SICKNESS
by J. C. Ryle
"He whom You love is sick." John 11:3
The chapter from which this text is taken is
well known to all Bible readers. In life-like
description, in touching interest, in sublime
simplicity, there is no writing in existence
that will bear comparison with that chapter. A
narrative like this is to my own mind one of the
great proofs of the inspiration of Scripture.
When I read the story of Bethany, I feel "There
is something here which the infidel can never
account for."-"This is nothing else but the
finger of God."
The words which I specially dwell upon in this
chapter are singularly affecting and
instructive. They record the message which
Martha and Mary sent to Jesus when their brother
Lazarus was sick: "Lord, behold he whom You
loves is sick" That message was short and
simple. Yet almost every word is deeply
suggestive.
Mark the child-like faith of these holy women.
They turned to the Lord Jesus in their hour of
need, as the frightened infant turns to its
mother, or the compass-needle turns to the Pole.
They turned to Him as their Shepherd, their
almighty Friend, their Brother born for
adversity. Different as they were in natural
temperament, the two sisters in this matter were
entirely agreed. Christ's help was their first
thought in the day of trouble. Christ was the
refuge to which they fled in the hour of need.
Blessed are all those who do likewise!
Mark the simple humility of their language about
Lazarus. They call Him "He whom You loves. They
do not say, "He who loves You, believes in You,
serves You," but "He whom You loves." Martha and
Mary were deeply taught of God. They had learned
that Christ's love towards us, and not our love
towards Christ, is the true ground of
expectation, and true foundation of
hope-Blessed,-again, are all those who are
taught likewise! To look inward to our love
towards Christ is painfully unsatisfying: to
look outward to Christ's love towards us is
peace.
Mark, lastly, the touching circumstance which
the message of Martha and Mary reveals: "He whom
You loves is sick.." Lazarus was a good man,
converted, believing, renewed, sanctified, a
friend of Christ, and an heir of glory. And yet
Lazarus was sick! Then sickness is no sign that
God is displeased. Sickness is intended to be a
blessing to us, and not a curse. "All things
work together for good to those who love God,
and are called according to His purpose." "All
things are yours,-life, death, things present,
or things to come: for you are Christ's; and
Christ is God's." (Rom. 8:28; I Cor. 3:22-23.
Blessed, I say again, are those who have learned
this! Happy are they who can say, when they are
ill, "This is my Father's doing. It must be
well."
I invite the attention of my readers to the
subject of sickness. The subject is one which we
ought frequently to look in the face. We cannot
avoid it. It needs no prophet's eye to see
sickness coming to each of us in turn one day.
"In the midst of life we are in death." Let us
turn aside for a few moments, and consider
sickness as Christians. The consideration will
not hasten its coming, and by God's blessing may
teach us wisdom.
In considering the subject of sickness, three
points appear to me to demand attention. On each
I shall say a few words.
I. The universal prevalence of sickness and
disease.
II. The general benefits which sickness confers
on mankind.
III. The special duties to which sickness calls
us.
I. The universal prevalence of sickness
I need not dwell long on this point. To
elaborate the proof of it would only be
multiplying truisms, and heaping up
common-places which all allow.
Sickness is everywhere. In Europe, in Asia, in
Africa, in America; in hot countries and in
cold, in civilized nations and in savage
tribes,-men, women, and children sicken and die.
Sickness is among all classes. Grace does not
lift a believer above the reach of it. Riches
will not buy exemption from it. Rank cannot
prevent its assaults. Kings and their subjects,
masters and servants, rich men and poor, learned
and unlearned, teachers and scholars, doctors
and patients, ministers and hearers, all alike
go down before this great foe. "The rich man's
wealth is his strong city." (Prov. 18:11.) The
Englishman's house is called his castle; but
there are no doors and bars which can keep out
disease and death.
Sickness is of every sort and description. From
the crown of our head to the sole of our foot we
are liable to disease. Our capacity of suffering
is something fearful to contemplate. Who can
count up the ailments by which our bodily frame
may be assailed? Who ever visited a museum of
morbid anatomy without a shudder? "Strange that
a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune
so long." It is not, to my mind, so wonderful
that men should die so soon, as it is that they
should live so long.
Sickness is often one of the most humbling and
distressing trials that can come upon man. It
can turn the strongest into a little child, and
make him feel-"the grasshopper a burden."
