou? Wilt
thou answer this question now, or wilt thou take time to do it? or wilt thou be
desperate, and venture all? And let me put this text in thine ear to keep it
open; and so the Lord have mercy upon thee: "Upon the wicked shall the Lord rain
snares, fire and brimstone, and an horrible tempest; this shall be the portion
of their cup." (Psa 11:6) Repent, sinners!
[USE SECOND.]—My second word is to them that are upon the potter's wheel;
concerning whom we know not as yet whether their convictions and awakenings will
end in conversion or not. Several things I shall say to you, both to further
your convictions, and to caution you from staying anywhere below or short of
saving grace.
1. Remember that but few shall be saved; and if God should count thee worthy to
be one of that few, what a mercy would that be!
2. Be thankful, therefore, for convictions; conversion begins at conviction,
though all conviction doth not end in conversion. It is a great mercy to be
convinced that we are sinners, and that we need a Saviour; count it therefore a
mercy, and that thy convictions may end in conversion, do thou take heed of
stifling of them. It is the way of poor sinners to look upon convictions as
things that are hurtful; and therefore they use to shun the awakening ministry,
and to check a convincing conscience. Such poor sinners are much like to the
wanton boy that stands at the maid's elbow, to blow out her candle as fast as
she lights it at the fire. Convinced sinner, God lighteth thy candle, and thou
puttest it out; God lights it again, and thou puttest it out. Yea, "how oft is
the candle of the wicked put out?" (Job 21:17) At last, God resolveth he will
light thy candle no more; and then, like the Egyptians, you dwell all your days
in darkness, and never see light more, but by the light of hell-fire; wherefore
give glory to God, and if he awakens thy conscience, quench not thy convictions.
Do it, saith the prophet, "before he cause darkness, and before your feet
stumble upon the dark mountains, and he turn" your convictions "into the shadow
of death, and make them gross darkness." (Jer 13:16)
(1.) Be willing to see the worst of thy condition. It is better to see it here
than in hell; for thou must see thy misery here or there. (2.) Beware of little
sins; they will make way for great ones, and they again will make way for
bigger, upon which God's wrath will follow; and then may thy latter end be worse
than thy beginning. (2 Peter 2:20) (3.) Take heed of bad company, and evil
communication, for that will corrupt good manners. God saith, evil company will
turn thee away from following him, and will tempt thee to serve other gods,
devils. "So the anger of the Lord will be kindled against you, and destroy thee
suddenly." (Deu 7:4) (4.) Beware of such a thought as bids thee delay
repentance, for that is damnable. (Prov 1:24, Zech 7:12,13) (5.) Beware of
taking example by some poor, carnal professor, whose religion lies in the tip of
his tongue. Beware, I say, of the man whose head swims with notions, but "his
life is among the unclean." (Job 36:14) "He that walketh with wise men shall be
wise; but a companion of fools shall be destroyed." (Prov 13:20) (6.) Give
thyself much to the Word, and prayer, and good conference. (7.) Labour to see
the sin that cleaveth to the best of thy performances, and know that all is
nothing if thou be not found in Jesus Christ. (8.) Keep in remembrance that
God's eye is upon thy heart, and upon all thy ways. "Can any hide himself in
secret places that I shall not see him? saith the Lord. Do not I fill heaven and
earth? saith the Lord." (Jer 23:24) (9.) Be often meditating upon death and
judgment. (Eccl 11:9, 12:14) (10.) Be often thinking what a dreadful end sinners
that have neglected Christ will make at that day of death and judgment. (Heb
10:31) (11.) Put thyself often, in thy thoughts, before Christ's judgment-seat,
in thy sins, and consider with thyself, Were I now before my Judge, how should I
look, how should I shake and tremble? (12.) Be often thinking of them that are
now in hell, past all mercy; I say, be often thinking of them, thus: They were
once in the world, as I now am; they once took delight in sin, as I have done;
they once neglected repentance, as Satan would have me do. But now they are
gone; now they are in hell, now the pit hath shut her mouth upon them!
