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Showing
how difficult the practice of humility is made, by the
general spirit and temper of the world. How Christianity
requireth us to live contrary to the world.
EVERY
person, when he first applies himself to the exercise of
this virtue of humility, must, as I said before, consider
himself as a learner, that is to learn something that is
contrary to former tempers and habits of mind, and which
can only be got by daily and constant practice.
He has
not only as much to do as he that has some new art or
science to learn, but he has also a great deal to unlearn:
he is to forget and lay aside his own spirit, which has
been a long while fixing and forming itself; he must
forget and depart from abundance of passions and opinions,
which the fashion, and vogue, and spirit of the world, has
made natural to him.
He must
lay aside his own spirit; because as we are born in sin,
so in pride, which is as natural to us as self-love, and
continually springs from it. And this is one reason why
Christianity is so often represented as a new birth, and a
new spirit.
He must
lay aside the opinions and passions which he has received
from the world; because the vogue and fashion of the
world, by which we have been carried away as in a torrent,
before we could pass right judgments of the value of
things, is, in many respects, contrary to humility; so
that we must unlearn what the spirit of the world has
taught us, before we can be governed by the spirit of
humility.
The devil
is called in Scripture the prince of this world, because
he has great power in it, because many of its rules and
principles are invented by this evil spirit, the father of
all lies and falsehoods, to separate us from God, and
prevent our return to happiness.
Now,
according to the spirit and vogue of this world, whose
corrupt air we have all breathed, there are many things
that pass for great and honourable, and most desirable,
which yet are so far from being so, that the true
greatness and honour of our nature consists in the not
desiring them.
To abound
in wealth, to have fine houses, and rich clothes, to be
attended with splendour and equipage, to be beautiful in
our persons, to have titles of dignity, to be above our
fellow-creatures, to command the bows and obeisance of
other people, to be looked on with admiration, to overcome
our enemies with power, to subdue all that oppose us, to
set out ourselves in as much splendour as we can, to live
highly and magnificently, to eat, and drink, and delight
ourselves in the most costly manner, these are the great,
the honourable, the desirable things, to which the spirit
of the world turns the eyes of all people. And many a man
is afraid of standing still, and not engaging in the
pursuit of these things, lest the same world should take
him for a fool.
The
history of the Gospel is chiefly the history of Christ's
conquest over the spirit of the world. And the number of
true Christians is only the number of those who, following
the Spirit of Christ, have lived contrary to this spirit
of the world.
"If
any man hath not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of
His." Again, "Whatsoever is born of God,
overcometh the world." "Set your affection on
things above, and not on things on the earth; for ye are
dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." [Rom.
viii. 9.; 1 John v. 4.; Col. iii. 2, 3] This is the
language of the whole New Testament: this is the mark of
Christianity: you are to be dead, that is, dead to the
spirit and temper of the world, and live a new life in the
Spirit of Jesus Christ.
But
notwithstanding the clearness and plainness of these
doctrines which thus renounce the world, yet great part of
Christians live and die slaves to the customs and temper
of the world.
How many
people swell with pride and vanity, for such things as
they would not know how to value at all, but that they are
admired in the world!
Would a
man take ten years more drudgery in business to add two
horses more to his coach, but that he knows that the world
most of all admires a coach and six? How fearful are many
people of having their houses poorly furnished, or
themselves meanly clothed, for this only reason, lest the
world should make no account of them, and place them
amongst low and mean people!
How often
would a man have yielded to the haughtiness and ill-nature
of others, and shown a submissive temper, but that he
dares not pass for such a poorspirited man in the opinion
of the world!
Many a
man would often drop a resentment, and forgive an affront,
but that he is afraid if he should, the world would not
forgive him.
How many
would practise Christian temperance and sobriety, in its
utmost perfection, were it not for the censure which the
world passes upon such a life!
Others
have frequent intentions of living up to the rules of
Christian perfection, which they are frighted from by
considering what the world would say of them.
Thus do
the impressions which we have received from living in the
world enslave our minds, that we dare not attempt to be
eminent in the sight of God and holy angels, for fear of
being little in the eyes of the world.
