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Bunyan Characters (Second Series)

by Alexander Whyte D.D.

September, 1999 [Etext #1886]

Project Gutenberg Etext Bunyan Characters (2nd Series), by Whyte

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from the 1894 Oliphant Anderson and Ferrier edition.

BUNYAN CHARACTERS (Second Series)

Lectures delivered in St. George's Free Church Edinburgh

IGNORANCE

"I was alive without the law once."--Paul.

"I was now a brisk talker also myself in the matter of religion."--

Bunyan.

This is a new kind of pilgrim. There are not many pilgrims like

this bright brisk youth. A few more young gentlemen like this, and

the pilgrimage way would positively soon become fashionable and

popular, and be the thing to do. Had you met with this young

gentleman in society, had you noticed him beginning to come about

your church, you would have lost no time in finding out who he was.

I can well believe it, you would have replied. Indeed, I felt sure

of it. I must ask him to the house. I was quite struck with his

appearance and his manners. Yes; ask him at once to your house;

show him some pointed attentions and you will never regret it. For

if he goes to the bar and works even decently at his cases, he will

be first a sheriff and then a judge in no time. If he should take

to politics, he will be an under-secretary before his first

parliament is out. And if he takes to the church, which is not at

all unlikely, our West-end congregations will all be competing for

him as their junior colleague; and, if he elects either of our

Established churches to exercise his profession in it, he will have

dined with Her Majesty while half of his class-fellows are still

half-starved probationers. Society fathers will point him out with

anger to their unsuccessful sons, and society mothers will smile

under their eyelids as they see him hanging over their daughters.

Well, as this handsome and well-appointed youth stepped out of his

own neat little lane into the rough road on which our two pilgrims

were staggering upward, he felt somewhat ashamed to be seen in

their company. And I do not wonder. For a greater contrast you

would not have seen on any road in all that country that day. He

was at your very first sight of him a gentleman and the son of a

gentleman. A little over-dressed perhaps; as, also, a little lofty

to the two rather battered but otherwise decent enough men who,

being so much older than he, took the liberty of first accosting

him. "Brisk" is his biographer's description of him. Feather-

headed, flippant, and almost impudent, you might have been tempted

to say of him had you joined the little party at that moment. But

those two tumbled, broken-winded, and, indeed, broken-hearted old

men had been, as an old author says, so emptied from vessel to

vessel--they had had a life of such sloughs and stiff climbs--they

had been in hunger and thirst, in cold and nakedness so often--that

it was no wonder that their dandiacal companion walked on a little

ahead of them. 'Gentlemen,' his fine clothes and his cane and his

head in the air all said to his two somewhat disreputable-looking

fellow-travellers,--"Gentlemen, you be utter strangers to me: I

know you not. And, besides, I take my pleasure in walking alone,

even more a great deal than in company, unless I like it better."

But all his society manners, and all his costly and well-kept

clothes, and all his easy and self-confident airs did not impose

upon the two wary old pilgrims. They had seen too much of the

world, and had been too long mixing among all kinds of pilgrims,

young and old, true and false, to be easily imposed upon. Besides,

as one could see from their weather-beaten faces, and their

threadbare garments, they had found the upward way so dreadfully

difficult that they both felt a real apprehension as to the future

of this light-hearted and light-headed youth. "You may find some

difficulty at the gate," somewhat bluntly broke in the oldest of

the two pilgrims on their young comrade. "I shall, no doubt, do at

the gate as other good people do," replied the young gentleman

briskly. "But what have you to show at the gate that may cause

that the gate be opened to you?" "Why, I know my Lord's will, and

I have been a good liver all my days, and I pay every man his own.

I pray, moreover, and I fast. I pay tithes, and give alms, and

have left my country for whither I am going." Now, before we go

further: Do all you young gentlemen do as much as that? Have you

always been good livers? Have you paid every man and woman their

due? Do you pray to be called prayer? And, if so, when, and

where, and what for, and how long at a time? I do not ask if your

private prayer-book is like Bishop Andrewes' Devotions, which was

so reduced to pulp with tears and sweat and the clenching of his

agonising hands that his literary executors were with difficulty

able to decipher it. Clito in the Christian Perfection was so

expeditious with his prayers that he used to boast that he could

both dress and do his devotions in a quarter of an hour. What was

the longest time you ever took to dress or undress and say your

prayers? Then, again, there is another Anglican young gentleman in

the same High Church book who always fasts on Good Friday and the

Thirtieth of January. Did you ever deny yourself a glass of wine

or a cigar or an opera ticket for the church or the poor? Could

you honestly say that you know what tithes are? And is there a

poor man or woman or child in this whole city who will by any

chance put your name into their prayers and praises at bedtime to-

night? I am afraid there are not many young gentlemen in this

house tonight who could cast a stone at that brisk lad Ignorance,

Vain-Hope, door in the side of the hill, and all. He was not far

from the kingdom of heaven; indeed, he got up to the very gate of

it. How many of you will get half as far?

Now (what think you?), was it not a very bold thing in John Bunyan,

whose own descent was of such a low and inconsiderable generation,

his father's house being of that rank that is meanest and most

despised of all the families in the land--was it not almost too

bold in such a clown to take such a gentleman-scholar as Saul of

Tarsus, the future Apostle of the Lord, and put him into the

Pilgrim's Progress, and there go on to describe him as a very brisk

lad and nickname him with the nickname of Ignorance? For, in

knowledge of all kinds to be called knowledge, Gamaliel's gold

medallist could have bought the unlettered tinker of Elstow in one

end of the market and sold him in the other. And nobody knew that

better than Bunyan did. And yet such a lion was he for the truth,

such a disciple of Luther was he, and such a defender and preacher

of the one doctrine of a standing or falling church, that he fills

page after page with the crass ignorance of the otherwise most

learned of all the New Testament men. Bunyan does not accuse the

rising hope of the Pharisees of school or of synagogue ignorance.

That young Hebrew Rabbi knew every jot and tittle of the law of

Moses, and all the accumulated traditions of the fathers to boot.

But Bunyan has Paul himself with him when he accuses and convicts

Saul of an absolutely brutish ignorance of his own heart and hidden

nature. That so very brisk lad was always boasting in himself of

the day on which he was circumcised, and of the old stock of which

he had come; of his tribe, of his zeal, of his blamelessness, and

of the profit he had made of his educational and ecclesiastical

opportunities. Whereas Bunyan is fain to say of himself in his

Grace Abounding that he is "not able to boast of noble blood or of

a high-born state according to the flesh. Though, all things

considered, I magnify the Heavenly Majesty for that by this door He

brought me into this world to partake of the grace and life that is

in Christ by the Gospel."

As we listen to the conversation that goes on between the two old

pilgrims and this smartly appointed youth, we find them striving

hard, but without any sign of success, to convince him of some of

the things from which he gets his somewhat severe name. For one

thing, they at last bluntly told him that he evidently did not know

the very A B C about himself. Till, when too hard pressed by the

more ruthless of the two old men, the exasperated youth at last

frankly burst out: "I will never believe that my heart is thus

bad!" There is a warm touch of Bunyan's own experience here, mixed

up with his so dramatic development of Paul's morsels of

autobiography that he lets drop in his Epistles to the Philippians

and to the Galatians. "Now was I become godly; now I was become a

right honest man. Though as yet I was nothing but a poor painted

hypocrite, yet I was proud of my godliness. I read my Bible, but

as for Paul's Epistles, and such like Scriptures, I could not away

with them; being, as yet, but ignorant both of the corruptions of

my nature and of the want and worth of Jesus Christ to save me.

The new birth did never enter my mind, neither knew I the

deceitfulness and treachery of my own wicked heart. And as for

secret thoughts, I took no notice of them." My brethren, old and

young, what do you think of all that? What have you to say to all

that? Does all that not open a window and let a flood of daylight

into your own breast? I am sure it does. That is the best

portrait of you that ever was painted. Do you not see yourself

there as in a glass? And do you not turn with disgust and loathing

from the stupid and foolish face? You complain and tell stories

about how impostors and cheats and liars have come to your door and

have impudently thrust themselves into your innermost rooms; but

your own heart, if you only knew it, is deceitful far above them

all. Not the human heart as it stands in confessions, and in

catechisms, and in deep religious books, but your own heart that

beats out its blood-poison of self-deceit, and darkness, and death

day and night continually. "My heart is a good heart," said that

poor ill-brought-up boy, who was already destroyed by his father

and his mother for lack of self-knowledge. I entirely grant you

that those two old sinners by this time were taking very

pessimistic and very melancholy views of human nature, and,

therefore, of every human being, young and old. They knew that no

language had ever been coined in any scripture, or creed, or

catechism, or secret diary of the deepest penitent, that even half

uttered their own evil hearts; and they had lived long enough to

see that we are all cut out of one web, are all dyed in one vat,

and are all corrupted beyond all accusation or confession in Adam's

corruption. But how was that poor, mishandled lad to know or

believe all that? He could not. It was impossible. "You go so

fast, gentlemen, that I cannot keep pace with you. Go you on

before and I will stay a while behind. Then said Christian to his

companion: "It pities me much for this poor lad, for it will

certainly go ill with him at last." "Alas!" said Hopeful, "there

are abundance in our town in his condition: whole families, yea,

whole streets, and that of pilgrims too." Is your family such a

family as this? And are you yourself just such a pilgrim as

Ignorance was, and are you hastening on to just such an end?

And then, as a consequence, being wholly ignorant of his own

corruption and condemnation in the sight of God, this miserable man

must remain ignorant and outside of all that God has done in Christ

for corrupt and condemned men. "I believe that Christ died for

sinners and that I shall be justified before God from the curse

through His gracious acceptance of my obedience to His law. Or,

then, to take it this way, Christ makes my duties that are

religious acceptable to His Father by virtue of His merits, and so

shall I be justified." Now, I verify believe that nine out of ten

of the young men who are here to-night would subscribe that

statement and never suspect there was anything wrong with it or

with themselves. And yet, what does Christian, who, in this

matter, is just John Bunyan, who again is just the word of God--

what does the old pilgrim say to this confession of this young

pilgrim's faith? "Ignorance is thy name," he says, "and as thy

name is, so art thou: even this thy answer demonstrateth what I

say. Ignorant thou art of what justifying righteousness is, and as

ignorant how to secure thy soul through the faith of it from the

heavy wrath of God. Yea, thou also art ignorant of the true effect

of saving faith in this righteousness of Christ's, which is to bow

and win over the heart to God in Christ, to love His name, His

word, His ways, and His people." Paul sums up all his own early

life in this one word, "ignorant of God's righteousness." "Going

about," he says also, "to establish our own righteousness, not

submitting ourselves to be justified by the righteousness that God

has provided with such wisdom and grace, and at such a cost in His

Son Jesus Christ." Now, young men, I defy you to be better born,

better brought up, or to have better prospects than Saul of Tarsus

had. I defy you to have profited more by all your opportunities

and advantages than he had done. I defy you to be more blameless

in your opening manhood than he was. And yet it all went like

smoke when he got a true sight of himself, and, with that, a true

sight of Christ and His justifying righteousness. Read at home to-

night, and read when alone, what that great man of God says about

all that in his classical epistle to the Philippians, and refuse to

sleep till you have made the same submission. And, to-night, and

all your days, let SUBMISSION, Paul's splendid submission, be the

soul and spirit of all your religious life. Submission to be

searched by God's holy law as by a lighted candle: submission to

be justified from all that that candle discovers: submission to

take Christ as your life and righteousness, sanctification and

redemption: and submission of your mind and your will and your

heart to Him at all times and in all things. Nay, stay still, and

say where you sit, Lord, I submit. I submit on the spot to be

pardoned. I submit now to be saved. I submit in all things from

this very hour and house of God not any longer to be mine own, but

to be Thine, O God, Thine, Thine, for ever, in Jesus Christ Thy Son

and my Saviour!