Thou mayest also doubt[18] thy thoughts of the damned thus: If these poor
creatures were in the world again, would they sin as they did before? would they
neglect salvation as they did before? If they had sermons, as I have; if they
had the Bible, as I have; if they had good company, as I have; yea, if they had
a day of grace, as I have, would they neglect it as they did before?
Sinner, couldst thou soberly think of these things, they might help, God
blessing them, to awaken thee, and to keep thee awake to repentance, to the
repentance that is to salvation, never to be repented of.
Object. But you have said few shall be saved; and some that go a great way, yet
are not saved. At this, therefore, I am even discouraged and weakened; I think I
had as good go no further. I am, indeed, under conviction, but I may perish; and
if I go on in my sins, I can but perish; and it is ten, twenty, and an hundred
to one if I be saved, should I be ever so earnest for heaven.
Answ. That few will be saved must needs be a truth, for Christ hath said it;
that many go far, and come short of heaven, is as true, being testified by the
same hand. But what then? "Why, then had I as good never seek." Who told thee
so? Must nobody seek because few are saved? This is just contrary to the text,
that bids us therefore strive; strive to enter in, because the gate is strait,
and because many will seek to enter in, and shall not be able. But why go back
again, seeing that is the next way to hell? Never go over hedge and ditch to
hell. If I must needs go thither, I will go the furthest way about. But who can
tell, though there should not be saved so many as there shall, but thou mayest
be one of that few? They that miss of life perish, because they will not let go
their sins, or because they take up a profession short of the saving faith of
the gospel. They perish, I say, because they are content with such things as
will not prove graces of a saving nature when they come to be tried in the fire.
Otherwise, the promise is free, and full, and everlasting—"Him that cometh to
me," saith Christ, "I will in no wise cast out"; "for God so loved the world,
that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not
perish, but have everlasting life." (John 6:37, 3:16) Wherefore let not this
thought, Few shall be saved, weaken thy heart; but let it cause thee to mend thy
pace, to mend thy cries, to look well to thy grounds for heaven; let it make
thee fly faster from sin to Christ; let it keep thee awake, and out of carnal
security, and thou mayest be saved.
[USE THIRD.]—My third word is to professors. Sirs, give me leave to set my
trumpet to your ears again a little. When every man hath put in all the claim
they can for heaven, but few will have it for their inheritance; I mean but few
professors, for so the text intendeth, and so I have also proved. "For many, I
say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be able." Let me, therefore,
a little expostulate the matter with you, O ye thousands of professors!
1. I begin with you whose religion lieth only in your tongues; I mean you who
are little or nothing known from the rest of the rabble of the world, only you
can talk better than they. Hear me a word or two. If "I speak with the tongues
of men and of angels, and have not charity," that is, love to God, and Christ,
and saints, and holiness, "I am nothing"; no child of God, and so have nothing
to do with heaven. (1 Cor 13:1,2) A prating tongue will not unlock the gates of
haven, nor blind the eyes of the Judge. Look to it. "The wise in heart will
receive commandments; but a prating fool shall fall." [19] (Prov 10:8)
2. Covetous professor, thou that makest a gain of religion, that usest thy
profession to bring grist to thy mill, look to it also. Gain is not godliness.
Judas' religion lay much in the bag, but his soul is now burning in hell. All
covetousness is idolatry; but what is that, or what will you call it, when men
are religious for filthy lucre's sake? (Eze 33:31)
3. Wanton professors, I have a word for you; I mean you that can tell how to
misplead Scripture, to maintain your pride, your banqueting, and abominable
idolatry. Read what Peter says. You are the snare and damnation of others. You
"allure through the lust of the flesh, through much wantonness, those that were
clean escaped from them who live in error." (2 Peter 2:18) Besides, the Holy
Ghost hath a great deal against you, for your feastings, and eating without
fear, not for health, but gluttony. (Jude 12) Further, Peter says, that you that
count it pleasure to riot in the day-time are spots and blemishes, sporting
yourselves with your own deceivings. (2 Peter 2:13) And let me ask, Did God give
his Word to justify your wickedness? or doth grace teach you to plead for the
flesh, or the making provision for the lusts thereof? Of these also are they
that feed their bodies to strengthen their lusts, under pretence of
strengthening frail nature. But pray, remember the text, "Many, I say unto you,
will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
4. I come next to the opinionist; I mean, to him whose religion lieth in some
circumstantials of religion. With this sort this kingdom swarms at this day.
