Sermon 1062. Why Am I Thus?
(No. 1062)
A SERMON DELIVERED ON THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 14, 1872,
BY C. H. SPURGEON,
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.
"I delight in the Law of God after the inward man. But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind,and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members." Romans 7:22,23.
LAST Thursday evening, as many of you will remember, I addressed you upon the final perseverance of the saints. I have beengreatly surprised and gratified during the week to learn how many persons found comfort and cheer from the simple explanationof that doctrine which I gave you. In fact, on the past two Thursday evenings [PERSEVERANCE without presumption, #1056, andA persuasive TO steadfastness, #1042] we have been handling a precept and a promise both relating to the same matter, thougheach putting it in a different light. The one admonished us to perseverance by holding fast-the other assured us of preservationbecause we are fast held.
The welcome you gave to these familiar expositions has led me to think it would be acceptable, especially to such of you ashave been lately brought into the sacred household and may not even know the rudiments of religious experience, were I tonightto follow up those two elementary discourses with some little account of the great inward conflict to which the Believer'slife is exposed.
The passage before us tells a portion of the experience of the Apostle Paul. We all of us concede that he was a most eminentsaint. Indeed, we place him in the front rank. For this reason his experience is the more valuable to us. If your greatestsaints have their inward struggles, how much more should we expect to have them who have not attained the same degree of DivineGrace the Apostle did? If he who was not a whit behind the very chief of the Apostles yet had to say, "When I would do good,evil is present with me," then you and I, who can only take the position of babes in Grace, or of ordinary disciples of JesusChrist, must not be surprised if we have to bear assaults that surprise us and enter into struggles that distress us. We mustnot be surprised if we are often, by emotional stress, forced to cry out, "O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver mefrom the body of this death?"
I shall ask you, therefore, for your personal consolation to notice, first of all, that the ruling power in the Christian'smind is a strong affection and, therefore, an intense pleasure in that which is pure and holy-"I delight in the Law of Godafter the inward man." Secondly, there are passions and propensities within the breast of a man which come into direct conflictwith this holy principle-"I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind." And, thirdly, that the disciplineinvolved in this constant hostility, despite all the fretfulness and irritation it causes, is not without true and satisfactoryevidence of our spiritual welfare. "I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord."
I. It may be said of every true Christian that the ruling power in him delights in the Law of God. The new nature which Godhas created in every Believer cannot sin because it is born of God. This is the work of the Holy Spirit and as such withoutguile, unblemished, incorruptible. We are made partakers of the Divine Nature. The Divine Nature, so far as it is communicable,is given to us when we are begotten again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.
We are born not of the flesh, not of blood, nor of the will of man, but of God. We receive from God a new nature at the timeof our regeneration. This new nature, though it is the younger, compels the older nature within us to submit to it. It hasa struggle, but it gets the victory-that significant word, "The elder shall serve the younger," is abundantly fulfilled inthe little kingdom within our souls! It has a long struggling trial before the full subjugation and there are many harassingrebellions to encounter, but at length, that which is born of the Spirit shall overcome that which is born of the flesh andthe Divine Nature within us shall vanquish the sensual nature. The Christian man, because of this new nature implanted inhim, delights in the Law of God. He has no desire to change that Law in any way whatever.
When we read the Ten Commandments, our conscience approves the ordinances of God while it reproves our own culpable shortcomings.Yes, we feel that only God could have drawn up so complete, so perfect a code. We would not wish to have one single iota,word, or syllable of that Law altered, though it condemns us! Though we know, apart from the precious blood of Christ, itwould have cast us into Hell and most justly so, yet with holy instinct, pure taste and righteous judgment we consent untothe Law that is good. It expresses God's mind on the difference between right and wrong, good and evil, truth and falsehood,harmony and discord-and our mind agrees with God's mind.
