By
William Huntington
(Condensed from "The Rule and Riddle." Published in 1811 by T.
Bensley, London)
Dear Sir,
If the ten commandments in the letter be the believer's only rule, Abel, who
obtained
witness that he was righteous, God testifying of his gifts, had no rule to
go by, Enoch walked with
God three hundred years, (Gen. 5:22) and "was translated that he should
not see death, for before
his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God." (Heb
11:5); yet he had no rule of life.
Noah the just, who took warning of God, prepared an ark, condemned the
world, and became heir
of an everlasting righteousness, was without rule. Abraham, the friend of
God, and the father of
the faithful, and heir of the world, must walk at an uncertainty also.
Melchisedek, king of
righteousness, and king of peace, priest of the Most High God; after whose
order Christ is a priest
forever and ever, had no rule for his order. Yea, all the antediluvian and
post diluvian saints, down
to the time of the children of Israel's compassing the Mount Sinai, must be
left to walk and to
worship at random; for, if the letter of the law, or the ten commandments
delivered at Sinai, be
the believer's only rule of life, it is clear they were without that rule.
Yet they were not without
law to God, for they feared Him, loved Him, and walked with Him; and saw Him
at a distance and
embraced Him, were united to Him, and became one spirit with Him.
Paul says, "He that cometh to God must believe that He is, and that He
is a rewarder of
them that diligently seek Him;" then faith must be the rule of his
coming. "We have access by faith
into this grace wherein we stand; then faith is the rule of our approach to
God. "The just shall live
by his faith;" then faith is the just man's rule of life. "We walk
by faith, not by sight;" then faith is
our rule of walk. "Thou standest by faith," says Paul; then faith
is the rule of the believer's
standing. "Whatever ye shall ask believing, ye shall receive,"
says Christ; then faith is the rule of
that branch of worship. By faith Enoch had this testimony, that he pleased
God; "but without faith
it is impossible to please Him;" then faith is a rule that God approves
of, and is pleased with.
"Whatsoever is not of faith is sin;" then faith is a perfect rule
of holiness. "All that believe are
justified from all things, from which ye could not be justified by the law
of Moses;" then faith is
our rule of righteousness. It is by faith we overcome the world to lay hold
on eternal life, is to
fight the good fight of faith, according to Paul; "I have fought a good
fight, I have finished my
course, I have kept the faith;" then faith was the rule of his warfare,
and the rule of his race, and it
was the grace of God that made Paul obedient to that rule. "We have
received grace and
apostleship for obedience to the faith;" that is, by Christ we have
received grace to save our souls,
and apostleship to be of use to the church, not as a reward of our
obedience, but to furnish us
with power to make us obedient to the faith, among all nations for His name,
Rom. 1:5; then faith
is the rule of apostolic obedience; for it cannot be called receiving grace
for obedience to the faith
if faith be not the gracious man's rule of obedience.
I have sometimes thought that, if the letter of the law in the twentieth
chapter of Exodus
be the believer's only rule of life, he would be sorely put to his shifts
when the devil sets a troop of Arians, Socinians, or Sabellians at him; he would find these words, "I
am the Lord thy God, which
have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, and out of the house of bondage.
Thou shalt have no
other gods before Me." This rule would hardly set him right. It is by
faith that we apprehend
Christ; it is by faith we lay hold of Him, as the hope set before us. (Heb.
6:18) It is by Christ that
we believe in God. 1 Pet. 1:21; and we receive the promise of the Spirit
through faith, (Gal. 3:14).
By this rule we come to a saving knowledge of the Trinity; for the eye of
faith is a light by which
we see what is the fellowship of the mystery, Eph. 3:9. Without the
assurance of understanding
there will be no true acknowledgement of the mystery of God the Holy Ghost,
and of the Father
and of Christ, Col. 2:2. The ten commandments will never guide a man into
this mystery, nor set
him right if he errs in it.
A friend of mine once asked a certain divine in London what he thought of
the law as the
believer's only rule of life? He replied, "The believer must look with
one eye to Christ, and with
the other to the law." But he brought no more proof from the word of
God than this author has,
who attempts to prove it by the fitness of things. My friend replied, "Then
every believer must
squint." However, there is no call for squinting in this matter; Christ
says, "Look unto me, and be saved, all ye ends of the earth;" and adds, "I will keep that man
in perfect peace whose mind is
stayed on me " and Paul tells us to "run the race set before us,
looking unto Jesus, the author and
finisher of our faith." Looking with one eye to the law, and with the
other to Christ, is erring from
wisdom's rule of direction; which is, "Let thine eyes look right on,
and let thine eyelids look
straight before thee. Ponder the path of thy feet, and let all thy ways be
established."
The printed letter that you sent me is a discord upon the same string I
perceive; but the
author will never be able to prove from the Scriptures of truth, that the
ten commandments in the
letter are called the rule of life. He tells us that it is implied; this
brings to my mind an old woman,
who had been long contending for this letter rule, being asked to give a
reason of the hope that
was in her; on suspicion of her having none, replied "You will find my
experience in such a verse
of Jeremiah's prophecy," hinting that it was implied there. Which
served to convince the inquirer
that she had no hope but what stood on the paper. I suppose all the
experience of the devil is
implied in four texts of Scripture: one says; he is cursed above all cattle;
another, that he believes
and trembles; another that he is cast down to hell and another, that he is "reserved
in everlasting
chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day." But the
devil has another experience
beside this; which will stick close to him, and be like a thousand hells
within him, when every
letter of Scripture text will be burnt up. When the killing letter has slain
the reprobate, it has done
its office; the living Word that abides forever, which is in the hand of the
Spirit, and which dwells
in the saints of God, will be settled in heaven, and abide forever there.
I cannot find it in my heart to criticize the reasons that you assign;
because you have not
addressed me, as some have, with insolence and lies, but you seem as
desirous of information as
you are to inform me, or set me right; therefore without taking your letter
to pieces, I will
endeavor to make it appear, that the believer in his liberty is in no sense
of the word an outlaw,
nor yet without law; for he is in no wise excluded from any benefit that
arises from the law, and
yet he is not under the law, but under grace. (Rom. 6:14).
A fountain is supplied from its own spring, yields its contents to supply
the poor and
needy when they seek water and there is none elsewhere, and their tongue
faileth for thirst, that
they may drink and not famish, or die by famishing. So this law of the wise
is a fountain of life, to
depart from the snares of death. Can this law of the wise be the ten
commandments, which are
affirmed by some to be the believer's only rule of life? I trow not. Paul
tells us the letter killeth, 2
Cor. 3:6; that it is the law of death, Rom. 7:2; that the law worketh wrath,
(Rom. 4:15); and is the
ministration of death and condemnation, (2 Cor: 4:7,9) nor does our faith in
Christ alter the
nature of the law, or make it to us what it was not before. It is the yoke
of bondage, and
gendereth to bondage still; hence we are exhorted to stand fast in our
liberty, and not be entangled
again with that yoke of bondage, Gal. 5:1. It still retains its binding
nature, even to the believer,
and will entangle him again if he looks to it for help.
But perhaps my unknown friend may ask why this dispensation of the Spirit is
called a
law? To which I answer, first, because of its binding power; the cords of
everlasting love, the
bond of peace, and the girdle of truth, will hold the soul faster than all
the lifeless commandments
in the world, whether they be from heaven or of men. Secondly, it is called
a law, because of its
constraining power; "the love of Christ constrains me," says Paul;
it is a powerful constraint from
evil, and mightily influences the mind to that which is good. Thirdly,
Because of the obedience it
produces; the blessed Giver of this law circumcises our hearts, that we may
love the Lord our
God with all our heart and with all our soul, that we may live, Deut. 30:6.
It produces the fruits of
the Spirit, which is evangelical obedience; we are taught of God to love one
another by the love of
God shed abroad in our hearts, which is attended with filial fear that keeps
us from departing from
God, Jer. 32:40. God directs our work in truth by it, Isa. 61:8; and works
our works in us, Isa.
26:12; he works in us an inclining and moving power, "both to will and
to do of his own good
pleasure," Phil 2:13. Well may this be called the law of the Spirit,
when it produces such spiritual
obedience; well may the desire of the righteous when it comes be called a
Tree of Life, Prov.
13:12; seeing it produces love, joy, peace, meekness, temperance, etc.
In order to convince my friend further that we do not make void the law
through faith, or
represent the believer without law to God, I will fetch in another law,
which is not properly
distinct from, but a branch of this that has been considered; and it is a
branch that debases the
proud boaster, cuts up the self-righteous, discovers the fool, lays the
legalist in the dust, exposes
the blind guide, furnishes the spiritual soldier of Christ with weapons
against him, and secures the
whole glory of salvation to God, to whom it belongs, and to whom it must be
given without
reserve.
If you ask why Paul calls this law the law of faith? answer, because faith
works by love,
which is the fulfilling of the law, which is the end of the commandment, and
lays hold of Christ,
who is the end of the law; and puts on an everlasting righteousness adequate
to the law; because it
is Christ's obedience thereto, and because he that believes hath everlasting
life, which was the
greatest thing that the law ever promised, and which that law could never
give; and because the
believer has the Spirit of holiness, as the law is holy; by faith he is a
just man, as the law is just; a
good man, as the law is good; a spiritual man, as the law is spiritual: and
thus "the righteousness
of the law is fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the
Spirit," Rom. 8:4. I will
show my friend that I have yet to speak on the saints' behalf; on the
subject of their being not
without law to God.
As Paul divides the believer from the infidel, and divides the law between
them also,
applying the law of faith to the believer, and the law of works to the
infidel, declaring "that what
things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law;"
and those that are under the
law are under sin, and under the curse, Gal. 3:22; 10; so James divides the
hearer from the doer.
He tells us that "God of his own will begat us with the word of truth,
that we should be a kind of
first fruits of His creatures," and then he tells us to be doers of the
word and not hearers only,
deceiving ourselves. By doing He means the works or fruits of faith; "Show
me," saith he, "thy
faith without thy works, and I will show thee my faith by my works;"
and then adds: "For if any
be a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like unto a man beholding his
natural face in a glass,
for he beholds himself and goeth his way, and straightway forgetteth what
manner of man he
was."
If my friend asks what this law of liberty is, I will endeavor to show him.
It is taken from
the law of release, when the jubilee trumpet was to be sounded, and liberty
to be proclaimed
according to the tenor of the law. "If thou buy an Hebrew servant, six
years shall he serve, and in
the seventh he shall go free for nothing. If he came in by himself he shall
go out by himself; if he
were married, then his wife shall go out with him." Every poor elect
sinner is like this Hebrew
servant, he has sold himself for nought (Isa. 42:3); and is the servant of
sin, and under the
dominion of the law - two hard masters indeed, who show no favor; he that is
under the dominion
of sin is also under the law of death; he that is delivered from the power
of sin, is delivered from
the law also, as the apostle intimates, "sin shall not have dominion
over you;" but why? "because
you are not under the law, (which is the strength of sin) but under grace,"
which reigns through
righteousness unto eternal life. In this state of servitude the sinner lies
till the great trumpet is
blown, Isa. 27:13; and the joyful sound reaches his ears, Psa. 89:15; by
which Christ preached
deliverance to captives, and sets at liberty those that are bruised with
this yoke of hard service,
(Luke 4:18).
When the Hebrew servant's liberty was proclaimed, he was delivered from his
master,
from the command of his master, from the threatening of his master, and from
the service of his
master, he was a free man; he shall, says God, go out free; and yet this
man, that went out at the
year of jubilee, is, says God, my servant, Lev. 25:49. So the believing
sinner is delivered from the
law, that being dead, Rom. 7:6; from the command of the law, for the letter
killeth; from the curse
of the law, Gal. 313; and from the service of the law, for he shall "serve
in the newness of the
Spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter." Rom. 7:6. He is a free
man: "if the Son therefore shall
make you free, ye shall be free indeed;" and yet he that is this free
man is Christ's servant, 1 Cor.
7:22; for though he is not under the law, yet he is not without law to God,
but under this law of
liberty to Christ, who has made him free indeed, and he that looks into this
law of liberty, and
continues in it shall be blessed in his deed.
And who set these men to keep to themselves teachers is also as great a
mystery. I know
Paul bids Timothy commit his doctrine to faithful men, that they might be
able to teach others; but
to turn infidels into faithful men and divines is another thing. Paul speaks
of some in his days that
acted as the Hebrew masters did by their servants, who proclaimed liberty to
them, and subjected
them to servitude again; and calls them "false brethren, unawares
brought in, who came in privily
to spy out our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring
us into bondage to
whom we gave place by subjection, no not for an hour; that the truth of the
gospel, (or the
freedom that Christ has promised to them that receive the truth (Jn. 8:32);
might continue with
you." (Gal. 2:4, 5). And what was the bondage that these spies, who
came in privily, brought in
unexpectedly, wanted to bring in? Why they wanted to subject them to the
command of the law,
which genders to bondage, by telling them that they were under the law as a
rule of life. "There
rose up certain of the sect of the Pharisees which believed, saying, that it
was needful to
circumcise them, (the believing Gentiles), and to command them to keep the
law of Moses."
(Act.15:15)
I have considered Solomon's conclusion of the whole matter, "Fear God
and keep his
commandments; for this is the whole duty of man," and have deliberately
considered all that you
have drawn from the text; and I have likewise considered Paul's comment on
Solomon's words,
which differs much from yours. "Now the end of the commandment is
charity, out of a pure heart
and of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned; from which some having
swerved have turned
aside unto vain jangling; desiring to be teachers of the law; understanding
neither what they say
nor whereof they affirm," 1 Tim. 1:5-7. What Solomon calls the
conclusion of the whole matter,
Paul calls the end of the commandment, James calls the perfect law of
liberty; Peter calls the gift
of the Holy Ghost and of purifying faith; which is the Savior's easy yoke
and springing well; which
is Paul's law of the Spirit of life; Solomon's law of the wise; the
prophets' law that went forth out
of Zion; the apostles' law of faith; Peter's holy commandment delivered unto
us; and that the end
of the commandment, which is charity, out of an heart purified by faith,
attended with a good
conscience, which all turn from who end in the flesh, and give themselves up
to vain jangling, or
to talking about things which they understand not.
