Religious Affections, Part 3
by Jonathan Edwards
Previous Section Next Section Table of Contents
I. Affections that are truly spiritual and gracious, do arise
from those influences and operations on the heart, which are
spiritual, supernatural and
divine.
I will explain what I mean by these terms, whence will appear their use to
distinguish between those affections which are spiritual, and those which are
not so.
We find that true saints, or those persons who are sanctified by the Spirit of
God, are in the New Testament called spiritual persons. And their being
spiritual is spoken of as their peculiar character, and that wherein they are
distinguished from those who are not sanctified. This is evident, because those
who are spiritual are set in opposition to natural men, and carnal men. Thus
the spiritual man and the natural man are set in opposition one to another, 1
Cor. 2:14, 15: "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God;
for they are foolishness unto him; neither can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned. But he that is spiritual judgeth all things." The
Scripture explains itself to mean an ungodly man, or one that has no grace, by
a natural man: thus the Apostle Jude, speaking of certain ungodly men, that had
crept in unawares among the saints, ver. 4, of his epistle, says, 5:19, "These
are sensual, having not the Spirit." This the apostle gives as a reason why
they behaved themselves in such a wicked manner as he had described. Here the
word translated sensual, is the very same as that
which in those verses in 1 Cor. chap. 2 is translated
natural. In the like manner, in the continuation of the same discourse,
in the next verse but one, spiritual men are opposed to carnal men; which the
connection plainly shows mean the same, as spiritual men and natural men, in
the foregoing verses; "And I, brethren, could not speak unto you, as unto
spiritual, but as unto carnal;" i.e., as in a great measure unsanctified. That
by carnal the apostle means corrupt and unsanctified, is abundantly evident, by
Rom. 7:25, and 8:1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 19, 13, Gal. 5:16, to the end, Col. 2:18.
Now therefore, if by natural and carnal in these texts, be intended
unsanctified, then doubtless by spiritual, which is opposed thereto, is meant
sanctified and gracious.
And as the saints are called spiritual in Scripture, so we also find that there
are certain properties, qualities, and principles, that have the same epithet
given them. So we read of a "spiritual mind," Rom. 8:6, 7, and of "spiritual
wisdom," Col. 1:9, and of "spiritual blessings," Eph. 1:3.
Now it may be observed, that the epithet spiritual, in these and other
parallel texts of the New Testament, is not used to signify any relation of
persons or things to the spirit or soul of man, as the spiritual part of man,
in opposition to the body, which is the material part. Qualities are not said
to be spiritual, because they have their seat in the soul, and not in the body:
for there are some properties that the Scripture calls carnal or
fleshly, which have their seat as much in the soul, as those properties
that are called spiritual. Thus it is with pride and self-righteousness,
and a man's trusting to his own wisdom, which the apostle calls fleshly,
Col. 2:18. Nor are things called spiritual, because they are conversant about
those things that are immaterial, and not corporeal. For so was the wisdom of
the wise men, and princes of this world, conversant about spirits, and
immaterial beings; which yet the apostle speaks of as natural men, totally
ignorant of those things that are spiritual, 1 Cor. chap. 2. But it is with
relation to the Holy Ghost, or Spirit of God, that persons or things are termed
spiritual in the New Testament. Spirit, as the word is used to signify the
third person in the Trinity, is the substantive, of which is formed the
adjective spiritual, in the holy Scriptures. Thus Christians are called
spiritual persons, because they are born of the Spirit, and because of the
indwelling and holy influences of the Spirit of God in them. And things are
called spiritual as related to the Spirit of God; 1 Cor. 2:13, 14, "Which
things also we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, but which
the Holy Ghost teacheth, comparing spiritual things with spiritual. But the
natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God." Here the apostle
himself expressly signifies, that by spiritual things, he means the things of
the Spirit of God, and things which the Holy Ghost teacheth. The same is yet
more abundantly apparent by viewing the whole context. Again, Rom. 8:6, "To be
carnally minded, is death; to be spiritually minded, is life and peace" The
apostle explains what he means by being carnally and spiritually minded in what
follows in the 9th verse, and shows that by being spiritually minded, he means
a having the indwelling and holy influences of the Spirit of God in the heart:
"But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, it so be the Spirit of God
dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his."
The same is evident by all the context. But time would fail to produce all the
evidence there is of this, in the New Testament.
And it must be here observed, that although it is with relation to the Spirit
of God and his influences, that persons and things are called spiritual; yet
not all those persons who are subject to any kind of influence of the Spirit of
God, are ordinarily called spiritual in the New Testament. They who have only
the common influences of God's Spirit, are not so called, in the places cited
above, but only those who have the special, gracious, and saving influences of
God's Spirit; as is evident, because it has been already proved, that by
spiritual men is meant godly men, in opposition to natural, carnal, and
unsanctified men. And it is most plain, that the apostle by spiritually minded,
Rom. 8:6, means graciously minded. And though the extraordinary gifts of the
Spirit, which natural men might have, are sometimes called spiritual, because
they are from the Spirit; yet natural men, whatever gifts of the Spirit they
had, were not, in the usual language of the New Testament, called spiritual
persons. For it was not by men's having the gifts of the Spirit, but by their
having the virtues of the Spirit, that they were called spiritual; as is
apparent by Gal. 6:1: "Brethren, if any man be overtaken in a fault, ye which
are spiritual, restore such a one in the spirit of meekness." Meekness is one
of those virtues which the apostle had just spoken of, in the verses next
preceding, showing what are the fruits of the Spirit. Those qualifications are
said to be spiritual in the language of the New Testament, which are truly
gracious and holy, and peculiar to the saints.
Thus, when we read of spiritual wisdom and understanding (as in Col. 1:9, "We
desire that ye may be filled with the knowledge of his will, in all wisdom and
spiritual understanding"), hereby is intended that wisdom which is gracious,
and from the sanctifying influences of the Spirit of God. For, doubtless, by
spiritual wisdom is meant that which is opposite to what the Scripture calls
natural wisdom; as the spiritual man is opposed to the natural man. And
therefore spiritual wisdom is doubtless the same with that wisdom which is from
above, that the Apostle James speaks of, Jam. 3:17: "The wisdom that is from
above, is first pure, then peaceable, gentle," &c., for this the apostle
opposes to natural wisdom, ver. 15: "This wisdom descendeth not from above, but
is earthly, sensual"--the last word in the original is the same that is
translated natural, in 1 Cor. 2:14.
So that although natural men may be the subjects of many influences of the
Spirit of God, as is evident by many Scriptures, as Numb. 24:2, 1 Sam. 10:10,
and 11:6, and 16:14, 1 Cor. 13:1, 2, 3, Heb. 6:4, 5, 6, and many others; yet
they are not, in the sense of the Scripture, spiritual persons; neither are any
of those effects, common gifts, qualities, or affections, that are from the
influence of the Spirit of God upon them, called spiritual things. The great
difference lies in these two things.
1. The Spirit of God is given to the true saints to dwell in them, as his
proper lasting abode; and to influence their hearts, as a principle of new
nature or as a divine supernatural spring of life and action. The Scriptures
represent the Holy Spirit not only as moving, and occasionally influencing the
saints, but as dwelling in them as his temple, his proper abode, and
everlasting dwelling place, 1 Cor. 3:16, 2 Cor. 6:16, John 14:16, 17. And he is
represented as being there so united to the faculties of the soul, that he
becomes there a principle or spring of new nature and life.
So the saints are said to live by Christ living in them, Gal. 2:20. Christ by
his Spirit not only is in them, but lives in them; and so that
they live by his life; so is his Spirit united to them, as a principle of life
in them; they do not only drink living water, but this "living water becomes a
well or fountain of water," in the soul, "springing up into spiritual and
everlasting life," John 4:14, and thus becomes a principle of life in them.
This living water, this evangelist himself explains to intend the Spirit of
God, chap. 7:38, 39. The light of the Sun of righteousness does not only shine
upon them, but is so communicated to them that they shine also, and become
little images of that Sun which shines upon them; the sap of the true vine is
not only conveyed into them, as the sap of a tree may be conveyed into a
vessel, but is conveyed as sap is from a tree into one of its living branches,
where it becomes a principle of life. The Spirit of God being thus communicated
and united to the saints, they are from thence properly denominated from it,
and are called spiritual.
On the other hand, though the Spirit of God may many ways influence natural
men; yet because it is not thus communicated to them, as an indwelling
principle, they do not derive any denomination or character from it: for, there
being no union, it is not their own. The light may shine upon a body that is
very dark or black; and though that body be the subject of the light, yet,
because the light becomes no principle of light in it, so as to cause the body
to shine, hence that body does not properly receive its denomination from it,
so as to be called a lightsome body. So the Spirit of God acting upon the soul
only, without communicating itself to be an active principle in it, cannot
denominate it spiritual. A body that continues black, may be said not to have
light, though the light shines upon it: so natural men are said "not to have
the Spirit," Jude 19, sensual or natural (as the word is elsewhere rendered),
having not the Spirit.
