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Sermon 33: Upon Our Lord’s Sermon On The Mount, Discourse XIII

   https://wesleyworks.ecdsdev.org/sermons/Sermon033

01:466 An Introductory Comment [to Sermons 21-33]

The unifying theme of these next thirteen ‘discourses’ on the Sermon on the Mount, with all their variations and nuancings, is the Christian life understood as the fruit of justifying faith. But given such faith, what follows? Wesley’s answer is given in this extended exposition of the Christian life based on the locus classicus of evangelical ethics, ‘The Sermon on the Mount’ (i.e., Matthew 5-7). Since Tyndale, this ‘sermon’ had been understood as ‘the epitome of God’s laws and promises’ for Christian believers; cf. Clebsch, England’s Earliest Protestants, p. 184; see also William Burkitt, Expository Notes…on the New Testament (eleven editions between 1700 and 1739), Preface to chapter 5: ‘Christ’s famous Sermon on the Mount comprehends the sum and substance of both the Old and New Testaments.’

Taken together, the following sermons are not a thirteen-part essay, tightly organized and argued. Instead, they are separate sermons, drawn from materials running back to 1725, arranged in a triadic pattern that seems to have been original with Wesley. Each is a discourse in its own right; yet the series is designed so that each appears as a part of a whole. This means that the sermons may be read singly or together, but with an eye on their shared aim: ‘to assert and prove every branch of gospel obedience as indispensably necessary to eternal salvation’; cf. Wesley’s open letter (Nov. 17, 1759) to John Downes in reply to the latter’s abusive Methodism Examined and Exposed (1759).

Many of the great and near-great commentators of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries had devoted their talents to the interpretation of Matthew 5-7 as the principal summary of Christian ethics, or, in Henry Hammond’s phrase, as ‘an abstract of Christian philosophy’; cf. his Practical Catechism (1st edn., c. 1644), II.1, in the Library of Anglo-Catholic Theology (1847), p. 83. Chief among these earlier works, in the order of their influences upon Wesley’s thought, were Bishop Offspring Blackall, ‘Eighty-Seven Practical Discourses Upon Our Saviour’s Sermon on the Mount’, Works, I.1-561; II.609-939; 01:467John Norris, Practical Discourses; the American, James Blair, Our Saviour’s Divine Sermon on the Mount in IV Volumes (1722; 2nd edn., 1740, with a preface by Daniel Waterland); John Cardinal Bona, Guide to Eternity… (six editions in English between 1672 and 1712); and Henry Hammond, op. cit. Echoes of all these are scattered along the way, together with lesser borrowings from Bengel, Poole, and Henry. This makes it all the more remarkable that Wesley came up with a model of his own, both inform and substance. This series thus reminds us, yet again, of Wesley’s ready appeal to tradition—even while he maintains his own originality and independence.

Benjamin Ingham records in his Journal that ‘during the voyage [to Georgia] Wesley went over our Saviour’s Sermon on the Mount’ with the ship’s company aboard the Simmonds. There are also other records of his preaching, very early on, from one or another text in Matthew 5-7. For example, his second sermon was preached at Binsey (near Oxford), November 21, 1725, on Matt. 6:33. A first draft of the sermon which appears here as ‘Discourse VIII’ seems to have been written out in 1736. Later, it was the example of the Sermon on the Mount that encouraged Wesley to break out of his High Church prejudices in Bristol, April 1, 1739: ‘In the evening (Mr. Whitefield being gone) I begun expounding our Lord’s Sermon on the Mount (one pretty remarkable precedent of field preaching, though I suppose there were churches at that time also) to a little society which was accustomed to meet once or twice a week in Nicholas Street;’ cf. Journal entries for this whole story of the unplanned outbreak of the Wesleyan Revival.

The records show that, between 1739 and 1746, Wesley preached more than one hundred sermons from separate texts in the Sermon on the Mount. There is, however, no recorded instance of his having treated that Sermon as a whole anywhere else. Evidently, he was prepared to allow this series, once published, to stand as his sufficient comment on the subject.

