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<h1>BUNYAN CHARACTERS: FIRST SERIES<br/> BEING LECTURES DELIVERED IN ST. GEORGE’S FREE CHURCH EDINBURGH<br/> BY ALEXANDER WHYTE, D.D.</h1>
<h2>INTRODUCTORY</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘The express image’ [Gr. ‘the character’].—Heb.
1. 3.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The word ‘character’ occurs only once in the New Testament,
and that is in the passage in the prologue of the Epistle to the Hebrews,
where the original word is translated ‘express image’ in
our version. Our Lord is the Express Image of the Invisible Father.
No man hath seen God at any time. The only-begotten Son, who is
in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him. The Father hath
sealed His divine image upon His Son, so that he that hath seen the
Son hath seen the Father. The Son is thus the Father’s character
stamped upon and set forth in human nature. The Word was made
flesh. This is the highest and best use to which our so expressive
word ‘character’ has ever been put, and the use to which
it is put when we speak of Bunyan’s Characters partakes of the
same high sense and usage. For it is of the outstanding good or
evil in a man that we think when we speak of his character. It
is really either of his likeness or unlikeness to Jesus Christ we speak,
and then, through Him, his likeness or unlikeness to God Himself.
And thus it is that the adjective ‘moral’ usually accompanies
our word ‘character’—moral or immoral. A man’s
character does not have its seat or source in his body; character is
not a physical thing: not even in his mind; it is not an intellectual
thing. Character comes up out of the will and out of the heart.
There are more good minds, as we say, in the world than there are good
hearts. There are more clever people than good people; character,—high,
spotless, saintly character,—is a far rarer thing in this world
than talent or even genius. Character is an infinitely better
thing than either of these, and it is of corresponding rarity.
And yet so true is it that the world loves its own, that all men worship
talent, and even bodily strength and bodily beauty, while only one here
and one there either understands or values or pursues moral character,
though it is the strength and the beauty and the sweetness of the soul.</p>
<p>We naturally turn to Bishop Butler when we think of moral character.
Butler is an author who has drawn no characters of his own. Butler’s
genius was not creative like Shakespeare’s or Bunyan’s.
Butler had not that splendid imagination which those two masters in
character-painting possessed, but he had very great gifts of his own,
and he has done us very great service by means of his gifts. Bishop
Butler has helped many men in the intelligent formation of their character,
and what higher praise could be given to any author? Butler will
lie on our table all winter beside Bunyan; the bishop beside the tinker,
the philosopher beside the poet, the moralist beside the evangelical
minister.</p>
<p>In seeking a solid bottom for our subject, then, we naturally turn
to Butler. Bunyan will people the house for us once it is built,
but Butler lays bare for us the naked rock on which men like Bunyan
build and beautify and people the dwelling-place of God and man.
What exactly is this thing, character, we hear so much about? we ask
the sagacious bishop. And how shall we understand our own character
so as to form it well till it stands firm and endures? ‘Character,’
answers Butler, in his bald, dry, deep way, ‘by character is meant
that temper, taste, disposition, whole frame of mind from whence we
act in one way rather than another . . . those principles from which
a man acts, when they become fixed and habitual in him we call his character
. . . And consequently there is a far greater variety in men’s
characters than there is in the features of their faces.’
Open Bunyan now, with Butler’s keywords in your mind, and see
the various tempers, tastes, dispositions, frames of mind from which
his various characters act, and which, at bottom, really make them the
characters, good or bad, which they are. See the principles which
Bunyan has with such inimitable felicity embodied and exhibited in their
names, the principles within them from which they have acted till they
have become a habit and then a character, that character which they
themselves are and will remain. See the variety of John Bunyan’s
characters, a richer and a more endless variety than are the features
of their faces. Christian and Christiana, Obstinate and Pliable,
Mr. Fearing and Mr. Feeblemind, Temporary and Talkative, Mr. By-ends
and Mr. Facing-both-ways, Simple, Sloth, Presumption, that brisk lad
Ignorance, and the genuine Mr. Brisk himself. And then Captain
Boasting, Mr. High-mind, Mr. Wet-Eyes, and so on, through a less known
(but equally well worth knowing) company of municipal and military characters
in the <i>Holy War</i>.</p>
<p>We shall see, as we proceed, how this and that character in Bunyan
was formed and deformed. But let us ask in this introductory lecture
if we can find out any law or principle upon which all our own characters,
good or bad, are formed. Do our characters come to be what they
are by chance, or have we anything to do in the formation of our own
characters, and if so, in what way? And here, again, Butler steps
forward at our call with his key to our own and to all Bunyan’s
characters in his hand, and in three familiar and fruitful words he
answers our question and gives us food for thought and solemn reflection
for a lifetime. There are but three steps, says Butler, from earth
to heaven, or, if you will, from earth to hell—acts, habits, character.
All Butler’s prophetic burden is bound up in these three great
words—acts, habits, character. Remember and ponder these
three words, and you will in due time become a moral philosopher.
Ponder and practise them, and you will become what is infinitely better—a
moral man. For acts, often repeated, gradually become habits,
and habits, long enough continued, settle and harden and solidify into
character. And thus it is that the severe and laconic bishop has
so often made us shudder as he demonstrated it to us that we are all
with our own hands shaping our character not only for this world, but
much more for the world to come, by every act we perform, by every word
we speak, almost by every breath we draw. Butler is one of the
most terrible authors in the world. He stands on our nearest shelf
with Dante on one side of him and Pascal on the other. He is indeed
terrible, but it is with a terror that purifies the heart and keeps
the life in the hour of temptation. Paul sometimes arms himself
with the same terror; only he composes in another style than that of
Butler, and, with all his vivid intensity, he calls it the terror of
the Lord. Paul and Bunyan are of the same school of moralists
and stylists; Butler went to school to the Stoics, to Aristotle, and
to Plato.</p>
<p>Our Lord Himself came to be the express image He was and is by living
and acting under this same universal law of human life—acts, habits,
character. He was made perfect on this same principle. He
learned obedience both by the things that He did, and the things that
He suffered. Butler says in one deep place, that benevolence and
justice and veracity are the basis of all good character in God and
in man, and thus also in the God-man. And those three foundation
stones of our Lord’s character settled deeper and grew stronger
to bear and to suffer as He went on practising acts and speaking words
of justice, goodness, and truth. And so of all the other elements
of His moral character. Our Lord left Gethsemane a much more submissive
and a much more surrendered man than He entered it. His forgiveness
of injuries, and thus His splendid benevolence, had not yet come to
its climax and crown till He said on the cross, ‘Father, forgive
them’. And, as He was, so are we in this world. This
world’s evil and ill-desert made it but the better arena and theatre
for the development and the display of His moral character; and the
same instruments that fashioned Him into the perfect and express image
He was and is, are still, happily, in full operation. Take that
divinest and noblest of all instruments for the carving out and refining
of moral character, the will of God. How our Lord made His own
unselfish and unsinful will to bow to silence and to praise before the
holy will of His Father, till that gave the finishing touch to His always
sanctified will and heart! And, happily, that awful and blessed
instrument for the formation of moral character is still active and
available to those whose ambition rises to moral character, and who
are aiming at heaven in all they do and all they suffer upon the earth.
Gethsemane has gone out till it has covered all the earth. Its
cup, if not in all the depth and strength of its first mixture, still
in quite sufficient bitterness, is put many times in life into every
man’s hand. There is not a day, there is not an hour of
the day, that the disciple of the submissive and all-surrendered Son
has not the opportunity to say with his Master, If it be possible, let
this cup pass: nevertheless, not as I will, but as Thou wilt.</p>
<p>It is not in the great tragedies of life only that character is tested
and strengthened and consolidated. No man who is not himself under
God’s moral and spiritual instruments could believe how often
in the quietest, clearest, and least tempestuous day he has the chance
and the call to say, Yea, Lord, Thy will be done. And, then, when
the confessedly tragic days and nights come, when all men admit that
this is Gethsemane indeed, the practised soul is able, with a calmness
and a peace that confound and offend the bystanders, to say, to act
so that he does not need to say, Not my will, but Thine. And so
of all the other forms and features of moral character; so of humility
and meekness, so of purity and temperance, so of magnanimity and munificence,
so of all self-suppression and self-extinction, and all corresponding
exalting and magnifying and benefiting of other men. Whatever
other passing uses this present world, so full of trial and temptation
and suffering, may have, this surely is the supreme and final use of
it—to be a furnace, a graving-house, a refining place for human
character. Literally all things in this life and in this world—I
challenge you to point out a single exception—work together for
this supreme and only good, the purification, the refining, the testing,
and the approval of human character. Not only so, but we are all
in the very heat of the furnace, and under the very graving iron and
in the very refining fire that our prefigured and predestinated character
needs. Your life and its trials would not suit the necessities
of my moral character, and you would lose your soul beyond redemption
if you exchanged lots with me. You do not put a pearl under the
potter’s wheel; you do not cast clay into a refining fire.
Abraham’s character was not like David’s, nor David’s
like Christ’s, nor Christ’s like Paul’s. As
Butler says, there is ‘a providential disposition of things’
around every one of us, and it is as exactly suited to the flaws and
excrescences, the faults and corruptions of our character as if Providence
had had no other life to make a disposition of things for but one, and
that one our own. Have you discovered that in your life, or any
measure of that? Have you acknowledged to God that you have at
last discovered the true key of your life? Have you given Him
the satisfaction to know that He is not making His providential dispositions
around a stock or a stone, but that He has one under His hand who understands
His hand, and responds to it, and rises up to meet and salute it?</p>
<p>And we cease to wonder so much at the care God takes of human character,
and the cost He lays out upon it, when we think that it is the only
work of His hands that shall last for ever. It is fit, surely,
that the ephemeral should minister to the eternal, and time to eternity,
and all else in this world to the only thing in this world that shall
endure and survive this world. All else we possess and pursue
shall fade and perish, our moral character shall alone survive.
Riches, honours, possessions, pleasures of all kinds: death, with one
stroke of his desolating hand, shall one day strip us bare to a winding-sheet
and a coffin of all the things we are so mad to possess. But the
last enemy, with all his malice and all his resistless power, cannot
touch our moral character—unless it be in some way utterly mysterious
to us that he is made under God to refine and perfect it. The
Express Image carried up to His Father’s House, not only the divine
life He had brought hither with Him when He came to obey and submit
and suffer among us; He carried back more than He brought, for He carried
back a human heart, a human life, a human character, which was and is
a new wonder in heaven. He carried up to heaven all the love to
God and angels and men He had learned and practised on earth, with all
the earthly fruits of it. He carried back His humility, His meekness,
His humanity, His approachableness, and His sympathy. And we see
to our salvation some of the uses to which those parts of His moral
character are at this moment being put in His Father’s House;
and what we see not now of all the ends and uses and employments of
our Lord’s glorified humanity we shall, mayhap, see hereafter.
And we also shall carry our moral character to heaven; it is the only
thing we have worth carrying so far. But, then, moral character
is well worth achieving here and then carrying there, for it is nothing
else and nothing less than the divine nature itself; it is the divine
nature incarnate, incorporate, and made manifest in man. And it
is, therefore, immortal with the immortality of God, and blessed for
ever with the blessedness of God.</p>
<h2>EVANGELIST</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Do the work of an evangelist.’—Paul
to Timothy.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>On the 1st of June 1648 a very bitter fight was fought at Maidstone,
in Kent, between the Parliamentary forces under Fairfax and the Royalists.
Till Cromwell rose to all his military and administrative greatness,
Fairfax was generalissimo of the Puritan army, and that able soldier
never executed a more brilliant exploit than he did that memorable night
at Maidstone. In one night the Royalist insurrection was stamped
out and extinguished in its own blood. Hundreds of dead bodies
filled the streets of the town, hundreds of the enemy were taken prisoners,
while hundreds more, who were hiding in the hop-fields and forests around
the town, fell into Fairfax’s hands next morning.</p>
<p>Among the prisoners so taken was a Royalist major who had had a deep
hand in the Maidstone insurrection, named John Gifford, a man who was
destined in the time to come to run a remarkable career. Only,
to-day, the day after the battle, he has no prospect before him but
the gallows. On the night before his execution, by the courtesy
of Fairfax, Gifford’s sister was permitted to visit her brother
in his prison. The soldiers were overcome with weariness and sleep
after the engagement, and Gifford’s sister so managed it that
her brother got past the sentries and escaped out of the town.
He lay hid for some days in the ditches and thickets around the town
till he was able to escape to London, and thence to the shelter of some
friends of his at Bedford. Gifford had studied medicine before
he entered the army, and as soon as he thought it safe he began to practise
his old art in the town of Bedford. Gifford had been a dissolute
man as a soldier, and he became, if possible, a still more scandalously
dissolute man as a civilian. Gifford’s life in Bedford was
a public disgrace, and his hatred and persecution of the Puritans in
that town made his very name an infamy and a fear. He reduced
himself to beggary with gambling and drink, but, when near suicide,
he came under the power of the truth, till we see him clothed with rags
and with a great burden on his back, crying out, ‘What must I
do to be saved?’ ‘But at last’—I quote
from the session records of his future church at Bedford—‘God
did so plentifully discover to him the forgiveness of sins for the sake
of Christ, that all his life after he lost not the light of God’s
countenance, no, not for an hour, save only about two days before he
died.’ Gifford’s conversion had been so conspicuous
and notorious that both town and country soon heard of it: and instead
of being ashamed of it, and seeking to hide it, Gifford at once, and
openly, threw in his lot with the extremest Puritans in the Puritan
town of Bedford. Nor could Gifford’s talents be hid; till
from one thing to another, we find the former Royalist and dissolute
Cavalier actually the parish minister of Bedford in Cromwell’s
so evangelical but otherwise so elastic establishment.</p>
<p>At this point we open John Bunyan’s <i>Grace Abounding to the
Chief of Sinners</i>, and we read this classical passage:—‘Upon
a day the good providence of God did cast me to Bedford to work in my
calling: and in one of the streets of that town I came where there were
three or four poor women sitting at the door in the sun and talking
about the things of God. But I may say I heard, but I understood
not, for they were far above and out of my reach . . . About this time
I began to break my mind to those poor people in Bedford, and to tell
them of my condition, which, when they had heard, they told Mr. Gifford
of me, who himself also took occasion to talk with me, and was willing
to be well persuaded of me though I think on too little grounds.
But he invited me to his house, where I should hear him confer with
others about the dealings of God with their souls, from all which I
still received more conviction, and from that time began to see something
of the vanity and inner wretchedness of my own heart, for as yet I knew
no great matter therein . . . At that time also I sat under the ministry
of holy Mr. Gifford, whose doctrine, by the grace of God, was much for
my stability.’ And so on in that inimitable narrative.</p>
<p>The first minister whose words were truly blessed of God for our
awakening and conversion has always a place of his own in our hearts.
We all have some minister, some revivalist, some faithful friend, or
some good book in a warm place in our heart. It may be a great
city preacher; it may be a humble American or Irish revivalist; it may
be <i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i>, or <i>The Cardiphonia</i>, or
the <i>Serious Call</i>—whoever or whatever it was that first
arrested and awakened and turned us into the way of life, they all our
days stand in a place by themselves in our grateful heart. And
John Gifford has been immortalised by John Bunyan, both in his <i>Grace
Abounding</i> and in his <i>Pilgrim’s Progress</i>. In his
<i>Grace Abounding</i>, as we have just seen, and in <i>The Pilgrim</i>,
Gifford has his portrait painted in holy oil on the wall of the Interpreter’s
house, and again in eloquent pen and ink in the person of Evangelist.</p>
<p>John Gifford had himself made a narrow escape out of the City of
Destruction, and John Bunyan had, by Gifford’s assistance, made
the same escape also. The scene, therefore, both within that city
and outside the gate of it, was so fixed in Bunyan’s mind and
memory that no part of his memorable book is more memorably put than
just its opening page. Bunyan himself is the man in rags, and
Gifford is the evangelist who comes to console and to conduct him.
Bunyan’s portraits are all taken from the life. Brilliant
and well-furnished as Bunyan’s imagination was, Bedford was still
better furnished with all kinds of men and women, and with all kinds
of saints and sinners. And thus, instead of drawing upon his imagination
in writing his books, Bunyan drew from life. And thus it is that
we see first John Gifford, and then John Bunyan himself at the gate
of the city; and then, over the page, Gifford becomes the evangelist
who is sent by the four poor women to speak to the awakened tinker.</p>
<p>‘Wherefore dost thou so cry?’ asks Evangelist.
‘Because,’ replied the man, ‘I am condemned to die.’
‘But why are you so unwilling to die, since this life is so full
of evils?’ And I suppose we must all hear Evangelist putting
the same pungent question to ourselves every day, at whatever point
of the celestial journey we at present are. Yes; why are we all
so unwilling to die? Why do we number our days to put off our
death to the last possible period? Why do we so refuse to think
of the only thing we are sure soon to come to? We are absolutely
sure of nothing else in the future but death. We may not see to-morrow,
but we shall certainly see the day of our death. And yet we have
all our plans laid for to-morrow, and only one here and one there has
any plan laid for the day of his death. And can it be for the
same reason that made the man in rags unwilling to die? Is it
because of the burden on our back? Is it because we are not fit
to go to judgment? And yet the trumpet may sound summoning us
hence before the midnight clock strikes. If this be thy condition,
why standest thou still? Dost thou see yonder shining light?
Keep that light in thine eye. Go up straight to it, knock at the
gate, and it shall be told thee there what thou shalt do next.
Burdened sinner, son of man in rags and terror: What has burdened thee
so? What has torn thy garments into such shameful rags?
What is it in thy burden that makes it so heavy? And how long
has it lain so heavy upon thee? ‘I cannot run,’ said
the man, ‘because of the burden on my back.’ And it
has been noticed of you that you do not laugh, or run, or dress, or
dance, or walk, or eat, or drink as once you did. All men see
that there is some burden on your back; some sore burden on your heart
and your mind. Do you see yonder wicket gate? Do you see
yonder shining light? There is no light in all the horizon for
you but yonder light over the gate. Keep it in your eye; make
straight, and make at once for it, and He who keeps the gate and keeps
the light burning over it, He will tell you what to do with your burden.
He told John Gifford, and He told John Bunyan, till both their burdens
rolled off their backs, and they saw them no more. What would
you not give to-night to be released like them? Do you not see
yonder shining light?</p>
<p>Having set Christian fairly on the way to the wicket gate, Evangelist
leaves him in order to seek out and assist some other seeker.
But yesterday he had set Faithful’s face to the celestial city,
and he is off now to look for another pilgrim. We know some of
Christian’s adventures and episodes after Evangelist left him,
but we do not take up these at present. We pass on to the next
time that Evangelist finds Christian, and he finds him in a sorry plight.
He has listened to bad advice. He has gone off the right road,
he has lost sight of the gate, and all the thunders and lightnings of
Sinai are rolling and flashing out against him. What doest thou
here of all men in the world? asked Evangelist, with a severe and dreadful
countenance. Did I not direct thee to His gate, and why art thou
here? Christian told him that a fair-spoken man had met him, and
had persuaded him to take an easier and shorter way of getting rid of
his burden. Read the whole place for yourselves. The end
of it was that Evangelist set Christian right again, and gave him two
counsels which would be his salvation if he attended to them: Strive
to enter in at the strait gate, and, Take up thy cross daily.
He would need more counsel afterwards than that; but, meantime, that
was enough. Let Christian follow that, and he would before long
be rid of his burden.</p>
<p>In the introductory lecture Bishop Butler has been commended and
praised as a moralist, and certainly not one word beyond his deserts;
but an evangelical preacher cannot send any man with the burden of a
bad past upon him to Butler for advice and direction about that.
While lecturing on and praising the sound philosophical and ethical
spirit of the great bishop, Dr. Chalmers complains that he so much lacks
the <i>sal evangelicum</i>, the strength and the health and the sweetness
of the doctrines of grace. Legality and Civility and Morality
are all good and necessary in their own places; but he is a cheat who
would send a guilt-burdened and sick-at-heart sinner to any or all of
them. The wicket gate first, and then He who keeps that gate will
tell us what to do, and where next to go; but any other way out of the
City of Destruction but by the wicket gate is sure to land us where
it landed Evangelist’s quaking and sweating charge. When
Bishop Butler lay on his deathbed he called for his chaplain, and said,
‘Though I have endeavoured to avoid sin, and to please God to
the utmost of my power, yet from the consciousness of my perpetual infirmities
I am still afraid to die.’ ‘My lord,’ said his
happily evangelical chaplain, ‘have you forgotten that Jesus Christ
is a Saviour?’ ‘True,’ said the dying philosopher,
‘but how shall I know that He is a Saviour for me?’
‘My lord, it is written, “Him that cometh to Me, I will
in no wise cast out.”’ ‘True,’ said Butler,
‘and I am surprised that though I have read that Scripture a thousand
times, I never felt its virtue till this moment, and now I die in peace.’</p>
<p>The third and the last time on which the pilgrims meet with their
old friend and helper, Evangelist, is when they are just at the gates
of the town of Vanity. They have come through many wonderful experiences
since last they saw and spoke with him. They have had the gate
opened to them by Goodwill. They have been received and entertained
in the Interpreter’s House, and in the House Beautiful.
The burden has fallen off their backs at the cross, and they have had
their rags removed and have received change of raiment. They have
climbed the Hill Difficulty, and they have fought their way through
the Valley of the Shadow of Death. More than the half of their
adventures and sufferings are past; but they are not yet out of gunshot
of the devil, and the bones of many a promising pilgrim lie whitening
the way between this and the city. Many of our young communicants
have made a fair and a promising start for salvation. They have
got over the initial difficulties that lay in their way to the Lord’s
table, and we have entered their names with honest pride in our communion
roll. But a year or two passes over, and the critical season arrives
when our young communicant ‘comes out,’ as the word is.
Up till now she has been a child, a little maid, a Bible-class student,
a young communicant, a Sabbath-school teacher. But she is now
a young lady, and she comes out into the world. We soon see that
she has so come out, as we begin to miss her from places and from employments
her presence used to brighten; and, very unwillingly, we overhear men
and women with her name on their lips in a way that makes us fear for
her soul, till many, oh, in a single ministry, how many, who promised
well at the gate and ran safely past many snares, at last sell all—body
and soul and Saviour—in Vanity Fair.</p>
<p>Well, Evangelist remains Evangelist still. Only, without losing
any of his sweetness and freeness and fulness of promise, he adds to
that some solemn warnings and counsels suitable now, as never before,
to these two pilgrims. If one may say so, he would add now such
moral treatises as Butler’s <i>Sermons</i> and <i>Serious Call</i>
to such evangelical books as <i>Grace Abounding</i> and <i>A Jerusalem
Sinner Saved</i>.</p>
<p>To-morrow the two pilgrims will come out of the wilderness and will
be plunged into a city where they will be offered all kinds of merchandise,—houses,
lands, places, honours, preferments, titles, pleasures, delights, wives,
children, bodies, souls, and what not. An altogether new world
from anything they have yet come through, and a world where many who
once began well have gone no further. Such counsels as these,
then, Evangelist gave Christian and Faithful as they left the lonely
wilderness behind them and came out towards the gate of the seductive
city—‘Let the Kingdom of Heaven be always before your eyes,
and believe steadfastly concerning things that are invisible.’
Visible, tangible, sweet, and desirable things will immediately be offered
to them, and unless they have a faith in their hearts that is the substance
of things hoped for, and the evidence of things not seen, it will soon
be all over with them and their pilgrimage. ‘Let no man
take your crown,’ he said also, as he foresaw at how many booths
and counters, houses, lands, places, preferments, wives, husbands, and
what not, would be offered them and pressed upon them in exchange for
their heavenly crown. ‘Above all, look well to your own
hearts,’ he said. Canon Venables laments over the teaching
that Bunyan received from John Gifford. ‘Its principle,’
he says, ‘was constant introspection and scrupulous weighing of
every word and deed, and even of every thought, instead of leading the
mind off from self to the Saviour.’ The canon seems to think
that it was specially unfortunate for Bunyan to be told to keep his
heart and to weigh well every thought of it; but I must point out to
you that Evangelist puts as above all other things the most important
for the pilgrims the looking well to their own hearts; and our plain-spoken
author has used a very severe word about any minister who should whisper
anything to any pilgrim that could be construed or misunderstood into
putting Christ in the place of thought and word and deed, and the scrupulous
weighing of every one of them. ‘Let nothing that is on this
side the other world get within you; and above all, look well to your
own hearts, and to the lusts thereof.’</p>
<p>‘Set your faces like a flint,’ Evangelist proceeds.
How little like all that you hear in the counsels of the pulpit to young
women coming out and to young men entering into business life.
I am convinced that if we ministers were more direct and plain-spoken
to such persons at such times; if we, like Bunyan, told them plainly
what kind of a world it is they are coming out to buy and sell in, and
what its merchandise and its prices are; if our people would let us
so preach to their sons and daughters, I feel sure far fewer young communicants
would make shipwreck, and far fewer grey heads would go down with sorrow
to the grave. ‘Be not afraid,’ said Robert Hall in
his charge to a young minister, ‘of devoting whole sermons to
particular parts of moral conduct and religious duty. It is impossible
to give right views of them unless you dissect characters and describe
particular virtues and vices. The works of the flesh and the fruits
of the Spirit must be distinctly pointed out. To preach against
sin in general without descending to particulars may lead many to complain
of the evil of their hearts, while at the same time they are awfully
inattentive to the evil of their conduct.’ Take Evangelist’s
noble counsels at the gate of Vanity Fair, and then take John Bunyan’s
masterly description of the Fair itself, with all that is bought and
sold in it, and you will have a lesson in evangelical preaching that
the evangelical pulpit needed in Bunyan’s day, in Robert Hall’s
day, and not less in our own.</p>
<p>‘My sons, you have heard the truth of the gospel, that you
must through many tribulations enter the Kingdom of God. When,
therefore, you are come to the Fair and shall find fulfilled what I
have here related, then remember your friend; quit yourselves like men,
and commit the keeping of your souls to your God in well-doing as unto
a faithful Creator.’</p>
<h2>OBSTINATE</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Be ye not as the mule.’—David.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Little Obstinate was born and brought up in the City of Destruction.
His father was old Spare-the-Rod, and his mother’s name was Spoil-the-Child.
Little Obstinate was the only child of his parents; he was born when
they were no longer young, and they doted on their only child, and gave
him his own way in everything. Everything he asked for he got,
and if he did not immediately get it you would have heard his screams
and his kicks three doors off. His parents were not in themselves
bad people, but, if Solomon speaks true, they hated their child, for
they gave him all his own way in everything, and nothing would ever
make them say no to him, or lift up the rod when he said no to them.
When the Scriptures, in their pedagogical parts, speak so often about
the rod, they do not necessarily mean a rod of iron or even of wood.
There are other ways of teaching an obstinate child than the way that
Gideon took with the men of Succoth when he taught them with the thorns
of the wilderness and with the briars thereof. George Offor, John
Bunyan’s somewhat quaint editor, gives the readers of his edition
this personal testimony:—‘After bringing up a very large
family, who are a blessing to their parents, I have yet to learn what
part of the human body was created to be beaten.’ At the
same time the rod must mean something in the word of God; it certainly
means something in God’s hand when His obstinate children are
under it, and it ought to mean something in a godly parent’s hand
also. Little Obstinate’s two parents were far from ungodly
people, though they lived in such a city; but they were daily destroying
their only son by letting him always have his own way, and by never
saying no to his greed, and his lies, and his anger, and his noisy and
disorderly ways. Eli in the Old Testament was not a bad man, but
he destroyed both the ark of the Lord and himself and his sons also,
because his sons made themselves vile, and he restrained them not.
God’s children are never so soft, and sweet, and good, and happy
as just after He restrains them, and has again laid the rod of correction
upon them. They then kiss both the rod and Him who appointed it.
And earthly fathers learn their craft from God. The meekness,
the sweetness, the docility, and the love of a chastised child has gone
to all our hearts in a way we can never forget. There is something
sometimes almost past description or belief in the way a chastised child
clings to and kisses the hand that chastised it. But poor old
Spare-the-Rod never had experiences like that. And young Obstinate,
having been born like Job’s wild ass’s colt, grew up to
be a man like David’s unbitted and unbridled mule, till in after
life he became the author of all the evil and mischief that is associated
in our minds with his evil name.</p>
<p>In old Spare-the-Rod’s child also this true proverb was fulfilled,
that the child is the father of the man. For all that little Obstinate
had been in the nursery, in the schoolroom, and in the playground—all
that, only in an aggravated way—he was as a youth and as a grown-up
man. For one thing, Obstinate all his days was a densely ignorant
man. He had not got into the way of learning his lessons when
he was a child; he had not been made to learn his lessons when he was
a child; and the dislike and contempt he had for his books as a boy
accompanied him through an ignorant and a narrow-minded life.
It was reason enough to this so unreasonable man not to buy and read
a book that you had asked him to buy and read it. And so many
of the books about him were either written, or printed, or published,
or sold, or read, or praised by people he did not like, that there was
little left for this unhappy man to read, even if otherwise he would
have read it. And thus, as his mulish obstinacy kept him so ignorant,
so his ignorance in turn increased his obstinacy. And then when
he came, as life went on, to have anything to do with other men’s
affairs, either in public or in private life, either in the church,
or in the nation, or in the city, or in the family, this unhappy man
could only be a drag on all kinds of progress, and in obstacle to every
good work. Use and wont, a very good rule on occasion, was a rigid
and a universal rule with Obstinate. And to be told that the wont
in this case and in that had ceased to be the useful, only made him
rail at you as only an ignorant and an obstinate man can rail.
He could only rail; he had not knowledge enough, or good temper enough,
or good manners enough to reason out a matter; he was too hot-tempered
for an argument, and he hated those who had an acquaintance with the
subject in hand, and a self-command in connection with it that he had
not. ‘The obstinate man’s understanding is like Pharaoh’s
heart, and it is proof against all sorts of arguments whatsoever.’
Like the demented king of Egypt, the obstinate man has glimpses sometimes
both of his bounden duty and of his true interest, but the sinew of
iron that is in his neck will not let him perform the one or pursue
the other. ‘Nothing,’ says a penetrating writer, ‘is
more like firm conviction than simple obstinacy. Plots and parties
in the state, and heresies and divisions in the church alike proceed
from it.’ Let any honest man take that sentence and carry
it like a candle down into his own heart and back into his own life,
and then with the insight and honesty there learned carry the same candle
back through some of the plots and parties, the heresies and schisms
of the past as well as of the present day, and he will have learned
a lesson that will surely help to cure himself, at any rate, of his
own remaining obstinacy. All our firm convictions, as we too easily
and too fondly call them, must continually be examined and searched
out in the light of more reading of the best authors, in the light of
more experience of ourselves and of the world we live in, and in that
best of all light, that increasing purity, simplicity, and sincerity
of heart alone can kindle. And in not a few instances we shall
to a certainty find that what has hitherto been clothing itself with
the honourable name and character of a conviction was all the time only
an ignorant prejudice, a distaste or a dislike, a too great fondness
for ourselves and for our own opinion and our own interest. Many
of our firmest convictions, as we now call them, when we shall have
let light enough fall upon them, we shall be compelled and enabled to
confess to be at bottom mere mulishness and pride of heart. The
mulish, obstinate, and proud man never says, I don’t know.
He never asks anything to be explained to him. He never admits
that he has got any new light. He never admits having spoken or
acted wrongly. He never takes back what he has said. He
was never heard to say, You are right in that line of action, and I
have all along been wrong. Had he ever said that, the day he said
it would have been a white-stone day both for his mind and his heart.
Only, the spoiled son of Spare-the-Rod never said that, or anything
like that.</p>
<p>But, most unfortunately, it is in the very best things of life that
the true mulishness of the obstinate man most comes out. He shows
worst in his home life and in the matters of religion. When our
Obstinate was in love he was as sweet as honey and as soft as butter.
His old friends that he used so to trample upon scarcely recognised
him. They had sometimes seen men converted, but they had never
seen such an immediate and such a complete conversion as this.
He actually invited correction, and reproof, and advice, and assistance,
who had often struck at you with his hands and his feet when you even
hinted at such a thing to him. The best upbringing, the best books,
the best preaching, the best and most obedient life, taken all together,
had not done for other men what a woman’s smile and the touch
of her hand had in a moment done for this once so obstinate man.
He would read anything now, and especially the best books. He
would hear and enjoy any preacher now, and especially the best and most
earnest in preaching. His old likes and dislikes, prejudices and
prepossessions, self-opinionativeness and self-assertiveness all miraculously
melted off him, and he became in a day an open-minded, intelligent,
good-mannered, devout-minded gentleman. He who was once such a
mule to everybody was now led about by a child in a silken bridle.
All old things had passed away, and all things had become new.
For a time; for a time. But time passes, and there passes away
with it all the humility, meekness, pliability, softness, and sweetness
of the obstinate man. Till when long enough time has elapsed you
find him all the obstinate and mulish man he ever was. It is not
that he has ceased to love his wife and his children. It is not
that. But there is this in all genuine and inbred obstinacy, that
after a time it often comes out worst beside those we love best.
A man will be affable, accessible, entertaining, the best of company,
and the soul of it abroad, and, then, instantly he turns the latch-key
in his own door he will relapse into silence, and sink back into utter
boorishness and bearishness, mulishness and doggedness. He swallows
his evening meal at the foot of the table in silence, and then he sits
all night at the fireside with a cloud out of nothing on his brow.
His sunshine, his smile, and his universal urbanity is all gone now;
he is discourteous to nobody but to his own wife. Nothing pleases
him; he finds nothing at home to his mind. The furniture, the
hours, the habits of the house are all disposed so as to please him;
but he was never yet heard to say to wife, or child, or servant that
he was pleased. He never says that a meal is to his taste or a
seat set so as to shelter and repose him. The obstinate man makes
his house a very prison and treadmill to himself and to all those who
are condemned to suffer with him. And all the time it is not that
he does not love and honour his household; but by an evil law of the
obstinate heart its worst obstinacy and mulishness comes out among those
it loves best.</p>
<p>But, my brethren, worse than all that, we have all what good Bishop
Hall calls ‘a stone of obstination’ in our hearts against
God. With all his own depth and clearness and plain-spokenness,
Paul tells us that our hearts are by nature enmity against God.
Were we proud and obstinate and malicious against men only it would
be bad enough, and it would be difficult enough to cure, but our case
is dreadful beyond all description or belief when our obstinacy strikes
out against God. We know as well as we know anything, that in
doing this and in not doing that we are going every day right in the
teeth both of God’s law and God’s grace; and yet in the
sheer obstinacy and perversity of our heart we still go on in what we
know quite well to be the suicide of our souls. We are told by
our minister to do this and not to do that; to begin to do this at this
new year and to break off from doing that; but, partly through obstinacy
towards him, reinforced by a deeper and subtler and deadlier obstinacy
against God, and against all the deepest and most godly of the things
of God, we neither do the one nor cease from doing the other.
There is a sullenness in some men’s minds, a gloom and a bitter
air that rises up from the unploughed, undrained, unweeded, uncultivated
fens of their hearts that chills and blasts all the feeble beginnings
of a better life. The natural and constitutional obstinacy of
the obstinate heart is exasperated when it comes to deal with the things
of God. For it is then reinforced with all the guilt and all the
fear, all the suspicion and all the aversion of the corrupt and self-condemned
heart. There is an obdurateness of obstinacy against all the men,
and the books, and the doctrines, and the precepts, and the practices
that are in any way connected with spiritual religion that does not
come out even in the obstinate man’s family life.</p>
<p>John Bunyan’s Obstinate, both by his conduct as well as by
the etymology of his name, not only stands in the way of his own salvation,
but he does all he can to stand in the way of other men setting out
to salvation also. Obstinate set out after Christian to fetch
him back by force, and if it had not been that he met his match in Christian,
<i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i> would never have been written.
‘That can by no means be,’ said Christian to his pursuer,
and he is first called Christian when he shows that one man can be as
obstinate in good as another man can be in evil. ‘I never
now can go back to my former life.’ And then the two obstinate
men parted company for ever, Christian in holy obstinacy being determined
to have eternal life at any cost, and Obstinate as determined against
it. The opening pages of <i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i> set
the two men very graphically and very impressively before us.</p>
<p>As to the cure of obstinacy, the rod in a firm, watchful, wise, and
loving hand will cure it. And in later life a long enough and
close enough succession of humble, yielding, docile, submissive, self-chastening
and thanksgiving acts will cure it. Reading and obeying the best
books on the subjugation and the regulation of the heart will cure it.
Descending with Dante to where the obstinate, and the embittered, and
the gloomy, and the sullen have made their beds in hell will cure it.
And much and most agonising prayer will above all cure it.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘O Lord, if thus so obstinate I,<br/>
Choose Thou, before my spirit die,<br/>
A piercing pain, a killing sin,<br/>
And to my proud heart run them in.</p>
</blockquote>
<h2>PLIABLE</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘He hath not root in himself.’—Our
Lord.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>With one stroke of His pencil our Lord gives us this Flaxman-like
outline of one of his well-known hearers. And then John Bunyan
takes up that so expressive profile, and puts flesh and blood into it,
till it becomes the well-known Pliable of <i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i>.
We call the text a parable, but our Lord’s parables are all portraits—portraits
and groups of portraits, rather than ordinary parables. Our Lord
knew this man quite well who had no root in himself. Our Lord
had crowds of such men always running after Him, and He threw off this
rapid portrait from hundreds of men and women who caused discredit to
fall on His name and His work, and burdened His heart continually.
And John Bunyan, with all his genius, could never have given us such
speaking likenesses as that of Pliable and Temporary and Talkative,
unless he had had scores of them in his own congregation.</p>
<p>Our Lord’s short preliminary description of Pliable goes, like
all His descriptions, to the very bottom of the whole matter.
Our Lord in this passage is like one of those masterly artists who begin
their portrait-painting with the study of anatomy. All the great
artists in this walk build up their best portraits from the inside of
their subjects. He hath not root in himself, says our Lord, and
we need no more than that to be told us to foresee how all his outside
religion will end. ‘Without self-knowledge,’ says
one of the greatest students of the human heart that ever lived, ‘you
have no real root in yourselves. Real self-knowledge is the root
of all real religious knowledge. It is a deceit and a mischief
to think that the Christian doctrines can either be understood or aright
accepted by any outward means. It is just in proportion as we
search our own hearts and understand our own nature that we shall ever
feel what a blessing the removal of sin will be; redemption, pardon,
sanctification, are all otherwise mere words without meaning or power
to us. God speaks to us first in our own hearts.’
Happily for us our Lord has annotated His own text and has told us that
an honest heart is the alone root of all true religion. Honest,
that is, with itself, and with God and man about itself. As David
says in his so honest psalm, ‘Behold, Thou desirest truth in the
inward parts, and in the hidden part Thou shalt make me to know wisdom.’
And, indeed, all the preachers and writers in Scripture, and all Scriptural
preachers and writers outside of Scripture, are at one in this: that
all true wisdom begins at home, and that it all begins at the heart.
And they all teach us that he is the wisest of men who has the worst
opinion of his own heart, as he is the foolishest of men who does not
know his own heart to be the worst heart that ever any man was cursed
with in this world. ‘Here is wisdom’: not to know
the number of the beast, but to know his mark, and to read it written
so indelibly in our own heart.</p>
<p>And where this first and best of all wisdom is not, there, in our
Lord’s words, there is no deepness of earth, no root, and no fruit.
And any religion that most men have is of this outside, shallow, rootless
description. This was all the religion that poor Pliable ever
had. This poor creature had a certain slight root of something
that looked like religion for a short season, but even that slight root
was all outside of himself. His root, what he had of a root, was
all in Christian’s companionship and impassioned appeals, and
then in those impressive passages of Scripture that Christian read to
him. At your first attention to these things you would think that
no possible root could be better planted than in the Bible and in earnest
preaching. But even the Bible, and, much more, the best preaching,
is all really outside of a man till true religion once gets its piercing
roots down into himself. We have perhaps all heard of men, and
men of no small eminence, who were brought up to believe the teaching
of the Bible and the pulpit, but who, when some of their inherited and
external ideas about some things connected with the Bible began to be
shaken, straightway felt as if all the grounds of their faith were shaken,
and all the roots of their faith pulled up. But where that happened,
all that was because such men’s religion was all rooted outside
of themselves; in the best things outside of themselves, indeed, but
because, in our Lord’s words, their religion was rooted in something
outside of themselves and not inside, they were by and by offended,
and threw off their faith. There is another well-known class of
men all whose religion is rooted in their church, and in their church
not as a member of the body of Christ, but as a social institution set
up in this world. They believe in their church. They worship
their church. They suffer and make sacrifices for their church.
They are proud of the size and the income of their church; her past
contendings and sufferings, and present dangers, all endear their church
to their heart. But if tribulation and persecution arise, that
is to say, if anything arises to vex or thwart or disappoint them with
their church, they incontinently pull up their roots and their religion
with it, and transplant both to any other church that for the time better
pleases them, or to no church at all. Others, again, have all
their religiosity rooted in their family life. Their religion
is all made up of domestic sentiment. They love their earthly
home with that supreme satisfaction and that all-absorbing affection
that truly religious men entertain for their heavenly home. And
thus it is that when anything happens to disturb or break up their earthly
home their rootless religiosity goes with it. Other men’s
religion, again, and all their interest in it, is rooted in their shop;
you can make them anything or nothing in religion, according as you
do or do not do business in their shop. Companionship, also, accounts
for the fluctuations of many men’s, and almost all women’s,
religious lives. If they happen to fall in with godly lovers and
friends, they are sincerely godly with them; but if their companions
are indifferent or hostile to true religion, they gradually fall into
the same temper and attitude. We sometimes see students destined
for the Christian ministry also with all their religion so without root
in themselves that a session in an unsympathetic class, a sceptical
book, sometimes just a sneer or a scoff, will wither all the promise
of their coming service. And so on through the whole of human
life. He that hath not the root of the matter in himself dureth
for a while, but by and by, for one reason or another, he is sure to
be offended.</p>
<p>So much, then,—not enough, nor good enough—for our Lord’s
swift stroke at the heart of His hearers. But let us now pass
on to Pliable, as he so soon and so completely discovers himself to
us under John Bunyan’s so skilful hand. Look well at our
author’s speaking portrait of a well-known man in Bedford who
had no root in himself, and who, as a consequence, was pliable to any
influence, good or bad, that happened to come across him. ‘Don’t
revile,’ are the first words that come from Pliable’s lips,
and they are not unpromising words. Pliable is hurt with Obstinate’s
coarse abuse of the Christian life, till he is downright ashamed to
be seen in his company. Pliable, at least, is a gentleman compared
with Obstinate, and his gentlemanly feelings and his good manners make
him at once take sides with Christian. Obstinate’s foul
tongue has almost made Pliable a Christian. And this finely-conceived
scene on the plain outside the city gate is enacted over again every
day among ourselves. Where men are in dead earnest about religion
it always arouses the bad passions of bad men; and where earnest preachers
and devoted workers are assailed with violence or with bad language,
there is always enough love of fair play in the bystanders to compel
them to take sides, for the time at least, with those who suffer for
the truth. And we are sometimes too apt to count all that love
of common fairness, and that hatred of foul play, as a sure sign of
some sympathy with the hated truth itself. When an onlooker says
‘Don’t revile,’ we are too ready to set down that
expression of civility as at least the first beginning of true religion.
