GraciousCall.org - On the Christian Life
LIFE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN. SCRIPTURAL ARGUMENTS EXHORTING TO IT.
This first chapter consists of two parts,--I.
Connection between this
treatise on the Christian Life and the doctrine of Regeneration and Repentance. Arrangement of the treatise, sec. 1-3. II. Extremes to be avoided; 1. False Christians denying Christ by their works condemned, sec. 4. 2. Christians
should not despair, though they have not attained perfection, provided they
make daily progress in piety and righteousness.
1.
WE have said that the object of regeneration is to bring the life of believers
into concord and harmony with the righteousness of God, and so confirm the
adoption by which they have been received as sons. But although the law
comprehends within it that new life by which the image of God is restored in
us, yet, as our sluggishness stands greatly in need both of helps and
incentives it will be useful to collect out of Scripture a true account of this
reformations lest any who have a heartfelt desire of repentance should in their
zeal go astray. Moreover, I am not unaware that, in undertaking to describe the
life of the Christian, I am entering on a large and extensive subject, one
which, when fully considered in all its parts, is sufficient to fill a large
volume. We see the length to which the Fathers in treating of individual
virtues extend their exhortations. This they do, not from mere loquaciousness;
for whatever be the virtue which you undertake to recommend, your pen is
spontaneously led by the copiousness of the matter so to amplify, that you seem
not to have discussed it properly if you have not done it at length. My
intention, however, in the plan of life which I now propose to give, is not to
extend it so far as to treat of each virtue specially, and expatiate in
exhortation. This must be sought in the writings of others, and particularly in
the Homilies of the Fathers.[1] For me
it will be sufficient to point out the method by which a pious man may be
taught how to frame his life aright, and briefly lay down some universal rule
by which he may not improperly regulate his conduct. I shall one day possibly
find time for more ample discourse, [or leave others to perform an office for
which I am not so fit. I have a natural love of brevity, and, perhaps, any
attempt of mine at copiousness would not succeed. Even if I could gain the
highest applause by being more prolix, I would scarcely be disposed to attempt
it,[2]] while the nature of my present
work requires me to glance at simple doctrine with as much brevity as possible.
As philosophers have certain definitions of rectitude and honesty, from which
they derive particular duties and the whole train of virtues; so in this
respect Scripture is not without order, but presents a most beautiful
arrangement, one too which is every way much more certain than that of
philosophers. The only difference is, that they, under the influence of
ambition, constantly affect an exquisite perspicuity of arrangement, which may
serve to display their genius, whereas the Spirit of God, teaching without
affectation, is not so perpetually observant of exact method, and yet by
observing it at times sufficiently intimates that it is not to be neglected.
2.
The Scripture system of which we speak aims chiefly at two objects. The former
is, that the love of righteousness, to which we are by no means naturally
inclined, may be instilled and implanted into our minds. The latter is, (see
chap. ii.,) to prescribe a rule which will prevent us while in the pursuit of
righteousness from going astray. It has numerous admirable methods of
recommending righteousness.[3] Many
have been already pointed out in different parts of this work; but we shall
here also briefly advert to some of them. With what better foundation can it
begin than by reminding us that we must be holy, because "God is holy?" (Lev.
xix. 1; 1 Pet. i. 16.) For when we were scattered abroad like lost sheep,
wandering through the labyrinth of this world, he brought us back again to his
own fold. When mention is made of our union with God, let us remember that
holiness must be the bond; not that by the merit of holiness we come into
communion with him, (we ought rather first to cleave to him, in order that,
pervaded with his holiness, we may follow whither he calls,) but because it
greatly concerns his glory not to have any fellowship with wickedness and
impurity. Wherefore he tells us that this is the end of our calling, the end to
which we ought ever to have respect, if we would answer the call of God. For to
what end were we rescued from the iniquity and pollution of the world into
which we were plunged, if we allow ourselves, during our whole lives, to wallow
in them? Besides, we are at the same time admonished, that if we would be
regarded as the Lord's people, we must inhabit the holy city Jerusalem, (Isaiah
rev. 8, et alibi;) which, as he hath consecrated it to himself, it were
impious for its inhabitants to profane by impurity. Hence the expressions, "Who
shall abide in thy tabernacle? who shall dwell in thy holy hill? He that
walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness," (Ps. xv. 1, 2; xxiv. 3, 4;) for
the sanctuary in which he dwells certainly ought not to be like an unclean
stall.
3.
The better to arouse us, it exhibits God the Father, who, as he hath reconciled
us to himself in his Anointed, has impressed his image upon us, to which he
would have us to be conformed, (Rom. v. 4.) Come, then, and let them show me a
more excellent system among philosophers, who think that they only have a moral
philosophy duly and orderly arranged. They, when they would give excellent
exhortations to virtue, can only tell us to live agreeably to nature. Scripture
derives its exhortations from the true source,[4] when it not only enjoins us to
regulate our lives with a view to God its author to whom it belongs; but after
showing us that we have degenerated from our true origin, viz., the law of our
Creator, adds, that Christ, through whom we have returned to favour with God,
is set before us as a model, the image of which our lives should express. What
do you require more effectual than this? Nay, what do you require beyond this?
If the Lord adopts us for his sons on the condition that our life be a
representation of Christ, the bond of our adoption,--then, unless we dedicate
and devote ourselves to righteousness, we not only, with the utmost perfidy,
revolt from our Creator, but also abjure the Saviour himself. Then, from an
enumeration of all the blessings of God, and each part of our salvation, it
finds materials for exhortation. Ever since God exhibited himself to us as a
Father, we must be convicted of extreme ingratitude if we do not in turn
exhibit ourselves as his sons. Ever since Christ purified us by the laver of
his blood, and communicated this purification by baptism, it would ill become
us to be defiled with new pollution. Ever since he ingrafted us into his body,
we, who are his members, should anxiously beware of contracting any stain or
taint. Ever since he who is our head ascended to heaven, it is befitting in us
to withdraw our affections from the earth, and with our whole soul aspire to
heaven. Ever since the Holy Spirit dedicated us as temples to the Lord, we
should make it our endeavour to show forth the glory of God, and guard against
being profaned by the defilement of sin. Ever since our soul and body were
destined to heavenly incorruptibility and an unfading crown, we should
earnestly strive to keep them pure and uncorrupted against the day of the Lord.
These, I say, are the surest foundations of a well-regulated life, and you will
search in vain for any thing resembling them among philosophers, who, in their
commendation of virtue, never rise higher than the natural dignity of man.
4.
This is the place to address those who, having nothing of Christ but the name
and sign, would yet be called Christians. How dare they boast of this sacred
name? None have intercourse with Christ but those who have acquired the true
knowledge of him from the Gospel. The Apostle denies that any man truly has
learned Christ who has not learned to put off "the old man, which is corrupt
according to the deceitful lusts, and put on Christ," (Eph. iv. 22.) They are
convicted, therefore, of falsely and unjustly pretending a knowledge of Christ,
whatever be the volubility and eloquence with which they can talk of the
Gospel. Doctrine is not an affair of the tongue, but of the life; is not
apprehended by the intellect and memory merely, like other branches of
learning; but is received only when it possesses the whole soul, and finds its
seat and habitation in the inmost recesses of the heart. Let them, therefore,
either cease to insult God, by boasting that they are what they are not, or let
them show themselves not unworthy disciples of their divine Master. To doctrine
in which our religion is contained we have given the first place, since by it
our salvation commences; but it must be transfused into the breast, and pass
into the conduct, and so transform us into itself, as not to prove unfruitful.
If philosophers are justly offended, and banish from their company with
disgrace those who, while professing an art which ought to be the mistress of
their conduct, convert it into mere loquacious sophistry, with how much better
reason shall we detest those flimsy sophists who are contented to let the
Gospel play upon their lips, when, from its efficacy, it ought to penetrate the
inmost affections of the heart, fix its seat in the soul, and pervade the whole
man a hundred times more than the frigid discourses of philosophers?
5.
I insist not that the life of the Christian shall breathe nothing but the
perfect Gospel, though this is to be desired, and ought to be attempted. I
insist not so strictly on evangelical perfection, as to refuse to acknowledge
as a Christian any man who has not attained it. In this way all would be
excluded from the Church, since there is no man who is not far removed from
this perfection, while many, who have made but little progress, would be
undeservedly rejected. What then? Let us set this before our eye as the end at
which we ought constantly to aim. Let it be regarded as the goal towards which
we are to run. For you cannot divide the matter with God, undertaking part of
what his word enjoins, and omitting part at pleasure. For, in the first place,
God uniformly recommends integrity as the principal part of his worship,
meaning by integrity real singleness of mind, devoid of gloss and fiction, and
to this is opposed a double mind; as if it had been said, that the spiritual
commencement of a good life is when the internal affections are sincerely
devoted to God, in the cultivation of holiness and justice. But seeing that, in
this earthly prison of the body, no man is supplied with strength sufficient to
hasten in his course with due alacrity, while the greater number are so
oppressed with weakness, that hesitating, and halting, and even crawling on the
ground, they make little progress, let every one of us go as far as his humble
ability enables him, and prosecute the journey once begun. No one will travel
so badly as not daily to make some degree of progress. This, therefore, let us
never cease to do, that we may daily advance in the way of the Lord; and let us
not despair because of the slender measure of success. How little soever the
success may correspond with our wish, our labour is not lost when to-day is
better than yesterday, provided with true singleness of mind we keep our aim,
and aspire to the goal, not speaking flattering things to ourselves, nor
indulging our vices, but making it our constant endeavour to become better,
until we attain to goodness itself. If during the whole course of our life we
seek and follow, we shall at length attain it, when relieved from the infirmity
of flesh we are admitted to full fellowship with God.
