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Andrew Fuller was a gifted and
highly useful English Particular Baptist pastor who lived from
1754 to 1815. The following message is found
in Volume 1 of the Complete Works of the Reverend Andrew Fuller,
published in the year 1845, on pages 117 to 134. The title of the message is The
Nature and Importance of Walking by Faith. It was preached at
Nottingham before the Northamptonshire Association, June 2, 1784. There is a note by the title
of the message, and it reads as follows. There is sometimes
something instructive in the history of a sermon. Many a minister
could disclose interesting facts as to the origin of some of his
most useful discourses. This sermon, delivered at the
annual session of the Association when, in the recommendation of
a monthly meeting for prayer, originated the great missionary
enterprise, was not composed with strenuous application in
prospect of the service he had undertaken. On his way to the
association, the roads in several places were flooded, and Mr. Fuller came to one part which,
being deep and he a stranger, he was somewhat reluctant to
go on. A plain country man, residing
in the neighborhood and better acquainted with the depth of
the water than our traveler, recommended him to urge his horse
through the water. Go on, sir, you are quite safe. Mr. Fuller went on, but the water
touched his saddle, and he paused to think. Go on, sir, exclaimed
the man. All is right. Taking the man
at his word, the traveler proceeded, and the text was suggested, We
walk by faith, not by sight. He delivered the sermon, which
his brethren wisely requested him to print. The text for the
message is 2 Corinthians chapter 5 and verse 7. We walk by faith,
not by sight. Much is said concerning faith
in the Holy Scriptures, especially in the New Testament, and great
stress is laid upon it, especially by the author of the epistles
of the Hebrews. This, I apprehend, is not very
difficult to be accounted for. Ever since the fall of man, we
have been entirely dependent on the mercy of God through a
mediator. We all lie at his discretion
and are beholden to his mere sovereign grace for all the happiness
we enjoy. We have nothing on which we can
rely for the possession or continuance of any good but the word and
will of God. The only life, therefore, proper
for a fallen creature in our world is a life of faith, to
be constantly sensible of our dependence upon God, continually
going to Him and receiving all from Him for the life that now
is, and that which is to come. Believers, and they only, are
brought to be of a spirit suitable to such a kind of life. The hearts
of all others are too full of pride and self-sufficiency. But
these are contented to be pensioners on the bounty of another, can
willingly commit their all into Christ's hands, and venture their
present and everlasting concerns upon His Word. The just shall
live by faith. self-renunciation and confidence
in another are ideas which seem ever to accompany that of faith.
The Apostle speaks of being justified by faith, that is, not by our
own righteousness, but by the righteousness of another, of
living by faith, that is, not by our own earnings, so to speak,
but by the generosity of another. of standing by faith, that is,
not upon our own legs, as we should say, but upon those of
another, and here of walking by faith, which is as much as
if he had said, we walk not trusting our own eyes, but the eyes of
another. We are blind and cannot guide
ourselves. We must therefore rely upon God
for discretion and instruction. This, my brethren, is the life
we must live while in this world, and this the manner in which
we must walk in our progress toward the heavenly state. Great
is the wisdom and goodness of God in so ordering it. Great
glory hereby redounds to Him, and great good accrues to us. All I shall attempt will be to
explain the matter, explain the nature, and show the importance
of the Christian's walk by faith. Both are necessary, the one that
we may form just ideas of what we have to do, and the other
that we may feel our hearts excited to do it. O may the same Spirit
who indited the sacred passage breathe upon us that these ends
may be accomplished. Heading 1. Let us inquire what
is intended by the sacred writer when he says, We walk by faith,
not by sight. Faith and sight. it is easy to
see here stand opposed as indeed they do in many other parts of
scripture especially in that remarkable definition of faith
wherein the Apostle to the Hebrews calls it the evidence of things
not seen but what kind of site it is opposed to may deserve
our attentive inquiry and here before I proceed any further
in good order to make the way clear I will advert to a notion
which has been too generally received, but which appears to
me unscriptural and pernicious. What I refer to is that faith
is to be considered as opposed to spiritual sight or spiritual
discernment. It is true I never heard of any
persons, either in preaching, writing, or conversation, who
said so and expressed words. But expressions are often used
which convey the same idea. When the terms faith and sense
are used, it is common with many to understand by the latter sensible
communion with God. So it is common to hear a life
of faith opposed to a life of frames and feelings. Those times
in which we have the most spiritual discernment of God's glory, sensible
communion with Him, and feel our love most ardently drawn
out to Him, are thought to have the least of the exercise of
faith. It is common to say, there is
no need for faith then, at those times we live by sense. but that
when all our graces seem dead and we can see no evidence from
which to draw the favorable conclusion, then is the time to walk by faith. The meaning is, then, is the
time to believe all is well and rest easy whether we have evidence
that it is so or not. Thus, we have often heard several
passages of scripture applied or rather miserably misapplied. For instance, that in the last
chapter of Habakkuk. Although the fig tree shall not
blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vines. The labor of
the olive shall fail, and the fields shall yield no meat. The
flock shall be cut off from the fold, and no herd in the stalls.
Yet will I rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation. As if by the fig tree not blossoming,
etc., were met the Christian graces not being in exercise. And that then was the time to
walk by faith, to rejoice in the God of our salvation. That
passage also concerning Abraham who, against hope, believed in
hope, has been understood as if to be strong in faith, giving
glory to God, like Abraham, was to maintain an unshaken persuasion
of the goodness of our state, whether we have evidence or no
evidence. So also that passage in the 50th
of Isaiah has been frequently brought for this purpose Who
is among you that feareth the Lord, that obeyeth the voice
of his servant, that walketh in darkness and hath no light?
Let him trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God. As though a state of darkness
there meant a state of mind wherein a person could discern no evidence
whatever of his being a good man. And as though such were
there encouraged to make themselves easy and leave the matter with
God, not doubting the goodness of their state. Our Lord's rebuke
to Thomas has been understood in the same manner. Because thou
hast seen me, thou hast believed. Blessed are they that have not
seen, and yet have believed. As if a blessing should rest
upon those who, destitute of all discernible evidence of their
Christianity, nevertheless believe it with an unshaken confidence.
If this is to walk by faith, then faith must stand opposed
to spiritual sight or spiritual discernment. I doubt not that
there is such a thing as to live upon frames, which ought to be
guarded against. If I imagine, for instance, that
God changes as I change, that he admires me at one time and
not at another, or that his great love, whence all my hope of salvation
springs, rises and falls according to the state of my mind, this
is doubtless to dishonor God. as it strikes at the immutability
of his love. So, if I derive my chief consolation
for reflecting upon what I am, instead of reflecting upon what
Christ is, this is to dishonor Christ, and I may very properly
stand opposed to living by faith. But this is not the common idea
of living upon frames. It has been usual with many to
account that man to live upon frames who, when he is stupid
and dark and carnal, cannot be confident about the safety of
his state, and him to live by faith who can maintain his confidence
in the worst of frames. Allow me, brethren, to offer
three or four plain reasons against this notion of the subject. 1. Faith is the only means of spiritual
discernment and communion with God, and therefore cannot be
opposed to them. Our best frames are those in
which faith is most in exercise, and our worst when it is the
least. Faith is the eye of the mind. It is that by which we
realize invisible and spiritual objects, and so have fellowship
with God. Yes, it is by this grace that
we behold the glory of the Lord and are changed into the same
image from glory to glory by the Spirit of the Lord. 2. If faith is opposed to spiritual
discernment and communion with God, then it must work alone.