"But, one day, as I was passing in the field, and that, too, with

some dashes in my conscience, fearing lest all was not right,

suddenly this sentence fell upon my soul, Thy Righteousness is in

heaven! And, methought, I saw with the eyes of my soul Jesus

Christ at God's right hand. There, I saw, was my Righteousness. I

also saw, moreover, that it was not my good frame of heart that

made my Righteousness better, nor my bad frame of heart that made

my Righteousness worse: for my Righteousness was Jesus Christ

Himself, the same yesterday, and to-day, and for ever. 'Twas

glorious to me to see His exaltation, and the worth and prevalency

of His benefits. And that because I could now look from myself to

Him and should reckon that all those graces of God that were now

green in me were yet but like those crack-groats and four-pence

halfpennies that rich men carry in their purses when their gold is

in their trunks at home! Oh, I saw that day that my gold was all

in my trunk at home! Even in Christ, my Lord and Saviour! Now,

Christ was all to me: all my wisdom, all my righteousness, all my

sanctification and all my redemption."

"Methinks in this God speaks,

No tinker hath such power."

LITTLE-FAITH

"O thou of little faith."--Our Lord.

Little-Faith, let it never be forgotten, was, all the time, a good

man. With all his mistakes about himself, with his sad

misadventure, with all his loss of blood and of money, and with his

whole after-lifetime of doleful and bitter complaints,--all the

time, Little-Faith was all through, in a way, a good man. To keep

us right on this all-important point, and to prevent our being

prematurely prejudiced against this pilgrim because of his somewhat

prejudicial name--because give a dog a bad name, you know, and you

had better hang him out of hand at once--because, I say, of this

pilgrim's somewhat suspicious name, his scrupulously just, and,

indeed, kindly affected biographer says of him, and says it of him

not once nor twice, but over and over and over again, that this

Little-Faith was really all the time a truly good man. And, more

than that, this good man's goodness was not a new thing with him it

was not a thing of yesterday. This man had, happily to begin with,

a good father and a good mother. And if there was a good town in

all those parts for a boy to be born and brought up in it was

surely the town of Sincere. "Train up a child in the way he should

go, and when he is old he will not depart from it." Well, Little-

Faith had been so trained up both by his father and his mother and

his schoolmaster and his minister, and he never cost either of them

a sore heart or even an hour's sleep. One who knew him well, as

well, indeed, as only one young man knows another, has been fain to

testify, when suspicions have been cast on the purity and integrity

of his youth, that nothing will describe this pilgrim so well in

the days of his youth as just those beautiful words out of the New

Testament--"an example to all young men in word, in conversation,

in charity, in spirit, in faith even, and in purity"--and that, if

there was one young man in all that town of Sincere who kept his

garments unspotted it was just our pilgrim of to-night. Yes, said

one who had known him all his days, if the child is the father of

the man, then Little-Faith, as you so unaccountably to me call him,

must have been all along a good man.

It was said long ago in Vanity Fair about our present Premier that

if he were a worse man he would be a better statesman. Now, I do

not repeat that in this place because I agree with it, but because

it helps to illustrate, as sometimes a violent paradox will help to

illustrate, a truth that does not lie all at once on the surface.

But it is no paradox or extravagance or anything but the simple

truth to say that if Little-Faith had had more and earlier

discoveries made to him of the innate evil of his own heart, even

if it had been by that innate evil bursting out of his heart and

laying waste his good life, he would either have been driven out of

his little faith altogether or driven into a far deeper faith. Had

the commandment come to him in the manner it came to Paul; had it

come so as that the sinfulness of his inward nature had revived, as

Paul says, under its entrance; then, either his great goodness or

his little faith must have there and then died. God's truth and

man's goodness cannot dwell together in the same heart. Either the

truth will kill the goodness, or the goodness will kill the truth.

Little-Faith, in short, was such a good man, and had always been

such a good man, and had led such an easy life in consequence, that

his faith had not been much exercised, and therefore had not grown,

as it must have been exercised and must have grown, had he not been

such a good man. In short, and to put it bluntly, had Little-Faith

been a worse sinner, he would have been a better saint. "O felix

culpa!" exclaimed a church father; "O happy fault, which found for

us sinners such a Redeemer." An apostrophe which Bishop Ken has

put into these four bold lines -

"What Adam did amiss,

Turned to our endless bliss;

O happy sin, which to atone,

Drew Filial God to leave His throne."

And John Calvin, the soberest of men, supports Augustine, the most

impulsive of men, in saying the same thing. All things which

happen to the saints are so overruled by God that what the world

regards as evil the issue shows to be good. For what Augustine

says is true, that even the sins of saints are, through the guiding

providence of God, so far from doing harm to them, that, on the

contrary, they serve to advance their salvation. And Richard

Hooker, a theologian, if possible, still more judicious than even

John Calvin, says on this same subject and in support of the same

great father, "I am not afraid to affirm it boldly with St.

Augustine that men puffed up through a proud opinion of their own

sanctity and holiness receive a benefit at the hands of God, and

are assisted with His grace, when with His grace they are not

assisted, but permitted, and that grievously, to transgress. Ask

the very soul of Peter, and it shall undoubtedly make you itself

this answer: My eager protestations, made in the glory of my

ghostly strength, I am ashamed of; but those crystal tears,

wherewith my sin and weakness were bewailed, have procured my

endless joy: my strength hath been my ruin, and my fall my stay."

And our own Samuel Rutherford is not likely to be left far behind

by the best of them when the grace of God is to be magnified. "Had

sin never been we should have wanted the mysterious Emmanuel, the

Beloved, the Chief among ten thousand, Christ, God-man, the Saviour

of sinners. For, no sick sinners, no soul-physician of sinners; no

captive, no Redeemer; no slave of hell, no lovely ransom-payer of

heaven. Mary Magdalene with her seven devils, Paul with his hands

smoking with the blood of the saints, and with his heart sick with

malice and blasphemy against Christ and His Church, and all the

rest of the washen ones whose robes are made fair in the blood of

the Lamb, and all the multitude that no man can number in that best

of lands, are all but bits of free grace. O what a depth of

unsearchable wisdom to contrive that lovely plot of free grace.

Come, all intellectual capacities, and warm your hearts at this

fire. Come, all ye created faculties, and smell the precious

ointment of Christ. Oh come, sit down under His shadow and eat the

apples of life. Oh that angels would come, and generations of men,

and wonder, and admire, and fall down before the unsearchable

wisdom of this gospel-art of the unsearchable riches of Christ!"

And always pungent Thomas Shepard of New England: "You shall find

this, that there is not any carriage or passage of the Lord's

providence toward thee but He will get a name to Himself, first and

last, by it. Hence you shall find that those very sins that

dishonour His name He will even by them get Himself a better name;

for so far will they be from casting you out of His love that He

will actually do thee good by them. Look and see if it is not so

with thee? Doth not thy weakness strengthen thee like Paul? Doth

not thy blindness make thee cry for light? And hath not God out of

darkness oftentimes brought light? Thou hast felt venom against

Christ and thy brother, and thou hast on that account loathed

thyself the more. Thy falls into sin make thee weary of it,

watchful against it, long to be rid of it. And thus He makes thy

poison thy food, thy death thy life, thy damnation thy salvation,

and thy very greatest enemies thy very best friends. And hence Mr.

Fox said that he thanked God more for his sins than for his good

works. And the reason is, God will have His name." And, last, but

not least, listen to our old acquaintance, James Fraser of Brea:

"I find advantages by my sins: 'Peccare nocet, peccavisse vero

juvat.' I may say, as Mr. Fox said, my sins have, in a manner,

done me more good than my graces. Grace and mercy have more

abounded where sin had much abounded. I am by my sins made much

more humble, watchful, revengeful against myself. I am made to see

a greater need to depend more upon Him and to love Him the more. I

find that true which Shepard says, 'sin loses strength by every new

fall.'" Have you followed all that, my brethren? Or have you

stumbled at it? Do you not understand it? Does your superficial

gin-horse mind incline to shake its empty head over all this? I

know that great names, and especially the great names of your own

party, go much farther with you than the truth goes, and therefore

I have sheltered this deep truth under a shield of great names.

For their sakes let this sure truth of God's best saints lie in

peace and undisputed beside you till you arrive to understand it.

But, to proceed,--the thing was this. At this passage there comes

down from Broadway-gate a lane called Dead-Man's-lane, so called

because of the murders that are commonly done there. And this

Little-Faith going on pilgrimage, as we now do, chanced to sit down

there and fell fast asleep. Yes; the thing was this: This good

man had never been what one would call really awake. He was not a

bad man, as men went in the town of Sincere, but he always had a

half-slept half-awakened look about his eyes, till now, at this

most unfortunate spot, he fell stone-dead asleep. You all know, I

shall suppose, what the apostle Paul and John Bunyan mean by sleep,

do you not? You all know, at any rate, to begin with, what sleep

means in the accident column of the morning papers. You all know

what sleep meant and what it involved and cost in the Thirsk

signal-box the other night. {1} When a man is asleep, he is as

good as dead, and other people are as good as dead to him. He is

dead to duty, to danger, to other people's lives, as well as to his

own. He may be having pleasant dreams, and may even be laughing

aloud in his sleep, but that may only make his awaking all the more

hideous. He may awake just in time, or he may awake just too late.

Only, he is asleep and he neither knows nor cares. Now, there is a

sleep of the soul as well as of the body. And as the soul is in

worth, as the soul is in its life and in its death to the body, so

is its sleep. Many of you sitting there are quite as dead to

heaven and hell, to death and judgment, and to what a stake other

people as well as yourselves have in your sleep as that poor

sleeper in the signal-box was dead to what was coming rushing on

him through the black night. And as all his gnashing of teeth at

himself, and all his sobs before his judge and before the laid-out

dead, and before distracted widows and half-mad husbands did not

bring back that fatal moment when he fell asleep so sweetly, so

will it be with you. Lazarus! come forth! Wise and foolish

virgins both: Behold the Bridegroom cometh! Awake, thou that

sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee

light!