In his introduction to ‘Discourse X’, §§1-3, Wesley repeats his explanation (cf. ‘Discourse I’, Proem, §10) of how he had conceived the design of Matthew 5-7, according to its three unfolding themes: (1) ‘the sum of true religion’; (2) ‘rules touching that right intention which we are to preserve in all our outward actions’; and (3) ‘the main hindrances of this religion’. He then adds a clarifying summary: ‘In the fifth chapter [of St. Matthew] our great Teacher…has laid before us those dispositions of the soul which constitute real Christianity…. In the sixth [chapter] he has shown how all our actions…may be made holy, and good, and acceptable to God, by a pure and holy intention…. In 01:468the former part of [ch. 7] he points out the most common and fatal hindrances of this holiness; in the latter [part] he exhorts us, by various motives, to break through all [such hindrances] and secure that prize of our high calling [of God in Christ Jesus]’ (cf. Phil. 3:14).

The thirteen discourses are divided almost equally over the three chapters of St. Matthew: five for chapter five, four each for six and seven. Of the first five, Discourse I is devoted to the first two Beatitudes; Discourse II to Beatitudes three through five (with a hymn to love based on 1 Cor. 13); Discourse III to the remainder of the Beatitudes; Discourse IV turns to Christianity as ‘a social religion’ in which inward holiness (our love of God) prompts outward holiness (love of neighbour); Discourse V is a balancing of law and gospel. Discourses VI-IX are based on chapter six: VI to the problems of purity and holiness of intention (to the ‘works of piety and of mercy’); VII to fasting; VIII to a denunciation of greed and surplus accumulation; IX to the mutually exclusive services of God and Mammon. Discourses X-XIII turn to various hindrances to holy living and to their avoidance: X to ‘judging’ (contrary to love), ‘intemperate zeal’, ‘neglect of prayer’, ‘neglect of charity’; XI to the noxious influences of ill-example and ill-advice with which the world deludes us; XII to false prophets and unedifying preachers (and yet also our duties to attend church nonetheless and to avail ourselves of all means of grace); XIII is an inevitable comment on the parable of the houses built on sand and rock. Discourse XII was also published separately in the same year that it appeared in SOSO, III (1750), under the title, ‘A Caution Against False Prophets. A Sermon on Matt. vii. 15-20. Particularly recommended to the People Called Methodists’. This went through seven editions during Wesley’s lifetime. For a stemma delineating the publishing history of that sermon (‘collected’ and ‘separate’) and a list of variant readings, see Appendix, ‘Wesley’s Text’, Vol. IV, see also Bibliog, Nos. 130 and 13o.i.

Obviously there is no interest, in any of these sermons, in critical textual problems or in the historical context. Everywhere it is assumed that in St. Matthew’s text we are dealing with divine ipsissima verba—i.e., with a direct address from ὁ ὤν, ‘the self-existent, the Supreme, the God who is over all, blessed for ever’ (§9 below). The Sermon on the Mount, in Wesley’s view, is the only Gospel passage where Christ designed ‘to lay down at once the whole plan of his religion, to give us a full prospect of Christianity’. What matters most in our reading, therefore, is an awareness of Wesley’s sense of the wholeness of the message he is interpreting, of his conviction of the honest integration of an evangel profoundly ethical with an ethic that is also vividly 01:469evangelical. Maybe more than anywhere else in SOSO this particular bloc displays Wesley’s distinctive concern for integration and balance—between the faith that justifies and the faith that works by love.

01:687 Upon our Lord’s Sermon on the Mount,
Discourse the Thirteenth

Matthew 7:21-27

Not everyone that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven.

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?

And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.

Therefore whosoever heareth these sayings of mine, and doeth them, I will liken him unto a wise man, which built his house upon a rock;

And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell not; for it was founded upon a rock.

And everyone that heareth these sayings of mine, and doeth them not, shall be likened unto a foolish man, which built his house upon the sand;

And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell: and great was the fall of it.

11. Our divine Teacher, having declared the whole counsel of God with regard to the way of salvation, and observed the chief hindrance of those who desire to walk therein, now closes the whole with these weighty words; thereby, as it were, setting his seal to his prophecy, and impressing his whole authority on what he had delivered, that it might stand firm to all generations.

22. For thus saith the Lord, that none may ever conceive there is any other way than this: ‘Not everyone that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven. 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? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity. […] Therefore 01:688everyone that heareth these sayings of mine and doeth them not, shall be likened unto a foolish man which built his house upon the sand. And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house; and it fell: and great was the fall of it.’