If my friend objects, and enforces the commands of Christ on hearing the
word, attending
the Lord's supper, etc., it is answered, the Spirit shall lead them into all
truth. And if the Spirit
leads them not, it is serving in the oldness of the letter, contrary to the
apostles doctrine, which he
received not of men, nor was he taught it, but by the revelation of Jesus
Christ, Gal. 1:12. And if
purifying faith be not the rule of the believer's actions or obedience to
the commands of Christ,
and if he be not fully persuaded by the Spirit of faith in his own mind, his
works are sin;
"whatsoever is not of faith is sin;" to the unbelieving there is
nothing pure, their mind and
conscience is defiled, (Titus 1:5); nor does their obedience spring from
that charity which is the
end of the commandment, out of a pure heart, of a good conscience, and of
faith unfeigned; but is
a swerving from it. This is gospel that can never be overthrown; gospel
which God has and ever
will set His seal to; gospel which no hypocrite ever knew in the power
thereof; gospel that shall
never pass away, even when heaven and earth are both removed.
"Know ye not, brethren (for I speak to them that know the law), how
that the law hath
dominion over a man as long as he liveth? For the woman which hath an
husband is bound by the
law to her husband so long as he liveth; but if the husband be dead she is
loosed from the law of
her husband, so then if while her husband liveth, she be married to another
man, she shall be called
an adulteress; but if her husband be dead she is free from that law; so that
she is no adulteress
though she be married to another man. Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are
become dead to the
law by the body of Christ, that ye should be married to another, even to Him
who is raised from
the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God." (Rom. 7:14).
With respect to its usefulness to instruct the children of God, it may be
answered,
believers are not without teachers; the Lord their God teaches them to
profit, Isa. 48:7; to love
Him, Deut. 30:6. Yea, and they are taught of God to love one another, 1
Thess. 4:9. Christ, the
great prophet of the church, teaches them also. It is not now, remember the
law of Moses my
servant, but it is "this is my beloved Son, hear ye Him." "All
thy children shall be taught of the
Lord; and great shall be the peace of thy children." The Spirit of God,
"the anointing which ye
have received of Him, abideth in you; and ye need not that any man teach you
(if he be a minister
of the letter, or one that brings rules of life from the snares of death; -
but, as the same anointing
teacheth you of all things, and is true, and is no lie, and even as it hath
taught you, ye shall abide
in Him," 1 Jn. 2:27.
As to the letter of the commandments being an infallible rule of direction,
is answered
thus; they lead to the unity of God; that law prohibits idol worship and all
covetousness, and
commands love to the neighbor; but we are neither to serve God nor worship
God in the oldness
of the letter; He will be worshiped in Spirit and in truth, and served in
the newness of the Spirit
also; it is He that caused the light to shine out of darkness, that shines
into our hearts, and gives
us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus
Christ. God's worship, and
God's service, are to be performed under the Spirit's influence; "God
is a spirit, and they that
worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth." Although the law
forbids covetousness, the
power of it will never make any man hate it; "the law is weak through
the flesh;" the law of
unfeigned faith, that works by love out of a pure conscience, will make a
man hate covetousness.
"Pray for us," says Paul, "for we trust we have a good
conscience in all things, willing to live
honestly."
God has not left His people without sufficient directions nor yet without a
director. "In all
thy ways acknowledge God, and He shall direct thy paths." Wisdom is
profitable to direct; "I will
direct their work in truth, says God; "and I will make an everlasting
covenant with them," Isa.
61:8. "It is not in man that walketh to direct his steps." "I
will instruct thee, and teach thee in the
way which thou shalt go; I will guide thee with mine eye. Be ye not as the
horse or as the mule
which have no understanding," Psa. 32:8,9. "I will bring the blind
by a way that they know not; I
will lead them in paths that they have not known; I will make darkness light
before them, and
crooked things straight: these things will I do unto them and not forsake
them."
Nor does this doctrine remove the bounds of the church, nor leave her
without her
enclosures, unless it can be proved that God's putting His laws in their
hearts, and writing them in
their minds giving them a new heart and a new spirit; putting His fear
within them, and promising
they shall not depart from Him; holding them in His hand so that the gates
of hell cannot prevail
against them; causing them to walk in His statutes, to keep His judgments
and do them; being a
wall of fire round about them, placing salvation for walls and bulwarks, and
keeping them by His
mighty power through faith, can be called removing the bounds and taking
away the enclosures of
the church; and I think it is a pity that such a dispensation of super
abounding grace, the
ministration of God's eternal Spirit, should find no more favor in the eyes
of poor miserable
sinners, nor any better name than that of Antinomianism. For my part, I
believe it will go by
another name at the restitution of all things; for, if Christ restores all
things, He will doubtless
restore His own gospel to its proper name.
Who ever sent men to preach, who can make no difference between the law that
worketh
wrath, and love which casteth out fear; which the law genders; no difference
between the killing
letter and the bond of the everlasting covenant? Let love stand upon its own
bottom, fix it not on
the letter of the law. The law reveals the wrath to come; it is God's
magazine which contains all
the treasures of hail reserved against the day of battle and war, Job.
38:22. And who could ever
have thought that the only rule of life for believers could be brought from
the ministration of
condemnation, (2 Cor. 8:93) the snares of death (Prov. 13:14), the voice of
words (Heb. 12:19);
the law that worketh wrath, Rom. 4:15; the killing letter 2 Cor. 3:6; the
law that is against us.
(Col. 2:14) The adversary that delivers us to the judge to be cast into
prison; (Matt. 5:26) a law
that furnishes the sinner with an accuser before God Jn. 5 45; that is
contrary to us Col. 2:14; that
cursed the Savior Himself, though innocent Gal. 3:13; because He undertook
for His friends. A
fiery law (Deut. 33:2); a fire kindled in God's anger; Deut. 32:29; seven
thunders that are to utter
their voices Rev. 10:3; a shower of snares, fire and brimstone, and an
horrible tempest Psa. 11:6;
a fire that shall burn to the lowest hell (Deut. 32 22). But so it is; and
every preacher that does not
bind this grievous yoke upon men's shoulders; that does not turn aside to
vain jangling; that
refuses to tempt God by putting this yoke upon the disciples' necks, which
none are able to bear;
is an erroneous man; a man of a bad spirit: one that makes void the law; and
is, as I have been
often called a stinking Antinomian. God be merciful to such men! I have no
other glass to view
them in but the Scriptures of truth and my own experience. And as God
liveth, I do believe if
fifteen out of twenty of our present ministers were to see themselves as I
see them in the light of
God's word, that they would wish they had never been born; curse the day in
which they took
upon them the office of the ministry, and wish it to be blotted out from the
number of the months
(Job 3:6). But alas! ALAS! there are none who think themselves sufficient
for these things but
those of no understanding! A blind man knows not how to go to the city
(Eccl. 19:15). A blind
man beholdeth not the way of the vineyards. (Job. 24:18)
My friends may well ask, What is my sin? What have I done? Seeing some cry
one thing
and some another, the assembles are confused, and no account given of the
cause of this
concourse; and I can give none, unless it be for this one voice that I cried
among them; touching
the law, I said it is not the believer's rule of life. And this I do insist
upon, that bondage, hardness
of heart, revealed wrath, enmity against God, desperation, curses of hell
and damnation, are the
best things that men can fetch from the killing letter of the law of Moses;
whether the man be a
believer or an infidel it matters not. The law will pursue the believer if
he goes there, Christ alone
is his Refuge; it will entangle the believer, and yoke him again if he looks
for help there. The law
is not of faith, but of works; it is not of believing, but of doing: "he
that doth these things shall live
in them," is the language to the end of the chapter. Works are works.
and grace is grace, the one
is a covenant of works, the other a covenant of grace; one was given by
Moses, the other came by
Jesus Christ.
If the law of works be binding to the saints as some affirm, then James' law
of liberty is not
perfect, nor can we be blessed in our deeds by continuing in that. If the
law of works be binding,
then the law of the Spirit of life did not make Paul free from the law of
death, unless it can be
proved, that legal bondage and gospel liberty can stand together. If the
believer be under the law
as a rule of life, then he is under the law and under grace both at once;
which Paul says he is not;
he is not under the law, but under grace. If he be under the law as a rule
of life, he has got Peter's
unbearable yoke and Christ's easy yoke both on his neck at one time.
Election secures every minister in his station, and all the success that
shall attend his
labors. It has been observed that those, who have been the most forward at
lampooning me for an
Antinomian, have been the greatest novices in divinity; and, while they have
been contending for
the law as the only rule of life, they have preached the greatest confusion,
discovered the greatest
ignorance of the nature of the law, and have evidently appeared in the
strongest bondage: "He
that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity;" he that binds
grievous burdens on other men's
shoulders goes a sure way to load his own back.
Those that have felt the bondage, wrath, terrors, and death, that the law
works, will prize
their liberty, and take heed how they approach that blackness and darkness
again; but those that
never felt its power can play with it as with a bird, for they are alive
without it. It is vain that
ministers send men to Sinai in order to promote holiness: "the works of
the flesh are these,
adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft,
hatred, variance,
emulations, wrath, strife, seditions. heresies, envyings, murders,
drunkenness." And will sending
men to the law destroy these? Nay, says Paul, these are the motions of sin,
which are by the law
that works in our members to bring forth fruit unto death, Rom. 7:5. Nor was
the law manifested
to destroy these works of the devil, but to make them appear exceeding
sinful; nor does the law
weaken sin but aggravate it; for "the strength of sin is the law."
I know the law is holy, just, and good, because it defends a holy, just, and
good God, and
will certainly cut off and destroy forever every adversary that is found
under it; but though the law
is holy, yet it sanctifies none; it is just, but it justifies none; it is
good but it imparts no goodness to
men; God is our Justifier and Sanctifier, and Christ is our righteousness
and sanctification. God's
goodness to us comes by grace; severity comes by the law; "Behold
therefore the goodness and
severity of God: on them which fell, severity, but towards thee, goodness,
if thou continue in His
goodness; otherwise thou also shall be cut off," with the sword
furbished at that armory. It is the
fiery law that gives the sword of justice its flaming edge; "where
there is no law, there is no
transgression;" sin is the transgression of the law, and the law is the
transgressor's adversary that
makes his crimes appear exceeding sinful, and delivers him to the judge:
here lies its power; "the
strength of sin is the law." But with respect to our obedience, its
lending us any help, pardoning of
us, justifying of us, it is weak through the flesh, Rom. 8:3.
I have watched narrowly to see what good effects this doctrine of yours
produces among
those where it is perpetually enforced, and I can see nothing produced to
make me fall in love
with it, unless it be blindness, confusion, feigned humility, and struggling
under bondage; being
influenced with malice against the gospel; calling everything that tends to
make poor sinners free
and happy, Antinomianism, not knowing what they say, but taking it from
their teachers. The
saints are a people that God has formed for Himself to show forth His
praise. If he has created
them anew in Christ Jesus unto good works, which He hath before ordained,
that we should walk
in them. It is therefore their new creation in Christ Jesus, and their
abiding in Him, as the branch
doth in the vine, that produces these good works which they are to walk in.
As they received
Christ Jesus the Lord, so they are to walk in Him Every saint must
acknowledge as Paul, that, "by
the grace of God I am what I am."
These things, and a few zealous strokes at the power of religion, under the
name of
enthusiasm, and a candid application of those blind and bond children who
cannot see through
their mask, have been of very great use to the devil, because it has served
to stumble the faithful
and establish the Pharisee. Such as these have sent my soul bleeding home
many a time swaddled
with the spirit of bondage and sin has taken occasion by the commandment,
until the corruption of
my heart and carnal enmity have been stirred up against God, my mind
begloomed with horror,
and terrors have driven my feet; wrath then seemed to pursue me, Christ and
comfort were gone,
my sins, that had been long pardoned, came afresh to my remembrance and my
heart was filled
with hard thoughts of the Savior, the devil suggesting that Christ had left
me, and was become my
enemy, as a proof of which, he was now pursuing me with fire and sword. But,
when the Lord
again appeared and delivered me, I saw the bondage was from the law, not
from the Savior, and
that it was the devil pursuing me, not the Lord. I could then see the
difference between the
tempter and my great Deliverer. And all this was communicated to my soul
from the pulpit, and
that by the devil himself in a large wig and a long band.
Christ calls the scribes, notwithstanding their long robes, a generation of
vipers and says
they were of their father the devil, and his works they did, in binding
grievous burdens on men's
shoulders, which they never touched, though others labored hard under them.
If Satan can get
preachers to obscure the gospel and enforce the law, he knows the old veil
will gather on the
minds of the people and when a man is blinded you may lead him anywhere and
he shall never
know the want of a leader while Satan can furnish the world with blind
guides: for it is by these
men that he leads them into the ditch.
If the covenant of grace does not afford the believer a rule of life, it
must be very deficient;
however, Paul could bring a rule from thence sufficient for the believer to
live by, walk by,
worship by, and converse by. God's sovereign will is man's rule; and to the
saints God makes
known the mystery of His will according to His good pleasure which runs
thus: "This is the will of
him that sent me, that every one which seeth the Son, and believeth on Him,
may have everlasting
life: and I will raise him up at the last day." This mystery is called
by way of distinction from the
law, God's good will toward men which brings peace upon earth, and glory to
God in the highest,
Luke 2:14; and it is the good will of Him that dwelt in the bush. Deut.