It must never act in conjunction with any of those graces wherein
we feel our hearts go out to God. For this would be to confound
faith and sense together. But this is contrary to fact.
When we have most faith in exercise, we have most love, most hope,
most joy. And so, of all the graces, all
sweetly act in harmony. Thus the scriptures represent
it as ever accompanied by other graces, especially by love, purity,
and lowliness of heart. It is expressly said to work
by love, and it should seem never works without it. It is also
said to purify the heart. The exercise of faith, therefore,
and the exercise of holiness can never be separated. Especially
true is it that it is ever attended with lowliness of heart. There
are two instances of faith recorded which our Lord particularly commended,
saying He had not seen such great faith, no, not in Israel. The
one was the case of the woman of Canaan, and the other that
of the Roman centurion. And both these were attended
with great humility. The one was contented to be treated
as a dog, and the other thought himself unworthy that Christ
should come under his roof. A confidence unaccompanied with
these, if it may be called faith at all, seems nearly to resemble
what the Apostle James called faith without works, which he
pronounced to be dead, being alone. Three, if faith is to
be understood in this sense, then it not only works without
other graces, but contrary to them. The scriptures encourage
a spirit of self-examination and godly jealousy. They are
modest and upright graces, and constitute much of the beauty
of Christianity. Examine yourselves, whether ye
be in the faith, say the inspired writers. Try your own selves. Let us fear lest the promise
being left us of entering into his rest, any of us should seem
to come short of it. Let us pass the time of our sojourning
here in fear. But always to be confident of
the safety of our state, let the work of sanctification go
on as it may, is not only unfriendly to such a spirit, but subversive
of it. Hence it is common with some
to call every degree of godly jealousy by the name of unbelief. and to impute it to the enemy,
yea, to shun it, and cry out against it as if it were itself
a devil. This is not the most favorable
symptom of an honest heart. Surely a heart truly upright
would not wish to receive comfort for itself but upon solid evidence. And where it was taught to call
such a fear by the name of unbelief, I know not. I think I may say
it never came from the word of God. If the veracity of God were
called in question, no doubt it would be unbelief. But the
question at those times with a sincere mind is not whether
God will prove faithful in saving those that trust in him, but
whether he be indeed the subject of that trust. His doubts do
not respect God, but himself. Love and fear are the two great
springs and guardians of right action. When love is in exercise,
we do not stand in need of fear to stimulate or guide us. But
when we are not constrained by the former, it is well to be
restrained by the latter. 4. Faith, in that case, must
be unsupported by evidence. God's word affords us no warrant
to conclude ourselves interested in his promises. and so in a
state of safety, unless we bear the characters to which the promises
are made. We have no right, for instance,
to apply to ourselves that promise, Fear thou not, for I am with
thee. Be not dismayed, for I am thy God. I will strengthen thee,
yea, I will help thee, yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand
of my righteousness, unless we bear the character of the party
there addressed. This is expressed in the foregoing
verse, But thou, Israel, art my servant, etc. If from the
real desire of our hearts we yield not ourselves servants
to God, no impression of this passage upon our minds can warrant
us to conclude that God is indeed our God. or that we shall be
strengthened, helped, or upholden by him. So also no man has any
right to conclude himself interested in that promise. I have loved
thee with an everlasting love, therefore with lovingkindness
have I drawn thee, unless he be so drawn from the love of
sin, self, and the world as to love God better than any of them. But if we are to hold fast the
confidence of our safety, whatever be the condition of our mind
or the evils in our conduct, then we are, in that instance,
to believe without evidence. If the work of sanctification
be the only scriptural evidence of our interest in Christ, then
in proportion to that work increasing or declining, our evidence must
be strong or weak. When we degenerate into carnality
and indifference it must of course diminish. To say then that those
are the times in which we exercise most faith is the same thing
as to say we exercise most faith when we have least evidence and
consequently it must be a kind of faith, if it be faith at all,
that is unsupported by evidence. Here there is a footnote that
reads as follows. All true faith must have truth
for its foundation. That faith in which the Scriptures
promise salvation is founded upon evidence, and that evidence
is the testimony of God. Hence it is with great propriety
by the Apostle defined the belief of the truth. This definition
includes more than many seem to apprehend. To believe the
truth in reality is cordially to credit the account which God
has given of himself, of us, of sin, of Christ, of earth,
of heaven, etc. Whoever thus realizes divine
truth must of necessity feel its influence. The same apostle
tells us that those who receive the word as it is find it effectually
to work in them. Hence we are said to be sanctified
through truth, to know the truth and to be made free by it. I
cannot believe God to be that amiable and gracious being which
his word represents him to be without loving him. I cannot
believe myself to be that vile and worthless being that God
represents me to be without abhorring myself in dust and ashes. If I really credit what God hath
said of the exceeding sinfulness of sin, It is impossible but
that I should hate it, and perceive its dreadful demerit, and plainly
see myself righteously condemned for being a subject of it. If
I really believe the record that God has given of His Son, that
is the same thing as to think of his excellences in measure
as God thinks of them. And in that case, I cannot but
embrace him with all my heart and venture my everlasting all
upon his atonement. If, from my heart, I believe
what God hath said of the vanity of this world, and the substantial
bliss of that to come, if I realize the emptiness of all the enjoyments
of the former, and the eternal weight of glory pertaining to
the latter, I shall necessarily labor, not for the meat that
perisheth, but for that which endureth unto everlasting life. If this be a just notion of faith,
then it will follow, one, that all unconverted men are truly,
and in the most literal and proper sense of the word, unbelievers. Whatever they may pretend, they
do not realize what God has revealed of His character, or their own,
of the nature of sin and its dreadful demerit, of the excellences
of Christ, of the vanity of this world, and the solid bliss of
the next. Nor can their unbelief be removed
but by their becoming entirely new creatures, by a work of the
Almighty Spirit of God. 2. That a mere cold assent to
things, commonly called believing the doctrines of the gospel,
unaccompanied with love to them or a dependence on Christ for
salvation, is very far from being true saving faith. Let but the
doctrines of the gospel be really and heartily believed, as God
has revealed them. And, as before said, it will
be impossible but that we should feel a determination to venture
upon Christ alone for salvation, with all the proper effects of
living faith. But persons may profess to believe
these doctrines when they do not, or may believe them partially,
but not as God has revealed them. Yea, a person may think these
his professions to be true, and these his notions to be just,
and yet be an infidel at heart. The Jews profess to believe Moses. And no doubt verily thought they
did. But our Lord told them, Had ye believed Moses, ye would
have believed me, for he wrote of me. We are under a necessity,
therefore, of concluding that where these effects were not
produced, the faith of such persons is, in a great degree, pretended
and not real. And in that degree in which it
is real, it is very superficial. It reaches only to the shell
of truth at farthest. The essence and glory of the
gospel is by them neither discerned nor believed. 3. that all that
confidence which is unsupported by evidence held fast by so many
is not faith, but presumption or delusion. If faith is the
belief of the truth, then whatever I believe ought to be a truth
and a truth supported by evidence prior to and independently of
my believing it. This is certainly the case respecting
the excellence and all sufficiency of Christ. He is what He is,
whether I believe it or not. However, I may disallow Him.
