Treatise On Grace
by
Jonathan Edwards
CHAPTER I
[SHEWING] THAT COMMON AND SAVING
GRACE DIFFER, NOT ONLY IN DEGREE, BUT IN NATURE AND KIND
SUCH phrases as common grace, and special or saving grace, may be understood as
signifying either diverse kinds of influence of God's Spirit on the hearts of
men, or diverse fruits and effects of that influence. The Spirit of God is
supposed sometimes to have some influence upon the minds of men that are not
true Christians, and [it is supposed] that those dispositions, frames, and
exercises of their minds that are of a good tendency, but are common to them
with the saints, are in some respect owing to some influence or assistance of
God's Spirit. But as there are some things in the hearts of true Christians that
are peculiar to them, and that are more excellent than any thing that is to be
found in others, so it is supposed that there is an operation of the Spirit of
God different, and that the value which distinguishes them is owing to a higher
influence and assistance than the virtues of others. So that sometimes the
phrase common grace, is used to signify that kind of action or influence of the
Spirit of God, to which are owing those religious or moral attainments that are
common to both saints and sinners, and so signifies as much as common
assistance; and sometimes those moral or religious attainments themselves that
are the fruits of this assistance, are intended. So likewise the phrase, special
or saving grace, is sometimes used to signify that peculiar kind or degree of
operation or influence of God's Spirit, whence saving actions and attainments do
arise in the godly, or, which is the same thing, special and saving assistance;
or else to signify that distinguishing saving virtue itself, which is the fruit
of this assistance. These phrases are more frequently understood in the latter
sense, viz., nor for common and special assistance, but for common and special,
or saving virtue, which is the fruit of that assistance, and so I would be
understood by these phrases in this discourse.
And that special or saving grace in this sense is not only different from common
grace in degree, but entirely diverse in nature and kind, and that natural men
not only have not a sufficient degree of virtue to be saints, but that they have
no degree of that grace that is in godly men, is what I have now to shew.
1. This is evident by what Christ says in John 3:6, where Christ, speaking of
regeneration, says -- "That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which
is born of the Spirit is spirit." Now, whatever Christ intends by the terms
flesh and spirit in the words, yet this much is manifested and undeniable, that
Christ here intends to shew Nicodemus the necessity of a new birth, or another
birth than his natural birth, and that, from this argument, that a man that has
been the subject only of the first birth, has nothing of that in his heart which
he must have in order to enter in the kingdom. He has nothing at all of that
which Christ calls spirit, whatever that be. All that a man [has] that has been
the subject only of a natural birth don't go beyond that which Christ calls
flesh, for however it may be refined and exalted, yet it cannot be raised above
flesh. 'Tis plain, that by flesh and spirit, Christ here intends two things
entirely different in nature, which cannot be one from the other. A man cannot
have anything of a nature superior to flesh that is not born again, and
therefore we must be "born again." That by flesh and spirit are intended certain
moral principles, natures, or qualities, entirely different and opposite in
their nature one to another, is manifest from other texts, as particularly: Gal
5:17-- "For the flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against the
flesh: and they are contrary the one to the other; so that ye cannot do the
things which ye would;" Ver.19, "Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which
are these: Adultery, fornication," etc. Ver.22-- "But the fruit if the Spirit is
love, joy, peace," etc; and by Gal. 6:8-- "For he that soweth to the flesh shall
of the flesh reap corruption: but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the
Spirit reap life everlasting." Rom. 8:6-9-- "For to be carnally minded is death,
but to be spiritually minded is life and peace" etc. 1 Cor 3:1-- "And I,
brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, even
as unto babes in Christ." So that it is manifest by this, that men that have
been the subjects only of the first birth, have no degree of that moral
principle or quality that those that are new born have, whereby they have a
title to the kingdom of heaven. This principle or quality comes out then no
otherwise than by birth, and the birth that it must come by is not, cannot be,
the first birth, but it must be a new birth. If men that have no title to the
kingdom of heaven, could have something of the Spirit, as well as flesh, then
Christ's argument would be false. It is plain, by Christ's reasoning, that those
that are not in a state of salvation, cannot have these two opposite principle
in their hearts together, some flesh and some spirit, lusting one against the
other as the godly have, but that they have flesh only.
2. That the only principle in those that are savingly converted, whence gracious
acts flow, which in the language of Scripture is called the Spirit, and set in
opposition to the flesh, is that which others not only have not a sufficient
degree of, but have nothing at all of, is further manifest, because the
Scripture asserts both negatively, that those that have not the Spirit are not
Christ's. Romans 8:9-- "But ye are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if so be
that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of
Christ, he is none of his;" and also [positively] that those that have the
Spirit are His. 1 John 3:24-- "Hereby we know that he abideth in us by the
Spirit which he hath given us." And our having the Spirit of God dwelling in our
hearts is mentioned as a certain sign that persons are entitled to heaven, and
is called the earnest of the future inheritance (2 Cor 1:22 and v.5, Eph. 1:14;)
which it would not be if others that had no title to the inheritance might have
some of it dwelling in them.
Yea, that those that are not true saints have nothing of the Spirit, no part nor
portion of it, is still more evident, because not only a having any particular
motion of the Spirit, but a being of the Spirit is given as a sure sign of being
in Christ. 1 John 4:13-- "Hereby know we that we dwell in him, and he in us,
because he hath given us of his Spirit." If those that are not true saints have
any degree of that spiritual principle, then though they have not so much, yet
they have of it, and so that would be no sign that a person is in Christ. If
those that have not a saving interest in Christ have nothing of the Spirit, then
they have nothing; no degree of those graces that are the fruits of the Spirit,
mentioned in Gal 5:22-- "But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace,
longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance." Those fruits
are here mentioned with that very design, that we may know whether we have the
Spirit or no.
3. Those that are not true saints, and in a state of salvation, not only have
not so much of that holy nature and Divine principle that is in the hearts of
the saints, but they do not partake of it, because a being "partakers of the
divine nature" is spoken of as the peculiar privilege of true saints, (2 Peter
1:4.) It is evident that it is the true saints that the apostle is there
speaking of. The words in this verse with the foregoing are these: "According as
his Divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain unto life and
godliness, through the true knowledge of Him that hath called us to glory and
virtue: whereby are given to us exceeding great and precious promises: that by
these ye might be partakers of the Divine nature, having escaped the corruption
that is in the world through lust." The "Divine nature" and "lust" are evidently
here spoken of as two opposite principles in man. Those that are in the world,
and that are the men of the world, have only the latter principle; but to be
partakers of the Divine nature is spoken of as peculiar to them that are
distinguished and separated from the world, by the free and sovereign grace of
God giving them all things that pertain to life and godliness, giving the
knowledge of Him and calling them to glory and virtue, and giving them the
exceeding great and precious promises of the gospel, and that have escaped the
corruption of the world of wicked men. And a being partakers of the Divine
nature is spoken of, not only as peculiar to the saints, but as one of the
highest privileges of the saints.
4. That those that have not a saving interest in Christ have no degree of that
relish and sense of spiritual things or things of the Spirit, of their Divine
truth and excellency, which a true saint has, is evident by 1 Cor. 2:14-- "The
natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are
foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually
discerned." A natural man is here set in opposition to a spiritual one, or one
that has the Spirit, as appears by the foregoing and following verses. Such we
have shewn already the Scripture declares all true saints to be, and no other.
Therefore by natural men are meant those that have not the Spirit of Christ and
are none of His, and are the subjects of no other than the natural birth. But
here we are plainly taught that a natural man is perfectly destitute of any
sense, perception, or discerning of those things of the Spirit. [We are taught
that] by the words "he neither does nor can know them, or discern them;" so far
from this they are "foolishness unto him;" he is a perfect stranger, so that he
does not know what the talk of such things means; they are words without a
meaning to him; he knows nothing of the matter any more than a blind man of
colours.
Hence it will follow, that the sense of things of religion that a natural man
has, is not only not to the same degree, but nothing of the same nature with
that which a true saint has. And besides, if a natural person has the fruit of
the Spirit, which is of the same kind with what a spiritual person has, then he
experiences within himself the things of the Spirit of God; and how then can he
be said to be such a stranger to them, and have no perception or discerning of
them?
The reason why natural men have no knowledge of spiritual things is, because
they have nothing of the Spirit of God dwelling in them. This is evident by the
context: for there we are told that it is by the Spirit that these things are
taught, (verses 10-12;) godly persons in the next verse are called spiritual,
because they have the Spirit dwelling in them. Hereby the sense again is
confirmed, for natural men are in no degree spiritual; they have only nature and
no Spirit. If they had anything of the Spirit, though not in so great a degree
as the godly, yet they would be taught spiritual things, or things of the
Spirit, in proportion to the measure of the Spirit that they had. The Spirit
that searcheth all things would teach them in some measure. There would not be
so great a difference that the one could perceive nothing of them, and that they
should be foolishness to them, while to the other they appear divinely and
remarkably wise and excellent, as they are spoken of in the context, (verses
6-9,) and as such the apostle spoke here of discerning them.
The reason why natural men have no knowledge or perception of spiritual things
is, because they have none of the anointing spoken of, (1 John 2:27:) "The
anointing which ye have received of him, abideth in you, and you need not that
any man teach you." This anointing is evidently spoken of here, as a thing
peculiar to true saints. Ungodly men never had any degree of that holy oil
poured upon them, and therefore have no discerning of spiritual things.
Therefore none of that sense that natural men have of things of religion, is of
the same nature with what the godly have. But to these they are totally blind.
Therefore in conversion the eyes of the blind are opened. The world is wholly
unacquainted with the Spirit of God, as appears by John 14:17, where we read
about "the Spirit of truth whom the world cannot receive, because it knoweth him
not."
5. Those that go for those in religion that are not true saints and in a state
of salvation have no charity, as is plainly implied in the beginning of the 13th
chapter of the 1st Epistle to the Corinthians. Therefore they have no degree of
that kind of grace, disposition, or affection that is so called. So Christ
elsewhere reproves the Pharisees, those high pretenders to religion among the
Jews, that they had not the love of God in them, (John 5:42.)
6. That those that are not true saints have no degree of that grace that the
saints have is evident, because they have no communion or fellowship with
Christ. If those that are not true saints partake of any of that Spirit, those
holy inclinations and affections, and gracious acts of soul that the godly have
from the indwelling of the Spirit of Christ, then they would have communion with
Christ. The communion of saints with Christ does certainly very much consist in
that receiving of His fulness and partaking of His grace spoken of, John 1:16--
"Of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace," and in partaking of
that Spirit which God gives not by measure unto Him. Partaking of Christ's
holiness and grace, His nature, inclinations, tendencies, love, and desires,
comforts and delights, must be to have communion with Christ. Yea, a believer's
communion with the Father and the Son does mainly consist in his partaking of
the Holy Ghost, as appears by 2 Cor. 13:14--"The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ,
and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost."
