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Men Naturally Are God’s Enemies
by Jonathan Edwards
Dated August, 1736.
Romans 5:10, "For if, when
we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son."
THE apostle, from the beginning of the epistle, to the beginning of this
chapter, had insisted on the doctrine of justification by faith alone.
In this chapter he goes on to consider the benefits that are consequent
on justification, viz. Peace with God, present happiness, and hope of
glory. Peace with God is mentioned in the first verse, “Therefore being
justified by faith, we have peace with God, through our Lord Jesus
Christ.” In the following verses he speaks of present blessedness, and
hope of glory, “By whom also we have access by faith into this grace,
wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God.” — And
concerning this benefit, the hope of glory, the apostle particularly
takes notice of two things, viz. the blessed nature of this hope, and
the sure ground of it.
I. He insists on the blessed nature of this hope, in that in enables us
to glory in tribulations. This excellent nature of true Christian hope
is described in the following words (verses 3-5), “And not only so, but
we glory in tribulations also, knowing that tribulation worketh
patience; and patience, experience; and experience, hope; and hope
maketh not ashamed, because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts
by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us.” As if he had said, through
hope of a blessed reward, that will abundantly more than make up for all
tribulation, we are enabled to bear tribulation with patience; patiently
bearing, and patiently waiting for the reward. And patience works
experience; for when we thus bear tribulation with patient waiting for
the reward, this brings experience of the earnest of the reward, viz.
the earnest of the Spirit, in our feeling the love of God shed abroad in
our hearts by the Holy Ghost. So that our hope does not make us ashamed:
it is not disappointed; for in the midst of our tribulation, we
experience those blessed incomes of the Spirit in our souls, that make
even a time of tribulation sweet to us; and is such an earnest
abundantly confirms our hope; and so experience works hope.
II. The apostle takes notice of the sure ground there is for this hope;
or the abundant evidence we have, that we shall obtain the glory hoped
for, in that peace we have with God, by our justification through
Christ’s blood. For while we were without strength, in due time Christ
died for us; even while we were ungodly and sinners, enemies to God and
Christ (See verses 6-10). The apostle’s argument is exceeding clear and
strong. If God has done already so great a thing for us, as to give us
Christ to die and shed his precious blood for us, which was vastly the
greatest thing, we need not doubt but that he will bestow life upon us.
It is but a small thing for God actually to bestow eternal life, after
it is purchased; to what it is for him to give his own Son to die, in
order to purchase it. The giving Christ to purchase it, was virtually
all. It included the whole grace of God in salvation. When Christ had
purchased salvation at such a dear rate, all the difficulty was got
through, all was virtually over and done. It is a small thing, in
comparison, for God to bestow salvation, after it has been thus
purchased at a full price. Sinners who are justified by the death of
Christ, are already virtually saved. The thing is, as it were, done.
What remains is no more than the necessary consequence of what is done.
Christ when he died made an end of sin. And when he rose from the dead,
he did virtually rise with the elect. He brought them up from death with
him, and ascended into heaven with them. And therefore, when this is
already done, and we are thus reconciled to God through the death of his
Son, we need not fear but that we shall be saved by his life. The love
of God appears much more in his giving his Son to die for sinners, that
in giving eternal life after Christ’s death.
The giving of Christ to die for us is here spoken of as a much greater
thing, than the actual bestowment of life; because this is all that has
any difficulty in it. — When God did this for us, he did it for us as
sinners and enemies. But in actually bestowing salvation on us after we
are justified, we are not looked upon as sinners, but as perfectly
righteous persons. He beholds no iniquity in us. We are no more enemies,
but reconciled. When God gave Christ to die for the elect, he looked on
them as they are in themselves; but in actually bestowing eternal life,
he looks on them as they are in Christ.
There are three epithets used in the text and context, as appertaining
to sinners as they are in themselves, verse 6-8.
They are without strength, they cannot help themselves. — They are
ungodly or sinners, — and they are enemies. As in the text. — NATURAL
MEN ARE GOD’S ENEMIES.
God, though the Creator of all things, yet has some enemies in the
world. — Men in general will own that they are sinners. There are few,
if any, whose consciences are so blinded as not to be sensible [that]
they have been guilty of sin. And most sinners will own that they have
bad hearts. They will own that they do not love God so much as they
should do; that they are not so thankful as they ought to be for
mercies; and that in many things they fail. And yet few of them are
sensible that they are God’s enemies. They do not see how they can be
truly so called; for they are not sensible that they wish God any hurt,
or endeavor to do him any.
But we see that the Scripture speaks of them as enemies to God. So in
our text, and elsewhere, “And you that were sometime alienated, and
enemies in your minds by wicked works,” Col. 1:21. “The carnal mind is
enmity against God,” Rom. 8:7. — And that all natural or unregenerate
men are indeed such, is what I shall endeavor now particularly to show.
Which I propose to do in the following method. Particularly — In what
respects they are enemies to God — To how great a degree they are
enemies — And why they are enemies. Then I shall answer some objections.
SECTION I
In what respects natural men are God’s enemies.
1. THEIR enmity appears in their judgments, their natural relish, their
wills, affections, and practice. They have a very mean esteem of God.
Men are ready to entertain a good esteem of those with whom they are
friends. They are apt to think highly of their qualities, to give them
their due praises; and if there be defects, to cover them. But of those
to whom they are enemies, they are disposed to have mean thoughts. They
are apt to entertain a dishonorable opinion of them. They will be ready
to look contemptibly upon anything that is praiseworthy in them.
So it is with natural men towards God. They entertain very low and
contemptible thoughts of God. Whatever honor and respect they may
pretend, and make a show of towards God, if their practice be examined,
it will show, that they certainly look upon him as a Being that is but
little to be regarded. The language of their hearts is, “Who is the
Lord, that I should obey his voice?” Exo. 5:2. “What is the Almighty,
that we should serve him? and what profit should we have if we pray unto
him?” Job 21:15. They count him worthy neither to be loved nor feared.
They dare not behave with that slight and disregard towards one of their
fellow-creatures, when a little raised above them in power and
authority, as they dare, and do, towards God. They value one of their
equals much more than God, and are ten times more afraid of offending
such, than of displeasing the God that made them. They cast such
exceeding contempt on God, as to prefer every vile lust before him. And
every worldly enjoyment is set higher in their esteem than God. A morsel
of meat, or a few pence of worldly gain, is preferred before him. God is
set last and lowest in the esteem of natural men.
2. They are enemies in the natural relish of their souls. They have an
inbred distaste and disrelish of God’s perfections. God is not such a
being as they would have. Though they are ignorant of God; yet from what
they hear they of him, and from what is manifest by the light of nature,
they do not like him. By his being endowed with such attributes as he
is, they have an aversion to him. They hear God is an infinitely holy,
pure, and righteous Being, and they do not like him upon this account;
they have no relish of such qualifications. They take no delight in
contemplating them. It would be a mere task, a bondage to a natural man,
to be obliged to set himself to contemplate those attributes of God.
They see no manner of beauty or loveliness, nor taste any sweetness, in
them. And on account of their distaste of these perfections, they
dislike all his other attributes. They have greater aversion to him
because he is omniscient and knows all things; and because his
omniscience is a holy omniscience. They are not pleased that he is
omnipotent, and can do whatever he pleases; because it is a holy
omnipotence. They are enemies even to his mercy, because it is a holy
mercy. They do not like his immutability, because by this he never will
be otherwise than he is, an infinitely holy God.
It is from this disrelish that natural men have of the attributes of
God, that they do not love to have much to do with God. The natural
tendency of the heart of man is to fly from God, and keep at a distance
from him, as far off as possible. — A natural man is averse to communion
with God, and is naturally disinclined to those exercises of religion,
wherein he has immediately to do with him. It is said of wicked men, Psa.
10:4, “God is not in all their thoughts.” It is evident, that the mind
of man is naturally averse to thinking about God. And hence if any
thoughts of him be suggested to the mind, they soon go away. Such
thoughts are not apt to rest in the minds of natural men. If anything is
said to them of God, they are apt to forget it. It is like seed that
falls upon the hard path, the fowls of the air soon take it away: or
like seed that falls upon a rock. Other things will stick; but divine
things rebound. And if they were cast into the mind, they meet with that
there which soon thrusts them out again. They meet with no suitable
entertainment, but are soon chased away.
Hence also it is, that natural men are with difficulty persuaded to be
constant in the duty of secret prayer. They would not be so averse to
spending a quarter of an hour, night and morning, in some bodily labor;
but it is because they are averse to a work, wherein they have so
immediately to do with God; and they naturally love to keep at a
distance from him.
3. Their wills are contrary to his will. God’s will and theirs are
exceeding cross the one to the other. God wills those things that they
hate, and are most averse to; and they will those things that God hates.
Hence they oppose God in their wills. There is a dreadful, violent, and
obstinate opposition, of the will of natural men to the will of God.
They are very opposite to the commands of God. It is from the enmity of
the will (Rom. 8:7), that “the carnal mind is not subject to the law of
God, neither indeed can be.” Hence natural men are enemies to God’s
government. They are not loyal subjects, but enemies to God, considered
as Lord of the world. They are entire enemies to God’s authority.
