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Backsliders
Returning
Octavius
Winslow, D.D.
Return, ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backslidings.
Behold, we come unto thee; for thou art the Lord our God.Jeremiah.
3:22.
There are
some unvailings of Gods heart, which can only be understood and
met by responsive unfoldings of ours. It is not the flinty, impervious
rock that welcomes and absorbs the heaven-distilling dew. Upon such an
object in nature, beautiful and grand though it may be, the life-quickening
moisture, thus descending, is a thankless and fruitless offeringa
useless expenditure of one of natures richest treasures. But let
that dew, noiseless and unseen, fall upon the flower, the herb, the tree,the
earth which the ploughshare has upturned and the furrow has broken,and
how refreshing the boon, and how rich the return! Thus is it with such
an exhibition of the heart of God as that which we have just presentedinimitable
in its tenderness, unsurpassed in its condescension and grace. Let these
words distil upon any other than a heart humbled, softened, lying low
in a low place, in the consciousness of its sinful departure, its sad
backsliding from God, and they awake no tender, holy, grateful response.
How beautiful are the reciprocal influences of the human and the divine,
as presented in the narrative! A voice was heard upon the high places,
weeping and supplications of the children of Israel: for they have perverted
their way, and they have forgotten the Lord their God. That voice
of weeping entered into the ears of God, and lo! the gracious invitationReturn,
ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backslidings. And
then follows the instant and grateful responseBehold, we come
unto thee; for thou art the Lord our God. Mark, how divine and restoring
grace gently falls upon the lowly, penitent, returning soul; and then
how the sin-contrite heart of the child goes forth to meet and embrace
the sin-forgiving heart of the Father. Few will read the pages of a work
designed to proffer a helping hand to Zions travellers to whom that
hand will be more needful and acceptable than the awakened, returning
backslider. To such, languid and fainting, depressed and despairing, hesitating
to return, doubting Gods welcome,evidences lost, soul-beclouded,
fears rising, hope vailed,the strongest cordials of Gods most
gracious, full, and free promises are needful to rouse, revive, and reassure
the wanderer that the Lord invites, receives, and welcomes the returning
backsliderthe child retracing his way back to his forsaken Father.
God addresses them as backsliding CHILDREN. He can never forget His parental
relation to them, though they may forget or abuse their filial relation
to Him. Children though we are, adopted, sealed, and inalienably entitled
to all the covenant blessings of adoption, we are yet backsliding children.
The heart is ever swerving from God. The renewed soul possesses the principle
of its own departure, contains the elements of its own declension, and
but for the electing love, the restraining grace, the illimitable power
of God, would destroy itself entirely and forever. Having in a former
treatise (Personal Declension and Revival of Religion in the Soul) gone
somewhat at length into the nature, causes, symptoms, and recovery of
spiritual declension, my object now is specifically to meet that state
of lukewarmness, tenderness, and hesitancy which marks the tremulousness
of the contrite heart returning to God.
The language in which God addresses you is most reassuring. He calls you
children; though a backslider, yet a child. Can the human
parent ever forget, in the deepest provocation of his offspring, that
still he is his child? God here meets His wanderer just where that wanderer
stands most in need of a Divine assurance. What relation is it which spiritual
backsliding the most contravenes, which sin the most obscures, and of
which unbelief and Satan, presuming upon that backsliding, would suggest
to the mind the strongest suspicion and doubt? We answerthe relation
of Divine sonship. The backslider reasons thusIs my adoption
real? Can I be a child of God, and prove so base, sin so deeply, and depart
so far from my God? If a son, why am I so rebellious, disobedient, and
unfaithful? Surely I cannot belong to the adoption of God, and grieve
and wound the Spirit of adoption thus? Now God meets the wanderer
just at this critical juncture. He declares that though a backslider,
yet he is still His child, and that no departure however distant, and
that no sin however aggravated, has impaired the strength or lessened
the tenderness, tarnished or shaded the lustre of that relation. If God,
then, comes forth, and, despite our backsliding, recognizes our son-ship,
and acknowledges us as His children, who shall dispute or contravene the
fact? Let God be true, and every man a liar. Such, beloved,
is the first consolation I suggest to your sad and depressed soul. Could
it be surpassed by anything else I may offer? What! does God still call
you His child? Does He not disown and disinherit you as a son of God and
an heir of glory? Ah, no! He cannot forget that He has predestinated you
to the adoption of children, that His Spirit has been sent into your heart,
and that in happier days gone by you have often called Him Abba,
Father. And although you have been rebellious, backsliding, and
stiffnecked, yet, taking with you words and turning to the Lord your God,
He meets you as once He met His repenting, mourning Ephraim I
have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself . . . Is Ephraim my dear SON?
