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The Lord our Righteousness
by George Whitefield
"The Lord our Righteousness"
Jeremiah 23:6
Whoever is acquainted with the nature of mankind in general, or the
propensity of his own heart in particular, must acknowledge, that
self-righteousness is the last idol that is rooted out of the heart: being once
born under a covenant of works, it is natural for us all to have recourse to a
covenant of works, for our everlasting salvation. And we have contracted such
devilish pride, by our fall from God, that we would, if not wholly, yet in part
at least, glory in being the cause of our own salvation. We cry out against
popery, and that very justly; but we are all Papists, at least, I am sure, we
are all Arminians by nature; and therefore no wonder so many natural men embrace
that scheme. It is true, we disclaim the doctrine of merit, are ashamed directly
to say we deserve any good at the hands of God; therefore, as the Apostle
excellently well observes, "we go about," we fetch a circuit, "to establish a
righteousness of our own, and," like the Pharisees of old, "will not wholly
submit to that righteousness which is of God through Jesus Christ our Lord."
This is the sorest, though, alas! the most common evil that was ever yet seen
under the sun. An evil, that in any age, especially in these dregs of time
wherein we live, cannot sufficiently be inveighed against. For as it is with the
people, so it is with the priests; and it is to be feared, even in those places,
where once the truth as it is in Jesus was eminently preached, many ministers
are so sadly degenerated from their pious ancestors, that the doctrines of
grace, especially the personal, ALL-SUFFICIENT RIGHTEOUSNESS of Jesus, is but
too seldom, too slightly mentioned. Hence the love of many waxeth cold; and I
have often thought, was it possible, that this single consideration would be
sufficient to raise our venerable forefathers again from their graves; who would
thunder in their ears their fatal error.
The righteousness of Jesus Christ is one of those great mysteries, which the
angels desire to look into, and seems to be one of the first lessons that God
taught men after the fall. For, what were the coats that God made to put on our
first parents, but types of the application of the merits of righteousness of
Jesus Christ to believers hearts? We are told, that those coats were made of
skins of beasts; and, as beasts were not then food for men, we may fairly infer,
that those beasts were slain in sacrifice, in commemoration of the great
sacrifice, Jesus Christ, thereafter to be offered. And the skins of the beasts
thus slain, being put on Adam and Eve, they were hereby taught how their
nakedness was to be covered with the righteousness of the Lamb of God.
This is it which is meant, when we are told, "Abraham believed on the Lord, and
it was accounted to him for righteousness." In short, this is it of which both
the law and the prophets have spoken, especially Jeremiah in the words of the
text, "The Lord our righteousness."
I propose, through divine grace,
I. To consider who we are to understand by the word Lord.
II. How the Lord is man's righteousness.
III. I will consider some of the chief objections that are generally urged
against this doctrine.
IV. I shall show some very ill consequences that flow naturally from denying
this doctrine.
V Shall conclude with an exhortation to all to come to Christ by faith, that
they may be enabled to say with the prophet in the text, "The Lord our
righteousness."
I. I am to consider who we are to understand by the word Lord. The Lord our
righteousness.
If any Arians of Socinians are drawn by curiosity to hear what the babbler has
to say, let them be ashamed of denying the divinity of that Lord, who has bought
poor sinners with his precious blood. For the person mentioned in the text,
under the character of the Lord, is Jesus Christ. Ver. 5, "Behold, the days
come, saith the Lord, that I will raise unto David a righteous branch, a king
shall reign and prosper, and shall execute judgment and justice in the earth. In
his days (ver. 6) Judah shall be saved, and Israel shall dwell safely; and this
is his name whereby he shall be called, The Lord our righteousness." By the
righteous branch, all agree, that we are to understand Jesus Christ. He it is
that is called the Lord in our text. If so, if there were no other text in the
Bible to prove the divinity of Christ, this is sufficient: for if the word Lord
may properly belong to Jesus Christ, he must be God. And, as you have it in the
margin of your Bibles, the word Lord is in the original Jehovah, which is the
essential title of God himself. Come then, ye Arians, kiss the son of God, bow
down before him, and honor him, even as ye honor the Father. Learn of the
angels, those morning-stars, and worship him as truly God: for otherwise you are
as much idolaters, as those that worship the Virgin Mary. And as for you
Socinians, who say Christ was a mere man, and yet profess that he was your
Savior, according to your own principles you are accursed: for, if Christ be a
mere man, then he is only an arm of flesh: and it is written, "Cursed is he that
trusteth on an arm of flesh." But I would hope, there are no such monsters here;
at least, that, after these considerations, they would be ashamed of broaching
such monstrous absurdities any more. For it is plain, that, by the word Lord, we
are to understand the Lord Jesus Christ, who here takes to himself the title
Jehovah, and therefore must be very God of very God; or, as the Apostle devoutly
expresses it, "God blessed for evermore."
