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A By J O H N.B U N Y A N. "And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely."—Revelation 22:17 L O N D O N, Printed for N. Ponder, at the Peacock in the Poultry, over against the Stocks market: 1679. First published seven years after John Bunyan's twelve year incarceration. |
[THE USE OF THIS DOCTRINE.]
aving proceeded thus far about this doctrine of the fear of God,
I now come to make some use and application of the whole; and my
[USE FIRST, of Examination.]
FIRST USE shall be a USE OF EXAMINATION. Is this fear of God such an excellent thing?
Is it attended with so many blessed privileges? Then this should put us, every soul
of us, upon a diligent examination of ourselves, to wit, whether this grace be in
us or not, for if it be, then thou art one of these blessed ones to whom belong these
glorious privileges, for thou hast an interest in every of them; but if it shall
appear that this grace is not in thee, then thy state is fearfully miserable, as
hath partly been manifest already, and will further be seen in what comes after.
Now, the better to help thee to consider, and not to miss in finding out what thou
art in thy self-examination, I will speak to this— First. In general. Second. In
particular.
First. In general. No man brings this grace into the world with him. Every one by
nature is destitute of it; for naturally none fear God, there is no fear of God,
none of this grace of fear before their eyes, they do not so much as know what it
is; for this fear flows, as was showed before, from a new heart, faith, repentance
and the like; of which new heart, faith, and repentance, if thou be void, thou art
also void of this godly fear. Men must have a mighty change of heart and life, or
else they are strangers to this fear of God. Alas, how ignorant are the most of this!
Yea, and some are not afraid to say they are not changed, nor desire so to be. Can
these fear God? can these be possessed with this grace of fear? No: "Because
they have no changes, therefore they fear not God" (Psa 55:19; Psa 36:1; Rom
3:18).
Wherefore, sinner, consider whoever thou art that art destitute of this fear of God,
thou art void of all other graces; for this fear, as also I have showed, floweth
from the whole stock of grace where it is. There is not one of the graces of the
Spirit, but this fear is in the bowels of it; yea, as I may say, this fear is the
flower and beauty of every grace; neither is there anything, let it look as much
like grace as it will, that will be counted so indeed, if the fruit thereof be not
this fear of God; wherefore, I say again, consider well of this matter, for as thou
shalt be found with reference to this grace, so shall thy judgment be. I have but
briefly treated of this grace, yet have endeavoured, with words as fit as I could,
to display it in its colours before thy face, first by showing you what this fear
of God is, then what it flows from, as also what doth flow from it; to which, as
was said before, I have added several privileges that are annexed to this fear, that
by all, if it may be, thou mayest see it if thou hast it, and thyself without it
if thou hast it not. Wherefore I refer thee thither again for information in this
thing; or if thou art loath to give the book a second reading, but wilt go on to
the end now thou art gotten hither; then
Second and particularly, I conclude with these several propositions concerning those
that fear not God.
1. That man that is proud, and of a high and lofty mind, fears not God. This is plain
from the exhortation, "Be not high-minded, but fear" (Rom 11:20). Here
you see that a high mind and the fear of God are set in direct opposition the one
to the other; and there is in them, closely concluded by the apostle, that where
indeed the one is, there cannot be the other; where there is a high mind, there is
not the fear of God; and where there is the fear of God, the mind is not high but
lowly. Can a man at the same time be a proud man, and fear God too? Why, then, is
it said God beholdeth every one that is proud, and abases him? and again, He beholds
the proud afar off? He therefore that is proud of his person, of his riches, of his
office, of his parts, and the like, feareth not God. It is also manifest further,
for God resisteth the proud, which he would not do, if he feared him, but in that
he sets him at such a distance from him, in that he testifies that he will abase
him and resist him, it is evident that he is not the man that hath this grace of
fear; for that man, as I have showed you, is the man of God's delight, the object
of his pleasure (Psa 138:6; James 4:6; 1 Peter 5:5; Mal 4:1).
2. The covetous man feareth not God. This also is plain from the Word, because it
setteth covetousness and the fear of God in direct opposition. Men that fear God
are said to hate covetousness (Exo 18:21). Besides, the covetous man is called an
idolater, and is said to have no part in the kingdom of Christ and of God. And again,
"The wicked boasteth of his heart's desire, and blesseth the covetous, whom
the Lord abhorreth" (Eze 33:31; Eph 5:5; Psa 10:3). Hearken to this, you that
hunt the world to take it, you that care not how you get, so you get the world. Also
you that make even religion your stalking-horse to get the world, you fear not God.
And what will you do whose hearts go after your covetousness? you who are led by
covetousness up and down, as it were by the nose; sometimes to swear, to lie, to
cozen, and cheat and defraud, when you can get the advantage to do it. You are far,
very far, from the fear of God. "Ye adulterers and adulteresses," for so
the covetous are called, "know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity
with God? whosoever, therefore, will be a friend of the world, is the enemy of God"
(James 4:4).
3. The riotous eaters of flesh have not the fear of God. For this is done "without
fear" (Jude 12). Gluttony is a sin little taken notice of, and as little repented
of by those that use it, but yet it is odious in the sight of God, and the practice
of it a demonstration of the want of his fear in the heart: yea, so odious is it,
that God forbids that his people should so much as company with such. "Be not,"
saith he, "among wine-bibbers, among riotous eaters of flesh" (Prov 23:20).
And he further tells us, that they that are such, are spots and blemishes to those
that keep them company, for indeed they fear not God (2 Peter 2:13; Rom 13:13; 1
Peter 4:4). Alas! some men are as if they were for nought else born but to eat and
to drink, and pamper their carcasses with the dainties of this world, quite forgetting
why God sent them hither; but such, as is said, fear not God, and so consequently
are of the number of them upon whom the day of judgment will come at unawares (Luke
21:34).
4. The liar is one that fears not God. This also is evident from the plain text,
"Thou hast lied," saith the Lord, "and hast not remembered me, nor
laid it to thy heart: have not I held my peace even of old," saith the Lord,
"and thou fearest me not?" (Isa 57:11). What lie this was is not material;
it was a lie, or a course of lying that is here rebuked, and the person or persons
in this practice, as is said, were such as feared not God; a course of lying and
the fear of God cannot stand together. This sin of lying is a common sin, and it
walketh in the world in several guises. There is the profane scoffing liar, there
is the cunning artificial liar, there is the hypocritical religious liar, with liars
of other ranks and degrees. But none of them all have the fear of God, nor shall
any of them, they not repenting, escape the damnation of hell—"All liars shall
have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone" (Rev 21:8).
Heaven and the New Jerusalem are not a place for such—"And there shall in no
wise enter into it anything that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination,
or maketh a lie" (v 27). Therefore another scripture says that all liars are
without—"For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers,
and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie" (Rev 22:15). But this
should not be their sentence, judgment, and condemnation, if they that are liars
were such as had in them this blessed fear of God.
5. They fear not God who cry unto him for help in the time of their calamity, and
when they are delivered, they return to their former rebellion. This, Moses, in a
spirit of prophecy, asserteth at the time of the mighty judgment of the hail. Pharaoh
then desired him to pray to God that he would take away that judgment from him. Well,
so I will, said Moses, "But as for thee and thy servants, I know that ye will
not yet fear the Lord God" (Exo 9:30). As who should say, I know that so soon
as this judgment is removed, you will to your old rebellion again. And what greater
demonstration can be given that such a man feareth not God, than to cry to God to
be delivered from affliction to prosperity, and to spend that prosperity in rebellion
against him? This is crying for mercies that they may be spent, or that we may have
something to spend upon our lusts, and in the service of Satan (John 4:1-3). Of these
God complains in the sixteenth of Ezekiel, and in the second of Hosea—"Thou
hast," saith God, "taken thy fair jewels of my gold and of my silver, which
I had given thee, and madest to thyself images" &c. (Eze 16:17). This was
for want of the fear of God. Many of this kind there be now in the world, both of
men, and women, and children; art not thou that readest this book of this number?
Hast thou not cried for health when sick, for wealth when poor, when lame for strength,
when in prison for liberty, and then spent all that thou gottest by thy prayer in
the service of Satan, and to gratify thy lusts? Look to it, sinner, these things
are signs that with thy heart thou fearest not God.
6. They fear not God that way-lay his people and seek to overthrow them, or to turn
them besides the right path, as they are journeying from hence to their eternal rest.
This is evident from the plain text, "Remember," saith God, "what
Amalek did unto thee by the way when ye were come forth out of Egypt; how he met
thee by the way, and smote the hindmost of thee, even all that were feeble behind
thee, when thou wast faint and weary, and he feared not God" (Deut 25:17,18).
Many such Amalekites there be now in the world that set themselves against the feeble
of the flock, against the feeble of the flock especially, still smiting them, some
by power, some with the tongue, some in their lives and estates, some in their names
and reputations, by scandals, slanders, and reproach, but the reason of this their
ungodly practice is this, they fear not God. For did they fear him, they would be
afraid to so much as think, much more of attempting to afflict and destroy, and calumniate
the children of God; but such there have been, such there are, and such there will
be in the world, for all men fear not God.
7. They fear not God who see his hand upon backsliders for their sins, and yet themselves
will be backsliders also. "I saw," saith God, "when for all the causes
whereby backsliding Israel committed adultery, I had put her away, and given her
a bill of divorce, yet her treacherous sister Judah feared not, but went and played
the harlot also" (Jer 3:8, 2:19). Judah saw that her sister was put away, and
delivered by God into the hands of Shalmaneser, who carried her away beyond Babylon,
and yet, though she saw it, she went and played the harlot also—a sign of great hardness
of heart, and of the want of the fear of God indeed. For this fear, had it been in
her heart, it would have taught her to have trembled at the judgment that was executed
upon her sister, and not to have gone and played the harlot also: and not to have
done it while her sister's judgment was in sight and memory. But what is it that
a heart that is destitute of the fear of God will not do? No sin comes amiss to such:
yea, they will sin, they will do that themselves, for the doing of which they believe
some are in hell-fire, and all because they fear not God.
