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T H E 'Who being dead, yet speaketh.'Hebrews 11:4 By J O H N.B
U N Y A N.
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Edited by George Offor.
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR
This solemn, searching, awful treatise, was published by Bunyan in 1682; but does not
appear to have been reprinted until a very few months after his decease, which so
unexpectedly took place in 1688. Although we have sought with all possible diligence, no
copy of the first edition has been discovered; we have made use of a fine copy of the
second edition, in possession of that thorough Bunyanite, my kind friend, R. B. Sherring,
of Bristol. The third edition, 1692, is in the British Museum. Added to these posthumous
publications appeared, for the first time, 'An Exhortation to Peace and Unity,' which will
be found at the end of our second volume. In the advertisement to that treatise are
stated, at some length, my reasons for concluding that it was not written by Bunyan,
although inserted in all the editions of his collected works. That opinion is now more
fully confirmed, by the discovery of Bunyan's own list of his works, published just before
his death, in 1688, and in which that exhortation is not inserted. I was also much pleased
to find that the same conclusion was arrived at by that highly intelligent Baptist
minister, Mr. Robert Robinson.
His reasons are given at some length, concluding with, 'it is evident that Bunyan never
wrote this piece.'[1] Why it was, after Bunyan's death, published with his 'Barren
Fig-tree,' is one of those hidden mysteries of darkness and of wickedness that I cannot
discover. The beautiful parable from which Bunyan selected his text, represents an
enclosed ground, in which, among others, a fig-tree had been planted. It was not an
enclosure similar to some of the vineyards of France or Germany, exclusively devoted to
the growth of the vine, but a garden in which fruits were cultivated, such as grapes,
figs, or pomegranates. It was in such a vineyard, thus retired from the world, that
Nathaniel poured out his heart in prayer, when our Lord in spirit witnessed, unseen, these
devotional exercises, and soon afterwards rewarded him with open approbation (John 1:48).
In these secluded pleasant spots the Easterns spend much of their time, under their own
vines or fig-trees, sheltered from the world and from the oppressive heat of the
suna fit emblem of a church of Christ. In this vineyard stood a fig-treeby
nature remarkable for fruitfulnessbut it is barren. No inquiry is made as to how it
came there, but the order is given, 'Cut it down.' The dresser of the garden intercedes,
and means are tried to make it fruitful, but in vain. At last it is cut down as a
cumber-ground and burnt. This vineyard or garden represents a gospel church; the fig-tree
a member a barren, fruitless professor. 'It matters not how he got there,' if he
bears no fruit he must be cut down and away to the fire.
To illustrate so awful a subject this treatise was written, and it is intensely solemn.
God, whose omniscience penetrates through every disguise, himself examines every tree in
the garden, yea, every bough. Wooden and earthy professor, your detection is sure;
appearances that deceive the world and the church cannot deceive God. 'He will be with
thee in thy bed fruitsthy midnight fruitsthy closet fruits thy family
fruitsthey conversation fruits.' Professor, solemnly examine yourself; 'in
proportion to your fruitfulness will be your blessedness.' 'Naked and open are all things
to his eye.' Can it be imagined that those 'that paint themselves did ever repent of their
pride?' 'How seemingly self-denying are some of these creeping things.' 'Is there no place
will serve to fit those for hell but the church, the vineyard of God?' 'It is not the
place where the worker of iniquity can hide himself or his sins from God.' May such be
detected before they go hence to the fire. While there is a disposition to seek grace all
are invited to come; but when salvation by Christ is abandoned, there is no other refuge,
although sought with tears. Reader, may the deeply impressive language of Bunyan sink
profoundly into our hearts. We need no splendid angel nor hideous demon to reveal to us
the realities of the world to come. 'If we hear not Moses and the prophets,' as set forth
by Bunyan in this treatise, 'neither should we be persuaded though one rose from the dead'
to declare these solemn truths (Luke 16:31).
GEO. OFFOR.
TO THE READER.
COURTEOUS READER,
I have written to thee now about the Barren Fig-tree, or how it will fare with the
fruitless professor that standeth in the vineyard of God. Of what complexion thou art I
cannot certainly divine; but the parable tells thee that the cumber- ground must be cut
down. A cumber-ground professor is not only a provocation to God, a stumbling-block to the
world, and a blemish to religion, but a snare to his own soul also. 'Though his excellency
mount up to the heavens, and his head reach unto the clouds, yet he shall perish for ever,
like his own dung; they which have seen him shall say, Where is he?' (Job 20:6,7).
Now 'they count it pleasure to riot in the daytime.' But what will they do when the axe is
fetched out? (2 Peter 2:13,14).
The tree whose fruit withereth is reckoned a tree without fruit, a tree twice dead, one
that must be 'plucked up by the roots' (Jude 12).
O thou cumber-ground, God expects fruit, God will come seeking fruit shortly.
My exhortation, therefore, is to professors that they look to it, that they take heed.
The barren fig-tree in the vineyard, and the bramble in the wood, are both prepared for
the fire.
Profession is not a covert to hide from the eye of God; nor will it palliate the
revengeful threatening of his justice; he will command to cut it down shortly.
The church, and a profession, are the best of places for the upright, but the worst in the
world for the cumber-ground. He must be cast, as profane, out of the mount of God: cast, I
say, over the wall of the vineyard, there to wither; thence to be gathered and burned. 'It
had ben better for them not to have known the way of righteousness' (2 Peter 2:21). And
yet if they had not, they had been damned; but it is better to go to hell without, than
in, or from under a profession. These 'shall receive greater damnation' (Luke 20:47).
If thou be a professor, read and tremble: if thou be profane, do so likewise. For if the
righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and sinners appear? Cumber- ground,
take heed of the axe! Barren fig-tree, beware of the fire!
But I will keep thee no longer out of the book. Christ Jesus, the dresser of the vineyard,
take care of thee, dig about thee, and dung thee, that thou mayest bear fruit; that when
the Lord of the vineyard cometh with his axe to seek for fruit, or pronounce the sentence
of damnation on the barren fig-tree, thou mayest escape that judgment. The cumber- ground
must to the wood-pile, and thence to the fire. Farewell.
Grace be with all them that love our Lord Jesus in sincerity. Amen.
JOHN BUNYAN
THE BARREN FIG-TREE, OR THE DOOM AND DOWNFALL OF THE FRUITLESS PROFESSOR.
'A CERTAIN MAN HAD A FIG-TREE PLANTED IN HIS VINEYARD; AND HE CAME AND SOUGHT FRUIT
THEREON, AND FOUND NONE. THEN SAID HE UNTO THE DRESSER OF HIS VINEYARD, BEHOLD, THESE
THREE YEARS I COME SEEKING FRUIT ON THE FIG-TREE, AND FIND NONE: CUT IT DOWN; WHY
CUMBERETH IT THE GROUND? AND HE ANSWERING SAID UNTO HIM, LORD, LET IT ALONE THIS YEAR
ALSO, TILL I SHALL DIG ABOUT IT, AND DUNG IT: AND IF IT BEAR FRUIT, WELL: AND IF NOT, THEN
AFTER THAT THOU SHALT CUT IT DOWN.'LUKE 13:6-9.
At the beginning of this chapter we read how some of the Jews came to Jesus Christ, to
tell him of the cruelty of Pontius Pilate, in mingling the blood of the Galileans with
their sacrifices. A heathenish and prodigious act; for therein he showed, not only his
malice against the Jewish nation, but also against their worship, and consequently their
God. An action, I say, not only heathenish, but prodigious also; for the Lord Jesus,
paraphrasing upon this fact of his, teacheth the Jews, that without repentance 'they
should all likewise perish.' 'Likewise,' that is by the hand and rage of the Roman empire.
Neither should they be more able to avoid the stroke, than were those eighteen upon whom
the tower of Siloam fell, and slew them (Luke 13:1-5). The fulfilling of which prophecy,
for their hardness of heart, and impenitency, was in the days of Titus, son of Vespasian,
about forty years after the death of Christ. Then, I say, were these Jews, and their city,
both environed round on every side, wherein both they and it, to amazement, were miserably
overthrown. God gave them sword and famine, pestilence and blood, for their outrage
against the Son of his love. So wrath 'came upon them to the uttermost' (1 Thess 2:16).[2]
Now, to prevent their old and foolish salvo, which they always had in readiness against
such prophecies and denunciations of judgment, the Lord Jesus presents them with this
parable, in which he emphatically shows them that their cry of being the temple of the
Lord, and of their being the children of Abraham, &c., and their being the church of
God, would not stand them in any stead. As who should say, It may be you think to help
yourselves against this my prophecy of your utter and unavoidable overthrow, by the
interest which you have in your outward privileges. But all these will fail you; for what
think you? 'A certain man had a fig-tree planted in his vineyard, and he came and sought
fruit thereon, and found none.' This is your case! The Jewish land is God's vineyard; I
know it; and I know also, that you are the fig-trees. But behold, there wanteth the main
thing, fruit; for the sake, and in expectation of which, he set this vineyard with trees.
Now, seeing the fruit is not found amongst you, the fruit, I say, for the sake of which he
did at first plant this vineyard, what remains but that in justice he command to cut you
down as those that cumber the ground, that he may plant himself another vineyard? 'Then
said he unto the dresser of his vineyard, Behold, these three years I come seeking fruit
on this fig-tree, and find none; cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?' This therefore
must be your end, although you are planted in the garden of God; for the barrenness and
unfruitfulness of your hearts and lives you must be cut off, yea, rooted up, and cast out
of the vineyard.
In parables there are two things to be taken notice of, and to be inquired into of them
that read. First, The metaphors made use of. Second, The doctrine or mysteries couched
under such metaphors.
The metaphors in this parable are, 1. A certain man; 2. A vineyard; 3. A fig-tree, barren
or fruitless; 4. A dresser; 5. Three years; 6. Digging and dunging, &c.
The doctrine, or mystery, couched under these words is to show us what is like to become
of a fruitless or formal professor. For, 1. By the man in the parable is meant God the
Father (Luke 15:11). 2. By the vineyard, his church (Isa 5:7). 3. By the fig-tree, a
professor. 4. By the dresser, the Lord Jesus. 5. By the fig-tree's barrenness, the
professor's fruitlessness. 6. By the three years, the patience of God that for a time he
extendeth to barren professors. 7. This calling to the dresser of the vineyard to cut it
down, is to show the outcries of justice against fruitless professors. 8. The dresser's
interceding is to show how the Lord Jesus steps in, and takes hold of the head of his
Father's axe, to stop, or at least to defer, the present execution of a barren fig-tree.
9. The dresser's desire to try to make the fig-tree fruitful, is to show you how unwilling
he is that even a barren fig-tree should yet be barren, and perish. 10. His digging about
it, and dunging of it, is to show his willingness to apply gospel helps to this barren
professor, if haply he may be fruitful. 11. The supposition that the fig-tree may yet
continue fruitless, is to show, that when Christ Jesus hath done all, there are some
professors will abide barren and fruitless. 12. The determination upon this supposition,
at last to cut it down, is a certain prediction of such professor's unavoidable and
eternal damnation.
But to take this parable into pieces, and to discourse more particularly, though with all
brevity, upon all the parts thereof.
'A certain MAN had a fig-tree planted in his vineyard.'
The MAN, I told you, is to present us with God the Father; by which similitude he is often
set out in the New Testament.
Observe then, that it is no new thing, if you find in God's church barren fig-trees,
fruitless professors; even as here you see is a tree, a fruitless tree, a fruitless
fig-tree in the vineyard.[3] Fruit is not so easily brought forth as a profession is got
into; it is easy for a man to clothe himself with a fair show in the flesh, to word it,
and say, Be thou warmed and filled with the best. It is no hard thing to do these with
other things; but to be fruitful, to bring forth fruit to God, this doth not every tree,
no not every fig-tree that stands in the vineyard of God. Those words also, 'Every branch
in me that beareth not fruit, he taketh away,' assert the same thing (John 15:2). There
are branches in Christ, in Christ's body mystical, which is his church, his vineyard, that
bear not fruit, wherefore the hand of God is to take them away: I looked for grapes, and
it brought forth wild grapes, that is, no fruit at all that was acceptable with God (Isa
5:4). Again, 'Israel is an empty vine, he bringeth forth fruit unto himself,' none to God;
he is without fruit to God (Hosea 10:1). All these, with many more, show us the truth of
the observation, and that God's church may be cumbered with fruitless fig-trees, with
barren professors.
Had a FIG-TREE.
Although there be in God's church that be barren and fruitless; yet, as I said, to see to,
they are like the rest of the trees, even a fig-tree. It was not an oak, nor a willow, nor
a thorn, nor a bramble; but a FIG-TREE. 'they come unto thee as the people cometh' (Eze
33:31). 'They delight to know my ways, as a nation that did righteousness, and forsook not
the ordinance of their God. They ask of me the ordinances of justice, they take delight in
approaching to God,' and yet but barren, fruitless, and unprofitable professors (Isa
58:2-4). Judas also was one of the twelve, a disciple, an apostle, a preacher, an officer,
yea, and such a one as none of the eleven mistrusted, but preferred before themselves,
each one crying out, 'Is it I? Is it I?' (Mark 14:19). None of them, as we read of (John
6:70), mistrusting Judas; yet he in Christ's eye was the barren fig-tree, a devil, a
fruitless professor. The foolish virgins also went forth of the world with the other, had
lamps, and light, and were awakened with the other; yea, had boldness to go forth, when
the midnight cry was made, with the other; and thought that they could have looked Christ
in the face, when he sat upon the throne of judgment, with the other; and yet but foolish,
but barren fig-trees, but fruitless professors. 'Many,' saith Christ, 'will say unto me in
that day,' this and that, and will also talk of many wonderful works; yet, behold, he
finds nothing in them but the fruits of unrighteousness (Matt 7:22,23). They were
altogether barren and fruitless professors.
Had a fig-tree PLANTED.
This word PLANTED doth also reach far; it supposeth one taken out of its natural soil, or
removed from the place it grew in once; one that seemed to be called, awakened; and not
only so, but by strong hand carried from the world to the church; from nature to grace;
from sin to godliness. 'Thou hast brought a vine out of Egypt; thou hast cast out the
heathen, and planted it' (Psa 80:8). Of some of the branches of this vine were there
unfruitful professors.
It must be concluded, therefore, that this professor, that remaineth notwithstanding
fruitless, is, as to the view and judgment of the church, rightly brought in thither, to
wit, by confession of faith, of sin, and a show of repentance and regeneration; thus false
brethren creep in unawares![4] All these things this word planted intimateth; yea,
further, that the church is satisfied with them, consents they should abide in the garden,
and counteth them sound as the rest. But before God, in the sight of God, they are
graceless professors, barren and fruitless fig-trees.
Therefore it is one thing to be in the church, or in a profession; and another to be of
the church, and to belong to that kingdom that is prepared for the saint, that is so
indeed. Otherwise, 'Being planted, shall it prosper? shall it not utterly wither, when the
east-wind toucheth it? It shall wither in the furrows where it grew' (Eze 17:10).
