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The Potter and the Clay
by George Whitefield
"The word which came to Jeremiah from the LORD, saying, Arise, and go down to
the potter's house, and there I will cause thee to hear my words. Then I went
down to the potter's house, and, behold, he wrought a work on the wheels. And
the vessel that he made of clay was marred in the hand of the potter: so he made
it again another vessel, as seemed good to the potter to make [it]. Then the
word of the LORD came to me, saying, O house of Israel, cannot I do with you as
this potter? saith the LORD. Behold, as the clay [is] in the potter's hand, so
[are] ye in mine hand, O house of Israel.
Jeremiah 18:1-6
At sundry times, and in diverse manners, God was pleased to speak to our
fathers by the prophets, before he spoke to us in these last days by his Son. To
Elijah, he revealed himself by a small still voice. To Jacob, by a dream. To
Moses, he spoke face to face. Sometimes he was pleased to send a favorite
prophet on some especial errand; and whilst he was thus employed, vouchsafed to
give him a particular message, which he was ordered to deliver without reserve
to all the inhabitants of the land. A very instructive instance of this kind we
have recorded in the passage now read to you. The first verse informs us that it
was a word, or message, which came immediately from the Lord to the prophet
Jeremiah. At what time, or how the prophet was employed when it came, we are not
told. Perhaps, whilst he was praying for those who would not pray for
themselves. Perhaps, near the morning, when he was slumbering or musing on his
bed. For the word came to him, saying, "Arise." And what must he do when risen?
He must "go down to the potter's house" (the prophet knew where to find it) "and
there (says the great Jehovah) I will cause thee to hear my words." Jeremiah
does not confer with flesh and blood, he does not object that it was dark or
cold, or desire that he might have his message given him there, but without the
least hesitation is immediately obedient to the heavenly vision. "Then (says he)
I went down to the potter's house, and behold he wrought a work upon the
wheels." Just as he was entering into the house or workshop, the potter, it
seems, had a vessel upon his wheel. And was there any thing so extraordinary in
this, that it should be ushered in with the word Behold? What a dreaming
visionary, or superstitious enthusiast, would this Jeremiah be accounted, even
by many who read his prophecies with seeming respect, was he alive now? But this
was not the first time Jeremiah had heard from heaven in this manner. He
therefore willingly obeyed; and had you or I accompanied him to the potter's
house, I believe we should have seen him silently, but intensely waiting upon
his great and all-wise Commander, to know wherefore he sent him thither.
Methinks I see him all attention. He takes notice, that "the vessel was of
clay;" but as he held it in his hand, and turned round the wheel, in order to
work it into some particular form, "it was marred in the hands of the potter,"
and consequently unfit for the use he before intended to put it to. And what
becomes of this marred vessel? Being thus marred, I suppose, the potter, without
the least imputation of injustice, might have thrown it aside, and taken up
another piece of clay in its room. But he did not. "He made it again another
vessel." And does the potter call a council of his domestics, to inquire of them
what kind of vessel they would advise him to make of it? No, in no wise. "He
made it again another vessel, as seemed good to the potter to make it."
"Then," adds Jeremiah, whilst he was in the way of duty ?then ?whilst he was
mentally crying, Lord what wouldst thou have me to do? "Then the word of the
Lord came unto me, saying, O house of Israel, cannot I do with you as this
potter? Saith the Lord. Behold, as the clay is in the hands of the potter
(marred, and unfit for the first designed purpose) so are ye in mine hand, O
house of Israel." At length, then, Jeremiah hath his sermon given to him: short,
but popular. It was to be delivered to the whole house of Israel, princes,
priests, and people: short, but pungent, even sharper than a two-edged sword.
What! says the sovereign Lord of heaven and earth, must I be denied the
privilege of a common potter? May I not do what I will with my own? "Behold, as
the clay is in the potter's hands, so are ye in mine hands, O house of Israel. I
made and formed you into a people, and blessed you above any other nation under
heaven: but, O Israel, thou by thy backslidings hast destroyed thyself. As the
potter therefore might justly have thrown aside his marred clay, so may I justly
unchurch and unpeople you. But what if I should come over the mountains of your
guilt, heal your backslidings, revive my work in the midst of the years, and
cause your latter end greatly to increase? Behold, as the clay is in the hands
of the potter, lying at his disposal, either to be destroyed or formed into
another vessel, so are ye in my hands, O house of Israel: I may either reject,
and thereby ruin you, or I may revisit and revive you according to my own
sovereign good will and pleasure, and who shall say unto me, what dost thou?"