2. Another reason why the saints and their virtues are called spiritual (which
is the principal thing) is, that the Spirit of God, dwelling as a vital
principle in their souls, there produces those effects wherein he exerts and
communicates himself in his own proper nature. Holiness is the nature of the
Spirit of God, therefore he is called in Scripture the Holy Ghost. Holiness,
which is as it were the beauty and sweetness of the divine nature, is as much
the proper nature of the Holy Spirit, as heat is the nature of fire, or
sweetness was the nature of that holy anointing oil, which was the principal
type of the Holy Ghost in the Mosaic dispensation; yea, I may rather say, that
holiness is as much the proper nature of the Holy Ghost, as sweetness was the
nature of the sweet odor of that ointment. The Spirit of God so dwells in the
hearts of the saints, that he there, as a seed or spring of life, exerts and
communicates himself, in this his sweet and divine nature, making the soul a
partaker of God's beauty and Christ's joy, so that the saint has truly
fellowship with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ, in thus having the
communion or participation of the Holy Ghost. The grace which is in the hearts
of the saints, is of the same nature with the divine holiness, as much as it is
possible for that holiness to be, which is infinitely less in degree; as the
brightness that is in a diamond which the sun shines upon, is of the same
nature with the brightness of the sun, but only that it is as nothing to it in
degree. Therefore Christ says, John 3:6, "That which is born of the Spirit, is
spirit;" i.e., the grace that is begotten in the hearts of the saints, is
something of the same nature with that Spirit, and so is properly called a
spiritual nature; after the same manner as that which is born of the flesh is
flesh, or that which is born of corrupt nature is corrupt nature.
But the Spirit of God never influences the minds of natural men after this
manner. Though he may influence them many ways, yet he never, in any of his
influences, communicates himself to them in his own proper nature. Indeed he
never acts disagreeably to his nature, either on the minds of saints or
sinners: but the Spirit of God may act upon men agreeably to his own nature,
and not exert his proper nature in the acts and exercises of their minds: the
Spirit of God may act so, that his actions may be agreeable to his nature, and
yet may not at all communicate himself in his proper nature, in the effect of
that action. Thus, for instance, the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the
waters, and there was nothing disagreeable to his nature in that action; but
yet he did not at all communicate himself in that action, there was nothing of
the proper nature of the Holy Spirit in that motion of the waters. And so he
may act upon the minds of men many ways, and not communicate himself any more
than when be acts on inamimate things.
Thus not only the manner of the relation of the Spirit, who is the operator, to
the subject of his operations, is different; as the Spirit operates in the
saints, as dwelling in them, as an abiding principle of action, whereas he doth
not so operate upon sinners; but the influence and operation itself is
different, and the effect wrought exceeding different. So that not only the
persons are called spiritual, as having the Spirit of God dwelling in
them; but those qualifications, affections, and experiences, that are wrought
in them by the Spirit, are also spiritual, and therein differ vastly in
their nature and kind from all that a natural man is or can be the subject of,
while he remains in a natural state; and also from all that men or devils can
be the authors of. It is a spiritual work in this high sense; and therefore
above all other works is peculiar to the Spirit of God. There is no work so
high and excellent; for there is no work wherein God doth so much communicate
himself, and wherein the mere creature hath, in so high a sense a participation
of God; so that it is expressed in Scripture by the saints "being made
partakers of the divine nature," 2 Pet. 1:4, and "having God dwelling in them,
and they in God," 1 John 4:12, 15, 16, and chap. 3:21; "and having Christ in
them," John 17:21, Rom. 8:10; "being the temples of the living God," 2 Cor.
6:16; "living by Christ's life," Gal. 2:20; "being made partakers of God's
holiness," Heb. 12:10; "having Christ's love dwelling in them," John 17:26;
"having his joy fulfilled in them," John 17:13; "seeing light in God's light,
and being made to drink of the river of God's pleasures," Psal. 36:8, 9;
"having fellowship with God, or communicating and partaking with him (as the
word signifies)," 1 John 1:3. Not that the saints are made partakers of the
essence of God, and so are godded with God, and christed with
Christ, according to the abominable and blasphemous language and notions of
some heretics: but, to use the Scripture phrase, they are made partakers of
God's fullness, Eph. 3:17, 18, 19, John 1:16, that is, of God's spiritual
beauty and happiness, according to the measure and capacity of a creature; for
so it is evident the word fullness signifies in Scripture language.
Grace in the hearts of the saints, being therefore the most glorious work of
God, wherein he communicates of the goodness of his nature, it is doubtless his
peculiar work, and in an eminent manner above the power of all creatures. And
the influences of the Spirit of God in this, being thus peculiar to God, and
being those wherein God does, in so high a manner, communicate himself, and
make the creature partaker of the divine nature (the Spirit of God
communicating itself in its own proper nature); this is what I mean by those
influences that are divine, when I say that "truly gracious affections do arise
from those influences that are spiritual and divine."
The true saints only have that which is spiritual; others have nothing which is
divine, in the sense that has been spoken of. They not only have not these
communications of the Spirit of God in so high a degree as the saints, but have
nothing of that nature or kind. For the Apostle James tells us, that natural
men have not the Spirit; and Christ teaches the necessity of a new birth, or of
being born of the Spirit, from this, that he that is born of the flesh, has
only flesh, and no spirit, John 3:6. They have not the Spirit of God dwelling
in them in any degree; for the apostle teaches, that all who have the Spirit of
God dwelling in them, are some of his, Rom. 8:9-11. And a having the Spirit of
God is spoken of as a certain sign that persons shall have the eternal
inheritance; for it is spoken of as the earnest of it, 2 Cor. 1:29, and 5:5,
Eph. 1:14; and a having anything of the Spirit is mentioned as a sure sign of
being in Christ, 1 John 4:13: "Hereby know we that we dwell in him, because he
hath given us of his Spirit." Ungodly men not only have not so much of the
divine nature as the saints, but they are not partakers of it; which implies
that they have nothing of it; for a being partaker of the divine nature is
spoken of as the peculiar privilege of the true saints, 2 Pet. 1:4. Ungodly men
are not "partakers of God's holiness," Heb. 12:10. A natural man has no
experience of any of those things that are spiritual: the apostle teaches us,
that he is so far from it, that he knows nothing about them, he is a perfect
stranger to them, the talk about such things is all foolishness and nonsense to
him, he knows not what it means; 1 Cor. 2:14, "The natural man receiveth not
the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness to him: neither can
he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." And to the like purpose
Christ teaches us that the world is wholly unacquainted with the Spirit of God,
John 14:17: "Even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because
it seeth him not, neither knoweth him." And it is further evident, that natural
men have nothing in them of the same nature with the true grace of the saints,
because the apostle teaches us, that those of them who go farthest in religion
have no charity, or true Christian love, 1 Cor. chap. 13. So Christ elsewhere
reproves the Pharisees, those high pretenders to religion, that they "had not
the love of God in them," John 5:42. Hence natural men have no communion or
fellowship with Christ, or participation with him (as these words signify), for
this is spoken of as the peculiar privilege of the saints, 1 John 1:3, together
with ver. 6, 7, and 1 Cor. 1:8, 9. And the Scripture speaks of the actual being
of a gracious principle in the soul, though in its first beginning, as a seed
there planted, as inconsistent with a man's being a sinner, 1 John 3:9. And
natural men are represented in Scripture, as having no spiritual light, no
spiritual life, and no spiritual being; and therefore conversion is often
compared to opening the eyes of the blind, raising the dead, and a work of
creation (wherein creatures are made entirely new), and becoming new-born
children.
From these things it is evident, that those gracious influences which the
saints are subjects of, and the effects of God's Spirit which they experience,
are entirely above nature, altogether of a different kind from anything that
men find within themselves by nature, or only in the exercise of natural
principles; and are things which no improvement of those qualifications, or
principles that are natural, no advancing or exalting them to higher degrees,
and no kind of composition of them, will ever bring men to; because they not
only differ from what is natural, and from everything that natural men
experience, in degree and circumstances, but also in kind; and are of a nature
vastly more excellent. And this is what I mean, by supernatural, when I say
that gracious affections are from those influences that are supernatural.
From hence it follows, that in those gracious exercises and affections which
are wrought in the minds of the saints, through the saving influences of the
Spirit of God, there is a new inward perception or sensation of their minds,
entirely different in its nature and kind, from anything that ever their minds
were the subjects of before they were sanctified. For doubtless if God by his
mighty power produces something that is new, not only in degree and
circumstances, but in its whole nature, and that which could be produced by no
exalting, varying, or compounding of what was there before, or by adding
anything of the like kind; I say, if God produces something thus new in a mind,
that is a perceiving, thinking, conscious thing; then doubtless something
entirely new is felt, or perceived, or thought; or, which is the same thing,
there is some new sensation or perception of the mind, which is entirely of a
new sorts and which could be produced by no exalting, varying, or compounding
of that kind of perceptions or sensations which the mind had before; or there
is what some metaphysicians call a new simple idea. If grace be, in the sense
above described, an entirely new kind of principle, then the exercises of it
are also entirely a new kind of exercises. And if there be in the soul a new
sort of exercises which it is conscious of, which the soul knew nothing of
before, and which no improvement, composition, or management of what it was
before conscious or sensible of, could produce, or anything like it; then it
follows that the mind has an entirely new kind of perception or sensation; and
here is, as it were, a new spiritual sense that the mind has, or a principle of
a new kind of perception or spiritual sensation, which is in its whole nature
different from any former kinds of sensation of the mind, as tasting is diverse
from any of the other senses; and something is perceived by a true saint, in
the exercise of this new sense of mind, in spiritual and divine things, as
entirely diverse from anything that is perceived in them, by natural men, as
the sweet taste of honey is diverse from the ideas men have of honey by only
looking on it, and feeling of it. So that the spiritual perceptions which a
sanctified and spiritual person has, are not only diverse from all that natural
men have after the manner that the ideas or perceptions of the same sense may
differ one from another, but rather as the ideas and sensations of different
senses do differ. Hence the work of the Spirit of God in regeneration is often
in Scripture compared to the giving a new sense, giving eyes to see, and ears
to hear, unstopping the ears of the deaf, and opening the eyes of them that
were born blind, and turning from darkness unto light. And because this
spiritual sense is immensely the most noble and excellent, and that without
which all other principles of perception, and all our faculties are useless and
vain; therefore the giving this new sense, with the blessed fruits and effects
of it in the soul, is compared to a raising the dead, and to a new creation.