But that unbelievers have no fellowship or communion with Christ appears, (1.)
because they are not united to Christ. They are not in Christ. For the Scripture
is very plain and evident in this, that those that are in Christ are actually in
a state of salvation, and are justified, sanctified, accepted of Christ, and
shall be saved. Phil. 3:8-9--"Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for
the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have
suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win
Christ, and be found in Him." 2 Cor. 5:17-- "If any man be in Christ, he is a
new creature: old things are passed away ; behold, all things are become new." 1
John 2:5--"But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God
perfected : hereby know we that we are in Him; and 3:24-- "He that keepeth His
commandments dwelleth in Him, and He in him. And hereby we know that he abideth
in us, by the Spirit which He hath given us." But those that are not in Christ,
and are not united to Him, can have no degree of communion with Him. For there
is no communion without union. The members can have no communion with the head
or participation of its life and health unless they are united to it. The branch
must be united with the vine, otherwise there can be no communication from the
vine to it, nor any partaking of any degree of its sap, or life, or influence.
So without the union of the wife to the husband, she can have no communion in
his goods. (2.) The Scripture does more directly teach that it is only true
saints that have communion with Christ, as particularly this is most evidently
spoken of as what belongs to the saints, and to them only, in 1 John 1:3,
together with verses 6-7-- "That which we have seen and heard declare we unto
you, that ye also may have fellowship with us: and truly our fellowship is with
the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ." Ver. 6--"If we say that we have
fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not the truth: but if
we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with
another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin." Also
in 1 Cor. 1:9--"God is faithful, by whom ye were called unto the fellowship of
his Son Christ Jesus our Lord."
7. The Scripture speaks of the actual being of a truly holy and gracious
principle in the heart, as inconsistent with a man's being a sinner or a wicked
man. 1 John 3:9-- "Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed
remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of God." Here it is
needless to dispute what is intended by this seed, whether it be a principle of
true virtue and a holy nature in the soul, or whether it be the word of God as
the cause of that virtue. For let us understand it in either sense, it comes to
much the same thing in the present argument ; for if by the seed is meant the
word of God, yet when it is spoken of as abiding in him that is born again, it
must be intended, with respect to its effect, as a holy principle in his heart :
for the word of God does not abide in one that is born again more than another,
any other way than in its effect. The word of God abides in the heart of a
regenerate person as a holy seed, a Divine principle there, though it may be but
as a seed, a small thing. The seed is a very small part of the plant, and is its
first principle. It may be in the heart as a grain of mustard-seed, may be hid,
and seem to be in great measure buried in the earth. But yet it is inconsistent
with wickedness. The smallest degrees and first principles of a Divine and holy
nature and disposition are inconsistent with a state of sin; whence it is said
"he cannot sin." There is no need here of a critical inquiry into the import of
that expression; for doubtless so much at least is implied through this, "his
seed being in him," as is inconsistent with his being a sinner or a wicked man.
So that this heavenly plant of true holiness cannot be in the heart of a sinner,
no, not so much as in its first principle.
8. This is confirmed by the things that conversion is represented by in the
Scriptures, particularly its being represented as a work of creation. When God
creates He does not merely establish and perfect the things which were made
before, but makes wholly and immediately something entirely new, either out of
nothing, or out of that which was perfectly void of any such nature, as when He
made man of the dust of the earth. "The things that are seen are not made of
things that do appear. Saving grace in man is said to be the new man or a new
creature, and corrupt nature the old man. If that nature that is in the heart of
a godly man be not different in its nature and kind from all that went before,
then the man might possibly have had the same things a year before, and from
time to time from the beginning of his life, but only not quite to the same
degree. And how then is grace in him, the new man or the new creature?
Again, conversion is often compared to a resurrection. Wicked men are said to be
dead, but when they are converted they are represented as being by God's mighty
and effectual power raised from the dead. Now there is no medium between being
dead and alive. He that is dead has no degree of life ; he that has the least
degree of life in him is alive. When a man is raised from the dead, life is not
only in a greater degree, but it is all new.
The same is manifest by conversion being represented as a new birth or as
regeneration. Generation is not only perfecting what is old, but 'tis a
begetting from the new. Then nature and life that is then received has then its
beginning: it receives its first principles.
Again conversion in Scripture is represented as an opening of the eyes of the
blind. In such a work those have light given them that were totally destitute of
it before. So in conversion, stones are said to be raised up children to
Abraham: while stones they are altogether destitute of all those qualities that
afterwards render them the living children of Abraham, and not only had them not
in so great a degree. Agreeably to this, conversion is said to be a taking away
a heart of stone and a giving a heart of flesh. The man while unconverted has a
heart of stone which has no degree of that life and sense that the heart of
flesh has, because it yet remains a stone, than which nothing is further from
life and sense.
Inference 1. -- From what has been said, I would observe that it must needs be
that conversion is wrought at once. That knowledge, that reformation and
conviction that is preparatory to conversion may be gradual, and the work of
grace after conversion may be gradually carried on, yet that work of grace upon
the soul where by a person is brought out of a state of total corruption and
depravity into a state of grace, to an interest in Christ, and to be actually a
child of God, is in a moment.
It must needs be the consequence; for if that grace or virtue that a person has
when he is brought into a state of grace be entirely different in nature and
kind from all that went before, then it will follow that the last instant before
a person is actually a child of God and in a state of grace, a person has not
the least degree of any real goodness, and of that true virtue that is in a
child of God.
Those things by which conversion is represented in Scripture hold forth the same
thing. In creation something is brought out of nothing in an instant. God speaks
and it is done, He commands and it stands fast. When the dead are raised, it is
done in a moment. Thus when Christ called Lazarus out of his grave, it was not a
gradual work. He said, "Lazarus, come forth," and there went life with the call.
He heard His voice and lived. So Christ, John 5:25-- "Verily, verily, I say unto
you, The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the
Son of God : and they that hear shall live,"--which words must be understood of
the work of conversion. In creation, being is called out of nothing and
instantly obeys the call, and in the resurrection the dead are called into life:
as soon as the call is given the dead obey.
By reason of this instantaneousness of the work of conversion, one of the names
under which conversion is frequently spoken of in Scripture, is calling: Rom.
8:28-30--"And we know that all things work together for good to them that love
God, to them who are the called according to his purpose. For whom he did
foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that
he might be the firstborn among many brethren. Moreover whom he did
predestinate, them he also called; and whom he called, them he also justified ;
and whom he justified, them he also glorified." Acts 2:37-39-- "Now when they
heard this, they were pricked in their heart, and said unto Peter and to the
rest of the apostles, Men and brethren, what shall we do? Then Peter said unto
them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for
the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For the
promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are afar off, even as
many as the Lord our God shall call." Heb. 9:15, (last clause)--"That they which
are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance." 1 Thess. 5:23-24
--"And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly... Faithful is he that calleth
you, who also will do it." Nothing else can be meant in those places by calling
than what Christ does in a sinner's saving conversion. By which it seems evident
that it is done at once and not gradually; whereby Christ, through His great
power, does but speak the powerful word and it is done, He does but call and the
heart of the sinner immediately comes. It seems to be symbolised by Christ's
calling His disciples, and their immediately following Him. So when He called
Peter, Andrew, James, and John, they were minding other things ; but at His call
they immediately left all and followed Him. Matt. 4:18-22-- Peter and Andrew
were casting a net into the sea, and Christ says to them as He passed by, Follow
me ; and it is said, they straightway left their nets and followed Him. So James
and John were in the ship with Zebedee their father mending their nets, and He
called them, and immediately they left the ship and their father and followed
Him. So when Matthew was called: Matt. 9:9-- "And as Jesus passed forth from
thence, He saw a man, named Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom: and He
saith unto him, Follow me. And he arose and followed Him." Now whether they were
then converted or not, yet doubtless Christ in thus calling His first disciples
to a visible following of Him, represents to us the manner in which He would
call men to be truly His disciples and spiritually to follow Him in all ages.
There is something immediately and instantaneously put into their hearts at that
call that they had nothing of before, that effectually disposes them to follow.
It is very manifest that almost all the miracles of Christ that He wrought when
on earth were types of His great work of converting sinners, and the manner of
His working those miracles holds forth the instantaneousness of the work of
conversion. Thus when He healed the leper, which represented His healing us of
our spiritual leprosy, He put forth His hand and touched him, and said, "I will;
be thou clean." And immediately his leprosy was cleansed. Matt. 8:3; Mark 1:42;
Luke 5:13. And so, in opening the eyes of the blind, which represents His
opening the eyes of our blind souls, (Matt. 20:30 etc., ) He touched their eyes,
and immediately their eyes received sight, and they followed Him. So Mark 10:52;
Luke 18:43-- So when He healed the sick, which represents His healing our
spiritual diseases, or conversion, it was done at once. Thus when He healed
Simon's wife's mother, (Mark 1:31,) He took her by the hand and lifted her up;
and immediately the fever left her, and she ministered unto them. So when the
woman which had the issue of blood touched the hem of Christ's garment,
immediately the issue of blood stanched, (Luke 8:44.) So the woman that was
bowed together with the spirit of infirmity, when Christ laid His hands upon
her, immediately she was made straight, and glorified God, (Luke 13:12-13;)
which represents that action on the soul whereby He gives an upright heart, and
sets the soul at liberty from its bondage to glorify Him. So the man at the pool
of Bethesda, when Christ bade him rise, take up his bed and walk, (he) was
immediately made whole, (John 5:8-9.) After the same manner Christ cast out
devils, which represents His dispossessing the devil of our souls in conversion;
and so He settled the winds and waves, representing His subduing, in conversion,
the heart of the wicked, which is like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest;
and so He raised the dead, which represented His raising dead souls.
The same is confirmed by those things which conversion is compared to in
Scripture. It is often compared to a resurrection. Natural men (as was said
before) are said to be dead, and to be raised when they are converted by God's
mighty effectual power from the dead. Now, there is no medium between being dead
and alive ; he that is dead has no degree of life in him, he that has the least
degree of life in him is alive. When a man is raised from the dead, life is not
only in a greater degree in him than it was before, but it is all new. The work
of conversion seems to be compared to a raising the dead to life, in this very
thing, even its instantaneousness, or its being done, as it were, at a word's
speaking. As in John 5:25, (before quoted)-- "Verily, verily, I say unto you,
the hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of
God: and they that hear shall live." He speaks here of a work of conversion, as
appears by the preceding verse; and by the words themselves, which speak of the
time of this raising the dead, not only as to come hereafter, but as what was
already come. This shews conversion to be an immediate instantaneous work, like
to the change made on Lazarus when Christ called him from the grave: there went
life with the call, and Lazarus was immediately alive. Immediately before the
call sinners are dead or wholly destitute of life, as appears by the expression,
"The dead shall hear the voice," and immediately after the call they are alive;
yea, there goes life with the word, as is evident, not only because it is said
they shall live, but also because it is said, they shall hear His voice. The
first moment they have any life is the moment when Christ calls, and as soon as
they are called, which further appears by what was observed before, even that a
being called and converted are spoken of in Scripture as the same thing.
The same is confirmed (as observed before) from conversion being compared to a
work of creation, which is a work wherein something is made either out of
nothing, or out of that having no degree of the same kind of qualities and
principles, as when God made man of the dust of the earth. Thus it is said, "If
any man be in Christ he is a new creature;" which obviously implies that he is
an exceeding diverse kind of creature from what he was before he was in Christ,
that the principle or qualities that he has by which he is a Christian, are
entirely new, and what there was nothing of, before he was in Christ.