4. They are enemies to God in their affections. There is in every
natural man a seed of malice against God. And it often dreadfully breaks
forth. Though it may in great measure lie hid in secure times, when God
lets men alone, and they meet with no great disturbance of body or mind;
yet, if God does but touch men in their consciences, by manifesting to
them a little of his wrath for their sins, this oftentimes brings out
the principle of malice against him. This is exercised in dreadful
heart-risings, inward wranglings and quarrelings, and blasphemous
thoughts; wherein the heart is like a viper, hissing and spitting poison
at God. And however free from it the heart may seem to be, when let
alone and secure, yet a very little thing will set it in a rage.
Temptations will show what is in the heart. The alteration of a man’s
circumstances will often discover the heart. Pharaoh had no more natural
enmity against God than other men; and if other natural men had been in
Pharaoh’s circumstances, the same corruptions would have put forth
themselves in as dreadful a manner. The scribes and Pharisees had
naturally no more malice in their hearts against Christ than other men,
and other natural men would, in their case, and having as little
restraint, exercise as much malice against Christ as they did. When
wicked men come to be cast into hell, then their malice against God will
appear. Then their hearts will appear as full of malice, as hell is full
of fire. But when wicked men come to be in hell, there will be no new
corruptions put into their heart; but only old ones will then break
forth without restraint. That is all the difference between a wicked man
on earth, and a wicked man in hell, that in hell there will be more to
stir up the exercise of corruption, and less to restrain it, than on
earth. But there will be no new corruption put in. A wicked man will
have no principle of corruption in hell, but what he carried to hell
with him. There are now the seeds of all the malice that will be
exercised then. The malice of damned spirits is but a branch of the root
that is in the hearts of natural men now. A natural man has a heart like
the heart of a devil; only corruption is more under restraint in man
than in devils.
5. They are enemies in their practice. They walk contrary to him. In
their enmity against God, they are exceeding active. They are engaged in
war against God. Indeed they cannot injure God [for] he is so much above
them; but yet they do what they can. They oppose themselves to his honor
and glory. They oppose themselves to the interest of his kingdom in the
world. They oppose themselves to the will and command of God. And [they]
oppose him in his government. They oppose God in his works, and in his
declared designs; while he is doing one work, they are doing the
contrary. God seeks one thing, and they seek directly the contrary. They
list under Satan’s banner, and are his willing soldiers in opposing the
kingdom of God.
SECTION II
The degree of men’s natural enmity to God.
I NOW proceed to say something with respect to the degree of this
enmity: tending in some measure to show, how great enemies to God are
natural men.
1. They have no love to God; their enmity is mere enmity without any
mixture of love. A natural man is wholly destitute of any principle of
love to God, and therefore never had the least exercise of this love.
Some natural men have better tempers than others; and some are better
educated than others; and some live a great deal more soberly than
others. But one has no more love to God than another; for none have the
least spark of that. The heart of a natural man is as destitute of love
to God, as a dead, stiff, cold corpse is of vital heat. John 5:42, “I
know you, that ye have not the love of God in you.”
2. Every faculty and principle of action is wholly under the dominion of
enmity against God. The nature of man is wholly infected with this
enmity against God. He is tainted with it throughout, in all his
faculties and principles. And not only so, but every faculty is entirely
and perfectly subdued under it, and enslaved to it. This enmity against
God, has the absolute possession of the man. The apostle Paul, speaking
of what he was naturally, says, Rom. 7:14, “I am carnal, sold under
sin.”
The understanding is under the reigning power of this enmity against
God, so that it is entirely darkened and blinded with regard to the
glory and excellency of God. The will is wholly under the reigning power
of it. All the affections are governed by enmity against God. There is
not one affection, nor one desire, that a natural man has, or that he is
ever stirred up to act from, but what contains in it enmity against God.
A natural man is as full of enmity against God, as any viper, or any
venomous beast, is full of poison.
3. The power of the enmity of natural men against God, is so great, that
it is insuperable by any finite power. It has too great and strong a
possession of the heart, to be overcome by any created power. Indeed, a
natural man never sincerely strives to root out his enmity against God.
His endeavors are hypocritical. He delights in his enmity, and chooses
it. Neither can others do it, though they sincerely, and to their
utmost, endeavor to overcome this enmity. If godly friends and neighbors
labor to persuade them to cast away their enmity, and become friends to
God, they cannot persuade them to it. Though ministers use never so many
arguments and entreaties, and set forth the loveliness of God; tell them
of the goodness of God to them, hold forth God’s own gracious
invitations, and entreat them never so earnestly to cast off their
opposition, and be reconciled; yet they cannot overcome it. Still they
will be as bad enemies to God, as ever they were. — The tongue of men or
of angels cannot persuade them to relinquish their opposition to God.
Miracles will not do it. — How many miracles did the children of Israel
see in the wilderness! Yet their enmity against God remained; as
appeared by their often murmuring. And how often did Christ use miracles
to this end without effect, but the Jews obstinately stood out. Mat.
23:37, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and
stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered
thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her
wings, and ye would not.” And how great did the enmity of these people
appear to be after all; how spiteful and venomous were their hearts
towards Christ, as appears by their cruel treatment of him, in his last
sufferings!
4.. They are mortal enemies to God; i.e. they have that enmity in their
hearts, that strikes at the life of God. A man maybe no friend to
another, and may have an ill spirit towards him; and yet not be his
mortal enemy. His enmity will be satisfied with something short of the
death of the person. But it is not so with natural men, with respect to
God. They are mortal enemies. Their imbecility is no argument that this
is not the tendency of the principle.
Natural men are enemies to the dominion of God; and their nature shows
their good-will to dethrone him if they could! Yea, they are enemies to
the being of God, and would be glad if there was no God. And therefore
it necessarily follows, that they would cause that there should be none,
if they could. Psa. 14:1, “The fool hath said in his heart, There is no
God.” This implies, not only an aptness to question the being of God;
but, that he inclines it should be so. His heart says, i.e. his
inclination says. The words in the original are, “The fool hath said in
his heart, No God.” That is, I would have none, I do not desire any, I
wish there was none; that would suit my inclination best. Let the world
be emptied of a God, he stands in my way. And hence he is an atheist in
his heart.
The viper’s poison is deadly poison; and when he bites he seeks the
precious life. And men are in this respect a generation of vipers. Their
poison, which is enmity against God, seeks the life of God. Mat. 3:7, “O
generation of vipers.” Psa. 58:3-4, “The wicked are estranged from the
womb — Their poison is like the poison of a serpent.” Deu. 32:32-33,
“For their vine is the vine of Sodom, and of the fields of Gomorrah:
their grapes are the grapes of gall, their clusters are bitter. Their
vine is the poison of dragons, and the cruel venom of asps.” The divine
nature being immortal, and infinitely out of our reach, there is no
other trial possible, whether the enmity that is naturally in the heart
against God, be mortal or no, but only for God to take on him the human
nature, and become man; so as to come within man’s reach. There can be
no other experiment. And what has been the event? Why, when once God
became man, and came down to dwell here, among such vipers as fallen
men, they hated and persecuted him; and never desisted till they had
imbrued their hands in his blood. There was a multitude of them that
appeared combined in this design. Nothing would do, but he must be put
to death. All cry out, Crucify him, crucify him. Away with him. They had
rather Barabbas who greatly deserved death, should live, than he should
not die. Nothing would restrain them from it; even all his preaching,
and all his miracles. But they would kill him. And it was not the
ordinary kind of execution that would satisfy them; but it must be the
most cruel and most ignominious they possibly could invent. And they
aggravated it as much as they could, by mocking him, and spitting on
him, and scourging him. This shows what the nature and tendency of man’s
enmity against God is; here it appeared in its true colors.
5. Natural men are greater enemies to God than they are to any other
being whatsoever. Natural men may be very great enemies to their
fellow-creatures; but not so great as they are to God. There is no other
being that so much stands in sinners’ way, in those things that they
chiefly set their hearts upon, as God. Men are wont to hate their
enemies in proportion to two things, viz. their opposition to what they
look upon to be their interest, — and their power and ability. A great
and powerful enemy will be more hated, than one who is weak and
impotent. But none is so powerful as God.
Man’s enmity to others may be got over. Time may wear it out, and they
may be reconciled. But natural men, without a mighty work of God to
change their hearts, will never get over their enmity against God. They
are greater enemies to God than they are to the devil. Yea, they treat
the devil as their friend and master, and join with him against God.
John 8:44, “Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your
father ye will do: he was a murderer from the beginning.”
SECTION III
On what account men are enemies to God.
THE general reason is, that God is opposite to them in the worship of
their idols. The apostasy of man summarily consists in departing from
the true God, to idols; forsaking his Creator, and setting up other
things in his room. When God at first created man, he was united to his
Creator; the God that made him was his God. The true God was the object
of his highest respect, and had the possession of his heart. Love to God
was the principle in his heart, that rules over all other principles;
and every thing in the soul was wholly in subjection to it. But when man
fell, he departed from the true God, and the union that was between his
heart and his Creator was broken. He wholly lost his principle of love
to God. And henceforward man clave to other gods. He gave that respect
to the creature, which is due to the Creator. — When God ceased to be
the object of his supreme love and respect, other things of course
became the objects of it.
Man will necessarily have something that he respects as his god. If man
[does] not give his highest respect to the God that made him, there will
be something else that has the possession of it. Men will either worship
the true God, or some idol. It is impossible it should be otherwise.
Something will have the heart of man. And that which a man gives his
heart to, may be called his god. And therefore when man by the fall
extinguished all love to the true God, he set up the creature in his
room. For having lost his esteem and love of the true God, and set up
other gods in his room, and in opposition to him; and God still
demanding their worship, and opposing them; enmity necessarily follows.
