The Mortified Christian
Puritan Book Reviews
A guide on how to kill sin and make
sure it stays 6 feet under. The process of sanctification for the
Christian can be vividly seen in this work on the destruction (or
mortification) of sin in the Christian heart.
The Mortified Christian, by
Christopher Love
Soli Deo Gloria Publications, Morgan, PA: 1998.
148 Pages, Hardback
These sermons and teachings concern
mortification, in which
Love's judgment is more to be valued because his
heart was a commentary upon his text, and his own experience was a seal
to his doctrine. These sermons particularly were not compiled from
notes, but were taken by faithful note takers whiles the sermons were
given. They are fresh and vibrant, filled with good counsel
against the natures of men, of the corruption of men, which still
lingers within the bosom of the Christian though eh be converted.
But now, how does the Christian deal with remaining sin?
What does it mean to mortify the sins of
the flesh? How should a Christian arm himself against his own
flesh? What should he look for? How may he know he is
actually about the process of mortification? Christopher Love
demonstrates the duty of the believer in a series of chapters on this
top0ic. He covers such aspects of the topic as the Necessity of
Mortification, The Mistakes of Those who do not Recognize their
Mortification, The Ground and Mistakes of Deluded Men who may think they
have mortified their flesh, and more.
I especially enjoyed the aspects Love
brought out concerning the "conscience" and how he dealt with
the the habitual, or as he called it "the bosom", sin of the
Christian. He explains what this is, how to recognize it, and how
to mortify it. He very forward when he shows us that those sins
which we are most likely to commit, those habitual sins, are those which
we love to commit. This is difficult to hear, but very true.
Those sins we delight in are the most deadly of sins since they hinder
the sanctification we should be about.
Some quotes:
"Take this for your consolation:
inward stirrings and working of sin in your soul may in some cases argue
more that sin is near its dissolution that that you are void of
mortification..."
Mortification: It is a holy disposition
in a regenerate man derived from the efficacy and virtue of Christ's
death whereby the strength of sin is weakened and the dominion of it
destroyed, being utterly disabled from having a commanding power or rule
over man any more."
"That sin which of all others most
insinuates itself into your heart when you are in the service of God and
performing holy duties, that sin which can be so impudent as to intrude
upon your heart when you are in the presence of God - that is your
unmortified sin." |