Had a fig-tree planted in HIS vineyard.
In HIS vineyard. Hypocrites, with rotten hearts, are not afraid to come before God in
Sion. These words therefore suggest unto us a prodigious kind of boldness and hardened
fearlessness. For what presumption higher, and what attempt more desperate, than for a man
that wanteth grace, and the true knowledge of God, to crowd himself, in that condition,
into the house or church of God; or to make profession of, and desire that the name of God
should be called upon him?
For the man that maketh a profession of the religion of Jesus Christ, that man hath, as it
were, put the name of God upon himself, and is called and reckoned now, how fruitless
soever before God or men, the man that hath to do with God, the man that God owneth, and
will stand for. This man, I say, by his profession, suggesteth this to all that know him
to be such a professor. Men merely natural, I mean men that have not got the devilish art
of hypocrisy, are afraid to think of doing thus. 'And of the rest durst no man join
himself to them; but the people magnified them' (Acts 5:13). And, indeed, it displeaseth
God. 'Ye have brought,' saith he, 'men uncircumcised into my sanctuary' (Eze 44:7). And
again, 'When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hand, to tread my
courts?' saith God (Isa 1:12). They have therefore learned this boldness of none in the
visible world, they only took it of the devil, for he, and he only, with these his
disciples, attempt to present themselves in the church before God. 'The tares are the
children of the wicked one.' The tares, that is, the hypocrites, that are Satan's brood,
the generation of vipers, that cannot escape the damnation of hell.
HAD a fig-tree planted in his vineyard.
He doth not say, He planted a fig-tree, but there was a fig- tree there; he HAD, or found
a fig-tree planted in his vineyard.
The great God will now acknowledge the barren fig-tree, or barren professor, to be his
workmanship, or a tree of his bringing in, only the text saith, he had one there. This is
much like that in Matthew 15:13'Every plant which my heavenly Father hath not
planted, shall be rooted up.' Here again are plants in his vineyard which God will not
acknowledge to be of his planting; and he seems to suggest that in his vineyard are many
such. Every plant, or all those plants or professors, that are got into the assembly of
the saints, or into the profession of their religion, without God and his grace, 'shall be
rooted up.'
'And when the King came in to see the guests, he saw there a man which had not on the
wedding-garment. And he saith unto him, Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a
wedding-garment?' (Matt 22:11,12). Here is one so cunning and crafty that he beguiled all
the guests; he got and kept in the church even until the King himself came in to see the
guests; but his subtilty got him nothing; it did not blind the eyes of the King; it did
not pervert the judgment of the righteous. 'Friend, how camest thou in hither?' did
overtake him at last; even a public rejection; the King discovered him in the face of all
present. 'How camest thou in hither?' My Father did not bring thee hither; I did not bring
thee hither; my Spirit did not bring thee hither; thou art not of the heavenly Father's
planting. 'How camest thou in hither?' He that 'entereth not by the door, but climbeth up
some other way, the same is a thief and a robber' (John 10:1). This text also is full and
plain to our purpose; for this man came not in by the door, yet got into the church; he
got in by climbing; he broke in at the windows; he got something of the light and glory of
the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ in his head; and so, hardy wretch that he was, he
presumed to crowd himself among the children. But how is this resented? What saith the
King of him? Why, this is his sign, 'the same is a thief and a robber.' See ye here also,
if all they be owned as the planting of God that get into his church or profession of his
name.
'Had a fig-tree.' Had one without a wedding-garment, had a thief in his garden, at his
wedding, in his house. These climbed up some other way. There are many ways to get into
the church of God, and profession of his name, besides, and without an entering by the
door.
1. There is the way of lying and dissembling, and at this gap the Gibeonites got in (Josh
9 &c).
2. There is sometimes falseness among some pastors, either for the sake of carnal
relations, or the like; at this hole Tobiah, the enemy of God, got in (Neh 13:4-9).
3. There is sometimes negligence, and too much uncircumspectness in the whole church; thus
the uncircumcised got in (Eze 44:7,8).
4. Sometimes, again, let the church be never so circumspect, yet these have so much help
from the devil that they beguile them all, and so get in. These are of the sort of thieves
that Paul complains of, 'False brethren, that are brought in unawares' (Gal 2:4). Jude
also cries out of these, 'Certain men crept in unawares' (Jude 4). Crept in! What, were
they so lowly? A voluntary humility, a neglecting of the body, not in any humour (Col
2:23).[5] O! how seemingly self-denying are some of these 'creeping things,' that yet are
to be held, (as we shall know them) an abomination to Israel (Lev 11:43,44).
But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and of silver, but also of wood
and of earth; and some to honour, and some to dishonour (2 Tim 2:20). By these words the
apostle seems to take it for granted, that as there hath been, so there still will be
these kind of fig-trees, these barren professors in the house, when all men have done what
they can; even as in a great house there are always vessels to dishonour, as well as those
to honour and glory; vessels of wood and of earth, as well as of silver and gold. So,
then, there must be wooden professors in the garden of God, there must be earthy, earthen
professors in his vineyard; but that methinks is the biting word, 'and some to dishonour'
(Rom 9:21,22). That to the Romans is dreadful, but this seems to go beyond it; that speaks
but of the reprobate in general, but this of such and such in particular; that speaks of
their hardening but in the common way, but this that they must be suffered to creep into
the church, there to fit themselves for their place, their own place, the place prepared
for them of this sort only (Acts 1:25). As the Lord Jesus said once of the Pharisees,
These 'shall receive greater damnation' (Luke 20:47).
Barren fig-tree, fruitless professor, hast thou heard all these things? Hast thou
considered that this fig-tree is not acknowledged of God to be his, but is denied to be of
his planting, and of his bringing unto his wedding? Dost not thou see that thou art called
a thief and a robber, that hast either climbed up to, or crept in at another place than
the door? Dost thou not hear that there will be in God's house wooden and earthly
professors, and that no place will serve to fit those for hell but the house, the church,
the vineyard of God? Barren fig-tree, fruitless Christian, do not thine ears tingle?
And HE came and sought fruit thereon.
When a man hath got a profession, and is crowded into the church and house of God, the
question is not now, Hath he life, hath he right principles? but, Hath he fruit? HE came
seeking fruit thereon. It mattereth not who brought thee in hither, whether God or the
devil, or thine own vain-glorious heart; but hast thou fruit? Dost thou bring forth fruit
unto God? And, 'Let every one that nameth the name of' the Lord Jesus 'Christ depart from
iniquity' (2 Tim 2:19). He doth not say, And let every one that hath grace, or let those
that have the Spirit of God; but, 'Let every one that nameth the name of' the Lord Jesus
'Christ depart form iniquity.'
What do men meddle with religion for? Why do they call themselves by the name of the Lord
Jesus, if they have not the grace of God, if they have not the Spirit of Christ? God,
therefore, expecteth fruit. What do they do in the vineyard? Let them work, or get them
out; the vineyard must have labourers in it. 'Son, go WORK to-day in my vineyard' (Matt
21:28). Wherefore, want of grace and want of Spirit will not keep God from seeking fruit.
'And he came and sought fruit thereon' (Luke 13:6, 8:8). He requireth that which he
seemeth to have. Every man in the vineyard and house of God promiseth himself, professeth
to others, and would have all men take it for granted, that a heavenly principle is in
him, why then should not God seek fruit?
As for them, therefore, that will retain the name of Christians, fearing God, and yet make
no conscience of bringing forth fruit to him, he saith to such, Away! 'As for you, - Go
ye, serve ye every one his idols, and hereafter also, if ye will not hearken unto me,'
&c. (Eze 20:39). Barren fig-tree, dost thou hear? God expecteth fruit, God calls for
fruit, yea, God will shortly come seeking fruit on this barren fig-tree. Barren fig-tree,
either bear fruit, or go out of the vineyard; and yet then thy case will be unspeakably
damnable. Yea, let me add, if thou shalt neither bear fruit nor depart, God will take his
name out of thy mouth (Jer 44:26). He will have fruit. And I say further, if thou wilt do
neither, yet God in justice and righteousness will still come for fruit. And it will be in
vain for thee to count this austerity. He will reap where he hath not sowed, and gather
where he hath not strewed (Matt 25:24-26). Barren fig-tree, dost thou hear?
Quest. What if a man have no grace?
Answ. Yes, seeing he hath a profession.
And he came and sought fruit THEREON.
A church, then, and a profession, are not places where the workers of iniquity may hide
themselves and sins from God. Some of old thought that because they could cry, 'The temple
of the Lord, the temple of the Lord!' that therefore they were delivered, or had a
dispensation to do the abominations which they committed, as some in our days; for who,
say they, have a right to the creatures, if not Christians, if not professors, if not
church members? And, from this conclusion, let go the reins of their inordinate affections
after pride, ambition, gluttony; pampering themselves without fear (Jude 12), daubing
themselves with the lust-provoking fashions of the times; to walk with stretched out
necks, naked breasts, frizzled fore-tops, wanton gestures, in gorgeous apparel, mixed with
gold and pearl, and costly array.[6] I will not here make inspection into their lives,
their carriages at home, in their corners and secret holes; but certainly, persons thus
spirited, thus principled, and thus inclined, have but empty boughs, boughs that want the
fruit that God expects, and that God will come down to seek.
Barren fig-tree, thou art not licensed by thy profession, nor by the Lord of the vineyard,
to bear these clusters of Gomorrah; neither shall the vineyard, nor thy being crowded
among the trees there, shelter thee from the sight of the eye of God. Many make religion
their cloak, and Christ their stalking-horse, and by that means cover themselves and hide
their own wickedness from men; but God seeth their hearts, hath his print upon the heels
of their feet, and pondereth all their goings; and at last, when their iniquity is found
to be hateful, he will either smite them with hardness of heart, and so leave them, or
awaken them to bring forth fruit. Fruit he looks for, seeks, and expects, barren fig-tree!
But what! come into the presence of God to sin! What! come into the presence of God to
hide thy sin! Alas, man! the church is God's garden, and Christ Jesus is the great Apostle
and High-priest of our profession. What! come into the house that is called by my name!
into the place where mine honour dwelleth! (Psa 26:8). Where mine eyes and heart are
continually! (1 Kings 9:3). What! come there to sin, to hide thy sin, to cloak thy sin!
His plants are an orchard with pleasant fruits (Cant 4:13). And every time he goeth into
his garden, it is to see the fruits of the valley, and to 'see if the vine flourished, and
the pomegranates budded.'
Yea, saith he, he came seeking fruit on this fig-tree. The church is the place of God's
delight, where he ever desires to be: there he is night and day. He is there to seek for
fruit, to seek for fruit of all and every tree in the garden. Wherefore, assure thyself, O
fruitless one, that thy ways must needs be open before the eyes of the Lord. One black
sheep is soon espied, although in company with many; that is taken with the first cast of
the eye; its different colour still betrays it. I say, therefore, a church and a
profession are not places where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves from God that
seeks for fruit. 'My vineyard,' saith God, 'which is mine, is before me' (Cant 8:12).
And he came and sought fruit thereon, AND FOUND NONE.
Barren fig-tree, hearken; the continual non-bearing of fruit is a dreadful sign that thou
art to come to a dreadful end, as the winding up of this parable concludeth.
'AND FOUND NONE.' None at all, or none to God's liking; for when he saith, 'He came
seeking fruit thereon,' he means 'fruit meet for God,' pleasant fruit, fruit good and
sweet (Heb 6). Alas! it is not any fruit will serve; bad fruit is counted none. 'Every
tree which bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire' (Matt
3:10).
First. There is a fruit among professors that withers, and so never comes to be ripe; a
fruit that is smitten in the growth, and comes not to maturity; and this is reckoned no
fruit. This fruit those professors bear that have many fair beginnings, or blossoms; that
make many fair offers of repentance and amendment; that begin to pray, to resolve, and to
break off their sins by righteousness, but stop at those beginnings, and bring not fruit
forth to perfection. This man's fruit is withered, wrinkled, smitten fruit, and is in
effect no fruit at all.
Second. There is a hasty fruit, such as is the 'corn upon the house-top' (Psa 129:6); or
that which springs up on the dung-hill, that runs up suddenly, violently, with great
stalks and big show, and yet at last proves empty of kernel. This fruit is to be found in
those professors that on a sudden are so awakened, so convinced, and so affected with
their condition that they shake the whole family, the endship,[7] the whole town. For a
while they cry hastily, vehemently, dolefully, mournfully, and yet all is but a pang, an
agony, a fit, they bring not forth fruit with patience. These are called those hasty
fruits that 'shall be a fading flower' (Isa 28:4).
Third. There is a fruit that is vile and ill-tasted, how long soever it be in growing; the
root is dried, and cannot convey a sufficiency of sap to the branches, to ripen the fruit
(Jer 24). These are the fruits of such professors whose hearts are estranged from
communion with the Holy Ghost, whose fruit groweth from themselves, from their parts,
gifts, strength of wit, natural or moral principles. These, notwithstanding they bring
forth fruit, are called empty vines, such as bring not forth fruit to God. 'Their root is
dried up, they shall bear no fruit; yea, though they bring forth, yet will I slay even the
beloved fruit of their womb' (Hosea 9:16).
Fourth. There is a fruit that is wild. 'I looked for grapes and it brought forth wild
grapes' (Isa 5:4). I observe, that as there are trees and herbs that are wholly right and
noble, fit indeed for the vineyard; so there are also their semblance, but wild; not
right, but ignoble. There is the grape, and the wild grape; the vine, and the wild vine;
the rose, and canker rose; flowers and wild flowers; the apple, and the wild apple which
we call the crab. Now, fruit from these wild things, however they may please the children
to play with, yet the prudent and grave count them of little or no value. There are also
in the world a generation of professors that, notwithstanding their profession, are wild
by nature; yea, such as were never cut out, or off, from the wild olive-tree, nor never
yet planted into the good olive-tree. Now, these can bring nothing forth but wild olive
berries, they cannot bring forth fruit unto God. Such are all those that have lightly
taken up a profession, and crept into the vineyard without a new birth, and the blessing
of regeneration.
Fifth. There is also untimely fruit: 'Even as a fig-tree casteth her untimely figs' (Rev
6, 13). Fruit out of season, and so no fruit to God's liking. There are two sorts of
professors subject to bring forth untimely fruit: 1. They that bring forth fruit too soon;
2. They that bring forth fruit too late.
1. They that bring forth too soon. They are such as at present receive the Word with joy;
and anon, before they have root downwards, they thrust forth upwards; but having not root,
when the sun ariseth, they are smitten, and miserably die without fruit. These professors
are those light and inconsiderate ones that think nothing but peace will attend the
gospel; and so anon rejoice at the tidings, without foreseeing the evil. Wherefore, when
the evil comes, being unarmed, and so not able to stand any longer, they die, and are
withered, and bring forth no fruit. 'He that received the seed into stony places, the same
is he that heareth the Word, and anon with joy receiveth it; yet hath he not root in
himself, but dureth for a while; for when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of
the Word, by and by he is offended' (Matt 13:20,21). There is, in Isaiah 28:4, mention
made of some 'whose glorious beauty shall be a fading flower,' because it is 'fruit before
the summer.' Both these are untimely fruit.