From this
quarter arises the greatest difficulty of humility,
because it cannot subsist in any mind, but so far as it is
dead to the world, and has parted with all desires of
enjoying its greatness and honours. So that in order to be
truly humble, you must unlearn all those notions which you
have been all your life learning from this corrupt spirit
of the world.
You can
make no stand against the assaults of pride, the meek
affections of humility can have no place in your soul,
till you stop the power of the world over you, and resolve
against a blind obedience to its laws.
And when
you are once advanced thus far, as to be able to stand
still in the torrent of worldly fashions and opinions, and
examine the worth and value of things which are most
admired and valued in the world, you have gone a great way
in the gaining of your freedom, and have laid a good
foundation for the amendment of your heart.
For as
great as the power of the world is, it is all built upon a
blind obedience; and we need only open our eyes to get
quit of its power.
Ask whom
you will, learned or unlearned, every one seems to know
and confess, that the general temper and spirit of the
world, is nothing else but humour, folly and extravagance.
Who will
not own, that the wisdom of philosophy, the piety of
religion, was always confined to a small number? and is
not this expressly owning and confessing, that the common
spirit and temper of the world is neither according to the
wisdom of philosophy nor the piety of religion?
The
world, therefore, seems enough condemned even by itself,
to make it very easy for a thinking man to be of the same
judgment.
And,
therefore, I hope you will not think it a hard saying,
that in order to be humble, you must withdraw your
obedience from that vulgar spirit, which gives laws to
fops and coquets, and form your judgments according to the
wisdom of philosophy, and the piety of religion. Who would
be afraid of making such a change as this?
Again: to
lessen your fear and regard to the opinion of the world,
think how soon the world will disregard you, and have no
more thought or concern about you, than about the poorest
animal that died in a ditch.
Your
friends, if they can, may bury you with some distinction,
and set up a monument, to let posterity see that your dust
lies under such a stone; and when that is done, all is
done. Your place is filled up by another, the world is
just in the same state it was, you are blotted out of its
sight, and as much forgotten by the world as if you had
never belonged to it.
Think
upon the rich, the great, and the learned persons, that
have made great figures, and been high in the esteem of
the world; many of them died in your time, and yet they
are sunk, and lost, and gone, and as much disregarded by
the world, as if they had been only so many bubbles of
water.
Think,
again, how many poor souls see heaven lost, and lie now
expecting a miserable eternity, for their service and
homage to a world that thinks itself every whit as well
without them, and is just as merry as it was when they
were in it.
Is it
therefore worth your while to lose the smallest degree of
virtue, for the sake of pleasing so bad a master, and so
false a friend, as the world is?
Is it
worth your while to bow the knee to such an idol as this,
that so soon will have neither eyes, nor ears, nor a
heart, to regard you, instead of serving that great, and
holy, and mighty God, that will make all His servants
partakers of His own eternity?
Will you
let the fear of a false world, that has no love for you,
keep you from the fear of that God, who has only created
you that He may love and bless you to all eternity?
Lastly,
You must consider what behaviour the profession of
Christianity requireth of you with regard to the world.
Now this
is plainly delivered in these words: "Who gave
Himself for our sins, that He might deliver us from this
present evil world." [Gal. i. 4] Christianity
therefore implieth a deliverance from this world, and he
that professeth it, professeth to live contrary to
everything, and every temper, that is peculiar to this
evil world.
St. John
declareth this opposition to the world in this manner:
"They are of the world: therefore speak they of the
world, and the world heareth them. We are of God." [1
John iv. 5, 6] This is the description of the followers of
Christ; and it is proof enough, that no people are to be
reckoned Christians in reality, who in their hearts and
tempers belong to this world. "We know," saith
the same Apostle, "that we are of God, and the whole
world lieth in wickedness." [1 John v. 19]
Christians, therefore, can no farther know that they are
of God, than so far as they know they are not of the
world; that is, that they do not live according to the
ways, and the spirit of the world. For all the ways, and
maxims, and politics, and tempers of the world, lie in
wickedness. And he is only of God, or born of God in
Christ Jesus, who has overcome this world, that is, who
has chosen to live by faith, and govern his actions by the
principles of a wisdom revealed from God by Christ Jesus.
