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A
Treatise Of The Fear Of God;
Showing,
What it is, and how distinguished
from that which it is not so.
Also,
Whence it comes; who has it; what are the
effects; and what the privileges of those that
have it in their hearts.
By JOHN BUNYAN
"And whosoever will, let him take the
water of life freely."—Revelation 22:17
L O N D O N,
Printed for N. Ponder, at the Peacock in the
Poultry, over against the Stocks market: 1679.
First published seven years after John
Bunyan's twelve year incarceration.
|
Edited by George Offor.
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR.
"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom," and "a fountain
of life"—the foundation on which all wisdom rests, as well as the source from
whence it emanates. Upon a principle so vastly important, all the subtle malignity
of Satan has been directed, if possible to mislead the very elect; while the ungodly
and impenitent fall under his devices. To the mind enlightened by Divine truth, the
difference between a filial fear of offending God and the dread of punishment is
very plain. Still, by the devil's sophistry, some of the most pious Christians have
been puzzled and bewildered. Bunyan was not ignorant of Satan's devices, and he has
roused the energies of his powerful mind, guided by Divine truth, to render this
important doctrine so clear and easy to be understood, that the believer may not
err.
This rare volume, first published in 1679, soon became so scarce that Chandler, Wilson,
Whitefield, and others, omitted it from their editions of Bunyan's works. At length
it appeared in the more complete collection by Ryland and Mason, about 1780. Since
then, it has been reprinted, somewhat modernized, by the Tract Society, from an original
copy, discovered by that ardent lover of Bunyan, the Rev. Joseph Belcher. Of this
edition, four thousand copies have been printed.
The great line of distinction that Bunyan draws is between that terror and dread
of God, as the infinitely Holy One, before whom all sin must incur the intensity
of punishment; and the love of God, as the Father of mercies, and fountain of blessedness,
in the gift of his Son, and a sense of adoption into his family; by the influences
of which the soul fears to offend him. This fear is purely evangelical; for if the
slightest dependence is placed upon any supposed good works of our own, the filial
fear of God is swallowed up in dread and terror—for salvation depends upon the perfection
of holiness, without which none can enter heaven, and which can only be found in
Christ.
Mr. Mason, on reading this treatise, thus expressed his feelings—"When the fear
of the Lord is a permanent principle, inwrought in the soul by the Divine Spirit,
it is an undoubted token of election to life eternal; for the most precious promises
are made to God's fearers, even the blessings of the everlasting covenant. Such are
sure to be protected from every enemy; to be guided by unerring counsel; and what
will crown all, to be beloved of God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; till, by almighty
and effectual grace, he will be translated to those mansions of glory and blessedness
prepared for him, where he will sing the praises of his covenant-God while eternity
endures."
May this be the blessed experience of all those who prayerfully read this important
treatise.
Geo. Offor.
A TREATISE ON THE FEAR OF GOD
"BLESSED IS EVERY ONE THAT FEARETH THE LORD."—PSALM 128:1
"FEAR GOD."—REVELATION 14:7
This exhortation is not only found here in the text, but is in several other places
of the Scripture pressed, and that with much vehemency, upon the children of men,
as in Ecclesiastes 12:13; 1 Peter 1:17, &c. I shall not trouble you with a long
preamble, or forespeech to the matter, nor shall I here so much as meddle with the
context, but shall immediately fall upon the words themselves, and briefly treat
of the fear of God. The text, you see, presenteth us with matter of greatest moment,
to wit, with God, and with the fear of him.
First they present us with God, the true and living God, maker of the worlds, and
upholder of all things by the word of his power: that incomprehensible majesty, in
comparison of whom all nations are less than the drop of a bucket, and than the small
dust of the balance. This is he that fills heaven and earth, and is everywhere present
with the children of men, beholding the evil and the good; for he hath set his eyes
upon all their ways.
So that, considering that by the text we have presented to our souls the Lord God
and Maker of us all, who also will be either our Saviour or Judge, we are in reason
and duty bound to give the more earnest heed to the things that shall be spoken,
and be the more careful to receive them, and put them in practice; for, as I said,
as they present us with the mighty God, so they exhort us to the highest duty towards
him; to wit, to fear him. I call it the highest duty, because it is, as I may call
it, not only a duty in itself, but, as it were, the salt that seasoneth every duty.
For there is no duty performed by us that can by any means be accepted of God, if
it be not seasoned with godly fear. Wherefore the apostle saith, "Let us have
grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably, with reverence and godly fear."
Of this fear, I say, I would discourse at this time; but because this word fear is
variously taken in the Scripture, and because it may be profitable to us to see it
in its variety, I shall therefore choose this method for the managing of my discourse,
even to show you the nature of the word in its several, especially of the chiefest,
acceptations. FIRST. Then by this word fear we are to understand even God himself,
who is the object of our fear. SECOND. By this word fear we are to understand the
Word of God, the rule and director of our fear. Now to speak to this word fear, as
it is thus taken.
[THIS WORD FEAR AS TAKEN FOR GOD HIMSELF.]
FIRST. Of this word "fear," AS IT RESPECTETH GOD HIMSELF, who is the object
of our fear.
By this word fear, as I said, we are to understand God himself, who is the object
of our fear: For the Divine majesty goeth often under this very name himself. This
name Jacob called him by, when he and Laban chid together on Mount Gilead, after
that Jacob had made his escape to his father's house; "Except," said he,
"the God of my father, the God of Abraham, and the fear of Isaac had been with
me, surely thou hadst sent me away now empty." So again, a little after, when
Jacob and Laban agree to make a covenant of peace each with other, though Laban,
after the jumbling way of the heathen by his oath, puts the true God and the false
together, yet "Jacob sware by the fear of his father Isaac" (Gen 31:42,53).[1]
By the fear, that is, by the God of his father Isaac. And, indeed, God may well be
called the fear of his people, not only because they have by his grace made him the
object of their fear, but because of the dread and terrible majesty that is in him.
"He is a mighty God, a great and terrible, and with God is terrible majesty"
(Dan 7:28, 10:17; Neh 1:5, 4:14, 9:32; Job 37:22). Who knows the power of his anger?
"The mountains quake at him, the hills melt, and the earth is burned at his
presence, yea, the world, and all that dwell therein. Who can stand before his indignation?
who can abide in the fierceness of his anger? his fury is poured out like fire, and
the rocks are thrown down by him" (Nahum 1:5,6). His people know him, and have
his dread upon them, by virtue whereof there is begot and maintained in them that
godly awe and reverence of his majesty which is agreeable to their profession of
him. "Let him be your fear, and let him be your dread." Set his majesty
before the eyes of your souls, and let his excellency make you afraid with godly
fear (Isa 8:13).
There are these things that make God to be the fear of his people.
First. His presence is dreadful, and that not only his presence in common, but his
special, yea, his most comfortable and joyous presence. When God comes to bring a
soul news of mercy and salvation, even that visit, that presence of God, is fearful.
When Jacob went from Beersheba towards Haran, he met with God in the way by a dream,
in the which he apprehended a ladder set upon the earth, whose top reached to heaven;
now in this dream, from the top of this ladder, he saw the Lord, and heard him speak
unto him, not threateningly; not as having his fury come up into his face; but in
the most sweet and gracious manner, saluting him with promise of goodness after promise
of goodness, to the number of eight or nine; as will appear if you read the place.
Yet I say, when he awoke, all the grace that discovered itself in this heavenly vision
to him could not keep him from dread and fear of God's majesty. "And Jacob awaked
out of his sleep, and he said, Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not;
and he was afraid and said, How dreadful is this place! this is none other but the
house of God, and this is the gate of heaven" (Gen 28:10-17).
At another time, to wit, when Jacob had that memorable visit from God, in which he
gave him power as a prince to prevail with him; yea, and gave him a name, that by
his remembering it he might call God's favour the better to his mind; yet even then
and there such dread of the majesty of God was upon him, that he went away wondering
that his life was preserved (Gen 32:30). Man crumbles to dust at the presence of
God; yea, though he shows himself to us in his robes of salvation. We have read how
dreadful and how terrible even the presence of angels have been unto men, and that
when they have brought them good tidings from heaven (Judg 13:22; Matt 28:4; Mark
16:5,6). Now, if angels, which are but creatures, are, through the glory that God
has put upon them, so fearful and terrible in their appearance to men, how much more
dreadful and terrible must God himself be to us, who are but dust and ashes! When
Daniel had the vision of his salvation sent him from heaven, for so it was, "O
Daniel," said the messenger, "a man greatly beloved" ; yet behold
the dread and terror of the person speaking fell with that weight upon this good
man's soul, that he could not stand, nor bear up under it. He stood trembling, and
cries out, "O my lord, by the vision my sorrows are turned upon me, and I have
retained no strength. For how can the servant of this my lord talk with this my lord?
for as for me, straightway there remained no strength in me" (Dan 10:16-17).
See you here if the presence of God is not a dreadful and a fearful thing; yea, his
most gracious and merciful appearances; how much more then when he showeth himself
to us as one that disliketh our ways, as one that is offended with us for our sins?
And there are three things that in an eminent manner make his presence dreadful to
us.
1. The first is God's own greatness and majesty; the discovery of this, or of himself
thus, even as no poor mortals are able to conceive of him, is altogether unsupportable.
The man dies to whom he thus discovers himself. "And when I saw him," says
John, "I fell at his feet as dead" (Rev 1:17). It was this, therefore,
that Job would have avoided in the day that he would have approached unto him. "Let
not thy dread," says he, "make me afraid. Then call thou, and I will answer;
or let me speak, and answer thou me" (Job 13:21,22). But why doth Job after
this manner thus speak to God? Why! it was from a sense that he had of the dreadful
majesty of God, even the great and dreadful God that keepeth covenant with his people.
The presence of a king is dreadful to the subject, yea, though he carries it never
so condescendingly; if then there be so much glory and dread in the presence of the
king, what fear and dread must there be, think you, in the presence of the eternal
God?
2. When God giveth his presence to his people, that his presence causeth them to
appear to themselves more what they are, than at other times, by all other light,
they can see. "O my lord," said Daniel, "by the vision my sorrows
are turned upon me" ; and why was that, but because by the glory of that vision,
he saw his own vileness more than at other times. So again: "I was left alone,"
says he, "and saw this great vision" ; and what follows? Why, "and
there remained no strength in me; for my comeliness was turned into corruption, and
I retained no strength" (Dan 10:8,16). By the presence of God, when we have
it indeed, even our best things, our comeliness, our sanctity and righteousness,
all do immediately turn to corruption and polluted rags. The brightness of his glory
dims them as the clear light of the shining sun puts out the glory of the fire or
candle, and covers them with the shadow of death. See also the truth of this in that
vision of the prophet Isaiah. "Wo is me," said he, "for I am undone,
because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean
lips." Why, what is the matter? how came the prophet by this sight? Why, says
he, "mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts" (Isa 6:5). But do
you think that this outcry was caused by unbelief? No; nor yet begotten by slavish
fear. This was to him the vision of his Saviour, with whom also he had communion
before (vv 2-5). It was the glory of that God with whom he had now to do, that turned,
as was noted before of Daniel, his comeliness in him into corruption, and that gave
him yet greater sense of the disproportion that was betwixt his God and him, and
so a greater sight of his defiled and polluted nature.
3. Add to this the revelation of God's goodness, and it must needs make his presence
dreadful to us; for when a poor defiled creature shall see that this great God hath,
notwithstanding his greatness, goodness in his heart, and mercy to bestow upon him:
this makes his presence yet the more dreadful. They "shall fear the Lord and
his goodness" (Hosea 3:5). The goodness as well as the greatness of God doth
beget in the heart of his elect an awful reverence of his majesty. "Fear ye
not me? saith the Lord; will ye not tremble at my presence?" And then, to engage
us in our soul to the duty, he adds one of his wonderful mercies to the world, for
a motive, "Fear ye not me?" Why, who are thou? He answers, Even I, "which
have" set, or "placed the sand for the bound of the sea by a perpetual
decree, that it cannot pass it; and though the waves thereof toss themselves, yet
can they not prevail; though they roar, yet can they not pass over it?" (Jer
5:22). Also, when Job had God present with him, making manifest the goodness of his
great heart to him, what doth he say? how doth he behave himself in his presence?
"I have heard of thee," says he, "by the hearing of the ear, but now
mine eye seeth thee; wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes"
(Job 42:5,6).
And what mean the tremblings, the tears, those breakings and shakings of heart that
attend the people of God, when in an eminent manner they receive the pronunciation
of the forgiveness of sins at his mouth, but that the dread of the majesty of God
is in their sight mixed therewith? God must appear like himself, speak to the soul
like himself; nor can the sinner, when under these glorious discoveries of his Lord
and Saviour, keep out the beams of his majesty from the eyes of his understanding.
"I will cleanse them," saith he, "from all their iniquity, whereby
they have sinned against me, and I will pardon all their iniquities whereby they
have sinned, and whereby they have transgressed against me." And what then?
"And they shall fear and tremble for all the goodness, and for all the prosperity
that I procure unto it" (Jer 33:8,9). Alas! there is a company of poor, light,
frothy professors in the world, that carry it under that which they call the presence
of God, more like to antics, than sober sensible Christians; yea, more like to a
fool of a play, than those that have the presence of God. They would not carry it
so in the presence of a king, nor yet of the lord of their land, were they but receivers
of mercy at his hand. They carry it even in their most eminent seasons, as if the
sense and sight of God, and his blessed grace to their souls in Christ, had a tendency
in them to make men wanton: but indeed it is the most humbling and heart-breaking
sight in the world; it is fearful.[2]
Object. But would you not have us rejoice at the sight and sense of the forgiveness
of our sins?
Answ. Yes; but yet I would have you, and indeed you shall, when God shall tell you
that your sins are pardoned indeed, "rejoice with trembling" (Psa 2:11).
For then you have solid and godly joy; a joyful heart, and wet eyes, in this will
stand very well together; and it will be so more or less. For if God shall come to
you indeed, and visit you with the forgiveness of sins, that visit removeth the guilt,
but increaseth the sense of thy filth, and the sense of this that God hath forgiven
a filthy sinner, will make thee both rejoice and tremble. O, the blessed confusion
that will then cover thy face whilst thou, even thou, so vile a wretch, shalt stand
before God to receive at his hand thy pardon, and so the firstfruits of thy eternal
salvation—"That thou mayest remember, and be confounded, and never open thy
mouth any more because of thy shame (thy filth), when I am pacified toward thee for
all that thou hast done, saith the Lord God" (Eze 16:63). But,
Second. As the presence, so the name of God, is dreadful and fearful: wherefore his
name doth rightly go under the same title, "That thou mayest fear this glorious
and fearful name, THE LORD THY GOD" (Deut 28:58). The name of God, what is that,
but that by which he is distinguished and known from all others? Names are to distinguish
by; so man is distinguished from beasts, and angels from men; so heaven from earth,
and darkness from light; especially when by the name, the nature of the thing is
signified and expressed; and so it was in their original, for then names expressed
the nature of the thing so named. And therefore it is that the name of God is the
object of our fear, because by his name his nature is expressed: "Holy and reverend
is his name" (Psa 111:9). And again, he proclaimed the name of the Lord, "The
Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness
and truth; keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity, and transgression, and
sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty" (Exo 34:6,7).
Also his name, I am, Jah, Jehovah, with several others, what is by them intended
but his nature, as his power, wisdom, eternity, goodness, and omnipotency, &c.,
might be expressed and declared. The name of God is therefore the object of a Christian's
fear. David prayed to God that he would unite his heart to fear his name (Psa 86:11).
Indeed, the name of God is a fearful name, and should always be reverenced by his
people: yea his "name is to be feared for ever and ever," and that not
only in his church, and among his saints, but even in the world and among the heathen—"So
the heathen shall fear the name of the Lord, and all kings thy glory" (Psa 102:15).
God tells us that his name is dreadful, and that he is pleased to see men be afraid
before his name. Yea, one reason why he executeth so many judgments upon men as he
doth, is that others might see and fear his name. "So shall they fear the name
of the Lord from the west, and his glory from the rising of the sun" (Isa 59:19;
Mal 2:5).
The name of a king is a name of fear—"And I am a great king, saith the Lord
of hosts" (Mal 1:14). The name of master is a name of fear—"And if I be
a master, where is my fear? saith the Lord" (v 6). Yea, rightly to fear the
Lord is a sign of a gracious heart. And again, "To you that fear my name,"
saith he, "shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings"
(Mal 4:2). Yea, when Christ comes to judge the world, he will give reward to his
servants the prophets, and to his saints, "and to them that fear his name, small
and great" (Rev 11:18). Now, I say, since the name of God is that by which his
nature is expressed, and since he naturally is so glorious and incomprehensible,
his name must needs be the object of our fear, and we ought always to have a reverent
awe of God upon our hearts at what time soever we think of, or hear his name, but
most of all, when we ourselves do take his holy and fearful name into our mouths,
especially in a religious manner, that is, in preaching, praying, or holy conference.
I do not by thus saying intend as if it was lawful to make mention of his name in
light and vain discourses; for we ought always to speak of it with reverence and
godly fear, but I speak it to put Christians in mind that they should not in religious
duties show lightness of mind, or be vain in their words when yet they are making
mention of the name of the Lord—"Let every one that nameth the name of Christ
depart from iniquity" (2 Tim 2:19).
Make mention then of the name of the Lord at all times with great dread of his majesty
upon our hearts, and in great soberness and truth. To do otherwise is to profane
the name of the Lord, and to take his name in vain; and "the Lord will not hold
him guiltless that taketh his name in vain." Yea, God saith that he will cut
off the man that doth it; so jealous is he of the honour due unto his name (Exo 20:7;
Lev 20:3). This therefore showeth you the dreadful state of those that lightly, vainly,
lyingly, and profanely make use of the name, this fearful name of God, either by
their blasphemous cursing and oaths, or by their fraudulent dealing with their neighbour;
for some men have no way to prevail with their neighbour to bow under a cheat, but
by calling falsely upon the name of the Lord to be witness that the wickedness is
good and honest; but how these men will escape, when they shall be judged, devouring
fire and everlasting burnings, for their profaning and blaspheming of the name of
the Lord, becomes them betimes to consider of (Jer 14:14,15; Eze 20:39; Exo 20:7).[3]
But,
Third. As the presence and name of God are dreadful and fearful in the church, so
is his worship and service. I say his worship, or the works of service to which we
are by him enjoined while we are in this world, are dreadful and fearful things.
This David conceiveth, when he saith, "But as for me, I will come into thy house
in the multitude of thy mercy, and in thy fear will I worship toward thy holy temple"
(Psa 5:7). And again, saith he, "Serve the Lord with fear." To praise God
is a part of his worship. But, says Moses, "Who is a God like unto thee, glorious
in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?" (Exo 15:11). To rejoice before
him is a part of his worship; but David bids us "rejoice with trembling"
(Psa 2:11). Yea, the whole of our service to God, and every part thereof, ought to
be done by us with reverence and godly fear. And therefore let us, as Paul saith
again, "Cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting
holiness in the fear of God" (2 Cor 7:1; Heb 12).
1. That which makes the worship of God so fearful a thing, is, for that it is the
worship of GOD: all manner of service carries more or less dread and fear along with
it, according as the quality or condition of the person is to whom the worship and
service is done. This is seen in the service of subjects to their princes, the service
of servants to their lords, and the service of children to their parents. Divine
worship, then, being due to God, for it is now of Divine worship we speak, and this
God so great and dreadful in himself and name, his worship must therefore be a fearful
thing.
2. Besides, this glorious Majesty is himself present to behold his worshippers in
their worshipping him. "When two or three of you are gathered together in my
name, I am there." That is, gathered together to worship him, "I am there,"
says he. And so, again, he is said to walk "in the midst of the seven golden
candlesticks" (Rev 1:13). That is, in the churches, and that with a countenance
like the sun, with a head and hair as white as snow, and with eyes like a flame of
fire. This puts dread and fear into his service; and therefore his servants should
serve him with fear.
3. Above all things, God is jealous of his worship and service. In all the ten words,
he telleth us not anything of his being a jealous God, but in the second, which respecteth
his worship (Exo 20). Look to yourselves therefore, both as to the matter and manner
of your worship; "for I the Lord thy God," says he, "am a jealous
God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children." This therefore
doth also put dread and fear into the worship and service of God.
4. The judgments that sometimes God hath executed upon men for their want of godly
fear, while they have been in his worship and service, put fear and dread upon his
holy appointments. (1.) Nadab and Abihu were burned to death with fire from heaven,
because they attempted to offer false fire upon God's altar, and the reason rendered
why they were so served, was, because God will be sanctified in them that come nigh
him (Lev 10:1-3). To sanctify his name is to let him be thy dread and thy fear, and
to do nothing in his worship but what is well-pleasing to him. But because these
men had not grace to do this, therefore they died before the Lord. (2.) Eli's sons,
for want of this fear, when they ministered in the holy worship of God, were both
slain in one day by the sword of the uncircumcised Philistines (see 1 Sam 2). (3.)
Uzzah was smitten, and died before the Lord, for but an unadvised touching of the
ark, when the men forsook it (1 Chron 13:9,10). (4.) Ananias and Sapphira his wife,
for telling a lie in the church, when they were before God, were both stricken dead
upon the place before them all, because they wanted the fear and dread of God's majesty,
name, and service, when they came before him (Acts 5).
This therefore should teach us to conclude, that, next to God's nature and name,
his service, his instituted worship, is the most dreadful thing under heaven. His
name is upon his ordinances, his eye is upon the worshippers, and his wrath and judgment
upon those that worship not in his fear. For this cause some of those at Corinth
were by God himself cut off, and to others he has given the back, and will again
be with them no more (1 Cor 11:27-32).[4]
This also rebuketh three sorts of people.
[Three sorts of people rebuked.]
1. Such as regard not to worship God at all; be sure they have no reverence of his
service, nor fear of his majesty before their eyes. Sinner, thou dost not come before
the Lord to worship him; thou dost not bow before the high God; thou neither worshippest
him in thy closet nor in the congregation of saints. The fury of the Lord and his
indignation must in short time be poured out upon thee, and upon the families that
call not upon his name (Psa 79:6; Jer 10:25).
2. This rebukes such as count it enough to present their body in the place where
God is worshipped, not minding with what heart, or with what spirit they come thither.
Some come into the worship of God to sleep there; some come thither to meet with
their chapmen, and to get into the wicked fellowship of their vain companions. Some
come thither to feed their lustful and adulterous eyes with the flattering beauty
of their fellow-sinners. O what a sad account will these worshippers give, when they
shall count for all this, and be damned for it, because they come not to worship
the Lord with that fear of his name that became them to come in, when they presented
themselves before him![5]
3. This also rebukes those that care not, so they worship, how they worship; how,
where, or after what manner they worship God. Those, I mean, whose fear towards God
"is taught by the precept of men." They are hypocrites; their worship also
is vain, and a stink in the nostrils of God. "Wherefore the Lord said, Forasmuch
as this people draw near me with their mouth, and with their lips do honour me, but
have removed their heart far from me, and their fear toward me is taught by the precept
of men: therefore, behold I will proceed to do a marvellous work among this people,
even a marvellous work and a wonder: for the wisdom of their wise men shall perish,
and the understanding of their prudent men shall be hid" (Isa 29:13,14; Matt
15:7-9; Mark 7:6,7).[6] Thus I conclude this first thing, namely, that God is called
our dread and fear.
[OF THIS WORD FEAR AS IT IS TAKEN FOR THE WORD OF GOD.]
I shall now come to the second thing, to wit, to the rule and director of our fear.
SECOND. But again, this word FEAR is sometimes to be taken for THE WORD, the written
Word of God; for that also is, and ought to be, the rule and director of our fear.
So David calls it in the nineteenth Psalm: "the fear of the Lord," saith
he, "is clean, enduring for ever." The fear of the Lord, that is, the Word
of the Lord, the written word; for that which he calleth in this place the fear of
the Lord, even in the same place he calleth the law, statutes, commandments, and
judgments of God. "The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul: the
testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple: the statutes of the Lord are
right, rejoicing the heart: the commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the
eyes: the fear of the Lord is clean, enduring for ever: the judgments of the Lord
are true and righteous altogether." All these words have respect to the same
thing, to wit, to the Word of God, jointly designing the glory of it. Among which
phrases, as you see, this is one, "The fear of the Lord is clean, enduring for
ever." This written Word is therefore the object of a Christian's fear. This
is that also which David intended when he said, "Come, ye children, hearken
unto me, I will teach you the fear of the Lord" (Psa 34:11). I will teach you
the fear, that is, I will teach you the commandments, statutes, and judgments of
the Lord, even as Moses commanded the children of Israel—"Thou shalt teach them
diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house,
and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest
up" (Deut 6:4-7).
That also in the eleventh of Isaiah intends the same, where the Father saith of the
Son, that he shall be of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord; that he may
judge and smite the earth with the rod of his mouth. This rod in the text is none
other but the fear, the Word of the Lord; for he was to be of a quick understanding,
that he might smite, that is, execute it according to the will of his Father, upon
and among the children of men. Now this, as I said, is called the fear of the Lord,
because it is called the rule and director of our fear. For we know not how to fear
the Lord in a saving way without its guidance and direction. As it is said of the
priest that was sent back from the captivity to Samaria to teach the people to fear
the Lord, so it is said concerning the written Word; it is given to us, and left
among us, that we may read therein all the days of our life, and learn to fear the
Lord (Deut 6:1-3,24, 10:12, 17:19). And here it is that, trembling at the Word of
God, is even by God himself not only taken notice of, but counted as laudable and
praiseworthy, as is evident in the case of Josiah (2 Chron 34:26,27). Such also are
the approved of God, let them be condemned by whomsoever: "Hear the word of
the Lord, ye that tremble at his word; Your brethren that hated you, that cast you
out for my name's sake, said, Let the Lord be glorified; but he shall appear to your
joy, and they shall be ashamed" (Isa 66:5).
Further, such shall be looked to, by God himself cared for, and watched over, that
no distress, temptation, or affliction may overcome them and destroy them—"To
this man will I look," saith God, "even to him that is poor and of a contrite
spirit, and that trembleth at my word." It is the same in substance with that
in the same prophet in chapter 57: "For thus saith the high and lofty One that
inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy; I dwell in the high and holy place, with
him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble,
and to revive the heart of the contrite ones." Yea, the way to escape dangers
foretold, is to hearken to, understand, and fear the Word of God—"He that feared
the word of the Lord among the servants of Pharaoh, made his servants and his cattle
flee into the houses," and they were secured; but "he that regarded not
the word of the Lord, left his servants and his cattle in the field," and they
were destroyed of the hail (Exo 9:20-25).
If at any time the sins of a nation or church are discovered and bewailed, it is
by them that know and tremble at the word of God. When Ezra heard of the wickedness
of his brethren, and had a desire to humble himself before God for the same, who
were they that would assist him in that matter, but they that trembled at the word
of God?—"Then," saith he, "were assembled unto me every one that trembled
at the words of the God of Israel, because of the transgression of those that had
been carried away" (Ezra 9:4). They are such also that tremble at the Word that
are best able to give counsel in the matters of God, for their judgment best suiteth
with his mind and will: "Now therefore," said he, "let us make a covenant
with our God to put away all the (strange) wives, - according to the counsel of my
Lord, and of those that tremble at the commandment of our God, and let it be done
according to the law" (Ezra 10:3). Now something of the dread and terror of
the Word lieth in these things.
First. As I have already hinted, from the author of them, they are the words of God.
Therefore you have Moses and the prophets, when they came to deliver their errand,
their message to the people, still saying, "Hear the word of the Lord,"
"Thus saith the Lord," and the like. So when Ezekiel was sent to the house
of Israel, in their state of religion, thus was he bid to say unto them, "Thus
saith the Lord God" ; "Thus saith the Lord God" (Eze 2:4, 3:11). This
is the honour and majesty, then, that God hath put upon his written Word, and thus
he hath done even of purpose, that we might make them the rule and directory of our
fear, and that we might stand in awe of, and tremble at them. When Habakkuk heard
the word of the Lord, his belly trembled, and rottenness entered into his bones.
"I trembled in myself," said he, "that I might rest in the day of
trouble" (Hab 3:16). The word of a king is as the roaring of a lion; where the
word of a king is, there is power. What is it, then, when God, the great God, shall
roar out of Zion, and utter his voice from Jerusalem, whose voice shakes not only
the earth, but also heaven? How doth holy David set it forth; "The voice of
the Lord is powerful, the voice of the Lord is full of majesty," &c. (Psa
29).
Second. It is a Word that is fearful, and may well be called the fear of the Lord,
because of the subject matter of it; to wit, the state of sinners in another world;
for that is it unto which the whole Bible bendeth itself, either more immediately
or more mediately. All its doctrines, counsels, encouragements, threatenings, and
judgments, have a look, one way or other, upon us, with respect to the next world,
which will be our last state, because it will be to us a state eternal. This word,
this law, these judgments, are they that we shall be disposed of by—"The word
that I have spoken," says Christ, "it shall judge you (and so consequently
dispose of you) in the last day" (John 12:48). Now, if we consider that our
next state must be eternal, either eternal glory or eternal fire, and that this eternal
glory or this eternal fire must be our portion, according as the words of God, revealed
in the holy Scriptures, shall determine; who will not but conclude that therefore
the words of God are they at which we should tremble, and they by which we should
have our fear of God guided and directed, for by them we are taught how to please
him in everything?
Third. It is to be called a fearful Word, because of the truth and faithfulness of
it. The Scriptures cannot be broken. Here they are called the Scriptures of truth,
the true sayings of God, and also the fear of the Lord, for that every jot and tittle
thereof is for ever settled in heaven, and stand more steadfast than doth the world—"Heaven
and earth," saith Christ, "shall pass away, but my words shall not pass
away" (Matt 24:35). Those, therefore, that are favoured by the Word of God,
those are favoured indeed, and that with the favour that no man can turn away; but
those that by the word of the Scriptures are condemned, those can no man justify
and set quit in the sight of God. Therefore what is bound by the text, is bound,
and what is released by the text, is released; also the bond and release is unalterable
(Dan 10:21; Rev 19:9; Matt 24:35; Psa 119:89; John 10:35). This, therefore, calleth
upon God's people to stand more in fear of the Word of God than of all the terrors
of the world.[7] There wanteth even in the hearts of God's people a greater reverence
of the Word of God than to this day appeareth among us, and this let me say, that
want of reverence of the Word is the ground of all disorders that are in the heart,
life, conversation, and in Christian communion. Besides, the want of reverence of
the Word layeth men open to the fearful displeasure of God—"Whoso despiseth
the word shall be destroyed; but he that feareth the commandment shall be rewarded"
(Prov 13:13).
All transgression beginneth at wandering from the Word of God; but, on the other
side, David saith, "Concerning the works of men, by the word of thy lips I have
kept me from the paths of the destroyer" (Psa 17:4). Therefore Solomon saith,
"My son, attend to my words; incline thine ear unto my sayings; let them not
depart from thine eyes; keep them in the midst of thine heart; for they are life
unto those that find them, and health to all their flesh" (Prov 4:20-22). Now,
if indeed thou wouldest reverence the Word of the Lord, and make it thy rule and
director in all things, believe that the Word is the fear of the Lord, the Word that
standeth fast for ever; without and against which God will do nothing, either in
saving or damning of the souls of sinners. But to conclude this,
1. Know that those that have no due regard to the Word of the Lord, and that make
it not their dread and their fear, but the rule of their life is the lust of their
flesh, the desire of their eyes, and the pride of life, are sorely rebuked by this
doctrine, and are counted the fools of the world; for "lo, they have rejected
the word of the Lord, and what wisdom is in them?" (Jer 8:9). That there are
such a people is evident, not only by their irregular lives, but by the manifest
testimony of the Word. "As for the word of the Lord,"said they to Jeremiah,
"that thou hast spoken to us in the name of the Lord, we will not hearken unto
thee, but we will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our own mouth"
(Jer 44:16). Was this only the temper of wicked men then? Is not the same spirit
of rebellion amongst us in our days? Doubtless there is; for there is no new thing—"The
thing that hath been, it is that which shall be, and that which is done is that which
shall be done; and there is no new thing under the sun" (Eccl 1:9). Therefore,
as it was then, so it is with many in this day.