is he a pleasant CHILD? for since I spake against him, I do earnestly
remember him still: therefore my bowels are troubled for him; I will surely
have mercy upon him, saith the Lord, (Jer. 31:18, 20.) Clear is
it, then, that Gods children do backslide; that it is no strange
thing that their love to Him should wax cold, their faith decline, their
strength decay, their zeal slacken, their godly frames grow sleepy and
inert, the spirit of prayer be restrained, the means of grace be neglected;
and, as a consequence of all this inward declension, the world should
have an ascendancy, Satan prevail, and the sin that does most easily beset
them attain a momentary triumph. But still they are Gods children,O
wondrous grace! O changeless love!and chastened, corrected, rebuked,
and humbled, their heavenly Father will restore them to His pardoning
love and gracious favour, and they shall again walk with Him filially,
humbly, softly, as His dear children, when He is pacified towards
them for all that they have done.
What an invitation! RETURN! It is GOD who speaks itthe
God from whom we have revolted, departed, and gone so far astray. It is
the word of our Father, against whom we have rebelled, so deeply, so grievously
sinned. He trammels His invitation with no conditions. His simple word
isReturn unto me! And more than this,He has placed
before us an open door of return through Jesus His beloved Son. The covenant
of works provided no restoration for the soul that departed from God under
the first testament. But the covenant of grace has this distinction, this
glorious featureit places before the penitent backslider, the contrite
child, an open door of return, a way of restored pardon, joy, and peace,
and bids him enter. The Lord Jesus is this open door. The blood of Jesus,
the righteousness of Jesus, the intercession of Jesus, the grace of Jesus,
the quenchless love of Jesus, the outstretched hand of Jesus, unite in
guiding the trembling footstep of the returning soul back to its Father.
The present efficacy and the continuous presentation of the Lords
sacrifice in heaven, blended with His intercessory work, personally and
constantly prosecuted before the throne, are a warrant that this door
to God shall never be closed while there lives a penitent sinner to enter
it. Beware of shading the lustre of this truththe present efficacy
of the blood. The blood of Jesus Christ CLEANSETHit
is in the form of the present tense the great truth is put. The past is
gone, the future all to us unknownit is with the present we have
to deal. A present sorrow needing comfort, a present perplexity needing
guidance, a present burden demanding support, a present sin asking forgiveness,
with a present Saviour prepared to meet and supply it all. Grasp this
truth with all the intensity of your faith under present circumstances.
Brood not over what is past, yield to no forebodings and fears as to what
may be the futuregrapple with the present. For it you have a door,
which God Himself has opened and which neither man, nor Satan, nor sin,
shall shut. You have a throne of grace now inviting your approach; and
you have the blood of Jesus with which to enter, as new, as efficacious,
as prevalent, and as free as when it streamed from His sacred body on
the cross. Let there be no postponement, then, of your return to God.
Tarry for no more favourable moment, wait not for a better frame, dream
not that Christ will be more willing to present, or that God will be more
ready to receive you at any future time than now; or, that by delaying
you will be more worthy of His acceptance. Vain reasoning! God says, Return
unto me, and He means by this, Return NOW!
And what is the promise? I will heal your backslidings. Backsliding
from the Lord involves wounds, bruises, dislocation. It wounds the conscience,
it bruises the soul, it breaks the bones of our strength, and causeth
us to travel in pain and halting many a weary step. Ah, there is nothing
so wounding as departure from God! Nothing so bruising of the souls
peace and joy and hope as sin! Who can heal, who can bind up, who can
mollify, who can reset these broken bones so that they shall rejoice again,
but our sin-pardoning God? We have no self-power in this great matter
of restoration. All that we can do is to make burdens, forge chains, carve
crosses, inflict wounds,in a word, destroy our own selves. Listen
to Davids experienceI have gone astray like a lost sheep.