This new spiritual sense, and the new dispositions that attend it, are no new
faculties, but are new principles of nature. I use the word principles for want
of a word of a more determinate signification. By a principle of nature in this
place, I mean that foundation which is laid in nature, either old or new, for
any particular manner or kind of exercise of the faculties of the soul; or a
natural habit or foundation for action, giving a personal ability and
disposition to exert the faculties in exercises of such a certain kind; so that
to exert the faculties in that kind of exercises may be said to be his nature.
So this new spiritual sense is not a new faculty of understanding, but it is a
new foundation laid in the nature of the soul, for a new kind of exercises of
the same faculty of understanding. So that new holy disposition of heart that
attends this new sense is not a new faculty of will, but a foundation laid in
the nature of the soul, for a new kind of exercises of the same faculty of
will.
The Spirit of God, in all his operations upon the minds of natural men, only
moves, impresses, assists, improves, or some way acts upon natural principles;
but gives no new spiritual principle. Thus when the Spirit of God gives a
natural man visions, as he did Balaam, he only impresses a natural principle,
viz., the sense of seeing, immediately exciting ideas of that sense; but he
gives no new sense; neither is there anything supernatural, spiritual, or
divine in it. So if the Spirit of God impresses on a man's imagination, either
in a dream, or when he is awake, any outward ideas of any of the senses, either
voices, or shapes and colors, it is only exciting ideas of the same kind that
he has by natural principles and senses. So if God reveals to any natural man
any secret fact: as, for instance, something that he shall hereafter see or
hear; this is not infusing or exercising any new spiritual principle, or giving
the ideas of any new spiritual sense; it is only impressing, in an
extraordinary manner, the ideas that will hereafter be received by sight and
hearing.--So in the more ordinary influences of the Spirit of God on the hearts
of sinners, he only assists natural principles to do the same work to a greater
degree, which they do of themselves by nature. Thus the Spirit of God by his
common influences may assist men's natural ingenuity, as he assisted Bezaleel
and Aholiab in the curious works of the tabernacle: so he may assist men's
natural abilities in political affairs, and improve their courage and other
natural qualifications, as he is said to have put his spirit on the seventy
elders, and on Saul, so as to give him another heart: so God may greatly assist
natural men's reason, in their reasoning about secular things, or about the
doctrines of religion, and may greatly advance the clearness of their
apprehensions and notions of things of religion in many respects, without
giving any spiritual sense. So in those awakenings and convictions that natural
men may have, God only assists conscience, which is a natural principle, to do
that work in a further degree, which it naturally does. Conscience naturally
gives men an apprehension of right and wrong, and suggests the relation there
is between right and wrong, and a retribution: the Spirit of God assists men's
consciences to do this in a greater degree, helps conscience against the
stupifying influence of worldly objects and their lusts. And so many other ways
might be mentioned wherein the Spirit acts upon, assists, and moves natural
principles; but after all it is no more than nature moved, acted and improved;
here is nothing supernatural and divine. But the Spirit of God in his spiritual
influences on the hearts of his saints, operates by infusing or exercising new,
divine, and supernatural principles; principles which are indeed a new and
spiritual nature, and principles vastly more noble and excellent than all that
is in natural men.
From what has been said it follows, that all spiritual and gracious affections
are attended with and do arise from some apprehension, idea, or sensation of
mind, which is in its whole nature different, yea, exceeding different, from
all that is, or can be in the mind of a natural man; and which the natural man
discerns nothing of, and has no manner of idea of (agreeable to 1 Cor. 2:14),
and conceives of no more than a man without the sense of tasting can conceive
of the sweet taste of honey, or a man without the sense of hearing can conceive
of the melody of a tune, or a man born blind can have a notion of the beauty of
the rainbow.
But here two things must be observed, in order to the right understanding of
this.
1. On the one hand it must be observed, that not everything which in any
respect appertains to spiritual affections, is new and entirely different from
what natural men can conceive of, and do experience; some things are common to
gracious affections with other affections; many circumstances, appendages and
effects are common. Thus a saint's love to God has a great many things
appertaining to it, which are common with a man's natural love to a near
relation; love to God makes a man have desires of the honor of God, and a
desire to please him; so does a natural man's love to his friend make him
desire his honor, and desire to please him; love to God causes a man to delight
in the thoughts of God, and to delight in the presence of God, and to desire
conformity to God, and the enjoyment of God; and so it is with a man's love to
his friend; and many other things might be mentioned which are common to both.
But yet that idea which the saint has of the loveliness of God, and that
sensation, and that kind of delight he has in that view, which is as it were
the marrow and quintessence of his love, is peculiar, and entirely diverse from
anything that a natural man has, or can have any notion of. And even in those
things that seem to be common, there is something peculiar; both spiritual and
natural love cause desires after the object beloved; but they be not the same
sort of desires: there is a sensation of soul in the spiritual desires of one
that loves God, which is entirely different from all natural desires: both
spiritual love and natural love are attended with delight in the object
beloved; but the sensations of delight are not the same, but entirely and
exceedingly diverse. Natural men may have conceptions of many things about
spiritual affections; but there is something in them which is as it were the
nucleus, or kernel of them, that they have no more conception of, than one born
blind, has of colors.
It may be clearly illustrated by this: we will suppose two men; one is born
without the sense of tasting, the other has it; the latter loves honey, and is
greatly delighted in it, because he knows the sweet taste of it; the other
loves certain sounds and colors; the love of each has many things that
appertain to it, which is common; it causes both to desire and delight in the
object beloved, and causes grief when it is absent, &c., but yet that idea
or sensation which he who knows the taste of honey has of its excellency and
sweetness, that is the foundation of his love, is entirely different from
anything the other has or can have; and that delight which he has in honey is
wholly diverse from anything that the other can conceive of, though they both
delight in their beloved objects. So both these persons may in some respects
love the same object: the one may love a delicious kind of fruit, which is
beautiful to the eye, and of a delicious taste; not only because he has seen
its pleasant colors, but knows its sweet taste; the other, perfectly ignorant
of this, loves it only for its beautiful colors: there are many things seen, in
some respect, to be common to both; both love, both desire, and both delight;
but the love and desire, and delight of the one, is altogether diverse from
that of the other. The difference between the love of a natural man and a
spiritual man is like to this; but only it must be observed, that in one
respect it is vastly greater, viz., that the kinds of excellency which are
perceived in spiritual objects, by these different kinds of persons, are in
themselves vastly more diverse than the different kinds of excellency perceived
in delicious fruit, by a tasting and a tasteless man; and in another respect it
may not be so great, viz., as the spiritual man may have a spiritual sense or
taste, to perceive that divine and most peculiar excellency but in small
beginnings, and in a very imperfect degree.
2. On the other hand, it must be observed that a natural man may have those
religious apprehensions and affections, which may be in many respects very new
and surprising to him, and what before he did not conceive of; and yet what he
experiences be nothing like the exercises of a principle of new nature, or the
sensations of a new spiritual sense; his affections may be very new, by
extraordinarily moving natural principles in a very new degree, and with a
great many new circumstances, and a new co-operation of natural affections, and
a new composition of ideas; this may be from some extraordinary powerful
influence of Satan, and some great delusion; but there is nothing but nature
extraordinarily acted. As if a poor man that had always dwelt in a cottage and,
had never looked beyond the obscure village where he was born, should in a jest
be taken to a magnificent city and prince's court, and there arrayed in
princely robes, and set on the throne, with the crown royal on his head, peers
and nobles bowing before him, and should be made to believe that he was now a
glorious monarch; the ideas he would have, and the affections he would
experience, would in many respects be very new, and such as he had no
imagination of before; but all this is no more than extraordinarily raising and
exciting natural principles, and newly exalting, varying, and compounding such
sort of ideas, as he has by nature; here is nothing like giving him a new
sense.
Upon the whole, I think it is clearly manifest, that all truly gracious
affections do arise from special and peculiar influences of the Spirit, working
that sensible effect or sensation in the souls of the saints, which are
entirely different from all that is possible a natural man should experience,
not only different in degree and circumstances, but different in its whole
nature; so that a natural man not only cannot experience that which is
individually the same, but cannot experience anything but what is exceeding
diverse, and immensely below it, in its kind; and that which the power of men
or devils is not sufficient to produce the like of, or anything of the same
nature.
I have insisted largely on this matter, because it is of great importance and
use evidently to discover and demonstrate the delusions of Satan, in many kinds
of false religious affections, which multitudes are deluded by, and probably
have been in all ages of the Christian church; and to settle and determine many
articles of doctrine, concerning the operations of the Spirit of God, and the
nature of true grace.
Now, therefore, to apply these things to the purpose of this discourse.
From hence it appears, that impressions which some have made on their
imagination, or the imaginary ideas which they have of God or Christ, or
heaven, or anything appertaining to religion, have nothing in them that is
spiritual, or of the nature of true grace. Though such things may attend what
is spiritual, and be mixed with it, yet in themselves they have nothing that is
spiritual, nor are they any part of gracious experience.
