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"Holiness" by J. C. Ryle Table of Contents
Needs of the Times
"Men that had understanding of the times" (1 Chron.
12:32).
These words were written about the tribe of Issachar, in
the days when David first began to reign over Israel. It seems that after
Saul’s unhappy death, some of the tribes of Israel were undecided what to
do. "Under which king?" was the question of the day in Palestine. Men
doubted whether they should cling to the family of Saul, or accept David as
their king. Some hung back, and would not commit themselves; others came
forward boldly, and declared for David. Among these last were many of the
children of Issachar; and the Holy Spirit gives them a special word of
praise. He says, "They were men that had understanding of the times."
I cannot doubt that this sentence, like every sentence in
Scripture, was written for our learning. These men of Issachar are set
before us as a pattern to be imitated, and an example to be followed; for it
is a most important thing to understand the times in which we live, and to
know what those times require. The wise men in the court of Ahasuerus knew
the times (Esther 1:13). Our Lord Jesus Christ blames the Jews, because they
"knew not the time of their visitation," and did not "discern the signs of
the times" (Luke 19:44; Matt. 16:3). Let us take heed lest we fall into the
same sin. The man who is content to sit ignorantly by his own fireside,
wrapped up in his own private affairs, and has no public eye for what is
going on in the church and the world, is a miserable patriot, and a poor
style of Christian. Next to our Bibles and our own hearts, our Lord would
have us study our own times.
1. First and foremost,
the times require of us a bold and unflinching
maintenance of the entire truth of Christianity, and the divine authority of
the Bible.
Our lot is cast in an age of abounding unbelief,
skepticism and, I fear I must add, infidelity. Never, perhaps, since the
days of Celsus, Porphyry and Julian, was the truth of revealed religion so
openly and unblushingly assailed, and never was the assault so speciously
and plausibly conducted. The words which Bishop Butler wrote in 1736 are
curiously applicable to our own days "It is come to be taken for granted by
many people, that Christianity is not even a subject of inquiry, but that it
is now at length discovered to be fictitious. And accordingly they treat it
as if, in the present age, this was an agreed point among all people of
discernment, and nothing remained but to set it up as a principal subject of
mirth and ridicule, as it were by way of reprisals for its having so long
interrupted the pleasures of the world." I often wonder what the good bishop
would have now said, if he had lived in 1879.
In reviews, magazines, newspapers, lectures, essays and
sometimes even in sermons, scores of clever writers are incessantly waging
war against the very foundations of Christianity. Reason, science, geology,
anthropology, modern discoveries, free thought, are all boldly asserted to
be on their side. No educated person, we are constantly told nowadays, can
really believe supernatural religion, or the plenary inspiration of the
Bible, or the possibility of miracles. Such ancient doctrines as the
Trinity, the deity of Christ, the personality of the Holy Spirit, the
atonement, the obligation of the Sabbath, the necessity and efficacy of
prayer, the existence of the devil and the reality of future punishment, are
quietly put on the shelf as useless old almanacs, or contemptuously thrown
overboard as lumber! And all this is done so cleverly, and with such an
appearance of candor and liberality, and with such compliments to the
capacity and nobility of human nature, that multitudes of unstable
Christians are carried away as by a flood, and become partially unsettled,
if they do not make complete shipwreck of faith.
The existence of this plague of unbelief must not
surprise us for a moment. It is only an old enemy in a new dress, an old
disease in a new form. Since the day when Adam and Eve fell, the devil has
never ceased to tempt men not to believe God, and has said, directly or
indirectly, "You shall not die even if you do not believe." In the latter
days especially we have warrant of Scripture for expecting an abundant crop
of unbelief "When the Son of man comes, shall He find faith on the earth?"
"Evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse," "There shall come in the
last days scoffers" (Luke 18:8; 2 Tim. 3:13; 2 Peter 3:3). Here in England
skepticism is that natural rebound from semi–popery and superstition which
many wise men have long predicted and expected. It is precisely that swing
of the pendulum which far–sighted students of human nature looked for; and
it has come.
But as I tell you not to be surprised at the widespread
skepticism of the times, so also I must urge you not to be shaken in mind by
it, or moved from your steadfastness. There is no real cause for alarm. The
ark of God is not in danger, though the oxen seem to shake it. Christianity
has survived the attacks of Hume and Hobbes and Tindal, of Collins and
Woolston and Bolingbroke and Chubb, of Voltaire and Payne and Holyoake.
