Mortification of Sin
How can we go about mortifying (or
putting to death) the sinful inclinations of our fleshly nature?
The
Mortification of Sin
by Christopher Love
"But if ye through the Spirit do mortify the
deeds of the body, ye
shall live."
Romans 8:13
The Necessity of
Mortification
Mortifying the deeds of the body cannot
be understood of the religious deeds of the body, for they are to be
cherished, nor of the natural deeds of the body such as eating and
drinking; but it refers to the sinful actions that are done by the body
arising from the temptations and injections of Satan or the corrupt
dictates of our own sinful heart.
"But if ye through the Spirit do
mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live," Ye- see here,
beloved, that the Lord walks in ways contrary to the judgments of flesh
and blood. He bids us mourn and sow in tears and then we shall reap in
joy. He bids us die, and tells us this is the way to live; and no way
can be more contrary to flesh and blood, and yet there is no other way
to live but this. We most first die to sin and the world before we can
live . life of grace; and we must die a natural death before we can come
to live a life of glory.
There are two observations that I shall
draw from this latter part of the text:
DOCTRINE 1. Mortification of corruption
is a necessary qualification
-required in every person who shall obtain salvation.
If you mortify the deeds f the body, you
shall live.
DOCTRINE 2.
From the addition of this phrase, "through the
Spirit," observe that, though a man can commit it by his own
strength, he cannot mortify but by the strength of the
Spirit.
RULE 1. Count not the restraining of sin
from coming into action to be a real mortifying of sin. Restraining
grace is not mortifying grace. In Genesis 20:6 God said to Abimelech,
"I withheld thee from sinning against Me; therefore suffered I thee
not to touch her.' He had sin restrained, but not mortified.
A lion confined within the grates- is a
lion still, though he cannot go about to devour his prey; similarly,
though men are restrained from acting out those sins to which they are
inclined, yet the restraint of sin is not to be taken for the mortifying
of sin. A man may for a time lay a curb and restraint upon his lusts, so
that they do not come forth into action, even without the powers of
mortifying grace. A man may bridle a lust for many years, and yet the
lust remains unmortified. Therefore, I say, do not count the restraining
of a sin to be the mortifying of a sin.
RULE 2. A listlessness toward any kind of
sin is no infallible demonstration that such a sin is mortified. Count
not a present listlessness to some sins to be a saving mortification of
them. This is a great mistake that many men run into: because they have
no desire to commit some sins which their education makes them averse
to, therefore they think they have a work of mortification and
sanctification wrought in them; whereas there are divers external causes
that may make a man indisposed and averse to some sins such as sickness,
old age, better of conscience, education, or a man's natural temper.
These cases are expounded in answer to the following question.
QUESTION. Why are men more disposed to
some sins than others?
ANSWER 1. A man my have a listlessness
and unwillingness toward some sins arising from a fit of sickness, so
that, though he has been a drunkard or an adulterer in former times, yet
because he has thereby distempered himself and impaired his health he
has no lost or desire for those sins now. Or, if he has renewed desires
after these sins, yet it may be that he wants strength of body to act.
Such listlessness to sin, flowing from a sick bed, does not proceed from
mortifying grace.
ANSWER 2. This indisposition to sin may
flow from old age, wherein a man's strength is wasted and decayed, and
so he is not able to commit those sins of adultery and drunkenness which
formerly he committed and took pleasure in.
ANSWER 3. It may flow from a good
education and principles of morality in men which restrain them from any
gross and scandalous sins.
ANSWER 4. It may proceed likewise to.-
better and terror of conscience. When this seizes upon a man in whose
face God casts the flashes of hellfire, this may make him abstain from
sin for a time while the horror lies upon him. As a thundering storm
sours the beer in our cellars, so, when God thunders upon the
conscience, it will sour and embitter sin to a man so that he has no
desires after it for the present. Yet this is not mortifying grace upon
the heart, but the horror of conscience that gnaws and grips and
terrifies the man, and makes him listless after sin at such a time.
ANSWER 5. Another eternal cause of a
man's listlessness to some sins may be his natural temper. For, though
every man has sin in him seminally, yet there are some sins which by
nature he is more inclined to than others, according to his
constitution. A man of a choleric disposition is most inclined to anger;
a man of a sanguine disposition is most inclined to uncleanness. There
are many sins that, by a man's natural temper, he is most averse to. Luther
professed of himself that he was never in all his lifetime troubled with
covetousness. This did not proceed from mortifying grace, but from the
natural temper of his body. It was a gift of nature given him by God,
and of a gift of grace.
Give me leave to illustrate this to you
by this familiar similitude. Suppose you put a dog and a sheep together,
and cast flesh before the sheep and grass before the dog. Neither of
them will eat anything The sheep will net eat the flesh; neither will
the dog eat grass, which arises from the natural temper of the
creatures. Why, so it is here. Men's natural temper dispose them to some
sin, and not to others, which therefore is not to be imputed to the
power of mortifying grace.
Therefore, beloved, you are not to impute
to mortifying grace what is merely the result of a violent sickness, old
age, education, terror of conscience, or a man's natural temper and
constitution.
RULE 3. Let mortification be attended to
inward and secret sins as well a, to outward and scandalous sins. Not
only the lusts of the flesh, but those of the mind are to be mortified;
not only the deeds of the body, but the thoughts of the heart and
corruptions in the inward man are to be subdued. You are to extend
mortification to the subduing of vicious affection, as well as base
actions. Colossians 3:5 the Apostle says, "Mortify, therefore, your
members which are upon the earth, fornication, uncleanness," and so
on. You think, it may be, that these two are one. No, fornication is sin
in action; uncleanness is sinning in affections and thought. The Apostle
bids them mortify fornication, that is, uncleanness in action; but he
does not stop there. He tells them they must subdue their sinful
affections and inclinations to those sins. You must mortify the very
first motions and secret propensities to any sin in your hearts.
RULE 4. Let mortification be especially
directed to strike at those sins that act your master sins-that at, most
prevalent and predominant in your heart, that yet you have most prayed
against and are least able to resist, that strongly assault you and most
easily beset you and are masters over you. Thus David, in Psalm 18:23,
sys, "I have kept myself from mine iniquity," that is, from my
special sins, my constitutional sins, my bosom iniquities. I might give
you the same advice that the King of Syria gave his captains to 2
Chronicles 18:30: "Fight neither with small nor great, but only
with the King of Israel." So I say to you, fight not so much
against any sin as against your beloved, darling, constitutional sins
that most easily beset you and prevail over you.
RULE 5. Think net to compass this great
,work of mortification by a general, superficial sight of sin, unless
you come to a distinct and particular apprehension of your sins. If you
take your sins and corruptions all together in a lump, you will never be
able to break and mortify them. When a bundle of gods is knit closely
one to another, the strongest man to the world is net able to break
them; yet, if they are taken asunder, any man may break them all one by
one with ease. So it is here: if you take sin apart and labor to have a
distinct view and sight of each one, this is the way to overcome and
mortify them. |
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