And, with that, Guilt with a great club that was in his hand struck

Little-Faith on the head, and with that blow felled him to the

earth, where he lay bleeding as one that would soon bleed to death.

Yes, yes, all true to the very life. A man may be the boast and

the example of all the town, and yet, unknown to them all, and all

but unknown to himself till he is struck down, he may have had

guilt enough on his track all the time to lay him half dead at the

mouth of Dead-Man's-lane. Good as was the certificate that all men

in their honesty gave to Little-Faith, yet even he had some bad

enough memories behind him and within him had he only kept them

ever present with him. But, then, it was just this that all along

was the matter with Little-Faith. Till, somehow, after that sad

and yet not wholly evil sleep, all his past sins leapt out into the

light and suddenly became and remained all the rest of his life

like scarlet. So loaded, indeed, was the club of Guilt with the

nails and studs and clamps of secret aggravation, that every nail

and stud left its own bleeding bruise in the prostrate man's head.

I have myself, says the narrator of Little-Faith's story, I have

myself been engaged as he was, and I found it to be a terrible

thing. I would, as the saying is, have sold my life at that moment

for a penny; but that, as God would have it, I was clothed with

armour of proof: ay, and yet though I was thus harnessed, I found

it hard work to quit myself like a man. No man can tell what in

that combat attends us but he that hath been in the battle himself.

Great-Grace himself,--whoso looks well upon his face shall see

those cuts and scars that shall easily give demonstration of what I

say.

Most unfortunately there was no good Samaritan with his beast on

the road that day to take the half-dead man to an inn. And thus it

was that Little-Faith was left to lie in his blood till there was

almost no more blood left in him. Till at last, coming a little to

himself, he made a shift to scrabble on his way. When he was able

to look a little to himself, besides all his wounds and loss of

blood, he found that all his spending money was gone, and what was

he to do, a stranger in such a plight on a strange road? There was

nothing for it but he must just beg his way with many a hungry

belly for the remainder of his way. You all understand the parable

at this point? Our knowledge of gospel truth; our personal

experience of the life of God in our own soul; our sensible

attainments in this grace of the Spirit and in that; in secret

prayer, in love to God, in forgiveness of injuries, in good-will to

all men, and in self-denial that no one knows of,--in things like

these we possess what may be called the pocket-money of the

spiritual life. All these things, at their best, are not the true

jewel that no thief can break through nor steal; but though they

are not our best and truest riches, yet they have their place and

play their part in sending us up the pilgrim way. By our long and

close study of the word of God, if that is indeed our case; by

divine truth dwelling richly and experimentally in our hearts; and

by a hidden life that is its own witness, and which always has the

Holy Spirit's seal set upon it that we are the children of God,--

all that keeps, and is designed by God to keep our hearts up amid

the labours and the faintings, the hopes and the fears of the

spiritual life. All that keeps us at the least and the worst above

famine and beggary. Now, the whole pity with Little-Faith was,

that though he was not a bad man, yet he never, even at his best

days, had much of those things that make a good and well-furnished

pilgrim; and what little he had he had now clean lost. He had

never been much a reader of his Bible; he had never sat over it as

other men sat over their news-letters and their romances. He had

never had much taste or talent for spiritual books of any kind. He

was a good sort of man, but he was not exactly the manner of man on

whose broken heart the Holy Ghost sets the broad seal of heaven.

But for his dreadful misadventure, he might have plodded on, a

decent, humdrum, commonplace, everyday kind of pilgrim; but when

that catastrophe fell on him he had nothing to fall back upon. The

secret ways of faith and love and hope were wholly unknown to him.

He had no practice in importunate prayer. He had never prayed a

whole night all his life. He had never needed to do so. For were

we not told when we first met him what a blameless and pure and

true and good man he had always been? He did not know how to find

his way about in his Bible; and as for the maps and guide-books

that some pilgrims never let out of their hand, even when he had

some spending money about him, he never laid it out that way. And

a more helpless pilgrim than Little-Faith was all the rest of the

way you never saw. He was forced to beg as he went, says his

historian. That is to say, he had to lean upon and look to wiser

and better-furnished men than himself. He had to share their

meals, look to them to pay his bills, keep close to their company,

walk in their foot-prints, and at night borrow their oil, and it

was only in this poor dependent way that Little-Faith managed to

struggle on to the end of his dim and joyless journey.

It would have been far more becoming and far more profitable if

Christian and Hopeful, instead of falling out of temper and calling

one another bad names over the sad case of Little-Faith, had tried

to tell one another why that unhappy pilgrim's faith was so small,

and how both their own faith and his might from that day have been

made more. Hopeful, for some reason or other, was in a rude and

boastful mood of mind that day, and Christian was more tart and

snappish than we have ever before seen him; and, altogether, the

opportunity of learning something useful out of Little-Faith's

story has been all but lost to us. But, now, since there are so

many of Little-Faith's kindred among ourselves--so many good men

who are either half asleep in their religious life or are begging

their way from door to door--let them be told, in closing, one or

two out of many other ways in which their too little faith may

possibly be made stronger and more fruitful.

Well, then, faith, like everything else, once we have it, grows

greater by our continual exercise of it. Exercise, then,

intentionally and seriously and on system your faith every day.

And exercise it habitually and increasingly on your Bible, on

heaven, and on Jesus Christ. And let your faith on all these

things, and places, and persons, work by love,--by love and by

imagination. Our love is cold and our faith is small and weak for

lack of imagination. Read your Psalm, your Gospel, your Epistle

every morning and every night with your eye upon the object. Think

you see the Psalmist amid all his deep and divine experiences.

Think you see Jesus Christ speaking His parables, saying His

prayers, and doing His good works. Walk up and down with Him,

observing His manner, His look, His gait, His divinity in your

humanity, till Galilee and Jerusalem become Scotland and Edinburgh;

that is, till He is as much with you, and more, than He was with

Peter and James and John. Never close your eye a single night till

you have again laid your hand on the very head of the Lamb of God,

and till you feel that your sin and guilt have all passed off your

hand and on upon His head. And never rise without, like William

Law, saluting the rising sun in the name of God, as if he had just

been created and sent up into your sky to let you see to serve God

and your neighbour for another day. And be often out of this world

and up in heaven. Beat all about you at building castles in the

air; you have more material and more reason. For is not faith the

substance of things hoped for, and the evidence of things not seen?

Walk often in heaven's friendly streets. Pass often into heaven's

many mansions filled with happy families. Imagine this unhappy

life at an end, and imagine yourself sent back to this probationary

world to play the man for a few short years before heaven finally

calls you home. Little-Faith was a good man, but there was no

speculation in his eyes and no secrets of love in his heart. And

if your faith also is little, and your spending money also is run

low, try this way of love and imagination. If you have a better

way, then go on with it and be happy yourself and helpful to

others; but if your faith is at a standstill and is stricken with

barrenness, try my counsel of putting more heart and more inward

eye, more holy love and more heavenly joy, into your frigid and

sterile religion.

THE FLATTERER

"A man that flattereth his neighbour spreadeth a net for his

feet."--The Wise Man.

Both Ignorance and Little-Faith would have had their revenge and

satisfaction upon Christian and Hopeful had they seen those two so

Pharisaical old men taken in the Flatterer's net. For it was

nothing else but the swaggering pride of Hopeful over the pitiful

case of Little-Faith, taken along with the hard and hasty ways of

Christian with that unhappy youth Ignorance, that so soon laid them

both down under the small cords of the Shining One. This word of

the wise man, that pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty

spirit before a fall, was fulfilled to the very letter in Christian

and Hopeful that high-minded day. At the same time, it must be

admitted that Christian and Hopeful would have been more than human

if they had not both felt and let fall some superiority, some

scorn, and some impatience in the presence of such a silly and

upsetting stripling as Ignorance was; as, also, over the story of

such a poor-spirited and spunging creature as Little-Faith was.

Christian and Hopeful had just come down from their delightful time

among the Delectable Mountains, and they were as full as they could

hold of all kinds of knowledge, and faith, and hope, and assurance;

when, most unfortunately, as it turned out, they first came across

Ignorance, and then, after quarrelling with him, they fell out

between themselves over the case of Little-Faith. Their superior

knowledge of the truth, and their superior strength of faith, ought

to have made them more able to bear with the infirmities of the

weak, and with the passing moods, however provoking, of one

another. But no. And their impatience and contempt and bad temper

all came at this crisis to such a head with them that they could

only be cured by the small cords and the stinging words of the

Shining One. The true key to this so painful part of the parable

hangs at our own girdle. We who have been born and brought up in

an evangelical church are thrown from time to time into the company

of men--ministers and people--who have not had our advantages and

opportunities. They have been born, baptized, and brought up in

communities and churches the clean opposite of ours; and they are

as ignorant of all New Testament religion as Ignorance himself was;

or, on the other hand, they are as full of superstition and terror

and spiritual starvation as Little-Faith was. And then, instead of

recollecting and laying to heart Who made us to differ from such

ignorance and such unbelief, and thus putting on love and humility

and patience toward our neighbours, we speak scornfully and roughly

to them, and boast ourselves over them, and as good as say to them,

Stand by thyself, come not near to me, for I am wiser, wider-

minded, stronger, and better every way than thou. And then, ere

ever we are aware of what we are doing, we have let the arch-

flatterer of religious superiority and of spiritual pride seduce us

aside out of the lowly and heavenly way of love and humility till

we are again brought back to it with rebukes of conscience and with

other chastisements. You all understand, my brethren, that the man

black of flesh but covered with a white robe was no wayside seducer

who met Christian and Hopeful at that dangerous part of the road

only and only on that high-minded day. You know from yourselves

surely that both Christian and Hopeful carried that black but

smooth-spoken man within themselves. The Flatterer who led the two

pilgrims so fatally wrong that day was just their own heart taken

out of their own bosom and personified and dramatised by Bunyan's

dramatic genius, and so made to walk and talk and flatter and puff

up outside of themselves till they came again to see who in reality

he was and whence he came,--that is to say, till they were brought

to see what they themselves still were, and would always be, when

they were left to themselves. "Where did you lie last night? asked

the Shining One with the whip. With the Shepherds on the

Delectable Mountains, they answered. He asked them then if they

had not of those shepherds a note of direction for the way? They

answered, Yes. But did you not, said he, when you were at a stand

pluck out and read your note? They answered, No. He asked them

why? They said they forgot. He asked, moreover if the shepherds

did not bid them beware of the Flatterer? They answered, Yes; but

we did not imagine, said they, that this fine-spoken man had been

he."

