Dated January 1732
SECTION I
The words explained.
Subject: ’Tis the most
absolute and indispensable duty of a people of God to give bountifully and
willingly for the supply of the wants of the needy.
THE duty here enjoined, is
giving to the poor. “If there be among you a poor man of one of thy brethren,
thou shalt not harden thine heart, nor shut thine hand from thy poor brother:
— Thou shalt surely give him.” Here by thy poor brother is to be
understood the same as in other places is meant by neighbor. It is
explained in Lev. 25:35 to mean not only those of their own nation, but even
strangers and sojourners. “And if thy brother be waxen poor, and fallen in
decay with thee; then thou shalt relieve him: yea, though he be a stranger,
or a sojourner.” The Pharisees indeed interpreted it to signify only
one of their own nation. But Christ condemns this interpretation, Luke 10:29,
etc. and teaches, in contradiction to their opinion, that the rules of charity,
in the law of Moses, are to be extended to the Samaritans, who were not of their
nation, and between whom and the Jews there was the most bitter enmity, and who
were a people very troublesome to the Jews.
God gives us direction how
we are to give in such a case, viz. bountifully, and willingly. We
should give bountifully, and sufficiently for the supply of the
poor’s need. Deu. 15:7, 8, “Thou shalt not shut up thine hand from thy poor
brother; but thou shalt open thine hand wide unto him, and lend him sufficient
for his need, in that which he wanteth.” And again, in verse 11, “Thou shalt
open thine hand wide unto thy brother, to thy poor, and to thy needy, in thy
land.” Again, we should give willingly and without grudging. Deu.
15:7, “Thou shalt not harden thine heart from thy poor brother,” And verse
10, “And thine heart shall not be grieved when thou givest him.”
We may also observe how
peremptorily this duty is here enjoined, and how much it is insisted on. It is
repeated over and over again, and enjoined in the strongest terms. Deu. 15:7,
“Thou shalt not harden thine heart, nor shut thine hand from thy poor
brother.” Verse 8, “But thou shalt open thine hand wide unto him.” Verse
10, “Thou shalt surely give him.” Verse 11, “I command thee, saying, Thou
shalt open thine hand wide unto thy brother, to thy poor, and to thy needy.”
Moreover, God strictly warns
against objections, Deu. 15:9, “Beware that there be not a thought in thy
wicked heart, saying, The seventh year, the year of release, is at hand; and
thine eye be evil against thy poor brother, and thou givest him nought, and he
cry unto the Lord against thee, and it be sin unto thee.” The matter
concerning the seventh year, or year of release, was thus: God had given Israel
a law, that every seventh year should be a year of release; that if any man had
lent anything to any of his poor neighbors, if the latter had not been able to
repay it before that year, the former should release it, and should not exact it
of his neighbor, but give it to him. Therefore God warns the children of Israel
against making of this an objection to helping their poor neighbors, that the
year of release was near at hand, and it was not likely that they would be able
to refund it again before that time, and then they should lose it wholly,
because then they would be obliged to release it. God foresaw that the
wickedness of their hearts would be very ready to make such an objection. But
very strictly warns them against it, that they should not be the more backward
to supply the wants of the needy for that, but should be willing to give him.
“Thou shalt be willing to lend, expecting nothing again.”
Men are exceedingly apt to
make objections against such duties, which God speaks of here as a manifestation
of the wickedness of their hearts: “Beware that there be not a thought in thy
wicked heart,” etc. The warning is very strict. God doth not only say, Beware
that thou do not actually refuse to give him, but, Beware that thou have not one
objecting thought against it, arising from a backwardness to liberality. God
warns against the beginnings of uncharitableness in the heart, and against
whatever tends to a forbearance to give. “And thou give him nought, and he cry
unto the Lord against thee, and it be sin unto thee.” God warns them, from the
guilt which they would be liable to bring upon themselves hereby.
We may observe here several enforcements
of this duty. There is a reason of this duty implied in God’s calling him that
is needy, our brother: “Thou shalt not shut thine hand from thy poor brother.”
And Deu. 15:9, “Beware that thine eye be not evil against thy poor brother.”
And verse 11, “Thou shalt open thine hand wide to thy brother.” We
are to look upon ourselves as related to all mankind, but especially to those
who are of the visible people of God. We are to look upon them as brethren, and
to treat them accordingly. We shall be base indeed, if we be not willing to help
a brother in want. — Another enforcement of this duty is the promise of
God, that for this thing he will bless us in all our works, and in all that we
put our hands unto; a promise that we shall not lose, but gain by it (Deu.
15:10). — Another is, that we shall never want proper objects of our charity
and bounty. Verse 11, “For the poor shall never cease out of thy land.” This
God saith to the Jewish church; and the like Christ saith to the Christian
church, Mat. 26:11, “The poor ye have always with you.” This is to cut off
an excuse that uncharitable persons would be ready to make for not giving, that
they could find nobody to give to, that they saw none who needed. God cuts off
such an excuse, by telling us, that he would so order it in his providence, that
his people everywhere, and in all ages, shall have occasion for the exercise of
that virtue.
From this account the
doctrine is obvious, that it is the absolute and indispensable duty of the
people of God, to give bountifully and willingly for supplying the wants of the
needy. — But more particularly,
I. It is the duty of the
people of God to give bountifully for the aforesaid purpose. It is
commanded once and again in the text, “Thou shalt open thine hand wide unto
thy poor brother.” Merely to give something is not sufficient. It answers not
the rule, nor comes up to the holy command of God. But we must open our hand
wide. What we give, considering our neighbor’s wants, and our ability, should
be such as may be called a liberal gift. What is meant in the text by
opening the hand wide, with respect to those that are able, is explained in Deu.
15:8, “Thou shalt open thine hand wide unto him, and shalt surely lend him
sufficient for his want, in that which he needeth.” By lending here, as is
evident by the two following verses, and as we have just now shown, is not only
meant lending to receive again; [for] the word lend in Scripture is
sometimes used for giving; as in Luke 6:35, “Do good and lend, hoping for
nothing again.”
We are commanded, therefore,
to give our poor neighbor what is sufficient for his need. There ought to be
none suffered to live in pinching want, among a visible people of God, who are
able, unless in case of idleness, or prodigality, or some such case which the
Word of God excepts. — It is said that the children of Israel should lend to
the poor, and in the year of release should release what they had lent, save
when there should be no poor among them. It is rendered in the margin, to
the end there be no poor among you; i.e. you should so supply the wants of
the needy, that there may be none among you in pinching want. This translation
seems the more likely to be the true one, because God says, Deu. 15:11, that
there shall be no such time when there shall be no poor, who shall be proper
objects of charity. — When persons give very sparingly, it is no
manifestation of charity, but of a contrary spirit. 2 Cor. 9:5, “Therefore I
thought it necessary to exhort the brethren, that they would go before unto you,
and make up beforehand your bounty, whereof ye had notice before, that the same
might be ready, as a matter of bounty, and not as of covetousness.
II. It is the duty of the
visible people of God to give for the supply of the needy, freely, and
without grudging. It doth not at all answer the rule in the sight of God, if it
be done with an inward grudging, or if the heart be grieved, and it inwardly
hurt the man to give what he gives. “Thou shalt surely give,” says God,
“and thine heart shall not be grieved.” God looks at the heart, and the hand
is not accepted without it. 2 Cor. 9:7, “Every man according as he hath
purposed in his heart, so let him give, not grudgingly, or of necessity; for God
loveth a cheerful giver.”
III. This is a duty to which
God’s people are under very strict obligation. It is not merely a
commendable thing for a man to be kind and bountiful to the poor, but our
bounden duty, as much a duty as it is to pray, or to attend public worship, or
anything else whatever. And the neglect of it brings great guilt upon any
person.
SECTION II
Of the
obligation of Christians to perform the duty of charity to the poor.
THIS duty is
absolutely commanded, and much insisted on, in the Word of God. Where have we
any command in the Bible laid down in stronger terms, and in a more peremptory
urgent manner, than the command of giving to the poor? We have the same law in a
positive manner laid down in Lev. 25:35, etc. “And if thy brother be waxen
poor, and fallen in decay with thee, then thou shalt relieve him; yea, though he
be a stranger or a sojourner, that he may live with thee.” And at the
conclusion of verse 38, God enforces it with saying, I am the Lord thy God.
