
Sermon 9
Christ Alone
Exalted
By
Tobias Crisp
With explanatory notes by John Gill
The New Covenant of Free Grace
Men’s Own Righteousness
Their Grand Idol.
For they being ignorant of God’s righteousness, and going
about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves to the
righteousness of God.” Romans 10:3
Provident and well-wishing pilots, observing the rocks on
which many ignorant and heedless passengers have split and sunk, and where they
themselves have escaped but narrowly, use to set up sea-marks as cautions or
warnings to such as shall come after, that by other men’s harms they may learn
to be wary. It is the apostle’s very practice in this place; in the former part
of this epistle; and especially in chapter 9 he mightily contends for the free
grace of God unto peace, life, and salvation, without works: “The children being
yet unborn, having done neither good nor evil, but that the purpose of God might
stand according to election, not of works, but of grace; it was said, Jacob have
I loved, Esau have I hated: he will have mercy on whom he will have mercy, and
whom he will he hardens:” I say, this is the main doctrine that he preacheth,
from the beginning of the epistle, to the closure of chapter 9.
Then he comes upon the Jews with an argument to their
reproach: “The Gentiles that followed not after righteousness, have attained
unto righteousness, when they themselves that did follow after righteousness
could not attain it:” and he gives the reason why they that pressed so hard
after it could not attain it; “Because they sought it not by faith, but, as it
were, by the works of the law.” Why, what hurt was there in that, will some say?
The apostle answereth, that hereby “they stumbled at that stumbling-block, as it
is written; I lay in Sion a stumbling-stone, and a rock of offence:” This it
seems was the rock of offence; they would have their righteousness set up to do
them good, and this they sought as it were by the works of the law.
But some men might think that the apostle had a bitterness of
spirit, or some malice against his own brethren, and that this was but the fruit
of it; therefore in the beginning of this chapter, he clears himself from any
such base ends in his ministry: for his part he wishes with all his heart, it
may be well with them, My heart’s desire, and prayer for Israel is, that they
may be saved nay, so far as he may speak well of them, and the most he can say,
he will; and he will not conceal any thing: in verse 2, he confesses, nay he
bears witness to it, that “they had a zeal of God;” but yet he must not
dissemble, he must deal friendly, though ever so plainly; though they had a zeal
of God, “Yet it was not according to knowledge.”
And because he had taxed them with ignorance, here in the
text; he discovers what this ignorance of theirs was; and what the fearful and
desperate fruits of it were; that whereof they were ignorant, was “God’s
righteousness, being ignorant of the righteousness of God;” the fruit of it is
twofold, both very bitter, the one immediately issuing from the other.
·
First,
This ignorance of God’s righteousness put them upon a fearful mistake: “They go
about, (upon this,) to establish their own righteousness.”
·
Secondly, And that mistake put them upon another as bad as that, if not worse;
therefore they submitted not to the righteousness of God.
The proposition the words afford us, is briefly this, (for we
will sum up the whole verse into one head) namely; “That ignorance of God’s
righteousness puts men upon these two dangerous mischiefs, an establishing of
their own righteousness, and submitting themselves to the righteousness of God.”
Men will establish their own righteousness; they will not
submit to the righteousness of God, while they are ignorant of it. Beloved, they
were not so easily misled, as we are apt to follow them, having gone before us;
we are like sheep leaping without looking, if any leap before us; it hath been
the rock of offence, a stumbling-stone from the beginning to this day, and will
be to the end of the world; there will be an establishing of our own
righteousness, without submitting to the righteousness of God, while there is an
ignorance of this righteousness.
Now, that we may take warning, and so escape the danger that
they have felt the smart of already, it will be requisite we take into
consideration.
·
First,
What this righteousness of theirs and ours is, that they did, and we are apt to
go about to establish.
·
Secondly, What it is to go about to establish this our righteousness.
·
Thirdly, What this righteousness of God is that they did not submit unto.
·
Fourthly, What it is, not to submit unto this righteousness of God.
·
Fifthly, What this ignorance is, from whence both these fearful evils issue, the
establishing of our own righteousness, and not submitting to the righteousness
of God.
·
And,
Sixthly, What the issue in the end will prove. of these, or as many of these as
the time will permit in their order.