He is chosen of God and precious. Whatever real excellence I at
any time discern or believe to be in Him, I only believe the
truth. And what would have been the
truth if I had never believed it? Faith, therefore, draws aside
the veil, and I discover things in some measure as they are. So if that persuasion which I
may have of my interest in Christ have any right to be the name
of faith, it must be a truth, and a truth capable of being
proved by scripture, by scriptural evidence at the time. to the message after that note.
These are but two cases that I recollect in the whole system
of true Christian experience which so much as seem to resemble
this notion and these are in fact essentially different from
it. One is that of the most eminent
Christians having a general and well-grounded persuasion of their
interest in Christ even at those times wherein they may not experience
such evident and sensible exercises of grace as they do at other
times. But then, it is to be observed,
grace has more ways than one of being an exercise. The grace
of love, for instance, sometimes it is exercised in the most tender
and affectionate feelings of the heart towards Christ, longing
to be with him and to enjoy him in the world to come. At other
times it works more in a way of serving him and promoting
his interests in the present world. This latter may not so
sensibly strike the person himself as being an exercise of love,
but perhaps other people may consider it superior evidence.
The industrious peasant, sitting in his evening chair, sees his
children gathering round him and courting his affections by
a hundred little winning ways. He looks and smiles and loves. The next day he returns to his
labor and cheerfully bears the burdens of the day in order to
provide for these little ones and promote their interest. During
his day's labor, he may not feel his love operate in such sensible
emotions as he did the evening before. Nay, he may be so attentive
to other things as not immediately to have them in his thoughts.
What then? He loves his children. Indeed,
he gives proof of it. by cheerfully enduring the toils
of labor, and willingly denying himself of many a comfort, that
they might share their part. And were he to hear of their
being injured or afflicted, he would quickly feel the returns
of glowing affection, in as strong and perhaps stronger emotions
than ever. Thus the believer may have real
love to God in exercise, exciting him to a cheerful and habitual
discharge of duty, and a careful watch against evil, and yet feel
little or none of that desirable tenderness of heart which at
other times he experiences. He has grace in exercise. only it does not work in the
same way as it does at other times. And he, in general, enjoys
a conscious satisfaction that the more he knows of God, His
holy law, and glorious gospel, the more he loves them. During
this, he may have an abiding satisfaction that things are
right with him. But this is a very different thing from a person,
at all events, maintaining the safety of his state, yea, and
reckoning himself in so doing to be strong in faith, giving
glory to God, while carnality governs his spirit, and folly
debases his conversation. The other case is when, on a
failure of evidence from a reflection on past experiences, the believer
has recourse to an immediate application to the Lord Jesus
Christ, casting himself directly on his mercy and relying on his
word, seeing, he has said, him that cometh to me I will in no
wise cast out. This case, no doubt, often occurs. The believer, through the prevalence
of carnality with some other causes, too often finds his evidences
for glory so obscured that past experiences will afford but small
consolation. At such a time his mind is either
easy and carnally disposed, in that case a few painful fears
will do him no harm, or else his heart is depressed with perplexity
and gloom. in which case nothing is better
than immediately to go to Christ as a poor sinner for salvation. This is the shortest and it is
commonly the surest way. It is not best in such a state
of mind to start disputing whether we have believed or not. Be that
as it may, the door of mercy is still open and the Redeemer
still says, Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.
It is best, therefore, to make a fresh venture of our souls
upon him, that if we have never before trusted in him, we may
now. This is no more than he has a
warrant at any time to do. Let him be as they may with him,
for though internal qualifications are necessary to our concluding
ourselves interested in Christ, Yet it is not so in respect of
application to him. The perplexed soul need not say
before he ventures to inquire whether he be fit to come to
Christ. It is not required that he should
prove his saintship before he applies for mercy, though it
is before he claims an interest in gospel blessings. All that
is necessary here is that he be sensible of his being a vile
and lost sinner, and that is not to be considered as a qualification
giving him a right to come, but as a state of mind essential
to the act itself of coming. Many a Christian has found sweet
rest to his soul by such a direct application to Christ, and surely
it would be much better for Christians who go almost all their life
in painful perplexity, lest they should be mistaken at last, if
instead of perpetually pouring on past experiences, they were
to practice more in this way. This would furnish them with
present evidence. which is much the best, and what
God best approves, for He loves to have us continue to exercise
our graces, and not barely to remember that we have exercised
them sometime or other heretofore. This, in some sort, may be called
walking by faith and not by sight. And in this case, faith may in
some sense be opposed to spiritual sight. It is opposed to that
discernment which we sometimes have of being true Christians
from a review of past experiences. But then this is ever attended
with present spiritual discernment of Christ's excellence, and a
longing desire after interest in Him. And herein essentially
differs from what we have been opposing. Confidence in the one
case is nothing else but carnal security, tending to make men
easy without God. Confidence in the other is an
actual venture of the soul afresh on the Lord Jesus, encouraged
by His gracious testimony. The subject of the one considers
himself as an established saint, the other as a poor, lost sinner. and deals with Christ for salvation
just as he did when he first applied to him. To the one we
say, be not high-minded, but fear. To the other, fear not. Thou shalt not be ashamed. None
ever trusted in him and was confounded. In what sense then do we walk
by faith and not by sight? I answer in general, walking
by faith is a going forward in the ways of godliness, as influenced
not by sensible but by invisible objects, objects of the reality
of which we have no evidence but the testimony of God. But
perhaps faith may be considered as opposed to sight, more particularly
in three senses, namely to a corporal sight, to discoveries of mere
reason, and to ultimate vision. 1. To walk by faith is opposed to
walking by corporal sight. In this sense, we shall find
it plentifully used in the eleventh chapter to the Hebrews concerning
Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, and others. Thus Abel, by faith,
offered a more excellent offering than Cain. God had said, in effect,
once for all, that he would never speak nor be spoken to in any
way of friendship by any of the human race but through a mediator. This was intimated partly by
man's being debarred from all access to the tree of life, partly
by the promise of the woman's seed, and partly by the institution
of sacrifices. Cain overlooked all these and
approached God without an expiatory sacrifice, as if there had been
no breach between them and so no need of an atonement. This
was an instance of daring unbelief. Abel, on the contrary, took God
at His word, perceived the evil of sin and the awful breach made
by it, dared not to bring an offering without a victim for
atonement, but had respect to the promised Messiah, and thus,
by faith in the unseen Lamb, offered a more excellent sacrifice
than Cain. Thus also it is said of Noah,
by faith he being warned of God of things not seen as yet. moved
with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house by the
witch he condemned the world. No doubt the world were ready
to despise Noah while building his ark as an enthusiast whose
faculties were probably deranged who put himself to a deal of
trouble and wanted to put other people to as much merely through
a notion that ran in his head that the world should be drowned.