These men made a great noise in their day, and frightened weak people, but
they produced no more effect than idle travelers produce by scratching their
names on the great pyramid of Egypt. Depend on it, Christianity in like
manner will survive the attacks of the clever writers of these times. The
startling novelty of many modern objections to revelation, no doubt, makes
them seem more weighty than they really are. It does not follow, however,
that hard knots cannot be untied because our fingers cannot untie them, or
formidable difficulties cannot be explained because our eyes cannot see
through or explain them. When you cannot answer a skeptic, be content to
wait for more light; but never forsake a great principle. In religion, as in
many scientific questions, said Faraday, "The highest philosophy is often a
judicious suspense of judgment." He that believes shall not make haste: he
can afford to wait.
When skeptics and infidels have said all they can, we
must not forget that there are three great broad facts which they have never
explained away, and I am convinced they never can, and never will. Let me
tell you briefly what they are. They are very simple facts, and any plain
man can understand them.
a. The first fact is Jesus Christ Himself. If
Christianity is a mere invention of man, and the Bible is not from God, how
can infidels explain Jesus Christ? His existence in history they cannot
deny. How is it that without force or bribery, without arms or money, He has
made such an immensely deep mark on the world as He certainly has? Who was
He? What was He? Where did He come from? How is it that there never has been
one like Him, neither before nor after, since the beginning of historical
times? They cannot explain it. Nothing can explain it but the great
foundation principle of revealed religion, that Jesus Christ is God, and His
gospel is all true.
b. The second fact is the Bible itself. If Christianity
is a mere invention of man, and the Bible is of no more authority than any
other uninspired volume, how is it that the book is what it is? How is it
that a book written by a few Jews in a remote corner of the earth, written
at distant periods without consort or collusion among the writers; written
by members of a nation which, compared to Greeks and Romans, did nothing for
literature—how is it that this book stands entirely alone, and there is
nothing that even approaches it, for high views of God, for true views of
man, for solemnity of thought, for grandeur of doctrine, and for purity of
morality? What account can the infidel give of this book, so deep, so
simple, so wise, so free from defects? He cannot explain its existence and
nature on his principles. We only can do that who hold that the book is
supernatural and of God.
c. The third fact is the effect which Christianity has
produced on the world. If Christianity is a mere invention of man, and not a
supernatural, divine revelation, how is it that it has wrought such a
complete alteration in the state of man kind? Any well–read man knows that
the moral difference between the condition of the world before Christianity
was planted and since Christianity took root is the difference between night
and day, the kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of the devil.
Whenever you are tempted to be alarmed at the progress of
infidelity, look at the three facts I have just mentioned, and cast your
fears away. Take up your position boldly behind the ramparts of these three
facts, and you may safely defy the utmost efforts of modern skeptics. They
may often ask you a hundred questions you cannot answer, and start ingenious
problems about various readings, or inspiration, or geology, or the origin
of man, or the age of the world, which you cannot solve. They may vex and
irritate you with wild speculations and theories, of which at the time you
cannot prove the fallacy, though you feel it. But be calm and fear not.
Remember the three great facts I have named, and boldly challenge skeptics
to explain them away. The difficulties of Christianity no doubt are great;
but, depend on it, they are nothing compared to the difficulties of
infidelity.
2. The times require at our
hands distinct and decided views of Christian doctrine. I cannot
withhold my conviction that the professing church is as much damaged by
laxity and indistinctness about matters of doctrine within, as it is by
skeptics and unbelievers without. Myriads of professing Christians nowadays
seem utterly unable to distinguish things that differ. Like people afflicted
with color blindness, they are incapable of discerning what is true and what
is false, what is sound and what is unsound. If a preacher of religion is
only clever and eloquent and earnest, they appear to think he is all right,
however strange and heterogeneous his sermons may be. They are destitute of
spiritual sense, apparently, and cannot detect error. Popery or
Protestantism, an atonement or no atonement, a personal Holy Spirit or no
Holy Spirit, future punishment or no future punishment, "high" church or
"low" church or "broad" church, Trinitarianism, Arianism, or Unitarianism,
nothing comes amiss to them: they can swallow all, if they cannot digest it!
Carried away by a fancied liberality and charity, they seem to think
everybody is right and nobody is wrong, every clergyman is sound and none
are unsound, everybody is going to be saved and nobody is going to be lost.
Their religion is made up of negatives; and the only positive thing about
them is, that they dislike distinctness, and think all extreme and decided
and positive views are very naughty and very wrong!