We perceive it not as Truth established by investigation, but as Truth all radiant, shining in its own majesty. We would willinglytake our place on Mount Ebal or Mount Gerizim to give our Amen to the curses pronounced on disobedience, or to hail with solemnjoy the blessings avouched to those who observe and do His Commandments. Nor, Beloved, would the Christian man wish to havethe spirituality of the Law in any degree compromised. He is not only pleased with the Law as he reads it, though, as I havesaid, it condemns him-he is pleased with the very spirit of the Law.
What if the Law condemns in him an unchaste look as well as an unchaste action? He condemns that unchaste look in himself.What if the Law reaches to the heart and says, "You should not even desire your neighbor's goods, much less should you stealthem"? He feels in his soul that it is sin and that it is a bitter thing in him even to covet where he does not defraud. Henever thinks that God is too exacting. He never, for a moment, says, "I knew that you were an austere man, gathering whereyou had not planted," but he consents to the Law though it is high and broad, exceedingly broad. Though the thunder, the lightningand the voices which usher in that Law terrify him, yet the wisdom, the equity and the benevolence which ordained it resolvesthis awe into admiration!
Being born from above-in fellowship with Christ, at peace with God-his very constitution is in unison with the Law of theLord. Is the Law spiritual? So is He. The pact is unbroken, the concord perfect. I trust full many of you, my Hearers, canendorse this, for, doubtless, as many of us as have been born-again can bear witness we delight in the Law of God after theinward man. Again, no Christian desires to have any dispensation to exempt him from complying with any one of the Lord's commands.His old nature may desire it, but the inner man says, "No, I do not wish to get or to give any concession to the flesh, tohave an allowance or make an excuse for sin in any point whatever." The flesh craves for liberty and asks to have provisionmade for it. But, does any Believer need liberty to sin?
My Brothers and Sisters, if it were possible to conceive without blasphemy that the Lord should say to you, "My Child, ifthere is one sin that you love, you may continue in it," would you desire any sin? Would you not rather say, "Oh, that I maybe purged from every sin, for sin to me is misery! It is but another term for sorrow! Moral evil is its own curse-a plague,a pest-I shudder at the thought of it"?
It is thought a blessing, in the Church of Rome, that a dispensation is given to men from certain religious duties. We askno such favor! We value not their gifts! Liberty to sin would mean putting double fetters upon us. A license even for a momentto relax our obedience to Christ would be but a license to leave the paths of light and the way of peace to wander awhilein darkness and to exchange the glow of health for sore distemper and smarting pain. Brethren, I am sure you never did, andnever will, if you are Believers, ask the Lord for permission to transgress His Statutes! You may have taken leave to do whatyou did not know was sinful at the time. There may have been a desire in your heart after something that was wrong. I grantyou that. But the new-born nature, the moment it discovers its culpability, recoils at it and turns from it! It could notdo otherwise. It cannot sin, for it is born of God!
The new nature that is in you shudders at sin! It is not its element. It cannot endure it, whereas before you could riot init and take pleasure in it and drink iniquity like water. You ask no dispensation that you may escape from the Law of God.You delight in it after the inward man. The new-born nature of the Christian also laboriously desires to keep the holy Lawaccording to the mind of God. If it were proposed to any one of us that we should have whatever we would ask for-if in a visionof the night the Lord should appear to us and say to us as He did to Solomon, "Ask what I shall give you," I do not thinkany of us would hesitate.
I cannot imagine myself asking for riches or honor, or even for wisdom unless it were wisdom of a far higher order than iscommonly esteemed among the sons of men. But the gift which I feel I should crave beyond every other is holiness, pure andimmaculate holiness! Possessing, now, an interest in Christ-knowing that my sins are forgiven me for His
name's sake-the one thing I desire beyond everything else is to be perfectly free from sin and to lead an unblemished lifewithout sin of omission or sin of commission.
