Directions for Hating Sin
by Richard
Baxter
Direction 1. Labor to know God, and to
be affected with his attributes, and
always to live as in his sight.
No man can
know sin perfectly, because no man can
know God perfectly. You can no further
know what sin is than you know what God
is, whom you sin against; for the
malignity of sin is against the will and
attributes of God. The godly have some
knowledge of the malignity of sin,
because they have some knowledge of God
who is wronged by it. The wicked have no
practical knowledge of the malignity of
sin, because they have no such knowledge
of God. Those who fear God, will fear
sinning. Those who in their hearts are
bold irreverently with God, will, in
heart and life, be bold with sin. The
atheist, who thinks there is no God,
thinks there is no sin against him.
Nothing in world will tell us so plainly
and powerfully of the evil of sin, as
the knowledge of the greatness, wisdom
goodness, holiness, authority, justice,
truth, etc. of God. The sense of his
presence, therefore, will revive our
sense of sin’s malignity.
Direction 2. Consider well of the
office, the bloodshed, and the holy life
of Christ.
His office is
to expiate sin, and to destroy it. His
blood was shed for it. His life
condemned it. Love Christ, and
you will hate that which caused his
death. Love him, and you will
love to be made like him, and hate that
which is so contrary to Christ. These
two great lights will show the
odiousness of darkness.
Direction 3. Think well both how holy
the office and work of the Holy Spirit
is, and how great a mercy it is to us.
Shall God
himself, the heavenly light, come down
into a sinful heart, to illuminate and
purify it? And yet shall I keep my
darkness and defilement, in opposition
to such wonderful mercy? Though all sin
against the Holy Spirit be not the
unpardonable blasphemy, yet all is
aggravated hereby.
Direction 4. Know and consider the
wonderful love and mercy of God, and
think what he has done for you; and you
will hate sin, and be ashamed of it.
It is an
aggravation which makes sin odious even
to common reason and sincerity—that we
should offend a God of infinite
goodness, who has filled up our lives
with mercy. It will grieve you if you
have wronged an extraordinary friend:
his love and kindness will come into
your thoughts, and make you angry with
your own unkindness. Here look over the
catalogue of God’s mercies to you, for
soul and body. And here observe that
Satan, in hiding the love of God from
you, and tempting you under the pretense
of humility to deny his greatest,
special mercy, seeks to destroy your
repentance and humiliation, also, by
hiding the greatest aggravation of your
sin.
Direction 5. Think what the soul of man
is made for, and should be used for—even
to love, obey, and glorify our Maker;
and then you will see what sin is, which
disables and perverts it.
How excellent,
and high, and holy a work are we created
for and called to! And should we defile
the temple of God? And should we serve
the devil in filthiness and folly—when
we should receive, and serve, and
magnify our Creator?
Direction 6. Think well what pure and
sweet delights a holy soul may enjoy
from God, in his holy service; and then
you will see what sin is, which robs him
of these delights, and prefers fleshly
lusts before them.
O how happily
might we perform every duty, and how
fruitfully might we serve our Lord, and
what delight should we find in his love
and acceptance, and the foresight of
everlasting blessedness—if it were not
for sin; which brings down the soul from
the doors of heaven—to wallow with swine
in the mire!
Direction 7. Bethink you what a life it
is which you must live forever, if you
live in heaven; and what a life the holy
ones there now live; and then think
whether sin, which is so contrary to it,
be not a vile and hateful thing.
Either you
would live in heaven, or not. If not,
you are not those I speak to. If you
would, you know that there is no
sinning; no worldly mind, no pride, no
fleshly lust or pleasures there. Oh, did
you but see and hear one hour—how those
blessed spirits are taken up in loving
and magnifying the glorious God in
purity and holiness, and how far they
are from sin—it would make you loathe
sin ever after, and look on sinners as
insane men wallowing naked in their
dung. Especially, to think that you hope
yourselves to live forever like those
holy spirits; and therefore hate all
sin.
Direction 8. Look but to the state and
torment of the damned, and think of the
difference between holy angels and
devils, and you may know what sin is.