These people live in a kind of mist or fog. They see
nothing clearly, and do not know what they believe. They have not made up
their minds about any great point in the gospel, and seem content to be
honorary members of all schools of thought. For their lives they could not
tell you what they think is truth about justification or regeneration or
sanctification or the Lord’s Supper or baptism or faith or conversion or
inspiration or the future state. They are eaten up with a morbid dread of
controversy and an ignorant dislike of "party spirit," and yet they really
cannot define what they mean by these phrases. The only point you can make
out is that they admire earnestness and cleverness and charity, and cannot
believe that any clever, earnest, charitable man can ever be in the wrong!
And so they live on undecided; and too often undecided they drift down to
the grave, without comfort in their religion and, I am afraid, often without
hope.
The explanation of this boneless, nerveless, jellyfish
condition of soul is not difficult to find. To begin with, the heart of man
is naturally in the dark about religion, has no intuitive sense of truth and
really needs instruction and illumination. Beside this, the natural heart in
most men hates exertion in religion and cordially dislikes patient
painstaking inquiry. Above all, the natural heart generally likes the praise
of others, shrinks from collision and loves to be thought charitable and
liberal. The whole result is that a kind of broad religious "agnosticism"
just suits an immense number of people, and specially suits young people.
They are content to shovel aside all disputed points as rubbish, and if you
charge them with indecision, they will tell you, "I do not pretend to
understand controversy; I decline to examine controverted points. I dare say
it is all the same in the long run." Who does not know that such people
swarm and abound everywhere?
Now I do beseech all who read this message to beware of
this undecided state of mind in religion. It is a pestilence which walks in
darkness, and a destruction that kills in noonday. It is a lazy, idle frame
of soul which, doubtless, saves men the trouble of thought and
investigation; but it is a frame of soul for which there is no warrant in
the Bible, nor yet in the Articles or Prayer Book of the Church of England.
For your own soul’s sake dare to make up your mind what you believe, and
dare to have positive distinct views of truth and error. Never, never be
afraid to hold decided doctrinal opinions; and let no fear of man and no
morbid dread of being thought party–spirited, narrow or controversial, make
you rest contented with a bloodless, boneless, tasteless, colorless,
lukewarm, undogmatic Christianity.
Mark what I say. If you want to do good in these times,
you must throw aside indecision, and take up a distinct, sharply cut,
doctrinal religion. If you believe little, those to whom you try to do good
will believe nothing. The victories of Christianity, wherever they have been
won, have been won by distinct doctrinal theology, by telling men roundly of
Christ’s vicarious death and sacrifice, by showing them Christ’s
substitution on the cross and His precious blood, by teaching them
justification by faith and bidding them believe on a crucified Savior, by
preaching ruin by sin, redemption by Christ, regeneration by the Spirit, by
lifting up the bronze serpent, by telling men to look and live, to believe,
repent and be converted. This, this is the only teaching which for eighteen
centuries God has honored with success, and is honoring at the present day
both at home and abroad. Let the clever advocates of a broad and undogmatic
theology—the preachers of the gospel of earnestness and sincerity and cold
morality—let them, I say, show us at this day any English village or parish
or city or town or district, which has been evangelized without "dogma," by
their principles. They cannot do it, and they never will. Christianity
without distinct doctrine is a powerless thing. It may be beautiful to some
minds, but it is childless and barren. There is no getting over facts. The
good that is done in the earth may be comparatively small. Evil may abound
and ignorant impatience may murmur, and cry out that Christianity has
failed. But, depend on it, if we want to "do good" and shake the world, we
must fight with the old apostolic weapons, and stick to "dogma". No dogma,
no fruits! No positive evangelical doctrine, no evangelization!
Mark once more what I say. The men who have done most for
the Church of England, and made the deepest mark on their day and generation
have always been men of most decided and distinct doctrinal views. It is the
bold, decided outspoken man, like Capel Molyneux, or our grand old
Protestant champion Hugh McNeile, who makes a deep impression, and sets
people thinking, and "turns the world upside down". It was "dogma" in the
apostolic ages which emptied the heathen temples, and shook Greece and Rome.