But the religion of Jesus Christ cuts far deeper into the heart of man
than to the dividing asunder of justice and injustice, civility and
incivility, ribaldry and good manners. And it is always found
in the long-run that the cross of Christ and its crucifixion of the
human heart goes quite as hard with the gentlemanly-mannered man, the
civil and urbane man, as it does with the man of bad behaviour and of
brutish manners. ‘Civil men,’ says Thomas Goodwin,
‘are this world’s saints.’ And poor Pliable
was one of them. ‘My heart really inclines to go with my
neighbour,’ said Pliable next. ‘Yes,’ he said,
‘I begin to come to a point. I really think I will go along
with this good man. Yes, I will cast in my lot with him.
Come, good neighbour, let us be going.’</p>
<p>The apocalyptic side of some men’s imaginations is very easily
worked upon. No kind of book sells better among those of our people
who have no root in themselves than just picture-books about heaven.
Our missionaries make use of lantern-slides to bring home the scenes
in the Gospels to the dull minds of their village hearers, and with
good success. And at home a magic-lantern filled with the splendours
of the New Jerusalem would carry multitudes of rootless hearts quite
captive for a time. ‘Well said; and what else? This
is excellent; and what else?’ Christian could not tell Pliable
fast enough about the glories of heaven. ‘There we shall
be with seraphim and cherubim, creatures that will dazzle your eyes
to look on them. There also you shall meet with thousands and
ten thousands who have gone before us to that place. Elders with
golden crowns, and holy virgins with golden harps, and all clothed with
immortality as with a garment.’ ‘The hearing of all
this,’ cried Pliable, ‘is enough to ravish one’s heart.’
‘An overly faith,’ says old Thomas Shepard, ‘is easily
wrought.’</p>
<p>As if the text itself was not graphic enough, Bunyan’s racy,
humorous, pathetic style overflows the text and enriches the very margins
of his pages, as every possessor of a good edition of <i>The Pilgrim</i>
knows. ‘Christian and Obstinate pull for Pliable’s
soul’ is the eloquent summary set down on the side of the sufficiently
eloquent page. As the picture of a man’s soul being pulled
for rises before my mind, I can think of no better companion picture
to that of Pliable than that of poor, hard-beset Brodie of Brodie, as
he lets us see the pull for his soul in the honest pages of his inward
diary. Under the head of ‘Pliable’ in my Bunyan note-book
I find a crowd of references to Brodie; and if only to illustrate our
author’s marginal note, I shall transcribe one or two of them.
‘The writer of this diary desires to be cast down under the facileness
and plausibleness of his nature, by which he labours to please men more
than God, and whence it comes that the wicked speak good of him . .
. The Lord pity the proneness of his heart to comply with the men who
have the power . . . Lord, he is unsound and double in his heart, politically
crafty, selfish, not savouring nor discerning the things of God . .
. Let not self-love, wit, craft, and timorousness corrupt his mind,
but indue him with fortitude, patience, steadfastness, tenderness, mortification
. . . Shall I expose myself and my family to danger at this time?
A grain of sound faith would solve all my questions.’ ‘Die
Dom. I stayed at home, partly to decline the ill-will and rage
of men and to decline observation.’ Or, take another Sabbath-day
entry: ‘Die Dom. I stayed at home, because of the time,
and the observation, and the Earl of Moray . . . Came to Cuttiehillock.
I am neither cold nor hot. I am not rightly principled as to the
time. I suspect that it is not all conscience that makes me conform,
but wit, and to avoid suffering; Lord, deliver me from all this unsoundness
of heart.’ And after this miserable fashion do heaven and
earth, duty and self-interest, the covenant and the crown pull for Lord
Brodie’s soul through 422 quarto pages. Brodie’s diary
is one of the most humiliating, heart-searching, and heart-instructing
books I ever read. Let all public men tempted and afflicted with
a facile, pliable, time-serving heart have honest Brodie at their elbow.</p>
<p>‘Glad I am, my good companion,’ said Pliable, after the
passage about the cherubim and the seraphim, and the golden crowns and
the golden harps, ‘it ravishes my very heart to hear all this.
Come on, let us mend our pace.’ This is delightful, this
is perfect. How often have we ourselves heard these very words
of challenge and reproof from the pliable frequenters of emotional meetings,
and from the emotional members of an emotional but rootless ministry.
Come on, let us mend our pace! ‘I am sorry to say,’
replied the man with the burden on his back, ‘that I cannot go
so fast as I would.’ ‘Christian,’ says Mr. Kerr
Bain, ‘has more to carry than Pliable has, as, indeed, he would
still have if he were carrying nothing but himself; and he does have
about him, besides, a few sobering thoughts as to the length and labour
and some of the unforeseen chances of the way.’ And as Dean
Paget says in his profound and powerful sermon on ‘The Disasters
of Shallowness’: ‘Yes, but there is something else first;
something else without which that inexpensive brightness, that easy
hopefulness, is apt to be a frail resourceless growth, withering away
when the sun is up and the hot winds of trial are sweeping over it.
We must open our hearts to our religion; we must have the inward soil
broken up, freely and deeply its roots must penetrate our inner being.
We must take to ourselves in silence and in sincerity its words of judgment
with its words of hope, its sternness with its encouragement, its denunciations
with its promises, its requirements, with its offers, its absolute intolerance
of sin with its inconceivable and divine long-suffering towards sinners.’
But preaching like this would have frightened away poor Pliable.
He would not have understood it, and what he did understand of it he
would have hated with all his shallow heart.</p>
<p>‘Where are we now?’ called Pliable to his companion,
as they both went over head and ears into the Slough of Despond.
‘Truly,’ said Christian, ‘I do not know.’—No
work of man is perfect, not even the all-but-perfect <i>Pilgrim’s
Progress</i>. Christian was bound to fall sooner or later into
a slough filled with his own despondency about himself, his past guilt,
his present sinfulness, and his anxious future. But Pliable had
not knowledge enough of himself to make him ever despond. He was
always ready and able to mend his pace. He had no burden on his
back, and therefore no doubt in his heart. But Christian had enough
of both for any ten men, and it was Christian’s overflowing despondency
and doubt at this point of the road that suddenly filled his own slough,
and, I suppose, overflowed into a slough for Pliable also. Had
Pliable only had a genuine and original slough of his own to so sink
and be bedaubed in, he would have got out of it at the right side of
it, and been a tender-stepping pilgrim all his days.—‘Is
this the happiness you have told me all this while of? May I get
out of this with my life, you may possess the brave country alone for
me.’ And with that he gave a desperate struggle or two,
and got out of the mire on that side of the slough which was next his
own house; so he went away, and Christian saw him no more. ‘The
side of the slough which was next his own house.’ Let us
close with that. Let us go home thinking about that. And
in this trial of faith and patience, and in that, in this temptation
to sin, and in that, in this actual transgression, and in that, let
us always ask ourselves which is the side of the slough that is farthest
away from our own house, and let us still struggle to that side of the
slough, and it will all be well with us at the last.</p>
<h2>HELP</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘I was brought low, and He helped me.’—David.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The Slough of Despond is one of John Bunyan’s masterpieces.
In his description of the slough, Bunyan touches his highest water-mark
for humour, and pathos, and power, and beauty of language. If
we did not have the English Bible in our own hands we would have to
ask, as Lord Jeffrey asked Lord Macaulay, where the brazier of Bedford
got his inimitable style. Bunyan confesses to us that he got all
his Latin from the prescription papers of his doctors, and we know that
he got all his perfect English from his English Bible. And then
he got his humour and his pathos out of his own deep and tender heart.
The God of all grace gave a great gift to the English-speaking world
and to the Church of Christ in all lands when He created and converted
John Bunyan, and put it into his head and his heart to compose <i>The
Pilgrim’s Progress</i>. His heart-affecting page on the
slough has been wetted with the tears of thousands of its readers, and
their tears have been mingled with smiles as they read their own sin
and misery, and the never-to-be-forgotten time and place where their
sin and misery first found them out, all told so recognisably, so pathetically,
and so amusingly almost to laughableness in the passage upon the slough.
We see the ocean of scum and filth pouring down into the slough through
the subterranean sewers of the City of Destruction and of the Town of
Stupidity, which lies four degrees beyond the City of Destruction, and
from many other of the houses and haunts of men. We see His Majesty’s
sappers and miners at their wits’ end how to cope with the deluges
of pollution that pour into this slough that they have been ordained
to drain and dry up. For ages and ages the royal surveyors have
been laying out all their skill on this slough. More cartloads
than you could count of the best material for filling up a slough have
been shot into it, and yet you would never know that so much as a single
labourer had emptied his barrow here. True, excellent stepping-stones
have been laid across the slough by skilful engineers, but they are
always so slippery with the scum and slime of the slough, that it is
only now and then that a traveller can keep his feet upon them.
Altogether, our author’s picture of the Slough of Despond is such
a picture that no one who has seen it can ever forget it. But
better than reading the best description of the slough is to see certain
well-known pilgrims trying to cross it. Mr. Fearing at the Slough
of Despond was a tale often told at the tavern suppers of that country.
Never pilgrim attempted the perilous journey with such a chicken-heart
in his bosom as this Mr. Fearing. He lay above a month on the
bank of the slough, and would not even attempt the steps. Some
kind Pilgrims, though they had enough to do to keep the steps themselves,
offered him a hand; but no. And after they were safely over it
made them almost weep to hear the man still roaring in his horror at
the other side. Some bade him go home if he would not take the
steps, but he said that he would rather make his grave in the slough
than go back one hairsbreadth. Till, one sunshiny morning,—no
one knew how, and he never knew how himself—the steps were so
high and dry, and the scum and slime were so low, that this hare-hearted
man made a venture, and so got over. But, then, as an unkind friend
of his said, this pitiful pilgrim had a slough of despond in his own
mind which he carried always and everywhere about with him, and made
him the proverb of despondency that he was and is. Only, that
sunshiny morning he got over both the slough inside of him and outside
of him, and was heard by Help and his family singing this song on the
hither side of the slough: ‘He brought me up also out of an horrible
pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established
my goings.’</p>
<p>Our pilgrim did not have such a good crossing as Mr. Fearing.
Whether it was that the discharge from the city was deeper and fouler,
or that the day was darker, or what, we are not told, but both Christian
and Pliable were in a moment out of sight in the slough. They
both wallowed, says their plain-spoken historian, in the slough, only
the one of the two who had the burden on his back at every wallow went
deeper into the mire; when his neighbour, who had no such burden, instead
of coming to his assistance, got out of the slough at the same side
as he had entered it, and made with all his might for his own house.
But the man called Christian made what way he could, and still tumbled
on to the side of the slough that was farthest from his own house, till
a man called Help gave him his hand and set him upon sound ground.
Christiana, again, and Mercy and the boys found the slough in a far
worse condition than it had ever been found before. And the reason
was not that the country that drained into the slough was worse, but
that those who had the mending of the slough and the keeping in repair
of the steps had so bungled their work that they had marred the way
instead of mending it. At the same time, by the tact and good
sense of Mercy, the whole party got over, Mercy remarking to the mother
of the boys, that if she had as good ground to hope for a loving reception
at the gate as Christiana had, no slough of despond would discourage
her, she said. To which the older woman made the characteristic
reply: ‘You know your sore and I know mine, and we shall both
have enough evil to face before we come to our journey’s end.’</p>
<p>Now, I do not for a moment suppose that there is any one here who
can need to be told what the Slough of Despond in reality is.
Indeed, its very name sufficiently declares it. But if any one
should still be at a loss to understand this terrible experience of
all the pilgrims, the explanation offered by the good man who gave Christian
his hand may here be repeated. ‘This miry slough,’
he said, ‘is such a place as cannot be mended. This slough
is the descent whither the scum and filth that attends conviction of
sin doth continually run, and therefore it is called by the name of
Despond, for still as the sinner is awakened about his lost condition
there ariseth in his soul many fears and doubts and discouraging apprehensions,
which all of them get together, and settle in this place, and this is
the reason of the badness of the ground.’ That is the parable,
with its interpretation; but there is a passage in <i>Grace Abounding</i>
which is no parable, and which may even better than this so pictorial
slough describe some men’s condition here. ‘My original
and inward pollution,’ says Bunyan himself in his autobiography,
‘that, that was my plague and my affliction; that, I say, at a
dreadful rate was always putting itself forth within me; that I had
the guilt of to amazement; by reason of that I was more loathsome in
my own eyes than a toad; and I thought I was so in God’s eyes
also. Sin and corruption would bubble up out of my heart as naturally
as water bubbles up out of a fountain. I thought now that every
one had a better heart than I had. I could have changed heart
with anybody. I thought none but the devil himself could equalise
me for inward wickedness and pollution of mind. I fell, therefore,
at the sight of my own vileness, deeply into despair, for I concluded
that this condition in which I was in could not stand with a life of
grace. Sure, thought I, I am forsaken of God; sure I am given
up to the devil, and to a reprobate mind.’</p>
<blockquote><p>‘Let no man, then, count me a fable maker,<br/>
Nor made my name and credit a partaker<br/>
Of their derision: what is here in view,<br/>
Of mine own knowledge I dare say is true.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Sometimes, as with Christian at the slough, a man’s way in
life is all slashed up into sudden ditches and pitfalls out of the sins
of his youth. His sins, by God’s grace, find him out, and
under their arrest and overthrow he begins to seek his way to a better
life and a better world; and then both the burden and the slough have
their explanation and fulfilment in his own life every day. But
it is even more dreadful than a slough in a man’s way to have
a slough in his mind, as both Bunyan himself and Mr. Fearing, his exquisite
creation, had. After the awful-enough slough, filled with the
guilt and fear of actual sin, had been bridged and crossed and left
behind, a still worse slough of inward corruption and pollution rose
up in John Bunyan’s soul and threatened to engulf him altogether.
So terrible to Bunyan was this experience, that he has not thought it
possible to make a parable of it, and so put it into the <i>Pilgrim</i>;
he has kept it rather for the plain, direct, unpictured, personal testimony
of the <i>Grace Abounding</i>. I do not know another passage anywhere
to compare with the eighty-fourth paragraph of <i>Grace Abounding</i>
for hope and encouragement to a great inward sinner under a great inward
sanctification. I commend that powerful passage to the appropriation
of any man here who may have stuck fast in the Slough of Despond to-day,
and who could not on that account come to the Lord’s Table.
Let him still struggle out at the side of the slough farthest from his
own house, and to-night, who can tell, Help may come and give that man
his hand. When the Slough of Despond is drained, and its bottom
laid bare, what a find of all kinds of precious treasures shall be laid
bare! Will you be able to lay claim to any of it when the long-lost
treasure-trove is distributed by command of the King to its rightful
owners?</p>
<p>‘What are you doing there?’ the man whose name was Help
demanded of Christian, as he still wallowed and plunged to the hither
side of the slough, ‘and why did you not look for the steps?’
And so saying he set Christian’s feet upon sound ground again,
and showed him the nearest way to the gate. Help is one of the
King’s officers who are planted all along the way to the Celestial
City, in order to assist and counsel all pilgrims. Evangelist
was one of those officers; this Help is another; Goodwill will be another,
unless, indeed, he is more than a mere officer; Interpreter will be
another, and Greatheart, and so on. All these are preachers and
pastors and evangelists who correspond to all those names and all their
offices. Only some unhappy preachers are better at pushing poor
pilgrims into the slough, and pushing them down to the bottom of it,
than they are at helping a sinking pilgrim out; while some other more
happy preachers and pastors have their manses built at the hither side
of the slough and do nothing else all their days but help pilgrims out
of their slough and direct them to the gate. And then there are
multitudes of so-called ministers who eat the King’s bread who
can neither push a proud sinner into the slough nor help a prostrate
sinner out of it; no, nor point him the way when he has himself wallowed
out. And then, there are men called ministers, too, who also eat
the King’s bread, whose voice you never hear in connection with
such matters, unless it be to revile both the pilgrims and their helpers,
and all who run with fear and trembling up the heavenly road.
But our pilgrim was happy enough to meet with a minister to whom he
could look back all his remaining pilgrimage and say: ‘He brought
me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my
feet upon a rock, and established my goings. And he hath put a
new song in my mouth, even praise to our God.’</p>
<p>Now, as might have been expected, there is a great deal said about
all kinds of help in the Bible. After the help of God, of which
the Bible and especially the more experimental Psalms are full, this
fine name is then applied to many Scriptural persons, and on many Scriptural
occasions. The first woman whom God Almighty made bore from her
Maker to her husband this noble name. Her Father, so to speak,
gave her away under this noble name. And of all the sweet and
noble names that a woman bears, there is none so rich, so sweet, so
lasting, and so fruitful as just her first Divine name of a helpmeet.
And how favoured of God is that man to be accounted whose life still
continues to draw meet help out of his wife’s fulness of help,
till all her and his days together he is able to say, I have of God
a helpmeet indeed! For in how many sloughs do many men lie till
this daughter of Help gives them her hand, and out of how many more
sloughs are they all their days by her delivered and kept! Sweet,
maidenly, and most sensible Mercy was a great help to widow Christiana
at the slough, and to her and her sons all the way up to the river—a
very present help in many a need to her future mother-in-law and her
pilgrim sons. Let every young man seek his future wife of God,
and let him seek her of her Divine Father under that fine, homely, divine
name. For God, who knoweth what we have need of before we ask
Him, likes nothing better than to make a helpmeet for those who so ask
Him, and still to bring the woman to the man under that so spouse-like
name.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘What next I bring shall please thee, be assured,<br/>
Thy likeness, thy fit help, thy other self,<br/>
Thy wish exactly to thy heart’s desire.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>And then when the apostle is making an enumeration of the various
offices and agencies in the New Testament church of his day, after apostles
and teachers and gifts of healing, he says, ‘helps,’—assistants,
that is, succourers, especially of the sick and the aged and the poor.
And we do not read that either election or ordination was needed to
make any given member of the apostolic church a helper. But we
do read of helpers being found by the apostle among all classes and
conditions of that rich and living church; both sexes, all ages, and
all descriptions of church members bore this fine apostolic name.
‘Salute Urbane, our helper in Christ . . . Greet Priscilla and
Aquila, my helpers in Christ.’ And both Paul and John and
all the apostles were forward to confess in their epistles how much
they owed of their apostolic success, as well as of their personal comfort
and joy, to the helpers, both men and women, their Lord had blessed
them with.</p>
<p>Now, the most part of us here to-night have been at the Lord’s
Table to-day. We kept our feet firm on the steps as we skirted
or crossed the slough that self-examination always fills and defiles
for us before every new communion. And before our Lord let us
rise from His Table this morning. He again said to us: ‘Ye
call Me Master and Lord, and ye say well, for so I am. If I then
have given you My hand, and have helped you, ye ought also to help one
another.’ Who, then, any more will withhold such help as
it is in his power to give to a sinking brother? And you do not
need to go far afield seeking the slough of desponding, despairing,
drowning men. This whole world is full of such sloughs.
There is scarce sound ground enough in this world on which to build
a slough-watcher’s tower. And after it is built, the very
tower itself is soon stained and blinded with the scudding slime.
Where are your eyes, and full of what? Do you not see sloughs
full of sinking men at your very door; ay, and inside of your best built
and best kept house? Your very next neighbour; nay, your own flesh
and blood, if they have nothing else of Greatheart’s most troublesome
pilgrim about them, have at least this, that they carry about a slough
with them in their own mind and in their own heart. Have you only
henceforth a heart and a hand to help, and see if hundreds of sinking
hearts do not cry out your name, and hundreds of slimy hands grasp at
your stretched-out arm. Sloughs of all kinds of vice, open and
secret; sloughs of poverty, sloughs of youthful ignorance, temptation,
and transgression; sloughs of inward gloom, family disquiet and dispute;
lonely grief; all manner of sloughs, deep and miry, where no man would
suspect them. And how good, how like Christ Himself, and how well-pleasing
to Him to lay down steps for such sliding feet, and to lift out another
and another human soul upon sound and solid ground. ‘Know
ye what I have done to you? For I have given you an example, that
ye should do as I have done to you. If ye know these things, happy
are ye if ye do them.’</p>
<h2>MR. WORLDLY-WISEMAN</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Wise in this world.’—Paul.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mr. Worldly-Wiseman has a long history behind him on which we cannot
now enter at any length. As a child, the little worldling, it
was observed, took much after his secular father, but much more after
his scheming mother. He was already a self-seeking, self-satisfied
youth; and when he became a man and began business for himself, no man’s
business flourished like his. ‘Nothing of news,’ says
his biographer in another place, ‘nothing of doctrine, nothing
of alteration or talk of alteration could at any time be set on foot
in the town but be sure Mr. Worldly-Wiseman would be at the head or
tail of it. But, to be sure, he would always decline those he
deemed to be the weakest, and stood always with those, in his way of
thinking, that he supposed were the strongest side.’ He
was a man, it was often remarked, of but one book also. Sunday
and Saturday he was to be found deep in <i>The Architect of Fortune</i>;
<i>or</i>, <i>Advancement in Life</i>, a book written by its author
so as to ‘come home to all men’s business and bosoms.’
He drove over scrupulously once a Sunday to the State church, of which
he was one of the most determined pillars. He had set his mind
on being Lord Mayor of the town before long, and he was determined that
his eldest son should be called Sir Worldly-Wiseman after him, and he
chose his church accordingly. Another of his biographers in this
connection wrote of him thus: ‘Our Lord Mayor parted his religion
betwixt his conscience and his purse, and he went to church not to serve
God, but to please the king. The face of the law made him wear
the mask of the Gospel, which he used not as a means to save his soul,
but his charges.’ Such, in a short word, was this ‘sottish
man’ who crossed over the field to meet with our pilgrim when
he was walking solitary by himself after his escape from the slough.</p>
<p>‘How now, good fellow? Whither away after this burdened
manner?’ What a contrast those two men were to one another
in the midst of that plain that day! Our pilgrim was full of the
most laborious going; sighs and groans rose out of his heart at every
step; and then his burden on his back, and his filthy, slimy rags all
made him a picture such that it was to any man’s credit and praise
that he should stop to speak to him. And then, when our pilgrim
looked up, he saw a gentleman standing beside him to whom he was ashamed
to speak. For the gentleman had no burden on his back, and he
did not go over the plain laboriously. There was not a spot or
a speck, a rent or a wrinkle on all his fine raiment. He could
not have been better appointed if he had just stepped out of the gate
at the head of the way; they can wear no cleaner garments than his in
the Celestial City itself. ‘How now, good fellow?
Whither away after this burdened manner?’ ‘A burdened
manner, indeed, as ever I think poor creature had. And whereas
you ask me whither away, I tell you, sir, I am going to yonder wicket
gate before me; for there, as I am informed, I shall be put into a way
to be rid of my heavy burden.’ ‘Hast thou a wife and
children?’ Yes; he is ashamed to say that he has.
But he confesses that he cannot to-day take the pleasure in them that
he used to do. Since his sin so came upon him, he is sometimes
as if he had neither wife nor child nor a house over his head.
John Bunyan was of Samuel Rutherford’s terrible experience,—that
our sins and our sinfulness poison all our best enjoyments. We
do not hear much of Rutherford’s wife and children, and that,
no doubt, for the sufficient reason that he gives us in his so open-minded
letter. But Bunyan laments over his blind child with a lament
worthy to stand beside the lament of David over Absalom, and again over
Saul and Jonathan at Mount Gilboa. At the same time, John Bunyan
often felt sore and sad at heart that he could not love and give all
his heart to his wife and children as they deserved to be loved and
to have all his heart. He often felt guilty as he looked on them
and knew in himself that they did not have in him such a father as,
God knew, he wished he was, or ever in this world could hope to be.
‘Yes,’ he said, ‘but I cannot take the pleasure in
them that I would. I am sometimes as if I had none. My sin
sometimes drives me like a man bereft of his reason and clean demented.’
‘Who bid thee go this way to be rid of thy burden? I beshrew
him for his counsel. There is not a more troublesome and dangerous
way in the world than this is to which he hath directed thee.
And besides, though I used to have some of the same burden when I was
young, not since I settled in that town,’ pointing to the town
of Carnal-Policy over the plain, ‘have I been at any time troubled
in that way.’ And then he went on to describe and denounce
the way to the Celestial City, and he did it like a man who had been
all over it, and had come back again. His alarming description
of the upward way reads to us like a page out of Job, or Jeremiah, or
David, or Paul. ‘Hear me,’ he says, ‘for I am
older than thou. Thou art like to meet with in the way which thou
goest wearisomeness, painfulness, hunger, perils, nakedness, sword,
lions, dragons, darkness, and in a word, death, and what not.’
You would think that you were reading the eighth of the Romans at the
thirty-fifth verse; only Mr. Worldly-Wiseman does not go on to finish
the chapter. He does not go on to add, ‘I am persuaded that
neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers,
nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any
other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which
is in Jesus Christ our Lord.’ No; Worldly-Wiseman never
reads the Romans, and he never hears a sermon on that chapter when he
goes to church.</p>
<p>Mr. Worldly-Wiseman became positively eloquent and impressive and
all but convincing as he went so graphically and cumulatively over all
the sorrows that attended on the way to which this pilgrim was now setting
his face. But, staggering as it all was, the man in rags and slime
only smiled a sad and sobbing smile in answer, and said: ‘Why,
sir, this burden upon my back is far more terrible to me than all the
things which you have mentioned; nay, methinks I care not what I meet
with in the way, so be I can also meet with deliverance from my burden.’
This is what our Lord calls a pilgrim having the root of the matter
in himself. This poor soul had by this time so much wearisomeness,
painfulness, hunger, perils, nakedness, sword, lions, dragons, darkness,
death, and what not in himself, that all these threatened things outside
of himself were but so many bugbears and hobgoblins wherewith to terrify
children; they were but things to be laughed at by every man who is
in ernest in the way. ‘I care not what else I meet with
if only I also meet with deliverance.’ There speaks the
true pilgrim. There speaks the man who drew down the Son of God
to the cross for that man’s deliverance. There speaks the
man, who, mire, and rags, and burdens and all, will yet be found in
the heaven of heavens where the chief of sinners shall see their Deliverer
face to face, and shall at last and for ever be like Him. Peter
examined Dante in heaven on faith, James examined him on hope, and John
took him through his catechism on love, and the seer came out of the
tent with a laurel crown on his brow. I do not know who the examiner
on sin will be, but, speaking for myself on this matter, I would rather
take my degree in that subject than in all the other subjects set for
a sinner’s examination on earth or in heaven. For to know
myself, and especially, as the wise man says, to know the plague of
my own heart, is the true and the only key to all other true knowledge:
God and man; the Redeemer and the devil; heaven and hell; faith, hope,
and charity; unbelief, despair, and malignity, and all things of that
kind else, all knowledge will come to that man who knows himself, and
to that man alone, and to that man in the exact measure in which he
does really know himself. Listen again to this slough-stained,
sin-burdened, sighing and sobbing pilgrim, who, in spite of all these
things—nay, in virtue of all these things—is as sure of
heaven and of the far end of heaven as if he were already enthroned
there. ‘Wearisomeness,’ he protests, ‘painfulness,
hunger, perils, nakedness, sword, lions, dragons, darkness, death, and
what not—why, sir, this burden on my back is far more terrible
to me than all these things which you have mentioned; nay, methinks
I care not what I meet with in the way, so be I can also meet with deliverance
from my burden.’ O God! let this same mind be found in me
and in all the men and women for whose souls I shall have to answer
at the day of judgment, and I shall be content and safe before Thee.</p>
<p>That strong outburst from this so forfoughten man for a moment quite
overawed Worldly-Wiseman. He could not reply to an earnestness
like this. He did not understand it, and could not account for
it. The only thing he ever was in such earnestness as that about
was his success in business and his title that he and his wife were
scheming for. But still, though silenced by this unaccountable
outburst of our pilgrim, Worldly-Wiseman’s enmity against the
upward way, and especially against all the men and all the books that
made pilgrims take to that way, was not silenced. ‘How camest
thou by thy burden at first?’ By reading this Book in my
hand.’ Worldly-Wiseman did not fall foul of the Book indeed,
but he fell all the more foul of those who meddled with matters they
had not a head for. ‘Leave these high and deep things for
the ministers who are paid to understand and explain them, and attend
to matters more within thy scope.’ And then he went on to
tell of a far better way to get rid of the burden that meddlesome men
brought on themselves by reading that book too much—a far better
and swifter way than attempting the wicket-gate. ‘Thou wilt
never be settled in thy mind till thou art rid of that burden, nor canst
thou enjoy the blessings of wife and child as long as that burden lies
so heavy upon thee.’ That was so true that it made the pilgrim
look up. A gentleman who can speak in that true style must know
more than he says about such burdens as this of mine; and, after all,
he may be able, who knows, to give me some good advice in my great straits.
‘Pray, sir, open this secret to me, for I sorely stand in need
of good counsel.’ Let him here who has no such burden as
this poor pilgrim had cast the first stone at Christian; I cannot.
If one who looked like a gentleman came to me to-night and told me how
I would on the spot get to a peace of conscience never to be lost again,
and how I would get a heart to-night that would never any more plague
and pollute me, I would be mightily tempted to forget what all my former
teachers had told me and try this new Gospel. And especially if
the gentleman said that the remedy was just at hand. ‘Pray,
sir,’ said the breathless and spiritless man, ‘wilt thou,
then, open this secret to me?’</p>
<p>The wit and the humour and the satire of the rest of the scene must
be fully enjoyed over the great book itself. The village named
Morality, hard by the hill; that judicious man Legality, who dwells
in the first house you come at after you have turned the hill; Civility,
the pretty young man that Legality hath to his son; the hospitality
of the village; the low rents and the cheap provisions, and all the
charities and amenities of the place,—all together make up such
a picture as you cannot get anywhere out of John Bunyan. And then
the pilgrim’s stark folly in entering into Worldly-Wiseman’s
secret; his horror as the hill began to thunder and lighten and threaten
to fall upon him; the sudden descent of Evangelist; and then the plain-spoken
words that passed between the preacher and the pilgrim,—don’t
say again that the poorest of the Puritans were without letters, or
that they had not their own esoteric writings full of fun and frolic;
don’t say that again till you are a pilgrim yourself, and have
our John Bunyan for one of your classics by heart.</p>
<p>We are near an end, but before you depart, stand still a little,
as Evangelist said to Christian, that I may show you the words of God.
And first, watch yourselves well, for you all have a large piece of
this worldly-wise man in yourselves. You all take something of
some ancestor, remote or immediate, who was wise only for this world.
Yes, to be sure, for you still decline as they did, and desert as they
did, those you deem to be the weakest, and stand with those that you
suppose to be the strongest side. <i>The Architect of Fortune</i>
is perhaps too strong meat for your stomach; but still, if you ever
light upon its powerful pages, you will surely blush in secret to see
yourself turned so completely inside out. You may not have chosen
your church wholly with an eye to your shop; but you must admit that
you see as good and better men than you are doing that every day.
And it is a sure sign to you that you do not yet know the plague of
your own heart, unless you know yourself to be a man more set upon the
position and the praise that this world gives than you yet are on the
position and the praise that come from God only. Set a watch on
your own worldly heart. Watch and pray, lest you also enter into
all Worldly-Wiseman’s temptation. This is one of the words
of God to you.</p>
<p>Another word of God is this. The way of the cross, said severe
Evangelist, is odious to every worldly-wise man; while, all the time,
it is the only way there is, and there never will be any other way to
eternal life. The only way to life is the way of the cross.
There are two crosses, indeed, on the way to the Celestial City; there
is, first, the Cross of Christ, once for you, and then there is your
cross daily for Christ, and it takes both crosses to secure and to assure
any man that he is on the right road, and that he will come at last
to the right end. ‘The Christian’s great conquest
over the world,’ says William Law, ‘is all contained in
the mystery of Christ upon the cross. And true Christianity is
nothing else but an entire and absolute conformity to that spirit which
Christ showed in the mysterious sacrifice of Himself upon the cross.
Every man is only so far a Christian as he partakes of this same spirit
of Christ—the same suffering spirit, the same sacrifice of himself,
the same renunciation of the world, the same humility and meekness,
the same patient bearing of injuries, reproaches, and contempts, the
same dying to all the greatness, honours, and happiness of this world
that Christ showed on the cross. We also are to suffer, to be
crucified, to die, to rise with Christ, or else His crucifixion, His
death, and His resurrection will profit us nothing. ‘This
is the second word of God unto thee. And the third thing to-night
is this, that though thy sin be very great, though thou hast a past
life round thy neck enough to sink thee for ever out of the sight of
God and all good men; a youth of sensuality now long and closely cloaked
over with an after life of worldly prosperity, worldly decency, and
worldly religion, all which only makes thee that whited sepulchre that
Christ has in His eye when He speaks of thee with such a severe and
dreadful countenance; yet if thou confess thyself to be all the whited
sepulchre He sees thee to be, and yet knock at His gate in all thy rags
and slime, He will immediately lay aside that severe countenance and
will show thee all His goodwill. Notwithstanding all that thou
hast done, and all thou still art, He will not deny His own words, or
do otherwise than at once fulfil them all to thee. Ask, then,
and it shall be given thee; seek, and thou shalt find; knock, and it
shall be opened unto thee. And with a great goodwill, He will
say to those that stand by Him, Take away the filthy garments from him.
And to thee He will say, Behold, I have caused all thine iniquity to
pass from thee, and I will clothe thee with change of raiment.</p>
<h2>GOODWILL, THE GATEKEEPER</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Goodwill.’—Luke 2. 14.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>‘So in process of time Christian got up to the gate.
Now there was written over the gate, <i>Knock</i>, <i>and it shall be
opened unto you</i>. He knocked, therefore, more than once or
twice, saying, May I now enter here? when at last there came a grave
person to the gate, named Goodwill, who asked him who was there?’
The gravity of the gatekeeper was the first thing that struck the pilgrim.
And it was the same thing that so struck some of the men who saw most
of our Lord that they handed down to their children the true tradition
that He was often seen in tears, but that no one had ever seen or heard
Him laugh. The prophecy in the prophet concerning our Lord was
fulfilled to the letter. He was indeed a man of sorrows, and He
early and all His life long had a close acquaintance with grief.
Our Lord had come into this world on a very sad errand. We are
so stupefied and besotted with sin, that we have no conception how sad
an errand our Lord had been sent on, and how sad a task He soon discovered
it to be. To be a man without sin, a man hating sin, and hating
nothing else but sin, and yet to have to spend all His days in a world
lying in sin, and in the end to have all that world of sin laid upon
Him till He was Himself made sin,—how sad a task was that!
Great, no doubt, as was the joy that was set before our Lord, and sure
as He was of one day entering on that joy, yet the daily sight of so
much sin in all men around Him, and the cross and the shame that lay
right before Him, made Him, in spite of the future joy, all the Man
of Sorrow Isaiah had said He would be, and made light-mindedness and
laughter impossible to our Lord,—as it is, indeed, to all men
among ourselves who have anything of His mind about this present world
and the sin of this world, they also are men of sorrow, and of His sorrow.
They, too, are acquainted with grief. Their tears, like His, will
never be wiped off in this world. They will not laugh with all
their heart till they laugh where He now laughs. Then it will
be said of them, too, that they began to be merry. ‘What
was the matter with you that you did laugh in your sleep last night?
asked Christiana of Mercy in the morning. I suppose you were in
a dream. So I was, said Mercy, but are you sure that I laughed?
Yes, you laughed heartily; but, prithee, Mercy, tell me thy dream.
Well, I dreamed that I was in a solitary place and all alone, and was
there bemoaning the hardness of my heart, when methought I saw one coming
with wings towards me. So he came directly to me, and said, Mercy,
what aileth thee? Now, when he heard my complaint, he said, Peace
be to thee. He also wiped mine eyes with his handkerchief, and
clad me in silver and gold; he put a chain about my neck also, and earrings
in mine ears, and a beautiful crown upon my head. So he went up.
I followed him till we came to a golden gate; and I thought I saw your
husband there. But did I laugh? Laugh! ay, and well you
might, to see yourself so well.’</p>
<p>But to return and begin again. Goodwill, who opened the gate,
was, as we saw, a person of a very grave and commanding aspect; so much
so, that in his sudden joy our pilgrim was a good deal overawed as he
looked on the countenance of the man who stood in the gate, and it was
some time afterwards before he understood why he wore such a grave and
almost sad aspect. But afterwards, as he went up the way, and
sometimes returned in thought to the wicket-gate, he came to see very
good reason why the keeper of that gate looked as he did look.
The site and situation of the gate, for one thing, was of itself enough
to banish all light-mindedness from the man who was stationed there.
For the gatehouse stood just above the Slough of Despond, and that itself
filled the air of the place with a dampness and a depression that could
be felt. And then out of the downward windows of the gate, the
watcher’s eye always fell on the City of Destruction in the distance,
and on her sister cities sitting like her daughters round about her.
And that also made mirth and hilarity impossible at that gate.
And then the kind of characters who came knocking all hours of the day
and the night at that gate. Goodwill never saw a happy face or
heard a cheerful voice from one year’s end to the other.
And when any one so far forgot himself as to put on an untimely confidence
and self-satisfaction, the gatekeeper would soon put him through such
questions as quickly sobered him if he had anything at all of the root
of the matter in him. Terror, horror, despair, remorse, chased
men and women up to that gate. They would often fall before his
threshold more dead than alive. And then, after the gate was opened
and the pilgrims pulled in, the gate had only opened on a path of such
painfulness, toil, and terrible risk, that at whatever window Goodwill
looked out, he always saw enough to make him and keep him a grave, if
not a sad, man. It was, as he sometimes said, his meat and his
drink to keep the gate open for pilgrims; but the class of men who came
calling themselves pilgrims; the condition they came in; the past, that
in spite of all both he and they could do, still came in through his
gate after them, and went up all the way with them; their ignorance
of the way, on which he could only start them; the multitudes who started,
and the handfuls who held on; the many who for a time ran well, but
afterwards left their bones to bleach by the wayside; and all the impossible-to-be-told
troubles, dangers, sorrows, shipwrecks that certainly lay before the
most steadfast and single-hearted pilgrim—all that was more than
enough to give the man at the gate his grave and anxious aspect.</p>
<p>Not that his great gravity, with all the causes of it, ever made
him a melancholy, a morose, a despairing, or even a desponding man.
Far from that. The man of sorrows Himself sometimes rejoiced in
spirit. Not sometimes only, but often He lifted up His heart and
thanked His Father for the work His Father had given Him to do, and
for the success that had been granted to Him in the doing of it.
And as often as He looked forward to the time when he should finish
His work and receive His discharge, and return to His Father’s
house, at the thought of that He straightway forgot all His present
sorrows. And somewhat so was it with Goodwill at his gate.
No man could be but at bottom happy, and even joyful, who had a post
like his to occupy, a gate like his to keep, and, altogether, a work
like his to do. No man with his name and his nature can ever in
any circumstances be really unhappy. ‘Happiness is the bloom
that always lies on a life of true goodness,’ and this gatehouse
was full of the happiness that follows on and always dwells with true
goodness. Goodwill cannot have more happiness till he shuts in
his last pilgrim into the Celestial City, and then himself enters in
after him as a shepherd after a lost sheep.</p>
<p>The happy, heavenly, divine disposition of the gatekeeper was such,
that it overflowed from the pilgrim who stood beside him and descended
upon his wife and children who remained behind him in the doomed city.
So full of love was the gatekeeper’s heart, that it ran out upon
Obstinate and Pliable also. His heart was so large and so hospitable,
that he was not satisfied with one pilgrim received and assisted that
day. How is it, he asked, that you have come here alone?
Did any of your neighbours know of your coming? And why did he
who came so far not come through? Alas, poor man, said Goodwill,
is the celestial glory of so little esteem with him that he counteth
it not worth running the hazards of a few difficulties to obtain it?
Our pilgrim got a lifelong lesson in goodwill to all men at that gate
that day. The gatekeeper showed such deep and patient and genuine
interest in all the pilgrim’s past history, and in all his family
and personal affairs, that Christian all his days could never show impatience,
or haste, or lack of interest in the most long-winded and egotistical
pilgrim he ever met. He always remembered, when he was becoming
impatient, how much of his precious time and of his loving attention
his old friend Goodwill had given to him. Our pilgrim got tired
of talking about himself long before Goodwill had ceased to ask questions
and to listen to the answers. So much was Christian taken with
the courtesy and the kindness of Goodwill, that had it not been for
his crushing burden, he would have offered to remain in Goodwill’s
house to run his errands, to light his fires, and to sweep his floors.
So much was he taken captive with Goodwill’s extraordinary kindness
and unwearied attention. And since he could not remain at the
gate, but must go on to the city of all goodwill itself, our pilgrim
set himself all his days to copy this gatekeeper when he met with any
fellow-pilgrim who had any story that he wished to tell. And many
were the lonely and forgotten souls that Christian cheered and helped
on, not by his gold or his silver, nor by anything else, but just by
his open ear. To listen with patience and with attention to a
fellow-pilgrim’s wrongs and sorrows, and even his smallest interests,
said this Christian to himself, is just what Goodwill so winningly did
to me.</p>
<p>With all his goodwill the grave gatekeeper could not say that the
way to the Celestial City was other than a narrow, a stringent, and
a heart-searching way. ‘Come,’ he said, ‘and
I will tell thee the way thou must go.’ There are many wide
ways to hell, and many there be who crowd them, but there is only one
way to heaven, and you will sometimes think you must have gone off it,
there are so few companions; sometimes there will be only one footprint,
with here and there a stream of blood, and always as you proceed, it
becomes more and more narrow, till it strips a man bare, and sometimes
threatens to close upon him and crush him to the earth altogether.
Our Lord in as many words tells us all that. Strive, He says,
strive every day. For many shall seek to enter into the way of
salvation, but because they do not early enough, and long enough, and
painfully enough strive, they come short, and are shut out. Have
you, then, anything in your religious life that Christ will at last
accept as the striving He intended and demanded? Does your religion
cause you any real effort—Christ calls it <i>agony</i>?
Have you ever had, do you ever have, anything that He would so describe?
What cross do you every day take up? In what thing do you every
day deny yourself? Name it. Put your finger on it.
Write it in cipher on the margin of your Bible. Would the most
liberal judgment be able to say of you that you have any fear and trembling
in the work of your salvation? If not, I am afraid there must
be some mistake somewhere. There must be great guilt somewhere.
At your parents’ door, or at your minister’s, or, if their
hands are clean, then at your own. Christ has made it plain to
a proverb, and John Bunyan has made it a nursery and a schoolboy story,
that the way to heaven is steep and narrow and lonely and perilous.
And that, remember, not a few of the first miles of the way, but all
the way, and even through the dark valley itself. ‘Almost
all that is said in the New Testament of men’s watching, giving
earnest heed to themselves, running the race that is set before them,
striving and agonising, fighting, putting on the whole armour of God,
pressing forward, reaching forth, crying to God day and night; I say,
almost all that we have in the New Testament on these subjects is spoken
and directed to the saints. Where those things are applied to
sinners seeking salvation once, they are spoken of the saints’
prosecution of their salvation ten times’ (Jonathan Edwards).