Inference 2. Hence we may learn that it is impossible for men to convert
themselves by their own strength and industry, with only a concurring assistance
helping in the exercise of their natural abilities and principles of the soul,
and securing their improvement. For what is gained after this manner is a
gradual acquisition, and not something instantaneously begotten, and of an
entirely different nature, and wholly of a separate kind, from all that was in
the nature of the person the moment before. All that men can do by their own
strength and industry is only gradually to increase and improve and new-model
and direct qualities, principles, and perfections of nature that they have
already. And that is evident, because a man in the exercise and improvement of
the strength and principles of his own nature has nothing but the qualities,
powers, and perfections that are already in his nature to work with, and nothing
but them to work upon; and therefore 'tis impossible that by this only, anything
further should be brought to pass, than only a new modification of what is
already in the nature of the soul. That which is only by an improvement of
natural qualities, principles, and perfections -- let these things be improved
never so much and never so industriously, and never so long, they'll still be no
more than an improvement of those natural qualities, principles, and
perfections; and therefore not anything of an essentially distinct and superior
nature and kind.
'Tis impossible (as Dr Clarke observes) "that any effect should have any
perfection that was not in the cause: for if it had, then that perfection would
be caused by nothing." 'Tis therefore utterly impossible that men's natural
perfections and qualities in that exercise, and however assisted in that
exercise, should produce in the soul a principle or perfection of a nature
entirely different from all of them, or any manner of improvement or
modification of them.
The qualities and principles of natural bodies, such as figure or motion, can
never produce anything beyond themselves. If infinite comprehensions and
divisions be eternally made, the things must still be eternally the same, and
all their possible effects can never be anything but repetitions of the same.
Nothing can be produced by only those qualities of figure and motion, beyond
figure and motion: and so nothing can be produced in the soul by only its
internal principles, beyond these principles or qualities, or new improvements
and modifications of them. And if we suppose a concurring assistance to enable
to a more full and perfect exercise of those natural principles and qualities,
unless the assistance of influence actually produces something beyond the
exercise of internal principle: still, it is the same thing. Nothing will be
produced but only an improvement and new modification of those principles that
are exercised. Therefore it follows that saving grace in the heart, can't be
produced in man by mere exercise of what perfections he has in him already,
though never so much assisted by moral suasion, and never so much assisted in
the exercise of his natural principles, unless there be something more that all
this, viz., an immediate infusion or operation of the Divine Being upon the
soul. Grace must be the immediate work of God, and properly a production of His
almighty power on the soul.
CHAPTER II
SHEWING WHEREIN ALL SAVING GRACE DOES SUMMARILY CONSIST
The next thing that arises for consideration is, What is the nature of this
Divine principle in the soul that is so entirely diverse from all that is
naturally in the soul? Here I would observe,--
1. That that saving grace that is in the hearts if the saints, that within them
[which is] above nature, and entirely distinguishes 'em from all unconverted
men, is radically but one -- i.e., however various its exercises are, yet it is
but one in its root; 'tis one individual principle in the heart.
'Tis common for us to speak of various graces of the Spirit of God as though
they were so many different principles of holiness, and to call them by distinct
names as such, -- repentance, humility, resignation, thankfulness, etc. But we
err if we imagine that these in their first source and root in the heart are
properly distinct principles. They all come from the same fountain, and are,
indeed, the various exertions and conditions of the same thing, only different
denominations according to the various occasions, objects, and manners,
attendants and circumstances of its exercise. There is some one holy principle
in the heart that is the essence and sum of all grace, the root and source of
all holy acts of every kind, and the fountain of every good stream, into which
all Christian virtues may ultimately be resolved, and in which all duty and
[all] holiness is fulfilled.
Thus the Scripture represents it. Grace in the soul is one fountain of water of
life, (John 4:14,) and not various distinct fountains. So God, in the work of
regeneration, implants one heavenly seed in the soul, and not various different
seeds. 1 John 3:9--"Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed
remaineth in him." ... The Day [that] has arisen on the soul is but one. The oil
in the vessel is simple and pure, conferred by one holy anointing. All is
"wrought" by one individual work of the Spirit of God. And thus it is there is a
consentanation of graces. Not only is one grace in some way allied to another,
and so tends to help and promote one another, but one is really implied in the
other. The nature of one involves the nature of another. And the great reason of
it is, that all graces have one common essence, the original principle of all,
and is but one. Strip the various parts of the Christian soul of their
circumstances, concomitants, appendages, means, and occasions, and consider that
which is, as it were, their soul and essence, and all appears to be the same. [I
observe]
2. That principle in the soul of the saints, which is the grand Christian
virtue, and which is the soul and essence and summary comprehension of all
grace, is a principle of Divine Love. This is evident,
(1.) Because we are abundantly taught in the Scripture that Divine Love is the
sum of all duty; and that all that God requires of us is fulfilled in it,
--i.e., That Love is the sum of all duty of the heart, and its exercises and
fruits the sum of all [the] duty of life. But if the duty of the heart, or all
due dispositions of the hearts, are all summed up in love, then undoubtedly all
grace may be summed up in LOVE.
The Scripture teaches us that all our duty is summed up in love;or, which is the
same thing, that 'tis the sum of all that is required in the Law; and that,
whether we take the Law as signifying the Ten Commandments, or the whole written
Word of God. So, when by the Law is meant the Ten Commandments : Rom. 13:8--"Owe
no man any thing, but to love one another: for he that loveth another hath
fulfilled the law" ; and, therefore, several of these commandments are there
rehearsed. And again, in ver. 10, "Love is the fulfilling of the law." And
unless love was the sum of what the law required, the law could not be fulfilled
in love. A law is not fulfilled but by obedience to the sum of what it contains.
So the same apostle again: 1 Tim. 1:5-- "Now the end of the commandment is
charity" [love].
If we take the law in a yet more extensive sense for the whole written Word of
God, the Scripture still teaches us that love is the sum of what is required in
it. [Thus] Matt. 22:40. There Christ teaches us that on these two precepts of
loving God and our neighbour hang all the Law and the Prophets, --that is, all
the written Word of God. So that what was called the Law and the Prophets was
the whole written Word of God that was then extant. The Scripture teaches this
of each table of the law in particular.
Thus, the lawyer that we read of in the 10th chapter of Luke, vv.25-28, mentions
the love of God and our neighbour as the sum of the two tables of the law; and
Christ approves of what he says. When he stood up and tempted Christ with this
question, "Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" Christ asks him
what was required of him "in the Law?" He makes answer, "Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy
strength, and with all thy mind, and thy neighbour as thyself;" and Christ
replies, "Thou hast answered right: this do, and thou shalt live;" as much as to
say, "Do this, then thou hast fulfilled the whole law."
So in Matthew 22:36-38, that commandment, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with
all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind," is given by Christ
himself as the sum of the first Table of the Law, in answer to the question of
the lawyer, who asked Him, "Which is the great commandment in the law!" And in
the next verse, loving our neighbours as ourselves is mentioned as the sum of
the second Table, as it is also in Romans 13:9, where most of the precepts of
the second Table are rehearsed over in particular: "For this, Thou shalt not
commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear
false witness, Thou shalt not covet ; and if there be any other commandment, it
is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as
thyself."
The Apostle James seems to teach the same thing. James 2:8-- "If ye fulfil the
royal law according to the scripture, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself,
ye do well."
Thus frequent, express, and particular is the Scripture in teaching us that all
duty is comprehended in Love. The Scripture teaches us, in like manner, of
nothing else. This is quite another thing than if Religion in general had only
sometimes gone under the name of the Love of God, as it sometimes goes by the
name of the fearing of God, and sometimes the knowledge of God, and sometimes
feeling of God.
This argument does fully and irrefragably prove that all grace, and every
Christian disposition and habit of mind and heart, especially as to that which
is primarily holy and Divine in it, does summarily consist in Divine Love, and
may be resolved into it: however, with respect to its kinds and manner of
exercise and its appendages, it may be diversified. For certainly there is no
duty of heart, or due disposition of mind, but what is included in the Law and
the Prophets," and is required by some precept of that law and rule which He has
given mankind to walk by. But yet the Scripture affords us other evidences of
the truth of this.
(2.) The apostle speaks of Divine Love as that which is the essence of all
Christianity in the thirteenth chapter of [the] 1st [Epistle to the]
Corinthians. There the apostle evidently means a comparison between the gifts of
the Spirit and the grace of the Spirit. In the foregoing chapter the apostle had
been speaking of the gifts of the Spirit throughout, such as the gift of wisdom,
the gift of knowledge, the gift of faith, the gift of healing or working
miracles, prophecy, discerning spirits, speaking with tongues, etc.; and in the
last verse in the chapter he exhorts the Corinthians to "covet earnestly the
best gifts;" but adds, "and yet shew I unto you a more excellent way," and so
proceeds to discourse of the saving grace of the Spirit under the name of
a)ga/ph love, and to compare this saving grace in the heart with those gifts.
Now, 'tis manifest that the comparison is between the gifts of the Spirit that
were common to both saints and sinners, and that saving grace that distinguishes
true saints; and, therefore, charity or love is here understood by divines as
intending the same thing as sincere grace of heart.
By love or charity here there is no reason to understand the apostle [as
speaking] only of love to men, but that principle of Divine Love that is in the
heart of the saints in the full extent, which primarily has God for its object.
For there is no reason to think that the apostle doesn't mean the same thing by
charity here as he does in the eighth chapter of the same Epistle, where he is
comparing the same two things together, knowledge and charity, as he does here.
But there he explains himself to mean by charity the love of God: [verses 1-3]
--"Now as touching things offered unto idols, we know that we all have
knowledge. Knowledge puffeth up, but charity edifieth. And if any man think that
he knoweth anything, he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know. But if any man
love God, the same is known of him," etc.
'Tis manifest that love or charity is here (Chap. 13) spoken of as the very
essence of all Christianity, and is the very thing wherein a gracious sincerity
consists. For the Apostle speaks of it as the most excellent, the most
necessary, and essential thing of all, without which all that makes the
greatest, and fairest, and most glittering show in Religion is nothing --
without which, "if we speak with the tongues of men and angels, we are become as
sounding brass and tinkling cymbals" -and without which, though we have "the
gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge, and have all
faith, so that we could remove mountains, and should bestow all our goods to
feed the poor, and even give our bodies to be burned, we are nothing."
Therefore, how can we understand the Apostle any otherwise than that this is the
very thing whereof the essence of all consists; and that he means the same by
charity as a gracious charity, as indeed it is generally understood. If a man
does all these things here spoken, makes such glorious prophecies, has such
knowledge, such faith, and speaks so excellently, and performs such excellent
external acts, and does such great things in religion as giving all his goods to
the poor and giving his body to be burned, what is wanting but one thing? The
very quintessence of all Religion, the very thing wherein lies summarily the
sincerity, spirituality, and divinity of Religion. And that, the Apostle teaches
us, is LOVE.
