DEATH
From
Thomas Boston's "Human Nature in
its Fourfold State"
Section I. MAN'S LIFE IS VANITY
"For I
know that you will bring me to
death, and to the house
appointed for all living." Job
30:23.
I come
now to discourse of man's
eternal state, into which he
enters by death. Of this
entrance, Job takes a solemn
serious view, in the words of
the text, which contain a
general truth, and a particular
application of it. The general
truth is supposed; namely, that
all men must, by death, remove
out of this world; they must
die. But where must they go?
They must go to the house
appointed for all living; to the
grave, that darksome, gloomy,
solitary house, in the land of
forgetfulness. Wherever the body
is laid up until the
resurrection, there, as to a
dwelling-house, death brings us
home. While we are in the body,
we are but in a lodging-house,
in an inn, on our way homeward.
When we come to our grave, we
come to our home, our long
home, Eccl. 12:5.
All
living must be inhabitants of
this house, good and bad, old
and young. Man's life is a
stream, running into death's
devouring deeps. Those who now
live in palaces, must leave
them, and go home to this house;
and those who have not where to
lay their heads, shall thus have
a house at length. It is
appointed for all, by Him whose
counsel shall stand. This
appointment cannot be shifted;
it is a law which mortals cannot
transgress. Job's application of
this general truth to himself,
is expressed in these words:
"For I know that you will bring
me to death, and to the house
appointed for all living." He
knew, that he must meet with
death; that his soul and body
must part; that God, who had set
the time, would certainly see it
kept. Sometimes Job was inviting
death to come to him, and carry
him home to its house; yes, he
was in the hazard of running to
it before the time– Job 7:15,
"My soul chooses strangling, and
death rather than my life." But
here he considers God would
bring him to it; yes, bring him
back to it, as the word imports.
Whereby he seems to intimate,
that we have no life in this
world, but as runaways from
death, which stretches out its
cold arms, to receive us from
the womb– but though we do then
narrowly escape its clutches, we
cannot escape long; we shall be
brought back again to it. Job
knew this, he had laid it down
as a certainly, and was looking
for it.
I.
ALL MUST DIE.
Although this doctrine is
confirmed by the experience of
all former generations, ever
since Abel entered into the
house appointed for all living,
and though the living know that
they shall die, yet it is
needful to discourse of the
certainty of death, that it may
be impressed on the mind, and
duly considered.
Therefore consider,
1.
There is an unalterable statute
of death, under which all men
are concluded. "It is
appointed unto men once to die,"
Heb. 9:27. It is laid up for
them, as parents lay up for
their children– they may look
for it, and cannot miss it;
seeing God has designed and
reserved it for them. There is
no peradventure in it; "we must
die," II Sam. 14:14. Though some
men will not hear of
death, yet every man must see
death, Psalm 89:48. Death is a
champion all must grapple with–
we must enter the lists with it,
and it will have the mastery,
Eccl. 8:8, "There is no man that
has power over the spirit, to
retain the spirit; neither has
he power in the day of death."
Those indeed who are found alive
at Christ's coming, shall all be
changed, I Cor. 15:51. But that
change will be equivalent to
death, will answer the purposes
of it. All other people must go
the common road, the way of all
flesh.
2. Let
us consult daily observation.
Every man "sees that wise men
die, likewise the fool and
brutish person," Psalm 49:10.
There is room enough on this
earth for us, notwithstanding
the multitudes that were upon it
before us. They are gone, to
make room for us; as we must
depart, to make room for others.
It is long since death began to
transport men into another
world, and vast multitudes are
gone there already– yet the work
is going on still; death is
carrying off new inhabitants
daily, to the house appointed
for all living. Who has ever
heard the grave say, It is
enough! Long has it been
getting, but still it asks. This
world is like a great fair or
market, where some are coming
in, others going out; while the
assembly that is in it is
confusion, and the most part
know not why they are come
together; or, like a town
situated on the road to a great
city, through which some
travelers have passed, some are
passing, while others are only
coming in, Eccl. 1:4, "One
generation passes away, and
another generation comes– but
the earth abides forever."
Death
is an inexorable, irresistible
messenger, who cannot be
diverted from executing his
orders by the force of the
mighty, the bribes of the rich,
or the entreaties of the poor.
It does not reverence the hoary
head, nor pity the harmless
babe. The bold and daring cannot
outbrave it; nor can the
faint-hearted obtain a discharge
in this war.
3. The
human body consists of perishing
materials, Gen. 3:19,
"Dust you are, and unto dust you
shall return." The strongest are
but brittle earthen vessels,
easily broken in shivers. The
soul is but basely housed, while
in this mortal body, which is
not a house of stone, but
a house of clay, the mud
walls cannot but molder away;
especially seeing the foundation
is not on a rock, but in the
dust; they are crushed before
the moth, though this insect be
so tender that the gentle touch
of a finger will destroy it, Job
4:19.
These
materials are like gunpowder; a
very small spark lighting on
them will set them on fire, and
blow up the house– the seed of a
raison, or a hair in milk,
having choked men, and laid the
house of clay in the dust. If we
consider the frame and structure
of our bodies, how fearfully and
wonderfully we are made; and on
how regular and exact a motion
of the fluids, and balance of
humors, our life depends; and
that death has as many doors
to enter in by, as the body has
pores; and if we compare the
soul and body together, we may
justly reckon, that there is
somewhat more astonishing in our
life, than in our
death; and that it is
more strange to see dust walking
up and down on the dust, than
lying down in it.
Though
the lamp of our life may not be
violently blown out, yet the
flame must go out at length for
lack of oil. What are those
distempers and diseases which we
are liable to, but death's
harbingers, that come to prepare
his way? They meet us, as soon
as we set our foot on earth, to
tell us at our entry, that we
do but come into the world to go
out again. Nevertheless,
some are snatched away in a
moment, without being warned by
sickness or disease.
4. We
have sinful souls, and therefore
have dying bodies–
death follows sin, as the shadow
follows the body. The wicked
must die, by virtue of the
threatening of the covenant of
works, Gen. 2:17, "In the day
that you eat thereof, you shall
surely die." And the godly must
die too, that as death entered
by sin, sin may go out by death.
Christ has taken away the sting
of death, as to them; though he
has not as yet removed death
itself. Therefore, though it
fastens on them, as the viper
did on Paul's hand, it shall do
them no harm– but because the
leprosy of sin is in the walls
of the house, it must be broken
down, and all the materials
thereof carried forth.
5.
Man's life in this world,
according to the Scripture
account of it, is but a few
degrees removed from death.
The Scripture represents
it as a vain and empty thing,
short in its continuance, and
swift in its passing away.
First,
Man's life is a vain and empty
thing– while it is, it vanishes
away; and lo! it is not. Job
7:6, "My days are vanity." If we
suspect afflicted Job of
partiality in this matter, hear
the wise and prosperous
Solomon's character of the
days of his life, Eccl. 7:15,
"All things have I seen in the
days of my vanity," that is, my
vain days. Moses, who was
a very active man, compares our
days to a sleep, Psalm 90:5,
"They are as a sleep," which is
not noticed until it is ended.
The resemblance is just– few men
have right apprehensions of
life, until death awaken them;
then we begin to know that we
were living. "We spend our years
as a tale that is told," ver. 9.
When an idle tale is telling it
may affect a little; but when it
is ended, it is remembered no
more– and so is a man forgotten,
when the fable of his life
is ended. It is as a dream, or
vision of the night, in which
there is nothing solid; when one
awakes, all vanishes; Job 20:8,
"He shall fly away as a dream,
and shall not be found; yes, he
shall be chased away as a vision
of the night." It is but a vain
show or image; Psalm 39:6,
"Surely every man walks in a
vain show." Man, in this world,
is but as it were a walking
statue– his life is but an
image of life, there is so
much of death in it.
If we
look on our life, in the several
periods of it, we shall find it
a heap of vanities. "Childhood
and youth are vanity," Eccl.
11:10. We come into the world
the most helpless of all
animals– young birds and beasts
can do something for themselves,
but infant man is altogether
unable to help himself. Our
childhood is spent in pitiful
trifling pleasures, which become
the scorn of our after thoughts.
Youth is a flower that
soon withers, a blossom that
quickly falls off; it is a space
of time in which we are rash,
foolish, and inconsiderate,
pleasing ourselves with a
variety of vanities, and
swimming as it were through a
flood of them.