If you have a life at all like that, you will be sorely tempted to think
that such suffering and struggle, increasing rather than diminishing
as life goes on, is a sign that you are so bad as not to be a true Christian
at all. You will be tempted to think and say so. But all
the time the truth is, that he who has not that labouring, striving,
agonising, fearing, and trembling in himself, knows nothing at all about
the religion of Christ and the way to heaven; and if he thinks he does,
then that but proves him a hypocrite, a self-deceived, self-satisfied
hypocrite; there is not an ounce of a true Christian in him. Says
Samuel Rutherford on this matter: ‘Christ commandeth His hearers
to a strict and narrow way, in mortifying heart-lusts, in loving our
enemy, in feeding him when he is hungry, in suffering for Christ’s
sake and the gospel’s, in bearing His cross, in denying ourselves,
in becoming humble as children, in being to all men and at all times
meek and lowly in heart.’ Let any man lay all that intelligently
and imaginatively alongside of his own daily life. Let him name
some such heart-lust. Let him name also some enemy, and ask himself
what it is to love that man, and to feed him in his hunger; what it
is in which he is called to suffer for Christ’s sake and the gospel’s,
in his reputation, in his property, in his business, in his feelings.
Let him put his finger on something in which he is every day to deny
himself, and to be humble and teachable, and to keep himself out of
sight like a little child; and if that man does not find out how narrow
and heart-searching the way to heaven is, he will be the first who has
so found his way thither. No, no; be not deceived. Deceive
not yourself, and let no man deceive you. God is not mocked, neither
are His true saints. ‘Would to God I were back in my pulpit
but for one Sabbath,’ said a dying minister in Aberdeen.
‘What would you do?’ asked a brother minister at his bedside.
‘I would preach to the people the difficulty of salvation,’
he said. All which things are told, not for purposes of debate
or defiance, but to comfort and instruct God’s true people who
are finding salvation far more difficult than anybody had ever told
them it would be. Comfort My people, saith your God. Speak
comfortably to My people. Come, said Goodwill, and I will teach
thee about the way thou must go. Look before thee, dost thou see
that narrow way? That is the way thou must go. And then
thou mayest always distinguish the right way from the wrong. The
wrong is crooked and wide, and the right is straight as a rule can make
it,—straight and narrow.</p>
<p>Goodwill said all that in order to direct and to comfort the pilgrim;
but that was not all that this good man said with that end. For,
when Christian asked him if he could not help him off with his burden
that was upon his back, he told him: ‘As to thy burden, be content
to bear it until thou comest to the place of deliverance, for there
it will fall from thy back of itself.’ Get you into the
straight and narrow way, says Goodwill, with his much experience of
the ways and fortunes of true pilgrims; get you sure into the right
way, and leave your burden to God. He appoints the place of deliverance,
and it lies before thee. The place of thy deliverance cannot be
behind thee, and it is not in my house, else thy burden would have been
already off. But it is before thee. Be earnest, therefore,
in the way. Look not behind thee. Go not into any crooked
way; and one day, before you know, and when you are not pulling at it,
your burden will fall off of itself. Be content to bear it till
then, says bold and honest Goodwill, speaking so true to pilgrim experience.
Yes; be content, O ye people of God, crying with this pilgrim for release
from your burden of guilt, and no less those of you who are calling
with Paul for release from the still more bitter and crushing burden
made up of combined guilt and corruption. Be content till the
place and the time of deliverance; nay, even under your burden and your
bonds be glad, as Paul was, and go up the narrow way, still chanting
to yourself, I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. It is
only becoming that a great sinner should tarry the Lord’s leisure;
all the more that the greatest sinner may be sure the Lord will come,
and will not tarry. The time is long, but the thing is sure.</p>
<p>And now two lessons from Goodwill’s gate:—</p>
<p>1. The gate was shut when Christian came up to it, and no one
was visible anywhere about it. The only thing visible was the
writing over the gate which told all pilgrims to knock. Now, when
we come up to the same gate we are disappointed and discouraged that
the gatekeeper is not standing already upon his doorstep and his arms
round our neck. We knelt to-day in secret prayer, and there was
only our bed or our chair visible before us. There was no human
being, much less to all appearance any Divine Presence, in the place.
And we prayed a short, indeed, but a not unearnest prayer, and then
we rose up and came away disappointed because no one appeared.
But look at him who is now inheriting the promises. He knocked,
says his history, more than once or twice. That is to say, he
did not content himself with praying one or two seconds and then giving
over, but he continued in prayer till the gatekeeper came. And
as he knocked, he said, so loud and so impatient that all those in the
gatehouse could hear him,</p>
<blockquote><p>‘May I now enter here? Will he within<br/>
Open to sorry me, though I have been<br/>
A wandering rebel? Then shall I<br/>
Not fail to sing his lasting praise on high.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>2. ‘We make no objections against any,’ said Goodwill;
‘notwithstanding all that they have done before they come hither,
they are in no wise cast out.’ He told me all things that
ever I did, said the woman of Samaria, telling her neighbours about
our Lord’s conversation with her. And, somehow, there was
something in the gatekeeper’s words that called back to Christian,
if not all the things he had ever done, yet from among them the worst
things he had ever done. They all rose up black as hell before
his eyes as the gatekeeper did not name them at all, but only said ‘notwithstanding
all that thou hast done.’ Christian never felt his past
life so black, or his burden so heavy, or his heart so broken, as when
Goodwill just said that one word ‘notwithstanding.’
‘We make no objections against any; notwithstanding all that they
have done before they come hither, they are in no wise cast out.’</p>
<h2>THE INTERPRETER</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘An interpreter, one among a thousand.’—Elihu.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>We come to-night to the Interpreter’s House. And since
every minister of the gospel is an interpreter, and every evangelical
church is an interpreter’s house, let us gather up some of the
precious lessons to ministers and to people with which this passage
of the <i>Pilgrim’s Progress</i> so much abounds.</p>
<p>1. In the first place, then, I observe that the House of the
Interpreter stands just beyond the Wicket Gate. In the whole topography
of the <i>Pilgrim’s Progress</i> there lies many a deep lesson.
The church that Mr. Worldly-Wiseman supported, and on the communion
roll of which he was so determined to have our pilgrim’s so unprepared
name, stood far down on the other side of Goodwill’s gate.
It was a fine building, and it had an eloquent man for its minister,
and the whole service was an attraction and an enjoyment to all the
people of the place; but our Interpreter was never asked to show any
of his significant things there; and, indeed, neither minister nor people
would have understood him had he ever done so. And had any of
the parishioners from below the gate ever by any chance stumbled into
the Interpreter’s house, his most significant rooms would have
had no significance to them. Both he and his house would have
been a mystery and an offence to Worldly-Wiseman, his minister, and
his fellow-worshippers. John Bunyan has the clear warrant both
of Jesus Christ and the Apostle Paul for the place on which he has planted
the Interpreter’s house. ‘It is given to you,’
said our Lord to His disciples, ‘to know the mysteries of the
Kingdom of Heaven, but to them it is not given.’ And Paul
tells us that ‘the natural man receiveth not the things of the
Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know
them, because they are spiritually discerned.’ And, accordingly,
no reader of the <i>Pilgrim’s Progress</i> will really understand
what he sees in the Interpreter’s House, unless he is already
a man of a spiritual mind. Intelligent children enjoy the pictures
and the people that are set before them in this illustrated house, but
they must become the children of God, and must be well on in the life
of God, before they will be able to say that the house next the gate
has been a profitable and a helpful house to them. All that is
displayed here—all the furniture and all the vessels, all the
ornaments and all the employments and all the people of the Interpreter’s
House—is fitted and intended to be profitable as well as interesting
to pilgrims only. No man has any real interest in the things of
this house, or will take any abiding profit out of it, till he is fairly
started on the upward road. In his former life, and while still
on the other side of the gate, our pilgrim had no interest in such things
as he is now to see and hear; and if he had seen and heard them in his
former life, he would not, with all the Interpreter’s explanation,
have understood them. As here among ourselves to-night, they who
will understand and delight in the things they hear in this house to-night
are those only who have really begun to live a religious life.
The realities of true religion are now the most real things in life—to
them; they love divine things now; and since they began to love divine
things, you cannot entertain them better than by exhibiting and explaining
divine things to them. There is no house in all the earth, after
the gate itself, that is more dear to the true pilgrim heart than just
the Interpreter’s House. ‘I was glad when it was said
to me, Let us go into the house of the Lord. Peace be within thy
walls, and prosperity within thy palaces.’</p>
<p>2. And besides being built on the very best spot in all the
land for its owner’s purposes, every several room in that great
house was furnished and fitted up for the entertainment and instruction
of pilgrims. Every inch of that capacious and many-chambered house
was given up to the delectation of pilgrims. The public rooms
were thrown open for their convenience and use at all hours of the day
and night, and the private rooms were kept retired and secluded for
such as sought retirement and seclusion. There were dark rooms
also with iron cages in them, till Christian and his companions came
out of those terrible places, bringing with them an everlasting caution
to watchfulness and a sober mind. There were rooms also given
up to vile and sordid uses. One room there was full of straws
and sticks and dust, with an old man who did nothing else day nor night
but wade about among the straws and sticks and dust, and rake it all
into little heaps, and then sit watching lest any one should overturn
them. And then, strange to tell it, and not easy to get to the
full significance of it, the bravest room in all the house had absolutely
nothing in it but a huge, ugly, poisonous spider hanging to the wall
with her hands. ‘Is there but one spider in all this spacious
room?’ asked the Interpreter. And the water stood in Christiana’s
eyes; she had come by this time thus far on her journey also.
She was a woman of a quick apprehension, and the water stood in her
eyes at the Interpreter’s question, and she said: ‘Yes,
Lord, there is here more than one. Yea, and spiders whose venom
is far more destructive than that which is in her.’ The
Interpreter then looked pleasantly on her, and said: ‘Thou hast
said the truth.’ This made Mercy blush, and the boys to
cover their faces, for they all began now to understand the riddle.
‘This is to show you,’ said the Interpreter, ‘that
however full of the venom of sin you may be, yet you may, by the hand
of faith, lay hold of, and dwell in the best room that belongs to the
King’s House above.’ Then they all seemed to be glad,
but the water stood in their eyes. A wall also stood apart on
the grounds of the house with an always dying fire on one side of it,
while a man on the other side of the wall continually fed the fire through
hidden openings in the wall. A whole palace stood also on the
grounds, the inspection of which so kindled our pilgrim’s heart,
that he refused to stay here any longer, or to see any more sights—so
much had he already seen of the evil of sin and of the blessedness of
salvation. Not that he had seen as yet the half of what that house
held for the instruction of pilgrims. Only, time would fail us
to visit the hen and her chickens; the butcher killing a sheep and pulling
her skin over her ears, and she lying still under his hands and taking
her death patiently; also the garden with the flowers all diverse in
stature, and quality, and colour, and smell, and virtue, and some better
than some, and all where the gardener had set them, there they stand,
and quarrel not with one another. The robin-red-breast also, so
pretty of note and colour and carriage, but instead of bread and crumbs,
and such like harmless matter, with a great spider in his mouth.
A tree also, whose inside was rotten, and yet it grew and had leaves.
So they went on their way and sang:</p>
<blockquote><p>‘This place hath been our second stage,<br/>
Here have we heard and seen<br/>
Those good things that from age to age<br/>
To others hid have been.<br/>
The butcher, garden, and the field,<br/>
The robin and his bait,<br/>
Also the rotten tree, doth yield<br/>
Me argument of weight;<br/>
To move me for to watch and pray,<br/>
To strive to be sincere,<br/>
To take my cross up day by day,<br/>
And serve the Lord with few.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The significant rooms of that divine house instruct us also that
all the lessons requisite for our salvation are not to be found in any
one scripture or in any one sermon, but that all that is required by
any pilgrim or any company of pilgrims should all be found in every
minister’s ministry as he leads his flock on from one Sabbath-day
to another, rightly dividing the word of truth. Our ministers
should have something in their successive sermons for everybody.
Something for the children, something for the slow-witted and the dull
of understanding, and something specially suited for those who are of
a quick apprehension; something at one time to make the people smile,
at another time to make them blush, and at another time to make the
water stand in their eyes.</p>
<p>3. And, then, the Interpreter’s life was as full of work
as his house was of entertainment and instruction. Not only so,
but his life, it was well known, had been quite as full of work before
he had a house to work for as ever it had been since. The Interpreter
did nothing else but continually preside over his house and all that
was in it and around it, and it was all gone over and seen to with his
own eyes and hands every day. He had been present at the laying
of every stone and beam of that solid and spacious house of his.
There was not a pin nor a loop of its furniture, there was not a picture
on its walls, nor a bird nor a beast in its woods and gardens, that
he did not know all about and could not hold discourse about.
And then, after he had taken you all over his house, with its significant
rooms and woods and gardens, he was full all supper-time of all wise
saws and witty proverbs. ‘One leak will sink a ship,’
he said that night, ‘and one sin will destroy a sinner.’
And all their days the pilgrims remembered that word from the Interpreter’s
lips, and they often said it to themselves as they thought of their
own besetting sin. Now, if it is indeed so, that every gospel
minister is an interpreter, and every evangelical church an interpreter’s
house, what an important passage this is for all those who are proposing
and preparing to be ministers. Let them reflect upon it: what
a house this is that the Interpreter dwells in; how early and how long
ago he began to lay out his grounds and to build his house upon them;
how complete in all its parts it is, and how he still watches and labours
to have it more complete. Understandest thou what thou here readest?
it is asked of all ministers, young and old, as they turn over John
Bunyan’s pungent pages. And every new room, every new bird,
and beast, and herb, and flower makes us blush for shame as we contrast
our own insignificant and ill-furnished house with the noble house of
the Interpreter. Let all our students who have not yet fatally
destroyed themselves and lost their opportunity lay the Interpreter’s
House well to heart. Let them be students not in idle name only,
as so many are, but in intense reality, as so few are. Let them
read everything that bears upon the Bible, and let them read nothing
that does not. They have not the time nor the permission.
Let them be content to be men of one book. Let them give themselves
wholly to the interpretation of divine truth as its riddles are set
in nature and in man, in scripture, in providence, and in spiritual
experience. Let them store their memories at college with all
sacred truth, and with all secular truth that can be made sacred.
And if their memories are weak and treacherous, let them be quiet under
God’s will in that, and all the more labour to make up in other
ways for that defect, so that they may have always something to say
to the purpose when their future people come up to church hungry for
instruction and comfort and encouragement. Let them look around
and see the sin that sinks the ship of so many ministers; and let them
begin while yet their ship is in the yard and see that she is fitted
up and furnished, stored and stocked, so that she shall in spite of
sure storms and sunken rocks deliver her freight in the appointed haven.
When they are lying in bed of a Sabbath morning, let them forecast the
day when they shall have to give a strict account of their eight years
of golden opportunity among the churches, and the classes, and the societies,
and the libraries of our university seats. Let them be able to
name some great book, ay, more than one great book, they mastered, for
every year of their priceless and irredeemable student life. Let
them all their days have old treasure-houses that they filled full with
scholarship and with literature and with all that will minister to a
congregation’s many desires and necessities, collected and kept
ready from their student days. ‘Meditate upon these things;
give thyself wholly up to them, that thy profiting may appear unto all.’</p>
<p>4. And then with a sly stroke at us old ministers, our significant
author points out to us how much better furnished the Interpreter’s
House was by the time Christiana and the boys visited it compared with
that early time when Christian was entertained in it. Our pilgrim
got far more in the Interpreter’s House of delight and instruction
than he could carry out of it, but that did not tempt the Interpreter
to sit down and content himself with taking all his future pilgrims
into the same room, and showing them the same pictures, and repeating
to them the same explanations. No, for he reflected that each
coming pilgrim would need some new significant room to himself, and
therefore, as soon as he got one pilgrim off his hands, he straightway
set about building and furnishing new rooms, putting up new pictures,
and replenishing his woods and his waters with new beasts and birds
and fishes. I am ashamed, he said, that I had so little to show
when I first opened my gates to receive pilgrims, and I do not know
why they came to me as they did. I was only a beginner in these
things when my first visitor came to my gates. Let every long-settled,
middle-aged, and even grey-headed minister read the life of the Interpreter
at this point and take courage and have hope. Let it teach us
all to break some new ground in the field of divine truth with every
new year. Let it teach us all to be students all our days.
Let us buy, somehow, the poorest and the oldest of us, some new and
first-rate book every year. Let us not indeed shut up altogether
our old rooms if they ever had anything significant in them, but let
us add now a new wing to our spiritual house, now a new picture to its
walls, and now a new herb to its gardens. ‘Resolved,’
wrote Jonathan Edwards, ‘that as old men have seldom any advantage
of new discoveries, because these are beside a way of thinking they
have been long used to; resolved, therefore, if ever I live to years,
that I will be impartial to hear the reasons of all pretended discoveries,
and receive them, if rational, how long soever I have been used to another
way of thinking.’</p>
<p>5. The fickle, frivolous, volatile character of so many divinity
students is excellently hit off by Bunyan in our pilgrim’s impatience
to be out of the Interpreter’s House. No sooner had he seen
one or two of the significant rooms than this easily satisfied student
was as eager to get out of that house as he had been to get in.
Twice over the wise and learned Interpreter had to beg and beseech this
ignorant and impulsive pilgrim to stop and get another lesson in the
religious life before he left the great school-house. All our
professors of divinity and all our ministers understand the parable
at this point only too well. Their students are eager to get into
their classes; like our pilgrim, they have heard the fame of this and
that teacher, and there is not standing-room in the class for the first
weeks of the session. But before Christmas there is room enough
for strangers, and long before the session closes, half the students
are counting the weeks and plotting to petition the Assembly against
the length and labour of the curriculum. Was there ever a class
that was as full and attentive at the end of the session as it was at
the beginning? Never since our poor human nature was so stricken
with laziness and shallowness and self-sufficiency. But what is
the chaff to the wheat? It is the wheat that deserves and repays
the husbandman’s love and labour. When Plato looked up from
his desk in the Academy, after reading and expounding one of his greatest
Dialogues, he found only one student left in the class-room, but then,
that student was Aristotle. ‘Now let me go,’ said
Christian. ‘Nay, stay,’ said the Interpreter, ‘till
I have showed thee a little more.’ ‘Sir, is it not
time for me to go?’ ‘Do tarry till I show thee just
one thing more.’</p>
<p>6. ‘Here have I seen things rare and profitable,</p>
<p>. . . Then let me be</p>
<p>Thankful, O good Interpreter, to thee.’</p>
<p>Sydney Smith, with his usual sagacity, says that the last vice of
the pulpit is to be uninteresting. Now, the Interpreter’s
House had this prime virtue in it, that it was all interesting.
Do not our children beg of us on Sabbath nights to let them see the
Interpreter’s show once more; it is so inexhaustibly and unfailingly
interesting? It is only stupid men and women who ever weary of
it. But, ‘profitable’ was the one and universal word
with which all the pilgrims left the Interpreter’s House.
‘Rare and pleasant,’ they said, and sometimes ‘dreadful;’
but it was always ‘profitable.’ Now, how seldom do
we hear our people at the church door step down into the street saying,
‘profitable’? If they said that oftener their ministers
would study profit more than they do. The people say ‘able,’
or ‘not at all able’; ‘eloquent,’ or ‘stammering
and stumbling’; ‘excellent’ in style and manner and
accent, or the opposite of all that; and their ministers, to please
the people and to earn their approval, labour after these approved things.
But if the people only said that the prayers and the preaching were
profitable and helpful, even when they too seldom are, then our preachers
would set the profit of the people far more before them both in selecting
and treating and delivering their Sabbath-day subjects. A lady
on one occasion said to her minister, ‘Sir, your preaching does
my soul good.’ And her minister never forgot the grave and
loving look with which that was said. Not only did he never forget
it, but often when selecting his subject, and treating it, and delivering
it, the question would rise in his heart and conscience, Will that do
my friend’s soul any good? ‘Rare and profitable,’
said the pilgrim as he left the gate; and hearing that sent the Interpreter
back with new spirit and new invention to fill his house of still more
significant, rare, and profitable things than ever before. ‘Meditate
on these things,’ said Paul to Timothy his son in the gospel,
‘that thy profiting may appear unto all.’ ‘Thou
art a minister of the word,’ wrote the learned William Perkins
beside his name on all his books, ‘mind thy business.’</p>
<h2>PASSION</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘A man subject to like passions as we are.’—James
5. 17.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>That was a very significant room in the Interpreter’s House
where our pilgrim saw Passion and Patience sitting each one in his chair.
Passion was a young lad who seemed to our pilgrim to be much discontented.
He was never satisfied. He would have all his good things now.
His governor would have him wait for his best things till the beginning
of next year; but no, he will have them all now. And then, when
he had got all his good things, he soon lavished and wasted them all
till he had nothing left but rags. Then said Christian to the
Interpreter, ‘Expound this matter more fully to me.’
So he said, ‘Those two lads are figures; Passion, of the men of
this world; and Patience of the men of that which is to come.’
‘Then I perceive,’ said Christian, ‘’tis not
best to covet things that are now, but to wait for things to come.’
‘You say truth,’ replied the Interpreter, ‘for the
things that are seen are temporal, but the things that are not seen
are eternal.’</p>
<p>Now from the texts that I have taken out of James and out of this
so significant room in the Interpreter’s House, let me try to
tell you something profitable, if so it may be, about passion; the nature
of it, the place it holds, and the part it performs both in human nature
and in the life and the character of a Christian man.</p>
<p>The name of Passion has already told us his nature, his past life,
and his present character. The whole nomenclature of <i>The Pilgrim’s
Progress</i> and of <i>The Holy War</i> is composed on the divine, original,
and natural principle of embodying the nature of a man in his name.
God takes His own names to Himself on that principle. The Creator
gave Adam his name also on that same principle; and then Adam gave their
names to all cattle, to the fowls of the air, and to every beast of
the field on the same principle on which he had got his own name.
And so it was at first with all the Bible names of men and of nations
of men. Their name contained their nature. And John Bunyan
was such a student of the Bible, and of no other book but the Bible,
that all his best books are all full, like the Bible, of the most descriptive
and suggestive names. As soon as Bunyan tells us the name of some
new acquaintance or fellow-traveller, we already know him, so exactly
is his nature put into his name. And thus it is that when we stop
for a moment at the door of this little significant room in the Interpreter’s
House and ask ourselves the meaning of the name Passion, we see at once
where we are and what we have here before us. For a ‘passion’
is just some excitement or agitation of the mind caused by some outward
thing acting on the mind. The inward world of the mind and heart
of man, and this outward world down into which God has placed man, instantly
and continually respond to one another. And what are called, with
so much correctness and propriety, our passions, are just those inward
responses, excitements, and agitations that the outward world causes
in the inward world when those two worlds meet together. ‘Passion’
and ‘perturbation’ are the old classical names that the
ancient philosophers and moralists gave to what they felt in themselves
as their minds and their hearts were affected by the world of men and
things around them. And they used to illustrate their teaching
on the subject of the passions by the figure of a storm at sea.
They said that it was because God had made the sea sensitive and responsive
to the winds that blew over it that a storm at sea ever arose.
The storm did not arise and the ships were not wrecked by anything from
within the sea itself; it was the outward world of the winds striking
against the quiet and inward world of the waters that roused the storms
and sank the ships. And with that illustration well printed in
the minds and imaginations of their scholars the old moralists felt
their work among their scholars was already all but done. For,
so full of adaptation and appeal is the whole outward world to the mind
and heart of man, and so sensitive and instantly responsive is the mind
and heart of man to all the approaches of the outward world, that the
mind and heart of man are constantly full of all kinds of passions,
both bad and good. And, then, this is our present life of probation
and opportunity, that all our passions are placed within us and are
committed and entrusted to us as so many first elements and so much
unformed material out of which we are summoned to build up our life
and to shape and complete our character. The springs of all our
actions are in our passions. All our activities in life, trace
them all up to their source, and they will all be found to run up into
the wellhead of our passions. All our virtues are cut as with
a chisel out of our passions, and all our vices are just the disorders
and rebellions of our passions. Our several passions, as they
lie still asleep in our hearts, have as yet no moral character; they
are only the raw material so to speak, of moral character. Our
passions are the life and the riches and the ornaments of human nature,
and it is only because human nature in its present estate is so corrupt
and disordered and degraded, that the otherwise so honourable name of
passion has such a sinister sound to us. And the full regeneration
and restitution of human nature will be accomplished when every several
passion is in its right place, and when reason and conscience and the
Spirit of God shall inspire and rule and regulate all that is within
us.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘On life’s vast ocean diversely we sail,<br/>
Reason the card, but passion is the gale.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>And not Elijah only, as James says, and not Paul and Barnabas only,
as they themselves said, were men of like passions with ourselves, but
our Lord Himself was a man of like passions with us also. He took
to Himself a true body, full of all the appetites of the body, and a
reasonable soul, full of all the affections, passions, and emotions
of the soul. Only, in Him reason and conscience and the law and
the Spirit of God were the card and the compass according to which He
steered His life. We have all our ruling passion, and our Lord
also had His. As His disciples saw His ruling passion kindled
in His heart and coming out in His life, they remembered that it was
written of Him in an old Messianic psalm: ‘The zeal of Thine house
hath eaten me up.’ They were all eaten up of their ruling
passions also. One of ambition, one of emulation, one of avarice,
and so on,—each several disciple was eaten up of his own besetting
sin. But they all saw that it was not so with their Master.
He was eaten up always and wholly of the zeal of His Father’s
house, and of absolute surrender and devotion to His Father’s
service, till His ruling passion was seen to be as strong in His death
as it had been in His life. The Laird of Brodie’s Diary
has repeatedly been of great use to us in these inward matters, and
his words on this subject are well worth repeating. ‘We
poor creatures,’ he says, ‘are commanded by our affections
and passions. They are not at our command. But the Holy
One doth exercise all His attributes at His own will; they are at His
command; they are not passions nor perturbations in His mind, though
they transport us. When I would hate, I cannot. When I would
love, I cannot. When I would grieve, I cannot. When I would
desire, I cannot. But it is the better for us that all is as He
wills it to be.’</p>
<p>And now, to come still closer home, let us look for a moment or two
at some of our own ruling and tyrannising passions. And let us
look first at self-love—that master-passion in every human heart.
Let us give self-love the first place in the inventory and catalogue
of our passions, because it has the largest place in all our hearts
and lives. Nay, not only has self-love the largest place of any
of the passions of our hearts, but it is out of self-love that all our
other evil passions spring. It is out of this parent passion that
all the poisonous brood of our other evil passions are born. The
whole fall and ruin and misery of our present human nature lies in this,
that in every human being self-love has taken, in addition to its own
place, the place of the love of God and of the love of man also.
We naturally now love nothing and no one but ourselves. And as
long as self-love is in the ascendant in our hearts, all the passions
that are awakened in us by our self-love will be selfish with its selfishness,
inhumane with its inhumanity, and ungodly with its ungodliness.
And it is to kill and extirpate our so passionate self-love that is
the end and aim of all God’s dealings with us in this world.
All that God is doing with us and for us in providence and in grace,
in the world and in the church,—it is all to cure us of this deadly
disease of self-love. We may never have had that told us before,
and we may not like it, and we may not believe it; but there can be
no better proof of the truth of what is now said than just this, that
we do not like it and will not have it. Self-love will not let
us listen to the truth about ourselves; it puts us in a passion both
against the truth and against him who tells the truth, as the history
of the truth abundantly testifies. Yes, your indignant protest
is quite true. Self-love has her divine rights,—no doubt
she has. But you are not commanded to attend to them. Your
self-love will look after herself. She will manage to have her
full share of what is right and proper for any passion to possess even
after she cries out that she is trampled upon and despoiled. My
brethren, till you begin to crucify yourselves and to pluck up your
self-love by the roots, you will never know what a cruel and hopeless
task the Christian life is—I do not say the Christian profession.
Nor, on the other hand, will you ever discover what a noble task it
is—what a divine task and how divinely assisted and divinely recompensed.
You will not know what a kennel of hell-hounds your own heart is till
you have long sought to enter it and cleanse it out. And after
you have done your utmost, and your best, death will hurry you away
from your but half-accomplished task. Only, in that case you will
be able to die in the hope that what is impossible with man is possible
with God, as promised by Him, and that He will not leave your soul in
hell, but will perfect that good thing which alone concerneth you, even
your everlasting deliverance from all sinful self-love.</p>
<p>And if self-love is the fruitful mother of all our passions, then
sensuality is surely her eldest son. Indeed, so shallow are we,
and so shallow are our words, that when we speak of sinful passion most
men instantly think of sensuality. There are so many seductive
things that appeal to our appetites, and our appetites are so easily
awakened, and are so imperious when they are awakened, that when passion
is spoken about, few men think of the soul, all men think instantly
of the body. And no wonder. For, stupid and besotted as
we are, we must all at some time of our life have felt the bondage and
degradation of the senses. Passion in the Interpreter’s
House had soon nothing left but rags. And in this house to-night
there are many men whose consciences and hearts and characters are all
in such rags from sensual sin, that when the Scriptures speak of uncleanness,
or rags, or corruption, their thoughts flee at once to sensual sin and
its conscience-rending results. Cease from sensuality, said Cicero,
for if once you give your minds up to sensuality, you will never be
able to think of anything else.</p>
<p>Ambition, emulation, and envy are the leading members of a whole
prolific family of satanic passions in the human heart. Indeed,
these passions, taken along with their kindred passions of hatred and
ill-will, are, in our Lord’s words, the very lusts of the devil
himself. The Jews hated our Lord the more for what He said about
these detestable passions, but His own disciples love Him only the more
that He so well knows the evil affections of their hearts, and so well
describes and denounces them. Anybody can denounce sensual sin,
and everybody will understand and approve. But spiritual sin,—ambition
and emulation and envy and ill-will—these things are more easy
to denounce than they are to detect and describe, and more easy to detect
and describe than they are to cast out. These sins seem rather
to multiply and to strike a deeper root when you begin to cast them
out. What an utterly and abominably evil passion is envy which
is awakened not by bad things but by the best things! That another
man’s talents, attainments, praises, rewards should kindle it,
and that the blame, the depreciation, the hurt that another man suffers
should satisfy it,—what a piece of very hell must that be in the
human heart! What more do we need than just a little envy in our
hearts to make us prostrate penitents before God and man all our days?
What more doctrine, argument, proof, authority, persuasion should a
sane man need beyond a little envy in his heart at his best friend to
make him an evangelical believer and an evangelical preacher?
How, in the name of wonder, is it that men can be so ignorant of the
plague of their own hearts as to remain indifferent, and, much more,
hostile, to the gospel of love and holiness? Pride, also,—what
a hateful and intolerable passion is that! How stone-blind to
his own state must that sinner be whose heart is filled with pride,
and how impossible it is for that man to make any real progress in any
kind of truth or goodness! And resentment,—what a deep-seated,
long-lived, and suicidal passion is that! How it hunts down him
it hates, and how surely it shuts the door of salvation against him
who harbours it! Forgive us our debts, the resentful man says
in his prayer, as we forgive our debtors. And detraction,—how
some men’s ink-horns are filled with detraction for ink, and how
it drops from their tongue like poison! At their every word a
reputation dies. Life and all its opportunities of doing good
and having good done to us is laid like a bag of treasure at our feet,
but, like the prodigal son in the Interpreter’s House, with all
those passions raging in our own hearts at other men, and in other men’s
hearts at us, we have soon nothing left us but rags. God be thanked
for every man here who sees and feels that he has nothing left him but
rags; and, still more, thanks for all those who see and feel how, by
their bad passions, sensual and spiritual, they have left on other people
nothing but rags.</p>
<p>Now, from all this let us lay it to heart that our sanctification
and salvation lie in our mastery over all these and over many other
passions that have not even been named. He is an accepted saint
of God, who, taking his and other people’s rags to God’s
mercy every day, every day also in God’s strength grapples with,
bridles, and tames his own wild and ungodly passions. Be not deceived,
my friends; he alone is a saint of God who is a sanctified man; and
his passions,—as they are the spring of his actions, so they are
the sphere and seat of his sanctification. Be not deceived; that
man, and no other manner of man, is, or ever will be, a partaker of
God’s salvation. You often hear me recommending those students
who have first to subdue their own passions and then the passions of
those who hear them to study Jonathan Edwards’ ethical and spiritual
writings. Well, just at this present point, to show you how well
that great man practised what he preached, let me read to you a few
lines from his biographer: ‘Few men,’ says Henry Rogers,
‘ever attained a more complete mastery over their passions than
Jonathan Edwards did. This was partly owing to the ascendency
of his intellect; partly, and in a still greater degree, to the elevation
of his piety. For the subjugation of his passions he was no doubt
very greatly indebted to the prodigious superiority of his reason.
Such was the commanding attitude his reason assumed, and such the tremendous
power with which it controlled the whole man, that any insurrection
among his senses was hopeless; they had their tenure only by doing fealty
and homage to his intellect. Those other and more dangerous enemies,
because more subtle and more spiritual, such as pride, vanity, wrath,
and envy, which lurk in the inmost recesses of our nature, and some
of which have such affinities for a genius like that of Edwards, yield
not to such exorcism. Such more powerful kind of demons go not
forth but by prayer and fasting; to their complete mortification, therefore,
Edwards brought incessant watchfulness and devotion; and seldom, assuredly,
have they been more nearly expelled from the bosom of a depraved intelligence.’
We shall be in the best company, both intellectually and spiritually,
if we work out our own salvation among the sinful passions of our depraved
hearts. And then, as life goes on, and we continue in well-doing,
we shall be able to measure and register our growth in grace best by
watching the effect of outward temptations upon our still sinful and
but half-sanctified hearts. And among much to be humbled for,
and much to make us fear and tremble for the issue, we shall, from time
to time, have a good conscience and a holy and humble joy that this
passion and that is at last showing some signs of crucifixion and mortification.
And thus that death to sin shall gradually set in which shall issue
at last in an everlasting life unto holiness.</p>
<p>‘Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be
clean: from all your filthiness, and from all your idols will I cleanse
you. A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I
put within you . . . Behold, I have caused thine iniquity to pass from
thee, and I will clothe thee with change of raiment. In that day
there shall be a fountain opened to the house of David, and to the inhabitants
of Jerusalem, for sin and for uncleanness . . . Bring forth the best
robe and put it upon him, for this my son was dead, and is alive again;
he was lost, and is found . . . What are these that are arrayed in white
robes, and whence came they? These are they which came out of
great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white
in the blood of the Lamb.’</p>
<h2>PATIENCE</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘In your patience possess ye your souls.’
(Revised Version: ‘In your patience ye shall win your souls.’)—Our
Lord.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>‘I saw moreover in my dream that the Interpreter took the pilgrim
by the hand, and had him into a little room, where sate two little children,
each one in his chair. The name of the eldest was Passion and
of the other Patience. Passion seemed to be much discontent, but
Patience was very quiet. Then Christian asked, What is the reason
of the discontent of Passion? The interpreter answered, The governor
of them would have him stay for his best things till the beginning of
the next year; but he will have all now. But Patience is willing
to wait.’</p>
<p>Passion and Patience, like Esau and Jacob, are twin-brothers.
And their names, like their natures, spring up from the same root.
‘Patience,’ says Crabb in his <i>English Synonyms</i>, ‘comes
from the active participle to suffer; while passion comes from the passive
participle of the same verb; and hence the difference between the two
names. Patience signifies suffering from an active principle,
a determination to suffer; while passion signifies what is suffered
from want of power to prevent the suffering. Patience, therefore,
is always taken in a good sense, and Passion always in a bad sense.’
So far this excellent etymologist. This is, therefore, another
case of blessing and cursing proceeding out of the same mouth, and of
the same fountain sending forth at the same place both sweet water and
bitter.</p>
<p>Our Lord tells us in this striking text that our very souls by reason
of sin are not our own. He tells us that we have lost hold of
our souls before we have as yet come to know that we have souls.
We only discover that we have souls after we have lost them. And
our Lord,—our best, indeed our only, authority in the things of
the soul,—here tells us that it is only by patience that we shall
ever win back our lost souls. More, far more, is needed to the
winning back of a lost soul than its owner’s patience, and our
Lord knew that to His cost. But that is not His point with us
to-night. His sole point with each one of us to-night is our personal
part in the conquest and redemption of our sin-enslaved souls.
He who has redeemed our souls with His own blood tells us with all plainness
of speech, that His blood will be shed in vain, as far as we are concerned,
unless we add to His atoning death our own patient life. Every
human life, as our Lord looks at it, and would have us look at it, is
a vast field of battle in which a soul is lost or won; little as we
think of it or will believe it, in His sight every trial, temptation,
provocation, insult, injury, and all kinds and all degrees of pain and
suffering, are all so many divinely appointed opportunities afforded
us for the reconquest and recovery of our souls. Sometimes faith
is summoned into the battle-field, sometimes hope, sometimes self-denial,
sometimes prayer, sometimes one grace and sometimes another; but as
with the sound of a trumpet the Captain of our salvation here summons
Patience to the forefront of the fight.</p>
<p>1. To begin with, how much impatience we are all from time
to time guilty of in our family life. Among the very foundations
of our family life how much impatience the husband often exhibits toward
the wife, and the wife toward her husband. Patience is the very
last grace they look forward to having any need of when they are still
dreaming about their married life; but, in too many cases, they have
not well entered on that life, when they find that they need no grace
of God so much as just patience, if the yoke of their new life is not
to gall them beyond endurance. However many good qualities of
mind and heart and character any husband or wife may have, no human
being is perfect, and most of us are very far from being perfect.
When therefore, we are closely and indissolubly joined to another life
and another will, it is no wonder that sometimes the ill-fitting yoke
eats into a lifelong sore. We have all many defects in our manners,
in our habits, and in our constitutional ways of thinking and speaking
and acting,—defects that tempt those who live nearest us to fall
into annoyances with us that sometimes deepen into dislike, and even
positive disgust, till it has been seen, in some extreme cases, that
home-life has become a very prison-house, in which the impatient prisoner
chafes and jibs and strikes out as he does nowhere else. Now,
when any unhappy man or woman wakens up to discover how different life
is now to be from what it once promised to become, let them know that
all their past blindness, and precipitancy, and all the painful results
of all that, may yet be made to work together for good. In your
patience with one another, says our Lord, you will make a conquest of
your adverse lot, and of your souls to the bargain. Say to yourselves,
therefore, that perfection, faultlessness, and absolute satisfaction
are not to be found in this world. And say also that since you
have not brought perfection to your side of the house any more than
your partner has to his side, you are not so foolish as to expect perfection
in return for such imperfection. You have your own share of what
causes fireside silence, aversion, disappointment, and dislike; and,
with God’s help, say that you will patiently submit to what may
not now be mended. And then, the sterner the battle the nobler
will the victory be; and the lonelier the fight, the more honour to
him who flinches not from it. In your patience possess ye your
souls.</p>
<p>What a beautiful, instructive, and even impressive sight it is to
see a nurse patiently cherishing her children! How she has her
eye and her heart at all their times upon them, till she never has any
need to lay her hand upon them! Passion has no place in her little
household, because patience fills all its own place and the place of
passion too. What a genius she displays in her talks to her children!
How she cheats their little hours of temptation, and tides them over
the rough places that her eye sees lying like sunken rocks before her
little ship! How skilfully she stills and heals their impulsive
little passions by her sudden and absorbing surprise at some miracle
in a picture-book, or some astonishing sight under her window!
She has a thousand occupations also for her children, and each of them
with a touch of enterprise and adventure and benevolence in it.
She is so full of patience herself, that the little gusts of passion
are soon over in her presence, and the sunshine is soon back brighter
than ever in her little paradise. And, over and above her children
rising up and calling her blessed, what wounds she escapes in her own
heart and memory by keeping her patient hands from ever wounding her
children! What peace she keeps in the house, just by having peace
always within herself! Paul can find no better figure wherewith
to set forth God’s marvellous patience with Israel during her
fretful childhood in the wilderness, than just that of such a nurse
among her provoking children. And we see the deep hold that same
touching and instructive sight had taken of the apostle’s heart
as he returns to it again to the Thessalonians: ‘We were gentle
among you, even as a nurse cherisheth her children. So, being
affectionately desirous of you, we were willing to have imparted unto
you, not the gospel of God only, but also our own souls, because ye
were dear unto us.’ What a school of divine patience is
every man’s own family at home if he only were teachable, observant,
and obedient!</p>
<p>2. Clever, quick-witted, and, themselves, much-gifted men,
are terribly intolerant of slow and stupid men, as they call them.
But the many-talented man makes a great mistake here, and falls into
a great sin. In his fulness of all kinds of intellectual gifts,
he quite forgets from Whom he has his many gifts, and why it is that
his despised neighbour has so few gifts. If you have ten or twenty
talents, and I have only two, who is to be praised and who is to be
blamed for that allotment? Your cleverness has misled you and
has hitherto done you far more evil than good. You bear yourself
among ordinary men, among less men than yourself, as if you had added
all these cubits to your own stature. You ride over us as if you
had already given in your account, and had heard it said, Take the one
talent from them and give it to this my ten-talented servant.
You seem to have set it down to your side of the great account, that
you had such a good start in talent, and that your fine mind had so
many tutors and governors all devoting themselves to your advancement.
And you conduct yourself to us as if the Righteous Judge had cast us
away from His presence, because we were not found among the wise and
mighty of this world. The truth is, that the whole world is on
a wholly wrong tack in its praise and in its blame. We praise
the man of great gifts, and we blame the man of small gifts, completely
forgetful that in so doing we give men the praise that belongs to God,
and lay on men the blame, which, if there is any blame in the matter,
ought to be laid elsewhere. Learn and lay to heart, my richly-gifted
brethren, to be patient with all men, but especially to be patient with
all stupid, slow-witted, ungifted, God-impoverished men. Do not
add your insults and your ill-usage to the low estate of those on whom,
in the meantime, God’s hand lies so cold and so straitened.
For who maketh thee to differ from another? and what hast thou that
thou didst not receive? Now, if thou didst receive it, why dost
thou glory as if thou hadst not received it? Call that to mind
the next time you are tempted to cry out that you have no patience with
your slow-witted servant.</p>
<p>3. ‘Is patient with the bad’ is one of the tributes
of praise that is paid in the fine paraphrase to that heart that is
full of the same love that is in God. A patient love to the unjust
and the evil is one of the attributes and manifestations of the divine
nature, as that nature is seen both in God and in all genuinely godly
men. And, indeed, in no other thing is the divine nature so surely
seen in any man as just in his love to and his patience with bad men.
He schools and exercises himself every day to be patient and good to
other men as God has been to him. He remembers when tempted to
resentment how God did not resent his evil, but, while he was yet an
enemy to God and to godliness, reconciled him to Himself by the death
of His Son. And ever since the godly man saw that, he has tried
to reconcile his worst enemies to himself by the death of his impatience
and passion toward them, and has more pitied than blamed them, even
when their evil was done against himself. Let God judge, and if
it must be, condemn that bad man. But I am too bad myself to cast
a stone at the worst and most injurious of men. If we so much
pity ourselves for our sinful lot, if we have so much compassion on
ourselves because of our inherited and unavoidable estate of sin and
misery, why do we not share our pity and our compassion with those miserable
men who are in an even worse estate than our own? At any rate,
I must not judge them lest I be judged. I must take care when
I say, Forgive me my trespasses, as I forgive them that trespass against
me. Not to seven times must I grudgingly forgive, but ungrudgingly
to seventy times seven. For with what judgment I judge, I shall
be judged; and with what measure I mete, it shall be measured to me
again.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘Love harbours no suspicious thought,<br/>
Is patient to the bad:<br/>
Grieved when she hears of sins and crimes,<br/>
And in the truth is glad.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>4. And then, most difficult and most dangerous, but most necessary
of all patience, we must learn how to be patient with ourselves.