And further, 'tis manifestly the Apostle's drift to shew how this excellent
principle does radically comprehend all that is good. For he goes on to shew how
all essences of good and excellent dispositions and exercises, both towards God
and towards man, are virtually contained and will flow from this one principle:
"Love suffereth long, and is kind, envieth not, ... endureth all things" etc.
The words of this last verse especially respects duties to God, as the former
did duties to men, as I would shew more particularly afterwards.
(Here it may be noted, by the way, that by charity 'believing all things, hoping
all things,' the Apostle has undoubtedly respect to the same faith and hope that
in other parts of the chapter are mentioned together and compared with charity,
[as I think might be sufficiently made manifest, if it were proper here to spend
time upon it.] And not believing and hoping, in the case of our neighbour, which
the apostle has spoken of before, in the last words of verse 5th, and had
plainly summed up all parts of charity towards our neighbour in the 6th verse.
And then in this verse the apostle proceeds to mention other exercises or fruits
of charity quite of another kind--viz., patience under suffering, faith and
hope, and perseverance.)
Thus the Apostle don't only represent love or charity as the most excellent
thing in Christianity, and as the quintessence, life and soul of all Religion,
but as that which virtually comprehends all holy virtues and exercises. And
because love is the quintessence and soul of all grace, wherein the divinity and
holiness of all that belongs to charity does properly and essentially consist,
therefore, when Christians come to be in their most perfect state, and the
Divine nature in them shall be in its greatest exaltation and purity, and be
free from all mixtures, stripped of these appurtenances and that clothing that
it has in the present state ; and [when] it shall lose many other of its
denominations, especially from the peculiar manner and exercises accommodated to
the imperfect circumstances of the present state, they will be what will remain.
All other names will be swallowed up in the name of charity or love, as the
apostle, agreeably to his chapter on this, (1 Cor. 13.,) observes in verses
8-10-- "Charity never faileth.... But when that which is perfect is come, then
that which is in part shall be done away." And, therefore, when the apostle, in
the last verse, speaks of charity as the greatest grace, we may well understand
him in the same sense as when Christ speaks of the command of love God, etc., as
the greatest commandment --viz., that among the graces, that is the source and
sum of all graces, as that commanded is spoken of as the sum of all commands,
and requiring that duty which is the ground of all other duties.
It must be because Charity is the quintessence and soul of all duty and all good
in the heart that the apostle says that it is "the end of the commandment," for
doubtless the main end of the commandment is to promote that which is most
essential in Religion and constituent of holiness.
3. Reason bears witness to the same thing.
(1.)Reason testifies that Divine Love is so essential in Religion that all
Religion is but hypocrisy and a "vain show" without it. What is Religion but the
exercise and expressions of regard to the Divine Being? But certainly if there
be no love to Him, there is no sincere regard to Him; and all pretences and show
of respect to Him, whether it be in word or deed, must be hypocrisy, and of no
value in the eyes of Him who sees the heart How manifest is it that without love
there can be no true honour, no sincere praise! And how can obedience be hearty,
if it be not a testimony of respect to God! The fear of God without love is no
other than the fear of devils; and all that outward respect and obedience, all
that resignation, that repentance and sorrow for sin, that form in religion,
that outward devotion that is performed merely from such a fear without love, is
all of it a practical lie, as in Psalm 66:3-- "...How terrible art Thou in Thy
works! through the greatness of Thy power shall Thine enemies submit themselves
unto Thee." In the original it is "shall thine enemies lie unto Thee" -- i.e.,
shall yield a feigned or lying obedience and respect to Thee, when still they
remain enemies in their hearts. There is never a devil in hell but what would
perform all that many a man [has] performed in religion, that had no love to
God; and a great deal more if they were in like circumstances and the like hope
of gain by it, and be as much of a devil in this heart as he is now. The Devil
once seemed to be religious from fear of torment: Luke 8:28-- "When he saw
Jesus, he cried out and fell down before him, and with a loud voice said, What
have I to do with thee, Jesus, thou Son of God most high? I beseech Thee,
torment me not." Here is external worship. The Devil is religious; he prays --
he prays in a humble posture; he falls down before Christ, he lies prostrate; he
prays earnestly, he cries with a loud voice; he uses humble expressions -- "I
beseech Thee, torment me not;" he uses respectful, honourable, adoring
expressions -- "Jesus, Thou Son of God most high." Nothing was wanting but LOVE.
And with respect to duties towards men, no good offices would be accepted by men
one from another, if they saw the heart, and knew they did not proceed from any
respect in the heart. If a child carry it very respectfully to his father,
either from a strong fear, or from hope of having the larger inheritance when
his father is dead, or from the like consideration, and not at all from any
respect to his father in his heart; if the child's heart were open to the view
of his father, and he plainly knew that there was no real regard to him. Would
the child's outward honour and obedience be acceptable to the parent? So if a
wife should carry it very well to her husband, and not at all from any love to
him, but from other considerations plainly seen, and certainly known by the
husband, Would he at all delight in her outward respect any more than if a
wooden image were contrived to make respectful motions in his presence?
If duties towards men are [to be] accepted of God as a part of Religion and the
service of the Divine Being, they must be performed not only with a hearty love
to men, but that love must flow from regard to Him.
(2.) Reason shews that all good dispositions and duties are wholly comprehended
in, and will flow from, Divine Love. Love to God and men implies all proper
respect or regard to God and men; and all proper acts and expressions of regard
to both will flow from it, and therefore all duty to both. To regard God and men
in our heart as we ought, is the same thing. And, therefore, a proper regard or
love comprehends all virtue of heart; and he that shews all proper regard to God
and men in his practice, performs all that in practice towards them which is his
duty. The Apostle says, Romans 13:10-- "Love works no ill to his neighbor." 'Tis
evident by his reasoning in that place, that he means more than is expressed --
that love works no ill but all good towards our neighbor; so, by a parity of
reason, love to God works no ill, but all duty towards God.
A Christian love to God, and Christian love to men, are not properly two
distinct principles in the heart. These varieties are radically the same; the
same principle flowing forth towards different objects, according to the order
of their existence. God is the First Cause of all things, and the Fountain and
Source of all good; and men are derived from Him, having something of His image,
and are the objects of His mercy. So the first and supreme object of Divine love
is God; and men are loved either as the children of God or His creatures, and
those that are in His image, and the objects of His mercy, or in some respects
related to God, or partakers of His loveliness, or at least capable of
happiness.
That love to God, and a Christian love to men, are thus but one in their root
and foundation-principle in the heart, is confirmed by several passages in the
First Epistle of John: chap. 3:16-17-- "Hereby perceive we the love of God,
because He laid down His life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the
brethren. But whoso hath this world's goods,... how dwelleth the love of God in
him?" Chap. 4:20,21-- "If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a
liar: for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God
whom he hath not seen? And this commandment have we from him, That he who loveth
God love his brother also." Chap. 5:1,2-- "Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the
Christ is born of God: and every one loveth Him that begat, loveth him also that
is begotten of him. By this we know that we love the children of God, when we
love God, and keep His commandments."
Therefore to explain the nature of Divine Love, what is principally requisite is
to explain the nature of love to God. For this may especially be called Divine
Love; and herein all Christian love or charity does radically consist, for this
is the fountain of all.
As to a definition of Divine Love, things of this nature are not properly
capable of a definition. They are better felt than defined. Love is a term as
clear in its signification, and that does as naturally suggest to the mind the
thing signified by it, as any other term or terms that we can find out or
substitute in its room. But yet there may be a great deal of benefit in
descriptions that may be given of this heavenly principle though they all are
imperfect. They may serve to limit the signification of the term and distinguish
this principle from other things, and to exclude counterfeits, and also more
clearly to explain some things that do appertain to its nature.
Divine Love, as it has God for its object, may be thus described. 'Tis the
soul's relish of the supreme excellency of the Divine nature, inclining the
heart to God as the chief good.
The first thing in Divine Love, and that from which everything that appertains
to it arises, is a relish of the excellency of the Divine nature; which the soul
of man by nature has nothing of.
The first effect that is produced in the soul, whereby it is carried above what
it has or can have by nature, is to cause it to relish or taste the sweetness of
the Divine relation. That is the first and most fundamental thing in Divine
Love, and that from which everything else that belongs to the Divine Love
naturally and necessarily proceeds. When one the soul is brought to relish the
excellency of the Divine nature, then it will naturally, and of course, incline
to God every way. It will incline to be with Him and to enjoy Him. It will have
benevolence to God. It will be glad that He is happy. It will incline that He
should be glorified, and that His will should be done in all things. So that the
first effect of the power of God in the heart in REGENERATION, is to give the
heart a Divine taste or sense; to cause it to have a relish of the loveliness
and sweetness of the supreme excellency of the Divine nature; and indeed this is
all the immediate effect of the Divine Power that there is, this is all the
Spirit of God needs to do, in order to a production of all good effects in the
soul. If God, by an immediate act of His, gives the soul a relish of the
excellency of His own nature, other things will follow of themselves without any
further act of the Divine power than only what is necessary to uphold the nature
of the faculties of the soul. He that is once brought to see, or rather to
taste, the superlative loveliness of the Divine Being, will need no more to make
him long after the enjoyment of God, to make him rejoice in the happiness of
God, and to desire that this supremely excellent Being may be pleased and
glorified. (Love is commonly distinguished into a love of complacence and love
of benevolence. Of these two a love of complacence is first, and is the
foundation of the other,--i.e., if by a love of complacence be meant a relishing
a sweetness in the qualifications of the beloved, and a being pleased and
delighted in his excellency. This, in the order of nature, is before
benevolence, because it is the foundation and reason of it. A person must first
relish that wherein the amiableness of nature consists, before he can wish well
to him on the account of that loveliness, or as being worthy to receive good.
Indeed, sometimes love of complacence is explained something differently, even
for that joy that the soul has in the presence and possession of the beloved,
which is different from the soul's relish of the beauty of the beloved, and is a
fruit of it, as benevolence is. The soul may relish the sweetness and the beauty
of a beloved object, whether that object be present or absent, whether in
possession or not in possession; and this relish is the foundation of love of
benevolence, or desire of the good of the beloved. And it is the foundation of
love of affection to the beloved object when absent; and it is the foundation of
one's rejoicing in the object when present; and so it is the foundation of
everything else that belongs to Divine Love.) And if this be true, then the main
ground of true love to God is the excellency of His own nature, and not any
benefit we have received, or hope to receive, by His goodness to us. Not but
that there is such a thing as a gracious gratitude to God for mercies bestowed
upon us; and the acts and fruits of His goodness to us may [be,] and very often
are, occasions and incitements of the exercise of true love to God, as I must
shew more particularly hereafter. But love or affection to God, that has no
other good than only some benefit received or hoped for from God, is not true
love. [If it be] without any sense of a delight in the absolute excellency of
the Divine nature, [it] has nothing Divine in it. Such gratitude towards God
requires no more to be in the soul than that human nature that all men are born
with, or at least that human nature well cultivated and improved, or indeed not
further vitiated and depraved than it naturally is. It is possible that natural
men, without the addition of any further principle than they have by nature, may
be affected with gratitude by some remarkable kindness of God to them, as that
they should be so affected with some great act of kindness of a neighbour. A
principle of self-love is all that is necessary to both. But Divine Love is a
principle distinct from self-love, and from all that arises from it. Indeed,
after a man is come to relish the sweetness of the supreme good there is in the
nature of God, self-love may have a hand in an appetite after the enjoyment of
that good. For self-love will necessarily make a man desire to enjoy that which
is sweet to him. But God's perfections must first savour appetite and [be] sweet
to men, or they must first have a taste to relish sweetness in the perfection of
God, before self-love can have any influence upon them to cause an appetite
after the enjoyment of that sweetness. And therefore that divine taste or relish
of the soul, wherein Divine Love doth most fundamentally consist, is prior to
all influence that self-love can have to incline us to God; and so must be a
principle quite distinct from it, and independent of it.
