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John Owen, in his work Of Temptation,
talks about the trials that are coming upon the world. Of Temptation,
to the reader, Christian reader, if you are in any measure awake
in these days in which we live, and have taken notice of the
manifold great and various temptations in which all sorts of persons
that know the Lord and Professor's name are beset, and whereunto
they are continually exposed, with what success those temptations
have obtained to the unspeakable scandal of the Gospel. With the
wounding and ruin of innumerable souls, I suppose you will not
inquire any further after other reasons of the publishing of
the ensuing warnings and directions, being suited to the times that
pass over us, and our own concern in them. This I shall only say
to those who think it fit to persist in any such inquiry. That though my first engagement
for the exposing of these meditations to public view arose from the
desires of some, whose avouching the interest of Christ in the
world by personal holiness and constant adhering to everything
that is made precious by its relation to Him, have given their
requests power over me to require at any time services of greater
importance, yet I dare not lay my doing of it so upon that account. is in the least to intimate that,
with respect to the general state of the things mentioned, I did
not myself esteem it seasonable and necessary to variety of outward
providences and dispensations which I have myself been exercised
in this world, with the inward trials they have been attended
with, added to the observation that I have had advantages to
make of the ways and walkings of others, their beginnings,
progresses, and endings, their risings and falls in profession
and conversation. in darkness and light, have left
such a constant sense and impression of the power and danger of temptations
upon my mind and spirit, that, without other pleas and pretenses,
I cannot but own a serious call to men to beware, with the discovery
of some of the most imminent ways and means of the prevalency
of present temptations to have been, in my own judgment, in
this season needful. But now, listener, if you are
amongst them who take no notice of these things or do not care
for them, who have no sense of the efficacies and dangers of
temptations in your own walking and Christian profession, nor
have observed the power of them upon others, who don't discern
the manifold advantages that they have gotten in these days
in which all things are shaken, nor been troubled or moved for
the sad successes they have had amongst professors, but suppose
that all things are well within, doors, and without. It would
be better, could you obtain fuller satisfaction to some of your
lusts and the pleasures or profits of the world, I desire you to
know that I do not write for you, nor esteem you a fit reader
or judge of what is here written. While all the issues of providential
dispensations in reference to the public concern of these nations
are perplexed and entangled, the footsteps of God lying in
the deep where his paths are not known, while in particular
unparalleled distresses and strange prosperities are measured out
to men, yea, to professing Christians, While the spirit of their giddiness
and delusion goes forth with such strength and power as it
seems to have received a commission to go and prosper, while there
is such division, strife, simulations attended with such evil surmises,
wrath and revenge found amongst the brethren, While the desperate
issues and products of men's temptations are seen daily in
partial and total apostasy in the decay of love, the overthrow
of faith, our days being filled with fearful examples of backsliding
such as former ages never knew. While there is a visible declension
from reformation seasoned upon the professing party of these
nations, Both as to personal holiness and zeal for the interest
of Christ, he that understands not, that there is an hour of
temptation that is coming upon the world, to try them to dwell
upon the earth, is doubtless either himself at present captivated
under the power of some woeful lust, corruption, or temptation,
There is indeed stark, blind, and knows not at all what it
is to serve God in temptations. With such then I have not at
present to do. For those who have in general
a sense of these things, who also in some measure are able
to consider that the plague has begun, that they may be further
awakened to look about them lest the infection have approached
nearer to them by some secret and imperceptible ways than they
did apprehend. lest they should be surprised
at, unawares hereafter, by any of those temptations that in
these days either waste at noon or else walk in darkness, is
the ensuing warning intended, and for the sake of them that
mourn in secret for all the abominations that are found among and upon
them that profess the gospel. and who are under the conduct
of the captain of their salvation. Fighting and resisting the power
of temptations, from what springs, soever they arise in themselves,
are these ensuing directions proposed to your consideration.