2. They also bring forth untimely fruit that stay till the season is over. God will have
his fruit in his season; I say, he will receive them of such men as shall render them to
him in their seasons (Matt 21:41). The missing of the season is dangerous; staying till
the door is shut is dangerous (Matt 25:10,11). Many there be that come not till the flood
of God's anger is raised, and too deep for them to wade through; 'Surely in the floods of
great waters they shall not come nigh unto him' (Psa 32:6). Esau AFTERWARDS is fearful:
'For ye know how that afterward, when he would have inherited the blessing, he was
rejected; for he found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears'
(Heb 12:17).
So the children of Israel, they brought to God the fruits of obedience too late; their
'Lo, we be here' came too late (Num 14:40-42); their 'We will go up' came too late (Num
14:40-44). The Lord had sworn before, 'that they should not possess the land' (Matt 25:10,
27:5). All these are such as bring forth untimely fruit (Heb 12:17; Luke 13:25-27). It is
the hard hap of the reprobate to do all things too late; to be sensible of his want of
grace too late; to be sorry for sin too late; to seek repentance too late; to ask for
mercy, and to desire to go to glory too late.
Thus you see, 1. That fruit smitten in the growth, that withereth, and that comes not to
maturity, is no fruit. 2. That hasty fruit, such as 'the grass upon the house-top,'
withereth also before it groweth up, and is no fruit (Psa 129:6). 3. That the fruit that
is vile, and ill-tasted, is no fruit. That wild fruit, wild grapes, are no fruit (Rev 6).
That untimely fruit, such as comes too soon, or that comes too late, such as come not in
their season, are no fruit.
And he came and sought FRUIT thereon, and found none.
Nothing will do but fruit; he looked for grapes. 'When the time of the fruit drew near, he
sent his servants to the husbandmen, that they might receive the fruits of it' (Matt
21:34).
Quest. But what fruit doth God expect?
Answ. Good fruit. 'Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit, is hewn down' (Matt
7:19). Now, before the fruit can be good, the tree must be good; for good fruit makes not
a good tree, but a 'good tree bringeth forth good fruit. Do men gather grapes of thorns,
or figs of thistles?' A man must be good, else he can bring forth no good fruit; he must
have righteousness imputed, that he may stand good in God;'s sight from the curse of his
law; he must have a principle of righteousness in his soul, else how should he bring forth
good fruits? and hence it is, that a Christian's fruits are called 'the fruits of the
Spirit, the fruits of righteousness, which are by Jesus Christ' (Gal 5:22,23; Phil 1:11).
The fruits of the Spirit, therefore the Spirit must be there; the fruits of righteousness,
therefore righteousness must first be there. But to particularize in a few things
briefly:
First. God expecteth fruit that will answer, and be worthy of the repentance which thou
feignest thyself to have. Every one in a profession, and that hath crowded into the
vineyard, pretendeth to repentance; now of every such soul, God expecteth that the fruits
of repentance be found to attend them. 'Bring forth, therefore, fruits meet for
repentance,' or answerable to thy profession of the doctrine of repentance (Matt 3:8).
Barren fig-tree, seeing thou art a professor, and art got into the vineyard, thou standest
before the Lord of the vineyard as one of the trees of the garden; wherefore he looketh
for fruit from thee, as from the rest of the trees in the vineyard; fruits, I say, and
such as may declare thee in heart and life one that hath made sound profession of
repentance. By thy profession thou hast said, I am sensible of the evil of sin. Now then,
live such a life as declares that thou art sensible of the evil of sin. By thy profession
thou hast said, I am sorry for my sin. Why, then, live such a life as may declare this
sorrow. By thy profession thou hast said, I am ashamed of my sin; yea, but live such a
life, that men by that may see thy shame for sin (Psa 38:18; Jer 31:19). By thy profession
thou sayest, I have turned from, left off, and am become an enemy to every appearance of
evil (1 Thess 5:22). Ah! but doth thy life and conversation declare thee to be such an
one? Take heed, barren fig-tree, lest thy life should give thy profession the lie. I say
again, take heed, for God himself will come for fruit. 'And he sought fruit thereon.'
You have some professors that are only saints before men when they are abroad, but are
devils and vipers at home; saints by profession, but devils by practice; saints in word,
but sinners in heart and life. These men may have the profession, but they want the fruits
that become repentance.[8]
Barren fig-tree, can it be imagined that those that paint themselves did ever repent of
their pride? or that those that pursue this world did ever repent of their covetousness?
or that those that walk with wanton eyes did ever repent of their fleshly lusts? Where,
barren fig-tree, is the fruit of these people's repentance? Nay, do they not rather
declare to the world that they have repented of their profession? Their fruits look as if
they had. Their pride saith they have repented of their humility. Their covetousness
declareth that they are weary of depending upon God; and doth not thy wanton actions
declare that thou abhorrest chastity? Where is thy fruit, barren fig-tree? Repentance is
not only a sorrow, and a shame for, but a turning from sin to God; it is called
'repentance from dead works' (Heb 6:1). Hast thou that 'godly sorrow' that 'worketh
repentance to salvation, not to be repented of?' (2 Cor 7:10,11). How dost thou show thy
carefulness, and clearing of thyself; thy indignation against sin; they fear of offending;
thy vehement desire to walk with God; thy zeal for his name and glory in the world? And
what revenge hast thou in thy heart against every thought of disobedience?
But where is the fruit of this repentance? Where is thy watching, thy fasting, thy praying
against the remainders of corruption? Where is thy self-abhorrence, thy blushing before
God, for the sin that is yet behind? Where is thy tenderness of the name of God and his
ways? Where is thy self-denial and contentment? How dost thou show before men the truth of
thy turning to God? Hast thou 'renounced the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in
craftiness?' Canst thou commend thyself 'to every man's conscience in the sight of God?'
(2 Cor 4:2).
Second. God expecteth fruits that shall answer that faith which thou makest profession of.
The professor that is got into the vineyard of God doth feign that he hath the faith, the
faith most holy, the faith of God's elect. Ah! but where are thy fruits, barren fig-tree?
The faith of the Romans was 'spoken of throughout the whole world' (Rom 1:8). And the
Thessalonians' faith grew exceedingly (2 Thess 1:3).
Thou professest to believe thou hast a share in another world: hast thou let got THIS,
barren fig-tree? Thou professest thou believest in Christ: is he thy joy, and the life of
thy soul? Yea, what conformity unto him, to his sorrows and sufferings? What resemblance
hath his crying, and groaning, and bleeding, and dying, wrought in thee? Dost thou 'bear
about in thy body the dying of the Lord Jesus?' and is also the life of Jesus 'made
manifest in thy mortal body?' (2 Cor 4:10,11). Barren fig-tree, 'show me thy faith by thy
works.' 'Show out of a good conversation thy works with meekness of wisdom' (James 2:18,
3:13). What fruit, barren fig-tree, what degree of heart holiness? for faith purifies the
heart (Acts 15:9). What love to the Lord Jesus? for 'faith worketh by love' (Gal 5:6).
Third. God expecteth fruits according to the seasons of grace thou art under, according to
the rain that cometh upon thee. Perhaps thou art planted in a good soil, by great waters,
that thou mightest bring forth branches, and bear fruit; that thou mightest be a goodly
vine or fig-tree. Shall he not therefore seek for fruit, for fruit answerable to the
means? Barren fig-tree, God expects it, and will find it too, if ever he bless thee. 'For
the earth which drinketh in the rain that cometh oft upon it, and bringeth forth herbs
meet for them by whom it is dressed, receiveth blessing from God: but that which beareth
thorns and briars is rejected, and is nigh unto cursing, whose end is to be burned' (Heb
6:7,8).
Barren soul, how many showers of grace, how many dews from heaven, how many times have the
silver streams of the city of God run gliding by thy roots, to cause thee to bring forth
fruit! These showers and streams, and the drops that hang upon thy boughs, will all be
accounted for; and will they not testify against thee that thou oughtest, of right, to be
burned? Hear and tremble, O thou barren professor! Fruits that become thy profession of
the gospel, the God of heaven expecteth. The gospel hath in it the forgiveness of sins,
the kingdom of heaven, and eternal life; but what fruit hath thy profession of a belief of
these things put forth in thy heart and life? Hast thou given thyself to the Lord? and is
all that thou hast to be ventured for his name in this world? Dost thou walk like one that
is bought with a price, even with the price of precious blood?
Fourth. The fruit that God expecteth is such as is meet for himself; fruit that may
glorify God. God's trees are trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that he may
be glorified; fruit that tasteth of heaven, abundance of such fruit. For 'herein,' saith
Christ, 'is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit' (John 15:8). Fruits of all
kinds, new and old; the fruits of the Spirit are in all goodness, and righteousness, and
truth. Fruits before the world, fruits before the saints, fruits before God, fruits before
angels.
O my brethren, 'what manner of persons ought we to be,' who have subscribed to the Lord,
and have called ourselves by the name of Israel? 'One shall say I am the Lord's; and
another shall call himself by the name of Jacob; and another shall subscribe with his hand
unto the Lord, and surname himself by the name of Israel' (Isa 44:5). Barren fig-tree,
hast thou subscribed, hast thou called thyself by the name of Jacob, and surnamed thyself
by the name of Israel? All this thou pretendest to, who art got into the vineyard, who art
placed among the trees of the garden of God. God doth therefore look for such fruit as is
worthy of his name, as is meet for him; as the apostle saith, 'we should walk worthy of
God'; that is, so as we may show in every place that the presence of God is with us, his
fear in us, and his majesty and authority upon our actions. Fruits meet for him, such a
dependence upon him, such trust in his word, such satisfaction in his presence, such a
trusting of him with all my concerns, and such delight in the enjoyment of him, that may
demonstrate that his fear is in my heart, that my soul is wrapped up in his things, and
that my body, and soul, and estate, and all, are in truth, through his grace, at his
dispose, fruit meet for him. Hearty thanks, and blessing God for Jesus Christ, for his
good word, for his free grace, for the discovery of himself in Christ to the soul, secret
longing after another world, fruit meet for him. Liberality to the poor saints, to the
poor world; a life in word and deed exemplary; a patient and quiet enduring of all things,
till I have done and suffered the whole will of God, which he hath appointed for me. 'That
on the good ground are they which, in an honest and good heart, having heard the word,
keep it, and bring forth fruit with patience' (Luke 8:15). This is bringing forth fruit
unto God; having our 'fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life' (Rom 7:4, 6:22,
14:8).
Fifth. The Lord expects fruit becoming the vineyard of God. 'The vineyard,' saith he, 'in
a very fruitful hill': witness the fruit brought forth in all ages (Isa 5:1). The most
barren trees that ever grew in the wood of this world, when planted in this vineyard by
the God of heaven, what fruit to Godward have they brought forth! 'Abel offered the more
excellent sacrifice' (Heb 11:4). Enoch walked with God three hundred years (Heb 11:5).
Noah, by his life of faith, 'condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness
which is by faith' (Heb 11:7). Abraham left his country, and went out after God, not
knowing whither he went (Heb 11:8). Moses left a kingdom, and run the hazard of the wrath
of the king, for the love he had to God and Christ. What shall I say of them who had
trials, 'not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection? They
were stoned; they were sawn asunder; were tempted; were slain with the sword; they
wandered about in sheep-skins and goat-skins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented' (Heb
11:35-37). Peter left his father, ship, and nets (Matt 4:18-20). Paul turned off from the
feet of Gamaliel. Men brought their goods and possessions (the price of them) and cast it
down at the apostle's feet (Acts 19:18-20). And others brought their books together, and
burned them; curious books, though they were worth fifty thousand pieces of silver. I
could add how many willingly offered themselves in all ages, and their all, for the worthy
name of the Lord Jesus, to be racked, starved, hanged, burned, drowned, pulled in pieces,
and a thousand calamities.[9] Barren fig-tree, the vineyard of God hath been a fruitful
place. What dost thou there? What dost thou bear? God expects fruit according to, or
becoming the soil of the vineyard.
Sixth. The fruit which God expecteth is such as becometh God's husbandry and labour. The
vineyard is God's husbandry, or tillage. 'I am the true vine, ' saith Christ, 'and my
Father is the husbandman' (John 15:1). And again, 'Ye are God's husbandry, ye are God's
building' (1 Cor 3:9). The vineyard; God fences it, God gathereth out the stones, God
builds the tower, and the wine-press in the midst thereof. Here is labour, here is
protection, here is removing of hindrances, here is convenient purgation, and all that
there might be fruit.
Barren fig-tree, what fruit hast thou? Hast thou fruit becoming the care of God, the
protection of God, the wisdom of God, the patience and husbandry of God? It is the fruit
of the vineyard that is either the shame or the praise of the husbandman. 'I went by the
field of the slothful,' saith Solomon, 'and by the vineyard of the man void of
understanding; and lo, it was all grown over with thorns, and nettles had covered the face
thereof' (Prov 34:30-32).
Barren fig-tree, if men should make a judgment of the care, and pains, and labour of God
in his church, by the fruit that thou bringest forth, what might they say? Is he not
slothful, is not he careless, is he not without discretion? O! thy thorns, thy nettles,
thy barren heart and barren life, is a continual provocation to the eyes of his glory, as
likewise a dishonour to the glory of his grace.
Barren fig-tree, hast thou heard all these things? I will add yet one more.
'And he came and sought fruit thereon.'
The question is not now, What thou thinkest of thyself, nor what all the people of God
think of thee, but what thou shalt be found in that day when God shall search thy boughs
for fruit? When Sodom was to be searched for righteous men, God would not, in that matter,
trust his faithful servant Abraham; but still, as Abraham interceded, God answered, 'If I
find fifty, - or forty and five there, I will not destroy the city' (Gen 18:20-28). Barren
fig-tree, what sayest thou? God will come down to see, God will make search for fruit
himself.
'And he came and sought fruit thereon, and found none. Then said he unto the dresser of
the vineyard, Behold, these three years I come seeking fruit on this fig-tree, and find
none; cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?'
These words are the effects of God's search into the boughs of a barren fig-tree; he
sought fruit, and found nonenone to his liking, none pleasant and good. Therefore,
first, he complains of the want thereof to the dresser; calls him to come, and see, and
take notice of the tree; then signifieth his pleasure: he will have it removed, taken
away, cut down from cumbering the ground.
Observe, The barren fig-tree is the object of God's displeasure; God cannot bear with a
fruitless professor.
THEN said he, &c.