CHAPTER III
SHEWING HOW A PRINCIPLE OF GRACE IS FROM THE SPIRIT OF GOD.
I. That this holy and Divine principle, which we have shewn does radically and
summarily consist in Divine Love, comes into existence in the soul by the power
of God in the influences of the Holy Spirit, the Third Person in the blessed
Trinity, is abundantly manifest from the Scriptures.
Regeneration is by the Spirit: John 3:5-6--"Verily, verily, I say unto thee,
Except a man be born of water, and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the
kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born
of the Spirit is spirit." And verse 8-- "The wind bloweth where it listeth, and
thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither
it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit."
The renewing of the soul is by the Holy Ghost: Titus 3:5-- "Not by works of
righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the
washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost." A new heart is given
by God's putting His Spirit within us: Ezekiel 36:26,27-- "A new heart also will
I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you; and I will take away the
stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh. And I will
put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall
keep my judgments and do them." Quickening of the dead soul is by the Spirit:
John 6:63-- "It is the Spirit that quickeneth." Sanctification is by the Spirit
of God: 2 Thess. 2:13-- "God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation
through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth." Romans 15:16--
"That the offering up of the Gentiles might be acceptable, being sanctified by
the Holy Ghost." 1 Cor. 6:11-- "Such were some of you: but ye are washed, but ye
are sanctified, but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the
Spirit of our God." 1 Peter 1:2-- "Elect according to the foreknowledge of God
the Father, through sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling
of the blood of Jesus Christ." All grace in the heart is the fruit of the
Spirit: Gal. 5:22, 23-- "But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, long
-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance." Eph. 5:9-- "The
fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness and righteousness and truth." Hence the
Spirit of God is called the Spirit of grace, (Heb. 10:29.)
This doctrine of a gracious nature being by the immediate influence of the
Spirit of God, is not only taught in the Scriptures, but is irrefragable to
Reason. Indeed there seems to be a strong disposition in men to disbelieve and
oppose the doctrine of true disposition, to disbelieve and oppose the doctrine
of immediate influence of the Spirit of God in the hearts of men, or to diminish
and make it as small and remote a matter as possible, and put it as far out of
sight as may be. Whereas it seems to me, true virtue and holiness would
naturally excite a prejudice (if I may so say) in favour of such a doctrine; and
that the soul, when in the most excellent frame, and the most lively exercise of
virtue, --love to God and delight in Him,-- would naturally and unavoidably
think of God as kindly communicating Himself to him, and holding communion with
him, as though he did as it were see God smiling on him, giving to him and
conversing with him; and that if he did not so think of God, but, on the
contrary, should conceive that there was no immediate communication between God
and him, it would tend greatly to quell his holy motions of soul, and be an
exceeding damage to his pleasure.
No good reason can be given why men should have such an inward disposition to
deny any immediate communication between God and the creature, or to make as
little of it as possible. 'Tis a strange disposition that men have to thrust God
out of the world, or to put Him as far out of sight as they can, and to have in
no respect immediately and sensibly to do with Him. Therefore so many schemes
have been drawn to exclude, or extenuate, or remove at a great distance, any
influence of the Divine Being in the hearts of men, such as the scheme of the
Pelagians, the Socinians, etc. And therefore these doctrines are so much
ridiculed that ascribe much to the immediate influence of the Spirit, and called
enthusiasm, fanaticism, whimsy, and distraction; but no mortal can tell for
what.
If we make no difficulty of allowing that God did immediateiy make the whole
Universe at first, and caused it to exist out of nothing, and that every
individual thing owes its being to an immediate, voluntary, arbitrary act of
Almighty power, why should we make a difficulty of supposing that He has still
something immediately to do with the things that He has made, and that there is
an arbitrary influence still that God has in the creation that He has made?
And if it be reasonable to suppose it with respect to any part of the Creation,
it is especially so with respect to reasonable creatures, who are the highest
part of the Creation, next to God, and who are most immediately made for God,
and have Him for their next Head, and are created for the business wherein they
are mostly concerned. And above all, in that wherein the highest excellency of
this highest rank of beings consist, and that wherein he is most conformed to
God, is nearest to Him, and has God for his most immediate object.
It seems to me most rational to suppose that as we ascend in the order of being
we shall at last come immediately to God, the First Cause. In whatever respect
we ascend, we ascend in the order of time and succession.
II. The Scripture speaks of this holy and Divine principle in the heart as not
only from the Spirit, but as being spiritual. Thus saving knowledge is called
spiritual understanding: Col. 1:9-- "We desire that ye might be filled with the
knowledge of his will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding." So the
influences, graces, and comforts of God's Spirit are called spiritual blessings:
Eph. 1:3-- "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath
blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ." So the
imparting of any gracious benefit is called the imparting of a spiritual gift:
Rom. 1:11-- "For I long to see you, that I may impart unto you some spiritual
gift." And the fruits of the Spirit which are offered to God are called
spiritual sacrifices: 1 Peter 2:5-- "A spiritual priesthood to offer up
spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ." And a spiritual person
signifies the same In Scripture as a gracious person, and sometimes one that is
much under the influence of grace: 1 Cor. 2:15-- "He that is spiritual judgeth
all things, yet he himself is judged of no man;" and 3:1-- "And I, brethren,
could not speak unto you as unto spiritual but as unto carnal." Gal. 6:1-- "If a
man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual restore such an one in the
spirit of meekness." And to be graciously minded is called in Scripture a being
spiritually minded: Rom. 8:6-- "To be spiritually minded is life and peace."
Concerning this, two things are to be noted.
1. That this Divine principle in the heart is not called spiritual, because it
has its seat in the soul or spiritual part of man, and not in his body. It is
called spiritual, not because of its relation to the spirit of man, in which it
is, but because of its relation to the Spirit of God, from which it is. That
things are not called spiritual because they appertain not to the body but the
spirit of man is evident, because gracious or holy understanding is called
spiritual understanding in the forementioned passage, (Col. 1:9.) Now, by
spiritual understanding cannot be meant that understanding which has its scat in
the soul, to distinguish it from other understanding that has its seat in the
body, for all understanding has its seat in the soul; and that things are called
spiritual because of their relation to the Spirit of God is most plain, by the
latter part of the 2d chapter of 1st Corinthians. There we have both those
expressions, one immediately after another, evidently meaning the same thing:
verses 13, 14-- "Which things also we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom
teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth; comparing spiritual things with
spiritual. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God."
And that by the spiritual man is meant one that has the Spirit is also as
plainly evident by the context: verses 10-12-- "God hath revealed them unto us
by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.
For what man knoweth the things of a man," etc. Also ver. 15-- "He that is
spiritual judgeth all things," by which is evidently meant the same as he that
hath the Spirit that "searcheth all things," as we find in the forgoing verses.
So persons are said to be spiritually minded, not because they mind things that
relate to the soul or spirit of man, but because they mind things that relate to
the Spirit of God: Romans 8:5, 6-- "For they that are after the flesh do mind
the things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit the things of the
Spirit. For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life
and peace."
2. It must be observed that where this holy Divine principle of saving grace
wrought in the mind is in Scripture called spiritual, what is intended by the
expression is not merely nor chiefly that it is from the Spirit of God, but that
it is of the nature of the Spirit of God. There are many things in the minds of
some natural men that are from the influence of the Spirit, but yet are by no
means spiritual things in the scriptural sense of the word. The Spirit of God
convinces natural men of sin, (John 16:8.) Natural men may have common grace,
common illuminations, and common affections that are from the Spirit of God, as
appears by Hebrews 6:4. Natural men have sometimes the influences of the Spirit
of God in His common operations and gifts, and therefore God's Spirit is said to
be striving with them, and they are said to resist the Spirit, (Acts 7:51;) to
grieve and vex God's Holy Spirit, (Eph. 4:30; Isaiah 63:10;) and God is said to
depart from them even as the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul: 1 Sam.
16:14-- "But the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul, and an evil spirit from
the Lord troubled him."
But yet natural men are not in any degree spiritual. The great difference
between natural men and godly men seems to be set forth by this, that the one is
natural and carnal, and the other spiritual; and natural men are so totally
destitute of that which is Spirit, that they know nothing about it, and the
reason given for it is because they are not spiritual, (1 Cor. 2:13-15.) Indeed
sometimes those miraculous gifts of the Spirit that were common are called
spiritual because they are from the Spirit of God; but for the most part the
term seems to be appropriate to its gracious influences and fruits on the soul,
which are no otherwise spiritual than the common influences of the Spirit that
natural men have, in any other respect than this, that this saving grace in the
soul, is not only from the Spirit, but it also partakes of the nature of that
Spirit that it is from, which the common grace of the Spirit does not. Thus
things in Scripture language are said to be earthly, as they partake of an
earthly nature, partake of the nature of the earth; so things are said to be
heavenly, as they in their nature agree with those things that are in heaven;
and so saving grace in the heart is said to be spiritual, and therein
distinguished from all other influences of the Spirit, that it is of the nature
of the Spirit of God. It partakes of the nature of that Spirit, while no common
gift of the Spirit doth so.
But here an enquiry may be raised, viz.:--
Enq. How does saving grace partake of the nature of that Spirit that it is from,
so as to be called on that account spiritual, thus essentially distinguishing it
from all other effects of the Spirit? for every effect has in some respect or
another the nature of its cause, and the common convictions and illuminations
that natural men have are in some respects [of] the nature of the Spirit of God;
for there is light and understanding and conviction of truth in these common
illuminations, and so they are of the nature of the Spirit of God--that is, a
discerning spirit and a spirit of truth. But yet saving grace, by its being
called spiritual, as though it were thereby distinguished from all other gifts
of the Spirit, seems to partake of the nature of the Spirit of God in some very
peculiar manner.
Clearly to satisfy this enquiry, we must do these two things:-- 1. We must bear
in mind what has already been said of the nature of saving grace, and what I
have already shewn to be that wherein its nature and essence lies, and wherein
all saving grace is radically and summarily comprised viz., a principle of
Divine Love. 2. We must consider what the Scripture reveals to be in a peculiar
manner the nature of the Holy Spirit of God, and in an enquiry of this nature I
would go no further than I think the Scripture plainly goes before me. The Word
of God certainly should be our rule in matters so much above reason and our own
notions.