But pray observe, if those that take not warning when they see the hand of God upon
backsliders, are said to have none of the fear of God, have they it, think you, that
lay stumbling-blocks in the way of God's people, and use devices to cause them to
backslide, yea, rejoice when they can do this mischief to any? and yet many of this
sort there are in the world, that even rejoice when they see a professor fall into
sin, and go back from his profession, as if they had found some excellent thing.
8. They fear not God who can look upon a land as wallowing in sin, and yet are not
humbled at the sight thereof. "Have ye," said God by the prophet to the
Jews, "forgotten the wickedness of your fathers, and the wickedness of the kings
of Judah, and the wickedness of their wives, which they have committed in the land
of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem? They are not humbled to this day, neither
have they feared, nor walked in my law" (Jer 44:9,10). Here is a land full of
wickedness, and none to bewail it, for they wanted the fear of God, and love to walk
in his law. But how say you, if they that are not humbled at their own and others'
wickedness are said not to fear, or have the fear of God, what shall we think or
say of such that receive, that nourish and rejoice in such wickedness? Do they fear
God? Yea, what shall we say of such that are the inventors and promoters of wickedness,
as of oaths, beastly talk, or the like? Do they, do you think, fear God? Once again,
what shall we say of such that cannot be content to be wicked themselves, and to
invent and rejoice in other men's wickedness, but must hate, reproach, vilify and
abuse those that they cannot persuade to be wicked? Do they fear God?
9. They that take more heed to their own dreams than to the Word of God, fear not
God. This also is plain from the Word—"For in the multitude of dreams, there
are also divers vanities, but fear thou God" ; that is, take heed unto his Word
(Eccl 5:7; Isa 8:20). Here the fearing of God is opposed to our overmuch heeding
dreams: and there is implied, that it is for want of the fear of God that men so
much heed those things. What will they say to this that give more heed to a suggestion
that ariseth from their foolish hearts, or that is cast in thither by the devil,
than they do to the holy Word of God? These are "filthy dreamers." Also,
what shall we say to those that are more confident of the mercy of God to their soul,
because he hath blessed them with outward things, than they are afraid of his wrath
and condemnation, though the whole of the Word of God doth fully verify the same?
These are "filthy dreamers" indeed.
A dream is either real, or so by way of semblance, and so some men dream sleeping,
and some waking (Isa 29:7). And as those that a man dreams sleeping are caused either
by God, Satan, business, flesh, or the like; so are they that a man dreams waking,
to pass by those that we have in our sleep. Men, when bodily awake, may have dreams,
that is, visions from heaven; such are all they that have a tendency to discover
to the sinner his state, or the state of the church according to the Word. But those
that are from Satan, business, and the flesh, are such—especially the first and last,
to wit, from Satan and the flesh—as tend to embolden men to hope for good in a way
disagreeing with the Word of God.[25]
These Jude calls "filthy dreamers," such whose principles were their dreams,
and they led them "to defile the flesh," that is, by fornication and uncleanness;
"to despise dominion," that the reins might be laid upon the neck of their
lusts; "to speak evil of dignities," of those that God had set over them,
for their governing in all the law and testament of Christ, these dreamt that to
live like brutes, to be greedy of gain, and to take away for it, as Cain and Balaam
did by their wiles, the lives of the owners thereof, would go for good coin in the
best of trials. These also Peter speaks of (2 Peter 2). And he makes their dreams,
that Jude calls so, their principle and errors in life and doctrine; you may read
of them in that whole chapter, where they are called cursed children, and so by consequence
such as fear not God.
10. They fear not God, who are sorcerers, adulterers, false swearers, and that oppress
the hireling of his wages. It is a custom with some men to keep back by fraud from
the hireling that which by covenant they agreed to pay for their labour; pinching,
I say, and paring from them their due that of right belongs to them, to the making
of them cry in "the ears of the Lord of sabaoth" (James 5:4). These fear
not God; they are reckoned among the worst of men, and in their day of account God
himself will bear witness against them. "And I," saith God, "will
come near to you to judgment; and I will be a swift witness against the adulterers,
and against the false swearers, and against those that oppress the hireling in his
wages, the widow and the fatherless, and that turn aside the stranger from his right,
and fear not me, saith the Lord" (Mal 3:5).
11. They fear not God, who instead of pitying of, rail at God's people in their affliction,
temptations, and persecutions, and rather rejoice and skip for joy, than sympathize
with them in their sorrow. Thus did David's enemies, thus did Israel's enemies, and
thus did the thief, he railed at Christ when he hanged upon the cross, and was for
that, even by his fellow, accounted for one that feared not God (Luke 23:40; Psa
35:1,22-26. Read Oba 10-15; Jer 48:2-6). This is a common thing among the children
of men, even to rejoice at the hurt of them that fear God, and it ariseth even of
an inward hatred to godliness. They hate you, saith Christ, because they hated me.
Therefore Christ takes what is done to his, in this, as done unto himself, and so
to holiness of life. But this falls hard upon such as despise at, and rejoice to
see, God's people in their griefs, and that take the advantage, as dogged Shimei
did, to augment the griefs and afflictions of God's people (2 Sam 16:5-8). These
fear not God, they do this of enmity, and their sin is such as will hardly be blotted
out (1 Kings 2:8,9).
12. They fear not God, who are strangers to the effects of fear. "If I be a
master, where is my fear?" That is, show that I am so by your fear of me in
the effects of your fear of me. "You offer polluted bread upon mine altar."
This is not a sign that you fear me, ye offer the blind for sacrifices, where is
my fear? ye offer the lame and the sick, these are not the effects of the fear of
God (Mal 1:6-8). Sinner, it is one thing to say, I fear God, and another to fear
him indeed. Therefore, as James says, show me thy faith by thy works, so here God
calls for a testimony of thy fear by the effects of fear. I have already showed you
several effects of fear; if thou art a stranger to them, thou art a stranger to this
grace of fear. Therefore, to conclude this, it is not a feigned profession that will
do; nothing is good here, but what is salted with this fear of God, and they that
fear him are men of truth, men of singleness of heart, perfect, upright, humble,
holy men; wherefore, reader, examine, and again, I say examine, and lay the Word
and thy heart together, before that thou concludest that thou fearest God.
What! fear God, and in a state of nature? fear God without a change of heart and
life? What! fear God and be proud, and covetous, a wine-bibber, and a riotous eater
of flesh? How! fear God and a liar, and one that cries for mercies to spend them
upon thy lusts? This would be strange. True, thou mayest fear as devils do, but what
will that profit? Thou mayest by thy fear be driven away from God, from his worship,
people, and ways, but what will that avail? It may be thou mayest so fear at present,
as to be a little stopped in thy sinful course; perhaps thou hast got a knock from
the Word of God, and are at present a little dazzled and hindered from being in thy
former and full career after sin; but what of that? if by the fear that thou hast,
thy heart is not united to God, and to the love of his Son, Word, and people, thy
fear is nothing worth.[26] Many men also are forced to fear God, as
underlings are forced to fear those that are by force above them. If thou only thus
fearest God, it is but a false fear; it flows not from love to God: this fear brings
not willing subjection, which indeed brings the effect of right fear; but being over-mastered
like an hypocrite, thou subjected thyself by feigned obedience, being forced, I say,
by mere dread to do it (Psa 66:3).
It is said of David, "that the fame of him went out into all lands, and the
Lord brought the fear of him upon all nations" (1 Chron 14:17). But what, did
they now love David? did they now choose him to be their king? no verily; they, many
of them, rather hated him, and, when they could, made resistance against him. They
did even as thou dost—feared, but did not love; feared, but did not choose his government
that ruled over them. It is also said of Jehoshaphat, when God had subdued before
him Ammon, Moab, and mount Seir, that "the fear of God was on all the kingdoms
of these countries, when they had heard that the Lord fought against the enemies
of Israel" (2 Chron 20:29). But, I say, was this fear, that is called now the
fear of God, anything else, but a dread of the greatness of power of the king? No
verily, nor did that dread bring them into a willing subjection to, and liking of
his laws and government; it only made them like slaves and underlings, stand in fear
of his executing the vengeance of God upon them.
Therefore still, notwithstanding this fear, they were rebels to him in their hearts,
and when occasion and advantage offered themselves, they showed it by rising in rebellion
against Israel. This fear therefore provoked but feigned and forced obedience, a
right emblem of the obedience of such, who being still enemies in their minds to
God, are forced by virtue of present conviction to yield a little, even of fear to
God, to his Word, and to his ordinances. Reader, whoever thou art, think of this,
it is thy concern, therefore do it, and examine, and examine again, and look diligently
to thy heart in thine examination, that it beguile thee not about this thy so great
concern, as indeed the fear of God is.
One thing more, before I leave thee, let me warn thee of. Take heed of deferring
to fear the Lord. Some men, when they have had conviction upon their heart that the
fear of God is not in them, have through the overpowering of their corruptions yet
deferred and put off the fear of God from them, as it is said of them in Jeremiah:
"This people hath a revolting and a rebellious heart; they are revolted and
gone. Neither say they in their heart, Let us now fear the Lord" (Jer 5:23,24).
They saw that the judgments of God attended them because they did not yet fear God,
but that conviction would not prevail with them to say, "Let us now fear the
Lord." They were for deferring to fear him still; they were for putting off
his fear from them longer. Sinner, hast thou deferred to fear the Lord? is thy heart
still so stubborn as not to say yet, "Let us fear the Lord?" O! the Lord
hath taken notice of this thy rebellion, and is preparing some dreadful judgment
for thee. "Shall I not visit for these things? saith the Lord; shall not my
soul be avenged on such a nation as this?" (v 29). Sinner, why shouldest thou
pull vengeance down upon thee? why shouldest thou pull vengeance down from heaven
upon thee? Look up, perhaps thou hast already been pulling this great while, to pull
it down upon thee. O! pull no longer; why shouldest thou be thine own executioner?
Fall down upon thy knees, man, and up with thy heart and thy hands to the God that
dwells in the heavens; cry, yea cry aloud, Lord, unite mine heart to fear thy name,
and do not harden mine heart from thy fear. Thus holy men have cried before thee,
and by crying have prevented judgment.
[A few things that may provoke thee to fear the Lord.]
Before I leave this use, let me give thee a few things, that, if God will, may provoke
thee to fear the Lord.