A SUMMARY OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE. OF SELF-DENIAL.[5]
The divisions of the chapter are,--I. The rule which permits us
not to go astray in the study of righteousness, requires two things, viz., that
man, abandoning his own will, devote himself entirely to the service of God;
whence it follows, that we must seek not our own things, but the things of God,
sec. 1, 2. II. A description of this renovation or Christian life taken from
the Epistle to Titus, and accurately explained under certain special heads,
sec. 3 to end.
1.
ALTHOUGH the Law of God contains a perfect rule of conduct admirably arranged,
it has seemed proper to our divine Master to train his people by a more
accurate method, to the rule which is enjoined in the Law; and the leading
principle in the method is, that it is the duty of believers to present their
"bodies a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable unto God, which is their
reasonable service," (Rom. xii. 1.) Hence he draws the exhortation: "Be not
conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind,
that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect will of God."
The great point, then, is, that we are consecrated and dedicated to God, and,
therefore, should not henceforth think, speak, design, or act, without a view
to his glory. What he hath made sacred cannot, without signal insult to him, be
applied to profane use. But if we are not our own, but the Lord's, it is plain
both what error is to be shunned, and to what end the actions of our lives
ought to be directed. We are not our own; therefore, neither is our own reason
or will to rule our acts and counsels. We are not our own; therefore, let us
not make it our end to seek what may be agreeable to our carnal nature. We are
not our own; therefore, as far as possible, let us forget ourselves and the
things that are ours. On the other hand, we are God's; let us, therefore, live
and die to him (Rom. xiv. 8.) We are God's; therefore, let his wisdom and will
preside over all our actions. We are God's; to him, then, as the only
legitimate end, let every part of our life be directed. O how great the
proficiency of him who, taught that he is not his own, has withdrawn the
dominion and government of himself from his own reason that he may give them to
God! For as the surest source of destruction to men is to obey themselves, so
the only haven of safety is to have no other will, no other wisdom, than to
follow the Lord wherever he leads. Let this, then be the first step, to abandon
ourselves, and devote the whole energy of our minds to the service of God. By
service, I mean not only that which consists in verbal obedience, but that by
which the mind, divested of its own carnal feelings, implicitly obeys the call
of the Spirit of God. This transformation, (which Paul calls the renewing of
the mind, Rom. xii. 2; Eph. iv. 23,) though it is the first entrance to
life, was unknown to all the philosophers. They give the government of man to
reason alone, thinking that she alone is to be listened to; in short, they
assign to her the sole direction of the conduct. But Christian philosophy bids
her give place, and yield complete submission to the Holy Spirit, so that the
man himself no longer lives, but Christ lives and reigns in him, (Gal. ii.
20.)
2.
Hence follows the other principle, that we are not to seek our own, but the
Lord's will, and act with a view to promote his glory. Great is our
proficiency, when, almost forgetting ourselves, certainly postponing our own
reason, we faithfully make it our study to obey God and his commandments. For
when Scripture enjoins us to lay aside private regard to ourselves, it not only
divests our minds of an excessive longing for wealth, or power, or human
favour, but eradicates all ambition and thirst for worldly glory, and other
more secret pests. The Christian ought, indeed, to be so trained and disposed
as to consider, that during his whole life he has to do with God. For this
reason, as he will bring all things to the disposal and estimate of God, so he
will religiously direct his whole mind to him. For he who has learned to look
to God in everything he does, is at the same time diverted from all vain
thoughts. This is that self-denial which Christ so strongly enforces on his
disciples from the very outset, (Matth. xvi. 24,) which, as soon as it takes
hold of the mind, leaves no place either, first, for pride, show, and
ostentation; or, secondly, for avarice, lust, luxury, effeminacy, or other
vices which are engendered by self love. On the contrary, wherever it reigns
not, the foulest vices are indulged in without shame; or, if there is some
appearance of virtue, it is vitiated by a depraved longing for applause. Show
me, if you can, an individual who, unless he has renounced himself in obedience
to the Lord's command, is disposed to do good for its own sake. Those who have
not so renounced themselves have followed virtue at least for the sake of
praise. The philosophers who have contended most strongly that virtue is to be
desired on her own account, were so inflated with arrogance as to make it
apparent that they sought virtue for no other reason than as a ground for
indulging in pride. So far, therefore, is God from being delighted with these
hunters after popular applause with their swollen breasts, that he declares
they have received their reward in this world, (Matth. vi. 2,) and that harlots
and publicans are nearer the kingdom of heaven than they, (Matth. xxi. 31.) We
have not yet sufficiently explained how great and numerous are the obstacles by
which a man is impeded in the pursuit of rectitude, so long as he has not
renounced himself. The old saying is true, There is a world of iniquity
treasured up in the human soul. Nor can you find any other remedy for this than
to deny yourself, renounce your own reason, and direct your whole mind to the
pursuit of those things which the Lord requires of you, and which you are to
seek only because they are pleasing to Him.
3.
In another passage, Paul gives a brief, indeed, but more distinct account of
each of the parts of a well-ordered life: "The grace of God that bringeth
salvation hath appeared to all men, teaching us that, denying ungodliness and
worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present
world; looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearance of the great
God and our Saviour Jesus Christ; who gave himself for us, that he might redeem
us from all iniquity, and purify to himself a peculiar people, zealous of good
works," (Tit. ii. 11-14.) After holding forth the grace of God to animate us,
and pave the way for His true worship, he removes the two greatest obstacles
which stand in the way, viz., ungodliness, to which we are by nature too prone,
and worldly lusts, which are of still greater extent. Under ungodliness,
he includes not merely superstition, but everything at variance with the true
fear of God. Worldly lusts are equivalent to the lusts of the flesh.
Thus he enjoins us, in regard to both tables of the Law, to lay aside our own
mind, and renounce whatever our own reason and will dictate. Then he reduces
all the actions of our lives to three branches, sobriety, righteousness, and
godliness. Sobriety undoubtedly denotes as well chastity and temperance
as the pure and frugal use of temporal goods, and patient endurance of want.
Righteousness comprehends all the duties of equity, in every one his
due. Next follows godliness, which separates us from the pollutions of
the world, and connects us with God in true holiness. These, when connected
together by an indissoluble chain, constitute complete perfection. But as
nothing is more difficult than to bid adieu to the will of the flesh, subdue,
nay, abjure our lusts, devote ourselves to God and our brethren, and lead an
angelic life amid the pollutions of the world, Paul, to set our minds free from
all entanglements, recalls us to the hope of a blessed immortality, justly
urging us to contend, because as Christ has once appeared as our Redeemer, so
on his final advent he will give full effect to the salvation obtained by him.
And in this way he dispels all the allurements which becloud our path, and
prevent us from aspiring as we ought to heavenly glory; nay, he tells us that
we must be pilgrims in the world, that we may not fail of obtaining the
heavenly inheritance.
4.
Moreover, we see by these words that self-denial has respect partly to men and
partly (more especially) to God, (sec. 8-10.) For when Scripture enjoins us, in
regard to our fellow men, to prefer them in honour to ourselves, and sincerely
labour to promote their advantages (Rom. xii. 10; Phil. ii. 3,) he gives us
commands which our mind is utterly incapable of obeying until its natural
feelings are suppressed. For so blindly do we all rush in the direction of
self-love, that every one thinks he has a good reason for exalting himself and
despising all others in comparison. If God has bestowed on us something not to
be repented of, trusting to it, we immediately become elated, and not only
swell, but almost burst with pride. The vices with which we abound we both
carefully conceal from others, and flatteringly represent to ourselves as
minute and trivial, nay, sometimes hug them as virtues. When the same qualities
which we admire in ourselves are seen in others, even though they should be
superior, we, in order that we may not be forced to yield to them, maliciously
lower and carp at them; in like manner, in the case of vices, not contented
with severe and keen animadversion, we studiously exaggerate them. Hence the
insolence with which each, as if exempted from the common lot, seeks to exalt
himself above his neighbour, confidently and proudly despising others, or at
least looking down upon them as his inferiors. The poor man yields to the rich,
the plebeian to the noble, the servant to the master, the unlearned to the
learned, and yet every one inwardly cherishes some idea of his own superiority.
Thus each flattering himself, sets up a kind of kingdom in his breast; the
arrogant, to satisfy themselves, pass censure on the minds and manners of other
men, and when contention arises, the full venom is displayed. Many bear about
with them some measure of mildness so long as all things go smoothly and
lovingly with them, but how few are there who, when stung and irritated,
preserve the same tenor of moderation? For this there is no other remedy than
to pluck up by the roots those most noxious pests, self-love and love of
victory. This the doctrine of Scripture does. For it teaches us to remember,
that the endowments which God has bestowed upon us are not our own, but His
free gifts, and that those who plume themselves upon them betray their
ingratitude. "Who maketh thee to differ," saith Paul, "and what hast thou that
thou didst not receive? now if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory, as
if thou hadst not received it?" (1 Cor. iv. 7.) Then by a diligent examination
of our faults let us keep ourselves humble. Thus while nothing will remain to
swell our pride, there will be much to subdue it. Again, we are enjoined,
whenever we behold the gifts of God in others, so to reverence and respect the
gifts, as also to honour those in whom they reside. God having been pleased to
bestow honour upon them, it would ill become us to deprive them of it. Then we
are told to overlook their faults, not, indeed, to encourage by flattering
them, but not because of them to insult those whom we ought to regard with
honour and good will.[6] In this way,
with regard to all with whom we have intercourse, our behaviour will be not
only moderate and modest, but courteous and friendly. The only way by which you
can ever attain to true meekness, is to have your heart imbued with a humble
opinion of yourself and respect for others.