That which a man chooses for his god, he sets his heart mainly upon. And
nothing will so soon excite enmity, as opposition in that which is
dearest. A man will be the greatest enemy to him who opposes him in what
he chooses for his god. He will look on none as standing so much in his
way, as he that would deprive him of his god. Jdg. 18:24, “Ye have taken
away my gods; and what have I more?” A man, in this respect, cannot
serve two masters that stand in competition for his service. And not
only, if he serves one, he cannot serve the other; but if he cleaves to
one, he will necessarily hate the other. Mat. 6:24, “No man can serve
two masters; for either he will hate the one, and love the other, or
else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God
and mammon.” And this is the very reason that men hate God. In this case
it is, as when two kings set up in one kingdom, in opposition one to the
other; and they both challenge the same throne, and are competitors for
the same crown. They who are loyal, hearty subjects to the one, will
necessarily be enemies to the other. As that which is a man’s god, is
the object of his highest love; so that God who chiefly opposes him in
it, must be the object of his greatest hatred.
The gods which a natural man worships, instead of the God that made him,
are himself and the world. He has withdrawn his esteem and honor from
God, and proudly exalts himself. As Satan was not willing to be in
subjection; and therefore rebelled, and set up himself; so a natural
man, in the proud and high thoughts he has of himself, sets up himself
upon God’s throne. He gives his heart to the world, worldly riches,
worldly pleasures, and worldly honors. They have the possession of that
regard which is due to God. The apostle sums up all the idolatry of
wicked men in their love of the world. 1 John 2:15-16, “Love not the
world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the
world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the
world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of
life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.” And the apostle James
observes ,that a man must necessarily be the enemy of the true God, if
he be a friend of the world. “Whosoever therefore will be a friend of
the world, is the enemy of God,” Jam. 4:4.
All the sin that men commit, is what they do in the service of their
idols. There is no one act of sin, but what is an act of service to some
false god. And therefore wherein soever God opposes sin in them, he is
opposite to their worship of their idols. On which account they are his
enemies. God opposes them in their service of their idols, in the
following respects:
1. He manifests his utter abhorrence of their attachment to their idols.
Their idols are what they love above all things: they would by no means
part with them. This wickedness is sweet unto them. Job 20:12. If you
take them away, what have they more? If they lose their idols, they lose
their all. — To rend away their idols from them, would be more grievous
to them, than to rend body and soul asunder. It is like rending their
heart in twain. They love their idolatry. But God does not approve of
it, but exceedingly hates it. He will by no means be reconciled to it;
and therefore they hate him. God declares an infinite hatred of every
act they do, in the service of their false gods. He declares himself to
be a holy and a jealous God; a God who is very jealous of his own honor;
and that greatly abhors giving that honor to another.
2. He utterly forbids their cleaving to those idols, and all the service
that they do to them. He not only shows that he dislikes it, but he
utterly forbids it; and demands that they should worship him; serve him
only, and give their hearts wholly to him: without tolerating any
competitor. He allows them to serve their idols in no degree; but
requires them to cast them away utterly and pay no more worship to them,
at any time. He requires a final parting with their idols. Not only that
they should refrain from them for a while, but cast them away forever;
and never gratify their idolatrous respect to them any more. This is so
exceeding contrary to them, and what they are so averse to, that they
are enemies to God for it. They cannot endure God’s commands, because
they forbid all that in which their hearts are so engaged. And as they
hate God’s commands, so they hate Him whose commands they are.
3. He threatens them with everlasting damnation for their service of
their idols. He threatens them for their past idolatry. He threatens
them with his eternal wrath, for their having departed from him, and
their having chosen to themselves other gods. He threatens them for that
disposition they have in their hearts to cleave to other gods. He
threatens the least degrees of that respect which they have in their
hearts to their idols. He manifests that he will not tolerate any regard
to them, but has fixed eternal death, as the wages of every degree of
it. And he will not release them from their guilt; he holds them to
their obligations; and he will accept of no atonement that they can
make. He will not forgive them for whatever they do in religion;
whatever pains they take; whatever tears they shed. He will accept of no
money or price that they have to offer.
And he threatens every future act of their idolatry. He not only forbids
them ever to be guilty of the least act, but forbids them on pain of
eternal damnation. So strictly does God prohibit them from the service
of their beloved idols! He threatens them with everlasting wrath for all
exercises of inordinate love of worldly profit; for all manifestations
of inordinate regard to worldly pleasures, or worldly honors. He
threatens them with everlasting torments for their self-exaltations. He
requires them to deny and renounce themselves, and to abase themselves
at his feet, on pain of bearing his wrath to all eternity.
The strictness of God’s law is a principal cause of man’s enmity against
God. If God were one that did not so much hate sin; if he would allow
them in the gratification of their lusts in some degree, and his
threatenings were not so awful against all criminal indulgence; if his
threatenings were not so absolute; if his displeasure could be appeased
by a few tears, a little reformation, or the like; they would not be so
great enemies, nor hate him so much as they do. But God shows himself to
be an implacable enemy to their idols, and has threatened everlasting
wrath, infinite calamity, for all that they do in the service of their
lusts. And this makes them irreconcilable enemies to him.
For this reason, the scribes and Pharisees were such bitter enemies to
Christ; because he showed himself to be such an enemy to their pride,
conceit of their own wisdom, self-righteousness, and inordinate
affectation of their own honor, which was their god. Natural men are
enemies to God, because he is so opposite to them, in that in which they
place their all. If you go to take away that which is very dear to a
man, nothing will provoke him more. God is infinitely opposite to that
in which natural men place all their delight, and all their happiness.
He is an enemy to that which natural men value as their greatest honor
and highest dignity; and to which they wholly trust; viz. their own
righteousness.
Hence natural men are greater enemies to God than they are to any other
being. Some of their fellow-creatures may stand very much in their way,
with regard to some things on which they set their hearts; but God
opposes them with respect to ALL their idols, and his opposition to them
is infinitely great. None of our fellow-creatures ever oppose us in any
of our interests so much as God opposes wicked men in their idolatry.
His infinite opposition is manifested by his threatening an infinite
punishment, viz. his dreadful wrath to all eternity, misery without end.
Hence we need not wonder that natural men are enemies to God.
SECTION IV
The objection, that men are not conscious of this enmity, answered.
NATURAL men do not generally conceive themselves to be so bad; they have
not this notion of themselves, that they are enemies to God. And
therefore when they hear such doctrine as this taught them, they stand
ready to make objections. Some may be ready to say, “I do not know, I am
not sensible, that I hate God, and have a mortal enmity against him. I
feel no such thing in my self, and if I have such enmity, why do not I
feel it? If I am a mortal enemy, why should not I know it better than
any body else? How can others see what is in my heart better than I
myself? If I hate one of my fellow-creatures, I can feel it inwardly
working.” To such an objection I would answer,
1. If you do but observe yourself, and search your own heart, unless you
are strangely blinded, you may be sensible of those things, wherein
enmity does fundamentally consist. Particularly, you may be sensible
that you have at least had a low and contemptible estimation of God. And
that, in your esteem, you set the trifles and vanities of this world far
above him; so as to regard the enjoyment of these things far before the
enjoyment of God, and to value these things better than his love. — And
you may be sensible that you despise the authority of God, and value his
commands and his honor but very little. Or if by some means you have
blinded yourself, so as to think you do regard them now, doubtless you
can look back and see that you have not regarded them. You may be
sensible that you have had a disrelish and aversion towards God; an
opposition to thinking of him; so that it would have been a very
uncomfortable task to have been confined to that exercise for any time.
The vanities of the world, at the same time, have been very pleasing to
you; and you have been all swallowed up by them, while you have been
averse to the things of religion. If you look into your heart, it is
there plain to be seen, that there is an enmity in your will, that it is
contrary to God’s will, for you have been opposing the will of God all
your life long. — These things are plain; it is nothing but some great
delusion that can hide them from you. These are the foundation of all
enmity. And if these things be in you, all the rest that we have spoken
of will follow of course.
2. One reason why you have not more sensibly felt the exercises of
malice against God, is that your enmity is now exercised partly in your
unbelief of God’s being; and this prevents its appearing in other ways.
Man has naturally a principle of atheism in him; an indisposition to
realize God’s being, and a disposition to doubt of it. The being of God
does not ordinarily seem real to natural men. All the discoveries that
there are of God’s being in his works, will not overcome the principle
of atheism in the heart. And though they seem in some measure to be
rationally convinced, yet it does not appear real; the conviction is
faint. There is no strong conviction impressed on the mind that there is
a God. And oftentimes they are ready to think that there is none. Now
this will prevent the exercise of this enmity, which otherwise would be
felt; particularly, it may be an occasion of there not being sensible
exercises of hatred.