33. I design in the following discourse, first, to consider the case of him who thus builds his house upon the sand; secondly, to show the wisdom of him who builds upon a rock; and thirdly, to conclude with a practical application.

1

1I. 1. And, first, I am to consider the case of him who builds his house upon the sand. It is concerning him our Lord saith, ‘Not everyone that saith unto me, Lord, Lord! shall enter into the kingdom of heaven.’ And this is a decree which cannot pass; which standeth fast for ever and ever.

1

See Ps. 148:6.

It therefore imports us in the highest degree throughly to understand the force of these words. Now what are we to understand by that expression, ‘that saith unto me, Lord, Lord’? It undoubtedly means, ‘that thinks of going to heaven by any other way than that which I have now described’. It therefore implies (to begin at the lowest point) all good words, all verbal religion. It includes whatever creeds we may rehearse; whatever professions of faith we make; whatever number of prayers we may repeat, whatever thanksgivings we read or say to God. We may speak good of his name;
2

I.e., lead (or join in) the responses of the daily offices, beginning with the ‘Jubilate Deo’, Ps. 100:4, etc., in BCP, Morning Prayer.

and declare his loving-kindness to the children of men.
3

See another favourite Psalm in ‘Morning Prayer’: 107:8, 15, 21, 31 (BCP).

We may be talking of all his mighty acts, and telling of his salvation from day to day. By comparing spiritual things with spiritual,
4

See 1 Cor. 2:13.

we may show the meaning of the oracles of God. We may explain the mysteries of his kingdom, which have been hid from the beginning of the world.
5

See Col. 1:26.

We may speak with the tongue of angels rather than men concerning the deep things of God.
6

See 1 Cor. 13:1.

We may proclaim to sinners, ‘Behold the Lamb of God, who taketh away the sin of the world.’
7

John 1:29.

Yea, we may do this with such a measure of the power of God, and such demonstration of his Spirit, as to save many souls from death,
8

See Jas. 5:20.

and hide a multitude of sins.
9

See 1 Pet.4:8.

And yet ’tis very possible all 01:689this may be no more than ‘saying, Lord, Lord!’ After I have thus successfully preached to others, still I myself may be a castaway.
10

A compounded echo here from 1 Cor. 9:27 and the shipboard memoranda back in January and February 1738; cf. JWJ, Jan. 8, Jan. 24, and Feb. 1; see also Moore, I.342-44. Note also the premonition here of John Wesley’s later outburst to Charles, June 27, 1766: ‘Neither am I impelled to [my evangelical mission] by fear of any kind. I have no more fear than love. Or if I have any fear, it is not that of falling into hell but of falling into nothing.’ Cf. No. 2, The Almost Christian, I.13 and n.

I may in the hand of God snatch many souls from hell, and yet drop into it when I have done. I may bring many others to the kingdom of heaven, and yet myself never enter there. Reader, if God hath ever blessed my word to thy soul, pray that he may be merciful to me a sinner.
11

Luke 18:13; as we have seen, Wesley’s ‘assurance’ of 1738 had been confirmed to him in 1739 when others received ‘assurance’ as a fruit of his preaching of it.

22. The ‘saying, Lord, Lord!’ may, secondly, imply the doing no harm.

12

Cf. below, III.2-4, and No. 22, ‘Sermon on the Mount, II’, II.4 and n.

We may abstain from every presumptuous sin, from every kind of outward wickedness. We may refrain from all those ways of acting or speaking which are forbidden in Holy Writ. We may be able to say to all those among whom we live, Which of you convinceth me of sin?
13

John 8:46.

We may have a conscience void of any external offence towards God and towards man.
14

See Acts 24:16.

We may be clear of all uncleanness, ungodliness, and unrighteousness as to the outward act, or (as the Apostle testifies concerning himself) ‘touching the righteousness of the law’, i.e. outward righteousness, ‘blameless’;
15

Cf. Phil. 3:6.

but yet we are not hereby justified. Still this is no more than ‘saying, Lord, Lord!’ And if we go no farther than this we shall never ‘enter into the kingdom of heaven’.