Here, for the sake of common people, I will explain what is intended by
impressions on the imagination and imaginary ideas. The imagination is that
power of the mind whereby it can have a conception, or idea of things of an
external or outward nature (that is, of such sort of things as are the objects
of the outward senses) when those things are not present, and be not perceived
by the senses. It is called imagination from the word image; because thereby a
person can have an image of some external thing in his mind, when that thing is
not present in reality, nor anything like it. All such things as we perceive by
our five external senses, seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, and feeling, are
external things: and when a person has an idea or image of any of these sorts
of things in his mind, when they are not there, and when he does not really
see, hear, smell, taste, nor feel them; that is to have an imagination of them,
and these ideas are imaginary ideas: and when such kinds of ideas are strongly
impressed upon the mind, and the image of them in the mind is very lively,
almost as if one saw them, or heard them, &c., that is called an impression
on the imagination. Thus colors and shapes, and a form of countenance, they are
outward things; because they are that sort of things which are the objects of
the outward sense of seeing; and therefore when any person has in his mind a
lively idea of any shape, or color, or form of countenance; that is to have an
imagination of those things. So if he has an idea, of such sort of light or
darkness, as he perceives by the sense of seeing; that is to have an idea of
outward light, and so is an imagination. So if he has an idea of any marks made
on paper, suppose letters and words written in a book; that is to have an
external and imaginary idea of such kind of things as we sometimes perceive by
our bodily eyes. And when we have the ideas of that kind of things which we
perceive by any of the other senses, as of any sounds or voices, or words
spoken; this is only to have ideas of outward things, viz., of such kind of
things as are perceived by the external sense of hearing, and so that also is
imagination: and when these ideas are livelily impressed, almost as if they
were really heard with the ears, this is to have an impression on the
imagination. And so I might go on, and instance in the ideas of things
appertaining to the other three senses of smelling, tasting, and feeling.
Many who have had such things have very ignorantly supposed them to be of the
nature of spiritual discoveries. They have had lively ideas of some external
shape, and beautiful form of countenance; and this they call spiritually seeing
Christ. Some have had impressed upon them ideas of a great outward light; and
this they call a spiritual discovery of God's or Christ's glory. Some have had
ideas of Christ's hanging on the cross, and his blood running from his wounds;
and this they call a spiritual sight of Christ crucified, and the way of
salvation by his blood. Some have seen him with his arms open ready to embrace
them; and this they call a discovery of the sufficiency of Christ's grace and
love. Some have had lively ideas of heaven, and of Christ on his throne there,
and shining ranks of saints and angels; and this they call seeing heaven opened
to them. Some from time to time have had a lively idea of a person of a
beautiful countenance smiling upon them; and this they call a spiritual
discovery of the love of Christ to their souls, and tasting the love of Christ.
And they look upon it a sufficient evidence that these things are spiritual
discoveries, and that they see them spiritually because they say they do not
see these things with their bodily eves, but in their hearts; for they can see
them when their eyes are shut. And in like manner, the imaginations of some
have been impressed with ideas of the sense of hearing; they have had ideas of
words, as if they were sunken to them, sometimes they are the words of
Scripture, and sometimes other words: they have had ideas of Christ's speaking
comfortable words to them. These things they have called having the inward call
of Christ, hearing the voice of Christ spiritually in their hearts, having the
witness of the Spirit, and the inward testimony of the love of Christ,
&c.
The common and less considerate and understanding sort of people, are the more
easily led into apprehensions that these things are spiritual things, because
spiritual things being invisible, and not things that can be pointed forth with
the finger, we are forced to use figurative expressions in speaking of them,
and to borrow names from external and sensible objects to signify them by. Thus
we call a clear apprehension of things spiritual by the name of light;
and a having such an apprehension of such or such things, by the name of
seeing such things; and the conviction of the judgment, and the
persuasion of the will by the word of Christ in the gospel, we signify by
spiritually hearing the call of Christ: and the scripture itself abounds with
such like figurative expressions. Persons hearing these often used, and having
pressed upon them the necessity of having their eyes opened, and having a
discovery of spiritual things, and seeing Christ in his glory and having the
inward call, and the like, they ignorantly look and wait for some such external
discoveries, and imaginary views as have been spoken of; and when they have
them are confident, that now their eyes are opened, now Christ has discovered
himself to them, and they are his children; and hence are exceedingly affected
and elevated with their deliverance and happiness, and many kinds of affections
are at once set in a violent motion in them.
But it is exceedingly apparent that such ideas have nothing in them which is
spiritual and divine, in the sense wherein it has been demonstrated that all
gracious experiences are spiritual and divine. These external ideas are in no
wise of such a sort, that they are entirely, and in their whole nature diverse
from all that men have by nature, perfectly different from, and vastly above
any sensation which it is possible a man should have by any natural sense or
principle, so that in order to have them, a man must have a new spiritual and
divine sense given him, in order to have any sensations of that sort: so far
from this, that they are ideas of the same sort which we have by the external
senses, that are some of the inferior powers of the human nature: they are
merely ideas of external objects, or ideas of that nature, of the same outward,
sensitive kind: the same sort of sensations of mind (differing not in degree,
but only in circumstances) that we have by those natural principles which are
common to us with the beasts, viz., the five external senses. This is a low,
miserable notion of spiritual sense, to suppose that it is only a conceiving or
imagining that sort of ideas which we have by our animal senses, which senses
the beasts have in as great perfection as we; it is, as it were, a turning
Christ, or the divine nature in the soul, into a mere animal. There is nothing
wanting in the soul, as it is by nature, to render it capable of being the
subject of all these external ideas, without any new principles. A natural man
is capable of having an idea, and a lively idea of shapes, and colors, and
sounds, when they are absent, and as capable as a regenerate man is: so there
is nothing supernatural in them. And it is known by abundant experience, that
it is not the advancing or perfecting human nature, which makes persons more
capable of having such lively and strong imaginary ideas, but that on the
contrary, the weakness of body and mind, and distempers of body, make persons
abundantly more susceptive of such impressions.[37]
As to a truly spiritual sensation, not only is the manner of its coming into
the mind extraordinary, but the sensation itself is totally diverse from all
that men have, or can have, in a state of nature, as has been shown. But as to
these external ideas, though the way of their coming into the mind is sometimes
unusual, yet the ideas in themselves are not the better for that; they are
still of no different sort from what men have by their senses; they are of no
higher kind, nor a whit better. For instance, the external idea a man has now
of Christ hanging on the cross, and shedding his blood, is no better in itself,
than the external idea that the Jews his enemies had, who stood round his
cross, and saw this with their bodily eyes. The imaginary idea which men have
now of an external brightness and glory of God, is no better than the idea the
wicked congregation in the wilderness had of the external glory of the Lord at
Mount Sinai, when they saw it with their bodily eyes; or any better than that
idea which millions of cursed reprobates will have of the external glory of
Christ at the day of judgment, who shall see, and have a very lively idea of
ten thousand times greater external glory of Christ, than ever yet was
conceived in any man's imagination:[38]
yea, the image of Christ, which men conceive in their imaginations, is not in
its own nature of any superior kind to the idea the Papists conceive of Christ,
by the beautiful and affecting images of him which they see in their churches
(though the way of their receiving the idea may not be so bad); nor are the
affections they have, if built primarily on such imaginations, any better than
the affections raised in the ignorant people, by the sight of those images,
which oftentimes are very great; especially when these images, through the
craft of the priests, are made to move, and speak, and weep, and the like.[39] Merely the way of persons receiving
these imaginary ideas, does not alter the nature of the ideas themselves that
are received; let them be received in what way they will, they are still but
external ideas, or ideas of outward appearances, and so are not spiritual. Yea,
if men should actually receive such external ideas by the immediate power of
the most high God upon their minds, they would not be spiritual, they would be
no more than a common work of the Spirit of God; as is evident in fact, in the
instance of Balaam, who had impressed on his mind, by God himself, a clear and
lively outward representation or idea of Jesus Christ, as "the Star rising out
of Jacob, when he heard the words of God, and knew the knowledge of the Most
High, and saw the vision of the Almighty, failing into a trance," Numb. 24:16,
17, but yet had no manner of spiritual discovery of Christ; that Day Star never
spiritually rose in his heart, he being but a natural man.
And as these external ideas have nothing divine or spiritual in their nature
and nothing but what natural men, without any new principles, are capable of;
so there is nothing in their nature which requires that peculiar, inimitable
and unparalleled exercise of the glorious power of God, in order to their
production, which it has been shown there is in the production of true grace.
There appears to be nothing in their nature above the power of the devil. It is
certainly not above the power of Satan to suggest thoughts to men; because
otherwise he could not tempt them to sin. And if he can suggest any thoughts or
ideas at all, doubtless imaginary ones, or ideas of things external, are not
above his power;[40] for the external
ideas men have are the lowest sort of ideas. These ideas may be raised only by
impressions made on the body, by moving the animal spirits, and impressing the
brain.--Abundant experience does certainly show, that alterations in the body
will excite imaginary or external ideas in the mind; as often, in the case of a
high fever, melancholy, &c. These external ideas are as much below the more
intellectual exercises of the soul, as the body is a less noble part of man
than the soul.
And there is not only nothing in the nature of these external ideas or
imaginations of outward appearances, from whence we can infer that they are
above the power of the devil; but it is certain also that the devil can excite,
and often hath excited such ideas. They were external ideas which he excited in
the dreams and visions of the false prophets of old, who were under the
influence of lying spirits, that we often read of in Scripture, as Deut. 13:1.,
1 Kings 22:22, Isa. 33:7, Ezek. 13:7. And they were external ideas that he
often excited in the minds of the heathen priests, magicians and sorcerers, in
their visions and ecstasies, and they were external ideas that he excited in
the mind of the man Christ Jesus, when he showed him all the kingdoms of the
world, with the glory of them, when those kingdoms were not really in sight.