This seems to be the genuine interpretation, and primary intention of this
beautiful part of holy writ. But waving all further inquiries about its primary
design or meaning, I shall now proceed to show, that what the glorious Jehovah
here says of the house of Israel in general, is applicable to every individual
of mankind in particular. And as I presume this may be done, without either
wire-drawing scripture on the one hand, or wrestling it from its original
meaning on the other, not to detain you any longer, I shall, from the passage
thus explained and paraphrased, deduce, and endeavor to enlarge on these two
general heads.
FIRST, I shall undertake to prove, that every man naturally engendered of the
offspring of Adam, is in the sight of the all-seeing, heart-searching God, only
as a "piece of marred clay."
SECONDLY, That being thus marred, he must necessarily be renewed: and under this
head, we shall likewise point out by whose agency this mighty change is to be
brought about.
These particulars being discussed, way will naturally be made for a short word
of application.
FIRST, To prove that every man naturally engendered of the offspring of Adam, is
in the sight of an all-seeing, heart-searching God, only as a piece of marred
clay.
Be pleased to observe, that we say every man NATURALLY engendered of the
offspring of Adam, or every man since the fall: for if we consider man as he
first came out of the hands of his Maker, he was far from being in such
melancholy circumstances. No; he was originally made upright; or as Moses, that
sacred penman, declares, "God made him after his own image." Surely never was so
much expressed in so few words; which hath often made me wonder how that great
critic Longinus, who so justly admires the dignity and grandeur of Moses's
account of the creation, and "God said, Let there be light, and there was
light;" I say I have often wondered why he did not read a little further, and
bestow as just an encomium [praise, approval, acclaim] upon this short, but
withal inexpressibly august [noble, elegant, superb] and comprehensive
description of the formation of man, "so God created man in his own image."
Struck with a deep sense of such amazing goodness, and that he might impress yet
a deeper sense of it upon our minds too, he immediately adds, "in the image of
God made he him." A council of the most adorable Trinity was called on this
important occasion: God did not say, Let there be a man, and there was a man,
but God said, "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness." This is the
account which the lively oracles of God do give us of man in his first estate;
but it is very remarkable, that the transition from the account of his creation
to that of his misery, is very quick, and why? For a very good reason, because
he soon fell from his primeval dignity; and by that fall, the divine image is so
defaced, that he is now to be valued only as antiquarians value an ancient
medal, merely for the sake of the image and superscription once stamped upon it;
or of a second divine impress, which, through grace, it may yet receive.
Let us take a more particular survey of him, and see whether these things are so
or not: and first, as to his UNDERSTANDING. As man was created originally "after
God in knowledge," as well as righteousness and true holiness, we may rationally
infer, that his understanding, in respect to things natural, as well as divine,
was of a prodigious extent: for he was make but a little lower than the angels,
and consequently being like them, excellent in his understanding, he knew much
of God, of himself, and all about him; and in this as well as every other
respect, was, as Mr. Golter expresses it in one of his essays, a perfect major:
but this is far from being our case now. For in respect to NATURAL THINGS, our
understandings are evidently darkened. It is but little that we can know, and
even that little knowledge which we can acquire, is with much weariness of the
flesh, and we are doomed to gain it as we do our daily bread, I mean by the
sweat of our brows.
Men of low and narrow minds soon commence wise in their own conceits: and having
acquired a little smattering of the learned languages, and made some small
proficiency in the dry sciences, are easily tempted to look upon themselves as a
head taller than their fellow mortals, and accordingly too, too often put forth
great swelling words of vanity. But persons of a more exalted, and extensive
reach of thought, dare not boast. No: they know that the greatest scholars are
in the dark, in respect to many even of the minutest things in life: and after
all their painful researches into the Arcana Natura, they find such an immense
void, such an unmeasurable expanse yet to be traveled over, that they are
obliged at last to conclude, almost with respect to every thing, "that they know
nothing yet as they ought to know." This consideration, no doubt, led Socrates,
when he was asked by one of his scholars, why the oracle pronounced him the
wisest man on earth, to give him this judicious answer, "Perhaps it is, because
I am most sensible of my own ignorance." Would to God, that all who call
themselves Christians, had learned so much as this heathen! We should then no
longer hear so many learned men, falsely so called, betray their ignorance by
boasting of the extent of their shallow understanding, nor by professing
themselves so wise, prove themselves such arrant pedantic fools.