33. The ‘saying, Lord, Lord!’ may imply, thirdly, many of what are usually styled good works. A man may attend the Supper of the Lord, may hear abundance of excellent sermons, and omit no opportunity of partaking all the other ordinances of God. I may do good to my neighbour, deal my bread to the hungry, and cover the naked with a garment. I may be so zealous of good works as even to ‘give all my goods to feed the poor’.

16

Cf. 1 Cor. 13:3.

Yea, and I may do all this with a desire to please God and a real belief that I do please him thereby (which is undeniably the case of those our Lord introduces, ‘saying unto him, Lord, Lord!’); and still I may have no part in the glory which shall be revealed.
17

Rom. 8:18; another description of ‘the almost Christian’.

401:6904. If any man marvels at this, let him acknowledge he is a stranger to the whole religion of Jesus Christ; and in particular to that perfect portraiture thereof which he has set before us in this discourse. For how far short is all this of that righteousness and true holiness

18

Eph. 4:24.

which he has described therein! How widely distant from that inward kingdom of heaven which is now opened in the believing soul! Which is first sown in the heart as a grain of mustard seed, but afterwards putteth forth great branches,
19

See Matt. 13:31-32.

on which grow all the fruits of righteousness,
20

Phil. 1:11.

every good temper and word and work.

55. Yet as clearly as he had declared this, as frequently as he had repeated that none who have not this kingdom of God within them shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, our Lord well knew that many would not receive this saying, and therefore confirms it yet again. ‘Many’ (saith he; not one; not a few only; it is not a rare or an uncommon case) ‘shall say unto me in that day’. Not only, we have said many prayers; we have spoken thy praise; we have refrained from evil; we have exercised ourselves in doing good; but what is abundantly more than this—‘We have prophesied in thy name. In thy name have we cast out devils; in thy name done many wonderful works.’ ‘We have prophesied’: we have declared thy will to mankind; we have showed sinners the way to peace and glory. And we have done this ‘in thy name’, according to the truth of thy gospel. Yea, and by thy authority, who didst confirm the Word with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven. For ‘in’ (or by) ‘thy name’, by the power of thy Word and of thy Spirit, ‘have we cast out devils;’ out of the souls which they had long claimed as their own, and whereof they had full and quiet possession. ‘And in thy name’, by thy power, not our own, ‘have we done many wonderful works;’ insomuch that even ‘the dead heard the voice of the Son of God’

21

Cf. John 5:25.

speaking by us, and lived. ‘And then will I profess’ even ‘unto them, I never knew you:’ no, not then, when you were ‘casting out devils in my name’. Even then I did not know you as my own; for your heart was not right toward God. Ye were not yourselves meek and lowly; ye were not lovers of God and of all mankind; ye were not renewed in the image of God.
22

See Col. 3:10.

Ye were not holy as I am holy.
23

See 1 Pet. 1:16.

‘Depart from me, ye’ who, 01:691notwithstanding all this, are ‘workers of iniquity’ (ἀνομία). Ye are transgressors of my law—my law of holy and perfect love.

66. It is to put this beyond all possibility of contradiction that our Lord confirms it by that apposite comparison. ‘Everyone’, saith he, ‘who heareth these sayings of mine and doeth them not, shall be likened unto a foolish man which built his house upon the sand. And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house:’ as they will surely do, sooner or later, upon every soul of man; even the floods of outward affliction, or inward temptation; the storms of pride, anger, fear, or desire. ‘And it fell: and great was the fall of it;’ so that it perished for ever and ever. Such must be the portion of all who rest in anything short of that religion which is above described. And the greater will their fall be because they ‘heard those sayings, and yet did them not’.

2

1II. 1. I am, secondly, to show the wisdom of him that doth them, that ‘buildeth his house upon a rock’. He indeed is wise who ‘doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven’. He is truly wise whose ‘righteousness exceeds the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees’.

24

Matt. 5:20.

He is poor in spirit;
25

Matt. 5:3.

knowing himself even as also he is known.
26

See 1 Cor. 13:12.

He sees and feels all his sin, and all his guilt, till it is washed away by the atoning blood. He is conscious of his lost estate, of the wrath of God abiding on him,
27

See John 3:36.

and of his utter inability to help himself till he is filled with peace and joy in the Holy Ghost.
28

Rom. 14:17.

He is meek and gentle, patient toward all men, never ‘returning evil for evil, or railing for railing, but contrariwise blessing’,
29

Cf. 1 Pet. 3:9.

till he overcomes evil with good.
30

See Rom. 12:21.