33:16. When this is
revealed to men's hearts by the Holy Ghost it is called the mystery of faith
in a pure conscience, 1
Tim. 3:9; and this is the saints' All sufficient rule; by faith the just man
is to live; by faith, and not
by sight, is the just man to walk; in the Spirit, not in the letter, is the
just man to serve; in Spirit
and in truth to worship; he that is faithful unto death shall have a crown
of life; the end of faith is
salvation of the soul.
"O foolish Galatians, who hath bewitched you, that you should not obey
the truth! This
only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law,
or by the hearing of
faith? Are ye so foolish? having begun in the Spirit, are you now made
perfect by the flesh? These
people did not intend to give up the Savior, they were only going to help
Him; they did not intend
to cast off the Spirit, they were only going to perfect that which was
lacking in His work; they had
begun in the Spirit, and were going to the law to be made perfect. Ah! says
Paul, the law belongs
to the children of the flesh; to them it speaks; the works of it are the
works of the flesh. Your
perfection from thence will be only perfection in the flesh, and where you
go for perfection there
you must go for righteousness. Christ is our righteousness and
sanctification too; go to the law
for one, and you must go to the law for the other; by going for perfection
there that yoke will
entangle you again, and bring you into bondage. God makes us perfect by the
Spirit, which unites
to and makes us one with Christ, in whom we are complete. These poor souls
were coming to be
circumcised, and take the law on them as a rule of life, in order to perfect
the Spirit's work. These
preachers, Paul says, bewitched them, zealously affected them; yea, they
would have excluded
them from Christ, that they might affect them: "ye are fallen from
grace," says Paul. "Christ shall
profit you nothing."
Zion's laws are in the heart of Zion's King; the law of faith, the perfect
law of liberty, and
the law of the Spirit of life, go forth from thence: "out of Zion shall
go forth the law, and the
word of the Lord from Jerusalem," Isa. 2:3. And as for them that say, "Let
us break their bonds
asunder, and cast away their cords from us; He that sitteth in the heavens
shall laugh; the Lord
shall have them in derision." The throne of grace is in Zion; "Whosoever
shall call on the name of
the Lord shall be delivered; for the mount Zion shall be deliverance, as the
Lord hath said, and in
the remnant whom the Lord shall call." This is our comfort, that God
will never depart from this
city; for "the name of the city from that day shall be, the Lord is
there," Ezek. 48:35. From this
city God sends help to His people; they are strengthened out of Zion: and it
is against this city that
all our blind legal watchmen are levelling their vain janglings; but all
that fight against mount Zion
and her munition, and all that distress her, shall be as the dream of a
night vision, Isa. 29:7. The
Highest Himself shall establish her; "God shall help her, and that
right early! she shall never be
moved; not one of her stakes shall ever be removed, nor any of her cords
ever be broken," Isa
33:20.
To Mrs. R. J. at B- N-D:
I received the packet which you directed to me, consisting of your very long
epistle, of a circular in print, and of a sermon on the promises of God. I read your
epistle without offense, as I believe you meant well, which I gather from your
politeness, civil treatment, and cautious way of expressing yourself; such a
letter I have never received from any person who has thought proper to expose or
oppose me, as a maintainer of licentious doctrines. Their letters have generally
been filled with the scurrility of Billingsgate, and without any truth fairly
stated; which has only served to convince me that such persons are without
Christ, and have no hope in the world.
Was it in my power, I would address you as a gentleman of sense and a scholar, for both appear in your affectionate epistle, but I have neither politeness nor learning, as it is now called, yet
will give you the best answer I am capable of, in the language of Scripture.
If I know anything of my own heart, I can truly assert, that I wish all that fear
God to know what He hath done for my soul; and, in declaring it, I desire to
speak as the oracles of God; and to live up to what I preach, as far as grace
shall enable me while in this body of death! and I wish some of our zealous
advocates for Moses would do the same, by letting their light shine before me
that others might see as well as hear of their good works; seeing it is not the
hearers nor the contenders for the law that are just before God; but the doers
of the law shall be justified.
That the ten commandments are the believer's only rule of life,
was insisted upon by the first person that I ever disputed with on that subject;
which he endeavored to enforce and prove by Paul's quoting part of it in his
epistle to the Romans, which church he supposed to consist of saints only, by
Paul's addressing them as the beloved of God called to be saints, of considering
that hypocrites, wise virgins and foolish ones, are to go and grow together as
tares and wheat until harvest. And on the account of this mixture it is that the
killing letter and the promise of life must go together, the promises are to the
heirs of promise; and "we know that what things soever the law saith, it
saith to them who are under the law." I asked a gentleman which of the
commandments he meant? And he replied, "Those in the 20th chapter of
Exodus." And if those ten commandments are the believer's rule, the other
parts of Scripture, one would think, might be dispensed with by the believer;
for, if that law be his only rule of life, what can he want more? Though, by and
by, there is not the command to love God in that chapter.
I have sometimes wondered why these ancient saints should be set forth with
the
encomiums of being God's friends, walking with Him, obtaining witness that
they were righteous,
obtaining promises, obtaining good report, as strangers and pilgrims upon
earth, of whom the
world was not worthy, seeking an heavenly country, and a city that hath
foundations, despising all
worldly pleasure, self, and honor, leaving their own house, home, and
country, without any desire
to return thither; and why we should be commended to go forth by the
footsteps of this flock, and
be said to be compassed about with this cloud of witnesses, and be directed
to follow those who
through faith and practice now inherit the promises; when we know that if
they were on earth, in
this refined age, they would be ranked among the worst of Antinomians.
It is strange that the believer is not commanded to look to Moses the law
giver, and to the
bondwoman that is under the law, instead of looking to Abraham our father,
and to Sarah that
bare us, whom God called alone, and blessed and increased. (Isaiah 51:2).
Paul would have us
tread in the steps of the faith of our father Abraham, the promise that he
should be the heir of the
world, was not to him, or to his seed, through the law, Rom. 4:12,13; and
yet affirms, that as
many as are of faith are blessed with faithful Abraham. And this promised
blessing, and promised
heirship, was given to Abraham, and to his seed, four hundred and thirty
years before the law, or
before our only rule of life was given.
What rule had those glorious pilgrims to walk by, who obtained so good a
report, or so
good a testimony from God? Paul tells us that Abel offered to God, and
obtained witness that he
was righteous by faith; then faith was his rule of walk; and Noah condemned
the world by faith;
then faith was his rule of judgment. "By faith Abraham, when he was
called, went out not
knowing whither he went," then faith was his rule, by which he took his
journey, though he knew
not whither, and his obedience was the obedience of faith. But if he had
been favored with our
only rule of life, he might have known whither he was going, and not have
gone in ignorance, and
his obedience would have been the obedience of the law instead of faith. But
Paul will have it that
all Abraham's children are in the same strait that their father was, for
they walk by faith, not by
sight. But if the letter of the law be the only rule that the believer is to
walk and live by, then he
walks by sight, not by faith; he looks at the things that are seen, not at
the things that are not seen.
If it is by faith that Moses saw Him who is invisible, then by faith we must
look at the things that
are not seen, which are eternal.
Paul counts all things but dung that he may win Christ, and be found in Him;
not having
his own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the
faith of Christ; and tells
us to walk by the same rule, and mind the same thing. You take this rule of
Paul's to be his
pressing forward, or any of his attainments, it is answered, by faith he
pressed forward, and by
faith he attained; or else his pressing and attaining had been nothing but
sin, for whatsoever is not
of faith, according to Paul's doctrine, is sin.
By faith Christ dwells in our hearts, and by faith we dwell in Him; and "in
Christ Jesus
neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new
creature," which is Christ
formed within us: "and as many as walk according to this rule, peace be
on them and mercy, and
upon the Israel of God." Faith is the rule of life according to the
revealed will of God in Christ
Jesus; "and this is the will of Him that sent me, that every one which
seeth the Son, and believeth
on Him, may have everlasting life, and I will raise him up at the last day."
(Jn. 5:40) Thus faith,
appears to be the believer's rule of life. according to the will of God in
Christ Jesus; and the letter
of the law is the bond-childrens' rule of life; he that doth these things
shall live in them. Let him do
according to this rule and he shall live. The law is not the rule of
believing, but of doing; the law is
not of faith but of works, and the man that doth them shall live in them.
(Gal. 3:12)
If to see the Son, and believe on Him, entitles us to everlasting life
according to God's
will, then faith must be the rule of that life; and one would think that if "he
that liveth and
believeth shall never die," faith must be a safe rule to live by.
In your epistle, Sir, you tell me that, if I do not enforce the law as the
believer's rule of life,
I must in some sense make it void. I think I have sufficiently proved that
Paul's rule of life and
walk was faith; and he asks, "Do we then make void the law through
faith? God forbid: yea, we
establish the law." Paul insists upon it that faith worketh by love,
and tells us that "love worketh
no ill to his neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law."
(Rom. 13:10) If this doctrine be
the fulfilling of the law, it cannot make it void.
The sermon that you were so kind to send me is pregnant with a deal of
scholastic
unscriptural logic, little better than nonsense, which may serve to display
the worldly wisdom of
the author, and excite the admiration of unenlightened people. But any
spiritual person will easily
perceive that he knows little or nothing of the killing letter of the law,
or of the spiritual power of
the gospel.
The law, as the believer's rule of life, he endeavors to enforce from the
fitness of things,
which are phrases that stand for anything or nothing, just as the author
pleases. But he does not
satisfy me concerning the things that fit. God grant he may not go out of
the world with this
confusion in his heart! if he does, it is to be feared that he will find the
ministration of death, and
his carnal mind, when they come to grip one another in a dying hour, will
not fit so easy as he
imagines. Paul delighted in the law of God after the inward man, Rom. 7:22.
And, according to
Paul, the law of God and the inward man are things that will fit; a new
heart and a new spirit are
things that join well; a sense of God's love to us, and a pure love to Him,
brings about an union
that fits sweetly. "Believe," says the Savior, "that I am in
you and you in me;" and when Christ
crucified and a broken heart come together, they are things that fit exactly
as the branch and the
vine, or as the foundation with the super structure. And if the author of
this sermon dies a
stranger to the fitness of these things, as he seems to be at present, it
had been good for him if he
had never been born. Persons who are strangers to an union with Christ by
the Spirit know
nothing savingly of the spiritual fitness of things; they may make a noise
about the law just to
blind folks, but they bring forth no more fruit to God's glory than a branch
that is not in the vine.
(Jn. 15:4).
The professor must have Christ in him the hope of glory if ever he arrives
safe to the
happy enjoyment of God in heaven. People, who have no hope but in the
written letter of
Scripture, will find that the flood of wrath and the final conflagration
will leave them without an
anchor in that storm; and I am persuaded that the believer's rule of life
must be found in his heart
also, if ever he lives with God in heaven.
If the believer's rule be implied in the ten commandments according to this
gentleman, I
believe it would be there long enough before he would find it out. To put on
the Lord Jesus and
walk in Him, to put off the old man daily, and to put on the new man, which
is created in
righteousness and true holiness; to follow Christ in the Spirit; to deny
self, and take up the cross
daily to stand fast in gospel liberty, and not be entangled with the yoke of
bondage; to renounce
all confidence in the flesh, and rejoice in Christ Jesus; to hate one's own
life, or be unworthy of
the Savior; to walk in the Spirit, in order to escape the fulfilling of the
lusts of the flesh; to know
that the strength of sin is the law, and that it is the ministration of
death and condemnation; are
things that, if they are implied in the ten commandments, would lay there,
concealed from the
believer, to all eternity, if the mystery of faith had not revealed them, or
the gospel, that brings life
and immortality to light, had not brought them to light also. "When
Moses is read, the veil is upon
their heart." By the law is the knowledge of sin, but it brings not the
path of life to light, that is the
new and living way, (Heb. 10:20) and is revealed from another quarter; "God
who commanded
the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts to give the
light of the knowledge of
the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.''
Paul says, "To them that are without law I became as without law, being
not without law
to God, but under the law to Christ." Hence it appears that the
believer is not without law to God.
And, as long as I have made it my study to consider the believer's laws, I
will endeavor to bring
them forth, and set them in as fair a light as I am capable of, and see
whether they amount to what
is called Antinomianism, or whether they amount to real divinity; because
Paul says, we do not
make void the law through faith. Wisdom affirms, "Who so despises the
word shall be destroyed;
but he that feareth the commandment shall be rewarded;" and then tells
us that "the law of the
wise is a fountain of life, to depart from the snares of death,", Prov.
13:13,14. Let it be observed
that Wisdom's wise man, who is always opposed to the fool is, in New
Testament language, the
believer, who is opposed to the infidel; and this law is emphatically called
the law of the wise!
which is the same as the household of faith, being their law in particular,
as belonging to none
else; and it is called a fountain of life.
This rule of life, as some term it, is still a killing letter, hence God
declares that, "we are
delivered from the law, that being dead, wherein we were held, that we
should serve in newness
of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter," Rom. 7:6. If the law
be a killing letter, and the law
of death, it cannot be a fountain of life; by which the wise man departs
from the snares of death.
We know that sin is a transgression of the law, and that where there is no
law there is no
transgression; and that death is the sentence of the law; if so, the
commandments are the snares
that hold the sinner in the arms of death. The first snare that entangles a
thief is the law; and if he
is left to the mercy of that, it will serve him as the spider does the fly
in the web, never let him go
till it has killed him; it is a killing letter, and so all will find it that
weave the spider's web, no web
can be woven that will cover the soul on that loom; the commandment is
exceeding broad. Nor
can we suppose that our calling the ministration of condemnation the rule of
life will alter this
matter, or turn a killing letter into a living fountain; for that law gives
no life, therefore it can be
no part of this law of the wise. "Had there been a law given that could
have given life, verily righteousness should have come by the law." This law of the wise, that
is, a fountain of life, to
depart from the snares of death, is what Paul calls the ministration of the
Spirit opposed to the
ministration of death, 2 Cor. 3:9. Solomon's fountain of life is Paul's
ministration of the Spirit; and
what Solomon calls the snares of death is Paul's law of death. The wise
man's law of life is the
same as the living water that the Savior gives, that is in the believer as a
well of water springing
up into everlasting life. (Jn. 4:14)
Blessed be God forever, it is a fountain of life indeed by which the poor
believing sinner
departs from the snares of death, and that for ever more; or, to speak in
the apostle's language,
"The law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from
the law of sin and death;" that
is, the law of the Spirit of life in Christ has made me free from the law of
sin that works in my
members, and to the law of Moses, which is the ministration of death. We may
call this law of the
wise the believer's only rule of life, without talking nonsense.
