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God The Best Portion Of The Christian
by Jonathan Edwards
Dated April, 1736.
Psalm 73:25, "Whom have I
in heaven but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire besides
thee."
IN this psalm, the psalmist (Asaph) relates the great difficulty which
existed in his own mind, from the consideration of the wicked. He
observes, verses 2 and 3, “As for me, my feet were almost gone; my steps
had well nigh slipped. For I was envious at the foolish, when I saw the
prosperity of the wicked.” In the 4th and following verses, he informs
us, what in the wicked was his temptation. In the first place, he
observed, that they were prosperous, and all things went well with them.
He then observed their behavior in their prosperity, and the use which
they made of it; and that God, notwithstanding such abuse, continued
their prosperity. Then he tells us by what means he was helped out of
this difficulty, viz. by going into the sanctuary, verses 16, 17. And
[he] proceeds to inform us what considerations they were which helped
him, viz. — (1.) The consideration of the miserable end of wicked men.
However they prosper for the present, yet they come to a woeful end at
last, verses 18-20. — (2). The consideration of the blessed end of the
saints. Although the saints, while they live, may be afflicted, yet they
come to a happy end at last, verses 21-24. — (3.) The consideration,
that the godly have much better portion than the wicked, even though
they have no other portion but God; as in the text and following verse.
Though the wicked are in prosperity, [they] are not in trouble as other
men. Yet the godly, though in affliction, are in a state infinitely
better, because they have God for their portion. They need desire
nothing else. He that hath God, hath all. Thus the psalmist professes
the sense and apprehension which he had of things: Whom have I in heaven
but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee.
In the verse immediately preceding, the psalmist takes notice how the
saints are happy in God, both when they are in this world, and also when
they are taken to another. They are blessed in God in this world, in
that he guides them by his counsel. And when he takes them out of it,
they are still happy, in that then he receives them to glory. This
probably led him, in the text, to declare that he desired no other
portion, either in this world or in that to come, either in heaven or
upon earth. — Whence we learn, That it is the spirit of a truly godly
man, to prefer God before all other things, either in heaven or on
earth.
I. A godly man prefers God before anything else in heaven.
First, he prefers God before anything else that actually is in heaven.
Every godly man hath his heart in heaven; his affections are mainly set
on what is to be had there. Heaven is his chosen country and
inheritance. He hath respect to heaven, as a traveler, who is in a
distant land, hath to his own country. The traveler can content himself
to be in a strange land for a while, but his own native land is
preferred by him to all others: Heb. 11:13, etc. “These all died in
faith, not having received the promises, but were persuaded of them, and
embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on
the earth. For they that say such things, declare plainly that they seek
a country. And truly if they had been mindful of that country from
whence they came out, they might have had opportunity to have returned.
But now they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly.” — The
respect which a godly person hath to heaven may be compared to the
respect which a child, when he is abroad, hath to his father’s house. He
can be contented abroad for a little while; but the place to which he
desires to return, and in which to dwell, is his own home. Heaven is the
true saint’s Father’s house: John 14:2, “In my Father’s house are many
mansions.” John 20:17, “I ascend to my Father and your Father.”
Now, the main reason why the godly man hath his heart thus to heaven is
because God is there; that is the palace of the Most High. It is the
place where God is gloriously present, where his love is gloriously
manifested, where the godly may be with him, see him as he is, and love,
serve, praise, and enjoy him perfectly. If God and Christ were not in
heaven, he would not be so earnest in seeking it, nor would he take so
much pains in a laborious travel through this wilderness, nor would the
consideration that he is going to heaven when he dies, be such a comfort
to him under toils and afflictions. The martyrs would not undergo cruel
sufferings, from their persecutors, with a cheerful prospect of going to
heaven, did they not expect to be with Christ, and to enjoy God there.