But
before we are aware it is past;
and we are, in middle age,
encompassed with a thick cloud
of cares, through which we must
grope; and finding ourselves
beset with prickling thorns of
difficulties, through them we
must force our way, to
accomplish the projects and
contrivances of our riper
thoughts. The more we solace
ourselves in any earthly
enjoyment we attain to, the more
bitterness do we find in parting
with it.
Then
comes old age, attended
with its own train of
infirmities, labor, and sorrow,
Psalm 90:10, and sets us down
next door to the grave. In a
word, "All flesh is like grass,"
Isa. 40:6. Every stage or period
in life, is vanity. "Man at his
best state," his middle age,
when the heat of youth is spent,
and the sorrows of old age have
not yet overtaken him, "is
altogether vanity," Psalm 39:5.
Death carries off some in the
bud of childhood, others in the
blossom of youth, and others
when they are come to their
fruit; few are left standing,
until, like ripe corn, they
forsake the ground– all die one
time or other.
II.
Man's life is a SHORT thing.
It is not only a vanity, but
a short-lived vanity.
Consider,
1. How the
life of man is reckoned in the
Scriptures. It was
indeed sometimes reckoned by
hundreds of years– but no
man ever arrived at a thousand,
which yet bears no proportion to
eternity. Now hundreds are
brought down to scores;
threescore and ten, or
fourscore, is its utmost length,
Psalm 90:10. But few men arrive
at that length of life. Death
does but rarely wait, until men
be bowing down, by reason of
age, to meet the grave. Yet, as
if years were too big a word for
such a small thing as the life
of man on earth, we find it
counted by months, Job
14:5. "The number of his
months are with you." Our
course, like that of the moon,
is run in a little time– we are
always waxing or waning, until
we disappear.
But
frequently it is reckoned by
days; and these but few, Job
14:1, "Man, that is born of a
woman, is of few days."
No, it is but one day, in
Scripture account; and that a
hireling's day, who will
precisely observe when his day
ends, and give over his work,
ver. 6, "Until he shall
accomplish as an hireling his
day."
Yes,
the Scripture brings it down to
the shortest space of time, and
calls it a moment, II
Cor. 4:17, "Our light
affliction," though it last all
our life long, "is but for a
moment." Elsewhere it is
brought down yet to a lower
pitch, farther than which one
cannot carry it, Psalm 39:5, "My
age is as nothing before
you." Agreeably to this, Solomon
tells us, Eccl. 3:2, "There is a
time to be born, and a
time to die"; but makes
no mention of a time to live,
as if our life were but a skip
from the womb to the grave.
2.
Consider the various SIMILITUDES
by which the Scripture
represents the shortness of
man's life. Hear
Hezekiah, Isa. 38:12, "My age is
departed, and is removed from me
as a shepherd's tent; I
am cut off like a weaver's
shuttle." The shepherd's
tent is soon removed; for the
flocks must not feed long in one
place; such is a man's life on
this earth, quickly gone. It is
a web which he is incessantly
working; he is not idle so much
as for one moment– in a short
time it is wrought, and then it
is cut off. Every breathing is a
thread in this web; when the
last breath is drawn, the web is
woven out; he expires, and then
it is cut off, he breathes no
more.
Man is
like grass, and like a
flower, Isa. 40:6. "All
flesh," even the strongest and
most healthy flesh, "is grass,
and all the goodness thereof is
as the flower of the field." The
grass is flourishing in the
morning; but, being cut down by
the mowers, in the evening it is
withered– so man sometimes is
walking up and down at ease in
the morning, and in the evening
is lying a corpse, being struck
down by a sudden blow, with one
or other of death's weapons.
The
flower, at best, is but a
weak and tender thing, of short
continuance wherever it grows–
but observe, man is not compared
to the flower of the garden; but
to the flower of the field,
which the foot of every beast
may tread down at any time. Thus
is our life liable to a thousand
accidents every day, any of
which may cut us off. But though
we should escape all these, yet
at length this grass withers,
this flower fades by itself. It
is carried off "as the cloud
is consumed, and vanishes away,"
Job 7:9. It looks big as the
morning cloud, which promises
great things, and raises the
expectation of the husbandman;
but the sun rises, and the cloud
is scattered; death comes,
and man vanishes!
The
apostle James proposes the
question, "What is your life?"
chapter 4:14. Hear his answer,
"It is even a vapor, that
appears for a little time, and
then vanishes away." It is
frail, uncertain, and does not
last. It is as smoke,
which goes out of the chimney,
as if it would darken the face
of the heavens; but quickly it
is scattered, and appears no
more– thus goes man's life, and
"where is he?" It is wind,
Job 7:7, "O remember that my
life is wind." It is but a
passing blast, a short puff, "a
wind that passes away, and comes
not again," Psalm 78:39. Our
breath is in our nostrils,
as if it were always upon the
wing to depart; ever passing and
repassing, like a traveler,
until it goes away, not to
return until the heavens be no
more.
III. Man's
life is a SWIFT thing;
not only a passing, but a
flying vanity. Have you not
observed how swiftly a shadow
runs along the ground, in a
cloudy and a windy day, suddenly
darkening the places beautified
before with the beams of the
sun, but is suddenly
disappearing? Such is the life
of man on the earth, for "he
flees as a shadow, and continues
not," Job 14:2. A weaver's
shuttle is very swift in its
motion; in a moment it is thrown
from one side of the web to the
other; yet "our days are swifter
than a weaver's shuttle," chap.
7:6. How quickly is man
tossed through time, into
eternity! See how Job
describes the swiftness of the
time of life, chap. 9:25-26.
"Now my days are swifter than a
runner; they flee away, they see
no good. They are passed away as
the swift ships; as the eagle
that hastens to the prey." He
compares his days with a
runner, who runs speedily to
carry tidings, and will make no
stop. But though the runner were
like Ahimaaz, who overrun Cushi,
our days would be swifter than
he; for they flee away, like a
man fleeing for his life before
the pursuing enemy; he runs with
his utmost vigor, yet our days
run as fast as he.
But
this is not all; even he who is
fleeing for his life, cannot run
always– he must needs sometimes
stand still, lie down, or turn
in somewhere, as Sisera did into
Jael's tent, to refresh himself–
but our time never halts!
Therefore it is compared to
ships, that can sail night
and day without intermission,
until they reach their port; and
to swift ships, ships of desire,
in which men quickly arrive at
their desired haven; or ships of
pleasure, that sail more swiftly
than ships of burden. Yet the
wind failing, the ship's course
is checked– but our time
always runs with a rapid course!
Therefore it is compared to
the eagle flying; not
with his ordinary flight, for
that is not sufficient to
represent the swiftness of our
days; but when he flies upon his
prey, which is with an
extraordinary swiftness. And
thus, even thus, our days flee
away.
Having
thus discoursed of death, let us
APPLY
the subject in discerning the
vanity of the world; in bearing
up, with Christian contentment
and patience under all troubles
and difficulties in it; in
mortifying our lusts; in
cleaving unto the Lord with full
purpose of heart, at all
hazards, and in preparing for
death's approach.
I. Let us
hence, as in a looking-glass,
Behold
the vanity of the world, and of
all those things in it, which
men so much value and esteem;
and therefore set their hearts
upon. The rich and the poor are
equally intent upon gaining this
world; they bow the knee to it;
yet it is but a clay god–
they court the bulky vanity, and
run eagerly to catch this
shadow. The rich man is hugged
to death in its embraces; and
the poor man wearies himself in
the fruitless pursuit. What
wonder if the world's smiles
overcome us, when we pursue it
so eagerly, even while it frowns
upon us!
But
look into the grave! O man!
consider and be wise; listen to
the doctrine of death; and
learn,
1.
that, "hold as hard as you can,
you shall be forced to let go
your hold of the world at
length." Though you
load yourself with the fruits of
this earth; yet all shall fall
off when you come to creep into
your hole, the house, under
ground, appointed for all
living. When death comes, you
must bid an eternal farewell to
your enjoyments in this world–
you must leave your goods to
another; Luke 12:20, "And whose
shall those things be which you
have provided?"
2. Your
portion of these things shall be
very little before long.