1. The man that feareth not God, carrieth it worse towards him than the beast, the
brute beast, doth carry it towards that man. "The fear of you, and the dread
of you, shall be upon every beast of the earth," yea, "and upon every fowl
of the air," and "upon all that moveth upon the earth, and upon all the
fishes of the sea" (Gen 9:2).
Mark, all my creatures shall fear you, and dread you, says God. None of them shall
be so hardy as to cast of all reverence of you. But what a shame is this to man,
that God should subject all his creatures to him, and he should refuse to stoop his
heart to God? The beast, the bird, the fish, and all, have a fear and dread of man,
yea, God has put it in their hearts to fear man, and yet man is void of fear and
dread, I mean of godly fear of him, that thus lovingly hath put all things under
him. Sinner, art thou not ashamed, that a silly cow, a sheep, yea, a swine, should
better observe the law of his creation, than thou dost the law of thy God?
2. Consider, he that will not fear God, God will make him fear him whether he will
or no. That is, he that doth not, will not now so fear him, as willingly to bow before
him, and put his neck into his yoke. God will make him fear him when he comes to
take vengeance on him. Then he will surround him with terror, and with fear on every
side, fear within, and fear without; fear shall be in the way, even in the way that
thou goest when thou art going out of this world; and that will be dreadful fear
(Eccl 12:5). "I will bring their fears upon them," saith the Lord (Isa
66:4).
3. He that fears not God now, the Lord shall laugh at his fears then. Sinner, God
will be even with all them that choose not to have his fear in their hearts: for
as he calls and they hear not now, so they shall cry, yea, howl then, and he will
laugh at their fears. "I will laugh," saith he, "at their destruction;
I will mock when their fear cometh, when your fear cometh as desolation and your
destruction cometh as a whirlwind, when distress and anguish cometh upon you; then
shall they call upon me, but I will not answer: they shall seek me early, but they
shall not find me, for that they hated knowledge, and did not choose the fear of
the Lord" (Prov 1:27-29).
Sinner! thou thinkest to escape the fear; but what wilt thou do with the pit? Thou
thinkest to escape the pit; but what wilt thou do with the snare? The snare, say
you, what is that? I answer, it is even the work of thine own hands. "The wicked
is snared in the work of his own hands," he is "snared by the transgression
of his lips" (Psa 9:16; Prov 12:13).
Sinner! what wilt thou do when thou comest into this snare; that is, into the guilt
and terror that thy sins will snaffle[27] thee with, when
they, like a cord, are fastened about thy soul? This snare will bring thee back again
to the pit, which is hell, and then how wilt thou do to be rid of thy fear? The fear,
pit, and the snare shall come upon thee, because thou fearest not God.
Sinner! art thou one of them that hast cast off fear? poor man, what wilt thou do
when these three things beset thee? whither wilt thou fly for help? And where wilt
thou leave thy glory? If thou fliest from the fear, there is the pit; if thou fliest
from the pit, there is the snare.
[USE SECOND, an exhortation to fear God.]
SECOND USE. My next word shall be AN EXHORTATION TO FEAR GOD. I mean an exhortation
to saints—"O fear the Lord, ye his saints, for there is no want to them that
fear him." Not but that every saint doth fear God, but as the apostle saith
in another case, "I beseech you, do it more and more." The fear of the
Lord, as I have showed you, is a grace of the new covenant, as other saving graces
are, and so is capable of being stronger or weaker, as other graces are. Wherefore
I beseech you, fear him more and more.
It is said of Obadiah, that he feared the Lord greatly: every saint fears the Lord,
but every saint does not greatly fear him. O there are but few Obadiahs in the world,
I mean among the saints on earth: see the whole relation of him (1 Kings 18). As
Paul said of Timothy, "I have none like-minded," so it may be said of some
concerning the fear of the Lord; they have scarce a fellow. So it was with Job, "There
is none like him in the earth, one that feareth God," &c. (Job 1:8). There
was even none in Job's day that feared God like him, no, there was not one like him
in all the earth, but doubtless there were more in the world that feared God; but
this fearing of him greatly, that is the thing that saints should do, and that was
the thing that Job did do, and in that he did outstrip his fellows. It is also said
of Hananiah, that "he was a faithful man, and feared God above many" (Neh
7:2). He also had got, as to the exercise of, and growth in, this grace, the start
of many of his brethren. He "feared God above many." Now then, seeing this
grace admits of degrees, and is in some stronger, and in some weaker, let us be all
awakened as to other graces, so to this grace also. That like as you abound in everything,
in faith, in utterance, in knowledge, and in all diligence, and in your love to us,
see that ye abound in this grace also. I will labour to enforce this exhortation
upon you by several motives.
First. Let God's distinguishing love to you be a motive to you to fear him greatly.
He hath put his fear in thy heart, and hath not given that blessing to thy neighbour;
perhaps not to thy husband, thy wife, thy child, or thy parent. O what an obligation
should this consideration lay upon thy heart greatly to fear the Lord! Remember also,
as I have showed in the first part of this book, that this fear of the Lord is his
treasure, a choice jewel, given only to favourites, and to those that are greatly
beloved. Great gifts naturally tend to oblige, and will do so, I trust, with thee,
when thou shalt ingeniously consider it. It is a sign of a very bad nature when the
contrary shows itself; could God have done more for thee than to have put his fear
in thy heart? This is better than to have given thee a place even in heaven without
it. Yea, had he given thee all faith, all knowledge, and the tongue of men and angels,
and a place in heaven to boot, they had all been short of this gift, of the fear
of God in thy heart. Therefore love it, nourish it, exercise it, use all means to
cause it to increase and grow in thy heart, that it may appear it is set by at thy
hand, poor sinner.
Second. Another motive to stir thee up to grow in this grace of the fear of God may
be the privileges that it lays thee under. What or where wilt thou find in the Bible,
so many privileges so affectionately entailed to any grace, as to this of the fear
of God? God speaks of this grace, and of the privileges that belong unto it, as if,
to speak with reverence, he knew not how to have done blessing of the man that hath
it. It seems to me as if this grace of fear is the darling grace, the grace that
God sets his heart upon at the highest rate. As it were, he embraces the hugs, and
lays the man in his bosom, that hath, and grows strong in this grace of the fear
of God. See again the many privileges in which the man is interested that hath this
grace in his heart: and see also that there are but few of them, wherever mentioned,
but have entailed to them the pronunciation of a blessing, or else that man is spoken
of by way of admiration.
Third. Another motive may be this: The man that groweth in this grace of the fear
of the Lord will escape those evils that others will fall into. Where this grace
is, it keepeth the soul from final apostasy, "I will put my fear in their hearts,
that they shall not depart from me" (Jer 32:40). But yet, if there be not an
increase in this grace, much evil may attend, and be committed notwithstanding. There
is a child that is healthy, and hath its limbs, and can go, but it is careless; now
the evil of carelessness doth disadvantage it very much; carelessness is the cause
of stumblings, of falls, of knocks, and that it falls into the dirt, yea, that sometimes
it is burned, or almost drowned. And thus it is, even with God's people that fear
him, because they add not to their fear a care of growing more in the fear of God,
therefore they reap damage; whereas, were they more in his fear, it would keep them
better, deliver them more, and preserve them from these snares of death.
Fourth. Another motive may be this: To grow in this grace of the fear of God, is
the way to be kept always in a conscientious performance of Christian duties. An
increase in this grace, I say, keeps every grace in exercise, and the keeping of
our graces in their due exercise, produceth a conscientious performance of duties.
Thou hast a watch perhaps in thy pocket, but the hand will not as yet be kept in
any good order, but does always give the lie as to the hour of the day; well, but
what is the way to remedy this, but to look well to the spring, and the wheels within?
for if they indeed go right, so will the hand do also. This is thy case in spiritual
things; thou art a gracious man, and the fear of God is in thee, but yet for all
that, one cannot well tell, by thy life, what time of day it is.[28] Thou givest no
true and constant sign that thou art indeed a Christian; why, the reason is, thou
dost not look well to this grace of the fear of God. Thou dost not grow and increase
in that, but sufferest thy heart to grow careless, and hard, and so thy life remiss
and worldly: Job's growing great in the fear of God made him eschew evil (Job 1,
2:3).
Fifth. Another motive is: This is the way to be wise indeed. A wise man feareth and
departeth from evil. It doth not say a wise man hath the grace of fear, but a wise
man feareth, that is, putteth this grace into exercise. There is no greater sign
of wisdom than to grow in this blessed grace. Is it not a sign of wisdom to depart
from sins, which are the snares of death and hell? Is it not a sign of wisdom for
a man yet more and more to endeavour to interest himself in the love and protection
of God? Is it not a high point of wisdom for a man to be always doing of that which
lays him under the conduct of angels? Surely this is wisdom. And if it be a blessing
to have this fear, is it not wisdom to increase in it? Doubtless it is the highest
point of wisdom, as I have showed before, therefore grow therein.
Sixth. Another motive may be this: It is seemly for saints to fear, and increase
in this fear of God. He is thy Creator; is it not seemly for creatures to fear and
reverence their Creator? He is thy King; is it not seemly for subjects to fear and
reverence their King? He is thy Father; is it not seemly for children to reverence
and fear their Father? yea, and to do it more and more?
Seventh. Another motive may be: It is honourable to grow in this grace of fear; "When
Ephraim spake trembling, he exalted himself in Israel" (Hosea 13:1). Truly,
to fear, and to about in this fear, is a sign of a very princely spirit; and the
reason is, when I greatly fear my God, I am above the fear of all others, nor can
anything in this world, be it never so terrible and dreadful, move me at all to fear
them. And hence it is that Christ counsels us to fear—"And I say unto you, my
friends," saith he, "be not afraid of them that kill the body, and after
that have no more that they can do." Aye, but this is a high pitch, how should
we come by such princely spirits? well, I will forewarn you whom you shall fear,
and by fearing of him, arrive to this pitch, "Fear him, which after he hath
killed, hath power to cast into hell; yea, I say unto you, fear him" (Luke 12:4,5).
Indeed this true fear of God sets a man above all the world. And therefore it saith
again, "Neither fear ye their fear," - but "sanctify the Lord God"
in your hearts, "and let him be your fear, and let him be your dread" (Isa
8:12,13).