They would not with that cheerfulness forsake all their earthly
possessions, and all their earthly friends, as many thousands of them
have done, and wander about in poverty and banishment, being destitute,
afflicted, tormented, in hopes of exchanging their earthly for a
heavenly inheritance, were it not that they hope to be with their
glorious Redeemer and heavenly Father. — The believer’s heart is in
heaven, because his treasure is there.
Second, a godly man prefers God before anything else that might be in
heaven. Not only is there nothing actually in heaven, which is in his
esteem equal with God; but neither is there any of which he can conceive
as possible to be there, which by him is esteemed and desired equally
with God. Some suppose quite different enjoyments to be in heaven, from
those which the Scriptures teach us. The Mahometans, for instance,
suppose that in heaven are to be enjoyed all manner of sensual delights
and pleasures. Many things which Mahomet has feigned are to the lusts
and carnal appetites of men the most agreeable that he could devise, and
with them he flattered his followers. — But the true saint could not
contrive one more agreeable to his inclination and desires, than such as
is revealed in the Word of God; a heaven of enjoying the glorious God,
and the Lord Jesus Christ. There he shall have all sin taken away, and
shall be perfectly conformed to God, and shall spend an eternity in
exalted exercises of love to him, and in the enjoyment of his love. If
God were not to be enjoyed in heaven, but only vast wealth, immense
treasures of silver, and gold, great honor of such kind as men obtain in
this world, and a fullness of the greatest sensual delights and
pleasures; all these things would not make up for the want of God and
Christ, and the enjoyment of them there. If it were empty of God, it
would indeed be an empty melancholy place. — The godly have been made
sensible, as to all creature-enjoyments, that they cannot satisfy the
soul; and therefore nothing will content them but God. Offer a saint
what you will, [but] if you deny him God, he will esteem himself
miserable. God is the center of his desires; and as long as you keep his
soul from its proper center, it will not be at rest.
II. It is the temper of a godly man to prefer God before all other
things on the earth.
First, the saint prefers that enjoyment of God, for which he hopes
hereafter, to anything in this world. He looketh not so much at the
things which are seen and temporal, as at those which are unseen and
eternal, 2 Cor. 4:18. It is but a little of God that the saint enjoys in
this world. He hath but a little acquaintance with God, and enjoys but a
little of the manifestations of the divine glory and love. But God hath
promised to give him Himself hereafter in a full enjoyment. And these
promises are more precious to the saint, than the most precious earthly
jewels. The gospel contains greater treasures, in his esteem, than the
cabinets of princes, or the mines of the Indies.
Second, the saints prefer what of God may be obtained in this life
before all things in the world. There is a great difference in the
present spiritual attainments of the saints. Some attain to much greater
acquaintance and communion with God, and conformity to him, than others.
But the highest attainments are very small in comparison with what is
future. The saints are capable of making progress in spiritual
attainments, and they earnestly desire such further attainments. Not
contented with those degrees to which they have already attained, they
hunger and thirst after righteousness, and, as newborn babes, desire the
sincere milk of the word, that they may grow thereby. It is their
desire, to know more of God, to have more of his image, and to be
enabled more to imitate God and Christ in their walk and conversation.
Psa. 27:4, “One thing have I desired of the Lord, that will I seek
after, that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my
life, to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire in his temple.”
Psa. 42:1, 2, “As the hart panteth after the water-brooks, so panteth my
soul after thee, O God. My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God:
when shall I come and appear before God?” Psa. 63:1, 2, “O God, thou art
my God, early will I seek thee: my soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh
longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land, where no water is; to see
thy power and thy glory, so as I have seen thee in the sanctuary.” See
also Psa. 84:1, 2, 3 and Psa. 130:6, “My soul waiteth for the Lord, more
than they that watch for the morning; I say, more than they that watch
for the morning.”
