The Beatitudes - Thomas Watson
They shall be called the children of God
They shall be
called the children of God.
In these
words the glorious privilege of the saints is set down. Those who have made
their peace with God and labour to make peace among brethren, this is the great
honour conferred upon them, `They shall be called the children of God'.
'They shall
be (called)', that is, they shall be so reputed and esteemed of God. God never
miscalls anything. He does not call them children which are no children. `Thou
shalt be called the prophet of the Highest', {Lu
1:76} that is, thou shalt be so. They shall be `called the children
of God', that is, they shall be accounted and admitted for children.
The
proposition resulting is this: that peacemakers are the children of the most
High. God is said in Scripture to have many children:
By eternal generation.
So only Christ is the natural Son of his Father. `Thou art my Son: this day
have I begotten thee'. {Ps 2:7}
By creation.
So the angels are the sons of God. `When the morning stars sang together and
all the sons of God shouted for joy'. {Job
38:7}
By
participation of dignity. So king and rulers are said to be children of the
high God. `I have said, ye are gods, and all of you are children of the most
High'. {Ps 82:6}
By visible
profession. So God has many children. Hypocrites forge a title of son-ship.
`The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair'. {Ge
6:2}
By real
sanctification. So all the faithful are peculiarly and eminently the children
of God.
That I may
illustrate and amplify this, and that believers may suck much sweetness out of
this gospel-flower, I shall discuss and demonstrate these seven particulars:
1. That
naturally we are not the children of God.
2. What it is
to be the children of God.
3. How we
come to be made children.
4. The signs
of God's children.
5. The love
of God in making us children.
6. The honour
of God's children.
7. The
privileges of God's children.
Naturally we
are not the children of God. As Jerome says, we are not born God's children but
made so. By nature we are strangers to God, swine not sons. {2Pe
2:22} Will a man settle his estate upon his swine? He will give them
his acorns, not his jewels. By nature we have the devil for our father: `Ye are
of your father the devil. {Joh 8:44}
A wicked man may search the records of hell for his pedigree.
What it is to
be the children of God. This child-ship consists in two things. Adoption;
infusion of grace.
Child-ship
consists in adoption: `That we might receive the adoption of sons'. {Ga 4:5}
Wherein does
the true nature of adoption consist?
In three
things:
(i) A
transition or translation from one family to another. He that is adopted is
taken out of the old family of the devil and hell {Eph
2:2,Eph 2:3} to which he was heir
apparent, and is made of the family of heaven, of a noble family. {Eph 2:19} God is his Father, Christ is
his elder-brother, the saints co-heir, the angels fellow-servants in that
family.
(ii) Adoption
consists in an immunity and disobligement from all the laws of the former
family. `Forget also thy father's house'. {Ps
45:10} He who is spiritually adopted has now no more to do with sin.
`Ephraim shall say, what have I to do any more with idols?'. {Ho
14:8} A child of God has indeed to do with sin as with an enemy to
which he gives battle, but not as with a lord to which he yields obedience. He
is freed from sin. {Ro 6:7} I do not say he is freed from
duty. Was it ever heard that a child should be freed from duty to his parents?
This is such a freedom as rebels take.
(iii)
Adoption consists in a legal investitute into the rights and royalties of the
family into which the person is to be adopted. These are chiefly two:
The first
royalty is a new name. He who is divinely adopted assumes a new name; before, a
slave; now, a son; of a sinner, a saint. This is a name of honour better than
any title of prince or monarch. `To him that overcometh I will give a white
stone, and in the stone a new name written'. {Re
2:17} The white stone signifies remission. The new name signifies
adoption, and the new name is put in the white stone to show that our adoption
is grounded upon our justification; and this new name is written to show that
God has all the names of his children enrolled in the book of life.
The second
royalty is a giving the party adopted an interest in the inheritance. The
making one an heir implies a relation to an inheritance. A man does not adopt
another to a title but to an estate. So God in adopting us for his children
gives us a glorious inheritance: `The inheritance of the saints in light'. {Col 1:12}
It is
pleasant; it is an inheritance in light.
It is safe;
God keeps the inheritance for his children, {1Pe
1:4} and keeps them for the inheritance, {1Pe
1:5} so that they cannot be hindered from taking possession.
There is no
disinheriting, for the saints are co-heirs with Christ. {Ro
8:17} Nay, they are members of Christ. {Col
1:18} The members cannot be disinherited but the head must.
The heirs
never die. Eternity is a jewel of their crown. `They shall reign for ever and
ever'. {Re 22:5}
Before I pass
to the next, here a question may arise. How do God's adopting and man's
adopting differ?
1. Man adopts
to supply a defect, because he has no children of his own, but God does not
adopt upon this account. He had a Son of his own, the Lord Jesus. He was his
natural Son and the Son of his love, testified by a voice from heaven, `This is
my beloved Son'. {Mt 3:17} Never was there any Son so
like the Father. He was his exact effigy, `the express image of his person'. {Heb 1:3} He was such a Son as was worth
more than all the angels in heaven: `Being made so much better than the
angels'; {Heb 1:4} so that God adopts not out of
necessity, but pity.
2. When a man
adopts, he adopts but one heir, but God adopts many: `In bringing many sons to
glory'. {Heb 2:10} Oh may a poor trembling
Christian say, Why should I ever look for this privilege to be a child of God!
It is true, if God did act as a man, if he adopted only one son, then you might
despair. But he adopts millions. He brings `many sons to glory'. Indeed this
may be the reason why a man adopts but one, because he does not have enough
estate for more. If he should adopt many his land would not hold out. But God
has enough land to give to all his children. `In my Father's house are many
mansions'. {Joh 14:2}
3. Man when
he adopts does it with ease. It is but sealing a deed and the thing is done.
But when God adopts, it puts him to a far greater expense. It sets his wisdom
on work to find out a way to adopt us. It was no easy thing to reconcile hell
and heaven, to make the children of wrath the children of the promise; and when
God in his infinite wisdom had found out a way, it was no easy way. It cost God
the death of his natural Son, to make us his adopted sons. When God was about
to constitute us sons and heirs, he could not seal the deed but by the blood of
his own Son. It did not cost God so much to make us creatures as to make us
sons. To make us creatures cost but the speaking of a word. To make us sons
cost the effusion of blood.
4. Man, when
he adopts, settles but earthly privileges upon his heir, but God settles
heavenly privileges justification, glorification. Men but entail their land
upon the persons they adopt. God does more. He not only entails his land upon
his children, but he entails himself upon them. `I will be their God'. {Heb 8:10} Not only heaven is their
portion, but God is their portion.
God's
filiating or making of children is by infusion of grace. When God makes any his
children he stamps his image upon them. This is more than any man living can
do. He may adopt another, but he cannot alter his disposition. If he be of a
morose rugged nature, he cannot alter it; but God in making of children fits
them for son-ship. He prepares and sanctifies them for this privilege. He
changes their disposition. He files off the ruggedness of their nature. He
makes them not only sons, but saints. They are of another spirit. {Nu 14:24} They become meek and
humble. They are `partakers of the divine nature'. {2Pe
1:4}
The third
thing is how we come to be the children of God.
There is a
double cause of our filiation or child-ship.
The impulsive
cause is God's free grace. We were rebels and traitors, and what could move God
to make sinners sons, but free grace? `Having predestinated us unto the
adoption of children according to the good pleasure of his will'. {Eph 1:5} Free grace gave the casting
voice. Adoption is a mercy spun out of the bowels of free grace. It were much
for God to take a clod of earth and make it a star, but it is more for God to
take a piece of clay and sin and instate it into the glorious privilege of
son-ship. How will the saints read over the lectures of free grace in heaven!
The organic
or instrumental cause of our son-ship is faith. Baptism does not make us
children. That is indeed a badge and livery and gives us right to many external
privileges, but the thing which makes God take cognisance of us for children is
faith. `Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus'. {Ga 3:26} Before faith be wrought we
have nothing to do with God. We are (as the apostle speaks in another sense)
bastards and not sons. {Heb 12:8} An unbeliever may call God
his Judge, but not his Father. Wicked men may draw near to God in ordinances,
and hope that God will be their Father, but while they are unbelievers they are
bastards, and God will not father them but will lay them at the devil's door.
`Ye are the children of God by faith'. Faith legitimates us. It confers upon us
the title of son-ship and gives us right to inherit.
How then
should we labour for faith! Without faith we are creatures, not children.
Without faith we are spiritually illegitimate. This word `illegitimate, is a
term of infamy. Such as are illegitimate are looked upon with disgrace. We call
them baseborn. You who ruffle it in your silks and velvets, but are in the
state of nature, you are illegitimate. God looks upon you with an eye of scorn
and contempt. You are a vile person, a son of the earth, `of the seed of the
serpent'. The devil can show as good a coat of arms as you.
This word
`illegitimate' also imports infelicity and misery. Persons illegitimate cannot
inherit legally. The land goes only to such as are lawful heirs. Till we are
the children of God, we have no right to heaven, and there is no way to be
children but by faith. `Ye are the children of God by faith'.
Here two
things are to be discussed:
1. What faith
is.
2. Why faith
makes us children.
1. What faith
is. If faith instates us into son-ship, it concerns us to know what faith is.
There is a twofold faith.