This law of the wise is called a fountain, because it plays all its
productions high enough to
reach the spring from whence it is supplied; evangelical obedience springing
from the Spirit of life
and love, directed to the glory of God as the believer's chief end, makes
the assembly of the saints
like a garden enclosed, a spring shut up, or a fountain sealed, S.O.S. 4:12.
This law of the Spirit
of life produces more real obedience to God in one hour than ever hath been
produced by all the
rules that have been drawn by human wisdom from killing snares. This law of
the wise is Christ's
yoke that is easy, and it is his burden that is light, Matt. 11:29,30. Those
souls that are under this
are "the circumcision that worship God in the Spirit, rejoice in Christ
Jesus, and have no
confidence in the flesh." God wrote this law on our hearts and in our
minds does He put it, (Jer.
31:33).
This is the law that goes forth of Zion, not from Sinai, and is the word of
the Lord that
went from Jerusalem, (Micah 4:2); and those that receive it are the people "that
keep the
commandments of God and the faith of Jesus," Rev. 14:12. By this law
are the servants of God
warned, and in keeping this there is great reward, for charity abideth
forever, Psa. 19:11. This is
the holy commandment delivered unto us, from which legions have continually
departed, 2 Pet.
2:21; because it was only delivered to them in the letter of it, not put
into them as a fountain of
life. Hence they begin in the Spirit, or with the dispensation of the
gospel, and end in the flesh, or
under the killing letter.
The law of the wise may be called a fountain of life, because it quickens
the dead soul, and
raises it to a lively hope; it produces that life which the law promised but
could not give because
we could give it no obedience; but this law enables a soul to live unto God,
to live by the faith of
the Son of God; it produces a lively motion toward God; it is attended with
life and peace, and
enables us to love God that we may live eternally with Him.
Thus, Sir, the believer is not without law to God, for God has written His
law in his heart,
and he is under this law to Christ as his eternal Head, King, and Ruler. And
I think this is speaking
as the oracles of God, and preaching it is doing the work of an evangelist,
and making full proof
of the ministry, much better than telling poor blind souls to look with one
eye to Christ, who is
our life, and the other to the law, which is death; and it is better than
bringing rules of life from a
law which is the strength of sin; or telling people that the rule of life is
implied in the killing letter;
or that it appears from the fitness of things; when we know that a living
soul serving God in the
oldness of the letter are things that can fit in no better than has darkness
and light; the eye of faith
the blinding veil; perfect liberty and a yoke of bondage; real love and a
gendering to fear; a display
of mercy and a revelation of wrath; one working friendship and the other the
motions of sin and
vengeance. Are these the things that will fit; or what is the fitness that
rises from them? I should
like to hear the author again on this matter.
By the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified, for by the law is the
knowledge of sin;
but now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being
witnessed by the law and
the prophets, even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus
Christ. For all have sinned
and come short of the glory of God; being justified freely by His grace,
through the redemption
that is in Christ Jesus: whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation
through faith in His blood, to
declare His righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through
the forbearance of God,
to declare at this time His righteousness, that He might be just, and the
justifier of him which
believeth in Jesus. "Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what
law; of works? Nay, but by the
law of faith." But what doth Paul mean by the law of faith? Does he
mean the gospel, which is
sometimes called faith, as Paul, who persecuted the saints in times past, is
said now to preach the
faith? No; for the gospel is the revelation and explanation of the covenant
of promise; and all the
blessings of it are the free gifts of God; Christ the covenant head, the
Spirit of promise,
everlasting righteousness, everlasting salvation, life, and glory, are all
the gifts of God, held forth
in unconditional promises, which are all yea and amen, to the glory of God,
and our everlasting
salvation.
As all these things come freely from God, from the, better covenant, a
covenant of
promise, made with Christ, and with His seed in Him and are purely free in
their fountain, in their
administration and bestowed on a God-honoring and hell-deserving people,
irrespective of any
work, worth, or worthiness in them, there can be nothing like a law in it,
that is, there is nothing
that binds with rigor to obedience or that threatens damnation for
non-performance; there is
nothing in it that sets a man to work for life, reckoning the reward to be
of debt; for God gives
grace to make us obedient to the faith, and by grace he preserveth and
rewardeth the faithful. The
Lord gives both grace and glory, and will display the riches of His grace in
glory by Christ Jesus:
yea, even the kingdom itself is given of God in His good pleasure. Therefore
I presume that the
word of faith dwelling richly in us, the spirit of faith working powerfully,
and the grace of faith
working by love, purifying the heart, holding an imputed righteousness, and
giving Christ a
residence within us, is Paul's law of faith. For it is not hearing the
gospel, nor imbibing a
speculative knowledge of it, that will exclude boasting; but the word, and
grace of faith when
powerfully applied to the heart, will stop the sinner's mouth, and forever
silence him upon that
head.
Here James compares the gospel preached to a glass, the light of which
reflecting upon the
sinner's conscience makes manifest the state of his soul; as Paul speaks: "but
we all with open face
beholding as in a glass;" so here the sinner hates the light, and goeth
his way; he will come no
more to it; this glass has shown, and the light of it has reproved his
deeds, therefore, he hates it,
and goeth his way into the world again, and so hardens his heart and sears
his conscience, until all
is forgotten, and then he sinks into a deeper security; or, as the text
saith, "he straightway
forgetteth what manner of man he was. But whoso looketh into the perfect law
of liberty, and
continueth therein, he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work,
this man shall be
blessed in his deed." Jas. 1:25. Here is a law of perfect liberty, or a
perfect law of liberty, to be
looked into, and to be continued in if a man will be blessed in his deed.
No doubt but many of the mercenary Hebrew masters were grieved at this law
of liberty;
they were galled and chafed in their minds to see their slaves go out free.
Hence we read that
Zedekiah made a covenant with all the people at Jerusalem to proclaim
liberty to their servants
unjustly detained: that every man should let his man servant or maid
servant, being an Hebrew or
Hebrewess, go free that they should not serve themselves of them. When the
princes and people
heard of this covenant of the kings, they obeyed it, and let their servants
go free; "but afterwards
they turned, and caused the servants and handmaids, whom they had let go
free, to return, and
brought them into subjection for servants and for handmaids."
"I made a covenant with your fathers, says God, that when the servant
had served six
years ye shall let him go free, and you had now turned and done right in my
sight, in proclaiming
liberty; and ye had made a covenant before me, in the house which is called
by my name, but ye
returned and polluted my name, by causing every man and maid servant whom he
had set at
liberty at their pleasure to return, and brought them into subjection.
Therefore, thus saith the
Lord, Ye have not hearkened unto me in proclaiming liberty; - behold, I
proclaim a liberty for
you, saith the Lord, to the sword, to the pestilence, and to the famine, and
I will make you to be
removed into all the kingdoms of the earth." (read Jeremiah 34)
"He that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity," says
John, Rev. 13:10; and so it was
here, the masters hated the Lord's release; they refused to break the yoke,
therefore God put their
necks under the yoke of the king of Babylon, Jer. 27:8; and left them in his
service three score and
ten years, and then proclaimed a jubilee to them, which they were glad to
hear of as their poor
servants had been before; as it is written, "when the Lord turned the
captivity of Zion we were
like them that dream." But the deliverance that God proclaimed to them
was more than a dream,
though that was better than they had formerly proclaimed to their servants.
God's release of them
was real, which filled their mouth with laughter, and their tongues with
singing, insomuch, that the
heathens said the Lord hath done great things for them (Psa. 127:1, 2)
These mercenary masters are lively figures of many of our preachers; and it
is with allusion
to them that the inspired penmen often speak of false apostles and deceitful
workers, who under
the veil of the law, and the influence of the devil transformed, call the
everlasting gospel
Anti-nomianism the preachers of it Anti-nomians, the powerful operations of
the Spirit of it
enthusiasm, and the liberty of it licentiousness; as if the word, Spirit,
grace, and ministers of the
Lord, were the only instruments of Satan; and graceless men the only
infallible preachers of
holiness, who under a false show of it tempt God; bring forth the old yoke;
lead the saints into
bondage; pervert their way; and set their hearts to fretting against the
Lord, Prov. 19:3. Of this
number are some; I may say legions, for there are many that go from our
universities and
academies, who have no other qualifications for the ministry, authority in
it, credentials for it,
right to live by it, or to claim the honor of it, than that which is of men;
they are ministers of men
and by men. And among all the mysteries that puzzle the wise this is none of
the least, that men of
worldly wisdom, which God calls foolishness. (1 Cor. 3:19); and wise and
prudent men, from
whom he has hid the mysteries of His kingdom, Matt. 11:25; should be able
with the help of that
wisdom that is earthly, sensual, and devilish. (Jas. 3 15); to turn carnal
men into ministers of the
Spirit, spiritual lords, divines, and doctors of divinity. But so it is, if
we may credit all that we
hear; but how it is done must remain a mystery, until he that has promised
to reveal the mystery of
iniquity reveal this also as a main branch of it.
Here is the command to the believers, they were to keep the law of Moses; to
which Peter
answers, "God which knoweth the hearts, bare them witness, giving them
the Holy Ghost, even as
he did unto us; and put no difference between us and them, purifying their
hearts by faith. Now
therefore why tempt ye God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples,
which neither our
fathers nor we were able to bear?" The liberty which Peter here alludes
to is the liberty of the
Holy Ghost, which God had given them, which Paul calls the law of the Spirit
of life, which made
him free from the law of sin and death; and "where the Spirit of the
Lord is there is liberty," 2
Cor. 3:17, for, as David says, the Spirit of God is a free Spirit, Psa.
51:12. The rule that Peter
gives them is faith, which purifies the heart.
The unbearable yoke that they were going to tempt God with, by galling the
neck of the
disciples, was first, the needfulness of circumcision: Secondly, a command
to keep the law of
Moses; and it is called tempting God, because it was a reflection cast upon
His work who had
purified their hearts by faith, and sent His spirit to govern and lead them
into all truth, as if the
Holy Ghost was not sufficient to make them obedient, nor God's purifying
their hearts a sufficient
purification, nor faith a sufficient rule, without yoking them with the
killing letter as the only rule
of life. And as it was then, so it is now; every man that refuses to tempt
God, and that will not
bring forth this yoke, and that does not affirm that the killing letter is
the living man's only rule of
life, is an Antinomian, a licentious person, a man in errors, one that makes
void the law; and is
cried down by every blind watchman, though they cannot bring one text to
prove that the believer
is under the law as a rule of life nor one text that calls Moses' law the
believer's rule of life; nor
one text from God's book to overthrow this doctrine, this everlasting
gospel: Paul says, they
know not what they say, nor whereof they affirm.
If it be urged that the command, thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all
thy heart, is still
a yoke upon the believer's neck; it is answered, the believer is not under
the law, but under grace;
not an heir of wrath, nor of the commandments, but an heir of promise and he
is to take the
commandment to the promise, which belongs to the better covenant; and he
will find that God has
promised to circumcise his heart, and that he shall love the Lord that he
may live. Paul makes a
difference between the commandment and Christ, "I have loved thee with
an everlasting love, and
therefore with loving kindness have I drawn thee," is in a promise, and
is better than a command:
they shall love me is safer and better than do love me; it comes from the
better covenant,
established upon better promises than conditional ones, and is sure to all
the chosen seed.
It will be expected that my unknown friend will send me in his answer to
this, from the
word of God, an account of the bad effects, licentious practices and
libertinism, that this doctrine
has produced in the saints of God; and likewise an account from Scripture of
the superior
holiness, fruitfulness, or usefulness, that has demonstrated itself in those
who have tempted God,
putting the commanding yoke of the law upon the disciples' necks; or, as
Paul says, swerved from
this end of the commandment, which is charity out of a pure heart, to the
study and practice of
vain jangling, or desiring to be teachers of the law, knowing neither what
they say nor whereof
they affirm.
It is not to be wondered at that men love or desire to be teachers of the
law; the letter is
more superficial, it lays nearer home, and is within the compass of nature.
But as for this mystery,
to an unenlightened, unquickened, uninspired, unrenewed minister of the
letter, it is too profound
a depth, the natural man receives it not, nor can he know it, because it is
spiritually discerned, and
by the saints powerfully felt; but it will ever be a parable in the mouth of
fools, Prov. 26:7. These
are the great things of God's law, and they are accounted a strange thing,
Hos. 8:12. It contains
the weighty matters of the law, judgment, mercy, faith, and the love of God,
and teaches a man to
do the lesser matters in faith, and under the constraining power of the
Spirit of love and of a
sound mind; sound in the faith, and inspired with love, which will make a
man obedient unto
death; "love is strong as death;" and so those saints found it who
"loved not their lives unto the
death," Rev. 12:11. I come now to another branch of this perfect law of
liberty. which is to be
continued in, if a man will be blessed in his deed.