It may in some measure be thus illustrated. If you had a rooted malice
against another man, a principle that had been long established there,
and if you should hear that he was dead, the sensible workings of your
malice would not be felt, as when you realized it that he was alive. But
if you should afterward hear the news contradicted, and perceive that
your enemy was still alive; you would feel the same workings of hatred
that you did before. And thus your not realizing the fact that God has a
being, may prevent those sensible workings of hatred that otherwise you
would have. If wicked men in this world were sensible of the reality of
God’s being, as the wicked are in another, they would feel more of that
hatred which men in another world do. The exercise of corruption in one
way, may, and often does, prevent it working in other ways. As
covetousness may prevent the exercise of pride, so atheism may prevent
malice; and yet it may be no argument of there being any less enmity in
the heart; for it is the same enmity, working in another way. The same
enmity that in this world works by atheism, will in another world, where
there will be no room for atheism, work by malice and blasphemy. The
same mortal enmity which, if you saw there was a God, might make you to
wish there were none, may now dispose and incline you to think there is
none. Men are very often apt to think things are as they would have them
to be. The same principle disposes you to think God has no existence,
which, if you knew he had, would dispose you, if it were possible, to
dispossess him of it.
3. If you think that here is a God, yet you do not realize it, that he
is such a God as he really is. You do not realize it, that he is so holy
as he is; that he has such a hatred of sin as indeed he has; that he is
so just a God as he is, who will by no means clear the guilty. But that
in the Psalms is applicable to you: “these things hast thou done, and I
kept silence: thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as
thyself,” Psa. 50:21. So that your atheism appears in this, as well as
in thinking there is no God. So that your objection arises from this,
that you do not find such a sensible hatred against that god which you
have formed, to suit yourself; a god that you like better than the true
God. But this is no argument that you have not bitter enmity against the
true God; for it was your enmity against the true God, and your not
liking him, that has put you upon forming up another in your
imagination, that you like better. It is your enmity against those
attributes of God’s holiness and justice, and the like, that has put you
upon conceiting another, who is not so holy as he is, and does not hate
sin so much, and will not be so strictly just in punishing it; and whose
wrath against sin is not so terrible.
But if you were sensible of the vanity of your own conceits, and that
God was not such an one as you have imagined; but that he is, as he is
indeed, an infinitely holy, just, sin hating and sin revenging God, who
will not tolerate nor endure the worship of idols, you would be much
more liable to feel the sensible exercises of enmity against him than
you are now. And this experience confirms. For we see that when men come
to be under convictions, and to be made sensible that God is not as they
have heretofore imagined; but that he is such a jealous, sin hating God,
and whose wrath against sin is so dreadful, they are much more apt to
have sensible exercises of enmity against him than before.
4. Your having always been taught that God is infinitely above you, and
out of your reach, has prevented your enmity being exercised in those
ways, that otherwise it would have been. And hence your enmity has not
been exercised in revengeful thoughts; because revenge has never found
any room here; it has never found any handle to take hold of: there has
been no conception of any such thing, and hence it has lain still. A
serpent will not bite, or spit poison, at that which it sees at a great
distance; which if it saw near, would do it immediately. Opportunity
often shows what men are, whether friends or enemies. Opportunity to do
puts men in mind of doing; wakens up such principles as lay dormant
before. Opportunity stirs up desire to do, where there was before a
disposition, that without opportunity would have lain still. If a man
has had an old grudge against another, and has a fair opportunity to be
revenged, this will revive his malice, and waken up a desire of revenge.
If a great and sovereign prince injures a poor man, and what he does is
looked upon as very cruel, that will not ordinarily stir up passionate
revenge, because he is so much above him, and out of his reach. Many a
man has appeared calm and meek, when he has had no power in his hands,
and has not appeared, either to himself or others, to have any
disposition to cruel acts; yet afterwards, when he came to have
opportunity by unexpected advancement, or otherwise, has appeared like a
ravenous wolf, or devouring lion. So it was with Hazael. “And Hazael
said, Why weepeth my lord? And he answered, Because I know the evil that
thou wilt do unto the children of Israel: their strong holds wilt thou
set on fire, and their young men wilt thou slay with the sword, and wilt
dash their children, and rip up their women with child. And Hazael said,
But what is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing! And
Elisha answered, the Lord hath showed me that thou shalt be king over
Syria,” 2 Kings 8:12, 13. Hazael was then a servant; he had no power in
his hands to do as he pleased; and so his cruel disposition had lain
hid, and he did not himself imagine that it was there. But afterwards,
when he became king of Syria, and was absolute, having none to control
him; then it broke out and appeared, and he did as the prophet had
foretold. He committed those very acts of cruelty, that he thought it
was not in his heart to do. It was want of opportunity that made the
difference. It was all in his heart before. He was such a dog then as to
do this thing, but only had not opportunity. And therefore when he seems
surprised that the prophet should say so of him, all the reason the
prophet gives is, “The Lord hath showed me that thou shalt be king over
Syria.”
Some natural men are such “dogs” as to do things, if they had
opportunity, which they do not imagine it is in their hearts to do. You
object against your having a moral hatred against God; that you never
felt any desire to dethrone him. But one reason has been, that it has
always been conceived so impossible by you. But if the throne of God
were within your reach, and you knew it, it would not be safe one hour.
Who knows what thoughts would presently arise in your heart by such an
opportunity, and what disposition would be raised up in your heart. Who
would trust your heart, that there would not presently be such thoughts
as these, though they are enough to make one tremble to mention them?
“Now I have opportunity to set my self at liberty — that I need not be
kept in continual slavery by the strict law of God. — Then I may take my
liberty to walk in that way I like best, and need not be continually in
such slavish fear of God’s displeasure. And God has not done well by me
in many instances. He has done most unjustly by me, in holding me bound
to destruction for unbelief, and other things which I cannot help. — He
has shown mercy to others, and not to me. I have now an opportunity to
deliver myself, and there can be no danger of my being hurt for it.
There will be nothing for us to be terrified about, and so keep us in
slavery.”
Who would trust your heart, that such thoughts would not arise? Or
others much more horrid and too dreadful to be mentioned? And therefore
I forbear. Those natural men are foolishly insensible of what is in
their own hearts, who think there would be no danger of any such
workings of heart, if they knew they had opportunity.
5. You little consider how much your having no more of the sensible
exercises of hatred to God is owing to a being restrained by fear. You
have always been taught what a dreadful thing it is to hate God, and how
terrible his displeasure; that God sees the heart and knows all the
thoughts; and that you are in his hands, and he can make you as
miserable as he pleases, and as soon as he pleases. And these things
have restrained you. And the fear that has risen from them, has kept you
from appearing what you are; it has kept down your enmity, and made that
serpent afraid to show its head, as otherwise it would do. If a wrathful
man were wholly under the power of an enemy, he would be afraid to
exercise his hatred in outward acts, unless it were with great disguise.
And if it be supposed that such an enemy, in whose power he was, could
see his heart, and know all his thoughts; and apprehended that he would
put him to a terrible death, if he saw the workings of malice there, how
greatly would this restrain! He would be afraid so much as to believe
himself, that he hated his enemy. But there would be all manner of
disguise and hypocrisy, and feigning even of thoughts and affections.
Thus your enmity has been kept under restraint; and thus it has been
from your infancy. You have grown up in it, so that it is become an
habitual restraint. You dare not so much as think you hate God. If you
do exercise hatred, you have a disguise for it, whereby you endeavor
even to hide it from your own conscience; and so have all along deceived
yourself. Your deceit is very old and habitual. There has been only
restraint; not mortification. There has been an enmity against God in
its full strength. It has been only restrained, like an enemy that durst
not rise up and show himself.
6.. One reason why you have not felt more sensible hatred to God may be
because you have not had much trial of what is in your heart. It may be
God has hitherto, in a great measure, let you alone. The enmity that is
in men’s hearts against God, is like a serpent, which, if it be let
alone lies still. But if anybody disturbs it, will soon hiss, and be
enraged, and show its serpentine spiteful nature.
Notwithstanding the good opinion you have of yourself, yet a little
trial would show you to be a viper, and your heart would be set all on
rage against God. One thing that restrains you now is your hope. You
hope to receive many things from God. Your own interest is concerned. So
that both hope and fear operate together, to restrain your enmity from
sensible exercises. But if once hope were gone, you would soon show what
you were; you would feel your enmity against God in a rage.
7. If you pretend that you do not feel enmity against God, and yet act
as an enemy, you may certainly conclude that it is not because you are
no enemy, but because you do not know your own heart. Actions are the
best interpreters of the disposition. They show, better than anything
else, what the heart is. It must be because you do not observe your own
behavior that you question whether you are an enemy to God.
What other account can you give of your own carriage, but only your
being God’s enemy? What other account can be given of your opposing God
in your ways; walking so exceeding contrary to him, contrary to his
counsels, contrary to his commands, and contrary to his glory? What
other account can be given of your casting so much contempt upon God;
your setting him so low; your acting so much against his authority, and
against his kingdom and interest in the world? What other account can be
given of your so setting your will in opposition to God’s will, and that
so obstinately, for so long a time, against so many warnings as you have
had? What other account can be given of your joining so much with Satan,
in the opposition he is making to the kingdom of God in the world? And
that you will join with him against God, though it be so much against
your own interest, and though you expose yourself by it to everlasting
misery?