To begin with the first, What is that righteousness of theirs
and ours, that the apostle complains of, that being established, is a rock of
offence?
I am not ignorant, that the eyes of stone persons are only,
or most, upon a righteousness of man’s own devising and contriving; such a
righteousness as never came into God’s thoughts; a righteousness according to
the precepts and traditions of men; such a righteousness as our Saviour, in
Matthew 15:9, taxeth the Pharisees withal, who “Taught for doctrines the
traditions of men;” and by their own traditions, as much as in them lay, made
void the commandments of God: this kind of righteousness in our time proceeds
from the presumption of men, that dare put any thing of their own, without
warrant and commission from God, into the worship and service of God; charging
things upon men as duties of religion, that God binds not men unto: for my own
part, I am dear of the mind, that this kind of righteousness is far from the
righteousness of God, the apostle here speaks of; and that it is the highest
presumption that a man can possibly take upon himself, to set himself so in the
place of God, as not only, not to command from him, but also to command without
and against him: law-givers hole themselves then most disparaged and contemned,
when any inferior will take upon him to make laws without them, or against them.
It will lie heavy when it shall once come to an account, not only upon the
actors, but also upon those that may be the redressers, if this kind of
righteousness established by some be not brought down, and laid in the dust.
But, under favor, I conceive that the apostle aims at a more
sublime righteousness, than the righteousness in the precepts of men; he speaks
of such a righteousness, which some it may be are too forward to establish, who
yet abhor to establish the other, we have now spoken of: the righteousness the
apostle complains of being established, is not the righteousness of man’s
making, but of God’s own making, a righteousness according to his own will; I
mean a righteousness consisting in obedience to the things that God himself hath
commanded unto men; a righteousness which is a walking in all the commandments
of God, though it be in a way of blamelessness; this very righteousness, I say,
is that, which being established, proves a stumbling-stone, and rock of offence
to all that shall establish it.
This may seem harsh, beloved, at first, but I shall make it
clear to you from the apostle’s own interpretation of himself, who best knew his
own mind: that this is the righteousness he here speaks of, mark but the words
immediately following the text, “For, (saith he,) Christ is the end of the law
for righteousness to every one that believeth,” (Rom. 10:4); to what purpose
doth he bring this passage, that Christ is the end of the law; but that by these
words he might confute their vanity, who think to establish their own
righteousness in the fulfilling of the law? As if he should say, you think by
your keeping the law, by your righteousness you perform, you can attain to the
end of it, that so you may obtain the grace and goodness of the Lord; but it is
in vain, it is not you that can reach the end of the law; neither doth God aim
at it that you should reach it, but he hath constituted and ordained Christ to
be the end of it. Therefore the righteousness of God must be the righteousness
of Christ; the righteousness that God aims at is perfect, a righteousness that
reaches to the very end of the law; your righteousness can never reach to the
end of it; it is Christ’s alone that doth it.
And yet again, in verse 5, the apostle clears more fully what
he means by our righteousness, for there he begins to make the distinction
between our righteousness, and the righteousness of God, explaining what they
both are: Moses, saith he, describing the righteousness of the law, saith thus,
(that which he calls our own righteousness, in verse 4, from Moses, he calls the
righteousness of the law, in verse 5,) “He that doth those things shall even
live in them:” and if you will look into Leviticus 18:5, you shall there see
what the righteousness of the law is, which the apostle speaks of in this place:
and if you observe but the margin of your bible, you shall find this very text,
in verse 5, is wisely referred to that of Leviticus, “You shall keep my
statutes, and do my judgments; which if a man do, he shall even live in them.”
See, the apostle makes use of the very phrase, “he that doth them shall live
through them, and in them.” It is the righteousness of the law, saith he; it is
the keeping of God’s statutes, and doing of God’s judgments, saith Moses. By
this, you may see what righteousness it is, that the Lord by the apostle speaks
of; a righteousness that consists in doing the statutes and judgments of the
Lord.
