|
Little Sins
A Sermon Delivered on Sabbath Morning, April 17th, 1859, by the
REV. C.H. SPURGEON
At the Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens
"Is it not a little one?"Genesis 19:20.
These words we shall take for a motto, rather
than a text in the ordinary acceptation of that term. I shall not this morning
attempt to explain the connection. It was the utterance of Lot, when he pleaded for the
salvation of Zoar; but I shall take it altogether away from the connection in which it
stands, and make use of it in another fashion. The great Father of Lies hath multitudes of
devices by which he seeks to ruin the souls of men. He uses false weights and false
balances in order to deceive them. Sometimes he uses false times, declaring at one hour
that it is too early to seek the Lord, and at another that it is now too late. And he uses
false quantities, for he will declare that great sins are but little, and as for what he
confesses to be little sins, he makes them afterwards to be nothing at allmere
peccadilloes, almost worthy of forgiveness in themselves. Many souls, I doubt not, have
been caught in this trap, and being snared thereby, have been destroyed. They have
ventured into sin where they thought the stream was shallow, and, fatally deceived by its
depth, they have been swept away by the strength of the current to that cataract which is
the ruin of such vast multitudes of the souls of men.
It shall be my business this morning to
answer this temptation, and try to put a sword in your hands wherewith to resist the enemy
when he shall come upon you with this cry; "Is it not a little one?" and
tempt you into sin because he leads you to imagine that there is but very little harm in
it. "Is it not a little one?"
With regard then to this temptation of
Satan concerning the littleness of sin, I would make this first answer, the best of men
have always been afraid of little sins. The holy martyrs of God have been ready to
endure the most terrible torments rather than step so much as one inch aside from the road
of truth and righteousness. Witness Daniel: when the king's decree went forth that no man
should worship God for such and such a time, nevertheless he prayed three times a day as
aforetime, with his window open towards Jerusalem, not fearing the king's commandment. Why
could he not have retired into an inner chamber? Why might he not have ceased from vocal
prayer, and have kept his petitions in his thought and in his heart? Would he not have
been as well accepted as when he kneeled as usual, with the window open, so that all the
world might see him? Ah! but Daniel judged that little as the offence might seem, he would
rather suffer death at the jaws of the lion, than he would by that little offence provoke
the anger of his God, or lead men to blaspheme his holy name, because his servant had been
afraid to obey. Mark, too, the three holy children. They are asked by king Nebuchadnezzar
simply to bend the knee and worship the golden image which he had set up. How slight the
homage! One bend of the knee, and all is done. One prostration, and they may go their way
safely. Not so. They will not worship the golden image which the king has set up. They can
burn for God, but they cannot turn from God. They can suffer, but they will not sin; and
though all the world might have excused them with the plea of expediency, if they had
performed that one little act of idol worship, yet they will not do it, but would rather
be exposed to the fury of a furnace, seven times heated, than commit an offence against
the Most High. So also among the early Christians. You may have read of that noble warrior
for Christ, Martin Arethusa, the bishop. He had led the people to pull down the idol
temple in the city over which he presided; and when the apostate emperor Julian came to
power, he commanded the people to rebuild the temple. They were bound to obey on pain of
death. But Arethusa all the while lifted up his voice against the evil they were doing,
until the wrath of the king fell upon him of a sudden. He was, however, offered his life
on condition that he would subscribe so much as a single half penny towards the building
of the temple; nay, less than that, if he would cast one grain of incense into the censer
of the false god he might escape. But he would not do it. He feared God, and he would not
do the most tiny little sin to save his life. They therefore exposed his body, and gave
him up to the children to prick him with knives; then they smeared him with honey, and he
was exposed to wasps and stung to death. But all the while the grain of incense he would
not give. He could give his body to wasps, and die in the most terrible pains, but he
could not, he would not, he dared not sin against God. A noble example!
Now, brethren, if men have been able to
perceive so much of sin in little transgressions, that they would bear inconceivable
tortures rather than commit them, must there not be something dreadful after all in the
thing of which Satan says, "Is it not a little one?" Men, with their eyes well
opened by divine grace, have seen a whole hell slumbering in the most minute sin. Gifted
with a microscopic power, their eyes have seen a world of iniquity hidden in a single act,
or thought, or imagination of sin; and hence they have avoided it with horror, have
passed by and would have nought to do with it. But if the straight road to heaven be
through flames, through floods, through death itself, they had sooner go through all these
torments than turn one inch aside to tread an easy and an erroneous path. I say this
should help us when Satan tempts us to commit little sins,this should help us to the
answer, "No, Satan, if God's people think it great, they know better than thou dost.