Every day we hear of miserable men rushing upon death because they can
no longer endure themselves and the things they have brought on themselves.
And there are moral suicides who cast off the faith and the hope and
the endurance of a Christian man because they are so evil and have lived
such an evil life. We speak of patience with bad men, but there
is no man so bad, there is no man among all our enemies who has at all
hurt us like that man who is within ourselves. And to bear patiently
what we have brought upon ourselves,—to endure the inward shame,
the self-reproof, the self-contempt bitterer to drink than blood, the
lifelong injuries, impoverishment, and disgrace,—to bear all these
patiently and uncomplainingly,—to acquiesce humbly in the discovery
that all this was always in our hearts, and still is in our hearts—what
humility, what patience, what compassion and pity for ourselves must
all that call forth! The wise nurse is patient with her passionate,
greedy, untidy, disobedient child. She does not cast it out of
doors, she does not run and leave it, she does not kill it because all
these things have been and still are in its sad little heart.
Her power for good with such a child lies just in her pity, in her compassion,
and in her patience with her child. And the child that is in all
of us is to be treated in the same patient, hopeful, believing, forgiving,
divine way. We should all be with ourselves as God is with us.
He knoweth our frame. He remembereth that we are dust. He
shows all patience toward us. He does not look for great things
from us. He does not break the bruised reed, nor quench the smoking
flax. He shall not fail nor be discouraged till He have set judgment
in the earth. And so shall not we.</p>
<p>5. And, then,—it is a sufficiently startling thing to
say, but—we must learn to be patient with God also. All
our patience, and all the exercises of it, if we think aright about
it, all run up in the long-run into patience with God. But there
are some exercises of patience that have to do directly and immediately
with God and with God alone. When any man’s heart has become
fully alive to God and to the things of God; when he begins to see and
feel that he lives and moves and has his being in God; then everything
that in any way affects him is looked on by him as come to him from
God. Absolutely, all things. The very weather that everybody
is so atheistic about, the climate, the soil he labours, the rain, the
winter’s cold and the summer’s heat,—true piety sees
all these things as God’s things, and sees God’s immediate
will in the disposition and dispensation of them all. He feels
the untameableness of his tongue in the indecent talk that goes on everlastingly
about the weather. All these things may be without God to other
men, as they once were to him also, but you will find that the truly
and the intelligently devout man no longer allows himself in such unbecoming
speech. For, though he cannot trace God’s hand in all the
changes of the seasons, in heat and cold, in sunshine and snow, yet
he is as sure that God’s wisdom and will are there as that Scripture
is true and the Scripture-taught heart. ‘Great is our Lord,
and His understanding is infinite. Who covereth the heavens with
clouds, and prepareth rain for the earth, and maketh the grass to grow
upon the mountains. He giveth snow like wool; He scattereth the
hoarfrost like ashes; He casteth forth His ice like morsels. Who
can stand before his cold?’ Here is the patience and the
faith of the saints. Here are they that keep the commandments
of God and the faith of Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>And, then, when through rain or frost or fire, when out of any terror
by night or arrow that flieth by day, any calamity comes on the man
who is thus pointed and practised in his patience, he is able with Job
to say, ‘This is the Lord. What, shall we receive good at
the hand of God and not also receive evil?’ By far the best
thing I have ever read on this subject, and I have read it a thousand
times since I first read it as a student, is Dr. Thomas Goodwin’s
<i>Patience and its Perfect Work</i>. That noble treatise had
its origin in the great fire of London in 1666. The learned President
of Magdalen College lost the half of his library, five hundred pounds
worth of the best books, in that terrible fire. And his son tells
us he had often heard his father say that in the loss of his not-to-be-replaced
books, God had struck him in a very sensible place. To lose his
Augustine, and his Calvin, and his Musculus, and his Zanchius, and his
Amesius, and his Suarez, and his Estius was a sore stroke to such a
man. I loved my books too well, said the great preacher, and God
rebuked me by this affliction. Let the students here read Goodwin’s
costly treatise, and they will be the better prepared to meet such calamities
as the burning of their manse and their library, as also to counsel
and comfort their people when they shall lose their shops or their stockyards
by fire.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘Blind unbelief is sure to err,<br/>
And scan His work in vain;<br/>
God is His own interpreter,<br/>
And He will make it plain.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>And, then, in a multitude of New Testament scriptures, we are summoned
to great exercise of patience with the God of our salvation, because
it is His purpose and plan that we shall have to wait long for our salvation.
God has not seen it good to carry us to heaven on the day of our conversion.
He does not glorify us on the same day that He justifies us. We
are appointed to salvation indeed, but it is also appointed us to wait
long for it. This is not our rest. We are called to be pilgrims
and strangers for a season with God upon the earth. We are told
to endure to the end. It is to be through faith and patience that
we, with our fathers, shall at last inherit the promises. Holiness
is not a Jonah’s gourd. It does not come up in a night,
and it does not perish in a night. Holiness is the Divine nature,
and it takes a lifetime to make us partakers of it. But, then,
if the time is long the thing is sure. Let us, then, with a holy
and a submissive patience wait for it.</p>
<p>‘I saw moreover in my dream that Passion seemed to be much
discontent, but Patience was very quiet. Then Christian asked,
What is the reason of the discontent of Passion? The Interpreter
answered, The governor of them would have him stay for his best things
till the beginning of the next year; but he will have them all now.
But Patience is willing to wait.’</p>
<h2>SIMPLE, SLOTH, AND PRESUMPTION</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Ye did run well, who did hinder you?’—Paul.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>It startles us not a little to come suddenly upon three pilgrims
fast asleep with fetters on their heels on the upward side of the Interpreter’s
House, and even on the upward side of the cross and the sepulchre.
We would have looked for those three miserable men somewhere in the
City of Destruction or in the Town of Stupidity, or, at best, somewhere
still outside of the wicket-gate. But John Bunyan did not lay
down his <i>Pilgrim’s Progress</i> on any abstract theory, or
on any easy and pleasant presupposition, of the Christian life.
He constructed his so lifelike book out of his own experiences as a
Christian man, as well as out of all he had learned as a Christian minister.
And in nothing is Bunyan’s power of observation, deep insight,
and firm hold of fact better seen than just in the way he names and
places the various people of the pilgrimage. Long after he had
been at the Cross of Christ himself, and had seen with his own eyes
all the significant rooms in the Interpreter’s House, Bunyan had
often to confess that the fetters of evil habit, unholy affection, and
a hard heart were still firmly riveted on his own heels. And his
pastoral work had led him to see only too well that he was not alone
in the temptations and the dangers and the still-abiding bondage to
sin that had so surprised himself after he was so far on in the Christian
life. It was the greatest sorrow of his heart, he tells us in
a powerful passage in his <i>Grace Abounding</i>, that so many of his
spiritual children broke down and came short in the arduous and perilous
way in which he had so hopefully started them. ‘If any of
those who were awakened by my ministry did after that fall back, as
sometimes too many did, I can truly say that their loss hath been more
to me than if one of my own children, begotten of my body, had been
going to its grave. I think, verily, I may speak it without an
offence to the Lord, nothing hath gone so near me as that, unless it
was the fear of the salvation of my own soul. I have counted as
if I had goodly buildings and lordships in those places where my children
were born; my heart has been so wrapped up in this excellent work that
I counted myself more blessed and honoured of God by this than if He
had made me the emperor of the Christian world, or the lord of all the
glory of the earth without it.’ And I have no doubt that
we have here the three things that above everything else bereft Bunyan
of so many of his spiritual children personified and then laid down
by the heels in Simple, Sloth, and Presumption.</p>
<h2>SIMPLE</h2>
<p>Let us shake up Simple first and ask him what it was that laid him
so soon and in such a plight and in such company in this bottom.
It was not that which from his name we might at first think it was.
It was not the weakness of his intellects, nor his youth, nor his inexperience.
There is danger enough, no doubt, in all these things if they are not
carefully attended to, but none of all these things in themselves, nor
all of them taken together, will lay any pilgrim by the heels.
There must be more than mere and pure simplicity. No blame attaches
to a simple mind, much less to an artless and an open heart. We
do not blame such a man even when we pity him. We take him, if
he will let us, under our care, or we put him under better care, but
we do not anticipate any immediate ill to him so long as he remains
simple in mind, untainted in heart, and willing to learn. But,
then, unless he is better watched over than any young man or young woman
can well be in this world, that simplicity and child-likeness and inexperience
of his may soon become a fatal snare to him. There is so much
that is not simple and sincere in this world; there is so much falsehood
and duplicity; there are so many men abroad whose endeavour is to waylay,
mislead, entrap, and corrupt the simple-minded and the inexperienced,
that it is next to impossible that any youth or maiden shall long remain
in this world both simple and safe also. My son, says the Wise
Man, keep my words, and lay up my commandments with thee. For
at the window of my house I looked through my casement, and beheld among
the simple ones, I discerned among the youths, a young man void of understanding;—and
so on,—till a dart strike through his liver, and he goeth as an
ox to the slaughter. And so, too often in our own land, the maiden
in her simplicity also opens her ear to the promises and vows and oaths
of the flatterer, till she loses both her simplicity and her soul, and
lies buried in that same bottom beside Sloth and Presumption.</p>
<p>It is not so much his small mind and his weak understanding that
is the fatal danger of their possessor, it is his imbecile way of treating
his small mind. In our experience of him we cannot get him, all
we can do, to read an instructive book. We cannot get him to attend
our young men’s class with all the baits and traps we can set
for him. Where does he spend his Sabbath-day and week-day evenings?
We cannot find out until we hear some distressing thing about him, that,
ten to one, he would have escaped had he been a reader of good books,
or a student with us, say, of Dante and Bunyan and Rutherford, and a
companion of those young men and young women who talk about and follow
such intellectual tastes and pursuits. Now, if you are such a
young man or young woman as that, or such an old man or old woman, you
will not be able to understand what in the world Bunyan can mean by
saying that he saw you in his dream fast asleep in a bottom with irons
on your heels. No; for to understand the <i>Pilgrim’s Progress</i>,
beyond a nursery and five-year-old understanding of it, you must have
worked and studied and suffered your way out of your mental and spiritual
imbecility. You must have for years attended to what is taught
from the pulpit and the desk, and, alongside of that, you must have
made a sobering and solemnising application of it all to your own heart.
And then you would have seen and felt that the heels of your mind and
of your heart are only too firmly fettered with the irons of ignorance
and inexperience and self-complacency. But as it is, if you would
tell the truth, you would say to us what Simple said to Christian, I
see no danger. The next time that John Bunyan passed that bottom,
the chains had been taken off the heels of this sleeping fool and had
been put round his neck.</p>
<h2>SLOTH</h2>
<p>Sloth had a far better head than Simple had; but what of that when
he made no better use of it? There are many able men who lie all
their days in a sad bottom with the irons of indolence and inefficiency
on their heels. We often envy them their abilities, and say about
them, What might they not have done for themselves and for us had they
only worked hard? Just as we are surprised to see other men away
above us on the mountain top, not because they have better abilities
than we have, but because they tore the fetters of sloth out of their
soft flesh and set themselves down doggedly to their work. And
the same sloth that starves and fetters the mind at the same time casts
the conscience and the heart into a deep sleep. I often wonder
as I go on working among you, if you ever attach any meaning or make
any application to yourselves of all those commands and counsels of
which the Scriptures are full,—to be up and doing, to watch and
pray, to watch and be sober, to fight the good fight of faith, to hold
the fort, to rise early, and even by night, and to endure unto death,
and never for one moment to be found off your guard. Do you attach
any real meaning to these examples of the psalmists, to these continual
commands and examples of Christ, and to these urgent counsels of his
apostles? Do you? Against whom and against what do you thus
campaign and fight? For fear of whom or of what do you thus watch?
What fort do you hold? What occupies your thoughts in night-watches,
and what inspires and compels your early prayers? It is your stupefying
life of spiritual sloth that makes it impossible for you to answer these
simple and superficial questions. Sloth is not the word for it.
Let them give the right word to insanity like that who sleep and soak
in sinful sloth no longer.</p>
<p>We have all enemies in our own souls that never sleep, whatever we
may do. There are no irons on their heels. They never procrastinate.
They never say to their master, A little more slumber. Now, could
you name any hateful enemy entrenched in your own heart, of which you
have of yourself said far more than that? And, if so, what have
you done, what are you at this moment doing, to cast that enemy out?
Have you any armour on, any weapons of offence and precision, against
that enemy? And what success and what defeat have you had in unearthing
and casting out that enemy? What fort do you hold? On what
virtue, on what grace are you posted by your Lord to keep for yourself
and for Him? And with what cost of meat and drink and sleep and
amusement do you lose it or keep it for Him? Alexander used to
leave his tent at midnight and go round the camp, and spear to his post
the sentinel he found sleeping.</p>
<p>There is nothing we are all so slothful in as secret, particular,
importunate prayer. We have an almighty instrument in our hand
in secret and exact prayer if we would only importunately and perseveringly
employ it. But there is an utterly unaccountable restraint of
secret and particularising prayer in all of us. There is a soaking,
stupefying sloth, that so fills our hearts that we forget and neglect
the immense concession and privilege we have afforded us in secret prayer.
Our sloth and stupidity in prayer is surely the last proof of our fall
and of the misery of our fallen state. Our sloth with a gold mine
open at our feet; a little more sleep on the top of a mast with a gulf
under us that hath no bottom,—no language of this life can adequately
describe the besottedness of that man who lies with irons on his heels
between Simple and Presumption.</p>
<h2>PRESUMPTION</h2>
<p>The greatest theologian of the Roman Catholic Church has made an
induction and classification of sins that has often been borrowed by
our Protestant and Puritan divines. His classification is made,
as will be seen, on an ascending scale of guilt and aggravation.
In the world of sin, he says, there are, first, sins of ignorance; next,
there are sins of infirmity; and then, at the top, there are sins of
presumption. And this, it will be remembered, was the Psalmist’s
inventory and estimate of sins also. His last and his most earnest
prayer was, that he might be kept back from all presumptuous sin.
Now you know quite well, without any explanation, what presumption is.
Don’t presume, you say, with rising and scarce controlled anger.
Don’t presume too far. Take care, you say, with your heart
beating so high that you can scarcely command it, take care lest you
go too far. And the word of God feels and speaks about presumptuous
sin very much as you do yourself. Now, what gave this third man
who lay in fetters a little beyond the cross the name of Presumption
was just this, that he had been at the cross with his past sin, and
had left the cross to commit the same sin at the first opportunity.
Presumption presumed upon his pardon. He presumed upon the abounding
grace of God. He presumed upon the blood of Christ. He was
so high on the Atonement, that he held that the gospel was not sufficiently
preached to him, unless not past sin only and present, but also all
future sin was atoned for on the tree before it was committed.
There is a reprobate in Dante, who, all the time he was repenting, had
his eye on his next opportunity. Now, our Presumption was like
that. He presumed on his youth, on his temptations, on his opportunities,
and especially on his future reformation and the permanence and the
freeness of the gospel offer. When he was in the Interpreter’s
House he did not hear what the Interpreter was saying, the blood was
roaring so through his veins. His eyes were so full of other images
that he did not see the man in the iron cage, nor the spider on the
wall, nor the fire fed secretly. He had no more intention of keeping
always to the way that was as straight as a rule could make it, than
he had of cutting off both his hands and plucking out both his eyes.
When the three shining ones stripped him of his rags and clothed him
with change of raiment, he had no more intention of keeping his garments
clean than he had of flying straight up to heaven on the spot.
Now, let each man name to himself what that is in which he intentionally,
deliberately, and by foresight and forethought sins. Have you
named it? Well, it was for that that this reprobate was laid by
the heels on the immediately hither side of the cross and the sepulchre.
Not that the iron might not have been taken off his heels again on certain
conditions, even after it was on; but, even so, he would never have
been the same man again that he was before his presumptuous sin.
You will easily know a man who has committed much presumptuous sin,—that
is to say, if you have any eye for a sinner. I think I would find
him out if I heard him pray once, or preach once, or even select a psalm
for public or for family worship; even if I heard him say grace at a
dinner-table, or reprove his son, or scold his servant. Presumptuous
sin has so much of the venom and essence of sin in it that, forgiven
or unforgiven, even a little of it never leaves the sinner as it found
him. Even if his fetters are knocked off, there is always a piece
of the poisonous iron left in his flesh; there is always a fang of his
fetters left in the broken bone. The presumptuous saint will always
be detected by the way he halts on his heels all his after days.
Keep back Thy servant, O God, from presumptuous sin. Let him be
innocent of the great transgression.</p>
<p>Dr. Thomas Goodwin says somewhere that the worm that dieth not only
comes to its sharpest sting and to its deadliest venom when it is hatched
up under gospel light. The very light of nature itself greatly
aggravates some of our sins. The light of our early education
greatly aggravates others of our sins. But nothing wounds our
conscience and then exasperates the wound like a past experience of
the same sin, and, especially, an experience of the grace of God in
forgiving that sin. Had we found young Presumption in his irons
before his conversion, we would have been afraid enough at the sight.
Had we found him laid by the heels after his first uncleanness, it would
have made us shudder for ourselves. But we are horrified and speechless
as we see him apprehended and laid in irons on the very night of his
first communion, and with the wine scarcely dry on his unclean lips.
Augustine postponed his baptism till he should have his fill of sin,
and till he should no longer return to sin like a dog to his vomit.
Now, next Sabbath is our communion day in this congregation. Let
us therefore this week examine ourselves. And if we must sin as
long as we are in this world, let it henceforth be the sin of ignorance
and of infirmity.</p>
<p>So the three reprobates lay down to sleep again, and Christian as
he left that bottom went on in the narrow way singing:</p>
<blockquote><p>‘O to grace how great a debtor<br/>
Daily I’m constrained to be<br/>
Let that grace, Lord, like a fetter,<br/>
Bind my wandering heart to Thee.’</p>
</blockquote>
<h2>THE THREE SHINING ONES AT THE CROSS</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Salvation shall God appoint for walls.’—Isaiah.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>John Bunyan’s autobiography, <i>Grace Abounding to the Chief
of Sinners</i>, is the best of all our commentaries on <i>The Pilgrim’s
Progress</i>, and again to-night I shall have to fall back on that incomparable
book. ‘Now, I saw in my dream that the highway up which
Christian was to go was fenced on either side with a wall, and that
wall is called Salvation. Up this way, therefore, did burdened
Christian run, but not without great difficulty, because of the load
on his back.’ In the corresponding paragraph in <i>Grace
Abounding</i>, our author says, speaking about himself: ‘But forasmuch
as the passage was wonderful narrow, even so narrow that I could not
but with great difficulty enter in thereat, it showed me that none could
enter into life but those that were in downright earnest, and unless
also they left this wicked world behind them; for here was only room
for body and soul, but not for body and soul and sin.’ ‘He
ran thus till he came to a place somewhat ascending, and upon that place
stood a cross, and a little below in the bottom a sepulchre. So
I saw in my dream, that just as Christian came up with this cross, his
burden loosed from off his shoulders and fell from off his back, and
began to tumble, and so continued to do till it came to the mouth of
the sepulchre, where it fell in, and I saw it no more.’
Turning again to the <i>Grace Abounding</i>, we read in the 115th paragraph:
‘I remember that one day as I was travelling into the country
and musing on the wickedness and blasphemy of my heart, and considering
of the enmity that was in me to God, that scripture came into my mind,
He hath made peace by the blood of His Cross. By which I was made
to see both again and again and again that day that God and my soul
were friends by that blood: yea, I saw that the justice of God and my
sinful soul could embrace and kiss each other through that blood.
That was a good day to me; I hope I shall not forget it. I thought
I could have spoken of His love and of His mercy to me that day to the
very crows that sat upon the ploughed lands before me had they been
capable to have understood me. Wherefore I said in my soul with
much gladness, Well, I would I had a pen and ink here and I would write
this down before I go any farther, for surely I will not forget this
forty years hence.’</p>
<p>From all this we learn that the way to the Celestial City lies within
high and close fencing walls. There is not room for many pilgrims
to walk abreast in that way; indeed, there is seldom room for two.
There are some parts of the way where two or even three pilgrims can
for a time walk and converse together, but for the most part the path
is distressingly lonely. The way is so fenced up also that a pilgrim
cannot so much as look either to the right hand or the left. Indeed,
it is one of the laws of that road that no man is to attempt to look
except straight on before him. But then there is this compensation
for the solitude and stringency of the way that the wall that so encloses
it is Salvation. And Salvation is such a wall that it is companionship
and prospect enough of itself. Dante saw a long reach of this
same wall running round the bottom of the mount that cleanses him who
climbs it,—a long stretch of such sculptured beauty, that it arrested
him and instructed him and delighted him beyond his power sufficiently
to praise it. And thus, that being so, burdened and bowed down
to the earth as our pilgrim was, he was on the sure way, sooner or later,
to deliverance. Somewhere and sometime and somehow on that steep
and high fenced way deliverance was sure to come. And, then, as
to the burdened man himself. His name was once Graceless, but
his name is Graceless no longer. No graceless man runs long between
these close and cramping-up walls; and, especially, no graceless man
has that burden long on his back. That is not Graceless any longer
who is leaving the Interpreter’s House for the fenced way; that
is Christian, and as long as he remains Christian, the closeness of
the fence and the weight of his burden are a small matter. But
long-looked-for comes at last. And so, still carrying his burden
and keeping close within the fenced-up way, our pilgrim came at last
to a cross. And a perfect miracle immediately took place in that
somewhat ascending ground. For scarcely had Christian set his
eyes on the cross, when, without his pulling at it, or pushing it, or
even at that moment thinking of it, ere ever he was aware, he saw his
burden begin to tumble, and so it continued to do till it fell fairly
out of his sight into an open sepulchre.</p>
<p>The application of all that is surely self-evident. For our
way in a holy life is always closely fenced up. It is far oftener
a lonely way than otherwise. And the steepness, sternness, and
loneliness of our way are all aggravated by the remembrance of our past
sins and follies. They still, and more and more, lie upon our
hearts a heart-crushing burden. But if we, like Christian, know
how to keep our back to our former house and our face to heaven, sooner
or later we too shall surely come to the cross. And then, either
suddenly, or after a long agony, our burden also shall be taken off
our back and shut down into Christ’s sepulchre. And I saw
it no more, says the dreamer. He does not say that its owner saw
it no more. He was too wise and too true a dreamer to say that.</p>
<p>It will be remembered that the first time we saw this man, with whose
progress to the Celestial City we are at present occupied, he was standing
in a certain place clothed with rags and with a burden on his back.
After a long journey with him, we have just seen his burden taken off
his back, and it is only after his burden is off and a Shining One has
said to him, Thy sins be forgiven, that a second Shining One comes and
strips him of his rags and clothes him with change of raiment.
Now, why, it may be asked, has Christian had to carry his burden so
long, and why is he still kept so ragged and so miserable and he so
far on in the pilgrim’s path? Surely, it will be said, John
Bunyan was dreaming indeed when he kept a truly converted man, a confessedly
true and sincere Christian, so long in bonds and in rags. Well,
as to his rags: filthy rags are only once spoken of in the Bible, and
it is the prophet Isaiah, whose experience and whose language John Bunyan
had so entirely by heart, who puts them on. And that evangelist
among the prophets not only calls his own and Israel’s sins filthy
rags, but Isaiah is very bold, and calls their very righteousnesses
by that opprobrious name. Had that bold prophet said that all
his and all his people’s <i>un</i>righteousnesses were filthy
rags, all Israel would have subscribed to that. There was no man
so brutish as not to admit that. But as long as they had any sense
of truth and any self-respect, multitudes of Isaiah’s first hearers
and readers would resent what he so rudely said of their righteousnesses.
On the other hand, the prophet’s terrible discovery and comparison,
just like our dreamer’s dramatic distribution of Christian experience,
was, to a certainty, an immense consolation to many men in Israel in
his day. They gathered round Isaiah because, but for him and his
evangelical ministry, they would have been alone in their despair.
To them Isaiah’s ministry was a house of refuge, and the prophet
himself a veritable tower of strength. They felt they were not
alone so long as Isaiah dwelt in the same city with them. And
thus, whatever he might be to others, he was God’s very prophet
to them as his daily prayers in the temple both cast them down and lifted
them up. ‘Oh that Thou wouldst rend the heavens and come
down . . . But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses
are as filthy rags, and our iniquities like the wind have taken us away.’
Thousands in Israel found in these terrible words a door of hope, a
sense of fellowship, and a call to trust and thanksgiving. And
tens of thousands have found the same help and consolation out of what
have seemed to others the very darkest and most perplexing pages of
the <i>Pilgrim’s Progress</i> and the <i>Grace Abounding</i>.
‘It made me greatly ashamed,’ says Hopeful, ‘of the
vileness of my former life, and confounded me with the sense of mine
own ignorance, for there never came into mine heart before now that
showed me so by contrast the beauty of the Lord Jesus. My own
vileness and nakedness made me love a holy life. Yea, I thought
that had I now a thousand gallons of blood in my body, I could spill
it all for the sake of the Lord Jesus.’ And if you, my brother,
far on in the way of Salvation, still think sometimes that, after all,
you must be a reprobate because of your filthy rags, read what David
Brainerd wrote with his half-dead hand on the last page of his seraphic
journal: ‘How sweet it is to love God and to have a heart all
for God! Yes; but a voice answered me, You are not all for God,
you are not an angel. To which my whole soul replied, I as sincerely
desire to love and glorify God as any angel in heaven. But you
are filthy, and not fit for heaven. When hereupon there instantly
appeared above me and spread over me the blessed robes of Christ’s
righteousness which I could not but exult and triumph in. And
then I knew that I should be as active as an angel in heaven, and should
then be for ever stripped of my filthy garments and clothed with spotless
raiment.’ Let me die the death of David Brainerd, and let
my latter end be like his!</p>
<p>The third Shining One then came forward and set a mark on the forehead
of this happy man. And it was a most ancient and a most honourable
mark. For it was the same redeeming mark that was set by Moses
upon the foreheads of the children of Israel when the Lord took them
into covenant with Himself at the Passover in the wilderness.
It was the same distinguishing mark also that the man with the slaughter-weapon
in his hand first set upon the foreheads of the men who sighed and cried
for the abominations that were done in the midst of Jerusalem.
And it was the same glorious mark that John saw in the foreheads of
the hundred and forty and four thousand who stood upon Mount Zion and
sang a song that no man knew but those men who had been redeemed from
the earth by the blood of the Lamb. The mark was set for propriety
and for ornament and for beauty. It was set upon his forehead
so that all who looked on him ever after might thus know to what company
and what country he belonged, and that this was not his rest, but that
he had been called and chosen to a heavenly inheritance. And,
besides, it was no sooner set upon his forehead than it greatly added
to his dignity and his comeliness. He had now the gravity and
beauty of an angel; nay, the beauty in his measure and the gravity of
Goodwill at the gate himself. And, then, as if that were not enough,
the third Shining One also gave him a roll with a seal upon it, which
he was bidden look on as he ran, and which he was to give in when he
arrived at the Celestial Gate. Now, what was that sealed roll
but just the inward memory and record of all this pilgrim’s experiences
of the grace of God from the day he set out on pilgrimage down to that
day when he stood unburdened of his guilt, unclothed of his rags, and
clothed upon with change of raiment? The roll contained his own
secret life, all sealed and shone in upon by the light of God’s
countenance. The secret of the Lord with this pilgrim was written
within that roll, a secret that no man could read but he himself alone.
It was the same roll that this same Shining One gave to Abraham, the
first pilgrim and the father of all true pilgrims, after Melchizedek,
the priest of the Most High God, had brought forth bread and wine and
had blessed that great believer. ‘Fear not, Abram: I am
thy shield, and thy exceeding great reward.’ And, again,
after Abram had lost his roll, like our pilgrim in the arbour, when
he recovered it he read thus in it: ‘I am the Almighty God: walk
before Me, and be thou perfect. And I will make My covenant between
Me and thee.’ And Abram fell on his face for joy.
It was the same roll out of which the Psalmist proposed to read a passage
to all those in his day who feared God. ‘Come and hear,
all ye that fear God, and I will declare what He hath done for my soul.’
It was the same roll also that God sent to Israel in his sore captivity.
‘Fear not, O Israel, for I have redeemed thee; I have called thee
by thy name, thou art Mine. When thou passest through the waters,
I will be with thee.’ The high priest Joshua also had the
same roll put into his hand, and that not only for his own comfort,
but to make him the comforter of God’s afflicted people.
For after the Lord had plucked Joshua as a brand out of the fire, and
had made his iniquity to pass from him, and had clothed him with change
of raiment, and had set a fair mitre on his head, the Lord gave to Joshua
a sealed roll, the contents of which may be read to this day in the
book of the prophet Zechariah. Nay, more: ‘Will you have
me to speak plainly?’ says great Goodwin on this matter.
‘Then, though our Lord had the assurance of faith that He was
the Son of God, for He knew it out of the Scriptures by reading all
the prophets, yet, to have it sealed to Him with joy unspeakable and
glorious,—this was deferred to the time of His baptism.
He was then anointed with the oil of assurance and gladness in a more
peculiar and transcendent manner.’ ‘In His baptism,’
says Bengel, ‘our Lord was magnificently enlightened. He
was previously the Son of God, and yet the power of the Divine testimony
to His Sonship at His baptism long affected Him in a lively manner.’
And we see our Lord reading His roll to assure and sustain His heart
when all outward acceptance and sustenance failed Him. ‘There
is One who beareth witness of Me, and His witness is true. I receive
not witness from men. I have a greater witness than even that
of John. For the Father Himself that hath sent Me, He beareth
witness of Me.’ No wonder that our heavy-laden pilgrim of
yesterday gave three leaps for joy and went on singing with such a roll
as that in his bosom. For, at that supreme moment he had that
inward illumination and assurance sealed on his heart that had so gladdened
and sustained so many prophets and psalmists and apostles and saints
before his day. And though, like Abraham and all the other saints
who ever had that noble roll put into their keeping, except Jesus Christ,
he often lost it, yet as often as he again recovered it, it brought
back again with it all his first joy and gladness.</p>
<p>But, as was said at the beginning, the <i>Grace Abounding</i> is
the best of all our commentaries on <i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i>.
As thus here also: ‘Now had I an evidence, as I thought, of my
salvation from heaven, with many golden seals thereon, all hanging in
my sight. Now could I remember this manifestation and that other
discovery of grace with comfort, and should often long and desire that
the last day were come, that I might be for ever inflamed with the sight
and joy of Him and communion with Him whose head was crowned with thorns,
whose face was spit on, and body broken, and soul made an offering for
my sins. For whereas, before, I lay continually trembling at the
mouth of hell, now, methought, I was got so far therefrom that I could
not, when I looked back, scarce discern it. And oh! thought I,
that I were fourscore years old now, that I might die quickly, that
my soul might be gone to rest.’</p>
<p>Then Christian gave three leaps for joy and went on singing:</p>
<blockquote><p>‘Thus far did I come laden with my sin,<br/>
Nor could ought ease the grief that I was in<br/>
Till I came hither: . . .<br/>
Blest Cross! blest Sepulchre! blest rather be<br/>
The Man that there was put to shame for me.’</p>
</blockquote>
<h2>FORMALIST AND HYPOCRISY</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘A form of godliness.’—Paul.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>We all began our religious life by being formalists. And we
were not altogether to blame for that. Our parents were first
to blame for that, and then our teachers, and then our ministers.
They made us say our psalm and our catechism to them, and if we only
said our sacred lesson without stumbling, we were straightway rewarded
with their highest praise. They seldom took the trouble to make
us understand the things we said to them. They were more than
content with our correct repetition of the words. We were never
taught either to read or repeat with our eyes on the object. And
we had come to our manhood before we knew how to seek for the visual
image that lies at the root of all our words. And thus the ill-taught
schoolboy became in us the father of the confirmed formalist.
The mischief of this neglect still spreads through the whole of our
life, but it is absolutely disastrous in our religious life. Look
at the religious formalist at family worship with his household gathered
round him all in his own image. He would not on any account let
his family break up any night without the habitual duty. He has
a severe method in his religious duties that nothing is ever allowed
to disarrange or in any way to interfere with. As the hour strikes,
the big Bible is brought out. He opens where he left off last
night, he reads the regulation chapter, he leads the singing in the
regulation psalm, and then, as from a book, he repeats his regulation
prayer. But he never says a word to show that he either sees or
feels what he reads, and his household break up without an idea in their
heads or an affection in their hearts. He comes to church and
goes through public worship in the same wooden way, and he sits through
the Lord’s Table in the same formal and ceremonious manner.
He has eyes of glass and hands of wood, and a heart without either blood
or motion in it. His mind and his heart were destroyed in his
youth, and all his religion is a religion of rites and ceremonies without
sense or substance. ‘Because I knew no better,’ says
Bunyan, ‘I fell in very eagerly with the religion of the times:
to wit, to go to church twice a day, and that, too, with the foremost.
And there should I sing and say as others did. Withal, I was so
overrun with the spirit of superstition that I adored, and that with
great devotion, even all things, both the high place, priest, clerk,
vestment, service, and what else belonged to the church: counting all
things holy that were therein contained. But all this time I was
not sensible of the danger and evil of sin. I was kept from considering
that sin would damn me, what religion soever I followed, unless I was
found in Christ. Nay, I never thought of Christ, nor whether there
was one or no.’</p>
<p>A formalist is not yet a hypocrite exactly, but he is ready now and
well on the way at any moment to become a hypocrite. As soon now
as some temptation shall come to him to make appear another and a better
man than he really is: when in some way it becomes his advantage to
seem to other people to be a spiritual man: when he thinks he sees his
way to some profit or praise by saying things and doing things that
are not true and natural to him,—then he will pass on from being
a bare and simple formalist, and will henceforth become a hypocrite.
He has never had any real possession or experience of spiritual things
amid all his formal observances of religious duties, and he has little
or no difficulty, therefore, in adding another formality or two to his
former life of unreality. And thus the transition is easily made
from a comparatively innocent and unconscious formalist to a conscious
and studied hypocrite. ‘An hypocrite,’ says Samuel
Rutherford, ‘is he who on the stage represents a king when he
is none, a beggar, an old man, a husband, when he is really no such
thing. To the Hebrews, they were <i>faciales</i>, face-men; <i>colorati</i>,
dyed men, red men, birds of many colours. You may paint a man,
you may paint a rose, you may paint a fire burning, but you cannot paint
a soul, or the smell of a rose, or the heat of a fire. And it
is hard to counterfeit spiritual graces, such as love to Christ, sincere
intending of the glory of God, and such like spiritual things.’
Yes, indeed; it is hard to put on and to go through with a truly spiritual
grace even to the best and most spiritually-minded of men; and as for
the true hypocrite, he never honestly attempts it. If he ever
did honestly and resolutely attempt it, he would at once in that pass
out of the ranks of the hypocrites altogether and pass over into a very
different category. Bunyan lets us see how a formalist and a hypocrite
and a Christian all respectively do when they come to a real difficulty.
The three pilgrims were all walking in the same path, and with their
faces for the time in the same direction. They had not held much
conference together since their first conversation, and as time goes
on, Christian has no more talk but with himself, and that sometimes
sighingly, and sometimes more comfortably. When, all at once,
the three men come on the hill Difficulty. A severe act of self-denial
has to be done at this point of their pilgrimage. A proud heart
has to be humbled to the dust. A second, a third, a tenth place
has to be taken in the praise of men. An outbreak of anger and
wrath has to be kept under for hours and days. A great injury,
a scandalous case of ingratitude, has to be forgiven and forgotten;
in short, as Rutherford says, an impossible-to-be-counterfeited spiritual
grace has to be put into its severest and sorest exercise; and the result
was—what we know. Our pilgrim went and drank of the spring
that always runs at the bottom of the hill Difficulty, and thus refreshed
himself against that hill; while Formalist took the one low road, and
Hypocrisy the other, which led him into a wide field full of dark mountains,
where he stumbled and fell and rose no more. When, after his visit
to the spring, Christian began to go up the hill, saying:</p>
<blockquote><p>‘This hill, though high, I covet to ascend;<br/>
The difficulty will not me offend;<br/>
For I perceive the way to life lies here;<br/>
Come, pluck up heart; let’s neither faint nor fear;<br/>
Better, though difficult, the right way to go,<br/>
Than wrong, though easy, where the end is woe.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Now, all this brings us to the last step in the evolution of a perfect
hypocrite out of a simple formalist. The perfect and finished
hypocrite is not your commonplace and vulgar scoundrel of the playwright
and the penny-novelist type; the finest hypocrite is a character their
art cannot touch. ‘The worst of hypocrites,’ Rutherford
goes on to say, ‘is he who whitens himself till he deceives himself.
It is strange that a man hath such power over himself. But a man’s
heart may deceive his heart, and he may persuade himself that he is
godly and righteous when he knows nothing about it.’ ‘Preaching
in a certain place,’ says Boston, ‘after supper the mistress
of the house told me how I had terrified God’s people. This
was by my doctrine of self-love, self-righteousness, self-ends, and
such like. She restricted hypocrites to that sort that do all
things to be seen of men, and harped much on this—how can one
be a hypocrite who hates hypocrisy in other people? how can one be a
hypocrite and not know it? All this led me to see the need of
such doctrine.’ And if only to show you that this is not
the dismal doctrine of antediluvian Presbyterians only, Canon Mozley
says: ‘The Pharisee did not know that he was a Pharisee; if he
had known it he would not have been a Pharisee. He does not know
that he is a hypocrite. The vulgar hypocrite knows that he is
a hypocrite because he deceives others, but the true Scripture hypocrite
deceives himself.’ And the most subtle teacher of our century,
or of any century, has said: ‘What is a hypocrite? We are
apt to understand by a hypocrite one who makes a profession of religion
for secret ends without practising what he professes; who is malevolent,
covetous, or profligate, while he assumes an outward sanctity in his
words and conduct, and who does so deliberately, deceiving others, and
not at all self-deceived. But this is not what our Saviour seems
to have meant by a hypocrite; nor were the Pharisees such. The
Pharisees deceived themselves as well as others. Indeed, it is
not in human nature to deceive others for any long time without in a
measure deceiving ourselves also. When they began, each in his
turn, to deceive the people, they were not at the moment self-deceived.
But by degrees they forgot that outward ceremonies avail nothing without
inward purity. They did not know themselves, and they unawares
deceived themselves as well as the people.’ What a terrible
light, as of the last day itself, does all that cast upon the formalisms
and the hypocrisies of which our own religious life is full! And
what a terrible light it casts on those miserable men who are complete
and finished in their self-deception! For the complete and finished
hypocrite is not he who thinks that he is better than all other men;
that is hopeless enough; but the paragon of hypocrisy is he who does
not know that he is worse than all other men. And in his stone-blindness
to himself, and consequently to all reality and inwardness and spirituality
in religion, you see him intensely interested in, and day and night
occupied with, the outside things of religion, till nothing short of
a miracle will open his eyes. See him in the ministry, for instance,
sweating at his sermons and in his visiting, till you would almost think
that he is the minister of whom Paul prophesied, who should spend and
be spent for the salvation of men’s souls. But all the time,
such is the hypocrisy that haunts the ministerial calling, he is really
and at bottom animated with ambition for the praise of men only, and
for the increase of his congregation. See him, again, now assailing
or now defending a church’s secular privileges, and he knowing
no more, all the time, what a church has been set up for on earth than
the man in the moon. What a penalty his defence is and his support
to a church of Christ, and what an incubus his membership must be!
Or, see him, again, making long speeches and many prayers for the extension
of the kingdom of Christ, and all the time spending ten times more on
wine or whisky or tobacco, or on books or pictures or foreign travel,
than he gives to the cause of home or foreign missions. And so
on, all through our hypocritical and self-blinded life. Through
such stages, and to such a finish, does the formalist pass from his
thoughtless and neglected youth to his hardened, blinded, self-seeking
life, spent in the ostensible service of the church of Christ.
If the light that is in such men be darkness, how great is that darkness!
We may all well shudder as we hear our Lord saying to ministers and
members and church defenders and church supporters, like ourselves:
‘Now ye say, We see; therefore your sin remaineth.’</p>
<p>Now, the first step to the cure of all such hypocrisy, and to the
salvation of our souls, is to know that we are hypocrites, and to know
also what that is in which we are most hypocritical. Well, there
are two absolutely infallible tests of a true hypocrite,—tests
warranted to unmask, expose, and condemn the most finished, refined,
and even evangelical hypocrite in this house to-night, or in all the
world. By far and away the best and swiftest is prayer.
True prayer, that is. For here again our inexpugnable hypocrisy
comes in and leads us down to perdition even in our prayers. There
is nothing our Lord more bitterly and more contemptuously assails the
Pharisees for than just the length, the loudness, the number, and the
publicity of their prayers. The truth is, public prayer, for the
most part, is no true prayer at all. It is at best an open homage
paid to secret prayer. We make such shipwrecks of devotion in
public prayer, that if we have a shred of true religion about us, we
are glad to get home and to shut our door. We preach in our public
prayers. We make speeches on public men and on public events in
our public prayers. We see the reporters all the time in our public
prayers. We do everything but pray in our public prayers.
And to get away alone,—what an escape that is from the temptations
and defeats of public prayer! No; public prayer is no test whatever
of a hypocrite. A hypocrite revels in public prayer. It
is secret prayer that finds him out. And even secret prayer will
sometimes deceive us. We are crushed down on our secret knees
sometimes, by sheer shame and the strength of conscience. Fear
of exposure, fear of death and hell, will sometimes make us shut our
door. A flood of passing feeling will sometimes make us pray for
a season in secret. Job had all that before him when he said,
‘Will the hypocrite delight himself in the Almighty? will he always
call upon God?’ No, he will not. And it is just here
that the hypocrite and the true Christian best discover themselves both
to God and to themselves. The true Christian will, as Job again
says, pray in secret till God slays him. He will pray in his dreams;
he will pray till death; he will pray after he is dead. Are you
in earnest, then, not to be any more a hypocrite and to know the infallible
marks of such? Ask the key of your closet door. Ask the
chair at your bedside. Ask the watchman what you were doing and
why your light was in so long. Ask the birds of the air and the
beasts of the field and the crows on the ploughed lands after your solitary
walk.</p>
<p>Almost a better test of true and false religion than even secret
prayer, but a test that is far more difficult to handle, is our opinion
of ourselves. In His last analysis of the truly justified man
and the truly reprobate, our Lord made the deepest test to be their
opinion of themselves. ‘God, I thank Thee that I am not
as this publican,’ said the hypocrite. ‘God be merciful
to me a sinner,’ said the true penitent. And then this fine
principle comes in here—not only to speed the sure sanctification
of a true Christian, but also, if he has skill and courage to use it,
for his assurance and comfort,—that the saintlier he becomes and
the riper for glory, the more he will beat his breast over what yet
abides within his breast. Yes; a man’s secret opinion of
himself is almost a better test of his true spiritual state than even
secret prayer. But, then, these two are not competing and exclusive
tests; they always go together and are never found apart. And
at the mouth of these two witnesses every true hypocrite shall be condemned
and every true Christian justified.</p>
<p>Dr. Pusey says somewhere that the perfect hypocrite is the man who
has the truth of God in his mind, but is without the love of God in
his heart. ‘Truth without love,’ says that saintly
scholar, ‘makes a finished Pharisee.’ Now we Scottish
and Free Church people believe we have the truth, if any people on the
face of the earth have it; and if we have not love mixed with it, you
see where and what we are. We are called to display a banner because
of the truth, but let love always be our flag-staff. Let us be
jealous for the truth, but let it be a godly, that is to say, a loving
jealousy. When we contend for purity of doctrine and for purity
of worship, when we protest against popery and priestcraft, when we
resist rationalism and infidelity, when we do battle now for national
religion, as we call it, and now for the freedom of the church, let
us do it all in love to all men, else we had better not do it at all.