Your great ranting, swaggering, roysters,[29] that are ignorant
of the nature of the fear of God, count it a poor, sneaking, pitiful, cowardly spirit
in men to fear and tremble before the Lord; but whoso looks back to jails and gibbets,
to the sword and burning stake, shall see, that there, in them, has been the most
mighty and invincible spirit that has been in the world!
Yea, see if God doth not count that the growth of his people in this grace of fear
is that which makes them honourable, when he positively excludeth those from a dwelling-place
in his house, that do not honour them that fear him (Psa 15:4). And he saith moreover,
"A woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised." If the world and
godless men will not honour these, they shall be honoured some way else. Such, saith
he, "that honour me I will honour," and they shall be honoured in heaven,
in the churches, and among the angels.
Eighth. Another motive to grow in this fear of God may be: This fear, and the increase
of it, qualifies a man to be put in trust with heavenly and spiritual things, yea,
and with earthly things too.
1. For heavenly and spiritual things. "My covenant," saith God, "was
with [Levi] of life and peace, and I gave them to him, for the fear wherewith he
feared me, and was afraid before my name" (Mal 2:5).
Behold what a gift, what a mercy, what a blessing this Levi is intrusted with; to
wit, with God's everlasting covenant, and with the life and peace that is wrapped
up in this covenant. But why is it given to him? the answer is, "for the fear
wherewith he feared me, and was afraid before my name." And the reason is good,
for this fear of God teaches a man to put a due estimation upon every gift of God
bestowed upon us; also it teaches us to make use of the same with reverence of his
name, and respect to his glory in most godly-wise, all which becomes him that is
intrusted with any spiritual gift. The gift here was given to Levi to minister to
his brethren doctrinally thereof, for he, saith God, shall teach Jacob my statutes
and Israel my law. See also Exodus 18:21 and Nehemiah 7:2, with many other places
that might be named, and you will find that men fearing God and hating covetousness;
that men that fear God above others, are intrusted by God, yea, and by his church
too, with the trust and ministration of spiritual things before any other in the
world.
2. For earthly things. This fear of God qualifies a man to be put in trust with them
rather than with another. Therefore God made Joseph lord of all Egypt; Obadiah, steward
of Ahab's house; Daniel, Mordecai, and the three children, were set over the province
of Babylon; and this by the wonderful working hand of God, because he had to dispose
of earthly things now, not only in a common way, but for the good of his people in
special. True, when there is no special matter or thing to be done by God in a nation
for his people, then who will (that is, whether they have grace or no) may have the
disposal of those things; but if God has anything in special to bestow upon his people
of this world's goods, then he will intrust it in the hands of men fearing God. Joseph
must now be made lord of Egypt, because Israel must be kept from starving; Obadiah
must now be made steward of Ahab's house, because the Lord's prophets must be hid
from and fed in despite of the rage and bloody mind of Jezebel; Daniel, with his
companions, and Mordecai also, they were all exalted to earthly and temporal dignity,
that they might in that state, they being men that abounded in the fear of God, be
serviceable to their brethren in their straits and difficulties (Gen 42:18, 41:39;
1 Kings 18:3; Esth 6:10; Dan 2:48, 3:30, 5:29, 6:1-3).
Ninth. Another motive to grow in this grace of fear is, Where the fear of God in
the heart of any is not growing, there no grace thrives, nor duty done as it should.
There no grace thrives, neither faith, hope, love, nor any grace. This is evident
from that general exhortation, "Perfecting holiness in the fear of God"
(2 Cor 7:1). Perfecting holiness, what is that? but as James says of patience, let
every grace have its perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, lacking nothing
(James 1:4).
But this cannot be done but in the fear of God, yea, in the exercise of that grace,
and so consequently in the growth of it, for there is no grace but grows by being
exercised. If then you would be perfect in holiness, if you would have every grace
that God has put into your souls, grow and flourish into perfection; lay them, as
I may say, a-soak in this grace of fear,[30] and do all in the exercise of it; for a little
done in the fear of the Lord is better than the revenues of the wicked. And again,
the Lord will not suffer the soul of the righteous, the soul that liveth in the fear
of the Lord, to famish, but he casteth away the abundance of the wicked. Bring abundance
to God, and if it be not seasoned with godly fear, it shall not be acceptable to
him, but loathsome and abominable in his sight; for it doth not flow from the spirit
of the fear of the Lord.
Therefore, where there is not a growth in this fear, there is no duty done so acceptably.
This flows from that which goes before, for if grace rather decays than grows, where
this grace of fear is not in the growth and increase thereof, then duties in their
glory and acceptableness decay likewise.
Tenth. Another motive to stir thee up to grow in the increase of this grace of fear
is, It is a grace, do but abound therein, that will give thee great boldness both
with God and men. Job was a man a none-such in his day for one that feared God; and
who so bold with God as Job? who so bold with God, and who so bold with men as he?
How bold was he with God, when he wishes for nothing more than that he might come
even to his seat, and concludes that if he could come at him, he would approach even
as a prince unto him, and as such would order his cause before him (Job 23:3-7, 31:35-37).
Also before his friends, how bold was he? For ever as they laid to his charge that
he was an hypocrite, he repels them with the testimony of a good conscience, which
good conscience he got, and kept, and maintained by increasing in the fear of God;
yea, his conscience was kept so good by this grace of fear, for it was by that that
he eschewed evil, that it was common with him to appeal to God when accused, and
also to put himself for his clearing under most bitter curses and imprecations (Job
13:3-9, 18, 19:23,24, 31).
This fear of God is it that keeps the conscience clean and tender, and so free from
much of that defilement that even a good man may be afflicted with, for want of his
growth in this fear of God. Yea, let me add, if a man can with a good conscience
say that he desires to fear the name of God, it will add boldness to his soul in
his approaches into the presence of God. "O Lord," said Nehemiah, "I
beseech thee, let now thine ear be attentive to the prayer of thy servant, and servants,
who desire to fear thy name" (Neh 1:11). He pleaded his desire of fearing the
name of God, as an argument with God to grant him his request; and the reason was,
because God had promised before "to bless them that fear him, both small and
great" (Psa 115:13).
Eleventh. Another motive to stir you up to fear the Lord, and to grow in this fear
is, By it thou mayest have thy labours blessed, to the saving of the souls of others.
It is said of Levi, of whom mention was made before, that he feared God and was afraid
before his name—that he saved others from their sins. "The law of truth was
in his mouth, and he walked with me in peace and equity, and did turn away many from
iniquity" (Mal 2:6). The fear of God that dwelt in his heart, showed its growth
in the sanctifying of the Lord by his life and words, and the Lord also blessed this
his growth herein, by blessing his labours to the saving of his neighbours.
Wouldest thou save thy husband, thy wife, thy children, &c., then be greatly
in the fear of God.
This Peter teaches, "Wives," saith he, "be in subjection to your own
husbands, that, if any obey not the word, they also may without the word be won by
the conversation of the wives, while they behold your chaste conversation, coupled
with fear" (1 Peter 3:1,2). So then, if wives and children, yea, if husbands,
wives, children, servants, &c., did but better observe this general rule of Peter,
to wit, of letting their whole conversation be coupled with fear, they might be made
instruments in God's hand of much more good than they are. But the misery is, the
fear of God is wanting in actions, and that is the cause that so little good is done
by those that profess. It is not a conversation that is coupled with a profession—for
a great profession may be attended with a life that is not good, but scandalous;
but it is a conversation coupled with fear of God—that is, with the impressions of
the fear of God upon it—that is convincing and that ministereth the awakenings of
God to the conscience, in order to saving the unbeliever. O they are a sweet couple,
to wit, a Christian conversation coupled with fear.
The want of this fear of God is that that has been a stumbling-block to the blind
oftentimes. Alas, the world will not be convinced by your talk, by your notions,
and by the great profession that you make, if they see not, therewith mixed, the
lively impressions of the fear of God; but will, as I said, rather stumble and fall,
even at your conversation and at your profession itself. Wherefore, to prevent this
mischief, that is, of stumbling of souls while you make your profession of God, by
a conversation not becoming your profession, God bids you fear him; implying that
a good conversation, coupled with fear, delivers the blind world from those falls
that otherwise they cannot be delivered from. "Thou shalt not curse the deaf,
nor put a stumbling-block before the blind, but shalt fear thy God: I am the Lord"
(Lev 19:14). But shalt fear thy God, that is the remedy that will prevent their stumbling
at you, at what else soever they stumble. Wherefore Paul says to Timothy, "Take
heed unto thyself, and unto the doctrine; continue in them; for in doing this thou
shalt both save thyself and them that hear thee" (1 Tim 4:16).
Twelfth. Another motive to fear, and to grow in this fear of God is, This is the
way to engage God to deliver thee from many outward dangers, whoever falls therein
(Psa 34:7). This is proved from that of the story of the Hebrew midwives. "The
midwives," said Moses, "feared God," and did not drown the men-children
as the king had commanded, but saved them alive. And what follows? "Therefore
God dealt well with the midwives; and it came to pass because the midwives feared
God, that he made them houses" (Exo 1). That is, he sheltered them and caused
them to be hid from the rage and fury of the king, and that perhaps in some of the
houses of the Egyptians themselves for why might not the midwives be there hid as
well as was Moses even in the king's court?[31] And how many times
are they that fear God said to be delivered both by God and his holy angels? as also
I have already showed.
Thirteenth. Another motive to fear and to grow in this fear of God is, This is the
way to be delivered from errors and damnable opinions. There are some that perish
in their righteousness, that is an error; there be some that perish in their wickedness,
and that is an error also. Some again prolong their lives by their wickedness, and
others are righteous over-much, and also some are over-wise, and all these are snares,
and pits, and holes. But then, sayest thou, how shall I escape? Indeed that is the
question, and the Holy Ghost resolves it thus, "He that feareth God shall come
forth of them all" (Eccl 7:18).