Though every saint has not this longing desire after God to the same
degree that the psalmist had, yet they are all of the same spirit. They
earnestly desire to have more of his presence in their hearts. That this
is the temper of the godly in general, and not of some particular saints
only, appears from Isa. 26:8, 9, where not any particular saint, but the
church in general speaks thus: “Yea, in the way of thy judgments, O
Lord, have we waited for thee; the desire of our soul is to thy name,
and to the remembrance of thee. With my soul have I desired thee in the
night, and with my spirit within me will I seek thee early.” See also
Song 3:1, 2, 6, 8.
The saints are not always in the lively exercise of grace, but such a
spirit they have, and sometimes they have the sensible exercise of it.
They desire God and divine attainments, more than all earthly things;
and seek to be rich in grace, more than they do to get earthly riches.
They desire the honor which is of God, more than that which is of men,
John 5:44, and communion with him, more than any earthly pleasures. They
are of the same spirit which the apostle expresses, Phil. 3:8, “Yea,
doubtless, and I count all things but loss, for the excellency of the
knowledge of Christ Jesus, my Lord, and do count them but dung that I
may win Christ.”
Third, the saint prefers what he hath already of God before anything in
this world. That which was infused into his heart at his conversion, it
more precious to him than anything which the world can afford. The views
which are sometimes given him of the beauty and excellency of God, are
more precious to him than all the treasures of the wicked. The relation
of a child in which he stands to God, the union which there is between
his soul and Jesus Christ, he values more than the greatest earthly
dignity. That image of God which is enstamped on his soul, he values
more than any earthly ornaments. It is, in his esteem, better to be
adorned with the graces of God’s Holy Spirit, than to be made to shine
in jewels of gold, and the most costly pearls, or to be admired for the
greatest external beauty. He values the robe of Christ’s righteousness,
which he hath on his soul, more than the robes of princes. The spiritual
pleasures and delights which he sometimes has in God, he prefers far
before all the pleasures of sin. Psa. 84:10, “A day in thy courts is
better than a thousand: I had rather be a doorkeeper in the house of
God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness.”
A saint thus prefers God before all other things in this world — 1. As
he prefers God before anything else that he possesses in the world.
Whatever temporal enjoyments he has, he prefers God to them all. Psa.
16:5, 6, “The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance, and of my cup:
thou maintainest my lot. The lines are fallen to me in pleasant places;
yea, I have a goodly heritage.” If he be rich, he chiefly sets his heart
on his heavenly riches. He prefers God before any earthly friend, and
the divine favor before any respect shown him by his fellow-creatures.
Although inadvertently, these have room in his heart, and too much room;
yet he reserves the throne for God; Luke 14:26, “If man come to me, and
hate not his father and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren,
and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple.”
2. He prefers God before any earthly enjoyment of which he hath a
prospect. The children of men commonly set their hearts more on some
earthly happiness for which they hope, and after which they are seeking,
than on what they have in present possession. But a godly man prefers
God to anything which he has in prospect in this world. He may, indeed,
through the prevalence of corruption, be for a season carried away with
some enjoyment. However, he will again come to himself. This is not the
temper of the man; he is of another spirit.
3. It is the spirit of a godly man to prefer God to any earthly
enjoyments of which he can conceive. He not only prefers him to anything
which he now possesses, but he sees nothing possessed by any of his
fellow-creatures, so estimable. Could he have as much worldly prosperity
as he would, could he have earthly things just to his mind, and
agreeable to his inclination; he values the portion which he has in God,
incomparably more. He prefers Christ to earthly kingdoms.