THEN, after this provocation; then, after he had sought and found no fruit, then. This
word, THEN, doth show us a kind of an inward disquietness; as he saith also in another
place, upon a like provocation. 'THEN the anger of the Lord, and his jealousy, shall smoke
against that man, and all the curses that are written in this book shall lie upon him, and
the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven' (Deut 29:18-20).
THEN; it intimateth that he was now come to a point, to a resolution what to do with this
fig-tree. 'Then said he to the dresser of this vineyard,' that is, to Jesus Christ,
'behold,' as much as to say, come hither, here is a fig-tree in my vineyard, here is a
professor in my church, that is barren, that beareth no fruit.
Observe, However the barren professor thinks of himself on earth, the Lord cries out in
heaven against him. 'And now go to, I will tell you what I will do to my vineyard: I will
take away the hedge thereof, and it shall be eaten up; and I will break down the wall
thereof, and it shall be trodden down' (Isa 5:5).
'Behold, THESE THREE YEARS I come seeking fruit.'
Observe, 'THESE THREE YEARS.' God cries out that this patience is abused, that his
forbearance is abused. Behold, these three years I have waited, forborne; these three
years I have deferred mine anger. 'Therefore will I stretch out my hand against thee, and
destroy thee; I am weary with repenting' (Jer 15:6). 'These three years.' Observe, God
layeth up all the time; I say, a remembrance of all the time that a barren fig-tree, or a
fruitless professor, misspendeth in this world. As he saith also of Israel of old, 'forty
years long was I grieved with this generation' (Psa 95:10).
'These three years,' &c. These three seasons: Observe, God remembers how many seasons
thou hast misspent: for these three years signify so many seasons. And when the time of
fruit drew nigh, that is, about the season they begin to be ripe, or that according to the
season might so have been. Barren fig-tree, thou hast had time, seasons, sermons,
ministers, afflictions, judgments, mercies, and what not; and yet hast not been fruitful.
Thou hast had awakenings, reproofs, threatenings, comforts, and yet hast not been
fruitful. Thou hast had patterns, examples, citations, provocations, and yet has not been
fruitful. Well, God hath laid up thy three years with himself. He remembers every time,
every season, every sermon, every minister, affliction, judgment, mercy, awakening,
pattern, example, citation, provocation; he remembers all. As he said of Israel of old,
'They have tempted me now these ten times, and have not hearkened to my voice' (Num
14:22). And again, 'I remember all their wickedness' (Hosea 7:2).
'These three years,' &c. He seeks for the fruit of every season. He will not that any
of his sermons, ministers, afflictions, judgments, or mercies, should be lost, or stand
for insignificant things; he will have according to the benefit bestowed. (2 Chron
32:24,25). He hath not done without a cause all that he hath done, and therefore he
looketh for fruit (Eze 14:23). Look to it, barren fig-tree.[10]
I came 'SEEKING' fruit.
Observe, This word 'SEEKING' signifies a narrow search; for when a man seeks for fruit on
a tree, he goes round it and round it; now looking into this bough, and then into that; he
peeks into the inmost boughs, and the lowermost boughs, if perhaps fruit may be thereon.
Barren fig-tree, God will look into all thy boughs, he will be with thee in thy
bed-fruits, thy midnight-fruits, thy closet-fruits, thy family-fruits, thy
conversation-fruits, to see if there be any among all these that are fit for, or worthy of
the name of the God of heaven. He sees 'what the ancients of the house of Israel do in the
dark' (Eze 8:12). 'All things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom we have
to do' (Heb 4:12,13).
Seeking fruit on 'THIS' fig-tree.
I told you before, that he keeps in remembrance the times and seasons that the barren
professor had wickedly misspent. Now, forasmuch as he also pointeth out the fig- tree,
THIS fig-tree, it showeth that the barren professor, above all professors, is a continual
odium in the eyes of God. This fig-tree, 'this man Coniah' (Jer 22:28). This people draw
nigh me with their mouth, but have removed their hearts far from me. God knows who they
are among all the thousands of Israel that are the barren and fruitless professors; his
lot will fall upon the head of Achan, though he be hid among six hundred thousand men.
'And he brought his household, man by man, and Achan, the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi,
the son of Zera, of the tribe of Judah, was taken' (Josh 7:17,18). This is the Achan, this
is the fig-tree, this is the barren professor!
There is a man hath a hundred trees in his vineyard, and at the time of the season, he
walketh into his vineyard to see how the trees flourish; and as he goes, and views, and
prys, and observes how they are hanged with fruit, behold, he cometh to one where he
findeth naught but leaves. Now he makes a stand; looks upon it again and again; he looks
also here and there, above and below; and if after all this seeking, he finds nothing but
leaves thereon, then he begins to cast in his mind, how he may know this tree next year;
what stands next it, or how far it is off the hedge? But if there be nothing there that
may be as a mark to know it by, then he takes his hook, and giveth it a private
mark'And the Lord set a mark upon Cain' (Gen 4), saying, Go thy ways, fruitless
fig-tree, thou hast spent this season in vain. Yet doth he not cut it down, I will try it
another year: may be this was not a hitting[11] season. Therefore he comes again next
year, to see if now it have fruit; but as he found it before, so he finds it now, barren,
barren, every year barren; he looks again, but finds no fruit. Now he begins to have
second thoughts, How! neither hit last year nor this? Surely the barrenness is not in the
season; sure the fault is in the tree; however, I will spare it this year also, but will
give it a second mark; and it may be he toucheth it with a hot iron, because he begins to
be angry.
Well, at the third season he comes again for fruit, but the third year is like the first
and second; no fruit yet; it only cumbereth the ground. What now must be done with this
fig-tree? Why, the Lord will lop its boughs with terror; yea, the thickets of those
professors with iron. I have waited, saith God, these three years; I have missed of fruit
these three years; it hath been a cumber-ground these three years; cut it down. Precept
hath been upon precept, and line upon line, one year after another, for these three years,
but no fruit can be seen; I find none, fetch out the axe! I am sure THIS is the fig-tree,
I know it from the first year; barrenness was its sign then, barrenness is its sign now;
make it fit for the fire! Behold, 'now also the axe is laid unto the root of the trees:
therefore, every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit, is hewn down, and cast into the
fire' (Matt 3:10).
Observe, my brethren, God's heart cannot stand towards a barren fig-tree. You know thus it
is with yourselves. If you have a tree in your orchard or vineyard that doth only cumber
the ground, you cannot look upon that tree with pleasure, with complacency and delight.
No; if you do but go by it, if you do but cast your eye upon it: yea, if you do but think
of that tree, you threaten it in your heart, saying, I will hew thee down shortly; I will
to the fire with thee shortly: and it is in vain for any to think of persuading of you to
show favour to the barren fig-tree; and if they should persuade, your answer is
irresistible, It yields me no profit, it takes up room and doth no good; a better may grow
in its room.
Cut it down.
Thus, when the godly among the Jews made prayers that rebellious Israel might not be cast
out of the vineyard, what saith the answer of God? (Jer 14:17). 'Though Moses and Samuel
stood before me, yet my mind could not be toward this people': wherefore 'cast them out of
my sight, and let them go forth' (Jer 15:1).
What a resolution is here! Moses and Samuel could do almost anything with God in prayer.
How many times did Moses by prayer turn away God's judgments from even Pharaoh himself!
yea, how many times did he by prayer preserve Israel, when in the wilderness, from the
anger and wrath of God! (Psa 106:23). Samuel is reckoned excellent this way, yea, so
excellent, that when Israel had done that fearful thing as to reject the Lord, and choose
them another king, he prayed, and the Lord spared, and forgave them (1 Sam 12). But yet
neither Moses nor Samuel can save a barren fig-tree. No; though Moses and Samuel stood
before me, that is, pleading, arguing, interceding, supplicating, and beseeching, yet
could they not incline mine heart to this people.
Cut it down.
'Ay, but Lord, it is a fig-tree, a fig-tree!' If it was a thorn, or a bramble, or a
thistle, the matter would not be much; but it is a fig-tree, or a vine. Well, but mark the
answer of God, 'Son of man, What is the vine-tree more than any tree, or than a branch
which is among the trees of the forest? Shall wood be taken thereof to do any work? or
will men take a pin of it to hang any vessel thereon?' (Eze 15:2,3). If trees that are
set, or planted for fruit, bring not forth that fruit, there is betwixt them and the trees
of the forest no betterment at all, unless the betterment lieth in the trees of the wood,
for they are fit to build withal; but a fig-tree, or a vine, if they bring not forth
fruit, yea, good fruit, they are fit for nothing at all, but to be cut down and prepared
for the fire; and so the prophet goes on, 'Behold, it is cast into the fire for fuel.' If
it serve not for fruit it will serve for fuel, and so 'the fire devoureth both the ends of
it, and the midst of it is burnt.'
Ay, but these fig-trees and vines are church-members, inhabiters of Jerusalem. So was the
fig-tree mentioned in the text. But what answer hath God prepared for these objections?
Why, 'Thus saith the Lord God, As the vine- tree among the trees of the forest, which I
have given to the fire for fuel; so will I give the inhabitants of Jerusalem; and I will
set my face against them, they shall go out from one fire, and another fire shall devour
them' (Eze 15:6,7).
Cut it down.
The woman that delighteth in her garden, if she have a slip there, suppose, if it was
fruitful, she would not take five pounds for it; yet if it bear no fruit, if it wither,
and dwindle, and die, and turn cumber-ground only, it may not stand in her garden. Gardens
and vineyards are places for fruit, for fruit according to the nature of the plant or
flowers. Suppose such a slip as I told you of before should be in your garden, and there
die, would you let it abide in your garden? No; away with it, away with it! The woman
comes into her garden towards the spring, where first she gives it a slight cast with her
eye, then she sets to gathering out the weeds, and nettles, and stones; takes a besom and
sweeps the walks; this done, she falls to prying into her herbs and slips, to see if they
live, to see if they are likely to grow. Now, if she comes to one that is dead, that she
is confident will not grow, up she pulls that, and makes to the heap of rubbish with it,
where she despisingly casts it down, and valueth it no more than a nettle, or a weed, or
than the dust she hath swept out of her walks. Yea, if any that see her should say, Why do
you so? the answer is ready. It is dead, it is dead at root; if I had let it stand it
would but have cumbered the ground. The strange slips, and also the dead ones, they must
be 'a heap in the day of grief, and of desperate sorrow' (Isa 17:10,11).
Cut it down.
There are two manner of cuttings down; First. When a man is cast out of the vineyard.
Second. When a man is cast out of the world.
First. When a man is cast out of the vineyard. And that is done two ways; 1. By an
immediate hand of God. 2. By the church's due execution of the laws and censures which
Christ for that purpose has left with his church.
1. God cuts down the barren fig-tree by an immediate hand, smiting his roots, blasting his
branches, and so takes him away from among his people. 'Every branch,' saith Christ, 'that
beareth not fruit in me, he,' my Father, 'taketh away' (John 15:2). He taketh him out of
the church, he taketh him away from the godly. There are two things by which God taketh
the barren professor from among the children of God: (1.) Strong delusions. (2.) Open
profaneness.
(.1). By strong delusion; such as beguile the soul with damnable doctrines, that swerve
from faith and godliness, 'They have chosen their own ways,' saith God, 'and their soul
delighteth in their abominations. I also will choose their delusions, and will bring their
fears upon them' (Isa 66:3,4). I will smite them with blindness, and hardness of heart,
and failing of eyes; and will also suffer the tempter to tempt and affect his hellish
designs upon them. 'God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie:
that they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in
unrighteousness' (2 Thess 2:10-12).
(2.) Sometimes God takes away a barren professor by open profaneness. There is one hath
taken up a profession of that worthy name, the Lord Jesus Christ; but this profession is
but a cloak; he secretly practiseth wickedness. He is a glutton, a drunkard, or covetous,
or unclean. Well, saith God, I will loose the reins of this professor; I will give him up
to his vile affections; I will loose the reins of his lusts before him; he shall be
entangled with his beastly lusts; he shall be overcome of ungodly company. Thus they that
turn aside to their own crooked ways 'the Lord shall lead them forth with the workers of
iniquity' (Psa 125:5). This is God's hand immediately; God is now dealing with this man
himself. Barren fig-tree, hearken! Thou art crowded into a profession, art got among the
godly, and there art a scandal to the holy and glorious gospel; but withal so cunning
that, like the sons of Zeruiah, thou art too hard for the church; she knows not how to
deal with thee. Well, saith God, I will deal with that man myself, 'I will answer that man
by myself.' He that sets up his idols in his heart, and puts the stumbling-block of his
iniquity before his face, and yet comes and appears before me, 'I will set my face against
that man, and will make him a sign and a proverb: and I will cut him off from the midst of
my people; and ye shall know that I am the Lord' (Eze 14:7,8). But,
2. God doth sometimes cut down the barren fig-tree by the church, by the church's due
execution of the laws and censures which Christ for that purpose hath left with his
church. This is the meaning of that in Matthew 18; 1 Corinthians 5: and that in 1 Timothy
1:20 upon which now I shall not enlarge, But which way soever God dealeth with thee, O
thou barren fig-tree, whither by himself immediately, or by his church, it amounts to one
and the same; for if timely repentance prevent not, the end of that soul is damnation.
They are blasted, and withered, and gathered by men, God's enemies; and at last being cast
into the fire burning must be their end. 'That which beareth thorns and briars is nigh
unto cursing, whose end is to be burned' (Heb 6:8).
Second. And, again, sometimes by 'Cut it down' God means, cast it out of the world. Thus
he cut down Nadab and Abihu, when he burned them up with fire from heaven. Thus he cut
down Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, when he made the earth to swallow them up (Num 3:4,
16:31-33). Thus he cut down Saul, when he gave him up to fall upon the edge of his own
sword, and died (1 Sam 31:4). Thus he cut down Ananias, with Sapphira his wife, when he
struck them down dead in the midst of the congregation (Acts 5:5,10). I might here also
discourse of Absalom, Ahithophel, and Judas, who were all three hanged: the first by God's
revenging hand, the others were given up of God to be their own executioners. These were
barren and unprofitable fig-trees, such as God took no pleasure in, therefore he commanded
to cut them down. The Psalmist saith, 'He shall take them away as with a whirlwind, both
living, and in his wrath' (Psa 58:9). Barren fig-tree, hearken! God calls for the axe, his
sword; bring it hither; here is a barren professor. Cut him down, why cumbereth he the
ground?
Why cumbereth it the ground?
By these words the Lord suggesteth reasons of his displeasure against the barren fig-tree;
it cumbereth the ground. The Holy Ghost doth not only take an argument from its
barrenness, but because it is a cumber-ground, therefore cut it down; wherefore it must
needs be a provocation. 1. Because, as much as in him lieth, he disappointeth the design
of God in planting his vineyard; I looked that it should bring forth fruit. 2. It hath
also abused his patience, his long-suffering, his three years' patience. 3. It hath also
abused his labour, his pains, his care, and providence of protection and preservation: for
he hedges his vineyard, and walls it about. Cumber-ground, all these things thou abusest!