If you lie down on the grass,
and stretch yourself at full
length, and observe the print of
your body when you rise, you may
see how much of this earth will
fall to your share at last. It
may be you shall get a coffin,
and a winding-sheet; but you are
not sure of that; many who have
had abundance of wealth, yet
have not had so much when they
took up their new house in the
land of silence. But however
that be, more you cannot expect.
It was
a sobering lesson, which
Saladin, when dying, gave to his
soldiers. He called for his
standard bearer, and ordered him
to take his shroud upon a pole,
and go out to the camp with it,
and declare that of all his
conquests, victories, and
triumphs, he had nothing now
left him, but that piece of
linen to wrap his body in for
burial.
3. "This
world is a false friend," who
leaves a man in time of greatest
need, and flees from him when he
has most to do. When
you are lying on a deathbed, all
your friends and relatives
cannot rescue you; all your
substance cannot ransom you, nor
procure you a reprieve for one
day; no, not for one hour! Yes,
the more you possess of this
world's goods, your sorrow at
death is likely to be the
greater; for though one may live
more commodiously in a palace
than in a cottage, yet he may
die more easily in the cottage,
where he has very little to make
him fond of life.
II. It
may serve as
a
storehouse for Christian
contentment and patience under
worldly losses and crosses.
A close application of the
doctrine of death is an
excellent remedy against
fretting, and gives some ease to
a troubled heart. When Job had
sustained very great losses, he
sat down contented, with this
meditation, Job 1:21, "Naked I
came out of my mother's womb,
and naked shall I return there;
the Lord gave, and the Lord has
taken away; blessed be the name
of the Lord." When Providence
brings a mortality or disease
among your cattle, how ready are
you to fret and complain! but
the serious consideration of
your own death, to which you
have a notable help from such
providential occurrences, may be
of use to silence your
complaints, and quiet your
spirits. Look to "the house
appointed for all living," and
learn,
1. That
you must suffer a more severe
tragedy than the loss of worldly
goods. Do not cry out
because of an illness in the leg
or arm– for before long there
will be a long home thrust at
the heart. You may lose your
dearest relations– the wife may
lose her husband, and the
husband his wife; the parents
may lose their dear children and
the children their parents; but
if any of these trials happen to
you, remember you must lose your
own life at last; and "Why does
a living man complain?" Lam.
3:39. It is always profitable to
consider, under affliction, that
our case might have been worse
than it is. Whatever is
consumed, or taken from us, "It
is of the Lord's mercies that we
ourselves are not consumed,"
ver. 22.
2. It
is but for a short space of time
that we are in this world.
It is but a little that our
necessities require in so short
a space of time; when death
comes, we shall stand in need of
none of these things. Why should
men rack their heads with cares
how to provide for tomorrow;
while they know not if they
shall then need anything? Though
a man's provision for his
journey be nearly spent, he is
not disquieted, if he thinks he
is near home. Are you working by
candle light, and is there
little of your candle left?
It may be there is as little
sand in your glass; and if so,
you have little use for it.
3.
You have matters of great
weight that challenge your care.
Death is at the door,
beware that you lose not your
souls. If blood breaks out at
one part of the body, they often
open a vein in another part of
it, to turn the stream of the
blood, and to stop it. Thus the
Spirit of God sometimes cures
men of sorrow for earthly
things, by opening the
heart-vein to bleed for sin. Did
we pursue heavenly things more
vigorously when our affairs in
this life prosper not, we should
thereby gain a double advantage–
our worldly sorrow would be
diverted, and our best treasure
increased.
4.
Crosses of this nature will
not last long. The
world's smiles and frowns will
quickly be buried together in
everlasting forgetfulness. Its
smiles go away like foam
on the water; and its frowns
are as a passing ache in a man's
side. Time flies away with swift
wings, and carries our earthly
comforts, and crosses too, along
with it– neither of them will
accompany us into "the house
appointed for all living." "For
in death the wicked cease from
troubling, and the weary are at
rest. Even prisoners are at ease
in death, with no guards to
curse them. Rich and poor are
there alike, and the slave is
free from his master." Job
3:17-19.
Cast a
look into eternity, and you will
see affliction here in this
world, is but for a moment. The
truth is, our time is so very
short, that it will not allow
either our joys or griefs to
come to perfection. Therefore,
let them "that weep be as though
they wept not; and those who
rejoice as though they rejoiced
not," etc., I Cor. 7:29-31.
5.
Death will put all men on the
same level.
The king and the beggar must
dwell in one house, when they
come to their journey's end;
though their entertainment by
the way may be very different.
"The small and the great are
there," Job 3:19. We are all in
this world as on a stage; it is
no great matter, whether a man
acts the part of a prince or a
peasant, for when they have
acted their parts, they must
both get behind the curtain, and
appear no more.
6. If
you are not in Christ, whatever
your afflictions now be,
"troubles a thousand times
worse, are abiding you in
another world."
Death will turn your crosses
into pure unmixed curses!
and then, how gladly would you
return to your former afflicted
state, and purchase it at any
rate, were there any possibility
of such a return.
7. If
you are in Christ, you may well
bear your cross.
Death will put an end to all
your troubles. If a man
on a journey is not well
accommodated, where he lodges
only for a night, he will not
trouble himself much about the
matter; because he is not to
stay there, it is not his home.
You are on the road to
eternity! let it not
distress you that you meet with
some hardships in the 'inn of
this world'. Fret not, because
it is not so well with you as
with some others. One man
travels with a cane in his hand;
his fellow traveler, perhaps,
has but a common staff or stick–
either of them will serve the
turn. It is no great matter
which of them be yours; both
will be laid aside when you come
to your journey's end.
III. It
may serve for a bridle, to curb
all manner of lusts,
particularly those conversant
about the body. A
serious visit made to cold
death, and that solitary
mansion, the grave, might be of
good use to repress them.
(1.) It
may be of use to cause men to
cease from their INORDINATE CARE
FOR THE BODY; which is to many
the bane of their souls.
Often do these questions, "What
shall we eat? what shall we
drink? and with what shall we be
clothed?" leave no room for
another of more importance,
namely, "With what shall I come
before the Lord?" The soul
is put on the shelf, to answer
these base questions in favor of
the body; while its own
eternal interests are neglected.
But ah! why are men so busy to
repair the ruinous cottage;
leaving the inhabitant to
bleed to death of his wounds,
unheeded, unregarded? Why so
much care for the body, to the
neglect of the concerns of the
immortal soul? O do not be so
anxious for what can only serve
your bodies; since, before long,
the clods of cold earth will
serve for back and belly too!
(2.) It
may abate your pride on account
of BODILY ENDOWMENTS, which vain
man is apt to glory in.
Value not yourselves on the
blossom of youth; for
while you are in your blooming
years, you are but ripening
for a grave; death gives the
fatal stroke, without asking any
body's age. Do not boast in your
strength, it will quickly
be gone– the time will soon
be, when you shall not be able
to turn yourselves on a bed;
and you must be carried by your
grieving friends to your long
home. And what signifies your
healthful constitution?
Death does not always enter in
soonest where it begins soonest
to knock at the door; but makes
as great dispatch with some in a
few hours, as with others in
many years.
Do not
value yourselves on your
beauty, which "shall consume
in the grave," Psalm 49:14.
Remember the change which death
makes on the fairest face, Job
14:20– "You always overpower
them, and then they pass from
the scene. You disfigure them in
death and send them away." Death
makes the greatest beauty so
loathsome, that it must be
buried out of sight. Could a
mirror be used in "the house
appointed for all living," it
would be a terror to those who
now look oftener into their
mirrors than into their Bibles.
And what though the body be
gorgeously arrayed? The finest
clothes are but badges of
our sin and shame; and in a
little time will be exchanged
for a shroud, when the body will
become a feast to the worms!
(3.) It
may be A CHECK UPON SENSUALITY
AND FLESHLY LUSTS. 1
Peter 2:11, "I beseech you as
strangers and pilgrims, abstain
from fleshly lusts, which war
against the soul." It is hard to
cause wet wood to take fire; and
when the fire does take hold of
it, it is soon extinguished.
Sensuality makes men most unfit
for divine communications, and
is an effectual means to quench
the Spirit. Intemperance in
eating and drinking carries
on the ruin of soul and body at
once; and hastens death, while
it makes the man most unfit for
it. Therefore, "Be careful, or
your hearts will be weighed down
with dissipation, drunkenness
and the anxieties of life, and
that day will close on you
unexpectedly like a trap." Luke
21:34
But O
how often is the soul struck
through with a dart, in
gratifying the senses! At these
doors destruction enters in.