If we cannot do it with clean and all-men-loving hearts, let us leave
all debate and contention to stronger and better men than we are.
The truth will never be advanced or guarded by us, nor will the Lord
of truth and love accept our service or bless our souls, till we put
on the divine nature, and have our hearts and our mouths still more
full of love than our minds and our mouths are full of truth.
Let us watch ourselves, lest with all our so-called love of truth we
be found reprobates at last because we loved the truth for some selfish
or party end, and hated and despised our brother, and believed all evil
and disbelieved all good concerning our brother. Truth without
love makes a hypocrite, says Dr. Pusey; and evangelical truth without
evangelical love makes an evangelical hypocrite, says Thomas Shepard.
Only where the whole truth is united to a heart full of love have we
the perfect New Testament Christian.</p>
<h2>TIMOROUS AND MISTRUST</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘There is a lion in the way.’—The Slothful
Man.</p>
<p>‘I must venture.’—Christian.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>‘I at any rate must venture,’ said Christian to Timorous
and Mistrust. ‘Whatever you may do I must venture, even
if the lions you speak of should pull me to pieces. I, for one,
shall never go back. To go back is nothing but death; to go forward
is fear of death and everlasting life beyond it. I will yet go
forward.’ So Mistrust and Timorous ran down the hill, and
Christian went on his way. George Offor says, in his notes on
this passage, that civil despotism and ecclesiastical tyranny so terrified
many young converts in John Bunyan’s day, that multitudes turned
back like Mistrust and Timorous; while at the same time, many like Bunyan
himself went forward and for a time fell into the lion’s mouth.
Civil despotism and ecclesiastical tyranny do not stand in our way as
they stood in Bunyan’s way—at least, not in the same shape:
but every age has its own lions, and every Christian man has his own
lions that neither civil despots nor ecclesiastical tyrants know anything
about.</p>
<p>Now, who or what is the lion in your way? Who or what is it
that fills you with such timorousness and mistrust, that you are almost
turning back from the way to life altogether? The fiercest of
all our lions is our own sin. When a man’s own sin not only
finds him out and comes roaring after him, but when it dashes past him
and gets into the woods and thickets before him, and stands pawing and
foaming on the side of his way, that is a trial of faith and love and
trust indeed. Sometimes a man’s past sins will fill all
his future life with sleepless apprehensions. He is never sure
at what turn in his upward way he may not suddenly run against some
of them standing ready to rush out upon him. And it needs no little
quiet trust and humble-minded resignation to carry a man through this
slough and that bottom, up this hill and down that valley, all the time
with his life in his hand; and yet at every turn, at every rumour that
there are lions in the way, to say, Come lion, come lamb, come death,
come life, I must venture, I will yet go forward. As Job also,
that wonderful saint of God, said, ‘Hold your peace, let me alone
that I may speak, and let come on me what will. Wherefore do I
take my flesh in my teeth and put my life in my hand? Though He
slay me, yet will I trust in Him. He also shall be my salvation;
for an hypocrite shall not come before Him.’</p>
<p>One false step, one stumble in life, one error in judgment, one outbreak
of an unbridled temperament, one small sin, if it is even so much as
a sin, of ignorance or of infirmity, will sometimes not only greatly
injure us at the time, but, in some cases, will fill all our future
life with trials and difficulties and dangers. Many of us shall
have all our days to face a future of defeat, humiliation, impoverishment,
and many hardships, that has not come on us on account of any presumptuous
transgression of God’s law so much as simply out of some combination
of unfortunate circumstances in which we may have only done our duty,
but have not done it in the most serpent-like way. And when we
are made to suffer unjustly or disproportionately all our days for our
error of judgment or our want of the wisdom of this world, or what not,
we are sorely tempted to be bitter and proud and resentful and unforgiving,
and to go back from duty and endurance and danger altogether.
But we must not. We must rather say to ourselves, Now and here,
if not in the past, I must play the man, and, by God’s help, the
wise man. I must pluck safety henceforth out of the heart of the
nettle danger. Yes, I made a mistake. I did what I would
not do now, and I must not be too proud to say so. I acted, I
see now, precipitately, inconsiderately, imprudently. And I must
not gloom and rebel and run away from the cross and the lion.
I must not insist or expect that the always wise and prudent man’s
reward is to come to me. The lion in my way is a lion of my own
rearing; and I must not turn my back on him, even if he should be let
loose to leap on me and rend me. I must pass under his paw and
through his teeth, if need be, to a life with him and beyond him of
humility and duty and quiet-hearted submission to his God and mine.</p>
<p>Then, again, our salvation itself sometimes, our true sanctification,
puts on a lion’s skin and not unsuccessfully imitates an angry
lion’s roar. Some saving grace that up till now we have
been fatally lacking in lies under the very lip of that lion we see
standing straight in our way. God in His wisdom so orders our
salvation, that we must work out the best part of it with fear and trembling.
Right before us, just beside us, standing over us with his heavy paw
upon us, is a lion, from under whose paw and from between whose teeth
we must pluck and put on that grace in which our salvation lies.
Repentance and reformation lie in the way of that lion; resignation
also and humility; the crucifixion of our own will; the sacrifice of
our own heart; in short, everything that is still lacking but is indispensable
to our salvation lies through that den of lions. One man here
is homeless and loveless; another is childless; another has a home and
children, and much envies the man who has neither; one has talents there
is no scope for; another has the scope, but not the sufficient talent;
another must now spend all his remaining life in a place where he sees
that anger and envy and jealousy and malevolence will be his roaring
lions daily seeking to devour his soul. There is not a Christian
man or woman in this house whose salvation, worth being called a salvation,
does not lie through such a lion’s thicket as that. Our
Lord Himself was a roaring lion to John the Baptist. For the Baptist’s
salvation lay not in his powerful preaching, but in his being laid aside
from all preaching; not in his crowds increasing, but in his Successor’s
crowds increasing and his decreasing. The Baptist was the greatest
born of woman in that day, not because he was a thundering preacher—any
ordinary mother in Israel might have been his mother in that: but to
decrease sweetly and to steal down quietly to perfect humility and self-oblivion,—that
salvation was reserved for the son of Elisabeth alone. I would
not like to say Who that is champing and pawing for your blood right
in your present way. Reverence will not let me say Who it is.
Only, you venture on Him.</p>
<p>‘Yes, I shall venture!’ said Christian to the two terrified
and retreating men. Now, every true venture is made against risk
and uncertainty, against anxiety and danger and fear. And it is
just this that constitutes the nobleness and blessedness of faith.
Faith sells all for Christ. Faith risks all for eternal life.
Faith faces all for salvation. When it is at the worst, faith
still says, Very well; even if there is no Celestial City anywhere in
the world, it is better to die still seeking it than to live on in the
City of Destruction. Even if there is no Jesus Christ,—I
have read about Him and heard about Him and pictured Him to myself,
till, say what you will, I shall die kissing and embracing that Divine
Image I have in my heart. Even if there is neither mercy-seat
nor intercession in heaven, I shall henceforth pray without ceasing.
Far far better for me all the rest of my sinful life to be clothed with
sackcloth and ashes, even if there is no fountain opened in Jerusalem
for sin and uncleanness, and no change of raiment. Christian protested
that, as for him, lions and all, he had no choice left. And no
more have we. He must away somewhere, anywhere, from his past
life. And so must we. If all the lions that ever drank blood
are to collect upon his way, let them do so; they shall not all make
him turn back. Why should they? What is a whole forest full
of lions to a heart and a life full of sin? Lions are like lambs
compared with sin. ‘Good morning! I for one must venture.
I shall yet go forward.’ So Mistrust and Timorous ran down
the hill, and Christian went on his way.</p>
<p>So I saw in my dream that he made haste and went forward, that if
possible he might get lodging in the house called Beautiful that stood
by the highway side. Now, before he had gone far he entered into
a very narrow passage which was about a furlong off from the porter’s
lodge, and looking very narrowly before him as he went, he espied two
lions in the way. Then was he afraid, and thought also to go back,
for he thought that nothing but death was before him. But the
porter at the lodge, whose name was Watchful, perceiving that Christian
made a halt, as if he would go back, cried unto him, saying, ‘Is
thy strength so small? Fear not the lions, for they are chained,
and are only placed there for the trial of faith where it is, and for
the discovery of those who have none. Keep the midst of the path
and no hurt shall come to thee.’ Yes, that is all we have
to do. Whatever our past life may have been, whatever our past
sins, past errors of judgment, past mistakes and mishaps, whatever of
punishment or chastisement or correction or instruction or sanctification
and growth in grace may be under those lions’ skins and between
their teeth for us, all we have got to do at present is to leave the
lions to Him who set them there, and to go on, up to them and past them,
keeping always to the midst of the path. The lions may roar at
us till they have roared us deaf and blind, but we are far safer in
the midst of that path than we would be in our own bed. Only let
us keep in the midst of the path. When their breath is hot and
full of blood on our cheek; when they paw up the blinding earth; when
we feel as if their teeth had closed round our heart,—still, all
the more, let us keep in the midst of the path. We must sometimes
walk on a razor-edge of fear and straightforwardness; that is the only
way left for us now. But, then, we have the Divine assurance that
on that perilous edge no hurt shall come to us. ‘Temptations,’
says our author in another place, ‘when we meet them at first,
are as the lion that roared upon Samson; but if we overcome them, the
next time we see them we shall find a nest of honey in them.’
O God, for grace and sense and imagination to see and understand and
apply all that to our own daily life! O to be able to take all
that home to-night and see it all there; lions and runaways, venturesome
souls, narrow paths, palaces of beauty, everlasting life and all!
Open Thou our eyes that we may see the wonderful things that await us
in our own house at home!</p>
<blockquote><p>‘Things out of hope are compassed oft with venturing.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>So they are; and so they were that day with our terrified pilgrim.
He made a venture at the supreme moment of his danger, and things that
were quite out of all hope but an hour before were then compassed and
ever after possessed by him. Make the same venture, then, yourselves
to-night. Naught venture, naught have. Your lost soul is
not much to venture, but it is all that Christ at this moment asks of
you—that you leave your lost soul in His hand, and then go straight
on from this moment in the middle of the path: the path, that is, as
your case may be, of purity, humility, submission, resignation, and
self-denial. Keep your mind and your heart, your eyes and your
feet, in the very middle of that path, and you shall have compassed
the House Beautiful before you know. The lions shall soon be behind
you, and the grave and graceful damsels of the House—Discretion
and Prudence and Piety and Charity—shall all be waiting upon you.</p>
<h2>PRUDENCE <SPAN name="citation1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote1">{1}</SPAN></h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Let a man examine himself.’—Paul.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Let a man examine himself, says the apostle to the Corinthians, and
so let him eat of that bread and drink of that cup. And thus it
was, that before the pilgrim was invited to sit down at the supper table
in the House Beautiful, quite a number of most pointed and penetrating
questions were put to him by those who had charge of that house and
its supper table. And thus the time was excellently improved till
the table was spread, while the short delay and the successive exercises
whetted to an extraordinary sharpness the pilgrim’s hunger for
the supper. Piety and Charity, who had joint charge of the house
from the Master of the house, held each a characteristic conversation
with Christian, but it was left to Prudence to hold the most particular
discourse with him until supper was ready, and it is to that so particular
discourse that I much wish to turn your attention to-night.</p>
<p>With great tenderness, but at the same time with the greatest possible
gravity, Prudence asked the pilgrim whether he did not still think sometimes
of the country from whence he had come out. Yes, he replied; how
could I help thinking continually of that unhappy country and of my
sad and miserable life in it; but, believe me,—or, rather, you
cannot believe me,—with what shame and detestation I always think
of my past life. My face burns as I now speak of my past life
to you, and as I think what my old companions know and must often say
about me. I detest, as you cannot possibly understand, every remembrance
of my past life, and I hate and never can forgive myself, who, with
mine own hands, so filled all my past life with shame and self-contempt.
Gently stopping the remorseful pilgrim’s self-accusations about
his past life, Prudence asked him if he had not still with him, and,
indeed, within him, some of the very things that had so destroyed both
him and all his past life. ‘Yes,’ he honestly and
humbly said. ‘Yes, but greatly against my will: especially
my inward and sinful cogitations.’ At this Prudence looked
on him with all her deep and soft eyes, for it was to this that she
had been leading the conversation up all the time. Prudence had
a great look of satisfaction, mingled with love and pity, at the way
the pilgrim said ‘especially my inward and sinful cogitations.’
Those who stood by and observed Prudence wondered at her delight in
the sad discourse on which the pilgrim now entered. But she had
her own reasons for her delight in this particular kind of discourse,
and it was seldom that she lighted on a pilgrim who both understood
her questions and responded to them as did this man now sitting beside
her. Now, my brethren, all parable apart, is that your religious
experience? Are you full of shame and detestation at your inward
cogitations? Are you tormented, enslaved, and downright cursed
with your own evil thoughts? I do not ask whether or no you have
such thoughts always within you. I do not ask, because I know.
But I ask, because I would like to make sure that you know what, and
the true nature of what, goes on incessantly in your mind and in your
heart. Do you, or do you not, spit out your most inward thoughts
ten times a day like poison? If you do, you are a truly religious
man, and if you do not, you do not yet know the very ABC of true religion,
and your dog has a better errand at the Lord’s table than you
have. And if your minister lets you sit down at the Lord’s
table without holding from time to time some particular discourse with
you about your sinful thoughts, he is deceiving and misleading you,
besides laying up for himself an awakening at last to shame and everlasting
contempt. What a mill-stone his communion roll will be round such
a minister’s neck! And how his congregation will gnash their
teeth at him when they see to what his miserable ministry has brought
them!</p>
<p>Let a man examine himself, said Paul. What about your inward
and sinful cogitations? asked Prudence. How long shall thy vain
thoughts lodge within thee? demanded the bold prophet. Now, my
brethren, what have you to say to that particular accusation? Do you
know what vain thoughts are? Are you at all aware what multitudes
of such thoughts lodge within you? Do they drive you every day
to your knees, and do you blush with shame when you are alone before
God at the fountain of folly that fills your mind and your heart continually?
The Apostle speaks of vain hopes that make us ashamed that we ever entertained
them. You have been often so ashamed, and yet do not such hopes
still too easily arise in your heart? What castles of idiotic
folly you still build! Were a sane man or a modest woman even
to dream such dreams of folly overnight, they would blush and hide their
heads all day at the thought. Out of a word, out of a look, out
of what was neither a word nor a look intended for you, what a world
of vanity will you build out of it! The question of Prudence is
not whether or no you are still a born fool at heart, she does not put
unnecessary questions: hers to you is the more pertinent and particular
question, whether, since you left your former life and became a Christian,
you feel every day increasing shame and detestation at yourself, on
account of the vanity of your inward cogitations. My brethren,
can you satisfy her who is set by her Master to hold particular discourse
with all true Christians before supper? Can you say with the Psalmist,—could
you tell Prudence where the Psalmist says,—I hate vain thoughts,
but Thy law do I love? And can you silence her by telling her
that her Master alone knows with what shame you think that He has such
a fool as you are among His people?</p>
<p>Anger, also, sudden and even long-entertained anger, was one of the
‘many failings’ of which Christian was so conscious to himself.
His outbursts of anger at home, he bitterly felt, might well be one
of the causes why his wife and children did not accompany him on his
pilgrimage. And though he knew his failing in this respect, and
was very wary of it, yet he often failed even when he was most wary.
Now, while anger is largely a result of our blood and temperament, yet
few of us are so well-balanced and equable in our temperament and so
pure and cool in our blood, as altogether to escape frequent outbursts
of anger. The most happily constituted and the best governed of
us have too much cause to be ashamed and penitent both before God and
our neighbours for our outbursts of angry passion. But Prudence
is so particular in her discourse before supper, that she goes far deeper
into our anger than our wives and our children, our servants and our
neighbours, can go. She not only asks if we stamp out the rising
anger of our heart as we would stamp out sparks of fire in a house full
of gunpowder; but she insists on being told what we think of ourselves
when the house of our heart is still so full of such fire and such gunpowder.
Any man, to call a man, would be humbled in his own eyes and in his
walk before his house at home after an explosion of anger among them;
but he who would satisfy Prudence and sit beside her at supper, must
not only never let his anger kindle, but the simple secret heat of it,
that fire of hell that is hid from all men but himself in the flint
of his own hard and proud heart,—what, asks Prudence, do you think
of that, and of yourself on account of that? Does that keep you
not only watchful and prayerful, but, what is the best ground in you
of all true watchfulness and prayerfulness, full of secret shame, self-fear,
and self-detestation? One forenoon table would easily hold all
our communicants if Prudence had the distribution of the tokens.</p>
<p>And, then, we who are true pilgrims, are of all men the most miserable,
on account of that ‘failing,’ that rankling sting in our
hearts, when any of our friends has more of this world’s possessions,
honours, and praises than we have, that pain at our neighbour’s
pleasure, that sickness at his health, that hunger for what we see him
eat, that thirst for what we see him drink, that imprisonment of our
spirits when we see him set at liberty, that depression at his exaltation,
that sorrow at his joy, and joy at his sorrow, that evil heart that
would have all things to itself. Yes, said Christian, I am only
too conversant with all these sinful cogitations, but they are all greatly
against my will, and might I but choose mine own thoughts, do you suppose
that I would ever think these things any more? ‘The cause
is in my will,’ said Cæsar, on a great occasion. But
the true Christian, unhappily, cannot say that. If he could say
that, he would soon say also that the snare is broken and that his soul
has escaped. And then the cause of all his evil cogitations, his
vain thoughts, his angry feelings, his envious feelings, his ineradicable
covetousness, his hell-rooted and heaven-towering pride, and his whole
evil heart of unbelief would soon be at an end. ‘I cannot
be free of sin,’ said Thomas Boston, ‘but God knows that
He would be welcome to make havoc of my lusts to-night and to make me
henceforth a holy man. I know no lust that I would not be content
to part with. My will bound hand and foot I desire to lay at His
feet.’ Yes: such is the mystery and depth of sin in the
hearts of all God’s saints, that far deeper than their will, far
back behind their will, the whole substance and very core of their hearts
is wholly corrupt and enslaved to sin. And thus it is that while
their renewed and delivered will works out, so far, their salvation
in their walk and conversation among men, the helplessness of their
will in the cleansing and the keeping of their hearts is to the end
the sorrow and the mystery of their sanctification. To will was
present with Paul, and with Bunyan, and with Boston; but their heart—they
could not with all their keeping keep their heart. No man can;
no man who has at all tried it can. ‘Might I but choose
mine own thoughts, I would choose never to think of these things more:
but when I would be doing of that which is best, that which is worst
is with me.’ We can choose almost all things. Our
will and choice have almost all things at their disposal. We can
choose our God. We can choose life or death. We can choose
heaven or hell. We can choose our church, our minister, our books,
our companions, our words, our works, and, to some extent, our inward
thoughts, but only to some extent. We can encourage this or that
thought; we can entertain it and dwell upon it; or we can detect it,
detest it, and cast it out. But that secret place in our heart
where our thoughts hide and harbour, and out of which they spring so
suddenly upon the mind and the heart, the imagination and the conscience,—of
that secretest of all secret places, God alone is able to say, I search
the heart. ‘As for secret thoughts,’ says our author,
speaking of his own former religious life, ‘I took no notice of
them, neither did I understand what Satan’s temptations were,
nor how they were to be withstood and resisted.’ But now
all these things are his deepest grief, as they are ours,—as many
of us as have been truly turned in our deepest hearts to God.</p>
<p>‘But,’ replied Prudence, ‘do you not find sometimes
as if those things were vanquished which at other times are your perplexity?’
‘Yes, but that is but seldom; but they are to me golden hours
in which such things happen to me.’ ‘Can you remember
by what means you find your annoyances at times as if they were vanquished?’
‘Yes, when I think what I saw at the cross, that will do it; and
when I look upon my broidered coat, that will do it; also, when I look
into the roll that I carry in my bosom, that will do it; and when my
thoughts wax warm about whither I am going, that will do it.’
Yes; and these same things have many a time done it to ourselves also.
We also, my brethren—let me tell you your own undeniable experience—we
also have such golden hours sometimes, when we feel as if we should
never again have such an evil heart within us. The Cross of Christ
to us also has done it. It is of such golden hours that Isaac
Watts sings in his noble hymn:</p>
<blockquote><p>‘When I survey the wondrous Cross;’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>and as often as we sing that hymn with our eyes upon the object,
that will for a time vanquish our worst cogitations. Also, when
we read the roll that we too carry in our bosom—that is to say,
when we go back into our past life till we see it and feel it all, and
till we can think and speak of nothing else but the sin that abounded
in it and the grace that much more abounded, that has a thousand times
given us also golden hours, even rest from our own evil hearts.
And we also have often made our hearts too hot for sin to show itself,
when we read our hearts deep into such books as <i>The Paradiso</i>,
<i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i>, <i>The Saint’s Rest</i>,
<i>The Serious Call</i>, <i>The Religious Affections</i>, and such like.
These books have often vanquished our annoyances, and given us golden
hours on the earth. Yes, but that is but seldom.</p>
<p>‘Now, what is it,’ asked Prudence, as she wound up this
so particular colloquy, ‘that makes you so desirous to go to Mount
Zion?’</p>
<p>‘Why,’ replied the pilgrim, and the water stood in his
eyes, ‘why, there I hope to see Him alive that did hang dead on
the cross; and there I hope to be rid of all those things that to this
day are an annoyance to me; there they say is no death, and there shall
I dwell with such company as I love best. For, to tell you truth,
I love Him, because by Him I was eased of my burden, and I am weary
of my inward sickness; and I would fain be where I shall die no more,
and for ever with that company that shall continually cry, Holy, holy,
holy.’</p>
<h2>CHARITY</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘I will walk within my house with a perfect heart.’—David.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>There can be nobody here to-night so stark stupid as to suppose that
the pilgrim had run away from home and left his wife and children to
the work-house. There have been wiseacres who have found severe
fault with John Bunyan because he made his Puritan pilgrim such a bad
husband and such an unnatural father. But nobody possessed of
a spark of common sense, not to say religion or literature, would ever
commit himself to such an utter imbecility as that. John Bunyan’s
pilgrim, whatever he may have been before he became a pilgrim, all the
time he was a pilgrim, was the most faithful, affectionate, and solicitous
husband in all the country round about, and the tenderest, the most
watchful, and the wisest of fathers. This pilgrim stayed all the
more at home that he went so far away from home; he accomplished his
whole wonderful pilgrimage beside his own forge and at his own fireside;
and he entered the Celestial City amid trumpets and bells and harps
and psalms, while all the time sleeping in his own humble bed.
The House Beautiful, therefore, to which we have now come in his company,
is not some remote and romantic mansion away up among the mountains
a great many days’ journey distant from this poor man’s
everyday home. The House Beautiful was nothing else,—what
else better, what else so good could it be?—than just this Christian
man’s first communion Sabbath and his first communion table (first,
that is, after his true conversion from sin to God and his confessed
entrance into a new life), while the country from whence he had come
out, and concerning which both Piety and Prudence catechised him so
closely, was just his former life of open ungodliness and all his evil
walk and conversation while he was as yet living without God and without
hope in the world. The country on which he confessed that he now
looked back with so much shame and detestation was not England or Bedfordshire,
but the wicked life he had lived in that land and in that shire.
And when Charity asked him as to whether he was a married man and had
a family, she knew quite well that he was, only she made a pretence
of asking him those domestic questions in order thereby to start the
touching conversation.</p>
<p>Beginning, then, at home, as she always began, Charity said to Christian,
‘Have you a family? Are you a married man?’
‘I have a wife and four small children,’ answered Christian.
‘And why did you not bring them with you?’ Then Christian
wept and said, ‘Oh, how willingly would I have done so, but they
were all of them utterly averse to my going on pilgrimage.’
‘But you should have talked to them and have shown them their
danger.’ ‘So I did,’ he replied, ‘but
I seemed to them as one that mocked.’ Now, this of talking,
and, especially, of talking about religious things to children, is one
of the most difficult things in the world,—that is, to do it well.
Some people have the happy knack of talking to their own and to other
people’s children so as always to interest and impress them.
But such happy people are few. Most people talk at their children
whenever they begin to talk to them, and thus, without knowing it, they
nauseate their children with their conversation altogether. To
respect a little child, to stand in some awe of a little child, to choose
your topics, your opportunities, your neighbourhood, your moods and
his as well as all your words, and always to speak your sincerest, simplest,
most straightforward and absolutely wisest is indispensable with a child.
Take your mannerisms, your condescensions, your affectations, your moralisings,
and all your insincerities to your debauched equals, but bring your
truest and your best to your child. Unless you do so, you will
be sure to lay yourself open to a look that will suddenly go through
you, and that will swiftly convey to you that your child sees through
you and despises you and your conversation too. ‘You should
not only have talked to your children of their danger,’ said Charity,
‘but you should have shown them their danger.’ Yes,
Charity; but a man must himself see his own and his children’s
danger too, before he can show it to them, as well as see it clearly
at the time he is trying to show it to them. And how many fathers,
do you suppose, have the eyes to see such danger, and how then can they
shew such danger to their children, of all people? Once get fathers
to see dangers or anything else aright, and then you will not need to
tell them how they are to instruct and impress their children.
Nature herself will then tell them how to talk to their children, and
when Nature teaches, all our children will immediately and unweariedly
listen.</p>
<p>But, especially, said Charity, as your boys grew up—I think
you said that you had four boys and no girls?—well, then, all
the more, as they grew up, you should have taken occasion to talk to
them about yourself. Did your little boy never petition you for
a story about yourself; and as he grew up did you never confide to him
what you have never confided to his mother? Something, as I was
saying, that made you sad when you were a boy and a rising man, with
a sadness your son can still see in you as you talk to him. In
conversations like that a boy finds out what a friend he has in his
father, and his father from that day has his best friend in his son.
And then as Matthew grew up and began to out-grow his brothers and to
form friendships out of doors, did you study to talk at the proper time
to him, and on subjects on which you never venture to talk about to
any other boy or man? You men, Charity went on to say, live in
a world of your own, and though we women are well out of it, yet we
cannot be wholly ignorant that it is there. And, we may well be
wrong, but we cannot but think that fathers, if not mothers, might safely
tell their men-children at least more than they do tell them of the
sure dangers that lie straight in their way, of the sorrow that men
and women bring on one another, and of what is the destruction of so
many cities. We may well be wrong, for we are only women, but
I have told you what we all think who keep this house and hear the reports
and repentances of pilgrims, both Piety and Prudence and I myself.
And I, for one, largely agree with the three women. It is easier
said than done. But the simple saying of it may perhaps lead some
fathers and mothers to think about it, and to ask whether or no it is
desirable and advisable to do it, which of them is to attempt it, on
what occasion, and to what extent. Christian by this time had
the Slough of Despond with all its history and all that it contained
to tell his eldest son about; he had the wicket gate also just above
the slough, the hill Difficulty, the Interpreter’s House, the
place somewhat ascending with a cross standing upon it, and a little
below, in the bottom, a sepulchre, not to speak of her who assaulted
Faithful, whose name was Wanton, and who at one time was like to have
done even that trusty pilgrim a lifelong mischief. Christian rather
boasted to Charity of his wariness, especially in the matter of his
children’s amusements, but Charity seemed to think that he had
carried his wariness into other matters besides amusements, without
the best possible results there either. I have sometimes thought
with her that among our multitude of congresses and conferences of all
kinds of people and upon all manner of subjects, room and membership
might have been found for a conference of fathers and mothers.
Fathers to give and take counsel about how to talk to their sons, and
mothers to their daughters. I am much of Charity’s mind,
that, if more were done at home, and done with some frankness, for our
sons and daughters, there would be fewer fathers and mothers found sitting
at the Lord’s table alone. ‘You should have talked
to them,’ said Charity, with some severity in her tones, ‘and,
especially, you should have told them of your own sorrow.’</p>
<p>And then, coming still closer up to Christian, Charity asked him
whether he prayed, both before and after he so spoke to his children,
that God would bless what he said to them. Charity believeth all
things, hopeth all things, but when she saw this man about to sit down
all alone at the supper table, it took Charity all her might to believe
that he had both spoken to his children and at the same time prayed
to God for them as he ought to have done. Our old ministers used
to lay this vow on all fathers and mothers at the time of baptism, that
they were to pray both with and for their children. Now, that
is a fine formula; it is a most comprehensive, and, indeed, exhaustive
formula. Both with and for. And especially with. With,
at such and such times, on such and such occasions, and in such and
such places. At those times, say, when your boy has told a lie,
or struck his little brother, or stolen something, or destroyed something.
To pray with him at such times, and to pray with him properly, and,
if you feel able to do it, and are led to do it, to tell him something
after the prayer about yourself, and your own not-yet-forgotten boyhood,
and your father; it makes a fine time to mix talk and prayer together
in that way. Charity is not easily provoked, but the longer she
lives and keeps the table in the House Beautiful the more she is provoked
to think that there is far too little prayer among pilgrims; far too
little of all kinds of prayer, but especially prayer with and for their
children. But hard as it was to tell all the truth at that moment
about Christian’s past walk in his house at home, yet he was able
with the simple truth to say that he had indeed prayed both with and
for his children, and that, as they knew and could not but remember,
not seldom. Yes, he said, I did sometimes so pray with my boys,
and that too, as you may believe, with much affection, for you must
think that my four boys were all very dear to me. And it is my
firm belief that all that good man’s boys will come right yet:
Matthew and Joseph and James and Samuel and all. ‘With much
affection.’ I like that. I have unbounded faith in
those prayers, both for and with, in which there is much affection.
It is want of affection, and want of imagination, that shipwrecks so
many of our prayers. But this man’s prayers had both these
elements of sure success in them, and they must come at last to harbour.
At that one word ‘with much affection,’ this man’s
closet door flies open and I see the old pilgrim first alone, and then
with his arms round his eldest son’s neck, and both father and
son weeping together till they are ashamed to appear at supper till
they have washed their faces and got their most smiling and everyday
looks put on again. You just wait and see if Matthew and all the
four boys down to the last do not escape into the Celestial City before
the gate is shut. And when it is asked, Who are these and whence
came they? listen to their song and you will hear those four happy children
saying that their father, when they were yet boys, both talked with
them and prayed for and with them with so much affection that therefore
they are before the throne.</p>
<p>Why, then, with such a father and with such makable boys, why was
this household brought so near everlasting shipwreck? It was the
mother that did it. In one word, it was the wife and the mother
that did it. It was the mistress of the house who wrought the
mischief here. She was a poor woman, she was a poor man’s
wife, and one would have thought that she had little enough temptation
to harm upon this present world. But there it was, she did hang
upon it as much as if she had been the mother of the finest daughters
and the most promising boys in all the town. Things like this
were from time to time reported to her by her neighbours. One
fine lady had been heard to say that she would never have for her tradesman
any man who frequented conventicles, who was not content with the religion
of his betters, and who must needs scorn the parish church and do despite
to the saints’ days. Another gossip asked her what she expected
to make of her great family of boys when it was well known that all
the gentry in the neighbourhood but two or three had sworn that they
would never have a hulking Puritan to brush their boots or run their
errands. And it almost made her husband burn his book and swear
that he would never be seen at another prayer-meeting when his wife
so often said to him that he should never have had children, that he
should never have made her his wife, and that he was not like this when
they were first man and wife. And in her bitterness she would
name this wife or that maid, and would say, You should have married
her. She would have gone to the meeting-house with you as often
as you wished. Her sons are far enough from good service to please
you. ‘My wife,’ he softly said, ‘was afraid
of losing the world. And then, after that, my growing sons were
soon given over, all I could do, to the foolish delights of youth, so
that, what by one thing and what by another, they left me to wander
in this manner alone.’ And I suppose there is scarcely a
household among ourselves where there have not been serious and damaging
misunderstandings between old-fashioned fathers and their young people
about what the old people called the ‘foolish delights’
of their sons and daughters. And in thinking this matter over,
I have often been struck with how Job did when his sons and his daughters
were bent upon feasting and dancing in their eldest brother’s
house. The old man did not lay an interdict upon the entertainment.
He did not take part in it, but neither did he absolutely forbid it.
If it must be it must be, said the wise patriarch. And since I
do not know whom they may meet there, or what they may be tempted to
do, I will sanctify them all. I will not go up into my bed till
I have prayed for all my seven sons and three daughters, each one of
them by their names; and till they come home safely I will rise every
morning and offer burnt-offerings according to the number of them all.
And do you think that those burnt-offerings and accompanying intercessions
would go for nothing when the great wind came from the wilderness and
smote the four corners of the banqueting-house? If you cannot
banish the love of foolish delights out the hearts of your sons and
daughters, then do not quarrel with them over such things; a family
quarrel in a Christian man’s house is surely far worse than a
feast or a dance. Only, if they must feast and dance and such
like, be you all the more diligent in your exercises at home on their
behalf till they are back again, where, after all, they like best to
be, in their good, kind, liberal, and loving father’s house.</p>
<p>Have you a family? Are you a married man? Or, if not,
do you hope one day to be? Then attend betimes to what Charity
says to Christian in the House Beautiful, and not less to what he says
back again to her.</p>
<h2>SHAME</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Whosoever shall be ashamed of Me, and of My words,
of him shall the Son of Man be ashamed, when He shall come in His own
glory, and in His Father’s, and of the holy angels.’—Our
Lord.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Shame has not got the attention that it deserves either from our
moral philosophers or from our practical and experimental divines.
And yet it would well repay both classes of students to attend far more
to shame. For, what really is shame? Shame is an original
instinct planted in our souls by our Maker, and intended by Him to act
as a powerful and pungent check to our doing of any act that is mean
or dishonourable in the eyes of our fellow-men. Shame is a kind
of social conscience. Shame is a secondary sense of sin.
In shame, our imagination becomes a kind of moral sense. Shame
sets up in our bosom a not undivine tribunal, which judges us and sentences
us in the absence or the silence of nobler and more awful sanctions
and sentences. But then, as things now are with us, like all the
rest of the machinery of the soul, shame has gone sadly astray both
in its objects and in its operations, till it demands a long, a severe,
and a very noble discipline over himself before any man can keep shame
in its proper place and directed in upon its proper objects. In
the present disorder of our souls, we are all acutely ashamed of many
things that are not the proper objects of shame at all; while, on the
other hand, we feel no shame at all at multitudes of things that are
really most blameworthy, dishonourable, and contemptible. We are
ashamed of things in our lot and in our circumstances that, if we only
knew it, are our opportunity and our honour; we are ashamed of things
that are the clear will and the immediate dispensation of Almighty God.
And, then, we feel no shame at all at the most dishonourable things,
and that simply because the men around us are too coarse in their morals
and too dull in their sensibilities to see any shame in such things.
And thus it comes about that, in the very best of men, their still perverted
sense of shame remains in them a constant snare and a source of temptation.
A man of a fine nature feels keenly the temptation to shrink from those
paths of truth and duty that expose him to the cruel judgments and the
coarse and scandalising attacks of public and private enemies.
It was in the Valley of Humiliation that Shame set upon Faithful, and
it is a real humiliation to any man of anything of this pilgrim’s
fine character and feeling to be attacked, scoffed at, and held up to
blame and opprobrium. And the finer and the more affectionate
any man’s heart and character are, the more he feels and shrinks
from the coarse treatment this world gives to those whom it has its
own reasons to hate and assail. They had the stocks and the pillory
and the shears in Bunyan’s rude and uncivilised day, by means
of which many of the best men of that day were exposed to the insults
and brutalities of the mob. The newspapers would be the pillory
of our day, were it not that, on the whole, the newspaper press is conducted
with such scrupulous fairness and with a love of truth and justice such
that no man need shrink from the path of duty through fear of insult
and injury.</p>
<p>But it is time to come to the encounter between Shame and Faithful
in the Valley of Humiliation. Shame, properly speaking, is not
one of our Bunyan gallery of portraits at all. Shame, at best,
is but a kind of secondary character in this dramatic book. We
do not meet with Shame directly; we only hear about him through the
report of Faithful. That first-class pilgrim was almost overcome
of Shame, so hot was their encounter; and it is the extraordinarily
feeling, graphic, and realistic account of their encounter that Faithful
gives us that has led me to take up Shame for our reproof and correction
to-night.</p>
<p>Religion altogether, but especially all personal religion, said Shame
to Faithful, is an unmanly business. There is a certain touch
of smallness and pitifulness, he said, in all religion, but especially
in experimental religion. It brings a man into junctures and into
companionships, and it puts offices and endurances upon one such as
try a man if he has any greatness of spirit about him at all.
This life on which you are entering, said Shame, will cost you many
a blush before you are done with it. You will lay yourself open
to many a scoff. The Puritan religion, and all the ways of that
religious fraternity, are peculiarly open to the shafts of ridicule.
Now, all that was quite true. There was no denying the truth of
what Shame said. And Faithful felt the truth of it all, and felt
it most keenly, as he confessed to Christian. The blood came into
my face as the fellow spake, and what he said for a time almost beat
me out of the upward way altogether. But in this dilemma also
all true Christians can fall back, as Faithful fell back, upon the example
of their Master. In this as in every other experience of temptation
and endurance, our Lord is the forerunner and the example of His people.
Our Lord was in all points tempted like as we are, and among all His
other temptations He was tempted to be ashamed of His work on earth
and of the life and the death His work led Him into. He must have
often felt ashamed at the treatment He received during His life of humiliation,
as it is well called; and He must often have felt ashamed of His disciples:
but all that is blotted out by the crowning shame of the cross.
We hang our worst criminals rather than behead or shoot them, in order
to heap up the utmost possible shame and disgrace upon them, as well
as to execute justice upon them. And what the hangman’s
rope is in our day, all that the cross was in our Lord’s day.
And, then, as if the cross itself was not shame enough, all the circumstances
connected with His cross were planned and carried out so as to heap
the utmost possible shame and humiliation upon His head. Our prison
warders have to watch the murderers in their cells night and day, lest
they should take their own life in order to escape the hangman’s
rope; but our Lord, keenly as He felt His coming shame, said to His
horrified disciples, Behold, we go up to Jerusalem, when the Son of
Man shall be mocked, and spitefully entreated, and spitted on; and they
shall scourge Him and put Him to death. Do you ever think of your
Lord in His shame? How they made a fool of Him, as we say.
How they took off His own clothes and put on Him now a red cloak and
now a white; how they put a sword of lath in His hand, and a crown of
thorns on His head; how they bowed the knee before Him, and asked royal
favours from Him; and then how they spat in His face, and struck Him
on the cheek, while the whole house rang with shouts of laughter.
And, then, the last indignity of man, how they stripped Him naked and
lashed His naked and bleeding body to a whipping-post. And how
they wagged their heads and put out their tongues at Him when He was
on the tree, and invited Him to come down and preach to them now, and
they would all become His disciples. Did not Shame say the simple
truth when he warned Faithful that religion had always and from the
beginning made its followers the ridicule of their times?</p>
<p>If you are really going to be a religious man, Shame went on, you
will have to carry about with you a very tender conscience, and a more
unmanly and miserable thing than a tender conscience I cannot conceive.
A tender conscience will cost you something, let me tell you, to keep
it. If nothing else, a tender conscience will all your life long
expose you to the mockery and the contempt of all the brave spirits
of the time. That also is true. At any rate, a tender conscience
will undoubtedly compel its possessor to face the brave spirits of the
time. There is a good story told to this present point about Sir
Robert Peel, a Prime Minister of our Queen. When a young man,
Peel was one of the guests at a select dinner-party in the West-end
of London. And after the ladies had left the table the conversation
of the gentlemen took a turn such that it could not have taken as long
as the ladies were present. Peel took no share in the stories
or the merriment that went on, and, at last, he rose up and ordered
his carriage, and, with a burning face, left the room. When he
was challenged as to why he had broken up the pleasant party so soon,
he could only reply that his conscience would not let him stay any longer.
No doubt Peel felt the mocking laughter that he left behind him, but,
as Shame said to Faithful, the tenderness of the young statesman’s
conscience compelled him to do as he did. But we are not all Peels.
And there are plenty of workshops and offices and dinner-tables in our
own city, where young men who would walk up to the cannon’s mouth
without flinching have not had Peel’s courage to protest against
indecency or to confess that they belonged to an evangelical church.
If a church is only sufficiently unevangelical there is no trial of
conscience or of courage in confessing that you belong to it.
But as Shame so ably and honestly said, that type of religion that creates
a tender conscience in its followers, and sets them to watch their words
and their ways, and makes them tie themselves up from all hectoring
liberty—to choose that religion, and to cleave to it to the end,
will make a young man the ridicule still of all the brave spirits round
about him. Ambitious young men get promotion and reward every
day among us for desertions and apostasies in religion, for which, if
they had been guilty of the like in war, they would have been shot.
‘And so you are a Free Churchman, I am told.’ That
was all that was said. But the sharp youth understood without
any more words, and he made his choice accordingly; till it is becoming
a positive surprise to find the rising members of certain professions
in certain churches. The Quakers have a proverb in England that
a family carriage never drives for two generations past the parish church
door. Of which state of matters Shame showed himself a shrewd
prophet two hundred years ago when he said that but few of the rich
and the mighty and the wise remained long of Faithful’s Puritan
opinion unless they were first persuaded to be fools, and to be of a
voluntary fondness to venture the loss of all.</p>
<p>And I will tell you two other things, said sharp-sighted and plain-spoken
Shame, that your present religion will compel you to do if you adhere
to it. It will compel you from time to time to ask your neighbour’s
forgiveness even for petty faults, and it will insist with you that
you make restitution when you have done the weak and the friendless
any hurt or any wrong. And every manly mind will tell you that
life is not worth having on such humbling terms as those are.
Whatever may be thought about Shame in other respects, it cannot be
denied that he had a sharp eye for the facts of life, and a shrewd tongue
in setting those facts forth. He has hit the blot exactly in the
matter of our first duty to our neighbour; he has put his finger on
one of the matters where so many of us, through a false shame, come
short. It costs us a tremendous struggle with our pride to go
to our neighbour and to ask his forgiveness for a fault, petty fault
or other. Did you ever do it? When did you do it last, to
whom, and for what? One Sabbath morning, now many years ago, I
had occasion to urge this elementary evangelical duty on my people here,
and I did it as plainly as I could. Next day one of my young men,
who is now a devoted and honoured elder, came to me and told me that
he had done that morning what his conscience yesterday told him in the
church to do. He had gone to a neighbour’s place of business,
had asked for an interview, and had begged his neighbour’s pardon.