II. How the Lord is to be man's righteousness, comes next to be considered.
And that is, in one word, by IMPUTATION. For it pleased God, after he had made
all things by the word of his power, to create man after his own image. And so
infinite was the condescension of the high and lofty One, who inhabiteth
eternity, that, although he might have insisted on the everlasting obedience of
him and his posterity; yet he was pleased to oblige himself, by a covenant or
agreement made with his own creatures, upon condition of an unsinning obedience,
to give them immortality and eternal life. For when it is said, "The day thou
eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die;" we may fairly infer, so long as he
continued obedient, and did not eat thereof, he should surely live. The 3rd of
Genesis gives us a full, but mournful account, how our first parents broke this
covenant, and thereby stood in need of a better righteousness than their own, in
order to procure their future acceptance with God. For what must they do? They
were as much under a covenant of works as ever. And though, after their
disobedience, they were without strength; yet they were obliged not only to do,
but continue to do all things, and that too in the most perfect manner, which
the Lord had required of them: and not only so, but to make satisfaction to
God's infinitely offended justice, for the breach they had already been guilty
of. Here then opens the amazing scene of DIVINE PHILANTHROPY; I mean, God's love
to man. For behold, what man could not do, Jesus Christ, the son of his Father's
love, undertakes to do for him. And that God might be just in justifying the
ungodly, though "he was in the form of God, and therefore thought it no robbery
to be equal with God; yet he took upon him the form of a servant," even human
nature. In that nature he obeyed, and thereby fulfilled the whole moral law in
our stead; and also died a painful death upon the cross, and thereby became a
curse for, or instead of, those whom the Father had given to him. As God, he
satisfied, at the same time that he obeyed and suffered as man; and, being God
and man in one person, he wrought out a full, perfect, and sufficient
righteousness for all to whom it was to be imputed.
Here then we see the meaning of the word righteousness. It implies the active as
well as passive obedience of the Lord Jesus Christ. We generally, when talking
of the merits of Christ, only mention the latter, -- his death; whereas, the
former, -- his life and active obedience, is equally necessary. Christ is not
such a Savior as becomes us, unless we join both together. Christ not only died,
but lived, not only suffered, but obeyed for, or instead of, poor sinners. And
both these jointly make up that complete righteousness, which is to be imputed
to us, as the disobedience of our first parents was made ours by imputation. In
this sense, and no other, are we to understand that parallel which the apostle
Paul draws, in the 5th of the Romans, between the first and second Adam. This is
what he elsewhere terms, "our being made the righteousness of God in him." This
is the sense wherein the Prophet would have us to understand the words of the
text; therefore, Jer. 33:16, "She (i.e. the church itself) shall be called,
(having this righteousness imputed to her) The Lord our righteousness." A
passage, I think, worthy of the profoundest meditation of all the sons and
daughters of Abraham.
Many are the objections which the proud hearts of fallen men are continually
urging against this wholesome, this divine, this soul saving doctrine. I come
now,
III. To answer some few of those which I think the most considerable.
And, FIRST, they say, because they would appear friends to morality, "That the
doctrine of an imputed righteousness is "destructive of good works, and leads to
licentiousness."
