Men, naturally, are God's enemies, by Jonathan Edwards. Romans 5 verse 10, For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of the Son.
The apostle from the beginning of the epistle to the beginning of this chapter had insisted on the doctrine of justification by faith alone. In this chapter he goes on to consider the benefits that are consequent on justification. Peace with God, present happiness and hope of glory.
Peace with God is mentioned in the first verse. Therefore, being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. present blessedness and hope of glory, by whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand and rejoice in hope of the glory of God.
In concerning this benefit, the hope of glory, the apostle particularly takes notice of two things, the blessed nature of this hope and the sure ground of it.
1. He insists on the blessed nature of this hope and that it enables us to glory in tribulations. This excellent nature of true Christian hope is described in the following words, verses 3 to 5, and not only so, but we glory in tribulations also, knowing that tribulation worketh patience, and patience experience, and experience hope. And hope maketh not ashamed, because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us.
through hope of a blessed reward, that will abundantly more than make up for all tribulation, we are unable to bear tribulation with patience, patiently bearing and patiently waiting for the reward. And patience works experience, for when we thus bear tribulation with patient waiting for the reward, this brings experience of the earnest of the reward, the earnest of the Spirit, and our feeling the love of God shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost.
So that our hope does not make us ashamed, it is not disappointed, for in the midst of our tribulations we experience those blessed incomes of the Spirit in our souls that make even a time of tribulation sweet to us, and as such an earnestness abundantly confirms our hope, and so experience works hope.
2. The apostle takes notice of the sure ground there is for this hope, or the abundant evidence we have that we shall obtain the glory hope for, and that peace we have with God by our justification through Christ's blood. For while we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for us, even while we Jesus' argument is exceedingly clear and strong.
If God has already done so great a thing for us as to give Christ to die and shed His precious blood for us, which was vastly the greatest thing, we need not doubt but that He will bestow life upon us. It is but a small thing for God actually to bestow eternal life, after it is purchased, to what it was for Him to give His own Son to die in order to purchase it.
The giving Christ to purchase it was virtually all. It included the whole grace of God in salvation. When Christ had purchased salvation at such a dear rate, all the difficulty was got through. All was virtually over and done. It is a small thing in comparison for God to bestow salvation after it has been thus purchased at a full price.
Sinners who are justified by the death of Christ are already virtually saved. The thing is as it were done. What remains is no more than the necessary consequence of what is done. Christ, when He died, made an end of sin. When He rose from the dead, He did virtually rise with the elect. He brought them up from death with Him, and ascended into heaven with them. And therefore, when this is already done, and we are thus reconciled to God through the death of His Son, we need not fear but that we shall be saved by His life
The love of God appears much more in His giving His Son to die for sinners than in giving eternal life after Christ's death. The giving of Christ to die for us is here spoken of as a much greater thing than the actual bestowment of life, because this is all that has any difficulty in it. When God did this for us, He did it for us as sinners and enemies. But in actually bestowing salvation on us, after we are justified, we are not looked upon as sinners, but as perfectly righteous persons. He beholds no iniquity in us. We are no more enemies, but reconciled. When God gave Christ to die for the elect, He looked on them as they are in themselves. But in actually bestowing eternal life, He looks on them as they are in Christ.
There are three epithets used in the text in context as appertaining to sinners as they are in themselves, verses 6 to 8. They are without strength, they cannot help themselves, they are ungodly, sinners, and they are enemies, as in the text, natural men are God's enemies. God, though the Creator of all things, yet has some enemies in the world. Men in general will own that they are sinners. There are few, if any, whose consciences are so blinded as not to be sensible they have been guilty of sin, and most sinners will own that they have bad hearts. They will learn that they do not love God so much as they should do, that they are not so thankful as they ought to be for mercies, and that in many things they fail. Yet few of them are sensible that they are God's enemies. They do not see how they can truly be so called, for they are not sensible that they wish God any hurt, or endeavor to do Him any. But we see that the Scripture speaks of them as enemies to God. So in our text and elsewhere, and you that were sometime alienated and enemies in your minds by wicked works, Colossians 1.21, the carnal mind is enmity against God, Romans 7.7. And that all natural or unregenerate manner indeed such as what I shall endeavor now particularly to show, which I propose to do in the following method, particularly in what respects they are enemies to God, to how great a degree they are enemies, and why they are enemies, then I shall answer some objections.