Why, was there anything in the world that looked like it or
seemed to pretend such an event? Nothing at all. All things seemed
to continue as they were from the creation. What then could
induce Noah to do as he did? Nothing but the testimony of
God, which he credited and acted accordingly. So also it is said
of Abraham, when called to go into another country, by faith
he obeyed and went out, not knowing whither he went. A pretty errand,
it would seem, to his friends and neighbors. It is possible
that some of these, observing him preparing for a journey,
might inquire whither he was going. Going? I am going to a
land which the Lord is to show me. And have you ever seen this
land? No, I neither know the country
nor a step of the way to it. How fine tale indeed! But seriously, what in the world
can move you to such an undertaking? I rely upon the testimony of
God. He hath said, Get thee out of
thy country and from thy kindred unto a land that I will show
thee. I take him at his word. and act
accordingly." These were cases in point for the Apostle to quote.
The Hebrews seemed hardly contented with an unseen high priest and
invisible religion. They had been used to priests
and sacrifices that they could hear and see and handle with
their bodily senses. Like their fathers by Moses,
therefore they were ready to say of Jesus, We know not where
he is gone. Come, let us make a captain and
return to Judaism. Judaism, says the apostle, methinks
true Judaism would condemn you. All your forefathers acted upon
a principle which you seem about to abandon. They walked by faith,
not by sight. They lived, they died in the
faith, even in the faith of that very Messiah of whom you make
so light. In this sense, it is easy to
see faith and sight are to be taken in our Lord's rebuke to
Thomas when he says, blessed are they that have not seen and
yet have believed. It is as if he had said, you
think you have acted very prudently, but what must the Christian world
do in after ages if they act upon your principle? Christianity
and the whole of it will depend upon testimony. Whoever receives
it after your death, yea, in your lifetime, besides yourselves,
must receive it upon your testimony. Blessed are they that shall cordially
so receive it. And blessed had you been, Thomas,
to have set them the example by believing the testimony of
your brethren. Faith may be considered as opposed
to the discoveries of mere reason unassisted by revelation. In
this sense it seems to be used in reference to Sarah. Through
faith she received strength to conceive seed and was delivered
of a child when she was past age because she judged him fateful
who had promised. Talsera should have a son was
not only indiscernible by the corporal eye, but by an eye of
reason, since it must be, if at all, entirely beside the common
course of nature. She had nothing to rely upon
in this case, but the promise of God. We do not suppose faith
and right reason to be opposites. that be far from us. On the contrary,
nothing is more evident than that Christianity is entirely
a rational system, and it is its glory that it is so. We should
never have been required to give a reason for the hope that is
in us, if there had been no reason to be given. But though nothing
in Revelation be contrary to right reason, yet there are many
things which our reason could never have found out, had they
not been made known by the supreme intelligence. The plan of redemption
by Jesus Christ, in particular, contains a set of truths which
the eye had never seen, nor the ear heard, nor had they entered
the heart of man to conceive, had not God revealed them to
us by His Spirit. For all the pleasure that we
enjoy, brethren, in contemplating these glorious truths, We are
wholly indebted to the testimony of God. Indeed, so far are they
from being discoverable by mere reason that every blessing contains
in it abundantly more than men or angels could have asked or
thought. It staggers our reason to receive
it. Even now it is told us. At every
pause we must stand and wonder, saying, Is this the manner of
man, O Lord? Not only was our reason incapable
of finding out many truths before they were revealed, but even
now they are revealed, they contain things above our comprehension.
It is one thing to say that scripture is contrary to right reason,
and another thing to say that it may exhibit truths too great
for our reason to grasp. Here there is another footnote,
and it reads as follows. May not the great disputes which
have taken place concerning faith and reason, as if the one were
opposite to the other, have arisen in a great degree from using
the term reason without defining it? The word reason, like the
word understanding, has two senses. One, it signifies the fitness
of things. So the apostles used it when
they said, it is not reason that we should leave the word of God
and serve tables. That is, it is not fit or proper. Two, it signifies our power or
capacity of reasoning. It is said of Nebuchadnezzar
that his reason returned to him. That is, his power or capacity
of reasoning. Now it is easy to see that these
are two essentially different ideas. The one is perfect and
immutable, remaining always the same. The other is shattered
and broken by sin, and liable to a thousand variations through
blindness and prejudice. No divine truth can disagree
with the former, but it may be both above and contrary to the
latter. If people were to talk in matters
of science and philosophy, as some have affected to talk in
religion, they would be treated as fools and deemed unworthy
of attention. A philosopher, for instance,
tells an unlettered countryman that it is generally thought
that the earth turns round every day upon its own axis, and not
the sun around the earth. The countryman replies, I don't
believe it. Very likely, says the philosopher,
but why not? It is contrary to my reason.
Contrary to your reason, that may be, but I hope you do not
think that everything contrary to your reason is contrary to
right reason. Were men of the greatest understanding
but to consider that there is a far greater disproportion between
some truths respecting the existence of a God, and their capacities
than between any truths of human science, and the capacity of
the most ignorant rustic, they would be ashamed to disbelieve
a truth because it is not according to their reason. It is right,
and stands commended in Scripture, to apply our hearts to understanding. But it is wrong and stands condemned
in scripture by the same pen and in the same page to lean
to our own understanding. So I apprehend it is right to
adhere to right reason and to use all means to find out what
it is. But it is wrong and presumptuous
to set up our reason as a standard competent to decide what is truth
and what is error. For that is the same thing as
supposing that our ideas of fitness and unfitness always accord with
the real fitness of things. Returning to the text of the
sermon. God must have told us nothing
about his own existence and infinite perfections if he had told us
nothing but what we could fully comprehend. In this case, it
becomes us to know our littleness and to bow our understandings
to the supreme intelligence. It is the most rational thing
in the world so to do. If God has said anything, we
ought to rest assured that so it is. In those cases, we ought
to trust his eyes, so to speak. rather than our own, and be content
to walk by faith, not by sight. 3. Faith may be considered as opposed
to ultimate vision. The saints in glory are described
as seeing Christ as He is, as knowing even as they are known,
and as being citizens of a city where there shall be no night,
and where they shall need no candle, neither light of the
sun nor light of the moon, for the Lord God shall be the light
thereof. Our knowledge of things there
will be immediate and intuitive, and not as it is here through
the medium of the word and ordinances. The sacred scriptures are to
us, with reverence be it spoken, like a letter from a distant
friend. But when we come face to face,
ink and paper shall be needed no more. However, for the present
it is otherwise. We are yet in the body, and while
such, as the apostle observes in the verse preceding the text,
we are absent from the Lord and must be glad of these helps. Let us make much of this letter
and be thankful that we can walk by it through this world, as
by a light in a dark place, till we come to a better, where we
shall no more walk by faith, but by sight. Thus far I have dwelt chiefly
upon the terms, but that we may obtain a more comprehensive view
of the thing itself, namely of a Christian's walking by faith,
let us take a view of a few of those circumstances and situations
through which he has to pass during the present life. It is
in these that faith, as well as every other grace, is exercised. Allow me then to request your
attention, brethren, to four or five observations on the subject. 1. There are many dark seasons
in God's providential dealings with us, in which we can see
no way of escape nor find any source of comfort but the testimony
of God. God's friends are not distinguished
in this world by an exemption from trying providences. He views
that, methinks, as too trifling a badge of distinction. They
shall be known by what is far more noble and advantageous,
namely by patience, obedience, submission, and divine support
under them. Moreover, as we profess to be
friends of God and to trust the salvation of our souls, with
all our concerns in His hands, we see it proper to prove the
sincerity of our professions and the stability of our hearts. He brings us into such circumstances,
therefore, as shall try us whether we will confide in Him or not. Christ has told his followers,
once for all, that all power in heaven and earth is in his
hands, that he is head over all things to the church, that he
will surely do them good, that however things may seem, all
things shall work together for good to them that love God, to
them who are the called according to his purpose, that as to temporal
things, let them but trust in the Lord and do good, And they
shall dwell in the land, and verily they shall be fed. And as to eternal things, if
they have a few light afflictions, they shall last but a moment,
and shall work for them a far more exceeding and eternal weight
of glory. These promises seem easy to be
believed when things are smooth and pleasing. And it is very
natural for us in a day of prosperity to talk of these things and try
and comfort those with them who are laboring in adversity. But
the greatest trial is when it comes home to ourselves. Then
it is well if we shall fall not under the reproof of Eliphaz.