It was "dogma" which awoke Christendom from its slumbers at the time of the
Reformation, and spoiled the pope of one third of his subjects. It was
"dogma" which one hundred years ago revived the Church of England in the
days of Whitefield, Wesley, Venn and Romaine, and blew up our dying
Christianity into a burning flame. It is "dogma" at this moment which gives
power to every successful mission, whether at home or abroad. It is
doctrine—doctrine, clear ringing doctrine—which, like the ram’s horns at
Jericho, casts down the opposition of the devil and sin. Let us cling to
decided doctrinal views, whatever some may please to say in these times, and
we shall do well for ourselves, well for others, well for the Church of
England, and well for Christ’s cause in the world.
3. The times require of us an
awakened and livelier sense of the unscriptural and soul–ruining character
of Romanism.
This is a painful subject, but it imperatively demands
some plain speaking.
The facts of the case are very simple. There is no longer
that general dislike, dread and aversion to popery, which was once almost
universal in this realm. The edge of the old British feeling about
Protestantism seems blunted and dull. Some profess to be tired of all
religious controversy, and are ready to sacrifice God’s truth for the sake
of peace. Some look on Romanism as simply one among many English forms of
religion, and neither worse nor better than others. Some try to persuade us
that Romanism is changed, and not nearly so bad as it used to be. Some
boldly point to the faults of Protestants, and loudly cry that Romanists are
quite as good as ourselves. Some think it fine and liberal to maintain that
we have no right to think anyone wrong who is in earnest about his creed.
And yet the two great historical facts,
(a) that ignorance, immorality and superstition, reigned
supreme in England four hundred years ago under popery,
(b) that the Reformation was the greatest blessing God
ever gave to this land—both these are facts which no one but a papist ever
thought of disputing fifty years ago! In the present day, alas, it is
convenient and fashionable to forget them! In short, at the rate we are
going, I shall not be surprised if it is soon proposed to repeal the Act of
Settlement, and to allow the crown of England to be worn by a papist.
The causes of this melancholy change of feeling are not
hard to discover.
a. It arises partly from the untiring zeal of the Roman
"Catholic" church herself. Her agents never slumber or sleep. They compass
sea and land to make one proselyte. They creep in everywhere, like the
Egyptian frogs, and leave no stone unturned, in the palace or the workhouse,
to promote their cause.
b. It has been furthered immensely by the proceedings of
the ritualistic party in the Church of England. That energetic and active
body has been vilifying the Reformation and sneering at Protestantism for
many years, with only too much success. It has corrupted, leavened, blinded
and poisoned the minds of many churchmen, by incessant misrepresentation. It
has gradually familiarized people with every distinctive doctrine and
practice of Romanism the real presence, the mass, auricular confession and
priestly absolution, the sacerdotal character of the ministry, the monastic
system and a histrionic, sensuous, showy style of public worship; and the
natural result is, that many simple people see no mighty harm in downright
genuine popery! Last, but not least, the spurious liberality of the day we
live in helps on the Romeward tendency. It is fashionable now to say that
all sects should be equal, that the state should have nothing to do with
religion, that all creeds should be regarded with equal favor and respect,
and that there is a substratum of common truth at the bottom of all kinds of
religion, whether Buddhism, Mohammadanism or Christianity! The consequence
is that myriads of ignorant folks begin to think there is nothing peculiarly
dangerous in the tenets of papists any more than in the tenets of
Methodists, Independents, Presbyterians or Baptists, and that we ought to
let Romanism alone, and never expose its unscriptural and Christ dishonoring
character.
The consequences of this changed tone of feeling, I am
bold to say, will be most disastrous and mischievous, unless it can be
checked. Once let popery get her foot again on the neck of England, and
there will be an end of all our national greatness. God will forsake us, and
we shall sink to the level of Portugal and Spain. With Bible reading
discouraged, with private judgment forbidden, with the way to Christ’s cross
narrowed or blocked up, with priestcraft re–established, with auricular
confession set up in every parish, with monasteries and nunneries dotted
over the land, with women everywhere kneeling like serfs and slaves at the
feet of clergymen, with men casting off all faith, and becoming skeptics,
with schools and colleges made seminaries of Jesuitism, with free thought
denounced and anathematized, with all these things the distinctive manliness
and independence of the British character will gradually dwindle, wither,
pine away and be destroyed, and England will be ruined. And all these
things, I firmly believe, will come unless the old feeling about the value
of Protestantism can be revived.
I warn all who read this message, and I warn my fellow
churchmen in particular, that the times require you to awake and be on your
guard. Beware of Romanism, and beware of any religious teaching which,
wittingly or unwittingly, paves the way to it. I beseech you to realize the
painful fact that the Protestantism of this country is gradually ebbing
away, and I entreat you, as Christians and patriots to resist the growing
tendency to forget the blessings of the English Reformation.