Section 1. In what respect natural men are God's enemies?
1. Their enmity appears in their judgments, their natural relish, their wills, affections, and practice. They have a very mean esteem of God. Men are ready to entertain a good esteem of those with whom they are friends. They are apt to think highly of their qualities, to give them their due whom they are enemies, they are disposed to have mean thoughts, they are apt to entertain a dishonorable opinion of them, they will be ready to look contemptibly upon anything that is praiseworthy in them. So it is with natural men towards God. They entertain very low and contemptible thoughts of God. Whatever honor and respect they may pretend and make a show of towards God, if their practice be examined it will show that they certainly look upon Him as a being that is but little to be regarded. The language of their heart says, Who is the Lord that I should obey His voice? Exodus 5, 2 What is the Almighty that we should serve Him? And what profit should we have if we pray unto Him? Job 21, 15 They count him worthy neither to be loved nor feared. They dare not behave with that slight and disregard towards one of their fellow creatures, one a little raised above them in power and authority, as they dare and do towards God. They value one of their equals much more than God, and are ten times more afraid of offending such than of displeasing the God that made them. They cast such exceeding contempt on God God is to prefer every vile lust before Him, and every worldly enjoyment is set higher in their esteem than God. A morsel of meat or a few pence of worldly gain is preferred before Him. God is set last and lowest in the esteem of natural men.
2. They are enemies in the natural relish of their souls. They have an inbred distaste and disrelish of God's perfections. God is not such a being as they would have. Though they are ignorant of God, yet from what they hear of Him and from what is manifest by the light of nature, they do not like Him. By His being endowed with such attributes as He is, they have an aversion to Him. They hear God is an infinitely holy, pure, and righteous being, and they do not like him upon this account. They have no relish of such qualifications. They take no delight in contemplating them. It would be a mere task, a bondage to a natural man, to be obliged to set himself to contemplate those attributes of God. They see no manner of beauty or loveliness, nor taste any sweetness in them. And on account of their distaste of these perfections, they dislike all his other attributes. They have greater aversion to him because he is omniscient and knows all things, and because his omniscience is a holy omniscience. They are not pleased that he is omnipotent and can do whatever he pleases because it is a holy omnipotence. They are enemies even to His mercy, because it is a holy mercy. They do not like His immutability, because by this He never will be otherwise than He is, an infinitely holy God.
It is from this disreligion that natural men have of the attributes of God that they do not love to have much to do with God. The natural tendency of the heart of man is to fly from God and keep at a distance from Him, as far off as possible. A natural man is averse to communion with God and is naturally disinclined to those exercises of religion wherein he has immediately to do with Him. It is said of wicked men, Psalm 10 verse 4, God is not in all their thoughts. It is evident that the mind of man is naturally averse to thinking about God, and hence if any thoughts of him be suggested to the mind, they soon go away. Such thoughts are not apt to rest in the minds of natural men. If anything is said of them to God, they are apt to forget it. It is like seed that falls upon the hard path. The fowls of the earth soon take it away, or like seed that falls upon a rock. Other things will stick, but divine things rebound. And if they were cast into the mine, they meet with that there, which soon thrusts them out again. They meet with no suitable entertainment, but are soon chased away. Hence also it is that natural men are with difficulty persuaded to be constant in the duty of secret prayer. They would not be so averse to spending a quarter of an hour night and morning in some bodily labor, but it is because they are averse to a work wherein they have so immediately to do with God, and they naturally love to keep at a distance from Him.
3. Their wills are contrary to His will. God's will and theirs are exceeding cross the one to the other. God wills those things that they hate in our most of verse 2, and they will those things that God hates. Hence, they oppose God in their wills. There is a dreadful, violent, and obstinate opposition of the will of natural men to the will of God. They are very opposite to the commands of God. It is from the enmity of the will, Romans 8.7, that the carnal mind is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be. Hence, natural men are enemies to God's government. They are not loyal subjects, but enemies to God considered as Lord of the world. They are entire enemies to God's authority.