Thy words have upholden him that was falling. and thou hast strengthened
the feeble knees, but now it is come upon thee, and thou faintest. It toucheth thee, but thou art
troubled, and thou art troubled. Then, if ever, is the time for
us to walk by faith, not by sight. We create to ourselves darlings
and place much of our happiness in their enjoyment. God, not
unfrequently, takes these first away as being most his rivals. If one child is more beloved
than all the rest, if he must be clothed with a coat of many
colors, the coat must quickly be returned without the owner. Yes, the period must soon arrive
when it shall be said Joseph is not. These, with a few more
strokes of the kind, will try Jacob's faith to the uttermost,
and he will find it hard work to reconcile promises with providences. Thou saidst, I will surely do
thee good, but all these things are against me. Ah, he fails,
he fails like Asaph in a similar condition, who could not see
how God could be good to Israel when waters of a full cup were
wrung out to them. The Shunammitish woman will set
us a better example than either the patriarch or the prophet.
It is well, said Elisha's servant, when her child lay dead in her
house. She replied, it is well. This was, in effect, saying,
whether I can see it or not, I know he doth all things well. This is believing when we cannot
see, taking God at his word against all the rebellion of sense and
feeling. This is what Jacob should have
done. But oh, that Jacob had failed
alone. If to resemble him in this instance
would constitute us Israelites, we should most of us be Israelites
indeed. We are often very thrifty in
devising plans for futurity, and apt to promise ourselves
great degrees of happiness when they are accomplished. Here it
is common for God to throw confusion upon our schemes, and cause things
to run in a different channel from what we expected. Job, while
in prosperity, sat like a bird in her well-feathered nest, and
thought within himself, I shall live to enjoy numerous years
of uninterrupted prosperity, to see children's children, and
then go down to the grave in peace. Or, as he himself afterwards,
in the bitter hour of reflection, expressed it, I said, I shall
die in my nest, I shall multiply my days as the sand. Well, so
he did at last. And there was a melancholy chasm
in his life which he never expected. Such there are, more or less,
in all our lives. And in such situations it is
well if we would not think hard of our best friend. Some have
been ready to ask, is this love? Is this his doing who has said,
I will surely do thee good? Yes, and you shall see it in
the end as Asaph did. who, after he had been to God's
sanctuary and saw things as they were, went home, it seems, and
penned the 73rd Psalm, beginning it all in ecstasy, saying, truly,
God is good to Israel. Christians, how criminal, how
cruel, that he that never failed us at any time should be so mistrusted
as he is. It should seem to suggest as
if He were such a God that we cannot trust Him out of sight. How amiable is that Spirit! How happy is that heart that
in every situation places unbounded confidence in Jehovah's Word! Such may be hedged up on every
side and encompassed like Israel at the Red Sea. with seemingly
insurmountable difficulties, yet even here they will follow
Israel's example, they will cry unto God and rely upon his mercy. If means can be used, they will
use them. If not, they will stand still
and see the salvation of the Lord. Speak unto the children
of Israel, said the Lord, that they go forward. Go forward! They might have replied, What? Leap at once into the jaws of
destruction? But nothing of this. At first,
indeed, their faith seemed to fail them. But they soon recovered
themselves. Speak unto the children of Israel,
said the Lord, that they go forward. They went, a way was made in
the sea, and a path in the mighty waters. Well may it be said,
by faith Israel passed through the Red Sea. Minds thus disposed
might defy the united sources of worldly sorrow to render them
unhappy. Let poverty stare them in the
face. Let pinching want stretch over them her miserable scepter. They have been known, even here
by faith, to break forth into songs of praise. Thus sang good
Habakkuk. And this evidently appears to
be his situation and not a state of spiritual declension. Although
the fig tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the
vines. The labor of the olive shall fail and the field shall
yield no meat. The flock shall be cut off from
the fold and no herd in the stalls. Yet will I rejoice in the Lord.
I will joy in the God of my salvation. Thus also sang the church. even
in her captivity, when her country was laid waste, Jerusalem raised
to the ground, and the temple burnt to ashes. The Lord is my
portion, saith my soul, therefore will I hope in Him." 2. In all our approaches to and
fellowship with Christ, it is by faith in the account that
God has given of Him and His Word Christ's excellence, undertaking,
and benefits are the joy and even the life of our souls if
we are true Christians. But what evidence have we of
all or any of these? Yea, what evidence have we that
there is or ever was such a person as Jesus Christ? Or, if there
was, that he was the Messiah, the Son of God? We neither saw
him alive, nor die, rise again, nor ascend to heaven. We never
saw the miracles he wrought, nor heard the voice from the
excellent glory, saying, This is my beloved son, hear ye him.
We speak of his personal excellences, divine and human, of his love,
zeal, righteousness, meekness, patience, etc. But what know
we of them? We rejoice in His being constituted
our surety, to obey the law and endure the curse in our stead.