And who, pray, are the persons that generally urge this objection? Are they men
full of faith, and men really concerned for good works? No; whatever few
exceptions there may be, if there be any at all, it is notorious, they are
generally men of corrupt minds, reprobate concerning the faith. The best title I
can give them is, that of PROFANE MORALISTS, or moralists false so called. For I
appeal to the experience of the present as well as past ages, if iniquity did
and does not most abound, where the doctrine of Christ's whole personal
righteousness is most cried down, and most seldom mentioned. Arminian being
antichristian principles, always did, and always will lead to antichristian
practices. And never was there a reformation brought about in the church, but by
the preaching the doctrine of an imputed righteousness. This, as the man of God,
Luther, calls it, is "Artienlus statntis out cedentis Eichlesin," the article by
which the Church stands or falls. And though the preachers of this doctrine are
generally branded by those on the other side, with the opprobrious names of
Antinomians, deceivers, and what not; yet, I believe, if the truth of the
doctrine on both sides was to be judged of by the lives of the preachers of
professors of it, on our side the question would have the advantage every way.
It is true, this, as well as every other doctrine of grace, may be abused. And
perhaps the unchristian walk of some, who have talked of Christ's imputed
righteousness, justification by faith, and the like, and yet never felt it
imputed to their own souls, has given the enemies of the Lord thus cause to
blaspheme. But this is a very unsafe, as well as a very unfair way of arguing.
The only question should be, Whether or not this doctrine of an imputed
righteousness, does in itself cut off the occasion of good works, or lean to
licentiousness? To this we may boldly answer, In no wise. It excludes works,
indeed, from being any cause of our justification in the sight of God; but it
requires good works as a proof of our having this righteousness imputed to us,
and as a declarative evidence of our justification in the sight of men. And
then, how can the doctrine of an imputed righteousness be a doctrine leading to
licentiousness?
It is all calumny. The apostle Paul introduceth an infidel making this
objection, in his epistle to the Romans; and none but infidels, that never felt
the power of Christ's resurrection upon their souls, will urge it over again.
And therefore, notwithstanding this objection, with the Prophet in the text, we
may boldly say, "The Lord is our righteousness."
But Satan (and no wonder that his servants imitate him) often transforms himself
into an angel of light; and therefore, (such perverse things will infidelity and
Arminianism make men speak) in order to dress their objections in the best
colors, some urge, "That our Savior preached no such doctrine; that in his
sermon on the mount, he mentions only morality:" and consequently the doctrine
of an imputed righteousness falls wholly to the ground.
But surely the men, who urge this objection, either never read, or never
understood, our Lord's blessed discourse, wherein the doctrine of an imputed
righteousness is so plainly taught, that he who runs, If he has eyes that see,
may read.
Indeed our Lord does recommend morality and good works, (as all faithful
ministers will do) and clears the moral law from many corrupt glosses put upon
it by the letter-learned Pharisees. But then, before he comes to this, tis
remarkable, he talks of inward piety, such as poverty of spirit, meekness, holy
mourning, purity of heart, especially hungering and thirsting after
righteousness; and then recommends good works, as an evidence of our having his
righteousness imputed to us, and these graces and divine tempers wrought in our
hearts. "Let your light (that is, the divine light I before have been
mentioning) shine before men, in a holy life; that they, seeing your good works,
may glorify your father which is in heaven." And then he immediately adds,
"Think not that I am come to destroy the moral law: I came not to destroy, (to
take away the force of it as a rule of life) but to fulfill, (to obey it in its
whole latitude, and give the complete sense of it.") And then he goes on to show
how exceeding broad the moral law is. So that our Lord, instead of setting aside
an imputed righteousness in his sermon upon the mount, not only confirms it, but
also answers the foregoing objection urged against it, by making good works a
proof and evidence of its being imputed to our souls. He, therefore, that hath
ears to hear, let him hear what the Prophet says in the words of the text, "The
Lord our righteousness."
But as Satan not only quoted scripture, but backed one temptation after another
with it, when he attacked Christ in the wilderness; so his children generally
take the same method in treating his doctrine. And, therefore, they urge another
objection against the doctrine of an imputed righteousness, from the example of
the young man in the gospel.
We may state it thus: "The Evangelist Mark, say they, chapter 10, mentions a
young man that came to Christ, running, and asking him what he should do to
inherit eternal life? Christ referred him to the commandments, to know what he
must do to inherit eternal life. It is plain, therefore, works were to be,
partly at least, the cause of his justification; and consequently the doctrine
of an imputed righteousness is unscriptural." This is the objection in its full
strength: and little strength in all its fullness. For, was I to prove the
necessity of an imputed righteousness, I scarce know how I could bring a better
instance to make it good.