St. Paul
takes it for a certainty, so well known to Christians,
that they are no longer to be considered as living in this
world, that he thus argues from it as from an undeniable
principle, concerning the abolishing the rites of the
Jewish law: "Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ from
the rudiments of the world, why, as though living in the
world, are ye subject to ordinances?" [Col ii. 20].
Here could be no argument in this but in the Apostle's
taking it for undeniable, that Christians knew that their
profession required them to have done with all the tempers
and passions of the world, to live as citizens of the new
Jerusalem, and to have their conversation in Heaven.
Our
Blessed Lord Himself has fully determined this point in
these words: "They are not of this world, as I am not
of this world." [John xvii. 16] This is the state of
Christianity with regard to this world. If you are not
thus out of, and contrary to the world, you want the
distinguishing mark of Christianity; you do not belong to
Christ, but by being out of the world as He was out of it.
We may
deceive ourselves, if we please, with vain and softening
comments upon these words; but they are, and will be,
understood in their first simplicity and plainness by
every one that reads them in the same spirit that our
Blessed Lord spoke them. And to understand them in any
lower, less significant meaning, is to let carnal wisdom
explain away that doctrine by which itself was to be
destroyed.
The
Christian's great conquest over the world is all contained
in the mystery of Christ upon the Cross. It was there, and
from thence, that He taught all Christians how they were
to come out of, and conquer the world, and what they were
to do in order to be His disciples. And all the doctrines,
Sacraments, and institutions of the Gospel are only so
many explications of the meaning, and applications of the
benefit, of this great mystery.
And the
state of Christianity implieth nothing else, but an
entire, absolute conformity to that spirit which Christ
showed in the mysterious Sacrifice of Himself upon the
Cross.
Every man
therefore is only so far a Christian, as he partakes of
this Spirit of Christ. It was this that made St. Paul so
passionately express himself, "God forbid that I
should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus
Christ": but why does he glory? Is it because Christ
had suffered in his stead, and had excused him from
suffering? No, by no means. But it was because his
Christian profession had called him to the honour of
suffering with Christ, and of dying to the world under
reproach and contempt, as He had done upon the Cross. For
he immediately adds, "by whom the world is crucified
unto me, and I unto the world." [Gal. vi. 14] This,
you see, was the reason of his glory in the Cross of
Christ, because it had called him to a like state of death
and crucifixion to the world.
Thus was
the Cross of Christ, in St. Paul's days, the glory of
Christians; not as it signified their not being ashamed to
own a Master that was crucified, but as it signified their
glorying in a religion which was nothing else but a
doctrine of the Cross, that called them to the same
suffering spirit, the same sacrifice of themselves, the
same renunciation of the world, the same humility and
meekness, the same patient bearing of injuries,
reproaches, and contempts, and the same dying to all the
greatness, honours, and happiness of this world, which
Christ showed upon the Cross.
To have a
true idea of Christianity, we must not consider our
Blessed Lord as suffering in our stead, but as our
Representative, acting in our name, and with such
particular merit, as to make our joining with Him
acceptable unto God.
He
suffered, and was a Sacrifice, to make our sufferings and
sacrifice of ourselves fit to be received by God. And we
are to suffer, to be crucified, to die, and rise with
Christ; or else His Crucifixion, Death, and Resurrection,
will profit us nothing.
The
necessity of this conformity to all that Christ did and
suffered upon our account is very plain from the whole
tenor of Scripture.
First, As
to His sufferings: this is the only condition of our being
saved by them, "if we suffer" with Him, "we
shall also reign with Him." [2 Tim. ii. 12]
Secondly,
As to His Crucifixion; "knowing this, that our old
man is crucified with him," [Rom. vi. 6. etc] Here
you see Christ is not crucified in our stead; but unless
our old man be really crucified with Him, the Cross of
Christ will profit us nothing.
Thirdly,
As to the death of Christ, the condition is this: "If
we be dead with Christ," we believe that "we
shall also live with him." [2 Tim. ii. 11] If
therefore Christ be dead alone, if we are not dead with
Him, we are as sure, from this Scripture, that we shall
not live with Him.