It is mentioned in
Scripture, not only as a duty, but a great duty. Indeed it is generally
acknowledged to be a duty, to be kind to the needy. But by many it seems not to
be looked upon as a duty of great importance. However, it is mentioned in
Scripture as one of the greater and more essential duties of religion. Mic. 6:8,
“He hath showed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord thy God
require of thee, but to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with
thy God?” Here to love mercy is mentioned as one of the three great
things that are the sum of all religion. So it is mentioned by the apostle
James, as one of the two things wherein pure and undefiled religion consists.
Jam. 1:27, “Pure religion, and undefiled, before God and the Father, is this,
To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself
unspotted from the world.”
So Christ tells us,
it is one of the weightier matters of the law. Mat. 23:23, “Ye have omitted
the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith.” The Scriptures
again and again teach us that it is a more weighty and essential thing than the
attendance on the outward ordinances of worship. Hos. 6:6, “I desired mercy,
and not sacrifice;” Mat. 9:13 and 12:7. I know of scarce any duty which is so
much insisted on, so pressed and urged upon us, both in the Old Testament and
New, as this duty of charity to the poor.
The reason of the
thing strongly obliges to it. It is not only very positively and frequently
insisted on by God, but it most reasonable in itself. And so, on this account,
there is reason why God should much insist upon it.
I. It is most
reasonable, considering the general state and nature of mankind. This is such as
renders it most reasonable that we should love our neighbor as ourselves; for
men are made in the image of our God, and on this account are worthy of our
love. Besides, we are all nearly allied one to another by nature. We have all
the same nature, like faculties, like dispositions, like desires of good, like
needs, like aversion to misery, and are made of one blood. And we are made to
subsist by society and union one with another. Mankind in this respect are as
the members of the natural body, one cannot subsist alone, without an union with
and the help of the rest.
Now, this state of
mankind shows how reasonable and suitable it is, that men should love their
neighbors, and that we should not look everyone at his own things, but every man
also at the things of others, Phil. 2:4. A selfish spirit is very unsuitable to
the nature and state of mankind. He who is all for himself, and none for his
neighbors, deserves to be cut off from the benefit of human society, and to be
turned out among wild beasts, to subsist by himself as well as he can. A private
niggardly spirit is more suitable for wolves, and other beasts of prey, than for
human beings.
To love our
neighbor as ourselves is the sum of the moral law respecting our fellow
creatures. And to help them, and to contribute to their relief is the most
natural expression of this love. It is vain to pretend to a spirit of love to
our neighbors, when it is grievous to us to part with anything for their help,
when under calamity. They who love only in word, and in tongue, and not in deed,
have no love in truth. Any profession without it is a vain pretense. To refuse
to give to the needy, is unreasonable, because we therein do to others contrary
to what we would have others to do to us in like circumstances. We are very
sensible of our own calamities. And when we suffer, [we] are ready enough to
think, that our state requires the compassion and help of others; and are ready
enough to think it hard, if others will not deny themselves in order to help us
when in straits.
II. It is
especially reasonable, considering our circumstances, under such a dispensation
of grace as that of the gospel. Consider how much God hath done for us, how
greatly he hath loved us, what he hath given us, when we were so unworthy, and
when he could have no addition to his happiness by us. Consider that silver, and
gold, and earthly crowns, were in his esteem but mean things to give us, and he
hath therefore given us his own Son. Christ loved and pitied us, when we were
poor, and he laid out himself to help, and even did shed his own blood for us
without grudging. He did not think much to deny himself, and to be at great cost
for us vile wretches, in order to make us rich, and to clothe us with kingly
robes, when we were naked; to feast us at his own table with dainties infinitely
costly, when we were starving; to advance us from the dunghill, and set us among
princes, and make us to inherit the throne of his glory, and so to give us the
enjoyment of the greatest wealth and plenty to all eternity. Agreeably to 2 Cor.
8:9, “For ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich,
yet for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich.”
Considering all these things, what a poor business will it be, that those who
hope to share these benefits, yet cannot give something for the relief of a poor
neighbor without grudging! That it should grieve them to part with a small
matter, to help a fellow servant in calamity, when Christ did not grudge to shed
his own blood for them!
How unsuitable is
it for us, who live only by kindness, to be unkind! What would have become of
us, if Christ had been so saving of his blood, and loth to bestow it, as many
men are of their money or goods? Or if he had been as ready to excuse himself
from dying for us, as men commonly are to excuse themselves from charity to
their neighbor? If Christ would have made objections of such things, as men
commonly object to performing deeds of charity to their neighbor, he would have
found enough of them.
Besides, Christ, by
his redemption, has brought us into a more near relations one to another, hath
made us children of God, children in the same family. We are all brethren,
having God for our common Father; which is much more than to be brethren in any
other family. He hath made us all one body. Therefore we ought to be united, and
subserve one another’s good, and bear one another’s burdens, as is the case
with the members of the same natural body. If one of the members suffer, all the
other members bear the burden with it, 1 Cor. 12:26. If one member be diseased
or wounded, the other members of the body will minister to it, and help it. So
surely it should be in the body of Christ. Gal. 6:2, “Bear ye one another’s
burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.”
Apply these things
to yourselves. And inquire whether you do not lie under guilt on account of the
neglect of this duty, in withholding that charity which God requires of you
towards the needy? You have often been put upon examining yourselves, whether
you do not live in some way displeasing to God. Perhaps at such times it never
came into your minds, whether you do not lie under guilt on this account. —
But this neglect certainly brings guilt upon the soul in the sight of God, as is
evident by the text. “Beware that thine eye be not evil against thy poor
brother, and thou givest him nought, and he cry unto the Lord against thee, and
it be sin unto thee,” Deu. 15:9. This is often mentioned as one of the sins of
Judah and Jerusalem, for which God was about to bring such terrible judgments
upon them. And it was one of the sins of Sodom, for which that city was
destroyed, that she did not give to supply the poor and needy, Eze. 16:49,
“This was the iniquity of thy sister Sodom, pride, fulness of bread, and
abundance of idleness in her, and in her daughters; neither did she strengthen
the hand of the poor and needy.”
And have we not
reason to fear, that much guilt lies upon this land on this very account? We
have a high conceit of ourselves for religion. But do not many other countries
shame us? Do not the papists shame us in this respect? So far as I can
understand the tenor of the Christian religion, and the rules of the Word of
God, the same are in no measure in this respect answered by the general practice
of most people in this land. There are many who make a high profession of
religion. But do not many of them need to be informed by the apostle James, what
true religion is?
Let everyone
examine himself, whether he [does] not lie under guilt in this matter. Have you
not forborne to give when you have seen your brother in want? Have you not
forborne to deny yourselves a little for his relief? Or when you have given,
have you not done it grudgingly? And has it not inwardly hurt and grieved you?
You have looked upon what you have given, as lost. So that what you have given,
has been, as the apostle expresses it, a matter of covetousness, rather than of
bounty. Have not occasions of giving been unwelcome to you? Have you not been
uneasy under them? Have you not felt a considerable backwardness to give? Have
you not, from a grudging, backward spirit, been apt to raise objections against
giving, and to excuse yourselves? Such things as these bring guilt upon the
soul, and often bring down the curse of God upon the persons in whom these
things are found, as we may show more fully hereafter.
SECTION III
An
exhortation to the duty of charity to the poor
WE are professors
of Christianity, we pretend to be the followers of Jesus, and to make the gospel
our rule. We have the Bible in our houses. Let us not behave ourselves in this
particular, as if we had never see the Bible, as if we were ignorant of
Christianity, and knew not what kind of religion it is. What will it signify to
pretend to be Christians, and at the same time to live in the neglect of those
rules of Christianity which are mainly insisted on in it? But there are several
things which I would here propose to your consideration.
I. Consider that
what you have is not your own; i.e. you have only a subordinate right.
Your goods are only lent to you of God, to be improved by you in such ways as he
directs. You yourselves are not your own. 1 Cor. 6:20, “Ye are not your own,
for ye are bought with a price; your body and your spirit are God’s.” And if
you yourselves are not your own, so then neither are your possessions your own.
Many of you have by covenant given up yourselves and all you have to God. You
have disowned and renounced any right in yourselves or in anything that you
have, and have given to God all the absolute right. And if you be true
Christians, you have done it from the heart.
Your money and your
goods are not your own. They are only committed to you as stewards, to be used
for him who committed them to you. 1 Pet. 4:9, 10, “Use hospitality one to
another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God.” A steward has no
business with his master’s goods, to use them any otherwise than for the
benefit of his master and his family, or according to his master’s direction.
He hath no business to use them, as if he were the proprietor of them. He hath
nothing to do with them, only as he is to use them for his master. He is to give
everyone of his master’s family their portion of meat in due season.