All good literature, both sacred and profane, both ancient and

modern, is full of the Flatterer. Let me not, protests Elihu in

his powerful speech in the book of Job, let me not accept any man's

person; neither let me give flattering titles unto man, lest in so

doing my Maker should soon take me away. And the Psalmist in his

powerful description of the wicked men of his day: There is no

faithfulness in their mouth; their inward part is very wickedness;

their throat is an open sepulchre; they flatter with their tongue.

And again: They speak with flattering lips, and with a double

heart do they speak. But the Lord shall cut off all flattering

lips, and the tongue that speaketh proud things. "The perpetual

hyperbole" of pure love becomes in the lips of impure love the

impure bait that leads the simple ones astray on the streets of the

city as seen and heard by the wise man out of his casement. My

son, say unto wisdom, Thou art my sister, and call understanding

thy kinswoman; that they may keep thee from the strange woman, from

the stranger which flattereth thee with her words, which forsaketh

the guide of her youth, and forgetteth the covenant of her God.

And then in the same book of Hebrew aphorisms we find this text

which Bunyan puts on the margin of the page: "A man that

flattereth his neighbour spreadeth a net for his feet." And now,

before we leave the ancient world, if you would not think it

beneath the dignity of the place we are in, I would like to read to

you a passage out of a round-about paper written by a satirist of

Greece about the time of Ezra and Nehemiah in Jerusalem. You will

easily remark the difference of tone between the seriousness and

pathos of the Hebrew prophet and the light and chaffing touch of

Theophrastus. "The Flatterer is a person," says that satirist of

Greek society, "who will say to you as he walks with you, 'Do you

observe how people are looking at you? This happens to no man in

Athens but to you. A fine compliment was paid you yesterday in the

Porch. More than thirty persons were sitting there when the

question was started, Who is our foremost man? Every one mentioned

you first, and ended by coming back to your name." The Flatterer

will laugh also at your stalest joke, and will stuff his cloak into

his mouth as if he could not repress his amusement when you again

tell it. He will buy apples and pears and will give to your

children when you are by, and will kiss them all and will say,

'Chicks of a good father.' Also, when he assists at the purchase

of slippers he will declare that the foot is more shapely than the

shoe. He is the first of the guests to praise the wine and to say

as he reclines next the host, 'How delicate your fare always is';

and taking up something from the table, 'Now, how excellent that

is!'" And so on. Yes, we have heard it all over and over again in

Modern Athens also. The Greek fable also of the fox and the crow

and the piece of cheese is only another illustration of the truth

that the God of truth and integrity never left Himself without a

witness. Our own literature also is scattered full of the

Flatterer and his too willing dupes. "Of praise a mere glutton,"

says Goldsmith of David Garrick, "he swallowed what came. The puff

of a dunce he mistook it for fame." "Delicious essence," exclaims

Sterne, "how refreshing thou art to poor human nature! How sweetly

dost thou mix with the blood, and help it through the most

difficult and tortuous passages to the heart." "He that slanders

me," says Cowper, "paints me blacker than I am, and he that

flatters me whiter. They both daub me, and when I look in the

glass of conscience, I see myself disguised by both." And then he

sings:

"The worth of these three kingdoms I defy

To lure me to the baseness of a lie;

And of all lies (be that one poet's boast),

The lie that flatters I abhor the most."

Now, praise, which is one of the best and sweetest things in human

life, so soon passes over into flattery, which is one of the worst

things, that something must here be said and laid to heart about

praise also. But, to begin with, praise itself must first be

praised. There is nothing nobler than true praise in him who

speaks it, and there is nothing dearer and sweeter to him who hears

it. God Himself inhabits the praises of Israel. All God's works

praise Him. Whoso offereth praise glorifieth Me. Praise waiteth

for Thee, O God, in Zion. Enter into His gates with thanksgiving,

and into His courts with praise. Violence shall no more be heard

in thy land, wasting nor destruction within thy borders; but thou

shalt call thy walls Salvation, and thy gates Praise. And such

also is all true praise between man and man. How deliciously sweet

is praise! How we labour after it! how we look for it and wait for

it! and how we languish and die if we do not get it! Again, when

it comes to us, how it cheers us up and makes our face to shine!

For a long time after it our step is so swift on the street and our

face beams so that all men can quite well see what has come to us.

Praise is like wine in our blood; it is new life to our fainting

heart. So much is this the case that a salutation of praise is to

be our first taste of heaven itself. It will wipe all tears off

our eyes when we hear our Lord saying to us, "Well done!" when all

our good works that we have done in the body shall be found unto

praise and honour and glory in the great day of Jesus Christ.

At the same time, this same love of praise is one of our most

besetting and fatal temptations as long as we are in this false and

double and deceptive world. Sin, God curse it! has corrupted and

poisoned everything, the very best things of this life, and when

the best things are corrupted and poisoned they become the worst

things. And praise does not escape this universal and fatal law.

Weak, evil, and self-seeking men are near us, and we lean upon

them, look to them, and listen to them. We make them our strength

and support, and seek repose and refreshment from them. They

cannot be all or any of these things to us; but we are far on in

life, we are done with life, before we have discovered that and

will admit that. Most men never discover and admit that till they

are out of this life altogether. Christ's praise and the applause

of His saints and angels are so future and so far away from us, and

man's praise and the applause of this world, hollow and false as it

is, is so near us, that we feed our souls on offal and garbage,

when, already, in the witness of a good conscience, we might be

feasting our souls on the finest of the wheat, and satisfying them

with honey out of the rock. And, then, this insatiable appetite of

our hearts, being so degraded and perverted, like all degraded and

perverted appetites, becomes an iron-fast slave to what it feeds

upon. What miserable slaves we all are to the approval and the

praise of men! How they hold us in their bondage! How we lick

their hands and sit up on our haunches and go through our postures

for a crumb! How we crawl on our belly and lick their feet for a

stroke and a smile! What a hound's life does that man lead who

lives upon the approval and the praise and the patronage of men!

What meanness fills his mind; what baseness fills his heart! What

a shameful leash he is led about the world in! How kicked about

and spat upon he is; while not half so much as he knows all the

time that he deserves to be! Better far be a dog at once and bay

the moon than be a man and fawn upon the praises of men.

If you would be a man at all, not to speak of a Christian man,

starve this appetite till you have quite extirpated it. You will

never be safe from it as long as it stirs within you. Extirpate

it! Extirpate it! You will never know true self-respect and you

will never deserve to know it, till you have wholly extirpated your

appetite for praise. Put your foot upon it, put it out of your

heart. Stop fishing for it, and when you see it coming, turn away

and stop your ears against it. And should it still insinuate

itself, at any rate do not repeat to others what has already so

flattered and humbled and weakened you. Telling it to others will

only humble and weaken you more. By repeating the praise that you

have heard or read about yourself you only expose yourself and

purchase well-deserved contempt for yourself. And, more than that,

by fishing for praise you lay yourself open to all sorts of

flatterers. Honest men, men who truly respect and admire you, will

show you their dignified regard and appreciation of you and your

work by their silence; while your leaky slaves will crowd around

you with floods of praise that they know well will please and

purchase you. And when you cannot with all your arts squeeze a

drop out of those who love and honour you, gallons will be poured

upon you by those who have respect neither for themselves nor for

you. Faugh! Flee from flatterers, and take up only with sternly

true and faithful men. "I am much less regardful," says Richard

Baxter, "of the approbation of men, and set much lighter store by

their praise and their blame, than I once did. All worldly things

appear most vain and unsatisfying to those who have tried them

most. But while I feel that this has had some hand in my distaste

for man's praise, yet it is the increasing impression on my heart

of man's nothingness and God's transcendent greatness; it is the

brevity and vanity of all earthly things, taken along with the

nearness of eternity;--it is all this that has at last lifted me

above the blame and the praise of men."

To conclude; let us make up our mind and determine to pass on to

God on the spot every syllable of praise that ever comes to our

eyes or our ears--if, in this cold, selfish, envious, and grudging

world, any syllable of praise ever should come to us. Even if pure

and generous and well-deserved praise should at any time come to

us, all that does not make it ours. The best earned usury is not

the steward's own money to do with it what he likes. The principal

and the interest, and the trader too, are all his master's. And,

more than that, after the wisest and the best trader has done his

best, he will remain, to himself at least, a most unprofitable

servant. Pass on then immediately, dutifully, and to its very last

syllable, to God all the praise that comes to you. Wash your hands

of it and say, Not unto us, O God, not unto us, but unto Thy name.

And then, to take the most selfish and hungry-hearted view of this

whole matter, what you thus pass on to God as not your own but His,

He will soon, and in a better and safer world, return again to the

full with usury to you, and you again to God, and He again to you,

and so on, all down the pure and true and sweet and blessed life of

heaven.

ATHEIST

" . . . without God [literally, atheists] in the world."--Paul.

"Yonder is a man with his back toward Zion, and he is coming to

meet us. So he drew nearer and nearer, and at last came up to

them. His name was Atheist, and he asked them whither they were

going? We are going to the Mount Zion, they answered. Then

Atheist fell into a very great laughter. What is the meaning of

your laughter? they asked. I laugh to see what ignorant persons

you are to take upon you so tedious a journey, and yet are like to

have nothing but your travel for your pains. Why, man? Do you

think we shall not be received? they said. Received! There is no

such place as you dream of in all this world. But there is in the

world to come, replied Christian. When I was at home, Atheist went

on, in mine own country I heard as you now affirm, and, from that

hearing, I went out to see, and have been seeking this city you

speak of this twenty years, but find no more of it than I did the

first day I set out. And, still laughing, he went his way."

Having begun to tell us about Atheist, why did Bunyan not tell us

more? We would have thanked him warmly to-night for a little more

about this unhappy man. Why did the dreamer not take another eight

or ten pages in order to tell us, as only he could have told us,

how this man that is now Atheist had spent his past twenty years

seeking Mount Zion? Those precious unwritten pages are now buried

in John Strudwick's vault in Bunhill Fields, and no other man has

arisen able to handle Bunyan's biographic pen. Had Bunyan but put

off the entrance of Christian and Hopeful into the city till he had

told us something more about the twenty years it had taken this

once earnest pilgrim to become an atheist, how valuable an

interpolation that would have been! What was it that made this man

to set out so long ago for the Celestial City? What was it that so

stoutly determined him to leave off all his old companions and turn

his back on the sweet refreshments of his youth? How did he do at

the Slough of Despond? Did he come that way? What about the

Wicket Gate, and the House Beautiful, and the Interpreter's House,

and the Delectable Mountains? What men, and especially what women,

did he meet and converse with on his way? What were his fortunes,

and what his misfortunes? How much did he lay out at Vanity Fair,

and on what? At what point of his twenty years' way did his

youthful faith begin to shake, and his youthful love begin to

become lukewarm? And what was it that at last made him quite turn

round his back on Zion and his face to his own country? I cannot

forgive Bunyan to-night for not telling us the story of Atheist's

conversion, his pilgrimage, and his apostasy in full.