And if you will but consider Luke 18:11 and 12, the condition
of the Pharisee, Christ speaks of, who went up into the temple to pray as the
publican did; in him you shall see, I say, and easily perceive, what the
righteousness was, that they went about to establish; for there the Pharisee
justifies himself in respect of many particular branches of the law: “I thank
thee, (saith he) I am not as other men are, an extortioner, unjust, an
adulterer, nor as this publican: I fast twice in the week, I pay tithes of all
that I possess. Mark it well, I pray, see what it is that he pleads for, as that
which must prevail with God for good to him; it is his own righteousness; and
what is that? It is a righteousness according to the law; it is a righteousness
of piety, of justice; “I fast twice in the week, I am no extortioner, nor unjust
person, nor adulterer,” &c. Now hear Christ’s answer concerning this Pharisee;
you shall see what he thinks of this righteousness he speaks of; “The publican
went away rather justified than he;” and the reason is, because he did go in the
strength of this righteousness of his, to plead with God; his expectation was
from this: it was not a righteousness of his own devising and contriving; but a
righteousness according to God’s law.
If you look further into Philippians 3 you shall find, the
apostle speaks fully to the case in hand, instancing in himself, in verses 5, 6,
and 7, where he gives an account of his estate, in which he was before the time
of his conversion. First, he saith, he had a zeal for God, and that put him on
so hot, that be persecuted the church of God, merely out of ignorance; for,
saith he of himself, “I did it ignorantly:” and “concerning the righteousness of
the law (saith he) I was blameless;” mark that passage well; as all this was
before conversion; afterwards he tells us, this was in the time of his
ignorance, wherein he made full account that this righteousness of his was his
gain; but, saith he, “what was gain to me, I accounted loss; yea, and I suffer
the loss of all things, that I may be found in Christ, not having mine own
righteousness, which is by the law.” By all these passages, I say, put together,
wherein the apostle so fully expounds himself, it plainly appears, that the
righteousness of the law, the establishing whereof; he here taxeth, as a
dangerous mistake, and a fruit of ignorance, is that, wherein men walk according
to God’s own law blamelessly.
I am not ignorant, beloved, how this assertion goeth under
the foul blur of Antinomianism, that blameless walking according to the law,
being established, is a fruit of ignorance, and a cause of men’s not “submitting
to the righteousness of God.” And no marvel it goes for such now; for, in the
apostle’s time it was accounted so; nay, it was objected against the apostle
himself as direct Antinomianism: and, therefore, he was enforced to vindicate
himself thus, “Do we make void the law, (saith he) through faith? God forbid!”
he takes away the objection they put to him, upon his establishing of God’s
righteousness, and his overthrowing our righteousness. It was objected, that
hereby he went about to make void the law; and, therefore, it is no marvel it
holds still as an objection, that the maintaining of this principle is the
overthrowing of the law. But, beloved, I must say to you, as the apostle did in
the same case, “God forbid! yea, we establish the law,” that is to say; in its
right place. It takes men off from performing duties to corrupt ends, and from
the bad use they are apt to make of them; namely, idolizing their own
righteousness. And, therefore, he doth not condemn the use of the law, and our
righteousness, simply: that which he speaks against here is the establishing of
our righteousness. Our own righteousness is good in its kind, and for its own
proper uses; but then it proves a fruit of sin, ignorance, and a dangerous
stumbling-block, and an idol, when we go about to establish it.
I come, therefore, to the second thing, which is to clear
this truth more fully, namely, What it is to establish this righteousness; or
what establishing the apostle drives at in this place?
For the clearing of which, the antithesis, or the opposition,
that he sets, will give you a great deal of light to understand his meaning and
purpose here, by “going about to establish their own righteousness, and not
submitting to the righteousness of God.” He speaks here, therefore, of such an
establishing of our righteousness, according to the law, as to bring it into the
room, and stead, or place of God’s righteousness. It is such an establishing of
it, as that for it we cannot, nor will not admit, that the righteousness of God
should do its office. So far forth, then, as any righteousness of ours
encroaches upon the privileges and prerogatives of the righteousness of God, so
that that cannot do its own work, or at least must be circumscribed in doing it,
by this, so far is there an establishing of our own righteousness, which is a
fruit of ignorance, and is a stumbling-block, and a rock of offence.