5.
How difficult it is to perform the duty of seeking the good of our neighbour!
Unless you leave off all thought of yourself and in a manner cease to be
yourself, you will never accomplish it. How can you exhibit those works of
charity which Paul describes unless you renounce yourself, and become wholly
devoted to others? "Charity (says he, 1 Cor. xiii. 4) suffereth long, and is
kind; charity envieth not; charity vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up, doth
not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked &c.
Were it the only thing required of us to seek not our own, nature would not
have the least power to comply: she so inclines us to love ourselves only, that
she will not easily allow us carelessly to pass by ourselves and our own
interests that we may watch over the interests of others, nay, spontaneously to
yield our own rights and resign it to another. But Scripture, to conduct us to
this, reminds us, that whatever we obtain from the Lord is granted on the
condition of our employing it for the common good of the Church, and that,
therefore, the legitimate use of all our gifts is a kind and liberal
communication of them with others. There cannot be a surer rule, nor a stronger
exhortation to the observance of it, than when we are taught that all the
endowments which we possess are divine deposits entrusted to us for the very
purpose of being distributed for the good of our neighbour. But Scripture
proceeds still farther when it likens these endowments to the different members
of the body, (1 Cor. xii. 12.) No member has its function for itself, or
applies it for its own private use, but transfers it to its fellow-members; nor
does it derive any other advantage from it than that which it receives in
common with the whole body. Thus, whatever the pious man can do, he is bound to
do for his brethren, not consulting his own interest in any other way than by
striving earnestly for the common edification of the Church. Let this, then, be
our method of showing good-will and kindness, considering that, in regard to
everything which God has bestowed upon us, and by which we can aid our
neighbour, we are his stewards, and are bound to give account of our
stewardship; moreover, that the only right mode of administration is that which
is regulated by love. In this way, we shall not only unite the study of our
neighbour's advantage with a regard to our own, but make the latter subordinate
to the former. And lest we should have omitted to perceive that this is the law
for duly administering every gift which we receive from God, he of old applied
that law to the minutest expressions of his own kindness. He commanded the
first-fruits to be offered to him as an attestation by the people that it was
impious to reap any advantage from goods not previously consecrated to him,
(Exod. xxii. 29; xxiii. 19.) But if the gifts of God are not sanctified to us
until we have with our own hand dedicated them to the Giver, it must be a gross
abuse that does not give signs of such dedication. It is in vain to contend
that you cannot enrich the Lord by your offerings. Though, as the Psalmist says
"Thou art my Lord: my goodness extendeth not unto thee," yet you can extend it
"to the saints that are in the earth," (Ps. xvi. 2, 3;) and therefore a
comparison is drawn between sacred oblations and alms as now corresponding to
the offerings under the Law.[7]
6.
Moreover, that we may not weary in well-doing, (as would otherwise forthwith
and infallibly be the case,) we must add the other quality in the Apostle's
enumeration, "Charity suffiereth long, and is kind, is not easily provoked," (1
Cor. xiii. 4.) The Lord enjoins us to do good to all without exception, though
the greater part, if estimated by their own merit, are most unworthy of it. But
Scripture subjoins a most excellent reason, when it tells us that we are not to
look to what men in themselves deserve, but to attend to the image of God,
which exists in all, and to which we owe all honour and love. But in those who
are of the household of faith, the same rule is to be more carefully observed,
inasmuch as that image is renewed and restored in them by the Spirit of Christ.
Therefore, whoever be the man that is presented to you as needing your
assistance, you have no ground for declining to give it to him. Say he is a
stranger. The Lord has given him a mark which ought to be familiar to you: for
which reason he forbids you to despise your own flesh, (Gal. vi. 10.) Say he is
mean and of no consideration. The Lord points him out as one whom he has
distinguished by the lustre of his own image, (Isaiah lviii. 7.) Say that you
are bound to him by no ties of duty. The Lord has substituted him as it were
into his own place, that in him you may recognize the many great obligations
under which the Lord has laid you to himself. Say that he is unworthy of your
least exertion on his account; but the image of God, by which he is recommended
to you, is worthy of yourself and all your exertions. But if he not only merits
no good, but has provoked you by injury and mischief, still this is no good
reason why you should not embrace him in love, and visit him with offices of
love. He has deserved very differently from me, you will say. But what has the
Lord deserved?[8] Whatever injury he
has done you, when he enjoins you to forgive him, he certainly means that it
should be imputed to himself. In this way only we attain to what is not to say
difficult but altogether against nature,[9] to love those that hate us, render
good for evil, and blessing for cursing, remembering that we are not to reflect
on the wickedness of men, but look to the image of God in them, an image which,
covering and obliterating their faults, should by its beauty and dignity allure
us to love and embrace them.
7.
We shall thus succeed in mortifying ourselves if we fulfil all the duties of
charity. Those duties, however, are not fulfilled by the mere discharge of
them, though none be omitted, unless it is done from a pure feeling of love.
For it may happen that one may perform every one of these offices, in so far as
the external act is concerned, and be far from performing them aright. For you
see some who would be thought very liberal, and yet accompany every thing they
give with insult, by the haughtiness of their looks, or the violence of their
words. And to such a calamitous condition have we come in this unhappy age,
that the greater part of men never almost give alms without contumely. Such
conduct ought not to have been tolerated even among the heathen; but from
Christians something more is required than to carry cheerfulness in their
looks, and give attractiveness to the discharge of their duties by courteous
language. First, they should put themselves in the place of him whom they see
in need of their assistance, and pity his misfortune as if they felt and bore
it, so that a feeling of pity and humanity should incline them to assist him
just as they would themselves. He who is thus minded will go and give
assistance to his brethren, and not only not taint his acts with arrogance or
upbraiding but will neither look down upon the brother to whom he does a
kindness, as one who needed his help, or keep him in subjection as under
obligation to him, just as we do not insult a diseased member when the rest of
the body labours for its recovery, nor think it under special obligation to the
other members, because it has required more exertion than it has returned. A
communication of offices between members is not regarded as at all gratuitous,
but rather as the payment of that which being due by the law of nature it were
monstrous to deny. For this reason, he who has performed one kind of duty will
not think himself thereby discharged, as is usually the case when a rich man,
after contributing somewhat of his substance, delegates remaining burdens to
others as if he had nothing to do with them. Every one should rather consider,
that however great he is, he owes himself to his neighbours, and that the only
limit to his beneficence is the failure of his means. The extent of these
should regulate that of his charity.
8.
The principal part of self-denial, that which as we have said has reference to
God, let us again consider more fully. Many things have already been said with
regard to it which it were superfluous to repeat; and, therefore, it will be
sufficient to view it as forming us to equanimity and endurance. First, then,
in seeking the convenience or tranquillity of the present life, Scripture calls
us to resign ourselves, and all we have, to the disposal of the Lord, to give
him up the affections of our heart, that he may tame and subdue them. We have a
frenzied desire, an infinite eagerness, to pursue wealth and honour, intrigue
for power, accumulate riches, and collect all those frivolities which seem
conducive to luxury and splendour. On the other hand, we have a remarkable
dread, a remarkable hatred of poverty, mean birth, and a humble condition, and
feel the strongest desire to guard against them. Hence, in regard to those who
frame their life after their own counsel, we see how restless they are in mind,
how many plans they try, to what fatigues they submit, in order that they may
gain what avarice or ambition desires, or, on the other hand, escape poverty
and meanness. To avoid similar entanglements, the course which Christian men
must follow is this: first, they must not long for, or hope for, or think of
any kind of prosperity apart from the blessing of God; on it they must cast
themselves, and there safely and confidently recline. For, however much the
carnal mind may seem sufficient for itself when in the pursuit of honour or
wealth, it depends on its own industry and zeal, or is aided by the favour of
men, it is certain that all this is nothing, and that neither intellect nor
labour will be of the least avail, except in so far as the Lord prospers both.
On the contrary, his blessing alone makes a way through all obstacles, and
brings every thing to a joyful and favourable issue. Secondly, though without
this blessing we may be able to acquire some degree of fame and opulence, (as
we daily see wicked men loaded with honours and riches,) yet since those on
whom the curse of God lies do not enjoy the least particle of true happiness,
whatever we obtain without his blessing must turn out ill. But surely men ought
not to desire what adds to their misery.
9.