(Eccles. 12:5.) It can unnerve the boldest, and
make him tremble at the fall of a pin. We are
"fearfully and wonderfully made." (Psalm
139:14.) The connection between body and mind is
curiously close. The influence that some
diseases can exercise upon the temper and
spirits is immensely great. There are ailments
of brain, and liver, and nerves, which can bring
down a Solomon in mind to a state little better
than that of a babe. He that would know to what
depths of humiliation poor man can fall, has
only to attend for a short time on sick-beds.
Sickness is not preventable by anything that man
can do. The average duration of life may
doubtless be somewhat lengthened. The skill of
doctors may continually discover new remedies,
and effect surprising cures. The enforcement of
wise sanitary regulations may greatly lower the
death rate in a land. But, after all,-whether in
healthy or unhealthy localities,-whether in mild
climates or in cold,-whether treated by
homeopathy or allopathy,-men will sicken and
die. "The days of our years are three-score
years and ten; and if by reason of strength they
be four-score years, yet is their strength labor
and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly
away." (Psalm 90:10.) That witness is indeed
true. It was true 3300 years ago.-It is true
still.
Now what can we make of this great fact,-the
universal prevalence of sickness? How shall we
account for it? What explanation can we give of
it? What answer shall we give to our inquiring
children when they ask us, "Father, why do
people get ill and die?" These are grave
questions. A few words upon them will not be out
of place. Can we suppose for a moment that God
created sickness and disease at the beginning?
Can we imagine that He who formed our world in
such perfect order was the Former of needless
suffering and pain? Can we think that He who
made all things "very good," made Adam's race to
sicken and to die? The idea is, to my mind,
revolting. It introduces a grand imperfection
into the midst of God's perfect works. I must
find another solution to satisfy my mind.
The only explanation that satisfies me is that
which the Bible gives. Something has come into
the world which has dethroned man from his
original position, and stripped him of his
original privileges. Something has come in,
which, like a handful of gravel thrown into the
midst of machinery, has marred the perfect order
of God's creation. And what is that something? I
answer, in one word, It is sin. "Sin has entered
into the world, and death by sin." (Rom. 5:12.)
Sin is the cause of all the sickness, and
disease, and pain, and suffering which prevail
on the earth. They are all a part of that curse
which came into the world when Adam and Eve ate
the forbidden fruit and fell. There would have
been no sickness, if there had been no fall.
There would have been no disease, if there had
been no sin.
I pause for a moment at this point, and yet in
pausing I do not depart from my subject. I pause
to remind my readers that there is no ground so
untenable as that which is occupied by the
Atheist, the Deist, or the unbeliever in the
Bible. I advise every young reader of this
paper, who is puzzled by the bold and specious
arguments of the infidel, to study well that
most important subject,-the Difficulties of
Infidelity. I say boldly that it requires far
more credulity to be a infidel than to be a
Christian. I say boldly that there are. great
broad patent facts in the condition of mankind,
which nothing but the Bible can explain, and
that one of the most striking of these facts is
the universal prevalence of pain, sickness, and
disease. In short, one of the mightiest
difficulties in the way of Atheists and Deists,
is the body of man.
You have doubtless heard of Atheists. An Atheist
is one who professes to believe that there is no
God, no Creator, no First Cause, and that all
things came together in this world by mere
chance.-Now shall we listen to such a doctrine
as this? Go, take an Atheist to one of the
excellent surgical schools of our land, and ask
him to study the wonderful structure of the
human body. Show him the matchless skill with
which every joint, and vein, and valve, and
muscle, and sinew, and nerve, and bone, and
limb, has been formed. Show him the perfect
adaptation of every part of the human frame to
the purpose which it serves. Show him the
thousand delicate contrivances for meeting wear
and tear, and supplying daily waste of vigor.
And then ask this man who denies the being of a
God, and a great First Cause, if all this
wonderful mechanism is the result of chance? Ask
him if it came together at first by luck and
accident? Ask him if he so thinks about the
watch he looks at, the bread he eats, or the
coat he wears? Oh, no! Design is an insuperable
difficulty in the Atheist's way. There is a God.
You have doubtless heard of Deists. A Deist is
one who professes to believe that there is a
God, who made the world and all things therein.
But He does not believe the Bible. "A God, but
no Bible!-a Creator, but no Christianity!" This
is the Deist's creed.