If Paul has any meaning I think it amounts to this, that the law has the
same dominion over
the sinner, that expects life or help from it by his own obedience to the
rules of it, as the husband
has over his wife by the law of marriage; and the law communicates bondage
to the soul; which
the soul naturally genders to, until the soul be pregnant with horror,
despair, and misery, just as a
man communicates seed to a wife, who brings forth a still-born or dead
child, which is the worst
of labors without any heir to satisfy the husband, as Paul aims to prove. "For,
when we were in
the flesh, the motions of sin, which: were by the law, did work in our
members to bring forth fruit
unto death, Rom. 7:5. But when God tells the poor sinner, who is so fond of
being Moses'
disciple, that "Moses my servant is dead;" and the soul is
quickened to feel and enlightened to see
that the law is a killing letter, the law of death, and ministration of
condemnation; and that the
soul can bring forth no fruit to God under its gendering bondage, no fruit
but fruit unto death or
dead works; the soul seeing a dead husband, and a dead law, that cannot give
life, the soul is
loosed from that law; nor is it an adulteress, nor an Antinomian, though it
be married to another
man. For that law has no more power over such a soul than the corpse of
Anna's husband had
over her, who had been a widow upwards of forty years, and had lived with an
husband but seven
years from her virginity, and was then waiting to be married to the
consolation of Israel. (Luke
2:36)
The way that the soul gets released from that law is by the body of Christ.
The soul that
sees that the law cursed the Savior as well as the sinner, and that the Lord
died under the law; that
it was the law of death to the Savior as well as to the sinner; and, finding
Christ raised from the
dead, it goes after him and unites with Him, and is begotten to a lively
hope by His resurrection
from the dead; and Christ formed in the soul the hope of glory is an
incorruptible seed indeed, a
precious fruit. Such are no adulteresses though they be married to another
man. Nor do they
deserve the name of licentious Antinomians, seeing the Holy Ghost affirmeth
that this is done that
they may bring forth fruit unto God, Rom. 7:4; namely, the fruits of the
Spirit. If the rigorous
husband of a poor simple woman be dead, according to Paul's doctrine, one
would think that he
could command her person, and beat her back no more; and that the other man
whom she had
married had got the sole and whole command of her; I am sure he has by the
laws of God, and by
the covenant of wedlock, or else I know not who would marry a widow to have
her hunted with
the commands of a ghost.
However, if the killing commandments of the dead husband be the believer's
rule of life,
who is espoused to Christ by faith, this is the case; Moses, the Lord's
servant, has still the
command and dominion over the bride the Lamb's wife, Rev. 21:3. And
notwithstanding his being
dead, as God affirms, yet he must manage the household of faith, and give
the only rule of life to
the queen, although she be exalted to stand at the right hand of the king in
gold of Ophir, Psa.
45:9. If she be at the right hand of the king, they do her much wrong who
place her at the foot of
a servant; one would think that, as he was not permitted to go into the
promised land, though he
fain would, which was but a faith type of heaven, he could never have such
power over the house
or church of Christ, which is so often emphatically called heaven.
We are under the law as the rule of life, say some; then the law of liberty
is far from being
perfect. One would think that souls espoused to Christ, and married to Him,
that they should
bring forth fruit unto God, were under no law but that of the husband; or,
as Paul says, under the
law to Christ. And I am sure it is so with souls wedded to Moses, he has the
whole command of
them, for they are without the spiritual law of life altogether: and surely
the second husband has
as much right as the first; if we allow this man to be worthy of as much,
Paul says, he is counted
worthy of more glory than Moses. inasmuch as he who hath builded the house,
as Jacob built the
house of Israel by Rachel and Leah, Ruth 4:11, is worthy of more honor than
the house. (Heb.
3:3)
It is clear that all the fruit brought forth under Moses was but dead works,
or fruit unto
death; therefore he built no house or household but that of the bond woman,
who is affirmed to be
desolate; and with respect to God, she is said to have no husband, Gal.
4:27; and therefore all her
offspring are a bastard race of dead children, dead in trespasses and sins,
which are sunk into the
synagogue of Satan instead of a righteous nation, called the living, that
are to rise up and praise
Christ. (Isa. 38:19) Hence we learn that souls under the law wedded to Moses
are not God's wife;
they bring forth fruit unto death, not unto God; they are free from
righteousness. God says, I am
not their husband; Moses has full command of them, though he accuses them
day and night; and
Christ Himself always sends such souls to the law, that they may not marry
another while the first
husband lives. But when an accusing Moses, and his killing law, have
executed their sentence of
death on the soul, it is then dead; and if Christ quickens it and enlightens
it, and it flies, as Ruth
did, to His skirt, if He spreads His skirt over it, it is a time of love,
and if He enters into a
marriage covenant with such a soul, it becomes His own, Ezek. 16:8. He has
the whole command
of such, and the full possession of them; He has married the soul that was
in a state of
widowhood, and says thy Maker is thy Husband; thou shalt remember the
reproach of thy
widowhood no more. Thus He marries the widow, discharges her debts, redeems
the mortgaged
inheritance, raises up the name of the dead upon it and does worthily in
Ephratah, and is famous
in Bethlehem, Ruth 4:11.
Paul tells us that he was dead to the law; "I through the law am dead
to the law, that I
might live unto God." He tells us that when the commandment came sin
revived, and he dies; that
sin took occasion by the commandment, deceived him, and by it slew him, Rom
7:11. One would
think that, when a law has apprehended a transgressor, arraigned him, tried
him, cast him,
condemned him, executed him, and buried him, he was got out of the reach of
that rule of life.
Paul says the law came to him, it apprehended him, sin revived, he would be
found guilty; it took
an occasion by the law to expose him to death, deceived him, with respect to
all hopes in it, and
slew him by the sentence of it; that he was dead and buried with Christ, or
planted together with
Him in the likeness of His death. If so, one would have thought that it had
done with him.
But according to some, this killing letter, or moral law, has never done
with the believer;
they would make it like the Popish law, which makes a believer in Christ a
heretic; condemns him,
curses him with bell, book, and candle, and burns him to ashes, and yet
pursues him still; if he
goes to purgatory, it follows him; if to heaven, it holds the keys of that;
and at the judgment day
there can be no favor or mercy without Popish absolution. So some handle the
law of Moses;
though it kills a man and he is crucified, dead, buried, and risen again
through the operation of
God; yet the commandment that came, which deceived and slew him is still his
only rule of life; it
is still binding, and if he goes into heaven itself it pursues him, for the
very angels round the
throne are governed by it, as some affirm which is strange, as God's voice,
whether in the law or
in the gospel, is declared to be to the sons of men. (Prov. 8:4)
It has been a puzzling matter to me to find out what this is that appears in
Moses' ministry,
with respect to success, that makes people so eager to copy after him. "He
fed the people forty
years in the wilderness it is true, but he was so far from exceeding the
apostles and evangelists in
success, with respect to conversion work, that he declares "the Lord
has not given you an heart to
perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear unto this day," Deut. 294;
and calls them a perverse
generation, a nation void of counsel, and children in whom is no faith,
Deut. 32:20. And we know
that their carcasses fell in unbelief twenty thousand together. Yea, and the
Jews for rejecting of
Christ and cleaving to Moses were destroyed by infinite numbers, and with an
infinite destruction;
and a Pharisee, who is the greatest advocate for the law, is farther from
the kingdom of God than
publicans and harlots; and if Moses be but read the veil is upon their
hearts, nor can it be taken
away till they turn to the Lord.
No fruits are brought forth under the law but wild grapes, wild figs,
untimely fruits, dead
works, mercenary and eye service, and fruits unto death; and all spring from
the base principles of
slavish fear; done to get a name or to be seen of men, to merit heaven, and
bring God in debt to
them; their works spring from the fear of a condemned criminal, which is the
worst of roots, and
are directed to self, the worst of ends; hence Israel is said to be an empty
vine, not united to
Christ the true Vine, therefore He brings forth fruit to himself (Hos.
10:8); and instead of bringing
forth fruit to himself he must deny himself daily.
The grace of God, that bringeth salvation, teaches us to deny ungodliness
and worldly lust,
and to live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world, Titus
2:11,12. The believer's own
reins, when God tries him, instruct him in the night season, Psa. 16:7. "The
heart of the wise,
(being a new heart, which contains a new spirit), teacheth his mouth, and
addeth learning to his
lips." Thus the children of God are not without teachers, nor yet
without divine and infallible
teachers. And I would to God that the saints would attend a little more to
their divine teaching,
they would not stumble upon the dark mountains, be tossed about with every
blind guide and
wind of doctrine, and go hood-winked, groping for the wall at noonday, as
numbers of them do.
But alas! instead of searching the Scriptures, as they are commanded to do,
which are able to
make them wise to salvation, through faith that is in Christ Jesus, they
load their shelves, and stuff
their heads with the notions of what are called the fathers; when, if they
would try them by God's
standard, they would find that not one half of their notions would stand the
touchstone of God's
word. If believers were to go to the great infallible Head and Prophet of
the church by humble
prayer, they would find their judgment better informed, their thoughts more
established, and their
hearts more firmly fixed, than ever they will be by reading a thousand folio
volumes of such
mongrel divinity, dashed with whole bowls of popery; where you may hunt for
seven years and
never find one page that can, in the strictest sense, be called the
everlasting gospel.
There are libraries, consisting chiefly of ancient books that cost fifty
thousand pounds, and
I would not go fifty steps to call them all my own if stripped of that
despised book called the
Bible, and a few more that I could name, which were written by our own
divines. I am fully
persuaded that every believer may get divinity more pure from adulteration,
more powerful, more
satisfactory, more establishing, by humble prayer to Christ Jesus, in one
hour, than ever he will
get from all those authors that are called the fathers, who were as blind as
bats, and their writings
as full of confusion as a gentleman's garret is full of lumber. "If any
of you lack wisdom, let him
ask of God, who giveth liberally and upbraideth not; and it shall be given
him."
It is when men get cold to God, dead to study, powerless and faithless in
prayer; shy of
the Lord; at a distance from His throne, and beneath heavenly mindedness,
and void of heavenly
meditation; that they fly to these fathers instead of flying to the Father
of eternity, where wisdom,
mercy, and comfort may be got; for He is "the Father of mercies, and
God of all comfort;" and I
know that he will withhold no good thing from them that walk uprightly, Psa.
84:11.
Sending the citizens of Zion to Sinai for rules of life and direction, is a
contempt of Mount
Zion, and of the heavenly Jerusalem, to which the Spirit of God leads all
believers, (Heb. 12:22)
and is no less a contempt of the King of saints, whom God hath set on that
most holy hill. Making
the letter the only rule of life, is sending the saints wrong, for as much
as the Lord hath said unto
them, they shall henceforth return no more that way, Deut. 17:16. They have
compassed that
mount long enough, Deut. 2:2,3. Moses is dead and buried, Josh. 1:2. Joshua
is to take the lead.
It is bewitching the people; (Gal. 3:1) it is sending them to the old yoke
of bondage, Gal. 5:1;
which is a contempt of the Savior's yoke. (Matt. 11:29) It is turning back
upon grace; it is abusing
their liberty; it is making Christ of none effect to them, Gal. 5:4; and
that should profit them
nothing. (Gal. 5:2)
Elijah, who traveled forty days into the wilderness in order to go to Horeb,
instead of
going to Mount Zion, was asked twice, by way of reproof, first in a storm,
and then by a still
voice, "What doest thou here, Elijah?" 1 Kings 29:9,13; which was
attended with an earthquake,
whirlwind, and a fire; God would not take him to heaven from that mount,
though he requested to
die there; that is not the new and living way, Heb. 10:20; he must go back
to the Holy Land, over
the river Jordan again, and into the plains of Jericho, where Joshua,
typical of our Captain, first
took the lead, before the fiery chariot appeared to take him to heaven, 2
Kings 2:11.
Nor can sending living souls to a killing letter for rules of life be any
way promotive of
fruitfulness. There can be no fruit brought forth to God's glory without an
union, by the Spirit of
love, to Christ the living Vine: the branch cannot bear fruit of itself. No
good fruit till the corrupt
tree be made good by grace; "make the tree good and his fruit will be
good; a good tree cannot
bring forth evil fruit." No good works without faith; "whatsoever
is not of faith is sin:" no honest
labors without love: no spiritual fruits without the Spirit of God produce
them; no works done
acceptable to God, unless He works in us both to will and to do them.
As for correcting unruly Christians by the law, I believe the saints' law
written on the
fleshly tables of every believing heart by the Spirit of God; and that
Christ dwells in them by faith;
and that He keeps His royal court in Mount Zion for all His friends, as He
is crowned King there;
but, as for Sinai, it is His court of judicature; He appears there as the
Judge of all. We are to
apprehend the unruly, and keep them to the royal court, and to the bar of
equity; and appeal, as
Paul did, to God and to conscience in God's sight: and when the unruly feels
the force of faithful
reproof, backed with the Scriptures of truth, and seconded by his own
conscience, it will be more
mortifying and humbling to him than flogging him with the scourges that can
be brought from the
ministration of death. This never brought a sinner to Christ, nor restored a
backslider; it is with
the cords of love that God leads a soul to the Savior; and by the same is
the backslider restored. "I
will heal their backslidings; I will love them freely."
Your enforcing the command to love God, calling it the believer's rule, that
must ever
remain binding, is not speaking as the oracles of God. We know that the law
commands us to love
God; and we have received favors enough to bring us in debtors so to do; but
the carnal mind is
enmity against God; it is not subject to that law, nor can be. There is
nothing that the law
demands but what the gospel gives; and there is nothing that the law
commands that it helps us to
perform, nor does it afford strength, life, love, holiness, mercy,
inclination or power to enable us
to give it its due.
I know we are commanded to walk in love as Christ has loved us; but we must
settle
things on their own proper basis. The end of the commandment is charity; but
where do we get
this charity or love? Why it is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost
which is given unto us.
It is given, is from ,the covenant of promise, not from the covenant of
works; if salvation be of
grace in every part, it is no more of works in any part. Love is the basis
of a covenant of grace; "I
have loved thee with an everlasting love;" the gift of Christ is the
wonderful effect of it; "God so
loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son." It is with
lovingkindness that God draws us
to Christ; "no man can come unto Me, except the Father which hath sent
Me draw him." Love is
the bond of the everlasting covenant; "My lovingkindness I will not
utterly take from him, nor
suffer My faithfulness to fail." Love is the bond of eternal union
between Christ and His church:
Thou, O Father, hast loved them as thou hast loved Me, Jn. 17:23. Love is
the bond of heartfelt
union between the Lord and us; "he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in
God, and God in him: " and
it is called the love of God perfected in us, not our love, which is of the
law; for it is said not that
we loved God, but that He loved us.