Let us take a nearer view of this young man, and of our Lord's behavior towards
him, Mark 10:17, the Evangelist tells us, "That when Christ was gone forth into
the way, there came one running (it should seem it was some nobleman; a rarity
indeed to see such a one running to Christ!) and not only so, but he kneeled to
him, (perhaps many of his rank now, scarce know the time when they kneeled to
Christ) and asked him, saying, Good Master, what shall I do that I may inherit
eternal life?" Then Jesus, to see whether or not he believed him to be what he
really was, truly and properly God, said unto him, "Why callest thou me good?
There is none good but one, that is God." And, that he might directly answer his
question, says he, "Thou knowest the commandments: do not commit adultery, do
not bear false witness, defraud not, honor thy father and thy mother." This was
a direct answer to his question; namely, That eternal life was not to be
attained by his doings. For our Lord, by referring him to the commandments, did
not (as the objectors insinuate) in the least hint, that his morality would
recommend him to the favor and mercy of God; but he intended thereby, to make
the law his schoolmaster to bring him to himself; that the young man, seeing how
he had broken every one of these commandments, might thereby be convinced of the
insufficiency of his own, and consequently of the absolute necessity of looking
out for a better righteousness, whereon he might depend for eternal life.
This was what our Lord designed. The young man being self-righteous, and willing
to justify himself, said, "All these have I observed from my youth;" but had he
known himself, he would have confessed, all these have I broken from my youth.
For, supposing he had not actually committed adultery, had he never lusted after
a woman in his heart? What, if he had not really killed another, had he never
been angry without a cause, or spoken unadvisedly with his lips? If so, by
breaking one of the least commandments in the least degree, he became liable to
the curse of God: for "cursed is he (saith the law) that continueth not to do
all things that are written in this book." And therefore, as observed before,
our Lord was so far from speaking against, that he treated the young man in that
manner, on purpose to convince him of the necessity of an imputed righteousness.
But perhaps they will reply, it is said, "Jesus beholding him, loved him." And
what then? This he might do with a human love, and at the same time this young
man have no interest in his blood. Thus Christ is said to wonder, to weep over
Jerusalem, and say, "O that thou hadst known, Me." But such like passages are to
be referred only to his human nature. And there is a great deal of difference
between the love wherewith Christ loved this young man, and that wherewith he
loved Mary, Lazarus, and their sister Martha. To illustrate this by comparison:
A minister of the Lord Jesus Christ seeing many amiable dispositions, such as a
readiness to hear the word, a decent behavior at public worship, and a life
outwardly spotless in many, cannot but so far love them; but then there is much
difference betwixt the love which a minister feels for such, and that divine
love, that union and sympathy of soul, which he feels for those that he is
satisfied are really born again of God. Apply this to our Lord's case, as a
faint illustration of it. Consider what has been said upon the young man's case
in general, and then, if before you were fond of this objection, instead of
triumphing, like him you will go sorrowful away. Our Savior's reply to him more
and more convinces us of the truth of the prophet's assertion in the text, that
"the Lord is our righteousness."
But there is a fourth, and a grand objection yet behind, which is taken from the
25th chapter of Matthew, "where our Lord is described as rewarding people with
eternal life, because they fed the hungry, clothed the naked, and such-like.
Their works therefore were a cause of their justification, consequently the
doctrine of imputed righteousness is not agreeable to scripture."
This, I confess, is the most plausible objection that is brought against the
doctrine insisted on from the text; and that we may answer it in as clear and
brief a manner as may be, we confess, with the Article of the Church of England,
"That albeit good works do not justify us, yet they will follow after
justification, as fruits of it; and though they spring from faith in Christ, and
a renewed soul, they shall receive a reward of grace, though not of debt; and
consequently the more we abound in such good works, the greater will be our
reward when Jesus Christ shall come to judgment."
Take these consideration along with us, and they will help us much to answer the
objection now before us. For thus saith Matthew, "Then shall the King say to
them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed children of my Father, inherit the
kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. For I was an
hungered, and ye gave me meat; I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink; I was a
stranger, and ye took me in; naked, and ye clothed me; I was sick, and ye
visited me; I was in prison, and ye came unto me. I will therefore reward you,
because you have done these things out of love to me, and hereby have evidenced
yourselves to be my true disciples." And that the people did not depend on these
good actions for their justification in the sight of God, is evident. "For when
saw we thee an hungered, say they, and fed thee? Or thirsty, and gave thee
drink? When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in, or naked, and clothed
thee? Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee?" Language, and
questions, quite improper for persons relying on their own righteousness, for
acceptance and acquittance in the sight of God.