Therefore, if we believe that all prosperous and desirable success depends
entirely on the blessing of God, and that when it is wanting all kinds of
misery and calamity await us, it follows that we should not eagerly contend for
riches and honours, trusting to our own dexterity and assiduity, or leaning on
the favour of men, or confiding in any empty imagination of fortune; but should
always have respect to the Lord, that under his auspices we may be conducted to
whatever lot he has provided for us. First, the result will be, that instead of
rushing on regardless of right and wrong, by wiles and wicked arts, and with
injury to our neighbours, to catch at wealth and seize upon honours, we will
only follow such fortune as we may enjoy with innocence. Who can hope for the
aid of the divine blessing amid fraud, rapine, and other iniquitous arts? As
this blessing attends him only who thinks purely and acts uprightly, so it
calls off all who long for it from sinister designs and evil actions. Secondly,
a curb will be laid upon us, restraining a too eager desire of becoming rich,
or an ambitious striving after honour. How can any one have the effrontery to
expect that God will aid him in accomplishing desires at variance with his
word? What God with his own lips pronounces cursed, never can be prosecuted
with his blessing. Lastly, if our success is not equal to our wish and hope, we
shall, however, be kept from impatience and detestation of our condition,
whatever it be, knowing that so to feel were to murmur against God, at whose
pleasure riches and poverty, contempt and honours, are dispensed. In shorts he
who leans on the divine blessing in the way which has been described, will not,
in the pursuit of those things which men are wont most eagerly to desire,
employ wicked arts which he knows would avail him nothing; nor when any thing
prosperous befalls him will he impute it to himself and his own diligence, or
industry, or fortune, instead of ascribing it to God as its author. If, while
the affairs of others flourish, his make little progress, or even retrograde,
he will bear his humble lot with greater equanimity and moderation than any
irreligious man does the moderate success which only falls short of what he
wished; for he has a solace in which he can rest more tranquilly than at the
very summit of wealth or power, because he considers that his affairs are
ordered by the Lord in the manner most conducive to his salvation. This, we
see, is the way in which David was affected, who, while he follows God and
gives up himself to his guidance, declares, "Neither do I exercise myself in
great matters, or in things too high for me. Surely I have behaved and quieted
myself as a child that is weaned of his mother," (Ps. cxxxi. 1, 2.)
10.
Nor is it in this respect only that pious minds ought to manifest this
tranquillity and endurance; it must be extended to all the accidents to which
this present life is liable. He alone, therefore, has properly denied himself,
who has resigned himself entirely to the Lord, placing all the course of his
life entirely at his disposal. Happen what may, he whose mind is thus composed
will neither deem himself wretched nor murmur against God because of his lot.
How necessary this disposition is will appear, if you consider the many
accidents to which we are liable. Various diseases ever and anon attack us: at
one time pestilence rages; at another we are involved in all the calamities of
war. Frost and hail, destroying the promise of the year, cause sterility, which
reduces us to penury; wife, parents, children, relatives, are carried off by
death; our house is destroyed by fire. These are the events which make men
curse their life, detest the day of their birth, execrate the light of heaven,
even censure God, and (as they are eloquent in blasphemy) charge him with
cruelty and injustice. The believer must in these things also contemplate the
mercy and truly paternal indulgence of God. Accordingly, should he see his
house by the removal of kindred reduced to solitude even then he will not cease
to bless the Lord; his thought will be, Still the grace of the Lord, which
dwells within my house, will not leave it desolate. If his crops are blasted,
mildewed, or cut off by frost, or struck down by hail,[10] and he sees famine before him, he
will not however despond or murmur against God, but maintain his confidence in
him; "We thy people, and sheep of thy pasture, will give thee thanks for ever,"
(Ps. lxxix. 13;) he will supply me with food, even in the extreme of sterility.
If he is afflicted with disease, the sharpness of the pain will not so overcome
him, as to make him break out with impatience, and expostulate with God; but,
recognising justice and lenity in the rod, will patiently endure. In short,
whatever happens, knowing that it is ordered by the Lord, he will receive it
with a placid and grateful mind, and will not contumaciously resist the
government of him, at whose disposal he has placed himself and all that he has.
Especially let the Christian breast eschew that foolish and most miserable
consolation of the heathen, who, to strengthen their mind against adversity,
imputed it to fortune, at which they deemed it absurd to feel indignant, as she
was aimless and rash, and blindly wounded the good equally with the bad. On the
contrary, the rule of piety is, that the hand of God is the ruler and arbiter
of the fortunes of all, and, instead of rushing on with thoughtless violence,
dispenses good and evil with perfect regularity.
OF BEARING THE CROSS--ONE BRANCH OF SELF-DENIAL.
The four divisions of this chapter are,--I. The nature of the
cross, its necessity and dignity, sec. 1, 2. II. The manifold advantages of the
cross described, sec. 3-6. III. The form of the cross the most excellent of
all, and yet it by no means removes all sense of pain, sec. 7, 8. IV. A
description of warfare under the cross, and of true patience, (not that of
philosophers,) after the example of Christ, sec. 9-11.
1.
THE pious mind must ascend still higher, namely, whither Christ calls his
disciples when he says, that every one of them must "take up his cross,"
(Matth. xvi. 24.) Those whom the Lord has chosen and honoured with his
intercourse must prepare for a hard, laborious, troubled life, a life full of
many and various kinds of evils; it being the will of our heavenly Father to
exercise his people in this way while putting them to the proof. Having begun
this course with Christ the first-born, he continues it towards all his
children. For though that Son was dear to him above others, the Son in whom he
was "well pleased," yet we see, that far from being treated gently and
indulgently, we may say, that not only was he subjected to a perpetual cross
while he dwelt on earth, but his whole life was nothing else than a kind of
perpetual cross. The Apostle assigns the reason, "Though he was a Son, yet
learned he obedience by the things which he suffered," (Heb. v. 8.) Why then
should we exempt ourselves from that condition to which Christ our Head behoved
to submit; especially since he submitted on our account, that he might in his
own person exhibit a model of patience? Wherefore, the Apostle declares, that
all the children of God are destined to be conformed to him. Hence it affords
us great consolation in hard and difficult circumstances, which men deem evil
and adverse, to think that we are holding fellowship with the sufferings of
Christ; that as he passed to celestial glory through a labyrinth of many woes,
so we too are conducted thither through various tribulations. For, in another
passage, Paul himself thus speaks, "we must through much tribulation enter the
kingdom of God," (Acts xiv. 22;) and again, "that I may know him, and the power
of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made
conformable unto his death," (Rom viii. 29.) How powerfully should it soften
the bitterness of the cross, to think that the more we are afflicted with
adversity, the surer we are made of our fellowship with Christ; by communion
with whom our sufferings are not only blessed to us, but tend greatly to the
furtherance of our salvation.
2.
We may add, that the only thing which made it necessary for our Lord to
undertake to bear the cross, was to testify and prove his obedience to the
Father; whereas there are many reasons which make it necessary for us to live
constantly under the cross. Feeble as we are by nature, and prone to ascribe
all perfection to our flesh, unless we receive as it were ocular demonstration
of our weakness, we readily estimate our virtue above its proper worth, and
doubt not that, whatever happens, it will stand unimpaired and invincible
against all difficulties. Hence we indulge a stupid and empty confidence in the
flesh, and then trusting to it wax proud against the Lord himself; as if our
own faculties were sufficient without his grace. This arrogance cannot be
better repressed than when He proves to us by experience, not only how great
our weakness, but also our frailty is. Therefore, he visits us with disgrace,
or poverty, or bereavement, or disease, or other afflictions. Feeling
altogether unable to support them, we forthwith, in so far as regards
ourselves, give way, and thus humbled learn to invoke his strength, which alone
can enable us to bear up under a weight of affliction. Nay, even the holiest of
men, however well aware that they stand not in their own strength, but by the
grace of God, would feel too secure in their own fortitude and constancy, were
they not brought to a more thorough knowledge of themselves by the trial of the
cross. This feeling gained even upon David, "In my prosperity I Said, I shall
never be moved. Lord, by thy favour thou hast made my mountain to stand strong:
thou didst hide thy face, and I was troubled," (Ps. xxx. 6, 7.) He confesses
that in prosperity his feelings were dulled and blunted, so that, neglecting
the grace of God, on which alone he ought to have depended, he leant to
himself, and promised himself perpetuity. If it so happened to this great
prophet, who of us should not fear and study caution? Though in tranquillity
they flatter themselves with the idea of greater constancy and patience, yet,
humbled by adversity, they learn the deception. Believers, I say, warned by
such proofs of their diseases, make progress in humility, and, divesting
themselves of a depraved confidence in the flesh, betake themselves to the
grace of God, and, when they have so betaken themselves, experience the
presence of the divine power, in which is ample protection.
3.
This Paul teaches when he says that tribulation worketh patience, and patience
experience. God having promised that he will be with believers in tribulation,
they feel the truth of the promise; while supported by his hand, they endure
patiently. This they could never do by their own strength. Patience, therefore,
gives the saints an experimental proof that God in reality furnishes the aid
which he has promised whenever there is need. Hence also their faith is
confirmed, for it were very ungrateful not to expect that in future the truth
of God will be, as they have already found it, firm and constant. We now see
how many advantages are at once produced by the cross. Overturning the
overweening opinion we form of our own virtue, and detecting the hypocrisy in
which we delight, it removes our pernicious carnal confidence, teaching us,
when thus humbled, to recline on God alone, so that we neither are oppressed
nor despond. Then victory is followed by hope, inasmuch as the Lord, by
performing what he has promised, establishes his truth in regard to the future.