Such like behavior in one man towards another, would be sufficient
evidence of enmity. If he should be seen to behave thus, and that it was
his constant manner, none would want better evidence that he was an
enemy to his neighbor. If you yourself had a servant that carried it
towards you, as you do towards God, you would not think there was need
of any greater evidence of his being your enemy. Suppose your servant
should manifest much contempt of you; and disregard your commands as
much as you do the commands of God; should go directly contrary, and in
many ways act the very reverse of your commands; should seem to set
himself in ways that were contrary to your will obstinately and
incorrigibly, without any amendment from your repeated calls, warnings,
and threatenings; and should act so cross to you day and night, as you
do to God; would he not be justly deemed your enemy? Suppose, further,
when you sought one thing, he would seek the contrary; when you did any
work, he would, as much as in him lay, undo and destroy that work; and
suppose he should continually drive at such ends, as tended to overthrow
the ends you aimed at. When you sought to bring to pass any design, he
would endeavor to overthrow your design; and set himself as much against
your interest, as you do yourself against God’s honor. And suppose you
should moreover see him, from time to time, with those who were your
declared mortal enemies; making them his counselors, and hearkening to
their counsels, as much as you do to Satan’s temptations; should you not
think you had sufficient evidence that he was your enemy? — Therefore
consider seriously your own ways, and weigh your own behavior. “How
canst thou say, I am not polluted? — see thy way in the valley, know
what thou hast done,” Jer. 2:23.
SECTION V
The objections, that they show respect to God, and experience some
religious affections, answered.
NATURAL men may be ready to object, the respect they show to God, from
time to time. This makes many to think that they are far from being such
enemies to God. They pray to him in secret, and attend on public
worship, and take a great deal of pains to do it in a decent manner. It
seems to them that they show God a great deal of respect. They use many
very respectful terms in their prayer. They are respectful in their
manner of speaking, their voice, gestures, and the like. — But to this I
answer, that all this is done in mere hypocrisy. All this seeming
respect is feigned, there is no sincerity in it. There is external
respect, but none in the heart. There is a show, and nothing else. You
only cover your enmity with a painted veil. You put on the disguise of a
friend, but in your heart you are a mortal enemy. There is external
honor, but inward contempt; there is a show of friendship and regard,
but inward hatred. You do but deceive yourself with your show of
respect; and endeavor to deceive God; not considering that God looks not
on the outward appearance, but on the heart. — Here consider
particularly,
1. That much of that seeming respect which natural men show to God, is
owing to their education. They have been taught from their infancy that
they ought to show great respect to God. They have been taught to use
respectful language when speaking about God, and to behave with
solemnity, when attending on those exercises of religion, wherein they
have to do with him. From their childhood, they have seen that this is
the manner of others, when they pray to God, to use reverential
expressions. and a reverential behavior before him.
Those who are brought up in places where they have, commonly from their
infancy, heard men take the name of God in vain, and swear and curse,
and blaspheme; they learn to do the same; and it becomes habitual to
them. And it is the same way, and no other, that you have learned to
behave respectfully towards God. [It is] not that you have any more
respect to God than they; but they have been brought up one way, and you
another. In some parts of the world, men are brought up in the worship
of idols of silver, and gold, and wood, and stone, made in the shape of
men and beast. “They say of them, Let the men that sacrifice, kiss the
calf,” Hos. 13:2. In some parts of the world, they are brought up to
worship serpents, and are taught from their infancy to show great
respect to them. And in some places, they are brought up in worshipping
the devil, who appears to them in a bodily shape; and to behave with a
show of great reverence and honor towards him. And what respect you show
to God has no better foundation; it comes the same way, and is worth no
more.
2. That show of respect which you make is forced. You come to God, and
make a great show of respect to him, and use very respectful terms, with
a reverential tone and manner of speaking; and your countenance is grave
and solemn. You put on an humble aspect; and use humble, respectful
postures, out of fear. You are afraid that God will execute his wrath
upon you, and so you feign a great deal of respect, that he may not be
angry with you. “Through the greatness of thy power shall thine enemies
submit themselves unto thee,” Psa. 66:3. In the original it is, shall
thine enemies lie to thee. It is rendered therefore in the margin, shall
yield feigned obedience to thee. All that you do in religion is forced
and feigned. Through the greatness of God’s power, you yield feigned
obedience. You are in God’s power, and he is able to destroy you. And so
you feign a great deal of respect to him, that he might not destroy you.
As one might do towards an enemy that had taken him captive, though he
at the same time would gladly make his escape, if he could, by taking
away the life of him who had taken him captive.
3. It is not real respect that moves you to behave so towards God. You
do it because you hope you shall get by it. It is respect to yourself,
and not respect to God that moves you. You hope to move God by it to
bestow the rewards of his children. You are like the Jews who followed
Christ, and called him Rabbi, and would make him a king. Not that they
honored him so much in their hearts, as to think him worthy of the honor
of a king; or that they had the respect of sincere subjects; but they
did it for the sake of the loaves. “Jesus perceived that they would come
and make him a king. And when they had found him on the other side of
the sea, they said unto him, Rabbi, how camest thou hither? Jesus
answered and said unto them, Verily, verily I say unto you, Ye seek me,
not because you saw the miracles, but because ye did eat of the loaves,
and were filled,” John 6:15, 25, 26.
These things do not argue but that you are implacable enemies to God. If
you examine your prayers and other duties, your own consciences will
tell you, that the seeming respect which you have shown to God in them,
has been only in hypocrisy. Oftentimes you have set forth in your
prayers, that God was a great, a glorious, and an infinitely holy God,
as if you greatly honored him on the account of these attributes; and,
at the same time, you had no sense in your heart of the greatness and
glory of God, or of any excellency in his holiness. Your own consciences
will tell you, that you have often pretended to be thankful; you have
told God, that you thanked him you was alive, and thanked him for
various mercies, when you have not found the least jot of thankfulness
in your heart. And so you have told God of your own unworthiness, and
set forth what a vile creature you [were]; when you have had no humble
sense of your own unworthiness.
If these forementioned restraints were thrown off, you would soon throw
off all your show of respect. Take away fear, and a regard to your own
interest, and there would soon be an end to all those appearances of
love, honor, and reverence, which now you make. All these things are not
at all inconsistent with the most implacable enmity. The devil himself
made a show of respect to Christ, when he was afraid that he was going
to torment him; and when he hoped to persuade Christ to spare him
longer. “When he saw Jesus, he cried out, and fell down before him, and
with a loud voice said, What have I to do with thee, Jesus, thou Son of
God most high? I beseech thee, torment me not,” Luke 8:28.
Some may perhaps object against this doctrine of their being God’s
enemies, the religious affections they have sometimes experienced. They
may be ready to say that when they have come before God in prayer, they
have not only used respectful terms and gestures, but they have prayed
with affection; their prayers have been attended with tears, which they
are ready to think showed something in the heart. — But to this it is
answered, that these affections have risen from other causes, and not
from any true respect to God.
(1.) They have risen from self-love, and not love to God. If you have
wept before God, from the consideration of your own pitiful case; that
has been because you loved yourself, and not because you had any respect
to God. If your tears have been from sorrow for your sins; you have
mourned for your sins, because you have sinned against yourself, and not
because you have sinned against God. “When ye fasted and mourned, did ye
at all fast unto me, even unto me?” Zec. 7:5.
(2.) Pride, and a good thought of themselves, very commonly has a great
hand in the affections of natural men. They have a good opinion of what
they are doing when they are praying; and the reflection on that affects
them. They are affected with their own goodness. Men’s
self-righteousness often occasions tears. A high opinion of themselves
before God, and an imagination of their being persons of great account
with him, has affected them in their transactions with God. There is
commonly abundance of pride in the midst of tears; and often pride is in
a great measure the source of them. And then they are so far from being
an argument that you are not an enemy to God, that on the contrary, they
are an argument, that you are. In your very tears, you are, in a vain
conceit of yourself, exalting yourself against God.
(3.) The affections of natural men often arise from wrong notions they
have of God. They conceived of God after the manner they do of men, as
though he were a being liable to be wrought upon in his affections. They
conceive of him as one whose heart could be drawn, whose affections can
be overcome, by what he sees in them. They conceive of him as being
taken with them, and their performances; and this works on their
affections; and thus one tear draws another, and their affections
increase by reflection. And oftentimes they conceived of God as one that
loves them, and is a friend to them. And such a mistake may work much on
their affections. But such affections that arise towards God, as they
conceit him to be, is no argument that they have not the same implacable
hatred towards God, considered as he really is. There is no concluding
that men are not enemies, because they are affected and shed tears in
their prayers, and the like. Saul was very much affected when David
expostulated with him about pursuing after him, and seeking to kill him.
David’s words wrought exceedingly upon Saul’s affections. “And it came
to pass when David had made an end of speaking these words unto Saul,
that Saul said, Is this thy voice, my son David? and Saul lift up his
voice and wept,” 1 Sam. 24:16, chap 26:1, 10. He was so affected that he
wept aloud, and called David his son, though he was but just before
seeking his life. But this affection of Saul was no argument that he did
not still continue in his enmity against David. He was David’s mortal
enemy before, and sought his life; and so he did afterwards. It was but
a pang. His enmity was not mortified or done away. The next news we hear
of Saul is that he was pursuing David, and seeking his life again.
SECTION VI
Restraining grace a great privilege.