His soul is athirst for nothing on earth, but only for God, the living God.
31

See Ps. 42:2.

He has bowels of love for all mankind, and is ready to lay down his life for his enemies. He loves the Lord his God with all his heart, and with all his mind and soul and strength.
32

See Mark 12:30.

He alone shall enter into the kingdom of heaven who in this spirit doth good unto all men;
33

See Gal. 6:10.

and who, being for this cause despised and 01:692rejected of men,
34

Isa. 53:3.

being hated, reproached, and persecuted, ‘rejoices and is exceeding glad’,
35

Cf. Matt. 5:12.

knowing in whom he hath believed;
36

See 2 Tim. 1:12.

and being assured these light, momentary afflictions will ‘work out for him an eternal weight of glory’.
37

Cf. 2 Cor. 4:17.

22. How truly wise is this man! He knows himself: an everlasting spirit which came forth from God, and was sent down into an house of clay,

38

See Job 4:19. Cf. No. 28, ‘Sermon on the Mount, VIII’, §28 and n.

not to do his own will, but the will of him that sent him.
39

See John 6:38.

He knows the world: the place in which he is to pass a few days or years, not as an inhabitant, but as a stranger and sojourner in his way to the everlasting habitations;
40

Luke 16:9.

and accordingly he uses the world, as not abusing it, and as knowing the fashion of it passes away.
41

See 1 Cor. 7:31. See also No. 20, The Lord Our Righteousness, II.20 and n.

He knows God: his Father and his friend, the parent of all good, the centre of the spirits of all flesh, the sole happiness of all intelligent beings. He sees, clearer than the light of the noonday sun, that this is the end of man: to glorify him who made him for himself, and to love and enjoy him for ever.
42

An interesting conflation of two famous aphorisms: Q.1 and A. in the Westminster Shorter Catechism and St. Augustine’s Confessions, I.i.; cf. No. 3, ‘Awake, Thou That Sleepest’, II.5 and n.

And with equal clearness he sees the means to that end, to the enjoyment of God in glory; even now to know, to love, to imitate God, and to believe in Jesus Christ whom he hath sent.
43

See John 6:29; 17:3.

33. He is a wise man, even in God’s account; for ‘he buildeth his house upon a rock;’ upon the Rock of Ages, the everlasting Rock, the Lord Jesus Christ. Fitly is he so called; for he changeth not.

44

See Mal. 3:6.

He is ‘the same yesterday, today, and for ever’.
45

Heb. 13:8.

To him both the man of God of old, and the Apostle citing his words, bear witness: ‘Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth, and the heavens are the works of thine hands. They shall perish, but thou remainest; they all shall wax old as doth a garment: and as a vesture shalt thou fold them up, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall not fail.’

Heb. 1:10-12 [quoting Ps. 102:25-27 (BCP)].

01:693Wise therefore is the man who buildeth on him; who layeth him for his only foundation; who builds only upon his blood and righteousness, upon what he hath done and suffered for us. On this corner-stone he fixes his faith, and rests the whole weight of his soul upon it. He is taught of God to say, Lord I have sinned; I deserve the nethermost hell. But I am ‘justified freely by thy grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ’.
46

Cf. Rom. 3:24.

‘And the life I now live I live by faith in him who loved me and gave himself for me.’
47

Cf. Gal. 2:20.

‘The life I now live’: namely, a divine, heavenly life, a life which is ‘hid with Christ in God’.
48

Col. 3:3.

I now live, even in the flesh, a life of love, of pure love both to God and man; a life of holiness and happiness, praising God and doing all things to his glory.

44. Yet let not such an one think that he shall not see war any more,

49

See Mic. 4:3.

that he is now out of the reach of temptation. It still remains for God to prove the grace he hath given: he shall be tried as gold in the fire.
50

See Rev. 3:18.

He shall be tempted not less than they who know not God; perhaps abundantly more. For Satan will not fail to try to the uttermost those whom he is not able to destroy. Accordingly ‘the rain’ will impetuously ‘descend’; only at such times and in such a manner as seems good, not to the prince of the power of the air, but to him whose ‘kingdom ruleth over all’.
51

Ps. 103:19.