Were these the only reasons, it is surely plain how necessary it is for us to
bear the cross. It is of no little importance to be rid of your self-love, and
made fully conscious of your weakness; so impressed with a sense of your
weakness as to learn to distrust yourself--to distrust yourself so as to
transfer your confidence to God, reclining on him with such heartfelt
confidence as to trust in his aid, and continue invincible to the end, standing
by his grace so as to perceive that he is true to his promises, and so assured
of the certainty of his promises as to be strong in hope.
4.
Another end which the Lord has in afflicting his people is to try their
patience, and train them to obedience--not that they can yield obedience to him
except in so far as he enables them; but he is pleased thus to attest and
display striking proofs of the graces which he has conferred upon his saints,
lest they should remain within unseen and unemployed. Accordingly, by bringing
forward openly the strength and constancy of endurance with which he has
provided his servants, he is said to try their patience. Hence the expressions
that God tempted Abraham, (Gen. xxi. 1, 12,) and made proof of his piety by not
declining to sacrifice his only son. Hence, too, Peter tells us that our faith
is proved by tribulation, just as gold is tried in a furnace of fire. But who
will say it is not expedient that the most excellent gift of patience which the
believer has received from his God should be applied to uses by being made sure
and manifest? Otherwise men would never value it according to its worth. But if
God himself, to prevent the virtues which he has conferred upon believers from
lurking in obscurity, nay, lying useless and perishing, does aright in
supplying materials for calling them forth, there is the best reason for the
afflictions of the saints, since without them their patience could not exist. I
say, that by the cross they are also trained to obedience, because they are
thus taught to live not according to their own wish, but at the disposal of
God. Indeed, did all things proceed as they wish, they would not know what it
is to follow God. Seneca mentions (De Vit. Beata, cap. xv.) that there was an
old proverb when any one was exhorted to endure adversity, "Follow God;"
thereby intimating, that men truly submitted to the yoke of God only when they
gave their back and hand to his rod. But if it is most right that we should in
all things prove our obedience to our heavenly Father, certainly we ought not
to decline any method by which he trains us to obedience.
5.
Still, however, we see not how necessary that obedience is, unless we at the
same time consider how prone our carnal nature is to shake off the yoke of God
whenever it has been treated with some degree of gentleness and indulgence. It
just happens to it as with refractory horses, which, if kept idle for a few
days at hack and manger, become ungovernable, and no longer recognize the
rider, whose command before they implicitly obeyed. And we invariably become
what God complains of in the people of Israel--waxing gross and fat, we kick
against him who reared and nursed us, (Deut. xxxii. 15.) The kindness of God
should allure us to ponder and love his goodness; but since such is our
malignity, that we are invariably corrupted by his indulgence, it is more than
necessary for us to be restrained by discipline from breaking forth into such
petulance. Thus, lest we become emboldened by an over-abundance of wealth; lest
elated with honour, we grow proud; lest inflated with other advantages of body,
or mind, or fortune, we grow insolent, the Lord himself interferes as he sees
to be expedient by means of the cross, subduing and curbing the arrogance of
our flesh, and that in various ways, as the advantage of each requires. For as
we do not all equally labour under the same disease, so we do not all need the
same difficult cure. Hence we see that all are not exercised with the same kind
of cross. While the heavenly Physician treats some more gently, in the case of
others he employs harsher remedies, his purpose being to provide a cure for
all. Still none is left free and untouched, because he knows that all, without
a single exception, are diseased.
6.
We may add, that our most merciful Father requires not only to prevent our
weakness, but often to correct our past faults, that he may keep us in due
obedience. Therefore, whenever we are afflicted we ought immediately to call to
mind our past life. In this way we will find that the faults which we have
committed are deserving of such castigation. And yet the exhortation to
patience is not to be founded chiefly on the acknowledgment of sin. For
Scripture supplies a far better consideration when it says, that in adversity
"we are chastened of the Lord, that we should not be condemned with the world,"
(1 Cor. xi. 32.) Therefore, in the very bitterness of tribulation we ought to
recognise the kindness and mercy of our Father, since even then he ceases not
to further our salvation. For he afflicts, not that he may ruin or destroy but
rather that he may deliver us from the condemnation of the world. Let this
thought lead us to what Scripture elsewhere teaches: "My son, despise not the
chastening of the Lord; neither be weary of his correction: For whom the Lord
loveth he correcteth; even as a father the son in whom he delighteth," (Prov.
iii 11, 12.) When we perceive our Father's rod, is it not our part to behave as
obedient docile sons rather than rebelliously imitate desperate men, who are
hardened in wickedness? God dooms us to destruction, if he does not, by
correction, call us back when we have fallen off from him, so that it is truly
said, "If ye be without chastisement," "then are ye bastards, and not sons,"
(Heb. xii. 8.) We are most perverse then if we cannot bear him while he is
manifesting his good-will to us, and the care which he takes of our salvation.
Scripture states the difference between believers and unbelievers to be, that
the latter, as the slaves of inveterate and deep-seated iniquity, only become
worse and more obstinate under the lash; whereas the former, like free-born
sons turn to repentance. Now, therefore, choose your class. But as I have
already spoken of this subject, it is sufficient to have here briefly adverted
to it.
7.
There is singular consolation, moreover, when we are persecuted for
righteousness' sake. For our thought should then be, How high the honour which
God bestows upon us in distinguishing us by the special badge of his soldiers.
By suffering persecution for righteousness' sake, I mean not only striving for
the defence of the Gospel, but for the defence of righteousness in any way.
Whether, therefore, in maintaining the truth of God against the lies of Satan,
or defending the good and innocent against the injuries of the bad, we are
obliged to incur the offence and hatred of the world, so as to endanger life,
fortune, or honour, let us not grieve or decline so far to spend ourselves for
God; let us not think ourselves wretched in those things in which he with his
own lips has pronounced us blessed, (Matth. v. 10.) Poverty, indeed considered
in itself, is misery; so are exile, contempt, imprisonment, ignominy: in fine,
death itself is the last of all calamities. But when the favour of God breathes
upon is, there is none of these things which may not turn out to our happiness.
Let us then be contented with the testimony of Christ rather than with the
false estimate of the flesh, and then, after the example of the Apostles, we
will rejoice in being "counted worthy to suffer shame for his name," (Acts v.
41.) For why? If, while conscious of our innocence, we are deprived of our
substance by the wickedness of man, we are, no doubt, humanly speaking, reduced
to poverty; but in truth our riches in heaven are increased: if driven from our
homes we have a more welcome reception into the family of God; if vexed and
despised, we are more firmly rooted in Christ; if stigmatised by disgrace and
ignominy, we have a higher place in the kingdom of God; and if we are slain,
entrance is thereby given us to eternal life. The Lord having set such a price
upon us, let us be ashamed to estimate ourselves at less than the shadowy and
evanescent allurements of the present life.
8.
Since by these, and similar considerations, Scripture abundantly solaces us for
the ignominy or calamities which we endure in defence of righteousness, we are
very ungrateful if we do not willingly and cheerfully receive them at the hand
of the Lord, especially since this form of the cross is the most appropriate to
believers, being that by which Christ desires to be glorified in us, as Peter
also declares, (1 Pet. iv. 11, 14.) But as to ingenuous natures, it is more
bitter to suffer disgrace than a hundred deaths, Paul expressly reminds us that
not only persecution, but also disgrace awaits us, "because we trust in the
living God," (1 Tim. iv. 10.) So in another passage he bids us, after his
example, walk "by evil report and good report," (2 Cor. vi. 8.) The
cheerfulness required, however, does not imply a total insensibility to pain.
The saints could show no patience under the cross if they were not both
tortured with pain and grievously molested. Were there no hardship in poverty,
no pain in disease, no sting in ignominy, no fear in death, where would be the
fortitude and moderation in enduring them? But while every one of these, by its
inherent bitterness, naturally vexes the mind, the believer in this displays
his fortitude, that though fully sensible of the bitterness and labouring
grievously, he still withstands and struggles boldly; in this displays his
patience, that though sharply stung, he is however curbed by the fear of God
from breaking forth into any excess; in this displays his alacrity, that though
pressed with sorrow and sadness, he rests satisfied with spiritual consolation
from God.
9.
This conflict which believers maintain against the natural feeling of pain,
while they study moderation and patience, Paul elegantly describes in these
words: "We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed; we are perplexed,
but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not
destroyed," (2 Cor. iv. 8, 9.) You see that to bear the cross patiently is not
to have your feelings altogether blunted, and to be absolutely insensible to
pain, according to the absurd description which the Stoics of old gave of their
hero as one who, divested of humanity, was affected in the same way by
adversity and prosperity, grief and joy; or rather, like a stone, was not
affected by anything. And what did they gain by that sublime wisdom? they
exhibited a shadow of patience, which never did, and never can, exist among
men. Nay, rather by aiming at a too exact and rigid patience, they banished it
altogether from human life. Now also we have among Christians a new kind of
Stoics, who hold it vicious not only to groan and weep, but even to be sad and
anxious. These paradoxes are usually started by indolent men who, employing
themselves more in speculation than in action, can do nothing else for us than
beget such paradoxes. But we have nothing to do with that iron philosophy which
our Lord and Master condemned--not only in word, but also by his own example.