As for the Word of the Lord, it is nothing at all to them; their lusts, and whatsoever
proceedeth out of their own mouths, that they will do, that they will follow. Now,
such will certainly perish in their own rebellion; for this is as the sin of witchcraft;
it was the sin of Korah and his company, and that which brought upon them such heavy
judgments; yea, and they are made a sign that thou shouldest not do as they, for
they perished (because they rejected the word, the fear of the Lord) from among the
congregation of the Lord, "and they became a sign." The word which thou
despisest still abideth to denounce its woe and judgment upon thee; and unless God
will save such with the breath of his word—and it is hard trusting to that—they must
never see his face with comfort (1 Sam 15:22,23; Num 26:9,10).
2. Are the words of God called by the name of the fear of the Lord? Are they so dreadful
in their receipt and sentence? Then this rebukes them that esteem the words and things
of men more than the words of God, as those do who are drawn from their respect of,
and obedience to, the Word of God, by the pleasures or threats of men. Some there
be who verily will acknowledge the authority of the Word, yet will not stoop their
souls thereto. Such, whatever they think of themselves, are judged by Christ to be
ashamed of the Word; wherefore their state is damnable as the other. "Whosoever,"
saith he, "shall be ashamed of me and of my words, in this adulterous and sinful
generation, of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed, when he cometh in the glory
of the Father, with the holy angels" (Mark 8:38).
3. And if these things be so, what will become of those that mock at, and professedly
contemn, the words of God, making them as a thing ridiculous, and not to be regarded?
Shall they prosper that do such things? From the promises it is concluded that their
judgment now of a long time slumbereth not, and when it comes, it will devour them
without remedy (2 Chron 36:15). If God, I say, hath put that reverence upon his Word
as to call it the fear of the Lord, what will become of them that do what they can
to overthrow its authority, by denying it to be his Word, and by raising cavils against
its authority? Such stumble, indeed, at the Word, being appointed thereunto, but
it shall judge them in the last day (1 Peter 2:8; John 12:48). But thus much for
this.
[OF SEVERAL SORTS OF FEAR OF GOD IN THE HEART OF THE CHILDREN OF MEN.]
Having thus spoken of the object and rule of our fear, I should come now to speak
of fear as it is a grace of the Spirit of God in the hearts of his people; but before
I do that, I shall show you that there are divers sorts of fear besides. For man
being a reasonable creature, and having even by nature a certain knowledge of God,
hath also naturally something of some kind of fear of God at times, which, although
it be not that which is intended in the text, yet ought to be spoken to, that that
which is not right may be distinguished from that that is.
There is, I say, several sorts or kinds of fear in the hearts of the sons of men,
I mean besides that fear of God that is intended in the text, and that accompanieth
eternal life. I shall here make mention of three of them. FIRST. There is a fear
of God that flows even from the light of nature. SECOND. There is a fear of God that
flows from some of his dispensations to men, which yet is neither universal nor saving.
THIRD. There is a fear of God in the heart of some men that is good and godly, but
doth not for ever abide so. To speak a little to all these, before I come to speak
of fear, as it is a grace of God in the hearts of his children, And,
FIRST. To the first, to wit, that there is a fear of God that flows even from the
light of nature. A people may be said to do things in a fear of God, when they act
one towards another in things reasonable, and honest betwixt man and man, not doing
that to others they would not have done to themselves. This is that fear of God which
Abraham thought the Philistines had destroyed in themselves, when he said of his
wife to Abimelech, "She is my sister." For when Abimelech asked Abraham
why he said of his wife, She is my sister; he replied, saying, "I thought surely
the fear of God is not in this place, and they will slay me for my wife's sake"
(Gen 20:11). I thought verily that in this place men had stifled and choked that
light of nature that is in them, at least so far forth as not to suffer it to put
them in fear, when their lusts were powerful in them to accomplish their ends on
the object that was present before them. But this I will pass by, and come to the
second thing, namely—
SECOND. To show that there is a fear of God that flows from some of his dispensations
to men, which yet is neither universal nor saving. This fear, when opposed to that
which is saving, may be called an ungodly fear of God. I shall describe it by these
several particulars that follow—
First. There is a fear of God that causeth a continual grudging, discontent, and
heart-risings against God under the hand of God; and that is, when the dread of God
in his coming upon men, to deal with them for their sins, is apprehended by them,
and yet by this dispensation they have no change of heart to submit to God thereunder.
The sinners under this dispensation cannot shake God out of their mind, nor yet graciously
tremble before him; but through the unsanctified frame that they now are in, they
are afraid with ungodly fear, and so in their minds let fly against him. This fear
oftentimes took hold of the children of Israel when they were in the wilderness in
their journey to the promised land; still they feared that God in this place would
destroy them, but not with that fear that made them willing to submit, for their
sins, to the judgment which they fear, but with that fear that made them let fly
against God. This fear showed itself in them, even at the beginning of their voyage,
and was rebuked by Moses at the Red Sea, but it was not there, nor yet at any other
place, so subdued, but that it would rise again in them at times to the dishonour
of God, and the anew making of them guilty of sin before him (Exo 14:11-13; Num 14:1-9).
This fear is that which God said he would send before them, in the day of Joshua,
even a fear that should possess the inhabitants of the land, to wit, a fear that
should arise for that faintness of heart that they should be swallowed up of, at
their apprehending of Joshua in his approaches towards them to destroy them. "I
will send my fear before thee, and will destroy all the people to whom thou shalt
come, and I will make all thine enemies turn their backs unto thee" (Exo 23:27).
"This day," says God, "will I begin to put the dread of thee, and
the fear of thee upon the nations that are under the whole heaven who shall hear
report of thee, and shall tremble, and be in anguish because of thee" (Deut
2:25, 11:25).
Now this fear is also, as you here see, called anguish, and in another place, an
hornet; for it, and the soul that it falls upon, do greet each other, as boys and
bees do. The hornet puts men in fear, not so as to bring the heart into a sweet compliance
with his terror, but so as to stir up the spirit into acts of opposition and resistance,
yet withal they flee before it. "I will send hornets before thee, which shall
drive out the Hivite," &c. (Exo 23:28). Now this fear, whether it be wrought
by misapprehending of the judgments of God, as in the Israelites, or otherwise as
in the Canaanites, yet ungodliness is the effect thereof, and therefore I call it
an ungodly fear of God, for it stirreth up murmurings, discontents, and heart-risings
against God, while he with his dispensations is dealing with them.
Second. There is a fear of God that driveth a man away from God—I speak not now of
the atheist, nor of the pleasurable sinner, nor yet of these, and that fear that
I spoke of just now—I speak now of such who through a sense of sin and of God's justice
fly from him of a slavish ungodly fear. This ungodly fear was that which possessed
Adam's heart in the day that he did eat of the tree concerning which the Lord has
said unto him, "In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die."
For then was he possessed with such a fear of God as made him seek to hide himself
from his presence. "I heard," said he, "thy voice in the garden, and
I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself" (Gen 3:10). Mind it, he
had a fear of God, but it was not godly. It was not that that made him afterwards
submit himself unto him; for that would have kept him from not departing from him,
or else have brought him to him again, with bowed, broken, and contrite spirit. But
this fear, as the rest of his sin, managed his departing from his God, and pursued
him to provoke him still so to do; by it he kept himself from God, by it his whole
man was carried away from him. I call it ungodly fear, because it begat in him ungodly
apprehensions of his Maker; because it confined Adam's conscience to the sense of
justice only, and consequently to despair.
The same fear also possessed the children of Israel when they heard the law delivered
to them on Mount Sinai; as is evident, for it made them that they could neither abide
his presence nor hear his word. It drove them back from the mountain. It made them,
saith the apostle to the Hebrews, that "they could not endure that which was
commanded" (Heb 12:20). Wherefore this fear Moses rebukes, and forbids their
giving way thereto. "Fear not," said he; but had that fear been godly,
he would have encouraged it, and not forbid and rebuke it as he did. "Fear not,"
said he, "for God is come to prove you" ; they thought otherwise. "God,"
saith he, "is come to prove you, and that his fear may be before your faces."
Therefore that fear that already had taken possession of them, was not the fear of
God, but a fear that was of Satan, of their own misjudging hearts, and so a fear
that was ungodly (Exo 20:18-20). Mark you, here is a fear and a fear, a fear forbidden,
and a fear commended; a fear forbidden, because it engendered their hearts to bondage,
and to ungodly thoughts of God and of his word; it made them that they could not
desire to hear God speak to them any more (vv 19-21).
Many also at this day are possessed with this ungodly fear; and you may know them
by this,—they cannot abide conviction for sin, and if at any time the word of the
law, by the preaching of the word, comes near them, they will not abide that preacher,
nor such kind of sermons any more. They are, as they deem, best at ease, when furthest
off of God, and of the power of his word. The word preached brings God nearer to
them than they desire he should come, because whenever God comes near, their sins
by him are manifest, and so is the judgment too that to them is due. Now these not
having faith in the mercy of God through Christ, nor that grace that tendeth to bring
them to him, they cannot but think of God amiss, and their so thinking of him makes
them say unto him, "Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways"
(Job 21:14). Wherefore their wrong thoughts of God beget in them this ungodly fear;
and again, this ungodly fear doth maintain in them the continuance of these wrong
and unworthy thoughts of God, and therefore, through that devilish service wherewith
they strengthen one another, the sinner, without a miracle of grace prevents him,
is drowned in destruction and perdition.
It was this ungodly fear of God that carried Cain from the presence of God into the
land of Nod, and that put him there upon any carnal worldly business, if perhaps
he might by so doing stifle convictions of the majesty and justice of God against
his sin, and so live the rest of his vain life in the more sinful security and fleshly
ease. This ungodly fear is that also which Samuel perceived at the people's apprehension
of their sin, to begin to get hold of their hearts; wherefore he, as Moses before
him, quickly forbids their entertaining of it. "Fear not," said he, "ye
have done all this wickedness, yet turn not aside from following the Lord."
For to turn them aside from following of him, was the natural tendency of this fear.
"But fear not," said he, that is, with that fear that tendeth to turn you
aside. Now, I say, the matter that this fear worketh upon, as in Adam, and the Israelites
mentioned before, was their sin. You have sinned, says he, that is true, yet turn
not aside, yet fear not with that fear that would make you so do (1 Sam 12:20). Note
by the way, sinner, that when the greatness of thy sins, being apprehended by thee,
shall work in thee that fear of God, as shall incline thy heart to fly from him,
thou art possessed with a fear of God that is ungodly, yea, so ungodly, that not
any of thy sins for heinousness may be compared therewith, as might be made manifest
in many particulars, but Samuel having rebuked this fear, presently sets before the
people another, to wit, the true fear of God; "fear the Lord," says he,
"serve him - with all your heart" (v 24). And he giveth them this encouragement
so to do, "for the Lord will not forsake his people." This ungodly fear
is that which you read of in Isaiah 2, and in many other places, and God's people
should shun it, as they would shun the devil, because its natural tendency is to
forward the destruction of the soul in which it has taken possession.[8]
Third. There is a fear of God, which, although it hath not in it that power as to
make men flee from God's presence, yet it is ungodly, because, even while they are
in the outward way of God's ordinances, their hearts are by it quite discouraged
from attempting to exercise themselves in the power of religion. Of this sort are
they which dare not cast off the hearing, reading, and discourse of the word as others;
no, nor the assembly of God's children for the exercise of other religious duties,
for their conscience is convinced this is the way and worship of God. But yet their
heart, as I said, by this ungodly fear, is kept from a powerful gracious falling
in with God. This fear takes away their heart from all holy and godly prayer in private,
and from all holy and godly zeal for his name in public, and there be many professors
whose hearts are possessed with this ungodly fear of God; and they are intended by
the slothful one. He was a servant, a servant among the servants of God, and had
gifts and abilities given him, therewith to serve Christ, as well as his fellows,
yea, and was commanded too, as well as the rest, to occupy till his master came.
But what does he? Why, he takes his talent, the gift that he was to lay out for his
master's profit, and puts it in a napkin, digs a hole in the earth, and hides his
lord's money, and lies in a lazy manner at to-elbow all his days, not out of, but
in his lord's vineyard;[9] for he came among the servants also at last. By which
it is manifest that he had not cast off his profession, but was slothful and negligent
while he was in it. But what was it that made him thus slothful?
What was it that took away his heart, while he was in the way, and that discouraged
him from falling in with the power and holy practice of religion according to the
talent he received? Why, it was this, he gave way to an ungodly fear of God, and
that took away his heart from the power of religious duties. "Lord," said
he, "behold, here is thy pound, which I have kept, laid up in a napkin, for
I feared thee." Why, man, doth the fear of God make a man idle and slothful?
No, no; that is, if it be right and godly. This fear was therefore evil fear; it
was that ungodly fear of God which I have here been speaking of. For I feared thee,
or as Matthew hath it, "for I was afraid." Afraid of what? Of Christ, "that
he was an hard man, reaping where he sowed not, and gathering where he had not strawed."
This his fear, being ungodly, made him apprehend of Christ contrary to the goodness
of his nature, and so took away his heart from all endeavours to be doing of that
which was pleasing in his sight (Luke 19:20; Matt 25:24, 25). And thus do all those
that retain the name and show of religion, but are neglecters as to the power and
godly practice of it. These will live like dogs and swine in the house; they pray
not, they watch not their hearts, they pull not their hands out of their bosoms to
work, they do not strive against their lusts, nor will they ever resist unto blood,
striving against sin; they cannot take up their cross, or improve what they have
to God's glory. Let all men therefore take heed of this ungodly fear, and shun it
as they shun the devil, for it will make them afraid where no fear is. It will tell
them that there is a lion in the street, the unlikeliest place in the world for such
a beast to be in; it will put a vizard upon the face of God, most dreadful and fearful
to behold, and then quite discourage the soul as to his service; so it served the
slothful servant, and so it will serve thee, poor sinner, if thou entertainest it,
and givest way thereto. But,
Fourth. This ungodly fear of God shows itself also in this. It will not suffer the
soul that is governed thereby to trust only to Christ for justification of life,
but will bend the powers of the soul to trust partly to the works of the law. Many
of the Jews were, in the time of Christ and his apostles, possessed with this ungodly
fear of God, for they were not as the former, to wit, as the slothful servant, to
receive a talent and hide it in the earth in a napkin, but they were an industrious
people, they followed after the law of righteousness, they had a zeal of God and
of the religion of their fathers; but how then did they come to miscarry? Why, their
fear of God was ungodly; it would not suffer them wholly to trust to the righteousness
of faith, which is the imputed righteousness of Christ. They followed after the law
of righteousness, but attained not to the law of righteousness. Wherefore? because
they sought it not by faith, but as it were by the works of the law. But what was
it that made them join their works of the law with Christ, but their unbelief, whose
foundation was ignorance and fear? They were afraid to venture all in one bottom,
they thought two strings to one bow would be best, and thus betwixt two stools they
came to the ground. And hence, to fear and to doubt, are put together as being the
cause one of another; yea, they are put ofttimes the one for the other; thus ungodly
fear for unbelief: "Be not afraid, only believe," and therefore he that
is overruled and carried away with this fear, is coupled with the unbeliever that
is thrust out from the holy city among the dogs. But the fearful and unbelievers,
and murderers are without (Rev 21:8). "The fearful and unbelieving," you
see, are put together; for indeed fear, that is, this ungodly fear, is the ground
of unbelief, or, if you will, unbelief is the ground of fear, this fear: but I stand
not upon nice distinctions. This ungodly fear hath a great hand in keeping of the
soul from trusting only to Christ's righteousness for justification of life.
Fifth. This ungodly fear of God is that which will put men upon adding to the revealed
will of God their own inventions, and their own performances of them, as a means
to pacify the anger of God. For the truth is, where this ungodly fear reigneth, there
is no end of law and duty. When those that you read of in the book of Kings were
destroyed by the lions, because they had set up idolatry in the land of Israel, they
sent for a priest from Babylon that might teach them the manner of the God of the
land; but behold when they knew it, being taught it by the priest, yet their fear
would not suffer them to be content with that worship only. "They feared the
Lord," saith the text, "and served their own gods." And again, "So
these nations feared the Lord, and served their graven images" (2 Kings 17).
It was this fear also that put the Pharisees upon inventing so many traditions, as
the washing of cups, and beds, and tables, and basins, with abundance of such other
like gear,[10] none knows the many dangers that an ungodly fear of God will drive
a man into (Mark 7). How has it racked and tortured the Papists for hundreds of years
together! for what else is the cause but this ungodly fear, at least in the most
simple and harmless of them, of their penances, as creeping to the cross, going barefoot
on pilgrimage, whipping themselves, wearing of sackcloth, saying so many Pater-nosters,
so many Ave- marias, making so many confessions to the priest, giving so much money
for pardons, and abundance of other the like, but this ungodly fear of God? For could
they be brought to believe this doctrine, that Christ was delivered for our offences,
and raised again for our justification, and to apply it by faith with godly boldness
to their own souls, this fear would vanish, and so consequently all those things
with which they so needlessly and unprofitably afflicted themselves, offend God,
and grieve his people. Therefore, gentle reader, although my text doth bid that indeed
thou shouldest fear God, yet it includeth not, nor accepteth of any fear; no, not
of any [or every] fear of God. For there is, as you see, a fear of God that is ungodly,
and that is to be shunned as their sin. Wherefore thy wisdom and thy care should
be, to see and prove thy fear to be godly, which shall be the next thing that I shall
take in hand.
THIRD. The third thing that I am to speak to is, that there is a fear of God in the
heart of some men that is good and godly, but yet doth not for ever abide so. Or
you may take it thus—There is a fear of God that is godly but for a time. In my speaking
to, and opening of this to you, I shall observe this method. First. I shall show
you what this fear is. Second. I shall show you by whom or what this fear is wrought
in the heart. Third. I shall show you what this fear doth in the soul. And, Fourth,
I shall show you when this fear is to have an end.
First. For the first, this fear is an effect of sound awakenings by the word of wrath
which begetteth in the soul a sense of its right to eternal damnation; for this fear
is not in every sinner; he that is blinded by the devil, and that is not able to
see that his state is damnable, he hath not this fear in his heart, but he that is
under the powerful workings of the word of wrath, as God's elect are at first conversion,
he hath this godly fear in his heart; that is, he fears that that damnation will
come upon him, which by the justice of God is due unto him, because he hath broken
his holy law. This is the fear that made the three thousand cry out, "Men and
brethren, what shall we do?" and that made the jailer cry out, and that with
great trembling of soul, "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" (Acts 2, 16).
The method of God is to kill and make alive, to smite and then heal; when the commandment
came to Paul, sin revived, and he died, and that law which was ordained to life,
he found to be unto death; that is, it passed a sentence of death upon him for his
sins, and slew his conscience with that sentence. Therefore from that time that he
heard that word, "Why persecutest thou me?" which is all one as if he had
said, Why dost thou commit murder? he lay under the sentence of condemnation by the
law, and under this fear of that sentence in his conscience. He lay, I say, under
it, until that Ananias came to him to comfort him, and to preach unto him the forgiveness
of sin (Acts 9). The fear therefore that now I call godly, it is that fear which
is properly called the fear of eternal damnation for sin, and this fear, at first
awakening, is good and godly, because it ariseth in the soul from a true sense of
its very state. Its state by nature is damnable, because it is sinful, and because
he is not one that as yet believeth in Christ for remission of sins: "He that
believeth not shall be damned."—"He that believeth not is condemned already,
and the wrath of God abideth on him" (Mark 16:16; John 3:18,36). The which when
the sinner at first begins to see, he justly fears it; I say, he fears it justly,
and therefore godly, because by this fear he subscribes to the sentence that is gone
out against him for sin.
Second. By whom or by what is this fear wrought in the heart? To this I shall answer
in brief. It is wrought in the heart by the Spirit of God, working there at first
as a spirit of bondage, on purpose to put us in fear. This Paul insinuateth, saying,
"Ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear" (Rom 8:15).
He doth not say, Ye have not received the spirit of bondage; for that they had received,
and that to put them in fear, which was at their first conversion, as by the instances
made mention of before is manifest; all that he says is, that they had not received
it again, that is, after the Spirit, as a spirit of adoption, is come; for then,
as a spirit of bondage, it cometh no more. It is then the Spirit of God, even the
Holy Ghost, that convinceth us of sin, and so of our damnable state because of sin
(John 16:8,9). For it cannot be that the Spirit of God should convince us of sin,
but it must also show us our state to be damnable because of it, especially if it
so convinceth us, before we believe, and that is the intent of our Lord in that place,
"of sin," and so of their damnable state by sin, because they believe not
on me. Therefore the Spirit of God, when he worketh in the heart as a spirit of bondage,
he doth it by working in us by the law, "for by the law is the knowledge of
sin" (Rom 3:20). And he, in this his working, is properly called a spirit of
bondage.
1. Because by the law he shows us that indeed we are in bondage to the law, the devil,
and death and damnation; for this is our proper state by nature, though we see it
not until the Spirit of God shall come to reveal this our state of bondage unto our
own senses by revealing to us our sins by the law.
2. He is called, in this his working, "the spirit of bondage," because
he here also holds us; to wit, in this sight and sense of our bondage-state, so long
as is meet we should be so held, which to some of the saints is a longer, and to
some a shorter time. Paul was held in it three days and three nights, but the jailer
and the three thousand, so far as can be gathered, not above an hour; but some in
these later times are so held for days and months, if not years.[11] But, I say,
let the time be longer or shorter, it is the Spirit of God that holdeth him under
this yoke; and it is good that a man should be in HIS time held under it, as is that
saying of the lamentation, "It is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his
youth" (Lam 3:27). That is, at his first awakening; so long as seems good to
this Holy Spirit to work in this manner by the law. Now, as I said, the sinner at
first is by the Spirit of God held in this bondage, that is, hath such a discovery
of his sin and of his damnation for sin made to him, and also is held so fast under
the sense thereof, that it is not in the power of any man, nor yet of the very angels
in heaven, to release him or set him free, until the Holy Spirit changeth his ministration,
and comes in the sweet and peaceable tidings of salvation by Christ in the gospel
to his poor, dejected, and afflicted conscience.
Third. I now come to show you what this fear doth in the soul. Now, although this
godly fear is not to last always with us, as I shall further show you anon, yet it
greatly differs from that which is wholly ungodly of itself, both because of the
author, and also of the effects of it. Of the author I have told you before; I now
shall tell you what it doth.
1. This fear makes a man judge himself for sin, and to fall down before God with
a broken mind under this judgment; the which is pleasing to God, because the sinner
by so doing justifies God in his saying, and clears him in his judgment (Psa 51:1-4).
2. As this fear makes a man judge himself, and cast himself down at God's foot, so
it makes him condole and bewail his misery before him, which is also well- pleasing
in his sight: "I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself," saying,
"Thou hast chastised me, and I was chastised, as a bullock unaccustomed to the
yoke," &c. (Jer 31:18,19).
3. This fear makes a man lie at God's foot, and puts his mouth in the dust, if so
be there may be hope. This also is well-pleasing to God, because now is the sinner
as nothing, and in his own eyes less than nothing, as to any good or desert: "He
sitteth alone and keepeth silence," because he hath now this yoke upon him;
"he putteth his mouth in the dust, if so be there may be hope" (Lam 3:28,29).
4. This fear puts a man upon crying to God for mercy, and that in most humble manner;
now he sensibly cries, now he dejectedly cries, now he feels and cries, now he smarts
and criest out, "God be merciful to me a sinner" (Luke 18:13).
5. This fear makes a man that he cannot accept of that for support and succour which
others that are destitute thereof will take up, and be contented with. This man must
be washed by God himself, and cleansed from his sin by God himself (Psa 51).
6. Therefore this fear goes not away until the Spirit of God doth change his ministration
as to this particular, in leaving off to work now by the law, as afore, and coming
to the soul with the sweet word of promise of life and salvation by Jesus Christ.
Thus far this fear is godly, that is, until Christ by the Spirit in the gospel is
revealed and made over unto us, and no longer.
Thus far this fear is godly, and the reason why it is godly is because the groundwork
of it is good. I told you before what this fear is; namely, it is the fear of damnation.
Now the ground for this fear is good, as is manifest by these particulars. 1. The
soul feareth damnation, and that rightly, because it is in its sins. 2. The soul
feareth damnation rightly, because it hath not faith in Christ, but is at present
under the law. 3. The soul feareth damnation rightly now, because by sin, the law,
and for want of faith, the wrath of God abideth on it. But now, although thus far
this fear of God is good and godly, yet after Christ by the Spirit in the word of
the gospel is revealed to us, and we made to accept of him as so revealed and offered
to us by a true and living faith; this fear, to wit, of damnation, is no longer good,
but ungodly. Nor doth the Spirit of God ever work it in us again. Now we do not receive
the spirit of bondage again to fear, that is to say, to fear damnation, but we have
received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Father, Father. But I would not
be mistaken, when I say, that this fear is no longer godly. I do not mean with reference
to the essence and habit of it, for I believe it is the same in the seed which shall
afterwards grow up to a higher degree, and into a more sweet and gospel current and
manner of working, but I mean reference to this act of fearing damnation, I say it
shall never by the Spirit be managed to that work; it shall never bring forth that
fruit more. And my reasons are,
[Reasons why the Spirit of God cannot work this ungodly fear.]
1. Because that the soul by closing through the promise, by the Spirit, with Jesus
Christ, is removed off of that foundation upon which it stood when it justly feared
damnation. It hath received now forgiveness of sin, it is now no more under the law,
but in Jesus Christ by faith; there is "therefore now no condemnation to it"
(Acts 26:18; Rom 6:14, 8:1). The groundwork, therefore, being now taken away, the
Spirit worketh that fear no more.
2. He cannot, after he hath come to the soul as a spirit of adoption, come again
as a spirit of bondage to put the soul into his first fear; to wit, a fear of eternal
damnation, because he cannot say and unsay, do and undo. As a spirit of adoption
he told me that my sins were forgiven me, that I was included in the covenant of
grace, that God was my Father through Christ, that I was under the promise of salvation,
and that this calling and gift of God to me is permanent, and without repentance.
And do you think, that after he hath told me this, and sealed up the truth of it
to my precious soul, that he will come to me, and tell me that I am yet in my sins,
under the curse of the law and the eternal wrath of God? No, no, the word of the
gospel is not yea, yea; nay, nay. It is only yea, and amen; it is so, "as God
is true" (2 Cor 1:17-20).
3. The state therefore of the sinner being changed, and that, too, by the Spirit's
changing his dispensation, leaving off to be now as a spirit of bondage to put us
in fear, and coming to our heart as the spirit of adoption to make us cry, Father,
Father, he cannot go back to his first work again; for if so, then he must gratify,
yea, and also ratify, that profane and popish doctrine, forgiven to-day, unforgiven
to-morrow—a child of God to-day, a child of hell to-morrow; but what saith the Scriptures?
"Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow-citizens
with the saints, and of the household of God; and are built upon the foundation of
the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone; in
whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord;
in whom ye also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit"
(Eph 2:19-22).
Object. But this is contrary to my experience. Why, Christian, what is thy experience?
Why, I was at first, as you have said, possessed with a fear of damnation, and so
under the power of the spirit of bondage. Well said, and how was it then? Why, after
some time of continuance in these fears, I had the spirit of adoption sent to me
to seal up to my soul the forgiveness of sins, and so he did; and was also helped
by the same Spirit, as you have said, to call God Father, Father. Well said, and
what after that? Why, after that I fell into as great fears as ever I was in before.[12]
Answ. All this may be granted, and yet nevertheless what I have said will abide a
truth; for I have not said that after the spirit of adoption is come, a Christian
shall not again be in as great fears, for he may have worse than he had at first;
but I say, that after the spirit of adoption is come, the spirit of bondage, as such,
is sent of God no more, to put us into those fears. For, mark, for we "have
not received the spirit of bondage again to fear." Let the word be true, whatever
thy experience is. Dost thou not understand me?
After the Spirit of God has told me, and also helped me to believe it, that the Lord
for Christ's sake hath forgiven mine iniquities: he tells me no more that they are
not forgiven. After the Spirit of God has helped me, by Christ, to call God my Father,
he tells me no more that the devil is my father. After he hath told me that I am
not under the law, but under grace, he tells me no more that I am not under grace,
but under the law, and bound over by it, for my sins, to the wrath and judgment of
God; but this is the fear that the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage, worketh in the
soul at first.
Quest. Can you give me further reason yet to convict me of the truth of what you
say?
Answ. Yes.
1. Because as the Spirit cannot give himself the lie, so he cannot overthrow his
own order of working, nor yet contradict that testimony that his servants, by his
inspiration, hath given of his order of working with them. But he must do the first,
if he saith to us—and that after we have received his own testimony, that we are
under grace—that yet we are under sin, the law, and wrath.
And he must do the second, if—after he hath gone through the first work on us as
a spirit of bondage, to the second as a spirit of adoption—he should overthrow as
a spirit of bondage again what before he had built as a spirit of adoption.
And the third must therefore needs follow, that is, he overthroweth the testimony
of his servants; for they have said, that now we receive the spirit of bondage again
to fear no more; that is, after that we by the Holy Ghost are enabled to call God
Father, Father.
2. This is evident also, because the covenant in which now the soul is interested
abideth, and is everlasting, not upon the supposition of my obedience, but upon the
unchangeable purpose of God, and the efficacy of the obedience of Christ, whose blood
also hath confirmed it. It is "ordered in all things, and sure," said David;
and this, said he, "is all my salvation" (2 Sam 23:5). The covenant then
is everlasting in itself, being established upon so good a foundation, and therefore
standeth in itself everlastingly bent for the good of them that are involved in it.
Hear the tenor of the covenant, and God's attesting of the truth thereof—"This
is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel, after those days, saith
the Lord; I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts; and
I will be to them a God, and they shall be to me a people; and they shall not teach
every man his neighbour, and every man his brother, saying, Know the Lord; for all
shall know me, from the least to the greatest; for I will be merciful to their unrighteousness,
and their sins and their iniquities I will remember no more" (Heb 8:10-12).
Now if God will do thus unto those that he hath comprised in his everlasting covenant
of grace, then he will remember their sins no more, that is, unto condemnation—for
so it is that he doth forget them; then cannot the Holy Ghost, who also is one with
the Father and the Son, come to us again, even after we are possessed with these
glorious fruits of this covenant, as a spirit of bondage, to put us in fear of damnation.
3. The Spirit of God, after it has come to me as a spirit of adoption, can come to
me no more as a spirit of bondage, to put me in fear, that is, with my first fears;
because, by that faith that he, even he himself, hath wrought in me, to believe and
call God "Father, Father," I am united to Christ, and stand no more upon
mine own legs, in mine own sins, or performances; but in his glorious righteousness
before him, and before his Father; but he will not cast away a member of his body,
of his flesh, and of his bones; nor will he, that the Spirit of God should come as
a spirit of bondage to put him into a grounded fear of damnation, that standeth complete
before God in the righteousness of Christ; for that is an apparent contradiction.[13]
Quest. But may it not come again as a spirit of bondage, to put me into my first
fears for my good?