This is all that he could do. But mark his conscious helplessness,seek
thy servant; and then observe the imperishable nature of the grace
of God in his soul,for I do not forget thy commandments,
(Ps. 119:176.) Of how many who bend over these pages will this be a faithful
portrait! Lord! I can leave Thy fold, can willfully depart from Thy ways,
can basely turn my back upon Thyself; but Thou must go in quest of me,
seek and restore my soul; and this I may venture to ask, since I have
not forgotten the happy days when Thy candle shone upon my head, when
Thy light guided me through darkness, when the name of Jesus was as ointment
poured forth, when I walked in sweet and holy communion with Thee, and
fed with the flock beside the Shepherds tent. I do not forget
thy commandments. God will forgive! Christ will bind up the broken
heart! The Comforter will restore joy to the soul! There is still balm
in Gilead, and a Physician there. The healing balsam still bleeds from
the wounded, stricken Tree of Life. The gate of paradise is yet unclosed,
its portal garlanded with a thousand exceeding great and precious promises,
all inviting your entrance and insuring you a welcome to its sunny banks,
its shaded bowers, its peaceful quiet streams. Who is a God like
unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of
the remnant of his heritage? he retaineth not his anger for ever, because
he delighteth in mercy. He will turn again, he will have compassion upon
us; he will subdue our iniquities; and thou wilt cast all their sins into
the depths of the sea, (Micah 7:18, 19.) What glad tidings these
astounding words contain to repentant back-sliders! What a bow of promise
and of hope do they paint upon the dark cloud of despair which enshrouds
the soul! He will turn again. Though He has turned a thousand
times before, yet, He will turn AGAIN; not seven times
only, but seventy times seven.
And what is the response of the returning soul? Behold, we come
unto thee; for thou art the Lord our God. Behold, we come! just
as we are. We come from the swines trough; we come from feeding
upon husks, upon ashes, and upon the wind. We come with the bruise, the
wound, the dislocated limb. We come deploring our fall, confessing our
departure, mourning over our sin; receive us graciously, love us freely,
and turn thine anger away from us. I will arise and go unto my Father,
and will say unto him, Father, I have sinned. What! after all that
I have donein the face of my willful transgression, of my base ingratitude,
of my abused mercies, of my past restorings, of my aggravated departures,
of all the past of Thy mercy, Thy goodness, Thy faithfulness, Thy love,
dost Thou still bid me return? Does the overture, the outstretched hand,
the first step, come from Thee? Then, behold, I come unto Thee, for Thou
art the Lord my God! Thy power draws, Thy goodness dissolves, Thy faithfulness
binds my heart, and, lo! I come. Thy grace restores, Thy love pardons,
Thy blood heals my soul, and, behold! I come. Thy voice, so kind, invites
me; Thy feet, so unwearied, seek me; Thy hand, so gentle, leads me; Thy
look, so loving, so melting, so forgiving, wins me: and, Lord, I must
not, I dare not, I cannot stay away. Behold! I come unto Thee.
Jesus, let Thy pitying eye
Call back a wandering sheep;
False to Thee like Peter, I
Would fain like Peter weep.
Let me be by grace restored;
On me be all long-suffering shown;
Turn and look upon me, Lord,
And break this heart of stone.
Look as when Thy grace beheld
The harlot in distress,
Dried her tears, her pardon seald,
And bade her go in peace;
Foul, like her, and self-abhorrd,
I at Thy feet for mercy groan:
Turn and look upon me, Lord,
And break this heart of stone.
Look as when, condemnd for them,
Thou didst Thy followers see;
Daughters of Jerusalem!
Weep for yourselves, not me.
And am I by my God deplored,
And shall I not myself bemoan?
Turn and look upon me, Lord,
And break this heart of stone.
Look as when Thy languid eye
Was closed that we might live:
Father, (at the point to die
My Saviour cried,) forgive;
Surely with that dying word,
He turns, and looks, and cries, Tis done!
O my gracious, bleeding Lord,
Thou breakst my heart of stone!
Thus have we sought to win back to Christ the strayed one, and to help
the returning wanderer heavenward. If the Lord has graciously given you
to experience His restoring mercy, forget not one great reason why you
are restoredthat you might hate and forsake the cause of your departure.
If we have succumbed to temptation, it is not enough that we have broken
from its snare; if we have fallen into sin, it is not enough that we have
escaped from its power. God would have you learn thereby one of your holiest
lessonsthe deeper knowledge of that which tempted and overcame you,
that you might go and sin no more. Restored yourself, seek the restoration
of others. Hear the injunction of Christ to Peter in view of his recovery,When
thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren. Seek to bring souls
to Jesus. Let this be an object of life. Be especially tender, gentle,
and kind to Christians who have fallen into sin, and are thereby wounded,
distressed, and despairing. Extend a helping hand to lead them back to
Christ. Your deep abhorrence of the sin must not be allowed to lessen
your compassion and sympathy for the sinning one. This did not Jesus.