But if instead of
that, he hoards up his master’s goods for himself, and withholds them from
those of the household, so that some of the family are pinched for want of food
and clothing. He is therein guilty of robbing his master and embezzling his
substance. And would any householder endure such a steward? If he discovered him
in such a practice, would he not take his goods out of his hands, and commit
them to the care of some other steward, who should give everyone of his family
his portion of meat in due season? Remember that all of us must give account of
our stewardship, and how we have disposed of those goods which our Master has
put into our hands. And if when our Master comes to reckon with us, it be found
that we have denied some of his family their proper provision, while we have
hoarded up for ourselves, as if we had been the proprietors of our Master’s
goods, what account shall we give of this?
II. God tells us,
that he shall look upon what is done in charity to our neighbors in want, as
done unto him; and what is denied unto them, as denied unto him. Pro. 19:17,
“He that hath pity on the poor lendeth to the Lord.” God hath been pleased
to make our needy neighbors his receivers. He in his infinite mercy hath so
interested himself in their case, that he looks upon what is given in charity to
them, as given to himself. And when we deny them what their circumstances
require of us, he looks upon it that we therein rob him of his right.
Christ teaches us,
that we are to look upon our fellow Christians in this case as himself, and that
our giving or withholding from them, shall be taken, as if we so behaved
ourselves towards him; see Mat. 25:40. There Christ says to the righteous on his
right hand, who had supplied the wants of the needy, “In that ye have done it
to one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.” In like
manner he says to the wicked who had not shown mercy to the poor, verse 45,
“Inasmuch as ye did it not unto one of the least of these, ye did it not to
me.” — Now what stronger enforcement of this duty can be conceived, or is
possible, than this, that Jesus Christ looks upon our kind and bountiful, or
unkind and uncharitable, treatment of our needy neighbors, as such a treatment
of himself?
If Christ himself
were upon earth, a dwelt among us in a frail body, as he once did, and were in
calamitous and needy circumstances, should we not be willing to supply him?
Should we be apt to excuse ourselves from helping him? Should we not be willing
to supply him so, that he might live free from distressing poverty? And if we
did otherwise, should we not bring great guilt upon ourselves? And might not our
conduct justly be very highly resented by God? Christ was once here in a frail
body, stood in need of the charity, and was maintained by it. Luke 8:2, 3,
“And certain women which had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities, Mary
called Magdalen, out of whom went seven devils, and Joanna the wife of Chuza,
Herod’s steward, and Susanna, and many others, which ministered unto him of
their substance.” So he still, in many of his members, needs the charity of
others.
III. Consider that
there is an absolute necessity of our complying with the difficult duties of
religion. To give to the poor in the manner and measure that the gospel
prescribes is a difficult duty, i.e. it is very contrary to corrupt
nature, to that covetousness and selfishness of which there is so much in the
wicked heart of man. Man is naturally governed only by a principle of self-love.
And it is a difficult thing to corrupt nature, for men to deny themselves of
their present interest, trusting in God to make it up to them hereafter. — But
how often hath Christ told us the necessity of doing difficult duties of
religion, if we will be his disciples; that we must sell all, take up our cross
daily, deny ourselves, renounce our worldly profits and interests, etc. And if
this duty seem hard and difficult to you, let not that be an objection with you
against doing it. For you have taken up quite a wrong notion of things if you
expect to go to heaven without performing difficult duties; if you expect any
other than to find the way to life a narrow way.
IV. The Scripture
teaches us that this very particular duty is necessary, Particularly,
First,
the Scripture teaches that God will deal with us as we deal with our fellow
creatures in this particular, and that with what measure we mete to others in
this respect, God will measure to us again. This the Scripture asserts both
ways. It asserts that if we be of a merciful spirit, God will be merciful to us.
Mat. 5:7, “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.” Psa.
18:25, “With the merciful thou wilt show thyself merciful.” On the other
hand it tells us, that if we be not merciful, God will not be merciful to us;
and that all our pretenses to faith and a work of conversion will not avail us,
to obtain mercy, unless we be merciful to them that are in want. Jam. 2:13-16,
“For he shall have judgment without mercy, that hath showed no mercy. — What
doth it profit, my brethren, though a man say he hath faith, and have not works?
Can faith save him? If a brother or sister be naked, and destitute of daily
food; and one of you say unto them, Depart in peace, be you warmed, and filled;
notwithstanding ye give them not those things which are needful to the body;
what doth it profit?”
Second,
this very thing is often mentioned in Scripture as an essential part of the
character of a godly man. Psa. 37:21, “The righteous showeth mercy, and giveth.”
And again, verse 26, “He is ever merciful, and lendeth.” Psa. 112:5, “A
good man showeth favour, and lendeth.” And verse 9, “He hath dispersed, and
given to the poor.” So Pro. 14:31, “He that honoureth God, hath mercy on the
poor.” Again, Pro. 21:26 and Isa. 57:1. A righteous man and a merciful
man are used as synonymous terms: “The righteous perisheth, and merciful
men are taken away,” etc.
It is mentioned in
the New Testament as a thing so essential, that the contrary cannot consist with
a sincere love to God. 1 John 3:17-19, “But whoso hath this world’s
goods, and seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his bowels of compassion
from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him? My little children, let us not
love in word, neither in tongue, but in deed and in truth. And hereby we know
that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before him.” So the
apostle Paul, when he writes to the Corinthians, and proposes their contributing
for the supply of the poor saints, tells them what he doth it for, viz. A
trial of their sincerity. See 2 Cor. 8:8, “I speak to prove the sincerity of
your love.”
Third,
Christ teaches that judgment will be past at the great day according to men’s
works in this respect. This is taught us by Christ in the most particular
account of the proceedings of that day, that we have in the whole Bible. See
Mat. 25:34, etc. It is evident that Christ thus represented the proceedings and
determinations of this great day, as turning upon this one point, on purpose,
and on design to lead us into this notion, and to fix it in us, that a
charitable spirit and practice towards our brethren is necessary to salvation.
V. Consider what
abundant encouragement the Word of God gives, that you shall be no losers by
your charity and bounty to them who are in want. As there is scarce any duty
prescribed in the Word of God, which is so much insisted on as this; so there is
scarce any to which there are so many promises of reward made. This virtue
especially hath the promises of this life and that which is to come. If we
believe the Scriptures, when a man charitably gives to his neighbor in want, the
giver has the greatest advantage by it, even greater than the receiver. Acts
20:35, “I have showed you all things, how that so labouring ye ought to
support the weak, and to remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said, It
is more blessed to give than to receive.” He that gives bountifully is a
happier man than he that receives bountifully. Pro. 14:21, “He that hath mercy
on the poor, happy is he.”
Many persons are
ready to look upon what is bestowed for charitable uses as lost. But we ought
not to look upon it as lost, because it benefits those whom we ought to love as
ourselves. And not only so, but it is not lost to us, if we give any
credit to the Scriptures. See the advice that Solomon gives in Ecc. 11:1,
“Cast thy bread upon the waters, for thou shalt find it after many days.” By
casting our bread upon the waters, Solomon means giving it to the poor, as
appears by the next words, “Give a portion to seven, and also to eight.”
Waters are sometimes put for people and multitudes.
What strange advice
would this seem to many, to cast their bread upon the waters, which would seem
to them like throwing it away! What more direct method to lose our bread, than
to go and throw it into the sea? But the wise man tells us, No, it is not lost;
you shall find it again after many days. It is not sunk, but you commit it to
Providence. You commit it to the winds and waves. However it will come about to
you, and you shall find it again after many days. Though it should be many days
first, yet you shall find it at last, at a time when you most need it. He that
giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord. And God is not one of those who will not
pay again what is lent to him. If you lend anything to God, you commit it into
faithful hands. Pro. 19:17, “He that hath pity on the poor lendeth to the
Lord, and that which he hath given will he pay him again.” God will not only
pay you again, but he will pay you with great increase. Luke 6:38, “Give, and
it shall be given you,” that is, in “good measure, pressed down, and shaken
together, and running over.”
Men do not account
that lost, that is let out to use. but what is bestowed in charity is lent to
the Lord, and he repays with great increase. Isa. 32:8, “The liberal deviseth
liberal things, and by liberal things shall he stand.” Here I would
particularly observe,
First,
that if you give with a spirit of true charity, you shall be rewarded in what is
infinitely more valuable than what you give, even eternal riches in heaven. Mat.
10:42, “Whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones, a cup of
cold water only, in the name of a disciple; verily I say unto you, he shall in
no wise lose his reward.”