that our faithful and merciful High Priest, who both suffered
and was tempted, and is on that account touched with a feeling
of our infirmities, would accompany this small discourse with seasonable
supplies of His Spirit and suitable mercy to them that shall consider
it, that it may be useful to His servants for the ends in
which it is designed, is a prayer of Him who received this handful
of seed from His storehouse and treasure. John Owen Chapter 1
The words of the text, that are the foundation of the ensuing
discourse, the occasion of the words with their dependence,
the things especially aimed at in them, things considerable
in the words as to the general purpose in hand, of the general
nature of temptation in which it consists, the special nature
of temptation, temptation taken actively and passively, How is
it that God tempts any? His end in so doing, the way
in which He does it, of temptation and its special nature, of the
actions of it, the true nature of temptation, stated. Matthew
26 verse 41. Watch and pray that you enter
not into temptation. These words of our Savior are
repeated with very little alteration in the three evangelists. Only,
whereas Matthew and Mark have recorded them as above written,
Luke reports them thus. Rise and pray, lest you enter
into temptation. So that the whole of his caution
seems to have been arise, watch, and pray that you enter not into
temptation. Solomon tells us of some that
lie down on the top of a mast in the midst of the sea. Proverbs
23 verse 34. Men, overborne by security in
the mouth of destruction, if ever poor souls lay down on the
top of a mast in the midst of the sea, these disciples, with
our Savior in the garden, did so. Their Master, at a little
distance from them, was offering up prayers and supplications
with strong crying and tears, Hebrews 5, 7. being then taken
into his hand and beginning to taste that cup that was filled
with the curse and wrath due to their sins. The Jews, armed
for his and their destruction, being but a little more distant
from them. On the other hand, our Savior
had a little before informed them that that night he should
be betrayed and be delivered up to be slain. They saw that
he was sorrowful and very heavy. Matthew 26, verse 37. Nay, he
told him plainly that his soul was exceeding sorrowful even
unto death, Ver 38, and therefore entreated them to tarry and watch
with him, now that he was dying, and that for them, in this condition,
leaving them but a little space, like men forsaken of all love
towards him or care of themselves, they fall fast asleep. Even the
best of saints, being left to themselves, will quickly appear
to be less than men, to be nothing. All our own strength is weakness,
and all our own wisdom folly. Peter, being one of them, who
but a little before had with so much self-confidence affirmed
that, though all men forsook him, yet he never would so do.
Our Savior expostulates a matter in particular with them. Verse
40. He saith unto Peter, Could you
not watch with me one hour, as if he should have said, Are you
he, Peter, who but now boasts of your resolution, never to
forsake me? Is it likely that you should
hold out in this when you cannot watch with me one hour? Is this
your dying for me, to be dead in security when I am dying for
you? And indeed it would be an amazing
thing to consider that Peter should make so high a promise
and be immediately so careless and remiss in the pursuit of
it, but that we find the root of the same treachery abiding
and working in our own hearts, and do see the fruit of it brought
forth every day. The most noble engagements to
obedience quickly end in indeplorable negligence. Romans 7 verse 18.
In this state, our Savior admonishes them of their condition, their
weakness, their danger, and stirs them up to a prevention of that
ruin which lay at the door. He says, Arise, watch, and pray. I shall not insist on a particular
aimed at here by our Savior. and his caution to them that
were then present with him. The great temptation that was
coming on them from the scandal of the cross was doubtless in
his eye. But I shall consider the words
as containing a general direction to all the disciples of Christ
and their following of him throughout all generations. There are three
things in the words. One, the evil caution against. temptation, number two, the means
of its prevalency by our entering into it, and number three, the
way of preventing it. Watch and pray. It is not in
my thoughts to handle the commonplace of temptations, but only the
danger of them in general, with the means of preventing that
danger yet. that we may know what we affirm and whereof we
speak, some concerns of the general nature of temptation may be premised
first. For the general nature of tempting
and temptation, it lies among things indifferent to try, to
experiment, to prove, to pierce a vessel that the liquor that
is in it may be known. is as much as is signified by
it. Hence God has said sometimes
to tempt and we are commanded as our duty to tempt or to try
or search ourselves to know what is in us and to pray that God
would do also. So temptation is like a knife