Answ. The text saith the contrary; for we "have not received the spirit of bondage
again to fear." Nor is God put to it for want of wisdom, to say and unsay, do
and undo, or else he cannot do good. When we are sons, and have received the adoption
of children, he doth not use to send the spirit after that to tell us we are slaves
and heirs of damnation, also that we are without Christ, without the promise, without
grace, and without God in the world; and yet this he must do if it comes to us after
we have received him as a spirit of adoption, and put us, as a spirit of bondage,
in fear as before.
[This ungodly fear wrought by the spirit of the devil.]
Quest. But by what spirit is it then that I am brought again into fears, even into
the fears of damnation, and so into bondage?
Answ. By the spirit of the devil, who always labours to frustrate the faith, and
hope, and comfort of the godly.
Quest. How doth that appear?
Answ. 1. By the groundlessness of such fears. 2. By the unseasonableness of them.
3. By the effects of them.
1. By the groundlessness of such fears. The ground is removed; for a grounded fear
of damnation is this—I am yet in my sins, in a state of nature, under the law, without
faith, and so under the wrath of God. This, I say, is the ground of the fear of damnation,
the true ground to fear it; but now the man that we are talking of, is one that hath
the ground of this fear taken away by the testimony and seal of the spirit of adoption.
He is called, justified, and has, for the truth of this his condition, received the
evidence of the spirit of adoption, and hath been thereby enabled to call God "Father,
Father." Now he that hath received this, has the ground of the fear of damnation
taken from him; therefore his fear, I say, being without ground, is false, and so
no work of the Spirit of God.
2. By the unseasonableness of them. This spirit always comes too late. It comes after
the spirit of adoption is come. Satan is always for being too soon or too late. If
he would have men believe they are children, he would have them believe it while
they are slaves, slaves to him and their lusts. If he would have them believe they
are slaves, it is when they are sons, and have received the spirit of adoption, and
the testimony, by that, of their sonship before. And this evil is rooted even in
his nature—"He is a liar, and the father of it" ; and his lies are not
known to saints more than in this, that he labours always to contradict the work
and order of the Spirit of truth (John 8).
3. It also appears by the effects of such fears. For there is a great deal of difference
betwixt the natural effects of these fears which are wrought indeed by the spirit
of bondage, and those which are wrought by the spirit of the devil afterwards. The
one, to wit, the fears that are wrought by the spirit of bondage, causeth us to confess
the truth, to wit, that we are Christless, graceless, faithless, and so at present;
that is, while he is so working in a sinful and damnable case; but the other, to
wit, the spirit of the devil, when he comes, which is after the spirit of adoption
is come, he causeth us to make a lie; that is, to say we are Christless, graceless,
and faithless. Now this, I say, is wholly, and in all part of it, a lie, and HE is
the father of it.
Besides, the direct tendency of the fear that the Spirit of God, as a spirit of bondage,
worketh in the soul, is to cause us to come repenting home to God by Jesus Christ,
but these latter fears tend directly to make a man, he having first denied the work
of God, as he will, if he falleth in with them, to run quite away from God, and from
his grace to him in Christ, as will evidently appear if thou givest but a plain and
honest answer to these questions following.
[This fear driveth a man from God.]
Quest. 1. Do not these fears make thee question whether there was ever a work of
grace wrought in thy soul? Answ. Yes, verily, that they do. Quest. 2. Do not these
fears make thee question whether ever thy first fears were wrought by the Holy Spirit
of God? Answ. Yes, verily, that they do. Quest. 3. Do not these fears make thee question
whether ever thou hast had, indeed, any true comfort from the Word and Spirit of
God? Answ. Yes, verily, that they do. Quest. 4. Dost thou not find intermixed with
these fears plain assertions that thy first comforts were either from thy fancy,
or from the devil, and a fruit of his delusions? Answ. Yes, verily, that I do. Quest.
5. Do not these fears weaken thy heart in prayer? Answ. Yes, that they do. Quest.
6. Do not these fears keep thee back from laying hold of the promise of salvation
by Jesus Christ? Answ. Yes; for I think if I were deceived before, if I were comforted
by a spirit of delusion before, why may it not be so again? so I am afraid to take
hold of the promise. Quest. 7. Do not these fears tend to the hardening of thy heart,
and to the making of thee desperate? Answ. Yes, verily, that they do. Quest. 8. Do
not these fears hinder thee from profiting in hearing or reading of the Word? Answ.
Yes, verily, for still whatever I hear or read, I think nothing that is good belongs
to me. Quest. 9. Do not these fears tend to the stirring up of blasphemies in thy
heart against God? Answ. Yes, to the almost distracting of me. Quest. 10. Do not
these fears make thee sometimes think, that it is in vain for thee to wait upon the
Lord any longer? Answ. Yes, verily; and I have many times almost come to this conclusion,
that I will read, pray, hear, company with God's people, or the like, no longer.
Well, poor Christian, I am glad that thou hast so plainly answered me; but, prithee,
look back upon thy answer. How much of God dost thou think is in these things? how
much of his Spirit, and the grace of his Word? Just none at all; for it cannot be
that these things can be the true and natural effects of the workings of the Spirit
of God: no, not as a spirit of bondage. These are not his doings. Dost thou not see
the very paw of the devil in them; yea, in every one of thy ten confessions? Is there
not palpably high wickedness in every one of the effects of this fear? I conclude,
then, as I began, that the fear that the spirit of God, as a spirit of bondage, worketh,
is good and godly, not only because of the author, but also because of the ground
and effects; but yet it can last no longer as such, as producing the aforesaid conclusion,
than till the Spirit, as the spirit of adoption, comes; because that then the soul
is manifestly taken out of the state and condition into which it had brought itself
by nature and sin, and is put into Christ, and so by him into a state of life and
blessedness by grace. Therefore, if first fears come again into thy soul, after that
the spirit of adoption hath been with thee, know they come not from the Spirit of
God, but apparently from the spirit of the devil, for they are a lie in themselves,
and their effects are sinful and devilish.
Object. But I had also such wickedness as those in my heart at my first awakening,
and therefore, by your argument, neither should that be but from the devil.
Answ. So far forth as such wickedness was in thy heart, so far did the devil and
thine own heart seek to drive thee to despair, and drown thee there; but thou hast
forgot the question; the question is not whether then thou wast troubled with such
iniquities, but whether thy fears of damnation at that time were not just and good,
because grounded upon thy present condition, which was, for that thou wast out of
Christ, in thy sins, and under the curse of the law; and whether now, since the spirit
of adoption is come unto thee, and hath thee, and hath done that for thee as hath
been mentioned; I say, whether thou oughtest for anything whatsoever to give way
to the same fear, from the same ground of damnation; it is evident thou oughtest
not, because the ground, the cause, is removed.
Object. But since I was sealed to the day of redemption, I have grievously sinned
against God, have not I, therefore, cause to fear, as before? may not, therefore,
the spirit of bondage be sent again to put me in fear, as at first? Sin was the first
cause, and I have sinned now.
Answ. No, by no means; for we have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear;
that is, God hath not given it us, "for God hath not given us the spirit of
fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind" (2 Tim 1:7). If, therefore,
our first fears come upon us again, after that we have received at God's hands the
spirit of love, of power, and of a sound mind, it is to be refused, though we have
grievously sinned against our God. This is manifest from 1 Samuel 12:20; "Fear
not; ye have done all this wickedness." That is, not with that fear which would
have made them fly from God, as concluding that they were not now his people. And
the reason is, because sin cannot dissolve the covenant into which the sons of God,
by his grace, are taken. "If his children forsake my law, and walk not in my
judgments; if they break my statutes, and keep not my commandments; then will I visit
their transgressions with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes. Nevertheless,
my loving-kindness will I not utterly take from him, nor suffer my faithfulness to
fail" (Psa 89:30-33). Now, if sin doth not dissolve the covenant; if sin doth
not cast me out of this covenant, which is made personally with the Son of God, and
into the hands of which by the grace of God I am put, then ought I not, though I
have sinned, to fear with my first fears.
Sin, after that the spirit of adoption is come, cannot dissolve the relation of Father
and son, of Father and child. And this the church did rightly assert, and that when
her heart was under great hardness, and when she had the guilt of erring from his
ways, saith she. "Doubtless thou art our Father" (Isa 63:16,17). Doubtless
thou art, though this be our case, and though Israel should not acknowledge us for
such.
That sin dissolveth not the relation of Father and son is further evident—"When
the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under
the law, to redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption
of sons. And because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into
your hearts, crying, [Abba, or] Father, Father." Now mark, "wherefore thou
art no more a servant" ; that is, no more under the law of death and damnation,
"but a son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ" (Gal 4:4-7).
Suppose a child doth grievously transgress against and offend his father, is the
relation between them therefore dissolved? Again, suppose the father should scourge
and chasten the son for such offence, is the relation between them therefore dissolved?
Yea, suppose the child should now, through ignorance, cry, and say, This man is now
no more my father; is he, therefore, now no more his father? Doth not everybody see
the folly of such arguings? Why, of the same nature is that doctrine that saith,
that after we have received the spirit of adoption, that the spirit of bondage is
sent to us again to put us in fear of eternal damnation.
Know then that thy sin, after thou hast received the spirit of adoption to cry unto
God, Father, Father, is counted the transgression of a child, not of a slave, and
that all that happeneth to thee for that transgression is but the chastisement of
a father—and "what son is he whom the father chasteneth not?" It is worth
your observation, that the Holy Ghost checks those who, under their chastisements
for sin, forget to call God their Father—"Ye have," said Paul, "forgotten
the exhortation which speaketh unto you as unto children, My son, despise not thou
the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when thou art rebuked of him." Yea, observe
yet further, that God's chastising of his children for their sin, is a a sign of
grace and love, and not of his wrath, and thy damnation; therefore now there is no
ground for the aforesaid fear—"For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth
every son whom he receiveth" (Heb 12). Now, if God would not have those that
have received the Spirit of the Son, however he chastises them, to forget the relation
that by the adoption of sons they stand in to God, if he checks them that do forget
it, when his rod is upon their backs for sin, then it is evident that those fears
that thou hast under a colour of the coming again of the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage,
to put thee in fear of eternal damnation, is nothing else but Satan disguised, the
better to play his pranks upon thee.
I will yet give you two or three instances more, wherein it will be manifest that
whatever happeneth to thee, I mean as a chastisement for sin, after the spirit of
adoption is come, thou oughtest to hold fast by faith the relation of Father and
son. The people spoken of by Moses are said to have lightly esteemed the rock of
their salvation, which rock is Jesus Christ, and that is a grievous sin indeed, yet,
saith he, "Is not God thy Father that hath bought thee?" and then puts
them upon considering the days of old (Deut 32:6). They in the prophet Jeremiah had
played the harlot with many lovers, and done evil things as they could; and, as another
scripture hath it, gone a-whoring from under their God, yet God calls to them by
the prophet, saying, "Wilt thou not from this time cry unto me, My Father, thou
art the guide of my youth?" (Jer 3:4). Remember also that eminent text made
mention of in 1 Samuel 12:20, "Fear not; ye have done all this wickedness"
; and labour to maintain faith in thy soul, of thy being a child, it being true that
thou hast received the spirit of adoption before, and so that thou oughtest not to
fall under thy first fears, because the ground is taken away, of thy eternal damnation.
Now, let not any, from what hath been said, take courage to live loose lives, under
a supposition that once in Christ, and ever in Christ, and the covenant cannot be
broken, nor the relation of Father and child dissolved; for they that do so, it is
evident, have not known what it is to receive the spirit of adoption. It is the spirit
of the devil in his own hue that suggesteth this unto them, and that prevaileth with
them to do so. Shall we do evil that good may come? shall we sin that grace may abound?
or shall we be base in life because God by grace hath secured us from wrath to come?
God forbid; these conclusions betoken one void of the fear of God indeed, and of
the spirit of adoption too. For what son is he, that because the father cannot break
the relation, nor suffer sin to do it—that is, betwixt the Father and him—that will
therefore say, I will live altogether after my own lusts, I will labour to be a continual
grief to my Father?
[Considerations to prevent such temptations.]
Yet lest the devil (for some are "not ignorant of his devices" ), should
get an advantage against some of the sons, to draw them away from the filial fear
of their Father, let me here, to prevent such temptations, present such with these
following considerations.
First. Though God cannot, will not, dissolve the relation which the spirit of adoption
hath made betwixt the Father and the Son, for any sins that such do commit, yet he
can, and often doth, take away from them the comfort of their adoption, not suffering
children while sinning to have the sweet and comfortable sense thereof on their hearts.
He can tell how to let snares be round about them, and sudden fear trouble them.
He can tell how to send darkness that they may not see, and to let abundance of waters
cover them (Job 22:10,11).
Second. God can tell how to hide his face from them, and so to afflict them with
that dispensation, that it shall not be in the power of all the world to comfort
them. "When he hideth his face, who then can behold him?" (Job 23:8,9,
34:29).
Third. God can tell how to make thee again to possess the sins that he long since
hath pardoned, and that in such wise that things shall be bitter to thy soul. "Thou
writest bitter things against me," says Job, "and makest me to possess
the iniquities of my youth." By this also he once made David groan and pray
against it as an insupportable affliction (Job 13:26; Psa 25:7).
Fourth. God can lay thee in the dungeon in chains, and roll a stone upon thee, he
can make thy feet fast in the stocks, and make thee a gazing-stock to men and angels
(Lam 3:7,53,55; Job 13:27; Nahum 3:6).
Fifth. God can tell how to cause to cease the sweet operations and blessed influences
of his grace in thy soul, and to make those gospel showers that formerly thou hast
enjoyed to become now to thee nothing but powder and dust (Psa 51; Deut 28:24).
Sixth. God can tell how to fight against thee "with the sword of his mouth,"
and to make thee a butt for his arrows; and this is a dispensation most dreadful
(Rev 2:16; Job 6:4; Psa 38:2-5).
Seventh. God can tell how so to bow thee down with guilt and distress that thou shalt
in no wise be able to lift up thy head (Psa 40:12).
Eighth. God can tell how to break thy bones, and to make thee by reason of that to
live in continual anguish of spirit: yea, he can send a fire into thy bones that
shall burn, and none shall quench it (Psa 51:8; Lam 3:4, 1:13; Psa 102:3; Job 30:30).
Ninth. God can tell how to lay thee aside, and make no use of thee as to any work
for him in thy generation. He can throw thee aside "as a broken vessel"
(Psa 31:12; Eze 44:10-13).
Tenth. God can tell how to kill thee, and to take thee away from the earth for thy
sins (1 Cor 11:29-32).
Eleventh. God can tell how to plague thee in thy death, with great plagues, and of
long continuance (Psa 78:45; Deut 28).
Twelfth. What shall I say? God can tell how to let Satan loose upon thee; when thou
liest a dying he can license him then to assault thee with great temptations, he
can tell how to make thee possess the guilt of all thy unkindness towards him, and
that when thou, as I said, art going out of the world, he can cause that thy life
shall be in continual doubt before thee, and not suffer thee to take any comfort
day nor night; yea, he can drive thee even to a madness with his chastisements for
thy folly, and yet all shall be done by him to thee, as a father chastiseth his son
(Deut 28:65-67).
Thirteenth. Further, God can tell how to tumble thee from off thy deathbed in a cloud,
he can let thee die in the dark; when thou art dying thou shalt not know whither
thou art going, to wit, whether to heaven or to hell. Yea, he can tell how to let
thee seem to come short of life, both in thine own eyes, and also in the eyes of
them that behold thee. "Let us therefore fear," says the apostle,—though
not with slavish, yet with filial fear—"lest a promise being left us of entering
into his rest, any of you should seem to come short of it" (Heb 4:1).
Now all this, and much more, can God do to his as a Father by his rod and fatherly
rebukes; ah, who know but those that are under them, what terrors, fears, distresses,
and amazements God can bring his people into; he can put them into a furnace, a fire,
and no tongue can tell what, so unsearchable and fearful are his fatherly chastisements,
and yet never give them the spirit of bondage again to fear. Therefore, if thou art
a son, take heed of sin, lest all these things overtake thee, and come upon thee.
Object. But I have sinned, and am under this high and mighty hand of God.
Answ. Then thou knowest what I say is true, but yet take heed of hearkening unto
such temptations as would make thee believe thou art out of Christ, under the law,
and in a state of damnation; and take heed also, that thou dost not conclude that
the author of these fears is the Spirit of God come to thee again as a spirit of
bondage, to put thee into such fears, lest unawares to thyself thou dost defy the
devil, dishonour thy Father, overthrow good doctrine, and bring thyself into a double
temptation.
Object. But if God deals thus with a man, how can he otherwise think but that he
is a reprobate, a graceless, Christless, and faithless one?
Answ. Nay, but why dost thou tempt the Lord thy God? Why dost thou sin and provoke
the eyes of his glory? Why "doth a living man complain, a man for the punishment
of his sins?" (Lam 3:39). He doth not willingly afflict nor grieve the children
of men; but if thou sinnest, though God should save thy soul, as he will if thou
art an adopted son of God, yet he will make thee know that sin is sin, and his rod
that he will chastise thee with, if need be, shall be made of scorpions; read the
whole book of the Lamentations; read Job's and David's complaints; yea, read what
happened to his Son, his well-beloved, and that when he did but stand in the room
of sinners, being in himself altogether innocent, and then consider, O thou sinning
child of God, if it is any injustice in God, yea, if it be not necessary, that thou
shouldest be chastised for thy sin. But then, I say, when the hand of God is upon
thee, how grievous soever it be, take heed, and beware that thou give not way to
thy first fears, lest, as I said before, thou addest to thine affliction; and to
help thee here, let me give you a few instances of the carriages of some of the saints
under some of the most heavy afflictions that they have met with for sin.
[Carriages of some of the saints under heavy afflictions for sin.]
First. Job was in great affliction and that, as he confessed, for sin, insomuch that
he said God had set him for his mark to shoot at, and that he ran upon him like a
giant, that he took him by the neck and shook him to pieces, and counted him for
his enemy; that he hid his face from him, and that he could not tell where to find
him; yet he counted not all this as a sign of a damnable state, but as a trial, and
chastisement, and said, when he was in the hottest of the battle, "when he hath
tried me I shall come forth as gold." And again, when he was pressed upon by
the tempter to think that God would kill him, he answers with greatest confidence,
"Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him" (Job 7:20, 13:15, 14:12, 16,
19:11, 23:8-10).
Second. David complained that God had broken his bones, that he had set his face
against his sins, and had taken from him the joy of his salvation: yet even at this
time he saith, "O God, thou God of my salvation" (Psa 51:8,9,12,14).
Third. Heman complained that his soul was full of troubles, that God had laid him
in the lowest pit, that he had put his acquaintance far from him, and was casting
off his soul, and had hid his face from him. That he was afflicted from his youth
up, and ready to die with trouble: he saith, moreover, that the fierce wrath of God
went over him, that his terrors had cut him off; yea, that by reason of them he was
distracted; and yet, even before he maketh any of these complaints, he takes fast
hold of God as his, saying, "O Lord God of my salvation" (Psa 88).
Fourth. The church in the Lamentations complains that the Lord had afflicted her
for her transgressions, and that in the day of his fierce anger; also that he had
trodden under foot her mighty men, and that he had called the heathen against her;
she says, that he had covered her with a cloud in his anger, that he was an enemy,
and that he had hung a chain upon her; she adds, moreover, that he had shut out her
prayer, broken her teeth with gravel stones, and covered her with ashes, and in conclusion,
that he had utterly rejected her. But what doth she do under all this trial? doth
she give up her faith and hope, and return to that fear that begot the first bondage?
No: "The Lord is my portion, saith my soul, therefore will I hope in him"
; yea, she adds, "O Lord, thou hast pleaded the causes of my soul, thou hast
redeemed my life" (Lam 1:5, 2:1,2,5, 3:7,8,16, 5:22, 3:24,31,58).
These things show, that God's people even after they have received the spirit of
adoption, have fell foully into sin, and have been bitterly chastised for it; and
also, that when the rod was most smart upon them, they made great conscience of giving
way to their first fears wherewith they were made afraid by the Spirit as it wrought
as a spirit of bondage; for indeed there is no such thing as the coming of the spirit
of bondage to put us in fear the second time, as such, that is, after he is come
as the spirit of adoption to the soul.
I conclude then, that that fear that is wrought by the spirit of bondage is good
and godly, because the ground for it is sound; and I also conclude, that he comes
to the soul as a spirit of bondage but once, and that once is before he comes as
a spirit of adoption: and if therefore the same fear doth again take hold of thy
heart, that is, if after thou hast received the spirit of adoption thou fearest again
the damnation of thy soul, that thou art out of Christ and under the law, that fear
is bad and of the devil, and ought by no means to be admitted by thee.
[How the devil worketh these fears.]
1. Quest. But since it is as you say, how doth the devil, after the spirit of adoption
is come, work the child of God into those fears of being out of Christ, not forgiven,
and so an heir of damnation again?
Answ. 1. By giving the lie, and by prevailing with us to give it too, to the work
of grace wrought in our hearts, and to the testimony of the Holy Spirit of adoption.
Or, 2. By abusing of our ignorance of the everlasting love of God to his in Christ,
and the duration of the covenant of grace. Or, 3. By abusing some scripture that
seems to look that way, but doth not. Or, 4. By abusing our senses and reason. Or,
5. By strengthening of our unbelief. Or, 6. By overshadowing of our judgment with
horrid darkness. Or, 7. By giving of us counterfeit representations of God. Or, 8.
By stirring up, and setting in a rage, our inward corruptions. Or, 9. By pouring
into our hearts abundance of horrid blasphemies. Or, 10. By putting of wrong constructions
on the rod, and chastising hand of God. Or, 11. By charging upon us, that our ill
behaviours under the rod, and chastising hand of God, is a sign that we indeed have
no grace, but are downright graceless reprobates. By these things and other like
these, Satan, I say, Satan bringeth the child of God, not only to the borders, but
even into the bowels of the fears of damnation, after it hath received a blessed
testimony of eternal life, and that by the Holy Spirit of adoption.
[The people of God should fear his rod.]
Quest. But would you not have the people of God stand in fear of his rod, and be
afraid of his judgments?
Answ. Yes, and the more they are rightly afraid of them, the less and the seldomer
will they come under them; for it is want of fear that brings us into sin, and it
is sin that brings us into these afflictions. But I would not have them fear with
the fear of slaves; for that will add no strength against sin; but I would have them
fear with the reverential fear of sons, and that is the way to depart from evil.
Quest. How is that?
Answ. Why, having before received the spirit of adoption; still to believe that he
is our father, and so to fear with the fear of children, not as slaves fear a tyrant.
I would therefore have them to look upon his rod, rebukes, chidings, and chastisements,
and also upon the wrath wherewith he doth inflict, to be but the dispensations of
their Father. This believed, maintains, or at least helps to maintain, in the heart,
a son-like bowing under the rod. It also maintains in the soul a son-like confession
of sin, and a justifying of God under all the rebukes that he grieveth us with. It
also engageth us to come to him, to claim and lay hold of former mercies, to expect
more, and to hope a good end shall be made of all God's present dispensations towards
us (Micah 7:9; Lam 1:18; Psa 77:10-12; Lam 3:31-34).[14]
Now God would have us thus fear his rod, because he is resolved to chastise us therewith,
if so be we sin against him, as I have already showed; for although God's bowels
turn within him, even while he is threatening his people, yet if we sin, he will
lay on the rod so hard as to make us cry, "Woe unto us that we have sinned"
(Lam 5:16); and therefore, as I said, we should be afraid of his judgments, yet only
as afore is provided as of the rod, wrath, and judgment of a Father.
[Five considerations to move to child-like fear.]
Quest. But have you yet any other considerations to move us to fear God with child-like
fear?
Answ. I will in this place give you five. 1. Consider that God thinks meet to have
it so, and he is wiser in heart than thou; he knows best how to secure his people
from sin, and to that end hath given them law and commandments to read, that they
may learn to fear him as a Father (Job 37:24; Eccl 3:14; Deut 17:18,19). 2. Consider
he is mighty in power; if he touch but with a fatherly touch, man nor angel cannot
bear it; yea, Christ makes use of that argument, he "hath power to cast into
hell; Fear him" (Luke 12:4,5). 3. Consider that he is everywhere; thou canst
not be out of his sight or presence; nor out of the reach of his hand. "Fear
ye not me? saith the Lord." "Can any hide himself in secret places that
I shall not see him? saith the Lord. Do not I fill heaven and earth? saith the Lord"
(Jer 5:22, 23:24). 4. Consider that he is holy, and cannot look with liking upon
the sins of his own people. Therefore, says Peter, be "as obedient children,
not fashioning yourselves according to the former lusts in your ignorance, but as
he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation, because
it is written, Be ye holy, for I am holy. And if ye call on the Father, who without
respect of persons judgeth according to every man's work, pass the time of your sojourning
here in fear." 5. Consider that he is good, and has been good to thee, good
in that he hath singled thee out from others, and saved thee from their death and
hell, though thou perhaps wast worse in thy life than those that he left when he
laid hold on thee. O this should engage thy heart to fear the Lord all the days of
thy life. They "shall fear the Lord, and his goodness in the latter days"
(Hosea 3:5). And now for the present, I have done with that fear, I mean as to its
first workings, to wit, to put me in fear of damnation, and shall come, in the next
place, to treat
[OF THE GRACE OF FEAR MORE IMMEDIATELY INTENDED IN THE TEXT.]
I shall now speak to this fear, which I call a lasting godly fear; first, by way
of explication; by which I shall show, FIRST. How by the Scripture it is described.
SECOND. I shall show you what this fear flows from. And then, THIRD. I shall also
show you what doth flow from it.
[How this Fear is described by the Scripture.]
FIRST. For the first of these, to wit, how by the Scripture this fear is described;
and that, First. More generally. Second. More particularly.
First. More generally.
1. It is called a grace, that is, a sweet and blessed work of the Spirit of grace,
as he is given to the elect by God. Hence the apostle says, "let us have grace,
whereby we may serve God acceptably, with reverence and godly fear" (Heb 12:28).
For as that fear that brings bondage is wrought in the soul by the Spirit as a spirit
of bondage, so this fear, which is a fear that we have while we are in the liberty
of sons, is wrought by him as he manifesteth to us our liberty; "where the Spirit
of the Lord is, there is liberty," that is, where he is as a spirit of adoption,
setting the soul free from that bondage under which it was held by the same Spirit
while he wrought as a spirit of bondage. Hence as he is called a spirit working bondage
to fear, so he, as the Spirit of the Son and of adoption, is called "the Spirit
of the fear of the Lord" (Isa 11:2). Because it is that Spirit of grace that
is the author, animater, and maintainer of our filial fear, or of that fear that
is son-like, and that subjecteth the elect unto God, his word, and ways; unto him,
his word, and ways, as a Father.
2. This fear is called also the fear of God, not as that which is ungodly is, nor
yet as that may be which is wrought by the Spirit as a spirit of bondage, but by
way of eminency; to wit, as a dispensation of the grace of the gospel, and as a fruit
of eternal love. "I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart
from me" (Jer 32:38-41).
3. This fear of God is called God's treasure, for it is one of his choice jewels,
it is one of the rarities of heaven, "The fear of the Lord is his treasure"
(Isa 33:6). And it may well go under such a title; for as treasure, so the fear of
the Lord is not found in every corner. It is said all men have not faith, because
that also is more precious than gold; the same is said about this fear—"There
is no fear of God before their eyes" ; that is, the greatest part of men are
utterly destitute of this godly jewel, this treasure, the fear of the Lord. Poor
vagrants, when they come straggling to a lord's house, may perhaps obtain some scraps
and fragments, they may also obtain old shoes, and some sorry cast-off rags, but
they get not any of his jewels, they may not touch his choicest treasure; that is
kept for the children, and those that shall be his heirs. We may say the same also
of this blessed grace of fear, which is called here God's treasure. It is only bestowed
upon the elect, the heirs and children of the promise; all others are destitute of
it, and so continue to death and judgment.
4. This grace of fear is that which maketh men excel and go beyond all men, in the
account of God; it is that which beautifies a man, and prefers him above all other;
"Hast thou," says God to Satan, "considered my servant Job, that there
is none like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God,
and escheweth evil?" (Job 1:8, 2:3). Mind it, "There is none like him,
none alike him in the earth." I suppose he means either [that Job was the only
most perfect and upright man] in those parts, or else he was the man that abounded
in the fear of the Lord; none like him to fear the Lord, he only excelled others
with respect to his reverencing of God, bowing before him, and sincerely complying
with his will; and therefore is counted the excellent man. It is not the knowledge
of the will of God, but our sincere complying therewith, that proveth we fear the
Lord; and it is our so doing that putteth upon us the note of excelling; hereby appears
our perfection, herein is manifest our uprightness. A perfect and an upright man
is one that feareth God, and that because he escheweth evil. Therefore this grace
of fear is that without which no part or piece of service which we do to God, can
be accepted of him. It is, as I may call it, the salt of the covenant, which seasoneth
the heart, and therefore must not be lacking there; it is also that which salteth,
or seasoneth all our doings, and therefore must not be lacking in any of them (Lev
2:13).
5. I take this grace of fear to be that which softeneth and mollifieth the heart,
and that makes it stand in awe both of the mercies and judgments of God. This is
that that retaineth in the heart that due dread, and reverence of the heavenly majesty,
that is meet should be both in, and kept in the heart of poor sinners. Wherefore
when David described this fear, in the exercise of it, he calls it an awe of God.
"Stand in awe," saith he, "and sin not" ; and again, "my
heart standeth in awe of thy word" ; and again, "Let all the earth fear
the Lord" ; what is that? or how is that? why? "Let all the inhabitants
of the world stand in awe of him" (Psa 4:4, 119:161, 33:8). This is that therefore
that is, as I said before, so excellent a thing in the eyes of God, to wit, a grace
of the Spirit, the fear of God, his treasure, the salt of the covenant, that which
makes men excel all others; for it is that which maketh the sinner to stand in awe
of God, which posture is the most comely thing in us, throughout all ages. But,
Second. And more particularly.
1. This grace is called "the beginning of knowledge," because by the first
gracious discovery of God to the soul, this grace is begot: and again, because the
first time that the soul doth apprehend God in Christ to be good unto it, this grace
is animated, by which the soul is put into an holy awe of God, which causeth it with
reverence and due attention to hearken to him, and tremble before him (Prov 1:7).
It is also by virtue of this fear that the soul doth inquire yet more after the blessed
knowledge of God. This is the more evident, because, where this fear of God is wanting,
or where the discovery of God is not attended with it, the heart still abides rebellious,
obstinate, and unwilling to know more, that it might comply therewith; nay, for want
of it, such sinners say rather, As for God, let him "depart from us," and
for the Almighty, "we desire not the knowledge of his ways."
2. This fear is called "the beginning of wisdom," because then, and not
till then, a man begins to be truly spiritually wise; what wisdom is there where
the fear of God is not? (Job 28:28; Psa 111:10). Therefore the fools are described
thus, "For that they hated knowledge and did not choose the fear of the Lord"
(Prov 1:29). The Word of God is the fountain of knowledge, into which a man will
not with godly reverence look, until he is endued with the fear of the Lord. Therefore
it is rightly called "the beginning of knowledge; but fools despise wisdom and
instruction" (Prov 1:7). It is therefore this fear of the Lord that makes a
man wise for his soul, for life, and for another world. It is this that teacheth
him how he should do to escape those spiritual and eternal ruins that the fool is
overtaken with, and swallowed up of for ever. A man void of this fear of God, wherever
he is wise, or in whatever he excels, yet about the matters of his soul, there is
none more foolish than himself; for through the want of the fear of the Lord, he
leaves the best things at sixes and sevens, and only pursueth with all his heart
those that will leave him in the snare when he dies.
