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T H E 'Who being dead, yet speaketh.'—Hebrews 11:4 By J O H N.B U N Y A N. L O N D O N, Printed for J. Robinson, at the Golden Lion, in St. Paul's Churchyard, 1688. This title page was printed with a wide black border. |
PROPOSITION SECOND.
he death or cutting down of such men will be dreadful.
Christ, at last, turns the barren fig-tree over to the justice of God, shakes his
hands of him, and gives him up to the fire for his unprofitableness. 'After that
thou shalt cut it down.'
Two things are here to be considered:
First. The executioner; thou, the great, the dreadful, the eternal God. These words,
therefore, as I have already said, signify that Christ the Mediator, through whom
alone salvation comes, and by whom alone execution hath been deferred, now giveth
up the soul, forbears to speak one syllable more for him, or to do the least act
of grace further, to try for his recovery; but delivereth him up to that fearful
dispensation, 'to fall into the hands of the living God' (Heb 10:31).
Second. The second to be considered is, The instrument by which this execution is
done, and that is death, compared here to an axe; and forasmuch as the tree is not
felled at one blow, therefore the strokes are here continued, till all the blows
be struck at it that are requisite for its felling: for now cutting time, and cutting
work, is come; cutting must be his portion till he be cut down. 'After that thou
shalt cut it down.' Death, I say, is the axe, which God often useth, therewith to
take the barren fig-tree out of the vineyard, out of a profession, and also out of
the world at once. But this axe is now new ground, it cometh well-edged to the roots
of this barren fig-tree. It hath been whetted by sin, by the law, and by a formal
profession, and therefore must, and will make deep gashes, not only in the natural
life, but in the heart and conscience also of this professor: 'The wages of sin is
death,' 'the sting of death is sin' (Rom 6:23; 1 Cor 15:56). Wherefore death comes
not to this man as he doth to saints, muzzled, or without his sting, but with open
mouth, in all his strength; yea, he sends his first-born, which is guilt, to devour
his strength, and to bring him to the king of terrors (Job 18:13,14).
But to give you, in a few particulars, the manner of this man's dying.
1. Now he hath his fruitless fruits beleaguer him round his bed, together with all
the bands and legions of his other wickedness. 'His own iniquities shall take the
wicked himself, and he shall be holden with the cords of his sins' (Prov 5:22).
2. Now some terrible discovery of God is made out unto him, to the perplexing and
terrifying of his guilty conscience. 'God shall cast upon him, and not spare'; and
he shall be 'afraid of that which is high' (Job 27:22; Eccl 12:5).
3. The dark entry he is to go through will be a sore amazement to him; for 'fears
shall be in the way' (Eccl 12:5). Yea, terrors will take hold on him, when he shall
see the yawning jaws of death to gape upon him, and the doors of the shadow of death
open to give him passage out of the world. Now, who will meet me in this dark entry?
how shall I pass through this dark entry into another world?
4. For by reason of guilt, and a shaking conscience, his life will hang in continual
doubt before him, and he shall be afraid day and night, and shall have no assurance
of his life (Deut 28:66,67).
5. Now also want will come up against him; he will come up like an armed man. This
is a terrible army to him that is graceless in heart, and fruitless in life. This
WANT will continually cry in thine ears, Here is a new birth wanting, a new heart,
and a new spirit wanting; here is faith wanting; here is love and repentance wanting;
here is the fear of God wanting, and a good conversation wanting: 'Thou art weighed
in the balances, and art found wanting' (Dan 5:27).
6. Together with these standeth by the companions of death, death and hell, death
and evils, death and endless torment in the everlasting flames of devouring fire.
'When God cometh up unto the people he will invade them with his troops' (Hab 3:16).
But how will this man die? Can his heart now endure, or can his hands be strong?
(Eze 22:14).
(1.) God, and Christ, and pity, have left him. Sin against light, against mercy,
and the long-suffering of God, is come up against him; his hope and confidence now
lie a-dying by him, and his conscience totters and shakes continually within him!
(2.) Death is at his work, cutting of him down, hewing both bark and heart, both
body and soul asunder. The man groans, but death hears him not; he looks ghastly,
carefully, dejectedly; he sighs, he sweats, he trembles, but death matters nothing.
(3.) Fearful cogitations haunt him, misgivings, direful apprehensions of God, terrify
him. Now he hath time to think what the loss of heaven will be, and what the torments
of hell will be: now he looks no way but he is frighted.
(4.) Now would he live, but may not; he would live, though it were but the life of
a bed-rid man, but he must not. He that cuts him down sways him as the feller of
wood sways the tottering tree; now this way, then that, at last a root breaks, a
heart-string, an eye-string, sweeps asunder.
(5.) And now, could the soul be annihilated, or brought to nothing, how happy would
it count itself, but it sees that may not be. Wherefore it is put to a wonderful
strait; stay in the body it may not, go out of the body it dares not. Life is going,
the blood settles in the flesh, and the lungs being no more able to draw breath through
the nostrils, at last out goes the weary trembling soul, which is immediately seized
by devils, who lay lurking in every hole in the chamber for that very purpose. His
friends take care of the body, wrap it up in the sheet or coffin, but the soul is
out of their thought and reach, going down to the chambers of death.
I had thought to have enlarged, but I forbear. God, who teaches man to profit, bless
this brief and plain discourse to thy soul, who yet standest a professor in the land
of the living, among the trees of his garden. Amen.
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