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T H E First Preached at Pinners Hall and now Enlarged and Published for Good. By J O H N.B U N Y A N. L O N D O N, Printed for Benjamin Alsop, at the Angel and Bible in the Poultry, 1682. Faithfully reprinted from the Author's First Edition. Written six years before John Bunyan's death. |
THE GREATNESS OF THE SOUL, AND UNSPEAKABLENESS OF THE LOSS THEREOF
OR WHAT SHALL A MAN GIVE IN
EXCHANGE FOR HIS SOUL? MARK 8:37.
HAVE chosen at this time to handle these words
among you, and that for several reasons:
l. Because the soul, and the salvation of it, are such great, such wonderful great
things; nothing is a matter of that concern as is, and should be, the soul of each
one of you. House and land, trades and honours, places and preferments, what are
they to salvation? to the salvation of the soul?
2. Because I perceive that this so great a thing, and about which persons should
be so much concerned, is neglected to amazement, and that by the most of men; yea,
who is there of the many thousands that sit daily under the sound of the gospel that
are concerned, heartily concerned, about the salvation of their souls?that is, concerned,
I say, as the nature of the thing requireth. If ever a lamentation was fit to be
taken up in this age about, for, or concerning anything, it is about, for, and concerning
the horrid neglect that everywhere puts forth itself with reference to salvation.
Where is one man in a thousand, yea, where is there two of ten thousand that do show
by their conversation, public and private, that the soul, their own souls, are considered
by them, and that they are taking that care for the salvation of them as becomes
them, to wit, as the weight of the work, and the nature of salvation requireth?
3. I have therefore pitched upon this text at this time; to see, if peradventure
the discourse which God shall help me to make upon it, will awaken you, rouse you
off your beds of ease, security, and pleasure, and fetch you down upon your knees
before Him, to beg of Him grace to be concerned about the salvation of your souls.
And then, in the last place, I have taken upon me to do this, that I may deliver,
if not you, yet myself, and that I may be clear of your blood, and stand quit, as
to you, before God, when you shall, for neglect, be damned, and wail to consider
that you have lost your souls. When I say, saith God, unto the wicked, Thou shalt
surely die; and thou, the prophet or preacher, givest him not warning, nor speakest
to warn the wicked from his wicked way, to save his life; the same wicked man shall
die in his iniquity; but his blood will I require at thine hand. Yet if thou warn
the wicked, and he turn not front his wickedness, nor from his wicked way, he shall
die in his iniquity; but thou hast delivered thy soul (Eze 3:18, 19).
Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?
In my handling of these words, I shall first speak to the occasion of them, and then
to the words themselves.
The occasion of the words was, for that the people that now were auditors to the
Lord Jesus, and that followed him, did it without that consideration as becomes so
great a work that is, the generality of them that followed Him were not for considering
first with themselves, what it was to profess Christ, and what that profession might
cost them.
And when he had called the people unto him , the great multitude that went with him
(Luke14:25) with his disciples also, he said unto them, Whosoever will come after
me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me (Mark 8:34). Let him
first sit down and count up the cost, and the charge he is like to be at, if he follows
me. For following of me is not like following of some other masters. The wind sits
always on my face, and the foaming rage of the sea of this world, and the proud and
lofty waves thereof, do continually beat upon the sides of the bark of the ship that
myself, my cause, and my followers are in; he therefore that will not run hazards,
and that is afraid to venture a drowning, let him not set foot into this vessel.
So whosever doth not bear his cross, and come after me, he cannot be my disciple.
For which of you, intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first and counteth
the cost, whether he have sufficient to finish it (Luke 14:27-29).
True, to reason, this kind of language tends to cast water upon weak and beginning
desires, but to faith, it makes the things set before us, and the greatness, and
the glory of them, more apparently excellent and desirable. Reason will say, Then
who will profess Christ that hath such coarse entertainment at the beginning? but
faith will say, Then surely the things that are at the end of a Christians race in
this world must needs be unspeakably glorious; since whoever hath had but the knowledge
and due consideration of them, have not stuck to run hazards, hazards of every kind,
that they might embrace and enjoy them. Yea, saith faith, it must needs be so, since
the Son himself, that best knew what they were, even, for the joy that was set before
Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of
the throne of God (Heb 12:2).
But, I say, there is not in every man this knowledge of things and so by consequence
not such consideration as can make the cross and self-denial acceptable to them for
the sake of Christ, and of the things that are where He now sitteth at the right
hand of God (Col 3:2-4). Therefore our Lord Jesus doth even at the beginning give
to His followers this instruction. And lest any of them should take distaste at His
saying, He presenteth them with the consideration of three things together, namely,
the cross, the loss of life, and the soul; and then reasoneth with them from the
same, saying, Here is the cross, the life, and the soul.
1. The cross, and that you must take up, if you will follow Me.
2. The life, and that you may save for a time, if you cast Me off.
3. And the soul, which will everlastingly perish if you come not to Me, and abide
not with Me.
Now consider what is best to be done. Will you take up the cross, come after Me,
and so preserve your souls from perishing? or will you shun the cross to save your
lives, and so run the danger of eternal damnation? Or, as you have it in John, will
you love your life till you lose it? or will you hate your life, and save it? He
that loveth his life shall lose it; and he that hateth his life in this world shall
keep it unto life eternal (John 12:25). As who should say, He that loveth a temporal
life, he that so loveth it, as to shun the profession of Christ to save it, shall
lose it upon a worse account, than if he had lost it for Christ and the gospel; but
he that will set light by it, for the love that he hath to Christ, shall keep it
unto life eternal.