If the Church has vindicated her purity and allegiance to Christ by a
wise and holy discipline of the offender, sufficient to such a man
is this punishment, which was inflicted of many. So that contrariwise
ye ought rather to forgive him and comfort him, lest perhaps such a one
should be swallowed up with overmuch sorrow. Wherefore I beseech you that
ye would confirm your love toward him, (2 Cor. 2:6-8.) Thus charged
Paul the church to which he wrote, and in so doing he but imitates his
Lord and Master, who, with a look of forgiving love, could comfort and
restore his fallen apostle Peter. Be ye imitators of God, as dear
children.
It is no uncommon thing for the Lords backsliding children to be
sadly and sorely distressed and cast down by certain portions of Gods
Word, containing delineations of character and denunciations of woe which
they suppose applicable to themselves; and which, so applied, inconceivably
aggravate their soul distress, their mental anguish, and incapacitate
them from receiving the promises and accepting the comfort which God,
in His Word, so profusely and so graciously extends to His children, returning
from their backslidings, with weeping and mourning, confession and prayer.
Among the declarations thus referred to, which are supposed to have, the
most direct application, and to wear the most threatening aspect, are
those, so frequently quoted and as frequently misinterpreted and misapplied,
found in the 6th chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrews from the 4th to
the 6th verse:For it is impossible for those who were once
enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers
of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers
of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto
repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and
put him to an open shame. Such are the solemn words, often perused
and pondered with terror and despair by the child of God, which we now
propose briefly to consider and explain. But before venturing upon their
exposition let me, in the outset, distinctly and emphatically give it
as my judgment that they in nowise refer to the case of the regenerate,
and that by no ingenuity of criticism, and by no perversion of error,
can they be made to bear strictly upon a state of real grace, or to invalidate
in the slightest degree the revealed doctrine of the final salvation of
the elect of God. Thus affirming our belief that the persons referred
to by the apostle were not true converts to Christianity, had never passed
into a state of spiritual regeneration, let us take each separate clause
of these remarkable passages, and endeavour, in the fear of God, rightly
to explain, and properly to apply His own truth.
Those who were once enlightened. Not spiritually or savingly
enlightened. The persons to whom these passages refer had some perception
of the doctrines and principles of Christianity,the mind was intelligent,
the judgment informed,but nothing more. They had received the knowledge
of the truth in the intellect, but not the quickening, sanctifying power
of the truth in the heart. It was an illumination of the mind only. They
were so enlightened as to see the evil effects of sin, but not the
evil that is in sin; to see the good things which come from Christ, but
not the goodness that is in Christ; so as to reform externally, but not
to be sanctified internally; to have knowledge of the gospel doctrinally,
but not experimentally; yea, to have such light into it as to be able
to preach it to others, and yet be destitute of the grace of God.
This is the enlightenment of which the apostle speaks, and nothing more.
Their religion would, in modern terms, be denominated the religion of
the intellecta religion which, however sound in its orthodoxy and
logical in its reasoning, is but as a palace of ice floating amid the
snows and gloom of the polar seas. But this description cannot apply to
you, penitent child of God! The truth as it is in Jesus has enlightened
your judgment, and from thence has penetrated your heart, and in its light
you see the sinfulness of your backslidings, the consciousness of which
has brought you in sorrow and confession to the Saviours feet. It
is safe, therefore, to conclude that you are not one of those persons
whom the apostle describes as being once enlightened, as having swerved
from the truth, whom it was impossible again to recover, seeing they had
rejected the evidence upon which they avowed their belief in, and their
attachment to, Christianitythe only evidence Christianity offers
in proof of its divinity.