Therefore Job "made a covenant
with his eyes," chap. 31:1. "The
mouth of a strange woman is a
deep pit– he that is abhorred of
the Lord, shall fall therein,"
Prov. 22:14. "Let him that
stands, take heed lest he fall,"
I Cor. 10:12. Beware of lustful
pleasure; study modesty in your
apparel, words, and actions. The
ravens of the valley of death
will at length pick out the
lustful eye– the obscene filthy
tongue will at length be quiet,
in the land of silence; and grim
death, embracing the body in its
cold arms, will effectually
allay the heat of all fleshly
lusts!
(4.) In
a word, it may CHECK OUR
EARTHLY-MINDEDNESS;
and at once knock down "the lust
of the flesh, the lust of the
eyes, and the pride of life."
Ah! if we must die why are we
so fond of temporal
things; so anxious to get
them, so eager in the embraces
of them, so mightily bothered
with the loss of them?
Let
me, upon a view of "the house
appointed for all living,"
address the worldling in the
words of Solomon. Prov. 23:5,
"Will you set your eyes upon
that which is not?" For riches
certainly make themselves wings,
"they flee away as an eagle
towards heaven." Riches, and all
worldly things are but 'a lovely
nothing'; they are that which is
not. They are not what they seem
to be– they are but gilded
vanities, that deceive the eye.
Comparatively, they are not;
there is infinitely more of
nothingness and non-being, than
of being, or reality, in the
best of them. What is the
world and all that is in it,
but a fashion, or fair show,
such as men make on the stage– a
passing show? I Cor. 7:31. Royal
pomp is but gaudy show, or
appearance, in God's account,
Acts 25:23. The best name they
get, is good things– but observe
it, they are only the wicked
man's good things, Luke 16:25,
"You in your lifetime received
your good things," says Abraham,
in the parable, to the rich man
in hell. Well may the men of the
world call these things their
goods; for there is no other
good in them, about them, nor
attending them.
Now,
will you set your eyes upon
empty shadows and fancies? Will
you cause your eyes to fly on
them, as the word is? Shall
men's hearts fly out at their
eyes upon them, as a ravenous
bird on its prey? If they do,
let them know, that at length
these shall flee as fast away
from them, as their eyes flew
upon them– like a flock of
fair-feathered birds, that
settle on a fool's ground;
which, when he runs to catch
them as his own, do immediately
take wing, fly away, and sitting
down on his neighbor's ground,
elude his expectation, Luke
12:20, "You fool, this
night your soul shall be
required of you; then whose
shall these things be?"
Though
you do not make wings to
them, as many do; they
themselves make wings, and fly
away; not as a tame house-bird,
which may be caught again; but
as an eagle, which quickly flies
out of sight, and cannot be
recalled. Forbear then to seek
these things. O mortal! there is
no good reason to be given why
you should set your eyes upon
them. This world is a great
inn, on the road to
eternity, to which you are
traveling. You are attended by
those things, as servants
belonging to the inn where you
lodge– they wait upon you while
you are there; and when you go
away, they will convoy you to
the door. But they are not
yours, they will not go away
with you; but return to wait on
other strangers, as they did on
you.
4. It
may serve as a spring of
CHRISTIAN RESOLUTION, to cleave
to Christ, adhere to his truths,
and continue in his ways;
whatever we may suffer for so
doing. It would much
allay 'the fear of man, that
brings a snare'. "Who are you,
that you should be afraid of a
man that shall die?" Isa. 51:12.
Look on persecutors as pieces of
brittle clay, that shall be
dashed in pieces, for then shall
you despise them as foes, that
are mortal; whose terror to
others in the land of the
living, shall quickly die with
themselves.
The
serious consideration of the
shortness of our time, and the
certainty of death, will teach
us, that all the advantage which
we can make by our seeking the
world, is not worth the while;
it is not worth going out of our
way to get it– and what we
refuse to forgo for Christ's
sake, may be quickly taken from
us by death. But we can never
lose it so honorably, as for the
cause of Christ, and his gospel;
for what glory is it, that you
give up what you have in the
world, when God takes it away
from you by death, whether you
will or not?
This
consideration may teach us to
undervalue life itself, and
choose to forgo it, rather than
to sin. The worst that men can
do, is to take away that life,
which we cannot long keep,
though all the world should
conspire to help us to retain
the spirit. If we refuse to
offer it up to God when he calls
for it in defense of his honor,
he can take it from us another
way; as it fared with him, who
could not burn as a martyr for
Christ, but was afterwards
burned by an accidental fire in
his house.
5. It
may serve for a spur to INCITE
US TO PREPARE FOR DEATH.
Consider,
(1.)
YOUR ETERNAL STATE WILL BE
ACCORDING TO THE STATE IN WHICH
YOU DIE– death will
open the doors of heaven or hell
to you. As the tree falls, so it
shall lie through eternity. If
the infant be dead born, the
whole world cannot raise it to
life again– and if one die out
of Christ, in an unregenerate
state, there is no more hope for
him, forever.
(2.)
SERIOUSLY CONSIDER WHAT IT IS TO
GO INTO THE ETERNAL WORLD;
a world of spirits, with which
we are very little acquainted.
How frightful is converse with
spirits to poor mortals in this
life! and how dreadful is the
case, when men are hurried away
into another world, not knowing
but that devils may be their
companions forever! Let us then
give all diligence to make and
advance our acquaintance with
the Lord of that world.
(3.) IT
IS BUT A SHORT TIME YOU HAVE TO
PREPARE FOR DEATH–
therefore now or never, seeing
the time assigned for
preparation will soon be over.
Eccl. 9:10, "Whatever your hand
finds to do, do it with your
might– for there is no work, nor
device, nor knowledge, nor
wisdom, in the grave, where you
go." How can we be idle,
having so great a work to do,
and so little time to do it in?
But if the time is short, the
work of preparation for death,
though hard work, will not last
long. The shadows of the evening
make the laborer work
cheerfully; knowing the time to
be at hand, when he will be
called in from his labor.
(4.)
MUCH OF OUR SHORT TIME IS OVER
ALREADY; and the
youngest of us all cannot assure
himself, that there is as much
of his time to come, as is past.
Our life in the world is but
a short preface to long
eternity; and much of the tale
is told. Oh! shall we not
double our diligence, when so
much of our time is spent, and
so little of our great work is
done?
(5.)
THE PRESENT TIME IS FLYING AWAY–
and we cannot bring back time
past, it has taken an
eternal farewell of us– there is
no kindling the fire again that
is burned to ashes. The time
to come is not ours– and we
have no assurance of a share in
it when it comes. We have
nothing we can call ours, but
the present moment; and that is
flying away. How soon our time
may be at an end, we know not.
Die we must– but who can tell us
when? If death kept one set time
for all, we were in no hazard of
a surprise– but daily
observation shows us, that there
is no such thing. The flying
shadow of our life allows no
time for loitering. The rivers
run speedily into the sea, from
where they came; but not so
speedily as man to dust, from
where he came. The stream of
time is the swiftest current,
and quickly runs out to
eternity!
(6.) If
once death carries us off, THERE
IS NO COMING BACK to mend our
matters, Job 14:14,
"If a man dies, shall he live
again?" Dying is a thing we
cannot get a trial of; it is
what we can only do once, Heb.
9:27, "It is appointed unto men
once to die." And that
which can be but once done, and
yet is of so much importance
that our all depends on our
doing it right, we have need to
use the utmost diligence that we
may do it well. Therefore
prepare for death.
If you
who are unregenerate ask me,
what you shall do to prepare for
death, that you may die safely;
I answer, I have told you
already what must be done. Your
nature and state must be
changed– you must be united to
Jesus Christ by faith. Until
this is done, you are not
capable of other directions,
which belongs to a person's
dying comfortably.
Section II.
The
difference between the Righteous
and the Wicked in their Death.
"The
wicked is driven away in
his wickedness; but the
righteous has hope in his
death." Proverbs 14:32.
This
text looks like the cloud
between the Israelites and
Egyptians; having a dark side
towards the latter, and a bright
side towards the former. It
represents death like Pharaoh's
jailor, bringing the chief
butler and the chief baker out
of prison; the one to be
restored to his office, and the
other to be led to execution. It
shows the difference between the
godly and ungodly in their
death; who, as they act a very
different part in life, so, in
death, have a very different
exit.