IF natural men are God’s enemies, then hence we may learn, how much we
are indebted to God for his restraining grace. If all natural men are
God’s enemies, what would they not do, if they were not restrained! For
what has one that is an enemy in his disposition, to restrain him from
acting against him to whom he is an enemy? Hatred will not restrain a
man from acting anything against him that is hated. Nothing is too bad
for hatred, if it be mere hatred and no love. Hatred shows no kindness
either in doing, or forbearing. It will never make a man forbear to act
against God; for the very nature of hatred is to seek evil. But wicked
men, as has been shown, are mere enemies to God. They have hatred,
without any love at all. And hence natural men have nothing within them,
in their own nature, to restrain them from anything that is bad. And
therefore their restraint must not be owing to nature, but to
restraining grace. And therefore whatever wickedness we have been kept
from, it is not because we have not been bad enough to commit it; but it
is God has restrained us, and kept us back from sin. There can be no
worse principle, than a principle of hatred to God. And there can be no
principle that will go further in wickedness than this, if it be neither
mortified nor restrained. But it is not mortified in natural men; and
therefore all that keeps them from any degree of wickedness, is
restrained. If we have seen others do things that we never did; and if
they have done worse than we, this is owing to restraining grace. If we
have not done as bad as Pharaoh, it is owing to divine restraints. If we
have not done as bad as Judas, or as the scribes and Pharisees, or as
bad as Herod, or Simon Magus, it is because God has restrained our
corruption. If we have ever heard or read of any that have done worse
than we; if we have not gone the length in sinning, that the most wicked
pirates or carnal persecutors have gone, this is owing to restraining
grace. For we are all naturally the enemies of God as much as they. If
we have not committed the unpardonable sin, it is owing to restraining
grace. There is no worse principle in exercise in that sin, than enmity
against God. There is the entire fountain, and all the foundation of the
sin against the Holy Ghost, in that enmity against God that naturally
reigns in us.
It is not we that restrain ourselves from the commission of the greatest
imaginable wickedness; for enmity against God reigns in us and over us;
we are under its power and dominion, and are sold under it. We do not
restrain that which reigns over us. A slave, as long as he continues a
mere slave, cannot control his master. “He that committeth sin, is the
servant of sin,” John 8:34. So that the restraint of this our cruel
tyrant, is owing to God, and not to us. What does a poor, impotent
subject do to restrain the absolute Lord, that has him wholly under his
power? How much will it appear that the world is indebted to the
restraining grace of God, if we consider that the world is full of
enemies to God. The world is full of inhabitants; and almost all are
God’s enemies, his implacable and mortal enemies. What therefore would
they not do, what work would they not make, if God did not restrain
them?
God’s work in the restraint that he exercises over a wicked world, is a
glorious work. God’s holding the reins upon the corruptions of a wicked
world, and setting bounds to their wickedness, is a more glorious work,
than his ruling the raging of the sea, and setting bounds to its proud
waves, and saying, hitherto shalt thou come, and no further. In hell,
God lets the wickedness of wicked spirits have the reins, to rage
without restraint; and it would be in a great measure upon earth as it
is in hell, did not God restrain the wickedness of the world. But in
order to the better understanding how it is owing to the restraining
grace of God, that we are kept and withheld from the highest acts of
sin, I would here observe several things.
1. Whenever men are withheld from sinning by the common influence of
God’s Spirit, they are withheld by restraining grace. If sinners are
awakened, and are made sensible of the great guilt that sin brings, and
that it exposes to a dreadful punishment; under such circumstances they
dare not allow themselves in willful sin; God restrains them by the
convictions of his Spirit; and therein their being kept from sin, is
owing to restraining grace. And unawakened sinners that live under the
gospel, who are in a great measure secure, commonly have some degrees of
the influence of God’s Spirit, with his ordinances influencing natural
conscience. And though they be not sufficient thoroughly to rouse them
out of security, or make them reform; yet they keep them from going such
lengths in sin, as otherwise they might do. And this is restraining
grace. They are indeed very stupid and sottish. Yet they would be a
great deal more so, if God should let them wholly alone.
2. All the restraints that men are under from the word and ordinances is
from grace. The word and ordinances of God might have some degree of
influence on men’s natural principles of self-love, to restrain them
from sin, without any degree of the influence of God’s Spirit. But this
would be the restraining grace of God; for God’s goodness and mercy to a
sinful world appears in his giving his word to be a restraint on the
wickedness of the world. When men are restrained by fear of those
punishments that the Word of God threatens; or by the warnings, the
offers, and promises of it; when the Word of God works upon hope, or
fear, or natural conscience, to restrain men from sin, this is the
restraining grace of God, and is owing to his mercy. It is an instance
of God’s mercy that he has revealed hell, to restrain men’s wickedness;
and that he has revealed a way of salvation, and a possibility of
eternal life. This which has great influence on men to keep them from
sin, is the restraining grace of God.
3. When men are restrained from sin, by the light of nature, this also
is of grace. If men are destitute of the light of God’s Word, yet the
light of natural conscience teaches that sin brings guilt, and exposes
to punishment. The light of nature teaches that there is a God who
governs the world, and will reward the good and punish the evil. God is
the author of the light of nature, as well as the light of revelation.
He in mercy to mankind makes known many things by natural light to work
upon men’s fear and self-love, in order to restrain their corruptions.
4. When God restrains men’s corruptions by his providence, this is from
grace. And that whether it be his general providence in ordering the
state of mankind; or his providential disposals towards them in
particular.
(1.) God greatly restrains the corruption of the world, by ordering the
state of mankind. He hath set them here in a mortal state, and in a
state of probation for eternity; and that is a great restraint to
corruption. God hath so ordered the state of mankind, that ordinarily
many kinds of sin and wickedness are disgraceful, and what tend to the
hurt of a man’s character and reputation amongst his fellowmen; and that
is a great restraint. He hath so disposed the world, that many kinds of
wickedness are many ways very contrary to men’s temporal interest; and
mankind [is] led to prohibit many kinds of wickedness by human laws; and
that is a great restraint. God hath set up a church in the world, made
up of those who, if they are answerable to their profession, have the
fear and love of God in their hearts; and they by holding forth revealed
light, by keeping up the ordinances of God, and by warning others, are a
great restraint to the wickedness of the world.
In all these things, the restraining grace of God appears. — It is God’s
mercy to mankind, that he has so ordered their state, that they should
have so many things, by fear and a regard to their own interest, to
restrain their corruptions. It is God’s mercy to the world, that the
state of mankind here differs from the state of the damned in hell;
where men will have none of these things to restrain them. The wisdom of
God, as well as the attributes of his grace, greatly appear in thus
disposing things for the restraining of the wickedness of men.
(2.) God greatly restrains the corruptions of men by his providence
towards particular persons; by placing men in such circumstances as to
lay them under restraints. And to this it is often owing that some
natural men never go such lengths in sinning, or are never guilty of
such atrocious wickedness, as some others, that Providence has placed
them in different circumstances. If it were not for this, many thousands
of natural men, who now live sober and orderly lives, would do as
Pharaoh did. The reason why they do not, is, that Providence has placed
them in different circumstances. If they were in the same circumstances
as Pharaoh was in, they would do as he did. And so, if in the same
circumstances as Manassah, as Judas, or Nero. But Providence restrains
their corruptions, by putting them in such circumstances, as not to open
such a door or outlet for their corruption, as he did to them. So some
do not perpetrate such horrid things, they do not live such horribly
vicious lives, as some others, because Providence has restrained them,
by ordering that they should have a better education than others.
Providence has ordered that they should be the children of pious
parents, it may be, or should live where they should enjoy many means of
grace; and so Providence has laid them under restraints. Now this is
restraining grace; or the attribute of God’s grace exercised in thus
restraining persons.
And oftentimes God restrains men’s corruptions by particular events of
providence. By particular afflictions they are brought under, or by
particular occurrences, whereby God does, as it were, block up men’s way
in their course of sin, or in some wickedness that they has devised, and
that otherwise they would perpetrate. Or something happens unexpected to
hold men back from that which they were about to commit. Thus God
restrained David by his providence from shedding blood, as he intended
to do. “Now therefore, my lord, as the Lord liveth, and as thy soul
liveth, seeing the Lord hath withholden thee from coming to shed blood,
and from avenging thyself with thine own hand,” — 1 Sam 25:26. God
withheld him from it no otherwise, than by ordering it so in his
providence that Abigail should come, and by her wisdom should cool,
pacify, and persuade him to alter his purpose. See verse 32, 33, 34.
5. Godly persons are greatly indebted to restraining grace, in keeping
them from dreadful acts of sin. So it was in that instance of David,
just mentioned. Even godly persons, when God has left, and has not
restrained them, have fallen into dreadful acts of sin. So did David, in
the case of Uriah; and Lot, and Peter. And when other godly persons are
kept from falling into such sins, or much worse sins than these, it is
owing to the restraining grace of God. Merely having a principle of
grace in their hearts, or merely their being godly persons, without
God’s presence to restrain them, will not keep them from great acts of
sin. That the godly do not fall into the most horrid sins that can be
conceived of, is owing not so much to any inconsistency between their
falling into such sins, and the having a principle of grace in the
heart, as it is owing to the covenant mercy of God, whereby he has
promised never to leave nor forsake his people; and that he will not
suffer them to be tempted above what they are able; but with the
temptation will make a way for them to escape. If saving grace restrains
men from great acts of sin, that is owing to God who gives such
exercises of grace at that time when the temptation comes, that they are
restrained.
Let not the godly therefore be insensible of their obligations to the
restraining grace of God. Though they cannot be said to be enemies to
God, because a principle of enmity does not reign; yet they have the
very same principle and seed of enmity in them, though it be mortified.
Though it be not in reigning power, yet it has great strength; and is
too strong for them, without God’s almighty power to help them against
it. Though they be not enemies to God, because they have a principle of
love; yet their old man, the body of sin and death that yet remains in
them, is a mortal enemy to God. Corruption in the godly, is not better
than it is in the wicked; but is of as bad a nature every whit, as that
which is in a mortal enemy to God. And though it be not in reigning
power; yet it would dreadfully rage, were it not for God’s restraining
grace.