‘The floods’, or torrents, ‘will come;’ they will lift up their waves and rage horribly. But to them also the Lord that sitteth above the water-floods, that remaineth a King for ever,
52

See Ps. 29:9 (BCP).

will say, ‘Hitherto shall ye come and no farther: here shall your proud waves be stayed.’
53

Cf. Job 38:11.

‘The winds will blow, and beat upon that house,’ as though they would tear it up from the foundation. But they cannot prevail: it falleth not; for it is founded upon a rock. He buildeth on Christ by faith and love; therefore he shall not be cast down. ‘He shall not fear, though the earth be moved, and though the hills be carried into the midst of the sea. Though the waters thereof rage and swell, and the mountains shake at the tempest of the same;’
54

Ps. 46:2-3 (BCP).

still he ‘dwelleth under the defence of the Most High, and is safe under the shadow of the Almighty’.
55

Ps. 91:1 (BCP).

3

101:694III. 1. How nearly then does it concern every child of man practically to apply these things to himself! Diligently to examine on what foundation he builds, whether on a rock or on the sand! How deeply are you concerned to inquire, What is the foundation of my hope? Whereon do I build my expectation of entering into the kingdom of heaven? Is it not built on the sand? Upon my orthodoxy or right opinions (which by a gross abuse of words I have called faith);

56

Cf. No. 7, ‘The Way to the Kingdom’, I.6 and n.

upon my having a set of notions—suppose more rational or scriptural than many others have? Alas! What madness is this? Surely this is building on the sand; or rather, on the froth of the sea! Say I am convinced of this. Am I not again building my hope on what is equally unable to support it? Perhaps on my belonging to ‘so excellent a church; reformed after the true Scripture model; blessed with the purest doctrine, the most primitive liturgy, the most apostolical form of government’.
57

A sardonic reference here; but cf. No. 13 ,On Sin in Believers, I.3 and n., for samples of Wesley’s own triumphalist sentiments on this very point.

These are doubtless so many reasons for praising God, as they may be so many helps to holiness. But they are not holiness itself. And if they are separate from it they will profit me nothing. Nay, they will leave me the more without excuse, and exposed to the greater damnation. Therefore, if I build my hope upon this foundation I am still building upon the sand.

22. You cannot, you dare not, rest here. Upon what next will you build your hope of salvation? Upon your innocence? Upon your doing no harm?

58

Cf. above, I.2; and No. 22, ‘Sermon on the Mount, II’, II.4 and n.

Your not wronging or hurting anyone? Well; allow this plea to be true. You are just in all your dealings; you are a downright honest man; you pay every man his own; you neither cheat nor extort; you act fairly with all mankind. And you have a conscience towards God; you do not live in any known sin. Thus far is well. But still it is not the thing. You may go thus far and yet never come to heaven. When all this harmlessness
59

Cf. No. 32, ‘Sermon on the Mount, XII’, II.2 and n.

flows from a right principle it is the least part of the religion of Christ. But in you it does not flow from a right principle, and therefore is no part at all of religion. So that in grounding your hope of salvation on this you are still building upon the sand.

33. Do you go farther yet? Do you add to the doing no harm the attending all the ordinances of God? Do you at all opportunities 01:695partake of the Lord’s Supper? Use public and private prayer? Fast often? Hear and search the Scriptures, and meditate thereon? These things likewise ought you to have done, from the time you first set your face towards heaven. Yet these things also are nothing, being alone. They are nothing without the weightier matters of the law.

60

See Matt. 23:23.

And those you have forgotten. At least you experience them not: faith, mercy, and love of God; holiness of heart; heaven opened in the soul. Still therefore you build upon the sand.

44. Over and above all this, are you zealous of good works?

61

Titus 2:14.

Do you, as you have time, do good to all men?
62

See Gal. 6:10.

Do you feed the hungry and clothe the naked, and visit the fatherless and widow in their affliction?
63

Jas. 1:27.

Do you visit those that are sick? Relieve them that are in prison? Is any a stranger and you take him in? Friend, come up higher.
64

See Luke 14:10.

Do you ‘prophesy in the name’ of Christ?
65

Cf. Matt. 7:22.

Do you preach the truth as it is in Jesus?
66

See Eph. 4:21.

And does the influence of his Spirit attend your word, and make it the power of God unto salvation?
67

Rom. 1:16.