For Christ’s sake, for the sake of the Church of England,
for the sake of our country, for the sake of our children, let us not drift
back to Roman "Catholic" ignorance, superstition, priestcraft and
immorality. Our fathers tried Popery long ago, for centuries, and threw it
off at last with disgust and indignation. Let us not put the clock back and
return to Egypt. Let us have no peace with Rome until Rome abjures her
errors, and is at peace with Christ. Until Rome does that, the vaunted
reunion of Western churches, which some talk of, and press upon our notice,
is an insult to Christianity.
Read your Bibles and store your minds with scriptural
arguments. A Bible–reading laity is a nation’s surest defense against error.
I have no fear for English Protestantism if the English laity will only do
their duty. Read your Thirty–nine Articles and Jewell’s Apology, and see how
those neglected documents speak of Roman "Catholic" doctrines. We clergymen,
I fear, are often sadly to blame. We break the first canon, which bids us
preach four times every year against the pope’s supremacy! Too often we
behave as if "Giant Pope" was dead and buried, and never name him. Too
often, for fear of giving offense, we neglect to show our people the real
nature and evil of popery.
I entreat my readers, beside the Bible and Articles, to
read history, and see what Rome did in days gone by. Read how she trampled
on liberties, plundered your forefathers pockets, and kept the whole nation
of England ignorant, superstitious and immoral. Read how Archbishop Laud
ruined church and state, and brought himself and King Charles to the
scaffold by his foolish, obstinate, and God displeasing effort to
unprotestantize the Church of England. Read how the last popish King of
England, James II, lost his crown by his daring attempt to put down
Protestantism and reintroduce popery. And do not forget that Rome never
changes. It is her boast and glory that she is infallible, and always the
same.
Read facts, standing out at this minute on the face of
the globe, if you will not read history. What has made Italy and Sicily what
they were until very lately? Popery. What has made the South American states
what they are? Popery. What has made Spain and Portugal what they are?
Popery. What has made Ireland what she is in Munster, Leinster and Connaught?
Popery. What makes Scotland, the United States, and our own beloved England
the powerful, prosperous countries they are, and I pray God they may long
continue? I answer, unhesitatingly, Protestantism, a free Bible and the
principles of the Reformation. Oh, think twice before you cast aside the
principles of the Reformation! Think twice before you give way to the
prevailing tendency to favor popery and go back to Rome.
The Reformation found Englishmen steeped in ignorance and
left them in possession of knowledge; found them without Bibles and placed a
Bible in every parish; found them in darkness and left them in comparative
tight; found them priest–ridden and left them enjoying the liberty which
Christ bestows; found them strangers to the blood of atonement, to faith and
grace and real holiness, and left them with the key to these things in their
hands; found them blind and left them seeing, found them slaves and left
them free. Forever let us thank God for the Reformation! It lighted a candle
which we ought never to allow to be extinguished or to burn dim. Surely I
have a right to say that the times require of us a renewed sense of the
evils of Romanism, and of the enormous value of the Protestant Reformation!
4. The times require of us a
higher standard of personal holiness, and an increased attention to
practical religion in daily life.
I must honestly declare my conviction that, since the
days of the Reformation, there never has been so much profession of religion
without practice, so much talking about God without walking with Him, so
much hearing God’s words without doing them, as there is in England at this
present date. Never were there so many empty tubs and tinkling cymbals!
Never was there so much formality and so little reality. The whole tone of
men’s minds on what constitutes practical Christianity seems lowered. The
old golden standard of the behavior which becomes a Christian man or woman
appears debased and degenerated. You may see scores of religious people
(so–called) continually doing things which in days gone by would have been
thought utterly inconsistent with vital religion. They see no harm in such
things as card–playing, theater–going, dancing, incessant novel reading and
Sunday traveling, and they cannot in the least understand what you mean by
objecting to them! The ancient tenderness of conscience about such things
seems dying away and becoming extinct, like the dodo; and when you venture
to remonstrate with young communicants who indulge in them, they only stare
at you as an old–fashioned narrow–minded, fossilized person, and say, "Where
is the harm?" In short, laxity of ideas among young men, and "fastness" and
levity among young women, are only too common characteristics of the rising
generation of Christian professors.