Giving to our needy
brethren is in Scripture called laying up treasure in heaven, in bags that wax
not old. Luke 12:33, “Sell what ye have and give alms, provide for yourselves
bags that wax not old, a treasure in the heavens that faileth not, where no
thief approacheth, nor moth corrupteth.” Men, when they have laid up their
money in their chests, do not suppose that they have thrown it away. But, on the
contrary, that it is laid up safe. Much less is treasure thrown away, when it is
laid up in heaven. What is laid up there is much safer than what is laid up in
chests or cabinets.
You cannot lay up
treasure on earth, but that it is liable to be stolen, or otherwise to fail. But
there no thief approaches nor moth corrupts. It is committed to God’s care,
and he will keep it safely for you. And when you die, you shall receive it with
infinite increase. Instead of a part of your earthly substance thus bestowed,
you shall receive heavenly riches, on which you may live in the greatest
fullness, honor, and happiness, to all eternity; and shall never be in want of
anything. After feeding with some of your bread those who cannot recompense you,
you shall be rewarded at the resurrection, and eat bread in the kingdom of God.
Luke 14:13-16, “When thou makest a feast, call the poor, the maimed, the lame,
and the blind: and thou shalt be blessed; for they cannot recompense thee: for
thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the just. And when one of them
that sat at meat with him, heard these things, he said unto him, Blessed is he
that shall eat bread in the kingdom of God.”
Second,
if you give to the needy though but in the exercise of moral virtue, you will be
in the way greatly to gain by it in your temporal interest. They who give in the
exercise of a gracious charity, are in the way to be gainers both here
and hereafter; and those that give in the exercise of a moral bounty and
liberality, have many temporal promises made to them. We learn by the Word of
God, that they are in the way to be prospered in their outward affairs.
Ordinarily such do not lose by it, but such a blessing attends their concerns,
that they are paid doubly for it. Pro. 11:24, 25, “There is that scattereth,
and yet increaseth; there is that withholdeth more than is meet, but it tendeth
to poverty. The liberal soul shall be made fat: and he that watereth, shall be
watered also himself.” And Pro. 28:27, “He that giveth to the poor, shall
not lack.”
When men give to
the needy, they do as it were sow seed for a crop. When men sow their seed, they
seem to throw it away. Yet they do not look upon it as thrown away because,
though they expect not the same again, yet they expect much more as the fruit of
it. And if it be not certain that they shall have a crop, yet they are willing
to run the venture of it; for that is the ordinary way wherein men obtain
increase. So it is when persons give to the poor. Though the promises of gaining
thereby, in our outward circumstances, perhaps are not absolute; yet it is as
much the ordinary consequence of it, as increase is of sowing seed. Giving to
the poor is in this respect compared to sowing seed, in Ecc. 11:6, “In the
morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold not thine hand: for thou
knowest not whether shall prosper, either this or that, or whether they both
shall be alike good.” By withholding the hand, the wise man means not giving
to the poor (see verse 1, 2). It intimates, that giving to the poor is as likely
a way to obtain prosperity and increase, as sowing seed in a field.
The husbandman doth
not look upon his seed as lost, but is glad that he has opportunity to sow it.
It grieves him not that he has land to be sown, but he rejoices in it. For the
like reason we should not be grieved that we find needy people to bestow our
charity upon. For this is as much an opportunity to obtain increase as the
other.
Some may think this
is strange doctrine; and it is to be feared, that not many will so far believe
it as to give to the poor with as much cheerfulness as they sow their ground.
However, it is the very doctrine of the Word of God, 2 Cor. 9:6, 7, 8, “But
this I say, He which soweth sparingly, shall reap also sparingly: and he which
soweth bountifully, shall reap also bountifully. Every man according as he
purposeth in his heart, so let him give; not grudgingly, or of necessity: for
God loveth a cheerful giver. And God is able to make all grace abound towards
you; that ye always having all sufficiency in all things, may abound to every
good work.”
It is easy with God
to make up to men what they give in charity. Many but little consider how their
prosperity or ill success in their outward affairs depends upon Providence.
There are a thousand turns of Providence, to which their affairs are liable,
whereby God may either add to their outward substance, or diminish from it, a
great deal more than they are ordinarily called to give to their neighbors. How
easy is it with God to diminish what they possess by sickness in their families,
by drought, or frost, or mildew, or vermin; by unfortunate accidents, by
entanglements in their affairs, or disappointments in their business! And how
easy is it with God to increase their substance, by suitable seasons, or by
health and strength; by giving them fair opportunities for promoting their
interest in their dealings with men; by conducting them in his providence, so
that they attain their designs; and by innumerable other ways which might be
mentioned! How often is it, that only one act of providence in a man’s affairs
either adds to his estate, or diminishes from it, more than he would need to
give to the poor in a whole year.
God hath told us
that this is the way to have his blessing attending our affairs. Thus, in the
text, Deu. 15:10, “Thou shalt surely give him, and thine heart shall not be
grieved when thou givest unto him; because that for this thing the Lord thy God
shall bless thee in all thy works, and all that thou puttest thine hand unto.”
And Pro. 22:9, “He that hath a bountiful eye, shall be blessed.” It is a
remarkable evidence how little many men realize the things of religion, whatever
they pretend; how little they realize that the Scripture is the Word of God, or
if it be, that he speaks true; that notwithstanding all the promises made in the
Scripture to bounty to the poor, yet they are so backward to this duty, and are
so afraid to trust God with a little of their estates. Observation may confirm
the same thing which the Word of God teaches on this head. God, in his
providence, generally smiles upon and prospers those men who are of a liberal,
charitable, bountiful spirit.
Sixth,
God hath threatened to follow with his curse those who are uncharitable to the
poor; as Pro. 28:27, “He that giveth to the poor shall not lack; but he that
hideth his eyes, shall have many a curse.” It is said, he that hideth his
eyes, because this is the way of uncharitable men. They hide their eyes from
seeing the wants of their neighbor. A charitable person, whose heart disposes
him to bounty and liberality, will be quick-sighted to discern the needs of
others. They will not be at any difficulty to find out who is in want. They will
see objects enough of their charity, let them go whither they will.
But, on the
contrary, he that is of a niggardly spirit, so that it goes against the grain to
give anything, he will be always at a loss for objects of his charity. Such men
excuse themselves with this, that they find not anyone to give to. They hide
their eyes, and will not see their neighbor’s wants. If a particular object is
presented, they will not very readily see his circumstances. They are a long
while in being convinced that he is an object of charity. They hide their eyes.
And it is not an easy thing to make them sensible of the necessities and
distresses of their neighbor, or at least to convince them, that his necessities
are such that they ought to give him any great matter.
Other men, who are
of a bountiful spirit, can very easily see the objects of charity. But the
uncharitable are very unapt both to see the proper objects of charity, and to
see their obligations to this duty. The reason is, that they are of that sort
spoken of here by the wise man, they hide their eyes. Men will readily
see, where they are willing to see. But where they hate to see, they will
hide their eyes.
God says, such as
hides his eyes in this case shall have many a curse. Such an one is in the way
to be cursed in soul and body, in both his spiritual and temporal affairs. We
have shown already, how those that are charitable to the poor are in the way of
being blessed. There are so many promises of the divine blessing, that we may
look upon it as much the way to be blessed in our outward concerns, as sowing
seed in a field is the way to have increase. And to be close and uncharitable,
is as much the way to be followed with a curse, as to be charitable is the way
to be followed with a blessing. To withhold more than is meet, tends as much to
poverty, as scattering tends to increase, Pro. 11:24. Therefore, if you withhold
more than is meet, you will cross your own disposition, and will frustrate your
own end. What you seek by withholding from your neighbor, is your own temporal
interest and outward estate. But if you believe the Scriptures to be the Word of
God, you must believe that you cannot take a more direct course to lose, to be
crossed and cursed in your temporal interest, than this of withholding from your
indigent neighbor.
Seventh,
consider that you know not what calamitous and necessitous circumstances you
yourselves or your children may be in. Perhaps you are ready to bless yourselves
in your hearts, as though there were no danger of you being brought into
calamitous and distressing circumstances. There is at present no prospect of it;
and you hope you shall be able to provide well for your children. But you little
consider what a shifting, changing, uncertain world you live in, and how often
it hath so happened, that men have been reduced from the greatest prosperity to
the greatest adversity, and how often the children of the rich have been reduced
to pinching want.