And here I would say--
(1.) That I think the Scripture does sufficiently reveal the Holy Spirit as a
proper Divine Person; and thus we ought to look upon Him as a distinct personal
agent. He is often spoken of as a person, revealed under personal characters and
in personal acts, and it speaks of His being acted on as a person, and the
Scripture plainly ascribes every thing to Him that properly denotes a distinct
person; and though the word person be rarely used in the Scriptures, yet I
believe that we have no word in the English language that does so naturally
represent what the Scripture reveals of the distinction of the Eternal
Three,--Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,--as to say they are one God but three
persons.
(2.) Though all the Divine perfections are to be attributed to each person of
the Trinity, yet the Holy Ghost is in a peculiar manner called by the name of
Love --A)ga/ph, the same word is that translated charity in the 13th chapter of
1st Corinthians. The Godhead or the Divine essence is once and again said to be
Love: 1 John 4:8 -- "He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love." So
again, ver. 16-- "God is love; and he that dwelleth in love, dwelleth in God,
and God in him." But the Divine essence is thus called in a peculiar manner as
breathed forth and subsisting in the Holy Spirit; as may be seen in the context
of these texts, as in the 12th and 13th verses of the same chapter-- "No man
hath seen God at any time. If we love one another, God dwelleth in us, and His
love is perfected in us. Hereby know we that we dwell in Him, and He in us,
because He hath given us of His Spirit." It is the same argument in both these
verses: in the 12th verse the apostle argues that if we have love dwelling in
us, we have God dwelling in us; and in the 13th verse he clears the face of the
argument by this, that his love which is dwelling in us is God's Spirit. And
this shews that the foregoing argument is good, and that if love dwells in us,
we know God dwells in us indeed, for the Apostle supposes it as a thing granted
and allowed that God's Spirit is God. The Scripture elsewhere does abundantly
teach us that the way in which God dwells in the saints is by His Spirit, by
their being the temples of the Holy Ghost. Here this apostle teaches us the same
thing. He says, "We know that he dwelleth in us, that he hath given us his
Spirit;" and this is manifestly to explain what is said in the foregoing verse--
viz., that God dwells in us, inasmuch as His love dwells in us; which love he
had told us before--ver. 8--is God himself. And afterwards, in the 16th verse,
he expresses it more fully, that this is the way that God dwells in the saint--
viz.. because this love dwells in them, which is God.
Again the same is signified in the same manner in the last verses of the
foregoing chapter. In the foregoing verses, speaking of love as a true sign of
sincerity and our acceptance with God, beginning with the 18th verse, he sums up
the argument thus in the last verse: "And hereby we know that he abideth in us,
by the Spirit which he hath given us."
We have also something very much like this in the apostle Paul's writings.
Gal. 5:13-16-- "Use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by love serve
one another. For all the law is fulfilled in one word, even in this, Thou shalt
love thy neighbour as thyself. But if ye bite and devour one another, take heed
that ye be not consumed one of another. This I say then, Walk in the Spirit, and
ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh." Here it seems most evident that what
the apostle exhorts and urges in the 13th, 14th, and 15th verses,-- viz., that
they should walk in love, that they might not give occasion to the gratifying of
the flesh,--he does expressly explain in the 16th verse by this, that they
should walk in the Spirit, that they might not fulfil the lust of the flesh;
which the great Mr Howe takes notice of in his "Sermons on the Prosperous State
of the Christian Interest before the End of Time," p. 185, published by Mr
Evans. His words are, "Walking in the Spirit is directed with a special eye and
reference unto the exercise of this love; as you may see in Galatians 5, the
14th, 15th, and 16th verses compared together. All the law is fulfilled in one
word, (he means the whole law of the second table,) even in this, Thou shalt
love thy neighbour as thyself. But if ye bite and devour one another, (the
opposite to this love, or that which follows on the want of it, or from the
opposite principle,) take heed that ye be not consumed one of another. This I
say then, (observe the inference,) Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil
the lust of the flesh. To walk in the Spirit is to walk in the exercise of this
love."
So that as the Son of God is spoken of as the wisdom, understanding, and Logos
of God, (Proverbs 8; Luke 11:49; John 1, at the beginning,) and is, as divines
express things, the personal wisdom of God; so the Spirit of God is spoken of as
the love of God, and may with equal foundation and propriety be called the
personal love of God. We read in the beloved disciple's writings of these two
--Logos and A)ga/ph, both of which are said to be God, (John 1:1; 1 John
4:8-16.) One is the Son of God, and the other the Holy Spirit. There are two
things that God is said to be in this First Epistle of John--light and love:
chap. 1:5--"God is light." This is the Son of God, who is said to be the wisdom
and reason of God, and the brightness of His glory; and in the 4th chapter of
the same epistle he says, "God is love," and this he applies to the Holy Spirit.
Hence the Scripture symbol of the Holy Ghost is a dove, which is the emblem of
love, and so was continually accounted (as is well known) in the heathen world,
and is so made use of by their poets and mythologists, which probably arose
partly from the nature and manner of the bird, and probably in part from the
tradition of the story of Noah's dove, that came with a message of peace and
love after such terrible manifestations of God's wrath in the time of the
deluge. This bird is also made use of as an emblem of love in the Holy
Scriptures; as it was on that message of peace and love that God sent it to
Noah, when it came with an olive-leaf in its mouth, and often in Solomon's Song:
Cant. 1:15-- "Thou hast doves' eyes": Cant. 5:12-- "His eyes are as the eyes of
doves:" Cant. 5:2-- "Open to me, my love, my dove," and in other places in that
song.
This bird, God is pleased to choose as the special symbol of His Holy Spirit in
the greatest office or work of the Spirit that ever it has or will exert--viz.,
in anointing Christ, the great Head of the whole Church of saints, from which
Head this holy oil descends to all the members, and the skirts of His garments,
as the sweet and precious ointment that was poured on Aaron's head, that great
type of Christ. As God the Father then poured forth His Holy Spirit of love upon
the Son without measure, so that which was then seen with the eye--viz., a dove
descending and lighting upon Christ--signified the same thing as what was at the
same time proclaimed to the Son--viz., This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased. This is the Son on whom I pour forth all my love, towards whom my
essence entirely flows out in love. See Matt. 3:16,17; Mark 1:10-11; Luke 3:22;
John 1:32-33.
This was the anointing of the Head of the Church and our great High Priest, and
therefore the holy anointing oil of old with which Aaron and other typical high
priests were anointed was the most eminent type of the Holy Spirit of any in the
Old Testament. This holy oil, by reason of its soft-flowing and diffusive
nature, and its unparalleled sweetness and fragrancy, did most fitly represent
Divine Love, or that Spirit that is the deity, breathed forth or flowing out and
softly falling in infinite love and delight. It is mentioned as a fit
representation of holy love, which is said to be like the precious ointment on
the head, that ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's beard, that went down to
the skirts of his garments. It was from the fruit of the olive-tree, which it is
known has been made use of as a symbol of love or peace, which was probably
taken from the olive-branch brought by the dove to Noah in token of the Divine
favour; so that the olive-branch and the dove that brought it, both signified
the same thing--viz., love, which is specially typified by the precious oil from
the olive-tree.
God's love is primarily to Himself, and His infinite delight is in Himself, in
the Father and the Son loving and delighting in each other. We often read of the
Father loving the Son, and being well pleased in the Son, and of the Son loving
the Father. In the infinite love and delight that is between these two persons
consists the infinite happiness of God: Prov. 8:30.--"Then I was by him, as one
brought up with him: and I was daily his delight, rejoicing always before him;"
and therefore seeing the Scripture signifies that the Spirit of God is the Love
of God, therefore it follows that Holy Spirit proceeds from or is breathed forth
from, the Father and the Son in some way or other infinitely above all our
conceptions, as the Divine essence entirely flows out and is breathed forth in
infinitely pure love and sweet delight from the Father and the Son; and this is
that pure river of water of life that proceeds out of the throne of the Father
and the Son, as we read at the beginning of the 22nd chapter of the Revelation;
for Christ himself tells us that by the water of life, or living water, is meant
the Holy Ghost, (John 7:38, 39.) This river of water of life in the Revelation
is evidently the same with the living waters of the sanctuary in Ezekiel, (Ezek.
47:1, etc.;) and this river is doubtless the river of God's pleasure, or of
God's own infinite delight spoken of in Ps. 36:7-9-- "How excellent is thy
loving-kindness, O God! therefore the children of men put their trust under the
shadow of thy wings. They shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy
house; and thou shalt make them drink of the river of thy pleasures. For with
thee is the fountain of life." The river of God's pleasures here spoken of is
the same with the fountain of life spoken of in the next words. Here, as was
observed before, the water of life by Christ's own interpretation is the Holy
Spirit. This river of God's pleasures is also the same with the fatness of God's
house, the holy oil of the sanctuary spoken of in the next preceding words, and
is the same with God's love, or God's excellent loving-kindness, spoken of in
the next preceding verse.
I have before observed that the Scripture abundantly reveals that the way in
which Christ dwells in the saint is by His Spirit's dwelling in them, and here I
would observe that Christ in His prayer, in the 17th chapter of John, seems to
speak of the way in which He dwells in them as by the indwelling of the love
wherewith the Father has loved Him: John 17:26 "And I have declared unto them
thy name, and will declare it; that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be
in them, and I in them." The beloved disciple that wrote this Gospel having
taken [such] particular notice of this, that he afterwards in his first epistle
once and again speaks of love's dwelling in the saints, and the Spirit's
dwelling in them being the same thing.
Again, the Scripture seems in many places to speak of love in Christians as if
it were the same with the Spirit of God in them, or at least as the prime and
most natural breathing and acting of the Spirit in the soul. So Rom. 5:5--
"Because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which
is given unto us:" Col. 1:8-- "Who also declared unto us your love in the
Spirit:" 2 Cor. 6:6-- "By kindness, by the Holy Ghost, by love unfeigned:" Phil.
2:1-- "If there be therefore any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love,
if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any bowels and mercies, fulfil ye my joy,
that ye be like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind."
The Scripture therefore leads us to this conclusion, though it be infinitely
above us to conceive how it should be, that yet as the Son of God is the
personal word, idea, or wisdom of God, begotten by God, being an infinitely
perfect, substantial image or idea of Himself, (as might be very plainly proved
from the Holy Scripture, if here were proper occasion for it;) so the Holy
Spirit does in some ineffable and inconceivable manner proceed, and is breathed
forth both from the Father and the Son, by the Divine essence being wholly
poured and flowing out in that infinitely intense, holy, and pure love and
delight that continually and unchangeably breathes forth from the Father and the
Son, primarily towards each other, and secondarily towards the creature. and so
flowing forth in a different subsistence or person in a manner to us utterly
inexplicable and inconceivable, and that this is that person that is poured
forth into the hearts of angels and saints.