3. This fear of the Lord is to hate evil. To hate sin and vanity. Sin and vanity,
they are the sweet morsels of the fool, and such which the carnal appetite of the
flesh runs after; and it is only the virtue that is in the fear of the Lord that
maketh the sinner have an antipathy against it (Job 20:12). "By the fear of
the Lord men depart from evil" (Prov 16:6). That is, men shun, separate themselves
from, and eschew it in its appearances. Wherefore it is plain that those that love
evil, are not possessed with the fear of God.
There is a generation that will pursue evil, that will take it in, nourish it, lay
it up in their hearts, hide it, and plead for it, and rejoice to do it. These cannot
have in them the fear of the Lord, for that is to hate it, and to make men depart
from it: where the fear of God and sin is, it will be with the soul, as it was with
Israel when Omri and Tibni strove to reign among them both at once, one of them must
be put to death, they cannot live together (see 1 Kings 16): sin must down, for the
fear of the Lord begetteth in the soul a hatred against it, an abhorrence of it,
therefore sin must die, that is, as to the affections and lusts of it; for as Solomon
says in another case, "where no wood is, the fire goeth out." So we may
say, where there is a hatred of sin, and where men depart from it, there it loseth
much of its power, waxeth feeble, and decayeth. Therefore Solomon saith again, "Fear
the Lord, and depart from evil" (Prov 3:7). As who should say, Fear the Lord,
and it will follow that you shall depart from evil: departing from evil is a natural
consequence, a proper effect of the fear of the Lord where it is. By the fear of
the Lord men depart from evil, that is, in their judgment, will, mind, and affections.
Not that by the fear of the Lord sin is annihilated, or has lost its being in the
soul; there still will those Canaanites be, but they are hated, loathed, abominated,
fought against, prayed against, watched against, striven against, and mortified by
the soul (Rom 7).
4. This fear is called a fountain of life—"The fear of the Lord is a fountain
of life, to depart from the snares of death" (Prov 14:27). It is a fountain,
or spring, which so continually supplieth the soul with variety of considerations
of sin, of God, of death, and life eternal, as to keep the soul in continual exercise
of virtue and in holy contemplation. It is a fountain of life; every operation thereof,
every act and exercise thereof, hath a true and natural tendency to spiritual and
eternal felicity. Wherefore the wise man saith in another place, "The fear of
the Lord tendeth to life, and he that hath it shall abide satisfied; he shall not
be visited with evil" (Prov 19:23). It tendeth to life; even as of nature, everything
hath a tendency to that which is most natural to itself; the fire to burn, the water
to wet, the stone to fall, the sun to shine, sin to defile, &c. Thus I say, the
fear of the Lord tendeth to life; the nature of it is to put the soul upon fearing
of God, of closing with Christ, and of walking humbly before him. "It is a fountain
of life, to depart from the snares of death." What are the snares of death,
but sin, the wiles of the devil, &c. From which the fear of God hath a natural
tendency to deliver thee, and to keep thee in the way that tendeth to life.
5. This fear of the Lord, it is called "the instruction of wisdom" (Prov
15:33). You heard before that it is the beginning of wisdom, but here you find it
called the instruction of wisdom; for indeed it is not only that which makes a man
begin to be wise, but to improve, and make advantage of all those helps and means
to life, which God hath afforded to that end; that is, both to his own, and his neighbour's
salvation also. It is the instruction of wisdom; it will make a man capable to use
all his natural parts, all his natural wisdom to God's glory, and his own good. There
lieth, even in many natural things, that, into which if we were instructed, would
yield us a great deal of help to the understanding of spiritual matters; "For
in wisdom has God made all the world" ; nor is there anything that God has made,
whether in heaven above, or on earth beneath, but there is couched some spiritual
mystery in it. The which men matter no more than they do the ground they tread on,
or than the stones that are under their feet, and all because they have not this
fear of the Lord; for had they that, that would teach them to think, even from that
knowledge of God, that hath by the fear of him put into their hearts, that he being
so great and so good, there must needs be abundance of wisdom in the things he hath
made: that fear would also endeavour to find out what that wisdom is; yea, and give
to the soul the instruction of it. In that it is called the instruction of wisdom,
it intimates to us that its tendency is to keep all even, and in good order in the
soul. When Job perceived that his friends did not deal with him in an even spirit
and orderly manner, he said that they forsook "the fear of the Almighty"
(Job 6:14). For this fear keeps a man even in his words and judgment of things. It
may be compared to the ballast of the ship, and to the poise of the balance of the
scales; it keeps all even, and also makes us steer our course right with respect
to the things that pertain to God and man.
What this fear of God flows from.
SECOND. I come now to the second thing, to wit, to show you what this fear of God
flows from.
First. This fear, this grace of fear, this son-like fear of God, it flows from the
distinguishing love of God to his elect. "I will be their God," saith he,
"and I will put my fear in their hearts." None other obtain it but those
that are enclosed and bound up in that bundle. Therefore they, in the same place,
are said to be those that are wrapt up in the eternal or everlasting covenant of
God, and so designed to be the people that should be blessed with this fear. "I
will make an everlasting covenant with them" saith God, "that I will not
turn away from them to do them good, but I will put my fear in their hearts, that
they shall not depart from me" (Jer 32:38-40). This covenant declares unto men
that God hath, in his heart, distinguishing love for some of the children of men;
for he saith he will be their God, that he will not leave them, nor yet suffer them
to depart, to wit, finally, from him. Into these men's hearts he doth put his fear,
this blessed grace, and this rare and effectual sign of his love, and of their eternal
salvation.
Second. This fear flows from a new heart. This fear is not in men by nature; the
fear of devils they may have, as also an ungodly fear of God; but this fear is not
in any but where there dwelleth a new heart, another fruit and effect of this everlasting
covenant, and of this distinguishing love of God. "A new heart also will I give
them" ; a new heart, what a one is that? why, the same prophet saith in another
place, "A heart to fear me," a circumcised one, a sanctified one (Jer 32:39;
Eze 11:19, 36:26). So then, until a man receive a heart from God, a heart from heaven,
a new heart, he has not this fear of God in him. New wine must not be put into old
bottles, lest the one, to wit, the bottles, mar the wine, or the wine the bottles;
but new wine must have new bottles, and then both shall be preserved (Matt 9:17).
This fear of God must not be, cannot be found in old hearts; old hearts are not bottles
out of which this fear of God proceeds, but it is from an honest and good heart,
from a new one, from such an one that is also an effect of the everlasting covenant,
and love of God to men.
" I will give them one heart" to fear me; there must in all actions be
heart, and without heart no action is good, nor can there be faith, love, or fear,
from every kind of heart. These must flow from such an one, whose nature is to produce,
and bring forth such fruit. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?
so from a corrupt heart there cannot proceed such fruit as the fear of God, as to
believe in God, and love God (Luke 6:43-45). The heart naturally is deceitful above
all things, and desperately wicked; how then should there flow from such an one the
fear of God? It cannot be. He, therefore, that hath not received at the hands of
God a new heart, cannot fear the Lord.
Third. This fear of God flows from an impression, a sound impression, that the Word
of God maketh on our souls; for without an impress of the Word, there is no fear
of God. Hence it is said that God gave to Israel good laws, statutes, and judgments,
that they might learn them, and in learning them, learn to fear the Lord their God.
Therefore, saith God, in another place, "Gather the people together, men, and
women, and children, and thy stranger that is within thy gates, that they may hear,
and that they may learn and fear the Lord your God" (Deut 6:1,2, 31:12). For
as a man drinketh good doctrine into his soul, so he feareth God. If he drinks it
in much, he feareth him greatly; if he drinketh it in but little, he feareth him
but little; if he drinketh it not in at all, he feareth him not at all. This, therefore,
teacheth us how to judge who feareth the Lord; they are those that learn, and that
stand in awe of the Word. Those that have by the holy Word of God the very form of
itself engraven upon the face of their souls, they fear God (Rom 6:17).[15]
But, on the contrary, those that do not love good doctrine, that give not place to
the wholesome truths of the God of heaven, revealed in his Testament, to take place
in their souls, but rather despise it, and the true possessors of it, they fear not
God. For, as I said before, this fear of God, it flows from a sound impression that
the Word of God maketh upon the soul; and therefore,
Fourth. This godly fear floweth from faith; for where the Word maketh a sound impression
on the soul, by that impression is faith begotten, whence also this fear doth flow.
Therefore right hearing of the Word is called "the hearing of faith" (Gal
3:2). Hence it is said again, "By faith Noah, being warned of God of things
not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house, by
the which he condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by
faith" (Heb 11:7). The Word, the warning that he had from God of things not
seen as yet, wrought, through faith therein, that fear of God in his heart that made
him prepare against unseen dangers, and that he might be an inheritor of unseen happiness.
Where, therefore, there is not faith in the Word of God, there can be none of this
fear; and where the Word doth not make sound impression on the soul, there can be
none of this faith. So that as vices hang together, and have the links of a chain,
dependence one upon another, even so the graces of the Spirit also are the fruits
of one another, and have such dependence on each other, that the one cannot be without
the other. No faith, no fear of God; devil's faith, devil's fear; saint's faith,
saint's fear.
Fifth. This godly fear also floweth from sound repentance for and from sin; godly
sorrow worketh repentance, and godly repentance produceth this fear— "For behold,"
says Paul, "this self-same thing, that ye sorrowed after a godly sort, what
carefulness it wrought in you! yea, what clearing of yourselves! yea, what indignation!
yea, what fear!" (2 Cor 7:10,11). Repentance is the effect of sorrow, and sorrow
is the effect of smart, and smart the effect of faith. Now, therefore, fear must
needs be an effect of, and flow from repentance. Sinner, do not deceive thyself;
if thou art a stranger to sound repentance, which standeth in sorrow and shame before
God for sin, as also in turning from it, thou hast no fear of God; I mean none of
this godly fear; for that is the fruit of, and floweth from, sound repentance.
Sixth. This godly fear also flows from a sense of the love and kindness of God to
the soul. Where there is no sense of hope of the kindness and mercy of God by Jesus
Christ, there can be none of this fear, but rather wrath and despair, which produceth
that fear that is either devilish, or else that which is only wrought in us by the
Spirit, as a spirit of bondage; but these we do not discourse of now; wherefore the
godly fear that now I treat of, it floweth from some sense or hope of mercy from
God by Jesus Christ—"If thou, Lord," says David, "shouldest mark iniquities,
O Lord, who shall stand? But there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared"
(Psa 130:3,4). "There is mercy with thee" ; this the soul hath sense of,
and hope in, and therefore feareth God. Indeed nothing can lay a stronger obligation
upon the heart to fear God, than sense of, or hope in mercy (Jer 33:8,9). This begetteth
true tenderness of heart, true godly softness of spirit; this truly endeareth the
affections to God; and in this true tenderness, softness, and endearedness of affection
to God, lieth the very essence of this fear of the Lord, as is manifest by the fruit
of this fear when we shall come to speak of it.
Seventh. This fear of God flows from a due consideration of the judgments of God
that are to be executed in the world; yea, upon professors too. Yea further, God's
people themselves, I mean as to themselves, have such a consideration of his judgments
towards them, as to produce this godly fear. When God's judgments are in the earth,
they effect the fear of his name, in the hearts of his own people—"My flesh
trembleth for fear of thee, and I am," said David, "afraid of thy judgments"
(Psa 119:120). When God smote Uzzah, David was afraid of God that day (1 Chron 13:12).
Indeed, many regard not the works of the Lord, nor take notice of the operation of
his hands, and such cannot fear the Lord. But others observe and regard, and wisely
consider of his doings, and of the judgments that he executeth, and that makes them
fear the Lord. This God himself suggesteth as a means to make us fear him. Hence
he commands the false prophet to be stoned, "that all Israel might hear and
fear." Hence also he commanded that the rebellious son should be stoned, "that
all Israel might hear and fear." A false witness was also to have the same judgment
of God executed upon him, "that all Israel might hear and fear." The man
also that did ought presumptuously was to die, "that all Israel might hear and
fear" (Deut 13:11, 21:21, 17:13, 19:20). There is a natural tendency in judgments,
as judgments, to beget a fear of God in the heart of man, as man; but when the observation
of the judgment of God is made by him that hath a principle of true grace in his
soul, that observation being made, I say, by a gracious heart, produceth a fear of
God in the soul of its own nature, to wit, a gracious or godly fear of God.
Eighth. This godly fear also flows from a godly remembrance of our former distresses,
when we were distressed with our first fears; for though our first fears were begotten
in us by the Spirit's working as a spirit of bondage, and so are not always to be
entertained as such, yet even that fear leaveth in us, and upon our spirits, that
sense and relish of our first awakenings and dread, as also occasioneth and produceth
this godly fear. "Take heed," says God, "and keep thy soul diligently,
lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen, and lest they depart from
thy heart all the days of thy life, but teach them thy sons, and thy son's sons."
But what were the things that their eyes had seen, that would so damnify them should
they be forgotten? The answer is, the things which they saw at Horeb; to wit, the
fire, the smoke, the darkness, the earthquake, their first awakenings by the law,
by which they were brought into a bondage fear; yea, they were to remember this especially—"Specially,"
saith he, the day that thou stoodest before the Lord thy God in Horeb, when the Lord
said unto me, Gather me the people together, and I will make them hear my words,
that they may learn to fear me all the days that they shall live upon the earth"
(Deut 4:9-11). The remembrance of what we saw, felt, feared, and trembled under the
sense of, when our first fears were upon us, is that which will produce in our hearts
this godly filial fear.
Ninth. This godly fear flows from our receiving of an answer of prayer, when we supplicated
for mercy at the hand of God. See the proof for this—"If there be in the land
famine, if there be pestilence, blasting, mildew, locust, or if there be caterpillar;
if their enemy besiege them in the land of their cities, whatsoever plague, whatsoever
sickness there be: what prayer and supplication soever be made by any man, or by
all thy people Israel, which shall know every man the plague of his own heart, and
spread forth his hands toward this house: then hear thou in heaven thy dwelling-place,
and forgive, and do, and give to every man according to his ways, whose heart thou
knowest (for thou, even thou only, knowest the hearts of all the children of men).
That they may fear thee all the days of their life, that they live in the land which
thou gavest unto our fathers" (1 Kings 8:37-40).
Tenth. This grace of fear also flows from a blessed conviction of the all-seeing
eye of God; that is, from a belief that he certainly knoweth the heart, and seeth
every one of the turnings and returnings thereof; this is intimated in the text last
mentioned—"Whose heart thou knowest, that they may fear thee," to wit,
so many of them as be, or shall be convinced of this. Indeed, without this conviction,
this godly fear cannot be in us; the want of this conviction made the Pharisees such
hypocrites—"Ye are they," said Christ, "which justify yourselves before
men, but God knoweth your hearts" (Luke 16:15). The Pharisees, I say, were not
aware of this; therefore they so much preferred themselves before those that by far
were better than themselves, and it is for want of this conviction that men go on
in such secret sins as they do, so much without fear either of God or his judgments.[16]
Eleventh. This grace of fear also flows from a sense of the impartial judgment of
God upon men according to their works. This also is manifest from the text mentioned
above. And give unto every man according to his works or ways, "that they may
fear thee," &c. This is also manifest by that of Peter—"And if ye call
on the Father, who without respect of persons judgeth according to every man's work,
pass the time of your sojourning here in fear" (1 Peter 1:17). He that hath
godly conviction of this fear of God, will fear before him; by which fear their hearts
are poised, and works directed with trembling, according to the will of God. Thus
you see what a weighty and great grace this grace of the holy fear of God is, and
how all the graces of the Holy Ghost yield mutually their help and strength to the
nourishment and life of it; and also how it flows from them all, and hath a dependence
upon every one of them for its due working in the heart of him that hath it. And
thus much to show you from whence it flows. And now I shall come to the third thing,
to wit, to show you
What flows from this godly fear.
THIRD. Having showed you what godly fear flows from, I come now, I say, to show you
what proceedeth or flows from this godly fear of God, where it is seated in the heart
of man. And,
First. There flows from this godly fear a godly reverence of God. "He is great,"
said David, "and greatly to be feared in the assembly of his saints." God,
as I have already showed you, is the proper object of godly fear; it is his person
and majesty that this fear always causeth the eye of the soul to be upon. "Behold,"
saith David, "as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their masters, and
as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress; so our eyes wait upon the
Lord our God, until that he have mercy upon us" (Psa 123:2). Nothing aweth the
soul that feareth God so much as doth the glorious majesty of God. His person is
above all things feared by them; "I fear God," said Joseph (Gen 42:18).
That is, more than any other; I stand in awe of him, he is my dread, he is my fear,
I do all mine actions as in his presence, as in his sight; I reverence his holy and
glorious majesty, doing all things as with fear and trembling before him. This fear
makes them have also a very great reverence of his Word; for that also, I told you,
was the rule of their fear. "Princes," said David, "persecuted me
without a cause, but my heart standeth in awe," in fear, "of thy word."
This grace of fear, therefore, from it flows reverence of the words of God; of all
laws, that man feareth the word; and no law that is not agreeing therewith (Psa 119:116).
There flows from this godly fear tenderness of God's glory.
This fear, I say, will cause a man to afflict his soul, when he seeth that by professors
dishonour is brought to the name of God and to his Word. Who would not fear thee,
said Jeremiah, O king of nations, for to thee doth it appertain? He speaks it as
being affected with that dishonour, that by the body of the Jews was continually
brought to his name, his Word, and ways; he also speaks it of a hearty wish that
they once would be otherwise minded. The same saying in effect hath also John in
the Revelation—"Who shall not fear thee, O Lord," said he, "and glorify
thy name?" (Rev 15:4); clearly concluding that godly fear produceth a godly
tenderness of God's glory in the world, for that appertaineth unto him; that is,
it is due unto him, it is a debt which we owe unto him. "Give unto the Lord,"
said David, "the glory due unto his name." Now if there be begotten in
the heart of the godly, by this grace of fear, a godly tenderness of the glory of
God, then it follows of consequence, that where they that have this fear of God do
see his glory diminished by the wickedness of the children of men, there they are
grieved and deeply distressed. "Rivers of waters," said David, "run
down mine eyes, because they keep not thy law" (Psa 119:136). Let met give you
for this these following instances—
How was David provoked when Goliath defied the God of Israel (1 Sam 17:23- 29,45,46).
Also, when others reproached God, he tells us that that reproach was even as "a
sword in his bones" (Psa 42:10). How was Hezekiah afflicted when Rabshakeh railed
upon his God (Isa 37). David also, for the love that he had to the glory of God's
word, ran the hazard and reproach "of all the mighty people" (Psa 119:151,
89:50). How tender of the glory of God was Eli, Daniel, and the three children in
their day. Eli died with fear and trembling of heart when he heard that "the
ark of God was taken" (1 Sam 4:14-18). Daniel ran the danger of the lions' mouths,
for the tender love that he had to the word and worship of God (Dan 6:10-16). The
three children ran the hazard of a burning fiery furnace, rather than they would
dare to dishonour the way of their God (Dan 3:13,16,20). This therefore is one of
the fruits of this godly fear, to wit, a reverence of his name and tenderness of
his glory.
Second. There flows from this godly fear, watchfulness. As it is said of Solomon's
servants, they "watched about his bed, because of fear in the night," so
it may be said of them that have this godly fear—it makes them a watchful people.
It makes them watch their hearts, and take heed to keep them with all diligence,
lest they should, by one or another of its flights, lead them to do that which in
itself is wicked (Prov 4:23; Heb 12:15). It makes them watch, lest some temptation
from hell should enter into their heart to the destroying of them (1 Peter 5:8).
It makes them watch their mouths, and keep them also, at sometimes, as with a bit
and bridle, that they offend not with their tongue, knowing that the tongue is apt,
being an evil member, soon to catch the fire of hell, to the defiling of the whole
body (James 3:2-7). It makes them watch over their ways, look well to their goings,
and to make straight steps for their feet (Psa 39:1; Heb 12:13). Thus this godly
fear puts the soul upon its watch, lest from the heart within, or from the devil
without, or from the world, or some other temptation, something should surprise and
overtake the child of God to defile him, or to cause him to defile the ways of God,
and so offend the saints, open the mouths of men, and cause the enemy to speak reproachfully
of religion.
Third. There flows from this fear a holy provocation to a reverential converse with
saints in their religious and godly assemblies, for their further progress in the
faith and way of holiness. "Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to
another." Spake, that is, of God, and his holy and glorious name, kingdom, and
works, for their mutual edification; "a book of remembrance was written before
him for them that feared the Lord, and that thought upon his name" (Mal 3:16).
The fear of the Lord in the heart provoketh to this in all its acts, not only of
necessity, but of nature: it is the natural effect of this godly fear, to exercise
the church in the contemplation of God, together and apart. All fear, good and bad,
hath a natural propenseness in it to incline the heart to contemplate upon the object
of fear, and though a man should labour to take off his thoughts from the object
of his fear, whether that object was men, hell, devils, &c., yet do what he could
the next time his fear had any act in it, it would return again to its object. And
so it is with godly fear; that will make a man speak of, and think upon, the name
of God reverentially (Psa 89:7); yea, and exercise himself in the holy thoughts of
him in such sort that his soul shall be sanctified, and seasoned with such meditations.
Indeed, holy thoughts of God, such as you see this fear doth exercise the heart withal,
prepare the heart to, and for God. This fear therefore it is that David prayed for,
for the people, when he said, "O Lord God of Abraham, Isaac, and of Israel our
fathers, keep this for ever in the imagination of the thoughts of the heart of thy
people, and prepare their heart unto thee" (1 Chron 29:18).
Fourth. There flows from this fear of God great reverence of his majesty, in and
under the use and enjoyment of God's holy ordinances. His ordinances are his courts
and palaces, his walks and places, where he giveth his presence to those that wait
upon him in them, in the fear of his name. And this is the meaning of that of the
apostle: "Then had the churches rest throughout all Judea, and Galilee, and
Samaria, and were edified; and, walking in the fear of the Lord, and in the comfort
of the Holy Ghost, were multiplied" (Acts 9:31). "And walking"—that
word intendeth their use of the ordinances of God. They walked in all the commandments
and ordinances of the Lord blameless. This, in Old Testament language, is called,
treading God's courts, and walking in his paths. This, saith the text, they did here,
in the fear of God. That is, in a great reverence of that God whose ordinances they
were. "Ye shall keep my Sabbaths, and reverence my sanctuary; I am the Lord"
(Lev 19:30, 26:2).
It is one thing to be conversant in God's ordinances, and another to be conversant
in them with a due reverence of the majesty and name of that God whose ordinances
they are: it is common for men to do the first, but none can do the last without
this fear. "In thy fear," said David, "will I worship" (Psa 5:7).
It is this fear of God, therefore, from whence doth flow that great reverence that
his saints have in them, of his majesty, in and under the use and enjoyment of God's
holy ordinances; and, consequently, that makes our service in the performance of
them acceptable to God through Christ (Heb 12). For God expects that we serve him
with fear and trembling, and it is odious among men, for a man in the presence, or
about the service of his prince, to behave himself lightly, and without due reverence
of that majesty in whose presence and about whose business he is. And if so, how
can their service to God have anything like acceptation from the hand of God, that
is done, not in, but without the fear of God? This service must needs be an abomination
to him, and these servers must come off with rebuke.
Fifth. There flows from this godly fear of God, self-denial. That is, a holy abstaining
from those things that are either unlawful or inexpedient; according to that of Nehemiah,
"The former governors that had been before me, were chargeable unto the people,
that had taken of them bread and wine, beside forty shekels of silver, yea, even
their servants bare rule over the people: but so did not I, because of the fear of
God" (Neh 5:15).[17]
Here not was self-denial; he would not do as they did that went before him, neither
himself, nor should his servants; but what was it that put him upon these acts of
self-denial? The answer is, the fear of God: "but so did not I, because of the
fear of God."
Now, whether by the fear of God in this place be meant his Word, or the grace of
fear in his heart, may perhaps be a scruple to some, but in my judgment the text
must have respect to the latter, to wit, to the grace of fear, for without that being
indeed in the heart, the word will not produce that good self-denial in us, that
here you find this good man to live in the daily exercise of. The fear of God, therefore,
that was the cause of his self-denial, was this grace of fear in his heart. This
made him to be, as was said before, tender of the honour of God, and of the salvation
of his brother: yea, so tender, that rather than he would give an occasion to the
weak to stumble, or be offended, he would even deny himself of that which others
never sticked to do. Paul also, through the sanctifying operations of this fear of
God in his heart, did deny himself even of lawful things, for the profit and commodity
of his brother—"I will eat no flesh while the world standeth, lest I make my
brother to offend" ; that is, if his eating of it would make his brother to
offend (1 Cor 8:13).
Men that have not this fear of God in them, will not, cannot deny themselves— of
love to God, and the good of the weak, who are subject to stumble at indifferent
things—but where this grace of fear is, there follows self-denial; there men are
tender of offending; and count that it far better becomes their profession to be
of a self-denying, condescending conversation and temper, than to stand sturdily
to their own liberty in things inexpedient, whoever is offended thereat. This grace
of fear, therefore, is a very excellent thing, because it yieldeth such excellent
fruit as this. For this self-denial, of how little esteem soever it be with some,
yet the want of it, if the words of Christ be true, as they are, takes quite away
from even a professor the very name of a disciple (Matt 10:37,38; Luke 14:26,27,33).
They, says Nehemiah, lorded it over the brethren, but so did not I. They took bread
and wine, and forty shekels of silver of them, but so did not I; yea, even their
servants bare rule over the people, "but so did not I, because of the fear of
God."
Sixth. There flows from this godly fear of God "singleness of heart" (Col
3:22). Singleness of heart both to God and man; singleness of heart, that is it which
in another place is called sincerity and godly simplicity, and it is this, when a
man doth a thing simply for the sake of him or of the law that commands it, without
respect to this by-end,[18]
or that desire of praise or of vain-glory from others; I say, when our obedience
to God is done by us simply or alone for God's sake, for his Word's sake, without
any regard to this or that by-end or reserve, "not with eye-service, as men-pleasers,
but in singleness of heart, fearing God." A man is more subject to nothing than
to swerve from singleness of heart in his service to God, and obedience to his will.
How doth the Lord charge the children of Israel, and all their obedience, and that
for seventy years together, with the want of singleness of heart towards him—"When
ye fasted and mourned in the fifth and seventh month, even those seventy years, did
ye at all fast unto me, even to me? And when ye did eat, and when ye did drink, did
not ye eat for yourselves, and drink for yourselves?" (Zech 7:5,6).
They wanted this singleness of heart in their fasting, and in their eating, in their
mourning, and in their drinking; they had double hearts in what they did. They did
not as the apostle bids; "whether ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all
to the glory of God." And the reason of their want of this thing was, they wanted
this fear of God; for that, as the apostle here saith, effecteth singleness of heart
to God, and makes a man, as John said of Gaius, "do faithfully whatsoever he
doth" (3 John 5). And the reason is, as hath been already urged, for that grace
of fear of God retaineth and keepeth upon the heart a reverent and awful sense of
the dread majesty and all-seeing eye of God, also a due consideration of the day
of account before him; it likewise maketh his service sweet and pleasing, and fortifies
the soul against all discouragements; by this means, I say, the soul, in its service
to God or man, is not so soon captivated as where there is not this fear, but through
and by it its service is accepted, being single, sincere, simple, and faithful; when
others, with what they do, are cast into hell for their hypocrisy, for they mix not
what they do with godly fear. Singleness of heart in the service of God is of such
absolute necessity, that without it, as I have hinted, nothing can be accepted; because
where that is wanting, there wanteth love to God, and to that which is true holiness
indeed. It was this singleness of heart that made Nathanael so honourable in the
eyes of Jesus Christ. "Behold," said he, "an Israelite indeed, in
whom there is no guile" (John 1:47). And it was the want of it that made him
so much abhor the Pharisees. They wanted sincerity, simplicity, and godly sincerity
in their souls, and so became an abhorrence in his esteem. Now, I say, this golden
grace, singleness of heart, it flows from this godly fear of God.
Seventh. There flows from this godly fear of God, compassion and bowels to those
of the saints that are in necessity and distress. This is manifest in good Obadiah;
it is said of him, "That he took an hundred" of the Lord's "prophets,
and hid them by fifty in a cave, and fed them with bread and water," in the
days when Jezebel, that tyrant, sought their lives to destroy them (1 Kings 18:3,4).
But what was it that moved so upon his heart, as to cause him to do this thing? Why,
it was this blessed grace of the fear of God. "Now Obadiah," saith the
text, "feared the Lord greatly, for it was so, when Jezebel cut off the prophets
of the Lord, that Obadiah took an hundred prophets, and hid them by fifty in a cave,
and fed them with bread and water." This was charity to the distressed, even
to the distressed for the Lord's sake.
Had not Obadiah served the Lord, yea, had he not greatly feared him, he would not
have been able to do this thing, especially as the case then stood with him, and
also with the church at that time, for then Jezebel sought to slay all that indeed
feared the Lord; yea, and the persecution prevailed so much at that time, that even
Elijah himself thought that she had killed all but him. But now, even now, the fear
of God in this good man's heart put forth itself into acts of mercy though attended
with so imminent danger. See here, therefore, that the fear of God will put forth
itself in the heart where God hath put it, even to show kindness, and to have compassion
upon the distressed servants of God, even under Jezebel's nose; for Obadiah dwelt
in Ahab's house, and Jezebel was Ahab's wife, and a horrible persecutor, as was said
before: yet Obadiah will show mercy to the poor because he feared God, yea, he will
venture her displeasure, his place, and neck, and all, but he will be merciful to
his brethren in distress. Cornelius, also, being a man possessed with this fear of
God, became a very free-hearted and open-handed man to the poor—"He feared God,
and gave much alms to the people." Indeed this fear, this godly fear of God,
it is a universal grace; it will stir up the soul unto all good duties. It is a fruitful
grace; from it, where it is, floweth abundance of excellent virtues; nor without
it can there be anything good, or done well, that is done. But,
Eighth. There flows from this fear of God hearty, fervent, and constant prayer. This
also is seen in Cornelius, that devout man. He feared God; and what then? why, he
gave much alms to the people, "and prayed to God alway" (Acts 10:1,2).
Did I say that hearty, fervent, and constant prayer flowed from this fear of God?
I will add, that if the whole duty, and the continuation of it, be not managed with
this fear of God, it profiteth nothing at all. It is said of our Lord Jesus Christ
himself, "He was heard in that he feared." He prayed, then, because he
feared, because he feared God, and therefore was his prayer accepted of him, even
because he feared—"He was heard in that he feared" (Heb 5:7). This godly
fear is so essential to right prayer, and right prayer is such an inseparable effect
and fruit of this fear, that you must have both or none; he that prayeth not feareth
not God, yea, he that prayeth not fervently and frequently feareth him not; and so
he that feareth him not cannot pray; for if prayer be the effect of this fear of
God, then without this fear, prayer, fervent prayer, ceaseth. How can they pray or
make conscience of the duty that fear not God? O prayerless man, thou fearest not
God! Thou wouldest not live so like a swine or a dog in the world as thou dost, if
thou fearest the Lord.