These think all out of the way that are not of their mode, when themselves may
be out of the way in the midst of their zeal for their opinions. Pray, do you
also observe the text; "Many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall
not be able."
5. Neither is the formalist exempted from this number. He is a man that hath
lost all but the shell of religion. He is hot, indeed, for his form; and no
marvel, for that is his all to contend for. But his form being without the power
and spirit of godliness, it will leave him in his sins; nay, he standeth now in
them in the sight of God, and is one of the many that "will seek to enter in,
and shall not be able." (2 Tim 3:5)
6. The legalist comes next, even him that hath no life but what he makes out of
his duties. This man hath chosen to stand or fall by Moses, who is the condemner
of the world. "There is one that accuseth you, even Moses, in whom ye trust."
(John 5:45)
7. There is, in the next place, the libertine—he that pretendeth to be against
forms and duties, as things that gender to bondage, neglecting the order of God.
This man pretends to pray always, but, under that pretence, prays not at all; he
pretends to keep every day a Sabbath, but this pretence serves him only to cast
off all set times for the worship of God. This is also one of the many that
"will seek to enter in, and shall not be able." (Titus 1:16)
8. There is the temporizing latitudinarian. He is a man that hath no God but his
belly, nor any religion but that by which his belly is worshipped. His religion
is always, like the times, turning this way and that way, like the cock on the
steeple; neither hath he any conscience but a benumbed and seared one, and is
next door to a downright atheist; and also is one of the many that "will seek to
enter in, and shall not be able."
9. There is also the willfully ignorant professor, or him that is afraid to know
more, for fear of the cross. He is for picking and choosing of truth, and loveth
not to hazard his all for that worthy name by which he would be called. When he
is at any time overset by arguments, or awakenings of conscience, he uses to
heal all by—I was not brought up in this faith; as if it were unlawful for
Christians to know more than hath been taught them at first conversion. There
are many Scriptures that lie against his man, as the mouths of great guns, and
he is one of the many that "will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
10. We will add to all these, the professor that would prove himself a
Christian, by comparing himself with others, instead of comparing himself with
the Word of God. This man comforts himself, because he is as holy as such and
such; he also knows as such as that old professor, and then concludes he shall
go to heaven: as if he certainly knew, that those with whom he compareth himself
would be undoubtedly saved; but how if he should be mistaken? nay, may they not
both fall short? But to be sure he is in the wrong that hath made the
comparison; and a wrong foundation will not stand in the day of judgment. (2 Cor
10:12) This man, therefore, is one of the many that "will seek to enter in, and
shall not be able."
11. There is yet another professor; and he is for God and for Baal too; he can
be anything for any company; he can throw stones with both hands; his religion
alters as fast as his company; he is a frog of Egypt, and can live in the water
and out of the water; he can live in religious company, and again as well out.
Nothing that is disorderly comes amiss to him; he will hold with the hare, and
run with the hound; he carries fire in the one hand, and water in the other; he
is a very anything but what he should be. This is also one of the many that
"will seek to enter in, and shall not be able." [20]
12. There is also that free-willer, who denies to the Holy Ghost the sole work
in conversion; and that Socinian, who denieth to Christ that he hath made to God
satisfaction for sin; and that Quaker, who takes from Christ the two natures in
his person: and I might add as many more, touching whose damnation, they dying
as they are, the Scripture is plain: these "will seek to enter in, and shall not
be able." But,
[USE FOURTH.]—If it be so, what a strange disappointment will many professors
meet with at the day of judgment! I speak not now to the open profane;
everybody, as I have said, that hath but common understanding between good and
evil, knows that they are in the broad way to hell and damnation, and they must
needs come thither; nothing can hinder it but repentance unto salvation, except
God should prove a liar to save them, and it is hard venturing of that.