Now, every Christian that has that desire within his soul will never be satisfied until that desire is fulfilled! And thisshows that we delight in the Law of God after the inward man. Nor is it long before that desire will be fulfilled. Why, weshall be like He when we shall see Him as He is-and until we see Him as He is and are like He, we shall always have restlessnessof spirit-and always be crying out for more Divine Grace and laboring against the evil that is in us, if by any means we maysubdue it. O yes, Beloved, in the fact that this is what we hope for, this is what we pray for, this is what we fight for,this is what we would be willing to die for-that we might be entirely conformed to the mind and will of God-there is evidencethat we see that the Law of God is good and delight in it after the inward man.
This, however, is proven in a more practical way to onlookers when the Christian shows that the life of God is enabling himto overcome many of the desires of the flesh and of the mind. Oftentimes, in striving to be holy, he has to put himself tomuch stern self-denial-but he does it cheerfully. For instance, should it happen in business that by using a very common trickin trade he might gain more profit, he will not do it if he is a Christian-he feels he cannot do this evil and sin againsthis God. Or should the young convert find that a little divergence from the right path would please the worldly people withwhom he is obliged to associate, he may, perhaps, turn aside in his weakness, but the new life within him will never be easyif he does.
The inner life, when it is in its vigor, will make him say, "Though I should lose the goodwill of these people, let me servemy Lord and Master. I must forfeit my situation, if it comes to that, sooner than I can do wrong. I must be put even in perilof my daily bread sooner than I will be found willfully breaking a Commandment of Christ. I cannot do it." Now, I know manyof God's children have often suffered very severely and have passed through a great many trials and troubles because theywould not flinch from following their Lord. This is one of the proofs that they delight in the Law of God after the innerman. When a man is willing to bear reproach, to be scoffed at, to be ridiculed and taunted as mad for righteousness sake-whenhe is willing that men should sneer at him as a hypocrite and accept him as a Pharisee when he braves the cold shoulder fromthose whose company he would otherwise have enjoyed-and all because he must and will follow the mind and direction of God'sSpirit, I say, then, it is then the man gives proof that he delights in the Law of God!
I thank God there are, in this Church, those who have given that proof and I pray that you and I, all of us who have receivedthe Divine Nature, may give constant evidence by using the good at all hazards and taking up the cross at all risks-that oursoul, even if it cannot be perfect in action-at any rate would be perfect in aim and determined, by God's help, to cherisha love and desire in all things to do Jehovah's will. Is there anyone here who is obliged to say, "Well, I do not consentto the Law of God. I do not delight in it. When I hear it said, 'You shall not covet,' 'You shall not commit adultery,' 'Rememberthe Sabbath day to keep it holy,' I wish it were not evil to do those things that are forbidden. It is a pity our pleasureand our profit, our duty and our delight should be so much at variance. I would rather there were less Law and more license.Those Commandments, especially those that touch our thoughts and trench on the freedom of our will, are harsh and unpalatable.I am not content to be bound by them. I would rather live as I
like."
Well, my dear Friend, I will say nothing more severe to you than this-you have no part or lot in this matter at all! If youhad-if your heart had been renewed-you would talk after a very different matter. Whenever you hear persons commending a lowstandard of religion, a low standard of morality-whenever you find them vindicating lax views of right and wrong-you may restassured that the spirit that is in them is not the Spirit of the holy God, but it is the spirit of their sinful nature! Yes,the spirit of Satan may have come in to make the human spirit even worse than it was before!
But, does your heart delight in God's Law? Is there a charm in that which is right to your soul? Is there a beauty in thatwhich is virtuous to your spirit's eye? Do you especially admire the Character of Jesus because, "in His life the Law appearsdrawn out in living characters"? If so, then I trust, dear Friends, you give evidence that you have been made partakers ofthe Divine Nature, that you are regenerate and though there is still evil in you, yet there is the life of God in you whichwill resist the evil and subdue it till you are brought safely to His right hand.