Thou art a deceiver; they are true. I must shun all sin, even though thou sayest it is but
little." It may be further answered, in reply to this temptation of Satan with regard
to little sins, thus: "Little sins lead to great ones. Satan! thou biddest me
commit a small iniquity. I know thee whom thou art, thou unholy one! Thou desirest me to
put in the thin end of the wedge. Thou knowest when that is once inserted thou canst drive
it home, and split my soul in twain. Nay, stand back! Little though the temptation be, I
dread thee, for thy little temptation leads to something greater, and thy small sin makes
way for something worse."
We all see in nature how easily we may
prove this,that little things lead to greater things. If it be desired to
bridge a gulf, it is often the custom to shoot an arrow, and cross it with a line almost
as thin as film. That line passes over and a string is drawn after it, and after that some
small rope, and after that a cable, and after that the swinging suspension bridge, that
makes a way for thousands. So it is oft times with Satan. It is but a thought that he
would shoot across the mind. That thought shall carry a desire; that desire a look; that
look a touch; that touch a deed; that deed a habit; and that habit something worse, until
the man, from little beginnings, shall be swamped and drowned in iniquity. Little things,
we say, lead on to something worse. And thus it has always been. A spark is dropped by
some unwary traveller amidst the dry grass of the prairie. It is but a spark; "Is it
not a little one?" A child's foot may tread it out; one drop from the rain-cloud may
quench it. But ah! what sets the prairie in a blaze? what bids the rolling waves of flame
drive before them all the beasts of the field? what is it that consumes the forest,
locking it in its fiery arms? what is it that burns down the habitation of man, or robs
the reaper of his harvest? It is this solitary spark,the one sparkthe breeder
of the flames. So is it with little sins. Keep them back Oh Satan! They be sparks, but the
very fire of hell is only a growth from them. The spark is the mother of conflagration,
and though it be a little one I can have nought to do with it. Satan always begins with us
as he did with Achan. He showed Achan, first of all, a goodly Babylonish garment, and a
wedge of gold. Achan looked at it: was it not a little thing to do,to look? Achan
touched it: was not that a little thing? How slight a sinto touch the forbidden
thing! He takes it, and carries it away to his tent, andhere is worse, he
hides it. And at length he must die for the awful crime. Oh! take heed of those small
beginnings of sin. Beginnings of sin are like the letting out of water: first, there is an
ooze; then a drip; then a slender stream; then a vein of water; and then, at last, a
flood: and a rampart is swept before it, a continent is drowned. Take heed of small
beginnings, for they lead to worse. There was never a man yet that came to the gallows but
confessed that he began with small thefts;the stealing of a book at schoolthe
pilfering, afterwards, from his master's till leading to the joining of the gang of
robbers,the joining of the gang of robbers leading to worse crimes and, at last, the
deed was done, the murder was committed, which brought him to an ignominious death. Little
sins often act as burglars do; burglars sometimes take with them a little child;
they put the little child into a window that is too small for them to enter, and then he
goes and opens the door to let in the thieves. So do little sins act. They are but little
ones, but they creep in, and they open the door for great ones. A traitor inside the camp
may be but a dwarf, and may go and open the gates of the city and let in a whole army.
Dread sin; though it be never so small, dread it. You cannot see all that is in it. It is
the mother of ten thousand mischiefs. The mother of mischief, they say, is as small as a
midge's egg; and certainly, the smallest sin has ten thousand mischiefs sleeping within
its bowels.
St. Augustine gives a picture of how far
men will go when they once begin to sin. There was a man who in argument declared that the
devil made flies; "Well," said the man with whom he was arguing, "If the
devil made flies, then it is but little more to say the devil made worms!"
"Well" said the other, "I believe it." " Well" said the man,
" If the devil made worms, how do you know but what he made small birds?"
"Well," said the other, " It is likely he did!" "Well,"
resumed the man with whom he was arguing, "But if he made small birds, why may he not
have made big ones? And if he made big birds, why may he not have made man? And if he made
man, why may he have not made the world?" "You see," says St. Augustine,
"By one admission, by once permitting the devil to be thought the creator of a fly,
the man came to believe that the devil was the Creator." Just get one small error
into your minds, get one small evil into your thoughts, commit one small act of sin in
your life, permit these things to be dandled, and fondled, favoured, petted, and treated
with respect, and you cannot tell whereunto they may grow. They are small in their
infancy: they will be giants when they come to their full growth. Thou little knowest how
near thy soul may be to destruction, when thou wantonly indulgest in the smallest act of
sin!