I. As to the death of a
WICKED man, here is,
1. The
MANNER of his passing out of the
world. He is "driven
away;" namely, in his death, as
is clear from the opposite
clause. He is forcibly thrust
out of his place in this world;
driven away as chaff before the
wind.
2. The
STATE he passes away in.
He dies also in a sinful
and hopeless state.
A. In a
sinful state– He is
driven away in his wickedness.
He lived in it, and he dies in
it. His filthy garments of sin
in which he wrapped up himself
in his life are his prison
garments, in which he shall lie
wrapped up forever.
B. In a
hopeless state– "but
the righteous has hope in his
death;" which plainly imports
the hopelessness of the wicked
in their death. Whereby is not
meant, that no wicked man shall
have any hope at all when
he is dying, but shall die in
despair. No– sometimes it is so
indeed; but frequently it is
otherwise; foolish virgins may,
and often do, hope to the last
breath. But the wicked man has
no solid hope– as for the
delusive hopes he entertains
himself with, death will root
them up, and he shall be forever
irretrievably miserable.
As to
the death of a righteous man, he
has hope in his death. This is
ushered in with a "but,"
importing the removal of these
dreadful circumstances, with
which the wicked man is
attended, who is driven away in
his wickedness; but the godly
are not so.
1. Not
so, in the manner of their
passing out of the world.
The righteous are not
driven away as chaff before the
wind; but led away as a bride to
the marriage chamber, carried
away by the angels into
Abraham's bosom, Luke 16:22.
2. Not
so as to their state, when
passing out of this life.
The righteous man dies,
not in a sinful, but in a
holy state. He does not go
away in his sin, but
out of it. In his life he
was putting off the old man,
changing his prison garments;
and now the remaining rags of
them are removed, and he is
adorned with robes of glory. Not
in a hopeless, but a hopeful
state. He has hope in his death;
he has the grace of hope, and
the well-founded expectation of
better things than he ever had
in this world– and though, the
stream of his hope at death may
run shallow, yet he has still so
much of it as makes him venture
his eternal interests upon the
Lord Jesus Christ.
DOCTRINE I
The WICKED dying, are driven
away in their wickedness, and in
a HOPELESS state.
In
speaking to this doctrine,
I. I
shall show how, and in what
sense, the wicked are "driven
away in their wickedness" at
death.
II. I
shall prove the hopelessness of
their state at death.
III.
And then apply the whole.
I. How,
and in what sense, the wicked
are "driven away in their
wickedness." In
discoursing of this matter, I
shall briefly inquire,
1.
What is meant by their being
"driven away."
2. Why
they shall be driven, and where.
3. In
what respects they may be said
to be driven away "in their
wickedness."
But
before I proceed, let me remark,
that you are mistaken if you
think that no people are to be
called wicked, but those who are
avowedly vicious and profane; as
if the devil could dwell in none
but those whose name is Legion.
In Scripture account, all who
are not righteous, in the manner
hereafter explained, are
reckoned wicked. Therefore the
the text divides the whole world
into two sorts– "the righteous
and the wicked," and you will
see the same thing in Malachi
3:18, "Then shall you return,
and discern between the
righteous and the wicked."
Therefore if you are not
righteous, you are wicked. If
you have not an imputed
righteousness, and also an
implanted righteousness, or
united to Christ by faith,
however moral and blameless in
the eyes of men your
conversation may be, you are the
wicked who shall be driven away
in their wickedness– if death
finds you in that state. Now,
1. As
to the MEANING of this phrase,
"driven away," there
are three things in it; the
wicked shall be taken away
suddenly, violently, and
irresistibly.
(1.)
Unrenewed men shall be taken
away SUDDENLY at death.
Not that all wicked men die
suddenly; nor that they are all
wicked that die so; God forbid.
But,
1.
Death commonly comes upon them
unexpectedly, and so
surprises them, as the deluge
surprised the old world, though
they were forewarned of it long
before it came; and as travail
comes on a woman with child,
with surprising suddenness,
although looked for and
expected, 1 Thess. 5:3. Death
seizes them, as a creditor does
his debtor, to drag him to
prison, Psalm 55:15, and that
when they are not aware. Death
comes in, as a thief, at the
window, and finds them full of
busy thoughts about this life
which that very day perish.
2.
Death always seizes them
unprepared for it; the old
house falls down about their
ears, before they have another
provided. When death casts them
to the door, they have not where
to lay their heads; unless it be
on a bed of fire and brimstone.
The soul and body are as it were
hugging one another in mutual
embraces; when death comes like
a whirlwind, and separates them.
3.
Death hurries them away in a
moment to destruction, and
makes a most dismal change– the
man for the most part never
knows where he is, until "in
hell he lift up his eyes,"
Luke 16:23. The floods of wrath
suddenly overwhelm his soul; and
before he is aware, he is
plunged into the bottomless pit!
(2.)
The unrenewed man is taken away
out of the world VIOLENTLY.
Driving is a violent action; he
is "chased out of the world,"
Job 18:18. Gladly would he stay,
if he could; but death drags him
away, like a malefactor to the
execution. He sought no other
portion than the profits and
pleasures of this world– he has
no other; he really desires no
other– how can he then go away
out of it, if he were not
driven?
Question. "But may not a
wicked man be willing to die?"
Answer. He may indeed be
willing to die; but observe it
is only in one of three cases.
1. In
a fit of passion, by reason of
some trouble that he is
impatient to be rid of. Thus,
many people, when their passion
has got the better of their
reason, and when, on that
account they are most unfit to
die, will be ready to cry, "O to
be gone!" But should their
desire be granted, and death
came at their call, they would
quickly show they were not in
earnest; and that, if they go,
they must be driven away against
their wills.
2.
When they are brim-full of
despair may they be willing
to die. Thus Saul murdered
himself; and Spira wished to be
in hell, that he might know the
uttermost of what he believed he
was to suffer. In this manner
men may seek after death, while
it flees from them. But fearful
is the violence these undergo,
whom the terrors of God do thus
drive.
3.
When they are dreaming of
happiness after death.
Foolish virgins, under the power
of delusion, as to their state,
may be willing to die, having no
fear of lying down in sorrow.
How many are there, who can give
no scriptural ground for their
hope, who yet have no bands in
their death! Many are driven to
darkness 'sleeping'– they go off
like lambs, who would roar like
lions, did they but know what
place they are going to; though
the chariot in which they are,
drives furiously to the depths
of hell, yet they fear not,
because they are fast asleep!
(3.)
The unregenerate man is taken
away IRRESISTIBLY. He
must go, though sore
against his will. Death will
lake no refusal, nor admit of
any delay; though the man has
not lived half his days,
according to his own
computation. If he will not
bow, it will break
him. If he will not come forth,
it will pull the house down
about his ears; for there he
must not stay. Although the
physicians help, friends groan,
the wife and children cry, and
he himself use his utmost
efforts to retain the spirit,
his soul is required of him;
yield he must, and go where he
shall never more see light.
2. Let us consider, WHY they are
driven, and WHERE.
When
the wicked die,
(1.) They are driven out
of this world, where they
sinned, into the other world,
where they must be judged, and
receive their particular
sentences, Heb. 9:27, "It is
appointed unto men once to die,
but after this the judgment."
They shall no more return to
their beloved earth. Though
their hearts are wedded to their
earthly enjoyments, they must
leave them, they can carry
nothing hence. How sorrowful
must their departure be, when
they have nothing in view so
good as that which they leave
behind them!
(2.) They are driven out of
the society of the saints on
earth, into the society of
the damned in hell, Luke
16:22-23, "The rich man also
died, and was buried. And in
hell he lift up his eyes." What
a multitude of the devil's goats
do now take place among Christ's
sheep! but at death they shall
be "led forth with the workers
of iniquity," Psalm 125:5. There
is a mixed multitude in
this world, but no mixture in
the other; each party is there
set by themselves. Though
hypocrites grow here as tares
among the wheat, death will root
them up, and they shall be bound
in bundles for the fire.