If we view our understandings in respect to spiritual things, we shall find that
they are not only darkened, but become darkness itself, even "darkness that may
be felt" by all who are not past feeling. And how should it be otherwise, since
the infallible word of God assures us, that they are alienated from the light of
life of God, and thereby naturally as incapable to judge of divine and spiritual
things, comparatively speaking, as a man born blind is incapacitated to
distinguish the various colors of the rainbow. "The natural man, (says on
inspired apostle) discerneth not the things of the Spirit of God;" so far from
it, "they are foolishness unto him;" and why? Because they are only to be
"spiritually discerned." Hence it was, that Nicodemus, who was blessed with an
outward and divine revelation, who was a ruler of the Jews, nay a master of
Israel, when our Lord told him, "he must be born again;" appeared to be quite
grappled. "How (says he) can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter a second
time into his mother's womb and be born? How can these things be?" Were three
more absurd questions ever proposed by the most ignorant man alive? Or can there
be a clearer proof of the blindness of man's understanding, in respect to
divine, as well as natural things? Is not man then a piece of marred clay?
This will appear yet more evident, if we consider the PERVERSE BENT OF HIS WILL.
Being made in the very image of God; undoubtedly before the fall, man had no
other will but his Maker's. God's will, and Adam's, were than like unisons in
music. There was not the least disunion, or discord between them. But now he
hath a will, as directly contrary to the will of God, as light is contrary to
darkness, or heaven to hell. We all bring into the world with us a carnal mind,
which is not only an enemy to God, but "enmity itself, and which is therefore
not subject unto the law of God, neither indeed can it be." A great many show
much zeal in talking against the man of sin, and loudly (and indeed very justly)
exclaim against the Pope for sitting in the temple, I mean the church of Christ,
and "exalting himself above all that is called God." But say not within thyself,
who shall go to Rome, to pull down this spiritual antichrist? As though there
was no antichrist but what is without us. For know, O man, whoever thou art, an
infinitely more dangerous antichrist, because less discerned, even SELF-WILL,
fits daily in the temple of thy heart, exalting itself, above all that is called
God, and obliging all its votaries to say of Christ himself , that Prince of
peace, "we will not have this man to reign over us." God's people, whose
spiritual senses, are exercised about spiritual things, and whose eyes are
opened to see the abominations that are in their hearts, frequently feel this to
their sorrow. Whether they will or not, this enmity from time to time bubbles
up, and in spite of all their watchfulness and care, when they are under the
pressure of some sharp affliction, a long desertion, or tedious night of
temptation, they often find something within rising in rebellion against the
all-wise disposals of divine Providence, and saying unto God their heavenly
Father, "what dost thou?" This makes them to cry (and no wonder, since it
constrained one of the greatest saints and apostles first to introduce the
expression) "O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of
this death?" The spiritual and renewed soul groans thus, being burdened; but as
for the natural and unawakened man, it is not so with him; self-will, as well as
every other evil, either in a more latent or discernible manner, reigns in his
unrenewed soul, and proves him, even to a demonstration to others, whether he
knows, or will confess it himself or not, that in respect to the disorders of
his will, as well as his understanding, man is only a piece of marred clay.
A transient view of fallen man's AFFECTIONS will yet more firmly corroborate
this melancholy truth, These, at his being first placed in the paradise of God,
were always kept within proper bounds, fixed upon their proper objects, and,
like so many gentle rivers, sweetly, spontaneously and habitually glided into
their ocean, God. But now the scene is changed. For we are not naturally full of
vile affections, which like a mighty and impetuous torrent carry all before
them. We love what we should hate, and hate what we should love; we fear what we
should hope for, and hope for what we should fear; nay, to such an ungovernable
height do our affections sometimes rise, that though our judgments are convinced
to the contrary, yet we will gratify our passions though it be at the expense of
our present and eternal welfare. We feel a war of our affections, warring
against the law of our minds, and bringing us into captivity to the law of sin
and death. So that video meliora proboque, deteriora foquor [latin phrase], I
approve of better things but follow worse, is too, too often the practice of us
all.