Neither is it amiss, if we take notice of the examples that are briefly
mentioned in the Scriptures, concerning professors that have miscarried. 1.
Judas perished from among the apostles. (Acts 1) 2. Demas, as I think, perished
from among the evangelists. (2 Tim 4:10) 3. Diotrephes from among the ministers,
or them in office in the church. (3 John 9) 4. And s for Christian professors,
they have fallen by heaps, and almost by whole churches. (2 Tim 1:15, Rev
3:4,15-17) 5. Let us add to these, that the things mentioned in the Scriptures
about these matters, are but brief hints and items of what is afterwards to
happen; as the apostle said, "Some men's sins are open beforehand, going before
to judgment; and some men they follow after." (1 Tim 5:24)
So that, fellow-professors, let us fear, lest a promise being left us of
entering into this rest, any of us should seem to come short of it. O! to come
short! nothing kills like it, nothing will burn like it. I intend not
discouragements, but awakenings; the churches have need of awakening, and so
have all professors. Do not despise me, therefore, but hear me over again. What
a strange disappointment will many professors meet with at the day of God
Almighty!—a disappointment, I say, and that as to several things.
(1.) They will look to escape hell, and yet fall just into the mouth of hell:
what a disappointment will be here! (2.) They will look for heaven, but the gate
of heaven will be shut against them: what a disappointment is here! (3.) They
will expect that Christ should have compassion for them, but will find that he
hath shut up all bowels of compassion form them: what a disappointment is here!
Again,
[USE FIFTH.]—As this disappointment will be fearful, so certainly it will be
very full of amazement.
1. Will it not amaze them to be unexpectedly excluded from life and salvation?
2. Will it not be amazing to them to see their own madness and folly, while they
consider how they have dallied with their own souls, and took lightly for
granted that they had that grace that would save them, but hath left them in a
damnable state? 3. Will they not also be amazed one at another, while they
remember how in their lifetime they counted themselves fellow-heirs of life? To
allude to that of the prophet, "They shall be amazed one at another, their faces
shall be as flames." (Isa 13:8) 4. Will it not be amazing to some of the damned
themselves, to see some come to hell that then they shall see come thither? to
see preachers of the Word, professors of the Word, practisers in the Word, to
come thither. What wondering was there among them at the fall of the king of
Babylon, since he thought to have swallowed up all, because he was run down by
the Medes and Persians! "How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the
morning! How art thou cut down to the ground which didst weaken the nations!" If
such a thing as this will with amazement surprise the damned, what an amazement
will it be to them to see such a one as he whose head reached to the clouds, to
see him come down to the pit, and perish for ever like his own dung. "Hell from
beneath is moved for thee, to meet thee at thy coming; it stirreth up the dead
for thee, even all the chief ones of the earth." (Isa 14) They that see thee
shall narrowly look upon thee, and consider thee, saying, Is this the man? Is
this he that professed, and disputed, and forsook us; but now he is come to us
again? Is this he that separated from us, but now he is fallen with us into the
same eternal damnation with us?
[USE SIXTH.]—Yet again, one word more, if I may awaken professors. Consider,
though the poor carnal world shall certainly perish, yet they will want these
things to aggravate their sorrow, which thou wilt meet with in every thought
that thou wilt have of the condition thou wast in when thou wast in the world.
1. They will not have a profession, to bite them when they come thither. 2. They
will not have a taste of a lost heaven, to bite them when they come thither. 3.
They will not have the thoughts of, "I was almost at heaven," to bite them when
they come thither. 4. They will not have the thoughts of, how they cheated
saints, ministers, churches, to bite them when they come thither. 5. They will
not have the dying thoughts of false faith, false hope, false repentance, and
false holiness, to bite them when they come thither. I was at the gates of
heaven, I looked into heaven, I thought I should have entered into heaven; O how
will these things sting! They will, if I may call them so, be the sting of the
sting of death in hell-fire.
[USE SEVENTH.]—Give me leave now in a word to give you a little advice.