Fourteenth. Another motive to fear, and to grow in this fear of God, is, Such as
have leave, be they never so dark in their souls, to come boldly to Jesus Christ,
and to trust in him for life. I told you before, that they that fear God have in
the general a license to trust in him; but now I tell you, and that in particular,
that they, and they especially, may do it, and that though in the dark; you that
sit in darkness and have no light, if this grace of fear be alive in your hearts,
you have this boldness—"Who is among you that feareth the Lord," mark,
that feareth the Lord, "that obeyeth the voice of his servant, that walketh
in darkness, and hath no light? let him trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon
his God" (Isa 50:10). It is no small advantage, you know, when men have to deal
in difficult matters, to have a patent or license to deal; now to trust in the Lord
is a difficult thing, yet the best and most gainful of all. But then, some will say,
since it is so difficult, how may we do without danger? Why, the text gives a license,
a patent to them to trust in his name, that have his fear in their hearts—"Let
him trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God." [32]
Fifteenth. Another motive to fear and grow in this grace of fear, is, God will own
and acknowledge such to be his, whoever he rejecteth. Yea he will distinguish and
separate them from all others, in the day of his terrible judgments. He will do with
them as he did by those that sighed for the abominations that were done in the land—command
the man that hath his ink- horn by his side "to set a mark upon their foreheads,"
that they might not fall in that judgment with others (Eze 9). So God said plainly
of them that feared the Lord, and that thought upon his name, that they should be
writ in his book—"A book of remembrance was written before him for them that
feared the Lord, and that thought upon his name; and they shall be mine, saith the
Lord of hosts, in that day when I make up my jewels, and I will spare them as a man
spareth his own son that serveth him" (Mal 3:16,17). Mark, he both acknowledges
them for his, and also promises to spare them, as a man would spare his own son;
yea, and moreover, will wrap them up as his chief jewels with himself in the bundle
of life. Thus much for the motives.
How to grow in this fear of God.
Having given you these motives to the duty of growing in this fear of God, before
I leave this use, I will, in a few words, show you how you may grow in this fear
of God.
First. Then, if thou wouldest grow in this fear of God, learn aright to distinguish
of fear in general. I mean, learn to distinguish between that fear that is godly,
and that which in itself is indeed ungodly fear of God; and know them well the one
from the other, lest the one, the fear that in itself indeed is ungodly, get the
place, even the upper hand of that which truly is godly fear. And remember the ungodly
fear of God is by God himself counted an enemy to him, and hurtful to his people,
and is therefore most plentifully forbidden in the Word (Gen 3:15, 26:24, 46:3; Exo
14:13, 20:20; Num 14:9, 21:34; Isa 41:10,14, 43:1, 44:2,8; 54:4; Jer 30:10; Dan 10:12,19;
Joel 2:21; Hagg 2:5; Zech 8:13).
Second. If thou wouldest grow in this godly fear, learn rightly to distinguish it
from that fear, in particular, that is godly but for a time; even from that fear
that is wrought by the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage. I say, learn to distinguish
this from that, and also perfectly to know the bounds that God hath set to that fear
that is wrought by the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage; lest, instead of growing in
the fear that is to abide with thy soul for ever, thou be over-run again with that
first fear, which is to abide with thee but till the spirit of adoption come. And
that thou mayest not only distinguish them one from the other, but also keep each
in its due place and bounds, consider in general of what hath already been said upon
this head, and in particular that the first fear is no more wrought by the Holy Spirit,
but by the devil, to distress thee, and make thee to live, not like a son, but a
slave. And for thy better help in this matter, know that God himself hath set bounds
to this fear, and has concluded that after the spirit of adoption is come, that other
fear is wrought in thy heart by him no more (Rom 8:15; 2 Tim 1:7).
Again, before I leave this, let me tell thee that if thou dost not well bestir thee
in this matter, this bondage fear, to wit, that which is like it, though not wrought
in thee by the Holy Ghost, will, by the management and subtlety of the devil, the
author of it, haunt, disturb, and make thee live uncomfortably, and that while thou
art an heir of God and his kingdom. This is that fear that the apostle speaks of,
that makes men "all their lifetime subject to bondage" (Heb 2:14,15). For
though Christ will deliver thee indeed at last, thou having embraced him by faith,
yet thy life will be full of trouble; and death, though Jesus hath abolished it,
will be always a living bugbear to thee in all thy ways and thoughts, to break thy
peace, and to make thee to draw thy loins heavily after him.
Third. Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? then, as thou shouldest learn to distinguish
of fears, so thou shouldest make conscience of which to entertain and cherish. If
God would have his fear—and it is called HIS fear by way of eminency—"that his
fear may be before you, that ye sin not" (Exo 20:20; Jer 32:40)—I say, if God
would have his fear be with thee, then thou shouldest make conscience of this, and
not so lightly give way to slavish fear, as is common for Christians to do.
There is utterly a fault among Christians about this thing; that is, they make not
that conscience of resisting of slavish fear as they ought; they rather cherish and
entertain it, and so weaken themselves, and that fear that they ought to strengthen.
And this is the reason that we so often lie grabbling[33] under the black
and amazing thoughts that are engendered in our hearts by unbelief; for this fear
nourisheth unbelief; that is, now it doth, to wit, if we give way to it after the
spirit of adoption is come, and readily closeth with all the fiery darts of the wicked.
But Christians are ready to do with this fear as the horse does when the tines[34] of the fork are set against his side; even lean to it until it entereth
into his belly. We lean naturally to this fear, I mean, after God has done good to
our souls; it is hard striving against it, because it has even our sense and feeling
of its side. But I say, if thou wouldest be a growing Christian—growing, I say, in
the fear that is godly, in the fear that is always so—then make conscience of striving
against the other, and against all these things that would bring thee back to it.
"Wherefore should I fear," said David, "in the day of evil, when the
iniquity of my heels shall compass me about?" (Psa 49:5).
What! not fear in the day of evil? What! not when the iniquity of thy heels compasseth
thee about? No, not then, saith he, that is, not with that fear that would bring
him again into bondage to the law; for he had received the spirit of adoption before.
Indeed, if ever a Christian has ground to give way to slavish fear, it is at these
two times, to wit, in the day of evil, and when the iniquity of his heels compasseth
him about; but you see, David would not then, no, not then, give way thereto, nor
did he see reason why he should. "Wherefore should I," said he? Aye, wherefore
indeed? since now thou art become a son of God through Christ, and hast received
the Spirit of his Son into thy heart, crying, Father, Father.
Fourth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of godly fear? then grow in the knowledge
of the new covenant, for that is indeed the girdle of our reins, and the strength
of our souls. Hear what Zacharias saith: God, says he, "hath raised up an horn
of salvation for us in the house of his servant David, as he spake by the mouth of
his holy prophets which have been since the world began." But what was it? what
was it that he spake? Why, "That he would grant unto us, that we, being delivered
out of the hand of our enemies, might serve him without fear," without this
slavish bondage fear, "in holiness and righteousness before him all the days
of our life." But upon what is this princely fearless service of God grounded?
Why, upon the holy covenant of God, upon the oath that he swore unto Abraham (Luke
1:69-74). Now in this covenant is wrapped up all thy salvation; in it is contained
all thy desire, and I am sure, that then it containeth the complete salvation of
thy soul; and I say, since this covenant is confirmed by promise, by oath, and by
the blood of the Son of God, and that on purpose that thou mightest serve thy God
without slavish fear, then the knowledge and faith of this covenant is of absolute
necessity to bring us into this liberty, and out of our slavish terrors, and so,
consequently, to cause us to grow in that son-like, godly fear, which became even
the Son of God himself, and becomes all his disciples to live in the growth and exercise
of.
Fifth. Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? then labour even always to keep thine
evidences for heaven and of thy salvation alive upon thy heart; for he that loseth
his evidences for heaven, will hardly keep slavish fear out of heart; but he that
hath the wisdom and grace to keep them alive, and apparent to himself, he will grow
in this godly fear. See how David words it, "From the end of the earth,"
saith he, "will I cry unto thee; when my heart is overwhelmed, lead me to the
rock that is higher than I. For thou hast been a shelter for me, and a strong tower
from the enemy: I will abide in thy tabernacle for ever. For thou, O God, hast heard
my vows; thou hast given me the heritage of those that fear thy name" (Psa 61:2-5).
Mark a little, David doth by these words, in the first place, suggest that sometimes,
to his thinking, he was as far off of his God as the ends of the earth are asunder,
and that at such times he was subject to be overwhelmed, afraid: [And] second, the
way that he took at such times, to help himself, was to cry to God to lead him again
to Jesus Christ—"lead me to the rock that is higher than I" ; for indeed
without faith in him, and the renewing of that faith, there can be no evidence for
heaven made to appear unto the soul. This therefore he prays for first.
Then he puts that faith into exercise, and that with respect to the time that was
past, and also of the time that was to come. For the time past, says he, "Thou
hast been a shelter to me, and a strong tower from the enemy" ; and for the
time to come, he said, "I will abide in thy tabernacle," that is, in thy
Christ by faith, and in thy way of worship by love, "forever." And observe
it, he makes the believing remembrance of his first evidences for heaven the ground
of this his cry and faith, "For thou," says he, "O God, hast given
me the heritage of those that fear thy name." Thou hast made me meet to be a
partaker of the mercy of thy chosen, and hast put me under the blessing of goodness
wherewith thou hast blessed those that fear thee. Thus you see how David, in his
distresses, musters up his prayers, faith, and evidences for eternal life, that he
might deliver himself from being overwhelmed, that is, with slavish fear, and that
he might also abound in that son-like fear of his fellow-brethren, that is not only
comely, with respect to our profession, but profitable to our souls.
Sixth. Wouldest thou grow in this fear of God? then set before thine eyes the being
and majesty of God; for that both begetteth, maintaineth, and increaseth this fear.
And hence it is called the fear of God, that is, an holy and awful dread and reverence
of his majesty. For the fear of God is to stand in awe of him, but how can that be
done if we do not set him before us? And again, if we would fear him more, we must
abide more in the sense and faith of his glorious majesty. Hence this fear and God's
name is so often put together: as fear God, fear the Lord, fear thy God, do this
in the fear of the Lord, and thou shalt fear thy God, I am the Lord. For these words,
"I am the Lord thy God," and the like, are on purpose put in, not only
to show us whom we should fear, but also to beget, maintain, and increase in us that
fear that is due from us to that "glorious and fearful name, the Lord our God"
(Deut 28:58).