Hence 'tis to be accounted for, that though we often read in Scripture of the
Father loving the Son, and the Son loving the Father, yet we never once read
either of the Father or the Son loving the Holy Spirit, and the Spirit loving
either of them. It is because the Holy Spirit is the Divine Love itself, the
love of the Father and the Son. Hence also it is to be accounted for, that we
very often read of the love both of the Father and the Son to men, and
particularly their love to the saints; but we never read of the Holy Ghost
loving them, for the Holy Ghost is that love of God and Christ that is breathed
forth primarily towards each other, and flows out secondarily towards the
creature. This also will well account for it, that the apostle Paul so often
wishes grace, mercy, and peace from God the Father, and from the Lord Jesus
Christ, in the beginning of his epistles, without even mentioning the Holy
Ghost, because the Holy Ghost is Himself the love and grace of God the Father
and the Lord Jesus Christ. He is the deity wholly breathed forth in infinite,
substantial, intelligent love: from the Father and Son first towards each other,
and secondarily freely flowing out to the creature, and so standing forth a
distinct personal subsistence.
Both the holiness and happiness of the Godhead consists in this love. As we have
already proved, all creature holiness consists essentially and summarily in love
to God and love to other creatures; so does the holiness of God consist in His
love, especially in the perfect and intimate union and love there is between the
Father and the Son. But the Spirit that proceeds from the Father and the Son is
the bond of this union, as it is of all holy union between the Father and the
Son, and between God and the creature, and between the creatures among
themselves. All seems to be signified in Christ's prayer in the 17th chapter of
John, from the 21st verse. Therefore this Spirit of love is the "bond of
perfectness" (Col. 3:14) throughout the whole blessed society or family in
heaven and earth, consisting of the Father, the head of the family, and the Son,
and all His saints that are the disciples, seed, and spouse of the Son. The
happiness of God doth also consist in this love; for doubtless the happiness of
God consists in the infinite love He has to, and delight He has in Himself; or
in other words, in the infinite delight there is between the Father and the Son,
spoken of in Prov. 8:30. This delight that the Father and the Son have in each
other is not to be distinguished from their love of complacence one in another,
wherein love does most essentially consist, as was observed before. The
happiness of the deity, as all other true happiness, consists in love and
society.
Hence it is the Spirit of God, the third person in the Trinity, is so often
called the Holy Spirit, as though "holy" were an epithet some way or other
peculiarly belonging to Him, which can be no other way than that the holiness of
God does consist in Him. He is not only infinitely holy as the Father and the
Son are, but He is the holiness of God itself in the abstract. The holiness of
the Father and the Son does consist in breathing forth this Spirit. Therefore He
is not only called the Holy Spirit, but the Spirit of holiness: Rom. 1:4--
"According to the Spirit of holiness."
Hence also the river of "living waters," or waters of life, which Christ
explains in the 7th [chapter] of John, of the Holy Spirit, is in the
forementioned Psalm [36:8] called the "river of God's pleasures;" and hence also
that holy oil with which Christ was anointed, which I have shewn was the Holy
Ghost, is called the "oil of gladness": Heb. 1:9--"Therefore God, even thy God,
hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows." Hence we learn
that God's fulness does consist in the Holy Spirit. By fulness, as the term is
used in Scripture, as may easily be seen by looking over the texts that mention
it, Is intended the good that any one possesses. Now the good that God possesses
does most immediately consist in His joy and complacence that He has in Himself.
It does objectively, indeed, consist in the Father and the Son; but it doth most
immediately consist in the complacence in these elements. Nevertheless the
fulness of God consists in the holiness and happiness of the deity. Hence
persons, by being made partakers of the Holy Spirit, or having it dwelling in
them, are said to be "partakers of the fulness of God" ar Christ. Christ's
fulness, as mediator, consists in His having the Spirit given Him "not by
measure," (John 3:34.) And so it is that He is said to have "the fulness of the
Godhead," [which] is said "to dwell in him bodily," (Col. 2:9.) And as we, by
receiving the Holy Spirit from Christ, and being made partakers of His Spirit,
are said "to receive of his fulness, and grace for grace." And because this
Spirit, which is the fulness of God, consists in the love of God and Christ;
therefore we, by knowing the love of Christ, are said "to be filled with all the
fulness of God," (Eph. 3:19.) For the way that we know the love of Christ, is by
having that love dwelling in us, as 1 John 4:13; because the fulness of God
consists in the Holy Spirit. Hence our communion with God the Father and God the
Son consists in our possessing of the Holy Ghost, which is their Spirit. For to
have communion or fellowship with either, is to partake with Them of Their good
in Their fulness in union and society with Them. Hence it is that we read of the
saints having fellowship and communion with the Father and with the Son; but
never of their having fellowship with the Holy Ghost, because the Holy Ghost is
that common good or fulness which they partake of in which their fellowship
consists. We read of the communion of the Holy Ghost; but not of communion with
Him, which are two very different things.
Persons are said to have communion with each other when they partake with each
other in some common good; but any one is said to have communion of anything,
with respect to that thing they partake of, in common with others. Hence, in the
apostolical benediction, he wishes the "grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the
love of God the Father, and the communion or partaking of the Holy Ghost." The
blessing wished is but one--viz., the Holy Spirit. To partake of the Holy Ghost
is to have that love of the Father and the grace of the Son.
From what has been said, it follows that the Holy Spirit is the summum of all
good. 'Tis the fulness of God. The holiness and happiness of the Godhead
consists in it; and in communion or partaking of it consists all the true
loveliness and happiness of the creature. All the grace and comfort that persons
here have, and all their holiness and happiness hereafter, consists in the love
of the Spirit, spoken of Rom. 15:30; and joy in the Holy Ghost, spoken of Rom.
14:17; Acts 9:31, 13:52. And, therefore, that which in Matt. 7:11-- "If ye then,
being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall
your Father which is in heaven, give good things to them that ask Him?" is in
Luke 11:13, expressed thus: "If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts
unto your children; how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy
Spirit to them that ask Him?" Doubtless there is an agreement in what is
expressed by each Evangelist: and giving the Holy Spirit to them that ask, is
the same as giving good things to them that ask; for the Holy Spirit is the sum
of all good.
Hence we may better understand the economy of the persons of the Trinity as it
appears in the part that each one has in the affair of redemption, and shews the
equality of each Person concerned in that affair, and the equality of honour and
praise due to each of Them. For that work, glory belongs to the Father and the
Son, that They so greatly loved the world. To the Father, that He so loved the
world, that He gave His only-begotten Son, who was all His delight, who is His
infinite objective Happiness. To the Son, that He so loved the world, that He
gave Himself. But there is equal glory due to the Holy Ghost on this account,
because He is the Love of the Father and the Son, that flows out primarily
towards God, and secondarily towards the elect that Christ came to save. So
that, however wonderful the love of the Father and the Son appear to be, so much
the more glory belongs to the Holy Spirit, in whom subsists that wonderful and
excellent love.
It shews the infinite excellency of the Father thus:--That the Son so delighted
in Him, and prized His honour and glory, that when He had a mind to save
sinners, He came infinitely low, rather than men's salvation should be the
injury of that honour and glory. It shewed the infinite excellency and worth of
the Son, that the Father so delighted in Him, that for His sake He was ready to
quit His own; yea, and receive into favour those that had deserved infinitely
ill at His hands. Both shews the infinite excellency of the Holy Spirit, because
He is that delight of the Father and the Son in each other, which is manifested
to be so great and infinite by these things.
What has been said shews that our dependence is equally on each Person in this
affair. The Father approves and provides the Redeemer, and Himself accepts the
price of the good purchased, and bestows that good. The Son is the Redeemer, and
the price that is offered for the purchased good. And the Holy Ghost is the good
purchased; [for] the Sacred Scriptures seem to intimate that the Holy Spirit is
the sum of all that Christ purchased for man, (Gal. 3:13-14.)
What Christ purchased for us is, that we might have communion with God in His
good, which consists in partaking or having communion of the Holy Ghost, as I
have shewn. All the blessedness of the redeemed consists in partaking of the
fulness of Christ, their Head and Redeemer, which, I have observed, consists in
partaking of the Spirit that is given Him not by measure. This is the vital sap
which the creatures derive from the true vine. This is the holy oil poured on
the head, that goes down to the members. Christ purchased for us that we should
enjoy the Love: but the love of God flows out in the proceeding of the Spirit;
and He purchased for them that the love and joy of God should dwell in them,
which is by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
The sum of all spiritual good which the saints have in this world, is that
spring of living water within them which we read of, (John 4:10;) and those
rivers of living waters flowing from within them which we read of, (John
7:38,39,) which we are there told is the Holy Spirit. And the sum of all
happiness in the other world, is that river of living water which flows from the
throne of God and the Lamb, which is the river of God's pleasures, and is the
Holy Spirit, which is often compared in Sacred Scripture to water, to the rain
and dew, and rivers and floods of waters, (Isa. 44:3; 32:15; 41:17,18, compared
with John 4:14; Isa. 35:6,7; 43:19,20.)
The Holy Spirit is the purchased possession and inheritance of the saints, as
appears, because that little of it which the saints have in this world is said
to be the earnest of that purchased inheritance, (Eph. 1:13,14; 2 Cor. 1:22,
v.5.) 'Tis an earnest of that which we are to have a fulness of hereafter. The
Holy Ghost is the great subject of all gospel promises, and therefore is called
the Spirit of promise, (Eph.1:13.) He is called the promise of the Father, (Luke
24:49.)
The Holy Ghost being a comprehension of all good things promised in the gospel,
we may easily see the force of the Apostle's inquiry: Gal. 3:2-- "This only
would I learn of you. Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law, or by the
hearing of faith? " So that in the offer of redemption 'tis of God of whom our
good is purchased, and 'tis God that purchases it, and 'tis God also that is the
thing purchased. Thus all our good things are of God, and through God, and in
God, as Rom. 11:36-- "For of him, and through him, and to him, and in him, [as
ei/V is rendered in 1 Cor. 8:6,] are all things: to whom be glory for ever."All
our good is of God the Father, and through God the Son, and all is in the Holy
Ghost, as He is Himself all our good. And so God is Himself the portion and
purchased inheritance of His people. Thus God is the Alpha and Omega in this
affair of Redemption.
If we suppose no more than used to be supposed about the Holy Ghost, the honour
of the Holy Ghost in the work of Redemption is not equal in any sense to the
Father and the Son's; nor is there an equal part of the glory of this work
belonging to Him. Merely to apply to us, or immediately to give or hand to us
blessing purchased, after it is purchased, is subordinate to the other two
Persons,--is but a little thing to the purchaser of it by the paying an infinite
price by Christ, by Christ's offering up Himself a sacrifice to procure it; and
'tis but a little thing to God the Father's giving His infinitely dear Son to be
a sacrifice for us to procure this good. But according to what has now been
supposed, there is an equality. To be the wonderful love of God, is as much as
for the Father and the Son to exercise wonderful love; and to be the thing
purchased, is as much as to be the price that purchases it. The price, and the
thing bought with that price, answer each other in value; and to be the
excellent benefit offered, is as much as to offer such an excellent benefit. For
the glory that belongs to Him that bestows the gospel, arises from the
excellency and value of the gift, and therefore the glory is equal to that
excellency of the benefit. And so that Person that is that excellent benefit,
has equal glory with Him that bestows such an excellent benefit.
But now to return: from what has been now observed from the Holy Scriptures of
the nature of the Holy Spirit, may be clearly understood why grace in the hearts
of the saints is called spiritual, in distinction from other things that are the
effects of the Spirit in the hearts of men. For by this it appears that the
Divine principle in the saints is of the nature of the Spirit; for as the nature
of the Spirit of God is Divine Love, so Divine Love is the nature and essence of
that holy principle in the hearts of the saints.