I am sensible, that many are offended, when mankind are compared to beasts and
devils. And they might have some shadow of reason for being so, if we asserted
in a physical sense, that they were really beasts and really devils. For then,
as I once heard a very learned prelate, who was objecting against this
comparison, observe, "a man being a beast would be incapable, and being a devil,
would be under an impossibility of being saved." But when we make use of such
shocking comparisons, as he was pleased to term them, we would be understood
only in a moral sense; and in so doing, we assert no more than some of the most
holy men of God have said of themselves, and others, in the lively oracles many
ages ago. Holy David, the man after God's own heart, speaking of himself, says,
"so foolish was I, and as a beast before thee." And holy Job, speaking of man in
general, says, that "he is born as a wild ass's colt," or take away the
expletive, which as some think ought to be done, and then he positively asserts,
that man is a wild ass's colt. And what says our Lord, "Ye are of your father
the devil;" and "the whole world is said to lie in him, the wicked one, who now
rules in the children of disobedience," that is, in all unrenewed souls. Our
stupidity, proneness to fix our affections on the things of the earth, and our
eagerness to make provision for the flesh, to fulfill the lusts thereof,
evidence us to be earthly and brutes!; and our mental passions, anger, hatred,
malice, envy, and such like, prove with equal strength, that we are also
devilish. Both together conspire to evince, that in respect to his affections,
as well as his understanding and will, man deservedly may be termed a piece of
marred clay.
The present BLINDNESS OF NATURAL CONSCIENCE makes this appear in a yet more
glaring light; in the soul of the first man Adam, conscience was no doubt the
candle of the Lord, and enabled him rightly and instantaneously to discern
between good and evil, right and wrong. And, blessed be God! Some remains of
this are yet left; but alas, how dimly does it burn, and how easily and quickly
is it covered, or put out and extinguished. I need not send you to the heathen
world, to learn the truth of this; you all know it by experience. Was there no
other evidence, your own consciences are instead of a thousand witnesses, that
man, as to his natural conscience, as well as understanding, will and
affections, is much marred clay.
Nor does that great and boasted Diana, I mean UNASSISTED UNENLIGHTENED REASON,
less demonstrate the justness of such an assertion. Far be it from me to decry
or exclaim against human reason. Christ himself is called the "LOGOS, the
Reason;" and I believe it would not require much learning, or take up much time
to prove, that so far and no farther than as we act agreeably to the laws of
Christ Jesus, are we any way conformable to the laws of right reason. His
service is therefore called "a reasonable service." And however his servants and
followers may now be looked upon as fools and madmen; yet there will come a
time, when those who despise and set themselves to oppose divine revelation,
will find, that what they now call reason, is only REASON DEPRAVED, and an
utterly incapable, of itself, to guide us into the way of peace, or show the way
of salvation, as the men of Sodom were to find Lot's door after they were struck
with blindness by the angels, who came to lead him out of the city. The horrid
and dreadful mistakes, which the most refined reasoners in the heathen world ran
into, both as to the object, as well as manner of divine worship, have
sufficiently demonstrated the weakness and depravity of human reason: nor do our
modern boasters afford us any better proofs of the greatness of its strength,
since the best improvement they generally make of it, is only to reason
themselves into downright willful infidelity, and thereby reason themselves out
of eternal salvation. Need we now any further witness, that man, fallen man, is
altogether a piece of marred clay?