Another argument may be used to respond
to this temptation of the devil. He says, "Is it not a little one?"
"Yes," we reply, "But little sins multiply very fast." Like all
other little things, there is a marvellous power of multiplication in little sins. As for
murder, it is a masterly sin; but we do not often hear of it compared with the multitude
of minor sins. The smaller the guilt, the more frequent it becomes. The elephant hath but
a small progeny and multiplieth slowly. But the aphis hath thousands springing from it
within an hour. It is even so with little sins: they multiply rapidly, beyond all
thoughtone becomes the mother of multitudes. And, mark this, little sins are as
mighty for mischief in their multitude, as if they were greater sins. Have you ever read
the story of the locusts when they sweep through a land? I was reading but yesterday of a
missionary who called all the people together when he heard that the locusts where coming
up the valley; and kindling huge fires, they hoped to drive off the living stream. The
locusts were but small; but it seemed as if the whole of the blazing fires were
quenchedthey marched over the dead and burning bodies of their comrades, and on they
went, one living stream. Before them everything was green, like the garden of Eden; behind
them everything was dry and desert. The vines were barked, the trees had lost every leaf,
and stretched their naked arms to the sky, as if winter had rent away their foliage. There
was not then so much as a single blade of grass, or sprig upon the tree, that even a goat
might have eaten. The locusts had done all this, and left utter devastation in their
track. Why this? The locust is but a little thing! Ay, but in their number how mighty they
become! Dread then a little sin, for it will be sure to multiply. It is not one, it is
many of these little sins. The plague of lice, or the plague of flies in Egypt, was
perhaps the most terrible that the Egyptians ever felt. Take care of those little insect
sins which may be your destruction. Surely if you are led to feel them, and to groan under
them, and to pray to God for deliverance from them, it may be said that in your
preservation is the finger of God. But let these sins alone, let them increase and
multiply, and your misery is near at hand. Listen not then to the evil voice of Satan when
he cries, "Is it not a little one?"
Years ago there was not a single thistle
in the whole of Australia. Some Scotchman who very much admired thistlesrather more
than I dothought it was a pity that a great island like Australia should be without
that marvellous and glorious symbol of his great nation. He, therefore, collected a packet
of thistle-seeds, and sent it over to one of his friends in Australia. Well, when it was
landed, the officers might have said, "Oh, let it in; 'is it not a little one?' Here
is but a handful of thistle-down, oh, let it come in; it will be but sown in a
gardenthe Scotch will grow it in their gardens; they think it a fine flower, no
doubt,let them have it, it is but meant for their amusement." Ah, yes, it was
but a little one; but now whole districts of country are covered with it, and it has
become the farmer's pest and plague. It was a little one; but, all the worse for that, it
multiplied and grew. If it had been a great evil, all men would have set to work to crush
it. This little evil is not to be eradicated, and of that country it may be said till
doomsday, "Thorns and thistles shall it bring forth." Happy would it have
been if the ship that brought that seed had been wrecked. No boon is it to those of our
countrymen there on the other side of the earth, but a vast curse. Take heed of the
thistle-seed; little sins are like it. Take care they are not admitted into your heart.
Endeavour to shun them as soon as Satan presents them. Go, seek by the grace of God and
his Holy Spirit to keep them away; for if not, these little sins will multiply so fast,
that they will be your ruin and destruction.
Once again; little sins, after all, if
you look at them in another aspect, are great. A little sin involves a great principle.