Ninth. There floweth from this fear of God a readiness or willingness, at God's call,
to give up our best enjoyments to his disposal. This is evident in Abraham, who at
God's call, without delay, rose early in the morning to offer up his only and well-beloved
Isaac a burnt-offering in the place where God should appoint him. It was a rare thing
that Abraham did; and had he not had this rare grace, this fear of God, he would
not, he could not have done to God's liking so wonderful a thing. It is true the
Holy Ghost also makes this service of Abraham to be the fruit of his faith—"By
faith Abraham offered up Isaac, and he that had received the promises offered up
his only-begotten son" (Heb 11; James 2). Aye, and without doubt love unto God,
in Abraham, was not wanting in this his service, nor was this grace of fear; nay,
in the story where it is recorded. There it is chiefly accounted for the fruit of
his godly fear, and that by an angel from heaven—"And the angel called out of
heaven, and said, Abraham, Abraham. And he said, Here am I. And he said, Lay not
thine hand upon the lad, neither do thou anything unto him, for now I know that thou
fearest God, seeing thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son, from me"
(Gen 22:11,12). Now I know it; now, now thou hast offered up thine only Isaac, thine
all, at the bidding of thy God. Now I know it. The fear of God is not presently discerned
in the heart and life of a man. Abraham had long before this done many a holy duty,
and showed much willingness of heart to observe and do the will of God; yet you find
not, as I remember, that he had this testimony from heaven that he feared God till
now; but now he has it, now he has it from heaven. "Now I know that thou fearest
God." Many duties may be done—though I do not say that Abraham did them— without
the fear of God; but when a man shall not stick at, or withhold, his darling from
God, when called upon by God to offer it up unto him, that declareth, yea, and gives
conviction to angels, that now he feareth God.
Tenth. There floweth from this godly fear humility of mind. This is evident, because,
when the apostle cautions the Romans against the venom of spiritual pride, he directs
them to the exercise of this blessed grace of fear as its antidote. "Be not
high-minded," saith he, "but fear" (Rom 11:20). Pride, spiritual pride,
which is here set forth by the word "high-minded," is a sin of a very high
and damnable nature; it was the sin of the fallen angels, and is that which causeth
men to fall into the same condemnation—"Lest being lifted up with pride, he
fall into the condemnation of the devil." Pride, I say, it damns a professor
with the damnation of devils, with the damnation of hell, and therefore it is a deadly,
deadly sin. Now against this deadly sin is set the grace of humility; that comely
garment, for so the apostle calls it, saying, "be clothed with humility."
But the question is now, how we should attain to, and live in, the exercise of this
blessed and comely grace? to which the apostle answers, Fear; be afraid with godly
fear, and thence will flow humility—"Be not high-minded, but fear." That
is, Fear, or be continually afraid and jealous of yourselves, and of your own naughty
hearts, also fear lest at some time or other the devil, your adversary, should have
advantage of you.
Fear, lest by forgetting what you are by nature, you also forget the need that you
have of continual pardon, support, and supplies from the Spirit of grace, and so
grow proud of your own abilities, or of what you have received of God, and fall into
the condemnation of the devil. Fear, and that will make you little in your own eyes,
keep you humble, put you upon crying to God for protection, and upon lying at his
foot for mercy; that will also make you have low thoughts of your own parts, your
own doings, and cause you to prefer your brother before yourself, and so you will
walk in humiliation, and be continually under the teachings of God, and under his
conduct in your way. The humble, God will teach—"The meek will he guide in judgment,
the meek will he teach his way." From this grace of fear then flows this excellent
and comely thing, humility; yea, it also is maintained by this fear. Fear takes off
a man from trusting to himself, it puts a man upon trying of all things, it puts
a man upon desiring counsel and help from heaven, it makes a man ready and willing
to hear instruction, and makes a man walk lowly, softly, and so securely in the way.
Eleventh. There flows from this grace of fear, hope in the mercy of God—"The
Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him, in them that hope in his mercy"
(Psa 147:11). The latter part of the text is an explanation of the former: as if
the psalmist had said, They be the men that fear the Lord, even they that hope in
his mercy; for true fear produceth hope in God's mercy. And it is further manifest
thus. Fear, true fear of God inclineth the heart to a serious inquiry after that
way of salvation which God himself hath prescribed; now the way that God hath appointed,
by the which the sinner is to obtain the salvation of his soul, is his mercy as so
and so set forth in the Word, and godly fear hath special regard to the Word. To
this way, therefore, the sinner with this godly fear submits his soul, rolls himself
upon it, and so is delivered from that death into which others, for want of this
fear of God, do headlong fall.
It is, as I also hinted before, the nature of godly fear to be very much putting
the soul upon the inquiry which is, and which is not, the thing approved of God,
and accordingly to embrace it or shun it. Now I say, this fear having put the soul
upon a strict and serious inquiry after the way of salvation, at last it finds it
to be by the mercy of God in Christ; therefore this fear putteth the soul upon hoping
also in him for eternal life and blessedness; by which hope he doth not only secure
his soul, but becomes a portion of God's delight—"The Lord takes pleasure in
them that fear him, in them that hope in his mercy."
Besides, this godly fear carrieth in it self-evidence that the state of the sinner
is happy, because possessed with this happy grace. Therefore, as John saith, "We
know we have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren" (1 John
3:14). So here, "The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him, in them that
hope in his mercy." If I fear God, and if my fearing of him is a thing in which
he taketh such pleasure, then may I boldly venture to roll myself for eternal life
into the bosom of his mercy, which is Christ. This fear also produceth hope; if therefore,
poor sinner, thou knowest thyself to be one that is possessed with this fear of God,
suffer thyself to be persuaded therefore to hope in the mercy of God for salvation,
for the Lord takes pleasure in thee. And it delights him to see thee hope in his
mercy.
Twelfth. There floweth from this godly fear of God an honest and conscientious use
of all those means which God hath ordained, that we should be conversant in for our
attaining salvation. Faith and hope in God's mercy is that which secureth our justification
and hope, and as you have heard, they do flow from this fear. But now, besides faith
and hope, there is a course of life in those things in which God hath ordained us
to have our conversation, without which there is no eternal life. "Ye have your
fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life" ; and again, "without
holiness no man shall see the Lord." Not that faith and hope are deficient,
if they be right, but they are both of them counterfeit when not attended with a
reverent use of all the means: upon the reverent use of which the soul is put by
this grace of fear. "Wherefore, beloved," said Paul, "as ye have always
obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in mine absence, work out your
own salvation with fear and trembling" (Rom 6:22; Heb 12:14; Phil 2:11).
There is a faith and hope of mercy that may deceive a man (though the faith of God's
elect, and the hope that purifies the heart never will), because they are alone,
and not attended with those companions that accompany salvation (Heb 6:3-8). But
now this godly fear carries in its bowels, not only a moving of the soul to faith
and hope in God's mercy, but an earnest provocation to the holy and reverent use
of all the means that God has ordained for a man to have his conversation in, in
order to his eternal salvation. "Work out your salvation with fear." Not
that work is meritorious, or such that can purchase eternal life, for eternal life
is obtained by hope in God's mercy; but this hope, if it be right, is attended with
this godly fear, which fear putteth the soul upon a diligent use of all those means
that may tend to the strengthening of hope, and so to the making of us holy in all
manner of conversation, that we may be meet to be partakers of the inheritance of
the saints in light. For hope purifieth the heart, if fear of God shall be its companion,
and so maketh a man a vessel of mercy prepared unto glory. Paul bids Timothy to fly
pride, covetousness, doting about questions, and the like, and to "follow after
righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience; to fight the good fight of faith,
and to lay hold on eternal life" (1 Tim 6).
So Peter bids that we "add to our faith virtue; and to virtue knowledge; and
to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and to patience godliness; and
to godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness charity" ; adding,
"for if these things be in you and abound, they make you that ye shall neither
be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. Wherefore the
rather, brethren, give diligence to make your calling and election sure; for if ye
do these things, ye shall never fall. For so an entrance shall be ministered unto
you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ"
(2 Peter 1:5-11). The sum of all which is that which was mentioned before; to wit,
"to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling." For none of these
things can be conscientiously done, but by and with the help of this blessed grace
of fear.
Thirteenth. There flows from this fear, this godly fear, a great delight in the holy
commands of God, that is, a delight to be conformable unto them. "Blessed is
the man that feareth the Lord, that delighteth greatly in his commandments"
(Psa 112:1). This confirmeth that which was said before, to wit, that this fear provoketh
to a holy and reverent use of the means; for that cannot be, when there is not an
holy, yea, a great delight in the commandments. Wherefore this fear maketh the sinner
to abhor that which is sin, because that is contrary to the object of his delight.
A man cannot delight himself at the same time in things directly opposite one to
another, as sin and the holy commandment is; therefore Christ saith of the servant,
he cannot love God and mammon—"Ye cannot serve God and mammon." If he cleaves
to the one, he must hate and despise the other; there cannot at the same time be
service to both, because that themselves are at enmity one with the other. So is
sin and the commandment. Therefore if a man delighteth himself in the commandment,
he hateth that which is opposite, which is sin: how much more when he greatly delighteth
in the commandment? Now, this holy fear of God it taketh the heart and affections
from sin, and setteth them upon the holy commandment. Therefore such a man is rightly
esteemed blessed. For no profession makes a man blessed but that which is accompanied
with an alienation of the heart from sin, nor doth anything do that when this holy
fear is wanting. It is from this fear then, that love to, and delight in, the holy
commandment floweth, and so by that the sinner is kept from those falls and dangers
of miscarrying that other professors are so subject to: he greatly delights in the
commandment.
Fourteenth. Lastly, There floweth from this fear of God, enlargement of heart. "Then
thou shalt see, and flow together, and thine heart shall fear, and be enlarged"
(Isa 60:5). "Thine heart shall fear, and be enlarged," enlarged to God-
ward, enlarged to his ways, enlarged to his holy people, enlarged in love after the
salvation of others. Indeed when this fear of God is wanting, though the profession
be never so famous, the heart is shut up and straitened, and nothing is done in that
princely free spirit which is called "the spirit of the fear of the Lord"
(Psa 51:12; Isa 11:2). But with grudging, legally, or with desire of vain-glory,
this enlargedness of heart is wanting, for that flows from this fear of the Lord.
Thus have I showed you both what this fear of God is, what it flows from, and also
what doth flow from it. I come now to show you some
[OF THE PRIVILEGES OF THEM THAT THUS DO FEAR THE LORD.]
Having thus briefly handled in particular thus far this fear of God, I shall now
show you certain of the excellent privileges of them that fear the Lord, not that
they are not privileges that have been already mentioned; for what greater privileges
than to have this fear producing in the soul such excellent things so necessary for
us for good, both with reference to this world, and that which is to come? But because
those fourteen above named do rather flow from this grace of fear where it is, than
from a promise to the person that hath it, therefore I have chosen rather to discourse
of them as the fruits and effects of fear, than otherwise. Now, besides all these,
there is entailed by promise to the man that hath this fear many other blessed privileges,
the which I shall now in a brief way lay open unto you.
First Privilege, then. That man that feareth the Lord, has a grant and a license
"to trust in the Lord," with an affirmation that he is their help, and
their shield— "Ye that fear the Lord, trust in the Lord; he is their help and
their shield" (Psa 115:11). Now what a privilege is this! an exhortation in
general to sinners, as sinners, to trust in him, is a privilege great and glorious;
but for a man to be singled out from his neighbours, for a man to be spoken to from
heaven, as it were by name, and to be told that God hath given him a license, a special
and peculiar grant to trust in him, this is abundantly more; and yet this is the
grant that God hath given that man! He hath, I say, a license to do it—a license
indicted by the Holy Ghost, and left upon record for those to be born that shall
fear the Lord, to trust in him. And not only so, but as the text affirmeth, "he
is their help and their shield." Their help under all their weaknesses and infirmities,
and a shield to defend them against all the assaults of the devil and this world.
So then, the man that feareth the Lord is licensed to make the Lord his stay and
God of his salvation, the succour and deliverer of his soul. He will defend him because
his fear is in his heart. O ye servants of the Lord, ye that fear him, live in the
comfort of this; boldly make use of it when you are in straits, and put your trust
under the shadow of his wings, for indeed he would have you do so, because you do
fear the Lord.
Second Privilege. God hath also proclaimed concerning the man that feareth the Lord,
that he will also be his teacher and guide in the way that he shall choose, and hath
moreover promised concerning such, that their soul shall dwell at ease—"What
man is he that feareth the Lord?" says David, "him shall he teach in the
way that he shall choose" (Psa 25:12). Now, to be taught of God, what like it?
yea, what like to be taught in the way that thou shalt choose? Thou hast chosen the
way to life, God's way; but perhaps thy ignorance about it is so great, and those
that tempt thee to turn aside so many and so subtle, that they seem to outwit thee
and confound thee with their guile. Well, but the Lord whom thou fearest will not
leave thee to thy ignorance, nor yet to thine enemies' power or subtlety, but will
take it upon himself to be thy teacher and thy guide, and that in the way that thou
hast chosen. Hear, then, and behold thy privilege, O thou that fearest the Lord;
and whoever wanders, turns aside, and swerveth from the way of salvation, whoever
is benighted, and lost in the midst of darkness, thou shalt find the way to the heaven
and the glory that thou hast chosen.
Further, He doth not only say, that he will teach them the way, for that must of
necessity be supplied, but he says also that he will teach such in it—"Him shall
he teach in the way that he shall choose." This argueth that, as thou shalt
know, so the way shall be made, by the communion that thou shalt have with God therein,
sweet and pleasant to thee. For this text promiseth unto the man that feareth the
Lord, the presence, company, and discovery of the mind of God, while he is going
in the way that he hath chosen. It is said of the good scribe, that he is instructed
unto, as well as into, the way of the kingdom of God (Matt 13:52). Instructed unto;
that is, he hath the heart and mind of God still discovered to him in the way that
he hath chosen, even all the way from this world to that which is to come, even until
he shall come to the very gate and door of heaven. What the disciples said was the
effect of the presence of Christ, to wit, "that their hearts did burn within
them while he talked to them by the way," shall be also fulfilled in thee, he
will meet with thee in the way, talk with thee in the way; he will teach thee in
the way that thou shalt choose (Luke 24:32).
Third Privilege. Dost thou fear the Lord? he will open his secret unto thee, even
that which he hath hid and keeps close from all the world, to wit, the secret of
his covenant and of thy concern therein—"The secret of the Lord is with them
that fear him, and he will shew them his covenant" (Psa 25:14). This, then,
further confirmeth what was said but just above; his secret shall be with them, and
his covenant shall be showed unto them. His secret, to wit, that which hath been
kept hid from ages and generations; that which he manifesteth only to the saints,
or holy ones; that is, his Christ, for he it is that is hid in God, and that no man
can know but he to whom the Father shall reveal him (Matt 11:27).
But O! what is there wrapped up in this Christ, this secret of God? why, all treasures
of life, of heaven, and happiness—"In him are hid all the treasures of wisdom
and knowledge." And "in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily"
(Col 2).
This also is that hidden One, that is so full of grace to save sinners, and so full
of truth and faithfulness to keep promise and covenant with them, that their eyes
must needs convey, even by every glance they make upon his person, offices, and relation,
such affecting ravishments to the heart, that it would please them that see him,
even to be killed with that sight. This secret of the Lord shall be, nay is, with
them that fear him, for he dwelleth in their heart by faith. "And he will shew
them his covenant." That is, the covenant that is confirmed of God in Christ,
that everlasting and eternal covenant, and show him too that he himself is wrapped
up therein, as in a bundle of life with the Lord his God. These are the thoughts,
purposes, and promises of God to them that fear him.
Fourth Privilege. Dost thou fear the Lord? his eye is always over thee for good,
to keep thee from all evil—"Behold the eye of the Lord is upon them that fear
him, upon them that hope in his mercy; to deliver their soul from death, and to keep
them alive in famine" (Psa 33:18,19). His eye is upon them; that is, to watch
over them for good. He that keepeth Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps. His eyes
are upon them, and he will keep them as a shepherd doth his sheep; that is, from
those wolves that seek to devour them, and to swallow them up in death. His eyes
are upon them; for they are the object of his delight, the rarities of the world,
in whom, saith he, is all my delight. His eye is upon them, as I said before, to
teach and instruct them—"I will instruct thee and teach thee in the way which
thou shalt go; I will guide thee with mine eye" (Psa 32:8; 2 Chron 7:15,16).
The eye of the Lord, therefore, is upon them, not to take advantage of them, to destroy
them for their sins, but to guide, to help, and deliver them from death; from that
death that would feed upon their souls—"To deliver their soul from death and
to keep them alive in famine." Take death here for death spiritual, and death
eternal; and the famine here, not for that that is for want of bread and water, but
for that which comes on many for want of the Word of the Lord (Rev 20:14; Amos 8:11,12);
and then the sense is this, the man that feareth the Lord shall neither die spiritually
nor eternally; for God will keep him with his eye from all those things that would
in such a manner kill him. Again, should there be a famine of the Word; should there
want both the Word and them that preach it in the place that thou dost dwell, yet
bread shall be given thee, and thy water shall be sure; thou shalt not die of the
famine, because thou fearest God. I say, that man shall not, behold he shall not,
because he feareth God, and this the next head doth yet more fully manifest.
Fifth Privilege. Dost thou fear God? fear him for this advantage more and more—"O
fear the Lord, ye his saints, for there is no want to them that fear him. The young
lions do lack and suffer hunger, but they that seek the Lord," that fear him,
"shall not want any good thing" (Psa 34:9,10). Not anything that God sees
good for them shall those men want that fear the Lord. If health will do them good,
if sickness will do them good, if riches will do them good, if poverty will do them
good, if life will do them good, if death will do them good, then they shall not
want them, neither shall any of these come nigh them, if they will not do them good.
The lions, the wicked people [19] of the world that fear not God, are not made sharers
in this great privilege; all things fall out to them contrary, because they fear
not God. In the midst of their sufficiency, they are in want of that good that God
puts into the worst things that the man that feareth God doth meet with in the world.
Sixth Privilege. Dost thou fear God? he hath given charge to the armies of heaven
to look after, take charge of, to camp about, and to deliver thee—"The angel
of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him, and delivereth them" (Psa
34:7). This also is a privilege entailed to them that in all generations fear the
Lord. The angels, the heavenly creatures, have it in commission to take the charge
of them that fear the Lord; one of them is able to slay of men in one night 185,000.
These are they that camped about Elisha like horses of fire, and chariots of fire,
when the enemy came to destroy him.
They also helped Hezekiah against the band of the enemy, because he feared God (2
Kings 6:17; Isa 37:36; Jer 26:19). "The angel of the Lord encampeth round about
them" ; that is, lest the enemy should set upon them on any side; but let him
come where he will, behind or before, on this side or that, the angel of the Lord
is there to defend them. "The angel." It may be spoken in the singular
number, perhaps, to show that every one that feareth God hath his angel to attend
on him, and serve him. When the church, in the Acts, was told that Peter stood at
the door and knocked; at first they counted the messenger mad, but when she did constantly
affirm it, they said, It is his angel (Acts 12:13-15). So Christ saith of the children
that came unto him, "their angels behold the face of my Father which is in heaven."
Their angels; that is, those of them that feared God, had each of them his angel,
who had a charge from God to keep them in their way. We little think of this, yet
this is the privilege of them that fear the Lord; yea, if need be, they shall all
come down to help them and to deliver them, rather than, contrary to the mind of
their God, they should by any be abused—"Are they not all ministering spirits,
sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" (Heb 1:14).
[Quest.] But how do they deliver them? for so says the text—"The angel of the
Lord encampeth round about them that fear him, and delivereth them." Answ. The
way that they take to deliver them that fear the Lord, is sometimes by smiting of
their enemies with blindness, that they may not find them; and so they served the
enemies of Lot (Gen 19:10,11). Sometimes by smiting of them with deadly fear; and
so they served those that laid siege against Samaria (2 Kings 7:6). And sometimes
by smiting of them even with death itself; and thus they served Herod, after he had
attempted to kill the apostle James, and also sought to vex certain others of the
church (Acts 12). These angels that are servants to them that fear the Lord, are
them that will, if God doth bid them, revenge the quarrel of his servants upon the
stoutest monarch on earth. This, therefore, is a glorious privilege of the men that
fear the Lord. Alas! they are, some of them, so mean that they are counted not worth
taking notice of by the high ones of the world; but their betters do respect them.
The angels of God count not themselves too good to attend on them, and camp about
them to deliver them. This, then, is the man that hath his angel to wait upon him,
even he that feareth God.
Seventh Privilege. Dost thou fear the Lord? salvation is nigh unto thee—"Surely
his salvation is nigh them that fear him, that glory may dwell in our land"
(Psa 85:9). This is another privilege for them that fear the Lord. I told you before,
that the angel of the Lord did encamp about them, but now he saith, "his salvation
is also nigh them" ; the which although it doth not altogether exclude the conduct
of angels,[20] but include them; yet it looketh further. "Surely his salvation,"
his saving, pardoning grace, "is nigh them that fear him" ; that is, to
save them out of the hand of their spiritual enemies. The devil, and sin, and death,
do always wait even to devour them that fear the Lord, but to deliver them from these
his salvation doth attend them. So then, if Satan tempts, here is their salvation
nigh; if sin, by breaking forth, beguiles them, here is God's salvation nigh them;
yea, if death itself shall suddenly seize upon them, why, here is their God's salvation
nigh them.
I have seen that great men's little children must go no whither without their nurses
be at hand. If they go abroad, their nurses must go with them; if they go to meals,
their nurses must go with them; if they go to bed, their nurses must go with them;
yea, and if they fall asleep, their nurses must stand by them. O my brethren, those
little ones that fear the Lord, they are the children of the highest, therefore they
shall not walk alone, be at their spiritual meats alone, go to their sick-beds, or
to their graves alone; the salvation of their God is nigh them, to deliver them from
the evil. This is then the glory that dwells in the land of them that fear the Lord.
Eighth Privilege. Dost thou fear the Lord? hearken yet again—"The mercy of the
Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him, and his righteousness
unto children's children" (Psa 103:17). This still confirms what was last asserted,
that is, that his salvation is nigh unto them. His salvation, that is, pardoning
mercy, that is nigh them. But mind it, there he says it is nigh them; but here it
is upon them. His mercy is upon them, it covereth them all over, it encompasseth
them about as with a shield. Therefore they are said in another place to be clothed
with salvation, and covered with the robe of righteousness. The mercy of the Lord
is upon them, that is, as I said, to shelter and defend them. The mercy, the pardoning
preserving mercy, the mercy of the Lord is upon them, who is he then that can condemn
them? (Rom 8).
But there yet is more behind, "The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to
everlasting upon them." It was designed for them before the world was, and shall
be upon them when the world itself is ended; from everlasting to everlasting it is
on them that fear him. This from everlasting to everlasting is that by which, in
another place, the eternity of God himself is declared—"From everlasting to
everlasting, thou art God" (Psa 90:2). The meaning, then, may be this; that
so long as God hath his being, so long shall the man that feareth him find mercy
at his hand. According to that of Moses—"The eternal God is thy refuge, and
underneath are the everlasting arms; and he shall thrust out the enemy from before
thee, and shall say, Destroy them" (Deut 33:27).
Child of God, thou that fearest God, here is mercy nigh thee, mercy enough, everlasting
mercy upon thee. This is long-lived mercy. It will live longer than thy sin, it will
live longer than temptation, it will live longer than thy sorrows, it will live longer
than thy persecutors. It is mercy from everlasting to contrive thy salvation, and
mercy to everlasting to weather it out with all thy adversaries. Now what can hell
and death do to him that hath this mercy of God upon him? And this hath the man that
feareth the Lord. Take that other blessed word, and O thou man that fearest the Lord,
hang it like a chain of gold about thy neck—"As the heaven is high above the
earth, so great is his mercy toward them that fear him" (Psa 103:11). If mercy
as big, as high, and as good as heaven itself will be a privilege, the man that feareth
God shall have a privilege.
Ninth Privilege. Dost thou fear God?—"Like as a father pitieth his children,
so the Lord pitieth them that fear him" (Psa 103:13).
" The Lord pitieth them that fear him" ; that is, condoleth and is affected,
feeleth and sympathizeth with them in all their afflictions. It is a great matter
for a poor man to be in this manner in the affections of the great and mighty, but
for a poor sinner to be thus in the heart and affections of God, and they that fear
him are so, this is astonishing to consider. "In his love and in his pity he
redeemed them." In his love and in his pity! "In all their affliction he
was afflicted, and the angel of his presence saved them; in his love and in his pity
he redeemed them, and he bare them, and carried them all the days of old" (Isa
63:9). I say, in that he is said to pity them, it is as much as to say, he condoleth,
feeleth, and sympathizeth with them in all their afflictions and temptations. So
that this is the happiness of him that feareth God, he has a God to pity him and
to be touched with all his miseries. It is said in Judges, "His soul was grieved
for the misery of Israel" (Judg 10:16). And in the Hebrews, he is "touched
with the feeling of our infirmities," and can "succour them that are tempted"
(4:15, 2:17,18).
But further, let us take notice of the comparison. "As a father pitieth his
children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him." Here is not only pity, but
the pity of a relation, a father. It is said in another place; "Can a woman,"
a mother, "forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on
the son of her womb? yea, they may, yet will not I forget thee." The pity of
neighbours and acquaintance helpeth in times of distress, but the pity of a father
and a mother is pity with an over and above. "The Lord," says James, "is
very pitiful, and of tender mercy." Pharaoh called Joseph his tender father,[21]
because he provided for him against the famine, but how tender a father is God! how
full of bowels! how full of pity! (James 5:11; Gen 41:43). It is said, that when
Ephraim was afflicted, God's bowels were troubled for him, and turned within him
towards him. O that the man that feareth the Lord did but believe the pity and bowels
that are in the heart of God and his father towards him (Jer 31:18-20).
Tenth Privilege. Dost thou fear God?—"He will fulfil the desire of them that
fear him; he also will hear their cry, and will save them" (Psa 145:19). Almost
all those places that make mention of the men that fear God, do insinuate as if they
still were under affliction, or in danger by reason of an enemy. But I say, here
is still their privilege, their God is their father and pities them—"He will
fulfil the desire of them that fear him." Where now is the man that feareth
the Lord? let him hearken to this. What sayest thou, poor soul? will this content
thee, the Lord will fulfil thy desires? It is intimated of Adonijah, that David his
father did let him have his head and his will in all things. "His father,"
says the text, "had not displeased him at any time in (so much as) saying, Why
hast thou done so?" (1 Kings 1:6). But here is more, here is a promise to grant
thee the whole desire of thy heart, according to the prayer of holy David, "The
Lord grant thee, according to thine own heart, and fulfil all thy counsel."
And again, "The Lord fulfil all thy petitions" (Psa 20).
O thou that fearest the Lord, what is thy desire? All my desire, says David, is all
my salvation (2 Sam 23:5), so sayest thou, "All my salvation" is "all
my desire." Well, the desire of thy soul is granted thee, yea, God himself hath
engaged himself even to fulfil this thy desire—"He will fulfil the desire of
them that fear him, he also will hear their cry, and will save them." O this
desire when it cometh, what a tree of life will it be to thee! Thou desirest to be
rid of thy present trouble; the Lord shall rid thee out of trouble. Thou desirest
to be delivered from temptation; the Lord shall deliver thee out of temptation. Thou
desirest to be delivered from thy body of death; and the Lord shall change this thy
vile body, that it may be like to his glorious body. Thou desirest to be in the presence
of God, and among the angels in heaven. This thy desire also shall be fulfilled,
and thou shalt be made equal to the angels (Exo 6:6; 2 Peter 2:9; Phil 3:20,21; Luke
16:22, 20:35,36). O but it is long first! Well, learn first to live upon thy portion
in the promise of it, and that will make thy expectation of it sweet. God will fulfil
thy desires, God will do it, though it tarry long. Wait for it, because it will surely
come, it will not tarry.
Eleventh Privilege. Dost thou fear God?—"The Lord taketh pleasure in them that
fear him" (Psa 147:11). They that fear God are among his chief delights. He
delights in his Son, he delights in his works, and takes pleasure in them that fear
him. As a man takes pleasure in his wife, in his children, in his gold, in his jewels;
so the man that fears the Lord is the object of his delight. He takes pleasure in
their prosperity, and therefore sendeth them health from the sanctuary, and makes
them drink of the river of his pleasures (Psa 35:27). "They shall be abundantly
satisfied with the fatness of thy house; and thou shalt make them drink of the river
of thy pleasures" (Psa 36:8). That or those that we take pleasure in, that or
those we love to beautify and adorn with many ornaments. We count no cost too much
to be bestowed on those in whom we place our delight, and whom we make the object
of our pleasure. And even thus it is with God. "For the Lord taketh pleasure
in his people," and what follows? "he will beautify the meek with salvation"
(Psa 149:4).
Those in whom we delight, we take pleasure in their actions; yea, we teach them,
and give them such rules and laws to walk by, as may yet make them that we love more
pleasurable in our eyes. Therefore they that fear God, since they are the object
of his pleasure, are taught to know how to please him in everything (1 Thess 4:1).
And hence it is said, that he is ravished with their looks, that he delighteth in
their cry, and that he is pleased with their walking (Can 4:9; Prov 15:8, 11:20).
Those in whom we delight and take pleasure, many things we will bear and put up that
they do, though they be not according to our minds. A man will suffer that in, and
put up that at, the hand of the child or wife of his pleasure, that he will not pass
by nor put up in another. They are my jewels, says God, even them that fear me; and
I will spare them, in all their comings-short of my will, "even as a man spareth
his own son that serveth him" (Mal 3:16,17). O how happy is the man that feareth
God! His good thoughts, his good attempts to serve him, and his good life pleases
him, because he feareth God.
You know how pleasing in our eyes the actions of our children are, when we know that
they do what they do even of a reverent fear and awe of us; yea, though that which
they do amounts but to little, we take it well at their hands, and are pleased therewith.
The woman that cast in her two mites into the treasury, cast in not much, for they
both did but make one farthing; yet how doth the Lord Jesus trumpet her up,[22] he
had pleasure in her, and in her action (Mark 12:41-44). This, therefore, that the
Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him, is another of their great privileges.
Twelfth Privilege. Dost thou fear God? the least dram of that fear giveth the privilege
to be blessed with the biggest saint—"He will bless them that fear the Lord,
small and great" (Psa 115:13). This word small may be taken three ways—1. For
those that are small in esteem, for those that are but little accounted of (Judg
6:15; 1 Sam 18:23). Art thou small or little in this sense, yet if thou fearest God,
thou art sure to be blessed. "He will bless them that fear him, small and great,"
be thou never so small in the world's eyes, in thine own eyes, in the saints' eyes,
as sometimes one saint is little in another saint's eye; yet thou, because thou fearest
God, art put among the blessed. 2. By small, sometimes is meant those that are but
small of stature, or young in years, little children, that are easily passed by and
looked over: as those that sang Hosanna in the temple were, when the Pharisees deridingly
said of them to Christ, "Hearest thou what these say?" (Matt 21:16). Well,
but Christ would not despise them, of them that feared God, but preferred them by
the Scripture testimony far before those that did contemn them. Little children,
how small soever, and although of never so small esteem with men, shall also, if
they fear the Lord, be blessed with the greatest saints—"He will bless them
that fear him, small and great." 3. By small may sometimes be meant those that
are small in grace or gifts; these are said to be the least in the church, that is,
under this consideration, and so are by it least esteemed (Matt 25:45). Thus also
is that of Christ to be understood, "Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the
least of these, ye did it not to me" (1 Cor 6:4).
Art thou in thine own thoughts, or in the thoughts of others, of these last small
ones, small in grace, small in gifts, small in esteem upon this account, yet if thou
fearest God, if thou fearest God indeed, thou art certainly blessed with the best
of saints. The least star stands as fixed, as the biggest of them all, in heaven.
"He will bless them that fear him, small and great." He will bless them,
that is, with the same blessing of eternal life. For the different degrees of grace
in saints doth not make the blessing, as to its nature, differ. It is the same heaven,
the same life, the same glory, and the same eternity of felicity that they are in
the text promised to be blessed with. That is observable which I mentioned before,
where Christ at the day of judgment particularly mentioneth and owneth the least—"Inasmuch
as ye did it not to one of the least." The least then was there, in his kingdom
and in his glory, as well as the biggest of all. "He will bless them that fear
him, small and great." The small are named first in the text, and are so the
first in rank; it may be to show that though they may be slighted and little set
by in the world, yet they are much set by in the eyes of the Lord.