Agreeable to this
is the advice that the wise man gives us, Ecc. 11:1, 2, “Cast thy bread upon
the waters; for thou shalt find it after many days. Give a portion to seven, and
also to eight; for thou knowest not what evil shall be upon earth.” Thou
knowest not what calamitous circumstances thou mayest be in thyself, in this
changeable uncertain world. You know not what circumstances you or your children
may be brought into by captivity, or other unthought-of providences. Providence
governs all things. Perhaps you may trust to your own wisdom to continue your
prosperity. But you cannot alter what God determines and orders in providence,
as in the words immediately following the fore-mentioned text in Ecclesiastes,
“If the clouds be full of rain, they empty themselves upon the earth; and if
the tree fall toward the south, or toward the north; in the place where the tree
falleth, there it shall be;” i.e. you cannot alter the determinations
of Providence. You may trust to your own wisdom for future prosperity. But if
God have ordained adversity, it shall come. As the clouds when full of
rain, empty themselves upon the earth, so what is in the womb of Providence
shall surely come to pass. And as Providence casts the tree, whether towards the
south, or towards the north, whether for prosperity or adversity, there it shall
be, for all that you can do to alter it. Agreeably to what the wise man observes
in Ecc. 7:13, “Consider the work of God; for who can make that straight which
he hath made crooked?”
This consideration,
that you know not what calamity and necessity you may be in yourselves or your
children, tends very powerfully to enforce this duty several ways.
1. This may put you
upon considering how your hearts would be effected, if it should so be. If it
should happen that you or some of your children should be brought into such
circumstances as those of your neighbors, how grievous would it be to you! Now
perhaps you say of this and the other poor neighbor, that they can do well
enough. If they be pinched a little, they can live. Thus you can make light of
their difficulties. But if Providence should so order it, that you or your
children should be brought into the same circumstances, would you make light of
them then? Would you not use another sort of language about it? Would you not
think that your case was such as needed the kindness of your neighbors? Would
you not think that they ought to be ready to help you? And would you not take it
hardly, if you saw a contrary spirit in them, and saw that they made light of
your difficulties?
If one of your
children should be brought to poverty by captivity, *1* or
otherwise, how would your hearts be affected in such a case? If you should hear
that some persons had taken pity on your child, and had been very bountiful to
it, would you not think that they did well? Would you be at all apt to accuse
them of folly or profuseness, that they should give so much to it?
2. If ever there
should be such a time, your kindness to others now will be but a laying up
against such a time. If you yourselves should be brought into calamity and
necessity, then would you find what you have given in charity to others, lying
ready in store for you. Cast thy bread upon the waters, and thou shalt find it
after many days, says the wise man. But when shall we find it? He tells us in
the next verse; “Give a portion to seven, and also to eight; for thou knowest
now what evil shall be upon the earth.” Then is the time when you shall find
it, when the day of evil cometh. You shall again find your bread which you have
cast upon the waters, when you shall want it most, and stand in greatest
necessity of it. God will keep it for you against such a time. When other bread
shall fail, then God will bring to you the bread which you formerly cast upon
the waters, so that you shall not famish. He that giveth to the poor shall not
lack.
Giving to the needy
is like laying up against winter, or against a time of calamity. It is the best
way of laying up for yourselves and for your children. Children in a time of
need very often find their fathers’ bread, that bread which their fathers had
cast upon the waters. Psa. 37:25, “I have been young and now am old, yet have
I not seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread.” Why? What is
the reason of it? It follows in the next verse, “He is ever merciful and
lendeth, and his seed is blessed.”
Whether the time
will ever come or not, that we or our children shall be in distressing want of
bread; yet doubtless evil will be on the earth. We shall have our times of
calamity, wherein we shall stand in great need of God’s pity and help, if not
of that of our fellow creatures. And God hath promised that at such a time, he
that hath been of a charitable spirit and practice, shall find help. Psa.
41:1-4, “Blessed is he that considereth the poor; the Lord will deliver him in
time of trouble. The Lord will preserve him, and keep him alive, and he shall be
blessed upon the earth; and thou wilt not deliver him unto the will of his
enemies. The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing: thou wilt
make all his bed in his sickness.” Such as have been merciful and liberal to
others in their distress, God will not forget it, but will so order it, that
they shall have help when they are in distress. Yea, their children shall reap
the fruit of it in the day of trouble.
3. God hath
threatened uncharitable persons, that if ever they come to be in calamity and
distress they shall be left helpless. Pro. 21:13, “Whoso stoppeth his ears at
the cry of the poor, he shall cry himself and not be heard.”
SECTION IV
Objections
which are sometimes made to the exercise of charity, answered.
I PROCEED now to
answer some OBJECTIONS which are sometimes made against this duty.
OBJECT. I. I am in
a natural condition, and if I should give to the poor, I should not do it with a
right spirit, and so should get nothing by it. — To this I answer,
First,
we have shown already that a temporal blessing is promised to a moral bounty and
liberality. This is the way to be prospered. This is the way to increase. We
find in Scripture many promises of temporal blessings to moral virtues; as to
diligence in our business, to justice in our dealings, to faithfulness, to
temperance. So there are many blessings promised to bounty and liberality.
Second,
you may as well make the same objection against any other duty of religion. You
may as well object against keeping the Sabbath, against prayer, or public
worship, or against doing anything at all in religion. For while in a natural
condition, you do not any of these duties with a right spirit. If you say, you
do these duties because God hath commanded or required them of you, and you
shall sin greatly if you neglect them, you shall increase your guilt, and so
expose yourselves to the greater damnation and punishment. The same may be said
of the neglect of this duty; the neglect of it is as provoking to God.
If you say that you
read, and pray, and attend public worship, because that is the appointed way for
you to seek salvation, so is bounty to the poor, as much as those. — The
appointed way for us to seek the favor of God and eternal life, is the way of
the performance of all known duties, of which giving to the poor is one as much
known, and as necessary, as reading the Scriptures, praying, or any other.
Showing mercy to the poor does as much belong to the appointed way of seeking
salvation, as any other duty whatever. Therefore this is the way in which Daniel
directed Nebuchadnezzar to seek mercy, in Dan. 4:27, “Wherefore, O king, let
my counsel be acceptable to thee, and break off thy sins by righteousness, and
thine iniquities by showing mercy to the poor.”
OBJECT. II. If I be
liberal and bountiful, I shall only make a righteousness of it, and so it will
do me more hurt than good. To this I say,
First,
the same answer may be made to this, as to the former objection, viz.
that you may as well make the same objection against doing any religious or
moral duty at all. If this be a sufficient objection against deeds of charity,
then it is a sufficient objection to prayer. For nothing is more common than for
persons to make a righteousness of their prayers. So it is a good objection
against your keeping the Sabbath, or attending any public worship, or ever
reading in the Bible. For of all these things you are in danger of making a
righteousness. — Yea, of the objection be good against deeds of charity, then
it is as good against acts of justice. And you may neglect to speak the truth,
may neglect to pay your debts, may neglect acts of common humanity; for of all
those things you are in danger of making a righteousness. So that if your
objection be good, you may throw up all religion, and live like heathens or
atheists, and may be thieves, robbers, fornicators, adulterers, murderers, and
commit all the sins that you can think of, lest if you should do otherwise, you
should make a righteousness of your conduct.
Second,
your objection carries it thus, that it is not best for you to do as God
commands and counsels you to do. We find many commands in Scripture to be
charitable to the poor. The Bible is full of them; and you are not excepted from
those commands. God makes no exception of any particular kinds of persons that
are especially in danger of making a righteousness of what they do. And God
often directs and counsels persons to this duty. Now will you presume to say
that God has not directed you to the best way? He has advised you to do thus,
but you think it not best for you, but that it would do you more hurt than good,
if you should do it. You think there is other counsel better than God’s, and
that it is the best way for you to go contrary to God’s commands.
OBJECT. III. I have
in times past given to the poor, but never found myself the better for it. I
have heard ministers preach, that giving to the poor was the way to prosper. But
I perceive not that I am more prosperous than I was before. — Yea, I have met
with many misfortunes, crosses, and disappointments in my affairs since. And it
may be that some will say, That very year, or soon after the very time, I had
been giving to the poor, hoping to be blessed for it, I met with great losses,
and things went hardly with me; and therefore I do not find what I hear preached
about giving to the poor, as being the way to be blessed and prosperous,
agreeable to my experience.
To this objection I
shall answer several things:
First,
perhaps you looked out for the fulfillment of the promise too soon, before you
had fulfilled the condition. As particularly, perhaps you have been so sparing
and grudging in your kindness to the poor, that what you have done has been
rather a discovery of a covetous, niggardly spirit, than of any bounty or
liberality. The promises are not made to every many who gives anything at all to
the poor, let it be ever so little, and after what manner soever given. You
mistook the promises, if you understood them so. A man may give something to the
poor, and yet be entitled to no promise, either temporal or spiritual. The
promises are made to mercy and liberality. But a man may give
something, and yet be so niggardly and grudging in it, that what he gives may
be, as the apostle calls it, a matter of covetousness. What he does may be more
a manifestation of his covetousness and closeness, than anything else. But there
are no promises made to men’s expressing their covetousness.