At the same time, though it cannot be denied that Bunyan has lost

at this point a great opportunity for his genius and for our

advantage,--at the same time, he undoubtedly did a very courageous

thing in introducing Atheist at all; and, especially, in

introducing him to us and making him laugh so loudly at us when we

are on the very borders of the land of Beulah. A less courageous

writer, and a writer less sure of his ground, would have left out

Atheist altogether; or, if he had felt constrained to introduce

him, would have introduced him at any other period of our history

rather than at this period. Under other hands than Bunyan's we

would have met with this mocking reprobate just outside the City of

Destruction; or, perhaps, among the booths of Vanity Fair; or,

indeed, anywhere but where we now meet him. And, that our greater-

minded author does not let loose the laughter of Atheist upon us

till we are almost out of the body is a stroke of skill and truth

and boldness that makes us glad indeed that we possess such a

sketch at Bunyan's hand at all, all too abrupt and all too short as

that sketch is. In the absence, then, of a full-length and

finished portrait of Atheist, we must be content to fall back on

some of the reflections and lessons that the mere mention of his

name, the spot he passes us on, and the ridicule of his laughter,

all taken together, awaken in our minds. One rapid stroke of such

a brush as that of John Bunyan conveys more to us than a full-

length likeness, with all the strongest colours, of any other

artist would be able to do.

  1. One thing the life-long admiration of John Bunyan's books has

helped to kindle and burn into my mind and my imagination is this:

What a universe of things is the heart of man! Were there nothing

else in the heart of man but all the places and all the persons and

all the adventures that John Bunyan saw in his sleep, what a world

that would open up in all our bosoms! All the pilgrims, good and

bad--they, or the seed and possibility of them all, are all in your

heart and in mine. All the cities, all the roads that lead from

one city to another, with all the paths and all the by-paths,--all

the adventures, experiences, endurances, conflicts, overthrows,

victories,--all are within us and never are to be seen anywhere

else. Heaven and hell, God and the devil, life and death,

salvation and damnation, time and eternity, all are within us.

"There is no Mount Zion in all this world," bellowed out this

blinded fool. "No; I know that quite well," quickly responded

Christian; "but there is in the world to come." He would have said

the whole truth, and he would have been entirely right, had he

taken time to add, "and in the world within." "And more," he

should have said to Atheist, "much more in the world within than in

any possible world to come." The Celestial City, every Sabbath-

school child begins gradually to understand, is not up among the

stars; till, as he grows older, he takes in the whole of the New

Testament truth that the kingdom of heaven is wholly within him.

You all understand, my brethren, that were we swept in a moment up

to the furthest star, by all that infinite flight we would not be

one hair's-breadth nearer the heavenly city. That is not the right

direction to that city. The city whose builder and maker is God

lies in quite a different direction from that altogether; not by

ascending up beyond sun and moon and stars to all eternity would we

ever get one hand's-breadth nearer God. But if you deny yourself

sleep to-night till you have read His book and bowed your knees in

His closet; if, for His sake, you deny yourself to-morrow when you

are eating and drinking; as often as you say, "Not my will, but

Thine be done"; as often as you humble yourself when others exalt

themselves; as often as you refuse praise and despise blame for His

sake; as often as you forgive before God your enemy, and rejoice

with your friend,--Behold! the kingdom of heaven, with its King and

all His shining court of angels and saints is around you;--is,

indeed, within you. No; there is no such place. Heaven is not in

any place: heaven is in a person where it is at all; and you are

that person as often as you put off an earthly and put on a

heavenly mind. That mocking reprobate, with his secret heart all

through those twenty years hungering after the lusts of his youth,-

-he was wholly right in what he so unintentionally said; there is

no such place in all this world. And, even if there were, it would

spue him and all who are like him out of its mouth.

2. And, then, in all that universe of things that fills that

bottomless pit and shoreless sea the human heart, there is nothing

deeper down in it than just its deep and unsearchable atheism. The

very deepest thing, and the most absolutely inexpugnable thing, in

every human heart is its theism; its original and inextinguishable

convictions about itself and about God. But, all but as deep as

that--for all around that, and all over that, and soaking all

through that--there lies a superincumbent mass of sullen, brutish,

malignant atheism. Nay, so deep down is the atheism of all our

hearts, that it is only one here and another there of the holiest

and the ripest of God's saints who ever get down to it, or even get

at their deepest within sight of it. Robert Fleming tells us about

Robert Bruce, that he was a man that had much inward exercise about

his own personal case, and had been often assaulted anent that

great foundation truth, if there was a God. And often, when he had

come up to the pulpit, after being some time silent, which was his

usual way, he would say, "I think it is a great matter to believe

there is a God"; telling the people that it was another thing to

believe that than they judged. But it was also known to his

friends what extraordinary confirmations he had from the Lord

therein, and what near familiarity he did attain to in his heart-

converse with God: Yea, truly, adds Fleming, some things I have

had thereanent that seem so strange and marvellous that I forbear

to set them down. And in Halyburton's priceless Memoirs we read:

"Hereby I was brought into a doubt about the truths of religion,

the being of God, and things eternal. Whenever I was in dangers or

straits and would build upon these things, a suspicion secretly

haunted me, what if the things are not? This perplexity was

somewhat eased while one day I was reading how Robert Bruce was

shaken about the being of God, and how at length he came to the

fullest satisfaction." And in another place: "Some days ago

reading Ex. ix. and x., and finding this, "That ye may know that I

am God" frequently repeated, and elsewhere in passages innumerable,

as the end of God's manifesting Himself in His word and works; I

observe from it that atheism is deeply rooted even in the Lord's

people, seeing they need to be taught this so much. The great

difficulty that the whole of revelation has to grapple with is

atheism; its whole struggle is to recover man to his first

impressions of a God. This one point comprehends the whole of

man's recovery, just as atheism is the whole of man's apostasy."

And, again, in another part of the same great book, Halyburton

says: "I must observe, also, the wise providence of God, that the

greatest difficulties that lie against religion are hid from

atheists. All the objections I meet with in their writings are not

nearly so subtle as those which are often suggested to myself. The

reason of this is obvious from the very nature of the thing--such

persons take not a near-hand view of religion, and while persons

stand at a distance neither are the advantages nor the difficulties

of religion discerned." And now listen to Bunyan, that arch-

atheist: "Whole floods of blasphemies both against God, Christ,

and the Scriptures were poured upon my spirit, to my great

confusion and astonishment. Against the very being of God and of

His only beloved Son; or, whether there were, in truth, a God and a

Christ, or no. Of all the temptations that ever I met with in my

life, to question the being of God and the truth of the Gospel is

the worst, and the worst to be borne. When this temptation comes

it takes away my girdle from me, and removeth the foundation from

under me."

"Fool, said my Muse to me, look in thy heart and write."

And John Bunyan looked into his own deep and holy heart, and out of

it he composed this incident of Atheist.

3. It may not be out of place at this point to look for a moment

at some of the things that agitate, stir up, and make the secret

atheism of our hearts to fluctuate and overflow. Butler has a fine

passage in which he points out that it is only the higher class of

minds that are tempted with speculative difficulties such as those

were that assaulted Christian and Hopeful after they were so near

the end of their journey. Coarse, common-place, and mean-minded

men have their probation appointed them among coarse, mean, and

commonplace things; whereas enlightened, enlarged, and elevated men

are exercised after the manner of Robert Bruce, Thomas Halyburton,

John Bunyan, and Butler himself. "The chief temptations of the

generality of the world are the ordinary motives to injustice or

unrestrained pleasure; but there are other persons without this

shallowness of temper; persons of a deeper sense as to what is

invisible and future. Now, these persons have their moral

discipline set them in that high region." The profound bishop

means that while their appetites and their tempers are the

stumbling-stones of the most of men, the difficult problems of

natural and revealed and experimental religion are the test and the

triumph of other men. As we have just seen in the men mentioned

above. Students, whose temptations lie fully as much in their

intellects as in their senses, should buy (for a few pence)

Halyburton's Memoirs. "With Halyburton," says Dr. John Duncan, "I

feel great intellectual congruity. Halyburton was naturally a

sceptic, but God gave that sceptic great faith."

Then again, what Atheist calls the "tediousness" of the journey has

undoubtedly a great hand in making some half-in-earnest men

sceptics, if not scoffers. Many of us here to-night who can never

now take this miserable man's way out of the tedium of the

Christian life, yet most bitterly feel it. Whether that tedium is

inherent in that life, and inevitable to such men as we are who are

attempting that life; how far that feature belongs to the very

essence of the pilgrim life, and how far we import our own tedium

into the pilgrimage; the fact remains as Atheist puts it. As

Atheist in this book says, so the Atheist who is in our hearts

often says: We are like to have nothing for all our pains but a

lifetime of tedious travel. Yes, wherever the blame lies, there

can be no doubt about it, that what this hilarious scoffer calls

the tediousness of the way is but a too common experience among

many of those who, tediousness and all, will still cleave fast to

it and will never leave it.

Then, again, great trials in life, great straits, dark and too-

long-continued providences, prayer unanswered, or not yet answered

in the way we dictate, bad men and bad causes growing like a green

bay tree, and good men and good work languishing and dying; these

things, and many more things such as these, of which this world of

faith and patience is full, prove quite too much for some men till

they give themselves up to a state of mind that is nothing better

than atheism. "My evidences and my certainty," says Halyburton,

"were not answerable to the weight I was compelled to lay upon

them." A figure which Goodwin in his own tender and graphic way

takes up thus: "Set pins in a wall and fix them in ever so

loosely, yet, if you hang nothing upon them they will seem to stand

firm; but hang a heavy weight upon them, or even give them the

least jog as you pass, and the whole thing will suddenly come down.

The wall is God's word, the slack pin is our faith, and the weight

and the jog are the heavy burdens and the sudden shocks of life,

and down our hearts go, wall and pin and suspended vessel and all.

When the church and her ministers, when the Scriptures and their

anomalies, and when the faults and failings of Christian men are

made the subject of mockery and laughter, the reverence, the fear,

the awe, the respect that all enter so largely into religion, and

especially into the religion of young people, is too easily

destroyed; and not seldom the first seeds of practical and

sometimes of speculative atheism are thus sown. The mischief that

has been done by mockery and laughter to the souls, especially of

the young and the inexperienced, only the great day will fully

disclose.

And then, two men of great weight and authority with us, tell us

what we who are ministers would have found out without them: this,

namely, that the greatest atheists are they who are ever handling

holy things without feeling them.