The covenant of works was made with man; it belongs to Adam, and all his
children in the
flesh that bear his image; the covenant of grace was made with Christ, and
all His seed in Him.
The one is established upon unconditional promises, the other upon the
conditions of dead man's
performances; and who would call this law the believer's only rule of life?
he is to walk and live by
faith; he is to worship and serve God in the newness of the Spirit, not in
the oldness of the letter;
he is to walk in love as Christ hath loved him. And it is pain that faith
worketh by love, and is
attended with divine life, which are all the gifts of God in Christ Jesus;
they are received from His
fullness, and wrought in us, and are no less than the law of the Spirit of
life in Christ Jesus, which
make us free from the law of sin and death.
If faith, life, holiness, and love, come from the law of the Spirit, why are
they ingrafted
upon the killing letter? and why is the believer sent forth to fetch his
rule of life from that law
which was once his death warrant? why this confusion: why this turning
things upside down? The
man that has got the law of the Spirit of life in him is the man to whom the
Lord speaks by His
Son. He speaks not to the believer out of the cloudy pillar, nor out of
thick darkness. He has
spoken to us in these last days by His Son; and it is to the believer that
He thus speaks: "Hearken
unto Me, ye that know righteousness, the people in whose heart is My law."
A believer is a
righteous man, made so by imputation; and the law is not made for the
righteous, but for the
lawless and disobedient, (1 Tim. 1:9). God speaks to the children of the
flesh in the law. "Now we
know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under
the law." But the saints
are not under the law, but under grace, Rom. 6:14. The law is a yoke of
bondage for bond
children, a covenant of works for proud work mongers, and a ministration of
condemnation, to
curse them for their pride and evil works.
As to what David says of the law being perfect, converting the soul, and of
its being a light
to his feet and a lamp to his path, it is soon answered. The killing letter
never turning a soul from
darkness to light, from the love of sin to love God with all his heart;
which is attended with faith,
repentance, and godly sorrow, which flows from a sense of God's love to him
in Christ Jesus; all
which come from the covenant of grace. Faith is a coming to Christ, and the
love that faith works
by draws his heart as he goes; and both these are the free gift of God.
Christ did not furnish Saul
with these spiritual weapons, which are mighty through God to pull down
strong holds from the
killing letter. I send thee Paul to turn sinners from darkness to light, and
from the power of Satan
unto God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins, and an inheritance
among them that are
sanctified by faith that is in Me, Acts 26:10.
The brightest light that shines in the law comes from the eye of offended
Justice; it was the
flames of wrath that the law was given at first; it was added because of
transgression, and it is in
that awful light that sinners see their own condemnation, as Saul and Balaam
saw their own future
destruction; and it is in that light that sinners will see their endless
misery, who are said to lift up
their eyes in hell; but that light discovers not the path of life, which is
called the path of the just.
The light of the knowledge of the glory of God shines in the face of Jesus
Christ, who is the true
Light, and the everlasting light of all His people; he that believeth in Me,
says the Savior, shall not
abide in darkness.
David was not without the law of faith; he tells you he believed, therefore
hath he spoken;
nor was he without the law of the Spirit of life, as appears by his prayer; "Take
not thy Spirit from
me." It was in this law that he saw wonders; as for the ten
commandments, he prayed that God
would not enter into judgment with his servant under them, for he knew the
commandments were
exceeding broad. If the commandments afford such a deal of light to our
feet, how comes it that
our present advocates for them are so exceeding blind? by them it appears
that Paul's assertions
are true, that the veil remains untaken away in reading the Old Testament, I
am bold therefore to
affirm, sir, that David and you have two different meanings.
With respect to what you have heard about my speaking lightly of the law, I
believe you
will find, in this my answer to yours, all that I have ever said about it;
and you must judge for
yourself whether I have spoken the language of Scripture or not. If I have
to lay the blame where
it ought to be laid; "if any man consent not to the wholesome words,
even the words of our Lord
Jesus Christ, he is proud knowing nothing.
However, as I am determined to publish this answer to yours, my accusers
will have a fair
opportunity to attack the doctrine. I have advanced on the ground of truth:
I have fled to none of
those poor shifts called implications and the fitness of things; I have used
no weapons but those
that I believe to be spiritual. They cannot have a fairer opportunity, nor a
fairer field to meet me
on, nor a smaller number to engage. If this be Antinomianism, let them
muster all their forces
against it, prove it to be so, and overthrow it. I am open to conviction; my
conscience is not
seared, nor am I past feeling; and, if I cannot defend it by God's word, I
will fly to no other shifts;
and therefore I hope my opponents will not puzzle my brains with St. Basil,
St. Augustine, St.
Ambrose, Herman Witsius, and saint nobody knows who. Jesus I know; but who
are these? For
my part, I have not a single doubt but God will enable me to defend this
doctrine; for I know it is
the doctrine that He applied to me, and set my soul at liberty by. And as I
am the Antinomian,
according to their accusations, it lies with them to overthrow it, and prove
their charge; and, if
upon trial it be found to be the everlasting gospel, then "let them
hear and say, it is truth," Isa. 43
9; and acknowledge that for the truth's sake I have suffered reproach.
The man that makes the killing letter his rule walks by sight, not by faith,
he looks at the
things that are seen, not at the things which are not seen. He serves in the
oldness of the letter, not
in the newness of the Spirit; he worships God in the letter, not in Spirit
and in truth; nor is he free
indeed. I know the law will bring a man into bondage notwithstanding his
grace, if he stands not
fast in the liberty wherewith Christ has made him free; nor does the law of
the wise, as a fountain
of life, cause a man to depart from the snares of death; or, as the Savior
says, pass from death to
life by faith, because the believer, according to them, is still under the
snares of death; he is still
under the law of death as his only rule of life.
This is called preaching the gospel, doing the work of an evangelist, being
a minister of the
Spirit, making full proof of the ministry; and every man that cannot turn
the law that worketh
wrath into a law of love; that cannot bring the living fruits of the Spirit
out of the killing letter;
that cannot turn the snares of death into rules of life, is an erroneous man
and an Antinomian.
Welcome reproach! welcome names! welcome Antinomian! These names bring no
guilt on the
conscience; they stop not up the new and living way between God and the
soul; they seal not up
God's book, nor bind the spirit-of liberty.
No wonder that legions are flocking back to Sinai; it is a proof that the
law is not dead to
them, nor they to it; they begun in the Spirit before they had been killed
by the letter. Their first
husband, it is to be feared, is not dead, therefore they are not loosed from
that law: and being
adulteresses, the first husband has taken them up and brought them back, not
being loosed from
their old bond of wedlock, nor favored with a writing of divorcement;
therefore, as a wife of the
first covenant, the eloped Lo-ruhamah is brought back, Hos. 1:6; Hos. 2-1,2;
but Hephzibah, the
Lord's delight, whom He has espoused to Himself, if she goes back, will
return again to her first
husband, saying, It was better with me then than it is now.
Consider, Sir, and see if there be anything that you want to make you holy
or happy that
does not come from the law of the Spirit of life; and whether any of these
things come from the
law of works; whether mercy, grace, hope, or help comes from that quarter:
and take heed that
you do not jumble these two covenants together. One is a covenant of works,
the other of grace;
one is the law of death, the other the law of life; bond children are under
the law; free children are
under grace; they that are under grace are under the blessing, those under
the law are under the
curse; one are the heirs of promise, the other heirs of wrath; one are
children of God, the other are
children of the devil. The free-born children receive the inheritance
freely, the bond children work
to earn it. "The gift of God is eternal life," "the wages of
sin is death." And in order to clear the
doctrine from the charge of Antinomianism, I will inquire what this law of
the Spirit of life
produces, for we are told that the gospel brings forth fruit, Col. 1:6. Paul
says, "the fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith,
meekness, temperance,
against such there is no law."
Now let us see what the law of the wise, which Solomon calls a fountain of
life, produces.
I think we shall find the same things springing from this fountain as comes
from Paul's law of the
Spirit: Solomon says wisdom loves them that love her; and that love is
better than a house full of
sacrifices; and that, "if a man would give all the substance of his
house for love, it would utterly
be condemned."
Here is what Paul calls the first fruit of the Spirit, the next is joy; "the
heart knoweth his
own bitterness, and a stranger doth not intermeddle with his joy."
Peace; "wisdom's ways are
pleasantness, and all her paths are peace." Longsuffering; "the
patient in spirit is better than the
proud in spirit." Gentleness; "be not hasty to go out of his
sight; stand not in the evil thing."
Goodness; "the upright shall have good things in possession."
Faith; "in the fear of the Lord is
strong confidence, and His children shall have a place of refuge."
Meekness; "Surely he scorneth
the scorners, but he giveth grace to the lowly." Temperance; "the
righteous eateth to the
satisfying of his soul." Thus the fruits of Paul's law of the Spirit
are the same as those that spring
from Solomon's law of the wise, which he calls a fountain of life: and
remember the gospel is
called the ministration of the Spirit, and the law is the ministration of
the letter; "the letter killeth,
but the Spirit giveth life." Solomon's fountain of life is supplied
from God in covenant, who tells
us that all his springs are in Zion; therefore it is vain to expect help
from Sinai. The law of the
Spirit will remain what it is, notwithstanding men's legality; and the
ministration of the letter will
remain what it is, notwithstanding man's faith and love, one will ever give
life, and the other will
ever give death: the one will ever produce freedom, and the other will ever
gender to bondage.
It is grace that makes the believer what he is, nor will the law ever make
him better. Those
that came privily in to spy out the apostles' liberty that they might bring
them into bondage, (Gal.
2:4) agree exactly with you in sentiment; for if the law be binding to the
believer, and he be under
it as a rule of life, it is the same as what they enforced; namely, "it
was needful to circumcise
them, and command them to keep the law of Moses." They said this was
needful; you say the
believer is under this necessity: they called it keeping the law of Moses;
and you call the law of
Moses the believer's rule of life.
There is no more difference between your assertions and theirs than there is
between my
two eyes. If you object that it is circumcision only that is called the yoke
that was unbearable; it is
answered they were circumcised at eight days old, therefore the fathers
could give very little
account of the unbearable pain of it. The yoke consisted in this; "he
that is circumcised is a debtor
to do the whole law:" "Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision
is nothing, but the keeping of
the commandments of God" is what is meant. Submitting to circumcision
is rejecting Christ, who
was a Minister of the circumcision for the truth of God, to confirm the
promises made unto the
fathers. And submitting to the yoke of keeping the law of Moses is rejecting
Christ's yoke, which
consists of faith and love in the Spirit. The yoke therefore is this, it is
needful to circumcise the
believers, and to command them to keep the law of Moses. (Acts 15:5) And you
say the law is
binding, and that the believer is under the law as his rule of life; you
might just as well have stuck
to the old text, for it amounts exactly to the same, nor doth your different
way of expression alter
the matter. Their need of keeping the law of Moses is your binding law as a
rule of life; it is the
spirit of legal bondage that obliges and binds you; and it was the same that
influenced those who
made it needful; different names make no alteration in the things.
Those men tempted God by putting that yoke on the saints, and subverted
their souls by
saying ye must be circumcised and keep the law of Moses, to whom God gave no
such
commandment, Acts 15:10-24; and they do no less than tempt God and subvert
the souls of
believers, who tell them the law is binding, and that they are under it as a
rule of life, for God has
given them no such commandment. Nor can men expect that the broad seal of
heaven should
attend a ministry that tempts God and subverts the souls of His saints, when
it is expressly said
that it seemed good to the Holy Ghost, and to the apostles, to lay on them
no such burden.
However, this is the way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof
are the ways of
death, Prov. 14:12; it is turning people from grace to works; from the
liberty of the Spirit to the
bondage of the law; from the law of the Spirit of life to the law of death.
Liberty and bondage,
grace and works, Christ's yoke and the yoke of Moses, the true light and the
old veil, death and
life, can never stand together, one must give way; grace shall reign, and
Moses must be subject.
If a believer be a new creature, has a new heart, a new spirit, walks in the
new and living
way, and must serve God in the newness of the Spirit, and walk in newness of
life, old things must
be done away: and if old things are done away, the yoke of bondage is
included among them,
which Paul calls the law of death, or else the apostle's assertion, cannot
stand good; "therefore if
any man be in Christ, he is a new creature; old things are passed away,
behold all things are
become new;" and he that sits upon the throne says, behold I create all
things new. God has
granted us "boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus,
by a new and living way which
He hath consecrated (or new made) for us through the veil, that is to say
his flesh." Take heed,
sir, that you despise not this new and living way; it is the old way that
you contend for at present,
which is stopped up; it is hedged about with thorns, namely, the curses of
the law; and so poor
sinners will find it, when like Balaam, they fall before that terrible sword
of God that turns every
way to keep the way of the tree of life, Gen. 3:24; none will ever get to
God that old way; the
sword that keeps the way of life destroys all thieves and robbers that climb
up any other way, or
dare to look through, or gaze, where God has fixed his bounds, Exod.
19:21-23.
I would to God, Sir, that you would pray a little more over your Bible, or
ask wisdom of
God. When Paul says, "the law is spiritual, but I am carnal, sold under
sin," he does not mean
thereby that spiritual life, spiritual health, spiritual help, or strength,
is communicated from thence.
The law gives neither righteousness, life, hope, help, nor strength. The law
is strong to destroy,
but never was mighty to save, nor is help laid upon that. It is called
spiritual, because it reaches to
the thoughts of men's hearts, and curses them for a lascivious look as being
adultery itself, (Matt.