It will be worth the while, therefore,
to consider, When our righteousness is said truly to be established in the room
and stead of the righteousness of God. This will be cleared by the consideration
of the main scope and drift of men, in the performing of the righteousness which
they establish. When men put that upon their own righteousness, which should
have been put upon God’s only; when men make that the sanctuary and refuge that
God’s righteousness only should be, then is it set up as a grand idol, and
established in the room and place of God’s righteousness. To clear the case to
you, by some particular instances: it is a thing of great importance, as at all
times, so now at this time of eminent danger, the sword being over our heads,
and over the whole nation (the Lord having revealed to the spirits of men, by
his truth, that in case of eminent danger, there should be a great deal of zeal
to God); that the people of God should be put mightily on, to deal with God in
this present extremity and necessity; but, I am afraid, many
have a zeal of God, in this
very case, but yet, not according to knowledge;
for that too many (ignorantly and zealously, I confess, yet, I say, too many),
in this zeal to God, for their own safety and security, too much establish their
own righteousness: and, I fear, if there be a miscarriage after so many
fasting-days, and so much praying and seeking God, that the fruits will be the
establishing of our own righteousness, in the room and place of the
righteousness of God. As, for example, when sin abounds, whether personally or
generally, what is the way to get off, or get out of such transgression? appeal
to your own spirits, you that are spiritual; is not this your end, you propound?
To fast, and pray, and mourn it out; this that which must bring you a discharge
of your sins; this is that which must bring you tidings that God will be
pacified towards you, that God will turn away his anger from you; if you do but
fast spiritually, mourn bitterly, pray zealously with strength of spirit, this
is that that shall overcome God.
I ask, or I
beseech you rather ask your own spirits (I mean still, you that are spiritual),
Do not your hearts run out continually this way? Do they, or do they not? What,
then mean all the complaints of yours upon the defects of your fastings, your
humiliation, self-denial, and the subduing of your corruptions? That this is
that which pulls down the wrath of God upon us; is not this common among us, as
long as men do not mend, there is no hope that God will? And, if every man would
mend one, this is the way to redress the evil of the times? Beloved, let me deal
plainly and freely with you; they that put deliverance from sin and wrath, upon
the spiritual performances of that righteousness, which the law, commands them,
they put that righteousness in the room and place of the righteousness of God;
they make it as great an idol as can be; for they make it to be that which God’s
righteousness only is. I speak not against the doing of any righteousness
according to the will of God revealed. Let that mouth be for ever stopped, that
shall be opened to blame the law that is holy, just, and good; or shall be the
means to discourse people from walking in the commandments of God blameless.1
All that I speak is this, That it will prove a rock of
offence in the end, if it be not turned from; namely, That we should expect that
our own righteousness should bring down a gracious answer from God to our
spirits; that when we have done our work, in effect, that must prove our
mediator and messenger from God; and, as that will speak, so will we have peace,
or remain in bitterness of spirit. What can the righteousness of God himself do
more than this, to have power with God, to prevail over God for good to us?
Beloved, although some, peradventure, may magnify
performances done in a spiritual way with attributes and titles even of God’s
own peculiar; I mean with attributes of omnipotency and invincibleness;
certainly there is no omnipotency but God himself, and the righteousness that is
God’s own; the best righteousness that ever any man could act, or perform in all
his life, is not able to divert the least effect of sins, or wrath, or procure
or obtain the least smile of favor from God. You know, that “God is a God of
purer eyes, and cannot behold iniquity;” you know, that iniquity is that which
separates between God and a people; now what is the perfect righteousness which
the best man upon earth performs? Is it not full of unrighteousness and
iniquity? “All our righteousnesses (saith the prophet Isaiah) are but as filthy
rags,” (Isa. 64:6); and, saith the apostle, “I account all as dung that I may
win Christ, and be found in him, not having my own righteousness,” (Phil.
3:8,9). Is there dung and filth in the best of man’s righteousness; and can this
righteousness have power with God, and prevail over him?