But this is not all, we have yet more evidence to call; for do the blindness of
our understandings, the perverseness of our will, the rebellion of our
affections, the corruption our consciences, the depravity of our reason prove
this charge; and does not present DISORDERED FRAME AND CONSTITUTION OF OUR BODES
confirm the same also? Doubtless in this respect, man, in the most literal sense
of the word, is a piece of marred clay. For God originally made him of the "dust
of the earth." So that notwithstanding our boasting of our high pedigrees, and
different descent, we were all originally upon a level, and a little red earth
was the common substratum out of which we were all formed. Clay indeed it was,
but clay wonderfully modified, even by the immediate hands of the Creator of
heaven and earth. One therefore hath observed, that it is said "God built the
man;" he did not form him rashly or hastily, but built and finished him
according to the plan before laid down in his own eternal mind. And though, as
the great God is without body, parts, or passions, we cannot suppose when it is
said "God made man after his own image," that it has any reference to his body,
yet I cannot help thinking (with Doctor South) that as the eternal Logos was
hereafter to appear, God manifest in the flesh, infinite wisdom was undoubtedly
exerted in forming a casket into which so invaluable a pearl was in the fullness
of time to be deposited. Some of the ancients are said to have asserted, that
man at the first, had what we call a glory shining round him; but without
attempting to be wise above what is written, we may venture to affirm, that he
had a glorious body, which knowing no sin, knew neither sickness nor pain. But
now on this, as well as other accounts, he may justly be called Ichabod; for its
primitive strength and glory are sadly departed from it, and like the ruins of
some ancient and stately fabric, only so much less as to give us some faint idea
of what it was when it first appeared in its original and perfect beauty. The
apostle Paul, therefore, who knew how to call things by their proper names, as
well as any man living, does not scruple to term the human body, though in its
original constitution fearfully and wonderfully made, a "vile body;" vile
indeed! Since it is subject to such vile diseases, put to such vile, yea very
vile uses, and at length is to come to so vile an end. "For dust we are, and to
dust we must return." This among other considerations, we may well suppose,
caused the blessed Jesus to weep at the grave of Lazarus. He wept, not only
because his friend Lazarus was dead, but he wept to see human nature, through
man's own default, thus laid in ruins, by being subject unto such a dissolution,
made like unto the beasts that perish.
Let us here pause a while, and with our sympathizing Lord, see if we cannot shed
a few silent tears at least, upon the same sorrowful occasion. Who, who is there
amongst us, that upon such a melancholy review of man' present, real, and most
deplorable depravity both in body and soul, can refrain from weeping over such a
piece of marred clay? Who, who can help adopting holy David's lamentation over
Saul and Jonathan? "How are the mighty fallen! How are they slain in their high
places!" Originally it was not so. No, "God made man after his own image; in the
image of God made he man." Never was there so much expressed in so few words. He
was created after God in righteousness and true holiness.
This is the account, which the sacred volume gives us of this interesting point.
This, this is that blessed book, that book of books, from whence, together with
an appeal to the experience of our own hearts, and the testimonies of all past
ages, we have thought proper to fetch our proofs. For, after all, we must be
obliged to divine revelation, to know what we were, what we are, and what we are
to be. In these, as in a true glass, we may see our real and proper likeness.
And from these only can we trace the source and fountain of all those
innumerable evils, which like a deluge have overflowed the natural and moral
world. If any should object against the authenticity of this revelation, and
consequently against the doctrine this day drawn from thence, they do in my
opinion thereby very much confirm it. For unless a man was very much disordered
indeed, as to his understanding, will, affections, natural conscience, and his
power of reasoning, he could never possibly deny such a revelation, which is
founded on a multiplicity of infallible external evidences, hath so many
internal evidences of a divine stamp in every page, is so suited to the common
exigencies of all mankind, so agreeable to the experience of all men, and which
hath been so wonderfully handed and preserved to us, hath been so instrumental
to the convicting, converting, and comforting so many millions of souls, and
hath stood the test of the most severe scrutinies, and exact criticisms of the
most subtle and refined, as well as the most malicious and persecuting enemies,
that ever lived, even from the beginning of time to this very day. Persons of
such a turn of mind, I think, are rather to be prayed for, than disputed with,
if so be this perverse wickedness of their hearts may be forgiven them: "They
are in the very gall of bitterness, and must have their consciences seared as it
were with a red-hot iron," and must have their eyes "blinded by the god of this
world," otherwise they could not but see, and feel, and assent to the truth of
this doctrine, of man's being universally depraved; which not only in one or
two, but in one or two thousands, in every page, I could almost say, is written,
in such legible characters, that runs may read. Indeed, revelation itself is
founded upon the doctrine of the fall. Had we kept our original integrity, the
law of God would have yet been written in our hearts, and thereby the want of a
divine revelation, at least such as ours, would have been superseded; but being
fallen, instead of rising in rebellion against God, we ought to be filled with
unspeakable thankfulness to our all bountiful Creator, who by a few lines in his
own books hath discovered more to us, than all the philosophers and most learned
men in the world could, or would, have discovered, though they had studied to
all eternity.