Christ having thus discoursed with His followers about their denying of themselves,
their taking up their cross and following of Him, doth, in the next place, put the
question to them, and so leaveth it upon them for ever, saying, For what shall it
profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? (Mark 8:36).
As who should say, I have bid you take heed that you do not lightly, and without
due consideration, enter into a profession of Me and of My gospel; for he that without
due consideration shall begin to profess Christ, will also without it forsake Him,
turn from Him, and cast Him behind his back; and since I have even at the beginning,
laid the consideration of the cross before you, it is because you should not be surprised
and overtaken by it unawares, and because you should know that to draw back from
Me after you have laid your hand to My plough, will make you unfit for the kingdom
of heaven (Luke 9:62).
Now, since this is so, there is no less lies at stake than salvation, and salvation
is worth all the world, yea, worth ten thousand worlds, if there should be so many.
And since this is so also, it will be your wisdom to begin to profess the gospel
with expectation of the cross and tribulation, for to that are my gospellers[1] in this world appointed
(James 1:12; 1 Thess 3:3). And if you begin thus, and hold it, the kingdom and crown
shall be yours; for as God counteth it a righteous thing to recompense tribulation
to them that trouble you, so to you who are troubled and endure it (for we count
them happy, says James, that endure, (James 5:11), rest with saints, when the Lord
Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with His mighty angels in flaming fire, to take
vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel, etc. (2 Thess
1:7, 8). And if no less lies at stake than salvation, then is a mans soul and his
all at the stake; and if it be so, what will it profit a man if, by forsaking of
Me, he should get the whole world? For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain
the whole world, and lose his own soul?
Having thus laid the soul in one balance, and the world in the other, and affirmed
that the soul out-bids the whole world, and is incomparably for value and worth beyond
it; in the next place, he descends to a second question, which is that I have chosen
at this time for my text, saying, Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?
In these words, we have first a supposition, and such an one as standeth upon a double
bottom. The supposition is this. That the soul is capable of being lost; or thus
'tis possible for a man to lose his soul. The double bottom that this supposition
is grounded upon is, first, a mans ignorance of the worth of his soul, and of the
danger that it is in; and the second is, for that men commonly do set a higher price
upon present ease and enjoyments than they do upon eternal salvation. The last of
these doth naturally follow upon the first; for if men be ignorant of the value and
worth of their souls, as by Christ in the verse before is implied, what should hinder
but that men should set a higher esteem upon that with which their carnal desires
are taken, than upon that about which they are not concerned, and of which they know
not the worth.
But again, as this by the text is clearly supposed, so to here is also something
implied; namely, that it is impossible to possess some men with the worth of their
souls until they are utterly and everlastingly lost. What shall a man give in exchange
for his soul? That is, men when their souls are lost, and shut down under the hatches
in the pits and hells in endless perdition and destruction, then they will see the
worth of their souls, then they will consider what they have lost, and truly not
till then. This is plain, not only to sense, but by the natural scope of the words,
What shall a man give in exchange for his soul? Or what would not those that are
now for sin, made to see themselves lost, by the light of hell fire for some will
never be convinced that they are lost till, with rich Dives, they see it in the light
of hell flames (Luke 16:22, 23). I say, what would not such, if they had it, give
in exchange for their immortal souls, or to recover them again from that place and
torment?[2]
I shall observe two truths in the words.
The first is, That the loss of the soul is the highest, the greatest loss, a loss
that can never be repaired or made up. What shall a man give in exchange for his
soul?that is, to recover or redeem his lost soul to liberty?
The second truth is this, That how unconcerned and careless so ever some now be,
about the loss or salvation of their souls, yet the day is coming; but it will then
be too late, when men will be willing, had they never so much, to give it all in
exchange for their souls. For so the question implies what will a man give in exchange
for his soul? What would he not give? What would he not part with at that day, the
day in which he will see himself damned, if he had it, in exchange for his soul?
The first observation, or truth, drawn from the words is cleared by the text, What
shall a man give in exchange for his soul?that is, there is not anything, nor all
the things under heaven, were they all in one mans hand, and all at his disposal,
that would go in exchange for the soul, that would be of value to fetch back one
lost soul, or that would certainly recover it from the confines of hell. The redemption
of their soul is precious, and it ceaseth for ever (Psa 49:8). And what saith the
words before the text but the same. For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain
the whole world, and lose his own soul? What shall profit a man that has lost his
soul? Nothing at all, though he hath by that loss gained the whole world; for all
the world is not worth a soul, not worth a soul in the eye of God and judgment of
the law. And it is from this consideration that good Elihu cautioneth Job to take
heed, Because there is wrath, saith he, beware lest He take thee away with His stroke:
then a great ransom cannot deliver thee. Will He esteem thy riches? no, not gold,
nor all the forces of strength (Job 36:18,19). Riches and power, what is there more
in the world? for money answereth all things that is, all but soul concerns. It can
neither be a price for souls while here, nor can that, with all the forces of strength,
recover one out of hell fire.
DOCTRINE FIRST.
So then, the first truth drawn from the words stands firm namely,
That the loss of the soul is the highest, the greatest loss; a loss that can never
be repaired or made up.
In my discourse upon this subject, I shall observe this method:
FIRST, I shall show you what the soul is.
SECOND, I shall show you the greatness of it.
THIRD, I shall show you what it is to lose the soul.
FOURTH, I shall show you the cause for which men lose their souls; and by this time
the greatness of the loss will be manifest.
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