Are great saints only to have the kingdom, and the glory everlasting? Are great works
only to be rewarded? works that are done by virtue of great grace, and the abundance
of the gifts of the Holy Ghost? No: "Whosoever shall give to drink unto one
of these little ones a cup of cold water only, in the name of a disciple, verily
I say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his (a disciple's) reward." Mark, here
is but a little gift, a cup of cold water, and that given to a little saint, but
both taken special notice of by our Lord Jesus Christ (Matt 10:42). "He will
give reward to his servants the prophets, and to his saints, and to them that fear
his name, small and great" (Rev 11:18). The small, therefore, among them that
fear God, are blessed with the great, as the great, with the same salvation, the
same glory, and the same eternal life; and they shall have, even as the great ones
also shall, as much as they can carry; as much as their hearts, souls, bodies, and
capacities can hold.
Thirteenth Privilege. Dost thou fear God? why, the Holy Ghost hath on purpose indited
for thee a whole psalm to sing concerning thyself. So that thou mayest even as thou
art in thy calling, bed, journey, or whenever, sing out thine own blessed and happy
condition to thine own comfort and the comfort of thy fellows. The psalm is called
the 128th Psalm; I will set it before thee, both as it is in the reading[23] and
in the singing Psalms—
" Blessed is every one that feareth the Lord, that walketh in his ways. For
thou shalt eat the labour of thine hands: happy shalt thou be, and it shall be well
with thee. Thy wife shall be as a fruitful vine by the sides of thine house; thy
children, like olive plants round about thy table. Behold, that thus shall the man
be blessed that feareth the Lord. The Lord shall bless thee out of Zion; and thou
shalt see the good of Jerusalem all the days of thy life. Yea, thou shalt see thy
children's children, and peace upon Israel."
AS IT IS SUNG.
Blessed art thou that fearest God,
And walkest in his way:
For of thy labour thou shalt eat;
Happy art thou, I say!
Like fruitful vines on thy house side,
So doth thy wife spring out;
Thy children stand like olive plants
Thy table round about.
Thus art thou blest that fearest God,
And he shall let thee see
The promised Jerusalem,
And her felicity.
Thou shalt thy children's children see,
To thy great joy's increase;
And likewise grace on Israel,
Prosperity and peace.[24]
And now I have done with the privileges when I have removed one objection.
Object. But the Scripture says, "perfect love casteth our fear" ; and therefore
it seems that saints, after that a spirit of adoption is come, should not fear, but
do their duty, as another Scripture saith, without it (1 John 4:18; Luke 1:74,75).
Answ. Fear, as I have showed you, may be taken several ways. 1. It may be taken for
the fear of devils. 2. It may be taken for the fear of reprobates. 3. It may be taken
for the fear that is wrought in the godly by the Spirit as a spirit of bondage; or,
4. It may be taken for the fear that I have been but now discoursing of.
Now the fear that perfect love casts out cannot be that son-like, gracious fear of
God, that I have in this last place been treating of; because that fear that love
casts out hath torment, but so has not the son-like fear. Therefore the fear that
love casts out is either that fear that is like the fear of devils and reprobates,
or that fear that is begot in the heart by the Spirit of God as a spirit of bondage,
or both; for, indeed, all these kinds of fear have torment, and therefore may be
cast out; and are so by the spirit of adoption, which is called the spirit of faith
and love, when he comes with power into the soul; so that without this fear we should
serve him. But to argue from these texts that we ought not to fear God, or to mix
fear with our worship of him, is as much as to say that by the spirit of adoption
we are made very rogues; for not to fear God is by the Scripture applied to such
(Luke 23:40). But for what I have affirmed the Scripture doth plentifully confirm,
saying, "Happy is the man that feareth alway." And again, "It shall
be well with them that fear God, which fear before him." Fear, therefore; the
spirit of the fear of the Lord is a grace that greatly beautifies a Christian, his
words, and all his ways: "Wherefore now let the fear of the Lord be upon you;
take heed, and do it, for there is no iniquity with the Lord our God, nor respect
of persons, nor taking of gifts" (2 Chron 19:7).
I come now to make some use and application of this doctrine.
[THE USE OF THIS DOCTRINE.]
Having proceeded thus far about this doctrine of the fear of God, I now come to make
some use and application of the whole; and my
[USE FIRST, of Examination.]
FIRST USE shall be a USE OF EXAMINATION. Is this fear of God such an excellent thing?
Is it attended with so many blessed privileges? Then this should put us, every soul
of us, upon a diligent examination of ourselves, to wit, whether this grace be in
us or not, for if it be, then thou art one of these blessed ones to whom belong these
glorious privileges, for thou hast an interest in every of them; but if it shall
appear that this grace is not in thee, then thy state is fearfully miserable, as
hath partly been manifest already, and will further be seen in what comes after.
Now, the better to help thee to consider, and not to miss in finding out what thou
art in thy self-examination, I will speak to this— First. In general. Second. In
particular.
First. In general. No man brings this grace into the world with him. Every one by
nature is destitute of it; for naturally none fear God, there is no fear of God,
none of this grace of fear before their eyes, they do not so much as know what it
is; for this fear flows, as was showed before, from a new heart, faith, repentance
and the like; of which new heart, faith, and repentance, if thou be void, thou art
also void of this godly fear. Men must have a mighty change of heart and life, or
else they are strangers to this fear of God. Alas, how ignorant are the most of this!
Yea, and some are not afraid to say they are not changed, nor desire so to be. Can
these fear God? can these be possessed with this grace of fear? No: "Because
they have no changes, therefore they fear not God" (Psa 55:19; Psa 36:1; Rom
3:18).
Wherefore, sinner, consider whoever thou art that art destitute of this fear of God,
thou art void of all other graces; for this fear, as also I have showed, floweth
from the whole stock of grace where it is. There is not one of the graces of the
Spirit, but this fear is in the bowels of it; yea, as I may say, this fear is the
flower and beauty of every grace; neither is there anything, let it look as much
like grace as it will, that will be counted so indeed, if the fruit thereof be not
this fear of God; wherefore, I say again, consider well of this matter, for as thou
shalt be found with reference to this grace, so shall thy judgment be. I have but
briefly treated of this grace, yet have endeavoured, with words as fit as I could,
to display it in its colours before thy face, first by showing you what this fear
of God is, then what it flows from, as also what doth flow from it; to which, as
was said before, I have added several privileges that are annexed to this fear, that
by all, if it may be, thou mayest see it if thou hast it, and thyself without it
if thou hast it not. Wherefore I refer thee thither again for information in this
thing; or if thou art loath to give the book a second reading, but wilt go on to
the end now thou art gotten hither; then
Second and particularly, I conclude with these several propositions concerning those
that fear not God.
1. That man that is proud, and of a high and lofty mind, fears not God. This is plain
from the exhortation, "Be not high-minded, but fear" (Rom 11:20). Here
you see that a high mind and the fear of God are set in direct opposition the one
to the other; and there is in them, closely concluded by the apostle, that where
indeed the one is, there cannot be the other; where there is a high mind, there is
not the fear of God; and where there is the fear of God, the mind is not high but
lowly. Can a man at the same time be a proud man, and fear God too? Why, then, is
it said God beholdeth every one that is proud, and abases him? and again, He beholds
the proud afar off? He therefore that is proud of his person, of his riches, of his
office, of his parts, and the like, feareth not God. It is also manifest further,
for God resisteth the proud, which he would not do, if he feared him, but in that
he sets him at such a distance from him, in that he testifies that he will abase
him and resist him, it is evident that he is not the man that hath this grace of
fear; for that man, as I have showed you, is the man of God's delight, the object
of his pleasure (Psa 138:6; James 4:6; 1 Peter 5:5; Mal 4:1).
2. The covetous man feareth not God. This also is plain from the Word, because it
setteth covetousness and the fear of God in direct opposition. Men that fear God
are said to hate covetousness (Exo 18:21). Besides, the covetous man is called an
idolater, and is said to have no part in the kingdom of Christ and of God. And again,
"The wicked boasteth of his heart's desire, and blesseth the covetous, whom
the Lord abhorreth" (Eze 33:31; Eph 5:5; Psa 10:3). Hearken to this, you that
hunt the world to take it, you that care not how you get, so you get the world. Also
you that make even religion your stalking-horse to get the world, you fear not God.
And what will you do whose hearts go after your covetousness? you who are led by
covetousness up and down, as it were by the nose; sometimes to swear, to lie, to
cozen, and cheat and defraud, when you can get the advantage to do it. You are far,
very far, from the fear of God. "Ye adulterers and adulteresses," for so
the covetous are called, "know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity
with God? whosoever, therefore, will be a friend of the world, is the enemy of God"
(James 4:4).
3. The riotous eaters of flesh have not the fear of God. For this is done "without
fear" (Jude 12). Gluttony is a sin little taken notice of, and as little repented
of by those that use it, but yet it is odious in the sight of God, and the practice
of it a demonstration of the want of his fear in the heart: yea, so odious is it,
that God forbids that his people should so much as company with such. "Be not,"
saith he, "among wine-bibbers, among riotous eaters of flesh" (Prov 23:20).
And he further tells us, that they that are such, are spots and blemishes to those
that keep them company, for indeed they fear not God (2 Peter 2:13; Rom 13:13; 1
Peter 4:4). Alas! some men are as if they were for nought else born but to eat and
to drink, and pamper their carcasses with the dainties of this world, quite forgetting
why God sent them hither; but such, as is said, fear not God, and so consequently
are of the number of them upon whom the day of judgment will come at unawares (Luke
21:34).
4. The liar is one that fears not God. This also is evident from the plain text,
"Thou hast lied," saith the Lord, "and hast not remembered me, nor
laid it to thy heart: have not I held my peace even of old," saith the Lord,
"and thou fearest me not?" (Isa 57:11). What lie this was is not material;
it was a lie, or a course of lying that is here rebuked, and the person or persons
in this practice, as is said, were such as feared not God; a course of lying and
the fear of God cannot stand together. This sin of lying is a common sin, and it
walketh in the world in several guises. There is the profane scoffing liar, there
is the cunning artificial liar, there is the hypocritical religious liar, with liars
of other ranks and degrees. But none of them all have the fear of God, nor shall
any of them, they not repenting, escape the damnation of hell—"All liars shall
have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone" (Rev 21:8).
Heaven and the New Jerusalem are not a place for such—"And there shall in no
wise enter into it anything that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination,
or maketh a lie" (v 27). Therefore another scripture says that all liars are
without—"For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers,
and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie" (Rev 22:15). But this
should not be their sentence, judgment, and condemnation, if they that are liars
were such as had in them this blessed fear of God.
5. They fear not God who cry unto him for help in the time of their calamity, and
when they are delivered, they return to their former rebellion. This, Moses, in a
spirit of prophecy, asserteth at the time of the mighty judgment of the hail. Pharaoh
then desired him to pray to God that he would take away that judgment from him. Well,
so I will, said Moses, "But as for thee and thy servants, I know that ye will
not yet fear the Lord God" (Exo 9:30). As who should say, I know that so soon
as this judgment is removed, you will to your old rebellion again. And what greater
demonstration can be given that such a man feareth not God, than to cry to God to
be delivered from affliction to prosperity, and to spend that prosperity in rebellion
against him? This is crying for mercies that they may be spent, or that we may have
something to spend upon our lusts, and in the service of Satan (John 4:1-3). Of these
God complains in the sixteenth of Ezekiel, and in the second of Hosea—"Thou
hast," saith God, "taken thy fair jewels of my gold and of my silver, which
I had given thee, and madest to thyself images" &c. (Eze 16:17). This was
for want of the fear of God. Many of this kind there be now in the world, both of
men, and women, and children; art not thou that readest this book of this number?
Hast thou not cried for health when sick, for wealth when poor, when lame for strength,
when in prison for liberty, and then spent all that thou gottest by thy prayer in
the service of Satan, and to gratify thy lusts? Look to it, sinner, these things
are signs that with thy heart thou fearest not God.
6. They fear not God that way-lay his people and seek to overthrow them, or to turn
them besides the right path, as they are journeying from hence to their eternal rest.
This is evident from the plain text, "Remember," saith God, "what
Amalek did unto thee by the way when ye were come forth out of Egypt; how he met
thee by the way, and smote the hindmost of thee, even all that were feeble behind
thee, when thou wast faint and weary, and he feared not God" (Deut 25:17,18).
Many such Amalekites there be now in the world that set themselves against the feeble
of the flock, against the feeble of the flock especially, still smiting them, some
by power, some with the tongue, some in their lives and estates, some in their names
and reputations, by scandals, slanders, and reproach, but the reason of this their
ungodly practice is this, they fear not God. For did they fear him, they would be
afraid to so much as think, much more of attempting to afflict and destroy, and calumniate
the children of God; but such there have been, such there are, and such there will
be in the world, for all men fear not God.
7. They fear not God who see his hand upon backsliders for their sins, and yet themselves
will be backsliders also. "I saw," saith God, "when for all the causes
whereby backsliding Israel committed adultery, I had put her away, and given her
a bill of divorce, yet her treacherous sister Judah feared not, but went and played
the harlot also" (Jer 3:8, 2:19). Judah saw that her sister was put away, and
delivered by God into the hands of Shalmaneser, who carried her away beyond Babylon,
and yet, though she saw it, she went and played the harlot also—a sign of great hardness
of heart, and of the want of the fear of God indeed. For this fear, had it been in
her heart, it would have taught her to have trembled at the judgment that was executed
upon her sister, and not to have gone and played the harlot also: and not to have
done it while her sister's judgment was in sight and memory. But what is it that
a heart that is destitute of the fear of God will not do? No sin comes amiss to such:
yea, they will sin, they will do that themselves, for the doing of which they believe
some are in hell-fire, and all because they fear not God.
But pray observe, if those that take not warning when they see the hand of God upon
backsliders, are said to have none of the fear of God, have they it, think you, that
lay stumbling-blocks in the way of God's people, and use devices to cause them to
backslide, yea, rejoice when they can do this mischief to any? and yet many of this
sort there are in the world, that even rejoice when they see a professor fall into
sin, and go back from his profession, as if they had found some excellent thing.
8. They fear not God who can look upon a land as wallowing in sin, and yet are not
humbled at the sight thereof. "Have ye," said God by the prophet to the
Jews, "forgotten the wickedness of your fathers, and the wickedness of the kings
of Judah, and the wickedness of their wives, which they have committed in the land
of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem? They are not humbled to this day, neither
have they feared, nor walked in my law" (Jer 44:9,10). Here is a land full of
wickedness, and none to bewail it, for they wanted the fear of God, and love to walk
in his law. But how say you, if they that are not humbled at their own and others'
wickedness are said not to fear, or have the fear of God, what shall we think or
say of such that receive, that nourish and rejoice in such wickedness? Do they fear
God? Yea, what shall we say of such that are the inventors and promoters of wickedness,
as of oaths, beastly talk, or the like? Do they, do you think, fear God? Once again,
what shall we say of such that cannot be content to be wicked themselves, and to
invent and rejoice in other men's wickedness, but must hate, reproach, vilify and
abuse those that they cannot persuade to be wicked? Do they fear God?
9. They that take more heed to their own dreams than to the Word of God, fear not
God. This also is plain from the Word—"For in the multitude of dreams, there
are also divers vanities, but fear thou God" ; that is, take heed unto his Word
(Eccl 5:7; Isa 8:20). Here the fearing of God is opposed to our overmuch heeding
dreams: and there is implied, that it is for want of the fear of God that men so
much heed those things. What will they say to this that give more heed to a suggestion
that ariseth from their foolish hearts, or that is cast in thither by the devil,
than they do to the holy Word of God? These are "filthy dreamers." Also,
what shall we say to those that are more confident of the mercy of God to their soul,
because he hath blessed them with outward things, than they are afraid of his wrath
and condemnation, though the whole of the Word of God doth fully verify the same?
These are "filthy dreamers" indeed.
A dream is either real, or so by way of semblance, and so some men dream sleeping,
and some waking (Isa 29:7). And as those that a man dreams sleeping are caused either
by God, Satan, business, flesh, or the like; so are they that a man dreams waking,
to pass by those that we have in our sleep. Men, when bodily awake, may have dreams,
that is, visions from heaven; such are all they that have a tendency to discover
to the sinner his state, or the state of the church according to the Word. But those
that are from Satan, business, and the flesh, are such—especially the first and last,
to wit, from Satan and the flesh—as tend to embolden men to hope for good in a way
disagreeing with the Word of God.[25]
These Jude calls "filthy dreamers," such whose principles were their dreams,
and they led them "to defile the flesh," that is, by fornication and uncleanness;
"to despise dominion," that the reins might be laid upon the neck of their
lusts; "to speak evil of dignities," of those that God had set over them,
for their governing in all the law and testament of Christ, these dreamt that to
live like brutes, to be greedy of gain, and to take away for it, as Cain and Balaam
did by their wiles, the lives of the owners thereof, would go for good coin in the
best of trials. These also Peter speaks of (2 Peter 2). And he makes their dreams,
that Jude calls so, their principle and errors in life and doctrine; you may read
of them in that whole chapter, where they are called cursed children, and so by consequence
such as fear not God.
10. They fear not God, who are sorcerers, adulterers, false swearers, and that oppress
the hireling of his wages. It is a custom with some men to keep back by fraud from
the hireling that which by covenant they agreed to pay for their labour; pinching,
I say, and paring from them their due that of right belongs to them, to the making
of them cry in "the ears of the Lord of sabaoth" (James 5:4). These fear
not God; they are reckoned among the worst of men, and in their day of account God
himself will bear witness against them. "And I," saith God, "will
come near to you to judgment; and I will be a swift witness against the adulterers,
and against the false swearers, and against those that oppress the hireling in his
wages, the widow and the fatherless, and that turn aside the stranger from his right,
and fear not me, saith the Lord" (Mal 3:5).
11. They fear not God, who instead of pitying of, rail at God's people in their affliction,
temptations, and persecutions, and rather rejoice and skip for joy, than sympathize
with them in their sorrow. Thus did David's enemies, thus did Israel's enemies, and
thus did the thief, he railed at Christ when he hanged upon the cross, and was for
that, even by his fellow, accounted for one that feared not God (Luke 23:40; Psa
35:1,22-26. Read Oba 10-15; Jer 48:2-6). This is a common thing among the children
of men, even to rejoice at the hurt of them that fear God, and it ariseth even of
an inward hatred to godliness. They hate you, saith Christ, because they hated me.
Therefore Christ takes what is done to his, in this, as done unto himself, and so
to holiness of life. But this falls hard upon such as despise at, and rejoice to
see, God's people in their griefs, and that take the advantage, as dogged Shimei
did, to augment the griefs and afflictions of God's people (2 Sam 16:5-8). These
fear not God, they do this of enmity, and their sin is such as will hardly be blotted
out (1 Kings 2:8,9).
12. They fear not God, who are strangers to the effects of fear. "If I be a
master, where is my fear?" That is, show that I am so by your fear of me in
the effects of your fear of me. "You offer polluted bread upon mine altar."
This is not a sign that you fear me, ye offer the blind for sacrifices, where is
my fear? ye offer the lame and the sick, these are not the effects of the fear of
God (Mal 1:6-8). Sinner, it is one thing to say, I fear God, and another to fear
him indeed. Therefore, as James says, show me thy faith by thy works, so here God
calls for a testimony of thy fear by the effects of fear. I have already showed you
several effects of fear; if thou art a stranger to them, thou art a stranger to this
grace of fear. Therefore, to conclude this, it is not a feigned profession that will
do; nothing is good here, but what is salted with this fear of God, and they that
fear him are men of truth, men of singleness of heart, perfect, upright, humble,
holy men; wherefore, reader, examine, and again, I say examine, and lay the Word
and thy heart together, before that thou concludest that thou fearest God.
What! fear God, and in a state of nature? fear God without a change of heart and
life? What! fear God and be proud, and covetous, a wine-bibber, and a riotous eater
of flesh? How! fear God and a liar, and one that cries for mercies to spend them
upon thy lusts? This would be strange. True, thou mayest fear as devils do, but what
will that profit? Thou mayest by thy fear be driven away from God, from his worship,
people, and ways, but what will that avail? It may be thou mayest so fear at present,
as to be a little stopped in thy sinful course; perhaps thou hast got a knock from
the Word of God, and are at present a little dazzled and hindered from being in thy
former and full career after sin; but what of that? if by the fear that thou hast,
thy heart is not united to God, and to the love of his Son, Word, and people, thy
fear is nothing worth.[26] Many men also are forced to fear God, as underlings are
forced to fear those that are by force above them. If thou only thus fearest God,
it is but a false fear; it flows not from love to God: this fear brings not willing
subjection, which indeed brings the effect of right fear; but being over-mastered
like an hypocrite, thou subjected thyself by feigned obedience, being forced, I say,
by mere dread to do it (Psa 66:3).
It is said of David, "that the fame of him went out into all lands, and the
Lord brought the fear of him upon all nations" (1 Chron 14:17). But what, did
they now love David? did they now choose him to be their king? no verily; they, many
of them, rather hated him, and, when they could, made resistance against him. They
did even as thou dost—feared, but did not love; feared, but did not choose his government
that ruled over them. It is also said of Jehoshaphat, when God had subdued before
him Ammon, Moab, and mount Seir, that "the fear of God was on all the kingdoms
of these countries, when they had heard that the Lord fought against the enemies
of Israel" (2 Chron 20:29). But, I say, was this fear, that is called now the
fear of God, anything else, but a dread of the greatness of power of the king? No
verily, nor did that dread bring them into a willing subjection to, and liking of
his laws and government; it only made them like slaves and underlings, stand in fear
of his executing the vengeance of God upon them.
Therefore still, notwithstanding this fear, they were rebels to him in their hearts,
and when occasion and advantage offered themselves, they showed it by rising in rebellion
against Israel. This fear therefore provoked but feigned and forced obedience, a
right emblem of the obedience of such, who being still enemies in their minds to
God, are forced by virtue of present conviction to yield a little, even of fear to
God, to his Word, and to his ordinances. Reader, whoever thou art, think of this,
it is thy concern, therefore do it, and examine, and examine again, and look diligently
to thy heart in thine examination, that it beguile thee not about this thy so great
concern, as indeed the fear of God is.
One thing more, before I leave thee, let me warn thee of. Take heed of deferring
to fear the Lord. Some men, when they have had conviction upon their heart that the
fear of God is not in them, have through the overpowering of their corruptions yet
deferred and put off the fear of God from them, as it is said of them in Jeremiah:
"This people hath a revolting and a rebellious heart; they are revolted and
gone. Neither say they in their heart, Let us now fear the Lord" (Jer 5:23,24).
They saw that the judgments of God attended them because they did not yet fear God,
but that conviction would not prevail with them to say, "Let us now fear the
Lord." They were for deferring to fear him still; they were for putting off
his fear from them longer. Sinner, hast thou deferred to fear the Lord? is thy heart
still so stubborn as not to say yet, "Let us fear the Lord?" O! the Lord
hath taken notice of this thy rebellion, and is preparing some dreadful judgment
for thee. "Shall I not visit for these things? saith the Lord; shall not my
soul be avenged on such a nation as this?" (v 29). Sinner, why shouldest thou
pull vengeance down upon thee? why shouldest thou pull vengeance down from heaven
upon thee? Look up, perhaps thou hast already been pulling this great while, to pull
it down upon thee. O! pull no longer; why shouldest thou be thine own executioner?
Fall down upon thy knees, man, and up with thy heart and thy hands to the God that
dwells in the heavens; cry, yea cry aloud, Lord, unite mine heart to fear thy name,
and do not harden mine heart from thy fear. Thus holy men have cried before thee,
and by crying have prevented judgment.
[A few things that may provoke thee to fear the Lord.]
Before I leave this use, let me give thee a few things, that, if God will, may provoke
thee to fear the Lord.
1. The man that feareth not God, carrieth it worse towards him than the beast, the
brute beast, doth carry it towards that man. "The fear of you, and the dread
of you, shall be upon every beast of the earth," yea, "and upon every fowl
of the air," and "upon all that moveth upon the earth, and upon all the
fishes of the sea" (Gen 9:2).
Mark, all my creatures shall fear you, and dread you, says God. None of them shall
be so hardy as to cast of all reverence of you. But what a shame is this to man,
that God should subject all his creatures to him, and he should refuse to stoop his
heart to God? The beast, the bird, the fish, and all, have a fear and dread of man,
yea, God has put it in their hearts to fear man, and yet man is void of fear and
dread, I mean of godly fear of him, that thus lovingly hath put all things under
him. Sinner, art thou not ashamed, that a silly cow, a sheep, yea, a swine, should
better observe the law of his creation, than thou dost the law of thy God?
2. Consider, he that will not fear God, God will make him fear him whether he will
or no. That is, he that doth not, will not now so fear him, as willingly to bow before
him, and put his neck into his yoke. God will make him fear him when he comes to
take vengeance on him. Then he will surround him with terror, and with fear on every
side, fear within, and fear without; fear shall be in the way, even in the way that
thou goest when thou art going out of this world; and that will be dreadful fear
(Eccl 12:5). "I will bring their fears upon them," saith the Lord (Isa
66:4).
3. He that fears not God now, the Lord shall laugh at his fears then. Sinner, God
will be even with all them that choose not to have his fear in their hearts: for
as he calls and they hear not now, so they shall cry, yea, howl then, and he will
laugh at their fears. "I will laugh," saith he, "at their destruction;
I will mock when their fear cometh, when your fear cometh as desolation and your
destruction cometh as a whirlwind, when distress and anguish cometh upon you; then
shall they call upon me, but I will not answer: they shall seek me early, but they
shall not find me, for that they hated knowledge, and did not choose the fear of
the Lord" (Prov 1:27-29).
Sinner! thou thinkest to escape the fear; but what wilt thou do with the pit? Thou
thinkest to escape the pit; but what wilt thou do with the snare? The snare, say
you, what is that? I answer, it is even the work of thine own hands. "The wicked
is snared in the work of his own hands," he is "snared by the transgression
of his lips" (Psa 9:16; Prov 12:13).
Sinner! what wilt thou do when thou comest into this snare; that is, into the guilt
and terror that thy sins will snaffle[27] thee with, when they, like a cord, are
fastened about thy soul? This snare will bring thee back again to the pit, which
is hell, and then how wilt thou do to be rid of thy fear? The fear, pit, and the
snare shall come upon thee, because thou fearest not God.
Sinner! art thou one of them that hast cast off fear? poor man, what wilt thou do
when these three things beset thee? whither wilt thou fly for help? And where wilt
thou leave thy glory? If thou fliest from the fear, there is the pit; if thou fliest
from the pit, there is the snare.
[USE SECOND, an exhortation to fear God.]
SECOND USE. My next word shall be AN EXHORTATION TO FEAR GOD. I mean an exhortation
to saints—"O fear the Lord, ye his saints, for there is no want to them that
fear him." Not but that every saint doth fear God, but as the apostle saith
in another case, "I beseech you, do it more and more." The fear of the
Lord, as I have showed you, is a grace of the new covenant, as other saving graces
are, and so is capable of being stronger or weaker, as other graces are. Wherefore
I beseech you, fear him more and more.
It is said of Obadiah, that he feared the Lord greatly: every saint fears the Lord,
but every saint does not greatly fear him. O there are but few Obadiahs in the world,
I mean among the saints on earth: see the whole relation of him (1 Kings 18). As
Paul said of Timothy, "I have none like-minded," so it may be said of some
concerning the fear of the Lord; they have scarce a fellow. So it was with Job, "There
is none like him in the earth, one that feareth God," &c. (Job 1:8). There
was even none in Job's day that feared God like him, no, there was not one like him
in all the earth, but doubtless there were more in the world that feared God; but
this fearing of him greatly, that is the thing that saints should do, and that was
the thing that Job did do, and in that he did outstrip his fellows. It is also said
of Hananiah, that "he was a faithful man, and feared God above many" (Neh
7:2). He also had got, as to the exercise of, and growth in, this grace, the start
of many of his brethren. He "feared God above many." Now then, seeing this
grace admits of degrees, and is in some stronger, and in some weaker, let us be all
awakened as to other graces, so to this grace also. That like as you abound in everything,
in faith, in utterance, in knowledge, and in all diligence, and in your love to us,
see that ye abound in this grace also. I will labour to enforce this exhortation
upon you by several motives.
First. Let God's distinguishing love to you be a motive to you to fear him greatly.
He hath put his fear in thy heart, and hath not given that blessing to thy neighbour;
perhaps not to thy husband, thy wife, thy child, or thy parent. O what an obligation
should this consideration lay upon thy heart greatly to fear the Lord! Remember also,
as I have showed in the first part of this book, that this fear of the Lord is his
treasure, a choice jewel, given only to favourites, and to those that are greatly
beloved. Great gifts naturally tend to oblige, and will do so, I trust, with thee,
when thou shalt ingeniously consider it. It is a sign of a very bad nature when the
contrary shows itself; could God have done more for thee than to have put his fear
in thy heart? This is better than to have given thee a place even in heaven without
it. Yea, had he given thee all faith, all knowledge, and the tongue of men and angels,
and a place in heaven to boot, they had all been short of this gift, of the fear
of God in thy heart. Therefore love it, nourish it, exercise it, use all means to
cause it to increase and grow in thy heart, that it may appear it is set by at thy
hand, poor sinner.
Second. Another motive to stir thee up to grow in this grace of the fear of God may
be the privileges that it lays thee under. What or where wilt thou find in the Bible,
so many privileges so affectionately entailed to any grace, as to this of the fear
of God? God speaks of this grace, and of the privileges that belong unto it, as if,
to speak with reverence, he knew not how to have done blessing of the man that hath
it. It seems to me as if this grace of fear is the darling grace, the grace that
God sets his heart upon at the highest rate. As it were, he embraces the hugs, and
lays the man in his bosom, that hath, and grows strong in this grace of the fear
of God. See again the many privileges in which the man is interested that hath this
grace in his heart: and see also that there are but few of them, wherever mentioned,
but have entailed to them the pronunciation of a blessing, or else that man is spoken
of by way of admiration.
Third. Another motive may be this: The man that groweth in this grace of the fear
of the Lord will escape those evils that others will fall into. Where this grace
is, it keepeth the soul from final apostasy, "I will put my fear in their hearts,
that they shall not depart from me" (Jer 32:40). But yet, if there be not an
increase in this grace, much evil may attend, and be committed notwithstanding. There
is a child that is healthy, and hath its limbs, and can go, but it is careless; now
the evil of carelessness doth disadvantage it very much; carelessness is the cause
of stumblings, of falls, of knocks, and that it falls into the dirt, yea, that sometimes
it is burned, or almost drowned. And thus it is, even with God's people that fear
him, because they add not to their fear a care of growing more in the fear of God,
therefore they reap damage; whereas, were they more in his fear, it would keep them
better, deliver them more, and preserve them from these snares of death.
Fourth. Another motive may be this: To grow in this grace of the fear of God, is
the way to be kept always in a conscientious performance of Christian duties. An
increase in this grace, I say, keeps every grace in exercise, and the keeping of
our graces in their due exercise, produceth a conscientious performance of duties.
Thou hast a watch perhaps in thy pocket, but the hand will not as yet be kept in
any good order, but does always give the lie as to the hour of the day; well, but
what is the way to remedy this, but to look well to the spring, and the wheels within?
for if they indeed go right, so will the hand do also. This is thy case in spiritual
things; thou art a gracious man, and the fear of God is in thee, but yet for all
that, one cannot well tell, by thy life, what time of day it is.[28] Thou givest
no true and constant sign that thou art indeed a Christian; why, the reason is, thou
dost not look well to this grace of the fear of God. Thou dost not grow and increase
in that, but sufferest thy heart to grow careless, and hard, and so thy life remiss
and worldly: Job's growing great in the fear of God made him eschew evil (Job 1,
2:3).