1. Dost thou love thine own soul? then pray to Jesus Christ for an awakened
heart, for a heart so awakened with all the things of another world, that thou
mayest be allured to Jesus Christ. 2. When thou comest there, beg again for more
awakenings about sin, hell, grace, and about the righteousness of Christ. 3. Cry
also for a spirit of discerning, that thou mayest know that which is saving
grace indeed. 4. Above all studies apply thyself to the study of those things
that show thee the evil of sin, the shortness of man's life, and which is the
way to be saved. 5. Keep company with the most godly among professors. 6. When
thou hearest what the nature of true grace is, defer not to ask thine own heart
if this grace be there. And here take heed—
(1.) That the preacher himself be sound, and of good life. (2.) That thou takest
not seeming graces for real ones, nor seeming fruits for real fruits. (3.) Take
heed that a sin in thy life goes not unrepented of; for that will make a flaw in
thine evidence, a wound in thy conscience, and a breach in thy peace; and a
hundred to one, if at last it doth not drive all the grace in thee into so dark
a corner of thy heart, that thou shalt not be able, for a time, by all the
torches that are burning in the gospel, to find it out to thine own comfort and
consolation. [21]
FOOTNOTES:
[1] However homely this illustration, yet how striking. No family has been many
years without that uneasy anxiety—earnest seeking the doctor to alleviate their
sufferings, or those of a beloved relative, and then the trembling hope that
"his excellent things" may produce the desired effect. Reader, have you had, at
any time, equal anxiety for your soul's health and salvation? What has been the
result?—Ed.
[2] How delightfully but solemnly is this illustrated in the "Pilgrim's
Progress." The wicket-gate, at the head of the way, at which the poor burdened
sinner must knock and obtain an entrance by Christ the door. It may be like
Mercy, with a trembling but sure hope. And then the glorious entrance into the
Celestial City itself, after crossing the river which has no bridge. This was
opened to Christian, but shut against Ignorance and against Turnaway of the Town
of Apostasy.— Ed.
[3] Much confusion appears to exist in the minds of many in reference to the
"strait gate" mentioned in the text, as this passage is frequently introduced
into exhortations to the unconverted. It is addressed exclusively to professors
of religion—to those who profess to have set out for the Celestial City, and
seems to say, Beware of the form of godliness without its power—of the
profession without the possession! For, as old Mason truly said, "They fall
deepest into hell that fall backward." The "striving" here alluded to refers to
the whole course of the believers' life, with its end in view—"We labour to be
accepted of him" "Give diligence," by adding to faith virtue, &c., "to make your
calling and election sure; for so an entrance shall be ministered unto you
abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ."
(2 Peter 1:5-11)
[4] How well does our unlettered author give the meaning of strive, agonize.—Ed.
[5] Reader, while we bless God for being mercifully relieved from those bodily
privations and sufferings through which our pilgrim fathers passed, forget not
that Satan plies all his arts to allure our souls from the narrow path. If we
are saved from tedious imprisonments in damp dungeons—if Antichrist has lost
much of his power, the flatterer is ever at hand to entangle us in his net—the
atheist is ever ready, by his derision and scorn, to drive us back to the City
of Destruction.—Ed.
[6] In the edition printed 1692, "an holiday saint" is used. Saints' days were
holidays upon which the gayest dress was put on; but the outward affectation of
religion in pious company is better expressed by "holiday suit," and I have
followed all the modern editors in concluding that the word "saint" is a
typographical error.—Ed.
[7] See the character of By-ends and his companions in the "Pilgrim's Progress."
[8] O how few professors feel that the judgment of man is as nothing in
comparison with that of a heart-searching God. Thousands would tremble at the
thought of outwardly committing these great crimes, but who inwardly, in spirit,
are daily guilty of them before God. He who is kept by Divine power from
spiritual sins, is alone safe from the commission of carnal sins.—Ed.
[9] It is an awful fact that in every age of the church these "blundering
raw-headed preachers" have abounded. It is a singular appellation to make use of
to those who strut in black, and vainly pride themselves upon being descended
from the apostles. Alas! how many are those whose hearts and heads are raw
indeed as to any influences of vital religion, and whose whole ministry is
calculated to mislead the souls of their fellow-sinners as to their eternal
hopes. Reader, how solemn is our duty to examine what we hear by the unerring
Word—to try all things, and hold fast that only which is good.—Ed.