He waters his vineyard, and looks to it night and day; but all these things thou hast
abused.
Further, there are other reasons of God's displeasure; as,
First. A cumber-ground is a very mock and reproach of religion, a mock and reproach to the
ways of God, to the people of God, to the Word of God, and to the name of religion. It is
expected of all hands, that all the trees in the garden of God should be fruitful: God
expects fruit, the church expects fruit, the world, even the world, concludes that
professors should be fruitful in good works; I say, the world expecteth that professors
should be better than themselves. But, barren fig-tree, thou disappointest all. Nay, hast
thou not learned the wicked ones thy ways? Hast thou not learned them to be more wicked by
thy example?but that is by the by. Barren fig-tree, thou hast disappointed others,
and must be disappointed thyself! 'Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?'
Second. The barren fig-tree takes up the room where a better tree might stand; I say, it
takes up the room, it keeps, so long as it stand where it doth; a fruitful tree out of
that place, and therefore it must be cut down. Barren fig-tree, dost thou hear? Because
the Jews stood fruitless in the vineyard, therefore, saith God, 'The kingdom of God shall
be taken from you,' and given to a nation that shall render him their fruits in their
season (Matt 21:33-41). The Jews for their barrenness were cut down, and more fruitful
people put in their room. As Samuel also said to barren Saul, 'The Lord hath rent the
kingdom from thee, and hath given it to a neighbour of thine that is better than thou' (1
Sam 15:28). The unprofitable servant must be cast out, must be cut down (Matt 25:27).
Cumber-ground, how many hopeful, inclinable, forward people, hast thou by thy fruitless
and unprofitable life, kept out of the vineyard of God? For thy sake have the people
stumbled at religion; by thy life have they been kept from the love of their own
salvation. Thou hast been also a means of hardening others, and of quenching and killing
weak beginnings. Well, barren fig-tree, look to thyself, thou wilt not go to heaven
thyself, and them that would, thou hinderest; thou must not always cumber the ground, nor
always hinder the salvation of others. Thou shalt be cut down, and another shall be
planted in thy room.
Third. The cumber-ground is a sucker; he draws away the heart and nourishment from the
other trees. Were the cumber ground cut down, the others would be more fruitful; he draws
away that fatness of the ground to himself, that would make the others more hearty and
fruitful. 'One sinner destroyeth much good' (Eccl 9:18).
The cumber-ground is a very drone in the hive, that eats up the honey that should feed the
labouring bee; he is a thief in the candle, that wasteth the tallow, but giveth no light;
he is the unsavoury salt, that is fit for nought but the dunghill. Look to it, barren
fig-tree!
And he answering, said unto him, Lord, let it alone this year also, till I shall dig about
it, and dung it; and if it bear fruit, well; and if not, then after that, thou shalt cut
it down (vv 8,9).
These are the words of the dresser of the vineyard, who, I told you, is Jesus Christ, for
he made intercession for the transgressors. And they contain a petition presented to an
offended justice, praying, that a little more time and patience might be exercised towards
the barren cumber- ground fig-tree.
In this petition there are six things considerable: 1. That justice might be deferred. O
that justice might be deferred! 'Lord, let it alone,' &c., a while longer. 2. Here is
time prefixed, as a space to try if more means will cure a barren fig-tree. 'Lord, let it
alone this year also.' 3. The means to help it are propounded, 'until I shall dig about
it, and dung it.'[12] 4. Here is also an insinuation of a supposition, that, by thus
doing, God's expectation may be answered; 'and if it bear fruit, well.' 5. Here is a
supposition that the barren fig-tree may yet abide barren, when Christ hath done what he
will unto it; 'and if it bear fruit,' &c. 6. Here is at last a resolution, that if
thou continue barren, hewing days will come upon thee; 'and if it bear fruit, well; and if
not, then after that thou shalt cut it down.' But to proceed according to my former
method, by way of exposition.
Lord, let it alone this year also.
Here is astonishing grace indeed! astonishing grace, I say, that the Lord Jesus should
concern himself with a barren fig-tree; that he should step in to stop the blow from a
barren fig-tree! True, he stopped the blow but for a time; but why did he stop it at all?
Why did not he fetch out the axe? Why did he not do execution? Why did not he cut it down?
Barren fig-tree, it is well for thee that there is a Jesus at God's right hand, a Jesus of
that largeness of bowels, as to have compassion for a barren fig-tree, else justice had
never let thee alone to cumber the ground as thou hast done! When Israel also had sinned
against God, down they had gone, but that Moses stood in the breach. 'Let me alone,' said
God to him, 'that I may consume them' in a moment, 'and I will make of thee a great
nation' (Exo 32:10). Barren fig-tree, dost thou hear? Thou knowest not how oft the hand of
Divine justice hath been up to strike, and how many years since thou hadst been cut down,
had not Jesus caught hold of his Father's axe. Let me alone, let me fetch my blow, or 'Cut
it down, why cumbereth it the ground?' Wilt thou not hear yet, barren fig-tree? Wilt thou
provoke still? Thou hast wearied men, and provoked the justice of God! And 'will ye weary
my God also?' (Isa 7:13).
Lord, let it alone this year.
Lord, a little longer! let us not lose a soul for want of means. I will try, I will see if
I can make it fruitful, I will not beg a long life, nor that it might still be barren, and
so provoke thee. I beg, for the sake of the soul, the immortal soul; Lord, spare it one
year only, one year longer, this year also. If I do any good to it, it will be in little
time. Thou shalt not be over wearied with waiting; one year and then.
Barren fig-tree, dost thou hear what a striving there is between the vine-dresser and the
husbandman, for thy life? 'Cut it down,' says one; 'Lord, spare it,' saith the other. It
is a cumber-ground, saith the Father; one year longer, prays the Son. 'Let it alone this
year also.'
Till I shall dig about it, and dung it.
The Lord Jesus by these words supposeth two things, as causes of the want of fruit in a
barren fig-tree; and two things he supposeth as a remedy.
The things that are a cause of want of fruit are, First. It is earth-bound. Lord, the
fig-tree is earth-bound. Second. A want of warmer means, of fatter means. Wherefore,
accordingly, he propoundeth to loosen the earth; to dig about it. And then to supply it
with dung.
'To dig about it, and dung it. Lord, let it alone this year also, until I shall dig about
it.' I doubt it is too much ground-bound. The love of this world, and the deceitfulness of
riches lie too close to the roots of the heart of this professor (Luke 14). The love of
riches, the love of honours, the love of pleasures, are the thorns that choke the word.
'For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the
pride of life, is not of the Father,' but enmity to God; how then, where these things bind
up the heart, can there be fruit brought forth to God? (1 John 2:15,16). Barren fig-tree,
see how the Lord Jesus, by these very words, suggesteth the cause of thy fruitfulessness
of soul! The things of this world lie too close to thy heart; the earth with its things
have bound up thy roots; thou art an earth-bound soul, thou art wrapped up in thick clay.
'If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him'; how then can he be
fruitful in the vineyard? This kept Judas from the fruit of caring for the poor (John
12:6). This kept Demas from the fruit of self- denial (2 Tim 4:10). And this kept Ananias
and Sapphira his wife from the goodly fruit of sincerity and truth (Acts 5:5,10). What
shall I say? These are 'foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and
perdition; for the love of money is the root of all evil.' How then can good fruit grow
from such a root, the root of all evil? 'Which while some coveted after, they have erred
from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows' (1 Tim 6:9,10). It is an
evil root, nay, it is the root of all evil. How then can the professor that hath such a
root, or a root wrapped up in such earthly things, as the lusts, and pleasures, and
vanities of this world, bring forth fruit to God?
Till I shall 'DIG' about it.
Lord, I will loose his roots, I will dig up this earth, I will lay his roots bare; my hand
shall be upon him by sickness, by disappointments, by cross providences; I will dig about
him until he stands shaking and tottering; until he be ready to fall; then, if ever, he
will seek to take faster hold. Thus, I say, deals the Lord Jesus ofttimes with the barren
professor; he diggeth about him, he smiteth one blow at his heart, another blow at his
lusts, a third at his pleasures, a fourth at his comforts, another at his
self-conceitedness. Thus he diggeth about him; this is the way to take bad earth from his
roots, and to loosen his roots from the earth. Barren fig- tree, see here the care, the
love, the labour, and way, which the Lord Jesus, the dresser of the vineyard, is fain to
take with thee, if haply thou mayest be made fruitful.[13]
Till I shall dig about it, and 'DUNG' it.
As the earth, by binding the roots too closely, may hinder the tree's being fruitful, so
the want of better means may be also a cause thereof. And this is more than intimated by
the dresser of the vineyard; 'Till I shall dig about it and dung it.' I will supply it
with a more fruitful ministry, with a warmer word; I will give them pastors after mine own
heart; I will dung them. You know dung is a more warm, more fat, more hearty, and
succouring matter than is commonly the place in which trees are planted.
'I will dig about it, and dung it.' I will bring it under a heart-awakening ministry; the
means of grace shall be fat and good: I will also visit it with heart-awakening, heart-
warming, heart-encouraging considerations; I will apply warm dung to his roots; I will
strive with him by my Spirit, and give him some tastes of the heavenly gift, and the power
of the world to come. I am loth to lose him for want of digging. 'Lord, let it alone this
year also, till I shall dig about it and dung it.'
And if it bear fruit, WELL.
And if the fruits of all my labour doth make this fig-tree fruitful, I shall count my
time, my labour, and means, well bestowed upon it; and thou also, O my God, shalt be
therewith much delighted; for thou art gracious, and merciful, and repentest thee of the
evil which thou threatenest to bring upon a people. These words, therefore, inform us,
that if a barren fig-tree, a barren professor, shall now at last bring forth fruit to God,
it shall go well with that professor, it shall go well with that poor soul. His former
barrenness, his former tempting of God, his abuse of God's patience and long-suffering,
his mis-spending year after year, shall now be all forgiven him. Yea, God the Father, and
our Lord Jesus Christ, will not pass by and forget all, and say, 'Well done,' at the last.
When I say to the wicked, O wicked man, thou shalt surely die; if he then do that which is
lawful and right, if he walk in the statutes of life, without committing iniquity, he
shall surely live, he shall not die (Eze 33).
Barren fig-tree, dost thou hear? the axe is laid to thy roots, the Lord Jesus prays God to
spare thee. Hath he been digging about thee? Hath he been dunging of thee? O barren
fig-tree, now thou art come to the point; if thou shalt now become good, if thou shalt,
after a gracious manner, suck in the gospel-dung, and if thou shalt bring forth fruit unto
God, well; but if not, the fire is the last! fruit, or the fire; fruit, or the fire,
barren fig-tree! 'If it bear fruit, well.'[14]
And if not, THEN after that thou shalt cut it down.
The Lord Jesus, by this if, giveth us to understand that there is a generation of
professors in the world that are incurable, that will not, that cannot repent, nor be
profited by the means of grace. A generation, I say, that will retain a profession, but
will not bring forth fruit; a generation that will wear out the patience of God, time and
tide, threatenings and intercessions, judgments and mercies, and after all will be
unfruitful.
O the desperate wickedness that is in thy heart! Barren professor, dost thou hear? the
Lord Jesus stands yet in doubt about thee; there is an IF stands yet in the way. I say,
the Lord Jesus stands yet in doubt about thee, whether or no, at last, thou wilt be good;
whether he may not labour in vain; whether his digging and dunging will come to more than
lost labour; 'I gave her space to repent, - and she repented not' (Rev 2:21). I digged
about it, I dunged it; I gained time, and supplied it with means; but I laboured herein in
vain, and spent my strength for nought, and in vain! Dost thou hear, barren fig-tree?
there is yet a question, Whether it may be well with thy soul at last?
And if not, THEN after that thou shalt cut it down.
There is nothing more exasperating to the mind of a man than to find all his kindness and
favour slighted; neither is the Lord Jesus so provoked with anything, as when sinners
abuse his means of grace; if it be barren and fruitless under my gospel; if it turn my
grace into wantonness, if after digging and dunging, and waiting, it yet remain
unfruitful, I will let thee cut it down.
Gospel means, applied, is the last remedy for a barren professor; if the gospel, if the
grace of the gospel, will not do, there can be nothing expected but cut it down. 'Then
after that thou shalt cut it down.' 'O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the
prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy
children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would
not!' Therefore 'your house is left unto you desolate' (Matt 23:37,38). Yet it cannot be,
but that this Lord Jesus, who at first did put a stop to the execution of his Father's
justice, because he desired to try more means with the fig-tree; I say, it cannot be, but
that a heart so full of compassion as his is should be touched, to behold this professor
must now be cut down. 'And when he was come near, he beheld the city, and wept over it,
saying, If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong
unto thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes' (Luke 19:41,42).
After that thou shalt cut it down.
When Christ giveth thee over, there is no intercessor, no mediator, no more sacrifice for
sin, all is gone but judgment, but the axe, but a 'certain fearful looking for of
judgment, and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries' (Heb 10:26,27).
Barren fig-tree, take heed that thou comest not to these last words, for these words are a
give up, a cast up, a cast up of a cast away; 'After that thou shalt cut it down.' They
are as much as if Christ had said, Father, I begged for more time for this barren
professor; I begged until I should dig about it, and dung it. But now, Father, the time is
out, the year is ended, the summer is ended, and no good done! I have also tried with my
means, with the gospel, I have digged about it; I have laid also the fat and hearty dung
of the gospel to it, but all comes to nothing. Father, I deliver up this professor to thee
again; I have done; I have done all; I have done praying and endeavouring; I will hold the
head of thine axe no longer. Take him into the hands of justice; do justice; do the law; I
will never beg for him more. 'After that thou shalt cut it down.' 'Woe also to them when I
depart from them!' (Hosea 9:12). Now is this professor left naked indeed; naked to God,
naked to Satan, naked to sin, naked to the law, naked to death, naked to hell, naked to
judgment, and naked to the gripes of a guilty conscience, and to the torment of that worm
that never dies, and to that fire that never shall be quenched. 'See that ye refuse not
him that speaketh. For if they escaped not, who refused him that spake on earth, much more
shall not we escape, if we turn away from him that speaketh from heaven' (Heb 12:25).
From this brief pass through this parable, you have these two general
observations:First. That even then when the justice of God cries out, I cannot
endure to wait on this barren professor any longer, then Jesus Christ intercedes for a
little more patience, and a little more striving with this professor, if possible he may
make him a fruitful professor. 'Lord, let it alone this year also, till I shall dig about
it, and dung it; and if it bear fruit, well,' &c. Second. There are some professors
whose day of grace will end with, Cut it down, with judgment; when Christ, by his means,
hath been used for their salvation.
First. The first of these observations I shall pass, and not meddle at all therewith; but
shall briefly speak to the
Second, to wit, that there are some professors whose day of grace will end with, Cut it
down, with judgment, when Christ, by his means, hath been used for their salvation.