5:28); for anger is murder in the abstract, 1 Jn. 3:15; yea, if a man break
one command, he is
guilty of all, James 2:10. It casts him for every idle word; for all that is
more than yea, or nay; it
brings him into judgment; and both heaven and earth shall pass away before
one jot or tittle of
that law shall fail, Luke 16:17.
It is called spiritual, because it reached to spirits; yea, to the wicked
souls of men and
devils also, for they are under one curse; it reveals wrath, spiritual
death, damnation, and
everlasting destruction, both to the bodies and souls of all them who die
under it; and it will hold
all rebellious spirits, whether men or devils, in the prison of hell till
they can pay the very last mite,
Luke 12:59; which will be effected when lying in gaol can be called paying
of debts. God says,
this fiery law, which is a revelation of wrath kindled in His anger, shall
burn to the lowest hell.
Christ, our Passover, was roasted in that fire, and it made His heart like
wax, it melted in the
midst of His bowels, Psa. 22:14; therefore take heed that thou attempt not
to turn that
ministration of death into rules of life. Cleave close to Him that is a
hiding place from that north
wind, and a covert from that tempest, Isa. 32:2. In Christ Jesus thou shalt
find refuge when God
makes the wicked as a fiery wheel, and persecutes them with all these
storms, Psa. 73:13-15; but
no where else.
If this handling the law lawfully, and holding forth the word of life, as a
faithful steward of
the manifold grace of God; if this be rightly dividing the word of truth: if
it be giving to each his
portion in due season, a portion to seven and also to eight; if it be doing
the work of an
evangelist; if it be preaching the gospel according to Christ's command; if
it be handling the word
faithfully, as a minister of the Spirit; if it be acting like a workman that
needeth not to be ashamed,
being approved of God; in short, if this be preaching the mystery of faith,
then where are legions
of our present preachers got? and if this be the pure, unmixed,
unadulterated gospel of Christ,
what are nine parts of ten of the doctrine that is delivered in our days
under that name? And if this
is error and antinomianism, then what is gospel?
I understand your hint, Sir, those speak it more plain who call me in public
a stinking
Antinomian; and this doctrine antinomianism which leads to licentiousness.
And I wish they
would speak it plainer still; then they would appear in their proper colors,
and be less capable of
deceiving the simple. They must either prove this doctrine to be error,
instead of truth, licentious
antinomianism, instead of gospel, or else acknowledge that calumny amounts
to this in the sight
of God; that, instead of walking in the Spirit, and delivering people from
fulfilling the lusts of the
flesh, it leads them into it; that, instead of the grace of God teaching men
to deny ungodliness
and worldly lusts, and to live soberly, righteously, and godly, it
encourages ungodliness, and a
licentious way of living; and instead of the law of the Spirit making men
free from the law of sin
and death, that it leads them into sin, the wages of which is death.
This is their reproach, and this is the meaning of it in the sight of God;
and it is plain to a
spiritual mind where this reproach falls; namely, on that God who is
gracious and merciful; on
that Savior by whom grace and truth came, as if He was the minister of sin;
and upon the Spirit
of grace, who gives the law of faith, and who is the real Giver of the law
of life, it being
emphatically called by the apostle his law, or the law of the Spirit of
life. This, Sir, borders upon
the unpardonable sin, it is trifling with the fold of infinite wisdom, (Eph.
3:10) and with the
greatest dispensation that ever heaven revealed to men, 2 Cor. 3:8. It is
making free with the
spiritual court, from which there is no appeal; it is sinning against the
last condescending lawgiver
that ever appeared in this lower world.
The Holy Ghost gives that law of the wise that is the fountain of life; He
gives the law of
faith that excludes all boasting. The Holy Ghost is the Giver of the law of
life, that takes men
from the law of sin and the snares of death. It is this Lawgiver that brings
every blessing from
heaven, testifies of Christ, and glorifies Him on His throne; whose kingdom
stands not in word,
or in rules of life drawn from the letter of Moses' law, but in power, "in
righteousness, peace, and
joy, in the Holy Ghost." To do despite to the Spirit of grace is
treading under foot of the Son of
God whom the Spirit testifies of. Heb. 10:29. Sin against Him, the Savior
that saves to the
uttermost, says, it shall never be forgiven, neither in this world nor in
the world to come, Matt.
12:31, 32.
O Sir, keep your distance, drop no such hints here; "He that shall
blaspheme against the
Holy Ghost hath never forgiveness, but is in danger of eternal damnation:
because they said He
hath an unclean spirit;" and those that declare the law of the Spirit
of life leads to licentiousness
say little better; for they charge Him with the devil's works though they do
not call Him in
express terms an unclean spirit. It is a bold, daring, presumptuous,
perilous step; it is spiritual
wickedness in the worst sense; it is leaving sin at the foot of a Lawgiver
that shed no blood; it is
committing rebellion against Him that will by no means clear the guilty,
Exod. 34:7; it is doing
despite on the bounds of the most sacred enclosure; it is venturing on the
most dangerous spot
of ground in all the holy land. Sins against God the Father in the law are
pardoned; he that
speaketh a word against the Son of man it shall be forgiven him; but he that
blasphemes against
the Holy Ghost hath never forgiveness. He will by no means, no not by the
blood of Christ,
pardon those that are guilty of the sin unto death, 1 Jn. 5:16.
If grace makes them what they are, sending them to the law will never mend
this work,
nor make the subjects of this workmanship better; God's work is perfect,
nothing can be added to
it by the wisdom of men nor by the law of Moses; "The law made nothing
perfect, but the
bringing in of a better hope did." The church is subject to Christ;
subject to the civil power where
they live; and subject to one another: but not subject to Moses, nor to his
law; they are no longer
under a schoolmaster, Gal. 3:25; no longer under tutors and governors, (Gal.
4:2) they are not
under the law but under grace. When the false brethren came in to spy out
the apostles' liberty,
that they might bring them into bondage; telling them that they must keep
the law of Moses, we
gave place to them by subjection, no, not for an hour, says Paul; nor did we
reject the truth and
admit their yoke of bondage, no, we gave place not for an hour; that the
truth of the gospel might
continue with you. (Gal. 2:4,5)
My friend will be ready to say, the way to heaven is a difficult way to
find; and I answer it
is so, because there is a ditch so close to it, which many fall into, being
led by false preachers,
deceitful workers, and blind guides, who turn from the truth that came by
Jesus Christ, and get
groping about Mount Sinai for help, till the old veil and the god of this
world blind their eyes; and
when they have lost sight of the puzzling mystery of the gospel, for such it
is to unconverted men,
then they think they see everything in the letter of the law and in
themselves, and so become vain
in their imaginations, their foolish hearts being darkened, they then follow
vain jangling, and make
shipwreck of faith, lampoon the power of religion, become haters of those
that are good,
deceiving themselves and deceiving others, till they get desperate against
the truth, and it becomes
a vexation only to understand the report of the gospel, but the path of the
just hath the light of
God's countenance upon it; he that walks and lives by faith is in the narrow
way that leadeth unto
life, Matt. 7:14; for the just man shall live by his faith, and he shall
walk in newness of life.
This is wisdom's way, "a path which no fowler knoweth, and which the
vulture's eye hath not
seen. The lion's whelps have not trodden it, nor the fierce lion passed by
it." Christ is the way as
well as the truth and the life; to live and walk by the faith of Him is to
walk safely indeed. "In this
way of righteousness is life, and in the pathway thereof there is no death."
Though this way
appears narrow and difficult, yet the poor believing sinner, who is nothing
in himself, but looks to
his Savior for all, though he be a fool, he shall not err in this way: the
Lord has promised to guide
him and uphold him; and I will, says God, lead them "in a straight way
Wherein they shall not
stumble; for I am a Father to Israel, and Ephraim is My firstborn."
(Jer. 31:9)
The bad use that ungodly men may make of the truth of the Christian's
liberty in the Spirit
is not to silence spiritual ministers, Christ's yoke must be brought forth;
the children of God must
be fed; the gospel must be preached; the saints' liberty must be shewed, and
they cautioned not to
abuse it, and counseled to stand fast in it; notwithstanding the villainy of
those that come in privily
to spy it out. Ungodly men will abuse the most High God, and even the Bible
itself; therefore no
wonder if they abuse the sermons or writings of His servants. The impenitent
infidel, whose mind
and conscience both are defiled; to whom there is nothing clean; who are
condemned already, and
under the wrath of God. will turn everything to bane.
But are we to muzzle the truth, yoke the saints of God with Moses' law, and
call the
snares of death rules of life, to please them? No, this is putting stumbling
blocks before the eyes of
the blind, and making men stumble at the law, Mal. 2:8; this is not
declaring the whole counsel of
God; this is not leaving the work with the Lord, who has power over all
flesh, that He may give
eternal life to as many as are ordained to it. We are not to make such men
as these the objects of
our fear in the pulpit, nor keep back God's word from His people on account
of their abusing it:
they call the Master Himself Beelzebub; and what can be expected from such
men but sin?
Ministers are a savor of death unto death to them, and are sent to preach
the gospel for a witness
against them; and their desperate wickedness against the gospel serves to
shew us that they were
before of old ordained to this condemnation, Jude 4.
I have considered the text you refer me to, "if ye love Me, keep My
commandments" and I
find His commandments are joyous, not grievous for the commands are that we
should believe on
Him and love one another. But those that call the law the believer's rule of
life, and me an
Antinomian, show but very little of this love. He keeps the Savior's
commandments who receives
the word in an honest and good heart, and keeps it, such receive the word
with power in the Holy
Ghost and in much assurance such and only such keep the word of Christ's
patience, and He will
keep them from the hour of temptation, Rev. 3:10. He that keeps the Lord's
commandments is
united to Him by the bond of love in the Spirit; he that keepeth His
commandment dwelleth in
Him and he in Him. He that is a stranger to this union alive without the
law, alive to sin and dead
to God for "hereby we know that He abideth in us, by the Spirit which
He hath given us."
I have had a world of legal duties formerly pressed upon me, and I know what
effect such
preaching had and I see the same in others that fear God. It serves to nurse
the pride of those that
know nothing of the power of godliness. I have heard misers, persecutors,
and hypocrites,
applaud and admire the doctrine, but they have been dreadfully exasperated
at some who are
called Antinomians, if they have happened to enforce the necessity of the
Spirit's assistance in the
performing of these things, and of their being done in faith. Men may lead
people as much as they
please with moral, relative, and church duties but if they spring not from
union with the true vine;
if not performed with the influence of the Spirit of God; if they are not
done in faith, and with an
eye to God's glory they amount to nothing more than the works of the flesh,
or dead works while
the legal performer is as proud as Satan himself and, by resting in these
things, is further from
God's kingdom than publicans or harlots.
A devil transformed into an angel of light is more dangerous than when he
comes in
character that is, as an accuser, a thief, or a robber, nor does Satan do
the seeking sinner so much
hurt when he throws him down and rends him, Mark 9:20, as he does when he
points us to legal
preachers, or ministers of the letter, crying out "these men are the
servants of the most high God,
that shew unto us the way of salvation," Acts 16:17. He was as much a
devil when he promised
this world and the glory of it to Christ as he was when he wished him to
throw Himself from m
the pinnacle of the temple, Luke 4:9.
Satan sometimes turns reformer in times of danger when the gospel makes a
stir in his
territories; then is the time that he fires the zeal and increases the
numbers of moral preachers; he
knows what the law can do. . . . "The law worketh wrath, for where no
law is there is no
transgression." consequently no transgressors. He knows that "the
strength of sin is the law,"
better than we do and he knows that those who are under the law of death are
under the law of
sin, hence it is that he never stirs men up to reproach, revile, belie,
scandalize, or persecute, a
graceless preacher of moral duties; for it is by the instrumentality of such
men that he has brought
thousands to his dark dominions: by such preachers as these the devil keeps
both the pulpit and
the pew; he stirs up the preacher to blind the people, and the people to
applaud their blind guide
and thus the god of this world holds both the leader and the led. When he
stirred up the Jewish
priests to reject Christ, and cast out His disciples, he became head ranger
both of the temple and
the synagogue.
The doctrine that routs the devil consists in righteousness, peace and joy
in the Holy
Ghost telling Zion that the King is come. When the disciples preached this
the Savior saw "Satan
as lightning fall from heaven." He cast abroad the rage of his wrath
and set the world in a blaze.
This sort of preachers are the only adversaries that the devil has got, he
gains ground by the
others. He was very high bringing over the whole church of Galatia by the
instrumentality of
moral preaching. If God does not uphold His people with His free Spirit,
Psa. 51:12, I much
question if any other yoke will do when trials come on. For my part, I never
found any doctrine
that would beget souls to God, keep them alive, make their minds heavenly,
their conversation
pure, keep their consciences tender, or make their lives exemplary, but that
of enforcing
regeneration, or a spiritual birth, justification by faith, union and
fellowship with Christ by love;
and a walk in the testimony and liberty of the Holy Ghost.
However, this I can say, that the religion that God has taught me has been
sufficient to
make me industrious and willing to live honestly and I must declare, and
will with my dying
breath, that I never knew what happiness and peace, rest, quietude, comfort,
joy, or pleasure,
meant until Jesus Christ appeared to my soul: in Him I have seen the
perfection of all beauty: I
have felt Him to be the foundation of all real happiness: the light of His
countenance, and the
anticipation of His love, is the quintessence of all that is called pleasure
and to have Him is to be
possessed of an immortal, incorruptible, undefiled, and never-fading
inheritance which has so
crucified me to this world, and the pleasures of it, that I have just as
much desire to return to it
again as Abraham had to return to Ur of the Chaldees, when God had promised
to be his shield
and everlasting reward in the land of Canaan.
Whatever the law of God enforces the Spirit of God impresses the mind with,
and leaves
the impression as legible upon the fleshly tables of the believer's heart,
as ever He did on the two
tables of stone, 2 Cor. 3:3. The devil is never more to be suspected than
when he appears in a
pulpit in a large wig and long bands, with a grave countenance, an audible
voice, ambiguous
speech, zeal mixed with candor, enforcing moral virtue, and bringing in
Christ as an example, but
not as the root of the matter, nor yet enforcing the need of His Spirit, nor
of union with Him.