Lastly,
As to the Resurrection of Christ, the Scripture showeth us
how we are to partake of the benefit of it: "If ye be
risen with Christ, seek those things which are above,
where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God." [Col.
iii. 1]
Thus you
see how plainly the Scripture sets forth our Blessed Lord
as our Representative, acting and suffering in our name,
binding and obliging us to conform to all that he did and
suffered for us.
It was
for this reason that the Holy Jesus said of His disciples,
and in them of all true believers, "They are not of
this world, as I am not of this world. [John xvii. 14]
Because all true believers, conforming to the sufferings,
Crucifixion, Death and Resurrection of Christ, live no
longer after the spirit and temper of this world, but
their life is hid with Christ in God.
This is
the state of separation from the world, to which all
orders of Christians are called. They must so far renounce
all worldly tempers, be so far governed by the things of
another life, as to show that they are truly and really
crucified, dead, and risen, with Christ. And it is as
necessary for all Christians to conform to this great
change of spirit, to be thus in Christ new creatures, as
it was necessary that Christ should suffer, die, and rise
again, for our salvation.
How high
the Christian life is placed above the ways of this world,
is wonderfully described by St. Paul, in these words:
"Wherefore henceforth know we no man after the flesh:
yea, though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet
henceforth know we Him no more. Therefore if any man be in
Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away;
behold, all things are become new." [2 Cor. v. 16,
17]
He that
feels the force and spirit of these words, can hardly bear
any human interpretation of them. Henceforth, says he,
that is, since the Death and Resurrection of Christ, the
state of Christianity is become so glorious a state, that
we do not even consider Christ Himself as in the flesh
upon earth, but as a God of glory in Heaven; we know and
consider ourselves not as men in the flesh, but as
fellow-members of a new society, that are to have all our
hearts, our tempers, and conversation, in Heaven.
Thus is
it that Christianity has placed us out of and above the
world; and we fall from our calling, as soon as we fall
into the tempers of the world.
Now as it
was the spirit of the world that nailed our Blessed Lord
to the Cross; so every man that has the Spirit of Christ,
that opposes the world as He did, will certainly be
crucified by the world, some way or other.
For
Christianity still lives in the same world that Christ
did; and these two will be utter enemies, till the kingdom
of darkness is entirely at an end.
Had you
lived with our Saviour as His true disciple, you had then
been hated as He was; and if you now live in His Spirit,
the world will be the same enemy to you now, that it was
to Him then.
" If
ye were of the world," saith our Blessed Lord,
"the world would love its own: but because ye are not
of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world,
therefore the world hateth you." [John xv. 19]
We are
apt to lose the true meaning of these words, by
considering them only as an historical description of
something that was the state of our Saviour and His
disciples at that time. But this is reading the Scripture
as a dead letter; for they as exactly describe the state
of true Christians at this, and at all other times, to the
end of the world.
For as
true Christianity is nothing else but the Spirit of
Christ, so whether that Spirit appear in the person of
Christ Himself, or His Apostles, or followers in any age,
it is the same thing; whoever hath His Spirit will be
hated, despised, and condemned by the world, as He was.
For the
world will always love its own, and none but its own: this
is as certain and unchangeable, as the contrariety betwixt
light and darkness.
When the
Holy Jesus saith, "If the world hate you," He
does not add by way of consolation, that it may some time
or other cease its hatred, or that it will not always hate
them; but He only gives this as a reason for their bearing
it, "you know that it hated me, before it hated
you"; [John xv. 18] signifying, that it was He, that
is, His Spirit, that, by reason of its contrariety to the
world, was then, and always would be, hated by it.
You will
perhaps say, that the world has now become Christian, at
least that part of it where we live; and therefore the
world is not now to be considered in that state of
opposition to Christianity, as when it was heathen.
It is
granted, the world now professeth Christianity. But will
any one say that this Christian world is of the Spirit of
Christ? Are its general tempers the tempers of Christ? Are
the passions of sensuality, self-love, pride,
covetousness, ambition, and vain-glory, less contrary to
the spirit of the Gospel now they are amongst Christians,
than when they were amongst heathens? Or will you say that
the tempers and passions of the heathen world are lost and
gone?