Perhaps what you
gave was not freely given, but as it were of necessity. It was grudgingly; your
hearts were grieved when you gave. And if you gave once or twice what was
considerable, yet that doth not answer the rule. It may be, for all that, that
in the general course of your lives you have been far from being kind and
liberal to your neighbors. Perhaps you thought that because you once or twice
gave a few shillings to the poor, that then you stood entitled to the promises
of being blessed in all your concerns, and of increasing and being established
by liberal things, though in the general you have lived in a faulty neglect of
the duty of charity. You raise objections from experience, before you have made
trial. To give once, or twice, or thrice, is not to make trial, though you give
considerably. You cannot make any trial unless you become a liberal person, or
unless you become such that you may be truly said to be of a liberal and
bountiful practice. Let one who is truly such, and has been such in the general
course of his life, tell what he hath found by experience.
Second,
if you have been liberal to the poor, and have met with calamities since, yet
how can you tell how much greater calamities and losses you might have met with,
if you had been otherwise? You say you have met with crosses, and
disappointments, and frowns. If you expected to meet with no trouble in the
world, because you gave to the poor, you mistook the matter. Though there be
many and great promises made to the liberal, yet God hath no where promised,
that they shall not find this world a world of trouble. It will be so to all.
Man is born to sorrow, and must expect no other than to meet with sorrow here.
But how can you tell how much greater sorrow you would have met with, if you had
been close and unmerciful to the poor? How can you tell how much greater losses
you would have met with? How much more vexation and trouble would have followed
you? Have none ever met with greater frowns in their outward affairs, than you
have?
Third,
how can you tell what blessings God hath yet in reserve for you if you do but
continue in well-doing? Although God hath promised great blessings to liberality
to the poor, yet he hath not limited himself as to the time of the bestowment.
If you have not yet seen any evident fruit of your kindness to the poor, yet the
time may come when you shall see it remarkably, and that at a time when you most
stand in need of it. You cast your bread upon the waters, and looked for it, and
expected to find it again presently. And sometimes it is so. But this is not
promised. It is promised, “Thou shalt find it again after many days.”
God knows how to choose a time for you, better than you yourselves. You should
therefore wait his time. If you go on in well-doing, God may bring it to you
when you stand most in need.
It may be that
there is some winter a-coming, some day of trouble. And God keeps your bread for
you against that time. And then God will give you good measure, and pressed
down, and shaken together, and running over. We must trust in God’s Word for
the bestowment of the promised reward, whether we can see in what manner it is
done or no. Pertinent to the present purpose are those words of the wise man in
Ecc. 11:4, “He that observeth the winds shall not sow; and he that regardeth
the clouds shall not reap.” In this context the wise man in speaking of
charity to the poor, and comparing it to sowing seed; and advises us to trust
Providence for success in that, as we do in sowing seed. He that regardeth the
winds and clouds, to prognosticate thence prosperity to seed, and will not trust
Providence with it, is not like to sow, nor to have bread-corn. So he that will
not trust Providence for the reward of his charity to the poor is [likely] to go
without the blessing. After the words now quoted, follows his advice, Ecc. 11:6,
“In the morning sow thy seed, and the evening withhold not thine hand; for
thou knowest not whether shall prosper, either this or that, or whether they
both shall be alike good.” — Therefore (Gal. 6:9) “Let us not be weary in
well doing, for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.” You think you
have not reaped yet. Whether you have or not, go on still in giving and doing
good; and if you do so, you shall reap in due time. God only knows the due time,
the best time, for you to reap.
OBJECT. IV. Some
may object against charity to such or such particular persons, that they are not
obliged to give them anything, for though they be needy, yet they are not in
extremity. It is true they meet with difficulty, yet not so but that they can
live, though they suffer some hardships. — But,
It doth not answer
the rules of Christian charity, to relieve those only who are reduced to
extremity, as might be abundantly shown. I shall at this time mention but two
things as evidences of it.
First,
we are commanded to love and treat one another as brethren. 1 Pet. 3:8, “Have
compassion one of another; love as brethren; be pitiful.” Now is it the part
of brethren to refuse to help one another, and to do anything for each other’s
comfort, and for the relief of each other’s difficulties, only when they are
in extremity? Doth it not become brothers and sisters to have a more friendly
disposition one towards another, than this comes to? And to be ready to
compassionate one another under difficulties, though they be not extreme?
The rule of the
gospel is that when we see our brother under any difficulty or burden, we should
be ready to bear the burden with him. Gal. 6:2, “Bear ye one another’s
burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ.” So we are commanded, “by love to
serve one another,” Gal. 5:13. The Christian spirit will make us apt to
sympathize with our neighbor, when we see him under any difficulty. Rom. 12:15,
“Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep.” When our
neighbor is in difficulty, he is afflicted; and we ought to have such a spirit
of love to him, as to be afflicted with him in his affliction. And if we ought
to be afflicted with him, then it will follow that we ought to be ready to
relieve him. Because if we are afflicted with him, in relieving him, we relieve
ourselves. His relief is so far our own relief, as his affliction is our
affliction. Christianity teaches us to be afflicted in our neighbor’s
affliction. And nature teaches us to relieve ourselves when afflicted.
We should behave
ourselves one towards another as brethren that are fellow travelers. For we are
pilgrims and strangers here on earth, and are on a journey. Now, if brethren be
on a journey together, and one meet with difficulty in the way, doth it not
become the rest to help him, not only in the extremity of broken bones, or the
like, but as to provision for the journey if his own fall short? It becomes his
fellow travelers to afford him a supply out of their stores, and not to be over
nice, exact, and fearful lest they give him too much: for it is but provision
for a journey. And all are supplied when they get to their journey’s end.
Second,
that we should relieve our neighbor only when in extremity, is not agreeable to
the rule of loving our neighbor as ourselves. That rule implies that our love
towards our neighbor should work in the same manner, and express itself in the
same ways, as our love towards ourselves. We are very sensible of our own
difficulties. We should also be readily sensible of theirs. From love to
ourselves, when we are under difficulties, and suffer hardships, we are
concerned for our relief, are wont to seek relief, and lay ourselves out for it.
— And as we would love our neighbor as ourselves, we ought in like manner to
be concerned when our neighbor is under difficulty, and to seek his relief. We
are wont to be much concerned about our own difficulties, though we be not
reduced to extremity, and are willing in those cases to lay ourselves out for
our own relief. So, as we would love our neighbor as ourselves, we should in
like manner lay out ourselves to obtain relief for him, though his difficulties
be not extreme.
OBJECT. V. Some may
object against charity to a particular object because he is an ill sort of
person. He deserves not that people should be kind to him. He is of a very ill
temper, of an ungrateful spirit, and particularly, because he hath not deserved
well of them, but has treated them ill, has been injurious to them, and
even now entertains an ill spirit against them.
But we are obliged
to relieve persons in want, notwithstanding these things, both by the general
and particular rules of God’s Word.
First,
we are obliged to do so by the general rules of Scripture. I shall
mention two.
1. That of loving
our neighbor as ourselves. A man may be our neighbor, though he be an ill
sort of man, and even our enemy, as Christ himself teaches us by his discourse
with the lawyer, Luke 10:25, etc. A certain lawyer came to Christ, and asked
him, what he should do to inherit eternal life? Christ asked him, how it was
written in the law? He answers, “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy
heart, and all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and
thy neighbour as thyself.” Christ tells him, that if he shall do thus, he
shall live. But then the lawyer asks him, who is his neighbor? Because it was
received doctrine among the Pharisees, that no man was their neighbor, but their
friends, and those of the same people and religion. — Christ answers him by a
parable, or story of a certain man, who went down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and
fell among thieves, who stripped him of his raiment, and wounded him, and
departed from him, leaving him half dead. Soon after there came a priest that
way, who saw the poor man that had been thus cruelly treated by the thieves; but
passed by without affording him any relief. The same as done by a Levite. —
But a certain Samaritan coming that way, as soon as he saw the half-dead man,
had compassion on him, took him up, bound up his wounds, set him on his own
beast, carried him to the inn, and took care of him, paying the innkeeper money
for his past and future expense. And promising him still more, if he should find
it necessary to be at more expense on behalf of the man.