And if Satan or any created being, has power to impress the mind with outward
representations, then no particular sort of outward representations can be any
evidence of a divine power. Almighty power is no more requisite to represent
the shape of man to the imagination, than the shape of anything else: there is
no higher kind of power necessary to form in the brain one bodily shape or
color than another: it needs a no more glorious power to represent the form of
the body of a man, than the form of a chip or block; though it be of a very
beautiful human body, with a sweet smile in his countenance, or arms open, or
blood running from the hands, feet and side: that sort of power which can
represent black or darkness to the imagination, can also represent white and
shining brightness: the power and skill which can well and exactly paint a
straw, or a stick of wood, on a piece of paper or canvass; the same in kind,
only perhaps further improved, will be sufficient to paint the body of a man,
with great beauty and in royal majesty, or a magnificent city, paved with gold,
full of brightness, and a glorious throne, &c. So it is no more than the
same sort of power that is requisite to paint one as the other of these on the
brain. The same sort of power that can put ink upon paper, can put on leaf
gold. So that it is evident to a demonstration, if we suppose it to be in the
devil's power to make any sort of external representation at all on the fancy
(as without doubt it is, and never anyone questioned it who believed there was
a devil, that had any agency with mankind): I say, if so, it is demonstrably
evident, that a created power may extend to all kinds of external appearances
and ideas in the mind. From hence it again clearly appears, that no such things
have anything in them that is spiritual, supernatural, and divine, in the sense
in which it has been proved that all truly gracious experiences have. And
though external ideas, through man's make and frame, do ordinarily in some
degree attend spiritual experiences, yet these ideas are no part of their
spiritual experience, any more than the motion of the blood, and beating of the
pulse, that attend experiences, are a part of spiritual experience. And though
undoubtedly, through men's infirmity in the present state, and especially
through the weak constitution of some persons, gracious affections which are
very strong, do excite lively ideas in the imagination; yet it is also
undoubted, that when persons' affections are founded on imaginations, which is
often the case, those affections are merely natural and common, because they
are built on a foundation that is not spiritual; and so are entirely different
from gracious affections, which, as has been proved, do evermore arise from
those operations that are spiritual and divine.
These imaginations do oftentimes raise the carnal affections of men to an
exceeding great height:[41] and no
wonder, when the subjects of them have an ignorant, but undoubting persuasion,
that they are divine manifestations, which the great Jehovah immediately makes
to their souls, therein giving them testimonies in an extraordinary manner, of
his high and peculiar favor.
Again, it is evident from what has been observed and proved of the manner in
which gracious operations and effects in the heart are spiritual, supernatural
and divine, that the immediate suggesting of the words of Scripture to the mind
has nothing in it which is spiritual.
I have had occasion to say something of this already; and what has been said
may be sufficient to evince it; but if the reader bears in mind what has been
said concerning the nature of spiritual influences and effects, it will be more
abundantly manifest that this is no spiritual effect. For I suppose there is no
person of common understanding, who will say or imagine that the bringing words
(let them be what words they will) to the mind is an effect of that nature
which it is impossible the mind of a natural man, while he remains in a state
of nature, should be the subject of, or anything like it; or that it requires
any new divine sense in the soul; or that the bringing sounds or letters to the
mind, is an effect of so high, holy, and excellent a nature, that it is
impossible any created power should be the cause of it.
As the suggesting words of Scripture to the mind, is only the exciting in the
mind ideas of certain sounds or letters; so it is only one way of exciting
ideas in the imagination; for sounds and letters are external things, that are
the objects of the external senses of seeing and hearing. Ideas of certain
marks upon paper, such as any of the twenty-four letters, in whatever order, or
any sounds of the voice, are as much external ideas, as of any other shapes or
sounds whatsoever; and therefore, by what has been already said concerning
these external ideas, it is evident they are nothing spiritual; and if at any
time the Spirit of God suggests these letters or sounds to the mind, this is a
common, and not any special or gracious influence of that Spirit. And therefore
it follows from what has been already proved, that those affections which have
this effect for their foundation, are no spiritual or gracious affections. But
let it be observed what it is that I say, viz., when this effect, even the
immediate and extraordinary manner of words of Scripture's coming to the mind,
is that which excites the affections, and is properly the foundation of them,
then these affections are not spiritual. It may be so, that persons may have
gracious affections going with Scriptures which come to their minds, and the
Spirit of God may make use of those Scriptures to excite them; when it is some
spiritual sense, taste or relish they have of the divine and excellent things
contained in those Scriptures, that is the thing which excites their
affections, and not the extraordinary and sudden manner of words being brought
to their minds. They are affected with the instruction they receive from the
words, and the view of the glorious things of God or Christ, and things
appertaining to them, that they contain and teach; and not because the words
came suddenly, as though some person had spoken them to them, thence concluding
that God did as it were immediately speak to them. Persons oftentimes are
exceedingly affected on this foundation; the words of some great and high
promises of Scripture came suddenly to their minds, and they look upon the
words as directed immediately by God to them, as though the words that moment
proceeded out of the mouth of God as spoken to them: so that they take it as a
voice from God, immediately revealing to them their happy circumstances, and
promising such and such great things to them: and this it is that effects and
elevates them. There is no near spiritual understanding of the divine things
contained in the Scripture, or new spiritual sense of the glorious things
taught in that part of the Bible going before their affection, and being the
foundation of it. All the new understanding they leave, or think they have, to
be the foundation of their affection, is this, that the words are spoken to
them, because they come so suddenly and extraordinarily. And so this affection
is built wholly on the sand! Because it is built on a conclusion for which they
have no foundation. For, as has been shown, the sudden coming of the words to
their minds, is no evidence that the bringing them to their minds in that
manner was from God. And if it was true that God brought the words to their
minds, and they certainly knew it, that would not be spiritual knowledge; it
may be without any spiritual sense: Balaam might know that the words which God
suggested to him, were indeed suggested to him by God, and yet have no
spiritual knowledge. So that these affections which are built on that notion,
that texts of Scripture are sent immediately from God, are built on no
spiritual foundation, and are vain and delusive. Persons who have their
affections thus raised, if they should be inquired of, whether they have and
new sense of the excellency of things contained in those Scriptures, would
probably say, Yes, without hesitation: but it is true no otherwise than
thus, that then they have taken up that notion, that the words are spoken
immediately to them, that makes them seem sweet to them, and they own the
things which these Scriptures say to them, for excellent things and wonderful
things. As for instance supposing these were the words which were suddenly
brought to their minds, Fear not, it is your Father's good pleasure to give
you the kingdom; they having confidently taken up a notion that the words
were as it were immediately spoken from heaven to them, as an immediate
revelation that God was their Father, and had given the kingdom to them, they
are greatly affected by it, and the words seem sweet to them; and oh, they say,
"they are excellent things that are contained in those words!" But the reason
why the promise seems excellent to them, is only because they think it is made
to them immediately; all the sense they have of any glory in them, is only from
self-love, and from their own imagined interest in the words; not that they had
any view or sense of the holy and glorious nature of the kingdom of heaven and
the spiritual glory of that God who gives it, and of his excellent grace to
sinful men, it offering and giving them this kingdom, of his own good pleasure
preceding their imagined interest in these things, and their being affected by
them, and being the foundation of their affection, and hope of an interest in
them. On the contrary, they first imagine they are interested, and then are
highly affected with that, and then can own these things to be excellent. So
that the sudden and extraordinary way of the Scripture's coming to their mind
is plainly the first foundation of the whole; which is a clear evidence of the
wretched delusion they are under.
The first comfort of many persons, and what they call their conversion, is
after this manner: after awakening and terror, some comfortable sweet promise
comes suddenly and wonderfully to their minds; and the manner of its coming
makes them conclude it comes from God to them; and this is the very thing that
is all the foundation of their faith, and hope, and comfort: from hence they
take their first encouragement to trust in God and in Christ, because they
think that God, by some Scripture so brought, has now already revealed to them
that he loves them, and has already promised them eternal life, which is very
absurd; for every one of common knowledge of the principles of religion, knows
that it is God's manner to reveal his love to men, and their interest in the
promises, after they have believed, and not before, because they must first
believe before they have any interest in the promises to be revealed. The
Spirit of God is a Spirit of truth and not of lies: he does not bring
Scriptures to men's minds, to reveal to them that they have an interest in
God's favor and promises, when they have none, having not yet believed: which
would be the case, if God's bringing texts of Scripture to men's minds, to
reveal to them that their sins were forgiven, or that it was God's pleasure to
give them the kingdom, or anything of that nature, went before, and was the
foundation of their first faith. No promise of the covenant of grace belongs to
any man, until he has first believed in Christ; for it is by faith alone that
we become interested in Christ, and the promises of the new covenant made in
him: and therefore whatever spirit applies the promises of that covenant to a
person who has not first believed, as being already his, must be a lying
spirit, and that faith which is first built on such an application of promises
is built upon a lie. God's manner is not to bring comfortable texts of
Scripture to give men assurance of his love, and that they shall be happy,
before they have had a faith of dependence.[42] And if the Scripture which comes to a
person's mind, be not so properly a promise, as an invitation; yet if he makes
the sudden or unusual manner of the invitations coming to his mind, the ground
on which he believes that he is invited, it is not true faith; because it is
built on that which is not the true ground of faith. True faith is built on no
precarious foundation: but a determination that the words of such a particular
text were, by the immediate power of God, suggested to the mind, at such a
time, as though then spoken and directed by God to him, because the words came
after such a manner, is wholly an uncertain and precarious determination, as
has been now shown; and therefore is a false and sandy foundation for faith;
and accordingly that faith which is built upon it is false. The only certain
foundation which any person has to believe that he is invited to partake of the
blessings of the gospel, is, that the word of God declares that persons so
qualified as he is, are invited, and God who declares it, is true, and cannot
lie. If a sinner be once convinced of the veracity of God, and that the
Scriptures are his word, he will need no more to convince and satisfy him that
he is invited; for the Scriptures are full of invitations to sinners, to the
chief of sinners, to come and partake of the benefits of the gospel; he will
not want any never speaking of God to him; what he hath spoken already will be
enough with him.