But how know we that so indeed it is? We glory in the imputation
of His righteousness and exult in the hope of being found in
Him and being forever with Him, faultless before His throne,
to serve Him day and night in His temple. But on what do we
rely for all this? If our expectations are but just,
truly they are noble, but if groundless, extravagant. Are
they then well founded? Yes, the testimony of God is
the rock whereon they rest. He has told us by the mouth of
His servants, the inspired writers, all that is necessary for us
to know of the character, conduct, and errand of His Son. of every
office he sustained and every end for which he came into the
world. To all this he has added that whosoever believeth on him
shall not perish, but have everlasting life. So they have preached,
and so we have believed. We have through grace ventured
our everlasting all in his hands. Nor is it in the hands of we
know not whom. We know whom we have trusted,
and are persuaded that he is able to keep that which we have
committed to him against that day. For though none of these
things are visible to our mortal eye, yet having evidence that
God has said them, we are satisfied. We would as soon trust God's
word as our own eyes. Thus we walk like Moses, as seeing
him who is invisible. and thus answer to that description,
whom having not seen ye love, in whom though now ye see him
not yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full
of glory. In all our applications to Christ
we have to rely merely upon the testimony of God. Here is a poor
self-condemned sinner who comes pressing through the crowd of
discouraging apprehensions. that he may, so to speak, touch
the hem of the Redeemer's garment and be made whole. As he approaches, one set of
thought suggests, how can such a monster hope for mercy? Is
it not doubtful whether there be efficacy enough in the blood
of Christ itself to pardon such heinous crimes? I know my crimes
are heinous beyond expression, replies the burdened soul, and
I should doubtless give up my case as desperate. but that I
have heard of him that he is able to save to the uttermost
all that come unto God by him. I will go therefore, who can
tell? As he goes, other objections
assail him, questioning whether Christ can find in his heart
to accept such a one. I should think not, indeed, rejoins
the poor man. But he has said, Him that cometh
to me I will in no wise cast out. I know were I to consult
nothing but my feelings and only to fix my eyes on the enormity
of my sin, I should utterly despair. But encouraged by His word, I
will go forward. I will walk by faith, not by
sight. Oh, I hear him say, come unto
me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and ye shall find
rest unto your souls. This, this is what I want. Depart from me, all ye that vex
my soul. I will go in the strength of
the Lord God. Three, we have to give up many
present enjoyments for Christ's sake. wherein we have no visible
prospect of recompense, none of any kind but what arises from
the promise of God. Self-denial is one of the initial
laws of Christ's kingdom. Far from enticing people into
his service by promises of wealth, ease, and honor, he sets out
with this public declaration, Whosoever will be my disciple
must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me. But who
would enter upon these terms? Who would give up houses, lands,
friends, and reputation, and expose himself to hardships,
persecutions, and death for nothing? Yet many followed him, and that
to the day of their death, yea, and upon these very terms too
they left all and followed him. What then induced them? Did not
they act irrationally? Prophets, apostles, and martyrs,
what mean ye? Have ye no regard for yourselves?
What, are you destitute of the feelings of men? No such thing. We have respect under the recompense
of reward. Reward? What can that be of? Respect under the recompense
of reward. Nothing surely below the sun
unless it were everything. the reverse of what is agreeable
to human nature. True, but our Lord has declared,
whoever shall forsake houses, or brethren, or sisters, or father,
or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my namesake, shall
receive a hundredfold and inherit everlasting life. We rely upon
this, and this supports us. God's friends in all ages have
forsaken sensible for invisible enjoyments. Encouraged by considerations
like these, Ruth forsook her father and her mother and the
land of her nativity and came to a people whom she knew not.
It was this that determined her to go forward when, as Naomi
told her, there was no earthly prospects before her. It was
this that made her resolve not to go back with Orpah, but to
cast in her lot with the friends of the God of Israel. The Lord
recompensed thy work, said Boaz to her afterwards, and a full
reward be given thee of the Lord God of Israel, under whose wings
thou art come to trust. The same things influenced Moses,
it seems, to refuse a crown. It has been thought that in virtue
of his adoption he might have been a king of Egypt. But that
throne, not only like other thrones, exposed him that sat thereon
to numberless snares, but probably was inaccessible to any but those
who would continue the system of idolatry and oppression. In that case, Moses, in order
to become king of Egypt, must have sacrificed a good conscience,
despised a crown of glory that fadeth not away, and united in
persecuting his own and the Lord's people. Moses seems fully to
have weighed this matter. The result was he refused to
be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter, choosing rather to
suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures
of sin for a season. Esteeming even the reproach of
Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt. He therefore
freely leaves the life of a courtier, avows himself the friend of the
poor despised captives, and dares to retire into Midian, to lead
the life of an obscure shepherd. I say he dared to retire, for
it required a greater degree of courage thus to deny himself,
than to stand in the forefront of a battle, or to face the mouth
of a cannon. But by faith he forsook Egypt,
and went and lived a stranger in a strange land. For he endured
as seeing Him who is invisible. Yes, he had respect under the
recompense of reward. In short, through this, the holy
tribes of martyrs in all ages loved not their lives unto death. By faith in invisible realities,
as the Apostle to the Hebrews largely proves, they bore all
manner of cruelties, not accepting deliverance itself upon dishonorable
conditions, suffered all kinds of deaths with unremitting fortitude,
and in some sort, like their glorious leader, triumphed over
principalities and powers when they fell. Indeed, every man
in the world may be said to walk either by faith or by sight.
There is not only a giving up sensible for invisible enjoyments
by actually parting with them, but by not setting our hearts
upon them as our chief good. This may be done where there
is no call actually to give them up, and is done by all real Christians
in the world. Men whose chief good consists
in the profits, pleasures, or honors of this life live by sight. They derive their life from objects
before their eyes, having neither patience nor inclination to wait
for a portion in the world to come. But good men, as well the
rich as the poor, derive their life from above, and so live
by faith. Their life is hid with Christ
in God. Perhaps here, as much as anywhere,
is required the peculiar exercise of faith. For one actually divested
of earthly good to look upward and set his heart on things above
is faith. But for one still possessed of
this, one on whom providence smiles, prospering him in all
he sets his hand, to blessing him with wife and children, houses
and lands in abundance, for him to exercise such a degree of
indifference to all these as to derive his chief happiness
from invisible realities, this is faith indeed. This seems to
have been exemplified in Abraham and other patriarchs. Of him,
it is said, by faith he sojourned in the land of promise as in
a strange country. How is this? We do not wonder
that when he and Sarah went into Egypt on account of a famine,
he should consider himself a sojourner there. But how is it that he
should do so in Canaan, the land of promise, his own estate, as
it were? The next verse informs us. For
he looked for a city which hath habitations whose builder and
maker is God. So Jacob, when before Pharaoh,
called his whole life a pilgrimage, though the far greater part of
it was spent in the land of promise. And they that say such things
as the apostle declare plainly that they seek a country. Though
God had given them the good land, they would not make it their
chief good. They could not be contented with
this Canaan, but longed for another. Noble souls! Bid them lift up
their eyes eastward and westward and northward and southward,
and tell them all they can see is their own. Still, they will
not live by sight, but by faith. They will desire a better country
that is a heavenly. Four. There are many low and
distressing seasons. in which the Church of God is
subject, in which there is little or no visible ground of encouragement,
scarcely any but what arises from the promise of God. The
whole Church of God, as individuals, has in all ages had its day of
adversity set over against the day of prosperity. Israel, after
their deliverance from Egypt and settlement in Canaan, enjoyed
pretty much prosperity, especially in the days of David and Solomon.
But afterwards, by a series of provocations, they procured to
themselves the Babylonish captivity. At that melancholy period, those
amongst them that feared the Lord must be supposed to be all
in darkness. Jerusalem laid waste, the temple
burnt with fire, Judah carried captive, all what becomes of
God's interests in the world. The foundations of his visible
kingdom seem to be laid in the holy mountains round about Jerusalem.
If these are destroyed, what can the righteous do? They had
long sighed and cried for the idolatrous abominations of their
countrymen, and prayed and hoped that mercy might be lengthened
out, but now all seems over. For their idolatry they must
go, and have enough of idolaters. They that feared the Lord must
also go with them. By the rivers of Babylon they
must go and sit down. Those that had been used to sound
the high praises of God in Zion must now hang their harps upon
the willows as having no use for them. Now is this the worst? They upon the willows as having
no use for them? Now is this the worst? They must
be taunted and their God derided. by their insulting lords. Come,
said they, sing us one of the songs of Zion, as if they had
said now, see what your religion has availed you. This was your
favorite employ, and these were the songs wherewith you address
your deity, in whom you confided to deliver you out of your lands.