(3.) They are driven out
of time into eternity! While
time lasts with them, there is
hope; but when time goes, all
hope goes with it. Precious time
is now lavishly spent– it lies
so heavy on the hands of many,
that they think themselves
obliged to take several ways to
drive away time. But beware of
being at a loss what to do in
life– improve time for eternity,
while you have it; for before
long, death will drive it from
you, and you from it, so as you
shall never meet again.
(4.) They are driven out
of their specious 'pretenses to
piety'. Death strips them of
the splendid robes of a fair
profession, with which some of
them are adorned; and turns them
off the stage, in the rags of a
wicked heart and life. The word
"hypocrite" properly signifies a
stage-player, who appears
to be what indeed he is not.
This world is the stage on which
these children of the devil
impersonate the children of God.
Their 'show of religion' is the
player's coat, under which one
must look, who will judge of
them aright. Death turns them
out of their coat, and they
appear in their native dress– it
unveils them, and takes off
their mask! There are none in
the other world, who pretend to
be better than they really are.
Depraved nature acts in the
regions of horror, undisguised!
(5.) They are driven away
from all means of grace; and are
set beyond the line, quite
out of all prospect of mercy.
There is no more an opportunity
to buy oil for the lamp; it is
gone out at death, and can never
be lighted again. There may be
offers of mercy and peace made,
after they are gone; but they
are to others, not to
them– there are no such offers
in the place to which they are
driven; these offers are only
made in that place from which
they are driven away.
3. In what respects may they
be said to be driven away in
their wickedness?
Answer
1. In respect of their being
driven away in
their sinful unconverted state.
Having lived enemies to
God, they die in a state
of enmity to him– for none are
brought into the eternal state
of consummate happiness, but by
the way of the state of grace in
this life. The child that is
dead in the womb, is born dead,
and is cast out of the womb into
the grave– so, "he who is dead
while he lives", or is
spiritually dead, is cast forth
of the womb of time, in the same
state of death, into the pit of
utter misery. O miserable death,
to die in the gall of
bitterness, and bond of
iniquity! It had been
incomparably better for such as
die thus, that they had never
been born!
Answer
2. In regard that they die
sinning, acting wickedly
against God, in contradiction to
the divine law; for they can do
nothing but sin while they live–
so death takes them in the very
act of sinning; violently draws
them from the embraces of their
lusts, and drives them away to
the tribunal, to receive their
sentence! It is a remarkable
expression, Job 36:14, "They die
in youth," the marginal reading
is, "their soul dies in youth"–
their lusts being lively, their
desires vigorous, and
expectations big, as is common
in youth. "And their life is
among the unclean;" or, "And the
company" or herd "of them" dies
"among the Sodomites," namely,
is taken awny in the act of
their sin and wickedness, as the
men of Sodom were, Genesis 19;
Luke 17:28, 29.
Answer
3. As they are driven away,
loaded with the guilt of all
their sins; this is the
winding-sheet that shall lie
down with them in the dust, Job
20:11. Their works follow them
into the other world; they go
away with the yoke of their
transgressions wreathed about
their necks. Guilt is a bad
companion in life, but how
terrible will it be in death! It
lies now, perhaps, like cold
brimstone on their benumbed
consciences– but when death
opens the way for sparks of
divine vengeance, like fire, to
fall upon it, it will make
dreadful flames in the
conscience, in which the soul
will be, as it were, wrapped up
forever!
Answer
4. The wicked are driven away in
their wickedness, in so far as
they die under the absolute
power of their wickedness.
While there is hope, there is
some restraint on the worst of
men; those moral endowments,
which God gives to a number of
men, for the benefit of mankind
in this life, are so many
restraints upon the impetuous
wickedness of human nature. But
all hope being cut off, and
these gifts withdrawn, the
wickedness of the wicked will
then arrive at its perfection.
As the
seeds of grace, sown in
the hearts of the elect, come to
their full maturity at death; so
wicked and hellish
dispositions in the reprobate,
come then to their highest
pitch! Their prayers to God
will then be turned to horrible
curses, and their praises to
hideous blasphemies, Matthew
25:13, "There shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth." This
gives a dismal, but
correct view of the state of
the wicked in another world.
II. I shall discover the
HOPELESSNESS of the state of
unrenenewed men at death. It
appears to be very hopeless, if
we consider these four things.
1.
Death cuts off their hopes and
prospects of peace and pleasure
in this life. Luke
12:19, 20, "Soul, you have much
goods laid up for many years;
take your ease, eat, drink, and
be merry. But God said unto him,
You fool, this night your soul
shall be required of you– then
who shall have those things
which you have provided?" They
look for great matters in this
world, they hope to increase
their wealth, to see their
families prosper, and to live at
ease; but death comes like a
stormy wind, and shakes off all
their fond hopes, like green
fruit from off a tree. "When he
is about to fill his belly, God
shall cast the fury of his wrath
upon him," Job 20:23. He may
begin a web of contrivances for
advancing his worldly interest;
but before he gets it wrought
out, death comes and cuts it
off. "His breath goes forth, he
returns to his earth; in that
very day his thoughts perish."
Psalm 146:4.
2. When
death comes, they have no solid
ground to hope for eternal
happiness. "For what
is the hope of the hypocrite,
though he has gained, when God
takes away his soul?" Job 27:8.
Whatever hopes they fondly
entertain, they are not founded
on God's word, which is the only
sure ground of hope; if they
knew their own case, they would
see themselves only happy in a
'dream'. And indeed what hope
can they have? The law is
plain against them, and condemns
them. The curses of it, those
cords of death, are about them
already. The Savior whom
they slighted, is now their
Judge; and their Judge is
their enemy! How then can
they hope? They have bolted the
door of mercy against
themselves, by their unbelief.
They have despised the remedy,
and therefore must die without
mercy. They have no saving
interest in Jesus Christ, the
only channel of conveyance
through which mercy flows– and
therefore they can never taste
it.
The
'sword of justice' guards the
door of mercy, so as none can
enter in, but the members of the
mystical body of Christ, over
whose head is a covert of
atoning blood, the Mediator's
blood. These indeed may pass
without a harm, for justice has
nothing to require of them. But
others cannot pass, since they
are not in Christ– death comes
to them with the sting in it–
the sting of unpardoned guilt.
It is armed against them with
all the force which the sanction
of a holy law can give it. 1
Cor. 15:56, "The sting of death
is sin, and the strength of sin
is the law." When that law was
given on Sinai, "the whole mount
quaked greatly," Exodus 19:18.
When the Redeemer was making
satisfaction for the elect's
breaking it, "the earth did
quake, and the rocks rent,"
Matt, 27:51.
What
possible ground of hope, then,
is there to the wicked man, when
death comes upon him armed with
the force of this law? How can
he escape that fire, which
"burnt unto the midst of
heaven?" Deut. 4:11. How shall
he be able to stand in that
smoke, that "ascended up as the
smoke of a furnace?" Exod.
19:18. How will he endure the
terrible "thunders and
lightnings," verse 16, and dwell
in "the darkness, clouds, and
thick darkness?" Deut. 4:11. All
these comparisons heaped
together do but faintly
represent the fearful tempest of
wrath and indignation, which
shall pursue the wicked to the
lowest hell; and forever abide
on those who are driven to
darkness at death.
3.
Death roots up their delusive
hopes of eternal happiness;
then it is that their covenant
with death and agreement with
hell, is broken. They are
awakened out of their golden
dreams, and at length lift up
their eyes; Job 8:14, "Whose
hope shall be cut off, and whose
trust shall be a spider's web."
They trust that all shall be
well with them after death– but
their trust is as a web woven
out of their own bowels, with a
great deal of art and industry.
They wrap themselves up in their
hope, as the spider wraps
herself in her web. But it is a
weak and slender defense; for
however it may withstand the
threatenings of the word of God;
death, that broom of
destruction, will sweep them and
it both away, so as there shall
not be the least shred of it
left; and he, who this moment
will not let his hope go, shall
next moment be utterly hopeless.
Death overturns the house built
on the sand; it leaves no man
under the power of delusion.
4.
Death makes their state
absolutely and forever hopeless.
Matters cannot be
retrieved and amended after
death. For,
1.
Time once gone can never be
recalled. If cries or tears,
price or pains, could bring time
back again, the wicked man might
have hope in his death. But
tears of blood will not prevail!
Nor will his roaring for
millions of ages cause it to
return! The sun will not stand
still for the sluggard to awake
and enter on his journey; and
when once it is gone down, he
needs not expect the night to be
turned into day for his sake– he
must lodge through the long
night of eternity, where his
time left him.