Suppose that to-morrow the Austrians should send a body of men into Sardinia. If they only
send a dozen it would be equal to a declaration of war. It may be said, "Is it not a
little one?a very small band of soldiers that we have sent?" "Yes,"
it would be replied, "but it is the principle of the thing. You cannot be allowed
with impunity to send your soldiers across the border. War must be proclaimed, because you
have violated the frontier, and invaded the land." It is not necessary to send a
hundred thousand troops into a country to break a treaty. It is true the breach of the
treaty may appear to be small; but if the slightest breach be allowed, the principle is
gone. There is very much more in principle than men imagine. In a sin against God, it is
not so much the thing itself as the principle of the thing at which God looks; and the
principle of obedience is as much broken, as much dishonoured by a little sin as by a
great sin. O man! the Creator hath made thee to obey him. Thou breakest his law; thou
sayst it is but a little breach. Still it is a breach. The law is broken. Thou art
disobedient. His wrath abideth on thee. The principle of obedience is compromised in thy
smallest transgression, and, therefore, is it great. Besides, I don't know whether the
things Christian men call little sins are not, after all, greater than what they
call great sins, in some respects. If you have a friend, and he does you a
displeasure for the sake of ten thousand pounds, you say, "Well, he had a very great
temptation. It is true he has committed a great fault, but still he has wronged me to some
purpose." But suppose your friend should vex and grieve your mind for the sake of a
farthing; what would you think of that? "This is wanton," you would say.
"This man has done it out of sheer malevolence toward me." Now, if Adam had been
denied by his Maker the whole of Paradise, and had been put into a stony desert, I do not
think that, had he taken all Paradise to himself, there would have been more sin in that
act, than when placed in the midst of the garden, he simply stole one fruit from the
forbidden tree. The transgression involved a great principle, because he did it wantonly.
He had so little to gain, he had so much to lose when he dishonored God. It has been said,
that to sin without temptation is to sin like the devil, for the devil was not tempted
when he sinned; and to sin with but little temptation is to sin like the devil. When there
is great temptation offered, I do not say there is any excuse, but when there is none,
where the deed is but little, bringing but little pleasure, and involving but a small
consequence, there is a wantonness about the sin which makes it greater in moral
obliquity, than many other iniquities that men commit. Ay, you cry out against a great
felon, when he is discovered; see of how much he robbed men; see how he wronged the widow
and robbed the fatherless! I know it. God forbid that I should make any excuse for him;
but that man had a name to maintain. He had thousands of temptations before him to get
immensely rich. He thought he never should be discovered. He had a family to keep. He had
got involved in expensive habits, and there are many things to be said for his
extenuation. But you, if you indulge in some slight sin which brings you no pleasure,
which involves no important interests, by which you have nothing to get, I say you sin
wantonly. You have committed an act which has in it the very virus and bitterness of
wilful obstinate, designing disobedience, because there is not even the extenuation, or
excuse, or apology, that you should gain something thereby. Little sins are, after all,
tremendous sins, viewed in the light of God's law. Looked upon as involving a breach of
that inviolable standard of right, and considered as having been committed wantonly, I say
they are great, and I know not that those sins men conceive to be gross and great, are
greater and grosser in reality than these.
Thus I have given you several arguments
with which to answer that temptation, "Is it not a little one?"
Now I am about to speak to the child of
God only, and I say to him, "Brother if Satan tempts thee to say, 'Is it not a little
one?'" reply to him, "Ah, Satan but little though it be, it may mar my
fellowship with Christ. Sin cannot destroy but it will annoy; it cannot ruin my soul, but
it will soon ruin my peace. Thou sayest it is a little one, Satan, but my Saviour had to
die for it, or otherwise I should have been shut out from heaven. 'That little one' may be
like a little thorn in my flesh, to prick my heart and wound my soul. I cannot, I dare not
indulge in this little sin, for I have been greatly forgiven, and I must greatly love. A
little sin in others would be a great sin for me' How can I do this great wickedness
and sin against God.'"
Is it a little one, Satan? But a little
stone in the shoe will make a traveller limp. A little thorn may breed a fester. A little
cloud may hide the sun. A cloud of the size of a man's hand may bring a deluge of rain.
Avaunt Satan! I can have nought to do with thee; for since I know that Jesus bled for
little sins, I cannot wound his heart by indulging in them afresh. A little sin, Satan!