Angels are
pure—devils are polluted; holiness and
sin do make the difference. Sin dwells
in hell—and holiness in heaven. Remember
that every temptation is from the
devil—to make you like himself. Likewise
every holy motion is from Christ—to make
you like himself. Remember when you sin,
that you are learning and imitating of
the devil—and are so far like him, John
8:44. And the end of all is, that you
may feel his pains. If hell-fire is not
good—then sin is not good.
Direction 9. Look always on sin as one
who is ready to die, and consider how
all men will judge of it at the last.
What do men in
heaven say of sin? And what do men in
hell say of it? And what do men at death
say of it? And what do converted souls,
or awakened consciences, say of it? Is
it then followed with delight and
fearlessness as it is now? Is it then
applauded? Will any of them speak well
of it? Nay, all the world speaks evil of
sin in the general now, even when they
love and commit it. Will you sin when
you are dying?
Direction 10. Look always on sin and
judgment together.
Remember that
you must answer for sin before God, and
angels, and all the world; and you will
the better know it.
Direction 11. Look now but upon
sickness, poverty, shame, despair,
death, and rottenness in the grave—and
it may a little help you to know what
sin is.
These are
things within your sight or feeling; you
need not faith to tell you of them. And
by such effects, you have
knowledge of the cause.
Direction 12. Look but upon some
eminent, holy people upon earth; and
upon the mad, profane, malignant world;
and the difference may tell you in part
what sin is.
Is there not
an amiableness in a holy, blameless
person, who lives in love to God and
man, and in the joyful hopes of life
eternal? Is not a beastly drunkard or
whoremonger, and a raging swearer, and a
malicious persecutor—a very deformed,
loathsome creature? Is not the mad,
confused, ignorant, ungodly state of the
world a very pitiful sight? What then is
the sin, which all this consists in?
Though the
principal part of the cure is in turning
the will to the hatred of sin, and is
done by this discovery of its malignity;
yet I shall add a few more directions
for the executive part, supposing that
what is said already has had its effect.
Direction 1.
When you have found out your disease and
danger, give up yourselves to Christ as
the Savior and Physician of souls, and
to the Holy Spirit as your Sanctifier,
remembering that he is sufficient and
willing to do the work which he has
undertaken. It is not you that are to be
saviors and sanctifiers of yourselves
(unless as you work under Christ). But
God who has undertaken it, takes it for
his glory to perform it.
Direction 2. Yet
must you be willing and obedient in
applying the remedies prescribed you by
Christ, and observing his directions in
order to your cure.
And you must not think that
his remedy is too bitter, and that is
too sharp; but trust his love, and
skill, and care, and take it as he
prescribes it, or gives it you, without
any more ado. Say not, 'It is grievous,
and I cannot take it!' For he commands
you nothing but what is safe, and
wholesome, and necessary. If you cannot
bear his remedy—think whether you can
bear the fire of hell! Are humiliation,
confession, restitution, mortification,
and holy diligence—worse than hell?
Direction 3. See
that you take not part with sin; and
wrangle not, or strive not against your
Physician, or any that would do you good.
Excusing sin, and persisting
in sin, and extenuating it, and striving
against the Spirit and conscience, and
wrangling against ministers and godly
friends, and hating reproof—are not the
means to be cured and sanctified.
Direction 4.
See that malignity in everyone of your
particular sins—which you can see and
say is in sin in general. It
is a gross deceit of yourselves, if you
will speak a great deal of the evil of
sin, and see none of this malignity in
your pride, and your worldliness,
and your passion and peevishness, and
your malice and uncharitableness, and
your lying, backbiting, slandering, or
sinning against conscience for worldly
gain. What self-contradiction is it for
a man in prayer to aggravate sin—and
when he is reproved for it, to justify
or excuse it! This is like him who will
speak against treason, and the enemies
of the king—but because the traitors are
his friends and kindred, will protect,
and hide and feed them.
Direction 5. Keep
as far as you can from those temptations
which feed and strengthen the sins which
you would overcome.
Lay siege to your sins, and
starve them out, by keeping away the
food and fuel which is their maintenance
and life.
Direction 6.
Live in the exercise of those graces and
duties which are contrary to the sins
which you are most in danger of.
For grace and duty are contrary to sin,
and kill it, and cure us of it—as heat
cures us of cold, or health of sickness.
Direction 7.
Hearken not to weakening unbelief and
distrust, and cast not away the comforts
of God, which are your cordials and
strength.