But then they reply against thee: "In the latter part of the chapter, it is
plain that Jesus Christ rejects and damns the others for not doing these things.
And therefore, if he damns these for not doing, he saves those for doing; and
consequently the doctrine of an imputed righteousness is good for nothing."
But that is no consequence at all; for God may justly damn any man for omitting
the least duty of the moral law, and yet in himself is not obliged to give to
any one any reward, supposing he has done all that he can. We are unprofitable
servants; we have not done near so much as it was our duty to do, must be the
language of the most holy souls living; and therefore, from or in ourselves,
cannot be justified in the sight of God. This was the frame of the devout souls
just now referred to. Sensible of this, they were so far from depending on their
works for justification in the sight of God, that they were filled, as it were,
with a holy blushing, to think our Lord should condescend to mention, much more
to reward them for, their poor works of faith and labors of love. I am persuaded
their hearts would rise with a holy indignation against those who urge this
passage, as an objection to the assertion of the prophet, that "the Lord is our
righteousness."
Thus, I think, we have fairly answered these grand objections, which are
generally urged against the doctrine of an IMPUTED RIGHTEOUSNESS. Was I to stop
here, I think I may say, "We are made more than conquerors through him that
loved us." But there is a way of arguing which I have always admired, because I
have thought it always very convincing, by showing the ABSURDITIES that will
follow from denying any particular proposition in dispute.
IV. This is the next thing that was proposed. And never did greater or more
absurdities flow from the denying any doctrine, than will flow from denying the
doctrine of Christ's imputed righteousness.
And FIRST, if we deny this doctrine, we turn the truth, I mean the word of God,
as much as we can, into a lie, and utterly subvert all those places of scripture
which say that we are saved by grace; that it is not of works, lest any man
should boast, that salvation is God's free gift, and that he who glorieth, must
glory only in the Lord. For, if the whole personal righteousness of Jesus Christ
be not the sole cause of my acceptance with God, if any work done by or foreseen
in me, was in the least to be joined with it, or looked upon by God an in
inducing, impulsive cause of acquitting my soul from guilt, then I have somewhat
whereof I may glory in myself. Not boasting is excluded in the great work of our
redemption; but that cannot be, if we are enemies to the doctrine of an imputed
righteousness. It would be endless to enumerate how many texts of scripture must
be false, if this doctrine be not true. Let it suffice to affirm in the general,
that if we deny an imputed righteousness, we may as well deny a divine
revelation all at once; for it is the alpha and omega, the beginning and the end
of the book of God. We must either disbelieve that, or believe what the prophet
has spoken in the text, "that the Lord is our righteousness."
But further: I observed at the beginning of this discourse, that we are all
Arminians and Papists by nature; for as one says, "Arminianism is the back way
to popery." And here I venture further to affirming that if we deny the doctrine
of an imputed righteousness, whatever we may stile ourselves, we are really
Papists in our hearts; and deserve no other title from men.
Sirs, what think you? Suppose I was to come and tell you that you must intercede
with saints, for them to intercede with God for you; would you not say, I was
justly reputed a papist missionary by some, and deservedly thrust out of thy
synagogues by others? I suppose you would. And why? Because, you would say, the
intercession of Jesus Christ was sufficient of itself, without the intercession
of saints, and that it was blasphemous to join theirs with his, as though he was
sufficient.
Suppose I went a little more round about, and told you that the death of Christ
was not sufficient, without our death being added to it; that you must die as
well as Christ, join your death with his, and then it would be sufficient. Might
you not then, with a holy indignation, throw dust in the air, and justly call me
a "setter forth of strange doctrines?" And how then, if it be not only absurd,
but blasphemous to join the intercession of saints with the intercession of
Christ, as though his intercession was not sufficient; or our death with the
death of Christ, as though his death was not sufficient: judge ye, if it be not
equally absurd, equally blasphemous, to join our obedience, either wholly or in
part, with the obedience of Christ, as if that was not sufficient. And if so,
what absurdities will follow the denying that the Lord, both as to his active
and passive obedience, is our righteousness?