II. Now, secondly, we come to the conflict. Where there is this delight in the Law of God, yet there is another law in themembers, so Paul says and he seems to me to speak of it in three different stages. He could see it first and then he had toencounter it and at length, to some extent, he was enslaved by it, for he says, "bringing me into captivity."
There is in each one of us a law of sin. It may always be seen, even when it is not in active operation, if our eyes are lightened.Whenever I hear a man say he has no propensity to sin, I infer at once that he does not live at home. I should think he mustlive a long way from home, or else he has never been anywhere except in the front parlor of his house where he keeps his profession.He cannot have gone through all the chambers and searched them thoroughly, or he would have discovered somewhere that thereis an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God. This is true of the Believer-he has to cry out against anothernature and say, "Help my unbelief."
It is always in the man. Sometimes it is dormant. I do not know whether the devil ever goes to sleep, but our sinful natureseems, for a time, to do so-not, indeed, that it is any the less sinful when asleep than when it is awake. It is just as badas it can be. Gunpowder is not always exploding, but it is always explosive. Bring but the spark to it and soon it burstsout, as though it had been ready and waiting to exert its powers of explosion. The viper may be coiled up doing no damage,but it has a deadly virus beneath its fangs. It is still a viper even when it is not putting forth its poisonous teeth.
There is within our nature that which would send the best saint to Hell if Sovereign Grace did not prevent. There is a littleHell within the heart of every child and only the great God of Heaven can overmaster that mischievous indwelling sin. Thissin will crop up when it is least expected. Generally it breaks forth suddenly, taking us by surprise. I have known it tomy sorrow. I am not going to stand here and make many confessions with regard to myself. Howbeit I did know a man once who,in attending a Prayer Meeting, felt his heart much lifted up in the ways of God. He drew very near to his heavenly Father,held sweet communion with Christ and enjoyed much of the fellowship of the Spirit. Little did he think that the moment thePrayer Meeting was over somebody in the congregation would insult and bitterly affront him!
Because he was taken unawares his anger was roused and he spoke unadvisedly with his tongue. He had better have held his peace.Now, I believe that man, if he had been met at any other time-for he was of a tolerably quiet temper- would have taken theinsult without resenting it or making any reply whatever. But he had been unwarned, therefore he was unguarded. The very loveshed abroad in his heart caused the animosity he encountered to shock his feelings the more. He had been so near Heaven thathe expected everybody present had thoughts in harmony with his own! He had not reckoned upon being assailed then. When thereis most money in the house, then is the likeliest time for thieves to break in-and when there is most Divine Grace in thesoul, the devil will try, if he can, to assault it.
Pirates were not accustomed to attack vessels when they went out to fetch gold from the Indies-they always waylaid them whenthey were coming home-with a view of getting rich spoil worth the capture. If you have enjoyed a sermon. If you have gottennear to God in prayer. If the Scriptures have been very precious to you, you may expect, just then, that the dragon that sleepswithin will wake up and disturb the peaceful calm of your soul-
"We should expect some danger near, When we receive too much delight." Let us be the most watchful, then, in seasons of tranquility.This evil nature, you see, will sometimes be exercised as if by jealousy when we are being refreshed with good. It will certainlybe developed when we are exposed to evil.
The man who congratulates himself because he feels no sinful proclivities, no unholy thoughts, no impure imaginations, noconceited ideas, no turbulent passions, had need be reminded of that saying of old Rutherford-"When the temptation sleepsthe madman is wise, the harlot is chaste. But when the vessel is pierced, out comes that which is within, be it wine or water."O my Soul, you have only been at rest awhile because there was not any exciting cause for a time. Put into the company ofgodly people and the mind occupied with good things continually, the bad instincts may sleep. But cast into other societyit only needs a slight provocation, and oh, how soon the evil that always was within manifests itself abundantly!