Look upon Christ himself, when he did bear the sins of many,
upon his own person; he himself was deserted and forsaken of God, “My God, my
God, why hast thou forsaken me?” Is Christ forsaken, when the sins of men are
upon him, and shall men’s persons be accepted and received in respect of such an
act of theirs that carries sinfulness in the face of it? Nay, that carries an
universal leprosy in the nature of it? Suppose your righteousness were a
fulfilling of the whole law of God, if you fail but in one point, that very
failing in one point, makes you guilty of the breach of all the rest; and, when
men stand guilty before God, shall they plead that which is full of guilt, to
procure favor, mercy, or grace from him? No, no, the sacrifice of God, which is
accepted of him, must be a male lamb, and “a lamb without blemish;” till,
therefore, you can purge your righteousness, and separate all iniquity from it,
know that all your righteousness in its own nature doth but separate you from
God; so far is it from prevailing with him.
Surely, will some say, the righteousness that is performed
according to the will of God, pleases him, and moves and melts him, and prevails
with him to do this and that good to his people.
I answer, Too many people in the world too much stunt the
will of God, so much spoken of when they speak of a righteousness according to
it, or a righteousness to do it; what is it? It is true indeed, righteousness
done according to the will of God, infinitely prevails with God; but show me the
man that can perform it, a mere man without Christ? Show me a man that ever did,
or ever can do this, acting righteousness according to the will of God? “Of
myself,” saith Paul, “I can do nothing:” “without me,” saith Christ, “ye can do
nothing;” nay, the apostle goes further, “How to perform that which is good, I
find not,” (Rom. 7:18), whilst men conceive that the will of God consists only
in the materials of righteousness; peradventure they may think theirs is
according to it; but alas the materials of righteousness, are but the least part
of the will of God wherewith he is pleased: now to do an act partly with the
will of God, and partly against it, is this to do an act according to it? To do
something that God calls for at your hands in some things, and to walk directly
contrary to him in others; is this to do his will? Suppose for the matter, the
righteousness you do, be according to the will of God, that you do the thing
that he calls for of you; as for instance, you fast, and pray, and the like; do
you do these things according to the will of God, because the outward act is
done? the will of God extends to the manner of doing, to the disposition of the
person that is to do, as well as to the matter: as in Isaiah 1 were not “New
moons, and sabbaths, and solemn assembles,” God’s own ordinances? And was not
the performance of them materially according to the will of God? Yet,
nevertheless, God loathed this service of righteousness; he was weary of it, he
could not bear it; there was sinfulness mixed with it; “Your hands are full of
blood,” saith the Lord; therefore, though the things were materially according
to his will, yet his soul abhorred them, being done amiss.
Suppose men go further than simply doing things according to
the will of God materially; they do not only the things, but do them
spiritually, with enlargedness of heart and affection; you fast, and you fast
with bitterness of spirit, you eat bitter herbs in fasting; you mourn, and you
mourn bitterly for your transgressions; you pray, and pray zealously; in the
heat and fervor of your spirits: now if all this be not done in faith, it is
abominable; “without faith, it is impossible to please God; he that comes to
God, must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that seek him,”
(Heb. 11:6): he that hath performed a duty, and expects from that performance,
an answer according to his mind, he doth not do it in faith; for “we must do all
we do in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,” saith the apostle; and “when we
have done all, must say, we are unprofitable servants;” and it must be Christ
alone that must prevail with the Father for us: all our righteousness will
prevail nothing at all with God, nor move him a jot, except it be to pull down
wrath: there is not one act of righteousness that a person doth but when that is
finished, there is more transgression belonging to him, than before he had
performed it: and there is no composition, there is no buying out of evil by
good doings; the doing of good doth not make a recompence for what sin doth; we
pay but our debts in doing good; so that as there is a new righteousness
performed, there is still a new reckoning added to the former; by acting of
righteousness, you make up a greater number of sins, (Rom. 14:23) than before;
so that it is only Christ from whom we must have the expectation of success, in
whatsoever thing we desire.
In a word, let a man’s righteousness be never so exact; yet
that is not according to the will of God, which hath not God’s ends, which he
proposeth in the doing of righteousness: you shall find the general rule of
Christ and his apostles, to be this, that what we do, we must not only do it in
the name of Christ, but also to the Lord, and for the Lord: “Being delivered out
of the hands of our enemies, let us serve him in holiness and righteousness,”
(Luke 1:74,75); it is not, let us serve ourselves in holiness and righteousness,
but let us serve him; “You are bought with a price, therefore,” saith the
apostle, “glorify God in your bodies and spirits, for they are God’s;” he doth
not say, being bought with a price, let us, now seek our own good, as if we were
still our own men; as if we had now liberty to trade for our own selves; you are
“not your own,” and therefore not your own, because you are “bought with a
price;” therefore “glorify God in your bodies and spirits.” It is most certainly
true, that God having provided through Christ all things appertaining to life
and godliness for his people; thereby calls them off from all self-ends, and
by-respects in his services, to have only respect to him in them; he hath done
all that may be done for yourselves.