[10] More particularly in the "Jerusalem Sinner Saved"—"He that would be saved
by Jesus Christ, through faith in his blood, cannot be counted for such," &c.
The sin against the Holy Ghost is an abandonment of Christianity—"to crucify the
Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame." (Heb 6:6) Poor trembler,
wouldst thou crucify the Son of God afresh? If thy conscience says, Never!
never! thou hast not committed this unpardonable sin.—Ed.
[11] The wedding garments being provided by the host, this man must have refused
it, and insults his King by sitting among the guests in his ordinary apparel. O
reader, before you take a seat at the Lord's table, take prayerful care to be
clothed with the robe of righteousness, otherwise you will eat to your utter
condemnation and may, after all, be cast into outer darkness.— Ed.
[12] May these searching words make an indelible impression upon the heart of
every reader. How striking, and alas! how true, is this delineation of
character. Religious when in company with professors—profane when with the
world; pretending to be a Christian on a Sunday; striving to climb with
Christian the Hill Difficulty—every other day running down the hill with
Timorous and Mistrust. Such may get to the bottom of the hill, and hide
themselves in the world; but they can never lie concealed from God's anger,
either in this world, or in the bottomless pit, whither they are hurrying to
destruction.
"Sinner, O why so thoughtless grown?
Why in such dreadful hast to die?"—Ed.
[13] "Tend it," or attend to it. What madness does sin engender and foster! The
trifles of time entirely occupy the attention, while the momentous affairs of
eternity are put off to a more convenient opportunity.—Ed.
[14] Lowth's translation of this passage in Isaiah 6:13 not only confirms
Bunyan, but exhibits his view in a more prominent light:—"And though there be a
tenth part remaining in it, even this shall undergo a repeated destruction; yet
as the ilex and the oak, though cut down, hath its stock remaining, a holy seed
shall be the stock of the nation."—Ed.
[15] How solemn the thought—there is but little wheat in comparison with all the
grass and vegetable produce of the earth; and in the harvest how much chaff and
straw, which grew with the wheat, will be cast out! Well may it be said, Look to
it, professors.—Ed.
[16] The word "faith" was changed in 1737 for "repentance," which has been
continued in subsequent editions; "faith" is right. Awakenings and repentance
are classed together under the first head, and faith under the second.—Ed.
[17] Many readers will cry out, Who then can be saved? Without charity, or the
love of Christ in the heart, all faith and works are but dross. Love is the
touchstone of faith and works—not to glorify ourselves, but him who has bought
us with his own most precious blood. Carry the solemn inquiry to the throne of
grace, Have I passed from death unto life? for whosoever thus liveth believeth
in Christ, and amidst the fatal wreck of professors, he shall never die.—Ed.
[18] "To doubt"; to suspect, make a question of, reconsider.—Ed.
[19] When Talkative asked Faithful what difference there is between crying out
against and abhorring sin, he answered, "O! a great deal; a man may cry out
against sin of policy, but he cannot abhor it but by virtue of a godly antipathy
against it. I have heard many cry out against sin in the pulpit, who yet can
abide it well enough in the heart, house, and conversation."— Pilgrim's
Progress.
[20] Similar to By-ends who never strove for heaven against wind or weather; was
most zealous when religion walked in his silver slippers, and walked with him in
the streets, while the sun shone, and people applauded him.—Pilgrim's Progress.
[21] The striving inculcated in this treatise reminds us of Hopkins' bold appeal
to conscience. He says, "There must be a holy roughness and violence, to break
through all that stands in our way; neither caring for allurements, nor fearing
opposition, but by a pious obstinacy and frowardness, we must thrust away the
one and bear down the other. This is the Christian who will carry heaven by
force, when the whining pusillanimous professor, who only complains of
difficulty, but never attempts to conquer it, will be for ever shut out!"—Ed.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "John Bunyan Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
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