There are weeds in almost every soil. If you throw up the soil from 10 or 20 feet deep there will be found the seeds fromwhich they grow. Now those seeds cannot germinate until they are put in a convenient place. Then let the sun shine and thedew fall-and the weeds begin to show themselves. There may be many weeds in our nature, deep down, out of sight-but shouldthey be thrown up by some change of circumstances we shall find in ourselves evils we never dreamt of. Oh, let no man boast!Let no man say, "I should never fall into that particular sin." How do you know, my Brother? You
may never have been in that position in which such a sin would have allured you. Beware! Perhaps where you think you are iron,you are clay. And when you think that the gates are closed with bars of brass it may be but rotten wood.
With respect to none of us, even the holiest, is there reason to trust his best faculties, his best desires, his best resolutions!We are utter weakness through and through and prone to transgressions, notwithstanding all that God's Grace has done for us.The sin which is in us, as a taint in our constitution, might easily break out as a loathsome distemper, spreading over theentire man from head to foot and spoiling all the character. I pray God it never may! It is remarkable how sin will show itselfin the Christian, even in the holiest of his duties. Suppose it is prayer. When you feel that you ought to pray and woulddraw near to God, do you not find, sometimes, an unwillingness as if the knees were stiff and the heart was hard?
In prayer, when your soul is led away with thoughts of Divine things, straight across your soul like some carrion crow flyingacross a landscape there comes a bad thought and you cannot get rid of it! Or perhaps you get through your devotion with muchdelight in God, but you have not got out of your little room before an alien pleasure steals over your mind-a self-satisfactionthat you have prayed so well that you are growing in Grace-that you are rising to the fullness of the stature of a man inChrist. Is it so, that you come from the chamber of reverent worship musing on your own importance-meditating your fitnessto occupy a place above the common rank and file of the soldiers of Christ-or that you might very well take a lieutenant'srank in the Church of God?
Perhaps, again, you did not feel any liberty in prayer and then with a peevish fretful temper you will inwardly murmur, ifyou do not actually say, you might as well give up praying such prayers as those, there can be no use in them. So do whatyou may, or leave undone what you may, yet still the evil that is within will rise-it will intrude upon you at some time orother to let you know of its existence. You may bolt the door and you may fancy that no thief can get in, and begin to takeoff your clothes and go to rest while yet the thief is under the bed! So many a man has thought, "I have barred the door againstthose temptations," and, lo, they have been hidden in his soul like the images which Rachel took that were concealed underthe camel's furniture. Somewhere or other they were secreted where he had not discovered them.
Take it for granted, dear Friends, and do not doubt it. The Apostle Paul saw it, so may you if you choose to look. He said,"I see another law in my members." And this law in his members, he goes on to tell us, was "warring against the law of hismind." It strove to get the mastery, but the new nature, on the other hand, would not let it get the mastery. The old lustsfight and then the new life fights, too, for there must be two sides to a war. Such is the warfare going on within the renewedsoul. We have known this warfare takes different shapes. At times it has been on this wise-a wrong desire has come into aChristian and he has loathed it-utterly loathed it-but that desire has followed him again and again.
He has cried to God against it. He has wept over it. He has not consented to it. He fears lest he may have found it sweetor palatable to him for the moment, but when he has had time for reflection he shudders at the very thought of giving wayto that temptation. And yet by the restiveness of his own flesh and by the reprisals of Satan that hateful desire will comeup and up and up again! He will hear it baying behind him like a bloodhound following his prey and sometimes it will takea leap and grip him by the throat and cast him down. It will be as much as that poor man can do to keep down that ferocioustemptation that has arisen in his spirit.
I can bear witness that such warfare is a very terrible ordeal, for it sometimes lasts for days, and weeks and months together.I have known thoughtful Christians who have been harassed with doubts which have been suggested about the Inspiration of Scripture;about the deity of our Lord; about the sureness of the Covenant of Grace or some other fundamental doctrine of our most holyfaith. Or it may even be the temptation has been to blasphemies which the Believer has abhorred from his very soul. Yet themore bitterly he has detested it the more relentlessly it has pursued him. If he drives it away, it returns with redoubledforce.