Then Christ asks
the lawyer, which of these three, the priest, the Levite, or the Samaritan was
neighbor to the man that fell among the thieves. Christ proposed this in such a
manner, that the lawyer could not help owning, that the Samaritan did well in
relieving the Jew, that he did the duty of a neighbor to him. Now, there was an
inveterate enmity between the Jews and the Samaritans. They hated one another
more than any other nation in the world. And the Samaritans were a people
exceedingly troublesome to the Jews. Yet we see that Christ teaches that the
Jews ought to do the part of neighbors to the Samaritans; i.e. to love
them as themselves. For it was that of which Christ was speaking.
And the consequence
was plain. If the Samaritan was neighbor to the distressed Jew, then the Jews,
by a parity of reason, were neighbors to the Samaritans. If the Samaritan did
well, in relieving a Jew that was his enemy, then the Jews would do well in
relieving the Samaritans, their enemies. — What I particularly observe is that
Christ here plainly teaches that our enemies, those that abuse and injure us,
are our neighbors, and therefore come under the rule of loving our neighbor as
ourselves.
2. Another general
rule that obliges us to the same thing is that wherein we are commanded to love
one another, as Christ hath loved us. We have it John 13:34, “A new
commandment I give unto you, that ye love one another; as I have loved you, that
ye also love one another.” Christ calls it a new commandment, with
respect to that old commandment of loving our neighbor as ourselves. This
command of loving our neighbor as Christ hath loved us opens our duty to us in a
new manner, and in a further degree than that did. We must not only love our
neighbor as ourselves, but as Christ hath loved us. We have the same again, John
15:12, “This is my commandment, that ye love one another, as I have loved
you.”
Now the meaning of
this is not that we should love one another to the same degree that
Christ loved us, though there ought to be a proportion, considering our nature
and capacity, but that we should exercise our love one to another in like manner.
As for instance, Christ hath loved us so as to be willing to deny himself, and
to suffer greatly, in order to help us, so should we be willing to deny
ourselves in order to help one another. Christ loved us and showed us great
kindness though we were far below him so should we show kindness to those of our
fellow men who are far below us. Christ denied himself to help us, though we are
not able to recompense him, so should we be willing to lay out ourselves to help
our neighbor, freely expecting nothing again. Christ loved us, was kind to us,
and was willing to relieve us, though we were very evil and hateful, of an evil
disposition, not deserving any good, but deserving only to be hated, and treated
with indignation; so we should be willing to be kind to those who are of an ill
disposition, and are very undeserving. Christ loved us, and laid himself out to
relieve us, though we were his enemies, and had treated him ill. So we, as we
would love one another as Christ hath loved us, should relieve those who are our
enemies, hate us, have an ill spirit toward us, and have treated us ill.
Second,
we are obliged to this duty by many particular rules. We are particularly
required to be kind to the unthankful and to the evil. And therein to follow the
example of our heavenly Father, who causes his sun to rise on the evil and on
the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust. We are obliged, not
only to be kind to them that are so to us, but to them that hate, and that
despitefully use us. I need not mention the particular places which speak to the
effect.
Not but that when
persons are virtuous and pious, and of a grateful disposition, and are friendly
disposed towards us, they are more the objects of our charity for it, and our
obligation to kindness to them is the greater. Yet if things be otherwise, that
doth not render them not fit objects of our charity, nor set us free from
obligation to kindness towards them.
OBJECT. VI. Some
may object from their own circumstances that they have nothing to spare; they
have not more than enough for themselves. — I answer,
First,
it must doubtless be allowed that in some cases persons, by reason of their own
circumstances, are not obliged to give to others. — For instance, if there be
a contribution for the poor, they are not obliged to join in the contribution,
who are in as much need as those are for whom the contribution is made. It
savors of ridiculous vanity in them to contribute with others for such as are
not more needy than they. It savors of a proud desire to conceal their own
circumstances and an affectation of having them accounted about what they in
truth are.
Second,
there are scarcely any who may not make this objection, as they interpret it.
There is no person who may not say, he has not more than enough for himself, as
he may mean by enough. He may intend, that he has not more than he
desires, or more than he can dispose of to his own advantage; or not so much,
but that, if he had anything less, he should look upon himself in worse
circumstances than he is in now. He will own, that he could live if he had less.
But then he will say he could not live so well. Rich men may say they have not
more than enough for themselves, as they may mean by it. They need it all, they
may say, to support their honor and dignity, as is proper for the place and
degree in which they stand. Those who are poor, to be sure, will say, they
have not too much for themselves. Those who are of the middle sort will say, they
have not too much for themselves. And the rich will say, they have not
too much for themselves. Thus there will be none found to give to the poor.
Third.
in many cases, we may, by the rules of the gospel, be obliged to give to others,
when we cannot do it without suffering ourselves. As if our neighbor’s
difficulties and necessities be much greater than our own, and we see that he is
not like to be otherwise relieved, we should be willing to suffer with him, and
to take part of his burden on ourselves. Else how is that rule of bearing one
another’s burdens fulfilled? If we be never obliged to relieve others’
burdens, but when we can do it without burdening ourselves, then how do we bear
our neighbor’s burdens, when we bear no burden at all? Though we may not have
a superfluity, yet we may be obliged to afford relief to others who are in much
greater necessity. As appears by that rule, Luke 3:11, “He that hath two
coats, let him impart to him that hath none; and he that hath meat, let him do
likewise.” — Yea, they who are very poor may be obliged to give for the
relief of others in much greater distress than they. If there be no other way of
relief, those who have the lightest burden are obliged still to take some part
of their neighbor’s burden, to make it the more supportable. A brother may be
obliged to help a brother in extremity, though they are both very much in want.
The apostle commends the Macedonian Christians, that they were liberal to their
brethren, though they themselves were in deep poverty. 2 Cor. 8:1, 2,
“Moreover, brethren, we do you to wit of the grace of God bestowed on the
churches of Macedonia: how in a great trial of affliction, the abundance of
their joy, and their deep poverty, abounded unto the riches of their
liberality.”
Fourth,
those who have not too much for themselves are willing to spare seed to sow,
that they may have fruit hereafter. Perhaps they need that which they scatter in
the field, and seem to throw away. They may need it for bread for their
families. Yet they will spare seed to sow, that they may provide for the future,
and may have increase. But we have already shown that giving to the poor is in
Scripture compared to sowing seed, and is as much the way to increase as the
sowing of seed is. It doth not tend to poverty, but the contrary. It is not the
way to diminish our substance, but to increase it. All the difficulty in this
matter is in trusting God with what we give, in trusting his promises. If men
could but trust the faithfulness of God to his own promises, they would give
freely.
OBJECT. VII. Some
may object concerning a particular person that they do not certainly know
whether he be an object of charity or not. They are not perfectly acquainted
with his circumstances. Neither do they know what sort of man he is. They know
not whether he be in want as he pretends. Or if they know this, they know not
how he came to be in want, whether it were not by his own idleness, or
prodigality. Thus they argue that they cannot be obliged, till they certainly
know these things. — I reply,
First,
this is Nabal’s objection, for which he is greatly condemned in Scripture; see
1 Sam. 25. David in his exiled state came and begged relief of Nabal. Nabal
objected, 1 Sam. 25:10, 11, “Who is David? And who is the son of Jesse? There
be many servants now-a-days that break away every man from his master. Shall I
then take my bread and my water, and my flesh that I have killed for my shearers,
and give it unto men, whom I know not whence they be?” His objection was, that
David was a stranger to him. He did not know who he was, nor what his
circumstances were. He did not know but that he was a runaway. And he was not
obliged to support and harbor a runaway. He objected, that he knew not that he
was a proper object of charity; that he knew not but that he was very much the
contrary.
But Abigail no way
countenanced his behavior herein, but greatly condemned it. She calls him a man
of Belial, and says that he was as his name was. Nabal was his name, and folly
was with him. And her behavior was very contrary to his. And she is greatly
commended for it. The Holy Ghost tells us in that chapter, 1 Sam. 25:3, that
“she was a woman of a good understanding.” At the same time God exceedingly
frowned on Nabal’s behavior on this occasion, as we are informed that about
ten days after God smote Nabal that he died, verse 38.
This story is
doubtless told us partly for this end, to discountenance too great a
scrupulosity as to the object on whom we bestow our charity, and the making of
this merely an objection against charity to others, that we do not certainly
know their circumstances. It is true, when we have opportunity to be certainly
acquainted with their circumstances, it is well to embrace it. And to be
influenced in a measure by probability in such cases, is not to be condemned.
Yet it is better to give to several that are not objects of charity, than to
send away empty one that is.