(i) A more
lax general faith. When we believe the truth of all that is revealed in the
Holy Scriptures, this is not the faith which privileges us in son-ship. The
devils believe all the articles in the creed. It is not the bare knowledge of a
medicine or believing the sovereign virtue of it that will cure one that is
ill. This general faith (so much cried up by some) will not save. This a man
may have and not love God. He may believe that God will come to judge the quick
and the dead, and hate him, as the prisoner believes the judge's coming to the
assizes, and abhors the thoughts of him. Take heed of resting in a general
faith. You may have this and be no better than devils.
(ii) There is
a special faith, when we not only believe the report we hear of Christ, but
rest upon him, embrace him, `taking hold of the horns of this altar', resolving
there to abide. In the body there are sucking veins, which draw the meat into
the stomach and concoct it there. So faith is the sucking vein which draws
Christ into the heart and applies him there. This is the filiating faith. By
this we are made the children of God, and wherever this faith is, it is not
like physic in a dead man's mouth, but is exceedingly operative. It obliges to
duty. It works by love. {Ga 5:6}
But why does
faith makes us children? Why should not other graces, repentance, love etc., do
so? I answer: Because faith is instituted of God and honoured to this work of
making us children. God's institution gives faith its value and validity. It is
the king's stamp makes the coin pass current. If he would put his stamp upon
brass or leather, it would go as current as silver. The great God has
authorised and put the stamp of his institution upon faith, and that makes it
pass for current and gives it a privilege above all the graces to make us
children.
Again, faith
makes us children as it is the vital principle. `The just shall live by faith'.
{Hab 2:4} All God's children are
living. None of them are stillborn. Now `by faith we live'. As the heart is the
fountain of life in the body, so faith is the fountain of life in the soul.
Faith also
makes us children as it is the uniting grace. It knits us to Christ. The other
graces cannot do this. By faith we are one with Christ and so we are akin to
God. Being united to the natural Son, we become adopted sons. The kindred comes
in by faith. God is the Father of Christ. Faith makes us Christ's brethren, {Heb 2:11} and so God comes to be our
Father.
The fourth
particular to be discussed is to show the signs of God's children. It concerns
us to know whose children we are. Augustine says that all mankind are divided
into two ranks; either they are the children of God or the children of the
devil.
1. The first
sign of our heavenly son-ship is tenderness of heart: `Because thy heart was
tender'. {2Ch 34:27} A childlike heart is a
tender heart. He who before had a flinty, has now a fleshy heart. A tender
heart is like melting wax to God. He may set what seal he will upon it. This
tenderness of heart shows itself three ways.
(i) A tender
heart grieves for sin. A child weeps for offending his father. Peter showed a
tender heart when Christ looked upon him and he remembered his sin, he wept as
a child. Clement of Alexandria says, he never heard a cock crow but he wept.
And some learned writers tell us that by much weeping there seemed to be as it
were channels made in his blessed face. The least hair makes the eye weep. The
least sin makes the heart smite. David's heart smote him when he cut off the
lap of King Saul's garment! What would it have done if he had cut off his head?
(ii) A tender
heart melts under mercy. Though when God thunders by affliction, the rain of
tears falls from a gracious eye, yet the heart is never so kindly dissolved as
under the sunbeams of God's mercy. See how David's heart was melted with God's
kindness: `Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house, that thou hast brought
me hitherto?'. {2Sa 7:18} There was a gracious thaw
upon his heart. So says a child of God, `Lord, who am I (a piece of dust and
sin kneaded together) that the orient beams of free grace should shine upon me?
Who am I, that thou shouldest pity me when I lay in my blood and spread the
golden wings of mercy over me? The soul is overcome with God's goodness, the
tears drop, the love flames; mercy has a melting influence upon the soul.
(iii) A
tender heart trembles under God's threatenings. `My flesh trembleth for fear of
thee'. {Ps 119:120} `Because thine heart was
tender, and thou didst humble thyself before God, when thou heardest his words against
this place, and didst rend thy clothes...'. {2Ch
34:27} If the father be angry, the child trembles. When ministers
denounce the menaces and threats of God against sin, tender souls sit in a
trembling posture. This frame of heart God delights in. `To this man will I
look, even to him that trembleth at thy word'. {Isa
66:2} A wicked man, like the Leviathan, `is made without fear'. {Job 41:33} He neither believes the
promises nor dreads the threatenings. Let judgement be denounced against sin,
`he laughs at the shaking of a spear'. He thinks either that God is ignorant
and does not see, or impotent and cannot punish. The mountains quake before the
Lord, the hills melt, the rocks are thrown down by him. {Na
1:5} But the hearts of sinners are more obdurate than the rocks. An
hardened sinner like Nebuchadnezzar has `the heart of a beast given to him'. {Da 4:16} A childlike heart is a
tender heart. The stone is taken away.
2. The second
sign of son-ship is assimilation. `Ye have put on the new man which is renewed
in knowledge after the image of him that created him'. {Col
3:10} The child resembles the father. God's children are like their
heavenly Father. They bear his very image and impress. Wicked men say they are
the children of God, but there is too great a dissimilitude and unlikeness. The
Jews bragged they were Abraham's children, but Christ disproves them by this
argument, because they were not like him. `Ye seek to kill me, a man that hath
told you the truth, which I have heard of God; this did not Abraham'. {Joh 8:40} You, Abraham's children, and
go about to kill me! Abraham would not have murdered an innocent. You are more
like Satan than Abraham. `Ye are of your father the devil' (verse Joh 8:44). Such as are proud, earthly,
malicious may say, `Our father which art in hell'. It is blasphemy to call God
our Father and make the devil our pattern. God's children resemble him in
meekness and holiness. They are his walking pictures. As the seal stamps its
print and likeness upon the wax, so does God stamp the print and effigy of his
own beauty upon his children.
3. The third
sign of God's children is, they have the Spirit of God. It is called the Spirit
of adoption; `ye have received the Spirit of adoption...'. {Ro
8:15}
How shall we
know that we have received the Spirit of adoption, and so are in the state of
adoption?
The Spirit of
God has a threefold work in them who are made children:
(i) A
regenerating work. (ii) A supplicating work. (iii) A witnessing work.
(i) A
regenerating work. Whomsoever the Spirit adopts, He regenerates. God's children
are said to be `born of the Spirit'. `Except a man be born of water and of the
Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God'. {Joh
3:5} We must first be born of the Spirit before we are baptised with
this new name of sons and daughters. We are not God's children by creation, but
by renovation; not by our first birth, but by our new birth. This new birth
produced by the Word as the material cause, {Jas
1:18} and by the Spirit as the efficient cause, is nothing else but
a change of nature, {Ro 12:2} which though it be not a
perfect change, yet is a thorough change. {1Th
5:23} This change of heart is as necessary as salvation.
How shall we
know that we have this regenerating work of the Spirit?
Two ways: by
the pangs; by the products.
By the pangs:
there are spiritual pangs before the new birth, some bruisings of soul, some
groanings and cryings out, some strugglings in the heart between flesh and
Spirit. `They were pricked at their heart'. {Ac
2:37} The child has sharp throws before the birth; so it is in the
new birth. I grant the new birth is marked by `more and less'. All do not have
the same pangs of humiliation, yet all have pangs; all feel the hammer of the
law upon their heart, though some are more bruised with this hammer than
others. God's Spirit is a Spirit of bondage before He is a Spirit of adoption.
{Ro 8:15} What then shall we say to
those who are as ignorant about the new birth as Nicodemus: `How can a man be
born when he is old...?'. {Joh 3:4}
The new birth is `a derision of the ungodly', though it be `a great secret' to
the godly. Some thank God they never had any trouble of spirit. They were
always quiet. These bless God for the greatest curse. It is a sign they are not
God's children. The child of grace is always born with pangs.
The new birth
is known by the products, which are three:
Sensibility.
The infant that is new-born is sensible of the least touch. If the Spirit has
regenerated you, you are sensible of the ebullitions and first risings of sin
which before you did not perceive. Paul cries out of the `law in his members'.
{Ro 7:23} The new-born saint sees sin
in the root.
Circumspection.
He who is born of the Spirit is careful to preserve grace. He plies the breast
of ordinances. {1Pe 2:1} He is fearful of that which
may endanger his spiritual life. {1Jo 5:18}
He lives by faith, yet passes the time of his sojourning in fear. {1Pe 1:17} This is the first work of
the Spirit in them who are made children, a regenerating work.
(ii) The
Spirit of God has a supplicating work in the heart. The Spirit of adoption is a
Spirit of supplication. `Ye have received the Spirit of adoption whereby we cry
Abba, Father'. {Ro 8:15} While the child is in the
womb it cannot cry. While men lie in the womb of their natural estate, they
cannot pray effectually, but when they are born of the Spirit, then they cry
`Abba, Father'. Prayer is nothing else but the soul's breathing itself into the
bosom of its Father. It is a sweet and familiar intercourse with God. As soon
as ever the Spirit of God comes into the heart, He sets it a-praying. No sooner
was Paul converted but the next word is, `Behold, he prayeth'. {Ac 9:11} It is reported in the life
of Luther that, when he prayed, it was with so much reverence as if he were
praying to God, and with so much boldness, as if he had been speaking to his
friend. And Eusebius reports of Constantine the Emperor that every day he used
to shut up himself in some secret place in his palace, and there on bent knees
make his devout prayers and soliloquies to God. God's Spirit tunes the strings
of the affections, and then we make melody in prayer. For any to say, in
derision, `you pray by the Spirit', is a blasphemy against the Spirit. It is a
main work of the Spirit of God in the hearts of his children to help them to
pray: `Because ye are sons, God has sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your
hearts, crying, Abba, Father'. {Ga 4:6}
But many of
the children of God do not have such abilities to express themselves in prayer.