Now, shall we listen to this doctrine? Go again,
I say, and take a Deist to an hospital, and show
him some of the awful handiwork of disease. Take
him to the bed where lies some tender child,
scarce knowing good from evil, with an incurable
cancer. Send him to the ward where there is a
loving mother of a large family in the last
state of some excruciating disease. Show him
some of the racking pains and agonies to which
flesh is heir, and ask him to account for them.
Ask this man, who believes there is a great and
Wise God who made the world, but cannot believe
the Bible,-ask him how he accounts for these
traces of disorder and imperfection in his God's
creation. Ask this man, who sneers at Christian
theology and is too wise to believe the fall of
Adam,-ask him upon his theory to explain the
universal prevalence of pain and disease in the
world. You may ask in vain! You will get no
satisfactory answer. Sickness and suffering are
insuperable difficulties in the Deist's way. Man
has sinned, and therefore man suffers. Adam fell
from his first estate, and therefore Adam's
children sicken and die.
The universal prevalence of sickness is one of
the indirect evidences that the Bible is true.
The Bible explains it. The Bible answers the
questions about it which will arise in every
inquiring mind. No other systems of religion can
do this. They all fail here. They are silent.
They are confounded. The Bible alone looks the
subject in the face. It boldly proclaims the
fact that man is a fallen creature, and with
equal boldness proclaims a vast remedial system
to meet his needs. I feel shut up to the
conclusion that the Bible is from God.
Christianity is a revelation from heaven. "Your
word is truth." (John 17:17.)
Let us stand fast on the old ground, that the
Bible, and the Bible only, is God's revelation
of Himself to man. Do not be moved by the many
new assaults which modern skepticism is making
on the inspired volume. Heed not the hard
questions which the enemies of the faith are
fond of putting about Bible difficulties, and to
which perhaps you often feel unable to give an
answer. Anchor your soul firmly on this safe
principle,-that the whole book is God's truth.
Tell the enemies of the Bible that, in spite of
all their arguments, there is no book in the
world which will bear comparison with the
Bible,-none that so thoroughly meets man's
want-none that explains so much of the state of
mankind. As to the hard things in the Bible,
tell them you are content to wait. You find
enough plain truth in the book to satisfy your
conscience and save your soul. The hard things
will be cleared up in one day. What you know not
now, you will know hereafter.
II. The second point I propose to consider is
the general Benefits which sickness confers on
mankind.
I use that word "benefits" advisedly. I feel it
of deep importance to see this part of our
subject clearly. I know well that sickness is
one of the supposed weak points in God's
government of the world, on which skeptical
minds love to dwell. "Can God be a God of love,
when He allows pain? Can God be a God of mercy,
when He permits disease? He might prevent pain
and disease; but He does not. How can these
things be?" Such is the reasoning which often
comes across the heart of man.
I reply to all such reasoners, that their doubts
and questionings are most unreasonable. They
might as well doubt the existence of a Creator,
because the order of the universe is disturbed
by earthquakes, hurricanes, and storms. They
might as well doubt the providence of God,
because of the horrible massacres of Delhi and
Cawnpore. All this would be just as reasonable
as to doubt the mercy of God, because of the
presence of sickness in the world.
I ask all who find it hard to reconcile the
prevalence of disease and pain with the love of
God, to cast their eyes on the world around
them, and to mark what is going on. I ask them
to observe the extent to which men constantly
submit to present loss for the sake of future
gain,-present sorrow for the sake of future
joy,-present pain for the sake of future health.
The seed is thrown into the ground, and rots:
but we sow in the hope of a future harvest. The
boy is sent to school amid many tears: but we
send him in the hope of his getting future
wisdom. The father of a family undergoes some
fearful surgical operation: but he bears it, in
the hope of future health.-I ask men to apply
this great principle to God's government of the
world. I ask them to believe that God allows
pain, sickness, and disease, not because He
loves to vex man, but because He desires to
benefit man's heart, and mind, and conscience,
and soul, to all eternity. Once more I repeat,
that I speak of the "benefits" of sickness on
purpose and advisedly. I know the suffering and
pain which sickness entails. I admit the misery
and wretchedness which it often brings in its
train. But I cannot regard it as an unmixed
evil. I see in it a wise permission of God. I
see in it a useful provision to check the
ravages of sin and the devil among men's souls.
If man had never sinned I should have been at a
loss to discern the benefit of sickness. But
since sin is in the world, I can see that
sickness is a good. It is a blessing quite as
much as a curse. It is a rough schoolmaster, I
grant But it is a real friend to man's soul.
(a) Sickness helps to remind men of death.
The
most live as if they were never going to die.