I am well aware, that some who pretend to own the validity of divine revelation,
are notwithstanding enemies to the doctrine that hath this day been delivered;
and would fain elude the force of the proofs generally urged in defense of it,
by saying, they only bespeak the corruption of particular persons, or have
reference only to the heathen world: but such persons err, not knowing their own
hearts, or the power of Jesus Christ: for by nature there is no difference
between Jew or Gentile, Greek or Barbarian, bond or free. We are altogether
equally become abominable in God's sight, all equally fallen short of the glory
of God, and consequently all alike so many pieces of marred clay.
How God came to suffer man to fall? how long man stood before he fell? And how
the corruption contracted by the fall, is propagated to every individual of his
species are questions of such an abstruse and critical nature, that should I
undertake to answer them, would be only gratifying a sinful curiosity, and
tempting you, as Satan tempted dour first parents, to eat forbidden fruit. It
will much better answer the design of this present discourse, which is
practical, to pass on
II. To the next thing proposed, and point out to you the absolute necessity
there is of this fallen nature's being renewed.
This I have had all along in my eye, and on account of this, have purposely been
so explicit on the first general head: for has Archimedes once said, "Give me a
place where I may fix my foot, and I will move the world;" so without the least
imputation of arrogance, with which, perhaps, he was justly chargeable, we may
venture to say, grant the foregoing doctrine to be true, and then deny the
necessity of man's being renewed who can.
I suppose, I may take it for granted, that all of you amongst whom I am now
preaching the kingdom of God, hope after death to go to a place which we call
Heaven. And my heart's desire and prayer to God for you is, that you all may
have mansions prepared for you there. But give me leave to tell you, were you
now to see these heavens opened, and the angel (to use the words of the seraphic
Hervey clothed with all his heavenly drapery, with one foot upon the earth, and
another upon the sea; nay, were you to see and hear the angel of the everlasting
covenant, Jesus Christ himself, proclaiming "time shall be no more," and giving
you all an invitation immediately to come to heaven; heaven would be no heaven
to you, nay it would be a hell to your souls, unless you were first prepared for
a proper enjoyment of it here on earth. "For what communion hath light with
darkness?" Or what fellowship could unrenewed sons of Belial possibly keep up
with the pure and immaculate Jesus?
The generality of people form strange ideas of heaven. And because the
scriptures, in condescension to the weakness of our capacities, describe it by
images taken from earthly delights and human grandeur, therefore they are apt to
carry their thoughts no higher, and at the best only form to themselves a kind
of Mahomitan paradise. But permit me to tell you, and God grant it may sink deep
into your hearts! Heaven is rather a state than a place; and consequently,
unless you are previously disposed by a suitable state of mind, you could not be
happy even in heaven itself. For what is grace but glory militant? What is glory
but grace triumphant? This consideration made a pious author say, that
"holiness, happiness, and heaven, were only three different words for one and
the self-same thing." And this made the great Preston, when he was about to die,
turn to his friends, saying, "I am changing my place, but not my company." He
had conversed with God and good men on earth; he was going to keep up the same,
and infinitely more refined communion with God, his holy angels, and the spirits
of just men made perfect, in heaven.
To make us meet to be blissful partakers of such heavenly company, this "marred
clay," I mean, these depraved natures of ours, must necessarily undergo an
universal moral change; our understandings must be enlightened; our wills,
reason, and consciences, must be renewed; our affections must be drawn toward,
and fixed upon things above; and because flesh and blood cannot inherit the
kingdom of heaven, this corruptible must put on incorruption, this mortal must
put on immortality. And thus old things must literally pass away, and behold all
things, even the body as well as the faculties of the soul, must become new.
This moral change is what some call, repentance, some, conversion, some,
regeneration; choose what name you please, I only pray God, that we all may have
the thing. The scriptures call it holiness, sanctification, the new creature,
and our Lord calls it a "New birth, or being born again, or born from above."
These are not barely figurative expressions, or the flights of eastern language,
nor do they barely denote a relative change of state conferred on all those who
are admitted into Christ's church by baptism; but they denote a real, moral
change of heart and life, a real participation of the divine life in the soul of
man. Some indeed content themselves with a figurative interpretation; but unless
they are made to experience the power and efficacy thereof, by a solid living
experience in their own souls, all their learning, all their labored criticism,
will not exempt them from a real damnation. Christ hath said it, and Christ will
stand, "Unless a man," learned or unlearned, high or low, though he be a master
of Israel as Nicodemus was, unless he "be born again, he cannot see, he cannot
enter into the kingdom of God."