Consider,
secondly, what you are to mean by the world. Now this is
fully described to our hands by St. John. "All that
is in the world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the
eyes, and the pride of life," [1 John ii. 16] This is
an exact and full description of the world. Now will you
say that this world is become Christian? But if all this
still subsists, then the same world is now in being, and
the same enemy to Christianity, that it was in St. John's
days.
It was
this world that St. John condemned, as being not of the
Father: whether therefore it outwardly professeth, or
openly persecuteth Christianity, it is still in the same
state of contrariety to the true spirit and holiness of
the Gospel.
And
indeed the world, by professing Christianity, is so far
from being a less dangerous enemy than it was before, that
it has by its favours destroyed more Christians than ever
it did by the most violent persecution.
We must,
therefore, be so far from considering the world as in a
state of less enmity and opposition to Christianity than
it was in the first times of the Gospel, that we must
guard against it as a greater and more dangerous enemy
now, than it was in those times.
It is a
greater enemy, because it has greater power over
Christians by its favours, riches, honours, rewards, and
protection, than it had by the fire and fury of its
persecutions.
It is a
more dangerous enemy, by having lost its appearance of
enmity. Its outward profession of Christianity makes it no
longer considered as an enemy, and therefore the
generality of people are easily persuaded to resign
themselves up to be governed and directed by it.
How many
consciences are kept at quiet, upon no other foundation,
but because they sin under the authority of the Christian
world!
How many
directions of the Gospel lie by unregarded, and how
unconcernedly do particular persons read them, for no
other reason but because they seem unregarded by the
Christian world!
How many
compliances do people make to the Christian world, without
any hesitation or remorse; which, if they had been
required of them only by heathens, would have been
refused, as contrary to the holiness of Christianity!
Who could
be content with seeing how contrary his life is to the
Gospel, but because he sees that he lives as the Christian
world doth?
Who, that
reads the Gospel, would want to be persuaded of the
necessity of great self-denial, humility, and poverty of
spirit, but that the authority of the world has banished
this doctrine of the Cross?
There is
nothing, therefore, that a good Christian ought to be more
suspicious of, or more constantly guard against, than the
authority of the Christian world.
And all
the passages of Scripture which represent the world as
contrary to Christianity, which require our separation
from it, as from a Mammon of unrighteousness, a monster of
iniquity, are all to be taken in the same strict sense, in
relation to the present world.
For the
change that the world has undergone has only altered its
methods, but not lessened its power, of destroying
religion.
Christians
had nothing to fear from the heathen world but the loss of
their lives; but the world become a friend, makes it
difficult for them to save their religion.
Whilst
pride, sensuality, covetousness, and ambition, had only
the authority of the heathen world, Christians were
thereby made more intent upon the contrary virtues. But
when pride, sensuality, covetousness, and ambition, have
the authority of the Christian world, then private
Christians are in the utmost danger, not only of being
ashamed out of the practice, but of losing the very
notion, of the piety of the Gospel.
There is,
therefore, hardly any possibility of saving yourself from
the present world, but by considering it as the same
wicked enemy to all true holiness, as it is represented in
the Scriptures; and by assuring yourself, that it is as
dangerous to conform to its tempers and passions now it is
Christian, as when it was heathen.
For only
ask yourself, Is the piety, the humility, the sobriety of
the Christian world, the piety, the humility, and sobriety
of the Christian spirit? If not, how can you be more
undone by any world, than by conforming to that which is
Christian?
Need a
man do more to make his soul unfit for the mercy of God,
than by being greedy and ambitious of honour? Yet how can
a man renounce this temper, without renouncing the spirit
and temper of the world, in which you now live?
How can a
man be made more incapable of the Spirit of Christ, than
by a wrong value for money? and yet, how can he be more
wrong in his value of it, than by following the authority
of the Christian world?
Nay, in
every order and station of life, whether of learning or
business, either in Church or State, you cannot act up to
the spirit of religion, without renouncing the most
general temper and behaviour of those who are of the same
order and business as yourself.
And
though human prudence seems to talk mighty wisely about
the necessity of avoiding particularities, yet he that
dares not be so weak as to be particular, will be often
obliged to avoid the most substantial duties of Christian
piety.
These
reflections will, I hope, help you to break through those
difficulties, and resist those temptations, which the
authority and fashion of the world hath raised against the
practice of Christian humility.
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