They follow business, or pleasure, or politics,
or science, as if earth was their eternal home.
They plan and scheme for the future, like the
rich fool in the parable, as if they had a long
lease of life, and were not, tenants at will. A
heavy illness sometimes goes far to dispel these
delusions. It awakens men from their day-dreams,
and reminds those who they have to die as well
as to live. Now this I say emphatically is a
mighty good.
(b) Sickness helps to make men think seriously
of God, and their souls, and the world to come.
The most in their days of health can find no
time for such thoughts. They dislike them. They
put them away. They count them troublesome and
disagreeable. Now a severe disease has sometimes
a wonderful power of mustering and rallying
these thoughts, and bringing them up before the
eyes of a man's soul. Even a wicked king like Benhadad, when sick, could think of Elisha (2
Kings 8:8.) Even heathen sailors, when death was
in sight, were afraid, and "cried every man to
his god." (Jonah 1:5.) Surely anything that
helps to make men think is a good.
(c) Sickness helps to soften men's hearts, and
teach them wisdom. The natural heart is as hard
as a stone. It can see no good in anything which
is not of this life, and no happiness excepting
in this world. A long illness sometimes goes far
to correct these ideas. It exposes the emptiness
and hollowness of what the world calls "good"
things, and teaches us to hold them with a loose
hand. The man of business finds that money alone
is not everything the heart requires. The woman
of the world finds that costly apparel, and
novel reading, and the reports of balls and
operas, are miserable comforters in a sick room.
Surely anything that obliges us to alter our
weights and measures of earthly things is a real
good.
(d) Sickness helps to level and humble us. We
are all naturally proud and high-minded. Few,
even of the poorest, are free from the
infection. Few are to be found who do not look
down on somebody else, and secretly flatter
themselves that they are "not as other men." A
sick bed is a mighty tamer of such thoughts as
these. It forces on us the mighty truth that we
are all poor worms, that we "dwell in houses of
clay," and are "crushed before the moth." (Job
4:19), and that kings and subjects, masters and
servants, rich and poor, are all dying
creatures, and will soon stand side by side at
the bar of God. In the sight of the coffin and
the grave it is not easy to be proud. Surely
anything that teaches that lesson is good.
(e) Finally, sickness helps to try men's
religion, of what sort it is. There are not many
on earth who have no religion at all. Yet few
have a religion that will bear inspection. Most
are content with traditions received from their
fathers, and can render no reason of the hope
that is in them. Now disease is sometimes most
useful to a man in exposing the utter
worthlessness of his soul's foundation. It often
shows him that he has nothing solid under his
feet, and nothing firm under his hand. It makes
him find out that, although he may have had a
form of religion, he has been all his life
worshiping "an unknown God." Many a creed looks
well on the smooth waters of health, which turns
out utterly unsound and useless on the rough
waves of the sick bed. The storms of winter
often bring out the defects in a man's dwelling,
and sickness often exposes the gracelessness of
a man's soul. Surely anything that makes us find
out the real character of our faith is a good. I
do not say that sickness confers these benefits
on all to whom it comes. Alas, I can say nothing
of the kind! Myriads are yearly laid low by
illness, and restored to health, who evidently
learn no lesson from their sick beds, and return
again to the world. Myriads are yearly passing
through sickness to the grave, and yet receiving
no more spiritual impressions from it than the
beasts that perish. While they live they have no
feeling, and when they die there are "no bands
in their death." (Psalm 73:4.) These are awful
things to say. But they are true. The degree of
deadness to which man's heart and conscience may
attain, is a depth which I cannot pretend to
fathom.
But does sickness confer the benefits of which I
have been speaking on only a few? I will allow
nothing of the kind. I believe that in very many
cases sickness produces impressions more or less
akin to those of which I have just been
speaking. I believe that in many minds sickness
is God's "day of visitation," and that feelings
are continually aroused on a sick bed which, if
improved, might, by God's grace, result in
salvation. I believe that in heathen lands
sickness often paves the way for the missionary,
and makes the poor idolater lend a willing ear
to the glad tidings of the Gospel. I believe
that in our own land sickness is one of the
greatest aids to the minister of the Gospel, and
that sermons and counsels are often brought home
in the day of disease which we have neglected in
the day of health. I believe that sickness is
one of God's most important subordinate
instruments in the saving of men, and that
though the feelings it calls forth are often
temporary, it is also often a means whereby the
Spirit works effectually on the heart. In short,
I believe firmly that the sickness of men's
bodies has often led, in God's wonderful
providence, to the salvation of men's souls.