If it be inquired, who is to be the potter? And by whose agency this marred clay
is to be formed into another vessel? Or in other words, if it be asked, how this
great and mighty change is to be effected? I answer, not by the mere dint and
force of moral suasion [persuasion]. This is good in its place. And I am so far
from thinking, that Christian preachers should not make use of rational
arguments and motives in their sermons, that I cannot think they are fit to
preach at all, who either cannot, or will not use them. We have the example of
the great God himself for such a practice; "Come (says he) and let us reason
together." And St. Paul, that prince of preachers, "reasoned of temperance, and
righteousness, and a judgment to come." And it is remarkable, "that whilst he
was reasoning of these things, Felix trembled." Nor are the most persuasive
strains of holy rhetoric less needful for a scribe ready instructed to the
kingdom of God. The scriptures both of the Old and New Testament, every where
abound with them. And when can they be more properly employed, and brought
forth, than when we are acting as ambassadors or heaven, and beseeching poor
sinners, as in Christ's stead, to be reconciled unto God. All this we readily
grant. But at the same time, I would as soon go to yonder church-yard, and
attempt to raise the dead carcasses, with a "come forth," as to preach to dead
souls, did I not hope for some superior power to make the word effectual to the
designed end. I should only be like a sounding brass for any saving purpose, or
as a tinkling cymbal. Neither is this change to be wrought by the power of our
own free-will. This is an idol every where set up, but we dare not fall down and
worship it. "No man (says Christ) can come to me, unless the Father draw him."
Our own free-will, if improved, may restrain us from the commission of many
evils, and put us in the way of conversion; but, after exerting our utmost
efforts (and we are bound in duty to exert them) we shall find the words of our
own church article to be true, that "man since the fall hath no power to turn to
God." No, we might as soon attempt to stop the ebbing and flowing of the tide,
and calm the most tempestuous sea, as to imagine that we can subdue, or bring
under proper regulations, our own unruly wills and affections by any strength
inherent in ourselves.
And therefore, that I may keep you no longer in suspense, I inform you, that
this heavenly potter, this blessed agent, is the Almighty Spirit of God, the
Holy Ghost, the third person in the most adorable Trinity, coessential with the
Father and the Son. This is that Spirit, which at the beginning of time moved on
the face of the waters, when nature lay in one universal chaos. This was the
Spirit that overshadowed the Holy Virgin, before that holy thing was born of
her: and this same Spirit must come, and move upon the chaos of our souls,
before we can properly be called the sons of God. This is what John the Baptist
calls "being baptized with the Holy Ghost," without which, his and all other
baptisms, whether infant or adult, avail nothing. This is that fire, which our
Lord came to send into our earthly hearts, and which I pray the Lord of all
lords to kindle in every unrenewed one this day.
As for the extraordinary operations of the Holy Ghost, such as working of
miracles, or speaking with divers kinds of tongues, they are long since ceased.
But as for this miracle of miracles, turning the soul to God by the more
ordinary operations of the Holy Ghost, this abides yet, and will abide till time
itself shall be nor more. For it is he that sanctifieth us, and all the elect
people of God. On this account, true believers are said to be "born from above,
to be born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man,
but of God." Their second, as well as their first creation, is truly and purely
divine. It is, therefore, called "a creation;" but put ye on (says the apostle)
the new man which is created" ?And how? Even as the first man was, "after God
in righteousness and true holiness."