One more absurdity I shall mention, as following the denying this doctrine, and
I have done.
I remember a story of a certain prelate, who, after many arguments in vain urged
to convince the Earl of Rochester of the invisible realities of another world,
took his leave of his lordship with some such words as these: "Well, my lord, if
there be no hell, I am safe; but if there should be such a thing as hell, what
will become of you?" I apply this so those that oppose the doctrine now insisted
on. If there be no such thing as the doctrine of an imputed righteousness, those
who hold it, and bring forth fruit unto holiness, are safe; but if there be such
a thing (as there certainly is) what will become of you that deny it? It is no
difficult matter to determine. Your portion must be in the lake of fire and
brimstone for ever and ever. Since you will rely upon your works, by your works
you shall be judged. They shall be weighed in the balance of the sanctuary; and
they will be found wanting. By your works therefore shall you be condemned; and
you, being out of Christ, shall find God, to your poor wretched souls, a
consuming fire.
The great Stoddard or Northampton in New England, has therefore well entitled a
book which he wrote (and which I would take this opportunity to recommend) "The
Safety of appearing in the Righteousness of Christ." For why should I lean upon
a broken reed, when I can have the rock of ages to stand upon, that never can be
moved?
And now, before I come to a more particular application, give me leave, in the
apostle's language, triumphantly to cry out, "Where is the scribe, where the
disputer?" Where is the reasoning infidel of this generation? Can any thing
appear more reasonable, even according to your own way of arguing, than the
doctrine here laid down? Have you not felt a convincing power go along with the
word? Why then will you not believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, that so he may
become the Lord your righteousness?
But it is time for me to come a little closer to your consciences.
Brethren, though some may be offended at this doctrine, and may account it
foolishness; yet, to many of you, I doubt not but it is precious, it being
agreeable to the form of sound words, which from your infancy has been delivered
to you; and, coming from a quarter, you would least have expected, may be
received with more pleasure and satisfaction. But give me leave to ask you one
question; Can you say, the Lord our righteousness? I say, the Lord OUR
righteousness. For entertaining this doctrine in your heads, without receiving
the Lord Jesus Christ savingly by a lively faith into your hearts, will but
increase your damnation. As I have often told you, so I tell you again, an
unapplied Christ is no Christ at all. Can you then, with believing Thomas, cry
our, "My Lord and my God?" Is Christ your sanctification, as well as your
outward righteousness? For the word righteousness, in the text, not only implies
Christ's personal righteousness imputed to us, but also holiness wrought in us.
These two, God has joined together. He never did, he never dies, he never will
put them asunder. If you are justified by the blood, you are also sanctified by
the Spirit of our Lord. Can you then in this sense say, The Lord our
righteousness? Were you ever made to abhor yourselves for your actual and
original sins, and to loathe your own righteousness; for, as the prophet
beautifully expresses it, "your righteousness is as filthy rags? Were you ever
made to see and admire the all-sufficiency of Christ's righteousness, and
excited by the Spirit of God to hunger and thirst after it? Could you ever say,
my soul is athirst for Christ, yea, even for the righteousness of Christ? O when
shall I come to appear before the presence of my God in the righteousness of
Christ! Nothing but Christ! Nothing but Christ! Give me Christ, O god, and I am
satisfied! My soul shall praise thee for ever.
Was this ever the language of your hearts? And, after these inward conflicts,
were you ever enabled to reach out the arm of faith, and embrace the blessed
Jesus in your souls, so that you could say, "my beloved is mine, and I am his?"