I am sure neither of those two men have forgotten that moment, and the
thought of it has often since nerved me to speak plainly about some
of their most unwelcome duties to my people. Shame, no doubt,
pulled back my noble friend’s hand when it was on the office bell,
but, like Faithful in the text, he shook him out of his company and
went in. I spoke of the remarkable justice of the newspaper press
in the opening of these remarks. And it so happens that, as I
lay down my pen to rest my hand after writing this sentence and lift
a London evening paper, I read this editorial note, set within the well-known
brackets at the end of an indignant and expostulatory letter: [‘Our
correspondent’s complaint is just. The paragraph imputing
bad motives should not have been admitted.’] I have no doubt
that editor felt some shame as he handed that apologetic note to the
printer. But not to speak of any other recognition and recompense,
he has the recompense of the recognition of all honourable-minded men
who have read that honourable admission and apology.</p>
<p>Shame was quite right in his scoff about restitution also.
For restitution rings like a trumpet tone through the whole of the law
of Moses, and then the New Testament republishes that law if only in
the exquisite story of Zaccheus. And, indeed, take it altogether,
I do not know where to find in the same space a finer vindication of
Puritan pulpit ethics than just in this taunting and terrifying attack
on Faithful. There is no better test of true religion both as
it is preached and practised than just to ask for and to grant forgiveness,
and to offer and accept restitution. Now, does your public and
private life defend and adorn your minister’s pulpit in these
two so practical matters? Could your minister point to you as
a proof of the ethics of evangelical teaching? Can any one in
this city speak up in defence of your church and thus protest: ‘Say
what you like about that church and its ministers, all I can say is,
that its members know how to make an apology; as, also, how to pay back
with interest what they at one time damaged or defrauded’?
Can any old creditor’s widow or orphan stand up for our doctrine
and defend our discipline pointing to you? If you go on to be
a Puritan, said Shame to Faithful, you will have to ask your neighbour’s
forgiveness even for petty faults, and you will have to make restitution
with usury where you have taken anything from any one, and how will
you like that?</p>
<p>And what did you say to all this, my brother? Say? I
could not tell what to say at the first. I felt my blood coming
up into my face at some of the things that Shame said and threatened.
But, at last, I began to consider that that which is highly esteemed
among men is often had in abomination with God. And I said to
myself again, Shame tells me what men do and what men think, but he
has told me nothing about what He thinks with Whom I shall soon have
alone to do. Therefore, thought I, what God thinks and says is
wisest and best, let all the men of the world say what they will.
Let all false shame, then, depart from my heart, for how else shall
I look upon my Lord, and how shall He look upon me at His coming?</p>
<h2>TALKATIVE</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘A man full of talk.’—Zophar.</p>
<p>‘Let thy words be few.’—The Preacher.</p>
<p>‘The soul of religion is the practick part.’—Christian.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Since we all have a tongue, and since so much of our time is taken
up with talk, a simple catalogue of the sins of the tongue is enough
to terrify us. The sins of the tongue take up a much larger space
in the Bible than we would believe till we have begun to suffer from
other men’s tongues and especially from our own. The Bible
speaks a great deal more and a great deal plainer about the sins of
the tongue than any of our pulpits dare to do. In the Psalms alone
you would think that the psalmists scarcely suffer from anything else
worth speaking about but the evil tongues of their friends and of their
enemies. The Book of Proverbs also is full of the same lashing
scourge. And James the Just, in a passage of terrible truth and
power, tells us that we are already as good as perfect men if we can
bridle our tongue; and that, on the other hand, if we do not bridle
our tongue, all our seeming to be religious is a sham and a self-deception,—that
man’s religion is vain.</p>
<p>With many men and many women great talkativeness is a matter of simple
temperament and mental constitution. And a talkative habit would
be a childlike and an innocent habit if the heart of talker and the
hearts of those to whom he talks so much were only full of truth and
love. But our hearts and our neighbours’ hearts being what
they are, in the multitude of words there wanteth not sin. So
much of our talk is about our absent neighbours, and there are so many
misunderstandings, prejudices, ambitions, competitions, oppositions,
and all kinds of cross-interests between us and our absent neighbours,
that we cannot long talk about them till our hearts have run our tongues
into all manner of trespass. Bishop Butler discourses on the great
dangers that beset a talkative temperament with almost more than all
his usual sagacity, seriousness, and depth. And those who care
to see how the greatest of our modern moralists deals with their besetting
sin should lose no time in possessing and mastering Butler’s great
discourse. It is a truly golden discourse, and it ought to be
read at least once a month by all the men and all the women who have
tongues in their heads. Bishop Butler points out to his offending
readers, in a way they can never forget, the certain mischief they do
to themselves and to other people just by talking too much. But
there are far worse sins that our tongues fall into than the bad enough
sins that spring out of impertinent and unrestrained loquacity.
There are many times when our talk, long or short, is already simple
and downright evil. It is ten to one, it is a hundred to one,
that you do not know and would not believe how much you fall every day
and in every conversation into one or other of the sins of the tongue.
If you would only begin to see and accept this, that every time you
speak or hear about your absent neighbour what you would not like him
to speak or hear about you, you are in that a talebearer, a slanderer,
a backbiter, or a liar,—when you begin to see and admit that about
yourself, you will not wonder at what the Bible says with such bitter
indignation about the diabolical sins of the tongue. If you would
just begin to-night to watch yourselves—on the way home from church,
at home after the day is over, to-morrow morning when the letters and
the papers are opened, and so on,—how instinctively, incessantly,
irrepressibly you speak about the absent in a way you would be astounded
and horrified to be told they were at that moment speaking about you,
then you would soon be wiser than all your teachers in the sins and
in the government of the tongue. And you would seven times every
day pluck out your tongue before God till He gives it back to you clean
and kind in that land where all men shall love their neighbours, present
and absent, as themselves.</p>
<p>Take detraction for an example, one of the commonest, and, surely,
one of the most detestable of the sins of the tongue. And the
etymology here, as in this whole region, is most instructive and most
impressive. In detraction you <i>draw away</i> something from
your neighbour that is most precious and most dear to him. In
detraction you are a thief, and a thief of the falsest and wickedest
kind. For your neighbour’s purse is trash, while his good
name is far more precious to him than all his gold. Some one praises
your neighbour in your hearing, his talents, his performances, his character,
his motives, or something else that belongs to your neighbour.
Some one does that in your hearing who either does not know you, or
who wishes to torture and expose you, and you fall straight into the
snare thus set for you, and begin at once to belittle, depreciate, detract
from, and run down your neighbour, who has been too much praised for
your peace of mind and your self-control. You insinuate something
to his disadvantage and dishonour. You quote some authority you
have heard to his hurt. And so on past all our power to picture
you. For detraction has a thousand devices taught to it by the
master of all such devices, wherewith to drag down and defile the great
and the good. But with all you can say or do, you cannot for many
days get out of your mind the heart-poisoning praise you heard spoken
of your envied neighbour. Never praise any potter’s pots
in the hearing of another potter, said the author of the <i>Nicomachean
Ethics</i>. Aristotle said potter’s pots, but he really
all the time was thinking of a philosopher’s books; only he said
potter’s pots to draw off his readers’ attention from himself.
Now, always remember that ancient and wise advice. Take care how
you praise a potter’s pots, a philosopher’s books, a woman’s
beauty, a speaker’s speech, a preacher’s sermon to another
potter, philosopher, woman, speaker, or preacher; unless, indeed, you
maliciously wish secretly to torture them, or publicly to expose them,
or, if their sanctification is begun, to sanctify them to their most
inward and spiritual sanctification.</p>
<p>Backbiting, again, would seem at first sight to be a sin of the teeth
rather than of the tongue, only, no sharpest tooth can tear you when
your back is turned like your neighbour’s evil tongue. Pascal
has many dreadful things about the corruption and misery of man, but
he has nothing that strikes its terrible barb deeper into all our consciences
than this, that if all our friends only knew what we have said about
them behind their back, we would not have four friends in all the world.
Neither we would. I know I would not have one. How many
would you have? And who would they be? You cannot name them.
I defy you to name them. They do not exist. The tongue can
no man tame.</p>
<p>‘Giving of characters’ also takes up a large part of
our everyday conversation. We cannot well help characterising,
describing, and estimating one another. But, as far as possible,
when we see the conversation again approaching that dangerous subject,
we should call to mind our past remorse; we should suppose our absent
neighbour present; we should imagine him in our place and ourselves
in his place, and so turn the rising talk into another channel.
For, the truth is, few of us are able to do justice to our neighbour
when we begin to discuss and describe him. Generosity in our talk
is far easier for us than justice. It was this incessant giving
of characters that our Lord had in His eye when He said in His Sermon
on the Mount, Judge not. But our Lord might as well never have
uttered that warning word for all the attention we give it. For
we go on judging one another and sentencing one another as if we were
entirely and in all things blameless ourselves, and as if God had set
us up in our blamelessness in His seat of judgment over all our fellows.
How seldom do we hear any one say in a public debate or in a private
conversation, I don’t know; or, It is no matter of mine; or, I
feel that I am not in possession of all the facts; or, It may be so,
but I must not judge. We never hear such things as these said.
No one pays the least attention to the Preacher on the Mount.
And if any one says to us, I must not judge, we never forgive him, because
his humility and his obedience so condemn all our ill-formed, prejudiced,
rash, and ill-natured judgments of our neighbour. Since, therefore,
so Butler sums up, it is so hard for us to enter on our neighbour’s
character without offending the law of Christ, we should learn to decline
that kind of conversation altogether, and determine to get over that
strong inclination most of us have, to be continually talking about
the concerns, the behaviour, and the deserts of our neighbours.</p>
<p>Now, it was all those vices of the tongue in full outbreak in the
day of James the Just that made that apostle, half in sorrow, half in
anger, demand of all his readers that they should henceforth begin to
bridle their tongues. And, like all that most practical apostle’s
counsels, that is a most impressive and memorable commandment.
For, it is well known that all sane men who either ride on or drive
unruly horses, take good care to bridle their horses well before they
bring them out of their stable door. And then they keep their
bridle-hand firm closed on the bridle-rein till their horses are back
in the stable again. Especially and particularly they keep a close
eye and a firm hand on their horse’s bridle on all steep inclines
and at all sharp angles and sudden turns in the road; when sudden trains
are passing and when stray dogs are barking. If the rider or the
driver of a horse did not look at nothing else but the bridle of his
horse, both he and his horse under him would soon be in the ditch,—as
so many of us are at the present moment because we have an untamed tongue
in our mouth on which we have not yet begun to put the bridle of truth
and justice and brotherly love. Indeed, such woe and misery has
an untamed tongue wrought in other churches and in other and more serious
ages than ours, that special religious brotherhoods have been banded
together just on the special and strict engagement that they would above
all things put a bridle on their tongues. ‘What are the
chief cares of a young convert?’ asked such a convert at an aged
Carthusian. ‘I said I will take heed to my ways that I trespass
not with my tongue,’ replied the saintly father. ‘Say
no more for the present,’ interrupted the youthful beginner; ‘I
will go home and practise that, and will come again when I have performed
it.’</p>
<p>Now, whatever faults that tall man had who took up so much of Faithful’s
time and attention, he was a saint compared with the men and the women
who have just passed before us. Talkative, as John Bunyan so scornfully
names that tall man, though he undoubtedly takes up too much time and
too much space in Bunyan’s book, was not a busybody in other men’s
matters at any rate. Nobody could call him a detractor or a backbiter
or a talebearer or a liar. Christian knew him well, and had known
him long, but Christian was not afraid to leave him alone with Faithful.
We all know men we feel it unsafe to leave long alone with our friends.
We feel sure that they will be talking about us, and that to our hurt,
as soon as our backs are about. But to give that tall man his
due, he was not given with all his talk to tale-bearing or scandal or
detraction. Had he been guilty of any of these things, Faithful
would soon have found him out, and would have left him to go to the
Celestial City by himself. But, after talking for half a day with
Talkative, instead of finding out anything wrong in the tall man’s
talk, Faithful was so taken and so struck with it, that he stepped across
to Christian and said, ‘What a brave companion we have got!
Surely this man will make a most excellent pilgrim!’ ‘So
I once thought too,’ said Christian, ‘till I went to live
beside him, and have to do with him in the business of daily life.’
Yes, it is near neighbourhood and the business of everyday life that
try a talking man. If you go to a meeting for prayer, and hear
some men praying and speaking on religious subjects, you would say to
yourself, What a good man that is, and how happy must his wife and children
and servants and neighbours be with such an example always before them,
and with such an intercessor for them always with God! But if
you were to go home with that so devotional man, and try to do business
with him, and were compelled to cross him and go against him, you would
find out why Christian smiled so when Faithful was so full of Talkative’s
praises.</p>
<p>But of all the religiously-loquacious men of our day, your ministers
are the chief. For your ministers must talk in public, and that
often and at great length, whether they are truly religious men at home
or no. It is their calling to talk to you unceasingly about religious
matters. You chose them to be your ministers because they could
talk well. You would not put up with a minister who could not
talk well on religious things. You estimate them by their talk.
You praise and pay them by their talk. And if they are to live,
talk incessantly to you about religion they must, and they do.
If any other man among us is not a religious man, well, then, he can
at least hold his tongue. There is no necessity laid on him to
speak in public about things that he does not practise at home.
But we hard-bested ministers must go on speaking continually about the
most solemn things. And if we are not extraordinarily watchful
over ourselves, and extraordinarily and increasingly conscientious,
if we are not steadily growing in inwardness and insight and depth and
real spirituality of mind and life ourselves, we cannot escape,—our
calling in life will not let us escape,—becoming as sounding brass.
There is an awful sentence in Butler that should be written in letters
of fire in every minister’s conscience, to the effect that continually
going over religion in talk and making fine pictures of it in the pulpit,
creates a professional insensibility to personal religion that is the
everlasting ruin of multitudes of eloquent ministers. That is
true. We ministers all feel that to be true. Our miserable
experience tells us that is only too true of ourselves. What a
flood of demoralising talk has been poured out from the pulpits of this
one city to-day!—demoralising to preachers and to hearers both,
because not intended to be put in practice. How few of those who
have talked and heard talk all this day about divine truth and human
duty, have made the least beginning or the least resolve to live as
they have spoken and heard! And, yet, all will in words again
admit that the soul of religion is the practick part, and that the tongue
without the heart and the life is but death and corruption.</p>
<p>Let us, then, this very night begin to do something practical after
all this talk about talk. And let us all begin to do something
in the direct line of our present talk. What a noble congregation
of evangelical Carthusians that would make us if we all put a bridle
on our tongue to-night before we left this house. For we all have
neighbours, friends, enemies, against whom we every day sin with our
unbridled tongue. We all have acquaintances we are ashamed to
meet, we have been so unkind and so unjust to them with our tongue.
We hang down our head when they shake our hand. Yes, we know the
men quite well of whom Pascal speaks. We know many men who would
never speak to us again if they only knew how, and how often, we have
spoken about them behind their back. Well, let us sin against
them, and against ourselves, and against our Master’s command
and example no more. Let this night and this lecture on Talkative
and his kindred see the last of our sin against our ill-used neighbour.
Let us promise God and our own consciences to-night, that we shall all
this week put on a bridle about that man, and about that subject, and
in that place, and in that company. Let us say, God helping me,
I shall for all this week not speak about that man at all, anything
either good or bad, nor on that subject, nor will I let the conversation
turn into that channel at all if I can help it. And God will surely
help us, till, after weeks and years of such prayer and such practice,
we shall by slow degrees, and after many defeats, be able to say with
the Psalmist, ‘I will take heed to my ways, that I sin not with
my tongue. I will keep my mouth with a bridle. I will be
dumb with silence. I will hold my peace even from good.’</p>
<h2>JUDGE HATE-GOOD</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Hear, O heads of Jacob, and ye princes of the
house of Israel . . . who hate the good and love the evil.’—Micah.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The portrait of Judge Hate-good in <i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i>
is but a poor replica, as our artists say, of the portrait of Judge
Jeffreys in our English history books. I am sure you have often
read, with astonishment at Bunyan’s literary power, his wonderful
account of the trial of Faithful, when, as Bunyan says, he was brought
forth to his trial in order to his condemnation. We have the whole
ecclesiastical jurisprudence of Charles and James Stuart put before
us in that single satirical sentence. But, powerful as Bunyan’s
whole picture of Judge Hate-good’s court is, it is a tame and
a poor picture compared with what all the historians tell us of the
injustice and cruelty of the court of Judge Jeffreys. Macaulay’s
portrait of the Lord Chief Justice of England for ferocity and fiendishness
beats out of sight Bunyan’s picture of that judge who keeps Satan’s
own seal in Bunyan’s Book. Jeffreys was bred for his future
work at the bar of the Old Bailey, a bar already proverbial for the
licence of its tongue and for the coarseness of its cases. Jeffreys
served his apprenticeship for the service that our two last Stuarts
had in reserve for him so well, that he soon became, so his beggared
biographer describes him, the most consummate bully that ever disgraced
an English bench. The boldest impudence when he was a young advocate,
and the most brutal ferocity when he was an old judge, sat equally secure
on the brazen forehead of George Jeffreys. The real and undoubted
ability and scholarship of Jeffreys only made his wickedness the more
awful, and his whole career the greater curse both to those whose tool
he was, and to those whose blood he drank daily. Jeffreys drank
brandy and sang lewd songs all night, and he drank blood and cursed
and swore on the bench all day. Just imagine the state of our
English courts when a judge could thus assail a poor wretch of a woman
after passing a cruel sentence upon her. ‘Hangman,’
shouted the ermined brute, ‘Hangman, pay particular attention
to this lady. Scourge her soundly, man. Scourge her till
the blood runs. It is the Christmas season; a cold season for
madam to strip in. See, therefore, man, that you warm her shoulders
thoroughly.’ And you all know who Richard Baxter was.
You have all read his seraphic book, <i>The Saints’ Rest</i>.
Well, besides being the Richard Baxter so well known to our saintly
fathers and mothers, he was also, and he was emphatically, the peace-maker
of the Puritan party. Baxter’s political principles were
of the most temperate and conciliatory, and indeed, almost royalist
kind. He was a man of strong passions, indeed, but all the strength
and heat of his passions ran out into his hatred of sin and his love
of holiness, and an unsparing and consuming care for the souls of his
people. Very Faithful himself stood before the bar of Judge Jeffreys
in the person of Richard Baxter. It took all the barefaced falsehood
and scandalous injustice of the crown prosecutors to draw out the sham
indictment that was read out in court against inoffensive Richard Baxter.
But what was lacking in the charge of the crown was soon made up by
the abominable scurrility of the judge. ‘You are a schismatical
knave,’ roared out Jeffreys, as soon as Baxter was brought into
court. ‘You are an old hypocritical villain.’
And then, clasping his hands and turning up his eyes, he sang through
his nose: ‘O Lord, we are Thy peculiar people: we are Thy dear
and only people.’ ‘You old blockhead,’ he again
roared out, ‘I will have you whipped through the city at the tail
of the cart. By the grace of God I will look after you, Richard.’
And the tiger would have been as good as his word had not an overpowering
sense of shame compelled the other judges to protest and get Baxter’s
inhuman sentence commuted to fine and imprisonment. And so on,
and so on. But it was Jeffreys’ ‘Western Circuit,’
as it was called, that filled up the cup of his infamy—an infamy,
say the historians, that will last as long as the language and the history
of England last. The only parallel to it is the infamy of a royal
house and a royal court that could welcome home and promote to honour
such a detestable miscreant as Jeffreys was. But the slaughter
in Somerset was only over in order that a similar slaughter in London
might begin. Let those who have a stomach for more blood and tears
follow out the hell upon earth that James Stuart and George Jeffreys
together let loose on the best life of England in their now fast-shortening
day. Was Judge Jeffreys, some of you will ask me, born and bred
in hell? Was the devil his father, and original sin his mother?
Or, was he not the very devil himself come to earth for a season in
English flesh? No, my brethren, not so. Judge Jeffreys was
one of ourselves. Little George Jeffreys was born and brought
up in a happy English home. He was baptised and confirmed in an
English church. He took honours in an English university.
He ate dinners, was called to the bar, conducted cases, and took silk
in an English court of justice. And in the ripeness of his years
and of his services, he wore the honourable ermine and sat upon the
envied wool-sack of an English sovereign. It would have been far
less awful and far less alarming to think of, had Judge Jeffreys been,
as you supposed, a pure devil let loose on the Church of Christ and
the awakening liberty of England. But some innocent soul will
ask me next whether there has ever been any other monster on the face
of the earth like Judge Jeffreys; and whether by any possibility there
are any such monsters anywhere in our own day. Yes, truth compels
me to reply. Yes, there are, plenty, too many. Only their
environment, nowadays, as our naturalists say, does not permit them
to grow to such strength and dimensions as those of James Stuart, and
George Jeffreys, his favourite judge. At the same time, be not
deceived by your own deceitful heart, nor by any other deceiver’s
smooth speeches. Judge Jeffreys is in yourself, only circumstances
have not yet let him fully show himself in you. Still, if you
look close enough and deep enough into your own hearts, you will see
the same wicked light glancing sometimes there that used so to terrify
Judge Jeffreys’ prisoners when they saw it in his wicked eyes.
If you lay your ear close enough to your own heart, you will sometimes
hear something of that same hiss with which that human serpent sentenced
to torture and to death the men and the women who would not submit to
his command. The same savage laughter also will sometimes all
but escape your lips as you think of how your enemy has been made to
suffer in body and in estate. O yes, the very same hell-broth
that ran for blood in Judge Jeffreys’ heart is in all our hearts
also; and those who have the least of its poison left in their hearts
will be the foremost to confess its presence, and to hate and condemn
and bewail themselves on account of its terrible dregs.</p>
<p>HATE-GOOD is an awful enough name for any human being to bear.
Those who really know what goodness is, and then, what hatred is,—they
will feel how awful a thing it is for any man to hate goodness.
But there is something among us sinful men far more awful than even
that, and that is to hate God. The carnal mind, writes the apostle
Paul to the Romans—and it is surely the most terrible sentence
that often terrible enough apostle ever wrote—the carnal mind
is enmity against God. And Dr. John Owen annotating on that sentence
is equally terrible. The carnal mind, he says, has ‘chosen
a great enemy indeed.’ And having mentioned John Owen, will
you let me once more beseech all students of divinity, that is, all
students, amongst other things, of the desperate depravity of the human
heart, to read John Owen’s sixth volume till they have it by heart,—by
a broken, believing heart. Owen <i>On Indwelling Sin</i> is one
of the greatest works of the great Puritan period. It is a really
great, and as we nowadays say, a truly scientific work to the bargain.
But all that by the way. Yes, this carnal heart that is still
left in every one of us has chosen a great enemy, and it would need
both strong and faithful allies in order to fight him. The hatred
that His Son also met with when He was in this world is one of the most
hateful pages of this hateful world’s hateful history. He
knew His own heart towards His enemies, and thus He was able to say
to the Searcher of Hearts with His dying breath, They hated Me without
a cause. Truly our hatred is hottest when it is most unjust.</p>
<p>‘Look to yourselves,’ wrote the apostle John to the elect
lady and her children. Yes; let us all look sharply and suspiciously
to ourselves in this matter now in hand, and we shall not need John
Owen nor anybody else to discover to us the hatred and the hatefulness
of our own hearts. Look to yourselves, and the work of the law
will soon be fulfilled in you. <i>Homo homini lupus</i>, taught
an old philosopher who had studied moral philosophy not in books so
much as in his own heart. ‘Is no man naturally good?’
asked innocent Lady Macleod of Dunvegan Castle at her guest, Dr. Samuel
Johnson. ‘No, madam, no more than a wolf.’ That
is quite past all question with all those who either in natural morals
or in revealed religion look to and know and characterise themselves.
We have all an inborn propensity to dislike one another, and a very
small provocation will suddenly blow that banked-up furnace into a flame.
It is ever present with me, says self-examining Paul, and hence its
so sudden and so destructive outbreaks. So the written or the
printed name of our enemy, his image in our mind, his passing step,
his figure out of the window; his wife, his child, his carriage, his
cart in the street, anything, everything will stir up our heart at the
man we do not like. And the whole of our so honest Bible, our
present text, and the illustrations of our text in Judge Jeffreys’
and Judge Hate-good’s courts, all go to show that the better a
man is the more sometimes will we hate him. Good men, better men
than we are, men who in public life and in private life pursue great
and good ends, of necessity cross and go counter to us in our pursuit
of small, selfish, evil ends, and of necessity we hate them. For,
cross a selfish sinner sufficiently and you have a very devil—as
many good men, if they knew it, have in us. Again, good men who
come into contact with us cannot help seeing our bad lives, our tempers,
our selfishness, our public and private vices; and we see that they
see us, and we cannot love those whose averted eye so goes to our conscience.
And not only in the hatred of good men, but if you know of God how to
watch yourselves, you will find yourselves out every day also in the
hatred of good movements, good causes, good institutions, and good works.
There are doctors who would far rather hear of their rival’s patient
expiring in his hands than hear their rival’s success trumpeted
through all the town. There are ministers, also, who would rather
that the masses of the city and the country sank yet deeper into improvidence
and drink and neglect of ordinances than that they were rescued by any
other church than their own. They hate to hear of the successes
of another church. There are party politicians who would rather
that the ship of the state ran on the rocks both in her home and her
foreign policy than that the opposite party should steer her amid a
nation’s cheers into harbour. And so of good news.
I will stake the divine truth of this evening’s Scriptures, and
of their historical and imaginative illustrations, on the feelings,
if you know how to observe, detect, characterise, and confess them,—the
feelings, I say, that will rise in your heart to-morrow morning when
you read what is good news to other men, even to good men, and to the
families and family interests of good men. It does not matter
one atom into what profession, office, occupation, interest you track
the corrupt heart of man, as sure as a substance casts a shadow, so
sure will you find your own selfish heart hating goodness when the goodness
does not serve or flatter you.</p>
<p>Now, though they will never be many, yet there must be some men among
us, one here and another there, who have so looked at and found out
themselves. I can well believe that some men here came up to this
house to-night trembling in their heart all the way. They felt
the very advertisement go through them like a knife: they felt that
they were summoned up hither almost by name as to judgment. For
they feel every day, though they have never told their feelings to any,
that they have this horrible heart deep-seated within them to love evil
and to hate good. They gnash their teeth at themselves as they
catch themselves rejoicing in iniquity. They feel their hearts
expanding, and they know that their faces shine, when you tell them
evil tidings. They sicken and lose heart and sit solitary when
you carry to them a good report. They feel as John Bunyan felt,
that no one but the devil can equal them in pollution of heart.
And their wonder sometimes is that the Searcher of Hearts does not drive
them down where devils dwell and hate God and man and one another.
They look around them when the penitential psalm is being sung, and
they smile bitterly to themselves. O people of God, they say,
you do not know what you are saying. Leave that psalm to me.
I can sing it. I can tell to God what He knows about sin, and
about sin in the heart. Stand away back from me, that man says,
for I am a leper. The chief of sinners is beside you. A
whited sepulchre stands open beside you.—Stop now, O hating and
hateful man, and let me speak for a single moment before we separate.
Before you say any more about yourself, and before you leave the house
of God, lift up your broken heart and with all your might bless God
that He has opened your eyes and taught you how to look at yourself
and how to hate yourself. There are hundreds of honest Christian
men and women in this house at this moment to whom God has not done
as, in His free grace, He has done to you. For He has not only
begun a good work in you, but He has begun that special and peculiar
work which, when it goes on to perfection, makes a great and an eminent
saint of God. To know your own heart as you evidently know it,
and to hate it as you say you hate it, and to hunger after a clean heart
as, with every breath, you hunger,—all that, if you would only
believe it, sets you, or will yet set you, high up among the people
of God. Be comforted; it is your bounden duty to be comforted.
God deserves it at your hands that you be more than comforted amid such
unmistakable signs of His eminent grace to you. And be patient
under your exceptional sanctification. Rome was not built in a
day. You cannot reverse the awful law of your sanctification.
You cannot be saved by Jesus Christ and His Holy Spirit without seeing
yourself, and you cannot see yourself without hating yourself, and you
cannot begin to hate yourself without all your hatred henceforth turning
against yourself. You are deep in the red-hot bosom of the refiner’s
fire. And when you are once sufficiently tried by the Divine Refiner
of Souls, He will in His own good time and way bring you out as gold.
Be patient, therefore, till the coming of the Lord. And say continually
amid all your increasing knowledge of yourself, and amid all your increasing
hatred of yourself, ‘As for me, I will behold Thy face in righteousness;
I shall be satisfied when I awake with Thy likeness.’</p>
<h2>FAITHFUL IN VANITY FAIR <SPAN name="citation2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote2">{2}</SPAN></h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Be thou faithful.’—Rev. 2. 10.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The breadth of John Bunyan’s mind, the largeness of his heart,
and the tolerance of his temper all come excellently out in his fine
portrait of Faithful. New beginners in personal religion, when
they first take up <i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i> in earnest, always
try to find out something in themselves that shall somewhat correspond
to the recorded experience of Christian, the chief pilgrim. And
they are afraid that all is not right with them unless they, like him,
have had, to begin with, a heavy burden on their back. They look
for something in their religious life that shall answer to the Slough
of Despond also, to the Hill Difficulty, to the House Beautiful, and,
especially and indispensably, to the place somewhat ascending with a
cross upon it and an open sepulchre beneath it. And because they
cannot always find all these things in themselves in the exact order
and in the full power in which they are told of Christian in Bunyan’s
book, they begin to have doubts about themselves as to whether they
are true pilgrims at all. But here is Faithful, with whom Christian
held such sweet and confidential discourse, and yet he had come through
not a single one of all these things. The two pilgrims had come
from the same City of Destruction indeed, and they had met at the gate
of Vanity and passed through Vanity Fair together, but, till they embraced
one another again in the Celestial City, that was absolutely all the
experience they had in common. Faithful had never had any such
burden on his back as that was which had for so long crushed Christian
to the earth. And the all but complete absence of such a burden
may have helped to let Faithful get over the Slough of Despond dry shod.
He had the good lot to escape Sinai also and the Hill Difficulty, and
his passing by the House Beautiful and not making the acquaintance of
Discretion and Prudence and Charity may have had something to do with
the fact that one named Wanton had like to have done him such a mischief.
His remarkable experiences, however, with Adam the First, with Moses,
and then with the Man with holes in His hands, all that makes up a page
in Faithful’s autobiography we could ill have spared. His
encounter with Shame also, and soon afterwards with Talkative, are classical
passages in his so individual history. Altogether, it would be
almost impossible for us to imagine two pilgrims talking so heartily
together, and yet so completely unlike one another. A very important
lesson surely as to how we should abstain from measuring other men by
ourselves, as well as ourselves by other men; an excellent lesson also
as to how we should learn to allow for all possible varieties among
good men, both in their opinions, their experiences, and their attainments.
True Puritan as the author of <i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i> is,
he is no Procrustes. He does not cut down all his pilgrims to
one size, nor does he clip them all into one pattern. They are
all thinking men, but they are not all men of one way of thinking.
John Bunyan is as fresh as Nature herself, and as free and full as Holy
Scripture herself in the variety, in the individuality, and even in
the idiosyncrasy of his spiritual portrait gallery.</p>
<p>Vanity Fair is one of John Bunyan’s universally-admitted masterpieces.
The very name of the fair is one of his happiest strokes. Thackeray’s
famous book owes half its popularity to the happy name he borrowed from
John Bunyan. Thackeray’s author’s heart must have
leaped in his bosom when Vanity Fair struck him as a title for his great
satire. ‘Then I saw in my dream that when they were got
out of the wilderness they presently saw a town before them, and the
name of that town is Vanity, and at that town there is a fair kept called
Vanity Fair. The fair is kept all the year long, and it beareth
the name of Vanity Fair, because the town where it is kept is lighter
than Vanity. And, also, because all that is sold there is vanity.
As is the saying of the wise, All that cometh is vanity. The fair
is no new erected business, but a thing of ancient standing: I will
show you the original of it. About five thousand years ago there
were pilgrims walking to the Celestial City, as these two honest persons
now are, and Beelzebub, Apollyon, and Legion, with their companions,
perceiving that by the path that the pilgrims made, that their way to
the city lay through this town of Vanity, they contrived there to set
up a fair: a fair wherein should be sold all sorts of vanity, and that
it should last all the year long. Therefore at this fair are all
such merchandise sold as houses, lands, trades, places, honours, preferments,
titles, countries, kingdoms, pleasures, and delights of all sorts, as
wives, husbands, children, masters, servants, lives, blood, bodies,
souls, silver, gold, precious stones, and what not. And, moreover,
at this fair at all times there is to be seen juggling, cheats, games,
plays, fools, apes, knaves, and rogues, and that of every kind.’
And then our author goes on to tell us the names of the various streets
and rows where such and such wares are vended. And from that again
he goes on to tell how the Prince of princes Himself went at one time
through this same fair, and that upon a fair day too, and how the lord
of the fair himself came and took Him from street to street to try to
get Him induced to cheapen and buy some of the vain merchandise.
But as it turned out He had no mind to the merchandise in question,
and He therefore passed through the town without laying out so much
as one farthing upon its vanities. The fair, therefore, you will
see, is of long standing and a very great fair. Now, our two pilgrims
had heard of all that, they remembered also what Evangelist had told
them about the fair, and so they buttoned up their pockets and pushed
through the booths in the hope of getting out at the upper gate before
any one had time to speak to them. But that was not possible,
for they were soon set upon by the men of the fair, who cried after
them: ‘Hail, strangers, look here, what will you buy?’
‘We buy the truth only,’ said Faithful, ‘and we do
not see any of that article of merchandise set out on any of your stalls.’
And from that began a hubbub that ended in a riot, and the riot in the
apprehension and shutting up in a public cage of the two innocent pilgrims.
Lord Hate-good was the judge on the bench of Vanity in the day of their
trial, and the three witnesses who appeared in the witness-box against
the two prisoners were Envy, Superstition, and Pickthank. The
twelve jurymen who sat on their case were Mr. Blindman, Mr. No-good,
Mr. Malice, Mr. Love-lust, Mr. Live-loose, Mr. Heady, Mr. High-mind,
Mr. Enmity, Mr. Liar, Mr. Cruelty, Mr. Hate-light, and Mr. Implacable,—Mr.
Blindman to be the foreman. And it was before these men that Faithful
was brought forth to his trial in order to his condemnation. And
very soon after his trial Faithful came to his end. ‘Now
I saw that there stood behind the multitude a chariot and a couple of
horses waiting for Faithful, who (so soon as his adversaries had despatched
him) was taken up into it, and straightway was carried up through the
clouds, with sound of trumpet, the nearest way to the Celestial gate.’</p>
<p>Now, I cannot tell you how it was, I cannot account for it to myself,
but it is nevertheless absolutely true that as I was reading my author
last week and was meditating my present exposition, it came somehow
into my mind, and I could not get it out of my mind, that there is a
great and a close similarity between John Bunyan’s Vanity Fair
and a general election. And, all I could do to keep the whole
thing out of my mind, one similarity after another would leap up into
my mind and would not be put out of it. I protest that I did not
go out to seek for such similarities, but the more I frowned on them
the thicker they came. And then the further question arose as
to whether I should write them down or no; and then much more, as to
whether I should set them out before my people or no. As you will
easily believe, I was immediately in a real strait as to what I should
do. I saw on the one side what would be sure to be said by ill-natured
people and people of a hasty judgment. And I saw with much more
anxiety what would be felt even when they restrained themselves from
saying it by timid and cautious and scrupulous people. I had the
full fear of all such judges before my eyes; but, somehow, something
kept this before my eyes also, that, as Evangelist met the two pilgrims
just as they were entering the fair, so, for anything I knew to the
contrary, it might be of God, that I also, in my own way, should warn
my people of the real and special danger that their souls will be in
for the next fortnight. And as I thought of it a procession of
people passed before me all bearing to this day the stains and scars
they had taken on their hearts and their lives and their characters
at former general elections. And, like Evangelist, I felt a divine
desire taking possession of me to do all I could to pull my people out
of gunshot of the devil at this election. And, then, when I read
again how both the pilgrims thanked Evangelist for his exhortation,
and told him withal that they would have him speak further to them about
the dangers of the way, I said at last to myself, that the thanks of
one true Christian saved in anything and in any measure from the gun
of the devil are far more to be attended to by a minister than the blame
and the neglect of a hundred who do not know their hour of temptation
and will not be told it. And so I took my pen and set down some
similarities between Vanity Fair and the approaching election, with
some lessons to those who are not altogether beyond being taught.</p>
<p>Well, then, in the first place, the only way to the Celestial City
ran through Vanity Fair; by no possibility could the advancing pilgrims
escape the temptations and the dangers of the fatal fair. He that
will go to the Celestial City and yet not go through Vanity Fair must
needs go out of the world. And so it is with the temptations and
trials of the next ten days. We cannot get past them. They
are laid down right across our way. And to many men now in this
house the next ten days will be a time of simply terrible temptation.
If I had been quite sure that all my people saw that and felt that,
I would not have introduced here to-night what some of them, judging
too hastily, will certainly call this so secular and unseemly subject.
But I am so afraid that many not untrue, and in other things most earnest
men amongst us, do not yet know sufficiently the weakness and the evil
of their own hearts, that I wish much, if they will allow me, to put
them on their guard. ‘’Tis hard,’ said Contrite,
who was a householder and had a vote in the town of Vanity, ‘’tis
hard keeping our hearts and our spirits in any good order when we are
in a cumbered condition. And you may be sure that we are full
of hurry at fair-time. He that lives in such a place as this is,
and that has to do with such as we have to do with, has need of an item
to caution him to take heed every hour of the day.’ Now,
if all my people, and all this day’s communicants, were only contrite
enough, I would leave them to the hurry of the approaching election
with much more comfort. But as it is, I wish to give them such
an item as I am able to caution them for the next ten days. Let
them know, then, that their way for the next fortnight lies, I will
not say through a fair of jugglings and cheatings, carried on by apes
and knaves, but, to speak without figure, their way certainly lies through
what will be to many of them a season of the greatest temptation to
the very worst of all possible sins—to anger and bitterness and
ill-will; to no end of evil-thinking and evil-speaking; to the breaking
up of lifelong friendships; and to widespread and lasting damage to
the cause of Christ, which is the cause of truth and love, meekness
and a heavenly mind. Now, amid all that, as Evangelist said to
the two pilgrims, look well to your own hearts. Let none of all
these evil things enter your heart from the outside, and let none of
all these evil things come out of your hearts from the inside.
Set your faces like a flint from the beginning against all evil-speaking
and evil-thinking. Let your own election to the kingdom of heaven
be always before you, and walk worthy of it; and amid all the hurry
of things seen and temporal, believe steadfastly concerning the things
that are eternal, and walk worthy of them.</p>
<p>‘We buy the truth and we sell it not again for anything,’
was the reply of the two pilgrims to every stall-keeper as they passed
up the fair, and this it was that made them to be so hated and hunted
down by the men of the fair. And, in like manner, there is nothing
more difficult to get hold of at an election time than just the very
truth. All the truth on any question is not very likely to be
found put forward in the programme of any man or any party, and, even
if it were, a general election is not the best time for you to find
it out. ‘I design the search after truth to be the one business
of my life,’ wrote the future Bishop Butler at the age of twenty-one.
And whether you are to be a member of Parliament or a silent voter for
a member of Parliament, you, too, must love truth and search for her
as for hid treasure from your youth up. You must search for all
kinds of truth,—historical, political, scientific, and religious,—with
much reading, much observation, and much reflection. And those
who have searched longest and dug deepest will always be found to be
the most temperate, patient, and forbearing with those who have not
yet found the truth. I do not know who first said it, but he was
a true disciple of Socrates and Plato who first said it. ‘Plato,’
he said, ‘is my friend, and Socrates is my friend, but the truth
is much more my friend.’ There is a thrill of enthusiasm,
admiration and hope that goes through the whole country and comes down
out of history as often as we hear or read of some public man parting
with all his own past, as well as with all his leaders and patrons and
allies and colleagues in the present, and taking his solitary way out
after the truth. Many may call that man Quixotic, visionary, unpractical,
imprudent, and he may be all that and more, but to follow conscience
and the love of truth even when they are for the time leading him wrong
is noble, and is every way far better both for himself and for the cause
he serves, than if he were always found following his leaders loyally
and even walking in the way of righteousness with the love of self and
the love of party at bottom ruling his heart. How healthful and
how refreshing at an election time it is to hear a speech replete with
the love of the truth, full knowledge of the subject, and with the dignity,
the good temper, the respect for opponents, and the love of fair play
that full knowledge of the whole subject is so well fitted to bring
with it! And next to hearing such a speaker is the pleasure of
meeting such a hearer or such a reader at such a time. Now, I
want such readers and such hearers, if not such speakers, to be found
all the next fortnight among my office-bearers and my people.
Be sure you say to some of your political opponents something like this:—‘I
do not profess to read all the speeches that fill the papers at present.
I do not read all the utterances made even on my own side, and much
less all the utterances made on your side. But there is one of
your speakers I always read, and I almost always find him instructive
and impressive, a gentleman, if not a Christian. He is fair, temperate,
frank, bold, and independent; and, to my mind at least, he always throws
light on these so perplexing questions.’ Now, if you have
the intelligence and the integrity and the fair-mindedness to say something
like that to a member of the opposite party you have poured oil on the
waters of party; nay, you are in that a wily politician, for you have
almost, just in saying that, won over your friend to your own side.
So noble is the love of truth, and so potent is the high-principled
pursuit and the fearless proclamation of the truth.</p>
<p>A general election is a trying time to all kinds of public men, but
it is perhaps most trying of all to Christian ministers. Unless
they are to disfranchise themselves and are to detach and shut themselves
in from all interest in public affairs altogether, an election time
is to our ministers, beyond any other class of citizens perhaps, a peculiarly
trying time. How they are to escape the Scylla of cowardice and
the contempt of all free and true men on the one hand, and the Charybdis
of pride and self-will and scorn of other men’s opinions and wishes
on the other, is no easy dilemma to our ministers. Some happily
constituted and happily circumstanced ministers manage to get through
life, and even through political life, without taking or giving a wound
in all their way. They are so wise and so watchful; they are so
inoffensive, unprovoking, and conciliatory; and even where they are
not always all that, they have around them sometimes a people who are
so patient and tolerant and full of the old-fashioned respect for their
minister that they do not attempt to interfere with him. Then,
again, some ministers preach so well, and perform all their pastoral
work so well, that they make it unsafe and impossible for the most censorious
and intolerant of their people to find fault with them. But all
our ministers are not like that. And all our congregations are
not like that. And those of our ministers who are not like that
must just be left to bear that which their past unwisdom or misfortune
has brought upon them. Only, if they have profited by their past
mistakes or misfortunes, a means of grace, and an opportunity of better
playing the man is again at their doors. I am sure you will all
join with me in the prayer that all our ministers, as well as all their
people, may come well out of the approaching election.</p>
<p>There is yet one other class of public men, if I may call them so,
many of whom come almost worse out of an election time than even our
ministers, and that class is composed of those, who, to continue the
language of Vanity Fair, keep the cages of the fair. I wish I
had to-night, what I have not, the ear of the conductors of our public
journals. For, what an omnipotence in God’s providence to
this generation for good or evil is theirs! If they would only
all consider well at election times, and at all times, who they put
into their cages and for what reason; if they would only all ask what
can that man’s motives be for throwing such dirt at his neighbour;
if they would only all set aside all the letters they will get during
the next fortnight that are avowedly composed on the old principle of
calumniating boldly in the certainty that some of it will stick, what
a service they would do to the cause of love and truth and justice,
which is, surely, after all, their own cause also! The very best
papers sin sadly in this respect when their conductors are full for
the time of party passion. And it is inexpressibly sad when a
reader sees great journals to which he owes a lifelong debt of gratitude
absolutely poisoned under his very eyes with the malignant spirit of
untruthful partisanship. But so long as our public cages are so
kept, let those who are exposed in them resolve to imitate Christian
and Faithful, who behaved themselves amid all their ill-usage yet more
wisely, and received all the ignominy and shame that was cast upon them
with so much meekness and patience that it actually won to their side
several of the men of the fair.</p>
<p>My brethren, this is the last time this season that I shall be able
to speak to you from this pulpit; and, perhaps, the last time altogether.