Now in saying all this I would not be mistaken. I
disclaim the slightest wish to recommend an ascetic religion. Monasteries,
nunneries, complete retirement from the world , and refusal to do our duty
in it, all these I hold to be unscriptural and mischievous nostrums. Nor can
I ever see my way clear to urging on men an ideal standard of perfection for
which I find no warrant in God’s Word, a standard which is unattainable in
this life, and hands over the management of the affairs of society to the
devil and the wicked. No, I always wish to promote a genial, cheerful, manly
religion, such as men may carry everywhere, and yet glorify Christ.
The pathway to a higher standard of holiness, which I
commend to the attention of my readers, is a very simple one, so simple that
I can fancy many smiling at it with disdain. But, simple as it is, it is a
path sadly neglected and overgrown with weeds, and it is high time to direct
men into it. We need then to examine more closely our good old friends the
Ten Commandments. Beaten out, and properly developed as they were by Bishop
Andrews and the Puritans, the two tables of God’s law are a perfect mine of
practical religion. I think it an evil sign of our day that many clergymen
neglect to have the commandments put up in their new or restored, churches,
and coolly tell you, "They are not wanted now!" I believe they never were
wanted so much! We need to examine more closely such portions of our Lord
Jesus Christ’s teaching as the sermon on the mount. How rich is that
wonderful discourse in food for thought! What a striking sentence that is
"Except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the scribes and
Pharisees, you shall in no case enter the kingdom of heaven!" (Matt. 5:20).
Alas, that text is rarely used. Last, but not least, we need to study more
closely the latter part of nearly all Paul’s Epistles to the churches. They
are far too much slurred over and neglected. Scores of Bible readers, I am
afraid, are well acquainted with the first eleven chapters of the Epistle to
the Romans, but know comparatively little of the five last. When Thomas
Scott expounded the Epistle to the Ephesians at the old Lock Chapel, he
remarked that the congregations became much smaller when he reached the
practical part of that blessed book! Once more I say you may think my
recommendations very simple. I do not hesitate to affirm That attention to
them would, by God’s blessing, be most useful to Christ’s cause. I believe
it would raise the standard of English Christianity about such matters as
home religion, separation from the world, diligence in the discharge of
relative duties, unselfishness, good temper and general
spiritual–mindedness, to a pitch which it seldom attains now.
There is a common complaint in these latter days that
there is a want of power in modern Christianity, and that the true church of
Christ, the body of which He is the Head, does not shake the world in the
nineteenth century as it used to do in former years. Shall I tell you in
plain words what is the reason? It is the low tone of life which is so sadly
prevalent among professing believers. We want more men and women who walk
with God and before God, like Enoch and Abraham. Though our numbers at this
date far exceed those of our evangelical forefathers, I believe we fall far
short of them in our standard of Christian practice. Where is the
self–denial, the redemption of time, the absence of luxury and
self–indulgence, the unmistakable separation from earthly things, the
manifest air of being always about our Master’s business, the singleness of
eye, the simplicity of home life, the high tone of conversation in society,
the patience, the humility, the universal courtesy, which marked so many of
our forerunners seventy or eighty years ago? Yes, where is it indeed? We
have inherited their principles and we wear their armor, but I fear we have
not inherited their practice. The Holy Spirit sees it, and is grieved; and
the world sees it, and despises us. The world sees it, and cares little for
our testimony. It is life, life—a heavenly, godly, Christ–like life—depend
on it, which influences the world. Let us resolve, by God’s blessing, to
shake off this reproach. Let us awake to a clear view of what the times
require of us in this matter. Let us aim at a much higher standard of
practice. Let the time past suffice us to have been content with a
half–and–half holiness. For the time to come, let us endeavor to walk with
God, to be thorough, and unmistakable in our daily life, and to silence, if
we cannot convert, a sneering world.
5. Finally, the times require of
us more regular and steady perseverance in the old ways, of getting good for
our souls.
I think no intelligent Englishman can fail to see that
there has been of late years an immense increase of what I must call, for
want of a better phrase, public religion in the land. Services of all sorts
are strangely multiplied. Places of worship are thrown open for prayer and
preaching and administration of the Lord’s Supper, at least ten times as
much as they were fifty years ago. Services in cathedral naves, meetings in
large public rooms like the Agricultural Hall and Mildmay Conference
Building, mission services carried on day after day and evening after
evening—all these have become common and familiar things. They are, in fact,
established institutions of the day, and the crowds who attend them supply
plain proof that they are popular. In short, we find ourselves face to face
with the undeniable fact that the last quarter of the nineteenth century is
an age of an immense amount of public religion.