And have tasted of the heavenly gift. A slight difference
of opinion has existed as to the gift here referred to; some
expositors, among whom is Owen, make the next clause exegetical of the
present one. Without, however, perplexing the reader with needless criticism,
we at once offer it as our opinion that the heavenly gift
is the same as the unspeakable gift referred to in another
place and by the same writer. It is quite possible for an apostate from
the truth, having the illumination we have spoken of, to have possessed
a certain knowledge of Christ, the heavenly gift, without
being renewed, sanctified, or saved. Does not Paul speak of his no
more knowing Christ after the flesh, as some still do, with a carnal,
fleshly knowledge? Does he not, in another place, describe the conduct
of some who had so far tasted of the heavenly gift as to preach
Christ, but to preach Him with envy and strife, and contention,
not sincerely? And yet again, is it not true that the same apostle
warns certain individuals against the sin of eating the bread and
drinking the cup of the Lord unworthily? What does all this prove
but that those who have tasted of the heavenly gift have no other knowledge
of Christ than that which is natural, notional, and speculative? They
have not Christ in their affections,Christ as the object of supreme
delight and love,nor Christ in them the hope of glory. But you have
not so learned Christ, O trembling penitent! It has pleased God to reveal
His Son in you. You have tasted, felt, and handled, with a living, appropriating
faith, the Lord Jesus. Your taste of this heavenly gift has been a heart-experience
of His preciousness and fulness. And although you have gone astray like
a lost sheep, yet you have not forgotten the power and savour of His precious
name, which is now more than ever to you as ointment poured forth. And
now your heart pines and your soul yearns to retrace its steps, to walk
once more with the Shepherd whom you have forsaken, and to lie down again
with the flock from whom you have strayed. What does this stirring within
you prove,this contrition, self-abhorrence, and sin-loathing,but
that you are not an apostate from the faith, a wanderer only from the
fold, back to whose pasture and repose the faithful Shepherd is gently
conducting you?
And were made partakers of the Holy Ghost. This clause is
more clear and definite. How far an individual may be said to partake
of the Holy Ghost, and not be savingly converted, has been long a mooted
question. These words, however, place the matter beyond doubt. The unhappy
persons to whom they refer were undoubtedly partakers of the Holy Ghost,
but in what sense? Let it be remembered that it was a distinctive feature
of the early Church that there existed within its pale those who were
endowed, some with ordinary, and others with extraordinary gifts of the
Holy Ghost; such as the power of working miracles, of prophesying, and
of speaking with tongues, and that these persons were possessed of, and
exercised in many instances these gifts, as instruments of pride, covetousness,
and ambition,the works of the flesh in alliance with the gifts of
the Spirit! Such, for example, was Simon Magus, who sought these supernatural
endowments, not for the glory of God, but as sources of gain, and as ministering
to his carnal aspirations. In his famous letter on charity,
addressed to the Church at Corinth, Paul recognizes the fact, that he
might be so far a partaker of the Holy Ghost as to speak with the tongues
of men and of angels, and understand all prophecies, and all mysteries,
and yet be destitute of the Holy Spirits regenerating grace. And
clearly it is to such individuals our Lord so pointedly and solemnly refers
in His awful description of the judgment, when He says, Many will
say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name?
and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful
works? To whom He will say, I never knew you; depart from
me, ye that work iniquity. In the absence of the miraculous gifts
of the Spirit, which we believe to have ceased in the Church with the
last of the apostles, men may still be endowed with many ordinary spiritual
gifts, conferring upon them a name, placing them upon a pinnacle of the
temple, and winning for them the admiration and homage of their fellows,
who yet are destitute of the converting grace of the Spirit. This is all
that is meant by having been made partakers of the Holy Ghost.
But your case, penitent believer, bears no analogy to this. What does
your present contrition, your distress and anguish of soul prove, but
that you are quickened with spiritual life, and that the Holy Ghost dwells
in you? that, despite your sinfulness, waywardness, and follies,the
grieving and wounding and quenching He has received at your hands,
the Spirit has not utterly departed from you, but that still your body
is His temple and your heart His home?