Does he enable you to bring sinners from darkness to light, from the power of Satan unto God?
68

Acts 26:18.

Then go and learn what thou hast so often taught, ‘By grace ye are saved, through faith.’
69

Cf. Eph. 2:8.

‘Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but of his own mercy he saveth us.’
70

Cf. Titus 3:5.

Learn to hang naked upon the cross of Christ, counting all thou hast done but dung and dross.
71

See Phil. 3:8.

Apply to him just in the spirit of the dying thief,
72

See Luke 23:42.

of the harlot with her seven devils;
73

See Mark 16:9.

else thou art still on the sand, and after saving others thou wilt lose thy own soul.

55. Lord! Increase my faith, if I now believe! Else, give me faith, though but as a grain of mustard seed!

74

See Matt. 17:20.

But ‘what doth it profit if a man say he hath faith, and have not works? Can’ that ‘faith save him?’
75

Cf. Jas. 2:14.

O no! That faith which hath not works, which doth not produce both inward and outward holiness, which does not stamp the whole image of God on the heart, and purify us as he is pure;
76

See 1 John 3:3.

01:696that faith which does not produce the whole of the religion described in the foregoing chapters, is not the faith of the gospel, not the Christian faith, not the faith which leads to glory. O beware of this, above all other snares of the devil, of resting on unholy, unsaving faith! If thou layest stress on this thou art lost for ever: thou still buildest thy house upon the sand. When ‘the rain descends and the floods come it’ will surely ‘fall; and great’ will be ‘the fall of it.’

66. Now, therefore, build thou upon a rock. By the grace of God, know thyself.

77

The prior human ‘re-action’ in all true repentance; see No. 7, ‘The Way to the Kingdom’, II.1 and n.

Know and feel that thou wast shapen in wickedness, and in sin did thy mother conceive thee;
78

See Ps. 51:5 (BCP).

and that thou thyself hast been heaping sin upon sin ever since thou couldst discern good from evil.
79

See Heb. 5:14.

Own thyself guilty of eternal death; and renounce all hope of ever being able to save thyself. Be it all thy hope to be washed in his blood and purified by his Spirit ‘who himself bore all thy sins in his own body upon the tree’.
80

1 Pet. 2:24.

And if thou knowest he hath taken away thy sins, so much the more abase thyself before him in a continued sense of thy total dependence on him for every good thought and word and work, and of thy utter inability to all good unless he ‘water thee every moment’.
81

Cf. Isa. 27:3.

77. Now weep for your sins, and mourn after God till he turns your heaviness into joy.

82

See Jas. 4:9.

And even then weep with them that weep;
83

Rom. 12:15.

and for them that weep not for themselves. Mourn for the sins and miseries of mankind. And see, but just before your eyes, the immense ocean of eternity,
84

Cf. No. 54, ‘On Eternity’, §4 and n.

without a bottom or a shore;
85

Cf. ibid., §18 and n.

which has already swallowed up millions of millions of men, and is gaping to devour them that yet remain. See here the house of God, eternal in the heavens;
86

See 2 Cor. 5:1.

there, hell and destruction without a covering.
87

See Job 26:6.

And thence learn the importance of every moment, which just appears, and is gone for ever!
88

Cf. No. 29, ‘Sermon on the Mount, IX’, §28 and n.

88. Now add to your seriousness, meekness of wisdom. Hold an even scale as to all your passions, but in particular as to anger, sorrow, and fear. Calmly acquiesce in whatsoever is the will of God. Learn in every state wherein you are, therewith to be 01:697content.

89

See Phil. 4:11.

Be mild to the good; be gentle toward all men,
90

2 Tim. 2:24.

but especially toward the evil and the unthankful. Beware not only of outward expressions of anger, such as calling thy brother ‘Raca’, or ‘Thou fool’
91

Matt. 5:22.

but of every inward emotion contrary to love, though it go no farther than the heart. Be angry at sin, as an affront offered to the majesty of heaven; but love the sinner still,
92

Cf. No. 22, ‘Sermon on the Mount, II’, I.8 and n.

like our Lord who ‘looked round about upon’ the Pharisees ‘with anger, being grieved for the hardness of their hearts’.
93

Cf. Mark 3:5.

He was grieved at the sinners, angry at the sin. Thus ‘be thou angry and sin not.’
94

Eph. 4:26.