God give his restraining grace to both natural and godly men. But there
is this difference; he gives his restraining grace to his children in
the way of covenant mercy; it is part of the mercy promised in his
covenant. God is faithful, and will not leave them to sin in like manner
as wicked men do; otherwise they would do every whit as bad. — Let not
therefore the godly attribute it to themselves, or merely to their own
goodness, that they are not guilty of such horrid crimes as they hear of
in others; let them consider it as not owing to them, but to God’s
restraints. — Thus, all, both godly and ungodly, may learn from this
doctrine, their great obligations to the restraining grace of God.
SECTION VII
Why natural men are not willing to come to Christ, and their dreadful
condition.
HENCE we may learn the reason why natural men will not come to Christ.
They do not come because they will not come. “Ye will not come to me,
that ye might have life,” John 5:40. When we say that natural men are
not willing to come to Christ, it is not meant that they are not willing
to be delivered from hell; for without doubt, no natural man is willing
to go to hell. Nor is it meant, that they are not willing that Christ
should keep them from going to hell. Without doubt, natural men under
awakenings often greatly desire this. But this does not argue that they
are willing to come to Christ. For, notwithstanding their desire to be
delivered from hell, their hearts do not close with Christ, but are
averse to him. They see nothing in Christ wherefore they should desire
him; no beauty nor comeliness to draw their hearts to him. And they are
not willing to take Christ as he is; they would fain divide him. There
are some things in him that they like, and others that they greatly
dislike. But consider him as he is, and as he is offered to them in the
gospel, and they are not willing to accept of Christ; for in doing so,
they must of necessity part with all their sins; they must sell the
world, and part with their own righteousness. But they had rather, for
the present, run the venture of going to hell, than do that.
When men are truly willing to come to Christ, they are freely willing.
It is not what they are forced and driven to by threatenings; but they
are willing to come, and choose to come without being driven. But
natural men have no such free willingness. But on the contrary have an
aversion. And the ground of it is that which we have heard, viz. that
they are enemies to God. Their having such a reigning enmity against
God, makes them obstinately refuse to come to Christ. If a man is an
enemy to God, he will necessarily be an enemy to Christ too; for Christ
is the Son of God; he is infinitely near to God, yea, has the nature of
God, as well as the nature of man. He is a Savior appointed of God. He
anointed him, and sent him into the world. And in performing the work of
redemption, he wrought the works of God; always did those things that
pleased him; and all that he does as a Savior, is to his glory. And one
great thing he aimed at in redemption, was to deliver them from their
idols, and bring them to God. The case being so, and sinners being
enemies to God, they will necessarily be opposite to coming to Christ;
for Christ is of God, and as a Savior seeks them to bring them to God
only. But natural men are not of God, but are averse to him.
Hence we see, how dreadful is the condition of natural men. Their state
is a state of enmity with God. If we consider what God is, and what men
are, it will be easy for us to conclude that such men as are God’s
enemies, must be miserable. Consider, ye that are enemies to God, how
great he is. He is the eternal God who fills heaven and earth, and whom
the heaven of heavens cannot contain. He is the God that made you; in
whose hand your breath is, and whose are all your ways; the God in whom
you live, and move, and have your being; who has your soul and body in
his hands every moment.
You would look on yourself as in very unhappy circumstances, if your
neighbors were all your enemies, and none of your fellow-creatures were
your friends. If everybody were set against you, and all despised and
hated you, you would be ready to think, you had better be out of the
world than in it. But if it be such a calamity to have enmity maintained
between you and your fellow-creatures, what is it, when you and the
almighty God are enemies? What avails either the friendship or enmity of
your neighbors, poor worms of the dust, in comparison of the friendship
or enmity of the great God of heaven and earth? — Consider,
1. If you continue in your enmity a little longer, there will be a
mutual enmity between God and you to all eternity. God will appear to be
your dreadful and irreconcilable enemy. If you should die an enemy to
God, there will be no such thing as any reconciliation after death. God
will then appear to you in hatred, without any love, any pity, and any
mercy at all. As you hate God, he will hate you. And that will be
verified of you. “My soul loathed them, and their soul abhorred me,” Zec.
11:8. And then God will be your enemy forever. If you be not reconciled
so as to become his friend in this life, God never will become your
friend after death. If you continue an enemy to God till death, God will
continue an enemy to you to all eternity. You will have no mediator
offered you, there will be no day’s-man betwixt you. So that it becomes
you to consider what it will be to have God your enemy to all eternity,
without any possibility of being reconciled.
Consider, what will it be to have this enmity to be mutual, and
maintained forever on both sides? For as God will forever continue an
enemy to you, so you will forever continue an enemy to God. If you
continue God’s enemy until death, you will always be his enemy. And
after death your enmity will have no restraint, but it will break out
and rage without control. When you come to be a fire-brand hell, you
will be so in two respects, viz. as you will be full of the fire of
God’s wrath; and as you will be on a blaze with spite and malice towards
God. You will be as full of the fire of malice, as you will with the
fire of divine vengeance, and both will make you full of torment. Then
you will appear as you are, a viper indeed. You are now under great
disguise; a wolf in sheep’s clothing. But then your mask will be pulled
off. You shall loose your garments, and walk naked. Rev. 16:15. Then
will you vent your rage and malice in fearful blasphemies. That same
tongue, to cool which you will wish for a drop of water, will be
eternally employed in cursing and blaspheming God and Christ. And that
not from any new corruption being put into your heart; but only from
God’s withdrawing his hand from restraining your old corruption. And
what a miserable way will this be of spending your eternity!
2. Consider, what will be the consequence of a mutual enmity between God
and you, if it be continued? Though hitherto you have met with no very
great changes, yet they will come. After a little while, dying time will
come; and then what will be the consequence of this enmity? God, whose
enemy you are, has the frame of your body in his hands. Your times are
in his hand; and he it is that appoints your bounds. And when he sends
death to arrest you, to change your countenance, to dissolve your frame,
and to take you away from all your earthly friends, and from all that is
dear and pleasant to you in the world; what will be the issue? Will not
you then stand in need of God’s help? Would not he be the best friend in
such a case, worth more than ten thousand earthly friends? If God be
your enemy, then to whom will you betake yourself for a friend? When you
launch forth into the boundless gulf of eternity, then you will need
some friend to take care of you, but if God be your enemy, where will
you betake yourself? Your soul must go naked into another world, in
eternal separation from all worldly things; and your soul will not be in
its own power, to defend or dispose of itself. Will you not then need to
have God for a friend, into whose hands you may commend your spirit? But
how dreadful will it be, to have God your enemy!
The time is coming when the frame of this world shall be dissolved.
Christ shall descend in the clouds of heaven, in the glory of his
Father; and you, with all the rest of mankind, must stand before his
judgment-seat. Then what will be the consequence of this mutual enmity
between God and you? If God be your enemy, who will stand your friend?
Now, it may be, it does not appear to be very terrible to have God for
your enemy. But when such changes as these are brought to pass, it will
greatly alter the appearance of things. Then God’s favor will appear to
you of infinite worth. They, and they only, will then appear happy, who
have the love of God. And then you will know that God’s enemies are
miserable. — But under this head, consider more particularly several
things.
(1.) What God can do to his enemies. Or rather, what can he not do? How
miserable can he who is almighty make his enemies! Consider, you that
are enemies to God, whether or not you shall be able to make your part
good with him. “Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy? Are we stronger than
he?” 1 Cor. 10:22. Have you such a conceit of your own strength, as that
you think to try it out with God? Do you intend to run the risk of an
encounter with him? Do you imagine that your hands can be strong, or
your heart can endure? Do you think you shall be well able to defend
yourself, or to escape out of his hand? Do you think that you shall be
able to uphold your spirits, when God acts as an enemy towards you? If
so, then gird up your loins, and see what the event will be. Therefore
thus will I do unto thee — “and because I will do this unto thee,
prepare to meet thy God.” — Amos 4:12. Is it not in vain to set the
briers and thorns in battle array against devouring flames; which though
they seemed to be armed with natural weapons ,yet the fire will pass
through them, and burn them together? See Isa. 27:4.
And if you endeavor to support yourself under God’s wrath, cannot God
lay you under such misery, as to cause your spirit quite to fail; so
that you shall find no strength to resist him, or to uphold yourself?
Why should a worm think of supporting himself against an omnipotent
adversary? Consider, God has made your soul; and he can fill it with
misery. He made your body, and can bring what torments he will upon it.
God who made you, has given you a capacity to bear torment; and he has
that capacity in his hands. How dreadful must it be to fall into the
hands of such an enemy! Surely, “it is a fearful thing to fall into the
hands of the living God,” Heb. 10:31.
(2.) If God be your enemy, you may rationally conclude that he will act
as such in his dealings with you. We have already observed that you have
enmity without any love or true respect. So, if you continue to be so,
God will appear to be your mere enemy; and will be so forever, without
being reconciled. But if it be so, he will doubtless act as such. If he
eternally hates you, he will act in his dealings with you, as one that
hates you without any love or pity. The proper tendency and aim of
hatred is the misery of the object hated; so that you may expect God
will make you miserable, and that you will not be spared. — Now, God
does not act as your mere enemy. If he corrects you, it is in measure.