Now I am not going to find fault with this. Let no one
suppose that for a moment. On the contrary, I thank God for revival of the
old apostolic plan of "aggressiveness" in religion, and the evident spread
of a desire "by all means to save some" (1 Cor. 9:22). I thank God for
shortened services, home missions and evangelistic movements like that of
Moody and Sankey. Anything is better than torpor, apathy and inaction. If
Christ is preached I rejoice, yes, and will rejoice (Phil. 1:18). Prophets
and righteous men in England once desired to see these things, and never saw
them. If Whitefield and Wesley had been told in their day that a time would
come when English archbishops and bishops would not only sanction mission
services, but take an active part in them, I can hardly think they would
have believed it. Rather, I suspect, they would have been tempted to say,
like the Samaritan nobleman in Elisha’s time, "if the Lord would make
windows in heaven, might this thing be" (2 Kings 7:2).
But while we are thankful for the increase of public
religion, we must never forget that, unless it is accompanied by private
religion, it is of no real solid value, and may even produce most
mischievous effects. Incessant running after sensational preachers,
incessant attendance at hot crowded meetings, protracted to late hours,
incessant craving after fresh excitement and highly spiced pulpit
novelties—all this kind of thing is calculated to produce a very unhealthy
style of Christianity and, in many cases I am afraid, the end is utter ruin
of soul. For, unhappily, those who make public religion everything are often
led away by mere temporary emotions, after some grand display of
ecclesiastical oratory, into professing far more than they really feel.
After this, they can only be kept up to the mark, which they imagine they
have reached, by a constant succession of religious excitements. By and by,
as with opium–eaters and dram–drinkers, there comes a time when their dose
loses its power, and a feeling of exhaustion and discontent begins to creep
over their minds. Too often, I fear, the conclusion of the whole matter is a
relapse into utter deadness and unbelief, and a complete return to the
world. And all results from having nothing but a public religion! Oh, that
people would remember that it was not the wind, or the fire, or the
earthquake, which showed Elijah the presence of God, but "the still small
voice" (1 Kings 19:12).
Now I desire to lift up a warning voice on this subject.
I want to see no decrease of public religion, remember; but I do want to
promote an increase of that religion which is private—private between each
man and his God. The root of a plant or tree makes no show above ground. If
you dig down to it and examine it, it is a poor, dirty, coarse–looking thing
and not nearly so beautiful to the eye as the fruit or leaf or flower. But
that despised root, nevertheless, is the true source of all the life,
health, vigor and fertility which your eyes see, and without it the plant or
tree would soon die. Now private religion is the root of all vital
Christianity. Without it we may make a brave show in the meeting or on the
platform, and sing loud, and shed many tears, and have a name to live and
the praise of man. But without it we have no wedding garment, and are "dead
before God". I tell my readers plainly that the times require of us all more
attention to our private religion.
a. Let us pray more heartily in private, and throw our
whole souls more into our prayers. There are live prayers and there are dead
prayers; prayers that cost us nothing, and prayers which often cost us
strong crying and tears. What are yours? When great professors backslide in
public, and the church is surprised and shocked, the truth is that they had
long ago backslidden on their knees. They had neglected the throne of grace.
b. Let us read our Bibles in private more, and with more
pains and diligence. Ignorance of Scripture is the root of all error, and
makes a man helpless in the hand of the devil. There is less private Bible
reading, I suspect, than there was fifty years ago. I never can believe that
so many English men and women would have been "tossed to and fro with every
wind of doctrine," some falling into skepticism, some rushing into the
wildest and narrowest fanaticism, and some going over to Rome, if there had
not grown up a habit of lazy, superficial, careless, perfunctory reading of
God’s Word. "You do err not knowing the Scriptures" (Matt. 22:29). The Bible
in the pulpit must never supersede the Bible at home.
c. Let us cultivate the habit of keeping up more private
meditation and communion with Christ. Let us resolutely make time for
getting alone occasionally, for talking with our own souls like David, for
pouring out our hearts to our great High Priest, Advocate, and Confessor at
the right hand of God. We want more auricular confession—but not to man. The
confessional we want is not in a box in the vestry, but the throne of grace.
I see some professing Christians always running about after spiritual food,
always in public, and always out of breath and in a hurry, and never
allowing themselves leisure to sit down quietly to digest, and take stock of
their spiritual condition. I am never surprised if such Christians have a
dwarfish, stunted religion and do not grow and if, like Pharaoh’s lean kin,
they look no better for their public religious feasting, but rather worse.