For he both grieved and shed tears for his own and others' woes. Nor did he
teach his disciples differently: "Ye shall weep and lament, but the world shall
rejoice," (John xvi. 20.) And lest any one should regard this as vicious, he
expressly declares, "Blessed are they that mourn," (Matth. v. 4.) And no
wonder. If all tears are condemned, what shall we think of our Lord himself,
whose "sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground?"
(Luke xxii. 44; Matth. xxvi. 38.) If every kind of fear is a mark of unbelief,
what place shall we assign to the dread which, it is said, in no slight degree
amazed him; if all sadness is condemned, how shall we justify him when he
confesses, "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death?"
10.
I wished to make these observations to keep pious minds from despair, lest,
from feeling it impossible to divest themselves of the natural feeling of
grief, they might altogether abandon the study of patience. This must
necessarily be the result with those who convert patience into stupor, and a
brave and firm man into a block. Scripture gives saints the praise of endurance
when, though afflicted by the hardships they endure, they are not crushed;
though they feel bitterly, they are at the same time filled with spiritual joy;
though pressed with anxiety, breathe exhilarated by the consolation of God.
Still there is a certain degree of repugnance in their hearts, because natural
sense shuns and dreads what is adverse to it, while pious affection, even
through these difficulties, tries to obey the divine will. This repugnance the
Lord expressed when he thus addressed Peter: "Verily, verily, I say unto thee,
When thou wast young, thou girdedst thyself and walkedst whither thou wouldst;
but when thou shalt be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands, and another
shall gird thee; and carry thee whither thou wouldest not," (John xxi. 18.) It
is not probable, indeed, that when it became necessary to glorify God by death
he was driven to it unwilling and resisting; had it been so, little praise
would have been due to his martyrdom. But though he obeyed the divine
ordination with the greatest alacrity of heart, yet, as he had not divested
himself of humanity, he was distracted by a double will. When he thought of the
bloody death which he was to die, struck with horror, he would willingly have
avoided it: on the other hand, when he considered that it was God who called
him to it, his fear was vanquished and suppressed, and he met death cheerfully.
It must therefore be our study, if we would be disciples of Christ, to imbue
our minds with such reverence and obedience to God as may tame and subjugate
all affections contrary to his appointment. In this way, whatever be the kind
of cross to which we are subjected, we shall in the greatest straits firmly
maintain our patience. Adversity will have its bitterness, and sting us. When
afflicted with disease, we shall groan and be disquieted, and long for health;
pressed with poverty, we shall feel the stings of anxiety and sadness, feel the
pain of ignominy, contempt, and injury, and pay the tears due to nature at the
death of our friends: but our conclusion will always be, The Lord so willed it,
therefore let us follow his will. Nay, amid the pungency of grief, among groans
and tears this thought will necessarily suggest itself and incline us
cheerfully to endure the things for which we are so afflicted.
11.
But since the chief reason for enduring the cross has been derived from a
consideration of the divine will, we must in few words explain wherein lies the
difference between philosophical and Christian patience. Indeed, very few of
the philosophers advanced so far as to perceive that the hand of God tries us
by means of affliction, and that we ought in this matter to obey God. The only
reason which they adduce is, that so it must be. But is not this just to say,
that we must yield to God, because it is in vain to contend against him? For if
we obey God only because it is necessary, provided we can escape, we shall
cease to obey him. But what Scripture calls us to consider in the will of God
is very different, namely, first justice and equity, and then a regard to our
own salvation. Hence Christian exhortations to patience are of this nature,
Whether poverty, or exile, or imprisonment, or contumely, or disease, or
bereavement, or any such evil affects us, we must think that none of them
happens except by the will and providence of God; moreover, that every thing he
does is in the most perfect order. What! do not our numberless daily faults
deserve to be chastised, more severely, and with a heavier rod than his mercy
lays upon us? Is it not most right that our flesh should be subdued, and be, as
it were, accustomed to the yoke, so as not to rage and wanton as it lists? Are
not the justice and the truth of God worthy of our suffering on their
account?[11] But if the equity of God
is undoubtedly displayed in affliction, we cannot murmur or struggle against
them without iniquity. We no longer hear the frigid cant, Yield, because it is
necessary; but a living and energetic precept, Obey, because it is unlawful to
resist; bear patiently, because impatience is rebellion against the justice of
God. Then as that only seems to us attractive which we perceive to be for our
own safety and advantage, here also our heavenly Father consoles us, by the
assurance, that in the very cross with which he afflicts us he provides for our
salvation. But if it is clear that tribulations are salutary to us, why should
we not receive them with calm and grateful minds? In bearing them patiently we
are not submitting to necessity but resting satisfied with our own good. The
effect of these thoughts is, that to whatever extent our minds are contracted
by the bitterness which we naturally feel under the cross, to the same extent
will they be expanded with spiritual joy. Hence arises thanksgiving, which
cannot exist unless joy be felt. But if the praise of the Lord and thanksgiving
can emanate only from a cheerful and gladdened breasts and there is nothing
which ought to interrupt these feelings in us, it is clear how necessary it is
to temper the bitterness of the cross with spiritual joy.
OF MEDITATING ON THE FUTURE LIFE.
The three divisions of this chapter,--I. The principal use of
the cross is, that it in various ways accustoms us to despise the present, and
excites us to aspire to the future life, sec. 1, 2. II. In withdrawing from the
present life we must neither shun it nor feel hatred for it; but desiring the
future life, gladly quit the present at the command of our sovereign Master,
see. 3, 4. III. Our infirmity in dreading death described. The correction and
safe remedy, sec. 6.
1.
WHATEVER be the kind of tribulation with which we are afflicted, we should
always consider the end of it to be, that we may be trained to despise the
present, and thereby stimulated to aspire to the future life. For since God
well knows how strongly we are inclined by nature to a slavish love of this
world, in order to prevent us from clinging too strongly to it, he employs the
fittest reason for calling us back, and shaking off our lethargy. Every one of
us, indeed, would be thought to aspire and aim at heavenly immortality during
the whole course of his life. For we would be ashamed in no respect to excel
the lower animals; whose condition would not be at all inferior to ours, had we
not a hope of immortality beyond the grave. But when you attend to the plans,
wishes, and actions of each, you see nothing in them but the earth. Hence our
stupidity; our minds being dazzled with the glare of wealth, power, and
honours, that they can see no farther. The heart also, engrossed with avarice,
ambition, and lust, is weighed down and cannot rise above them. In short, the
whole soul, ensnared by the allurements of the flesh, seeks its happiness on
the earth. To meet this disease, the Lord makes his people sensible of the
vanity of the present life, by a constant proof of its miseries. Thus, that
they may not promise themselves deep and lasting peace in it, he often allows
them to be assailed by war, tumult, or rapine, or to be disturbed by other
injuries. That they may not long with too much eagerness after fleeting and
fading riches, or rest in those which they already possess, he reduces them to
want, or, at least, restricts them to a moderate allowance, at one time by
exile, at another by sterility, at another by fire, or by other means. That
they may not indulge too complacently in the advantages of married life, he
either vexes them by the misconduct of their partners, or humbles them by the
wickedness of their children, or afflicts them by bereavement. But if in all
these he is indulgent to them, lest they should either swell with vain-glory,
or be elated with confidence, by diseases and dangers he sets palpably before
them how unstable and evanescent are all the advantages competent to mortals.
We duly profit by the discipline of the cross, when we learn that this life,
estimated in itself, is restless, troubled, in numberless ways wretched, and
plainly in no respect happy; that what are estimated its blessings are
uncertain, fleeting, vain, and vitiated by a great admixture of evil. From this
we conclude, that all we have to seek or hope for here is contest; that when we
think of the crown we must raise our eyes to heaven. For we must hold, that our
mind never rises seriously to desire and aspire after the future, until it has
learned to despise the present life.
2.
For there is no medium between the two things: the earth must either be
worthless in our estimation, or keep us enslaved by an intemperate love of it.
Therefore, if we have any regard to eternity, we must carefully strive to
disencumber ourselves of these fetters. Moreover, since the present life has
many enticements to allure us, and great semblance of delight, grace, and
sweetness to soothe us, it is of great consequence to us to be now and then
called off from its fascinations.[12]
For what, pray, would happen, if we here enjoyed an uninterrupted course of
honour and felicity, when even the constant stimulus of affliction cannot
arouse us to a due sense of our misery? That human life is like smoke or a
shadow, is not only known to the learned; there is not a more trite proverb
among the vulgar. Considering it a fact most useful to be known, they have
recommended it in many well-known expressions. Still there is no fact which we
ponder less carefully, or less frequently remember. For we form all our plans
just as if we had fixed our immortality on the earth. If we see a funeral, or
walk among graves, as the image of death is then present to the eye, I admit we
philosophise admirably on the vanity of life. We do not indeed always do so,
for those things often have no effect upon us at all. But, at the best, our
philosophy is momentary. It vanishes as soon as we turn our back, and leaves
not the vestige of remembrance behind; in short, it passes away, just like the
applause of a theatre at some pleasant spectacle. Forgetful not only of death,
but also of mortality itself, as if no rumour of it had ever reached us, we
indulge in supine security as expecting a terrestrial immortality. Meanwhile,
if any one breaks in with the proverb, that man is the creature of a day,[13] we indeed acknowledge its truth,
but, so far from giving heed to it, the thought of perpetuity still keeps hold
of our minds. Who then can deny that it is of the highest importance to us all,
I say not, to be admonished by words, but convinced by all possible experience
of the miserable condition of our earthly life; since even when convinced we
scarcely cease to gaze upon it with vicious, stupid admiration, as if it
contained within itself the sum of all that is good? But if God finds it
necessary so to train us, it must be our duty to listen to him when he calls,
and shakes us from our torpor, that we may hasten to despise the world, and
aspire with our whole heart to the future life.