Fifth. Another motive is: This is the way to be wise indeed. A wise man feareth and
departeth from evil. It doth not say a wise man hath the grace of fear, but a wise
man feareth, that is, putteth this grace into exercise. There is no greater sign
of wisdom than to grow in this blessed grace. Is it not a sign of wisdom to depart
from sins, which are the snares of death and hell? Is it not a sign of wisdom for
a man yet more and more to endeavour to interest himself in the love and protection
of God? Is it not a high point of wisdom for a man to be always doing of that which
lays him under the conduct of angels? Surely this is wisdom. And if it be a blessing
to have this fear, is it not wisdom to increase in it? Doubtless it is the highest
point of wisdom, as I have showed before, therefore grow therein.
Sixth. Another motive may be this: It is seemly for saints to fear, and increase
in this fear of God. He is thy Creator; is it not seemly for creatures to fear and
reverence their Creator? He is thy King; is it not seemly for subjects to fear and
reverence their King? He is thy Father; is it not seemly for children to reverence
and fear their Father? yea, and to do it more and more?
Seventh. Another motive may be: It is honourable to grow in this grace of fear; "When
Ephraim spake trembling, he exalted himself in Israel" (Hosea 13:1). Truly,
to fear, and to about in this fear, is a sign of a very princely spirit; and the
reason is, when I greatly fear my God, I am above the fear of all others, nor can
anything in this world, be it never so terrible and dreadful, move me at all to fear
them. And hence it is that Christ counsels us to fear—"And I say unto you, my
friends," saith he, "be not afraid of them that kill the body, and after
that have no more that they can do." Aye, but this is a high pitch, how should
we come by such princely spirits? well, I will forewarn you whom you shall fear,
and by fearing of him, arrive to this pitch, "Fear him, which after he hath
killed, hath power to cast into hell; yea, I say unto you, fear him" (Luke 12:4,5).
Indeed this true fear of God sets a man above all the world. And therefore it saith
again, "Neither fear ye their fear," - but "sanctify the Lord God"
in your hearts, "and let him be your fear, and let him be your dread" (Isa
8:12,13).
Your great ranting, swaggering, roysters,[29] that are ignorant of the nature of
the fear of God, count it a poor, sneaking, pitiful, cowardly spirit in men to fear
and tremble before the Lord; but whoso looks back to jails and gibbets, to the sword
and burning stake, shall see, that there, in them, has been the most mighty and invincible
spirit that has been in the world!
Yea, see if God doth not count that the growth of his people in this grace of fear
is that which makes them honourable, when he positively excludeth those from a dwelling-place
in his house, that do not honour them that fear him (Psa 15:4). And he saith moreover,
"A woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised." If the world and
godless men will not honour these, they shall be honoured some way else. Such, saith
he, "that honour me I will honour," and they shall be honoured in heaven,
in the churches, and among the angels.
Eighth. Another motive to grow in this fear of God may be: This fear, and the increase
of it, qualifies a man to be put in trust with heavenly and spiritual things, yea,
and with earthly things too.
1. For heavenly and spiritual things. "My covenant," saith God, "was
with [Levi] of life and peace, and I gave them to him, for the fear wherewith he
feared me, and was afraid before my name" (Mal 2:5).
Behold what a gift, what a mercy, what a blessing this Levi is intrusted with; to
wit, with God's everlasting covenant, and with the life and peace that is wrapped
up in this covenant. But why is it given to him? the answer is, "for the fear
wherewith he feared me, and was afraid before my name." And the reason is good,
for this fear of God teaches a man to put a due estimation upon every gift of God
bestowed upon us; also it teaches us to make use of the same with reverence of his
name, and respect to his glory in most godly-wise, all which becomes him that is
intrusted with any spiritual gift. The gift here was given to Levi to minister to
his brethren doctrinally thereof, for he, saith God, shall teach Jacob my statutes
and Israel my law. See also Exodus 18:21 and Nehemiah 7:2, with many other places
that might be named, and you will find that men fearing God and hating covetousness;
that men that fear God above others, are intrusted by God, yea, and by his church
too, with the trust and ministration of spiritual things before any other in the
world.
2. For earthly things. This fear of God qualifies a man to be put in trust with them
rather than with another. Therefore God made Joseph lord of all Egypt; Obadiah, steward
of Ahab's house; Daniel, Mordecai, and the three children, were set over the province
of Babylon; and this by the wonderful working hand of God, because he had to dispose
of earthly things now, not only in a common way, but for the good of his people in
special. True, when there is no special matter or thing to be done by God in a nation
for his people, then who will (that is, whether they have grace or no) may have the
disposal of those things; but if God has anything in special to bestow upon his people
of this world's goods, then he will intrust it in the hands of men fearing God. Joseph
must now be made lord of Egypt, because Israel must be kept from starving; Obadiah
must now be made steward of Ahab's house, because the Lord's prophets must be hid
from and fed in despite of the rage and bloody mind of Jezebel; Daniel, with his
companions, and Mordecai also, they were all exalted to earthly and temporal dignity,
that they might in that state, they being men that abounded in the fear of God, be
serviceable to their brethren in their straits and difficulties (Gen 42:18, 41:39;
1 Kings 18:3; Esth 6:10; Dan 2:48, 3:30, 5:29, 6:1-3).
Ninth. Another motive to grow in this grace of fear is, Where the fear of God in
the heart of any is not growing, there no grace thrives, nor duty done as it should.
There no grace thrives, neither faith, hope, love, nor any grace. This is evident
from that general exhortation, "Perfecting holiness in the fear of God"
(2 Cor 7:1). Perfecting holiness, what is that? but as James says of patience, let
every grace have its perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, lacking nothing
(James 1:4).
But this cannot be done but in the fear of God, yea, in the exercise of that grace,
and so consequently in the growth of it, for there is no grace but grows by being
exercised. If then you would be perfect in holiness, if you would have every grace
that God has put into your souls, grow and flourish into perfection; lay them, as
I may say, a-soak in this grace of fear,[30] and do all in the exercise of it; for
a little done in the fear of the Lord is better than the revenues of the wicked.
And again, the Lord will not suffer the soul of the righteous, the soul that liveth
in the fear of the Lord, to famish, but he casteth away the abundance of the wicked.
Bring abundance to God, and if it be not seasoned with godly fear, it shall not be
acceptable to him, but loathsome and abominable in his sight; for it doth not flow
from the spirit of the fear of the Lord.
Therefore, where there is not a growth in this fear, there is no duty done so acceptably.
This flows from that which goes before, for if grace rather decays than grows, where
this grace of fear is not in the growth and increase thereof, then duties in their
glory and acceptableness decay likewise.
Tenth. Another motive to stir thee up to grow in the increase of this grace of fear
is, It is a grace, do but abound therein, that will give thee great boldness both
with God and men. Job was a man a none-such in his day for one that feared God; and
who so bold with God as Job? who so bold with God, and who so bold with men as he?
How bold was he with God, when he wishes for nothing more than that he might come
even to his seat, and concludes that if he could come at him, he would approach even
as a prince unto him, and as such would order his cause before him (Job 23:3-7, 31:35-37).
Also before his friends, how bold was he? For ever as they laid to his charge that
he was an hypocrite, he repels them with the testimony of a good conscience, which
good conscience he got, and kept, and maintained by increasing in the fear of God;
yea, his conscience was kept so good by this grace of fear, for it was by that that
he eschewed evil, that it was common with him to appeal to God when accused, and
also to put himself for his clearing under most bitter curses and imprecations (Job
13:3-9, 18, 19:23,24, 31).
This fear of God is it that keeps the conscience clean and tender, and so free from
much of that defilement that even a good man may be afflicted with, for want of his
growth in this fear of God. Yea, let me add, if a man can with a good conscience
say that he desires to fear the name of God, it will add boldness to his soul in
his approaches into the presence of God. "O Lord," said Nehemiah, "I
beseech thee, let now thine ear be attentive to the prayer of thy servant, and servants,
who desire to fear thy name" (Neh 1:11). He pleaded his desire of fearing the
name of God, as an argument with God to grant him his request; and the reason was,
because God had promised before "to bless them that fear him, both small and
great" (Psa 115:13).
Eleventh. Another motive to stir you up to fear the Lord, and to grow in this fear
is, By it thou mayest have thy labours blessed, to the saving of the souls of others.
It is said of Levi, of whom mention was made before, that he feared God and was afraid
before his name—that he saved others from their sins. "The law of truth was
in his mouth, and he walked with me in peace and equity, and did turn away many from
iniquity" (Mal 2:6). The fear of God that dwelt in his heart, showed its growth
in the sanctifying of the Lord by his life and words, and the Lord also blessed this
his growth herein, by blessing his labours to the saving of his neighbours.
Wouldest thou save thy husband, thy wife, thy children, &c., then be greatly
in the fear of God.
This Peter teaches, "Wives," saith he, "be in subjection to your own
husbands, that, if any obey not the word, they also may without the word be won by
the conversation of the wives, while they behold your chaste conversation, coupled
with fear" (1 Peter 3:1,2). So then, if wives and children, yea, if husbands,
wives, children, servants, &c., did but better observe this general rule of Peter,
to wit, of letting their whole conversation be coupled with fear, they might be made
instruments in God's hand of much more good than they are. But the misery is, the
fear of God is wanting in actions, and that is the cause that so little good is done
by those that profess. It is not a conversation that is coupled with a profession—for
a great profession may be attended with a life that is not good, but scandalous;
but it is a conversation coupled with fear of God—that is, with the impressions of
the fear of God upon it—that is convincing and that ministereth the awakenings of
God to the conscience, in order to saving the unbeliever. O they are a sweet couple,
to wit, a Christian conversation coupled with fear.
The want of this fear of God is that that has been a stumbling-block to the blind
oftentimes. Alas, the world will not be convinced by your talk, by your notions,
and by the great profession that you make, if they see not, therewith mixed, the
lively impressions of the fear of God; but will, as I said, rather stumble and fall,
even at your conversation and at your profession itself. Wherefore, to prevent this
mischief, that is, of stumbling of souls while you make your profession of God, by
a conversation not becoming your profession, God bids you fear him; implying that
a good conversation, coupled with fear, delivers the blind world from those falls
that otherwise they cannot be delivered from. "Thou shalt not curse the deaf,
nor put a stumbling-block before the blind, but shalt fear thy God: I am the Lord"
(Lev 19:14). But shalt fear thy God, that is the remedy that will prevent their stumbling
at you, at what else soever they stumble. Wherefore Paul says to Timothy, "Take
heed unto thyself, and unto the doctrine; continue in them; for in doing this thou
shalt both save thyself and them that hear thee" (1 Tim 4:16).
Twelfth. Another motive to fear, and to grow in this fear of God is, This is the
way to engage God to deliver thee from many outward dangers, whoever falls therein
(Psa 34:7). This is proved from that of the story of the Hebrew midwives. "The
midwives," said Moses, "feared God," and did not drown the men-children
as the king had commanded, but saved them alive. And what follows? "Therefore
God dealt well with the midwives; and it came to pass because the midwives feared
God, that he made them houses" (Exo 1). That is, he sheltered them and caused
them to be hid from the rage and fury of the king, and that perhaps in some of the
houses of the Egyptians themselves for why might not the midwives be there hid as
well as was Moses even in the king's court?[31] And how many times are they that
fear God said to be delivered both by God and his holy angels? as also I have already
showed.
Thirteenth. Another motive to fear and to grow in this fear of God is, This is the
way to be delivered from errors and damnable opinions. There are some that perish
in their righteousness, that is an error; there be some that perish in their wickedness,
and that is an error also. Some again prolong their lives by their wickedness, and
others are righteous over-much, and also some are over-wise, and all these are snares,
and pits, and holes. But then, sayest thou, how shall I escape? Indeed that is the
question, and the Holy Ghost resolves it thus, "He that feareth God shall come
forth of them all" (Eccl 7:18).
Fourteenth. Another motive to fear, and to grow in this fear of God, is, Such as
have leave, be they never so dark in their souls, to come boldly to Jesus Christ,
and to trust in him for life. I told you before, that they that fear God have in
the general a license to trust in him; but now I tell you, and that in particular,
that they, and they especially, may do it, and that though in the dark; you that
sit in darkness and have no light, if this grace of fear be alive in your hearts,
you have this boldness—"Who is among you that feareth the Lord," mark,
that feareth the Lord, "that obeyeth the voice of his servant, that walketh
in darkness, and hath no light? let him trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon
his God" (Isa 50:10). It is no small advantage, you know, when men have to deal
in difficult matters, to have a patent or license to deal; now to trust in the Lord
is a difficult thing, yet the best and most gainful of all. But then, some will say,
since it is so difficult, how may we do without danger? Why, the text gives a license,
a patent to them to trust in his name, that have his fear in their hearts—"Let
him trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God." [32]
Fifteenth. Another motive to fear and grow in this grace of fear, is, God will own
and acknowledge such to be his, whoever he rejecteth. Yea he will distinguish and
separate them from all others, in the day of his terrible judgments. He will do with
them as he did by those that sighed for the abominations that were done in the land—command
the man that hath his ink- horn by his side "to set a mark upon their foreheads,"
that they might not fall in that judgment with others (Eze 9). So God said plainly
of them that feared the Lord, and that thought upon his name, that they should be
writ in his book—"A book of remembrance was written before him for them that
feared the Lord, and that thought upon his name; and they shall be mine, saith the
Lord of hosts, in that day when I make up my jewels, and I will spare them as a man
spareth his own son that serveth him" (Mal 3:16,17). Mark, he both acknowledges
them for his, and also promises to spare them, as a man would spare his own son;
yea, and moreover, will wrap them up as his chief jewels with himself in the bundle
of life. Thus much for the motives.
How to grow in this fear of God.
Having given you these motives to the duty of growing in this fear of God, before
I leave this use, I will, in a few words, show you how you may grow in this fear
of God.
First. Then, if thou wouldest grow in this fear of God, learn aright to distinguish
of fear in general. I mean, learn to distinguish between that fear that is godly,
and that which in itself is indeed ungodly fear of God; and know them well the one
from the other, lest the one, the fear that in itself indeed is ungodly, get the
place, even the upper hand of that which truly is godly fear. And remember the ungodly
fear of God is by God himself counted an enemy to him, and hurtful to his people,
and is therefore most plentifully forbidden in the Word (Gen 3:15, 26:24, 46:3; Exo
14:13, 20:20; Num 14:9, 21:34; Isa 41:10,14, 43:1, 44:2,8; 54:4; Jer 30:10; Dan 10:12,19;
Joel 2:21; Hagg 2:5; Zech 8:13).
Second. If thou wouldest grow in this godly fear, learn rightly to distinguish it
from that fear, in particular, that is godly but for a time; even from that fear
that is wrought by the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage. I say, learn to distinguish
this from that, and also perfectly to know the bounds that God hath set to that fear
that is wrought by the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage; lest, instead of growing in
the fear that is to abide with thy soul for ever, thou be over-run again with that
first fear, which is to abide with thee but till the spirit of adoption come. And
that thou mayest not only distinguish them one from the other, but also keep each
in its due place and bounds, consider in general of what hath already been said upon
this head, and in particular that the first fear is no more wrought by the Holy Spirit,
but by the devil, to distress thee, and make thee to live, not like a son, but a
slave. And for thy better help in this matter, know that God himself hath set bounds
to this fear, and has concluded that after the spirit of adoption is come, that other
fear is wrought in thy heart by him no more (Rom 8:15; 2 Tim 1:7).
Again, before I leave this, let me tell thee that if thou dost not well bestir thee
in this matter, this bondage fear, to wit, that which is like it, though not wrought
in thee by the Holy Ghost, will, by the management and subtlety of the devil, the
author of it, haunt, disturb, and make thee live uncomfortably, and that while thou
art an heir of God and his kingdom. This is that fear that the apostle speaks of,
that makes men "all their lifetime subject to bondage" (Heb 2:14,15). For
though Christ will deliver thee indeed at last, thou having embraced him by faith,
yet thy life will be full of trouble; and death, though Jesus hath abolished it,
will be always a living bugbear to thee in all thy ways and thoughts, to break thy
peace, and to make thee to draw thy loins heavily after him.
Third. Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? then, as thou shouldest learn to distinguish
of fears, so thou shouldest make conscience of which to entertain and cherish. If
God would have his fear—and it is called HIS fear by way of eminency—"that his
fear may be before you, that ye sin not" (Exo 20:20; Jer 32:40)—I say, if God
would have his fear be with thee, then thou shouldest make conscience of this, and
not so lightly give way to slavish fear, as is common for Christians to do.
There is utterly a fault among Christians about this thing; that is, they make not
that conscience of resisting of slavish fear as they ought; they rather cherish and
entertain it, and so weaken themselves, and that fear that they ought to strengthen.
And this is the reason that we so often lie grabbling[33] under the black and amazing
thoughts that are engendered in our hearts by unbelief; for this fear nourisheth
unbelief; that is, now it doth, to wit, if we give way to it after the spirit of
adoption is come, and readily closeth with all the fiery darts of the wicked.
But Christians are ready to do with this fear as the horse does when the tines[34]
of the fork are set against his side; even lean to it until it entereth into his
belly. We lean naturally to this fear, I mean, after God has done good to our souls;
it is hard striving against it, because it has even our sense and feeling of its
side. But I say, if thou wouldest be a growing Christian—growing, I say, in the fear
that is godly, in the fear that is always so—then make conscience of striving against
the other, and against all these things that would bring thee back to it. "Wherefore
should I fear," said David, "in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my
heels shall compass me about?" (Psa 49:5).
What! not fear in the day of evil? What! not when the iniquity of thy heels compasseth
thee about? No, not then, saith he, that is, not with that fear that would bring
him again into bondage to the law; for he had received the spirit of adoption before.
Indeed, if ever a Christian has ground to give way to slavish fear, it is at these
two times, to wit, in the day of evil, and when the iniquity of his heels compasseth
him about; but you see, David would not then, no, not then, give way thereto, nor
did he see reason why he should. "Wherefore should I," said he? Aye, wherefore
indeed? since now thou art become a son of God through Christ, and hast received
the Spirit of his Son into thy heart, crying, Father, Father.
Fourth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of godly fear? then grow in the knowledge
of the new covenant, for that is indeed the girdle of our reins, and the strength
of our souls. Hear what Zacharias saith: God, says he, "hath raised up an horn
of salvation for us in the house of his servant David, as he spake by the mouth of
his holy prophets which have been since the world began." But what was it? what
was it that he spake? Why, "That he would grant unto us, that we, being delivered
out of the hand of our enemies, might serve him without fear," without this
slavish bondage fear, "in holiness and righteousness before him all the days
of our life." But upon what is this princely fearless service of God grounded?
Why, upon the holy covenant of God, upon the oath that he swore unto Abraham (Luke
1:69-74). Now in this covenant is wrapped up all thy salvation; in it is contained
all thy desire, and I am sure, that then it containeth the complete salvation of
thy soul; and I say, since this covenant is confirmed by promise, by oath, and by
the blood of the Son of God, and that on purpose that thou mightest serve thy God
without slavish fear, then the knowledge and faith of this covenant is of absolute
necessity to bring us into this liberty, and out of our slavish terrors, and so,
consequently, to cause us to grow in that son-like, godly fear, which became even
the Son of God himself, and becomes all his disciples to live in the growth and exercise
of.
Fifth. Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? then labour even always to keep thine
evidences for heaven and of thy salvation alive upon thy heart; for he that loseth
his evidences for heaven, will hardly keep slavish fear out of heart; but he that
hath the wisdom and grace to keep them alive, and apparent to himself, he will grow
in this godly fear. See how David words it, "From the end of the earth,"
saith he, "will I cry unto thee; when my heart is overwhelmed, lead me to the
rock that is higher than I. For thou hast been a shelter for me, and a strong tower
from the enemy: I will abide in thy tabernacle for ever. For thou, O God, hast heard
my vows; thou hast given me the heritage of those that fear thy name" (Psa 61:2-5).
Mark a little, David doth by these words, in the first place, suggest that sometimes,
to his thinking, he was as far off of his God as the ends of the earth are asunder,
and that at such times he was subject to be overwhelmed, afraid: [And] second, the
way that he took at such times, to help himself, was to cry to God to lead him again
to Jesus Christ—"lead me to the rock that is higher than I" ; for indeed
without faith in him, and the renewing of that faith, there can be no evidence for
heaven made to appear unto the soul. This therefore he prays for first.
Then he puts that faith into exercise, and that with respect to the time that was
past, and also of the time that was to come. For the time past, says he, "Thou
hast been a shelter to me, and a strong tower from the enemy" ; and for the
time to come, he said, "I will abide in thy tabernacle," that is, in thy
Christ by faith, and in thy way of worship by love, "forever." And observe
it, he makes the believing remembrance of his first evidences for heaven the ground
of this his cry and faith, "For thou," says he, "O God, hast given
me the heritage of those that fear thy name." Thou hast made me meet to be a
partaker of the mercy of thy chosen, and hast put me under the blessing of goodness
wherewith thou hast blessed those that fear thee. Thus you see how David, in his
distresses, musters up his prayers, faith, and evidences for eternal life, that he
might deliver himself from being overwhelmed, that is, with slavish fear, and that
he might also abound in that son-like fear of his fellow-brethren, that is not only
comely, with respect to our profession, but profitable to our souls.
Sixth. Wouldest thou grow in this fear of God? then set before thine eyes the being
and majesty of God; for that both begetteth, maintaineth, and increaseth this fear.
And hence it is called the fear of God, that is, an holy and awful dread and reverence
of his majesty. For the fear of God is to stand in awe of him, but how can that be
done if we do not set him before us? And again, if we would fear him more, we must
abide more in the sense and faith of his glorious majesty. Hence this fear and God's
name is so often put together: as fear God, fear the Lord, fear thy God, do this
in the fear of the Lord, and thou shalt fear thy God, I am the Lord. For these words,
"I am the Lord thy God," and the like, are on purpose put in, not only
to show us whom we should fear, but also to beget, maintain, and increase in us that
fear that is due from us to that "glorious and fearful name, the Lord our God"
(Deut 28:58).
Seventh. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then keep always close to thy
conscience the authority of the Word; fear the commandment as the commandment of
a God both mighty and glorious, and as the commandment of a father, both loving and
pitiful; let this commandment, I say, be always with thine eye, with thine ear, and
with thine heart; for then thou wilt be taught, not only to fear, but to abound in
the fear of the Lord. Every grace is nourished by the Word, and without it there
is no thrift in the soul (Prov 13:13, 4:20-22; Deut 6:1,2).
Eighth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then be much in the faith of the
promise, of the promise that maketh over to thy soul an interest in God by Christ,
and of all good things. The promise naturally tendeth to increase in us the fear
of the Lord, because this fear, it grows by goodness and mercy; they shall fear the
Lord, and his goodness; now this goodness and mercy of God, it is wrapt up in, and
made over to us by promise; for God gave it to Abraham by promise. Therefore the
faith and hope of the promise causeth this fear to grow in the soul—"Having
therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness
of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God" (2 Cor 7:1).
"Perfecting holiness in the fear of God" ; therefore that fear by the promise
must needs grow mighty, for by, with, and in it, you see holiness is perfected.
Ninth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then remember the judgments of God
that have, or shall certainly overtake, those professors, that have either been downright
hypocrites, or else unwatchful Christians. For both these sorts partake of the judgments
of God; the one, to wit, the true Christian, for his unwatchfulness, for his correction;
the other, to wit, the hypocrite, for his hypocrisy, to his destruction. This is
a way to make thee stand in awe, and to make thee tremble, and grow in the grace
of fear before thy God.
Judgments! you may say, what judgments? Answ. Time will fail me here to tell thee
of the judgments that sometimes overtake God's people, and that always certainly
overtake the hypocrite for his transgressions. For those that attend God's people,
I would have thee look back to the place in this book where they are particularly
touched upon. And for those that attend the hypocrite, in general they are these.
1. Blindness of heart in this world. 2. The death of their hope at the day of their
death. 3. And the damnation of their souls at the day of judgment (Matt 23:15-19;
Job 8:13, 11:20, 18:14, 20:4-7, Matt 23:33, 24:51; Luke 20:47). The godly consideration
of these things tend to make men grow in the fear of God.
Tenth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then study the excellencies of the
grace of fear, and what profit it yieldeth to them that have it, and labour to get
thy heart into the love, both of the exercise of the grace itself, and also of the
fruit it yieldeth; for a man hardly grows in the increase of any grace, until his
heart is united to it, and until it is made lovely in his eyes (Psa 119:119,120).
Now the excellencies of this grace of fear have also been discoursed of in this book
before, where by reading thou shalt find the fruit it bears, and the promises that
are annexed to it, which, because they are many, I refer thee also thither for thy
instruction.
Eleventh. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then remember what a world of
privileges do belong to them that fear the Lord, as also I have hinted; namely, that
such shall not be hurt, shall want no good thing, shall be guarded by angels, and
have a special license, though in never so dreadful a plight, to trust in the name
of the Lord, and stay upon their God.
Twelfth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then be much in prayer to God
for abundance of the increase thereof. To fear God is that which is according to
his will, and if we ask anything according to his will, he heareth us. Pray therefore
that God will unite thy heart to fear his name; this is the way to grow in the grace
of fear.
Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then devote thyself to it (Psa
119:38). Devote myself to it, you will say, how is that? I answer, why, give thyself
to it, addict thyself to it. Solace thyself in the contemplation of God, and of a
reverence of his name, and word, and worship. Then wilt thou fear, and grow in this
grace of fear.
What things they are that have a tendency in them to hinder the growth of the fear
of God in our hearts.
And that I may yet be helpful to thee, reader, I shall now give thee caution of those
things that will, if way be given to them, hinder thy growth in this fear of God,
the which, because they are very hurtful to the people of God, I would have thee
be warned by them. And they are these which follow:
First. If thou wouldest grow in this grace of fear, take heed of A HARD HEART, for
that will hinder thy growth in this grace. "Why hast thou hardened our heart
from thy fear?" was a bitter complaint of the church heretofore; for it is not
only the judgment that in itself is dreadful and sore to God's people, but that which
greatly hindereth the growth of this grace in the soul (Isa 63:17). A hard heart
is but barren ground for any grace to grow in, especially for the grace of fear:
there is but little of this fear where the heart is indeed hard; neither will there
ever be much therein.
Now if thou wouldest be kept from a hard heart, 1. Take heed of the beginnings of
sin. Take heed, I say, of that, though it should be never so small; "A little
leaven leaveneth the whole lump." There is more in a little sin to harden, than
in a great deal of grace to soften. David's look upon Bathsheba was, one would think,
but a small matter; yet that beginning of sin contracted such hardness of heart in
him, that it carried him almost beyond all fear of God. It did carry him to commit
lewdness with her, murder upon the body of Uriah, and to abundance of wicked dissimulation;
which are things, I say, that have direct tendency to quench and destroy all fear
of God in the soul.
2. If thou hast sinned, lie not down without repentance; for the want of repentance,
after one has sinned, makes the heart yet harder and harder. Indeed a hard heart
is impenitent, and impenitence also makes the heart harder and harder. So that if
impenitence be added to hardness of heart, or to the beginning of sin which makes
it so, it will quickly be with that soul, as is said of the house of Israel, it will
have a whore's forehead, it will hardly be brought to shame (Jer 3:3).
3. If thou wouldest be rid of a hard heart, that great enemy to the growth of the
grace of fear, be much with Christ upon the cross in thy meditations; for that is
an excellent remedy against hardness of heart: a right sight of him, as he hanged
there for thy sins, will dissolve thy heart into tears, and make it soft and tender.
"They shall look upon me whom they have pierced, - and mourn" (Zech 12:10).
Now a soft, a tender, and a broken heart, is a fit place for the grace of fear to
thrive in. But,
Second. If thou wouldest have the grace of fear to grow in thy soul, take heed also
of A PRAYERLESS HEART, for that is not a place for this grace of fear to grow in.
Hence he that restraineth prayer is said to cast off fear. "Thou castest off
fear," said one of his friends to Job. But how must he do that? Why the next
words show, "Thou restrainest prayer before God" (Job 15:4). Seest thou
a professor that prayeth not? that man thrusteth the fear of God away from him. Seest
thou a man that prays but little, that man feareth God but little; for it is the
praying soul, the man that is mighty in praying, that has a heart for the fear of
God to grow in. Take heed, therefore, of a prayerless heart, if you would grow in
this grace of the fear of God. Prayer is as the pitcher that fetcheth water from
the brook, therewith to water the herbs; break the pitcher, and it will fetch no
water, and for want of water the garden withers.
Third. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A LIGHT AND WANTON
HEART, for neither is such a heart good ground for the fear of God to grow in. Wherefore
it is said of Israel, "She feared not, but went and played the harlot also."
She was given to wantonness, and to be light and vain, and so her fear of God decayed
(Jer 3:8). Had Joseph been as wanton as his mistress, he had been as void of the
fear of God as she; but he was of a sober, tender, godly, considerate spirit, therefore
he grew in the fear of God.
Fourth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A COVETOUS HEART,
for neither is that which is such an one good ground for this grace of fear to grow
in. Therefore this covetousness and the fear of God are as enemies, set the one in
opposition to the other: one that feareth God and hateth covetousness (Exo 18:21).
And the reason why covetousness is such an obstruction to the growth of this grace
of fear, is because covetousness casteth those things out of the heart which alone
can nourish this fear. It casteth out the Word and love of God, without which no
grace can grow in the soul; how then should the fear of God grow in a covetous heart?
(Eze 33:30-32; 1 John 2:15).
Fifth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of AN UNBELIEVING
HEART, for an unbelieving heart is not good ground for this grace of fear to grow
in. An unbelieving heart is called "an evil heart," because from it flows
all the wickedness that is committed in the world (Heb 3:12). Now it is faith, or
a believing heart, that nourisheth this fear of God, and not the other; and the reason
is, for that faith brings God, heaven, and hell, to the soul, and maketh it duly
consider of them all (Heb 11:7). This is therefore the means of fear, and that which
will make it grow in the soul; but unbelief is a bane thereto.
Sixth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A FORGETFUL HEART.
Such a heart is not a heart where the grace of fear will flourish, "when I remember,
I am afraid," &c. Therefore take heed of forgetfulness; do not forget but
remember God, and his kindness, patience, and mercy, to those that yet neither have
grace, nor special favour from him, and that will beget and nourish his fear in thy
heart, but forgetfulness of this, or of any other of his judgments, is a great wound
and weakening to this fear (Job 21:6). When a man well remembers that God's judgments
are so great a deep and mystery, as indeed they are, that remembrance puts a man
upon such considerations of God and of his judgments as to make him fear—"Therefore,"
said Job, "I am afraid of him." See the place, Job 23:15. "Therefore
am I troubled at his presence; when I consider, I am afraid of him"—when I remember
and consider of the wonderful depths of his judgments towards man.
Seventh. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A MURMURING
AND REPINING HEART, for that is not a heart for this grace of fear to grow in. As
for instance, when men murmur and repine at God's hand, at his dispensations, and
at the judgments that overtake them, in their persons, estates, families, or relations,
that their murmuring tendeth to destroy fear; for a murmuring spirit is such an one
as seems to correct God, and to find fault with his dispensations, and where there
is that, the heart is far from fear. A murmuring spirit either comes from that wisdom
that pretends to understand that there is a failure in the nature and execution of
things, or from an envy and spite at the execution of them. Now if murmurings arise
from this pretended wisdom of the flesh, then instead of fearing of God, his actions
are judged to be either rigid or ridiculous, which yet are done in judgment, truth,
and righteousness. So that a murmuring heart cannot be a good one for the fear of
God to grow in. Alas! the heart where that grows must be a soft one; as you have
it in Job 23:15, 16; and a heart that will stoop and be silent at the most abstruse
of all his judgments—"I was dumb, because THOU didst it." The heart in
which this fear of God doth flourish is such, that it bows and is mute, if it can
but espy the hand, wisdom, justice, or holiness of God in this or the other of his
dispensations, and so stirs up the soul to fear before him. But if this murmuring
ariseth from envy and spite, that looketh so like to the spirit of the devil, that
nothing need be said to give conviction of the horrible wickedness of it.