"Is it true?" "Is it so?" Maybe a hideous sentiment is wrapped up in a neat epigram and then it will haunt the memory, andhe will strive in vain to dislodge it. He would gladly hurl the thought and the words that clothe the thought into the bottomlesspit. Out, cursed specter, he will cry! Back like the ghost of one's own crimes it comes. From where do these evils come? Maythey sometimes be traced to Satan? Yes, but most commonly temptation derives its strength, as well as its opportunity, fromthe moods or habits to which our own constitution is prone. In the discharge of
public duties, when straining every nerve to serve the Lord, we may meet with men whose temper acts on our temper to stirup the bile and make us think evil of those to whom we are bent on doing good.
In the peaceful shades of retirement which wise men seek out as a relief from the distractions of society, what strange fanciesand monstrous vagaries will often come into the heart and confuse the brain. Or, sad to tell, in the walks of study wherethoughtful men set out reverently to enquire into the counsels of God, how frequently have they been lured from the open pathsto trespass on dangerous ground-to lose themselves in labyrinths, to leave the footsteps of the flock- and so to become giddyand high-minded. Anywhere, everywhere we are challenged to fight-and we must give battle to the sin that besets us.
But, the war carried on by this evil nature is not always by the continual besieging of the soul. At times it tries to takeus by assault. This is a favorite mode of warfare within our own corrupt heart. When we are off guard, up it will come andattack us! And as I have said before, we are apt to be off our guard when we have been brought up into the high mountain apart-whenhave been near the Lord. In that exalted sphere of communion we have not thought of the devil. His existence has not comeacross our mind-but when we go down, again, into the plain, we soon find that he is still living, still distressing our Brothersand Sisters-still lying in wait to ensnare us.
For this cause our experience should quicken our sympathy. Full many a Christian has been surprised into a sin for which hewas to be greatly blamed, but for which he ought not to be condemned by his fellow Christians with so much severity. Theyought to condemn the sin, but to remember, themselves, lest they also should be tempted. Many a man has been good becausehe had not a chance of being bad, and, I believe, many a professing Christian has stood because the road did not happen tobe very rough and there was not much to be gained by idling down. We do not judge each other as God does. He knows the infirmitiesof His dear children. While He does not make excuses for their sin-He is too pure and holy for that-yet, having blotted outtheir sins through the Atonement of Christ Jesus, He does not cast them off and turn them out of fellowship, as sometimesHis people do their poor Brethren who may, after all, be as true children as they are themselves and have as much real loveto their Father.
This evil nature, when it is warring, laughs at our own resolutions and mocks our own attempts to put it down. It must bewarred against by Divine Grace! No arm but the Almighty arm can overcome our natural corruption. Like the leviathan it laughsat the spear! It counts it but as rotten wood. You cannot come at a besetting sin as you would like. At times you fancy, "I'llwound it to its deadly hurt," and in the very act of wounding one sin you are calling another into play! Many a man has triedto overcome his propensity to faintheartedness and he has run into presumption. Some have tried to be less profuse in theirexpenditure and they have become penurious. Some have said, "I will no more be proud," and then they have become mean-spirited.
I have known some that were so stern for the Truth of God that they became bigoted. They have afterwards become latitudinarianand hold the Truth with so loose a hand that their constancy could hardly be relied on. Look straight on and "do the dutythat next lies before you." It is no easy thing, believe me, to defend yourself from the surprises of sin. It is a thing impossibleunless God who created the new nature shall come to its rescue-shall feed it with the Bread of Heaven, shall give it waterout of the Rock of Ages-and lead it on its way to the goodly land where the Canaanite shall never be and where our soul shallfeast on milk and honey.