This the apostle showeth in that third chapter of his Epistle to the Hebrews, where he
tells us that the people of the Jews, after a forty years' patience and endeavour to do
them good by the means appointed for that purpose, their end was to be cut down, or
excluded the land of promise, for their final incredulity. 'So we see that they could not
enter in, because of unbelief.' 'Wherefore,' saith he, 'I was grieved with that
generation, and said, They do alway err in their heart, and they have not known my ways;
so I sware in my wrath, They shall not enter into my rest.' As who should say, I would
they should have entered in, and for that purpose I brought them out of Egypt, led them
through the sea, and taught them in the wilderness, but they did not answer my work nor
designs in that matter; wherefore they shall not, I swear they shall not. 'I sware in my
wrath, they shall not enter into my rest.' Here is cutting down with judgment. So again,
he saith, 'As I have sworn in my wrath, If they shall enter into my rest; although the
works were finished from the foundation of the world' (Heb 4:4,5). This word 'if' is the
same with 'they shall not,' in the chapter before. And where he saith, 'Although the works
were finished from the foundation of the world,' he giveth us to understand that what
preparations soever are made for the salvation of sinners, and of how long continuance
soever they are, yet the God-tempting, God- provoking and fruitless professor, is like to
go without a share therein, 'although the works were finished from the foundation of the
world.' 'I will therefore put you in remembrance, though ye once knew this, how that the
Lord having saved the people out of the land of Egypt, afterward destroyed them that
believed not. And the angels that kept not their first estate, but left their own
habitation, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness, unto the judgment of
the great day' (Jude 5,6). Here is an instance to purpose, an instance of men and angels:
men saved out of the land of Egypt, and in their journey towards Canaan, the type of
heaven, cut down; angels created and placed in the heavens in great estate and
principality; yet both these, because unfruitful to God in their places, were cut
down the men destroyed by God, for so saith the text, and the 'angels reserved in
everlasting chains under darkness, unto the judgment of the great day.'
Now, in my handling of this point, I shall discourse of the cutting down, or the judgment
here denounced, as it respecteth the doing of it by God's hand immediately, and that too
with respect to his casting them out of the world, and not as it respecteth an act of the
church, &c. And as to this cutting down, or judgment, it must be concluded, that it
cannot be before the day of grace be past with the fig-tree; but according to the
observation, there are some professors whose day of grace will end with, Cut it down; and
according to the words of the text, 'Then,' after that, 'thou shalt cut it down.' 'After
that,' that is, after all my attempts and endeavours to make it fruitful, after I have
left it, given it over, done with it, and have resolved to bestow no more days of grace,
opportunities of grace, and means of grace upon it, then, 'after that,' thou shalt cut it
down.
Besides, the giving up of the fig-tree is before the execution. Execution is not always
presently upon the sentence given; for, after that, a convenient time is thought on, and
then is cutting down. And so it is here in the text. The decree, that he shall perish, is
gathered from its continuing fruitless quite through the last yearfrom its
continuing fruitless at the end of all endeavours. But cutting down is not yet, for that
comes with an afterward. 'Then, after that, thou shalt cut it down.'
So then, that I may orderly proceed with the observation, I must lay down these two
propositions:PROPOSITION FIRST. That the day of grace ends with some men before God
takes them out of this world. And, PROPOSITION SECOND. The death, or cutting down of such
men, will be dreadful. For this 'Cut it down,' when it is understood in the largest sense,
as here indeed it ought, it showeth not only the wrath of God against a man's life in this
world, but his wrath against him, body and soul; and is as much as to say, Cut him off
from all the privileges and benefits that come by grace, both in this world and that which
is to come. But to proceed:
PROPOSITION FIRST.The day of grace ends with some men before God taketh them out of
the world. I shall give you some instances of this, and so go on to the last proposition.
First. I shall instance Cain. Cain was a professor, a sacrificer, a worshipper of God,
yea, the first worshipper that we read of after the fall; but his grapes were wild ones.
His works were evil; he did not do what he did from true gospel motives, therefore God
disallowed his work (Gen 4:3-8). At this his countenance falls, wherefore he envies his
brother, disputes him, takes his opportunity, and kills him. Now, in that day that he did
this act were the heavens closed up against him, and that himself did smartingly and
fearfully feel when God made inquisition for the blood of Abel. 'And now art thou cursed,'
said God, 'from the earth; which hath opened her mouth to receive thy brother's blood from
thy hand,' &c. 'And Cain said, My punishment is greater than I can bear.' Mine
iniquity is greater than that it may be forgiven. 'Behold thou hast driven me out this day
from the face of the earth, and from thy face shall I be hid' (Gen 4:9-14). Now thou art
cursed, saith God. Thou hast driven me out this day, saith Cain, and from thy face shall I
be hid. I shall never more have hope in thee, smile from thee, nor expect mercy at thy
hand. Thus, therefore, Cain's day of grace ended; and the heavens, with God's own heart,
were shut up against him; yet after this he lived long. Cutting down was not come yet;
after this he lived to marry a wife, to beget a cursed brood, to build a city, and what
else I know not; all which could not be quickly done; wherefore Cain might live after the
day of grace was past with him several hundred of years (Gen 4:10-17).
Second. I shall instance Ishmael. Ishmael was a professor, was brought up in Abraham's
family, and was circumcised at thirteen years of age (Gen 16:12, 17:25,26). But he was the
son of the bond-woman, he brought not forth good fruit; he was a wild professor. For all
his religion, he would scoff at those that were better than himself. Well, upon a day his
brother Isaac was weaned, at which time his father made a feast, and rejoiced before the
Lord, for that he had given him the promised son; at this Ishmael mocked them, their son,
and godly rejoicing. Then came the Spirit of God upon Sarah, and she cried, Cast him out,
'cast out this bond- woman and her son; for the son of this bond-woman shall not be heir
with my son, with Isaac' (Gen 21:9-11). Now Paul to the Galatians makes this casting out
to be, not only a casting out of Abraham's family, but a casting out also from a lot with
the saints in heaven (Gal 4:29-31). Also Moses giveth us a notable proof thereof, in
saying, that when he died he was gathered to his peoplehis people by his mother's
side; for he was reckoned from her, the son of Hagar, the son of the bond-woman (Gen
25:17). Now, she came of the Egyptians, so that he was gathered when he died,
notwithstanding his profession, to the place that Pharaoh and his host were gathered to,
who were drowned in the Red Sea; these were his people, and he was of them, both by nature
and disposition, by persecuting as they did (Gen 21:9).[15] But now, when did the day of
grace end with this man? Observe, and I will show you. Ishmael was thirteen years old when
he was circumcised, and then was Abraham ninety years old and nine (Gen 17:24-26). The
next year Isaac was born; so that Ishmael was now fourteen years of age. Now, when Isaac
was weaned, suppose he sucked four years, by that account, the day of grace must be ended
with Ishmael by that time he was eighteen years old (Gen 25:12, &c.). For that day he
mocked; that day it was said, 'Cast him out'; and of that casting out the apostle makes
what I have said. Beware, ye young barren professors! Now, Ishmael lived a hundred and
nineteen years after this, in great tranquility and honour with men. After this he also
begat twelve princes, even after his day of grace was past.
Third. I shall instance Esau (Gen 25:27, &c.). Esau also was a professor; he was born
unto Isaac, and circumcised according to the custom. But Esau was a gamesome professor, a
huntsman, a man of the field; also he was wedded to his lusts, which he did also venture
to keep, rather than the birthright. Well, upon a day, when he came from hunting, and was
faint, he sold his birthright to Jacob, his brother. Now the birthright, in those days,
had the promise and blessing annexed to it. Yea, they were so entailed in this, that the
one could not go without the other; wherefore the apostle's caution is here of weight.
Take heed, saith he, 'lest there be any fornicator, or profane person, as Esau, who for
one morsel of meat sold his birthright. For ye know how that afterward, when he would have
inherited the blessing, he was rejected; for he found no place of repentance, though he
sought it carefully with tears' (Heb 12:16,17). Now, the ending of Esau's day of grace is
to be reckoned from his selling of his birthright; for there the apostle points it, lest
there be among you any that, like Esau, sells his birthright: for then goes hence the
blessing also.
But Esau sold his birthright long before his death. Twenty years after this Jacob was with
Laban, and when he returned home, his brother Esau met him (Gen 31:41, 32:4). Further,
after this, when Jacob dwelt again some time with his father, then Jacob and Esau buried
him. I suppose he might live above forty, yea, for ought I know, above fourscore years
after he had sold his birthright, and so consequently had put himself out of the grace of
God (Gen 35:28,29).[16]
Three things I would further note upon these three professors.
1. Cain, an angry professor; Ishmael, a mocking one; Esau, a lustful, gamesome one. Three
symptoms of a barren professor; for he that can be angry, and that can mock, and that can
indulge his lusts, cannot bring forth fruit to God.
2. The day of grace ended with these professors at that time when they committed some
grievous sin. Cain's, when he killed his brother; Ishmael's, when he mocked at Isaac; and
Esau's, when, out of love to his lusts, he despised and sold his birthright. Beware,
barren professor! thou mayest do that in half a quarter of an hour, from the evil of which
thou mayest not be delivered for ever and ever.[17]
3. Yet these three, after their day of grace was over, lived better lives, as to outward
things, than ever they did before. Cain, after this, was lord of a city (Gen 4:17).
Ishmael was, after this, father of twelve princes (Gen 25:16). And Esau, after this, told
his brother, 'I have enough, my brother, keep that thou hast unto thyself' (Gen 33:8,9).
Ease and peace, and a prosperous life in outwards, is no sign of the favour of God to a
barren and fruitless professor, but rather of his wrath; that thereby he may be capable to
treasure up more wrath against the day of wrath, and revelation of the righteous judgment
of God. Let this much serve for the proof of the first proposition, namely, That the day
of grace ends with some men before God takes them out of the world.
SIGNS OF BEING PAST GRACE.
Now, then, to show you, by some signs, how you may know that the day of grace is ended, or
near to ending, with the barren professor; and after that thou shalt cut it down. He that
hath stood it out against God, and that hath withstood all those means for fruit that God
hath used for the making of him, if it might have been, a fruitful tree in his garden, he
is in this danger; and this indeed is the sum of the parable. The fig-tree here mentioned
was blessed with the application of means, had time allowed it to receive the nourishment;
but it outstood, withstood, overstood all, all that the husbandman did, all that the vine-
dresser did.
But a little distinctly to particularize in four or five particulars.
First sign. The day of grace is like to be past, when a professor hath withstood, abused,
and worn out God's patience, then he is in danger; this is a provocation; then God cries,
'Cut it down.' There are some men that steal into a profession nobody knows how, even as
this fig-tree was brought into the vineyard by other hands than God's; and there they
abide lifeless, graceless, careless, and without any good conscience to God at all.
Perhaps they came in for the loaves, for a trade, for credit, for a blind; or it may be to
stifle and choke the checks and grinding pangs of an awakened and disquieted conscience.
Now, having obtained their purpose, like the sinners of Sion, they are at ease and secure;
saying like Agag, 'Surely the bitterness of death is past' (1 Sam 15:22); I am well, shall
be saved, and go to heaven. Thus in these vain conceits they spend a year, two, or three;
not remembering that at every season of grace, and at every opportunity of the gospel the
Lord comes seeking fruit. Well, sinner, well, barren fig-tree, this is but a coarse
beginning: God comes for fruit.
1. What have I here? saith God; what a fig-tree is this, that hath stood this year in my
vineyard, and brought me forth no fruit? I will cry unto him, Professor, barren fig-tree,
be fruitful! I look for fruit, I expect fruit, I must have fruit; therefore bethink
thyself! At these the professor pauses; but these are words, not blows, therefore off goes
this consideration from the heart. When God comes the next year, he finds him still as he
was, a barren, fruitless cumber-ground. And now again he complains, here are two years
gone, and no fruit appears; well, I will defer mine anger. 'For my name sake will I defer
mine anger, and for my praise will I refrain for thee, that I cut thee not off,' as yet
(Isa 48:9). I will wait, I will yet wait to be gracious. But this helps not, this hath not
the least influence upon the barren fig-tree. Tush, saith he, here is no threatening: God
is merciful, he will defer his anger, he waits to be gracious, I am not yet afraid (Isa
30:18). O! how ungodly men, that are at unawares crept into the vineyard, how do they turn
the grace of our God into lasciviousness! Well, he comes the third year for fruit, as he
did before, but still he finds but a barren fig-tree; no fruit. Now, he cries out again, O
thou dresser of my vineyard, come hither; here is a fig-tree hath stood these three years
in my vineyard, and hath at every season disappointed my expectation; for I have looked
for fruit in vain; 'Cut it down,' my patience is worn out, I shall wait on this fig-tree
no longer.
2. And now he begins to shake the fig-tree with his threatenings: Fetch out the axe! Now
the axe is death; death therefore is called for. Death, come smite me this fig-tree. And
withal the Lord shakes this sinner, and whirls him upon a sick-bed, saying, Take him,
death, he hath abused my patience and forbearance, not remembering that it should have led
him to repentance, and to the fruits thereof. Death, fetch away this fig-tree to the fire,
fetch this barren professor to hell! At this death comes with grim looks into the chamber;
yea, and hell follows with him to the bedside, and both stare this professor in the face,
yea, begin to lay hands upon him; one smiting him with pains in his body, with headache,
heart-ache, back-ache, shortness of breath, fainting, qualms, trembling of joints,
stopping at the chest, and almost all the symptoms of a man past all recovery. Now, while
death is thus tormenting the body, hell is doing with the mind and conscience, striking
them with its pains, casting sparks of fire in thither, wounding with sorrows, and fears
of everlasting damnation, the spirit of this poor creature.[18] And now he begins to
bethink himself, and to cry to God for mercy; Lord, spare me! Lord, spare me! Nay, saith
God, you have been a provocation to me these three years.
How many times have you disappointed me? How many seasons have you spent in vain? How many
sermons and other mercies did I, of my patience, afford you? but to no purpose at all.
Take him, death! O! good Lord, saith the sinner, spare me but this once; raise me but this
once. Indeed I have been a barren professor, and have stood to no purpose at all in thy
vineyard; but spare! O spare this one time, I beseech thee, and I will be better! Away,
away you will not; I have tried you these three years already; you are naught; if I should
recover you again, you would be as bad as you were before. And all this talk is while
death stands by. The sinner cries again, Good Lord, try me this once; let me get up again
this once, and see if I do not mend. But will you promise me to mend? Yes, indeed, Lord,
and vow it too; I will never be so bad again; I will be better. Well, saith God, death,
let this professor alone for this time; I will try him a while longer; he hath promised,
he hath vowed, that he will amend his ways. It may be he will mind to keep his promises.
Vows are solemn things; it may be he may fear to break his vows. Arise from off they bed.
And now God lays down his axe. At this the poor creature is very thankful, praises God,
and fawns upon him, shows as if he did it heartily, and calls to others to thank him too.