The Spirit of God may operate and produce effects upon the minds of natural men
that have no grace, as He does when He assists natural conscience and
convictions of sin and danger. The Spirit of God may produce effects upon
inanimate things, as of old He moved on the face of the waters. But He
communicates holiness in His own proper nature only, in those holy effects in
the hearts of the saints. And, therefore, those holy effects only are called
spiritual; and the saints only are called spiritual persons in Sacred Scripture.
Men's natural faculties and principles may be assisted by the operation of the
Spirit of God on their minds, to enable them to exert those acts which, to a
greater or lesser degree, they exert naturally. But the Spirit don't at all
communicate Himself in it in His own nature, which is Divine Love, any more than
when He moved upon the face of the waters.
Hence also we may more easily receive and understand a doctrine that seems to be
taught us in the Sacred Scripture concerning grace in the heart--viz., that it
is no other than the Spirit of God itself dwelling and acting in the heart of a
saint,-- which the consideration of these things will make manifest:--
(1.) That the Sacred Scriptures don't only call grace spiritual, but "spirit."
(2.) That when the Sacred Scriptures call grace spirit, the Spirit of God is
intended; and that grace is called "Spirit" no otherwise than as the name of the
Holy Ghost, the Third Person in the Trinity is ascribed to it.
1. This holy principle is often called by the name of "spirit" in Sacred
Scripture. So in John 3:6-- "That which is born of the Spirit is spirit." Here
by flesh and spirit, we have already shewn, are intended those two opposite
principles in the heart, corruption and grace. So by flesh and spirit the same
things are manifestly intended in Gal. 5:17-- "For the flesh lusteth against the
Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the
other; so that ye cannot do the things that ye would." This that is here given
as the reason why Christians cannot do the things that they would, is manifestly
the same that is given for the same thing in the latter part of the 7th chapter
of the Romans. The reason there given why they cannot do the things that they
would is, that the law of the members war with [and] against the law of the
mind; and, therefore, by the law of the members and the law of the mind are
meant the same as the flesh and Spirit in Galatians. Yea, they are called by the
same name of the flesh and Spirit there, in that context, in the continuation of
the same discourse in the beginning of the next chapter:-- "Therefore there is
no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus, that walk not after the flesh,
but after the Spirit." Here the Apostle evidently refers to the same two
opposite principles warring one against another, that he had been speaking of in
the close of the preceding chapter, which he here calls flesh and Spirit as he
does in his Epistle to the Galatians.
This is yet more abundantly clear by the next words, which are, "For the law of
the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and
death." Here these two things that in the preceding verse are called "flesh and
spirit," are in this verse called "the law of the Spirit of life" and "the law
of sin and death," evidently speaking still of the same law of our mind and the
law of sin spoken of in the last verse of the preceding chapter. The Apostle
goes on in the 8th chapter to call aversation and grace by the names of flesh
and Spirit, (verses 4-9, and again verses 12,13.) These two principles are
called by the same names in Matt. 26:41-- "The spirit indeed is willing, but the
flesh is weak." There can be no doubt but that the same thing is intended here
by the flesh and spirit as (compare what is said of the flesh and spirit here
and in these places) in the 7th and 8th chapters of Romans, and Gal. 5. Again,
these two principles are called by the same words in Gal. 6:8. If this be
compared with the 18th verse of the foregoing chapter, and with Romans 8:6 and
13, none can doubt but the same is meant in each place.
2. If the Sacred Scriptures be duly observed, where grace is called by the name
of "spirit," it will appear that 'tis so called by an ascription of the Holy
Ghost, even the third person in the Trinity, to that Divine principle in the
hearts of the saints, as though that principle in them were no other than the
Spirit of God itself, united to the soul, and living and acting in it, and
exerting itself in the use and improvement of its faculties.
Thus it is in the 8th chapter of Romans, as does manifestly appear by verses
9-16-- "But you are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be the Spirit of
God dwell in you," etc. "Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is
none of his," etc.
Here the apostle does fully explain himself what he means when he so often calls
that holy principle that is in the hearts of the saints by the name "spirit."
This he means, the Spirit of God itself dwelling and acting in them. In the 9th
verse he calls it the Spirit of God, and the Spirit of Christ in the 10th verse.
He calls it Christ in them in the 11th verse. He calls it the Spirit of Him that
raised up Jesus from the dead dwelling in them; and in the 14th verse he calls
it the Spirit of God. In the 16th verse he calls it the Spirit itself. So it is
called the Spirit of God in 1 Cor. 2:11,12. So that that holy, Divine principle,
which we have observed does radically and essentially consist in Divine love, is
no other than a communication and participation of that same infinite Divine
Love, which is GOD, and in which the Godhead is eternally breathed forth; and
subsists in the Third Person in the blessed Trinity. So that true saving grace
is no other than that very love of God-- that is, God, in one of the persons of
the Trinity, uniting Himself to the soul of a creature, as a vital principle,
dwelling there and exerting Himself by the faculties of the soul of man, in His
own proper nature, after the manner of a principle of nature.
And we may look back and more fully understand what the apostle John means when
he says once and again, "God is Love," and "He that dwelleth in Love dwelleth in
God, and God in him," and "If we love one another, God dwelleth in us," and "His
Love is perfected in us," [and] "Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in
us, because he has given us of his Spirit."
By this, also, we may understand what the apostle Peter means in his 2nd Epistle
1:4, that the saints are made "partakers of the Divine nature." They are not
only partakers of a nature that may, in some sense, be called Divine, because
'tis conformed to the nature of God; but the very deity does, in some sense,
dwell in them. That holy and Divine Love dwells in their hearts, and is so
united to human faculties, that 'tis itself become a principle of new nature.
That love, which is the very native tongue and spirit of God, so dwells in their
souls that it exerts itself in its own nature in the exercise of those
faculties, after the manner of a natural or vital principle in them.
This shews us how the saints are said to be the "temples of the Holy Ghost" as
they are.
By this, also, we may understand how the saints are said to be made "partakers
of God's holiness," not only as they partake of holiness that God gives, but
partake of that holiness by which He himself is holy. For it has been already
observed, the holiness of God consists in that Divine Love in which the essence
of God really flows out.
This also shews us how to understand our Lord when He speaks of His joy being
fulfilled in the saints: John 17:13-- "And now I come unto thee; and these
things I speak in the world, that they might have My joy fulfilled in
themselves." It is by the indwelling of that Divine Spirit, which we have shewn
to be God the Father's and the Son's infinite Love and Joy in each other. In the
13th verse He says He has spoken His word to His disciples, "that His joy might
be fulfilled;" and in verse 26th He says, "And I have declared unto them Thy
name, and will declare it; that the love wherewith Thou hast loved Me may be in
them, and I in them."
And herein lies the mystery of the vital union that is between Christ and the
soul of a believer, which orthodox divines speak so much of, Christ's love--that
is, His Spirit is actually united to the faculties of their souls. So it
properly lives, acts, and exerts its nature in the exercise of their faculties.
By this Love being in them, He is in them, (John 17:26;) and so it is said, 1
Cor. 6:17-- "But he that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit."
And thus it is that the saints are said to live, "yet not they, but Christ lives
in them," (Gal. 2:20.) The very promise of spiritual life in their souls is no
other than the Spirit of Christ himself. So that they live by His life, as much
as the members of the body live by the life of the Lord, and as much as the
branches live by the life of the root and stock. "Because I live, ye shall live
also," (John 14:19.) "We are dead: but our life is hid with Christ in God,"
(Col. 3:3.) "When Christ, who is our life, shall appear," (Col 3:4.)
There is a union with Christ, by the indwelling of the Love of Christ, two ways.
First, as 'tis from Christ, and is the very Spirit and life and fulness of
Christ; and second, as it acts to Christ. For the very nature of it is love and
union of heart to Him.
Because the Spirit of God dwells as a vital principle or a principle of new life
in the soul, therefore 'tis called the "Spirit of life," (Rom. 8:2;) and the
Spirit that "quickens." (John 6:63.)
The Spirit of God is a vital principle in the soul, as the breath of life is in
the body: Ezek. 37:5--"Thus saith the Lord God unto these bones, I will cause
breath to enter into you, and ye shall live;" and so verses 9,10...
That principle of grace that is in the hearts of the saints is as much a proper
communication or participation of the Spirit of God, the Third Person in the
Trinity, as that breath that entered into these bodies is represented to be a
participation of the wind that blew upon them. The prophet says, "Come from the
four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain that they may live," is now
the very same wind and the same breath; but only was wanted to these bodies to
be a vital principle in them, which otherwise would be dead. And therefore
Christ himself represents the communication of His Spirit to His disciples by
His breathing upon them, and communicating to them His breath, (John 20:22.)
We often, in our common language about things of this nature, speak of a
principle of grace. I suppose there is no other principle of grace in the soul
than the very Holy Ghost dwelling in the soul and acting there as a vital
principle. To speak of a habit of grace as a natural disposition to act grace,
as begotten in the soul by the first communication of Divine light, and as the
natural and necessary consequence of the first light, it seems in some respects
to carry a wrong idea with it. Indeed the first exercise of grace in the first
light has a tendency to future acts, as from an abiding principle, by grace and
by the covenant of God; but not by any natural force. The giving one gracious
discovery or act of grace, or a thousand, has no proper natural tendency to
cause an abiding habit of grace for the future; nor any otherwise than by Divine
constitution and covenant. But all succeeding acts of grace must be as
immediately, and, to all intents and purposes, as much from the immediate acting
of the Spirit of God on the soul, as the first; and if God should take away His
Spirit out of the soul-- all habits and acts of grace would of themselves cease
as immediately as light ceases in a room when a candle is carried out. And no
man has a habit of grace dwelling in him any otherwise than as he has the Holy
Spirit dwelling in him in his temple, and acting in union with his natural
faculties, after the manner of a vital principle. So that when they act grace,
'tis, in the language of the apostle, "not they, but Christ living in them."
Indeed the Spirit of God, united to human faculties, acts very much after the
manner of a natural principle or habit. So that one act makes way for another,
and so it now settles the soul in a disposition to holy acts; but that it does,
so as by grace and covenant, and not from any natural necessity.
Hence the Spirit of God seems in Sacred Scripture to be spoken of as a quality
of the persons in whom it resided. So that they are called spiritual persons; as
when we say a virtuous man, we speak of virtue as the quality of the man. 'Tis
the Spirit itself that is the only principle of true virtue in the heart. So
that to be truly virtuous is the same as to be spiritual.
And thus it is not only with respect to the virtue that is in the hearts of the
saints on earth, but also the perfect virtue and holiness of the saints in
heaven. It consists altogether in the indwelling and acting of the Spirit of God
in their habits. And so it was with man before the Fall; and so it is with the
elect, sinless angels. We have shewn that the holiness and happiness of God
consist in the Holy Spirit; and so the holiness and happiness of every holy or
truly virtuous creature of God, in heaven or earth, consist in the communion of
the same Spirit.