How then does the Spirit help their infirmities?
Though they
do not have always the gifts of the Spirit in prayer, yet they have the groans
of the Spirit. {Ro 8:26} Gifts are the ornaments of
prayer, but not the life of prayer. A carcass may be hung with jewels. Though
the Spirit may deny fluency of speech, yet He gives fervency of desire, and
such prayers are most prevalent. The prayers which the Spirit indites in the
hearts of God's children have these threefold qualifications.
The prayers
of God's children are believing prayers. Prayer is the key. Faith is the hand
that turns it. Faith feathers the arrow of prayer and makes it pierce the
throne of grace. `Whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer believing, ye shall
receive'. {Mt 21:22} Whereupon, says Jerome, I
would not presume to pray unless I bring faith along with me. To pray and not
believe is (as one says) a kind of jeer offered to God, as if we thought either
he did not hear or he would not grant.
That faith
may be animated in prayer, we must bring Christ in our arms when we appear
before God. `And Samuel took a sucking lamb, and offered it for a
burnt-offering; and Samuel cried unto the Lord for Israel, and the Lord heard
him'. {1Sa 7:9} This sucking lamb typified
Christ. When we come to God in prayer we must bring the Lamb, Christ along with
us. Themistocles carried the king's son in his arms and so pacified the king
when he was angry. The children of God present Christ in the arms of their
faith.
The prayers
of God's children indited by the Spirit are ardent prayers. `Ye have received
the Spirit, whereby we cry Abba, Father'. {Ro
8:15} `Father'; that implies faith. We cry; that implies fervency.
The incense was to be laid upon burning coals. {Le
16:12} The incense was a type of prayer; the burning coals, of
ardency in prayer. `Elias prayed earnestly, {Jas
5:17}. In the Greek it is `in praying he prayed', that is, he did it
with vehemence. In prayer the heart must boil over with heat of affection.
Prayer is compared to groans unutterable. {Ro
8:26} It alludes to a woman that is in pangs. We should be in pangs
when we are travailing for mercy. Such prayer `commands God himself'. {Isa 45:11}
The prayers
of God's children are heart-cleansing prayers. They purge out sin. Many pray
against sin and sin against prayer. God's children not only pray against sin,
but pray down sin.
(iii) The
Spirit of God has a witnessing work in the heart. God's children have not only
the influence of the Spirit, but the witness. `The Spirit itself beareth
witness with our spirit that we are the children of God'. {Ro
8:16} There is a threefold witness a child of God has the witness of
the Word, the witness of conscience, the witness of the Spirit. The Word makes
the major proposition. He who is in such a manner qualified is a child of God.
Conscience makes the minor proposition; but you are so divinely qualified. The
Spirit makes the conclusion therefore you are a child of God. The Spirit joins
with the witness of conscience. `The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits'. {Ro 8:16} The Spirit teaches conscience
to search the records of Scripture and find its evidences for heaven. It helps
conscience to spell out its name in a promise. It bears witness with our
spirit.
But how shall
I know the witness of the Spirit from a delusion?
The Spirit of
God always witnesses according to the Word, as the echo answers the voice.
Enthusiasts speak much of the Spirit, but they leave the Word. That inspiration
which is either without the Word or against it, is an imposture. The Spirit of
God indited the Word. {2Pe 1:21} Now if the Spirit should
witness otherwise than according to the Word, the Spirit would be divided
against Himself. He would be a spirit of contradiction, witnessing one thing
for a truth in the Word and another thing different from it in a man's
conscience.
4. The fourth
sign of God's children is zeal for God. They are zealous for his day, his
truth, his glory. They who are born of God are impatient of his dishonour.
Moses was cool in his own cause, but hot in God's. When the people of Israel
had wrought folly in the golden calf, he breaks the tables. When St. Paul saw
the people of Athens given to idolatry `his spirit was stirred in him'. {Ac 17:16} In the Greek it is his
spirit was `embittered', or, as the word may signify, he was in a paroxysm or
burning fit of zeal. He could not contain, but with this fire of zeal
discharges against their sin. As we shall answer for idle words, so for sinful
silence. It is dangerous in this sense to be possessed with a `dumb devil'.
David says, `the zeal of God's house had eaten him up'. {Ps
69:9} Many Christians whose zeal once had almost eaten them up, now
they have eaten up their zeal. They are grown tepid and neutral. The breath of
preferment blowing upon them has cooled their heat. I can never believe that he
has the heart of a child in him that can be patient when God's glory suffers.
Can an ingenuous child endure to hear his father reproached? Though we should
be silent under God's displeasure, yet not under his dishonour. When there is
an holy fire kindled in the heart, it will break forth at the lips. Zeal
tempered with holiness is the white and sanguine which gives the soul its best
complexion.
Of all others
let ministers be impatient when God's glory is impeached and eclipsed. A
minister without zeal is like 'salt that has lost its savour'. Zeal will make
men take injuries done to God as done to themselves. It is reported of
Chrysostom that he reproved any sin against God as if he himself had received a
personal wrong. Let not ministers be either shaken with fear or seduced with
flattery. God never made ministers to be as false glasses, to make bad faces
look fair. For want of this fire of zeal, they are in danger of another fire,
even the `burning lake', {Re 21:8} into which the fearful shall
be cast.
5. Those who
are God's children and are born of God are of a more noble and celestial spirit
than men of the world. They mind `things above'. {Col
3:2} `Whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world'. {1Jo 5:4} The children of God live in
an higher region. They are compared to eagles, {Isa
40:31} in regard of their sublimeness and heavenly-mindedness. Their
souls are fled aloft. Christ is in their heart {Col
1:27} and the world is under their feet. {Re
12:1} Men of the world are ever tumbling in thick clay. They are
'sons of earth'; not eagles, but earthworms. The saints are of another spirit.
They are born of God and walk with God as the child walks with the father.
`Noah walked with God'. {Ge 6:9} God's children show their
high pedigree in their heavenly conversation. {Php
3:20}
6. Another
sign of adoption is love to them that are children. God's children are knit
together with the bond of love, as all the members of the body are knit
together by several nerves and ligaments. If we are born of God, then we `love
the brotherhood'; {1Pe 2:17} He that loves the person,
loves the picture. The children of God are his walking pictures, and if we are
of God, we love those who have his effigy and portraiture drawn upon their
souls. If we are born of God, we love the saints notwithstanding their
infirmities. Children love one another though they have some imperfections of
nature, a squint-eye, or a crooked back. We love gold in the ore, though it has
some drossiness in it. The best saints have their blemishes. We read of the
'spot of God's children'. {De 32:5}
A saint in this life is like a fair face with a scar in it. If we are born of
God we love his children though they are poor. We love to see the image and
picture of our Father, though hung in never so poor a frame. We love to see a
rich Christ in a poor man.
And if we are
children of the Highest, we show our love to God's children:
(i) By
prizing their persons above others. He who is born of God `honoureth them that
fear the Lord'. {Ps 15:4} The saints are the `dearly
beloved of God's soul'. {Jer 12:7} They are his `jewels'. {Mal 3:17} They are of the true
blood-royal, and he who is divinely adopted sets an higher estimate upon these
than upon others.
(ii) We show
our love to the children of God by prizing their company above others. Children
love to associate and be together. The communion of saints is precious.
Christ's doves will flock together in company. `Like associates with like'. `I
am a companion of all them that fear thee'. {Ps
119:63} We read that `Abraham bowed himself to the children of Heth'
{Ge 23:7} A child of God has a love of
civility to all, but a love of complacency only to such as are fellow-heirs
with him of the same inheritance.
By this
persons may try their adoption. It appears plainly that they are not the
children of God who hate those that are born of God. They soil and blacken the
silver wings of Christ's doves by their aspersive reproaches. They cannot
endure the society of the saints. As vultures hate sweet smells and are killed
with them, so the wicked do not love to come near the godly. They cannot abide
the precious perfume of their graces. They hate these sweet smells. It is a
sign they are of the serpent's brood who hate the seed of the woman.
7. The
seventh sign of God's children is to delight to be much in God's presence.
Children love to be in the presence of their father. Where the king is, there
is the court. Where the presence of God is, there is heaven. God is in a
special manner present in his ordinances. They are the ark of his presence. Now
if we are children, we love to be much in holy duties. In the use of ordinances
we draw near to God. We come into our Father's presence. In prayer we have
secret conference with God. In the Word we hear God speaking from heaven to us,
and how does every child of God delight to hear his Father's voice! In the
sacraments God kisses his children with the `kisses of his lips'. He gives them
a smile of his face and a privy-seal of his love. Oh it is `good to draw near
to God'. {Ps 73:28} It is sweet being in his
presence. Every true child of God says, `a day in thy courts is better than a
thousand'. {Ps 84:10} Slighters of ordinances are
none of God's children, because they care not to be in his presence. They love
the tavern better than the temple. `Cain went out from the presence of the
Lord'; {Ge 4:16} not that he could go out of
God's sight, {Ps 139:7} but the meaning is, Cain
went from the church of God where the Lord gave the visible signs of his
presence to his people.