4. They are enemies to God in their affections. There is in every natural man a seed of malice against God, and it often dreadfully breaks forth. Though it may in great measure lie hid in secure times, when God lets men alone, and they meet with no great disturbance of body or mind, yet if God does but touch men in their consciences by manifesting to them a little of His wrath for their sins, this oftentimes brings out the principle of malice against Him. This is exercised in dreadful heart writhings, inward wranglings, and quarrelings, and blasphemous wherein the heart is like a viper, hissing and spitting poison at God. And however free from it the heart may seem to be, when let alone insecure, yet a very little thing will set it in rage. Temptations will show what is in the heart. The alteration of a man's circumstances will often discover the heart. Pharaoh had no more natural enmity against God than other men, and if other natural men had been in Pharaoh's circumstances, the same corruptions would have put forth themselves in as dreadful a manner. The scribes and Pharisees had naturally no more malice in their hearts against Christ than other men. Another natural man would, in their case, and having as little restraint, exercise as much malice against Christ as they did.
When wicked men come to be cast into hell, then their malice against God will appear, their hearts will appear as full of malice, as hell as full of fire, but when wicked men come to be in hell, there will be no new corruptions put into the heart, but only old ones will then break forth without restraint. That is all the difference between a wicked man on earth and a wicked man in hell, that in hell there will be more to stir up the exercise of corruption, and less to restrain it, than on earth, but there will be no new corruption put in. A wicked man will have no principle of corruption in hell, but what he carried to hell with him. There are now the seeds of all the malice that will be exercised then. The malice of damned spirits is but a branch of the root that is in the hearts of natural men now. A natural man has a heart like the heart of a devil. Only corruption is more under restraint in man than in devils.
5. They are enemies in their practice. They walk contrary to Him. In their enmity against God, they are exceedingly active. They are engaged in war against God. Indeed, they cannot injure God, He is so much above them, but yet they do what they can. They oppose themselves to His honor and glory. They oppose themselves to the interest of His kingdom in the world. They oppose themselves to the will and command of God, and oppose Him in His government. They oppose God in His works and in His declared designs. While He is doing one work, they are doing the contrary. God seeks one thing, and they seek directly the contrary. They list under Satan's banner, and are His willing soldiers in opposing the kingdom of God.
Section 2 The Degree of Man's Natural Enmity to God
I now proceed to say something with respect to the degree of this enmity, tending in some measure to show how great enemies to God are natural men.
1. They have no love to God. Their enmity is mere enmity without any mixture of love. A natural man is wholly destitute of any principle of love to God, and therefore never had the least exercise of this love. Some natural men have better tempers than others, and some are better educated than others, and some live a great deal more soberly than others. But one has no more love to God than another, for none have the least spark of love. The heart of a natural man is his destitute of love to God, as a dead, stiff, cold corpse is of vital heat, John 5.43. I know you, that ye have not the love of God in you.
2. Every faculty and principle of action is wholly under the dominion of enmity against God. The nature of man is wholly infected with this enmity against God. He is tainted with it throughout, in all his faculties and principles. And not only so, but every faculty is entirely and perfectly subdued under it, and enslaved to it. possession of the man. The Apostle Paul, speaking of what he was, naturally says, Romans 7.14, I am carnal, sold under sin. The understanding is under the reigning power of this enmity against God, so that it is entirely darkened and blinded with regard to the glory and excellency of God. The will is wholly under the reigning power of it, and all the affections are governed by enmity against God. There is not one affection nor one desire that a natural man has or that he has ever stirred up to act from, but what contains in it enmity against God. A natural man is as full of enmity against God as any viper or any venomous beast is full of poison.
3. The power of the enmity of natural men against God is so great that it is insupportable by any finite power. It has too great and strong a possession of the heart to be overcome by any created power. Indeed, a natural man never sincerely strives to root out his call, he delights in his enmity and chooses it.
Neither can others do it, though they sincerely and to their utmost endeavor to overcome this enmity. If godly friends and neighbors labor to persuade them to cast away their enmity and become friends to God, they cannot persuade them to it. Though ministers use never so many arguments and entities, and set forth the loveliness of God, tell them of the goodness of God, hold forth God's own gracious invitations, and entreat them never so earnestly to cast off their opposition and be reconciled, yet they cannot overcome it.
