Author:
Jonathan Edwards
"Charity...Rejoiceth
not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth"
I Corinthians 13:6
1. We may see one main reason why Christian practice
and good works are so abundantly insisted on in the Scriptures as an
evidence of sincerity in grace. — Christ has given it as a rule to us,
that we are to judge men by their fruits (Mat. 7:16-20); and he insists
on it, in a very emphatic manner, that the one that keeps his
commandments is the one that truly loves him (John 14:21); and declares
that the man that loves him will keep them, and the man that does not
love him will not keep them (John 14:23, 24). Hence we may see the
reason why the apostle Paul so much insisted on this point, declaring to
those to whom he wrote, that if any pretended to belong to the kingdom
of God, and yet did not keep God’s
commandments, they were either hypocrites or self-deceivers. His
language is, “For this ye know, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person,
nor covetous man, who is an idolater, hath any inheritance in the
kingdom of Christ and of God. Let no man deceive you with vain words:
for because of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of
disobedience” (Eph. 5:5, 6). “Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not
inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor
idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves
with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers,
nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God” (1 Cor. 6:9, 10).
“They that are Christ’s have crucified the flesh, with the affections
and lusts” (Gal. 5:24). “If ye live after the flesh, ye shall die” (Rom.
8:13). And all this teaches us the reason why the same thing is so much
insisted on by the apostle James, in various places with which you are
familiar, and by the apostle John, more than almost any other subject.
It is because God would have it deeply impressed on all, that good works
are the only satisfying evidence that we are truly possessed of grace in
the soul. It is by our practice that God judges us here on earth, and it
is by our practice that he will judge us all at the great and final day.
2. In view of this subject, let all examine themselves, whether their
grace is real and sincere. — Let everyone diligently and prayerfully ask
whether their graces all tend to practice, and are seen from day to day
in the life and conduct. But here even some truly godly persons may be
ready to say, that if they judge themselves by their practice, they must
condemn themselves, for they fail so much and so frequently, and are so
often wandering out of the way, that at times it scarcely seems that
they can be the children of God. But to such I answer, that persons who
try themselves by their practice, may find that they greatly fail every
day, and are often wandering out of the way, and yet they may really see
no just cause in their practice to condemn themselves. For when we speak
of a life of Christian practice, and when the Scriptures speak of the
course of life as Christian, the meaning is not, that the life is a
perfect and sinless life; on the contrary, a Christian’s life may be
attended with many and exceeding great imperfections, and yet be a holy
life, or a truly Christian life. It may be such a life as to clearly,
and even necessarily show, that the grace which the individual has, is
of the kind which has a tendency to holy practice. His fruits may be
such as to be good evidence of the good nature of the tree, and his
works such as to show his faith. And if you ask for still further light,
then I would say, whatever your
imperfections and failings may be, examine yourself whether you find the
following evidences of your grace being of that kind which tends to holy
practice.
First, has your supposed grace such influence as to render those things
in which you have failed of holy practice, loathsome, grievous, and
humbling to you? Has it such influence in your mind as to render your
past sinful practices hateful in your eyes, and has it led you to mourn
before God for them? And does it render those things in your conduct
that, since your supposed conversion, have been contrary to Christian
practice, odious in your eyes? And is it the great burden of your life,
that your practice is no better? Is it really grievous to you, that you
have fallen, or do fall into sin? and are you ready, after the example
of holy Job, to abhor yourself for it, and repent in dust and ashes?
and, like Paul, to lament your wretchedness, and pray to be delivered
from sin, as you would from a body of death?
Second, do you carry about with you, habitually, a
dread of sin? Do you not only mourn, and humble yourself for sins that
are past, but have you a dread of sin for the future? And do you dread
it because in itself it is evil, and so hurtful to your own soul, and
offensive to God? Do you dread it as a terrible enemy that you have
often suffered by, and feel that it has been a grievous thing to you
heretofore? And do you dread it as something that has hurt, and wounded,
and stung you, so that you would see it no more? Do you stand on your
watch against it, as a man would keep watch against something that he
dreads, with such a dread as led Joseph to say, “How can I do this great
wickedness, and sin against God?” (Gen. 39:9.)