But some may say, peradventure, this is a way to overthrow
all righteousness at once: what, all that ever a man doth, though he doth ever
so spiritually, though ever so exactly, to no purpose, and in vain? Doth a man
get nothing by all the righteousness he performs? Then we had as good sit still,
and do nothing at all, will some say.
I answer, this is carnal reasoning indeed; look but into the
ground of this argument, and it will discover nothing but the selfishness of the
person that makes it: I dare be bold to say, that that man will do no
righteousness, but simply for his own sake; who, if he should know beforehand,
that his righteousness will get him nothing, would therefore sit still, and do
nothing; I dare be bold to say, he had as good sit still indeed, and do nothing:
he serves himself, not God, and though he performs righteousness ever so
exactly, if he serves himself, God will never reckon that he serves him: when
self is eyed, we can never serve God; when our commodity and advantage be not in
the thing, we will sit still.
But, beloved, though the righteousness we are to perform be
superfluous and vain, in respect of any power it hath with God; to move him to
do us good, yet it is not altogether superfluous; it is most true, that all the
righteousness of man cannot prevail with God to do us good; there is but one
mover of God, the man Christ Jesus, who is the only and sole mediator. If you
will have your own righteousness to be your mediator with God, to speak to God
for you, to prevail with God for you; what is this, but to put it in the room
and place of Christ’s? What is the mediation of Christ else, but for him to come
between God and man, and be the day’s-man to lay his hand upon both, and at once
to reconcile them? and shall your righteousness be the day’s-man, and lay hands
upon God and man; then farewell Christ and his mediatorship; for this is the
peculiar office of Christ, to be man’s mediator, and advocate with the Father,
to prevail with him for any good for us; so far, therefore, as any person locks
after his own righteousness, to bring glad tidings from God to him, so far a man
establish it in the room and place of the righteousness of God; which proceeds
from the ignorance of that righteousness, and will in the bud prove a
stumbling-block to men, and a rock of offence to them.
All this while I desire not to be mistaken: some, it may be,
will desire to know then to what use this righteousness of ours serves, seeing
it is not of power to prevail with God. “My goodness extends not unto thee,”
saith David; not to God, but it may to men; “my righteousness extends to the
saints of the earth, and to such as excel in virtue,” (Ps. 6:3). Our
righteousness is appointed for excellent uses, if we could be contented with
those God hath ordained it unto.
First, It serves as a real way to manifest our thankfulness
to God, for what we have already received of him: in Psalm 103 David is
excellent, “Bless the Lord, O my soul; and all that is within me, bless his holy
name:” Why, what is the matter; David? “Who forgiveth all thine iniquities, and
healeth all thy diseases; who redeemeth thy life from destruction, and crowneth
thee with loving-kindness and tender mercies:” mark it well, I pray, all that is
within us must be praise, and nothing but praise; and the ground is this, God
pardons our sins, heals our infirmities, and supplies all our wants; in
consideration of this, all that is within us should continually express his
praise.
Again, secondly, There is this usefulness in it, namely, that
we may serve our generation; and the apostle gives this charge, that, “men study
to obtain good works,” because, saith he, “these things are profitable unto
men;” as we may therefore do good to men, so according to our ability, and
talent received, we must employ ourselves to the utmost for that end and
purpose. The heathens could say, “They were not made for themselves, but for
others:” therefore there is this usefulness in our righteousness, that others
may receive benefit by it: “Let your light so shine before men, that they,
seeing your good works, may glorify your Father which is in heaven;” that men
may be drawn on to glorify God, we must shine before men in a godly
conversation.