Still, they will be as bad enemies to God as ever they were. The tongue of men or of angels cannot persuade them to relinquish their opposition to God. Miracles will not do it. How many miracles did the children of Israel see of the wilderness? Yet their enmity against God remained, as appeared by their often murmuring. And how often did Christ use miracles to this end, without effect?
But the Jews obstinately stood it out. Matthew 23, verse 37, O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not? And how great did the enmity of these people appear to be after all! How spiteful and venomous were their hearts towards Christ as appears by their cruel treatment of Him and His last sufferings!
4. They are mortal enemies to God i.e., they have that enmity in their heart that strikes at the life of God. A man may be no friend to another and may have an ill spirit towards him and yet not be his mortal enemy. His enmity will be satisfied with something short of the death of the person. But it is not so with natural men with respect to God. They are mortal enemies. Their imbecility is no argument that this is not the tendency of the principle. Natural men are enemies to the dominion of God, and their nature shows their good will to dethrone Him if they could. Yea, they are enemies to the being of God, and would be glad if there was no God. And therefore it necessarily follows that they would cause that there should be none if they could.
Psalm 14 verse 1 The fool has said in his heart, there is no God. This implies not only an aptness to question the being of God, but that he inclines it should be so. His heart says, i.e., his inclination says. The fool has said in his heart, O God, that is, I would have none, I do not desire any, I wish there was none, that would suit my inclination best. Let the world be emptied of a god, he stands in my way, and hence he is an atheist in his heart.
The viper's poison is a deadly poison, and when he bites he seeks the precious life. And men are in this respect a generation of vipers. Their poison, which is enmity against God, seeks of the life of God.
Matthew 3 verse 7. O generation of vipers! The wicked are estranged from the womb. Their poison is like the poison of a serpent.
Deuteronomy 32, verses 32 and 33. For their vine is the vine of Sodom and the fields of Gomorrah. Their grapes are the grapes of Gaul. Their clusters are bitter. Their vine is the poison of dragons and the cruel venom of wasps.
The divine nature, being immortal and infinitely out of their reach, there is no other trial possible, whether the enmity that is naturally in the heart against God be mortal or no, but only for God to take on him the human nature and become man, so as to come within man's reach. There can be no other experiment. And what was the event? Why, when once God became man and came down to dwell here among such vipers as fallen men, they hated and persecuted Him and never desisted till they had imbrued their hands in His blood. There was a multitude of them that appeared combined in this design. Nothing would do, but He must be put to death. All cry out, Crucify Him! Crucify Him! Away with Him! They had rather Barabbas, who greatly deserved death, should live than Christ should not die. Nothing would restrain them from it, even all his preaching and all his miracles, but they would kill him. And it was not the ordinary kind of execution that would satisfy them, but it must be the most cruel and most ignominious they possibly could invent. and they aggravated as much as they could by mocking him and spitting on him and scourging him. This shows what the nature and tendency of man's enmity against God is. Here it appeared in its true colors.
5. Natural men are greater enemies to God than they are to any other being whatsoever. Natural men may be very great enemies to their fellow creatures, but not so great as they are to God. There is no other being that so much stands in sinners' ways. In those things that they chiefly set their hearts upon is God. Men are wont to hate their enemies in proportion to two things, their opposition to what they look upon to be their interest, and their power and ability. A great and powerful enemy will be more hated than one who is weak and impotent. But none is so powerful as God. Man's enmity to others may be got over, time may wear it out, and they may be reconciled. But natural men, without a mighty work of God to change their hearts, will never get over their enmity against God. They are greater enemies to God than they are to the devil. Yea, they treat the devil as their friend and master, and join with him against God.
" John 8, 44. You are of your father, the devil, and the less of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning.
Section 3. On what account men are enemies to God? The general reason is that God is opposite to them in the worship of their idols. The apostasy of man, summararily, consists in departing from the true God to idols, forsaking his Creator and setting up other things in his room. When God at first created man, he was united to his Creator. The God that made him was his God. The true God was the object of his highest respect and had the possession of his heart. Love to God was a principle in his heart that ruled over all other principles, and everything in the soul was wholly in subjection to it.