Eighth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A HIGH AND CAPTIOUS
SPIRIT, for that is not good ground for the fear of God to grow in. A meek and quiet
spirit is the best, and there the fear of God will flourish most; therefore Peter
puts meekness and fear together, as being most suited in their nature and natural
tendency one to another (1 Peter 3:15). Meekness of spirit is like that heart that
hath depth of earth in it in which things may take root and grow; but a high and
captious spirit is like to the stony ground, where there is not depth of earth, and
consequently, where this grace of fear cannot grow; therefore take heed of this kind
of spirit, if thou wouldest that the fear of God should grow in thy soul.
Ninth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of AN ENVIOUS HEART,
for that is not a good heart for the fear of God to grow in. "Let not thine
heart envy sinners; but be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long" (Prov
23:17). To envy any is a sign of a bad spirit, and that man takes upon him, as I
have already hinted, to be a controller and a judge, yea, and a malicious executioner
too, and that of that fury that ariseth from his own lusts and revengeful spirit,
upon (perhaps) the man that is more righteous than himself. But suppose he is a sinner
that is the object of thine envy, why, the text sets that envy in direct opposition
to the fear of God; "Envy not sinners, but be thou in the fear of God."
These two, therefore, to wit, envy to sinners and fearing of God, are opposites.
Thou canst not fear God, and envy sinners too. And the reason is, because he that
envieth a sinner, hath forgotten himself, that he is as bad; and how can he then
fear God? He that envies sinners rejects his duty of blessing of them that curse,
and praying for them that despitefully use us; and how can he that hath rejected
this, fear God? He that envieth sinners, therefore, cannot be of a good spirit, nor
can the fear of God grow in his heart.
Tenth. Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of HARDENING
THY HEART at any time against convictions to particular duties, as to prayer, alms,
self-denial, or the like. Take heed also of hardening thy heart, when thou art under
any judgment of God, as sickness, losses, crosses, or the like. I bid you before
to beware of a hard heart, but now I bid you beware of hardening your soft ones.
For to harden the heart is to make it worse than it is; harder, more desperate, and
bold against God, than at the present it is. Now, I say, if thou wouldest grow in
this grace of fear, take heed of hardening thy heart, and especially of hardening
of it against convictions to good; for those convictions are sent of God like seasonable
showers of rain, to keep the tillage of thy heart in good order, that the grace of
fear may grow therein; but this stifling of convictions makes the heart as hard as
a piece of the nether millstone. Therefore happy is he that receiveth conviction,
for so he doth keep in the fear of God, and that fear thereby nourished in his soul;
but cursed is he that doth otherwise—"Happy is the man that feareth alway; but
he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischief" (Prov 28:14).
USE THIRD, of encouragement.
USE THIRD. I come now to A USE OF ENCOURAGEMENT to those that are blessed with this
grace of fear. The last text that was mentioned saith, "Happy is the man that
feareth alway," and so doth many more. Happy already, because blessed with this
grace; and happy for time to come, because this grace shall abide, and continue till
the soul that hath it is brought unto the mansion-house of glory. "I will put
my fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart from me." Therefore, as
here it saith, Happy is he, so it saith also, It shall go well with him, that is,
in time to come. "It shall be well with them that fear God" (Eccl 8:12).
First. Had God given thee all the world, yet cursed hadst thou been, if he had not
given thee the fear of the Lord; for the fashion of this world is a fading thing,
but he that feareth the Lord shall abide for ever and ever. This therefore is the
first thing that I would propound for thy encouragement, thou man that fears the
Lord. This grace will dwell in thy heart, for it is a new covenant grace, and will
abide with thee for ever. It is sent to thee from God, not only to join thy heart
unto him, but to keep thee from final apostasy—"I will put my fear in their
hearts, that they shall not depart from me" (Jer 32:40). That thou mayest never
forsake God, is his design, and therefore, to keep thee from that wicked thing, he
hath put his fear in thy heart. Many are the temptations, difficulties, snares, traps,
trials, and troubles that the people of God pass through in the world, but how shall
they be kept, how shall they be delivered, and escape? Why, the answer is, The fear
of God will keep them—"He that feareth God shall come forth of them all."
Is it not therefore a wonderful mercy to be blessed with this grace of fear, that
thou by it mayest be kept from final, which is damnable apostasy? Bless God, therefore,
thou blessed man, that hast this grace of fear in thy soul. There are five things
in this grace of fear that have a direct tendency in them to keep thee from final
apostasy.
1. It is seated in the heart, and the heart is, as I may call it, the main fort in
the mystical world, man. It is not placed in the head, as knowledge is; nor in the
mouth, as utterance is, but in the heart, the seat of all, "I will put my fear
in their hearts." If a king will keep a town secure to himself, let him be sure
to man sufficiently the main fort thereof. If he have twenty thousand men well armed,
yet if they lie scattered here and there, the town may be taken for all that, but
if the main fort be well manned, then the town is more secure. What if a man had
all the parts, yea, all the arts of men and angels? That will not keep the heart
to God. But when the heart, this principal fort, is possessed with the fear of God,
then he is safe, but not else.
2. As the heart in general, so the will in special. That chief and great faculty
of the soul is the principle that is acted by this fear. The will, which way that
goes, all goes; if it be to heaven or hell. Now the will, I say, is that main faculty
that is governed by this fear that doth possess the soul, therefore all is like to
go well with it. This Samuel insinuateth, where he saith, "If ye will fear the
Lord." Fearing of God is a voluntary act of the will, and that being so, the
soul is kept from rebellion against the commandment, because by the will where this
fear of God is placed, and which it governeth, is led all the rest of the powers
of the soul (1 Sam 12:14). In this will, then, is this fear of God placed, that this
grace may the better be able to govern the soul, and so by consequence the whole
man; for as I said before, look what way the will goes, look what the will does,
thither goes, and that does, the whole man (Psa 110:3). Man, when his will is alienate
from God, is reckoned rebellious throughout, and that not without ground, for the
will is the principal faculty of the soul as to obedience, and therefore things done
without the will are as if they were not done at all. The spirit is willing; if ye
be willing; "she hath done what she could," and the like; by these and
such- like sayings the goodness of the heart and action is judged, as to the subjective
part thereof. Now this fear that we have been speaking of, is placed in the soul,
and so consequently in the will, that the man may thereby the better be kept from
final and damnable apostasy.
3. This fear, as I may say, even above every other grace, is God's well-wisher; and
hence it is called, as I also have showed you, his fear. As he also says in the text
mentioned above, "I will put my fear in their hearts." These words, his
and my, they are intimate and familiar expressions, bespeaking not only great favour
to man, but a very great trust put in him. As who should say, this fear is my special
friend, it will subject and bow the soul, and the several faculties thereof, to my
pleasure; it is my great favourite, and subdueth sinners to my pleasure. You shall
rarely find faith or repentance, or parts, go under such familiar characters as this
blessed fear of the Lord doth. Of all the counsellors and mighties that David had,
Hushai only was called the king's friend (2 Sam 15:37, 16:16). So of all the graces
of the Spirit this of the fear of God goes mostly, if not always, by the title of
MY fear, God's fear, HIS fear, &c. I told you before, if the king will keep a
town, the main fort therein must be sufficiently manned: and now I will add, that
if he have not to govern those men some trusty and special friend, such as Hushai
was to David, he may find it lost when it should stand him in greatest stead. If
a soul should be possessed with all things possible, yet if this fear of God be wanting,
all other things will give place in time of rebellion, and the soul shall be found
in, and under the conduct of hell, when it should stand up for God and his truth
in the world. This fear of God, it is God's special friend, and therefore it has
given unto it the chief seat of the heart, the will, that the whole man may now be,
and also be kept hereafter, in the subjection and obedience of the gospel. For,
4. This grace of fear is the softest and most tender of God's honour of any other
grace. It is that tender, sensible, and trembling grace, that keepeth the soul upon
its continual watch. To keep a good watch is, you know, a wonderful safety to a place
that is in continual danger because of the enemy. Why, this is the grace that setteth
the watch, and that keepeth the watchmen awake (Can 3:7,8). A man cannot watch as
he should, if he be destitute of fear: let him be confident, and he sleeps; he unadvisedly
lets into the garrison those that should not come there. Israel's fault when they
came to Canaan was, that they made a covenant with the inhabitants of the land, to
wit, the Gibeonites, without asking counsel of God. But would they have done so,
think you, if at the same time the fear of God had had its full play in the soul,
in the army? no, they at that time forgot to fear. The grace of fear had not at that
time its full stroke and sway among them.
5. This grace of fear is that which, as I may so say, first affects the hearts of
saints with judgments, after we have sinned, and so is as a beginning grace to bring
again that to rights that by sin is put out of frame. O it is a precious grace of
God! I know what I say in this matter, and also where I had been long ago, through
the power of my lusts, and the wiles of the devil, had it not been for the fear of
God.
Second. But secondly, another encouragement for those that are blessed with this
blessed grace of fear is this,—this fear fails not to do this work for the soul,
if there in truth, be it never so small in measure. A little of this leaven "leaveneth
the whole lump." True, a little will not do, or help the soul to do those worthy
exploits in the heart or life as well as a bigger measure thereof; nor, indeed, can
a little of any grace do that which a bigger measure will; but a little will preserve
the soul from final apostasy, and deliver it into the arms of the Son of God at the
final judgment. Wherefore, when he saith, "I will put my fear in their hearts,"
he says not, I will put so much of it there, such a quantity, or such a degree; but,
"I will put my fear there." I speak not this in the least to tempt the
godly man to be content with the least degree of the fear of God in his heart. True,
men should be glad that God hath put even the least degree of this grace into their
souls, but they should not be content therewith; they should earnestly covet more,
pray for more, and use all lawful, that is, all the means of God's appointing, that
they may get more.
There are, as I have said already, several degrees of this grace of fear, and our
wisdom is to grow in it, as in all the other graces of the Spirit. The reasons why,
I have showed you, and also the way to grow therein; but the least measure thereof
will do as I said, that is, keep the soul from final apostasy. There are, as I have
showed you, those that greatly fear the Lord, that fear exceedingly, and that fear
him above many of their brethren; but the small in this grace are saved as well as
those that are great therein: "He will bless" or save "them that fear
him, both small and great." This fear of the Lord is the pulse of the soul;
and as some pulses beat stronger, some weaker, so is this grace of fear in the soul.
They that beat best are a sign of best life, but they that beat worst show that life
is [barely] present. As long as the pulse beats, we count not that the man is dead,
though weak; and this fear, where it is, preserves to everlasting life. Pulses there
are also that are intermitting; to wit, such as have their times for a little, a
little time to stop, and beat again; true, these are dangerous pulses, but yet too
a sign of life. This fear of God also is sometimes like this intermitting pulse;
there are times when it forbears to work, and then it works again. David had an intermitting
pulse, Peter had an intermitting pulse, as also many other of the saints of God.
I call that an intermitting pulse, with reference to the fear we speak of, when there
is some obstruction by the workings of corruptions in the soul; I say, some obstruction
from, and hindrance of, the continual motion of this fear of God; yet none of these,
though they are various, and some of them signs of weakness, are signs of death,
but life. "I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart from
me."
Quest. But you may say, How shall I know that I fear God?
Answ. If I should say that desires, true sincere desires to fear him, is fear itself.
I should not say amiss (Neh 1:11). For although a desire to be, or do so and so,
makes not a man to be in temporal or natural things what he desires to be—for a sick,
or poor, or imprisoned man may desire to be well, to be rich, or to be at liberty,
and yet be as they are, sick, poor, or in prison—yet in spirituals, a man's desire
to be good, to believe, to love, to hope, and fear God, doth flow from the nature
of grace itself.
I said before, that in temporals a man could not properly be said to be what he was
not; yet a man, even in naturals or temporals, shows his love to that thing that
he desires, whether it be health, riches, or liberty; and in spirituals, desires
of, from love to this or that grace of God, sincere desires of it flow from the root
of the grace itself—"Thy servants who desire to fear thy name." Nehemiah
bore himself before God upon this, "that he desired to fear his name."
And hence again it is said concerning desires, true desires, "The desire of
man is his kindness" (Prov 19:22). For a man shows his heart, his love, his
affections, and his delights, in his desires; and since the grace of the fear of
God is a grace so pleasant in the sight of God, and of so sanctifying a nature in
the soul where it is, a true sincere desire to be blessed with that grace must needs
flow from some being of this grace in the soul already.
True desires are lower than higher acts of grace, but God will not overlook desires—"But
now they desire a better country, that is, an heavenly; wherefore God is not ashamed
to be called their God; for he hath prepared for them a city." Mark, they desire
a country, and they shall have a city. At this low place, to wit, sincere desires,
God will meet the soul and will tell him that he hath accepted of his desires, that
his desires are his kindness, and flow from grace itself: "He will fulfil the
desire of them that fear him." Therefore desires are not rejected of God; but
they would, if they did not flow from a principle of grace already in the soul; therefore
desires, sincere desires to fear God, flow from grace already in the soul. Therefore,
since thou fearest God, and it is evident by thy desires that thou dost so do, thou
art happy now in this thy fear, and shalt be happy for ever hereafter in the enjoyment
of that which God in another world hath laid up for them that fear him.
Third. Another encouragement for those that have this grace of fear is this; this
grace can make that man, that in many other things is not capable of serving of God,
serve him better than those that have all without it. Poor Christian man, thou hast
scarce been able to do anything for God all thy days, but only to fear the Lord.
Thou art no preacher, and so canst not do him service that way; thou art no rich
man, and so canst not do him service with outward substance; thou art no wise man,
and so canst not do anything that way; but here is thy mercy, thou fearest God. Though
thou canst not preach, thou canst fear God. Though thou hast no bread to feed the
belly, nor fleece to clothe the back of the poor, thou canst fear God. O how "blessed
is the man that feareth the Lord" ; because this duty of fearing of God is an
act of the mind, and may be done by the man that is destitute of all things but that
holy and blessed mind.
Blessed therefore is that man, for God hath not laid the comfort of his people in
the doing of external duties, nor the salvation of their souls, but in believing,
loving, and fearing God. Neither hath he laid these things in actions done in their
health nor in the due management of their most excellent parts, but in the receiving
of Christ, and fear of God. The which, good Christian, thou mayest do, and do acceptably,
even though thou shouldest lie bed-rid all thy days; thou mayest also be sick and
believe; be sick and love, be sick and fear God, and so be a blessed man. And here
the poor Christian hath something to answer them that reproach him for his ignoble
pedigree, and shortness of the glory of the wisdom of the world. True, may that man
say, I was taken out of the dunghill, I was born in a base and low estate, but I
fear God. I have no worldly greatness, nor excellency of natural parts, but I fear
God.
When Obadiah met with Elijah, he gave him no worldly and fantastical compliment,
nor did he glory in his promotion by Ahab the king of Israel, but gravely, and after
a gracious manner, said, "I thy servant fear the Lord from my youth." Also
when the mariners inquired of Jonah, saying, "What is thine occupation, and
whence comest thou? what is thy country, and of what people art thou?" This
was the answer he gave them, "I am a Hebrew, and I fear the Lord, the God of
heaven, which hath made the sea and the dry land" (Jonah 1:8,9). Indeed this
answer is the highest, and most noble in the world, nor are there any, save a few,
that in truth can thus express themselves, though other answers they had enough;
most can say, I have wisdom, or might, or riches, or friends, or health, or the like;
these are common, and are greatly boasted in by the most; but he is the man that
feareth God, and he that can say, when they say to him, What art thou? "I thy
servant fear the Lord," he is the man of many, he is to be honoured of men:
though this, to wit, that he feareth the Lord, is all that he hath in the world.
He hath the thing, the honour, the life, and glory that is lasting; his blessedness
will abide when all men's but his is buried in the dust, in shame and contempt.[35]
A word to hypocrites.
Hypocrites, my last word is to you; the hypocrite is one that would appear to be
that in men's eyes that is nothing of in God's—thou hypocrite, that wouldest be esteemed
to be one that loves and that fears God, but does not; I have this to say to thee,
thy condition is damnable, because thou art a hypocrite, and seekest to
deceive both God and man with guises, vizards, masks, shows, pretences, and thy formal,
carnal, feigned subjection to the outside of statutes, laws, and commandments; but
within thou art full of rottenness and all excess.
Hypocrite, thou mayest by thy cunning shifts be veiled and hid from men, but thou
art naked before the eyes of God, and he knoweth that his fear is not in thy heart
(Luke 16:15).
Hypocrite, be admonished that there is not obedience accepted of God, where the heart
is destitute of this grace of fear. Keeping of the commandments is but one part of
the duty of man, and Paul did that, even while he was a hypocrite (Phil 3). To "fear
God and keep his commandments, this is the whole duty of man" (Eccl 12:13).
This—fear God—the hypocrite, as a hypocrite, cannot do, and therefore, as such, cannot
escape the damnation of hell.
Hypocrite, thou must fear God first, even before thou dost offer to meddle with the
commandments, that is, as to the keeping of them. Indeed, thou shouldest read therein,
that thou mayest learn to fear the Lord, but yet, "fear God" goes before
the command to keep his commandments. And if thou dost not fear God first, thou transgressest,
instead of keeping of the commandments.
Hypocrite, this word, FEAR GOD, is that which the hypocrite quite forgets, although
it is that which sanctifies the whole duty of man. For this is that, and nothing
without it, that can make a man sincere in his obedience; the hypocrite looks for
applause abroad, and forgets that he is condemned at home, and both these he does
because he wanteth the fear of God.
Hypocrite, be admonished that none of the privileges that are spoken of in the former
part of the book belongs to thee, because thou art a hypocrite; and if thou hope,
thy hope shall be cut off, and if thou lean upon thy house, both thou and it shall
fall into hell-fire. Triumph then, thy triumph is but for awhile. Joy then, but the
joy of the hypocrite is but for a moment (Job 8:13,15, 20:4-6).
Perhaps thou wilt not let go now, what, as a hypocrite, thou hast got; but "what
is the hope of the hypocrite, when God taketh away his soul?" (Job 27:8). Hypocrite,
thou shouldest have chosen the fear of God, as thou hast chosen a profession without
it, but thou hast cast off fear, because thou art a hypocrite; and because thou art
such, thou shalt have the same measure that thou metest; God will cast thee off,
because thou art a hypocrite. God hath prepared a fear for thee because thou didst
not choose the fear of God, and that fear shall come upon thee like desolation, and
like an armed man, and shall swallow thee up, thou and all that thou art (Prov 1:27).
Hypocrite, read this text and tremble—"The sinners in Zion are afraid, fearfulness
hath surprised the hypocrites. Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire?
who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" (Isa 33:13,14).
Hypocrite, thou art not under the fatherly protection of God, because thou art a
hypocrite, and wantest his fear in thine heart. The eyes of the Lord are upon them
that fear him, to deliver them. But the fearless man or hypocrite is left to the
snares and wiles of the devil, to be caught therein and overcome, because he is destitute
of the fear of God.
Hypocrite, thou art like to have no other reward of God for thy labour than that
which the goats shall have;[36] the hypocrite, because he is a hypocrite, shall not
stand in God's sight. The gain of thy religion thou spendest as thou gettest it.
Thou wilt not have one farthing overplus at death and judgment.
Hypocrite, God hath not intrusted thee with the least dram of his saving grace, nor
will he, because thou art a hypocrite: and as for what thou hast, thou hast stolen
it, even every man of you from his neighbour; still pilfering out of their profession,
even as Judas did out of the bag. Thou comest like a thief into thy profession, and
like a thief thou shalt go out of the same. Jesus Christ hath not counted thee faithful
to commit to thee any of his jewels to keep, because thou fearest him not. He hath
given his "banner to them that fear him, that it may be displayed because of
the truth" (Psa 60:4).
Hypocrite, thou art not true to God nor man, nor thine own soul, because thou art
a hypocrite! How should the Lord put any trust in thee? Why should the saints look
for any good from thee? Should God give thee his Word, thou wilt sell it. Should
men commit their souls to thee, thou wilt destroy them, by making merchandise of
them, for thy own hypocritical designs. Yea, if the sun waxes hot, thou wilt throw
all away, and not endure the heat, because thou art a hypocrite!
FOOTNOTES:
[1] This is a very remarkable illustration of godly fear. Jacob does not swear by
the omnipresence or omniscience of God—nor by his omnipotence—nor by his love or
mercy in his covenant—nor by the God of Abraham, but by the "fear of his father
Isaac"—the sole object of his adoration. A most striking and solemn appeal to
Jehovah, fixing upon our hearts that Divine proverb, "The fear of the Lord is
the beginning of wisdom"—the source of all happiness, both in time and in eternity.—Ed.
[2] It is of solemn importance that we feel the vast difference between holy and
unholy familiarity with God. Has he adopted us into his family? Can we, by a new
birth, say "Our Father?" Still he is in heaven, we on earth. He is infinite
in purity; Holy, Holy, Holy is his name. We are defiled, and can only approach his
presence in the righteousness of the Saviour and Mediator. Then, O my soul, if it
is thy bliss to draw near to the throne of grace with holy boldness, let it be with
reverence and godly fear.—Ed.
[3] It is an awful thing to appeal to God for the truth of a lie! All appeals to
God, not required by law, are worse than useless; they are wicked, and cast a doubt
on the veracity of those who make them—Ed.
[4]"To give the back" ; to forsake, to depart, to treat with contempt.
See Imperial Dictionary, vol. i. p. 145.—Ed.
[5]The genuine disciple "who thinketh no evil" will say, Can this be so
now? Yes, reader, it is. Some go to God's house to worship their ease and forgetfulness
in sleep; some for worldly purposes; some to admire the beauty of the frail body;
but many to worship God in spirit and in truth. Reader, inquire to which of these
classes you belong.—Ed.
[6] They worshipped God, not according to his appointment, but their own inventions—the
direction of their false prophets, or their idolatrous kings, or the usages of the
nations round about them. The tradition of the elders was of more value and validity
with them than God's laws by Moses. This our Saviour applies to the Jews in his time,
who were formal in their devotions, and wedded to their own inventions; and pronounces
concerning them that in vain do they worship God. How many still in worship regard
the inventions of man, and traditions of the church, more than the commands of God.—Ed.
[7] The Word is the decree upon which we must depend or perish. In vain, poor sinner,
is any reliance upon churches or men; neither Papist nor Protestant have any power
"committed unto them" to forgive sins. If they claim it, believe them not,
but pity their pride and delusion. Christ is the Rock, and not poor erring Peter,
as some have vainly imagined. Peter is dead, awaiting the resurrection of his body,
and the great day of judgment; but Christ ever liveth at all times, and in all places,
able to save unto the uttermost. Put no trust in man, but in thy broken spirit seek
the blessing of Christ, that he may pardon thy sins.—Ed.
[8] The fear of the wicked arises from a corrupt, sinful, self-condemning conscience;
they fear God as an angry judge, and therefore consider him as their enemy. As they
love and will not part with their sins, so they are in continual dread of punishment.—Mason.
[9] "To-elbow all his days in his lord's vineyard" ; to sit or stand idly
resting upon his elbows, instead of labouring in the vineyard. "A sovereign
shame so elbows him."—King Lear, Act iv, Scene 3.—Ed.
[10] "Gear" ; apparel, furniture, implements. "The apostles were not
fixed in their residence, but were ready in their gears to move whither they were
called."— Barrow.—Ed.
[11] God does not limit himself as to his mode of calling poor sinners. The three
thousand he convinced at one hour, and they immediately made a profession, but Bunyan
was for years in a state of alarming uncertainty; some are driven by fiery terrors,
others by a still small voice. Reader, our anxious inquiry should be, Have we entered
in by Christ the gate? Are our fruits meet for repentance? Let no one vaunt of his
experience, because he go well bedaubed with the dirt of the slough. Every soul that
enters the gate is equally a miracle of grace.—Ed.
[12] This is remarkably instanced in Bunyan's Grace Abounding.—Ed.
[13] Those who are adopted into the family of heaven are "justified from all
things" ; being delivered from sin, the curse, and wrath, "there is now
no condemnation for them" ; and trusting to Jesus' precious blood of pardon,
to his righteousness for acceptance, and to his grace for sanctification, they are,
by the indwelling of the Spirit which adopted them, possessed of that love which
casteth out fear, and rejoiceth in hope of the glory of God. And to those who, through
their manifold infirmities and departures, are often beset with unbelieving fears,
the Lord says, for their encouragement, "Fear thou not, for I am with thee;
I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness"
(Isa 41:10).—Mason.
[14] Effectual grace in the soul is accompanied by doubts and fears, owing to the
remains of indwelling corruption; hence arises a continual warfare. Believer, how
needful is it ever to retain your confidence and assurance of your Lord's love to
you! Rely on his faithfulness, persevere steadfastly in the way of duty, looking
to Jesus, and living upon his fulness.—Mason. How does all this reasoning remind
us of Bunyan's own experience, recorded in his Grace Abounding; he was not ignorant
of Satan's devices.—Ed.
[15] Alas! how few attain to this most blessed state. To delight so in the Word—
to make it so much our daily study, and the object of our meditations at night, as
to have "its very form engraven upon the face of our souls." Happy is the
man that is in such a case. O my soul, why is it not thy case?—Ed.
[16] The filial fear of God is most prevalent when the heart is impressed with a
lively sense of the love of God manifested in Christ. As a dutiful and obedient child
fears to offend an affectionate parent, or as a person of grateful heart would be
extremely careful not to grieve a kind and bountiful friend, who is continually loading
him with favours and promoting his true happiness; so, and much more, will the gracious
soul be afraid of displeasing the Lord, his bountiful and unwearied benefactor, who
is crowning him with loving kindness and tender mercies.—Mason.
[17] It is no new thing for those who are in public places, to seek themselves more
than the public welfare; nay, and to serve themselves by the public loss.— Henry.
[18] How does this remind us of the character of By-ends in the "Pilgrim's Progress"
!—Ed.
[19] So Ainsworth understands, p. 134, vol. 10. He renders it, "lurking lions,
which are lusty, strong-toothed, fierce, roaring, and ravenous. And hereby,"
says he, "may be meant the rich and mighty of the world, whom God often bringeth
to misery." "They that are ravenous, and prey on all about them, shall
want, but the meek shall inherit the earth; they shall not want who, with quiet obedience,
work and mind their own business; plain-hearted Jacob has pottage enough, when Esau,
the cunning hunter, is ready to perish." Henry.—Ed.
[20] "The conduct of angels" means not merely their guiding pilgrims in
the way, but also, in a military sense, a guard, or what is now called a convoy.—Ed.
[21] See margin, Genesis 41:43, and 40:8.—Ed.
[22] To publish by sound of trumpet, to trumpet good tidings. In Bunyan's time it
was never used ironically.—Ed.
[23] This if from the Bible, and not from the inferior version in the Book of Common
Prayer, commonly called the reading Psalms.—Ed.
[24] Sternhold and Hopkin's edit. 1635.—The propriety of singing in public worship
was strongly debated by some of the Nonconformists. There were very weighty reasons,
in persecuting times, for meetings being held as quietly as possible. The Quakers
to this day do not admit singing in their assemblies. The introduction of this psalm
proves that Bunyan was acquainted with the "singing" Psalms, and, in all
probability, practised singing in public worship. When James I. improved this version
for church use, called the Psalms of KING David,
translated by KING James, his last four lines are—
Thou of Jerusalem shalt see
While as thou liv'st the good,
Thou shalt thy children's children see,
And peace on Israel's brood.
How blessed are we in our day with the poetry of Watts, Wesley, and a host of others,
who have supplied the church with beautiful soul-inspiring compositions, without
fear to restrain us in using them.—Ed.
[25] No one can charge Bunyan with a superstitious notion of dreams, whether asleep
or as if asleep. Such a mode of interpretation as he recommends is both rational
and scriptural. To dream awake is thus explained—"They dream on in a course
of reading without digesting."—Locke.—Ed.
[26] Whoever thou art, beseech the Lord to weigh thee in the balances of the sanctuary.
No fear of God—no grace in the soul. Of this class is the proud, the covetous, the
glutton, the liar, the apostate, the perverter of God's people from the right way;
obstinate and incorrigible backsliders; those who neither mourn nor sigh for the
wickedness of the land; they that prefer their own fancies, dreams, frames, and feelings,
to the Word of God; swearers, adulterers, perjured persons, and oppressors of the
poor; they that insult the godly, and rejoice at their sufferings; they that have
no love, gratitude, nor sense of duty to God, as the fountain of their unmerited
mercies. O reader, give God no rest until, by his Word and Spirit, he imparts to
thee this holy fear as the earnest of glory hereafter; without it you are perishing.—Mason.—Ed.
[27] "Snaffle" ; a loose bridle with a curb. "To snaffle" ; to
be easily led.
" The third o' the' world is yours, which with a snaffle, You may pace easy,
but not such a wise." Antony and Cleopatra.—Ed.
[28] How familiar but striking an illustration. Reader, look well to the mainspring,
and see also that the wheels are not clogged. We ought to be living epistles, known
and read of all men.—Ed.
[29] "A royster" ; a violent, riotous, blustering, turbulent, fellow—a
species of men now much out of date, as are jails and gibbets, sword and burning
stake. How great and true that courage which could look at, and expect, such trials,
without shrinking, when they were threatened as a reward for love to Christ and holy
obedience to his gospel!—Ed.
[30] This is a very strong and striking expression. "To soak," means to
imbibe as much as we can contain; and as to the influence of godly fear, happy shall
we be in proportion as we are enabled to follow Bunyan's advice.—Ed.
[31] The words, "he made them houses," we humbly suggest, may not only
mean that these God-fearing women had safe dwelling-places, but, in a more extensive
sense, God made them the heads of honourable families, see 1 Samuel 2:35; 2 Samuel
7:11, 13, 27, 29; 1 Kings 2:24, 11:28. So David's prayer was, "Let my house
be established before thee; thou, O my God, wilt build me an house" (1 Chron
17:24,25).—Ed.
[32] Royal patents, in Bunyan's time, were lucrative but most oppressive, conferring
upon favourites, or their nominees, an exclusive right to deal in any article of
manufacture. But the patent to God's fearers, to trust in him when involved in darkness
and distress, is a blessed privilege, injurious to none.—Ed.
[33] "Grabbling"; sprawling along, drawing the body, by the hands, through
a small aperture in a mine.—Ed.
[34] "Tines"; from the Saxon; the teeth or spikes in the rowel of a spur.—Ed.
[35] "Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord." Blessedness shall attend
him all the way to heaven, in proportion as that fear abounds. It is a heaven on
earth to live in the constant fear of God—to have a reverential awe and fear of his
majesty immovably fixed and implanted in the soul. The grace of fear has an eminent
influence in a Christian's sanctification; it is a powerful restraint from sin. A
holy fear of God, and a humble fear of ourselves, which are alike of Divine operation,
will preserve us from sin and engage us to obedience. God will be our protector and
instructor, our guide and our everlasting deliverer from all evil. Let us not rest
satisfied with the greatest attainments short of "perfecting holiness in the
fear of God."—Mason.
[36] By the goats we are to understand the hypocrites and the finally impenitent,
who will depart into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels; see
Matthew 25:32, 33-41.—Ed.
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