Thirdly, It is useful, as it is rite ordinance of God,
wherein the Lord hath appointed us to meet with him, and wherein he will make
good those things which before he hath promised. And this is the very end and
ground of our fasting, praying, and mourning in our exigencies, and extremities:
not that these duties do at all prevail with God, or at all move him; for, it is
God that moves even these services, and all the spiritualness in us in them; and
therefore he moves them in us, because when we are moved by his Spirit, and
according to his will [we] come forth to meet him where he appoints, there he
will pour out himself in grace and love, according to his promise, not according
to our performances. Thus, I say, this great objection may be answered easily,
why we fast, and pray, and mourn in adversity, if they do us no good? I say,
though they, do us no good, yet we fast and pray, in that the Lord saith, come
to me, meet me in this and that ordinance, and I wilt come with my hands full;
then, and there, I will pour out that which mine own freeness hath engaged me to
do for you: is it not injustice not to meet him then? We confess our sins to
him, but what is the ground of forgiveness? not our confession of sins, not our
fastings, prayers, mourning, and tears; but “I, even I, am he that blotteth out
thy iniquities, for mine own name sake, and will remember thy sins no more,”
(Isa. 43:25).
I will draw towards the conclusion. In a word, whoever he be
that is selfish in his own righteousness, and goes about to establish it in the
room of God’s, laboring to procure some good unto himself thereby, and makes
that righteousness do that for him, that God’s righteousness should do, so
making an idol of it;
First, He plays the most dishonest part with God that can be.
Do you profess yourselves to be the servants of God? If you be, what dishonesty
is there in you, that you professing to serve him, do, notwithstanding, by
secret and by stealth, serve yourselves? If an apprentice should hide himself
all day long, to earn and gain money for himself, might not his master justly
tax him for a dishonest fellow? Why doth the master keep him, and find him, but
that all he doth, he should do for him, and not for himself? Are you at God’s
finding, or are you at your own? Miserable are you, that are at your own: are
you at God’s finding then, and not at your own? What is it you seek for, and
would get by the righteousness you seek so eagerly after? The truth is, there is
nothing to be gotten that you have not already; if you have Christ, all things
are yours, and you are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s. Are you one of Christ’s? A
man need not work for that which is his own already; why then do you work for
that which is yours already? Are you in Christ, or are you not? Do you work to
get into Christ? Alas! how long might men work out of Christ, and work
themselves into hell at last? What can a man get of God by all his righteousness
and works, if he hath not Christ to get it for him? Therefore all things are
yours, because you are Christ’s, or else you shall have nothing at all God gives
nothing of gift, and of his dear love, but as men are in Christ, and for his
sake; therefore you do but labor in vain, if you labor for that which is yet to
be produced.
But to do good to others; “When thou art converted,
strengthen thy brethren:” let these be the ends of your services; work because
good is already made sure to you, and not to make it sure: when a father settles
an inheritance upon his son, he makes the deed so, that the son shall not work
for the father’s means; because the father hath passed over all that he hath to
his son, he serves out of love, for what he hath already received, not for what
is hoped for.
And as there is a dishonesty in self-seeking; so, secondly,
there is a foul blur cast upon God. Beloved, if you should see a servant go
about the streets complaining thus, Sir, help me to a little work, I must starve
except I can work for myself: what would you think of this man’s master? Surely,
you will say, he is a hard master, that his servant must starve, except he seek
for himself, and purvey for himself: you that say in your hearts, you are
undone, you must perish, you are lost, except your prayers and humbling of
yourselves can get some supply; is not this a working for yourselves? Is not
this plain saying, there is no trusting to God, and that we must work for
ourselves, or else we shall perish.
I should come to consider the other particulars in this text;
but time not permitting, We will wind up all in one word of application.
We now stand before the Lord, and, among other mercies, we
expect this great mercy, salvation; not only salvation in heaven, but salvation
from the sword: it is not, it must not be your good doings that must procure it;
or your repentance, that must bring it: you must not rest upon your performances
to get it; do all that God calls for when you are in his way; in this respect be
doing; but as for your help look up unto the hills from whence it cometh; your
help stands in the name of the Lord, that made heaven and earth; and, therefore,
in the expectation of help; all your business must he in this, “Stand still, and
see the salvation of the Lord.”
Footnotes:
1
Is this Antinomianism? Or, can such a preacher be called an Antinomian?
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