But when man fell, he departed from the true God, and the union that was between his heart and his Creator was broken. He wholly lost his principle of love to God, and henceforward man claimed to other gods. He gave that respect to the creature which is due to the Creator. When God ceased to be the object of the supreme love and respect, other things, of course, became the objects of it. Man will necessarily have something that he respects as his God. If man do not give his highest respect to the God that made him, there will be something else that has possession of it. Men will either worship the true God or some idol. It is impossible it should be otherwise. Something will have the heart of man. And that which a man gives his heart to may be called his God.
Therefore, when man by the fall extinguished all love to the true God, he set up the creature in his room. For having lost his esteem and love of the true God, and set up other gods in his room, and in opposition to him, and God still demanding their worship and opposing them, enmity necessarily follows. That which a man chooses for his God he sets his heart mainly upon, and nothing will so soon excite enmity as opposition in that which is dearest. A man will be the greatest enemy to him who opposes him in what he chooses for his God. He will look on none as standing so much in his way as he that would deprive him of his God.
Judges 18 verse 24, Ye have taken away my gods, and what have I more?
A man in this respect cannot serve two masters that stand in competition for his service, and not only if he serves one he cannot serve the other, but if he clings to one he will necessarily hate the other.
Matthew 6 verse 24 No man can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will hold to the one and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon. And this is the very reason that men hate God. In this case it is, as when two kings set up in one kingdom in opposition one to the other, and they both challenge the same throne and are competitors for the same crown, they who are loyal, hardy subjects to the one, will necessarily be enemies to the other. As that which is a man's God is the object of his highest love, so that God who chiefly opposes him in it must be the object of his greatest hatred.
The gods which a natural man worships, instead of the God that made him, are himself and the world. He has withdrawn his esteem and honor from God and proudly exalts himself. If Satan was not willing to be in subjection and therefore rebelled and set up himself, so a natural man in the proud and high thoughts he has of himself sets up himself upon God's throne. He gives his heart to the world, worldly riches, worldly pleasures, and worldly honors. They have the possession of that regard which is due to God.
The Apostle sums up all the idolatry of wicked men and their love of the world. 1 John 2, 15 and 16. Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If a man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is of the world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. And the Apostle James observes that a man must necessarily be the enemy of the true God if he be a friend of the world. Whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God, James 4 verse 4.
All the sin that men commit is what they do in the service of their idols. There is no one act of sin, but what is an act of service to some false god. And therefore, whensoever God opposes sin in them, He is opposite to their worship of their idols, on which account they are His enemies.
But God opposes them in their service of their idols in the following respects.
1. He manifests His utter abhorrence of their attachment to their idols. Their idols are what they love above all things. They would by no means part with them. This wickedness is sweet to them. Job 20 verse 12. If you take them away, what have they more? If they lose their idols, they lose their all. To rend away their idols from them would be more grievous to them than to rend body and soul asunder. It is like rending their heart in twain. They love their idolatry. But God does not approve of it, but exceedingly hates it. He will by no means be reconciled to it, and therefore they hate Him. God declares an infinite hatred of every act they do in the service of their false gods. He declares Himself to be a holy and a jealous God, a God who is very jealous of His own honor, and that greatly abhors giving that honor to another.
2. He utterly forbids their cleaving to those idols and all the service that they do to them. He not only shows that He dislikes it, but He utterly forbids it, and demands that they should worship Him, serve Him only, and give their hearts wholly to Him. without tolerating any competitor. He allows them to serve their idols in no degree, but requires them to cast them away utterly and pay no more worship to them at any time. He requires a final parting with their idols, not only that they should refrain from them for a while, but cast them away forever and never gratify their idolatrous respect to them anymore.
4. This is so exceeding contrary to them, and what they are so averse to, that they are enemies to God for it. They cannot endure God's commands, because they forbid all that in which their hearts are so engaged. And as they hate God's commands, so they hate Him whose commands they are.
3. He threatens them with everlasting damnation for their service of their idols. He threatens them for their past idolatry. He threatens them with His eternal wrath for their having departed from Him and their having chosen to themselves other gods. He threatens them for that disposition they have in their hearts to cleave to other gods. He threatens the least degree of that respect which they have in their hearts to their idols. He manifests that He will not tolerate any regard to them, but has fixed eternal death as the wages of every degree of it. And He will not release them from their guilt. He holds them to their obligations, and He will accept of no atonement that they can make. He will not forgive them for whatever they do in religion, whatever pains they take, whatever tears they shed. He will accept of no money or price that they have to offer, and he threatens every future act of their idolatry. He not only forbids them ever to be guilty of the least act, but forbids them on pain of eternal damnation. So strictly does God prohibit them from the service of their beloved idols.