2.
There is no returning to this
life, to amend what is amiss; it
is a state of probation and
trial, which terminates at
death; therefore we cannot
return to it again; it is but
once we thus live, and once we
die. Death carries the wicked
man to "his own place," Acts
1:25. This life is our working
day. Death closes our day and
our work together. We may
readily admit the wicked might
have some hope in their death,
if, after death has opened their
eyes, they could return to life,
and have but the trial of one
Sabbath, one offer of Christ,
one day, or but one hour more,
to make up their peace with God–
but "man lies down, and rises
not until the heavens be no
more; they shall not awake, nor
be raised out of their sleep,"
Job 14:12.
3.
In the other world, men have no
access to get their ruined state
and condition retrieved, though
they be ever so desirous of it.
"For there is no work, nor
device, nor knowledge, nor
wisdom, in the grave, where you
go," Eccl. 9:10. Now a
man may flee from the wrath to
come; he may get into a refuge.
But when once death has done its
work, "the door is shut!" there
are no more offers of mercy, no
more pardons– where the tree is
fallen, there it must lie.
Let
what has been said be carefully
pondered; and that it may be of
use, let me exhort you,
First, To take heed that you
entertain no hopes of heaven,
but what are built on a solid
foundation– tremble to think
what fair hopes of happiness
death sweeps away, like cobwebs;
how the hopes of many are cut
off, when they seem to
themselves to be at the very
threshold of heaven; how, in the
moment they expected to be
carried by angels into Abraham's
bosom, into the regions of bliss
and peace; they are carried by
devils into the society of the
damned in hell, into the place
of torment, and regions of
horror!
I beseech you to BEWARE–
1. Of
a hope built upon ground that
was never cleared. The wise
builder dug deep, Luke 6:48.
Were your hopes of heaven never
shaken; but have you had good
hopes all your days? Alas for
it! you may see the mystery of
your case explained, Luke 11:21,
When a strong man armed keeps
his palace, his goods are at
peace. But if they have been
shaken, take heed lest some
breaches only have been made in
the old building, which you have
got repaired again, by ways and
means of your own. I assure you,
that your hope, however fair a
building it is, is not fit to
trust to, unless your old hopes
have been razed, and you have
built on a foundation quite new.
2.
Beware of that hope which looks
bright in the dark, but loses
all its luster when it is set in
the light of God's word, when it
is examined and tried by the
touchstone of divine revelation,
John 3:20, 21, "for every one
that does evil hates the light,
neither comes to the light, lest
his deeds should be reproved.
But he that does the truth,
comes to the light, that his
deeds may be made manifest, that
they are wrought in God." That
hope, which cannot abide
scripture trial, but sinks
when searched into by sacred
truth, is a delusion, and not a
true hope– for God's word is
always a friend to the graces of
God's Spirit, and an enemy to
delusion.
3.
Beware of that hope, which
stands without being supported
by scriptural evidences. Alas!
many are big with hopes, who
cannot give, because they really
have not, any scripture grounds
for them. You hope that all will
be well with you after death–
but what word of God is it, on
which you have been caused to
hope? Psalm 119:49. What
scriptural evidence have you to
prove that yours is not the hope
of the hypocrite? What have you,
after impartial
self-examination, as in the
sight of God, found in yourself,
which the word of God determines
to be a sure evidence of his
right to eternal life, who is
possessed of it? Numbers are
ruined with such hopes as stand
unsupported by scriptural
evidence. Men are fond and
tenacious of these hopes; but
death will throw them down, and
leave the self-deceiver
hopeless.
4.
Beware of that hope of heaven,
which does not prepare and
dispose you for heaven, which
never makes your soul more holy,
1 John 3:3, "Every man that has
this hope in him, purifies
himself, even as he is pure."
The hope of the most part of
men, is rather a hope to be free
from pain and torment in another
life; than a hope of true
happiness, the nature whereof is
not understood and discerned.
Therefore it rests in sloth and
indolence, and does not excite
to mortification and a heavenly
life. So far are they from
hoping aright for heaven, that
they must own, if they speak
their genuine sentiments,
removing out of this world into
any other place whatever, is
rather their fear than
their hope.
The
glory of the heavenly city does
not at all draw their hearts
upwards to it, nor do they lift
up their heads with joy, in the
prospect of arriving at it. If
they had the true hope of the
marriage day, they would, as the
bride, the "Lamb's wife," be
"making themselves ready for
it," Rev. 19:7. But their hopes
are produced by their sloth, and
their sloth is nourished by
their hopes. Oh, Sirs, as you
would not be driven away
helpless in your death, beware
of these hopes! Raze them now,
and build on a new foundation,
lest death leave not one stone
of them upon another, and you
never be able to hope any more.
Secondly, Hasten, O sinners,
out of your wickedness, out of
your sinful state, and out of
your wicked life, if you would
not at death be driven
away in your wickedness!
Remember the fatal end of the
wicked as the text represents
it. I know there is a great
difference in the death of the
wicked, as to some
circumstances– but ALL of them,
in their death, agree in this,
that they are driven away in
their wickedness. Some of them
die resolutely, as if
they scorned to be afraid; some
in raging despair, so
filled with horror that they cry
out as if they were already in
hell; others in sullen
despondency, oppressed with
fears, so that their hearts sink
within them, at the remembrance
of misspent time, and the view
which they have of eternity,
having neither head nor heart to
do anything for their own
relief. And others die
stupidly; they live like
beasts, and they die like
beasts, without any concern on
their spirits, about their
eternal state. They groan under
their bodily distress but
have no sense of the danger of
their soul! One may, with
almost as much prospect of
success, speak to a stone, as
speak to them; vain is the
attempt to teach them; nothing
that can be said moves them. To
discourse to them, either of the
joys of heaven on the torments
of hell, is to plough on a rock,
or beat the air. Some die like
the foolish virgins,
dreaming of heaven; their
foreheads are steeled against
the fears of hell, with
presumptuous hopes of heaven.
The business of those who would
be useful to them, is not to
answer doubts about the case of
their souls, but to discover to
them their own false hopes. But
which way soever the unconverted
man dies, he is "driven away in
his wickedness."
O
dreadful case! Oh, let the
consideration of so horrid a
departure out of this world,
move you to flee to Jesus
Christ, as the all-sufficient
Savior, an almighty Redeemer.
Let it prevail to drive you out
of your wickedness, to holiness
of heart and life. Though you
reckon it pleasant to live in
wickedness, yet you cannot but
own, it is bitter to die in it.
And if you leave it not in time,
you must go on in your
wickedness to hell, the
proper place of it, that it
may be set there on its own
base. For when you are passing
out of this world, all your
sins, from the first to the last
of them, will swarm about you,
hang upon you, accompany you to
the other world, and, as so many
furies, surround you there
forever.
Thirdly, O be concerned for
others, especially for
your relations, that they may
not continue in their sinful
natural state, but be brought
into a state of salvation; lest
they be driven away in their
wickedness at death. What would
you not do to prevent any of
your friends dying an untimely
and violent death? But, alas! do
you not see them in hazard of
being driven away in their
wickedness! Is not death
approaching them, even the
youngest of them? And are
they not strangers to true
Christianity, remaining in that
state which they came into the
world? Oh! make haste to pluck
the brand out of the fire, lest
it be burned to ashes! The death
of relations often leaves a
sting in the hearts of those
they leave behind them, because
they did not do for their souls
as they had opportunity; and
because the opportunity is
forever taken out of their
hands.
Doctrine II
The state of
the GODLY in death is a HOPEFUL
state.
We
have seen the dark side of the
cloud looking towards ungodly
men, passing out of the world;
let us now take a view of the
bright side of it, shining on
the godly, as they enter on
their eternal state. In
discoursing on this subject, I
shall confirm this
doctrine, answer an objection
against it, and then make some
practical improvement of
the whole.
I. For
CONFIRMATION, let it
be observed, that although the
passage out of this world by
death has a frightful aspect to
poor mortals, and to miscarry in
it must needs be of fatal
consequence; yet the following
circumstances make the state of
the godly in their death, happy
and hopeful.
1. They
hare a trusty good Friend before
them in the other world.