Seventh. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then keep always close to thy
conscience the authority of the Word; fear the commandment as the commandment of
a God both mighty and glorious, and as the commandment of a father, both loving and
pitiful; let this commandment, I say, be always with thine eye, with thine ear, and
with thine heart; for then thou wilt be taught, not only to fear, but to abound in
the fear of the Lord. Every grace is nourished by the Word, and without it there
is no thrift in the soul (Prov 13:13, 4:20-22; Deut 6:1,2).
Eighth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then be much in the faith of the
promise, of the promise that maketh over to thy soul an interest in God by Christ,
and of all good things. The promise naturally tendeth to increase in us the fear
of the Lord, because this fear, it grows by goodness and mercy; they shall fear the
Lord, and his goodness; now this goodness and mercy of God, it is wrapt up in, and
made over to us by promise; for God gave it to Abraham by promise. Therefore the
faith and hope of the promise causeth this fear to grow in the soul—"Having
therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness
of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God" (2 Cor 7:1).
"Perfecting holiness in the fear of God" ; therefore that fear by the promise
must needs grow mighty, for by, with, and in it, you see holiness is perfected.
Ninth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then remember the judgments of God
that have, or shall certainly overtake, those professors, that have either been downright
hypocrites, or else unwatchful Christians. For both these sorts partake of the judgments
of God; the one, to wit, the true Christian, for his unwatchfulness, for his correction;
the other, to wit, the hypocrite, for his hypocrisy, to his destruction. This is
a way to make thee stand in awe, and to make thee tremble, and grow in the grace
of fear before thy God.
Judgments! you may say, what judgments? Answ. Time will fail me here to tell thee
of the judgments that sometimes overtake God's people, and that always certainly
overtake the hypocrite for his transgressions. For those that attend God's people,
I would have thee look back to the place in this book where they are particularly
touched upon. And for those that attend the hypocrite, in general they are these.
1. Blindness of heart in this world. 2. The death of their hope at the day of their
death. 3. And the damnation of their souls at the day of judgment (Matt 23:15-19;
Job 8:13, 11:20, 18:14, 20:4-7, Matt 23:33, 24:51; Luke 20:47). The godly consideration
of these things tend to make men grow in the fear of God.
Tenth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then study the excellencies of the
grace of fear, and what profit it yieldeth to them that have it, and labour to get
thy heart into the love, both of the exercise of the grace itself, and also of the
fruit it yieldeth; for a man hardly grows in the increase of any grace, until his
heart is united to it, and until it is made lovely in his eyes (Psa 119:119,120).
Now the excellencies of this grace of fear have also been discoursed of in this book
before, where by reading thou shalt find the fruit it bears, and the promises that
are annexed to it, which, because they are many, I refer thee also thither for thy
instruction.
Eleventh. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then remember what a world of
privileges do belong to them that fear the Lord, as also I have hinted; namely, that
such shall not be hurt, shall want no good thing, shall be guarded by angels, and
have a special license, though in never so dreadful a plight, to trust in the name
of the Lord, and stay upon their God.
Twelfth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then be much in prayer to God
for abundance of the increase thereof. To fear God is that which is according to
his will, and if we ask anything according to his will, he heareth us. Pray therefore
that God will unite thy heart to fear his name; this is the way to grow in the grace
of fear.
Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then devote thyself to it (Psa
119:38). Devote myself to it, you will say, how is that? I answer, why, give thyself
to it, addict thyself to it. Solace thyself in the contemplation of God, and of a
reverence of his name, and word, and worship. Then wilt thou fear, and grow in this
grace of fear.
What things they are that have a tendency in them to hinder the growth of the fear
of God in our hearts.
And that I may yet be helpful to thee, reader, I shall now give thee caution of those
things that will, if way be given to them, hinder thy growth in this fear of God,
the which, because they are very hurtful to the people of God, I would have thee
be warned by them. And they are these which follow:
First. If thou wouldest grow in this grace of fear, take heed of A HARD HEART, for
that will hinder thy growth in this grace. "Why hast thou hardened our heart
from thy fear?" was a bitter complaint of the church heretofore; for it is not
only the judgment that in itself is dreadful and sore to God's people, but that which
greatly hindereth the growth of this grace in the soul (Isa 63:17). A hard heart
is but barren ground for any grace to grow in, especially for the grace of fear:
there is but little of this fear where the heart is indeed hard; neither will there
ever be much therein.
Now if thou wouldest be kept from a hard heart, 1. Take heed of the beginnings of
sin. Take heed, I say, of that, though it should be never so small; "A little
leaven leaveneth the whole lump." There is more in a little sin to harden, than
in a great deal of grace to soften. David's look upon Bathsheba was, one would think,
but a small matter; yet that beginning of sin contracted such hardness of heart in
him, that it carried him almost beyond all fear of God. It did carry him to commit
lewdness with her, murder upon the body of Uriah, and to abundance of wicked dissimulation;
which are things, I say, that have direct tendency to quench and destroy all fear
of God in the soul.
2. If thou hast sinned, lie not down without repentance; for the want of repentance,
after one has sinned, makes the heart yet harder and harder. Indeed a hard heart
is impenitent, and impenitence also makes the heart harder and harder. So that if
impenitence be added to hardness of heart, or to the beginning of sin which makes
it so, it will quickly be with that soul, as is said of the house of Israel, it will
have a whore's forehead, it will hardly be brought to shame (Jer 3:3).
3. If thou wouldest be rid of a hard heart, that great enemy to the growth of the
grace of fear, be much with Christ upon the cross in thy meditations; for that is
an excellent remedy against hardness of heart: a right sight of him, as he hanged
there for thy sins, will dissolve thy heart into tears, and make it soft and tender.
"They shall look upon me whom they have pierced, - and mourn" (Zech 12:10).
Now a soft, a tender, and a broken heart, is a fit place for the grace of fear to
thrive in. But,
Second. If thou wouldest have the grace of fear to grow in thy soul, take heed also
of A PRAYERLESS HEART, for that is not a place for this grace of fear to grow in.
Hence he that restraineth prayer is said to cast off fear. "Thou castest off
fear," said one of his friends to Job. But how must he do that? Why the next
words show, "Thou restrainest prayer before God" (Job 15:4). Seest thou
a professor that prayeth not? that man thrusteth the fear of God away from him. Seest
thou a man that prays but little, that man feareth God but little; for it is the
praying soul, the man that is mighty in praying, that has a heart for the fear of
God to grow in. Take heed, therefore, of a prayerless heart, if you would grow in
this grace of the fear of God. Prayer is as the pitcher that fetcheth water from
the brook, therewith to water the herbs; break the pitcher, and it will fetch no
water, and for want of water the garden withers.
Third. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A LIGHT AND WANTON
HEART, for neither is such a heart good ground for the fear of God to grow in. Wherefore
it is said of Israel, "She feared not, but went and played the harlot also."
She was given to wantonness, and to be light and vain, and so her fear of God decayed
(Jer 3:8). Had Joseph been as wanton as his mistress, he had been as void of the
fear of God as she; but he was of a sober, tender, godly, considerate spirit, therefore
he grew in the fear of God.
Fourth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A COVETOUS HEART,
for neither is that which is such an one good ground for this grace of fear to grow
in. Therefore this covetousness and the fear of God are as enemies, set the one in
opposition to the other: one that feareth God and hateth covetousness (Exo 18:21).
And the reason why covetousness is such an obstruction to the growth of this grace
of fear, is because covetousness casteth those things out of the heart which alone
can nourish this fear. It casteth out the Word and love of God, without which no
grace can grow in the soul; how then should the fear of God grow in a covetous heart?
(Eze 33:30-32; 1 John 2:15).
Fifth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of AN UNBELIEVING
HEART, for an unbelieving heart is not good ground for this grace of fear to grow
in. An unbelieving heart is called "an evil heart," because from it flows
all the wickedness that is committed in the world (Heb 3:12). Now it is faith, or
a believing heart, that nourisheth this fear of God, and not the other; and the reason
is, for that faith brings God, heaven, and hell, to the soul, and maketh it duly
consider of them all (Heb 11:7). This is therefore the means of fear, and that which
will make it grow in the soul; but unbelief is a bane thereto.
Sixth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A FORGETFUL HEART.
Such a heart is not a heart where the grace of fear will flourish, "when I remember,
I am afraid," &c. Therefore take heed of forgetfulness; do not forget but
remember God, and his kindness, patience, and mercy, to those that yet neither have
grace, nor special favour from him, and that will beget and nourish his fear in thy
heart, but forgetfulness of this, or of any other of his judgments, is a great wound
and weakening to this fear (Job 21:6). When a man well remembers that God's judgments
are so great a deep and mystery, as indeed they are, that remembrance puts a man
upon such considerations of God and of his judgments as to make him fear—"Therefore,"
said Job, "I am afraid of him." See the place, Job 23:15. "Therefore
am I troubled at his presence; when I consider, I am afraid of him"—when I remember
and consider of the wonderful depths of his judgments towards man.
Seventh. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A MURMURING
AND REPINING HEART, for that is not a heart for this grace of fear to grow in. As
for instance, when men murmur and repine at God's hand, at his dispensations, and
at the judgments that overtake them, in their persons, estates, families, or relations,
that their murmuring tendeth to destroy fear; for a murmuring spirit is such an one
as seems to correct God, and to find fault with his dispensations, and where there
is that, the heart is far from fear. A murmuring spirit either comes from that wisdom
that pretends to understand that there is a failure in the nature and execution of
things, or from an envy and spite at the execution of them. Now if murmurings arise
from this pretended wisdom of the flesh, then instead of fearing of God, his actions
are judged to be either rigid or ridiculous, which yet are done in judgment, truth,
and righteousness. So that a murmuring heart cannot be a good one for the fear of
God to grow in. Alas! the heart where that grows must be a soft one; as you have
it in Job 23:15, 16; and a heart that will stoop and be silent at the most abstruse
of all his judgments—"I was dumb, because THOU didst it." The heart in
which this fear of God doth flourish is such, that it bows and is mute, if it can
but espy the hand, wisdom, justice, or holiness of God in this or the other of his
dispensations, and so stirs up the soul to fear before him. But if this murmuring
ariseth from envy and spite, that looketh so like to the spirit of the devil, that
nothing need be said to give conviction of the horrible wickedness of it.