If so, fear not, whoever you are. Hail, all hail, you happy souls! The Lord, the
Lord Christ, the everlasting God, is your righteousness. Christ has justified
you, who is he that condemneth you? Christ has died for you, nay rather is risen
again, and ever liveth to make intercession for you. Being now justified by his
grace, you have peace with God, and shall, ere long, be with Jesus in glory,
reaping everlasting and unspeakable fruits both in body and soul. For there is
no condemnation to those that are really in Christ Jesus. "Whether Paul or
Apollos, or life or death, all is yours if you are Christ's, for Christ is
God's. My brethren, my heart is enlarged towards you! O think of the love of
Christ in dying for you! If the Lord be your righteousness, let the
righteousness of your Lord be continually in your mouth. Talk of, O talk of, and
recommend the righteousness of Christ, when you lie down, and when you rise up,
at your going out and coming in! Think of the greatness of the gift, as well as
the giver! Show to all the world, in whom you have believed! Let all by your
fruits know, that the Lord is your righteousness, and that you are waiting for
your Lord from heaven! O study to be holy, even as he who has called you, and
washed you in his own blood, is holy! Let not the righteousness of the Lord be
evil spoken of through you. Let not Jesus be wounded in the house of his
friends, but grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ, day by day. O think of his dying love! Let that love constrain you to
obedience! Having much forgiven, love much. Be always asking, What shall I do,
to express my gratitude to the Lord, for giving me his righteousness? Let that
self-abasing, God-exalting question be always in your mouths; "Why me, Lord? Why
me?" why am I taken, and others left? Why is the Lord my righteousness? Why is
he become my salvation, who have so often deserved damnation at his hands?
My friends, I trust I feel somewhat of a sense of God's distinguishing love upon
my heart; therefore I must divert a little from congratulating you, to invite
poor Christless sinners to come to him, and accept of his righteousness, that
they may have life.
Alas, my heart almost bleeds! What a multitude of precious souls are now before
me! How shortly must all be ushered into eternity! And yet, O cutting thought!
Was God now to require all your souls, how few, comparatively speaking, could
really say, the Lord our righteousness!
And think you, O sinner, that you will be able to stand in the day of judgment,
if Christ be not your righteousness? No, that alone is the wedding garment in
which you must appear. O Christless sinners, I am distressed for you! The
desires of my soul are enlarged. O that this may be an accepted time! That the
Lord may be your righteousness! For whither would you flee, if death should fine
you naked? Indeed there is no hiding yourselves from his presence. The pitiful
fig-leaves of your own righteousness will not cover your nakedness, when God
shall call you to stand before him. Adam found them ineffectual, and so will
you. O think of death! O think of judgment! Yet a little while, and time shall
be no more; and then what will become of you, if the Lord be not your
righteousness? Think you that Christ will spare you? No, he that formed you,
will have no mercy on you. If you are not of Christ, if Christ be not your
righteousness, Christ himself shall pronounce you damned. And can you bear to
think of being damned by Christ? Can you bear to hear the Lord Jesus say to you,
"Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and
his angels." Can you live, think you, in everlasting burnings? Is your flesh
brass, and your bones iron? What if they are? Hell-fire, that fire prepared for
the devil and his angels, will heat them through and through. And can you bear
to depart from Christ? O that heart-piercing thought! Ask those holy souls, who
are at any time bewailing an absent God, who walk in darkness, and see no light,
though but a few days or hours; ask them, what it is to lose a light and
presence of Christ? See how they seek him sorrowing, and go mourning after him
all the day long! And, if it is so dreadful to lose the sensible presence of
Christ only for a day, what must it be to be banished from him to all eternity!
But thus it must be, if Christ be not your righteousness. For God's justice must
be satisfied; and, unless Christ's righteousness is imputed and applied to you
here, you must hereafter be satisfying the divine justice in hell-torments
eternally; nay, Christ himself shall condemn you to that place of torment. And
how cutting is that thought! Methinks I see poor, trembling, Christless
wretches, standing before the bar of god, crying out, Lord, if we must be
damned, let some angel, or some archangel, pronounce the damnatory sentence: but
all in vain. Christ himself shall pronounce the irrevocable sentence. Knowing
therefore the terrors of the Lord, let me persuade you to close with Christ, and
never rest till you can say, "the Lord our righteousness." Who knows but the
Lord may have mercy on, may, abundantly pardon you? Beg of God to give you
faith; and, if the Lord gives you that, you will by it receive Christ, with his
righteousness, and his All. You need not fear the greatness or number of your
sins. For are you sinners? So am I. Are you the chief of sinners? So am I. Are
you backsliding sinners? So am I. And yet the Lord (for ever adored be his rich,
free and sovereign grace) the Lord is my righteousness. Come then, O young man,
who (as I acted once myself) are playing the prodigal, and wandering away afar
off from your heavenly Father's house, come home, come home, and leave your
swines trough. Feed no longer on the husks of sensual delights: for Christ's
sake arise, and come home! Your heavenly Father now calls you. See yonder the
best robe, even the righteousness of his dear Son, awaits you. See it, view it
again and again. Consider at how dear a rate it was purchased, even by the blood
of God. Consider what great need you have of it. You are lost, undone, damned
for ever, without it. Come then, poor, guilty prodigals, come home: indeed, I
will not, like the elder brother in the gospel, be angry; no, I will rejoice
with the angels in heaven. And O that God would now bow the heavens, and come
down! Descend, O Son of God, descend; and, as thou hast shown in me such mercy,
O let thy blessed Spirit apply thy righteousness to some young prodigals now
before thee, and clothe their naked souls with thy best robe!