"Is it true," said Christian to Hopeful, his fellow, "is it true

what this man hath said?" "Take heed," said Hopeful, "remember

what it hath cost us already for hearkening to such kind of

fellows. What! No Mount Zion! Did we not see from the Delectable

Mountains the gate of the City? And, besides, are we not to walk

by faith? Let us go on lest the man with the whip overtakes us

again." Christian: "My brother, I said that but to prove thee,

and to fetch from thee a fruit of the honesty of thy heart." Many

a deep and powerful passage has Butler composed on that thesis

which Hopeful here supplies him with; and many a brilliant sermon

has Newman preached on that same text till he has made our

"predispositions to faith" a fruitful and an ever fresh commonplace

to hundreds of preachers. Yes; the best bulwark of faith is a good

and honest heart. To such a happy heart the truth is its own

unshaken evidence. To whom can we go but to Thee?--they who have

such a heart protest. The whole bent of such men's minds is toward

the truth of the gospel. Their instincts keep them on the right

way even when their reason and their observation are both

confounded. As Newman keeps on saying, they are "easy of belief."

They cannot keep away from Christ and His church. They cannot turn

back. They must go on. Though He slay them they will die yearning

after Him. They often fall into great error and into great guilt,

but their seed remaineth in them, and they cannot continue in error

or in guilt, because they are born of God. They are they in whom

"Persuasion and belief

Have ripened into faith; and faith become

A passionate intuition."

HOPEFUL

"We are saved by hope."--Paul

Up till the time when Christian and Faithful passed through Vanity

Fair on their way to the Celestial City, Hopeful was one of the

most light-minded men in all that light-minded town. By his birth,

and both on his father's and his mother's side, Hopeful was, to

begin with, a youth of an unusually shallow and silly mind. In the

jargon of our day he was a man of a peculiarly optimistic

temperament. No one ever blamed him for being too subjective and

introspective. It took many sharp trials and many bitter

disappointments to take the inborn frivolity and superficiality out

of this young man's heart. He was far on in his life, he was far

on even in his religious life, before you would have ever thought

of calling him a serious-minded man. Hopeful had been born and

brought up to early manhood in the town of Vanity, and he knew

nothing better and desired nothing better than to lay out his whole

life and to rest all his hopes on the things of the fair; on such

things, that is, as houses, lands, places, honours, preferments,

titles, pleasures, and delights of all sorts. And that vain and

empty life went on with him, till, as he told his companion

afterwards, it had all ended with him in revelling, and drinking,

and uncleanness, and Sabbath-breaking, and all such things as

destroyed his soul. But in Hopeful's happy case also the blood of

the martyrs became the seed of the church. Hopeful, as he was

afterwards called, had suffered so many bitter disappointments and

shipwrecks of expectation from the things of the fair, that is to

say, from the houses, the places, the preferments, the pleasures

and what not, of the fair, that even his heart was ripe for

something better than any of those things, when, as God would have

it, Christian and Faithful came to the town. Hopeful was still

hanging about the booths of the fair; he was just fingering his

last sixpence over a commodity that he knew quite well would be

like gall in his belly as soon as he had bought it; when,--what is

that hubbub that rolls down the street? Hopeful was always the

first to see and to hear every new thing that came to the town, and

thus it was that he was soon in the thick of the tumult that rose

around Christian and Faithful. Had those two pilgrims come to the

town at any former time, Hopeful would have been among the foremost

to mock at and smite the two men; but, to-day, Hopeful's heart is

so empty, and his purse also, that he is already won to their side

by the loving looks and the wise and sweet words of the two ill-

used men. Some of the men of the town said that the two pilgrims

were outlandish and bedlamite men, but Hopeful took courage to

reprove some of the foremost of the mob. Till, at last, when

Faithful was at the stake, it was all that his companions could do

to keep back Hopeful from leaping up on the burning pile and

embracing the expiring man. And then, when He who overrules all

things so brought it about that Christian escaped out of their

hands, who should come forth and join him at the upward gate of the

city but just Hopeful, who not only joined himself to the lonely

pilgrim, but told him also that there were many more of the men of

the city who would take their time and follow after. And thus,

adds his biographer, when one died to make his testimony to the

truth, another rose up out of his ashes to be a companion to

Christian.

When Madame Krudener was getting her foot measured by a pietist

shoemaker, she was so struck with the repose and the sweetness and

the heavenly joy of the poor man's look and manner that she could

not help but ask him what had happened to him that he had such a

look on his countenance and such a light in his eye. She was

miserable, though she had all that heart could wish. She had all

that made her one of the most envied women in Europe; she had

birth, talents, riches, rank, and the friendship of princes and

princesses, and yet she was of all women the most miserable. And

here was a poor chance shoemaker whose whole heart was running over

with a joy such that all her wealth could not purchase to her heart

one single drop of it. The simple soul soon told her his secret;

it was no secret: it was just Jesus Christ who had done it all.

And thus her poor shoemaker's happy face was the means of this

great lady's conversion. And, in like manner, it was the beholding

of Christian and Faithful in their words and in their behaviour at

the fair that decided Hopeful to join himself to Christian and

henceforth to be his companion.

What were the things, asked Christian of his young companion, that

first led you to leave off the vanities of the fair and to think to

be a pilgrim? Many things, replied Hopeful. Sometimes if I did

but meet a good man in the street. Or if mine head began

unaccountably, or mine heart, to ache. Or if some one of my

companions became suddenly sick. Or if I heard the bell toll that

some one was dead. But, especially, when I thought of myself that

I must quickly come to judgment. And then it is told in the best

style of the book how peace and rest and the beginning of true

satisfaction came to poor Hopeful's heart at last. But you must

promise me to read the passage for yourselves before you sleep to-

night; and to read it again and again till, like Hopeful's, your

heart also is full of joy, and your eyes full of tears, and your

affections running over with love to the name and to the people and

to all the ways of Jesus Christ.

And then, it is very encouraging and reassuring to us to see how

Hopeful's true conversion so deepened and sobered and strengthened

his whole character. He remained to the end in his mental

constitution and whole temperament, as we say, the same man he had

always been; but, while remaining the same man, at the same time a

most wonderful change gradually began to come over him, till, by

slow but sure degrees, he became the Hopeful we know and look to

and lean upon. To use his own autobiographic words about himself,

it was "by hearing and considering of things that are Divine" that

his natural levity was so completely whipped out of his soul till

he was made at last an indispensable companion to Christian,

strong-minded and serious-minded man as he was. "Conversion to

God," says William Law, "is often very sudden and instantaneous,

unexpectedly raised from variety of occasions. Thus, one by seeing

only a withered tree, another by reading the lives and deaths of

the antediluvian fathers, one by hearing of heaven, another of

hell, one by reading of the love or wrath of God, another of the

sufferings of Christ, may find himself, as it were, melted into

penitence all of a sudden. It may be granted also that the

greatest sinner may in a moment be converted to God, and may feel

himself wounded in such a degree as perhaps those never were who

have been turning to God all their lives. But, then, it is to be

observed that this suddenness of change or flash of conviction is

by no means of the essence of true conversion. This stroke of

conversion is not to be considered as signifying our high state of

a new birth in Christ, or a proof that we are on a sudden made new

creatures, but that we are thus suddenly called upon and stirred up

to look after a newness of nature. The renewal of our first birth

and state is something entirely distinct from our first sudden

conversion and call to repentance. That is not a thing done in an

instant, but is a certain process, a gradual release from our

captivity and disorder, consisting of several stages and degrees,

both of life and death, which the soul must go through before it

can have thoroughly put off the old man. It is well worth

observing that our Saviour's greatest trials were near the end of

His life. This might sufficiently show us that our first

awakenings have carried us but a little way; that we should not

then begin to be self-assured of our own salvation, but should

remember that we stand at a great distance from, and are in great

ignorance of, our severest trials." Such was the way that

Christian in his experience and in his wisdom talked to his young

companion till his outward trials and the consequent discoveries he

made of his own weakness and corruption made even Hopeful himself a

sober-minded and a thoughtful man. "Where pain ends, gain ends

too."

Then, again, no one can read Hopeful's remarkable history without

discovering this about him, that he showed best in adversity and

distress, just as he showed worst in deliverance and prosperity.

It is a fine lesson in Christian hope to descend into Giant

Despair's dungeon and hear the older pilgrim groaning and the

younger pilgrim consoling him, and, again, to stand on the bank of

the last river and hear Hopeful holding up Christian's drowning

head. "Be of good cheer, my brother, for I feel the bottom, and it

is good!" Bless Hopeful for that, all you whose deathbeds are

still before you. For never was more true and fit word spoken for

a dying hour than that. Read, till you have it by heart and in the

dark, Hopeful's whole history, but especially his triumphant end.

And have some one bespoken beforehand to read Hopeful in the River

to you when you have in a great measure lost your senses, and when

a great horror has taken hold of your mind. "I sink in deep

waters," cried Christian, as his sins came to his mind, even the

sins which he had committed both since and before he came to be a

pilgrim. "But I see the gate," said Hopeful, "and men standing at

it ready to receive us." "Read to me where I first cast my

anchor," said John Knox to his weeping wife.

The Enchanted Ground, on the other hand, threatened to throw

Hopeful back again into his former light-minded state. And there

is no saying what shipwreck he might have made there had the older

man not been with him to steady and reprove and instruct him. As

it was, a touch now and then of his old vain temper returned to him

till it took all his companion's watchfulness and wariness to carry

them both out of that second Vanity Fair. "I acknowledge myself in

a fault," said Hopeful to Christian, "and had I been here alone I

had run in danger of death. Hitherto, thy company hath been my

mercy, and thou shalt have a good reward for all thy labour."

Now, my brethren, in my opinion we owe a great debt of gratitude to

John Bunyan for the large and the displayed place he has given to

Hopeful in the Pilgrim's Progress. The fulness and balance and

proportion of the Pilgrim's Progress are features of that wonderful

book far too much overlooked. So far as my reading goes I do not

know any other author who has at all done the justice to the saving

grace of hope that John Bunyan has done both in his doctrinal and

in his allegorical works. Bunyan stands alone and supreme not only

for the insight, and the power with which he has constructed the

character and the career of Hopeful, but even for having given him

the space at all adequate to his merits and his services. In those

eighty-seven so suggestive pages that form the index to Dr. Thomas

Goodwin's works I find some hundred and twenty-four references to

"faith," while there are only two references to "hope." And that

same oversight and neglect runs through all our religious

literature, and I suppose, as a consequence, through all our

preaching too. Now that is not the treatment the Bible gives to

this so essential Christian grace, as any one may see at a glance

who takes the trouble to turn up his Cruden. Hope has a great

place alongside of faith and love in the Holy Scriptures, and it

has a correspondingly large and eloquent place in Bunyan. Now,

that being so, why is it that this so great and so blessed grace

has so fallen out of our sermons and out of our hearts? May God

grant that our reading of Hopeful's autobiography and his

subsequent history to-night may do something to restore the blessed

grace of hope to its proper place both in our pulpit and in all our

hearts.