Eighth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of A HIGH AND CAPTIOUS
SPIRIT, for that is not good ground for the fear of God to grow in. A meek and quiet
spirit is the best, and there the fear of God will flourish most; therefore Peter
puts meekness and fear together, as being most suited in their nature and natural
tendency one to another (1 Peter 3:15). Meekness of spirit is like that heart that
hath depth of earth in it in which things may take root and grow; but a high and
captious spirit is like to the stony ground, where there is not depth of earth, and
consequently, where this grace of fear cannot grow; therefore take heed of this kind
of spirit, if thou wouldest that the fear of God should grow in thy soul.
Ninth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of AN ENVIOUS HEART,
for that is not a good heart for the fear of God to grow in. "Let not thine
heart envy sinners; but be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long" (Prov
23:17). To envy any is a sign of a bad spirit, and that man takes upon him, as I
have already hinted, to be a controller and a judge, yea, and a malicious executioner
too, and that of that fury that ariseth from his own lusts and revengeful spirit,
upon (perhaps) the man that is more righteous than himself. But suppose he is a sinner
that is the object of thine envy, why, the text sets that envy in direct opposition
to the fear of God; "Envy not sinners, but be thou in the fear of God."
These two, therefore, to wit, envy to sinners and fearing of God, are opposites.
Thou canst not fear God, and envy sinners too. And the reason is, because he that
envieth a sinner, hath forgotten himself, that he is as bad; and how can he then
fear God? He that envies sinners rejects his duty of blessing of them that curse,
and praying for them that despitefully use us; and how can he that hath rejected
this, fear God? He that envieth sinners, therefore, cannot be of a good spirit, nor
can the fear of God grow in his heart.
Tenth. Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of HARDENING
THY HEART at any time against convictions to particular duties, as to prayer, alms,
self-denial, or the like. Take heed also of hardening thy heart, when thou art under
any judgment of God, as sickness, losses, crosses, or the like. I bid you before
to beware of a hard heart, but now I bid you beware of hardening your soft ones.
For to harden the heart is to make it worse than it is; harder, more desperate, and
bold against God, than at the present it is. Now, I say, if thou wouldest grow in
this grace of fear, take heed of hardening thy heart, and especially of hardening
of it against convictions to good; for those convictions are sent of God like seasonable
showers of rain, to keep the tillage of thy heart in good order, that the grace of
fear may grow therein; but this stifling of convictions makes the heart as hard as
a piece of the nether millstone. Therefore happy is he that receiveth conviction,
for so he doth keep in the fear of God, and that fear thereby nourished in his soul;
but cursed is he that doth otherwise—"Happy is the man that feareth alway; but
he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischief" (Prov 28:14).
USE THIRD, of encouragement.
USE THIRD. I come now to A USE OF ENCOURAGEMENT to those that are blessed with this
grace of fear. The last text that was mentioned saith, "Happy is the man that
feareth alway," and so doth many more. Happy already, because blessed with this
grace; and happy for time to come, because this grace shall abide, and continue till
the soul that hath it is brought unto the mansion-house of glory. "I will put
my fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart from me." Therefore, as
here it saith, Happy is he, so it saith also, It shall go well with him, that is,
in time to come. "It shall be well with them that fear God" (Eccl 8:12).
First. Had God given thee all the world, yet cursed hadst thou been, if he had not
given thee the fear of the Lord; for the fashion of this world is a fading thing,
but he that feareth the Lord shall abide for ever and ever. This therefore is the
first thing that I would propound for thy encouragement, thou man that fears the
Lord. This grace will dwell in thy heart, for it is a new covenant grace, and will
abide with thee for ever. It is sent to thee from God, not only to join thy heart
unto him, but to keep thee from final apostasy—"I will put my fear in their
hearts, that they shall not depart from me" (Jer 32:40). That thou mayest never
forsake God, is his design, and therefore, to keep thee from that wicked thing, he
hath put his fear in thy heart. Many are the temptations, difficulties, snares, traps,
trials, and troubles that the people of God pass through in the world, but how shall
they be kept, how shall they be delivered, and escape? Why, the answer is, The fear
of God will keep them—"He that feareth God shall come forth of them all."
Is it not therefore a wonderful mercy to be blessed with this grace of fear, that
thou by it mayest be kept from final, which is damnable apostasy? Bless God, therefore,
thou blessed man, that hast this grace of fear in thy soul. There are five things
in this grace of fear that have a direct tendency in them to keep thee from final
apostasy.
1. It is seated in the heart, and the heart is, as I may call it, the main fort in
the mystical world, man. It is not placed in the head, as knowledge is; nor in the
mouth, as utterance is, but in the heart, the seat of all, "I will put my fear
in their hearts." If a king will keep a town secure to himself, let him be sure
to man sufficiently the main fort thereof. If he have twenty thousand men well armed,
yet if they lie scattered here and there, the town may be taken for all that, but
if the main fort be well manned, then the town is more secure. What if a man had
all the parts, yea, all the arts of men and angels? That will not keep the heart
to God. But when the heart, this principal fort, is possessed with the fear of God,
then he is safe, but not else.
2. As the heart in general, so the will in special. That chief and great faculty
of the soul is the principle that is acted by this fear. The will, which way that
goes, all goes; if it be to heaven or hell. Now the will, I say, is that main faculty
that is governed by this fear that doth possess the soul, therefore all is like to
go well with it. This Samuel insinuateth, where he saith, "If ye will fear the
Lord." Fearing of God is a voluntary act of the will, and that being so, the
soul is kept from rebellion against the commandment, because by the will where this
fear of God is placed, and which it governeth, is led all the rest of the powers
of the soul (1 Sam 12:14). In this will, then, is this fear of God placed, that this
grace may the better be able to govern the soul, and so by consequence the whole
man; for as I said before, look what way the will goes, look what the will does,
thither goes, and that does, the whole man (Psa 110:3). Man, when his will is alienate
from God, is reckoned rebellious throughout, and that not without ground, for the
will is the principal faculty of the soul as to obedience, and therefore things done
without the will are as if they were not done at all. The spirit is willing; if ye
be willing; "she hath done what she could," and the like; by these and
such- like sayings the goodness of the heart and action is judged, as to the subjective
part thereof. Now this fear that we have been speaking of, is placed in the soul,
and so consequently in the will, that the man may thereby the better be kept from
final and damnable apostasy.
3. This fear, as I may say, even above every other grace, is God's well-wisher; and
hence it is called, as I also have showed you, his fear. As he also says in the text
mentioned above, "I will put my fear in their hearts." These words, his
and my, they are intimate and familiar expressions, bespeaking not only great favour
to man, but a very great trust put in him. As who should say, this fear is my special
friend, it will subject and bow the soul, and the several faculties thereof, to my
pleasure; it is my great favourite, and subdueth sinners to my pleasure. You shall
rarely find faith or repentance, or parts, go under such familiar characters as this
blessed fear of the Lord doth. Of all the counsellors and mighties that David had,
Hushai only was called the king's friend (2 Sam 15:37, 16:16). So of all the graces
of the Spirit this of the fear of God goes mostly, if not always, by the title of
MY fear, God's fear, HIS fear, &c. I told you before, if the king will keep a
town, the main fort therein must be sufficiently manned: and now I will add, that
if he have not to govern those men some trusty and special friend, such as Hushai
was to David, he may find it lost when it should stand him in greatest stead. If
a soul should be possessed with all things possible, yet if this fear of God be wanting,
all other things will give place in time of rebellion, and the soul shall be found
in, and under the conduct of hell, when it should stand up for God and his truth
in the world. This fear of God, it is God's special friend, and therefore it has
given unto it the chief seat of the heart, the will, that the whole man may now be,
and also be kept hereafter, in the subjection and obedience of the gospel. For,
4. This grace of fear is the softest and most tender of God's honour of any other
grace. It is that tender, sensible, and trembling grace, that keepeth the soul upon
its continual watch. To keep a good watch is, you know, a wonderful safety to a place
that is in continual danger because of the enemy. Why, this is the grace that setteth
the watch, and that keepeth the watchmen awake (Can 3:7,8). A man cannot watch as
he should, if he be destitute of fear: let him be confident, and he sleeps; he unadvisedly
lets into the garrison those that should not come there. Israel's fault when they
came to Canaan was, that they made a covenant with the inhabitants of the land, to
wit, the Gibeonites, without asking counsel of God. But would they have done so,
think you, if at the same time the fear of God had had its full play in the soul,
in the army? no, they at that time forgot to fear. The grace of fear had not at that
time its full stroke and sway among them.
5. This grace of fear is that which, as I may so say, first affects the hearts of
saints with judgments, after we have sinned, and so is as a beginning grace to bring
again that to rights that by sin is put out of frame. O it is a precious grace of
God! I know what I say in this matter, and also where I had been long ago, through
the power of my lusts, and the wiles of the devil, had it not been for the fear of
God.
Second. But secondly, another encouragement for those that are blessed with this
blessed grace of fear is this,—this fear fails not to do this work for the soul,
if there in truth, be it never so small in measure. A little of this leaven "leaveneth
the whole lump." True, a little will not do, or help the soul to do those worthy
exploits in the heart or life as well as a bigger measure thereof; nor, indeed, can
a little of any grace do that which a bigger measure will; but a little will preserve
the soul from final apostasy, and deliver it into the arms of the Son of God at the
final judgment. Wherefore, when he saith, "I will put my fear in their hearts,"
he says not, I will put so much of it there, such a quantity, or such a degree; but,
"I will put my fear there." I speak not this in the least to tempt the
godly man to be content with the least degree of the fear of God in his heart. True,
men should be glad that God hath put even the least degree of this grace into their
souls, but they should not be content therewith; they should earnestly covet more,
pray for more, and use all lawful, that is, all the means of God's appointing, that
they may get more.
There are, as I have said already, several degrees of this grace of fear, and our
wisdom is to grow in it, as in all the other graces of the Spirit. The reasons why,
I have showed you, and also the way to grow therein; but the least measure thereof
will do as I said, that is, keep the soul from final apostasy. There are, as I have
showed you, those that greatly fear the Lord, that fear exceedingly, and that fear
him above many of their brethren; but the small in this grace are saved as well as
those that are great therein: "He will bless" or save "them that fear
him, both small and great." This fear of the Lord is the pulse of the soul;
and as some pulses beat stronger, some weaker, so is this grace of fear in the soul.