But, if it so turns out, I shall not repent that the last time I spoke
to you, and that, too, immediately after the communion table, the burden
of my message was the burden of my Master’s message after the
first communion table. ‘If ye know these things, happy are
ye if ye do them. A new commandment I give unto you, that ye love
one another. By this shall all men know that ye are My disciples,
if ye have love one to another. Herein is My Father glorified,
that ye bear much fruit, so shall ye be My disciples. These things
have I spoken unto you that in Me ye might have peace. In the
world ye shall have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome
the world. Know ye what I have done unto you? Ye call Me
Master and Lord, and ye say well, for so I am.’</p>
<h2>BY-ENDS</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Ye seek Me, not because ye saw the miracles, but
because ye did eat of the loaves.’—Our Lord.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>In no part of John Bunyan’s ingenious book is his strong sense
and his sarcastic and humorous vein better displayed than just in his
description of By-ends, and in the full and particular account he gives
of the kinsfolk and affinity of By-ends. Is there another single
stroke in all sacred literature better fitted at once to teach the gayest
and to make the gravest smile than just John Bunyan’s sketch of
By-ends’ great-grandfather, the founder of the egoistical family
of Fairspeech, who was, to begin with, but a waterman who always looked
one way and rowed another? By-ends’ wife also is a true
helpmate to her husband. She was my Lady Feigning’s favourite
daughter, under whose nurture and example the young lady had early come
to a quite extraordinary pitch of good breeding; and now that she was
a married woman, she and her husband had, so their biographer tells
us, two firm points of family religion in which they were always agreed
and according to which they brought up all their children, namely, never
to strive too much against wind and tide, and always to watch when Religion
was walking on the sunny side of the street in his silver slippers,
and then at once to cross over and take his arm. But abundantly
amusing and entertaining as John Bunyan is at the expense of By-ends
and his family and friends, he has far other aims in view than the amusement
and entertainment of his readers. Bunyan uses all his great gifts
of insight and sense and humour and scorn so as to mark unmistakably
the road and to guide the progress of his reader’s soul to God,
his chiefest end and his everlasting portion.</p>
<p>It was no small part of our Lord’s life of humiliation on the
earth,—much more so than His being born in a low condition and
being made under the law,—to have to go about all His days among
men, knowing in every case and on every occasion what was in man.
It was a real humiliation to our Lord to see those watermen of the sea
of Tiberias sweating at their oars as they rowed round and round the
lake after Him; and His humiliation came still more home to Him as often
as He saw His own disciples disputing and pressing who should get closest
to Him while for a short season He walked in the sunshine; just as it
was His estate of exaltation already begun, when He could enter into
Himself and see to the bottom of His own heart, till He was able to
say that it was His very meat and drink to do His father’s will,
and to finish the work His Father had given Him to do. The men
of Capernaum went out after our Lord in their boats because they had
eaten of the multiplied loaves and hoped to do so again. Zebedee’s
children had forsaken all and followed our Lord, because they counted
to sit the one on His right hand and the other on His left hand in His
soon-coming kingdom. The pain and the shame all that cost our
Lord, we can only remotely imagine. But as for Himself, our Lord
never once had to blush in secret at His own motives. He never
once had to hang down His head at the discovery of His own selfish aims
and by-ends. Happy man! The thought of what He should eat
or what He should drink or wherewithal He should be clothed never troubled
His head. The thought of success, as His poor-spirited disciples
counted success, the thought of honour and power and praise, never once
rose in His heart. All these things, and all things like them,
had no attraction for Him; they awoke nothing but indifference and contempt
in him. But to please His Father and to hear from time to time
His Father’s voice saying that He was well pleased with His beloved
Son,—that was better than life to our Lord. To find out
and follow every new day His Father’s mind and will, and to finish
every night another part of His Father’s appointed work,—that
was more than His necessary food to our Lord. The great schoolmen,
as they meditated on these deep matters, had a saying to the effect
that all created things take their true goodness or their true evil
from the end they aim at. And thus it was that our Lord, aiming
only at His Father’s ends and never at His own, both manifested
and attained to a Divine goodness, just as the greedy crowds of Galilee
and the disputatious disciples, as long and as far as they made their
belly or their honour their end and aim, to that extent fell short of
all true goodness, all true satisfaction, and all true acceptance.</p>
<p>By-ends was so called because he was full of low, mean, selfish motives,
and of nothing else. All that this wretched creature did, he did
with a single eye to himself. The best things that he did became
bad things in his self-seeking hands. His very religion stank
in those men’s nostrils who knew what was in his heart.
By-ends was one of our Lord’s whited sepulchres. And so
deep, so pervading, and so abiding is this corrupt taint in human nature,
that long after a man has had his attention called to it, and is far
on to a clean escape from it, he still—nay, he all the more—languishes
and faints and is ready to die under it. Just hear what two great
servants of God have said on this humiliating and degrading matter.
Writing on this subject with all his wonted depth and solemnity, Hooker
says, ‘Even in the good things that we do, how many defects are
there intermingled! For God in that which is done, respecteth
especially the mind and intention of the doer. Cut off, then,
all those things wherein we have regarded our own glory, those things
which we do to please men, or to satisfy our own liking, those things
which we do with any by-respect, and not sincerely and purely for the
love of God, and a small score will serve for the number of our righteous
deeds. Let the holiest and best things we do be considered.
We are never better affected to God than when we pray; yet, when we
pray, how are our affections many times distracted! How little
reverence do we show to that God unto whom we speak! How little
remorse of our own miseries! How little taste of the sweet influence
of His tender mercy do we feel! The little fruit we have in holiness,
it is, God knoweth, corrupt and unsound; we put no confidence at all
in it, we challenge nothing in the world for it, we dare not call God
to a reckoning as if we had Him in our debt-books; our continued suit
to Him is, and must be, to bear with our infirmities, and to pardon
our offences.’ And Thomas Shepard, a divine of a very different
school, as we say, but a saint and a scholar equal to the best, and
indeed with few to equal him, thus writes in his <i>Spiritual Experiences</i>:—‘On
Sabbath morning I saw that I had a secret eye to my own name in all
that I did, for which I judged myself worthy of death. On another
Sabbath, when I came home, I saw the deep hypocrisy of my heart, that
in my ministry I sought to comfort and quicken others, that the glory
might reflect on me as well as on God. On the evening before the
sacrament I saw that mine own ends were to procure honour, pleasure,
gain to myself, and not to the Lord, and I saw how impossible it was
for me to seek the Lord for Himself, and to lay up all my honour and
all my pleasures in Him. On Sabbath-day, when the Lord had given
me some comfortable enlargements, I searched my heart and found my sin.
I saw that though I did to some extent seek Christ’s glory, yet
I sought it not alone, but my own glory too. After my Wednesday
sermon I saw the pride of my heart acting thus, that presently my heart
would look out and ask whether I had done well or ill. Hereupon
I saw my vileness to make men’s opinions my rule. The Lord
thus gave me some glimpse of myself and a good day that was to me.’
One would think that this was By-ends himself climbed up into the ministry.
And so it was. And yet David Brainerd could write on his deathbed
about Thomas Shepard in this way. ‘He valued nothing in
religion that was not done to the glory of God, and, oh! that others
would lay the stress of religion here also. His method of examining
his ends and aims and the temper of his mind both before and after preaching,
is an excellent example for all who bear the sacred character.
By this means they are like to gain a large acquaintance with their
own hearts, as it is evident he had with his.’</p>
<p>But it is not those who bear the sacred character of the ministry
alone who are full of by-ends. We all are. You all are.
And there is not one all-reaching, all-exposing, and all-humbling way
of salvation appointed for ministers, and another, a more external,
superficial, easy, and self-satisfied way for their people. No.
Not only must the ambitious and disputing disciples enter into themselves
and become witnesses and judges and executioners within themselves before
they can be saved or be of any use in the salvation of others—not
only they, but the fishermen of the Lake of Tiberias, they also must
open their hearts to these stabbing words of Christ, and see how true
it is that they had followed Him for loaves and fishes, and not for
His grace and His truth. And only when they had seen and submitted
to that humiliating self-discovery would their true acquaintance with
Christ and their true search after Him begin. Come, then, all
my brethren, and not ministers only, waken up to the tremendous importance
of that which you have utterly neglected, it may be ostentatiously neglected,
up to this hour,—the true nature, the true character, of your
motives and your ends. Enter into yourselves. Be not strangers
and foreigners to yourselves. Let not the day of judgment be any
surprise to you. Witness against, judge, and execute yourselves,
and that especially because of your by-aims and by-ends. Take
up the touchstone of truth and lay it upon your most secret heart.
Do not be afraid to discover how double-minded and deceitful your heart
is. Hunt your heart down. Track it to its most secret lair.
Put its true name, and continue to put its true name, upon the main
motive of your life. Extort an answer by boot and by wheel, only
extort an answer from the inner man of the heart, to the torturing question
as to what is his treasure, his hope, his deepest wish, his daily dream.
Watch not against any outward enemy, keep all your eyes and all your
ears to your own thoughts. God keeps His awful eye on your thoughts.
His eye goes at every glance to that great depth in you. Even
His all-seeing eye can go no deeper into you than to your secret thoughts.
Go you as deep as God goes, and you will be a wise man; go as deep and
as often as He does, and then you will soon come to see eye to eye with
God, not only about your own thoughts, but about His thoughts too, and
about everything else. Till you begin to watch your own thoughts,
and to watch them especially in their aims and their ends, you will
have no idea what that moral and spiritual life is that all God’s
saints live; that life that Christ lived, and which He this night summons
you all to enter henceforth upon.</p>
<p>It is such a happy fact that it cannot be too often told, that in
the things of the soul really and truly to know and feel the disease
is to have already entered on the remedy. You will not feel, indeed,
that you have entered on the remedy; but that does not much matter so
long as you really have. And there is nothing more certain among
all the certainties of divine things than that he who feels himself
to be in death and hell with his heart so full of by-ends is all the
time as far from death and hell as any one can be who is still on this
side of heaven. When a man’s whole will and desire is set
on God, as is now and then the case, that man is perilously near a sudden
and an abundant entrance into that life and that presence where his
heart has for so long been. When a man is half mad with his own
heart, as Thomas Shepard for one was, that stranger on the earth is
at last within a step of that happy coast where all wishes end.
Watch that man. Take a last look at that man. He will soon
be taken out of your sight. Ere ever he is himself aware, he will
be rapt up into that life where saints and angels seek not their own
will, labour not for their own profit or promotion, listen not for their
own praises, but find their blessedness, the half of which had not here
been told them, in glorifying God and in enjoying Him for ever.</p>
<p>You must all have heard the name of a book that has helped many a
saint now in glory to the examination and the keeping of his own heart.
I refer to Jeremy Taylor’s <i>Holy Living and Dying</i>.
Take two or three of Taylor’s excellent rules with you as you
go down from God’s house to-night. ‘If you would really
live a holy life and die a holy death,’ says Taylor, ‘learn
to reflect in your every action on your secret end in it; consider with
yourself why you do it, and what you propound to yourself for your reward.
Pray importunately that all your purposes and all your motives may be
sanctified. Renew and rekindle your purest purposes by such ejaculations
as these: “Not unto us, O God, not unto us, but to Thy name be
all the praise. I am in this Thy servant; let all the gain be
Thine.” In great and eminent actions let there be a special
and peculiar act of resignation or oblation made to God; and in smaller
and more frequent actions fail not to secure a pious habitual intention.’
And so on. And above all, I will add, labour and pray till you
feel in your heart that you love God with a supreme and an ever-growing
love. And, far as that may be above you as yet, impress your heart
with the assurance that such a love is possible to you also, and that
you can never be safe or happy till you attain to that love. Other
men once as far from the supreme love of God as you are have afterwards
attained to it; and so will you if you continue to set it before yourself.
Think often on God; read the best books about God; call continually
upon God; hold an intimate communion with God, till you feel that you
also actually and certainly love God. And though you begin with
loving God because He first loved you, you will, beginning with that,
rise far above that till you come to love Him for what He is in Himself
as well as for what He has done for you. ‘I have done this
in order to have a seat in the Academy,’ said a young man, handing
the solution of a problem to an old philosopher. ‘Sir,’
was the reply, ‘with such dispositions you will never earn a seat
there. Science must be loved for its own sake, and not for any
advantage to be derived from it.’ And much more is that
true of the highest of all the sciences, the knowledge and the love
of God. Love Him, then, till you arrive at loving Him for Himself,
and then you shall be for ever delivered from all self-love and by-ends,
and shall both glorify and enjoy God for ever. As all they now
do who engaged their hearts on earth to the service and the love and
the enjoyment of God is such psalms and prayers as these: ‘Whom
have I in heaven but Thee? and there is no one on earth that I desire
beside Thee. How excellent is Thy loving-kindness, O God!
The children of men shall put their trust under the shadow of Thy wings.
For with Thee is the fountain of life, and in Thy light shall we see
light. As for me, I will behold Thy face in righteousness: I shall
be satisfied when I awake with Thy likeness. Thou wilt show me
the path of life; in Thy presence is fullness of joy, and at Thy right
hand there are pleasures for evermore.’</p>
<h2>GIANT DESPAIR</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘A wounded spirit who can bear?’—Solomon.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Every schoolboy has Giant Despair by heart. The rough road
after the meadow of lilies, the stile into By-Path-Meadow, the night
coming on, the thunder and the lightning and the waters rising amain,
Giant Despair’s apprehension of Christian and Hopeful, their dreadful
bed in his dungeon from Wednesday morning till Saturday night, how they
were famished with hunger and beaten with a grievous crab-tree cudgel
till they were not able to turn, with many other sufferings too many
and too terrible to be told which they endured till Saturday about midnight,
when they began to pray, and continued in prayer till almost break of
day;—John Bunyan is surely the best story-teller in all the world.
And, then, over and above that, as often as a boy reads Giant Despair
and his dungeon to his father and mother, the two hearers are like Christian
and Hopeful when the Delectable shepherds showed them what had happened
to some who once went in at By-Path stile: the two pilgrims looked one
upon another with tears gushing out, but yet said nothing to the shepherds.</p>
<p>John Bunyan’s own experience enters deeply into these terrible
pages. In composing these terrible pages, Bunyan writes straight
and bold out of his own heart and conscience. The black and bitter
essence of a whole black and bitter volume is crushed into these four
or five bitter pages. Last week I went over <i>Grace Abounding</i>
again, and marked the passages in which its author describes his own
experiences of doubt, diffidence, and despair, till I gave over counting
the passages, they are so many. I had intended to illustrate the
passage before us to-night out of the kindred materials that I knew
were so abundant in Bunyan’s terrible autobiography, but I had
to give up that idea. It would have taken two or three lectures
to itself to tell all that Bunyan suffered all his life long from an
easily-wounded spirit. The whole book is just Giant Despair and
his dungeon, with a gleam here and there of that sunshiny weather that
threw the giant into one of his fits, in which he always lost for the
time the use of his limbs. Return often, my brethren, to that
masterpiece, <i>Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners</i>. I
have read it a hundred times, but last week it was as fresh and powerful
and consoling as ever to my sin-wounded spirit.</p>
<p>Let me select some of the incidents that offer occasion for a comment
or two.</p>
<p>1. And, in the first place, take notice, and lay well to heart,
how sudden, and almost instantaneous, is the fall of Christian and Hopeful
from the very gate of heaven to the very gate of hell. All the
Sabbath and the Monday and the Tuesday before that fatal Wednesday,
the two pilgrims had walked with great delight on the banks of a very
pleasant river; that river, in fact, which David the King called the
river of God, and John, the river of the water of life. They drank
also of the water of the river, which was pleasant and enlivening to
their weary spirits. On either side of the river was there a meadow
curiously beautified with lilies, and it was green all the year long.
In this meadow they lay down and slept, for here they might lie down
and sleep safely. When they awoke they gathered again of the fruits
of the trees, and drank again of the water of the river, and then lay
down again to sleep. Thus they did several days and nights.
Now, could you have believed it that two such men as our pilgrims were
could be in the enjoyment of all that the first half of the week, and
then by their own doing should be in Giant Despair’s deepest dungeon
before the end of the same week? And yet so it was. And
all that is written for the solemn warning of those who are at any time
in great enlargement and refreshment and joy in their spiritual life.
It is intended for all those who are at any time revelling in a season
of revival: those, for example, who are just come home from Keswick
or Dunblane, as well as for all those who at home have just made the
discovery of some great master of the spiritual life, and who are almost
beside themselves with their delight in their divine author. If
they are new beginners they will not take this warning well, nor will
even all old pilgrims lay it aright to heart; but there it is as plain
as the plainest, simplest, and most practical writer in our language
could put it.</p>
<blockquote><p>Behold ye how these crystal streams do glide<br/>
To comfort pilgrims by the highway side;<br/>
The meadows green, besides their fragrant smell,<br/>
Yield dainties for them: And he that can tell<br/>
What pleasant fruits, yea leaves, these trees do yield,<br/>
Will soon sell all that he may buy this field.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Thus the two pilgrims sang: only, adds our author in a parenthesis,
they were not, as yet, at their journey’s end.</p>
<p>2. ‘Now, I beheld in my dream that they had not journeyed
far when the river and the way for a time parted. At which the
two pilgrims were not a little sorry.’ The two pilgrims
could not perhaps be expected to break forth into dancing and singing
at the parting of the river and the way, even though they had recollected
at that moment what the brother of the Lord says about our counting
it all joy when we fall into divers temptations. But it would
not have been too much to expect from such experienced pilgrims as they
by this time were, that they should have suspected and checked and commanded
their sorrow. They should have said something like this to one
another: Well, it would have been very pleasant had it been our King’s
will and way with us that we should have finished the rest of our pilgrimage
among the apples and the lilies and on the soft and fragrant bank of
the river; but we believe that it must in some as yet hidden way be
better for us that the river and our road should part from one another
at least for a season. Come, brother, and let us go on till we
find out our Master’s deep and loving mind. But, instead
of saying that, Christian and Hopeful soon became like the children
of Israel as they journeyed from Mount Hor, their soul was much discouraged
because of the way. And always as they went on they wished for
a softer and a better way. And it was so that they very soon came
to the very thing they so much wished for. For, what is that on
the left hand of the hard road but a stile, and over the stile a meadow
as soft to the feet as the meadow of lilies itself? ‘’Tis
just according to my wish,’ said Christian; ‘here is the
easiest going. Come, good Hopeful, and let us go over.’
Hopeful: ‘But how if the path should lead us out of the way?’
‘That’s not like,’ said the other; ‘look, doth
it not go along by the wayside?’ So Hopeful, being persuaded
by his fellow, went after him over the stile.</p>
<p>Call to mind, all you who are delivered and restored pilgrims, that
same stile that once seduced you. To keep that stile ever before
you is at once a safe and a seemly occupation of mind for any one who
has made your mistakes and come through your chastisements. Christian’s
eyes all his after-days filled with tears, and he turned away his face
and blushed scarlet, as often as he suddenly came upon any opening in
a wall at all like that opening he here persuaded Hopeful to climb through.
It is too much to expect that those who are just mounting the stile,
and have just caught sight of the smooth path beyond it, will let themselves
be pulled back into the hard and narrow way by any persuasion of ours.
Christian put down Hopeful’s objection till Hopeful broke out
bitterly when the thunder was roaring over his head and he was wading
about among the dark waters: ‘Oh that I had kept myself in my
way!’ Are you a little sorry to-night that the river and
the way are parting in your life? Is your soul discouraged in
you because of the soreness of the way? And as you go do you still
wish for some better way than the strait way? And have you just
espied a stile on the left hand of your narrow and flinty path, and
on looking over it is there a pleasant meadow? And does your companion
point out to your satisfaction, and, almost to your good conscience,
that the soft road runs right along the hard road, only over the stile
and outside the fence? Then, good-bye. For it is all over
with you. We shall meet you again, please God; but when we meet
you again, your mind and memory will be full of shame and remorse and
suffering enough to keep you in songs of repentance for all the rest
of your life on earth. Farewell!</p>
<blockquote><p>The Pilgrims now, to gratify the flesh,<br/>
Will seek its ease; but oh! how they afresh<br/>
Do thereby plunge themselves new grieves into:<br/>
Who seek to please the flesh themselves undo.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>3. The two transgressors had not gone far on their own way
when night came on and with the night a very great darkness. But
what soon added to the horror of their condition was that they heard
a man fall into a deep pit right before them, and it sounded to them
as if he was dashed to pieces by his fall. So they called to know
the matter, but there was none to answer, only they heard a groaning.
Then said Hopeful: Where are we now? Then was his fellow silent,
as mistrusting that he had led Hopeful out of the way. Now, all
that also is true to the very life, and has been taken down by Bunyan
from the very life. We have all heard men falling and heard them
groaning just a little before us after we had left the strait road.
They had just gone a little farther wrong than we had as yet gone,—just
a very little farther; in some cases, indeed, not so far, when they
fell and were dashed to pieces with their fall. It was well for
us at that dreadful moment that we heard the same voice saying to us
for our encouragement as said to the two trembling transgressors: ‘Let
thine heart be toward the highway, even the way that thou wentest; turn
again.’ Now, what is it in which you are at this moment
going off the right road? What is that life of disobedience or
self-indulgence that you are just entering on? Keep your ears
open and you will hear hundreds of men and women falling and being dashed
to pieces before you and all around you. Are you falling of late
too much under the power of your bodily appetites? It is not one
man, nor two, well known to you, who have fallen never to rise again
out of that horrible pit. Are you well enough aware that you are
being led into bad company? Or, is your companion, who is not
a bad man in anything else, leading you, in this and in that, into what
at any rate is bad for you? You will soon, unless you cut off
your companion like a right hand, be found saying with misguided and
overruled Hopeful: Oh that I had kept me to my right way! And
so on in all manner of sin and trespass. Those who have ears to
hear such things hear every day one man after another falling through
lust or pride or malice or idleness or infidelity, till there is none
to answer.</p>
<p>4. ‘All hope abandon’ was the writing that Dante
read over the door of hell. And the two prisoners all but abandoned
all hope when they found themselves in Giant Despair’s dungeon.
Only, Christian, the elder man, had the most distress because their
being where they now were lay mostly at his door. All this part
of the history also is written in Bunyan’s very heart’s
blood. ‘I found it hard work,’ he tells us of himself,
‘to pray to God because despair was swallowing me up. I
thought I was as with a tempest driven away from God. About this
time I did light on that dreadful story of that miserable mortal, Francis
Spira, a book that was to my troubled spirit as salt when rubbed into
a fresh wound; every groan of that man with all the rest of his actions
in his dolours, as his tears, his prayers, his gnashing of teeth, his
wringing of hands, was as knives and daggers in my soul, especially
that sentence of his was frightful to me: “Man knows the beginning
of sin, but who bounds the issues thereof?”’ We never
read anything like Spira’s experience and <i>Grace Abounding</i>
and Giant Despair’s dungeon in the books of our day. And
why not, do you think? Is there less sin among us modern men,
or did such writers as John Bunyan overdraw and exaggerate the sinfulness
of sin? Were they wrong in holding so fast as they did hold that
death and hell are the sure wages of sin? Has divine justice become
less fearful than it used to be to those who rush against it, or is
it that we are so much better men? Is our faith stronger and more
victorious over doubt and fear? Is it that our hope is better
anchored? Whatever the reason is, there can be no question but
that we walk in a liberty that our fathers did not always walk in.
Whether or no our liberty is not recklessness and licentiousness is
another matter. Whether or no it would be a better sign of us
if we were better acquainted with doubt and dejection and diffidence,
and even despair, is a question it would only do us good to put to ourselves.
When we properly attend to these matters we shall find out that, the
holier a man is, the more liable he is to the assaults of doubt and
fear and even despair. We have whole psalms of despair, so deep
was David’s sense of sin, so high were his views of God’s
holiness and justice, and so full of diffidence was his wounded heart.
And David’s Son, when our sin was laid upon Him, felt the curse
and the horror of His state so much that His sweat was in drops of blood,
and His cry in the darkness was that His God had forsaken Him.
And when our spirits are wounded with our sins, as the spirits of all
God’s great saints have always been wounded, we too shall feel
ourselves more at home with David and with Asaph, with Spira even, and
with Bunyan. Despair is not good, but it is infinitely better
than indifference. ‘It is a common saying,’ says South,
‘and an observation in divinity, that where despair has slain
its thousands, presumption has slain its ten thousands. The agonies
of the former are indeed more terrible, but the securities of the latter
are far more fatal.’</p>
<p>5. ‘I will,’ says Paul to Timothy, ‘that
men pray everywhere, lifting up holy hands without doubting.’
And, just as Paul would have it, Christian and Hopeful began to lift
up their hands even in the dungeon of Doubting Castle. ‘Well,’
we read, ‘on Saturday night about midnight they began to pray,
and continued in prayer till almost break of day. Now, before
it was day, good Christian, as one half amazed, broke out in this passionate
speech: “What a fool,” quoth he, “am I thus to lie
in a stinking dungeon when I may as well walk at liberty; I have a key
in my bosom, called Promise, that will, I am persuaded, open any lock
in all Doubting Castle.” Then said Hopeful: “That’s
good news, good brother; pluck it out of thy bosom and try.”’
Then Christian pulled the key out of his bosom and the bolt gave back,
and Christian and Hopeful both came out, and you may be sure they were
soon out of the giant’s jurisdiction.</p>
<p>Now, I do not know that I can do better at this point, and in closing,
than just to tell you about some of that bunch of keys that John Bunyan
found from time to time in his own bosom, and which made all his prison
doors one after another fly open at their touch. ‘About
ten o’clock one day, as I was walking under a hedge, full of sorrow
and guilt, God knows, and bemoaning myself for my hard hap, suddenly
this sentence bolted in upon me: The blood of Christ remits all guilt.
Again, when I was fleeing from the face of God, for I did flee from
His face, that is, my mind and spirit fled before Him; for by reason
of His highness I could not endure; then would the text cry: Return
unto Me; it would cry with a very great voice: Return unto me, for I
have redeemed thee. And this would make me look over my shoulder
behind me to see if I could discern that this God of grace did follow
me with a pardon in His hand. Again, the next day, at evening,
being under many fears, I went to seek the Lord, and as I prayed, I
cried, with strong cries: O Lord, I beseech Thee, show me that Thou
hast loved me with an everlasting love. I had no sooner said it
but, with sweetness, this returned upon me as an echo or sounding-again,
I have loved thee with an everlasting love. Now, I went to bed
at quiet; also, when I awaked the next morning it was fresh upon my
soul and I believed it . . . Again, as I was then before the Lord, that
Scripture fastened on my heart: O man, great is thy faith, even as if
one had clapped me on the back as I was on my knees before God . . .
At another time I remember I was again much under this question: Whether
the blood of Christ was sufficient to save my soul? In which doubt
I continued from morning till about seven or eight at night, and at
last, when I was, as it were, quite worn out with fear, these words
did sound suddenly within my heart: He is able. Methought this
word <i>able</i> was spoke so loud unto me and gave such a justle to
my fear and doubt as I never had all my life either before that or after
. . . Again, one morning, when I was at prayer and trembling under fear,
that piece of a sentence dashed in upon me: My grace is sufficient.
At this, methought: Oh, how good a thing it is for God to send His word!
. . . Again, one day as I was in a meeting of God’s people, full
of sadness and terror, for my fears were again strong upon me, and as
I was thinking that my soul was never the better, these words did with
great power suddenly break in upon me: My grace is sufficient for thee,
My grace is sufficient for thee, three times together; and, oh! methought
that every word was a mighty word unto me; as <i>My</i>, and <i>grace</i>,
and <i>sufficient</i>, and <i>for thee</i>. These words were then,
and sometimes still are, far bigger words than others are. Again,
one day as I was passing in the field, and that, too, with some dashes
in my conscience, suddenly this sentence fell upon my soul: Thy righteousness
is in heaven. And methought withal I saw, with the eyes of my
soul, Jesus Christ at God’s right hand. I saw also, moreover,
that it was not my good frame of heart that made my righteousness better,
nor my bad frame that made my righteousness worse, for my righteousness
was Jesus Christ Himself, the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever .
. . Again, oh, what did I see in that blessed sixth of John: Him that
cometh to Me I will in nowise cast out. I should in those days
often flounce toward that promise as horses do toward sound ground that
yet stick in the mire. Oh! many a pull hath my heart had with
Satan for this blessed sixth of John . . . And, again, as I was thus
in a muse, that Scripture also came with great power upon my spirit:
Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His
mercy He saved us. Now was I got on high: I saw my self within
the arms of Grace and Mercy, and though I was before afraid to think
of a dying hour, yet now I cried: Let me die. Now death was lovely
and beautiful in my sight; for I saw that we shall never live indeed
till we be gone to the other world. Heirs of God, methought, heirs
of God! God himself is the portion of His saints. This did
sweetly revive my spirit, and help me to hope in God; which when I had
with comfort mused on a while, that word fell with great weight upon
my mind: Oh Death, where is thy sting? Oh Grave, where is thy
victory? At this I became both well in body and mind at once,
for my sickness did presently vanish, and I walked comfortably in my
work for God again.’</p>
<p>Such were some of the many keys by the use of which God let John
Bunyan so often out of despair into full assurance and out of darkness
into light. Which of the promises have been of such help to you?
Over what Scriptures have you ever cried out: Oh, how good a thing it
is for God to send me His word! Which are the biggest words in
all the Bible to you? To what promise did you ever flounce as
a horse flounces when he is sticking in the mire? And has any
word of God so made God your God that even death itself, since it alone
separates you from His presence, is lovely and beautiful in your eyes?
Have you a cluster of such keys in your bosom? If you have, take
them all out to-night and go over them again with thanksgiving before
you sleep.</p>
<h2>KNOWLEDGE</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘I will give you pastors after Mine own heart,
which shall feed you with knowledge and understanding.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The Delectable Mountains rise out of the heart of Immanuel’s
Land. This fine range of far-rolling hills falls away on the one
side toward the plain of Destruction, and on the other side toward the
land of Beulah and the Celestial City, and the way to the Celestial
City runs like a bee-line over these well-watered pastures. Standing
on a clear day on the highest peak of the Delectable Mountains, if you
have good eyes you can see the hill Difficulty in the far-back distance
with a perpetual mist clinging to its base and climbing up its sides,
which mist the shepherds say to you rises all the year round off the
Slough of Despond, while, beyond that again the heavy smoke of the city
of Destruction and the town of Stupidity shuts in the whole horizon.
And then, when you turn your back on all that, in favourable states
of the weather you can see here and there the shimmer of that river
over which there is no bridge; and, then again, so high above the river
that it seems to be a city standing in heaven rather than upon the earth,
you will see the high towers and shining palace roofs and broad battlements
of the New Jerusalem itself. The two travellers should have spent
the past three days among the sights of the Delectable Mountains; and
they would have done so had not the elder traveller misled the younger.
But now that they were set free and fairly on the right road again,
the way they had spent the past three days and three nights made the
gardens and the orchards and the pastures that ran round the bottom
and climbed up the sides of the Delectable Mountains delectable beyond
all description to them.</p>
<p>Now, there were on the tops of those mountains certain shepherds
feeding their flocks, and they stood by the highway side. The
two travellers therefore went up to the shepherds, and leaning upon
their staves (as is common with weary travellers when they stand to
talk with any by the way), they asked: Whose delectable mountains are
these? and whose be the sheep that feed upon them? These mountains,
replied the shepherds, are Immanuel’s Land, and they are within
sight of the city; the sheep also are His, and He laid down His life
for them. After some more talk like this by the wayside, the shepherds,
being pleased with the pilgrims, looked very lovingly upon them and
said: Welcome to the Delectable Mountains. The shepherds then,
whose names were Knowledge, Experience, Watchful, and Sincere, took
them by the hand to lead them to their tents, and made them partake
of what was ready at present. They said, moreover: We would that
you should stay with us a while to be acquainted with us, and yet more
to solace yourselves with the cheer of these Delectable Mountains.
Then the travellers told them they were content to stay; and so they
went to rest that night because it was now very late. The four
shepherds lived all summer-time in a lodge of tents well up among their
sheep, while their wives and families had their homes all the year round
in the land of Beulah. The four men formed a happy fraternity,
and they worked among and watched over their Master’s sheep with
one united mind. What one of those shepherds could not so well
do in the tent or in the fold or out on the hillside, some of the others
better did. And what one of them could do to any perfection all
the others by one consent left that to him to do. You would have
thought that they were made by a perfect miracle to fit into one another,
so harmoniously did they live and work together, and such was the bond
of brotherly love that held them together. At the same time, there
was one of the happy quaternity who, from his years on the hills, and
his services in times of trial and danger, and one thing and another,
fell always, and with the finest humility too, into the foremost place,
and his name, as you have already heard, was Knowledge. Old Mr.
Know-all the children in the villages below ran after him and named
him as they clustered round his staff and hid in the great folds of
his shepherd’s coat.</p>
<p>Now, in all this John Bunyan speaks as a child to children; but,
of such children as John Bunyan and his readers is the kingdom of heaven.
My very youngest hearer here to-night knows quite well, or, at any rate,
shrewdly suspects, that Knowledge was not a shepherd going about with
his staff among woolly sheep; nor would the simplest-minded reader of
John Bunyan’s book go to seek the Delectable Mountains and Immanuel’s
Land in any geographer’s atlas, or on any schoolroom map.
Oh, no. I do not need to stop to tell the most guileless of my
hearers that old Knowledge was not a shepherd whose sheep were four-footed
creatures, but a minister of the gospel, whose sheep are men, women,
and children. Nor are the Delectable Mountains any range of hills
and valleys of grass and herbs in England or Scotland. The prophet
Ezekiel calls them the mountains of Israel; but by that you all know
that he had in his mind something far better than any earthly mountain.
That prophet of Israel had in his mind the church of God with its synagogues
and its sacraments, with all the grace and truth that all these things
conveyed from God to the children of Israel. As David also sang
in the twenty-third Psalm: ‘The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not
want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures; He leadeth me
beside the still waters.’</p>
<p>Knowledge, then, is a minister; but every congregation has not such
a minister set over it as Knowledge is. All our college-bred and
ordained men are not ministers like Knowledge. This excellent
minister takes his excellent name from his great talents and his great
attainments. And while all his great talents are his Master’s
gift to him, his great attainments are all his own to lay out in his
Master’s service. To begin with, his Master had given His
highly-favoured servant a good understanding and a good memory, and
many good and suitable opportunities. Now, a good understanding
is a grand endowment for a minister, and his ministerial office will
all his days afford him opportunity for the best understanding he can
bring to it. The Christian ministry, first and last, has had a
noble roll of men of a strong understanding. The author of the
book now open before us was a man of a strong understanding. John
Bunyan had a fine imagination, with great gifts of eloquent, tender,
and most heart-winning utterance, but in his case also all that was
bottomed in a strong English understanding. Then, again, a good
memory is indispensable to a minister of knowledge. You must be
content to take a second, a third, or even a lower place still if your
Master has withheld from you a good memory. Dr. Goodwin has a
passage on this point that I have often turned up when I had again forgotten
it. ‘Thou mayest have a weak memory, perhaps, yet if it
can and doth remember good things as well and better than other things,
then it is a sanctified memory, and the defilement of thy memory is
healed though the imperfection of it is not; and, though thou art to
be humbled for it as a misery, yet thou art not to be discouraged; for
God doth not hate thee for it, but pities thee; and the like holds good
and may be said as to the want of other like gifts.’ You
cannot be a man of a commanding knowledge anywhere, and you must be
content to take a very subordinate and second place, even in the ministry,
unless you have both a good understanding and a good memory; but then,
at the last day your Master will not call you and your congregation
to an account for what He has not committed to your stewardship.
And on that day that will be something. But not only must ministers
of knowledge have a good mind and a good memory; they must also be the
most industrious of men. Other men may squander and kill their
time as they please, but a minister had as good kill himself at once
out of the way of better men unless he is to hoard his hours like gold
and jewels. He must read only the best books, and he must read
them with the ‘pain of attention.’ He must read nothing
that is not the best. He has not the time. And if he is
poor and remote and has not many books, he will have Butler, and let
him read Butler’s Preface to his Sermons till he has it by heart.
The best books are always few, and they must be read over and over again
when other men are reading the ‘great number of books and papers
of amusement that come daily in their way, and which most perfectly
fall in with their idle way of reading and considering things.’
And, then, such a minister must store up what he reads, if not in a
good memory, then in some other pigeon-hole that he has made for himself
outside of himself, since his Master has not seen fit to furnish him
with such a repository within himself. And, then, after all that,—for
a good minister is not made yet,—understanding and memory and
industry must all be sanctified by secret prayer many times every day,
and then laid out every day in the instruction, impression, and comfort
of his people. And, then, that privileged people will be as happy
in possessing that man for their minister as the sheep of Immanuel’s
Land were in having Knowledge set over them for their shepherd.
They will never look up without being fed. They will every Sabbath-day
be led by green pastures and still waters. And when they sing
of the mercies of the Lord to them and to their children, and forget
not all His benefits, among the best of their benefits they will not
forget to hold up and bless their minister.</p>
<p>But, then, there is, nowadays, so much sound knowledge to be gained,
not to speak of so many books and papers of mere pastime and amusement,
that it may well be asked by a young man who is to be a minister whether
he is indeed called to be like that great student who took all knowledge
for his province. Yes, indeed, he is. For, if the minister
and interpreter of nature is to lay all possible knowledge under contribution,
what must not the minister of Jesus Christ and the interpreter of Scripture
and providence and experience and the human heart be able to make the
sanctified use of? Yes, all kinds and all degrees of knowledge,
to be called knowledge, belong by right and obligation to his office
who is the minister and interpreter of Him Who made all things, Who
is the Heir of all things, and by Whom all things consist. At
the same time, since the human mind has its limits, and since human
life has its limits, a minister of all men must make up his mind to
limit himself to the best knowledge; the knowledge, that is, that chiefly
concerns him,—the knowledge of God so far as God has made Himself
known, and the knowledge of Christ. He must be a student of his
Bible night and day and all his days. If he has not the strength
of understanding and memory to read his Bible easily in the original
Hebrew and Greek, let him all the more make up for that by reading it
the oftener and the deeper in English. Let him not only read his
Bible deeply for his sermons and prayers, lectures and addresses, let
him do that all day every day of the week, and then read it all night,
and every night of the week, for his own soul. Let every minister
know his Bible down to the bottom, and with his Bible his own heart.
He who so knows his Bible and with it his own heart has almost books
enough. All else is but ostentatious apparatus. When a minister
has neither understanding nor memory wherewith to feed his flock, let
him look deep enough into his Bible and into his own heart, and then
begin out of them to write and speak. And, then, for the outside
knowledge of the passing day he will read the newspapers, and though
he gives up all the morning to the newspapers, and returns to them again
in the evening, his conscience will not upbraid him if he reads as Jonathan
Edwards read the newsletters of his day,—to see how the kingdom
of heaven is prospering in the earth, and to pray for its prosperity.
And, then, by that time, and when he has got that length, all other
kinds of knowledge will have fallen into its own place, and will have
taken its own proper proportion of his time and his thought. He
was a man of a great understanding and a great memory and great industry
who said that he had taken all knowledge for his province. But
he was a far wiser man who said that knowledge is not our proper happiness.
Our province, he went on to say, is virtue and religion, life and manners:
the science of improving the temper and making the heart better.
This is the field assigned us to cultivate: how much it has lain neglected
is indeed astonishing.</p>
<p>Now, my brethren, two dangers, two simply terrible dangers, arise
to every one of you out of all this matter of your ministers and their
knowledge. 1. The first danger is,—to be frank with you
on this subject,—that you are yourselves so ignorant on all the
matters that a minister has to do with, that you do not know one minister
from another, a good minister from one who is really no minister at
all. Now, I will put it to you, on what principle and for what
reason did you choose your present minister, if, indeed, you did choose
him? Was it because you were assured by people you could trust
that he was a minister of knowledge and knew his own business?
Or was it that when you went to worship with him for yourself you have
not been able ever since to tear yourself away from him, nor has any
one else been able to tear you away, though some have tried? When
you first came to the city, did you give, can you remember, some real
anxiety, rising sometimes into prayer, as to who your minister among
so many ministers was to be? Or did you choose him and your present
seat in his church because of some real or supposed worldly interest
of yours you thought you could further by taking your letter of introduction
to him? Had you heard while yet at home, had your father and mother
talked of such things to you, that rich men, and men of place and power,
political men and men high in society, sat in that church and took notice
of who attended it and who did not? Do you, down to this day,
know one church from another so far as spiritual and soul-saving knowledge
is concerned? Do you know that two big buildings, called churches,
may stand in the same street, and have men, called ministers, carrying
on certain services in them from week to week, and yet, for all the
purposes for which Christ came and died and rose again and gave ministers
to His church, these two churches and their ministers are farther asunder
than the two poles? Do you understand what I am saying?
Do you understand what I have been saying all night, or are you one
of those of whom the prophet speaks in blame and in pity as being destroyed
for lack of knowledge? Well, that is your first danger, that you
are so ignorant, and as a consequence, so careless, as not to know one
minister from another.</p>
<p>2. And your second danger in connection with your minister
is, that you have, and may have long had, a good minister, but that
you still remain yourself a bad man. My brethren, be you all sure
of it, there is a special and a fearful danger in having a specially
good minister. Think twice, and make up your mind well, before
you call a specially good minister, or become a communicant, or even
an adherent under a specially good minister. If two bad men go
down together to the pit, and the one has had a good minister, as, God
have mercy on us, sometimes happens, and the other has only had one
who had the name of a minister, the evangelised reprobate will lie in
a deeper bed in hell, and will spend a more remorseful eternity on it
than will the other. No man among you, minister or no minister,
good minister or bad, will be able to sin with impunity. But he
who sins on and on after good preaching will be beaten with many stripes.
‘Woe unto thee, Chorazin! Woe unto thee, Bethsaida!
For if the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre
and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes.