He therefore riseth, as one would think, to be a new creature indeed. But by that he hath
put on his clothes, is come down from his bed, and ventured into the yard or shop, and
there sees how all things are gone to sixes and sevens, he begins to have second thoughts,
and says to his folks, What have you all been doing? How are all things out of order? I am
I cannot tell what behind hand. One may see, if a man be but a little a to side, that you
have neither wisdom nor prudence to order things.[19] And now, instead of seeking to spend
the rest of his time to God, he doubleth his diligence after this world. Alas! all must
not be lost; we must have provident care. And thus, quite forgetting the sorrows of death,
the pains of hell, the promises and vows which he made to God to be better; because
judgment was not now speedily executed, therefore the heart of this poor creature is fully
set in him to do evil.
3. These things proving ineffectual, God takes hold of his axe again, sends death to a
wife, to a child, to his cattle, 'Your young men have I slain, - and taken away your
horses' (Amos 4:9,10). I will blast him, cross him, disappoint him, and cast him down, and
will set myself against him in all that he putteth his hand unto. At this the poor barren
professor cries out again, Lord, I have sinned; spare me once more, I beseech thee. O take
not away the desire of mine eyes; spare my children, bless me in my labours, and I will
mend and be better. No, saith God, you lied to me last time, I will trust you in this no
longer; and withal he tumbleth the wife, the child, the estate into a grave. And then
returns to his place, till this professor more unfeignedly acknowledgeth his offence
(Hosea 5:14,15).
At this the poor creature is afflicted and distressed, rends his clothes, and begins to
call the breaking of his promise and vows to mind; he mourns and prays, and like Ahab,
awhile walks softly at the remembrance of the justness of the hand of God upon him. And
now he renews his promises: Lord, try me this one time more; take off thy hand and see;
they go far that never turn. Well, God spareth him again, sets down his axe again. 'Many
times he did deliver them, but they provoked him with their counsel, and were brought low
for their iniquity' (Psa 106:43). Now they seem to be thankful again, and are as if they
were resolved to be godly indeed. Now they read, they pray, they go to meetings, and seem
to be serious a pretty while, but at last they forget. Their lusts prick them, suitable
temptations present themselves; wherefore they turn to their own crooked ways again. 'When
he slew them, then they sought him, and they returned and inquired early after God';
'nevertheless they did flatter him with their mouth, and they lied unto him with their
tongue' (Psa 78:34-36).
4. Yet again, the Lord will not leave this professor, but will take up his axe again, and
will put him under a more heart- searching ministry, a ministry that shall search him, and
turn him over and over; a ministry that shall meet with him, as Elijah met with Ahab, in
all his acts of wickedness, and now the axe is laid to the roots of the trees. Besides,
this ministry doth not only search the heart, but presenteth the sinner with the golden
rays of the glorious gospel; now is Christ Jesus s set forth evidently, now is grace
displayed sweetly; now, now are the promises broken like boxes of ointment, to the
perfuming of the whole room! But, alas! there is yet no fruit on this fig-tree. While his
heart is searching, he wrangles; while the glorious grace of the gospel is unveiling, this
professor wags and is wanton, gathers up some scraps thereof; 'Tastes the good Word of
God, and the powers of the world to come'; 'drinketh in the rain that cometh oft upon him'
(Heb 6:3-8; Jude 4). But bringeth not forth fruit meet for him whose gospel it is; 'Takes
no heed to walk in the law of the Lord God of Israel with all his heart' (2 Kings 10:31).
But counteth that the glory of the gospel consisteth in talk and show, and that our
obedience thereto is a matter of speculation; that good works lie in good words; and if
they can finely talk, they think they bravely please God. They think the kingdom of God
consisteth only in word, not in power; and thus proveth ineffectual this fourth means
also.
5. Well, now the axe begins to be heaved higher, for now indeed God is ready to smite the
sinner; yet before he will strike the stroke, he will try one way more at the last, and if
that misseth, down goes the fig-tree! Now this last way is to tug and strive with this
professor by his Spirit. Wherefore the Spirit of the Lord is now come to him; but not
always to strive with man (Gen 6:3). Yet a while he will strive with him, he will awaken,
he will convince, he will call to remembrance former sins, former judgments, the breach of
former vows and promises, the misspending of former days; he will also present persuasive
arguments, encouraging promises, dreadful judgments, the shortness of time to repent in;
and that there is hope if he come. Further, he will show him the certainty of death, and
of the judgment to come; yea, he will pull and strive with this sinner; but, behold, the
mischief now lies here, here is tugging and striving on both sides. The Spirit convinces,
the man turns a deaf ear to God; the Spirit saith, Receive my instruction and live, but
the man pulls away his shoulder; the Spirit shows him whither he is going, but the man
closeth his eyes against it; the Spirit offereth violence, the man strives and resists;
they have 'done despite unto the Spirit of grace' (Heb 10:29). The Spirit parlieth a
second time, and urgeth reasons of a new nature, but the sinner answereth, No, I have
loved strangers, and after them I will go (Amos 4:6-12). At this God's fury comes up into
his face: now he comes out of his holy place, and is terrible; now he sweareth in his
wrath they shall never enter into his rest (Heb 3:11). I exercised towards you my
patience, yet you have not turned unto me, saith the Lord. I smote you in your person, in
your relations, in your estate, yet you have not returned unto me, saith the Lord. 'In thy
filthiness is lewdness, because I have purged thee, and thou wast not purged; thou shalt
not be purged from thy filthiness any more, till I cause my fury to rest upon thee' (Eze
24:13). 'Cut it down, why doth it cumber the ground?'
The second sign. That such a professor is almost, if not quite, past grace, is, when God
hath given him over, or lets him alone, and suffers him to do anything, and that without
control, helpeth him not either in works of holiness, or in straits and difficulties.
'Ephraim is joined to idols; let him alone' (Hosea 4:17). Woe be to them when I depart
from them. I will laugh at their calamities, and will mock when their fear cometh (Prov
1:24-29).
Barren fig-tree, thou hast heretofore been digged about, and dunged; God's mattock hath
heretofore been at thy roots; gospel-dung hath heretofore been applied to thee; thou hast
heretofore been strove with, convinced, awakened, made to taste and see, and cry, O the
blessedness! Thou hast heretofore been met with under the word; thy heart hath melted, thy
spirit hath fallen, thy soul hath trembled, and thou hast felt something of the power of
the gospel. But thou hast sinned, thou hast provoked the eyes of his glory, thy iniquity
is found to be hateful, and now perhaps God hath left thee, given thee up, and lets thee
alone. Heretofore thou wast tender; thy conscience startled at the temptation to
wickedness, for thou wert taken off from 'the pollutions of the world, through the
knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ' (2 Peter 2:20-22). But that very vomit
that once thou wert turned from, now thou lappest up with the dog in the
proverbagain; and that very mire that once thou seemedst to be washed from, in that
very mire thou now art tumbling afresh. But to particularize, there are three signs of a
man's being given over of God.
1. When he is let alone in sinning, when the reins of his lusts are loosed, and he given
up to them. 'And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them
over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not convenient: being filled with
all unrighteousness' (Rom 1:28,29). Seest thou a man that heretofore had the knowledge of
God, and that had some awe of Majesty upon him: I say, seest thou such an one sporting
himself in his own deceivings, turning the grace of our God into lasciviousness, and
walking after his own ungodly lusts? (Rom 1:30-31). His 'judgment now of a long time
lingereth not, and his damnation slumbereth not' (2 Peter 2:13). Dost thou hear, barren
professor? It is astonishing to see how those that once seemed 'sons of the morning,' and
were making preparations for eternal life, now at last, for the rottenness of their
hearts, by the just judgment of God, to be permitted, being past feeling, to give
'themselves over unto lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness' (Eph
4:18,19). A great number of such were in the first gospel-days; against whom Peter, and
Jude, and John, pronounce the heavy judgment of God. Peter and Jude couple them with the
fallen angels, and John forbids that prayer be made for them, because that is happened
unto them that hath happened to the fallen angels that fell, who, for forsaking their
first state, and for leaving 'their own habitation,' are 'reserved in everlasting chains
under darkness, unto the judgment of the great day' (Jude 5,6; 2 Peter 2:3-8). Barren
fig-tree, dost thou hear? (1.) These are beyond all mercy! (2.) These are beyond all
promises! (3.) These are beyond all hopes of repentance! (4.) These have no intercessor,
nor any more share in a sacrifice for sin! (5.) For these there remains nothing but a
fearful looking for of judgment! (6.) Wherefore these are the true fugitives and
vagabonds, that being left of God, of Christ, of grace, and of the promise, and being
beyond all hope, wander and straggle to and fro, even as the devil, their associate, until
their time shall come to die, or until they descend in battle and perish!
2. Wherefore they are let alone in hearing. If these at any time come under the word,
there is for them no God, no savour of the means of grace, no stirrings of heart, no pity
for themselves, no love to their own salvation. Let them look on this hand or that, there
they see such effects of the word in others as produceth signs of repentance, and love to
God and his Christ. These men only have their backs bowed down alway (Rom 11:10). These
men only have the spirit of slumber, eyes that they should not see, and ears that they
should not hear, to this very day. Wherefore as they go to the place of the Holy, so they
come from the place of the Holy, and soon are forgotten in the places where they so did
(Eccl 8:10). Only they reap this damage, 'They treasure up wrath against the day of wrath,
and revelation of the righteous judgment of God' (Rom 2:3-5). Look to it, barren
professor!
3. If he be visited after the common way of mankind, either with sickness, distress, or
any mind of calamity, still no God appeareth, no sanctifying hand of God, no special mercy
is mixed with the affliction. But he falls sick, and grows well, like the beast; or is
under distress, as Saul, who when he was engaged by the Philistines was forsaken and left
of God, 'And the Philistines gathered themselves together, and came and pitched in Shunem,
and Saul gathered all Israel together, and they pitched in Gilboa. And when Saul saw the
host of the Philistines he was afraid, and his heart greatly trembled. And when Saul
inquired of the Lord, the Lord answered him not, neither by dreams, nor by Urim, nor by
prophets' (1 Sam 28:4-6). The Lord answered him no more; he had done with him, cast him
off, and rejected him, and left him to stand and fall with his sins, by himself. But of
this more in the conclusion: therefore I here forbear.
4. These men may go whither they will, do what they will; they may range from opinion to
opinion, from notion to notion, from sect to sect, but are steadfast nowhere; they are
left to their own uncertainties, they have not grace to establish their hearts; and though
some of them have boasted themselves of this liberty, yet Jude calls them 'wandering
stars, to whom is reserved the blackness of darkness for ever' (Jude 13). They are left,
as I told you before, to be fugitives and vagabonds in the earth, to wander everywhere,
but to abide nowhere, until they shall descend to their own place, with Cain and Judas,
men of the same fate with themselves (Acts 1:25).
A third sign that such a professor is quite past grace is, when his heart is grown so
hard, so stony, and impenetrable, that nothing will pierce it. Barren fig-tree, dost thou
consider? a hard and impenitent heart is the curse of God! A heart that cannot repent, is
instead of all plagues at once; and hence it is that God said of Pharaoh, when he spake of
delivering him up in the greatness of his anger, 'I will at this time,' saith he, 'send
all my plagues upon thine heart' (Exo 9:14).
To some men that have grievously sinned under a profession of the gospel, God giveth this
token of his displeasure; they are denied the power of repentance, their heart is bound,
they cannot repent; it is impossible that they should ever repent, should they live a
thousand years. It is impossible for those fall-aways to be renewed again unto repentance,
'seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame'
(Heb 6:4-6). Now, to have the heart so hardened, so judicially hardened, this is as a bar
put in by the Lord God against the salvation of this sinner. This was the burden of
Spira's complaint, 'I cannot do it! O! how I cannot do it!'[20]
This man sees what he hath done, what should help him, and what will become of him; yet he
cannot repent; he pulled away his shoulder before, he stopped his ears before, he shut up
his eyes before, and in that very posture God left him, and so he stands to this very day.
I have had a fancy, that Lot's wife, when she was turned into a pillar of salt, stood yet
looking over her shoulder, or else with her face towards Sodom; as the judgment caught
her, so it bound her, and left her a monument of God's anger to after generations (Gen
19:26).
We read of some that are seared with a hot iron, and that are past feeling; for so seared
persons in seared parts are. Their conscience is seared (1 Tim 4:2). The conscience is the
thing that must be touched with feeling, fear, and remorse, if ever any good be done with
the sinner. How then can any good be done to those whose conscience is worse than that?
that is, fast asleep in sin (Eph 4:19). For that conscience that is fast asleep, may yet
be effectually awakened and saved; but that conscience that is seared, dried, as it were,
into a cinder, can never have sense, feeling, or the least regret in this world. Barren
fig-tree, hearken, judicial hardening is dreadful! There is a difference betwixt that
hardness of heart that is incident to all men, and that which comes upon some as a signal
or special judgment of God. And although all kinds of hardness of heart, in some sense may
be called a judgment, yet to be hardened with this second kind, is a judgment peculiar
only to them that perish; hardness that is sent as a punishment for the abuse of light
received, for a reward of apostacy. This judicial hardness is discovered from that which
is incident to all men, in these particulars:
1. It is a hardness that comes after some great light received, because of some great sin
committed against that light, and the grace that gave it. Such hardness as Pharaoh had,
after the Lord had wrought wondrously before him; such hardness as the Gentiles had, a
hardness which darkened the heart, a hardness which made their minds reprobate. This
hardness is also the same with that the Hebrews are cautioned to beware of, a hardness
that is caused by unbelief, and a departing from the living God; a hardness completed
through the deceitfulness of sin (Heb 3:7, &c). Such as that in the provocation, of
whom God sware, that they should not enter into his rest. It was this kind of hardness
also, that both Cain, and Ishmael, and Esau, were hardened with, after they had committed
their great transgressions.
2. It is the greatest kind of hardness; and hence they are said to be harder than a rock,
or than an adamant, that is, harder than flint; so hard, that nothing can enter (Jer 5:3;
Zech 7:12).
3. It is a hardness given in much anger, and that to bind the soul up in an impossibility
of repentance.
4. It is a hardness, therefore, which is incurable, of which a man must die and be damned.
Barren professor, hearken to this.
A fourth sign that such a professor is quite past grace, is, when he fortifies his hard
heart against the tenor of God's word (Job 9:4, &c.) This is called hardening
themselves against God, and turning of the Spirit against them. As thus, when after a
profession of faith in the Lord Jesus, and of the doctrine that is according to godliness,
they shall embolden themselves in courses of sin, by promising themselves that they shall
have life and salvation notwithstanding. Barren professor, hearken to this! This man is
called, 'a root that beareth gall and wormwood,' or a poisonful herb, such an one as is
abominated of God, yea, the abhorred of his soul. For this man saith, 'I shall have peace,
though I walk in the imagination' or stubbornness 'of mine heart, to add drunkenness to
thirst'; an opinion flat against the whole Word of God, yea, against the very nature of
God himself (Deut 29:18,19). Wherefore he adds, 'Then the anger of the Lord, and his
jealousy, shall smoke against that man, and all the curses that are written in God's book
shall lie upon him, and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven' (Deut 19:20).