To kindle then, to quicken, and to anchor your hope, my brethren,

may I have God's help to speak for a little longer to your hearts

concerning this neglected grace! For, what is hope? Hope is a

passion of the soul, wise or foolish, to be ashamed of or to be

proud of, just according to the thing hoped for, and just according

to the grounds of the hope. Hope is made up of these two

ingredients--desire and expectation. What we greatly desire we

take no rest till we find good grounds on which to build up our

expectations of it; and when we have found good grounds for our

expectations, then a glad hope takes possession of our hearts.

Now, to begin with, how is it with your desires? You are afraid to

say much about your expectations and your hopes. Well; let us come

to your hearts' desires.--Men of God, I will enter into your hearts

and I will tell you your hearts' desires better than you know them

yourselves; for the heart is deceitful above all things. The time

was, when, like this young pilgrim before he became a pilgrim, your

desires were all set on houses, and lands, and places, and honours,

and preferments, and wives, and children, and silver, and gold, and

what not. These things at one time were the utmost limit of your

desires. But that has all been changed. For now you have begun to

desire a better city, that is, an heavenly. What is your chief

desire for this New Year? {2} Is it not a new heart? Is it not a

clean heart? Is it not a holy heart? Is it not that the Holy

Ghost would write the golden rule on the tables of your heart?

Does not God know that it is the deepest desire of your heart to be

able to love your neighbour as yourself? To be able to rejoice

with him in his joy as well as to weep with him in his sorrow?

What would you not give never again to feel envy in your heart at

your brother, or straitness and pining at his prosperity? One

thing do I desire, said the Psalmist, that mine ear may be nailed

to the doorpost of my God: that I may always be His servant, and

may never wander from His service. Now, that is your desire too.

I am sure it is. You would not say it of yourself, but I defy you

to deny it when it is said about you. Well, then, such things

being found among your desires, what grounds have you for expecting

the fulfilment of such desires? What grounds? The best of grounds

and every ground. For you have the sure ground of God's word. And

you have more than His word: you have His very nature, and the

very nature of things. For shall God create such desires in any

man's heart only to starve and torture that man? Impossible! It

were blasphemy to suspect it. No. Where God has made any man to

be so far a partaker of the Divine nature as to change all that

man's deepest desires, and to turn them from vanity to wisdom, from

earth to heaven, and from the creature to the Creator, doubt not,

wherever He has begun such a work, that He will hasten to finish

it. Yes; lift up your heavy hearts, all ye who desire such things,

for God hath sent His Son to say to you, Blessed are ye that hunger

and thirst after righteousness, for ye shall be filled. Only, keep

desiring. Desire every day with a stronger and a more inconsolable

desire. Desire, and ground your desire on God's word, and then

heave your hope like an anchor within the veil whither the

Forerunner is for you entered. May I so hope? you say. May I

venture to hope? Yes; not only may you hope, but you must hope.

You are commanded to hope. It is as much your bounden duty to hope

always, and to hope for the greatest and best things, as it is to

repent of your sins, to love God and your neighbour, to keep

yourself pure, and to set a watch on the door of your lips. You

have been destroyed, I confess and lament it, for lack of knowledge

about the nature, the grounds, and the duty of hope. But make up

now for past neglect. Hope steadfastly, hope constantly, hope

boldly; hope for the best things, the greatest things, the most

divine and the most blessed things. If you forget to-night all

else you have heard to-day, I implore you not any longer to forget

and neglect this, that hope is your immediate, constant, imperative

duty. No sin, no depth of corruption in your heart, no assault on

your heart from your conscience, can justify you in ceasing to

hope. Even when trouble "comes tumbling over the neck of all your

reformations" as it came tumbling on Hopeful, let that only drive

you the more deeply down into the true grounds of hope; even

against hope rejoice in hope. Remember the Psalmist in the

hundred-and-thirtieth Psalm,--down in the deeps, if ever a fallen

sinner was. Yet hear him when you cannot see him saying: I hope

in Thy word! And--for it is worthy to stand beside even that

splendid psalm,--I beseech you to read and lay to heart what

Hopeful says about himself in his conversion despair.

And then, as if to justify that hope, there always come with it

such sanctifying influences and such sure results. The hope that

you are one day to awaken in the Divine likeness will make you lie

down on your bed every night in self-examination, repentance,

prayer, and praise. The hope that your eyes are one day to see

Christ as He is will make you purify yourself as nothing else will.

The hope that you are to walk with Christ in white will make you

keep your garments clean; it will make you wash them many times

every day in the blood of the Lamb. The hope that you are to cast

your crown at His feet will make you watch that no man takes your

crown from you. The hope that you are to drink wine with Him in

His Father's kingdom will reconcile you meanwhile to water, lest

with your wine you stumble any of His little ones. The hope of

hearing Him say, Well done!--how that will make you labour and

endure and not faint! And the hope that you shall one day enter in

through the gates into the city, and have a right to the tree of

life,--how scrupulous that will make you to keep all His

commandments! And this is one of His commandments, that you gird

up the loins of your mind, and hope to the end for the grace that

is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ.

TEMPORARY

"They are they, which, when they hear, receive the word with joy;

and have no root, which for a while believe, and in time of

temptation fall away."--Our Lord.

"Well, then, did you not know about ten years ago one Temporary in

your parts who was a forward man in religion? Know him! replied

the other. Yes. For my house not being above three miles from his

house he would ofttimes come to me, and that with many tears.

Truly I pitied the man, and was not altogether without hope of him;

but one may see that it is not every one who cries Lord, Lord. And

now, since we are talking about him, let us a little inquire into

the reason of the sudden backsliding of him and such others. It

may be very profitable, said Christian, but do you begin. Well,

then, there are in my judgment several reasons for it." And then,

with the older man's entire approval, Hopeful sets forth several

reasons, taken from his own observation of backsliders, why so many

men's religion is such a temporary thing; why so many run well for

a time, and then stand still, and then turn back.

  1. The fear of man bringeth a snare, said Hopeful, moralising over

his old acquaintance Temporary. And how true that observation is

every evangelical minister knows to his deep disappointment. A

young man comes to his minister at some time of distress in his

life, or at some time of revival of religion in the community, or

at an ordinary communion season, and gives every sign that he is

early and fairly embarked on an honourable Christian life. He

takes his place in the Church of Christ, and he puts out his hand

to her work, till we begin to look forward with boastfulness to a

life of great stability and great attainment for that man. Our

Lord, as we see from so many of His parables, must have had many

such cases among His first followers. Our Lord might be speaking

prophetically, as well as out of His own experience, so well do His

regretful and lamenting words fit into so many of our own cases to-

day. For, look at that young business man. He has been born and

brought up in the Church of Christ. He has gladdened more hearts

than he knows by the noble promise of his early days. Many

admiring and loving eyes have been turned on him as he took so

hopefully the upward way. But a sifting-time soon comes. A time

of temptation comes. A time comes when sides must be taken in some

moral, religious, ecclesiastical controversy. This young man is at

that moment a candidate for a post that will bring distinction,

wealth, and social influence to him who holds it. And the

candidate we are so much interested in is admittedly a man of such

outstanding talents that he would at once get the post were it not

that the holder of that post must not have his name so much

associated with such and such a church, such and such political and

religious opinions, and such and such public men. He is told that.

Indeed, he is not so dull as to need to be told that. He has seen

that all along. And at first it is a dreadful wrench to him. He

feels how far he is falling from his high ideals in life; and, at

first, and for a long time, it is a dreadful humiliation to him.

But, then, there are splendid compensations. And, better than

that, there are some good, and indeed compelling, reasons that

begin to rise up in our minds when we need them and begin to look

for them, till what at first seemed so mean and so contemptible,

and so ungrateful, and so dishonourable, as well as so spiritually

perilous, comes to be faced and gone through with positively on a

ground of high principle, and, indeed, of stern moral necessity.

So deceitful is the human heart that you could not believe what

compelling reasons such a mean-spirited man will face you with as

to why he should leave all the ways he once so delighted in for a

piece of bread, and for the smile of the open enemies of his

church, and his faith, not to say his Saviour. You will meet with

several such men any afternoon coming home from their business.

Sometimes they have still some honest shame on their faces when

they meet you; but still oftener they pass you with a sullen hatred

and a fierce defiance. This is he who heard the word, and anon

with joy received it. Yet had he not root in himself, but dured

for a while; for when tribulation or persecution arose because of

the word by and by he was offended. They went out from us, says

John, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us they

would no doubt have continued with us; but they went out that they

might be made manifest that they were not all of us.

2. Guilt, again, Hopeful went on, and to meditate terror, are so

grievous to most men, that they rather choose such ways as will but

harden their hearts still more and more. You all know what it is

to meditate terror? "Thine heart shall meditate terror," says the

prophet, "when thou sayest to thyself, who among us shall dwell

with the devouring fire? who among us shall dwell with everlasting

burnings?" The fifty-first Psalm is perhaps the best meditation

both of guilt and of terror that we have in the whole Bible. But

there are many other psalms and passages of psalms only second to

the fifty-first Psalm, such as the twenty-second, the thirty-

eighth, the sixty-ninth, and the hundred-and-thirtieth. Our Lord

Himself also was meditating terror in the garden of Gethsemane, and

Paul both guilt and terror when he imagined himself both an

apostate preacher and a castaway soul. And John's meditations of

terror in the Revelation rose into those magnificent pictures of

the Last Judgment with which he has to all time covered the walls

of the Seven Churches. In his own Grace Abounding there are

meditations of terror quite worthy to stand beside the most

terrible things of that kind that ever were written, as also in

many others of our author's dramatical and homiletical books. I

read to you the other Sabbath morning a meditation of terror that

was found among Bishop Andrewes' private papers after his death.

You will not all have forgotten that meditation, but I will read it

to you to-night again. "How fearful," says Andrewes, in his

terror, "will Thy judgment be, O Lord, when the thrones are set,

and the angels stand around, and men are brought in, and the books

are opened, and all our works are inquired into, and all our

thoughts are examined, and all the hidden things of darkness!

What, O God, shall Thy judgment that day be upon me? Who shall

quench my flame, who shall lighten my darkness, if Thou pity me

not? Lord, as Thou art loving, give me tears, give me floods of

tears, and give me all that this day, before it be too late. For

then will be the incorruptible Judge, the horrible judgment-seat,

the answer without excuse, the inevitable charge, the shameful

punishment, the endless Gehenna, the pitiless angels, the yawning

hell, the roaring stream of fire, the unquenchable flame, the dark

prison, the rayless darkness, the bed of live coals, the unwearied

worm, the indissoluble chains, the bottomless chaos, the impassable

wall, the inconsolable cry. And none to stand by me; none to plead

for me; none to snatch me out." Now, no Temporary ever possessed

anything like that in his own handwriting among his private papers.