But I say unto you, it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at
the day of judgment than for you.’ ‘Thou that hast
knowledge,’ says a powerful old preacher, ‘canst not sin
so cheap as another that is ignorant. Places of much knowledge’—he
was preaching in the university pulpit of Oxford—‘and plentiful
in the means of grace are dear places for a man to sin in. To
be drunken or unclean after a powerful sermon, and after the Holy Ghost
has enlightened thee, is more than to have so sinned twenty times before.
Thou mightest have sinned ten times more and been damned less.
For does not Jesus Christ the Judge say to thee, This is thy condemnation,
that so much light has come to thee?’ And, taking the then
way of execution as a sufficiently awful illustration, the old Oxford
Puritan goes on to say that to sin against light is the highest step
of the ladder before turning off. And, again, that if there are
worms in hell that die not, it is surely gospel light that breeds them.</p>
<h2>EXPERIENCE</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘My heart had great experience.’—The
Preacher.</p>
<p>‘I will give them pastors after Mine own heart.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Experience, the excellent shepherd of the Delectable Mountains, had
a brother in the army, and he was an equally excellent soldier.
The two brothers—they were twin-brothers—had been brought
up together till they were grown-up men in the same town of Mansoul.
All the Experience family, indeed, had from time immemorial hailed from
that populous and important town, and their family tree ran away back
beyond the oldest extant history. The two brothers, while in all
other things as like as two twin-brothers could be, at the same time
very early in life began to exhibit very different talents and tastes
and dispositions; till, when we meet with them in their full manhood,
the one is a soldier in the army and the other a shepherd on the Delectable
Mountains. The soldier-brother is thus described in one of the
military histories of his day: ‘A man of conduct and of valour,
and a person prudent in matters. A comely person, moreover, well-spoken
in negotiations, and very successful in undertakings. His colours
were the white colours of Mansoul and his scutcheon was the dead lion
and the dead bear.’</p>
<p>The shepherd-brother, on the other hand, is thus pictured out to
us by one who has seen him. A traveller who has visited the Delectable
Mountains, and has met and talked with the shepherds, thus describes
Experience in his excellent itinerary: ‘Knowledge,’ he says,
‘I found to be the sage of the company, spare in build, high of
forehead, worn in age, and his tranquil gait touched with abstractedness.
While Experience was more firmly knit in form and face, with a shrewd
kindly eye and a happy readiness in his bearing, and all his hard-earned
wisdom evidently on foot within him as a capability for work and for
control.’ This, then, was the second of the four shepherds,
who fed Immanuel’s sheep on the Delectable Mountains.</p>
<p>But here again to-night, and in the case of Experience, just as last
Sabbath night and in the case of Knowledge, in all this John Bunyan
speaks to children,—only the children here are the children of
the kingdom of heaven. The veriest child who reads the Delectable
Mountains begins to suspect before he is done that Knowledge and Experience
are not after all two real and true shepherds going their rounds with
their staves and their wallets and their wheeling dogs. Yes, though
the little fellow cannot put his suspicions into proper words for you,
all the same he has his suspicions that he is being deceived by you
and your Sabbath book; and, ten to one, from that sceptical day he will
not read much more of John Bunyan till in after-life he takes up John
Bunyan never for a single Sabbath again to lay him down. Yes,
let the truth be told at once, Experience is simply a minister, and
not a real shepherd at all; a minister of the gospel, a preacher, and
a pastor; but, then, he is a preacher and a pastor of no ordinary kind,
but of the selectest and very best kind.</p>
<p>1. Now, my brethren, to plunge at once out of the parable and
into the interpretation, I observe, in the first place, that pastors
who are indeed to be pastors after God’s own heart have all to
pass into their pastorate through the school of experience. Preaching
after God’s own heart, and pastoral work of the same divine pattern,
cannot be taught in any other school than the school of experience.
Poets may be born and not made, but not pastors nor preachers.
Nay, do not all our best poets first learn in their sufferings what
afterwards they teach us in their songs? At any rate, that is
certainly the case with preachers and pastors. As my own old minister
once said to me in a conversation on this very subject, ‘Even
God Himself cannot inspire an experience.’ No. For
if He could He would surely have done so in the case of His own Son,
to Whom in the gift of the Holy Ghost He gave all that He could give
and all that His Son could receive. But an experience cannot in
the very nature of things be either bestowed on the one hand or received
and appropriated on the other. An experience in the unalterable
nature of the thing itself must be undergone. The Holy Ghost Himself
after He has been bestowed and received has to be experimented upon,
and taken into this and that need, trial, cross, and care of life.
He is not sent to spare us our experiences, but to carry us through
them. And thus it is (to keep for a moment in sight of the highest
illustration we have of this law of experience), thus it is, I say,
that the apostle has it in his Epistle to the Hebrews that though Christ
Himself were a Son, yet learned He obedience by the things that He suffered.
And being by experience made perfect He then went on to do such and
such things for us. Why, for instance, for one thing, why do you
think was our Lord able to speak with such extraordinary point, impressiveness,
and assurance about prayer; about the absolute necessity and certainty
of secret, importunate, persevering prayer having, sooner or later,
in one shape or other, and in the best possible shape, its answer?
Why but because of His own experience? Why but because His own
closet, hilltop, all-night, and up-before-the-day prayers had all been
at last heard and better heard than He had been able to ask? We
can quite well read between the lines in all our Lord’s parables
and in all the passages of His sermons about prayer. The unmistakable
traces of otherwise untold enterprises and successes, agonies and victories
of prayer, are to be seen in every such sermon of His. And so,
in like manner, in all that He says to His disciples about the sweetness
of submission, resignation, and self-denial, as also about the nourishment
for His soul that He got out of every hard act of obedience,—and
so on. There is running through all our Lord’s doctrinal
and homiletical teaching that note of reality and of certitude that
can only come to any teaching out of the long and deep and intense experience
of the teacher. And as the Master was, so are all His ministers.
When I read, for instance, what William Law says about the heart-searching
and heart-cleansing efficacy of intercessory prayer in the case of him
who continues all his life so to pray, and carries such prayer through
all the experiences and all the relationships of life, I do not need
you to tell me where that great man of God made that great discovery.
I know that he made it in his own closet, and on his own knees, and
in his own evil heart. And so, also, when I come nearer home.
Whenever I hear a single unconventional, immediate, penetrating, overawing
petition or confession in a minister’s pulpit prayer or in his
family worship, I do not need to be told out of what prayer-book he
took that. I know without his telling me that my minister has
been, all unknown to me till now, at that same school of prayer to which
his Master was put in the days of His flesh, and out of which He brought
the experiences that He afterwards put into the Friend at midnight,
and the Importunate widow, as also into the Egg and the scorpion, the
Bread and the stone, the Knocking and the opening, the Seeking and the
finding.</p>
<blockquote><p>His children thus most dear to Him,<br/>
Their heavenly Father trains,<br/>
Through all the hard experience led<br/>
Of sorrows and of pains.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>And if His children, then ten times more the tutors and governors
of His children,—the pastors and the preachers He prepares for
His people.</p>
<p>2. Again, though I will not put those two collegiate shepherds
against one another, yet, in order to bring out the whole truth on this
matter, I will risk so far as to say that where we cannot have both
Knowledge and Experience, by all means let us have Experience.
Yes, I declare to you that if I were choosing a minister for myself,
and could not have both the book-knowledge and the experience of the
Christian life in one and the same man; and could not have two ministers,
one with all the talents and another with all the experiences; I would
say that, much as I like an able and learned sermon from an able and
learned man, I would rather have less learning and more experience.
And, then, no wonder that such pastors and preachers are few.
For how costly must a thoroughly good minister’s experience be
to him! What a quantity and what a quality of experience is needed
to take a raw, light-minded, ignorant, and self-satisfied youth and
transform him into the pastor, the tried and trusted friend of the tempted,
the sorrow-laden, and the shipwrecked hearts and lives in his congregation!
What years and years of the selectest experiences are needed to teach
the average divinity student to know himself, to track out and run to
earth his own heart, and thus to lay open and read other men’s
hearts to their self-deceived owners in the light of his own.
A matter, moreover, that he gets not one word of help toward in all
his college curriculum. David was able to say in his old age that
he fed the flock of God in Israel according to the integrity of his
heart, and guided them by the skilfulness of his hands. But what
years and years of shortcoming and failure in private and in public
life lie behind that fine word ‘integrity’! as also what
stumbles and what blunders behind that other fine word ‘skilfulness’!
But, then, how a lightest touch of a preacher’s own dear-bought
experience skilfully let fall brightens up an obscure scripture!
How it sends a thrill through a prayer! How it wings an arrow
to the conscience! How it sheds abroad balm upon the heart!
Let no minister, then, lose heart when he is sent back to the school
of experience. He knows in theory that tribulation worketh patience,
and patience experience, but it is not theory, but experience, that
makes a minister after God’s own heart. I sometimes wish
that I may live to see a chair of Experimental Religion set up in all
our colleges. I fear it is a dream, and that it must have been
pronounced impracticable long ago by our wisest heads. Still,
all the same, that does not prevent me from again and again indulging
my dream. I indulge my fond dream again as often as I look back
on my own tremendous mistakes in the management of my own personal and
ministerial life, as well as sometimes see some signs of the same mistakes
in some other ministers. In my dream for the Church of the future
I see the programme of lectures in the Experimental Class and the accompanying
examinations. I see the class library, and I envy the students.
I am present at the weekly book-day, and at the periodical addresses
delivered to the class by those town and country ministers who have
been most skilful in their pastorate and most successful in the conversion
and in the character of their people. And, unless I wholly deceive
myself, I see, not all the class—that will never be till the millennium—but
here and there twos and threes, and more men than that, who will throw
their whole hearts into the work of such a class till they come out
of the hall in experimental religion like Sir Proteus in the play:</p>
<blockquote><p>Their years but young, but their experience old,<br/>
Their heads unmellowed, but their judgment ripe.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>It is quite true, that, as my old minister shrewdly said to me, even
the Holy Ghost cannot inspire an experience. No. But a class
of genuine experimental divinity would surely help to foster and develop
an experience. And, till the class is established, any student
who has the heart for it may lay in the best of the class library for
a few shillings. Mr. Thin will tell you that there is no literature
that is such a drug in the market as the best books of Experimental
Divinity. No wonder, then, that we make such slow and short way
in the skilfulness, success, and acceptance of our preaching and our
pastorate.</p>
<p>3. But, at the same time, my brethren, all your ministers’
experience of personal religion will be lost upon you unless you are
yourselves attending the same school. The salvation of the soul,
you must understand, is not offered to ministers only. Ministers
are not the only men who are, to begin with, dead in trespasses and
sins. The Son of God did not die for ministers only. The
Holy Ghost is not offered to ministers only. A clean, humble,
holy heart is not to be the pursuit of ministers only. It is not
to His ministers only that our Lord says, Take up My yoke and learn
of Me. The daily cross is not the opportunity of ministers only.
It is not to ministers only that tribulation worketh patience, and patience
experience, and experience hope. It was to all who had obtained
like precious faith with their ministers that Peter issued this exhortation
that they were to give all diligence to add to their faith virtue, and
to virtue knowledge, and to knowledge temperance, and to temperance
patience,—and so on. Now, my brethren, unless all that is
on foot in yourselves, as well as in your ministers, then their progress
in Christian experience will only every new Sabbath-day separate you
and your ministers further and further away from one another.
When a minister is really making progress himself in the life of religion
that progress must come out, and ought to come out, both in his preaching
and in his prayers. And, then, two results of all that will immediately
begin to manifest themselves among his people. Some of his people
will visibly, and still more will invisibly, make corresponding progress
with their minister; while some others, alas! will fall off in interest,
in understanding, and in sympathy till at last they drop off from his
ministry altogether. That is an old law in the Church of God:
‘like people like priest,’ and ‘like priest like people.’
And while there are various influences at work retarding and perplexing
the immediate operation of that law, at the same time, he who has eyes
to see such things in a congregation and in a community will easily
see Hosea’s great law of congregational selection in operation
every day. Like people gradually gravitate to like preachers.
You will see, if you have the eyes, congregations gradually dissolving
and gradually being consolidated again under that great law. You
will see friendships and families even breaking up and flying into pieces;
and, again, new families and new friendships being built up on that
very same law. If you were to study the session books of our city
congregations in the light of that law, you would get instruction.
If you just studied who lifted their lines, and why; and, again, what
other people came and left their lines, and why, you would get instruction.
The shepherds in Israel did not need to hunt up and herd their flocks
like the shepherds in Scotland. A shepherd on the mountains of
Israel had nothing more to do than himself pass up into the pasture
lands and then begin to sing a psalm or offer a prayer, when, in an
instant, his proper sheep were all round about him. The sheep
knew their own shepherd’s voice, and they fled from the voice
of a stranger. And so it is with a true preacher,—a preacher
of experience, that is. His own people know no voice like his
voice. He does not need to bribe and flatter and run after his
people. He may have, he usually has, but few people as people
go in our day, and the better the preacher sometimes the smaller the
flock. It was so in our Master’s case. The multitude
followed after the loaves but they fled from the feeding doctrines,
till He first tasted that dejection and that sense of defeat which so
many of His best servants are fed on in this world. Still, as
our Lord did not tune His pulpit to the taste of the loungers of Galilee,
no more will a minister worth the name do anything else but press deeper
and deeper into the depths of truth and life, till, as was the case
with his Master, his followers, though few, will be all the more worth
having. The Delectable Mountains are wide and roomy. They
roll far away both before and behind. Immanuel’s Land is
a large place, and there are many other shepherds among those hills
and valleys besides Knowledge and Experience and Watchful and Sincere.
And each several shepherd has, on the whole, his own sheep. Knowledge
has his; Experience has his; Watchful has his; and Sincere has his;
and all the other here unnamed shepherds have all theirs also.
For, always, like shepherd like sheep. Yes. Hosea must have
been something in Israel somewhat analogous to a session-clerk among
ourselves. ‘Like priest like people’ is certainly
a digest of some such experience. Let some inquisitive beginner
in Hebrew this winter search out the prophet upon that matter, consulting
Mr. Hutcheson and Dr. Pusey, and he will let me hear the result.</p>
<p>4. Now, my brethren, in closing, we must all keep it clearly
before our minds, and that too every day we live, that God orders and
overrules this whole world, and, indeed, keeps it going very much just
that He may by means of it make unceasing experiment upon His people.
Experiment, you know, results in experience. There is no other
way by which any man can attain to a religious experience but by undergoing
temptation, trial, tribulation:—experiment. And it gives
a divine dignity to all things, great and small, good and bad, when
we see them all taken up into God’s hand, in order that by means
of them He may make for Himself an experienced people. Human life
on this earth, when viewed under this aspect, is one vast workshop.
And all the shafts and wheels and pulleys; all the crushing hammers,
and all the whirling knives; all the furnaces and smelting-pots; all
the graving tools and smoothing irons, are all so many divinely-designed
and divinely-worked instruments all directed in upon this one result,—our
being deeply experienced in the ways of God till we are for ever fashioned
into His nature and likeness. Our faith in the unseen world and
in our unseen God and Saviour is at one time put to the experiment.
At another time it is our love to Him; the reality of it, and the strength
of it. At another time it is our submission and our resignation
to His will. At another time it is our humility, or our meekness,
or our capacity for self-denial, or our will and ability to forgive
an injury, or our perseverance in still unanswered prayer; and so on
the ever-shifting but never-ceasing experiment goes. I do beseech
you, my brethren, take that true view of life home with you again this
night. This true view of life, namely, that experience in the
divine life can only come to you through your being much experimented
upon. Meet all your trials and tribulations and temptations, then,
under this assurance, that all things will work together for good to
you also if you are only rightly exercised by means of them. Nothing
else but this growing experience and this settling assurance will be
able to support you under the sudden ills of life; but this will do
it. This, when you begin by experience to see that all this life,
and all the good and all the ill of this life, are all under this splendid
divine law,—that your tribulations also are indeed working within
you a patience, and your patience an experience, and your experience
a hope that maketh not ashamed.</p>
<h2>WATCHFUL</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘Son of man, I have made thee a watchman unto the
house of Israel.’—The word of the Lord to Ezekiel.</p>
<p>‘They watch for your souls.’—The Apostle to the
Hebrews.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>There were four shepherds who had the care of Immanuel’s sheep
on the Delectable Mountains, and their names were Knowledge, Experience,
Watchful, and Sincere. Now, in that very beautiful episode of
his great allegory, John Bunyan is doing his very utmost to impress
upon all his ministerial readers how much there is that goes to the
making of a good minister, and how much every good minister has to do.
Each several minister must do all that in him lies, from the day of
his ordination to the day of his death, to be all to his people that
those four shepherds were to Immanuel’s sheep. He is to
labour, in season and out of season, to be a minister of the ripest
possible knowledge, the deepest and widest possible experience, the
most sleepless watchfulness, and the most absolute and scrupulous sincerity.
Now, enough has perhaps been said already about a minister’s knowledge
and his experience; enough, certainly, and more than enough for some
of us to hope half to carry out; and, therefore, I shall at once go
on to take up Watchful, and to supply, so far as I am able, the plainest
possible interpretation of this part of Bunyan’s parable.</p>
<p>1. Every true minister, then, watches, in the words of the
apostle, for the souls of his people. An ordinary minister’s
everyday work embraces many duties and offers many opportunities, but
through all his duties and through all his opportunities there runs
this high and distinctive duty of watching for the souls of his people.
A minister may be a great scholar, he may have taken all sacred learning
for his province, he may be a profound and a scientific theologian,
he may be an able church leader, he may be a universally consulted authority
on ecclesiastical law, he may be a skilful and successful debater in
church courts, he may even be a great pulpit orator, holding thousands
entranced by his impassioned eloquence; but a true successor of the
prophets of the Old Testament and of the apostles of the New Testament
he is not, unless he watches for the souls of men. All these endowments,
and all these occupations, right and necessary as, in their own places,
they all are,—great talents, great learning, great publicity,
great popularity,—all tend, unless they are taken great care of,
to lead their possessors away from all time for, and from all sympathy
with, the watchfulness of the New Testament minister. Watching
over a flock brings to you none of the exhilaration of authority and
influence, none of the intoxication of publicity and applause.
Your experiences are the quite opposite of all these things when you
are watching over your flock. Your work among your flock is all
done in distant and lonely places, on hillsides, among woods and thickets,
and in cloudy and dark days. You spend your strength among sick
and dying and wandering sheep, among wolves and weasels, and what not,
of that verminous kind. At the same time, all good pastors are
not so obscure and forgotten as all that. Some exceptionally able
and exceptionally devoted and self-forgetful men manage to combine both
extremes of a minister’s duties and opportunities in themselves.
Our own Sir Henry Moncreiff was a pattern pastor. There was no
better pastor in Edinburgh in his day than dear Sir Henry was; and yet,
at the same time, everybody knows what an incomparable ecclesiastical
casuist Sir Henry was. Mr. Moody, again, is a great preacher,
preaching to tens of thousands of hearers at a time; but, at the same
time, Mr. Moody is one of the most skilful and attentive pastors that
ever took individual souls in hand and kept them over many years in
mind. But these are completely exceptional men, and what I want
to say to commonplace and limited and everyday men like myself is this,
that watching for the souls of our people, one by one, day in and day
out,—that, above everything else, that, and nothing else,—makes
any man a pastor of the apostolic type. An able man may know all
about the history, the habitat, the various species, the breeds, the
diseases, and the prices of sheep, and yet be nothing at all of a true
shepherd. And so may a minister.</p>
<p>2. Pastoral visitation, combined with personal dealing, is
by far the best way of watching for souls. I well remember when
I first began my ministry in this congregation, how much I was impressed
with what one of the ablest and best of our then ministers was reported
to have testified on his deathbed. Calling back to his bedside
a young minister who had come to see him, the dying man said: ‘Prepare
for the pulpit; above everything else you do, prepare for the pulpit.
Let me again repeat it, should it at any time stand with you between
visiting a deathbed and preparing for the pulpit, prepare for the pulpit.’
I was immensely impressed with that dying injunction when it was repeated
to me, but I have lived,—I do not say to put my preparation for
the pulpit, such as it is, second to my more pastoral work in my week’s
thoughts, but—to put my visiting in the very front rank and beside
my pulpit. ‘We never were accustomed to much visiting,’
said my elders to me in their solicitude for their young minister when
he was first left alone with this whole charge; ‘only appear in
your own pulpit twice on Sabbath: keep as much at home as possible:
we were never used to much visiting, and we do not look for it.’
Well, that was most kindly intended; but it was much more kind than
wise. For I have lived to learn that no congregation will continue
to prosper, or, if other more consolidated and less exacting congregations,
at any rate not this congregation, without constant pastoral attention.
And remember, I do not complain of that. Far, far from that.
For I am as sure as I am of anything connected with a minister’s
life, that a minister’s own soul will prosper largely in the measure
that the souls of his people prosper through his pastoral work.
No preaching, even if it were as good preaching as the apostle’s
itself, can be left to make up for the neglect of pastoral visitation
and personal intercourse. ‘I taught you from house to house,’
says Paul himself, when he was resigning the charge of the church of
Ephesus into the hands of the elders of Ephesus. What would we
ministers not give for a descriptive report of an afternoon’s
house-to-house visitation by the Apostle Paul! Now in a workshop,
now at a sickbed, now with a Greek, now with a Jew, and, in every case,
not discussing politics and cursing the weather, not living his holidays
over again and hearing of all the approaching marriages, but testifying
to all men in his own incomparably winning and commanding way repentance
toward God and faith toward the Lord Jesus Christ. We city ministers
call out and complain that we have no time to visit our people in their
own houses; but that is all subterfuge. If the whole truth were
told about the busiest of us, it is not so much want of time as want
of intention; it is want of set and indomitable purpose to do it; it
is want of method and of regularity such as all business men must have;
and it is want, above all, of laying out every hour of every day under
the Great Taskmaster’s eye. Many country ministers again,—we,
miserable men that we are, are never happy or well placed,—complain
continually that their people are so few, and so scattered, and so ignorant,
and so uninteresting, and so unresponsive, that it is not worth their
toil to go up and down in remote places seeking after them. It
takes a whole day among bad roads and wet bogs to visit a shepherd’s
wife and children, and two or three bothies and pauper’s hovels
on the way home. ‘On the morrow,’ so runs many an
entry in Thomas Boston’s <i>Memoirs</i>, ‘I visited the
sick, and spent the afternoon in visiting others, and found gross ignorance
prevailing. Nothing but stupidity prevailed; till I saw that I
had enough to do among my handful. I had another diet of catechising
on Wednesday afternoon, and the discovery I made of the ignorance of
God and of themselves made me the more satisfied with the smallness
of my charge . . . Twice a year I catechised the parish, and once a
year I visited their families. My method of visitation was this.
I made a particular application of my doctrine in the pulpit to the
family, exhorted them all to lay all these things to heart, exhorted
them also to secret prayer, supposing they kept family worship, urged
their relative duties upon them,’ etc. etc. And then at
his leaving Ettrick, he writes: ‘Thus I parted with a people whose
hearts were knit to me and mine to them. The last three or four
years had been much blessed, and had been made very comfortable to me,
not in respect of my own handful only, but others of the countryside
also.’ Jonathan Edwards called Thomas Boston ‘that
truly great divine.’ I am not such a judge of divinity as
Jonathan Edwards was, but I always call Boston to myself that truly
great pastor. But my lazy and deceitful heart says to me: No praise
to Boston, for he lived and did his work in the quiet Forest of Ettrick.
True, so he did. Well, then, look at the populous and busy town
of Kidderminster. And let me keep continually before my abashed
conscience that hard-working corpse Richard Baxter. Absolutely
on the same page on which that dying man enters diseases and medicines
enough to fill a doctor’s diary after a whole day in an incurable
hospital, that noble soul goes on to say: ‘I preached before the
wars twice each Lord’s Day, but after the wars but once, and once
every Thursday, besides occasional sermons. Every Thursday evening
my neighbours that were most desirous, and had opportunity, met at my
house. Two days every week my assistant and I myself took fourteen
families between us for private catechising and conference; he going
through the parish, and the town coming to me. I first heard them
recite the words of the Catechism, and then examined them about the
sense, and lastly urged them, with all possible engaging reason and
vehemency, to answerable affection and practice. If any of them
were stalled through ignorance or bashfulness, I forbore to press them,
but made them hearers, and turned all into instruction and exhortation.
I spent about an hour with a family, and admitted no others to be present,
lest bashfulness should make it burdensome, or any should talk of the
weakness of others.’ And then he tells how his people’s
necessity made him practise physic among them, till he would have twenty
at his door at once. ‘All these my employments were but
my recreations, and, as it were, the work of my spare hours. For
my writings were my chiefest daily labour. And blessed be the
God of mercies that brought me from the grave and gave me, after wars
and sickness, fourteen years’ liberty in such sweet employment!’
Let all ministers who would sit at home over a pipe and a newspaper
with a quiet conscience keep Boston’s <i>Memoirs</i> and Baxter’s
<i>Reliquiae</i> at arm’s-length.</p>
<p>3. Our young communicants’ classes, and still more, those
private interviews that precede and finish up our young communicants’
classes, are by far our best opportunities as pastors. I remember
Dr. Moody Stuart telling me long ago that he had found his young communicants’
classes to be the most fruitful opportunities of all his ministry; as,
also, next to them, times of baptism in families. And every minister
who tries to be a minister at all after Dr. Moody Stuart’s pattern,
will tell you something of the same thing. They get at the opening
history of their young people’s hearts before their first communion.
They make shorthand entries and secret memoranda at such a season like
this: ‘A. a rebuke to me. He had for long been astonished
at me that I did not speak to him about his soul. B. traced his
conversion to the singing of ‘The sands of time are sinking’
in this church last summer. C. was spoken to by a room-mate.
D. was to be married, and she died. Of E. I have great hope.
F., were she anywhere but at home, I would have great hopes of her,’—and
so on. But, then, when a minister takes boldness to turn over
the pages of his young communicants’ roll for half a lifetime—ah
me, ah me! What was I doing to let that so promising communicant
go so far astray, and I never to go after him? And that other.
And that other. And that other. Till we can read no more.
O God of mercy, when Thou inquirest after blood, let me be hidden in
the cleft of that Rock so deeply cleft for unwatchful ministers!</p>
<p>4. And then, as Dr. Joseph Parker says, who says everything
so plainly and so powerfully: ‘There is pastoral preaching as
well as pastoral visitation. There is pastoral preaching; rich
revelation of divine truth; high, elevating treatment of the Christian
mysteries; and he is the pastor to me who does not come to my house
to drink and smoke and gossip and show his littleness, but who, out
of a rich experience, meets me with God’s word at every turn of
my life, and speaks the something to me that I just at that moment want.’
Let us not have less pastoral visitation in the time to come, but let
us have more and more of such pastoral preaching.</p>
<p>5. But, my brethren, it is time for you, as John said to the
elect lady and her children, to look to yourselves. The salvation
of your soul is precious, and its salvation is such a task, such a battle,
such a danger, and such a risk, that it will take all that your most
watchful minister can do, and all that you can do yourself, and all
that God can do for you, and yet your soul will scarcely be saved after
all. You do not know what salvation is nor what it costs.
You will not be saved in your sleep. You will not waken up at
the last day and find yourself saved by the grace of God and you not
know it. You will know it to your bitter cost before your soul
is saved from sin and death. You and your minister too.
And therefore it is that He Who is to judge your soul at last says to
you, as much as He says it to any of His ministers, Watch! What
I say unto one I say unto all, Watch. Watch and pray, lest you
enter into temptation. Look to yourself, then, sinner. In
Christ’s name, look to yourself and watch yourself. You
have no enemy to fear but yourself. No one can hurt a hair of
your head but yourself. Have you found that out? Have you
found yourself out? Do you ever look in the direction of your
own heart? Have you begun to watch what goes on in your own heart?
What is it to you what goes on in the world around you compared with
what goes on in the world within you? Look, then, to yourself.
Watch, above all watching, yourself. Watch what it is that moves
you to do this or that. Stop sometimes and ask yourself why you
do such and such a thing. Did you ever hear of such a thing as
a motive in a human heart? And did your minister, watching for
your soul, ever tell you that your soul will be lost or saved, condemned
or justified at the last day according to your motives? You never
knew that! You were never told that by your minister! Miserable
pair! What does he take up his Sabbaths with? And what leads
you to waste your Sabbaths and your soul on such a stupid minister?
But, shepherd or no shepherd, minister or no minister, look to yourself.
Look to yourself when you lie down and when you rise up; when you go
out and when you come in; when you are in the society of men and when
you are alone with your own heart. Look to yourself when men praise
you, and look to yourself when men blame you. Look to yourself
when you sit down to eat and drink, and still more when you sit and
speak about your absent brother. Look to yourself when you meet
your enemy or your rival in the street, when you pass his house, or
hear or read his name. Yes, you may well say so. At that
rate a man’s life would be all watching. So it would.
And so it must. And more than that, so it is with some men not
far from you who never told you how much you have made them watch.
Did you never know all that till now? Were you never told that
every Christian man, I do not mean every communicant, but every truly
and sincerely and genuinely Christian man watches himself in that way?
For as the one essential and distinguishing mark of a New Testament
minister is not that he is an able man, or a studious man, or an eloquent
man, but that he is a pastor and watches for souls, so it is the chiefest
and the best mark, and to himself the only safe and infallible mark,
that any man is a sincere and true Christian man, that he watches himself
always and in all things looks first and last to himself.</p>
<h2>SINCERE</h2>
<blockquote><p>‘In all things showing sincerity.’—Paul
to Titus.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Charles Bennett has a delightful drawing of Sincere in Charles Kingsley’s
beautiful edition of <i>The Pilgrim’s Progress</i>. You
feel that you could look all day into those clear eyes. Your eyes
would begin to quail before you had looked long into the fourth shepherd’s
deep eyes; but those eyes of his have no cause to quail under yours.
This man has nothing to hide from you. He never had. He
loves you, and his love to you is wholly without dissimulation.
He absolutely and unreservedly means and intends by you and yours all
that he has ever said to you and yours, and much more than he has ever
been able to say. The owner of those deep blue eyes is as true
to you when he is among your enemies as he is true to the truth itself
when he is among your friends. Mark also the unobtrusive strength
of his mouth, all suffused over as it is with a most winning and reassuring
sweetness. The fourth shepherd of the Delectable Mountains is
one of the very best of Bennett’s excellent portraits. But
Mr. Kerr Bain’s pen-and-ink portrait of Sincere in his <i>People
of the Pilgrimage</i> is even better than Bennett’s excellent
drawing. ‘Sincere is softer in outline and feature than
Watchful. His eye is full-open and lucid, with a face of mingled
expressiveness and strength—a lovable, lowly, pure-spirited man—candid,
considerate, willing, cheerful—not speaking many words, and never
any but true words.’ Happy sheep that have such a shepherd!
Happy people! if only any people in the Church of Christ could have
such a pastor.</p>
<p>It is surely too late, too late or too early, to begin to put tests
to a minister’s sincerity after he has been licensed and called
and is now standing in the presence of his presbytery and surrounded
with his congregation. It is a tremendous enough question to put
to any man at any time: ‘Are not zeal for the honour of God, love
to Jesus Christ, and desire of saving souls your great motives and chief
inducement to enter into the function of the holy ministry?’
A man who does not understand what it is you are saying to him will
just make the same bow to these awful words that he makes to all your
other conventional questions. But the older he grows in his ministry,
and the more he comes to discover the incurable plague of his own heart,
and with that the whole meaning and full weight of your overwhelming
words, the more will he shrink back from having such questions addressed
to him. Fools will rush in where Moses and Isaiah and Jeremiah
and Peter and Paul feared to set their foot. Paul was to be satisfied
if only he was let do the work of a minister all his days and then was
not at the end made a castaway. And yet, writing to the same church,
Paul says that his sincerity among them had been such that he could
hold up his ministerial life like spotless linen between the eye of
his conscience and the sun. But all that was written and is to
be read and understood as Paul’s ideal that he had honestly laboured
after, rather than as an actual attainment he had arrived at.
Great as Paul’s attainments were in humility, in purity of intention,
and in simplicity and sincerity of heart, yet the mind of Christ was
not so given even to His most gifted apostle, that he could seriously
say that he had attained to such utter ingenuity, simplicity, disengagement
from himself, and surrender to Christ, as to be able to face the sun
with a spotless ministry. All he ever says at his boldest and
best on that great matter is to be read in the light of his universal
law of personal and apostolic imperfection—Not that I have attained,
either am already perfect; but I follow after. And blessed be
God that this is all that He looks for in any of His ministers, that
they follow all their days after a more and more godly sincerity.
It was the apostle’s love of absolute sincerity,—and, especially,
it was his bitter hatred of all the remaining dregs of insincerity that
he from time to time detected in his own heart,—it was this that
gave him his good conscience before a God of pity and compassion, truth
and grace. And with something of the same love of perfect sincerity,
accompanied with something of the same hatred of insincerity and of
ourselves on account of it, we, too, toward this same God of pity and
compassion, will hold up a conscience that would fain be a good conscience.
And till it is a good conscience we shall hold up with it a broken heart.
And that genuine love of all sincerity, and that equally genuine hatred
of all remaining insincerity, will make all our ministerial work, as
it made all Paul’s apostolic work, not only acceptable, but will
also make its very defects and defeats both acceptable and fruitful
in the estimation and result of God. It so happens that I am reading
for my own private purposes at this moment an old book of 1641, Drexilius
<i>On a Right Intention</i>, and I cannot do better at this point than
share with you the page I am just reading. ‘Not to be too
much troubled or daunted at any cross event,’ he says, ‘is
the happy state of his mind who has entered on any enterprise with a
pure and pious intention. That great apostle James gained no more
than eight persons in all Spain when he was called to lay down his head
under Herod’s sword. And was not God ready to give the same
reward to James as to those who converted kings and whole kingdoms?
Surely He was. For God does not give His ministers a charge as
to what they shall effect, but only as to what they shall intend to
effect. Wherefore, when his art faileth a servant of God, when
nothing goes forward, when everything turneth to his ruin, even when
his hope is utterly void, he is scarce one whit troubled; for this,
saith he to himself, is not in my power, but in God’s power alone.
I have done what I could. I have done what was fit for me to do.
Fair and foul is all of God’s disposing.’</p>
<p>And, then, this simplicity and purity of intention gives a minister
that fine combination of candour and considerateness which we saw to
exist together so harmoniously in the character of Sincere. Such
a minister is not tongue-tied with sinister and selfish intentions.
His sincerity toward God gives him a masterful position among his people.
His words of rebuke and warning go straight to his people’s consciences
because they come straight out of his own conscience. His words
are their own witness that he is neither fearing his people nor fawning
upon his people in speaking to them. And, then, such candour prepares
the way for the utmost considerateness when the proper time comes for
considerateness. Such a minister is patient with the stupid, and
even with the wicked and the injurious, because in all their stupidity
and wickedness and injuriousness they have only injured and impoverished
themselves. And if God is full of patience and pity for the ignorant
and the evil and the out of the way, then His sincere-hearted minister
is of all men the very man to carry the divine message of forgiveness
and instruction to such sinners. Yes, Mr. Bain must have seen
Sincere closely and in a clear light when he took down this fine feature
of his character, that he is at once candid and considerate—with
a whole face of mingled expressiveness and strength.</p>
<p>Writing about sincerity and a right intention in young ministers,
old Drexilius says: ‘When I turn to clergymen, I would have sighs
and groans to speak for me. For, alas! I am afraid that there
be found some which come into the ministry, not that they may obtain
a holy office in which to spend their life, but for worse ends.
To enter the ministry with a naughty intention is to come straight to
destruction. Let no minister think at any time of a better living,
but only at all times of a holier life. Wherefore, O ministers
and spiritual men, consider and take heed. There can be no safe
guide to your office but a right, sincere, pure intention. Whosoever
cometh to it with any other conduct or companion must either return
to his former state of life, or here he shall certainly perish . . .
What is more commendable in a religious man than to be always in action
and to be exercised one while in teaching the ignorant, another while
in comforting such as are troubled in mind, sometimes in making sermons,
and sometimes in admonishing the sick? But with what secret malignity
doth a wrong intention insinuate itself into these very actions that
are the most religious! For ofttimes we desire nothing else but
to be doing. We desire to become public, not that we may profit
many, but because we have not learned how to be private. We seek
for divers employments, not that we may avoid idleness, but that we
may come into people’s knowledge. We despise a small number
of hearers, and such as are poor, simple, and rustical, and let fly
our endeavours at more eminent chairs, though not in apparent pursuit;
all which is the plain argument of a corrupt intention. O ye that
wait upon religion, O ministers of God, this is to sell most transcendent
wares at a very low rate—nay, this is to cast them, and yourselves
too, into the fire.’</p>
<p>There are some outstanding temptations to insincerity in some ministers
that must be pointed out here. (1) Ministers with a warm rhetorical
temperament are beset continually with the temptation to pile up false
fire on the altar; to dilate, that is, both in their prayers and in
their sermons, upon certain topics in a style that is full of insincerity.
Ministers who have no real hold of divine things in themselves will
yet fill their pulpit hour with the most florid and affecting pictures
of sacred and even of evangelical things. This is what our shrewd
and satirical people mean when they say of us that So-and-so has a great
<i>sough</i> of the gospel in his preaching, but the <i>sough</i> only.
(2) Another kindred temptation to even the best and truest of ministers
is to make pulpit appeals about the evil of sin and the necessity of
a holy life that they themselves do not feel and do not attempt to live
up to. Butler has a terrible passage on the heart-hardening effects
of making pictures of virtue and never trying to put those pictures
into practice. And readers of Newman will remember his powerful
application of this same temptation to literary men in his fine sermon
on Unreal Words. (3) Another temptation is to affect an interest
in our people and a sympathy with them that we do not in reality feel.
All human life is full of this temptation to double-dealing and hypocrisy;
but, then, it is large part of a minister’s office to feel with
and for his people, and to give the tenderest and the most sacred expression
to that feeling. And, unless he is a man of a scrupulously sincere,
true, and tender heart, his daily duties will soon develop him into
a solemn hypocrite. And if he feels only for his own people, and
for them only when they become and as long as they remain his own people,
then his insincerity and imposture is only the more abominable in the
sight of God. (4) Archbishop Whately, with that strong English
common sense and that cultivated clear-headedness that almost make him
a writer of genius, points out a view of sincerity that it behoves ministers
especially to cultivate in themselves. He tells us not only to
act always according to our convictions, but also to see that our convictions
are true and unbiassed convictions. It is a very superficial sincerity
even when we actually believe what we profess to believe. But
that is a far deeper and a far nobler sincerity which watches with a
strict and severe jealousy over the formation of our beliefs and convictions.
Ministers must, first for themselves and then for their people, live
far deeper down than other men. They must be at home among the
roots, not of actions only, but much more of convictions. We may
act honestly enough out of our present convictions and principles, while,
all the time, our convictions and our principles are vitiated at bottom
by the selfish ground they ultimately stand in. Let ministers,
then, to begin with, live deep down among the roots of their opinions
and their beliefs. Let them not only flee from being consciously
insincere and hypocritical men; let them keep their eye like the eye
of God continually on that deep ground of the soul where so many men
unknown to themselves deceive themselves. And, thus exercised,
they shall be able out of a deep and clean heart to rise far above that
trimming and hedging and self-seeking and self-sheltering in disputed
and unpopular questions which is such a temptation to all men, and is
such a shame and scandal in a minister.</p>
<p>Now, my good friends, we have kept all this time to the fourth shepherd
and to his noble name, but let us look in closing at some of his sheep,—that
is to say, at ourselves. For is it not said in the prophet: Ye
my flock, the flock of my pasture, are men, and I am your God, saith
the Lord God. All, therefore, that has been said about the sincerity
and insincerity of ministers is to be said equally of their people also
in all their special and peculiar walks of life. Sincerity is
as noble a virtue, and insincerity is as detestable a vice, in a doctor,
or a lawyer, or a schoolmaster, or a merchant,—almost, if not
altogether, as much so as in a minister. Your insincerity and
hypocrisy in your daily intercourse with your friends and neighbours
is a miserable enough state of mind, but at the root of all that there
lies your radical insincerity toward God and your own soul. In
his <i>Christian Perfection</i> William Law introduces his readers to
a character called Julius, who goes regularly to prayers, and there
confesses himself to be a miserable sinner who has no health in him;
and yet that same Julius cannot bear to be informed of any imperfection
or suspected to be wanting in any kind or degree of virtue. Now,
Law asks, can there be a stronger proof that Julius is wanting in the
sincerity of his devotions? Is it not as plain as anything can
be that that man’s confessions of sin are only words of course,
a certain civility of sacred speech in which his heart has not a single
atom of share? Julius confesses himself to be in great weakness,
corruption, disorder, and infirmity, and yet he is mortally angry with
you if at any time you remotely and tenderly hint that he may be just
a shade wrong in his opinions, or one hair’s-breadth off what
is square and correct in his actions. Look to yourself, Julius,
and to your insincere heart. Look to yourself at all times, but
above all other times at the times and in the places of your devotions.
Ten to one, my hearer of to-night, you may never have thought of that
before. And what would you think if you were told that this Sincere
shepherd was appointed us for this evening’s discourse, and that
you were led up to this house, just that you might have your attention
turned to your many miserable insincerities of all kinds, but especially
to your so Julius-like devotions? ‘And Nathan said unto
David, Thou art the man. And David said unto Nathan, I have sinned
against the Lord.’</p>
<p>What, then, my truly miserable fellow-sinner and fellow-worshipper,
what are we to do? Am I to give up preaching altogether because
I am continually carried on under the impulse of the pulpit far beyond
both my attainments and my intentions? Am I to cease from public
prayer altogether because when engaged in it I am compelled to utter
words of contrition and confession and supplication that little agree
with the everyday temper and sensibility of my soul? And am I
wholly to eschew pastoral work because my heart is not so absolutely
clean and simple and sincere toward all my own people and toward other
ministers’ people as it ought to be? No! Never!
Never! Let me rather keep my heart of such earth and slag in the
hottest place of temptation, and then, such humiliating discoveries
as are there continually being made to me of myself will surely at last
empty me of all self-righteousness and self-sufficiency, and make me
at the end of my ministry, if not till then, the penitent pastor of
a penitent people. And when thus penitent, then surely, also somewhat
more sincere in my designs and intentions, if not even then in my attainments
and performances.</p>
<p>‘O Eternal God, Who hast made all things for man, and man for
Thy glory, sanctify my body and my soul, my thoughts and my intentions,
my words and my actions, that whatsoever I shall think or speak or do
may be by me designed to the glory of Thy name. O God, turn my
necessities into virtue, and the works of nature into the works of grace,
by making them orderly, regular, temperate, subordinate, and profitable
to ends beyond their own proper efficacy. And let no pride or
self-seeking, no covetousness or revenge, no impure mixtures or unhandsome
purposes, no little ends and low imaginations, pollute my spirit or
unhallow any of my words or actions. But let my body be the servant
of my spirit, and both soul and body servants of my Lord, that, doing
all things for Thy glory here, I may be made a partaker of Thy glory
hereafter; through Jesus Christ, my Lord. Amen.’</p>
<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
<p><SPAN name="footnote1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation1">{1}</SPAN> Delivered
on the Sabbath before Communion.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation2">{2}</SPAN> Delivered
June 26th, 1892, on the eve of a general election.</p>
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