Such preaching drives many poor distressed souls from all religion; they
hear of nothing
but wrath and duty and the more they labor the worse they get, and then they
shake off all, and
are glad to get out so, and such become the greatest enemies to religion
afterwards: and the
instruments of all this mischief are legal preachers for without Christ man
can do nothing, Jn.
15:5. It is looking to Jesus that enlightens us, abiding in the cleft of the
rock that shelters us from
Satan's rage. Souls flying here are compared to doves flying to their
windows, where they are sure
of light but going to the law is going to blackness, and darkness, and
tempest, and to the burning
fire, Heb 12:18; which pursues the sinner. Satan is not displeased at man's
dressing up the law,
calling it the believer's rule of life, the law of love, the law of
kindness, etc. He knows the law is
the snare of death, that has entangled all the prey which that artful fowler
has caught. This law is
the sinner's adversary that entangles him in his sin, and delivers him to
the judge; and the just
judge delivers him by the law to the tormentors. (Matt. 18:34) Are there
souls in hell? it was the
law that cast them, condemned them, and fixed them there. Are they holden
with the cords of
their sin? the strength of those cords is the law, 1 Cor. 15:55. Are they
under the curse? then they
are under the law. (Gal. 3:10) Are they under the dominion of eternal death?
They received it
from the law, which is the ministration of death, 2 Cor. 3:7.
Are their souls boiling with desperate indignation against God? The motions
of sin are by
the law. Are they under the wrath of God? the law worketh wrath, Rom. 415.
Are they in utter
darkness? it came from the law, which is blackness and darkness, Heb. 12:18.
Are they in hell
fire? they received it from the fiery law, Deut. 33:2. Can they never come
out of the bottomless
pit? the immutable sentence of the law is the gulf fixed; let the law be
repealed, and nothing can
detain the prisoner; but not a jot or tittle of the law can fail, therefore
no jail delivery can ever take
place; what God doth, it is done forever. The devil has not a greater friend
in this world than a
blind legal preacher; nor the children of God a greater enemy. I have sorely
felt the effects of such
a ministry; and I know where such ministers are, better than they do
themselves. Those that are
spiritual, says Paul, judge all things, but themselves are judges of no man.
(1 Cor. 2:15)
Let the law be what it may, and aim at what it please, "the end of the
commandment is
charity out of a pure heart, of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned;"
he that swerves from
this turns aside to vain jangling; knows not what he says, nor whereof he
affirms. God tells us to
hold faith and a good conscience, which some having put away, concerning
faith have made ship
wreck, 1 Tim. 1:16,19. Let men bring what rules they please from the law;
let them drive their
flocks with that storm as much as they can; I know the real believer, though
he be not to make
haste, in one sense, will hasten his escape from that stormy wind and
tempest, for he knows that
whatsoever is not a fruit of the Spirit is a work of the flesh; whatever
service be performed, if not
done under the influence of the Spirit of life, it is a dead work; and if
not done in faith it is sin; for
"whatsoever is not of faith is sin:" for "without faith it is
impossible to please God." We read of
ministers of the Spirit and ministers of the letter; and if there be any
such things as ministers, and a
ministration of the Spirit, I think these things belong to that
ministration, and to preach them is
doing the work of an evangelist, and making full proof of the gospel
ministry.
No man ever heard me say or hint a syllable against the goodness of the law;
the law is
good, and it works death in us by that which is good, Rom. 7:13. I suppose
no nation hath more
wholesome laws than this; and I believe no nation under heaven of its size
sends more criminals
out of the world by a halter. There are heathen nations destitute of such
wholesome laws that do
not execute half the number of felons that we do. Be so kind, Sir, as to
send me word what the
law requires that this better testament does not furnish a believer with;
when the imperfection or
deficiency of this law of the Spirit is made to appear, we shall be able to
justify the conduct of
those who send numbers that have begun in the Spirit to the law to be made
perfect by the flesh.
This must be done, or else we shall conclude that this doctrine, of allowing
the believer no rule of
life but the law, is no better, in the language of the Holy Ghost, than
witchcraft.
Peter on the mount of transfiguration did not intend to exclude the Savior
when he said,
"Let us make three tabernacles; one for Thee, and one for Moses, and
one for Elias; when Moses
and Elias heard, they withdrew, as all good servants ought to do. "And
a voice came out of the
cloud saying, This is My beloved Son, hear Him." Moses resigned his
office to the Mediator of
the better testament, who is the end of the law for righteousness, to whom
Moses had borne
witness. And Elias withdrew also, and left the Savior in His prophetic
office, as that great prophet
to whom all the prophets gave witness; and I believe that Jesus, in the
highest sense, was Elias
that was to come. And it is said that, suddenly when the disciples had
looked round about, that is,
after Moses and Elias, "they saw no man any more save Jesus only with
themselves," Mark 9:8;
and He is sufficient; and it is a thousand pities that we have so many in
our days who are fetching
Moses in again; but they will get neither peace nor good works from him, but
rather confusion.
The Master and the servant must not be coupled together; they are not
co-masters; co-rulers,
co-yokers, co-mediators, co-builders, co-lawgivers, co-husbands, nor
co-sovereigns. "The law
was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ."
There are several of our present divines who, not withstanding their zeal
for Moses, and
desire to copy after him, do not at all imitate him in this point; he kept
the blessing pointed out
two different mountains for the blessing and the curse; and different men
were named and
appointed for each work; these were typical of ministers of the Spirit, and
those of the letter;
Simeon, Levi, Juda, Issachar, Joseph, and Benjamin, shall stand on mount
Gerizim to bless; and
Reuben, Gad, Asher, Zebulun, Dan, and Naphtali, shall stand on mount Ebal to
curse, Deut.
27:12, 13. Zion and Sinai must be kept apart; they are two different
mountains, and two different
cities are founded on them: "For this Agar is mount Sinai in Arabia,
and answereth to Jerusalem
which now is, and is in bondage with her children." (Gal. 4:15) And woe
be to that man that is
found a citizen of this bond city in the great day! Tyre, Nineveh, Babylon
the literal, and Babylon
the mystical, may one day understand the awful allegory, when they will be
found to belong to the
city of destruction, Isa. 19:18.
But God hath built His city on the mountain of eternal election. He hath
laid this
everlasting foundation there, His foundation is in that holy mountain. "The
Lord loveth the gates
of Zion more than all the dwellings of Jacob." Psa. 87:2. God hath
founded this city Himself, and
the poor of His people shall trust in it, Isa. 14:32. He hath appointed
salvation to be her walls and
bulwarks; He is known in her palaces for a refuge; His dwelling place is in
Zion; He hath chosen
her, she is to be His rest forever: here will He dwell; for He has desired
it. He will abundantly
bless her provision and satisfy her poor with bread. He will clothe her
priests with salvation, and
her saints shall shout aloud for joy, Psa. 132:13-16.
It was this city that Abraham and Isaac had in view, they kept it in the eye
of their faith,
and it made them forget their own country and their native home; they sought
a city that hath
foundations, whose builder and maker is God, Heb. 11:10. Upon mount Zion God
hath
commanded the blessing, even life for evermore. To this mountain Jacob
looked when he was on
his death bed, and knew that God's eternal love was the bounds of this city,
and that all his
blessings came from thence. "The blessings of thy father have prevailed
above the blessings of my
progenitors, unto the utmost bound of the everlasting hills." This is
Solomon's little city with few
men in it, which the great king came to beseige with great bulwarks, which
the poor wise man by
his wisdom delivered, who is so little regarded for his great deliverance.
(Ecc. 9:14-16) This is the
only city of refuge under the gospel; and it is near to flee into, and it is
a little one; but God will
never destroy it, nor the lot of His inheritance who become citizens of it.
I received my sister's kind epistle; and have considered her numberless
complaints, and the
difficulty of her way. "That which is crooked cannot be made straight,
and that which is wanting
cannot be numbered," says Solomon.
If thou aim at holiness by the law, remember thou must be perfect in the
flesh as well as
spirit. The law is perfect; it will allow of no infirmities, no evil
thoughts, no adulterous looks, no
anger nor evil tempers, no fire to be kindled on the Sabbath day; not
speaking thy own words, nor
thinking of thy own thoughts on that day; thy neighbor must be loved as
thyself; half thy goods
must be given to the poor; one coat of the two must go to them that have
none; and then there is
no getting to heaven but by taking up the cross, and following Jesus. No man
shall ever stand the
test of that law without a pure love to God, divine life in Christ, holiness
by the Spirit, and an
everlasting righteousness from the God of his salvation.
When you come to London again we will compare notes together, and see which
has
gained most by trading; until which time, pursue your present path, and I
will pursue mine.
Make the law your only rule of life; read it, keep your eyes upon it, and
live by it; and I
will pray that I may be kept dead to the law, and alive unto God; that I may
be crucified with
Christ, and yet live; yet not I, but that Christ may live in me. If you make
the law your rule of life,
you are alive to the law, and walk in the law. And if Christ lives in me, I
shall be kept alive unto
God, and walk in newness of life.
Go you on with the commandments, and I will go on with the promises. Make
the law
your rule of walk, and I will pray God to perform His promise in me; for God
hath said, "I will
dwell in them, and walk in them." Thus you go on by the law, and I by
the gospel. Do you
perform your duty, and I will plead my privileges. Act thou as an
industrious servant, and by
God's grace, I will act an affectionate son. Be thou obedient to the law,
and I will pray for grace
for obedience to the faith. Live thou in the fear of thy master, and I will
endeavor to honor my
heavenly Father.
Make the law thy only rule of action, and act accordingly; and I will depend
upon God to
work in me both to will and to do of His own good pleasure; yea, to fulfill
all the good pleasure of
His will in me, and the work of faith with power.
Make the law your only rule of conversation. Speak of the commandments "when
thou
sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way! when thou liest
down and when thou
risest up. And thou shalt write them upon the door-posts of thine heart, and
upon thy gates; that
your days may be multiplied, and the days of your children; in the land
which the Lord sware unto
your fathers to give them as the days of heaven upon the earth." And I
will pray God to create the
fruit of my lips; to give me a mouth and wisdom that all my enemies shall
not be able to gainsay or
resist; and that it may not be me that speaks, but that the Spirit of my
heavenly Father may speak
in me and then my conversation will be with power, and my words seasoned
with salt, ministering
grace. Thus runs the promise, and the excellency and the power is of God;
and, if God performs
His promises to me He will have all the glory; and, thou perform thy task,
thou hast whereof to
glory, but not before God, wherever thou dost before men.
Let the ministers of the letter bind the grievous burdens upon your
shoulders that you
cannot possibly bear, and I will cast my burdens on the Lord, who has
promised to sustain me. Be
thou careful to observe all the grievousness which they prescribe, and I
will cast all my care upon
Him that careth for me. Walk thou by sight, and I by faith; walk thou in the
letter, and I in the
Spirit. Look thou to the commandments, and I will look to Jesus.
They that say this doctrine opens a door to all licentiousness know not what
they say. You
saw nothing like that in me; and those that are setting the law perpetually
before your eyes, and
enforcing holiness from that, in order to blind your mind, and prejudice
your soul against the
truth and the preachers of it, give you no other proof of their superior
holiness than what you hear
from their mouth. There is no more power in their discourses, no more savor
in their
conversation, no more knowledge of the word, no more experience of grace, no
more prevalency
with God in prayer, no more circumspection before men, nor conscientiousness
toward God, than
appears in some that are called Antinomians; nor half so much. Men who have
nothing to
recommend them either in heart or life, must do all by the sound of a
trumpet. He that labored
more abundantly than they all, and much more to the purpose, said, "It
is not I but the grace of
God that was with me." But we have some in our day who tell us they
fetch all their comfort from
their holiness, and their holiness from the law; and I believe them, for
they seem to have no
fellowship with the God of comfort, nor experience of the Holy Ghost.
Cleave thou to the Savior, and depend on His grace; and when these fail,
then try the law.
The way to Sinai is broader than the way to Zion; the path is the most
beaten, and there are the
greatest number of travelers. It is easier to get law than gospel; and a
throne of judgment is more
accessible than a throne of grace. We have legions of unconverted preachers
of the letter, for that
is all their stock. With the letter, a great noise, and a fair show in the
flesh, they deceive the
simple.
The mystery of faith is a puzzling thing to an unexperienced heart and an
unenlightened
head; when they attempt this they only betray their ignorance. The gentleman
was right; "And
without holiness no man shall see the Lord;" and if he has no holiness
but what he gets from the
law, he will never see the Lord with acceptance; for "Except a man be
born again (of the Holy
Spirit) he cannot see (much less enter) the kingdom of God." The
kingdom of God is in power:
regeneration enlightens us into it, and gives us a sensible enjoyment of it;
for it stands in
righteousness, peace, and joy, in the Holy Ghost; nothing of which comes to
us from the law.
If enforcing the law as the only rule of life, and setting it before thee as
the only standard
of holiness, be accompanied with power; if it produce love to God and man;
if it promotes true
holiness; if it refreshes the new man, and clothes the soul with humility
and self-loathing; if it
endears Christ, and strengthens faith; if it produces spiritual life and
peace; if it enlightens the
eyes, enlarges the heart; weans from the world, purifies the soul,
encourages diligence, and makes
God, His way and worship, the delight of thy soul,-thou mayest well bear
with them; for these
things come from God, and do accompany salivation. But I know there is
nothing of all this
attends such preaching; and this letter of yours is a sufficient proof of
it. I have set before my
sister the law and the gospel, commandments and promises, life and death, a
blessing and a curse.
If ,thou cleave to the letter of the law, and make that thy rule of life,
walk, and action, and
conversation; then thy obedience will be the obedience of the law, not of
faith; they will be thy
fruits, not the fruits of the Spirit.