He threatens them with everlasting wrath for all exercises of inordinate love of worldly profit, for all manifestations of inordinate regard to worldly pleasures or worldly honors. He threatens them with everlasting torments for their self-exaltation. He requires them to deny and renounce themselves and to abase themselves at His feet, on pain of bearing His wrath to all eternity.
The strictness of God's law is a principal cause of man's enmity against God. If God were one that did not so much hate sin, if He would allow them in the gratification of their lusts in some degree, and if His threatenings were not so awful against all criminal indulgence, if His threatenings were not so absolute, if His displeasure could be appeased for a few tears, a little reformation or the like, They would not be so great enemies, nor hate Him so much as they do. But God shows Himself to be an implacable enemy to their idols, and hath threatened everlasting wrath, infinite calamity for all that they do in the service of their lusts, and this makes them irreconcilable enemies to Him.
For this reason, the scribes and Pharisees were such bitter enemies to Christ, because he showed himself to be such an enemy to their pride, conceit of their own wisdom, self-righteousness, and inordinate affectation of their own honor, which was their God.
Natural men are enemies to God because He is so opposite to them in that in which they place their all. If you go to take away that which is very dear to a man, nothing will provoke him more. God is infinitely opposite to that in which natural men place all their delight and all their happiness. He is an enemy to that which natural men value as their greatest honor and highest dignity, and in which they wholly trust their own righteousness. Hence natural men are greater enemies to God than they are to any other being.
Some of their fellow-creatures may stand very much in their way with regard to some things on which they set their hearts, but God opposeth them with respect to all their idols, and His opposition to them is infinitely great. None of our fellow-creatures ever oppose us in any of our interests so much as God opposeth wicked men in their idolatry. His infinite opposition is manifested by a threatening and infinite punishment, His dreadful wrath to all eternity, misery without end. Hence we need not wonder that natural men are enemies to God. Section 4. The objection that men are not conscious of this enmity answered. Natural men do not generally conceive themselves to be so bad. They have not this notion of themselves that they are enemies to God, and therefore when they hear such doctrine as this taught them, they stand ready to make objections. Some may be ready to say, I do not know. I am not sensible that I hate God and have a mortal enmity against Him. I feel no such thing in myself. And if I have such enmity, why do I not feel it? If I am a mortal enmity, why should not I know it better than anybody else? How can others see what is in my heart better than I myself? If I hate one of my fellow creatures, I can feel it inwardly working. To such an objection I would answer, if you do but observe yourself and search your own heart, unless you are strangely blinded, you may be sensible of those things wherein enmity does fundamentally consist. particularly, you may be sensible that you have at least had a low and contemptible estimation of God, and that in your esteem you set the trifles and vanities of this world far above Him, so as to regard the enjoyment of these things far before the enjoyment of God, and to value these things better than His love. And you may be sensible that you despise the authority of God, and value His commands and His honor but very little. or if by some means you have blinded yourself so as to think you do regard them now, doubtless you can look back and see that you have not regarded them. You may be sensible that you have had a disrelation, aversion towards God, an opposition to thinking of Him, so that it would have been a very uncomfortable task to have been confined to that exercise for any time. The vanities of the world, at the same time, have been very pleasing to you, and you have been all swallowed up in them, while you have been averse to the things of religion. If you look into your heart, it is there plain to be seen that there is an enmity in your wills that is contrary to God's will, for you have been opposing the will of God all your life long. These things are plain. It is nothing but some great delusion that can hide them from you. These are the foundation of all enmity, and if these things be in you, all the rest that we have spoken of will follow, of course. 2. One reason why you have not more sensibly felt the exercises of malice against God is that your enmity is now exercised partly in your unbelief of God's being, and this prevents His appearing in other ways. Man has naturally a principle of atheism in him, an indisposition to realize God's being, and a disposition to doubt of it. The being of God does not ordinarily seem real to natural men. All the discoveries that there are of God's being in his works will not overcome the principle of atheism in the heart. And though they seem in some measure to be rationally convinced, yet it does not appear real. The conviction is faint. There is no strong conviction impressed on the mind that there is a God, and oftentimes they are ready to think that there is none. Now this will prevent the exercise of this enmity, which otherwise would be felt. Particularly, it may be an occasion of there not being sensible exercises of hatred. It may in some measure be thus illustrated. If you have a rooted malice against another man, a principle that had been long established there, and if you should hear that he was dead, the sensible working of your malice would not be felt as when you realized it that he was alive. But if you should afterwards hear the news contradicted and perceive that your enemy was still alive, you would feel the same workings of hatred that you did before, and thus you are not realizing the fact that God has a being may prevent those sensible workings of hatred that otherwise you would have.