As the first comfort of many persons, and their affections at the time of their
supposed conversion, are built on such grounds as these which have been
mentioned; so are their joys and hopes and other affections, from time to time
afterwards. They have often particular words of Scripture, sweet declarations
and promises suggested to them, which by reason of the manner of their coming,
they think are immediately sent from God to them, at that time, which they look
upon as their warrant to take them, and which they actually make the main
ground of their appropriating them to themselves, and of the comfort they take
in them, and the confidence they receive from them. Thus they imagine a kind of
conversation is carried on between God and them; and that God, from time to
time, does, as it were, immediately speak to them, and satisfy their doubts,
and testifies his love to them, and promises them supports and supplies, and
his blessing in such and such cases, and reveals to them clearly their interest
in eternal blessings. And thus they are often elevated, and have a course of a
sudden and tumultuous kind of joys, mingled with a strong confidence, and high
opinion of themselves; when indeed the main ground of these joys, and this
confidence, is not anything contained in, or taught by these Scriptures, as
they lie in the Bible, but the manner of their coming to them; which is a
certain evidence of their delusion. There is no particular promise in the word
of God that is the saint's, or is any otherwise made to him, or spoken to him,
than all the promises of the covenant of grace are his, and are made to him and
spoken to him;[43] though it be true
that some of these promises may be more peculiarly adapted to his case than
others, and God by his Spirit may enable him better to understand some than
others, and to have a greater sense of the preciousness, and glory, and
suitableness of the blessings contained in them.
But here some may be ready to say, What, is there no such thing as any
particular spiritual application of the promises of Scripture by the Spirit of
God? I answer, there is doubtless such a thing as a spiritual and saving
application of the invitations and promises of Scripture to the souls of men;
but it is also certain, that the nature of it is wholly misunderstood by many
persons, to the great ensnaring of their own souls, and the giving Satan a vast
advantage against them, and against the interest of religion, and the church of
God. The spiritual application of a Scripture promise does not consist in its
being immediately suggested to the thoughts by some extrinsic agent, and being
borne into the mind with this strong apprehension, that it is particularly
spoken and directed to them at that time; there is nothing of the evidence of
the hand of God in this effect, as events have proved, in many notorious
instances; and it is a mean notion of a spiritual application of Scripture;
there is nothing in the nature of it at all beyond the power of the devil, if
he be not restrained by God; for there is nothing in the nature of the effect
that is spiritual, implying any vital communication of God. A truly spiritual
application of the word of God is of a vastly higher nature; as much above the
devil's power, as it is, so to apply the word of God to a dead corpse, as to
raise it to life; or to a stone, to turn it into an angel. A spiritual
application of the word of God consists in applying it to the heart, in
spiritually enlightening, sanctifying influences. A spiritual application of an
invitation or offer of the gospel consists, in giving the soul a spiritual
sense or relish of the holy and divine blessings offered, and the sweet and
wonderful grace of the offerer, in making so gracious an offer, and of his holy
excellency and faithfulness to fulfill what he offers, and his glorious
sufficiency for it; so leading and drawing forth the heart to embrace the
offer; and thus giving the man evidence of his title to the thing offered. And
so a spiritual application of the promises of Scripture, for the comfort of the
saints, consists in enlightening their minds to see the holy excellency and
sweetness of the blessings promised, and also the holy excellency of the
promiser, and his faithfulness and sufficiency; thus drawing forth their hearts
to embrace the promiser, and thing promised; and by this means, giving the
sensible actings of grace, enabling them to see their grace, and so their title
to the promise. An application not consisting in this divine sense and
enlightening of the mind, but consisting only in the word's being borne into
the thoughts, as if immediately then spoken, so making persons believe, on no
other foundation, that the promise is theirs, is a blind application, and
belongs to the spirit of darkness, and not of light.
When persons have their affections raised after this manner, those affections
are really not raised by the word of God; the Scripture is not the foundation
of them; it is not anything contained in those Scriptures which come to their
minds, that raise their affections; but truly that effect, viz., the strange
manner of the word's being suggested to their minds, and a proposition from
thence taken up by them, which indeed is not contained in that Scripture, nor
any other; as that his sins are forgiven him, or that it is the Father's good
pleasure to give him in particular the kingdom, or the like. There are
propositions to be found in the Bible, declaring that persons of such and such
qualifications are forgiven and beloved of God: but there are no propositions
to be found in the Bible declaring that such and such particular persons,
independent on any previous knowledge of any qualifications, are forgiven and
beloved of God: and therefore, when any person is comforted, and affected by
any such proposition, it is by another word, a word newly coined, and not any
word of God contained in the Bible.[44]
And thus many persons are vainly affected and deluded.
Again, it plainly appears from what has been demonstrated, that no revelation
of secret facts by immediate suggestion, is anything spiritual and divine, in
that sense wherein gracious effects and operations are so.
By secret facts, I mean things that have been done, or are come to pass, or
shall hereafter come to pass, which are secret in that sense that they do not
appear to the senses, nor are known by any argumentation, or any evidence to
reason, nor any other way, but only by that revelation by immediate suggestion
of the ideas of them to the mind. Thus for instance, if it should be revealed
to me, that the next year this land would be invaded by a fleet from France, or
that such and such persons would then be converted, or that I myself should
then be converted; not by enabling me to argue out these events from anything
which now appears in providence, but immediately suggesting and bearing in upon
my mind, in an extraordinary manner, the apprehension or ideas of these facts,
with a strong suggestion or impression on my mind, that I had no hand in
myself, that these things would come to pass: or if it should be revealed to
me, that this day there is a battle fought between the armies of such and such
powers in Europe; or that such a prince in Europe was this day converted, or is
now in a converted state, having been converted formerly, or that one of my
neighbors is converted, or that I myself am converted; not by having any other
evidence of any of these facts, from whence I argue them, but an immediate
extraordinary suggestion or excitation of these ideas, and a strong impression
of them upon my mind: this is a revelation of secret facts by immediate
suggestion, as much as if the facts were future; for the facts being past,
present, or future, alters not the case, as long as they are secret and hidden
from my senses and reason, and not spoken of in Scripture, nor known by me any
other way than by immediate suggestion. If I have it revealed to me, that such
a revolution is come to pass this day in the Ottoman Empire, it is the very
same sort of revelation, as if it were revealed to me that such a revolution
would come to pass there this day come twelvemonth; because, though one is
present and the other future, yet both are equally hidden from me, any other
way than by immediate revelation. When Samuel told Saul that the asses which he
went to seek were found, and that his father had left caring for the asses and
sorrowed for him; this was by the same kind of revelation, as that by which he
told Saul, that in the plain of Tabor there should meet him three men going up
to God to Bethel (1 Sam. 10:2, 3), though one of these things was future, and
the other was not. So when Elisha told the king of Israel the words that the
king of Syria spake in his bed-chamber, it was by the same kind of revelation
with that by which he foretold many things to come.
It is evident that this revelation of secret facts by immediate suggestions,
has nothing of the nature of a spiritual and divine operation, in the sense
forementioned; there is nothing at all in the nature of the perceptions or
ideas themselves, which are excited in the mind, that is divinely excellent,
and so, far above all the ideas of natural men; though the manner of exciting
the ideas be extraordinary. In those things which are spiritual, as has been
shown, not only the manner of producing the effect, but the effect wrought is
divine, and so vastly above all that can be in an unsanctified mind. Now simply
the having an idea of facts, setting aside the manner of producing those ideas,
is nothing beyond what the minds of wicked men are susceptible of, without any
goodness in them; and they all, either have or will have, the knowledge of the
truth of the greatest and most important facts, that have been, are, or shall
be.
And as to the extraordinary manner of producing the ideas or perception of
facts, even by immediate suggestion, there is nothing in it, but what the minds
of natural men, while they are yet natural men, are capable of, as is manifest
in Balaam, and others spoken of in the Scripture. And therefore it appears that
there is nothing appertaining to this immediate suggestion of secret facts that
is spiritual, in the sense in which it has been proved that gracious operations
are so. If there be nothing in the ideas themselves, which is holy and divine,
and so nothing but what may be in a mind not sanctified, then God can put them
into the mind by immediate power without sanctifying it. As there is nothing in
the idea of a rainbow itself that is of a holy and divine nature; so that
nothing hinders but that an unsanctified mind may receive that idea; so God, if
he pleases, and when he pleases, immediately, and in an extraordinary manner,
may excite that idea in an unsanctified mind. So also, as there is nothing in
the idea or knowledge that such and such particular persons are forgiven and
accepted of God, and entitled to heaven, but what unsanctified minds may have
and will have concerning many at the day of judgment; so God can, if he
pleases, extraordinarily and immediately, suggest this to, and impress it upon
an unsanctified mind now: there is no principle wanting in an unsanctified
mind, to make it capable of such a suggestion or impression, nor is there
anything in it to exclude, or necessarily to prevent such a suggestion.