8. The eighth
sign is compliance with the will of our heavenly Father. A childlike heart
answers to God's call as the echo answers to the voice. It is like the flower
that opens and shuts with the sun. So it opens to God and shuts to temptation.
This is the motto of a new-born saint, `Speak, Lord, thy servant hears'. {1Sa 3:9} When God bids his children
pray in their closets, mortify sin, suffer for his name, they are ambitious to
obey. They will lay down their lives at their Father's call. Hypocrites court
God and speak him fair, but refuse to go on his errand. They are not children
but rebels.
9. The last
sign is, He who is a child of God will labour to make others the children of
God. The holy seed of grace propagates. {Ga
4:19 Phm 1:10} He who is of the seed royal
will be ambitiously desirous to bring others into the kindred. Are you divinely
adopted? You will studiously endeavour to make your child a child of the most
High.
How
Christians should bring up their children
There are two
reasons why a godly parent will endeavour to bring his child into the heavenly
kindred:
(i) Out of
conscience. A good parent sees the injury he has done to his child. He has
conveyed the plague of sin to him, and in conscience he will endeavour to make
some recompense. In the old law, he that had smitten and wounded another was
bound to see him healed and pay for his cure. Parents have given their children
a wound in their souls and therefore must do what in them lies by admonition,
prayers, tears, to see the wound healed.
(ii) Out of
flaming zeal to the honour of God. He who has tasted God's love in adoption
looks upon himself as engaged to bring God all the glory he can. If he has a
child or acquaintance that are strangers to God he would gladly promote the
work of grace in their hearts. It is a glory to Christ when multitudes are born
to him.
How far are
they from being God's children who have no care to bring others into the family
of God! To blame are those masters who mind more their servants' work than
their souls. To blame are those parents who are regardless of their children.
They do not drop in principles of knowledge into them, but suffer them to have
their head. They will let them lie and swear, but not ask blessing; read
play-books but not Scripture.
But, say
some, to catechise and teach our children is to take God's name in vain.
Is the
fulfilling God's command taking his name in vain? `These words which I command
thee this day, thou shalt teach them diligently to thy children'. {De 6:6,De
6:7} `Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old
he will not depart from it'. {Pr 22:6}
`Ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath, but bring them up in the
nurture and admonition of the Lord'. {Eph
6:4} This threefold cord of Scripture is not easily broken.
The saints of
old were continually grafting principles of holy knowledge in their children.
`I know that Abraham will command his children, and they shall keep the way of
the Lord'. {Ge 18:19} `And thou Solomon, my son,
know thou the God of thy father and serve him with a perfect heart'. {1Ch 28:9} Sure Abraham and David did
not take God's name in vain! What need is there of instilling holy instructions
to overtop the poisonful weeds of sin that grow! As husband-men, when they have
planted young trees, they set stays to them to keep them from bending. Children
are young plants. The heavenly precepts of their parents are like stays set
about them, to keep them from bending to error and profaneness. When can there
be a fitter season to disseminate and infuse knowledge into children than in
their minority? Now is a time to give them the breast and let them suck in the
'sincere milk of the word'. {1Pe 2:2}
But some may
object that it is to no purpose to teach our children the knowledge of God.
They have no sense of spiritual things, nor are they the better for our
instructions. I answer:
We read in
Scripture of children who by virtue of instruction have had their tender years
sanctified. Timothy's mother and grandmother taught him the Scriptures from his
cradle: `And that from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures'. {2Ti 3:15} Timothy sucked in religion
as it were with his milk. We read of young children who cried `Hosanna' to
Christ and trumpeted forth his praises. {Mt
21:15} And sure those children of Tyre had some seeds of good
wrought in them in that they showed their love to Paul and would help him on
his way to the seashore. `They all brought us on our way with wives and
children'. {Ac 21:5} Saint Paul had a convoy of
young saints to bring him to take ship.
And again,
suppose our counsel and instruction does not at present prevail with our
children, it may afterwards take effect. The seed a man sows in his ground does
not presently spring up, but in its season it brings forth a crop. He that
plants a wood does not see the full growth till many years after. If we must
not instruct our children because at present they do not reap the benefit, by
the same reason we should not baptise our children, because at present they do
not have the sense of baptism. Nay, by the same reason ministers should not
preach the Word, because at present many of their hearers have no benefit.
Again, if our
counsels and admonitions do not prevail with our children, yet `we have
delivered our own souls'. There is comfort in the discharge of conscience. We
must let alone issues and events. Duty is our work; success is God's.
All which
considered, should make parents whet holy instructions upon their children.
They who are of the family of God and whom he has adopted for children, will
endeavour that their children may be more God's children than theirs. They will
`travail in birth till Christ be formed in them'. A true saint is a loadstone
that will be still drawing others to God. Let this suffice to have spoken of
the signs of adoption. I proceed.
The fifth
particular to be discussed is the love of God in making us children. `Behold
what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called
the sons of God!'. {1Jo 3:1} God showed power in making us
creatures, but love in making us sons. Plato gave God thanks that he had made
him a man and not a beast, but what cause have they to adore God's love, who
has made them children! The apostle puts a `Behold' to it. That we may the
better behold God's love in making us children, consider three things.
1. We were
deformed. `When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own blood, it
was the time of love'. {Eze 16:6,Eze
16:8} Mordecai adopted Esther because she was fair, but we were in
our blood, and then God adopted us. He did not adopt us when we were clothed
with the robe of innocence in paradise, when we were hung with the jewels of
holiness and were white and ruddy; but when we were in our blood and had our
leprous spots upon us. The time of our loathing was the time of God's loving.
2. As we did
not deserve to be made children so neither did we desire it. No landed man will
force another to become his heir against his will. If a king should go to adopt
a beggar and make him heir of the crown, if the beggar should refuse the king's
favour and say, `I had rather be as I am, I would be a beggar still'; the king
would take it in high contempt of his favour and would not adopt him against
his will. Thus it was with us. We had no willingness to be made children. We
would have been begging still, but God out of his infinite mercy and
indulgence, not only offers to make us children, but makes us willing to
embrace the offer. {Ps 110:3} `Behold what manner of
love, is this!
3. It is the
wonder of love that God should adopt us for his children when we were enemies.
If a man would make another heir of his land, he would adopt one that is near
akin to him. No man would adopt an enemy. But that God should make us children
when we were enemies; that he should make us heirs to the crown when we were
traitors to the crown; oh amazing, astonishing love! `Behold what manner of
love, is this! We were not akin to God. We had by sin lost and forfeited our
pedigree. We had done God all the injury and spite we could, defaced his image,
violated his law, trampled upon his mercies, and when we had angered him, he
adopted us. What stupendous love was this! Such love was never shown to the
angels! When they fell (though they were of a more noble nature, and in
probability might have done God more service than we can, yet) God never
vouchsafed this privilege of adoption to them. He did not make them children,
but prisoners. They were heirs only to `the treasures of wrath'. {Ro 2:5}
Let all who
are thus nearly related to God, stand admiring his love. When they were like
Saul, breathing forth enmity against God; when their hearts stood out as
garrisons against him, the Lord conquered their stubbornness with kindness, and
not only pardoned, but adopted them. It is hard to say which is greater, the
mystery or the mercy. This is such amazing love as we shall be searching into
and adoring to all eternity. The bottom of it cannot be fathomed by any angel
in heaven. God's love in making us children is a rich love. It is love in God
to feed us, but it is rich love to adopt us. It is love to give us a crumb, but
it is rich love to make us heirs to a crown.
It is a distinguishing
love that when God has passed by so many millions, he should cast a favourable
aspect upon thee! Most are cut out for fuel, and are made vessels of wrath. And
that God should say to thee, `Thou art my son', here is the mirror of mercy,
the meridian of love! Who, O who, can tread upon these hot coals, and his heart
not burn in love to God?
The sixth
particular is the honour and renown of God's children. For the illustration of
this, observe two things:
I God makes a
precious account of them.
2. He looks
upon them as persons of honour.
1. God makes
a precious account of them. `Since thou wast precious in my sight...'. {Isa 43:4} A father prizes his child
above his estate. How dearly did Jacob prize Benjamin! His `life was bound up
in the life of the lad'. {Ge 44:30} God makes a precious
valuation of his children. The wicked are of no account with God. They are vile
persons. `I will make thy grave for thou art vile'. {Na
1:14} Therefore the wicked are compared to chaff, {Ps
1:4} to dross. {Ps 119:119}
There is little use of a wicked man while he lives and no loss of him when he
dies. There is only a little chaff blown away, which may well be spared. But
God's children are precious in his sight. They are his jewels. {Mal 3:17} The wicked are but lumber
which serves only to `cumber the ground'. But God's children are his jewels
locked up in the cabinet of his decree from all eternity. God's children are
`the apple of his eye', {Zec 2:8} very dear and very tender to
him, and the eyelid of his special providence covers them. The Lord accounts
every thing of his children precious.
Their name is
precious. The wicked leave their name for a curse. {Isa
65:15} The names of God's children are embalmed. {Isa
60:15} So precious are their names that God enters them in the book
of life and Christ carries them on his breast. How precious must their name
needs be, who have God's own name written upon them! `Him that overcometh, I
will write upon him the name of my God'. {Re
3:12}
Their prayers
are precious. `O my dove, in the clefts of the rock, let me hear thy voice, for
sweet is thy voice' (Canticles 2: 14). Every child of God is this dove. Prayer
is the voice of the dove, and 'sweet is this voice'. The prayer of God's
children is as sweet to him as music. A wicked man's prayer is as the `howling'
of a dog. {Ho 7:14} The prayer of the saints is
as the singing of the bird. The finger of God's Spirit touching the
lute-strings of their hearts, they make melody to the Lord. `Their sacrifices
shall be accepted upon mine altar'. {Isa
56:7}
Their tears
are precious. They drop as pearls from their eyes. `I have seen thy tears'. {Isa 38:5} The tears of God's children
drop as precious wine into God's bottle. `Put thou my tears into thy bottle'. {Ps 56:8} A tear from a broken heart
is a present for the king of heaven.