3.
Still the contempt which believers should train themselves to feel for the
present life, must not be of a kind to beget hatred of it or ingratitude to
God. This life, though abounding in all kinds of wretchedness, is justly
classed among divine blessings which are not to be despised. Wherefore, if we
do not recognize the kindness of God in it, we are chargeable with no little
ingratitude towards him. To believers, especially, it ought to be a proof of
divine benevolence, since it is wholly destined to promote their salvation.
Before openly exhibiting the inheritance of eternal glory, God is pleased to
manifest himself to us as a Father by minor proofs, viz., the blessings which
he daily bestows upon us. Therefore, while this life serves to acquaint us with
the goodness of God, shall we disdain it as if it did not contain one particle
of good? We ought, therefore, to feel and be affected towards it in such a
manner as to place it among those gifts of the divine benignity which are by no
means to be despised. Were there no proofs in Scripture, (they are most
numerous and clear,) yet nature herself exhorts us to return thanks to God for
having brought us forth into light, granted us the use of it, and bestowed upon
us all the means necessary for its preservation. And there is a much higher
reason when we reflect that here we are in a manner prepared for the glory of
the heavenly kingdom. For the Lord hath ordained, that those who are ultimately
to be crowned in heaven must maintain a previous warfare on the earth, that
they may not triumph before they have overcome the difficulties of war, and
obtained the victory. Another reason is, that we here begin to experience in
various ways a foretaste of the divine benignity, in order that our hope and
desire may be whetted for its full manifestation. When once we have concluded
that our earthly life is a gift of the divine mercy, of which, agreeably to our
obligation, it behoves us to have a grateful remembrance, we shall then
properly descend to consider its most wretched condition, and thus escape from
that excessive fondness for it, to which, as I have said, we are naturally
prone.
4.
In proportion as this improper love diminishes, our desire of a better life
should increase. I confess, indeed, that a most accurate opinion was formed by
those who thought, that the best thing was not to be born, the next best to die
early. For, being destitute of the light of God and of true religion, what
could they see in it that was not of dire and evil omen? Nor was it
unreasonable for those[14] who felt
sorrow and shed tears at the birth of their kindred, to keep holiday at their
deaths. But this they did without profit; because, devoid of the true doctrine
of faith, they saw not how that which in itself is neither happy nor desirable
turns to the advantage of the righteous: and hence their opinion issued in
despair. Let believers, then, in forming an estimate of this mortal life, and
perceiving that in itself it is nothing but misery, make it their aim to exert
themselves with greater alacrity, and less hinderance, in aspiring to the
future and eternal life. When we contrast the two, the former may not only be
securely neglected, but, in comparison of the latter, be disdained and
contemned. If heaven is our country, what can the earth be but a place of
exile? If departure from the world is entrance into life, what is the world but
a sepulchre, and what is residence in it but immersion in death? If to be freed
from the body is to gain full possession of freedom, what is the body but a
prison? If it is the very summit of happiness to enjoy the presence of God, is
it not miserable to want it? But "whilst we are at home in the body, we are
absent from the Lord," (2 Cor. v. 6.) Thus when the earthly is compared with
the heavenly life, it may undoubtedly be despised and trampled under foot. We
ought never, indeed, to regard it with hatred, except in so far as it keeps us
subject to sin; and even this hatred ought not to be directed against life
itself. At all events, we must stand so affected towards it in regard to
weariness or hatred as, while longing for its termination, to be ready at the
Lord's will to continue in it, keeping far from everything like murmuring and
impatience. For it is as if the Lord had assigned us a post, which we must
maintain till he recalls us. Paul, indeed, laments his condition, in being
still bound with the fetters of the body, and sighs earnestly for redemption,
(Rom. vii. 24;) nevertheless, he declared that, in obedience to the command of
Gods he was prepared for both courses, because he acknowledges it as his duty
to God to glorify his name whether by life or by death, while it belongs to God
to determine what is most conducive to His glory, (Phil. i. 20-24.) Wherefore,
if it becomes us to live and die to the Lord, let us leave the period of our
life and death at his disposal. Still let us ardently long for death, and
constantly meditate upon it, and in comparison with future immortality, let us
despise life, and, on account of the bondage of sin, long to renounce it
whenever it shall so please the Lord.
5.
But, most strange to say, many who boast of being Christians, instead of thus
longing for death, are so afraid of it that they tremble at the very mention of
it as a thing ominous and dreadful. We cannot wonder, indeed, that our natural
feelings should be somewhat shocked at the mention of our dissolution. But it
is altogether intolerable that the light of piety should not be so powerful in
a Christian breast as with greater consolation to overcome and suppress that
fear. For if we reflect that this our tabernacle, unstable, defective,
corruptible, fading, pining, and putrid, is dissolved, in order that it may
forthwith be renewed in sure, perfect, incorruptible, in fine, in heavenly
glory, will not faith compel us eagerly to desire what nature dreads? If we
reflect that by death we are recalled from exile to inhabit our native country,
a heavenly country, shall this give us no comfort? But everything longs for
permanent existence. I admit this, and therefore contend that we ought to look
to future immortality, where we may obtain that fixed condition which nowhere
appears on the earth. For Paul admirably enjoins believers to hasten cheerfully
to death, not because they a would be unclothed, but clothed upon," (2 Cor. v.
2.) Shall the lower animals, and inanimate creatures themselves even wood and
stone, as conscious of their present vanity, long for the final resurrection,
that they may with the sons of God be delivered from vanity, (Rom. viii. 19;)
and shall we, endued with the light of intellect, and more than intellect,
enlightened by the Spirit of God, when our essence is in question, rise no
higher than the corruption of this earth? But it is not my purpose, nor is this
the place, to plead against this great perverseness. At the outset, I declared
that I had no wish to engage in a diffuse discussion of common-places. My
advice to those whose minds are thus timid is to read the short treatise of
Cyprian De Mortalitate, unless it be more accordant with their deserts to send
them to the philosophers, that by inspecting what they say on the contempt of
death, they may begin to blush. This, however let us hold as fixed, that no man
has made much progress in the school of Christ who does not look forward with
joy to the day of death and final resurrection, (2 Tim. iv. 18; Tit. ii. 13:)
for Paul distinguishes all believers by this mark; and the usual course of
Scripture is to direct us thither whenever it would furnish us with an argument
for substantial joy. "Look up," says our Lord, "and lift up your heads: for
your redemption draweth nigh," (Luke xxi. 28.) Is it reasonable, I ask, that
what he intended to have a powerful effect in stirring us up to alacrity and
exultation should produce nothing but sadness and consternation? If it is so,
why do we still glory in him as our Master? Therefore, let us come to a sounder
mind, and how repugnant so ever the blind and stupid longing of the flesh may
be, let us doubt not to desire the advent of the Lord not in wish only, but
with earnest sighs, as the most propitious of all events. He will come as a
Redeemer to deliver us from an immense abyss of evil and misery, and lead us to
the blessed inheritance of his life and glory.
6.
Thus, indeed, it is; the whole body of the faithful, so long as they live on
the earth, must be like sheep for the slaughter, in order that they may be
conformed to Christ their head, (Rom. viii. 36.) Most deplorable, therefore,
would their situation be did they not, by raising their mind to heaven, become
superior to all that is in the world, and rise above the present aspect of
affairs, (1 Cor. xv. l9.) On the other hand, when once they have raised their
head above all earthly objects, though they see the wicked flourishing in
wealth and honour, and enjoying profound peace, indulging in luxury and
splendour, and revelling in all kinds of delights, though they should moreover
be wickedly assailed by them, suffer insult from their pride, be robbed by
their avarice, or assailed by any other passion, they will have no difficulty
in bearing up under these evils. They will turn their eye to that day, (Isaiah
xxv. 8; Rev. vii. 17,) on which the Lord will receive his faithful servants,
wipe away all tears from their eyes, clothe them in a robe of glory and joy,
feed them with the ineffable sweetness of his pleasures, exalt them to share
with him in his greatness; in fine, admit them to a participation in his
happiness. But the wicked who may have flourished on the earth, he will cast
forth in extreme ignominy, will change their delights into torments, their
laughter and joy into wailing and gnashing of teeth, their peace into the
gnawing of conscience, and punish their luxury with unquenchable fire. He will
also place their necks under the feet of the godly, whose patience they abused.
For, as Paul declares, "it is a righteous thing with God to recompense
tribulation to them that trouble you; and to you who are troubled rest with us,
when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven," (2 Thess. i. 6, 7.) This,
indeed, is our only consolation; deprived of it, we must either give way to
despondency, or resort to our destruction to the vain solace of the world. The
Psalmist confesses, "My feet were almost gone: my steps had well nigh slipt:
for I was envious at the foolish when I saw the prosperity of the wicked,"
(Psalm lxxiii. 3, 4;) and he found no resting-place until he entered the
sanctuary, and considered the latter end of the righteous and the wicked. To
conclude in one word, the cross of Christ then only triumphs in the breasts of
believers over the devil and the flesh, sin and sinners, when their eyes are
directed to the power of his resurrection.