I leave this branch of my subject here. It needs
no further remark. If sickness can do the things
of which I have been speaking (and who will
gainsay it?), if sickness in a wicked world can
help to make men think of God and their souls,
then sickness confers benefits on mankind.
We have no right to murmur at sickness, and
repine at its presence in the world. We ought
rather to thank God for it. It is God's witness.
It is the soul's adviser. It is an awakener to
the conscience. It is a purifier to the heart.
Surely I have a right to tell you that sickness
is a blessing and not a curse,-a help and not an
injury,-a gain and not a loss,-a friend and not
a foe to mankind. So long as we have a world
wherein there is sin, it is a mercy that it is a
world wherein It there is sickness.
III. The third and last point which I propose to
consider, is the special duties which the
prevalence of sickness entails on each one of
ourselves.
I should be sorry to leave the subject of
sickness without saying something on this point.
hold it to be of cardinal importance not to be
content with generalities in delivering God's
message to souls. I an anxious to impress on
each one into whose hands this paper may fall,
his own personal responsibility in connection
with the subject. would sincerely have no one
lay down this paper unable to answer the
questions, "What practical lesson have I
learned? What, in a world of disease and death,
what ought I to do?"
(a) One paramount duty which the prevalence of
sickness entails on man, is that of living
habitually prepared to meet God. Sickness is a remembrancer of death. Death is the door through
which we must all pass to judgment. Judgment is
the time when we must at last see God face to
face. Surely the first lesson which the
inhabitant of a sick and dying world should
learn should be to prepare to meet his God.
When are you prepared to meet God? Never until
your iniquities are forgiven, and your sin
covered! Never until your heart is renewed, and
your will taught to delight in the will of God!
You have many sins. If you go to church, your
own mouth is taught to confess this every
Sunday. The blood of Jesus Christ can alone
cleanse those sins away. The righteousness of
Christ can alone make you acceptable in the
sight of God. Faith, simple childlike faith, can
alone give you an interest in Christ and His
benefits. Would you know whether you are
prepared to meet God? Then where is your faith?
Your heart is naturally unfit for God's company.
You have no real pleasure in doing His will. The
Holy Spirit must transform you after the image
of Christ. Old things must pass away. All things
must become new. Would you know whether you are
prepared to meet God? Then, where is your grace?
Where are the evidences of your conversion and
sanctification?
I believe that this, and nothing less than
Pardon of sin this, is preparedness to meet God.
and fitness for God's presence,-justification by
faith and sanctification of the heart,-the blood
of Christ sprinkled on us, and the Spirit of
Christ dwelling in us,-these are the grand
essentials of the Christian religion. These are
no mere words and names to furnish bones of
contention for wrangling theologians. These are
sober, solid, substantial realities. To live in
the actual possession of these things, in a
world full of sickness and death, is the first
duty which I press home upon your soul.
(b) Another paramount duty which the prevalence
of sickness entails on you, is that of living
habitually ready to bear it patiently. Sickness
is no doubt a trying thing to flesh and blood.
To feel our nerves unstrung, and our natural
force abated,-to be obliged to sit still and be
cut off from all our usual avocations,-to see
our plans broken off and our purposes
disappointed,-to endure long hours, and days,
and nights of weariness and pain,-all this is a
severe strain on poor sinful human nature. What
wonder if peevishness and impatience are brought
out by disease! Surely in such a dying world as
this we should study patience.
How shall we learn to bear sickness patiently,
when sickness comes to our turn? We must lay up
stores of grace in the time of health. We must
seek for the sanctifying influence of the Holy
Spirit over our unruly tempers and dispositions.
We must make a real business of our prayers, and
regularly ask for strength to endure God's will
as well as to do it. Such strength is to be had
for the asking: "If you shall ask anything in my
name, I will do it for you." (John 14:14.) I
cannot think it needless to dwell on this point.
I believe the passive graces of Christianity
receive far less notice than they deserve.
Meekness, gentleness, patience, faith, patience,
are all mentioned in the Word of God as fruits
of the Spirit. They are passive graces which
specially glorify God. They often make men
think, who despise the active side of the
Christian character. Never do these graces shine
so brightly as they do in the sick room. They
enable many a sick person to preach a silent
sermon, which those around him never forget.