APPLICATION
First, hence we may learn, that whatever changes a godly man passes
through, he is happy; because God, who is unchangeable, is his chosen
portion. Though he meet with temporal losses, and be deprived of many,
yea, of all his temporal enjoyments; yet God, whom he prefers before
all, still remains, and cannot be lost. While he stays in this
changeable, troublesome world, he is happy; because his chosen portion,
on which he builds as his main foundation for happiness, is above the
world, and above all changes. And when he goes into another world, still
he is happy, because that portion yet remains. Whatever he be deprived
of, he cannot be deprived of his chief portion; his inheritance remains
sure to him. — Could worldly-minded men find out a way to secure to
themselves those earthly enjoyments on which they mainly set their
hearts, so that they could not be lost nor impaired while they live, how
great would they account the privilege, though other things which they
esteem in a less degree, were liable to the same uncertainty as they now
are! Whereas now, those earthly enjoyments, on which men chiefly set
their hearts, are often most fading. But how great is the happiness of
those who have chosen the Fountain of all good, who prefer him before
all things in heaven or on earth, and who can never be deprived of him
to all eternity!
Second, let all by these things examine and try themselves, whether they
be saints or not. As this which hath been exhibited is the spirit of the
saints, so it is peculiar to them. None can use the language of the
text, and say, Whom have I in heaven but thee? there is none upon earth
that I desire besides thee, but the saints. A man’s choice is that which
determines his state. He that chooses God for his portion, and prefers
him to all other things, is a godly man, for he chooses and worships him
as God. To respect him as God, is to respect him above all other things.
And if any man respect Him as his God, his God he is. There is an union
and covenant relation between that man and the true God. — Every man is
as his God is. If you would know what a man is, whether he be a godly
man or not, you must inquire what his God is. If the true God be he to
whom he hath a supreme respect, whom he regards above all; he is
doubtless a servant of the true God. But if the man have something else
to which he pays a greater respect than to Jehovah, he is not a godly
man.
Inquire, therefore, how it is with you, — whether you prefer God before
all other things. It may sometimes be a difficulty for persons to
determine this to their satisfaction. The ungodly may be deluded with
false affections; the godly in dull frames may be at a loss about it.
Therefore you may try yourselves, as to this matter, several ways; if
you cannot speak fully to one thing, yet you may perhaps to others.
1. What is it which chiefly makes you desire to go to heaven when you
die? Indeed some have no great desire to go to heaven. They do not care
to go to hell; but if they could be safe from that, they would not much
concern themselves about heaven. If it be not so with you, but you find
that you have a desire after heaven, then inquire what it is for. Is the
main reason, that you may be with God, have communion with him, and be
conformed to him? that you may see God, and enjoy him there? Is this the
consideration which keeps your hearts, and your desires, and your
expectations towards heaven?
2. If you could avoid death, and might have your free choice, would you
choose to live always in this world, without God, rather than in his
time to leave the world, in order to be with him? If you might live here
in earthly prosperity to all eternity, but destitute of the presence of
God and communion with him — having no spiritual intercourse between him
and your souls, God and you being strangers to each other for ever —
would you choose this rather than to leave the world, in order to dwell
in heaven, as the children of God, there to enjoy the glorious
privileges of children, in holy and perfect love to God, and enjoyment
of him to all eternity?
3. Do you prefer Christ to all others as the way to heaven? He who truly
chooses God, prefers him in each person of the Trinity, Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost: the Father, as his Father; the Son as his Savior; the Holy
Ghost, as his Sanctifier. Inquire, therefore, not only whether you
choose the enjoyment of God in heaven as your highest portion and
happiness, but also whether you choose Jesus Christ before all others,
as your way to heaven. And that in a sense of the excellency of Christ,
and of the way of salvation by him, as being that which is to the glory
of Christ, and of sovereign grace. Is the way of free grace, by the
blood and righteousness of the blessed and glorious Redeemer, the most
excellent way to life in your esteem? Doth it add a value to the
heavenly inheritance, that it is conferred in this way? Is this far
better to you than to be saved by your own righteousness, by any of your
own performances, or by any other mediator?
4. If you might go to heaven in what course you please, would you prefer
to all others the way of a strict walk with God? They who prefer God as
hath been represented, choose him, not only in the end, but in the way.