Hath not my Master said, "Take us the foxes, the little foxes that spoil the
vines, for our vines have tender grapes." Lo! these little things do mischief to my
tender heart. These little sins burrow in my soul, and soon make it to become a very den
and hole of the wild beasts that Jesus hates, soon drive him away from my spirit so that
he will hold no comfortable fellowship and communion with me. A great sin cannot destroy a
Christian, but a little sin can make him miserable. Jesus will not walk with his people
unless they drive out every known sin. He says, "If ye keep my commandments ye shall
abide in my love, even as I have kept my Father's commandments and abide in his
love." There are very many Christians in the world that do not see their Saviour's
face by the month together, and seem to be quite content without his company. I understand
you not, nor do I wish to know how it is, that you can reconcile your souls to the absence
of your Lord. A loving wife, without her husband for months and years, seems to me to be
sorely tried. Surely it must be an affliction for a tender child to be separated from his
father. We know that in our childhood it was always so, and we looked forward to our
return home with joy. And art thou a child of God, yet happy without seeing thy Father's
face? What! thou the spouse of Christ, and yet content without his company! Surely,
surely, surely, thou hast fallen into a sad state. Thou must have gone astray, if such be
thy experience, for the true chaste spouse of Christ mourns like a dove without her mate,
when he has left her. Ask, then, the question, what has driven Christ from you? He hides
his face behind the wall of your sins. That wall may be built up of little pebbles, as
easily as of great stones. The sea is made of drops, the rocks are made of grains; and ah!
surely the sea which divides thee from Christ may be filled with the drops of thy little
sins; and the rock which is to wreck thy barque, may have been made by daily working of
the coral insects of thy little sins. Therefore, take heed thereunto; for if thou wouldst
live with Christ, and walk with Christ, and see Christ, and have fellowship with Christ,
take heed, I pray thee, of the little foxes that spoil the vines, for our vines have
tender grapes.
And now, leaving the child of God thus
awhile, I turn myself to address others of you who have some thought with regard to your
souls, but who could not yet be ranked among those that fear God with a true heart. To
you, I know, Satan often offers this temptation "Is it not a little one?"
May God help you to answer him whenever he thus attacks you. "Is it not a little
one?" And so, young man, the devil has tempted thee to commit the first petty theft.
"Is it not a little one?" And so he has bidden thee, young man, for the first
time in thy life to spend the day of rest in foolish pleasure. It was but a little one, he
said, and thou hast taken him at his word, and thou hast committed it. It was but a little
one, and so you have told a lie. It was but a little one, and you have gone into the
assembly of the frivolous and mixed in the society of scorners. It was but a little one,
there could not be much hurt in it, it could not do much mischief to your soul. Ah! stop
awhile. Dost thou know that a little sin, if wantonly indulged, will prevent thy
salvation? "The foundation of God standeth sure having this seal, the Lord knoweth
them that are his, and let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from
iniquity." Christ will reveal salvation from all his sins to the man who hates all
his sins; but if thou keepest one sin to thyself, thou shalt never have mercy at his
hands. If thou wilt forsake all thy ways, and turn with full purpose of heart to Christ,
the biggest sin thou hast ever committed shall not destroy thy soul; but if a little sin
be harboured, thy prayers will be unheard, thy sighs disregarded, and thy earnest cries
shall return into thy bosom without a blessing. You have been in prayer lately, you have
been seeking Christ, you have been praying with all your might that God would meet with
you. Now months have rolled over your head, you are not yet saved, not yet have you
received the comfortable assurance of your pardon. Young man, is it not likely that some
little known sin is still harboured in your heart? Mark, then, God will never be at one
with thee till thou and thy sins are twain. Part with thy sins, or else part with all
hope, though thou hide but so much as a grain of sin back from God. He will not, he cannot
have any mercy on thee. Come to him just as thou art, but renounce thy sins. Ask him to
set thee free from every lust, from every false way, from every evil thing, or else, mark
thee, thou shalt never find grace and favour at his hands. The greatest sin in the world,
repented of, shall be forgiven, but the least unrepented sin shall sink thy soul lower
than the lowest hell. Mark then, again, sinner, thou who indulgest in little sins
sometimes. These little sins show that thou art yet in the gall of bitterness, and in the
bond of iniquity. Rowland Hill tells a curious tale of one of his hearers who sometimes
visited the theatre. He was a member of the church. So going to see him, he said, I
understand Mr. So-and-so, you are very fond of frequenting the theatre. No, sir, he said,
that's false. I go now and then just for a great treat, still I don't go because I like
it; it is not a habit of mine. Well, said Rowland Hill, suppose some one should say to me,
Mr. Hill, I understand you eat carrion, and I should say, no, no, I don't eat carrion. It
is true, I now and then have a piece of stinking carrion for a great treat. Why, he would
say, you have convicted yourself, it shows that you like it better than most people,
because you save it up for a special treat. Other men only take it as common daily food,
but you keep it by way of a treat. It shows the deceitfulness of your heart, and manifests
that you still love the ways and wages of sin.