He now exercises abundance of mercy to you. He threatens you now; but it
is in a way of warning, and so in a merciful way. He now calls, invites,
and strives with you, and waits to be gracious to you. But hereafter
there will be an end to all these things. In another world God will
cease to show you mercy.
(3.) If you will continue God’s enemy, you may rationally conclude that
God will deal with you so as to make it appear how dreadful it is to
have God for an enemy. It is very dreadful to have a mighty prince for
an enemy. “The wrath of a king is as the roaring of a lion,” Pro. 19:12.
But if the wrath of a man, a fellow-worm, be so terrible, what is the
wrath of God! And God will doubtless show it to be immensely more
dreadful. If you will be an enemy, God will act so as to glorify those
attributes which he exercises as an enemy; which are his majesty, his
power, and justice. His great majesty, his awful justice, and mighty
power, shall be showed upon you. “What if God, willing to show his
wrath, and to make his power known, endured with much long-suffering the
vessels of wrath fitted to destruction,” Rom. 9:22.
(4.) Consider, what God has said he will do to his enemies. He has
declared that they shall not escape; but that he will surely punish
them. “Thine hand shall find out all thine enemies, thy right hand shall
find out all those that hate thee,” Psa. 21:8. “And repayeth them that
hate him to their face, to destroy them: he will not be slack to him
that hateth him, he will repay him to his face,” Deu. 7:10. “The Lord
shall wound the head of his enemies, and the hairy scalp of such an one
as goeth on still in his trespasses,” Psa. 68:21.
Yea, God hath sworn that he will be avenged on them; and that in a most
awful and dreadful manner. “For I lift up my hand to heaven, and say, I
live forever. If I whet my glittering sword, and mine hand take hold on
judgment; I will render vengeance to mine enemies, and I will reward
them that hate me. I will make mine arrows drunk with blood (and my
sword shall devour flesh), and that with the blood of the slain — from
the beginning of revenges on the enemy,” Deu. 32:40, 41, 42. The
terribleness of the threatened destruction is here variously set forth.
God “whets his glittering sword,” as one that prepares himself to do
some great execution. “His hands take hold on judgment,” to signify that
he will surely reward them as they deserve. “He will render vengeance to
his enemies, and reward them that hate him.” i.e. He will render their
full reward. “I will make mine arrows drunk with blood.” This signifies
the greatness of the destruction. It shall not be a little of their
blood that shall satisfy; but his arrows shall be glutted with their
blood. “And his sword shall devour flesh.” That is, it shall make
dreadful waste of it. This is the terrible manner in which God will one
day rise up and execute vengeance on his enemies!
Again, the completeness of their destruction is represented in the
following words: “The wicked shall perish, the enemies of the Lord shall
be as the fat of lambs, they shall consume: into smoke shall they
consume away,” Psa. 37:20. The fat of lambs, when it is burnt in the
fire, burns all up; there is not so much as a cinder left; it all
consumes into smoke. This represents the perfect destruction of God’s
enemies in his wrath. So God hath promised Christ; that he would make
his enemies his footstool, Psa. 110:1. i.e. He would pour the greatest
contempt upon them, and as it were tread them under foot. Consider, that
all these things will be executed on you, if you continue God’s enemies.
SECTION VIII
God may justly withhold mercy
IF natural men are God’s enemies, hence we may learn, how justly God may
refuse to show you mercy. For is God obliged to show mercy to his
enemies? Is God bound to set his love on them that have no love to him;
but hate him with perfect hatred? Is he bound to come and dwell with
them that have an aversion to him, and choose to keep at a distance from
him, and fly from him as one that is hateful to them? Even should you
desire the salvation of your soul, is God bound to comply with your
desires, when you always resist and oppose his will? Is God bound to put
honor upon you, and to advance you to such dignity as to be a child of
the King of kings, and the heir of glory, while at the same time you set
him too low to have even the lowest place in your heart?
This doctrine affords a strong argument for the absolute sovereignty of
God, with respect to the salvation of sinners. If God is pleased to show
mercy to his haters, it is certainly fit that he should do it in a
sovereign way, without acting as any way obliged. God will show mercy to
his mortal enemies; but then he will not be bound, he will have his
liberty to choose the objects of his mercy; to show mercy to what enemy
he pleases, and to punish and destroy which of his haters he pleases.
And certainly this is a fit and reasonable thing. It is fit that God
should distribute saving blessings in this way, and in no other, viz. in
a sovereign and arbitrary way. And that ever anybody thought of or
devised any other way for God to show mercy, than to have mercy on whom
he will have mercy, must arise from ignorance of their own hearts,
whereby they were insensible what enemies they naturally are to God. But
consider here the following things:
1. How causelessly you are enemies to God. You have no manner of reason
for it, either from what God is, or from what he has done. You have no
reason for this from what he is. For he is an infinitely lovely and
glorious Being. The fountain of all excellency, all that is amiable and
lovely in the universe, is originally and eminently in him. Nothing can
possibly be conceived of that could be lovely in God, that is not in
him, and that in the greatest possible degree.
And you have no reason for this, from what God has done. For he has been
a good and bountiful God to you. He has exercised abundance of kindness
to you; has carried you from the womb, preserved your life, taken care
of you, and provided for you, all your life long. He has exercised great
patience and long-suffering towards you. If it had not been for the
kindness of God to you, what would have become of you? What would have
become of your body? And what, before this time, would have become of
your soul? And you are now, every day and hour, maintained by the
goodness and bounty of God. Every new breath you draw, is a new gift of
his to you. How causelessly then are you such dreadful enemies to God!
And how justly might he for it eternally deprive you of all mercy,
seeing you do thus requite God for his mercy and kindness to you!
2. Consider, how you would resent it, if others were such enemies to
you, as you are to God. If they had their hearts so full of enmity to
you; if they treated you with such contempt, and opposed you, as you do
God; how would you resent it! Do you not find that you are apt greatly
to resent it, when any oppose you, and show an ill spirit towards you?
And though you excuse your own enmity against God from your corrupt
nature that you brought into the world with you, which you could not
help. Yet you do not excuse others for being enemies to you from their
corrupt nature that they brought into the world, which they could not
help; but are ready bitterly to resent it notwithstanding.
Consider therefore, if you, a poor, unworthy, unlovely creature, do so
resent it, when you are hated, how may God justly resent it when you are
enemies to him, an infinitely glorious Being; and a Being from whom you
have received so much kindness!
3. How unreasonable is it for you to imagine that you can oblige God to
have respect to you by anything that you can do, continuing still to be
his enemy. If you think you have prayed, and read, and done something
considerable for God; yet who cares for the seeming kindness of an
enemy? What value would you yourself set upon a man making a show of
friendship, when you knew at the same time, that he was inwardly your
mortal enemy? Would you look upon yourself obliged for such respect and
kindness? Would you not rather abhor it? Would you count such respect to
be valued, as Joab’s towards Amasa, who took him by the beard, and
kissed him, and said, Art thou in health, my brother? And smote him at
the same time under the fifth rib, and killed him! What if you do pray
to God? Is he obliged to hear the prayers of an enemy? What if you have
taken a great deal of pains? Is God obliged to give heaven for the
prayers of an enemy? He may justly abhor your prayers, and all that you
do in religion, as the flattery of a mortal enemy.
SECTION IX
Practical Improvement
HENCE we may learn,
1. How wonderful is the love that is manifested in giving Christ to die
for us. For this is love to enemies. “While we were enemies, we were
reconciled to God by the death of his Son.” How wonderful was the love
of God the Father, in giving such a gift to those who not only could not
be profitable to him, but were his enemies, and to so great a degree!
They had great enmity against him; yet so did he love them, that he gave
his own Son to lay down his life, in order to save their lives. Though
they had enmity that sought to pull God down from his throne; yet he so
loved them, that he sent down Christ from heaven, from his throne there,
to be in the form of a servant; and instead of a throne of glory, gave
him to be nailed to the cross, and to be laid in the grave, that so we
might be brought to a throne of glory.
How wonderful was the love of Christ, in thus exercising dying love
towards his enemies! He loved those that hated him, with hatred that
sought to take away his life, so as voluntarily to lay down his life,
that they might have life through him. “Herein is love; not that we
loved him, but that he loved us, and laid down his life for us.”
2. If we are all naturally God’s enemies, hence we may learn what a
spirit it becomes us as Christians to possess towards our enemies.
Though we are enemies to God, yet we hope that God has loved us, that
Christ has died for us, that God has forgiven or will forgive us; and
will do us good, and bestow infinite mercies and blessings upon us, so
as to make us happy . All this mercy we hope has been, or will be,
exercised towards us forever
Certainly then, it will not become us to be bitter in our spirits
against those that are enemies to us, and have injured and ill treated
us; and though they have yet an ill spirit towards us. Seeing we depend
so much on God’s forgiving us, though enemies, we should exercise a
spirit of forgiveness towards our enemies. And therefore our Savior
inserted it in that prayer, which he dictated as a general directory to
all; “Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors,” to enforce the
duty upon us, and to show us how reasonable it is. And we ought to love
them even while enemies; for so we hope God hath done to us. We should
be the children of our Father, who is kind to the unthankful and evil.
Luke 6:35.
If we refuse thus to do, and are of another spirit, we may justly expect
that God will deny us his mercy, as he had threatened! “If ye forgive
men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you: but if
ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive
your trespasses,” Mat. 6:14, 15. The same we have in the parable of the
man, who owed his lord ten thousand talents. Mat. 18:23-35.
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