What think you now, poor Zion? She spreadeth forth her hands,
but there is none to comfort her. The Lord hath commanded
that her adversaries should be round about her. Her captive
sons can only remember Jerusalem and weep. Alas, how can they
sing the Lord's song in a strange land? But is there no help from
above? Is there no physician there?
Yes, the Lord God, whom Babel derides, but Judah adores, looks
down and sees their affliction. To his disheartened friends in
this situation, he addresses himself, saying, Who is among
you that feareth the Lord, that obeyeth the voice of his servant,
that walketh in darkness and hath no light? Let him trust
in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God. As if he should
say, for a season you must walk by faith, not by sight. But trust me, that season shall
soon be over. Seventy years and Babylon shall
fall and Judah return. By these declarations the Church
was encouraged in her captivity and furnished with an answer
to her insulting foes. Yea, and what is wonderful breaks
forth into one of the Lord's songs in a strange land. Hearken,
O Babel! to one of the songs of Zion.
Rejoice not against me, O mine enemy! When I fall, I shall arise. When I sit in darkness, the Lord
shall be a light unto me. I will bear the indignation of
the Lord, because I have sinned against Him, until He pleads
my cause and executes judgment for me. He will bring me forth
to the light, and I shall behold His righteousness. Then she that
is mine enemy shall see it. And shame shall cover her which
said unto me, Where is the Lord thy God? This is encouraging
to us as churches and as ministers. We have in many cases to walk
in darkness and have no light and to go on in our ministrations
in a great degree like the prophet Isaiah lamenting that there are
so few who have believed our report, so few to whom the arm
of the Lord has been revealed. When death removes worthy characters,
we must sometimes live and lament to see their places unoccupied
by others of like character. And what is worse, instead of
increase by Christ's conquests, we must sometimes live to see
a decrease by the conquests of the evil one. Many a faithful
minister has had to preach year after year till either by public
scandals or private disgust, many of his people have gone
off and walked no more with him. But let him then remember the
testimony of God, him that honoreth me, I will honor. Let him go on and faithfully
discharge his duty. Whether they will hear or whether
they will forbear, let him and those that are with him walk
by faith and not by sight. It often proves that after such
a night of weeping comes a morning of rejoicing. Let us not be discouraged. Better breath than ours has been
spent apparently in vain. Our Lord himself seemed to labor
in vain, and to spend his strength for naught. But he comforted
himself in this, herein serving as an example. Though Israel
be not gathered, yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord,
and my God shall be my strength. This may encourage and direct
us in larger concerns, concerns which respect the whole interest
of Christ in the world. If we compare the present state
of things or even the past with the glorious prophecies of the
word of God, we cannot think surely that all is yet accomplished. By these prophecies, the Christian
church is encouraged to look for great things. at some period
or other of her existence. She is taught to look for a time
when the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord
as the waters cover the sea, when a nation shall be born at
once, when the kingdoms of this world shall become the kingdoms
of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign from sea to
sea and from the river unto the ends of the earth. But surely
for the present, though great things upon the whole have been
done in the world, yet nothing like this has ever come to pass.
Instead of the world being conquered, what a great part yet continues
to stand out against him. Heathenism, Muhammadism, potpourri
and infidelity. How extensive still their influence. In all probability, not a single
country, city, town, village, or congregation has ever yet
been brought wholly to submit to Christ. Nay, is it not very
rare to find in any one of these so many friends as to make even
a majority in his favor. May these, so many real friends,
as to make even a majority in his favor. May these, may not
the Christian church then, for the present, adopt that language? We have been with child. We have,
as it were, brought forth wind. We have not wrought any deliverance
in the earth. Neither have the inhabitants
of the world fallen. What then? Shall we despair? God forbid. The vision is yet
for an appointed time. But at the end it shall speak
and not lie. Though it tarry, wait for it,
because it will surely come, it will not tarry. And meanwhile,
the just shall live by faith. Let us take encouragement in
the present day of small things, by looking forward and hoping
for better days. Let this be attended with earnest
and united prayer to Him by whom Jacob must arise. A life of faith
will ever be a life of prayer. O brethren, let us pray much
for an outpouring of God's Spirit upon our ministers and churches.
and not upon those only of our own connection and denomination,
but upon all that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ
our Lord, both theirs and ours. Our hope of a better state, when
this time is over, is built on faith in God's testimony. We
have no sort of evidence, but this, that any such state exists,
We cannot see anything of the kind or ought from which we can
infer it. We cannot learn it from any of
our senses. Reason itself could never have
found it out. Reason might have taught us the
idea of a future state, but not of a future state of bliss. Though
much might be argued from the fitness of things to prove that
man is not made barely for the present life, yet nothing could
thence be drawn to prove that rebels against the Supreme Being
should live in a state of eternal felicity. No, for this we are
wholly indebted to the word of promise. Hence, faith is said
to be the substance, ground, or foundation of things hoped
for. Supported by that we sustain
our heaviest losses, and attracted by these we come up out of great
tribulations, following the Lamb whithersoever he goeth, till
we shall overcome and sit down with him in his throne. as he
also hath overcome, and is set down with his Father in his throne."
The second head. We will now add a few words on
the importance of such a life. If all things considered, it
would have been best for us to have always seen our way before
us. We have been guided, so to speak,
with our eyes. and not to have implicitly followed
the directions of God. No doubt, so it would have been
ordered. But he who perfectly and at once saw the beginning
and end of all things judged otherwise, with the highest wisdom,
no doubt, he formed the resolution, the just shall live by faith. It may be impossible for us in
the present state to find out all the reasons for this resolution,
But two or three seem to present themselves to our view. Number
one, such a life brings great glory to God. Confidence is universally
a medium of honor. To confide in a fellow creature
puts honor upon him in the account of others, and affords a pleasure
to himself, especially if he be a wise and upright character,
as it gives an opportunity of proving his wisdom and fidelity.
Though the great God cannot be made more honorable than He is
by anything we can do, yet His honor may be, by this, be made
more apparent. We honor Him so far as we form
just conceptions of Him in our minds, and act so as to give
just representations of Him to others. God is graciously pleased
to declare that He takes pleasure in those that hope in His mercy.