I must not linger on this point, but pass on to notice the next. It is a sadder one. The Apostle said this warring broughthim into captivity to the law of sin. What does he mean by this? I do not think he means he wandered into open flagrant immoralities.No observer may have noticed any fault in the Apostle's character. He could see it in himself and he saw flaws in his lifewhere we are not able to detect them which probably was a habit with the Apostle. When I hear a good man lamenting his faults,I know what the world will say-they will take him at his word and think that he is as they are. Whereas with every godly manif you knew him and marked his life and conversation, you would be compelled, if you judged him candidly, to say that he waslike Job-perfect and upright, one that feared God and eschewed evil.
Yet that very man would be the first to see spots in himself because he has more light than others-because he has a higheridea of what holiness is than others-and chiefly because he lives nearer to God than others. He knows that God is so infinitelyholy that the heavens are not pure in His sight and He charged His angels with folly! Therefore, everyone who sees himselfin the glass of the Law sees in himself a filthiness that he never saw before. As Job said, "I have heard of You by the hearingof the ear: but now my eyes see You. Therefore I abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes."
But I think the Apostle was not referring, here, to acts of gross misdemeanor having brought him into captivity so far ashe himself was concerned, though many who are God's children get into sorry captivity because the law of sin and death intheir members gets the mastery over them, sometimes. Oh, watch against this! Weep against this-I was about to say wrestleunto blood against this! Brethren, they that have committed great sins who have been God's children, though they have beensaved, have been saved so as by fire.
And if they could tell you how their very bones were broken, how the Lord made them see that He hated sin in His own familyeven more than anywhere else-if you could hear them confess how they lost the light of His Countenance, lost enjoyments, lostthe sweet savor of the promises-oh, it would make you say, "My God, be pleased not only to save me at the last but all thejourney through! Hold up my footsteps in Your way that they slip not! Make me to run in the way of Your Commandments." Itis a captivity like that of the Israelites in Babylon, itself, when a child of God suffers to fall into some great sin.
But, long before it comes to pass, and I hope in your case it may never go so far, I think this law of sin brings us intocaptivity in other respects. While you are fighting and contending against inbred sin, doubts will invade your heart. "AmI a child of God?" If it is so, why am I thus? I cannot pray as I would. Surely if I were a child of God I should not be hamperedin devotion or go out to a place of worship and feel I have no enjoyment, while others feast and sing for joy of heart." Oh,what a captivity the soul is brought into when it allows inbred sin to cast any doubts upon its safety in Christ! Christ,having been all our Confidence, is always in us the hope of Glory. To as many as received Him, to them He gave power to becomethe sons of God, even to as many as believed on His name.
If I have believed on His name, whatever my inward experience may be-or may not be in my own estimation-if I have believedon the name of Jesus I have the privilege to be a child of God. But sometimes doubts will come over us and so we are broughtinto captivity. I have known those who were almost driven to despair. The child of God has written bitter things against himselfand signed his own death warrant. Thank God, even if we sign our own death warrant it does not stand for anything! Nobodycan sign that but the King and He will never sign it for any soul that believes in Him, however feeble his love may be!
We may be brought into captivity by a sense of sin, a temptation to sin, or a yielding to sin. If we ever come to that itwill make us weak in serving, cold in prayers when alone, and joyless in the society of the saints. No, we shall feel almostlifeless. Oh, may God save us from it! Oh, may we wrestle hard! May we wrestle every day that we may keep sin down! May DivineGrace, even that Grace which is treasured up in Christ Jesus, secure to us the victory!
III. It is some comfort when we feel a war within the soul, to remember that it is an interesting phase of Christian experience.Such as are dead in sin have never made proof of any of these things. Time was, when we were self-righteous, lost, ruinedand without the Law, sin was dead in us, or so we thought. We were dead in trespasses and sins, though we boasted of our ownrighteousness! These inward conflicts show that we are alive. There is some life in the soul that hates sin-even though itcannot do as it would.