that may either cut the meat or or the throat of a man. It
may be his food or his poison, his exercise or his destruction. Secondly, temptation in its special
nature, as it denotes any evil, is considered either actively
as it leads to evil or passively as it has an evil and suffering
in it. So temptation is taken for affliction. James 1 verse 2. For in that
sense we are to count it all joy when we fall into temptation. and the other, that we enter
not into it again. Actively considered, it either
denotes an attempt or a design for the bringing out of the special
end of temptation, namely a leading into evil. So it is said that
God tempts no man, James 1 verse 13, with a design for sin as
such. or the general nature and end
of temptation, which is trial. So God tempted Abraham, Genesis
22 verse 1, and he proves or tempts by false prophets, Deuteronomy
13 verse 3. Now, for as God's tempting of
any Two things are to be considered. First, what is the end? Why he
does it? And number two, the way in which
he does it. For the first, his general ends are two. He does
it to show to man what is in him, that is, the man himself,
and that ether as to his grace or to his corruption. I speak
not now of it as it may have a place and bear a part in judiciary
obduration. Grace and corruption lie deep
in the heart, and oftentimes deceive themselves in the search
after the one or the other of them. When we give in to the
soul to try what grace is there, corruption comes out. And when
we search for corruption, grace appears. So as the soul kept
in uncertainty, we fell in our trials. God comes with a gauge
that goes to the bottom. He sends his instruments of trial
into the bowels and the inmost parts of the soul and lets man
see what is in him, of what metal he is constituted. So he tempted
Abraham to show him his faith. Abraham didn't know what faith
he had. I mean, what power and vigor was in his faith. until
God drew it out by that great trial and temptation. When God
says He knew it, He made Abraham to know it. So he tried Hezekiah
to discover his pride. God left him. Did he might see
what was in his heart, 2 Chronicles 32 verse 31. He didn't know that
he had such a proud heart. so apt to be lifted up as he
appeared to have until God tried him, and so let out his filth
and poured it out before his face. The issues of such discoveries
to the saints and thankfulness, humiliation, and treasuring up
of experience I shall not treat of now. Number two, God does
it to show himself to man that, in a way of preventing grace,
a man shall see that it is God alone who keeps all from sin. Until we are tempted, we think
we live on our own strength. Though all men do this or that,
we will not. When the trial comes, we quickly
see whence this is our preservation by standing or falling. So was
it in the case of Abimelech, Genesis 20 verse 6. I withheld
you. Number two, in a way of renewing
grace, he would have the temptation continue with Paul that he might
reveal himself to him in the sufficiency of his renewing grace. Second Corinthians 12 9. We know
not the power and strength that God puts forth on our behalf.
nor what is the sufficiency of its grace until comparing the
temptation with our own weakness that appears to us. The efficacy
of an antidote is found when poison has been taken, and the
preciousness of medicines is made known by diseases. We shall
never know what strength there is in grace if we do not know
what strength there is in temptation. We must be tried that we may
be made sensible of being preserved. and many other good and gracious
sins he has which he accomplishes towards his saints by his trials
and temptations not now to be insisted on. For the ways in
which God accomplishes his search, trial, or temptations, these
are some of them. Number one, he puts men on great
duties such as they cannot apprehend that they have any strength for,
nor indeed have. So he tended to Abraham by calling
him to that duty of sacrifice and his son, a thing absurd to
reason, bitter to nature, and grievous to him on all accounts
whatever. Many men do not know what is
in them, or rather, what is ready for them. until they are put
upon what seems utterly above their strength, indeed upon what
is really above their strength. The duties of God in an ordinary
way requires that our hands are not proportioned to what strength
we have in ourselves, but to what help and relief is laid
up for us in Christ. and we are to address ourselves
to the greatest performances with a subtle persuasion that
we have not the ability for the least. This is the law of grace. But yet, when any duty is required
that is extraordinary, that is a secret not often discovered,
in the yoke of Christ it is a trial, a temptation. Number two, by
putting them upon great sufferings, How many have unexpectedly found
strength to die at a stake, to endure tortures for Christ, yet
their call to it was a trial? This, Peter tells us, is one
way in which we are brought into trying temptations, 1 Peter 1,
verses 6 and 7. Our temptations arise from the
fiery trial, and yet the end is but a trial of our faith.