Spiritual prosperity depends immensely on our private religion, and private
religion cannot flourish unless we determine that by God’s help we will make
time, whatever trouble it may cost us, for thought, for prayer, for the
Bible, and for private communion with Christ. Alas! That saying of our
Master is sadly overlooked: "Enter into your closet and shut the door"
(Matt. 6:6).
Our evangelical forefathers had far fewer means and
opportunities than we have. Full religious meetings and crowds, except
occasionally at a church or in a field, when such men as Whitefield or
Wesley or Rowlands preached, these were things of which they knew nothing.
Their proceedings were neither fashionable nor popular, and often brought on
them more persecution and abuse than praise. But the few weapons they used,
they used well. With less noise and applause from man they made, I believe,
a far deeper mark for God on their generation than we do, with all our
conferences, and meetings, and mission rooms, and halls, and multiplied
religious appliances. Their converts, I suspect, like the old–fashioned
cloths and linens, wore better, and lasted longer, and faded less, and kept
color, and were more stable and rooted and grounded than many of the newborn
babes of this day. And what was the reason of all this? Simply, I believe,
because they gave more attention to private religion than we generally do.
They walked closely with God and honored Him in private, and so He honored
them in public. Oh, let us follow them as they followed Christ! Let us go
and do likewise.
Let me now conclude this message with a few words of
practical application.
1. Do you want to understand what the times require of
you in reference to your own soul? Listen, and I will tell you. You live in
times of peculiar spiritual danger. Never perhaps were there more traps and
pitfalls in the way to heaven; never certainly were those traps so
skillfully baited, and those pitfalls so ingeniously made. Mind what you are
about. Look well to your goings. Ponder the paths of your feet. Take heed
lest you come to eternal grief, and ruin your own soul. Beware of practical
infidelity under the specious name of free thought. Beware of a helpless
state of indecision about doctrinal truth under the plausible idea of not
being party–spirited, and under the baneful influence of so–called
liberality and charity. Beware of frittering away life in wishing and
meaning and hoping for the day of decision, until the door is shut, and you
are given over to a dead conscience, and die without hope. Awake to a sense
of your danger. Arise and give diligence to make your calling and election
sure, whatever else you leave uncertain. The kingdom of God is very near.
Christ the almighty Savior, Christ the sinner’s Friend, Christ and eternal
life, are ready for you if you will only come to Christ. Arise and cast away
excuses; this very day Christ calls you. Wait not for company if you cannot
have it; wait for nobody. The times, I repeat, are desperately dangerous. If
only few are in the narrow way of life, resolve that by God’s help you at
any rate will be among the few.
2. Do you want to understand what the times require of
all Christians in reference to the souls of others? Listen, and I will tell
you. You live in times of great liberty and abounding opportunities of doing
good. Never were there so many open doors of usefulness, so many fields
white to the harvest. Mind that you use those open doors, and try to reap
those fields. Try to do a little good before you die. Strive to be useful.
Determine that by God’s help you will leave the world a better world in the
day of your burial than it was in the day you were born. Remember the souls
of relatives, friends and companions; remember that God often works by weak
instruments, and try with holy ingenuity to lead them to Christ. The time is
short the sand is running out of the glass of this old world; then redeem
the time, and endeavor not to go to heaven alone. No doubt you cannot
command success. It is not certain that your efforts to do good will always
do good to others but it is quite certain that they will always do good to
yourself. Exercise, exercise, is one grand secret of health, both for body
and soul. "He that waters shall be watered himself" (Prov. 11:25). It is a
deep and golden saying of our Master’s, but seldom understood in its full
meaning "It is more blessed to give than to receive" (Acts 20:35).
3. In the last place, would you understand what the times
require of you in reference to the Church of England? Listen to me, and I
will tell you. No doubt you live in days when our time–honored church is in
a very perilous, distressing and critical position. Her rowers have brought
her into troubled waters. Her very existence is endangered by papists,
infidels, and liberationists without. Her life–blood is drained away by the
behavior of traitors, false friends and timid officers within. Nevertheless,
so long as the Church of England sticks firmly to the Bible, the Articles,
and the principles of the Protestant Reformation, so long I advise you
strongly to stick to the church. When the Articles are thrown overboard, and
the old flag is hauled down, then, and not until then, it will be time for
you and me to launch the boats and quit the wreck. At present, let us stick
to the old ship.
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