I have known what it is to bless God for the times when my soul has felt inward war and I would have been glad to feel thewar renewed. Rest assured that the strong man of the soul, while he keeps the house will keep it in peace. It is when a strongerthan he comes to eject him that there is a fight within your soul. I would suggest, therefore, to you that it is a cause forconsolation and thankfulness. Do not be depressed about it. Say, "after all, there is some life here." Where there is painthere is life. The best of God's saints have suffered in this very same manner. Your way to Heaven is not a bad one.
Some, I know, are not so troubled to any great extent, but the majority of God's saints have to endure fights outside andfears within. You read of Martin Luther. That great bold man became a master of theology by being taught in the school oftemptation. Even his last hours were full of stern conflict. He was a man of war from his youth up. How constantly did hehave to contend against himself! We get the same testimony from this chapter of the life of Paul. Be not, therefore, downcastas though some strange thing had happened to you! Look up yonder to those saints above in their white robes singing theirunending song! Ask them from where their victory came! They will tell you that it did not come to them because they were sinlessor perfect in themselves, but through the blood of Jesus-
"Once they were wrestling here below, And wet their couch with tears.
They wrestled hard as we do now, With sins, with doubts and fears." The richest consolation comes from the last verse of thechapter. Paul, having asked how he should be delivered, answers the question "I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.""They shall call His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins"-not only from the guilt of their sins but fromthe power of their sins! What a mercy it is that the Lord Jesus has struck a deadly blow at our sin! He has broken the headof it. It is a monster and has immense vitality- but its back is broken! Its legs are broken! It is a broken-headed monster!There it is-it lies hissing and spitting, and writhing, capable of doing us much mischief-but He that has wounded it willstrike it again and again, until at last it shall utterly die!
Thank God it has not vitality enough to get across the river Jordan. No sinful desire shall ever swim on that stream! Theyare not molested there with tendencies and propensities to sin-and when they shall be restored to their bodies and their bodiesshall rise again-they shall have bodies not of flesh! Bodies of flesh shall not inherit the kingdom of Heaven, neither shalltheir bodies see corruption! But bodies fit for celestial minds, they shall be eternally free from their former sin. Let usrejoice that Jesus Christ can do it all! He can save us from all sin. He who has bought us with His blood, He will not cheaplylose that which He has dearly bought! He will deliver us from all sin and He will bring us into His eternal kingdom and Glorywithout fail!
So we fall back upon this sweet consolation. Though the fight may be long and arduous, the result is not doubtful. Rememberthe text of last Thursday night. That shall settle the point. "I give unto My sheep eternal life, and they shall never perish,neither shall any pluck them out of My hand." "My Father who gave them to Me is greater than all, and none shall pluck themout of My Father's hand." You will have to get to Heaven fighting sin every inch of the way, but you will get there! Someon boards and some on broken pieces of the ship-they all came safe to land in Paul's shipwreck-so shall it be with the saints.When the sheep shall pass again under the hand of Him that counts them one by one, there shall not be one of them missing!
They were all so weak that the wolf could have torn them in pieces. They were all so foolish that if left to themselves theywould have wandered on the mountains and in the woods and have been destroyed. But the eternal Shepherd makes this a pointof honor-"Of all them that You have given Me, I have lost none. Here am I, and the children that You have given Me." It oughtto make you quite well, now, to know that you are sure of victory! Oh, by the lilies of the love of Christ, and by the strongright arm that once smote Rahab and cut the dragons in two, let every Christian be of good courage! The Omnipotent is withus! The Invincible is for us!
Forward to the charge, onward to the conflict, though the fight waxes warmer and sterner! Onward forever! Onward without fearor a moment's hesitation! "He that has loved us bears us through and makes us more than conquerors, too." "The breaker iscome up before them. They have broken up and have passed through the gate, and are gone out by it, and their King shall passbefore them and the LORD on the head of them." They have put to the route their foes! Thus shall it be spoken of all thosethat follow under the leadership of Christ! This is the heritage of the saints and their righteousness is of Me, says theLord. God grant us to be victors in this holy war for Christ's sake. Amen.