They had rather be with God than with any other, not only when they come
to the end of their journey, but also while they are in their
pilgrimage. They choose the way of walking with God, though it be a way
of labor, and care, and self-denial, rather than a way of sin, though it
be a way of sloth, and of gratifying their lusts.
5. Were you to spend your eternity in this world, would you choose
rather to live in mean and low circumstances with the gracious presence
of God, than to live for ever in earthly prosperity without him? Would
you rather spend it in holy living, and serving and walking with God,
and in the enjoyment of the privileges of his children? God often
manifesting himself to you as your Father, discovering to you his glory,
and manifesting his love, lifting the light of his countenance upon you!
Would you rather choose these things, though in poverty, than to abound
in worldly things, and to live in ease and prosperity, at the same time
being an alien from the common wealth of Israel? Could you be content to
stand in no child-like relation to God, enjoying no gracious intercourse
with him, having no right to be acknowledged by him as his children? Or
would such a life as this, though in ever so great earthly prosperity,
be esteemed by you a miserable life?
If, after all, there remain with you doubts, and a difficulty to
determine concerning yourselves whether you do truly and sincerely
prefer God to all other things, I would mention two things which are the
surest ways to be determined in this matter, and which seem to be the
best grounds of satisfaction in it.
(1) The feeling of some particular, strong, and lively exercise of such
a spirit. A person may have such a spirit as is spoken of in the
doctrine, and may have the exercise of it in a low degree, and yet
remain in doubt whether he have it or not, and be unable to come to a
satisfying determination. But God is pleased sometimes to give such
discoveries of his glory, and of the excellency of Christ, as do so draw
forth the heart, that they know beyond all doubt, that they feel such a
spirit as Paul spoke of, when he said, “he counted all things but loss
for the excellency of Christ Jesus his Lord;” and they can boldly say,
as in the text, “Whom have I in heaven but thee? and there is none upon
earth that I desire besides thee.” At such times the people of God do
not need any help of ministers to satisfy them whether they have the
true love of God. They plainly see and feel it; and the Spirit of God
then witnesseth with their spirits, that they are the children of God. —
Therefore, if you would be satisfied upon this point, earnestly seek
such attainments; seek that you may have such clear and lively exercises
of this spirit. To this end, you must labor to grow in grace. Though you
have had such experiences in times past, and they satisfied you then,
yet you may again doubt. You should therefore seek that you may have
them more frequently; and the way to that is, earnestly to press
forward, that you may have more acquaintance with God, and have the
principles of grace strengthened. This is the way to have the exercises
of grace stronger, more lively, and more frequent, and so to be
satisfied that you have a spirit of supreme love to God.
(2) The other way is to inquire whether you prefer God to all other
things in practice, i.e. when you have occasion to manifest by your
practice which you prefer — when you must either cleave to one or the
other, and must either forsake other things, or forsake God — whether
then it be your manner practically to prefer God to all other things
whatever, even to those earthly things to which your hearts are most
wedded. Are your lives those of adherence to God, and of serving him in
this manner?
He who sincerely prefers God to all other things in his heart, will do
it in his practice. For when God and all other things come to stand in
competition, that is the proper trial what a man chooses; and the manner
of acting in such cases must certainly determine what the choice is in
all free agents, or those who act on choice. Therefore there is no sign
of sincerity so much insisted on in the Bible as this, that we deny
ourselves, sell all, forsake the world, take up the cross, and follow
Christ whithersoever he goeth. — Therefore, so run, not as uncertainly;
so fight, not as those that beat the air; but keep under your bodies,
and bring them into subjection. Act not as though you counted yourselves
to have apprehended; but this one thing do, “forgetting those things
which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before,
press toward the mark, for the prize of the high calling of God in
Christ Jesus.” 2 Pet. 1:5, etc. “And besides this, giving diligence, add
to your faith, virtue; and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge,
temperance; and to temperance, patience; and to patience, godliness; and
to godliness, brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, charity.
For if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall
neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus
Christ.”
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