Yea, that man shall not fail to be effectually destroyed, saith the text: 'The Lord shall
separate that man unto evil, out of all the tribes of Israel, according to all the curses
of the covenant' (Deut 19:21). He shall separate him unto evil; he shall give him up, he
shall leave him to his heart; he shall separate him to that or those that will assuredly
be too hard for him.
Now this judgment is much effected when God hath given a man up unto Satan, and hath given
Satan leave, without fail, to complete his destruction. I say, when God hath given Satan
leave effectually to complete his destruction; for all that are delivered up unto Satan
have not, nor do not come to this end. But that is the man whom God shall separate to
evil, and shall leave in the hands of Satan, to complete, without fail, his destruction.
Thus he served Ahab, a man that sold himself to work wickedness in the sight of the Lord.
'And the Lord said, Who shall persuade Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth-Gilead?
And one said on this manner, and another said on that manner. And there came forth a
spirit, and stood before the Lord, and said, I will persuade him. And the Lord said unto
him, Wherewith? And he said, I will go forth, and be a lying spirit in the mouth of all
his prophets. And he said, Thou shalt persuade him, and prevail also; go forth, and do so'
(1 Kings 21:25, 22:20-22). Thou shalt persuade him, and prevail; do thy will, I leave him
in thy hand, go forth, and do so.
Wherefore, in these judgments the Lord doth much concern himself for the management
thereof, because of the provocation wherewith they have provoked him. This is the man
whose ruin contriveth, and bringeth to pass by his own contrivance: 'I also will choose
their delusions' for them; 'I will bring their fears upon them' (Isa 66:4). I will choose
their devices, or the wickednesses that their hearts are contriving of. I, even I, will
cause them to be accepted of, and delightful to them. But who are they that must thus be
feared? Why, those among professors that have chosen their own ways, those whose soul
delighteth in their abominations. Because they received not the love of the truth, that
they might be saved: for this cause God shall send them strong delusions, that they should
believe a lie, that they all might be damned, who believed not the truth, but had pleasure
in unrighteousness.
'God shall send them.' It is a great word! Yea, God shall send them strong delusions;
delusions that shall do: that shall make them believe a lie. Why so? 'That they all might
be damned,' every one of them, 'who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in
unrighteousness' (2 Thess 2:10- 12).
There is nothing more provoking to the Lord, than for a man to promise when God
threateneth; for a man to delight of conceit that he shall be safe, and yet to be more
wicked than in former days, this man's soul abhorreth the truth of God; no marvel,
therefore, if God's soul abhorreth him; he hath invented a way contrary to God, to bring
about his own salvation; no marvel, therefore, if God invent a way to bring about this
man's damnation: and seeing that these rebels are at this point, we shall have peace; God
will see whose word will stand, his or theirs.
A fifth sign of a man being past grace is, when he shall at this scoff, and inwardly grin
and fret against the Lord, secretly purposing to continue his course, and put all to the
venture, despising the messengers of the Lord. 'He that despised Moses' law, died without
mercy; - of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath
trodden under foot the Son of God?' &c. (Heb 10:28). Wherefore, against these
despisers God hath set himself, and foretold that they shall not believe, but perish:
'Behold, ye despisers, and wonder, and perish: for I work a work in your days, a work
which ye shall in nowise believe, though a man declare it unto you' (Acts 13:41).
After that thou shalt cut it down.
Thus far we have treated of the barren fig-tree, or fruitless professor, with some signs
to know him by; whereto is added also some signs of one who neither will nor can, by any
means, be fruitful, but they must miserably perish. Now, being come to the time of
execution, I shall speak a word to that also; 'After that thou shalt cut it down.'
PROPOSITION SECOND. The death or cutting down of such men will be dreadful.
Christ, at last, turns the barren fig-tree over to the justice of God, shakes his hands of
him, and gives him up to the fire for his unprofitableness. 'After that thou shalt cut it
down.'
Two things are here to be considered:
First. The executioner; thou, the great, the dreadful, the eternal God. These words,
therefore, as I have already said, signify that Christ the Mediator, through whom alone
salvation comes, and by whom alone execution hath been deferred, now giveth up the soul,
forbears to speak one syllable more for him, or to do the least act of grace further, to
try for his recovery; but delivereth him up to that fearful dispensation, 'to fall into
the hands of the living God' (Heb 10:31).
Second. The second to be considered is, The instrument by which this execution is done,
and that is death, compared here to an axe; and forasmuch as the tree is not felled at one
blow, therefore the strokes are here continued, till all the blows be struck at it that
are requisite for its felling: for now cutting time, and cutting work, is come; cutting
must be his portion till he be cut down. 'After that thou shalt cut it down.' Death, I
say, is the axe, which God often useth, therewith to take the barren fig-tree out of the
vineyard, out of a profession, and also out of the world at once. But this axe is now new
ground, it cometh well-edged to the roots of this barren fig-tree. It hath been whetted by
sin, by the law, and by a formal profession, and therefore must, and will make deep
gashes, not only in the natural life, but in the heart and conscience also of this
professor: 'The wages of sin is death,' 'the sting of death is sin' (Rom 6:23; 1 Cor
15:56). Wherefore death comes not to this man as he doth to saints, muzzled, or without
his sting, but with open mouth, in all his strength; yea, he sends his first-born, which
is guilt, to devour his strength, and to bring him to the king of terrors (Job 18:13,14).
But to give you, in a few particulars, the manner of this man's dying.
1. Now he hath his fruitless fruits beleaguer him round his bed, together with all the
bands and legions of his other wickedness. 'His own iniquities shall take the wicked
himself, and he shall be holden with the cords of his sins' (Prov 5:22).
2. Now some terrible discovery of God is made out unto him, to the perplexing and
terrifying of his guilty conscience. 'God shall cast upon him, and not spare'; and he
shall be 'afraid of that which is high' (Job 27:22; Eccl 12:5).
3. The dark entry he is to go through will be a sore amazement to him; for 'fears shall be
in the way' (Eccl 12:5). Yea, terrors will take hold on him, when he shall see the yawning
jaws of death to gape upon him, and the doors of the shadow of death open to give him
passage out of the world. Now, who will meet me in this dark entry? how shall I pass
through this dark entry into another world?
4. For by reason of guilt, and a shaking conscience, his life will hang in continual doubt
before him, and he shall be afraid day and night, and shall have no assurance of his life
(Deut 28:66,67).
5. Now also want will come up against him; he will come up like an armed man. This is a
terrible army to him that is graceless in heart, and fruitless in life. This WANT will
continually cry in thine ears, Here is a new birth wanting, a new heart, and a new spirit
wanting; here is faith wanting; here is love and repentance wanting; here is the fear of
God wanting, and a good conversation wanting: 'Thou art weighed in the balances, and art
found wanting' (Dan 5:27).
6. Together with these standeth by the companions of death, death and hell, death and
evils, death and endless torment in the everlasting flames of devouring fire. 'When God
cometh up unto the people he will invade them with his troops' (Hab 3:16).
But how will this man die? Can his heart now endure, or can his hands be strong? (Eze
22:14).
(1.) God, and Christ, and pity, have left him. Sin against light, against mercy, and the
long-suffering of God, is come up against him; his hope and confidence now lie a-dying by
him, and his conscience totters and shakes continually within him!
(2.) Death is at his work, cutting of him down, hewing both bark and heart, both body and
soul asunder. The man groans, but death hears him not; he looks ghastly, carefully,
dejectedly; he sighs, he sweats, he trembles, but death matters nothing.
(3.) Fearful cogitations haunt him, misgivings, direful apprehensions of God, terrify him.
Now he hath time to think what the loss of heaven will be, and what the torments of hell
will be: now he looks no way but he is frighted.
(4.) Now would he live, but may not; he would live, though it were but the life of a
bed-rid man, but he must not. He that cuts him down sways him as the feller of wood sways
the tottering tree; now this way, then that, at last a root breaks, a heart-string, an
eye-string, sweeps asunder.
(5.) And now, could the soul be annihilated, or brought to nothing, how happy would it
count itself, but it sees that may not be. Wherefore it is put to a wonderful strait; stay
in the body it may not, go out of the body it dares not. Life is going, the blood settles
in the flesh, and the lungs being no more able to draw breath through the nostrils, at
last out goes the weary trembling soul, which is immediately seized by devils, who lay
lurking in every hole in the chamber for that very purpose. His friends take care of the
body, wrap it up in the sheet or coffin, but the soul is out of their thought and reach,
going down to the chambers of death.
I had thought to have enlarged, but I forbear. God, who teaches man to profit, bless this
brief and plain discourse to thy soul, who yet standest a professor in the land of the
living, among the trees of his garden. Amen.
FOOTNOTES:
[1]General Doctrine of Toleration, 8vo, 1781.
[2] This awful destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans is narrated by Josephus in his sixth
book of the Jewish Wars, in language that makes nature shudder. Multitudes had assembled
to celebrate the passover when the invading army beleaguered the city; a frightful famine
soon filled it with desolation: this, with fire and sword, miserably destroyed one
million, three hundred and thirty-seven thousand, four hundred and ninety Jews, while the
Christians fled before the siege, and escaped to the mountains. Well might the sun vail
his face at that atrocious deed, which was so quickly followed by such awful
punishment.Ed.
[3] Reader, do not imagine that this was peculiar to Bunyan's days; look not upon your
neighbours to find an example, but search your own heart'Lord, is it I?' and strive
and pray that you may bring forth more fruit.Ed.
[4] The mode of admitting a member to church-fellowship, among the Baptists, was and now
is by introducing the trembling convert to a private meeting of the whole church, that
they may hear why the union is sought, how the soul became alarmed, and fled for refuge to
Christ, with the grounds of hope; inquiries having been previously made into Christian
character and godliness. If, with all these precautions, a barren professor gains
admittance, the punishment is not upon the garden, but upon the barren tree.Ed.
[5] 'Humour,' the temper or disposition of mind. Not out of love to humility, but these
creeping things pretend to be humble, to gain some sinister end.Ed.
[6] However strange it may appear, it is true that the Ranters, in Bunyan's time, used
these arguments, and those so graphically put into the mouth of Bye-ends, in the Pilgrim,
to justify their nonconformity to Christ. The tom- fooleries and extravagancies of dress
introduced by Charles II, are here justly and contemptuously described. The ladies'
head-dresses, called 'frizzled fore-tops,' became so extravagant, that a barber used high
steps to enable him to dress a lady's head!Ed.
[7] A word not to be found in our dictionaries, being local and almost obsolete. It means
a division, end, or border of a town or village.Ed.
[8] See the character of Talkative, in the Pilgrim's Progress. 'His house is as empty of
religion as the white of an egg is of savour. There is in his house neither prayer, nor
sign of repentance for sin. He is the very stain, reproach, and shame of religion. Thus
say the common people that know him, A saint abroad and a devil at home.'Ed.
[9] How great is the mercy that those horrid barbarities, perpetrated upon peaceful
Christians, are now only heard of in those distance parts of Satan's empire, China and
Madagascar! Has the enmity of the human heart by nature changed? No; but the number of
Christians has so vastly increased with a civilizing influence, as to change the face of
society. What a paradise will this earth become when Christ shall reign in every
heart!Ed.
[10] In the midst of these faithful admonitions, we venture to remark that, according to
Lightfoot, so valuable was the fig-tree that it was never destroyed until means were
carefully used to restore its fruitfulness, and that the use of these means occupied a
period of three years. This illustrates the wisdom of our Lord in selecting the fig-tree
as the principal object presented to view in his parable. It is a most valuable
treecapable of bearing much fruit; still, after every trial, if it remains barren,
it must be cut down as a cumber-ground, and sent to the fire.Ed.
[11] A 'hit,' in some parts of the country, is used to express a good crop. A 'hitting
season' means a fruitful season. Ed.
[12] This mode of infusing new vigour into plants and trees is thus described in the
Gemara'They lay dung in their gardens, to soften the earth. They dig about the roots
of their trees, and sprinkle ashes, and pluck up suckers, and make a smoke beneath to kill
vermin.'Ed.
[13] Among the superstitions of the ancients, Michaelis states that both the Greeks and
Asiatics had a superstition that a tree might be rendered fruitful by striking it, at the
intercession of a friend, three times with the back of an axe.Ed.
[14] However painfully unpleasant these terms may appear to eyes or ears polite, it is a
homely but just representation, and calculated to make a lasting impression on every
reader. Afflictions, trials, crosses, are used as a means of creating or reviving
spiritual life, as manure is applied to vegetation.Ed.
[15] Mahomet professed descent from Ishmael, and that he came to revive the religion which
God had revealed to Abraham, who taught it to Ishmael. Mahometanism is the religion of the
outcast of God.Ed.
[16] Bunyan had been haunted with the temptation 'to sell and part with Christ,' and,
under a fear that he had fallen under that temptation, the case of Esau made a dreadful
impression upon his soul; extreme horror and anguish seized upon his spirit; 'he was like
a man bereft of life and bound over to eternal punishment,' for two years. At length,
after an awful storm, he found peace in the promise, 'his blood cleanseth from ALL sins,'
and a proof that he had not sold Christ.See Grace Abounding, No. 139-160.
[17] How solemn a thought! What an appeal to perpetual watchfulness. Why have I not made
shipwreck of faith? Most emphatically may we reply, Because God has sustained my
soul.Ed.
[18] Bunyan's tongue and pen are here fired by his vivid imagination of eternal realities.
With such burning words, we need no messenger from the invisible world to alarm the
consciences of sinners. What angel could arouse more powerfully, alarmingly, convincingly,
the poor sinner, than the whole of this chain of reasoning.Ed.
[19] This picture is drawn by a master hand: the master is laid by for a season; or, as
Bunyan quaintly expresses it, 'a little a to side': when raised from affliction earthly
affairs absorb his attention, and he forgets his good resolves. According to the old
rhyme:
'The devil was sick, the devil a saint would be
The devil to well, the devil a saint was he.'Ed.
[20] This is referred to in the Pilgrim, at the Interpreter's house, by the representation
of a man in an iron cage, who says, 'I cannot get out, O now I cannot!' The awful account
of Spira's despair must have made a strong impression upon Bunyan's mind. It commences
with a poem.
'Here see a soul that's all despair;
a man All hell; a spirit all wounds; who can
A wounded spirit bear?
Reader, would'st see, what may you never feel
Despair, racks, torments, whips of burning steel!
Behold, the man's the furnace, in whose heart
Sin hath created hell; O in each part
What flames appear:
His thoughts all stings; words, swords;
Brimstone his breath;
His eyes flames; wishes curses, life a death;
A thousand deaths live in him, he not dead;
A breathing corpse in living, scalding lead.' Fearful Estate of Francis
Spira.Ed.
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