Third, are you sensible of the beauty and pleasantness of the ways of
holy practice? Do you see the beauty of holiness, and the loveliness of
the ways of God and Christ? It is said in the text that “charity
rejoiceth in the truth;” and it is given as the character of the truly
godly, that “he rejoiceth and worketh righteousness,” which is the same
as saying that “he rejoices to work righteousness.” And how often does
the Psalmist speak of the law of God as being his delight, and of his
love to the divine commandments!
Fourth, do you find that you do particularly esteem and delight in those
practices that may, by way of eminence, be called Christian practices,
in distinction from mere worldly morality? And by Christian practices
are meant such as are implied in a meek, humble, prayerful,
self-denying, self-renouncing, heavenly walk and behavior. Some of the
heathen have been eminent for many of the moral virtues, and wrote
excellently about them, as, for example, of justice, and generosity, and
fortitude, etc.; but they were far from a Christian poverty of spirit
and lowliness of mind. They sought their own glory, and gloried
exceedingly in their outward virtues, and seemed to know nothing of such
a walk as the gospel commands, a walk of self-emptiness, and poverty of
spirit, and self-distrust, and self-renunciation, and prayerful reliance
on God. They were strangers to meekness, and did not allow, or even
dream, that the forgiveness and love of enemies was a virtue. Such
virtues as these are peculiarly Christian virtues, and Christian by way
of distinction and eminence, and of these it is, that I ask, if you hold
them in special esteem, for your Savior’s sake, and because they are
fraught with his spirit? If you are essentially distinguished and
different in your spirit from the mere moralist, or the heathen sage or
philosopher, you will have a spirit of special esteem for and delight in
those virtues that do especially belong to the gospel.
Fifth, do you hunger and thirst after a holy practice? Do you long to
live a holy life, to be conformed to God, to have your conduct, day by
day, better regulated, and more spiritual, more to God’s glory, and more
such as becometh a Christian? Is this what you love, and pray for, and
long for, and live for? This is mentioned by Christ, as belonging to the
character of true Christians, that they “hunger and thirst after
righteousness.” Does this trait belong to you?
Sixth, do you make a business of endeavoring to live holily, and as God
would have you, in all respects? Not only can you be said to endeavor
after holiness, but do you make a business of endeavoring after it? Is
it a matter that lies with weight upon your mind? A true and faithful
Christian does not make holy living a mere incidental thing, but it is
his great concern. As the business of the soldier is to fight, so the
business of the Christian is to be like Christ, to be holy as he is
holy. Christian practice is the great work that he is engaged in, just
as the race was the great work of the racers. Is this so with you? And
is it your great aim and love to keep all God’s commandments, and so far
as known to neglect none? “Then,” says the Psalmist, “I shall not be
ashamed, when I have respect unto all thy commandments.” Is this your
serious, constant, and prayerful aim, that you may be faithful in every
known duty? And once more,
Seventh, do you greatly desire that you may know all that is your duty?
And do you desire to know it that you may do it? With the patriarch Job,
can you, and do you, pray to the Almighty, “That which I see not, teach
thou me,” adding, as he added, to the great Searcher of hearts, “If I
have done iniquity, I will do no more”?
If you can honestly meet these tests, then you have the evidence that
your grace is of the kind that tends to holy practice, and to growth in
it. And though you may fall, through God’s mercy you shall rise again.
He that hath begun a good work in you will carry it on until the day of
Jesus Christ. Though you may be at times faint, yet, if pursuing, you
shall be borne on from strength to strength, and kept by the power of
God through faith unto salvation.
* * *
Excerpt from Sermon (No. 11)
"Charity and Its Fruits"
JoyPals, Editor & Publisher,
“Heavenly Notes 2004”
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