And if these suggestions of secret facts be attended with texts of Scripture,
immediately and extraordinarily brought to mind, about some other facts that
seem in some respects similar, that does not make the operation to be of a
spiritual and divine nature. For that suggestion of words of Scripture is no
more divine, than the suggestion of the facts themselves; as has been just now
demonstrated: and two effects together, which are neither of them spiritual
cannot make up one complex effect, that is spiritual.
Hence it follows, from what has been already shown, and often repeated, that
those affections which are properly founded on such immediate suggestions, or
supposed suggestions, of secret facts, are not gracious affections. Not but
that it is possible that such suggestions may be the occasion, or accidental
cause of gracious affections; for so may a mistake and delusion; but it is
never properly the foundation of gracious affections: for gracious affections,
as has been shown, are all the effects of an influence and operation which is
spiritual, supernatural, and divine. But there are many affections, and high
affections, which some have, that have such kind of suggestions or revelations
for their very foundation: they look upon these as spiritual discoveries, which
is a gross delusion, and this delusion is truly the spring whence their
affections flow.
Here it may be proper to observe, that it is exceedingly manifest from what has
been said, that what many persons call the witness of the Spirit, that they are
the children of God, has nothing in it spiritual and divine; and consequently
that the affections built upon it are vain and delusive. That which many call
the witness of the Spirit, is no other than an immediate suggestion and
impression of that fact, otherwise secret, that they are converted, or made the
children of God, and so that their sins are pardoned, and that God has given
them a title to heaven. This kind of knowledge, viz., knowing that a certain
person is converted, and delivered from hell, and entitled to heaven, is no
divine sort of knowledge in itself. This sort of fact, is not that which
requires any higher or more divine kind of suggestion, in order to impress it
on the mind, than any other fact which Balaam had impressed on his mind. It
requires no higher sort of idea or sensation, for a man to have the
apprehension of his own conversion impressed upon him, than to have the
apprehension of his neighbor's conversion, in like manner impressed: but God,
if he pleased, might impress the knowledge of this fact, that he had forgiven
his neighbor's sins, and given him a title to heaven, as well as any other
fact, without any communication of his holiness: the excellency and importance
of the fact, do not at all hinder a natural man's mind being susceptible of an
immediate suggestion and impression of it. Balaam had as excellent, and
important, and glorious facts as this, immediately impressed on his mind,
without any gracious influence; as particularly, the coming of Christ, and his
setting up his glorious kingdom, and the blessedness of the spiritual Israel in
his peculiar favor, and their happiness living and dying. Yea, Abimelech, king
of the Philistines, had God's special favor to a particular person, even
Abraham, revealed to him, Gen. 20:6, 7. So it seems that he revealed to Laban
his special favor to Jacob, see Gen. 31:24, and Psal. 105:15. And if a truly
good man should have an immediate revelation or suggestion from God, after the
like manned concerning his favor to his neighbor or himself; it would be no
higher kind of influence; it would be no more than a common sort of influence
of God's Spirit; as the gift of prophecy, and all revelation by immediate
suggestion is; see 1 Cor. 13:2. And though it be true, that it is not possible
that a natural man should have that individual suggestion from the Spirit of
God, that he is converted, because it is not true; yet that does not arise from
the nature of the influence, or because that kind of influence which suggests
such excellent facts, is too high for him to be the subject of; but purely from
the defect of a fact to be revealed. The influence which immediately suggests
this fact, when it is true, is of no different kind from that which immediately
suggests other true facts: and so the kind and nature of the influence is not
above what is common to natural men, with good men.
But this is a mean, ignoble notion of the witness of the Spirit of God given to
his dear children, to suppose that there is nothing in the kind and nature of
that influence of the Spirit of God, in imparting this high and glorious
benefit, but what is common to natural men, or which men are capable of, and be
in the mean time altogether unsanctified and the children of hell; and that
therefore the benefit or gift itself has nothing of the holy nature of the
Spirit of God in it, nothing of a vital communication of that Spirit. This
notion greatly debases that high and most exalted kind of influence and
operation of the Spirit, which there is in the true witness of the Spirit.[45] That which is called the witness of
the Spirit, Rom. 8, is elsewhere in the New Testament called the seal of the
Spirit, 2 Cor. 1:22, Eph. 1:13, and 4:13, alluding to the seal of princes,
annexed to the instrument, by which they advanced any of their subjects to some
high honor and dignity, or peculiar privilege in the kingdom, as a token of
their special favor. Which is an evidence that the influence of the Spirit, of
the Prince of princes, in sealing his favorites, is far from being of a common
kind; and that there is no effect of God's Spirit whatsoever, which is in its
nature more divine; nothing more holy, peculiar, inimitable and distinguishing
of divinity: as nothing is more royal than the royal seal; nothing more sacred,
that belongs to a prince, and more peculiarly denoting what belongs to him; it
being the very end and design of it, to be the most peculiar stamp and
confirmation of the royal authority, and great note of distinction, whereby
that which proceeds from the king, or belongs to him, may be known from
everything else. And therefore undoubtedly the seal of the great King of heaven
and earth enstamped on the heart, is something high and holy in its own nature,
some excellent communication from the infinite fountain of divine beauty and
glory; and not merely a making known a secret fact by revelation or suggestion;
which is a sort of influence of the Spirit of God, that the children of the
devil have often been the subjects of. The seal of the Spirit is a kind of
effect of the Spirit of God on the heart, which natural men, while such, are so
far from a capacity of being the subjects of; that they can have no manner of
notion or idea of it, agreeable to Rev. 2:17: "To him that overcometh will I
give to eat of the hidden manna, and I will give him a white stone, and in the
stone a new name written, which no man knoweth, saving he that receiveth it."
There is all reason to suppose that what is here spoken of, is the same mark,
evidence, or blessed token of special favor, which is elsewhere called the seal
of the Spirit.
What has misled many in their notion of that influence of the Spirit of God we
are speaking of, is the word witness, its being called the witness of
the Spirit. Hence they have taken it, not to be any effect or work of the
Spirit upon the heart, giving evidence, from whence men may argue that they are
the children of God; but an inward immediate suggestion, as though God inwardly
spoke to the man, and testified to him, and told him that he was his child, by
a kind of a secret voice, or impression: not observing the manner in which the
word witness, or testimony, is often used in the New Testament, where such
terms often signify, not only a mere declaring and asserting a thing to be
true, but holding forth evidence from whence a thing may be argued, and proved
to be true. Thus Heb. 2:4, God is said to "bear witness, with signs and wonders
and divers miracles, and gifts of the Holy Ghost." Now these miracles, here
spoken of, are called God's witness, not because they are of the nature of
assertions, but evidences and proofs. So Acts 14:3: "Long time therefore abode
they speaking boldly in the Lord, which gave testimony unto the word of his
grace, and granted signs and wonders to be done by their hands." And John 5:36:
"But I have greater witness than that of John: for the works which the Father
hath given me to finish, the same works that I do, bear witness of me, that the
Father hath sent of me." Again, chap. 10:25: "The works that I do in my
Father's name, they bear witness of me." So the water and the blood are said to
bear witness, 1 John 5:8, not that they spoke or asserted anything, but they
were proofs and evidences. So God's works of providence, in the rain and
fruitful seasons, are spoken of as witnesses of God's being and goodness, i.e.,
they are evidences of these things. And when the Scripture speaks of the seal
of the Spirit, it is an expression which properly denotes, not an immediate
voice or suggestion, but some work or effect of the Spirit, that is left as a
divine mark upon the soul, to be an evidence by which God's children might be
known. The seals of princes were the distinguishing marks of princes: and thus
God's seal is spoken of as God's mark, Rev. 7:3: "Hurt not the earth, neither
the sea, nor the trees, till we have sealed the servants of our God in their
foreheads;" together with Ezek. 9:4, "Set a mark upon the foreheads of the men
that sigh and that cry for all the abominations that are done in the midst
thereof." When God sets his seal on a man's heart by his Spirit, there is some
holy stamp, some image impressed and left upon the heart by the Spirit, as by
the seal upon the wax. And this holy stamp, or impressed image, exhibiting
clear evidence to the conscience, that the subject of it is the child of God,
is the very thing which in Scripture is called the seal of the Spirit, and the
witness, or evidence of the Spirit. And this image enstamped by the Spirit on
God's children's hearts, is his own image; that is the evidence by which they
are known to be God's children, that they have the image of their Father
stamped upon their hearts by the Spirit of adoption. Seals anciently had
engraven on them two things, viz., the image and the name of the person whose
seal it was. Therefore when Christ says to his spouse, Cant. 8:6, "Set me as a
seal upon thine heart, as a seal upon thine arm;" it is as much as to say, let
my name and image remain impressed there. The seals of princes were wont to
bear their image; so that what they set their seal and royal mark upon, had
their image left on it. It was the manner of princes of old to have their image
engraven on their jewels and precious stones; and the image of Augustus
engraven on a precious stone, was used as the seal of the Roman emperors, in
Christ's and the Apostle's times.[46]
And the saints are the jewels of Jesus Christ, the great potentate, who has the
possession of the empire of the universe; and these jewels have his image
enstamped upon them by his royal signet, which is the Holy Spirit. And this is
undoubtedly what the Scripture means by the seal of the Spirit; especially when
it is stamped in so fair and clear a manner, as to be plain to the eye of
conscience; which is what the Scripture calls our spirit. This is truly an
effect that is spiritual, supernatural and divine. This is in itself of a holy
nature, being a communication of the divine nature and beauty. That kind of
influence of the Spirit which gives and leaves this stamp upon the heart, is
such that no natural man can be the subject of anything of the like nature with
it. This is the highest sort of witness of the Spirit, which it is possible the
soul should be the subject of: if there were any such thing as a witness of the
Spirit by immediate suggestion or revelation, this would be vastly more noble
and excellent, and as much above it as the heaven is above the earth. This the
devil cannot imitate; as to an inward suggestion of the Spirit of God, by a
kind of secret voice speaking, and immediately asserting and revealing a fact,
he can do that which is a thousand times so like to this, as he can to that
holy and divine effect, or work of the Spirit of God, which has now been spoken
of.