Second,
we are commanded to be kind to strangers whom we know not, nor their
circumstances. This is commanded in many places. But I shall mention only one.
Heb. 13:2, “Be not forgetful to entertain strangers; for thereby some have
entertained angels unawares.” By strangers here the apostle means one whom we
know not, and whose circumstances we know not; as is evident by these words,
“for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.” Those who entertained
angels unawares, did not know the persons whom they entertained, nor their
circumstances. Else how could it be unawares?
OBJECT. VIII. Some
may say they are not obliged to give to the poor till they ask. If any man is in
necessity, let him come and make known his straits to me, and then it will be
time enough for me to give him. Or if he need a public contribution, let him
come and ask. I do not know that the congregation or church is obliged to
relieve till they ask relief. — I answer,
First,
it surely is the most charitable to relieve the needy in that way wherein we
shall do them the greatest kindness. Now it is certain that we shall do them a
greater kindness by inquiring into their circumstances, and relieving them,
without putting them upon begging. There is none of us but who, if it were their
case, would look upon it more kind in our neighbors, to inquire into our
circumstances, and help us of their own accord. To put our neighbors upon
begging in order to relief, is painful. It is more charitable, more brotherly,
more becoming Christians and the disciples of Jesus, to do it without. I think
this is self-evident, and needs no proof.
Second,
this is not agreeable to the character of the liberal man given in Scripture; viz.
that devises liberal things. Isa. 32:8. It is not to devise liberal things, if
we neglect all liberality till the poor come a begging to us. But to inquire who
stand in need of our charity, and to contrive to relieve them in the way that
shall do them the greatest kindness; that is to devise liberal things.
Third,
we should not commend a man for doing so to his own brother. If a man had an own
brother or sister in great straits, and he were well able to supply them, under
the pretense that if he or she want anything, let them come and ask and I will
give them, we should hardly think such an one behaved like a brother. Christians
are commanded to love as brethren, to look upon one another as brethren in
Christ, and to treat one another as such.
Fourth,
we should commend others for taking a method contrary to that which is proposed
by the objector. If we should hear or read of a people who were so charitable,
who took such care of the poor, and were so concerned that none among them
should suffer, who were proper objects of charity; that they were wont
diligently to inquire into the circumstances of their neighbors, to find out who
were needy, and liberally supplied them of their own accord; I say, if we should
hear or read of such a people, would it not appear well to us? Should not we
have the better thought of that people, on that account?
OBJECT. IX. He has
brought himself to want by his own fault. — In reply, it must be considered
what you mean by his fault.
First,
if you mean a want of a natural faculty to manage affairs to advantage, that is
to be considered as his calamity. Such a faculty is a gift that God bestows on
some, and not on others. And it is not owing to themselves. You ought to be
thankful that God hath given you such a gift, which he hath denied to the person
in question. And it will be a very suitable way for you to show your
thankfulness, to help those to whom that gift is denied, and let them share the
benefit of it with you. This is as reasonable as that he to whom Providence has
imparted sight should be willing to help him to whom sight is denied, and that
he should have the benefit of the sight of others, who has none of his own. Or,
as that he to whom God hath given wisdom, should be willing that the ignorant
should have the benefit of his knowledge.
Second,
if they have been reduced to want by some oversight and are to be blamed that
they did not consider for themselves better, yet that doth not free us from all
obligation to charity towards them. If we should forever refuse to help men
because of that, it would be for us to make their inconsiderateness and
imprudent act, an unpardonable crime, quite contrary to the rules of the gospel,
which insist so much upon forgiveness. — We should not be disposed so highly
to resent such an oversight in any for whom we have a dear affection, as our
children, or our friends. We should not refuse to help them in that necessity
and distress, which they brought upon themselves by their own inconsiderateness.
But we ought to have a dear affection and concern for the welfare of all our
fellow Christians, whom we should, love as brethren, and as Christ hath loved
us.
Third,
if they are come to want by a vicious idleness and prodigality, yet we are not
thereby excused from all obligation to relieve them, unless they continue in
those vices. If they continue not in those vices, the rules of the gospel direct
us to forgive them. And if their fault be forgiven, then it will not remain to
be a bar in the way of our charitably relieving them. If we do otherwise, we
shall act in a manner very contrary to the rule of loving one another as
Christ hath loved us. Now Christ hath loved us, pitied us, and greatly laid
out himself to relieve us from that want and misery which we brought on
ourselves by our own folly and wickedness. We foolishly and perversely threw
away those riches with which we were provided, upon which we might have lived
and been happy to all eternity.
Fourth,
if they continue in the same courses still, yet that doth not excuse us from
charity to their families that are innocent. If we cannot relieve those of their
families without their having something of it, yet that ought not to be a bar in
the way of our charity. And that because it is supposed that those of their
families are proper objects of charity. And those that are so, we are bound to
relieve. The command is positive and absolute. If we look upon that which the
heads of the families have of what we give, to be entirely lost; yet we had
better lose something of our estate, than suffer those who are really proper
objects of charity to remain without relief.
OBJECT. X. Some may
object and say, Others do not their duty. If others did their duty, the poor
would be sufficiently supplied. If others did as much as we in proportion to
their ability and obligation, the poor would have enough to help them out of
their straits. Or some may say, it belongs to others more than it does to us.
They have relations that ought to help them. Or there are others to whom it more
properly belongs than to us.
ANS. We ought to
relieve those who are in want though brought to it through others’ fault. If
our neighbor be poor, though others be to blame that it is so, yet that excuses
us not from helping him. If it belong to others more than to us, yet if those
others will neglect their duty, and our neighbor therefore remains in want, we
may be obliged to relieve him. If a man be brought into straits through the
injustice of others, suppose by thieves or robbers, as the poor Jew whom the
Samaritan relieved; yet we may be obliged to relieve him, though it be not
through our fault that he is in want, but through that of other men. And whether
that fault be a commission or a neglect alters not the case.
As to the poor Jew
that fell among thieves between Jerusalem and Jericho, it more properly belonged
to those thieves who brought him into that distress to relieve him, than to any
other person. Yet seeing they would not do it, others were not excused. And the
Samaritan did no more than his duty, relieving him as he did, though it properly
belonged to others. — Thus if a man have children or other relations, to whom
it most properly belongs to relieve him, yet if they will not do it, the
obligation to relieve him falls upon others. So for the same reason we should do
the more for the relief of the poor, because others neglect to do their
proportion, or what belongs to them. And that because by the neglect of others
to do their proportion they need the more, their necessity is the greater.
OBJECT. XI. The law
makes provision for the poor, and obliges the respective towns in which they
live to provide for them. Therefore some argue that there is no occasion for
particular persons to exercise any charity this way. They say, the case is not
the same with us now as it was in the primitive church. For then Christians were
under a heathen government. And however the charity of Christians in those times
be much to be commended, yet now, by reason of our different circumstances,
there is no occasion for private charity. Because, in the state in which
Christians now are, provision is made for the poor otherwise. — This objection
is built upon these two suppositions, both which I suppose are false.
First,
that the towns are obliged by law to relieve everyone who otherwise would be an
object of charity. This I suppose to be false, unless it be supposed that none
are proper objects of charity, but those that have no estate left to live upon,
which is very unreasonable, and what I have already shown to be false, in answer
to the fourth objection, in showing that it doth not answer the rules of
Christian charity, to relieve only those who are reduced to extremity.
Nor do I suppose it
was ever the design of the law, requiring the various towns to support their own
poor, to cut off all occasion for Christian charity. Nor is it fit there should
be such a law. It is fit that the law should make provision for those that have
no estates of their own. It is not fit that persons who are reduced to that
extremity should be left to so precarious a source of supply as a voluntary
charity. They are in extreme necessity of relief, and therefore it is fit that
there should be something sure for them to depend on. But a voluntary charity in
this corrupt world is an uncertain thing. Therefore the wisdom of the
legislature did not think fit to leave those who are so reduced upon such a
precarious foundation for subsistence. But I suppose not that it was ever the
design of the law to make such provision for all that are in want, as to leave
no room for Christian charity.
Second,
this objection is built upon another supposition which is equally false, viz.
that there are in fact none who are proper objects of charity, but those that
are relieved by the town. Let the design of the law be what it will, yet if
there are in fact persons who are so in want, as to stand in need of our
charity, then that law doth not free us from obligation to relieve them by our
charity. For as we have just now shown, in answer to the last objection, if it
more properly belong to others to relieve them than us; yet if they do it not,
we are not free. So that if it be true, that it belongs to the town to
relieve all who are proper objects of charity; yet if the town in fact do
it not, we are not excused.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's Jonathan Edwards Collection by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
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