A meditation like that, written out with his own hand, and hidden

away under lock and key, will secure any man from it, even if he

had been appointed to backsliding and reprobation. Bishop

Andrewes, as any one will see who reads his Private Devotions, was

the chief of sinners; but his discovered and deciphered papers will

all speak for him when they are spread out before the great white

throne, "glorious in their deformity, being slubbered," as his

editors say, "with his pious hands, and watered with his

penitential tears."

Thomas Shepard's Ten Virgins is the most terrible book upon

Temporaries that ever was written. Temporaries never once saw

their true vileness, he keeps on saying. Temporaries are, no

doubt, wounded for sin sometimes, but never in the right place nor

to the right depth. And again, sin, and especially heart-sin, is

never really bitter to Temporaries. In an "exhortation to all new

beginners, and so to all others," "Be sure," Shepard says, "your

wound for sin at first is deep enough. For all the error in a

man's faith and sanctification springs from his first error in his

humiliation. If a man's humiliation be false, or even weak or

little, then his faith and his hold of Christ are weak and little,

and his sanctification counterfeit. But if a man's wound be right,

and his humiliation deep enough, that man's faith will be right and

his sanctification will be glorious. The esteem of Christ is

always little where sin lies light." And Hopeful himself says a

thing at this point that is quite worthy of Shepard himself, such

is its depth and insight. He speaks of the righteous actually

LOVING the sight of their misery. He does not explain what he

means by that startling language because he is talking all the

time, as he knows quite well, to one who understood all that before

he was born. Nor will I attempt to explain or to vindicate what he

says. Those of you who love the sight of your own misery as

sinners will understand what Hopeful says without any explanation;

while those who do not understand him would only be the more

stumbled by any explanation of him. The love of the sight of their

misery, and the unearthly sweetness of their sorrow for sin, are

only another two of those provoking paradoxes of which the lives of

God's true saints are full--paradoxes and impossibilities and

incoherencies that make the literature of experimental religion to

be positively hateful and unbearable to Temporary and to all his

self-seeking and apostate kindred.

3. But even where the consciences of such men are occasionally

awakened, proceeds Hopeful, in his so searching discovery of

Temporaries, yet their minds are not changed. There you are pretty

near the business, replied his fellow; for the bottom of all is,

for want of a change of their mind and will. Now, one would have

been afraid and ashamed for one moment to suspect that Temporary's

mind was not completely changed, so "forward" was he at first in

his religion. But, no: forward before all his neighbours as

Temporary was, to begin with, yet all the time his mind was not

really changed. His forwardness did not properly spring out of his

true mind at all, but only out of his momentarily awakened

conscience and his momentarily excited heart. A sinner with a

truly changed mind is never forward. His mind is so changed that

forwardness in anything is utterly alien to it, and especially all

forwardness in the profession of religion. The change that had

taken place in Temporary, whatever was the seat of it, only led him

to bully men like Christian and Hopeful, who would not go fast

enough for him. "Come," said Pliable, in the beginning of the

book, "come on and let us mend our pace." "I cannot go so fast as

I would," humbly replied Christian, "because of this burden on my

back." It is a common observation among mountaineers that he who

takes the hill at the greatest spurt is the last climber to come to

the top, and that many who so ostentatiously make spurts at the

bottom of the hill never come within sight of the top at all. And

this is one of the constant dangers that wait on all revivals,

religious retreats, conferences, and even communion seasons. Our

hot fits, the hotter they are, are only the more likely, unless we

take the greatest care, to cast us down into all the more deadly a

chill. It is this danger that our Lord points out so plainly in

His parable of apostasy. The same is he, says our Lord, that

heareth the word, and anon with joy receiveth it; yet hath he not

root in himself, but dureth for a while. In Hopeful's words, his

mind and will were never changed with all his joy, only his passing

moods and his momentary emotions.

Multitudes of men who are as forward at first as Pliable and

Temporary were turn out at last to have no root in themselves; but

here and there you will discover a man who is all root together.

There are some men whose whole mind and heart and will, whose whole

inward man, has gone to root. All the strength and all the fatness

of their religious life retreat into its root. They have no leaves

at all, and they have too little fruit as yet; but you should see

their roots. Only, no eye but the eye of God can see sorrow for

sin--secret and sore humiliation on account of secret sin--the

incessant agony that goes on within between the flesh and the

spirit, between sin and grace, between very hell and heaven itself.

To know your own evil hearts, my brethren, say to you on that

subject what any Temporary will, is the very root of the whole

matter to you. Whatever Dr. Newman's mistakes as to outward

churches may have been, he was a master of the human heart, the

most difficult of all matters to master. Listen, then, to what he

says on the matter now in hand. "Now, unless we have some just

idea of our hearts and of sin, we can have no right idea of a Moral

Governor, a Saviour, or a Sanctifier; that is, in professing to

believe in them we shall be using words without attaching any

distinct meaning to them. Thus self-knowledge is at the root of

all real religious knowledge; and it is vain,--it is worse than

vain,--it is a deceit and a mischief, to think to understand the

Christian doctrines as a matter of course, merely by being taught

by books, or by attending sermons, or by any outward means, however

excellent, taken by themselves. For it is in proportion as we

search our hearts and understand our own nature that we understand

what is meant by an Infinite Governor and Judge; it is in

proportion as we comprehend the nature of disobedience and our

actual sinfulness that we feel what is the blessing of the removal

of sin, redemption, pardon, sanctification, which otherwise are

mere words. God speaks to us primarily in our hearts. Self-

knowledge is the key to the precepts and doctrines of Scripture.

The very utmost that any outward notices of religion can do is to

startle us and make us turn inward and search our hearts; and then,

when we have experienced what it is to read ourselves, we shall

profit by the doctrine of the Church and the Bible." My brethren,

the temper in which you receive that passage, and receive it from

its author, may be safely taken by you as a sure presage whether

you are to turn out a Temporary and a Castaway or no.

Now, to conclude with a word of admission, and, bound up with it, a

word of encouragement. After all that has been said, I fully admit

that we are all Temporaries to begin with. We all cool down from

our first heat in religion. We all halt from our first spurt. We

all turn back from faith and from duty and from privilege through

our fear of men, or through our corrupt love of ourselves, or

through our coarse-minded love of this present world. Only, those

who are appointed to perseverance, and through that to eternal

life, always kindle again; they are kindled again, and they love

the return of their lost warmth. They recover themselves and

address themselves again and again to the race that is still set

before them. They prove themselves not to be of those who draw

back unto perdition, but of those that believe to the saving of the

soul. Now, if you have only too good ground to suspect that you

are but a temporary believer, what are you to do to make your sure

escape out of that perilous state? What, but to keep on believing?

You must cry constantly, Lord, I believe, help Thou mine unbelief!

When at any time you are under any temptation or corruption, and

you feel that your faith and your love are letting slip their hold

of Christ and of eternal life, then knot your weak heart all the

faster to the throne of grace, to the cross of Christ, and to the

gate of heaven. Give up all your mind and heart, and all that is

within you, to the one thing needful. Labour night and day in your

own heart at believing on Christ, at loving your neighbour, and at

discovering, denying, and crucifying yourself. It will all pay you

in the long run. For if you do all these things, and persistently

do them, then, though you are at this moment all but dead to all

divine things, and all but a reprobate, it will be found at last

that all the time your name was written among the elect in heaven.

The perseverance of the saints, the "five points" notwithstanding,

is not a foregone conclusion. The final perseverance of the ripest

and surest saint is all made up of ever-new beginnings in

repentance, in faith, in love, and in obedience. Begin, then,

every new day to repent anew, to return anew, to believe and to

love anew. And if all your New-Year repentances and returnings and

reformations are all already proved to be but temporary--even if

they lie all around you already a bitter mockery of all your

professions--still, begin again. Begin to-night, and begin again

to-morrow morning. Spend all the remainder of your days on earth

beginning. And, ere ever you are aware, the final perseverance of

another predestinated saint will be found accomplished in you.

SECRET

"The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him."--David.

A truly religious life is always a secret life: it is a life hid,

as Paul has it, with Christ in God. The secret of the Lord, says

the Psalmist, is with them that fear Him. And thus it is that when

men begin to fear God, both their hearts and their lives are

henceforth full of all kinds of secrets that are known to

themselves and to God only. It was when Christiana's fearful

thoughts began to work in her mind about her husband whom she had

lost--it was when all her unkind, unnatural, and ungodly carriages

to her dear friend came into her mind in swarms, clogged her

conscience, and loaded her with guilt--it was then that Secret

knocked at her door. "Next morning," so her opening history runs,

"when she was up, and had prayed to God, and talked with her

children awhile, one knocked hard at the door to whom she spake

out, saying, If thou comest in God's name, come in. So he who was

at the door said, Amen, and opened the door, and saluted her with,

Peace be to this house. The which when he had done, he said,

Christiana, knowest thou wherefore I am come? Then she blushed and

trembled, also her heart began to wax warm with desires to know

whence he came, and what was his errand to her. So he said unto

her, My name is Secret, I dwell with those that are high. It is

talked of where I dwell as if thou hadst a desire to go thither;

also, there is a report that thou art aware now of the evil thou

formerly didst to thy husband in hardening of thy heart against his

way, and in keeping of thy babes in their ignorance. Christiana,

the Merciful One has sent me to tell thee that He is a God ready to

forgive, and that He taketh delight to multiply to pardon offences.

He would also have thee know that He inviteth thee to come into His

presence, even to His table, and that He will there feed thee with

the fat of His house, and with the heritage of Jacob thy father.

Christiana at all this was greatly abashed in herself, and she

bowed her head to the ground, while her visitor proceeded and said,

Christiana, here is a letter for thee which I have brought from thy

husband's King. So she took it and opened it, and, as she opened

it, it smelt after the manner of the best perfume; also it was

written in lettering of gold. The contents of the letter was to

this effect, that the King would have her do as did Christian her

husband, for that was the way to come to the city and to dwell in

His presence with joy for ever. At this the good woman was

completely overcome. So she said to her visitor, Sir, will you

carry me and my children with you that we may go and worship this

King? Then said the heavenly visitor, Christiana, the bitter is

before the sweet. Thou must through troubles, as did he that went

before thee, enter this celestial city." And so on.

  1. Now, to begin with, you will have noticed the way in which

Christiana was prepared for the entrance of Secret into her house.

She was a widow. She sat alone in that loneliness which only

widows know and understand. More than lonely, she was very

miserable. "