Would you adorn the doctrine you profess? Would
you make your Christianity beautiful in the eyes
of others? Then take the hint I give you this
day. Lay up a store of patience against the time
of illness. Then, though your sickness be not to
death, it shall be for the "glory of God." (John
11:4.)
(c) One more paramount duty which the prevalence
of sickness entails on you, is that of habitual
readiness to feel with and help your fellow-man.
Sickness is never very far from us. Few are the
families who have not some sick relative. Few
are the parishes where you will not find some
one ill. But wherever there is sickness, there
is a call to duty. A little timely assistance in
some cases,-a kindly visit in others,-a friendly
inquiry,-a mere expression of sympathy, may do a
vast good. These are the sort of things which
soften asperities, and bring men together, and
promote good feeling. These are ways by which
you may ultimately lead men to Christ and save
their souls. These are good works to which every
professing Christian should be ready. In a world
full of sickness and disease we ought to "bear
one another's burdens," and be "kind one to
another." (Gal. 6:2; Ephes. 4:32.)
These things, I dare say, may appear to some
little and trifling. They must needs be doing
something great, and grand, and striking, and
heroic! I take leave to say that conscientious
attention to these little acts of
brotherly-kindness is one of the clearest
evidences of having "the mind of Christ." They
are acts in which our blessed Master Himself was
abundant. He was ever "going about doing good"
to the sick and sorrowful. (Acts 10:38.) They
are acts to which He attaches great importance
in that most solemn passage of Scripture, the
description of the last judgment. He says there:
"I was sick, and you visited Me." (,Matt.
25:36.)
Have you any desire to prove the reality of your
charity,-that blessed grace which so many talk
of, and so few practice? If you have, beware of
unfeeling selfishness and neglect of your sick
brethren. Search them out. Assist them if they
need aid. Show your sympathy with them. Try to
lighten their burdens. Above all, strive to do
good to their souls. It will do you good if it
does no good to them. It will keep your heart
from murmuring. It may prove a blessing to your
own soul. I firmly believe that God is testing
and proving us by every case of sickness within
our reach. By permitting suffering, He tries
whether Christians have any feeling. Beware,
lest you be weighed in the balances and found
wanting. If you can live in a sick and dying
world and not feel for others, you have yet much
to learn.
I leave this branch of my subject here. I throw
out the points I have named as suggestions, and
I pray God that they may work in many minds. I
repeat, that habitual preparedness to meet
God,-habitual readiness to suffer
patiently,-habitual willingness to sympathize
heartily,-are plain duties which sickness
entails on all. They are duties within the reach
of every one. In naming them I ask nothing
extravagant or unreasonable. I bid no man retire
into a monastery and ignore the duties of his
station. I only want men to realize that they
live in a sick and dying world, and to live
accordingly. And I say boldly, that the man who
lives the life of faith, and holiness, and
patience, and charity, is not only the most true
Christian, but the most wise and reasonable man.
And now I conclude all with four words of
practical application. I want the subject of
this paper to be turned to some spiritual use.
My heart's desire and prayer to God in placing
it in this volume is to do good to souls.
(1) In the first place, I offer a question to
all who read this paper, to which, as God's
ambassador, I entreat their serious attention.
It is a question which grows naturally out of
the subject on which I have been writing. It is
a question which concerns all, of every rank,
and class, and condition. I ask you, What will
you do when you are ill? The time must come when
you, as well as others, must go down the dark
valley of the shadow of death. The hour must
come when you, like all your forefathers, must
sicken and die. The time may be near or far off.
God only knows. But whenever the time may be, I
ask again, What are you going to do? Where do
you mean to turn for comfort? On what do you
mean to rest your soul? On what do you mean to
build your hope? From where will you fetch your
consolations?
I do entreat you not to put these questions
away. Suffer them to work on your conscience,
and rest not until you can give them a
satisfactory answer. Trifle not with that
precious gift, an immortal soul. Defer not the
consideration of the matter to a more convenient
season. Presume not on a death-bed repentance.
The greatest business ought surely not to be
left to the last. One dying thief was saved that
men might not despair, but only one that none
might presume. I repeat the question. I am sure
it deserves an answer. "What will you do when
you are ill ?"
If you were going to live forever in this world
I would not address you as I do. But it cannot
be. There is no escaping the common lot of all
mankind. Nobody can die in our stead. The day
must come when we must each go to our long home.