99. Now do thou hunger and thirst, not for ‘the meat that perisheth, but for that which endureth unto everlasting life’.

95

John 6:27.

Trample under foot the world and the things of the world—all these riches, honours, pleasures. What is the world to thee? Let the dead bury their dead: but follow thou after the image of God.
96

Cf. Matt. 8:22; an interesting Christological note identifying Jesus Christ as the representative ‘image of God’.

And beware of quenching that blessed thirst, if it is already excited in thy soul, by what is vulgarly called religion—a poor, dull farce, a religion of form, of outside show
97

Cf. Matthew Prior, ‘An English Padlock’, l. 60: ‘’Tis a dull farce, an empty show;’ see No. 77, ‘Spiritual Worship’, III.5 and n.

—which leaves the heart still cleaving to the dust, as earthly and sensual as ever.
98

See Jas. 3:15.

Let nothing satisfy thee but the power of godliness, but a religion that is spirit and life; the dwelling in God and God in thee; the being an inhabitant of eternity; the entering in by the blood of sprinkling
99

Heb. 12:24.

‘within the veil’,
100

Heb. 6:19.

and ‘sitting in heavenly places with Christ Jesus’.
101

Cf. Eph. 2:6.

1010. Now, seeing thou canst do all things through Christ strengthening thee,

102

See Phil. 4:13.

be merciful as thy Father in heaven is merciful.
103

See Luke 6:36.

Love thy neighbour as thyself.
104

Lev. 19:18, etc.

Love friends and enemies as thy own soul. And let thy love be long-suffering, and patient towards all men.
105

1 Thess. 5:14.

Let it be kind, soft, benign: inspiring thee with the most amiable sweetness, and the most fervent and tender affection. Let it ‘rejoice in the truth’,
106

Cf. 1 Cor. 13:6.

wheresoever it is found, the truth that is after godliness.
107

See 1 Tim. 6:3.

Enjoy whatsoever brings 01:698glory to God, and promotes peace and goodwill among men. In love ‘cover all things’, of the dead and the absent speaking nothing but good;
108

Cf. No. 14, The Repentance of Believers, I.11 and n.

‘believe all things’ which may any way tend to clear your neighbour’s character; ‘hope all things’ in his favour; and ‘endure all things’, triumphing over all opposition. For true ‘love never faileth’,
109

Cf. 1 Cor. 13:7-8.

in time or in eternity.

1111. Now be thou ‘pure in heart’; purified through faith from every unholy affection, ‘cleansing thyself from all filthiness of flesh and spirit, and perfecting holiness in the fear of God’.

110

Cf. 2 Cor. 7:1.

Being through the power of his grace purified from pride by deep poverty of spirit; from anger, from every unkind or turbulent passion by meekness and mercifulness; from every desire but to please and enjoy God by hunger and thirst after righteousness;
111

Matt. 5:6.

now love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy strength.
112

See Mark 12:30.

1212. In a word: let thy religion be the religion of the heart.

113

Cf. No. 25, ‘Sermon on the Mount, V’, IV.13 and n.

Let it lie deep in thy inmost soul. Be thou little and base, and mean and vile (beyond what words can express) in thy own eyes; amazed and humbled to the dust by the love of God which is in Christ Jesus.
114

Rom. 8:39.

Be serious. Let the whole stream of thy thoughts, words, and actions flow from the deepest conviction that thou standest on the edge of the great gulf, thou and all the children of men, just ready to drop in, either into everlasting glory or everlasting burnings.
115

Isa. 33:14. Cf. No. 25, ‘Sermon on the Mount, V’, III.6, IV.13 and n.

Let thy soul be filled with mildness, gentleness, patience, long-suffering towards all men, at the same time that all which is in thee is athirst for God, the living God;
116

See Ps. 42:2.

longing to awake up after his likeness, and to be satisfied with it. Be thou a lover of God and of all mankind. In this spirit do and suffer all things. Thus show thy faith by thy works: thus ‘do the will of thy Father which is in heaven.’
117

Cf. Matt. 7:21; 12:50.

And as sure as thou now walkest with God on earth, thou shalt also reign with him in glory.


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Entry Title: Sermon 33: Upon Our Lord’s Sermon On The Mount, Discourse XIII

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