Their blood
is precious. `Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints'. {Ps 116:15} This is the blood God will
chiefly make inquisition for. Athaliah shed the blood of the king's children. {2Ki 11:1} The saints are the children
of the most High, and such as shed their blood shall pay dear for it. `Thou
hast given them blood to drink for they are worthy'. {Re
16:6}
2. God looks
upon his children as persons of honour. `Since thou wast precious in my sight,
thou hast been honourable...'. {Isa 43:4}
God esteems
them honourable. He calls them a crown and a royal diadem. {Isa
62:3} He calls them his glory: `Israel my glory {Isa
46:13}
God makes
them honourable. As a king creates dukes, marquises, earls, barons etc., so God
installs his children into honour. He creates them noble persons, persons of
renown. David thought it no small honour to be the king's son-in-law. `Who am I
that I should be son-in-law to the king?'. {1Sa
18:18} What an infinite honour is it to be the children of the High
God, to be of the blood-royal of heaven! The saints are of an ancient family.
They are sprung from `the Ancient of days'. {Da
7:9} That is the best pedigree which is fetched from heaven. Here
the youngest child is an heir, a co-heir with Christ who is heir of all. {Heb 1:2 Ro
8:17} Consider the honour of God's children positively and
comparatively.
Positively:
They have titles of honour. They are called `kings'; {Re
1:6} `the excellent of the earth'; {Ps
16:3} `vessels of honour'. {2Ti
2:21}
They have
their escutcheon. You may see the saints' escutcheon or coat-armour. The
Scripture has set forth their heraldry. Sometimes they give the lion in regard
of their courage. {Pr 28:1} Sometimes they give the
eagle in regard of their sublimeness. They are ever flying up to heaven upon
the two wings of faith and love. `They shall mount up with wings as eagles'. {Isa 40:31} Sometimes they give the
dove in regard of their meekness and innocence (Canticles 2: 14). This shows
the children of God to be persons of renown.
Consider the
honour of God's children comparatively; and this comparison is double. Compare
the children of God with Adam; with the angels.
Compare the
children of God with Adam in a state of innocence. Adam was a person of honour.
He was the sole monarch of the world. All the creatures veiled to him as their
sovereign. He was placed in the garden of Eden which was a paradise of
pleasure. He was crowned with all the contentments of the earth. Nay more, Adam
was God's lively picture. He was made in the likeness of God himself. Yet the
state of the meanest of God's children by adoption is far more excellent and
honourable than the state of Adam was, when he wore the robe of innocence, for
Adam's condition, though it was glorious yet it was mutable, and was soon lost;
Adam was a bright star, yet a falling star. But God's children by adoption are
in a state unalterable. Adam had a `posse non peccare', a possibility of
standing, but believers have a `non posse peccare', an impossibility of
falling; once adopted, and ever adopted. As Isaac said, when he had given the
blessing to Jacob, `I have blessed him and he shall be blessed'. {Ge 27:33} So may we say of all God's
children, they are adopted, and they shall be adopted; so that God's children
are in a better and more glorious condition now than Adam was in all his regal
honour and majesty.
Let us ascend
as high as heaven and compare God's children with the glorious and blessed
angels. God's children are equal to the angels, in some sense above them, so
that they must be persons of honour.
God's
children are equal to the angels. This is acknowledged by some of the angels
themselves. `I am thy fellow-servant'. {Re
19:10} Here is a parallel made between John the Divine and the
angel. The angel says to John, `I am thy fellow-servant.'
The children
of God by adoption are in some sense above the angels, and that two ways.
The angels
are servants to God's children. {Heb 1:14}
Though they are `glorious spirits', yet they are `ministering spirits'. The
angels are the saints' servitors. We have examples in Scripture of angels
attending the persons of God's children. We read of angels waiting upon
Abraham, Moses, Daniel, the Virgin Mary etc. Nor do the angels only render
service to God's children while they live, but at their death too. Lazarus had
a convoy of angels to carry him into the paradise of God. Thus we see the
children of God have a pre-eminence and dignity above the angels. The angels
are their servants both living and dying; and this is more to be observed,
because it is never said in Scripture that the children of God are servants to
the angels.
God's
children are above the angels, because Christ by taking their nature has
ennobled and honoured it above the angelic. `He in no wise took the nature of
angels'. {Heb 2:16} God by uniting us to Christ
has made us nearer to himself than the angels. The children of God are members
of Christ. {Eph 5:30} This was never said of the
angels. How can they be members of Christ, who are of a different nature from
him? Indeed metaphorically and improperly Christ may be called the head of the
angels, as they are subject to him. {1Pe
3:22} But that Christ is head of the angels in that near and sweet
conjunction, as he is head of the believers, we nowhere find in Scripture. In
this respect therefore I may clearly assert that the children of God have a
superiority and honour even above the angels. Though by creation they are `a
little lower than the angels', yet by adoption and mystical union they are
above the angels.
How may this
comfort a child of God in the midst either of calumny or penury! He is a person
of honour. He is above the angels. A gentleman that is fallen to decay will
sometimes boast of his parentage and noble blood; so a Christian who is poor in
the world, yet by virtue of his adoption he is of the family of God. He has the
true blood-royal running in his veins. He has a fairer coat of arms to show
than the angels themselves.
The seventh
particular to be explained is to show the glorious privileges of God's
children; and what I shall say now belongs not to the wicked. It is `children's
bread'. The fruit of paradise was to be kept with a flaming sword. So these
sweet and heart-ravishing privileges are to be kept with a flaming sword, that
impure sensual persons may not touch them. There are twelve rare privileges
which belong to the children of God.
1. If we are
children, then God will be full of tender love and affection towards us. A
father compassionates his child. `Like as a father pitieth his children, so the
Lord pitieth them that fear him'. {Ps 103:13}
Oh the yearning of God's bowels to his children! `Is Ephraim my dear son? Is he
a pleasant child? My bowels are troubled for him, I will surely have mercy upon
him, saith the Lord'. {Jer 31:20} Towards the wicked God's
wrath is kindled. {Ps 2:12} Towards them that are
children, God's repentings are kindled. {Ho
11:8} Mercy and pity as naturally flow from our heavenly Father as
light from the sun.
Some may
object: But God is angry and writes bitter things. How does this stand with
love?
God's love
and his anger towards his children are not in opposition but 'showing a
difference'. They may stand together. He is angry in love. `As many as I love I
rebuke and chasten'. {Re 3:19} We have as much need of
afflictions as ordinances. A bitter pill may be as needful for preserving
health as a julep or cordial. God afflicts with the same love as he adopts. God
is most angry when he is not angry. His hand is heaviest when it is lightest. {Ho 14:4} Affliction is an argument of
son-ship. `If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons'. {Heb 12:7}
Oh, says one,
surely God does not love me. I am none of his child, because he does not follow
me with such sore afflictions. Why, it is a sign of child-ship to be sometimes
under the rod. God had one son without sin, but no son without stripes. God
puts his children to the school of the cross, and there they learn best. God
speaks to us in the Word, children, do not be proud, do not love the world;
`Walk circumspectly'. {Eph 5:15} But, we are `dull of
hearing'; nay we 'stop the ear'. `I spake to thee in thy prosperity, but thou
saidst, I will not hear'. {Jer 22:21}
Now, says God, I shall lose my child if I do not correct him. Then God in love
smites that he may save. Aristotle' speaks of a bird that lives among thorns,
yet sings sweetly. God's children make the best melody in their heart, when God
`hedgeth their way with thorns'. {Ho 2:6}
Afflictions are refining. `The fining pot is for silver, and the furnace for
gold'. {Pr 17:3} Fiery trials make golden
Christians. Afflictions are purifying. `Many shall be tried and made white'. {Da 12:10} We think God is going to
destroy us, but he only lays us a-whitening. Some birds will not hatch but in
time of thunder. Christians are commonly best in affliction. God will make his
children at last bless him for sufferings. The eyes that sin shuts affliction
opens. When Manasseh was in chains, `then he knew the Lord was God'. {2Ch 33:13} Afflictions fit for heaven.
First the stones of Solomon's temple were hewn and polished and then set up
into a building. First the saints (who are called `living stones') must be hewn
and carved by sufferings as the corner stone was, and so made meet for the
celestial building. {Col 1:12} And is there not love in all
God's Fatherly castigations?
But there may
be another objection, that sometimes God's children are under the black clouds
of desertion. Is not this far from love?
Concerning
desertion, I must needs say that this is the saddest condition that can betide
God's children. When the sun is gone, the dew falls. When the sunlight of God's
countenance is removed, then the dew of tears falls from the eyes of the
saints. In desertion God rains hell out of heaven (to use Calvin's expression).
`The arrows of the Almighty are within me, the poison whereof drinketh up my
spirit, {Job 6:4}. This is the poisoned arrow
that wounds to the heart. Desertion is a taste of the torments of the damned.