Against that day I want you to be prepared. The
body which now takes up so much of your
attention-the body which you now clothe, and
feed, and warm with so much care,-that body must
return again to the dust. Oh, think what an
awful thing it would prove at last to have
provided for everything except the one thing
needful,-to have provided for the body, but to
have neglected the soul,-to die, in fact, like
Cardinal Beaufort, and "give no sign" of being
saved! Once more I press my question on your
conscience: "WHAT WILL YOU DO WHEN YOU ARE ILL?"
(2) In the next place, I offer counsel to all
who feel they need it and are willing to take
it, to all who feel they are not yet prepared to
meet God. That counsel is short and simple.
Acquaint yourself with the Lord Jesus Christ
without delay. Repent, be converted, flee to
Christ, and be saved.
Either you have a soul or you have not. You will
surely never deny that you have. Then if you
have a soul, seek that soul's salvation. Of all
gambling in the world, there is none so reckless
as that of the man who lives unprepared to meet
God, and yet puts off repentance. Either you
have sins or you have not. If you have (and who
will dare to deny it?), break off from those
sins, cast away your transgressions, and turn
away from them with-out delay. Either you need a
Savior or you do not. If you do, flee to the
only Savior this very day, and cry mightily to
Him to save your soul. Apply to Christ at once.
Seek Him by faith. Commit your soul into His
keeping. Cry mightily to Him for pardon and
peace with God. Ask Him to pour down the Holy
Spirit upon you, and make you a thorough
Christian. He will hear you. No matter what you
have been, He will not refuse your prayer. He
has said, "Him that comes to Me I will in no
wise cast out." (John 6:37.) Beware, I beseech
you, of a vague and indefinite Christianity. Do
not be content with a general hope that all is
right because you belong to the old Church of
England, and that all will be well at last
because God is merciful. Rest not, rest not
without personal union with Christ Himself. Rest
not, rest not until you have the witness of the
Spirit in your heart, that you are washed, and
sanctified, and Justified, and one with Christ,
and Christ in you. Rest not until you can say
with the apostle, "I know whom I have believed,
and am persuaded that He is able to keep that
which I have committed to Him against that day."
(2 Tim. 1:12.)
Vague, and indefinite, and indistinct religion
may do very well in time of health. It will
never do in the day of sickness. A mere formal,
perfunctory Church membership may carry a man
through the sunshine of youth and prosperity. It
will break down entirely when death is in sight.
Nothing will do then but real heart-union with
Christ. Christ interceding for us at God's right
hand, Christ known and believed as our Priest,
our Physician, our Friend, Christ alone can rob
death of its sting and enable us to face
sickness without fear. He alone can deliver
those who through fear of death are in bondage.
I say to every one who needs advice, Be
acquainted with Christ. As ever you would have
hope and comfort on the bed of sickness, be
acquainted with Christ. Seek Christ. Apply to
Christ.
Take every care and trouble to Him when you are
acquainted with Him. He will keep you and carry
you through all. Pour out your heart before Him,
when your conscience is burdened. He is the true
Confessor. He alone can absolve you and take the
burden away. Turn to Him first in the day of
sickness, like Martha and Mary. Keep on looking
to Him to the last breath of your life. Christ
is worth knowing. The more you know Him the
better you will love Him. Then be acquainted
with Jesus Christ.
(3) In the third place, I exhort all true
Christians who read this paper to remember how
much they may glorify God in the time of
sickness, and to lie quite in God's hand when
they are ill. I feel it very important to touch
on this point. I know how ready the heart of a
believer is to faint, and how busy Satan is in
suggesting doubts and questionings, when the
body of a Christian is weak. I have seen
something of the depression and melancholy which
sometimes comes upon the children of God when
they are suddenly laid aside by disease, and
obliged to sit still. I have marked how prone
some good people are to torment themselves with
morbid thoughts at such seasons, and to say in
their hearts, "God has forsaken me: I am cast
out of His sight."
I earnestly entreat all sick believers to
remember that they may honor God as much by
patient suffering as they can by active work. It
often shows more grace to sit still than it does
to go to and fro, and perform great exploits. I
entreat them to remember that Christ cares for
them as much when they are sick as He does when
they are well, and that the very chastisement
they feel so acutely is sent in love, and not in
anger. Above all, I entreat them to recollect
the sympathy of Jesus for all His weak members.