And why? Surely, among other things, because
it gives Him occasion to display the glory of His grace. And if
He takes pleasure in those that hope in His mercy and rely upon
it, so He takes pleasure in ordering things, so that we may be put
to the trial, whether we will rely on Him or not. It was this
which induced him to lead Israel through the wilderness, rather
than by the ready road to Canaan. He knew that they would be, in
fact, dependent upon him. Let them be where they would,
but they would not be sensible of that dependence, nor have
so much opportunity of entirely trusting him in any way as in
this. And so it would not be so much
for the glory of his great name. He therefore would lead a nation
with all their little ones into an inhospitable desert, where
there was scarcely a morsel of meat to eat, and in many places
not a drop of water to drink, a land of deserts and pits and
scorpions and fiery flying serpents. Here, if anywhere, they must
be sensibly dependent upon God. They must be fed and preserved
immediately from heaven itself, and that by miracles, or all
perish in a few days. Here, God must appear to be what
He was. Here, mercy and truth must appear
to go with them indeed. What an opportunity was afforded
them to have walked these 40 years by faith! What grounds
for an entire confidence! But alas, their faithless hearts
perverted their way and in the end proved their ruin. Ten times
they tempted God in the desert till at length he swore concerning
that generation that for their unbelief they should die in the
wilderness and never enter his rest. Few, if any, besides Joshua
and Caleb, would dare to trust Him. Notwithstanding all His
wonders and all His mercies, they, however, for their part,
took hold of His strength and thought themselves able, having
God on their side, to encounter anything. Their spirit was to
walk by faith and not by sight, and herein it is easy to see
how they glorified God. O brethren, let the glory of
God lie near our hearts. Let it be dearer to us than our
dearest delights. Herein consists the criterion
of true love to Him. Let us, after the noble example
of Joshua and Caleb, follow the Lord fully. Let us approve of
everything that tends to glorify Him. Let us be reconciled to
His conduct, who suffers us to hunger, that we may know that
man lives not by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth
out of the mouth of God. If He should bring us into hard
and difficult situations, situations to an eye of sense impossible
to be endured, let us remember that it is that He may give us
opportunity of glorifying Him by trusting Him in the dark.
The more difficult the trial, the more glory to him that bears
us through and the greater opportunity is afforded us for proving that
we can indeed trust him with all our concerns. That we can
trust him when we cannot see the end of his present dispensations. Those very much dishonor God
who profess to trust him for another world But in the common
difficulties of this are perpetually murmuring, peevish and distrustful. How different was it with Abraham
in offering up his son Isaac? What? Offer up Isaac? My son? My only son of promise? Why,
is not the Messiah to spring out of his loins? What are to
become of all the nations of the earth were to be blessed
in him? How natural and inexcusable might such questions have seemed?
much more so than most of our objections to the divine conduct. Since, in this case, had it been
consulted, must have entered a thousand protests. But the
father of the faithful consulted not with flesh and blood, not
doubting but God knew what he was about, if he himself did
not. O that we may prove ourselves
the children of faithful Abraham. Against hope in appearance, he
believed in hope of divine all-sufficiency, fully persuaded that what God
had promised he was able to perform. He stretched forth his obedient
arm, nor had he recalled it, had not heaven interposed. He
was strong in faith, giving glory to God. Two, it is productive
of great good to us. The glory of God and the good
of those that love Him, thanks be to His name, always go together. It is equally to their benefit
as to His honor. For instance, to lie low before
Him and to feel their entire dependence upon Him, it is essential
to the real happiness of an intelligent creature to be in its proper
place and to take a complacency in being so. But nothing tends
more to cultivate these dispositions than God's determining that at
present we should walk by faith and not by sight. Faith, in the
whole of it, tends more than a little to abase the fallen
creature. And to walk by faith, which is as much as to acknowledge
that we are blind and must see with the eyes of another, is
very humbling. The objects of our desire, being frequently
for a time withheld, in our being at such times reduced to situations
where we can see no help, and thus obliged to repose our trust
in God, contribute more than a little to make us feel our
dependence upon Him. Augur saw that a constant fullness
of this world was unfriendly to the spirit of entire dependence
upon God. Therefore he prayed, give me
not riches, lest I be full and deny thee. Whatever tends to
humble and try us, tends to do us good in the latter end. Great and wonderful is the consolation
that such a life affords. In all the vicissitudes of life
and horrors of death, nothing can cheer and fortify the mind
like this. By faith in an unseen world,
we can endure injuries without revenge, afflictions without
fainting, and losses without despair. Let the nations of the
earth dash like potsherds, one against another. Yea, let nature
herself approach toward her final dissolution. Let her groan as
being ready to expire and sink into her primitive nothing. Still
the believer lives. His all is not on board that
vessel. His chief inheritance lies in
another soil. His hand, the good man, fastens
on the skies. and bids earth roll nor feels
her idle whirl. Three, it will make vision the
sweeter. It affords a great pleasure when
we make a venture of any kind to find ourselves at last not
disappointed. If a considerate man embark his
all on board a vessel and himself with it, he may have a thousand
fears before he reaches the end of his voyage. Yet should he,
after numberless dangers, safely arrive, and find it not only
answered, but far exceed his expectations, his joy will then
be greater than if he had run no hazard at all. What he has
gained will seem much sweeter than if it had fallen to him
in a way that had cost him nothing. Thus believers venture their
all in the hands of Christ. persuaded that He is able to
keep that which they have committed to Him against that day, to find
at last that they have not confided in Him in vain. Yea, that their
expectations are not only answered, but infinitely outdone, will
surely enhance the bliss of heaven. The remembrance of our dangers,
fears, and sorrows will enable us to enjoy the heavenly state
with a degree of happiness impossible to have been felt if those dangers,
fears, and sorrows had never existed. My hearers, we all of
us live either by faith or by sight, either upon things heavenly
or things earthly. If on the former, let us go on
upon the word of God. Everlasting glory is before us,
but if on the latter, alas, our store will soon be exhausted. All these dear delights are but
the brood of time, a brood that will soon take to themselves
wings, and with her that cherished them fly away. O my hearers,
is it not common for many of you to suppose that those who
live by faith in the enjoyment of a world to come live upon
mere imaginations? But are you not mistaken? It
is your enjoyments and not theirs that are imaginary. Pleasures,
profits, honors. What are they? The whole form
only a kind of ideal world. A sort of splendid show, like
that in a dream. Which, when you wake, all is
gone. At most it is a fashion, a fashion
that passeth away. To grasp it is to grasp a shadow,
and to feed upon it is to feed upon the wind. Oh, that you may
turn away your eyes from beholding these vanities, and look to the
Lord Jesus Christ and the substantial realities beyond the grave for
your never failing portion. But if not, if you still prefer
this world with its enjoyments to those which are heavenly,
How just will it be for the Lord Jesus to say to you at that last
great day, Depart! Depart! You have had your reward. You have had your choice. What
would you have? You never chose me for your portion. You, in effect, said of me and
my interests, we will have no part in David, nor inheritance
in the son of Jesse. See to thyself, David. Ah, now,
see to thyself, sinner. Christians, ministers, brethren,
all of us. Let us realize the subject. Let
us pray and preach and hear and do everything we do with eternity
in view. Let us deal much with Christ
and invisible realities. Let us, whenever called, freely
deny ourselves for His sake and trust Him to make up the loss. Let us not faint under present
difficulties, but consider them as opportunities afforded us
to glorify God. Let us be ashamed that we derive
our happiness so much from things below, and so little from things
above. In one word, Let us fight the
good fight of faith and lay hold on eternal life.
Nature and Importance of Walking by Faith
Series Andrew Fuller Library
Andrew Fuller (1754-1815), the gifted and influential English Particular Baptist Pastor, preached this message in Nottingham, before the Northhamptonshire Baptist Association on June 2, 1784.
| Sermon ID | 910101726208 |
| Duration | 1:34:09 |
| Date | |
| Category | Special Meeting |
| Bible Text | 2 Corinthians 5:7 |
| Language | English |
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