God says, `In a little wrath I hid my face from thee'. {Isa
54:8} I may here gloss with Saint Bernard, `Lord, dost thou call
that a little wrath when thou hidest thy face? Is it but a little? What can be
more bitter to me than the eclipsing of thy face?' God is in the Scripture
called a light and a fire. The deserted soul feels the fire but does not see
the light. But yet you who are adopted may spell love in all this. They say of
Hercules, club that it was made of wood of olive. The olive is an emblem of
peace. So God's club, whereby he beats down the soul in desertion, has
something of the olive. There is peace and mercy in it. I shall hold forth a
spiritual rainbow wherein the children of God may see the love of their Father
in the midst of the clouds of desertion.
Therefore I
answer:
(i) In time
of desertion God leaves in his children a seed of comfort. `His seed remaineth
in him'. {1Jo 3:9} This seed of God is a seed of
comfort. Though God's children in desertion lack the seal of the Spirit, yet
they have the unction of the Spirit. {1Jo
2:27} Though they lack the sun, yet they have a daystar in their
hearts. As the tree in winter, though it has lost its leaves and fruit, yet
there is sap in the root; so in the winter of desertion there is the sap of
grace in the root of the heart. As it is with the sun masking itself with a
cloud when it denies light to the earth, yet it gives forth its influence; so
though God's dear adopted ones may lose sight of his countenance, yet they have
the influence of his grace.
What grace
appears in the time of desertion? I answer:
An high
prizing of God's love. If God should say to the deserted soul, What wilt thou
and it shall be granted to half of the kingdom?, he would reply, Lord that I
might see thee `as I was wont to see thee in the sanctuary'; that I may have
one golden beam of thy love. The deserted soul slights all other things in
comparison. It is not gardens or orchards, or the most delicious objects that
can give him contentment. They are like music to a sad heart. He desires, as
Absalom, `to see the king's face'.
A lamenting
after the Lord. It is the saddest day for him when the sun of righteousness is
eclipsed. A child of God can better bear the world's stroke than God's absence.
He is even melted into tears; the clouds of desertion produce spiritual rain,
and whence is this weeping but from love?
Willingness
to suffer anything so he may have sight of God. A child of God could be content
with Simon of Cyrene to carry the cross if he were sure Christ were upon it. He
could willingly die, if with Simeon he might die with Christ in his arms.
Behold here, `the seed of God' in a believer, the work of sanctification, when
he lacks the wine of consolation.
(ii) I
answer, God has a design of mercy in hiding his face from his adopted ones.
First, it is
for the trial of grace, and there are two graces brought to trial in time of
desertion, faith and love.
Faith: When
we can believe against sense and feeling; when we are without experience, yet
can trust to a promise; when we do not have the `kisses of God's mouth', yet
can cleave to `the word of his mouth'; this is faith indeed. Here is the
sparkling of the diamond.
Love: When
God smiles upon us, it is not much to love him, but when he seems to put us
away in anger, {Ps 27:9} now to love him and be as
the lime; the more water is thrown upon it the hotter it burns; this is love
indeed. That love sure is 'strong as death' (Canticles Ps
8:6) which the waters of desertion cannot quench.
Secondly, it
is for the exercise of grace. We are all for comfort. If it be put to our
choice, we would be ever upon Mount Pisgah, looking into Canaan. We are loath
to be in trials, agonies, desertions, as if God could not love us except he had
us in his arms. It is hard to lie long in the lap of spiritual joy and not fall
asleep. Too much sunshine causes a drought in our graces. Oftentimes when God
lets down comfort into the heart, we begin to let down care. As it is with
musicians, before they have money they will play you many a sweet lesson, but
as soon as you throw them down money they are gone. You hear no more of them.
Before joy and assurance, O the sweet music of prayer and repentance! But when
God throws down the comforts of his Spirit, we either leave off duty or at
least slacken the strings of our viol and grow remiss in it. You are taken with
the money, but God is taken with the music. Grace is better than comfort.
Rachel is more fair, but Leah is more fruitful. Comfort is fair to look upon,
but grace has the fruitful womb. Now the only way to exercise grace and make it
more vigorous and lively is sometimes to `walk in darkness and have no light'.
{Isa 50:10} Faith is a star that shines
brightest in the night of desertion. `I said, I am cast out of thy sight; yet
will I look again toward thy holy temple'. {Jon
2:4} Grace usually puts forth its most heroic acts at such a time.
(iii) I answer:
God may forsake his children in regard of vision, but not in regard of union.
Thus it was with Jesus Christ when he cried out, `my God, my God'. There was
not a separation of the union between him and his Father, only a suspension of
the vision. God's love through the interposition of our sins may be darkened
and eclipsed, but still he is a Father. The sun may be hid in a cloud, but it
is not out of the firmament. The promises in time of desertion may be, as it
were, sequestered. We do not have the comfort from them as formerly, but still
the believer's title holds good in law.
(iv) I
answer: when God hides his face from his child, his heart may be towards him.
As Joseph, when he spake roughly to his brethren and made them believe he would
take them for spies, still his heart was towards them and he was as full of
love as ever he could hold. He was fain to go aside and weep. So God is full of
love to his children even when he seems to look strange. And as Moses' mother
when she put her child into the ark of bulrushes and went away a little from
it, yet still her eye was toward it. `The babe wept'; aye, and the mother wept
too. So God, when he goes aside as if he had forsaken his children, yet he is
full of sympathy and love towards them. God may change his countenance but not
break his covenant. It is one thing for God to desert, another thing to
disinherit. `How shall I give thee up, Ephraim...'. {Ho
11:8} It is a metaphor taken from a father going to disinherit his
son, and while he is setting his hand to the deed, his bowels begin to melt and
to yearn over him and he thinks thus within himself, Though he be a prodigal
child, yet he is a child; I will not cut off the entail. So says God, `How
shall I give thee up?' Though Ephraim has been a rebellious son, yet he is a
son, I will not disinherit him. God's thoughts may be full of love when there
is a veil upon his face. The Lord may change his dispensation towards his
children, but not his disposition. He may have the look of an enemy, but the
heart of a Father. So that the believer may say, I am adopted; let God do what
he will with me; let him take the rod or the staff; it is all one; He loves me.
2. The second
adoptional privilege is this if we are children then God will bear with many
infirmities. A father bears much with a child he loves. `I will spare them, as
a man spareth his own son that serveth him'. {Mal
3:17} We often grieve the Spirit, abuse kindness. God will pass by
much in his children. `He hath not seen iniquity in Jacob'. {Nu
23:21} His love does not make him blind. He sees sin in his people
but not with an eye of revenge, but pity. He sees sin in his children as a
physician does a disease in his patient. He has not seen iniquity in Jacob so
as to destroy him. God may use the rod, {2Sa
7:14} not the scorpion. O how much is God willing to pass by in his
children, because they are children! God takes notice of the good that is in
his children, and passes by the infirmity. God does quite contrary to us. We
often take notice of the evil that is in others and overlook the good. Our eye
is upon the flaw in the diamond, but we do not observe its sparkling. But God
takes notice of the good that is in his children. God sees their faith and
winks at their failings. {1Pe 3:6} Even as `Sarah obeyed
Abraham, calling him lord'; the Holy Ghost does not mention her unbelief and
laughing at the promise, but takes notice of the good in her, namely, her
obedience to her husband. `She obeyed Abraham, calling him lord'. God puts his
finger upon the scars and infirmities of his children. How much did God wink at
in Israel his firstborn! Israel often provoked him with their murmurings, {De 1:27} but God answered their
murmurings with mercies. He spared them as a father spares his son.
3. The third
privilege is this; if we are children then God will accept of our imperfect
services. A parent takes anything in good part from his child. God accepts of
the will for the deed. {2Co 8:12} Often times we come with
broken prayers, but if we are children, God spells out our meaning and will
take our prayers as a grateful present. A father loves to hear his child speak,
though he but lisps and stammers. Like a `crane, so did I chatter'. {Isa 38:14} Good Hezekiah looked upon
his praying as chattering, yet that prayer was heard (verse Isa
38:5). A sigh and groan from an humble heart goes up as the smoke of
incense. `My groaning is not hid from thee'. {Ps
38:9} When all the glistering shows of hypocrites evaporate and come
to nothing, a little that a child of God does in sincerity is crowned with
acceptance. A father is glad of a letter from his son though there are blots in
the letter, though there are false spellings and broken English. O what
blottings are there in our holy things! What broken English sometimes! Yet coming
from broken hearts it is accepted. Though there be weakness in duty, yet if
there be willingness, the Lord is much taken with it. Says God, it is my child
and he would do better. `He hath accepted us in the beloved,. {Eph
1:6}
4. If we are
children then God will provide for us. A father will take care for his
children. He gives them allowance and lays up a portion. {2Co
12:14} So does our heavenly Father.
He gives us
our allowance: `The God which fed me all my life long unto this day'. {Ge 48:15} Whence is our daily bread,
but from his daily care? God will not let his children starve, though our
unbelief is ready sometimes to question his goodness and say, `Can God prepare
a table?' See what arguments Christ brings to prove God's paternal care for his
children. `Behold the fowls of the air, they sow not, neither do they reap, yet
your heavenly Father feedeth them'. {Mt
6:26} Does a man feed his bird, and will he not feed his child?