But I must speak a word to you, young maidens, as well as young men. I see many
of you adorned, as to your bodies, but are not your souls naked? Which of you
can say, the Lord is my righteousness? Which of you was ever solicitous to be
dressed in this robe of invaluable price, and without which you are no better
than whited sepulchers in the sight of God? Let not then so many of you, young
maidens, any longer forget your chief and only ornament. O seek for the Lord to
be your righteousness, or otherwise burning will soon be upon you, instead of
beauty!
And what shall I say to you of a middle age, you busy merchants, you cumbered
Martha's, who, with all your gettings, have not yet gotten the Lord to be your
righteousness? Alas! what profit will there be of all your labor under the sun,
if you do not secure this pearl of invaluable price? This one thing, so
absolutely needful, that it only can stand you in stead, when all other things
shall be taken from you. Labor therefore no longer so anxiously for the meat
which perisheth, but henceforward seek for the Lord to be your righteousness, a
righteousness that will entitle you to life everlasting. I see also many hoary
heads here, and perhaps the most of them cannot say, the Lord is my
righteousness. O gray-headed sinner, I could weep over you! Your gray hairs,
which ought to be your crown, and in which perhaps you glory, are now your
shame. You know not that the Lord is your righteousness: O haste then, haste ye,
aged sinners, and seek an interest in redeeming love! Alas, you have one foot
already in the grave, your glass is just run out, your sun is just going down,
and it will set and leave you in an eternal darkness, unless the Lord be your
righteousness! Flee then, O flee for your lives! Be not afraid. All things are
possible with God. If you come, though it be at the eleventh hour, Christ Jesus
will in no wise cast you out. Seek then for the Lord to be your righteousness,
and beseech him to let you know, how it is that a man may be born again when he
is old! But I must not forget the lambs of the flock. To feed them was one of my
Lord's last commands. I know he will be angry with me, if I do not tell them,
that the Lord may be their righteousness; and that of such is the kingdom of
heaven. Come then, ye little children, come to Christ; the Lord Christ shall be
your righteousness. Do not think, that you are too young to be converted.
Perhaps many of you may be nine or ten years old, and yet cannot say, the Lord
is our righteousness: which many have said, though younger than you. Come then,
while you are young. Perhaps you may not live to be old. Do not stay for other
people. If your fathers and mothers will not come to Christ, do you come without
them. Let children lead them, and show them how the Lord may be their
righteousness. Our Lord Jesus Christ loved little children. You are his lambs;
he bids me feed you. I pray God make you willing betimes to take the Lord for
your righteousness.
Here then I could conclude; but I must not forget the poor negroes; no, I must
not. Jesus Christ had died for them, as well as for others. Nor do I mention you
last, because I despise your souls; but because I would have what I shall say,
make the deeper impression upon your hearts. O that you would seek the Lord to
be your righteousness! Who knows but he may be found of you? For in Jesus Christ
there is neither male nor female, bond nor free; even you may be the children of
God, if you believe in Jesus. Did you never read of the eunuch belonging to the
queen of Candace? A negro like yourselves. He believed. The Lord was his
righteousness. He was baptized. Do you also believe, and you shall be saved.
Christ Jesus is the same now as he was yesterday, and will wash you in his own
blood. Go home then, turn the words of the text into a prayer, and entreat the
Lord to be your righteousness. Even so, come Lord Jesus, come quickly, into all
our souls! Amen, Lord Jesus, Amen and Amen!
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