And have tasted the good word of God. The meaning of this
clause is obvious. The revealed word, more especially the gospel of God,
is the only interpretation it will admit. These false professors, these
willful apostates, of whom the apostle writes, had heard the word of God
with the outward ear, and had so far tasted its power as to yield an intellectual
assent to its doctrines, and even to have felt some transient emotion,
some stirring of the natural affections by the sublime and awful tenderness
of its revelations. They had marked, too, the extraordinary power and
triumph of the truth in the souls of others, and, moved by the law of
sympathy, they were for a while the subjects of a natural and evanescent
joy. They had witnessed the power of Satan in the human soulhow
the gospel overcame it; the spell which the world wove around the hearthow
the gospel had broke it; the period of perplexityhow the gospel
had guided it; the season of sorrowhow the gospel had consoled it;
the hour of sicknesshow the gospel had strengthened it; the bed
of deathhow the gospel had smoothed it; the darkness of the sepulchrehow
the gospel had illumined it; the fear of perditionhow the gospel
had quelled it; the hope of salvationhow the gospel had confirmed
it; the glory of immortalityhow the gospel had unvailed it;and
their hearts were thrilled with a transient glow of gladness. Such were
the emotions of Herod when he sent for John, did many things, and heard
him gladly. And such, too, was the case of the stony-ground hearers, who
heard the word, and anon received it with joy, but by and by they were
offended, and fell away, not having root in themselves. These are they
who had tasted the good word of God, and this is all that
they had experienced of its power. But not such is your experience, sorrowing
soul! You have more than tasted, you have eaten of the good word of God,
and His word is unto you the joy and the rejoicing of your heart. In that
word your longing, sorrowful soul now hopes,upon it, weary and sad,
your heart now rests, until God shall fulfil its promise, and restore
unto you the joy of His salvation.
And the powers of the world to come. The age to come, as the
word has been, and we think properly, rendered. Clearly the allusion is
to the Messianic age, or the time and dispensation of the Messiah. This
was the age, or the world to come, to which the apostle refers
in another place: The world to come, whereof we speak. He
is clearly referring to the gospel, in contradistinction to the legal
dispensation; in the latter the word was spoken by angels, in the former
the word was spoken by Christ. This age, or gospel dispensation, was to
be ushered in and distinguished, both by signs and wonders, and
with divers miracles and gifts of the Holy Ghost. Now, it will not
be difficult to trace the application of this to the apostates whom these
passages describe. They had lived in the early dawn of the gospel age,
and amidst its most wondrous and stirring scenes. They had beheld these
signs, had marked these wonders, and perchance had wrought these miracles.
And so they had tasted of the powers of the world to come.
All this finds no application to your case, O backsliding yet returning
child of God!
Now follows the sentence of the Holy Ghost upon these apostates from the
profession of their faith. That sentence is the most solemn, the most
terrible, that ever lighted upon the human soul. It is impossible,
. . . if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing
they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open
shame. The key to the explanation of this awful mystery is found
in the word repentance. Could they become the subjects of
true repentance there might be hope, but with them this was impossible.
For the fearful sin which they had committed, no repentance was provided,for
the deep guilt which they had contracted, no sacrifice had been offered,from
the apostasy into which they had plunged, no avenue of return had been
made,in a word, for the crime with which they were charged, no remission
was given! Their salvation was IMPOSSIBLE! After having professed to believe
in, and to have received the Messiah as the Son of God, as the Saviour
of men, they had openly and willfully and utterly rejected Him. By so
doing they had repaired to Gethsemane, and justified the treacherous betrayal
of Christ by Judas; they had gone to Calvary, and ratified the cruel murder
of Christ by the Jews; they had fraternized with His enemies, and had
joined their shout, Away with Him! away with Him! Crucify Him! crucify
Him! And so they had crucified the Son of God afresh, and
put Him to an open shame. After having passed through all these
stages of sin, of crime, and guilt,having utterly abjured and renounced
the only means and object and grace of repentance,it was IMPOSSIBLE
that they could be renewed, recovered, saved! For them there remained
no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of judgment
and fiery indignation, which should devour the adversaries.
But, beloved child of God! we are persuaded better things of you, and
things that accompany salvation. The Holy Ghost has given you the truest,
the strongest evidence of spiritual life in your soula broken and
a contrite heart. Bring this sacrifice, and lay it upon Christ our Altar,
and God will accept it. Let the holy lessons we learn from the mournful,
the irretrievable, the hopeless case of the willful APOSTATE benot
to rest on spiritual illumination, however great, nor on spiritual gifts,
however eminent, nor on religious feelings, however ecstatic, but seek
after the mortification of sin, a closer communion with the Lord, and
still more to abound in those fruits of righteousness which are
by Jesus Christ unto the praise and glory of God. Upon you these
awful words fling no darkling shadow, but your path is that of the
just, which is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the
perfect day.
Welcome, weeping penitent;
Grace has made thy heart relent:
Welcome, long-estranged child;
God in Christ is reconciled.
Welcome to the cleansing fount,
Springing from the sacred mount;
Welcome to the feast divine,
Bread of life, and living wine.
Oh, the virtue of that price,
That redeeming sacrifice!
Come, ye bought, but not with gold,
Welcome to the sacred fold.
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