`Consider the lilies how they grow; they toil not, they spin not; if then, God
so clothe the grass...'. {Lu 12:27} Does God clothe the lilies
and will he not clothe his lambs? `The Lord careth for you'. {1Pe
5:7} As long as his heart is full of love, so long his head will be
full of care. This should be as physic to kill the worm of unbelief.
As God gives
his children a `viaticum' or bait' by the way, so he lays up a portion for
them. `It is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom'. {Lu 12:32} Our Father keeps the purse
and will give us enough to bear our charges here, and when at death we take
shipping and shall be set upon the shore of eternity, then will our heavenly
Father bestow upon us a kingdom immutable and immarcescible. Lo, here is a
portion which can never be summed up.
5. If we are
children then God will shield off dangers from us. A father will protect his
child from injuries. God ever lies sentinel to keep off evil from his children
temporal evil; spiritual evil.
(i) God
screens off temporal evil. There are many casualties and contingencies which
are incident to life. God mercifully prevents them. He keeps watch and ward for
his children. `My defence is of God'. {Ps
7:10} `He that keeps Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep'. {Ps 121:4} The eye of providence is
ever awake. God gives his angels charge over his children. {Ps
91:11} A believer has a guard of angels for his lifeguard. We read
of the wings of God in Scripture. As the breast of his mercy feeds his
children, so the wings of his power cover them. How miraculously did God
preserve Israel his firstborn! He with his wings sometimes covered, sometimes
carried them. `He bare you as upon eagles, wings', {Ex
19:4} an emblem of God's providential care. The eagle fears no bird
from above to hurt her young, only the arrow from beneath. Therefore she
carries them upon her wings that the arrow must first hit her before it can
come at her young ones. Thus God carries his children upon the wings of
providence, and they are such that there is no clipping these wings, nor can
any arrow hurt them.
(ii) God
shields off spiritual evils from his children. `There shall no evil befall
thee'. {Ps 91:10} God does not say no
afflictions shall befall us, but no evil.
But some may
say, that sometimes evil in this sense befalls the godly. They spot themselves
with sin. I answer:
But that evil
shall not be mortal. As quicksilver is in itself dangerous, but by ointments it
is so tempered that it is killed, so sin is in itself deadly but being tempered
with repentance and mixed with the sacred ointment of Christ's blood, the
venomous damning nature of it is taken away.
6. If we are
children then God will reveal to us the great and wonderful things of his law.
`I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these
things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes'. {Mt 11:25} A father will teach his
children. The child goes to his father, saying, `Father, teach me my lesson'.
So David goes to God: `Teach me to do thy will, for thou art my God'. {Ps 143:10} The Lord glories in this
title, `I am the Lord thy God which teacheth thee to profit'. {Isa
48:17} God's children have that anointing which teaches them all
things necessary to salvation. They see those mysteries which are veiled over
to carnal eyes, as Elisha saw those horses and chariots of fire which his
servant did not see. {2Ki 6:17} The adopted see their own
sins, Satan's snares, and Christ's beauty which they whom the god of the world
has blinded cannot discern. Whence was it that David understood more than the
ancients? {Ps 119:100} He had a Father to teach
him. God was his instructor. `O God, thou hast taught me from my youth'. {Ps 71:17} Many a child of God
complains of ignorance and dullness. Remember this, your Father will be your
tutor. He has promised to give `his Spirit to lead thee into all truth'. {Joh 16:13} And God not only informs
the understanding, but inclines the will. He not only teaches us what we should
do but enables us to do it. `I will cause you to walk in my statutes'. {Eze 36:27} What a glorious privilege
is this, to have the star of the Word pointing us to Christ, and the loadstone
of the Spirit drawing!
7. If we are
children this gives us boldness in prayer. The child goes with confidence to
his father, and he cannot find in his heart to deny him: `How much more shall
your heavenly Father give his Holy Spirit to them that ask him!'. {Lu 11:13} All the father has is for
his child. If he comes for money, who is it for but his child? If you come to
God for pardon, for brokenness of heart, God cannot deny his child. Whom does
he keep his mercies in store for, but his children?
And that
which may give God's children holy boldness in prayer is this; when they
consider God not only in the relation of a father, but as having the
disposition of a father. Some parents are of a morose, rugged nature, but God
is the `Father of mercies'. {2Co 1:3}
He begets all the bowels in the world. In prayer we should look upon God under
this notion, `a Father of mercy', sitting upon a `throne of grace'. We should
run to this heavenly Father in all conditions.
In our sins,
as that sick child who 'said unto his father, my head, my head!'. {2Ki 4:19} As soon as he found himself
not well, he ran to his father to succour him. So in case of sin, run to God:
`My heart, my heart! O this dead heart, Father, quicken it; this hard heart,
Father, soften it; Father, my heart, my heart!'
In our
temptations: A child, when another strikes him, runs to his father and
complains. So when the devil strikes us by his temptations, let us run to our
Father: `Father, Satan assaults and hurls in his fiery darts. He would not only
wound my peace, but thy glory. Father, take off the tempter. It is your child that
is worried by this `red dragon'. Father, will you not `bruise Satan' under my
feet?' What a sweet privilege is this! When any burden lies upon our spirits,
we may go to our Father and unload all our cares and griefs into his bosom!
8. If we are
children, then we are in a state of freedom. Claudius Lysias valued his freedom
of Rome at an high rate. {Ac 22:20} A state of son-ship is a
state of freedom. This is not to be understood in an Antinomian sense, that the
children of God are freed from the rule of the moral law. This is such a
freedom as rebels take. Was it ever heard that a child should be freed from
duty to his parents? But the freedom which God's children have is an holy
freedom. They are freed from `the law of sin'. {Ro
8:2}
It is the sad
misery of an unregenerate person that he is in a state of vassalage. He is
under the tyranny of sin. Justin Martyr used to say, It is the greatest slavery
in the world for a man to be subject to his own passions. A wicked man is as
very a slave as he that works in the galley. Look into his heart and there are
legions of lusts ruling him. He must do what sin will have him. A slave is at
the service of an usurping tyrant. If he bid him dig in the mine, hew in the quarries,
tug at the oar, he must do it. Thus every wicked man must do what corrupt
nature inspired by the devil bids him. If sin bids him be drunk, be unchaste,
he is at the command of sin, as the ass is at the command of the driver. Sin
first enslaves and then damns.
But the
children of God, though they are not free from the in-being of sin, yet they
are freed from the law of sin. All sin's commands are like laws repealed which
are not in force. Though sin live in a child of God it does not reign. `Sin shall
not have dominion over you'. {Ro 6:14}
Sin does not have a coercive power over a child of God. There is a principle of
grace in his heart which gives check to corruption. This is a believer's
comfort though sin be not removed, yet it is subdued; and though he cannot keep
sin out, yet he keeps sin under. The saints of God are said to `crucify the
flesh'. {Ga 5:24} Crucifying was a lingering
death. First one member died, then another.
Every child
of God crucifies sin. Some limb of the old man is ever and anon dropping off.
Though sin does not die perfectly, it dies daily. This is the blessed freedom
of God's children, they are freed from the law of sin. They are led by the
Spirit of God. {Ro 8:14} This Spirit makes them free
and cheerful in obedience. `Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty'.
{2Co 3:17}
9. If we are
children then we are heirs apparent to all the promises. The promises are
called precious. {2Pe 2:4} The promises are a cabinet of
jewels. They are breasts full of the milk of the gospel. The promises are
enriched with variety and are suited to a Christian's present condition. Does
he want pardoning grace? There is a promise carries forgiveness in it. {Jer 31:34} Does he want sanctifying
grace? There is a promise of healing. {Ho
14:4} Does he want corroborating grace? There is a promise of
strength. {Isa 41:10} And these promises are the
children's bread. The saints are called `heirs of the promise'. {Heb 6:17} There is Christ and heaven
in a promise; and there is never a promise in the Bible but an adopted person
may lay a legal claim to it and say, `This is mine.' The natural man who
remains still in the old family has nothing to do with these promises. He may
read over the promises (as one may read over another man's will or inventory)
but has no right to them. The promises are like a garden of flowers, paled in
and enclosed, which no stranger may gather, only the children of the family.
Ishmael was the son of the bond-woman. He had no right to the family. `Cast out
the bond-woman and her son,' as Sarah once said to Abraham. {Ge
21:10} So the unbeliever is not adopted, he is none of the
household, and God will say at the day of judgement, `Cast out this son of the
bond-woman into utter darkness', where is weeping and gnashing of teeth.
10. If we are
children, then we shall have our Father's blessing. `They are the seed which
the Lord has blessed'. {Isa 61:9} We read that Isaac blessed
his son Jacob: `God give thee of the dew of heaven', {Ge
27:28} which was not only a prayer for Jacob, but (as Luther says) a
prophecy of that happiness and blessing which should come upon him and his
posterity. Thus every adopted child has his heavenly Father's benediction.
There is a special blessing distilled into all that he possesses. `The Lord
will bless his people with peace'. {Ex 23:25
Ps 29:11} He will not only give them
peace, but they shall have it with a blessing. The wicked have the things they
enjoy with God's leave, but the adopted have them with God's love. The wicked
have them by providence; the saints by promise. Isaac had but one blessing to
bestow. `Hast thou but one blessing, my father?'. {Ge
27:38} But God has more blessings than one for his children. He
blesses them in their souls, bodies, names, estate, posterity. He blesses them
with the upper springs and the nether springs. He multiplies to bless them and
his blessing cannot be reversed. As Isaac said concerning Jacob, `I have
blessed him, yea and he shall be blessed', {Ge
27:33} so God blesses his children and they shall be blessed.