Jesus Christ, their best Friend,
is Lord of the land to which
death carries them. When Joseph
sent for his father to come down
to him to Egypt, telling him,
"God had made him lord over all
Egypt," Gen. 45:9, "And Jacob
"saw the wagons Joseph had sent
to carry him, the spirit of
Jacob revived," verse 27. He
resolves to undertake the
journey.
I
think, when the Lord calls a
godly man out of the world, he
sends him such glad tidings, and
such a kind invitation into the
other world, that, he has faith
to believe it, his spirit must
revive, when he sees the 'wagon
of death' which comes to carry
him there. It is true, indeed,
he has a weighty trial to
undergo– after death the
judgment. But the case of the
godly is altogether hopeful; for
the Lord of the land is
their husband, and their
husband is the judge.
"The Father has committed all
judgment unto the Son," John
5:22. Surely the case of the
wife is hopeful, when her own
husband is her judge, even such
a husband as hates divorce. No
husband is so loving and so
tender of his spouse, as the
Lord Christ is of his. One would
think it would be a very bad
land, which a wife would not
willingly go to, where her
husband is the ruler and judge.
Moreover, their judge is the
advocate, 1 John 2:1, "We
have an advocate with the
Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous." Therefore they need
not fear their being put back,
and falling into condemnation.
What can be more favorable? Can
they think, that he who pleads
their cause, will himself pass
sentence against them?
Yet
further, their advocate is their
Redeemer; they are
"redeemed with the precious
blood of Christ," 1 Pet. 1:18,
19. So when he pleads for them,
he is pleading his own cause.
Though an advocate may be
careless of the interest of one
who employs him, yet surely he
will do his utmost to
defend
his own right, which he
has purchased with his money–
and shall not their advocate
defend the purchase of his own
blood?
But
more than all that, their
Redeemer is their head,
and they are his members, Eph.
5:23, 30. Though one were so
silly as to let his own
purchase go, without
standing up to defend his right,
yet surely he will not part with
a limb of his own body.
Is not their case then hopeful
in death, who are so closely
linked and allied to the Lord of
the other world, who are "the
keys of hell and of death?"
2. They
shall have a safe passage to
another world. They
must indeed go through "the
valley of the shadow of death;"
but though it be in itself a
'dark and shady valley', it
shall be a 'valley of hope' to
them– they shall not be driven
through it, but be as men in
perfect safety, who fear no
evil, Psalm 23:4.
Why
should they thus fear? They have
the Lord of the land's safe
conduct, his pass sealed with
his own blood; namely, the
blessed covenant, which is the
saint's death-bed comfort, 2
Sam. 23:5, "Although my house be
not so with God, yet he has made
with me an everlasting covenant,
ordered in all things and sure–
for this is all my salvation,
and all my desire, although he
make it not to grow." Who then
can harm them? It is safe riding
in Christ's chariot, Cant. 3:9,
both through life and death.
They have good and honorable
attendants– a guard, even a
guard of angels. These encamp
about them in the time of their
life; and surely will not
leave them in the day of their
death. These happy
ministering spirits are
attendants on their Lord's
bride, and will doubtless convey
her safe home to his house.
When
friends in mournful mood stand
by the saint's bedside, waiting
to see him draw his last breath,
his soul is waited for by
angels, to be carried into
Abraham's bosom, Luke 16:22. The
captain of the saint's salvation
is the captain of this holy
guard– he was their guide even
unto death, and he will be their
guide through it too, Psalm
23:4, "Yes, though I walk
through the valley of the shadow
of death, I will fear no evil;
for you are with me." They may,
without fear, pass that 'river',
being confident it shall not
overflow them; and they may walk
through that 'fire', being sure
they shall not be burnt by it.
Death can do them no harm!
It cannot even hurt their
bodies– for though it separate
the soul from the body, it
cannot separate the body from
the Lord Jesus Christ. Even
death is to them but 'sleep in
Jesus', 1 Thess. 4:14. They
continue members of Christ,
though in a grave. Their dust is
precious dust; laid up in the
grave as in their Lord's
cabinet. They lie in a grave
'mellowing', as precious fruit
laid up to be brought forth to
him at the resurrection. The
husbandman has corn in his barn,
and corn lying in the ground–
the latter is more precious to
him than the former, because he
looks to get it returned with
increase. Even so the dead
bodies of the saints are valued
by their Savior– they are "sown
in corruption," to be "raised in
incorruption"; "sown in
dishonor," to be "raised in
glory," 1 Cor. 15:42, 43. It
cannot hurt their souls. It is
with the souls of the saints at
death, as with Paul and his
company in their voyage, whereof
we have the history, Acts,
chapter 27. The ship was broken
to pieces, but the passengers
got all safe to land.
When
the dying saint's speech is
stopped, his eyes set, and his
last breath drawn, the soul gets
safe away into the heavenly
paradise, leaving the body to
return to its earth, but in the
joyful hope of a reunion at its
glorious resurrection. But how
can death hurt the godly? It is
a foiled enemy– if it casts them
down, it is only that they may
rise more glorious. "Our Savior
Jesus Christ has abolished
death," 2 Tim. 1:10. The soul
and life of it is gone– it is
but a 'walking shadow' that may
fright, but cannot
hurt saints– it is only the
'shadow of death' to them– it is
not the thing itself; their
dying is 'but as dying', or
'somewhat like dying'.
The
apostle tells us, "It is Christ
that died," Rom. 8:34. Stephen,
the first Christian martyr,
though stoned to death, yet only
'fell asleep', Acts 7:60.
Certainly the nature of death is
quite changed, with respect to
the saints. It is not to them,
what it was to Jesus Christ
their head– it is not the
venomed ruining thing, wrapped
up in the sanction of the first
covenant, Gen. 2:17, "In the day
you eat thereof, you shall
surely die." It comes to the
godly without a sting– they may
meet it with that salutation, "O
death, where is your sting?" Is
this Mara? Is this 'bitter'
death? It went out full into the
world, when the first Adam
opened the door to it, but the
second Adam has brought it again
empty to his own people.
I feel
a sting, may the dying
saint say– yet it is but a bee
sting, slinging only through the
skin– but, O death, where
is your sting, your old sting,
the serpent's sting, that stings
to the heart and soul?
The sting of death is sin–
but that is taken away. If death
arrests the saint, and carries
him before the Judge, to answer
for the debt he contracted, the
debt will be found paid by the
glorious Surety; and he has the
discharge to show. The thorn
of guilt is pulled
out of the man's conscience; and
his name is blotted out of the
black roll, and written among
the living in Jerusalem.
It is
true, it is a great journey
through the valley of the shadow
of death– but the saint's burden
is taken away from his back, his
iniquity is pardoned, he may
walk at ease– "No lion shall be
there, nor any ravenous beast,"
the redeemed may walk at leisure
there, free from all
apprehensions of danger.
3. They
shall have a joyful entrance
into the other world.
Their arrival in the regions of
bliss, will be celebrated with
rapturous hymns of praise to
their glorious Redeemer. A
dying day is a good
day to a godly man. Yes, it is
his best day; it is
better to him than his
birth-day, or than the most
joyous day which he ever had on
earth. "A good name," says the
wise man, is "better than
precious ointment– and the day
of death, than the day of one's
birth," Eccl. 7:1.
The
notion of the immortality of the
soul, and of future happiness,
which obtained among some pagan
nations, had wonderful effects
on them. Some of them, when they
mourned for the dead, did it in
women's apparel; that, being
moved with the indecency of the
garb, they might the sooner lay
aside their mourning. Others
buried them without any
lamentation or mourning; but had
a sacrifice, and a feast for
friends, upon that occasion.
Some were used to mourn at
births, and rejoice at burials.
But the practice of some Indian
nations is yet more strange,
where, upon the husband's
decease, his wife, or wives,
with a cheerful countenance,
enter the flames prepared for
the husband's corpse.
But
however false notions of
a future state, assisted by
pride, affectation of applause,
apprehensions of difficulties in
this life, and such like
principles proper to depraved
human nature, may influence
crude uncultivated minds, when
strengthened by the arts of
hell; O what solid joy and
consolation may they have, who
are true Christians, being in
Christ, who "has brought life
and immortality to light through
the gospel!" 2 Tim. 1:10. Death
is one of those "all things,"
that "work together for good to
those who love God," Rom. 8:28.
When the body dies, the
soul is perfected– the
'body of death' goes off at the
'death of the body'.