They that beat best are a sign of best life, but they that beat worst show that life
is [barely] present. As long as the pulse beats, we count not that the man is dead,
though weak; and this fear, where it is, preserves to everlasting life. Pulses there
are also that are intermitting; to wit, such as have their times for a little, a
little time to stop, and beat again; true, these are dangerous pulses, but yet too
a sign of life. This fear of God also is sometimes like this intermitting pulse;
there are times when it forbears to work, and then it works again. David had an intermitting
pulse, Peter had an intermitting pulse, as also many other of the saints of God.
I call that an intermitting pulse, with reference to the fear we speak of, when there
is some obstruction by the workings of corruptions in the soul; I say, some obstruction
from, and hindrance of, the continual motion of this fear of God; yet none of these,
though they are various, and some of them signs of weakness, are signs of death,
but life. "I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart from
me."
Quest. But you may say, How shall I know that I fear God?
Answ. If I should say that desires, true sincere desires to fear him, is fear itself.
I should not say amiss (Neh 1:11). For although a desire to be, or do so and so,
makes not a man to be in temporal or natural things what he desires to be—for a sick,
or poor, or imprisoned man may desire to be well, to be rich, or to be at liberty,
and yet be as they are, sick, poor, or in prison—yet in spirituals, a man's desire
to be good, to believe, to love, to hope, and fear God, doth flow from the nature
of grace itself.
I said before, that in temporals a man could not properly be said to be what he was
not; yet a man, even in naturals or temporals, shows his love to that thing that
he desires, whether it be health, riches, or liberty; and in spirituals, desires
of, from love to this or that grace of God, sincere desires of it flow from the root
of the grace itself—"Thy servants who desire to fear thy name." Nehemiah
bore himself before God upon this, "that he desired to fear his name."
And hence again it is said concerning desires, true desires, "The desire of
man is his kindness" (Prov 19:22). For a man shows his heart, his love, his
affections, and his delights, in his desires; and since the grace of the fear of
God is a grace so pleasant in the sight of God, and of so sanctifying a nature in
the soul where it is, a true sincere desire to be blessed with that grace must needs
flow from some being of this grace in the soul already.
True desires are lower than higher acts of grace, but God will not overlook desires—"But
now they desire a better country, that is, an heavenly; wherefore God is not ashamed
to be called their God; for he hath prepared for them a city." Mark, they desire
a country, and they shall have a city. At this low place, to wit, sincere desires,
God will meet the soul and will tell him that he hath accepted of his desires, that
his desires are his kindness, and flow from grace itself: "He will fulfil the
desire of them that fear him." Therefore desires are not rejected of God; but
they would, if they did not flow from a principle of grace already in the soul; therefore
desires, sincere desires to fear God, flow from grace already in the soul. Therefore,
since thou fearest God, and it is evident by thy desires that thou dost so do, thou
art happy now in this thy fear, and shalt be happy for ever hereafter in the enjoyment
of that which God in another world hath laid up for them that fear him.
Third. Another encouragement for those that have this grace of fear is this; this
grace can make that man, that in many other things is not capable of serving of God,
serve him better than those that have all without it. Poor Christian man, thou hast
scarce been able to do anything for God all thy days, but only to fear the Lord.
Thou art no preacher, and so canst not do him service that way; thou art no rich
man, and so canst not do him service with outward substance; thou art no wise man,
and so canst not do anything that way; but here is thy mercy, thou fearest God. Though
thou canst not preach, thou canst fear God. Though thou hast no bread to feed the
belly, nor fleece to clothe the back of the poor, thou canst fear God. O how "blessed
is the man that feareth the Lord" ; because this duty of fearing of God is an
act of the mind, and may be done by the man that is destitute of all things but that
holy and blessed mind.
Blessed therefore is that man, for God hath not laid the comfort of his people in
the doing of external duties, nor the salvation of their souls, but in believing,
loving, and fearing God. Neither hath he laid these things in actions done in their
health nor in the due management of their most excellent parts, but in the receiving
of Christ, and fear of God. The which, good Christian, thou mayest do, and do acceptably,
even though thou shouldest lie bed-rid all thy days; thou mayest also be sick and
believe; be sick and love, be sick and fear God, and so be a blessed man. And here
the poor Christian hath something to answer them that reproach him for his ignoble
pedigree, and shortness of the glory of the wisdom of the world. True, may that man
say, I was taken out of the dunghill, I was born in a base and low estate, but I
fear God. I have no worldly greatness, nor excellency of natural parts, but I fear
God.
When Obadiah met with Elijah, he gave him no worldly and fantastical compliment,
nor did he glory in his promotion by Ahab the king of Israel, but gravely, and after
a gracious manner, said, "I thy servant fear the Lord from my youth." Also
when the mariners inquired of Jonah, saying, "What is thine occupation, and
whence comest thou? what is thy country, and of what people art thou?" This
was the answer he gave them, "I am a Hebrew, and I fear the Lord, the God of
heaven, which hath made the sea and the dry land" (Jonah 1:8,9). Indeed this
answer is the highest, and most noble in the world, nor are there any, save a few,
that in truth can thus express themselves, though other answers they had enough;
most can say, I have wisdom, or might, or riches, or friends, or health, or the like;
these are common, and are greatly boasted in by the most; but he is the man that
feareth God, and he that can say, when they say to him, What art thou? "I thy
servant fear the Lord," he is the man of many, he is to be honoured of men:
though this, to wit, that he feareth the Lord, is all that he hath in the world.
He hath the thing, the honour, the life, and glory that is lasting; his blessedness
will abide when all men's but his is buried in the dust, in shame and contempt.[35]
A word to hypocrites.
Hypocrites, my last word is to you; the hypocrite is one that would appear to be
that in men's eyes that is nothing of in God's—thou hypocrite, that wouldest be esteemed
to be one that loves and that fears God, but does not; I have this to say to thee,
thy condition is damnable, because thou art a hypocrite, and seekest to
deceive both God and man with guises, vizards, masks, shows, pretences, and thy formal,
carnal, feigned subjection to the outside of statutes, laws, and commandments; but
within thou art full of rottenness and all excess.
Hypocrite, thou mayest by thy cunning shifts be veiled and hid from men, but thou
art naked before the eyes of God, and he knoweth that his fear is not in thy heart
(Luke 16:15).
Hypocrite, be admonished that there is not obedience accepted of God, where the heart
is destitute of this grace of fear. Keeping of the commandments is but one part of
the duty of man, and Paul did that, even while he was a hypocrite (Phil 3). To "fear
God and keep his commandments, this is the whole duty of man" (Eccl 12:13).
This—fear God—the hypocrite, as a hypocrite, cannot do, and therefore, as such, cannot
escape the damnation of hell.
Hypocrite, thou must fear God first, even before thou dost offer to meddle with the
commandments, that is, as to the keeping of them. Indeed, thou shouldest read therein,
that thou mayest learn to fear the Lord, but yet, "fear God" goes before
the command to keep his commandments. And if thou dost not fear God first, thou transgressest,
instead of keeping of the commandments.
Hypocrite, this word, FEAR GOD, is that which the hypocrite quite forgets, although
it is that which sanctifies the whole duty of man. For this is that, and nothing
without it, that can make a man sincere in his obedience; the hypocrite looks for
applause abroad, and forgets that he is condemned at home, and both these he does
because he wanteth the fear of God.
Hypocrite, be admonished that none of the privileges that are spoken of in the former
part of the book belongs to thee, because thou art a hypocrite; and if thou hope,
thy hope shall be cut off, and if thou lean upon thy house, both thou and it shall
fall into hell-fire. Triumph then, thy triumph is but for awhile. Joy then, but the
joy of the hypocrite is but for a moment (Job 8:13,15, 20:4-6).
Perhaps thou wilt not let go now, what, as a hypocrite, thou hast got; but "what
is the hope of the hypocrite, when God taketh away his soul?" (Job 27:8). Hypocrite,
thou shouldest have chosen the fear of God, as thou hast chosen a profession without
it, but thou hast cast off fear, because thou art a hypocrite; and because thou art
such, thou shalt have the same measure that thou metest; God will cast thee off,
because thou art a hypocrite. God hath prepared a fear for thee because thou didst
not choose the fear of God, and that fear shall come upon thee like desolation, and
like an armed man, and shall swallow thee up, thou and all that thou art (Prov 1:27).
Hypocrite, read this text and tremble—"The sinners in Zion are afraid, fearfulness
hath surprised the hypocrites. Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire?
who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" (Isa 33:13,14).
Hypocrite, thou art not under the fatherly protection of God, because thou art a
hypocrite, and wantest his fear in thine heart. The eyes of the Lord are upon them
that fear him, to deliver them. But the fearless man or hypocrite is left to the
snares and wiles of the devil, to be caught therein and overcome, because he is destitute
of the fear of God.
Hypocrite, thou art like to have no other reward of God for thy labour than that
which the goats shall have;[36] the hypocrite, because he is a hypocrite,
shall not stand in God's sight. The gain of thy religion thou spendest as thou gettest
it. Thou wilt not have one farthing overplus at death and judgment.
Hypocrite, God hath not intrusted thee with the least dram of his saving grace, nor
will he, because thou art a hypocrite: and as for what thou hast, thou hast stolen
it, even every man of you from his neighbour; still pilfering out of their profession,
even as Judas did out of the bag. Thou comest like a thief into thy profession, and
like a thief thou shalt go out of the same. Jesus Christ hath not counted thee faithful
to commit to thee any of his jewels to keep, because thou fearest him not. He hath
given his "banner to them that fear him, that it may be displayed because of
the truth" (Psa 60:4).
Hypocrite, thou art not true to God nor man, nor thine own soul, because thou art
a hypocrite! How should the Lord put any trust in thee? Why should the saints look
for any good from thee? Should God give thee his Word, thou wilt sell it. Should
men commit their souls to thee, thou wilt destroy them, by making merchandise of
them, for thy own hypocritical designs. Yea, if the sun waxes hot, thou wilt throw
all away, and not endure the heat, because thou art a hypocrite!
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