11. If we are
children, then all things that fall out shall turn to our good. `All things
work together for good to them that love God': {Ro
8:28} good things; evil things.
(i) Good
things work for good to God's children. Mercies shall do them good. The mercies
of God shall soften them. David's heart was overcome with God's mercy. `Who am
I, and what is my house...?'. {2Sa 7:18}
I who was of a mean family, I who held the shepherd's staff, that now I should
hold the royal sceptre! Nay, thou hast spoken of thy servant's house for a
great while to come. Thou hast made a promise that my children shall sit upon
the throne; yea, that the blessed Messiah shall come of my line and race. And
is this the manner of man, O Lord God! As if he had said, `Do men show such
kindness undeserved? See how this good man's heart was dissolved and softened
by mercy! The flint is soonest broken upon a soft pillow.
Mercies make
the children of God more fruitful. The ground bears the better crop for the
cost that is laid upon it. God gives his children health and they spend and are
spent for Christ. He gives them estates and they honour the Lord with their
substance. The backs and bellies of the poor are the field where they sow the precious
seed of their charity. A child of God makes his estate a golden clasp to bind
his heart faster to God, a footstool to raise him up higher towards heaven.
Ordinances
shall work for good to God's children. The word preached shall do them good; it
is a savour of life; it is a lamp to the feet and a laver to their hearts. The
word preached is a means of health, a chariot of salvation. It is an engrafting
and a transforming word; it is a word with unction, anointing their eyes to see
that light. The preaching of the Word is that lattice where Christ looks forth
and shows himself to his saints. This golden pipe of the sanctuary conveys the
water of life. To the wicked the word preached works for evil; even the word of
life becomes a savour of death. The same cause may have divers, nay, contrary
effects. The sun dissolves the ice but hardens the clay. To the unregenerate
and profane, the Word is not humbling but hardening. Jesus Christ, the best of
preachers, was to some a rock of offence. The Jews sucked death from his sweet
lips. It is sad that the breast should kill any. The wicked suck poison from
that breast of ordinances where the children of God suck milk and are nourished
unto salvation.
The sacrament
works for good to the children of God. In the Word preached the saints hear
Christ's voice; in the sacrament they have his kiss. The Lord's Supper is to
the saints `a feast of fat things'. It is an healing and a sealing ordinance.
In this charger, or rather chalice, a bleeding Saviour is brought in to revive
drooping spirits. The sacrament has glorious effects in the hearts of God's
children. It quickens their affections, strengthens their faith, mortifies
their sin, revives their hopes, increases their joy. It gives a prelibation and
foretaste of heaven.
(ii) Evil
things work for good to God's children. `Unto the upright ariseth light in the
darkness'. {Ps 112:4}
Poverty works
for good to God's children. It starves their lusts. It increases their graces.
`Poor in the world, rich in faith'. {Jas
2:5} Poverty tends to prayer. When God has clipped his children's
wings by poverty, they fly swiftest to the throne of grace.
Sickness
works for their good. It shall bring the body of death into a consumption.
`Though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day'. {2Co 4:16} Like those two laurels at
Rome, when the one withered the other flourished.' When the body withers the
soul of a Christian flourishes. How often have we seen a lively faith in a
languishing body! Hezekiah was better on his sick bed than upon his throne.
When he was upon his sickbed he humbles himself and weeps. When he was on his
throne he grew proud. {Isa 39:2} God's children recover by
sickness. In this sense, `out of weakness they are made strong'. {Heb 11:34}
Reproach
works for good to God's children; it increases their grace and their glory.
Disgrace
increases their grace. The husband-man by dunging his ground makes the soil
more rich and fertile. God lets the wicked dung his people with reproaches and
calumnies, that their hearts may be a richer soil for grace to grow in.
Reproach
increases their glory. He that unjustly takes from a saint's credit shall add
to his crown. The sun shines brighter after an eclipse. The more a child of God
is eclipsed by reproaches the brighter he shall shine in the kingdom of heaven.
Persecution
to God's children works for good. The godly may be compared to that plant which
Gregory Nazianzen speaks of. It lives by dying and grows by cutting. The zeal
and love of the saints is blown up by sufferings. Their joy flourishes.
Tertullian says the primitive Christians rejoiced more in their persecutions
than in their deliverances.
Death works
for good to the children of God. It is like the whirlwind to the prophet
Elijah, which blew off his mantle, but carried him up to heaven. So death to a
child of God is like a boisterous whirlwind which blows off the mantle of his
flesh (for the body is but the mantle the soul is wrapped in), but it carries
up the soul to God. This is the glorious privilege of the sons of God.
Everything that falls out shall do them good. The children of God, when they
come to heaven (as Chrysostom speaks), shall bless God for all cross
providences.
12. And
lastly, if we are children we shall never finally perish. {Joh
5:24 Joh 10:28} Those who are adopted are
out of the power of damnation. `There is no condemnation to them that are in
Christ'. {Ro 8:1} Will a father condemn his own
son? God will never disinherit any of his children. Fathers may disinherit for some
fault. Reuben for incest lost the prerogative of his birthright. {Ge 49:4} What is the reason parents
disinherit their children? Surely this, because they can make them no better.
They cannot make them fit for the inheritance. But when we are bad our heavenly
Father knows how to make us better. He can make us fit to inherit. `Giving
thanks to the Father who hath made us meet for the inheritance'. {Col 1:12} Therefore it being in his
power to make us better and to work in us an idoneity and meetness for the
inheritance, certainly he will never finally disinherit.
Because this
is so sweet a privilege, and the life of a Christian's comfort lies in it,
therefore I shall clear it by arguments that the children of God cannot finally
perish. The entail of hell and damnation is cut off. Not but that the best of
God's children have that guilt which deserves hell, but Christ is the friend at
court which has begged their pardon. Therefore the damning power of sin is taken
away, which I prove thus:
The children
of God cannot finally perish, because God's justice is satisfied for their
sins. The blood of Christ is the price paid not only meritoriously, but
efficaciously for all them that believe. This being the `blood of God', {Ac 20:28} justice is fully satisfied
and does not meddle to condemn those for whom this blood was shed and to whom
it is applied. Jesus Christ was a sponsor. He stood bound for every child of
God as a surety. He said to justice, `Have patience with them and I will pay
thee all', so that the believer cannot be liable to wrath. God will not require
the debt twice, both of the surety and the debtor. {Ro
3:24-26} God is not only merciful in pardoning his children, but
`righteous, `He is just to forgive'. {1Jo
1:9} It is an act of God's equity and justice to spare the sinner
when he has been satisfied in the surety.
A damnatory
sentence cannot pass upon the children of God, because they are so God's
children, as withal they are Christ's spouse (Canticles 4: 11). There is a
marriage union between Christ and the saints. Every child of God is a part of
Christ. He is `Christ mystical'. Now, shall a member of Christ perish? A child
of God cannot perish but Christ must perish. Jesus Christ who is the Husband,
is the Judge, and will he condemn his own spouse?
Every child
of God is transformed into the likeness of Christ. He has the same Spirit, the
same judgement, the same will. He is a lively picture of Christ. As Christ
bears the saints' names upon his breast, so they bear his image upon their
hearts. {Ga 4:19} Will Christ suffer his own
image to be destroyed? Theodosius counted them traitors who defaced his image.
Christ will not let his image in believers be defaced and rent. He will not
endure to see his own picture take fire. The sea has not only stinking carrion,
but jewels thrown into it, but none of God's jewels shall ever be thrown into
the dread sea of hell.
If God's
children could be capable of final perishing then pardon of sin were no
privilege. The Scripture says, `Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven'.
{Ps 32:1} But what blessedness were
there in having sin forgiven, if afterwards a final and damnatory sentence
should pass upon the heirs of promise? What were a man the better for the
king's pardon if he were condemned after he were pardoned?
If the
children of God should be finally disinherited then the Scripture could not be
fulfilled which tells us of glorious rewards. `Verily there is a reward for the
righteous'. {Ps 58:11} God sweetens his commands
with promises. He ties duty and reward together. As in the body the veins carry
the blood and the arteries carry the spirits, so one part of the Word carries
duty in it, and another part of the Word carries reward. Now if the adopted of
God should eternally miscarry, what reward were there for the righteous? And
Moses did indiscreetly in looking to the `recompense of the reward'. {Heb 11:26} And so by consequence there
would be a door opened to despair.
By all which
it appears that the children of God cannot be disinherited or reprobated. If
they should lose happiness Christ should lose his purchase and should die in
vain.
Thus we have
seen the glorious privileges of the children of God. What an encouragement is
here to religion! How may this tempt men to turn godly! Can the world vie with
a child of God? Can the world give such privileges as these? As Saul said,
`Will the son of Jesse give everyone of you fields and vineyards, and make you
all captains of thousands?'. {1Sa 22:7}
Can the world do that for you which God does for his children? Can it give you
pardon of sin or eternal life? `Are not the gleanings of Ephraim better than
the vintage of Abiezer?'. {Jude 1:8:Jude 1:2} Is not godliness gain? What
is there in sin that men should love it? The work of sin is drudgery and the
wages death. They who see more in sin than in the privileges of adoption, let
them go on and have their ears bored to the devil's service