If wicked men in this world were sensible of the reality of God's being, as the wicked are in another, they would feel more of that hatred which men in another world do. The exercise of corruption in one way may and often does prevent it working in other ways, as covetousness may prevent the exercise of pride, so atheism may prevent malice. And yet it by no means is an argument to there being any less enmity in the heart, for it is the same enmity working in another way. The same enmity that is in this world works by atheism will in another world, where there will be no room for atheism, work by malice and blasphemy. The same mortal enmity which, if you saw there was a God, might make you to wish there were none, may now dispose and incline you to think there is none. Men are very often apt to think things are as they would have them be. This same principle disposes you to think God has no existence, which, if you knew He had, would dispose you, if it were possible, to dispossess Him of it.
3. If you think that there is a God, yet you do not realize that He is such a God as He really is, you do not realize that He is so holy as He is, that He has such a hatred of sin as indeed He has, that He is so just a God as He is, who will by no means clear the guilty. But that in the Psalms is applicable to you. These things thou hast done, and I kept silence. Thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as thyself. Psalm 50 verse 21 So that your atheism appears in this, as well as in thinking there is no God. So that your objection arises from this, that you do not find such a sensible hatred against that God which you have formed to suit yourself, a God that you like better than the true God. But this is no argument that you have not bitter enmity against of the true God. For it was your enmity against the true God, and your not liking Him, that has put you upon forming up another in your imagination that you like better. It is your enmity against those attributes of God's holiness and justice and the like that has put you upon conceding another who is not so holy as he is, and does not hate sin so much, and will not be so strictly just in punishing it, and whose wrath against sin is not so terrible.
But if you were sensible of the vanity of your conceits, and that God was not such in one as you have imagined, but that He is, as He is indeed, an infinitely holy, just, sin-hating and sin-revenging God, who will not tolerate nor endure the worship of idols, you would be much more liable to feel the sensible exercises of enmity against Him than you are now. And this experience confirms. For we see that when men come to be under convictions, and to be made sensible that God is not as they have heretofore imagined, but that He is such a jealous and hating God, and whose wrath against sin is so dreadful, they are much more apt to have sensible exercises of enmity against Him than before. This Reformation audio track is a production of Stillwater's Revival Books. www.SWRB.com We can also be reached by email. at SWRB at SWRB.com by phone at 780-450-3730 by fax at 780-468-1096 or by mail at 4710-37A Avenue Edmonton that's E-D-M-O-N-T-O-N Alberta abbreviated capital A capital B Canada T6L3T5. You may also request a free printed catalog.
And remember that John Calvin, in defending the Reformation's regulative principle of worship, or what is sometimes called the scriptural law of worship, commenting on the words of God, which I commanded them not, neither came into my heart, from his commentary on Jeremiah 731, writes, God here cuts off from men every occasion for making evasions. since he condemns by this one phrase, I have not commanded them, whatever the Jews devised.
There is then no other argument needed to condemn superstitions than that they are not commanded by God. For when men allow themselves to worship God according to their own fancies, and attend not to His commands, they pervert true religion. And if this principle was adopted by the papists, all those fictitious modes of worship in which they absurdly exercise themselves would fall to the ground. It is indeed a horrible thing for the Papists to seek to discharge their duties towards God by performing their own superstitions.
There is an immense number of them, as it is well known, and as it manifestly appears. Were they to admit this principle, that we cannot rightly worship God except by obeying His word, they would be delivered from their deep abyss of error. The Prophet's words, then, are very important. When he says, that God had commanded no such thing, and that it never came to his mind, as though he had said that men assume too much wisdom when they devise what he never required, nay what he never knew.