It is not a frightful,
dejected, despairing frame of mind—which
is fittest to resist sin; but it is the
encouraging sense of the love of God,
and thankful sense of grace received
(with a cautious fear).
Direction 8. Be
always suspicious of carnal self-love,
and watch against it.
For that is the fortress of sin,
and the common patron of it; ready to
draw you to it, and ready to justify it.
We are very prone to be partial to our
own sins. Our own passions, our own
pride, our own censures, or backbitings,
or injurious dealings, our own neglects
of duty—seem small, excusable, if not
justifiable things to us. Whereas we
could easily see the faultiness of all
these in another, especially in an
enemy. But we should be best acquainted
with our own selves and sins—and
therefore hate our own sins most.
Direction 9.
Bestow your first and chief labor to
kill sin at the root. Cleanse
the heart, which is the fountain; for
out of the heart come the evils of the
life. Know which are the master-roots;
and expend your greatest care and
industry to mortify these. They are
especially these: 1. Ignorance. 2.
Unbelief. 3. Inconsiderateness. 4.
Selfishness and pride. 5. Fleshliness,
in pleasing a brutish appetite, lust, or
fantasy. 6. Senseless hard-heartedness
and sleepiness in sin.
Direction 10.
Account the world and all its pleasures,
wealth, and honors, no better than
indeed they are, and then Satan will
find no bait to catch you.
Esteem all as dung with Paul,
Philippians 3:8. No man will sin and
sell his soul—for that which he accounts
but as dung.
Direction 11.
Keep up above in a heavenly thoughts.
Then your souls will be always in
the light, and as in the sight of God,
and taken up with those businesses and
delights which put them out of relish
with the baits of sin.
Direction 12. Let
Christian watchfulness be your daily
work.
Nourish a preserving, though not a
distracting and discouraging fear.
Direction 13. Take
heed of the first approaches and
beginnings of sin.
Oh how great a matter does a
little of this fire kindle! And if you
fall, rise quickly by sound repentance,
whatever it may cost you.
Direction 14. Make God’s word your
only rule and labor diligently to
understand it.
Direction 15. And in doubtful cases,
do not easily depart from the unanimous
judgment of the generality of the most
wise and godly of all ages.
Direction 16. In doubtful cases be not
passionate or rash,
but proceed deliberately, and prove
things well, before you fasten on them.
Direction 17.
Be acquainted with that sin which you
are most inclined to; and
what sin also your calling or living
situation leave you most open to, that
there your watch may be the stricter.
Direction 18.
Keep in a life of holy order, such as
God has appointed you to walk in.
For there is no preservation for
stragglers who keep not rank and file,
but forsake the order which God commands
them. And this order lies principally in
these points: 1. That you keep in union
with the universal church. Separate not
from Christ’s body upon any pretense
whatever. With the regenerate
church—hold spiritual communion, in
faith, love, and holiness. 2. If you are
not teachers, live under your
particular, faithful pastors, as
obedient disciples of Christ. 3. Let the
most godly, if possible, be your
familiar friends. 4. Be laborious in an
outward calling.
Direction 19. Turn
all God’s providences, whether of
prosperity or adversity, against your
sins.
If he gives you health and
wealth, remember he thereby obliges you
to obedience, and calls for special
service from you. If he afflicts you,
remember that it is sin that he is
offended at, and searches after; and
therefore take it as his medicine, and
see that you hinder not, but help on its
work, that it may purge away your sin.
Direction 20.
Wait patiently on Christ until he has
finished the cure, which will not be
until this trying life be finished.
Persevere in attendance on his
Spirit and means; for he will come in
season, and will not tarry. "Let us
acknowledge the Lord; let us press on to
acknowledge him. As surely as the sun
rises, he will appear; he will come to
us like the winter rains, like the
spring rains that water the earth."
Hosea 6:3. Though you have often said,
"There is no healing." Jeremiah 14:19.
"He will heal your backslidings, and
love you freely." Hosea 14:4. "Unto you
who fear his name, shall the Sun of
righteousness arise, with healing in his
wings." Malachi 4:2. "Blessed are all
those who wait for him." Isaiah 30:18.
Thus I have
given such directions as may help for
humiliation under sin, or hatred of it,
and deliverance from it.