They are always tenderly cared for by Him, but
never so much as in their time of need. Christ
has had great experience of sickness. He knows
the heart of a sick man. He used to see "all
manner of sickness, and all manner of disease"
when He was upon earth. He felt specially for
the sick in the days of His flesh. He feels for
them specially still. Sickness and suffering, I
often think, make believers more like their Lord
in experience, than health. "Himself took our
infirmities, and bare our sicknesses." (Isaiah
53:3; Matt. 8:17.) The Lord Jesus was a "Man of
sorrows, and acquainted with grief." None have
such an opportunity of learning the mind of a
suffering Savior as suffering disciples.
(4) I conclude with a word of exhortation to all
believers, which I heartily pray God to impress
upon their souls. I exhort you to keep up a
habit of close communion with Christ, and never
to be afraid of "going too far" in your
religion. Remember this, if you wish to have
"great peace" in your times of sickness.
I observe with regret a tendency in some
quarters to lower the standard of practical
Christianity, and to denounce what are called
"extreme views" about a Christian's daily walk
in life. I remark with pain that even religious
people will sometimes look coldly on those who
withdraw from worldly society, and will censure
them as "exclusive, narrow-minded, illiberal,
uncharitable, sour-spirited," and the like. I
warn every believer in Christ who reads this
paper to beware of being influenced by such
censures. I entreat him, if he needs light in
the valley of death, to "keep himself unspotted
from the world," to "follow the Lord very
fully," and to walk very closely with God.
(James 1:27; Num. 14:24.)
I believe that the want of "thoroughness" about
many people's Christianity is one secret of
their little comfort, both in health and
sickness. I believe that the
"half-and-half,"-"keep-in-with everybody"
religion, which satisfies many in the present
day, is offensive to God, and sows thorns in
dying pillows, which hundreds never discover
until too late. I believe that the weakness and
feebleness of such a religion never comes out so
much as it does upon a sick bed.
If you and I want "strong consolation" in our
time of need, we must not be content with a bare
union with Christ. (Heb. 6:18.) We must seek to
know something of heart-felt, experimental
communion with Him. Never, never let us forget,
that union" is one thing, and "communion"
another. Thousands, I fear, who know what
"union" with Christ is, know nothing of
"communion."
The day may come when after a long fight with
disease, we shall feel that medicine can do no
more, and that nothing remains but to die.
Friends will be standing by, unable to help us.
Hearing, eyesight, even the power of praying,
will be fast failing us. The world and its
shadows will be melting beneath our feet.
Eternity, with its realities, will be looming
large before our minds. What shall support us in
that trying hour? What shall enable us to feel,
"I fear no evil"? (Psalm 23:4.) Nothing, nothing
can do it but close communion with Christ.
Christ dwelling in our hearts by faith,-Christ
putting His right arm under our heads,-Christ
felt to be sitting by our side,-Christ can alone
give us the complete victory in the last
struggle.
Let us cleave to Christ more closely, love Him
more heartily, live to Him more thoroughly, copy
Him more exactly, confess Him more boldly,
follow Him more fully. Religion like this will
always bring its own reward. Worldly people may
'Laugh at it. Weak brethren may think it
extreme. But it will wear well. At even time it
will bring us light. In sickness it will bring
us peace. In the world to come it will give us a
crown of glory that fades not away.
The time is short. The fashion of this world
passes away. A few more sicknesses, and all will
be over. A few more funerals, and our own
funeral will take place. A few more storms and
tossings, and we shall be safe in harbor. We
travel towards a world where there is no more
sickness,-where parting, and pain, and crying,
and mourning, are done with for evermore. Heaven
is becoming every year more full, and earth more
empty. The friends ahead are becoming more
numerous than the friends astern. "Yet a little
time and He that shall come will come, and will
not tarry." (Heb. 10:37.) In His presence shall
be fullness of joy. Christ shall wipe away all
tears from His people's eyes. The last enemy
that shall be destroyed is Death. But He shall
be destroyed. Death himself shall one day die.
(Rev. 20:14.) In the meantime let us live the
life of faith in the Son of God. Let us lean all
our weight on Christ and rejoice in the thought
that He lives for evermore.
Yes: blessed be God! Christ lives, though we may
die. Christ lives, though friends and families
are carried to the grave. He lives who abolished
death, and brought life and immortality to light
by the Gospel. He lives who said, "O death, I
will be your plagues: 0 grave, I will be your
destruction." (Hos. 13:14.) He lives who will
one day change our vile body, and make it like
unto His glorious body. In sickness and in
health, in life and in death, let us lean
confidently on Him. Surely we ought to say daily
with one of old, "Blessed be God for Jesus
Christ!"