Another thing which is a full proof that the seal of the Spirit is no
revelation of any fact by immediate suggestion, but is grace itself in the
soul, is, that the seal of the Spirit is called in the Scripture, the
earnest of the Spirit. It is very plain that the seal of the Spirit is
the same thing with the earnest of the Spirit, by 2 Cor. 1:22: "Who hath also
sealed us, and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts;" and Eph. 1:13,
14, "In whom, after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of
promise, which is the earnest of our inheritance, until the redemption of the
purchased possession unto the praise of his glory." Now the earnest is part of
the money agreed for, given in hand, as a token of the whole, to be paid in due
time; a part of the promised inheritance granted now, in token of full
possession of the whole hereafter. But surely that kind of communication of the
Spirit of God, which is of the nature of eternal glory, is the highest and most
excellent kind of communication, something that is in its own nature spiritual,
holy and divine, and far from anything that is common: and therefore high above
anything of the nature of inspiration, or revelation of hidden facts by
suggestion of the Spirit of God, which many natural men have had. What is the
earnest, and beginning of glory, but grace itself, especially in the more
lively and clear exercises of it? It is not prophecy, nor tongues, nor
knowledge, but that more excellent divine thing, "charity that never faileth,"
which is a prelibation and beginning of the light, sweetness and blessedness of
heaven, that world of love or charity. It is grace that is the seed of glory
and dawning of glory in the heart, and therefore it is grace that is the
earnest of the future inheritance. What is it that is the beginning or earnest
of eternal life in the soul, but spiritual life; and what is that but grace?
The inheritance that Christ has purchased for the elect, is the Spirit of God;
not in any extraordinary gifts, but in his vital indwelling in the heart,
exerting and communicating himself there, in his own proper, holy, or divine
nature; and this is the sum total of the inheritance that Christ purchased for
the elect. For so are things constituted in the affair of our redemption, that
the Father provides the Savior or purchaser, and the purchase is made of him;
and the Son is the purchaser and the price; and the Holy Spirit is the great
blessing or inheritance purchased, as is intimated, Gal. 3:13, 14; and hence
the Spirit often is spoken of as the sum of the blessings promised in the
gospel, Luke 24:49, Acts 1:4, and chap. 2:38, 39, Gal. 3:14, Eph. 1:13. This
inheritance was the grand legacy which Christ left his disciples and church, in
his last will and testament, John chap. 14, 15, 16. This is the sum of the
blessings of eternal life, which shall be given in heaven. (Compare John 7:37,
38, 39, and John 4:14, with Rev. 21:6, and 22:1, 17.) It is through the vital
communications and indwelling of the Spirit that the saints have all their
light, life, holiness, beauty, and joy in heaven; and it is through the vital
communications and indwelling of the same Spirit that the saints have all
light, life, holiness, beauty and comfort on earth; but only communicated in
less measure. And this vital indwelling of the Spirit in the saints, in this
less measure and small beginning is, "the earnest of the Spirit, the earnest of
the future inheritance, and the first fruits of the Spirit," as the apostle
calls it, Rom. 8:22, where, by "the first fruits of the Spirit," the apostle
undoubtedly means the same vital, gracious principle that he speaks of in all
the preceding part of the chapter, which he calls Spirit, and sets in
opposition to flesh or corruption.--Therefore this earnest of the Spirit, and
first fruits of the Spirit, which has been shown to be the same with the seal
of the Spirit, is the vital, gracious, sanctifying communication and influence
of the Spirit, and not any immediate suggestion or revelation of facts by the
Spirit.[47]
And indeed the apostle, when in that, Rom. 8:16, he speaks of the Spirit's
bearing witness with our spirit that we are the children of God, does
sufficiently explain himself, if his words were but attended to. What is here
expressed is connected with the two preceding verses, as resulting from what
the apostle had said there as every reader may see. The three verses together
are thus: "For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of
God: for ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye have
received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father: the Spirit
itself beareth witness with our spirits that we are the children of God." Here,
what the apostle says, if we take it together, plainly shows that what he has
respect to, when he speaks of the Spirit's giving us witness or evidence that
we are God's children, is his dwelling in us, and leading us, as a spirit of
adoption, or spirit of a child, disposing us to behave towards God as to a
Father. This is the witness or evidence which the apostle speaks of that we are
children, that we have the spirit of children, or spirit of adoption. And what
is that but the spirit of love? There are two kinds of spirits the apostle
speaks of, the spirit of a slave or the spirit of bondage, that is fear; and
the spirit of a child, or spirit of adoption, and that is love. The apostle
says, we have not received the spirit of bondage, or of slaves, which is a
spirit of fear; but we have received the more ingenuous noble spirit of
children, a spirit of love, which naturally disposes us to go to God as
children to a father, and behave towards God as children. And this is the
evidence or witness which the Spirit of God gives us that we are his children.
This is the plain sense of the apostle; and so undoubtedly he here is speaking
of the very same way of casting out doubting and fear and the spirit of
bondage, which the Apostle John speaks of, 1 John 4:18, viz., by the prevailing
of love, that is the spirit of a child. The spirit of bondage works by fear,
the slave fears the rod: but love cries, Abba, Father; it disposes us to go to
God, and behave ourselves towards God as children; and it gives us clear
evidence of our union to God as his children, and so casts out fear. So that it
appears that the witness of the Spirit the apostle speaks of, is far from being
any whisper, or immediate suggestion or revelation; but that gracious holy
effect of the Spirit of God in the hearts of the saints, the disposition and
temper of children, appearing in sweet childlike love to God, which casts out
fear, or a spirit of a slave.
And the same thing is evident from all the context: it is plain the apostle
speaks of the Spirit, over and over again, as dwelling in the hearts of the
saints as a gracious principle, set in opposition to the flesh or corruption:
and so he does in the words that immediately introduce this passage we are
upon, ver. 13, "For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die: but if ye through
the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the flesh, ye shall live."
Indeed it is past doubt with me, that the apostle has a more special respect to
the spirit of grace, or the spirit of love, or spirit of a child, in its more
lively actings; for it is perfect love, or strong love only, which so witnesses
or evidences that we are children as to cast out fear, and wholly deliver from
the spirit of bondage. The strong and lively exercises of a spirit of
childlike, evangelical, humble love to God, give clear evidence of the soul's
relation to God as his child; which does very greatly and directly satisfy the
soul. And though it be far from being true, that the soul in this case, judges
only by an immediate witness without any sign or evidence; for it judges and is
assured by the greatest sign and clearest evidence; yet in this case the saint
stands in no need of multiplied signs, or any long reasoning upon them. And
though the sight of his relative union with God, and his being in his favor, is
not without a medium, because he sees it by that medium, viz., his love; yet
his sight of the union of his heart to God is immediate: love, the bond of
union, is seen intuitively: the saint sees and feels plainly the union between
his soul and God; it is so strong and lively, that he cannot doubt of it. And
hence he is assured that he is a child. How can he doubt whether he stands in a
childlike relation to God, when he plainly sees a childlike union between God
and his soul, and hence does boldly, and as it were naturally and necessarily
cry, Abba, Father?
And whereas the apostle says, the Spirit bears witness with our spirits; by our
spirit here, is meant our conscience, which is called the spirit of man, Prov.
20:17, "The spirit of man is the candle of the Lord, searching all the inward
parts of the belly." We elsewhere read of the witness of this spirit of ours: 2
Cor. 1:12, "For our rejoicing is this, the testimony of our conscience." And 1
John 3:19, 20, 21: "And hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shall
assure our hearts before him. For if our heart condemn us, God is greater than
our heart, and knoweth all things. Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then
have we confidence towards God." When the Apostle Paul speaks of the Spirit of
God bearing witness with our spirit, he is not to be understood of two spirits
that are two separate, collateral, independent witnesses; but it is by one that
we receive the witness of the other: the Spirit of God gives the evidence by
infusing and shedding abroad the love of God, the spirit of a child, in the
heart, and our spirit, or our conscience, receives and declares this evidence
for our rejoicing.
Many have been the mischiefs that have arisen from that false and delusive
notion of the witness of the Spirit, that it is a kind of inward voice,
suggestion, or declaration from God to man, that he is beloved of him, and
pardoned, elected, or the like, sometimes with, and sometimes without a text of
Scripture; and many have been the false and vain (though very high) affections
that have arisen from hence. And it is to be feared that multitudes of souls
have been eternally undone by it. I have therefore insisted the longer on this
head. But I proceed now to a second characteristic of gracious affections.
Previous Section Next Section Table of Contents
|