3. By his providential disposing of all things, so as that occasions
to send will be administered to men, which is a case mentioned
in Deuteronomy 13, verse 3, and innumerable other instances may
be added. now, they are not properly the
temptations of God as coming from Him, with His end upon them
that are here intended. And therefore I shall set these
apart from our present consideration. It is, then, temptation in its
special nature, as it denotes an active efficiency toward sinning,
as it is managed with evil to evil that I intend. In this sense,
temptation may proceed either singly from Satan or the world,
or other men in the world, or from ourselves, or jointly from
all or some of them in their several combinations. Number
one. Satan tempts sometimes singly
by himself without taking advantage from the world, the things or
persons of it, or ourselves. So he deals with his injection
of evil and blasphemous thoughts of God into the hearts of the
saints. which is His own work alone,
without any advantage from the world of our own hearts. For
nature will contribute nothing thereunto, nor anything that
is in the world, nor any man of the world. For none can conceive
a God and conceive evil of Him. In this, Satan is alone in the
sin, and shall be so in the punishment of it. These fiery darts are
prepared in the forge of his own malice, and shall, with all
their venom and poison, be turned into his own heart forever. Sometimes
Satan makes use of the world and joins forces against us without
any help from within. So he tempted our Savior by showing
him all the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them, Matthew
4 verse 8, and the variety of the assistances he finds from
the world in persons and things which I must not insist on. The
innumerable instruments and weapons he takes from this of all sorts
and at all seasons are inexpressible. 3. Sometimes he takes an assistance
from ourselves also. It is not with us as it is with
Christ when Satan came to tempt him. He declares that he had
nothing in him. John 14 verse 30. It is otherwise
with us. He has, for the encompassing
of most of his sins, a sure party within our own breasts. James
1, 14 and 15. So he tempted Judas. He was at
work himself. He put it into his heart to betray
Christ. Luke 22, verse 3. He entered
into him for that purpose. And he sets the world at work,
the things of it, providing for him thirty pieces of silver.
Verse 5. They covenanted to give him money. and Aminovit, even the priests
and the Pharisees, and calls in the assistance of its own
corruption. He was covetous, a thief, and
he had the bag. I might also show how the world
and our own corruptions act, single by themselves and jointly
in conjunction with Satan and one another. in this business
of temptation. But the truth is, the principles,
ways, and means of temptation, the kinds, degrees, efficacy,
and causes of them, are so inexpressible, large, and various, the circumstances
of them, from providences, natures, conditions, spiritual and natural,
with the particular case thence arising, so innumerable and impossible
to be comprised within any bound or order, that to attempt to
give in an account of them would be to undertake that which would
be endless. I shall content myself to give
a description of the general nature of that which we are to
watch against, which will make way for what I am aiming at.
Temptation, then, in general, is anything, any state or way
or condition, but upon any account whatever has a force or efficacy
to seduce, to draw the mind and heart of a man from its obedience
which God requires of him. and to any sin, any degree of
it, whatever. In particular, that is a temptation
to any man which causes or occasions him to sin or in anything to
go off from his duty, either by bringing evil into his heart
or drawing out that evil that is in his heart, or any other
way, diverting him from communion with God in that constant, equal,
universal obedience and manner that is required of him. For
declaring of this description, I shall only observe that though
temptation seems to be of a more active importance, and so to
denote only the power of seduction to sin itself, yet in the scripture
it is commonly taken in a neutral sense, and denotes a manner of
the temptation or the thing in which we are tempted. And this
is the ground of the description I have given of it, be it what
it will, that from anything whatever within us or without us has advantage
to hinder in duty or to provoke to or in any way to occasion
sin. It is a temptation and so to
be looked on, be it business, employment, course of life, company,
affections, nature, or corrupt design. relation, delights, name,
reputation, esteem, abilities, parts or excellencies of body
or mind, place, dignity, art. So far as they further or occasion
the promotion of the ends before mention, dare all of them no
less truly temptations, did the most violent solicitations of
Satan, or allurements of the world. And that soul lies at
the brink of ruin who does not discern it. But this will be
further discovered in our process. End of chapter one.
Of Temptation (1) The Trials That Are Coming Upon the World
Series John Owen's Temptation Book
While all the issues of providential dispensations, in reference to the public concerns of these nations, are perplexed and entangled, the footsteps of God lying in the deep, where his paths are not known; while, in particular, unparalleled distresses and strange prosperities are measured out to men, yea, to professors; while a spirit of error, giddiness, and delusion goes forth with such strength and efficacy, he that understands not that there is an "hour of temptation" come upon the world, to "try them that dwell upon the earth," is doubtless either himself at present captivated under the power of some woeful lust, corruption, or temptation, or is indeed stark blind, and knows not at all what it is to serve God in temptations.
| Sermon ID | 1126241220135491 |
| Duration | 24:04 |
| Date | |
| Category | Audiobook |
| Bible Text | Matthew 26:41 |
| Language | English |
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