These, these are the precious truths, which a scoffing world would fain rally or
ridicule us out of. To produce this glorious change, this new creation, the
glorious Jesus left his Father's bosom. For this he led a persecuted life; for
this he died an ignominious and accursed death; for this he rose again; and for
this he now sitteth at the right hand of his Father. All the precepts of his
gospel, all his ordinances, all his providences, whether of an afflictive or
prosperous nature, all divine revelation from the beginning to the end, all
center in these two points, to show us how we are fallen, and to begin, early
on, and complete a glorious and blessed change in our souls. This is an end
worthy of the coming of so divine a personage. To deliver a multitude of souls
of every nation, language and tongue, from so many moral evils, and to reinstate
them in an incomparably more excellent condition than that from whence they are
fallen, is an end worthy the shedding of such precious blood. What system of
religion is there now, or was there ever exhibited to the world, any way to be
compared to this? Can the deistical scheme pretend in any degree to come up to
it? Is it not noble, rational, and truly divine? And why then will not all that
hitherto are strangers to this blessed restoration of their fallen natures, (for
my heart is too full to abstain any longer from an application) why will you any
longer dispute or stand out against it? Why will you not rather bring your clay
to this heavenly Potter, and say from your inmost souls, "Turn us, O good Lord,
and so shall we be turned?" This, you may and can do: and if you go thus far,
who knows but that this very day, yea this very hour, the heavenly Potter may
take you in hand, and make you vessels of honor fit for the Redeemer's use?
Others that were once as far from the kingdom of God as you are, have been
partakers of this blessedness. What a wretched creature was Mary Magdalene? And
yet out of her Jesus Christ cast seven devils. Nay, he appeared to her first,
after he rose from the dead, and she became as it were an apostle to the very
apostles. What a covetous creature was Zaccheus? He was a griping cheating
publican; and yet, perhaps, in one quarter of an hour's time, his heart is
enlarged, and he made quite willing to give half of his goods to feed the poor.
And to mention no more, what a cruel person was Paul. He was a persecutor, a
blasphemer, injurious; one that breathed out threatenings against the disciples
of the Lord, and made havoc of the church of Christ. And yet what a wonderful
turn did he meet with, as he was journeying to Damascus? From a persecutor, he
became a preacher; was afterwards made a spiritual father to thousands, and now
probably sits nearest the Lord Jesus Christ in glory. And why all this? That he
might be made an example to them that should hereafter believe. O then believe,
repent; I beseech you, believe the gospel. Indeed, it is glad tidings, even
tidings of great joy. You will then no longer have any thing to say against the
doctrine of Original Sin; or charge the Almighty foolishly, for suffering our
first parents to be prevailed on to eat such sour grapes, and permitting thereby
their children's teeth to be set on edge. You will then no longer cry out
against the doctrine of the New Birth, as enthusiasm, or brand the assertors of
such blessed truths with the opprobrious names of fools and madmen. Having felt,
you will then believe; having believed, you will therefore speak; and instead of
being vessels of wrath, and growing harder and harder in hell fire, like vessels
in a potter's oven, you will be made vessels of honor, and be presented at the
great day by Jesus, to his heavenly Father, and be translated to live with him
as monuments of rich, free, distinguishing and sovereign grace, for ever and
ever.
You, that have in some degree experienced the quickening influence (for I must
not conclude without dropping a word or two to God's children) you know how to
pity, and therefore, I beseech you also to pray for those, to whose
circumstances this discourse is peculiarly adapted. But will you be content in
praying for them? Will you not see reason to pray for yourselves also? Yes,
doubtless, for yourselves also. For you, and you only know, how much there is
yet lacking in your faith, and how far you are from being partakers in that
degree, which you desire to be, of the whole mind that was in Christ Jesus. You
know what a body of sin and death you carry about with you, and that you must
necessarily expect many turns of God's providence and grace, before you will be
wholly delivered form it. But thanks be to God, we are in safe hands. He that
has been the author, will also be the finisher of our faith. Yet a little while,
and we like him shall say "It is finished;" we shall bow down our heads an give
up the ghost. Till then, (for to thee, O Lord, will we now direct our prayer)
help us, O Almighty Father, in patience to posses our souls. Behold, we are the
clay, and thou art the Potter. Let not the thing formed say to him that formed
it, whatever the dispensations of thy future Will concerning us may be, Why dost
thou deal with us thus? Behold, we put ourselves as blanks in thine hands, deal
with us as seemeth good in thy sight, only let every cross, ever affliction,
every temptation, be overruled to the stamping thy blessed image in more lively
characters on our hearts; that so passing from glory to glory, by the powerful
operations of they blessed Spirit, we may be made thereby more and more meet
for, and at last be translated to a full, perfect, endless, and uninterrupted
enjoyment of glory hereafter, with thee O Father, thee O Son, and thee O blessed
Spirit; to whom, three persons but one God, be ascribed, as is most due, all
honor, power, might, majesty and dominion, now and to all eternity. Amen and
Amen.
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