Ah, my friends, those men that say little
sins have no vice in them whatever, they do but give indications of their own character;
they show which way the stream runs. A straw may let you know which way the wind blows, or
even a floating feather; and so may some little sin be an indication of the prevailing
tendency of the heart. My hearer, if thou lovest sin, though it be but a little one, thy
heart is not right in the sight of God. Thou art still a stranger to divine grace. The
wrath of God abideth on thee. Thou art a lost soul unless God change thy heart.
And yet, another remark here. Sinner,
thou sayest it is but a little one. But dost thou know that God will damn thee for thy
little sins? Look angry now, and say the minister is harsh. But wilt thou look angry at
thy God in the day when he shalt condemn thee for ever? If there were a good man in a
prison to-day and you did not go to see him, would you think that a great sin? Certainly
not, you say, I should not think of doing such a thing. If you saw a man hungry and you
did not feed him, would you think that a great sin? No, you say, I should not.
Nevertheless, these are the very things for which men are sent to hell. What said the
Judge? "I was hungry and ye gave me no meat, thirsty and ye gave me no drink, I was
sick and in prison and ye visited me not. Forasmuch as ye have not done this unto the
least of these, my brethren, ye have not done it unto me." Now, if these things,
which we only consider to be little sins, actually send myriads to hell, ought we not to
stop and tremble ere we talk lightly of sin, since little sins may be our eternal
destroyers. Ah, man, the pit of hell is digged for little sins. An eternity of woe is
prepared for what men call little sins. It is not alone the murderer, the drunkard, the
whoremonger, that shall be sent to hell. The wicked, it is true, shall be sent there, but
the little sinner with all the nations that forget God shall have his portion there also.
Tremble, therefore, on account of little sins.
When I was a little lad, I one day read
at family prayer the chapter in the Revelations concerning the "bottomless pit."
Stopping in the midst of it, I said to my grandfather, "Grandfather, what does this
mean'the bottomless pit?'" He said, "Go on child, go on." So I read
that chapter, but I took great care to read it the next morning also. Stopping again I
said, "Bottomless pit, what does this mean?" "Go on," he said,
"Go on." Well it came the next morning, and so on for a fortnight; there was
nothing to be read by me of a morning but this same chapter, for explained it should be if
I read it a month. And I can remember the horror of my mind when he told me what the idea
was. There is a deep pit, and the soul is falling down,oh how fast it is falling!
There! the last ray of light at the top has disappeared, and it falls ononon,
and so it goes on fallingonononfor a thousand years! "Is it
not getting near the bottom yet? won't it stop?" No, nothe cry is,
onon on, "I have been falling a million years, is it not near the bottom
yet?" No, you are no nearer the bottom yet: it is the "bottomless
pit;" it is ononon, and so the soul goes on falling, perpetually, into a
deeper depth still, falling for ever into the "bottomless pit"on
onon, into the pit that has no bottom! Woe without termination, without hope
of it's coming to a conclusion. The same dreadful idea is contained in those words,
"The wrath to come." Mark, hell is always "the wrath to come." If a
man has been in hell a thousand years, it is still "to come." As to what you
have suffered in the past it is as nothing, in the dread account, for still the wrath is
"to come." And when the world has grown grey with age, and the fires of the sun
are quenched in darkness, it is still "the wrath to come." And when other worlds
have sprung up, and have turned into their palsied age, it is still "the wrath to
come." And when your soul, burnt through and through with anguish, sighs at last to
be annihilated, even then this awful thunder shall be heard, "the wrath to
cometo cometo come." Oh, what an idea! I know not how to utter it! And
yet for little sins, remember you incur "the wrath to come." Oh, if I am to be
damned, I would be damned for something; but to be delivered up to the executioner and
sent into "the wrath to come" for little sins which do not even make me famous
as a rebel, this is to be damned indeed. Oh that ye would arise, that ye would flee from
the wrath to come, that ye would forsake the little sins, and fly to the great cross of
Christ to have little sins blotted out, and little offences washed away. For
oh,again I warn you,if ye die with little sins unforgiven, with little sins
unrepented of, there shall be no little hell; the great wrath of the great king is ever to
come, in a pit without a bottom, in a hell the fire of which never shall be quenched, and
the worm of which ne'er shall die. Oh, "the wrath to come! the wrath to come!"
It is enough to make one's heart ache to think of it. God help you to flee from it. May
you escape from it now, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
The Reformed Reader Home Page
Copyright 1999, The Reformed Reader, All Rights Reserved