HOW TO USE THE PRESENT LIFE, AND THE COMFORTS OF IT.
The divisions of this chapter are,--I. The necessity and
usefulness of this doctrine. Extremes to be avoided, if we would rightly use
the present life and its comforts, sec. 1, 2. II. One of these extremes, viz,
the intemperance of the flesh, to be carefully avoided. Four methods of doing
so described in order, sec. 3-6.
1.
BY such rudiments we are at the same time well instructed by Scripture in the
proper use of earthly blessings, a subject which, in forming a scheme of life,
is by no mean to be neglected. For if we are to live, we must use the necessary
supports of life; nor can we even shun those things which seem more subservient
to delight than to necessity. We must therefore observe a mean, that we may use
them with a pure conscience, whether for necessity or for pleasure. This the
Lord prescribes by his word, when he tells us that to his people the present
life is a kind of pilgrimage by which they hasten to the heavenly kingdom. If
we are only to pass through the earth, there can be no doubt that we are to use
its blessings only in so far as they assist our progress, rather than retard
it. Accordingly, Paul, not without cause, admonishes us to use this world
without abusing it, and to buy possessions as if we were selling them, (1 Cor.
vii. 30, 31.) But as this is a slippery place, and there is great danger of
falling on either side, let us fix our feet where we can stand safely. There
have been some good and holy men who, when they saw intemperance and luxury
perpetually carried to excess, if not strictly curbed, and were desirous to
correct so pernicious an evil, imagined that there was no other method than to
allow man to use corporeal goods only in so far as they were necessaries: a
counsel pious indeed, but unnecessarily austere; for it does the very dangerous
thing of binding consciences in closer fetters than those in which they are
bound by the word of God. Moreover, necessity, according to them,[15] was abstinence from every thing
which could be wanted, so that they held it scarcely lawful to make any
addition to bread and water. Others were still more austere, as is related of
Cratetes the Theban, who threw his riches into the sea, because he thought,
that unless he destroyed them they would destroy him. Many also in the present
day, while they seek a pretext for carnal intemperance in the use of external
things, and at the same time would pave the way for licentiousness, assume for
granted, what I by no means concede, that this liberty is not to be restrained
by any modification, but that it is to be left to every man's conscience to use
them as far as he thinks lawful. I indeed confess that here consciences neither
can nor ought to be bound by fixed and definite laws; but that Scripture having
laid down general rules for the legitimate uses we should keep within the
limits which they prescribe.
2.
Let this be our principle, that we err not in the use of the gifts of
Providence when we refer them to the end for which their author made and
destined them, since he created them for our good, and not for our destruction.
No man will keep the true path better than he who shall have this end carefully
in view. Now then, if we consider for what end he created food, we shall find
that he consulted not only for our necessity, but also for our enjoyment and
delight. Thus, in clothing, the end was, in addition to necessity, comeliness
and honour; and in herbs, fruits, and trees, besides their various uses,
gracefulness of appearance and sweetness of smell. Were it not so, the Prophet
would not enumerate among the mercies of God "wine that maketh glad the heart
of man, and oil to make his face to shine," (Ps. civ. 15.) The Scriptures would
not everywhere mention, in commendation of his benignity, that he had given
such things to men. The natural qualities of things themselves demonstrate to
what end, and how far, they may be lawfully enjoyed. Has the Lord adorned
flowers with all the beauty which spontaneously presents itself to the eye, and
the sweet odour which delights the sense of smell, and shall it be unlawful for
us to enjoy that beauty and this odour? What? Has he not so distinguished
colours as to make some more agreeable than others? Has he not given qualities
to gold and silver, ivory and marble, thereby rendering them precious above
other metals or stones? In short, has he not given many things a value without
having any necessary use?
3.
Have done, then, with that inhuman philosophy which, in allowing no use of the
creatures but for necessity, not only maliciously deprives us of the lawful
fruit of the divine beneficence, but cannot be realised without depriving man
of all his senses, and reducing him to a block. But, on the other hand, let us
with no less care guard against the lusts of the flesh, which, if not kept in
order, break through all bounds, and are, as I have said, advocated by those
who, under pretence of liberty, allow themselves every sort of license. First
one restraint is imposed when we hold that the object of creating all things
was to teach us to know their author, and feel grateful for his indulgence.
Where is the gratitude if you so gorge or stupify yourself with feasting and
wine as to be unfit for offices of piety, or the duties of your calling? Where
the recognition of God, if the flesh, boiling forth in lust through excessive
indulgences infects the mind with its impurity, so as to lose the discernment
of' honour and rectitude? Where thankfulness to God for clothing, if on account
of sumptuous raiment we both admire ourselves and disdain others? if, from a
love of show and splendour, we pave the way for immodesty? Where our
recognition of God, if the glare of these things captivates our minds? For many
are so devoted to luxury in all their senses that their mind lies buried: many
are so delighted with marble, gold, and pictures, that they become
marble-hearted--are changed as it were into metal, and made like painted
figures. The kitchen, with its savoury smells, so engrosses them that they have
no spiritual savour. The same thing may be seen in other matters. Wherefore, it
is plain that there is here great necessity for curbing licentious abuse, and
conforming to the rule of Paul, "make not provision for the flesh to fulfil the
lusts thereof," (Rom. xiii. 14.) Where too much liberty is given to them, they
break forth without measure or restraint.
4.
There is no surer or quicker way of accomplishing this than by despising the
present life and aspiring to celestial immortality. For hence two rules arise:
First, "it remaineth, that both they that have wives be as though they had
none;" "and they that use this world, as not abusing it," (1 Cor. vii. 29, 31.)
Secondly, we must learn to be no less placid and patient in enduring penury,
than moderate in enjoying abundance. He who makes it his rule to use this world
as if he used it not, not only cuts off all gluttony in regard to meat and
drink, and all effeminacy, ambition, pride, excessive shows and austerity, in
regard to his table, his house, and his clothes, but removes every care and
affection which might withdraw or hinder him from aspiring to the heavenly
life, and cultivating the interest of his soul.[16] It was well said by Cato: Luxury
causes great care, and produces great carelessness as to virtue; and it is an
old proverb,--Those who are much occupied with the care of the body, usually
give little care to the soul. Therefore while the liberty of the Christian in
external matters is not to be tied down to a strict rule, it is, however,
subject to this law--he must indulge as little as possible; on the other hand,
it must be his constant aims not only to curb luxury, but to cut off all show
of superfluous abundance, and carefully beware of converting a help into an
hinderance.
5.
Another rule is, that those in narrow and slender circumstances should learn to
bear their wants patiently, that they may not become immoderately desirous of
things, the moderate use of which implies no small progress in the school of
Christ. For in addition to the many other vices which accompany a longing for
earthly good, he who is impatient under poverty almost always betrays the
contrary disease in abundance. By this I mean, that he who is ashamed of a
sordid garment will be vain-glorious of a splendid one; he who not contented
with a slender, feels annoyed at the want of a more luxurious supper, will
intemperately abuse his luxury if he obtains it; he who has a difficulty, and
is dissatisfied in submitting to a private and humble condition, will be unable
to refrain from pride if he attain to honour. Let it be the aim of all who have
any unfeigned desire for piety to learn, after the example of the Apostle,
"both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need," (Philip.
iv. 12.) Scripture, moreover, has a third rule for modifying the use of earthly
blessings. We have already adverted to it when considering the offices of
charity. For it declares that they have all been given us by the kindness of
God, and appointed for our use under the condition of being regarded as trusts,
of which we must one day give account. We must, therefore, administer them as
if we constantly heard the words sounding in our ears, "Give an account of your
stewardship." At the same time, let us remember by whom the account is to be
taken, viz., by him who, while he so highly commends abstinence, sobriety,
frugality, and moderation, abominates luxury, pride, ostentation, and vanity;
who approves of no administration but that which is combined with charity, who
with his own lips has already condemned all those pleasures which withdraw the
heart from chastity and purity, or darken the intellect.
6.
The last thing to be observed is, that the Lord enjoins every one of us, in all
the actions of life, to have respect to our own calling. He knows the boiling
restlessness of the human mind, the fickleness with which it is borne hither
and thither, its eagerness to hold opposites at one time in its grasp, its
ambition. Therefore, lest all things should be thrown into confusion by our
folly and rashness, he has assigned distinct duties to each in the different
modes of life. And that no one may presume to overstep his proper limits, he
has distinguished the different modes of life by the name of callings. Every
man's mode of life, therefore, is a kind of station assigned him by the Lord,
that he may not be always driven about at random. So necessary is this
distinction, that all our actions are thereby estimated in his sight, and often
in a very different way from that in which human reason or philosophy would
estimate them. There is no more illustrious deed even among philosophers than
to free one's country from tyranny, and yet the private individual who stabs
the tyrant is openly condemned by the voice of the heavenly Judge. But I am
unwilling to dwell on particular examples; it is enough to know that in every
thing the call of the Lord is the foundation and beginning of right action. He
who does not act with reference to it will never, in the discharge of duty,
keep the right path. He will sometimes be able, perhaps, to give the semblance
of something laudable, but whatever it may be in the sight of man, it will be
rejected before the throne of God; and besides, there will be no harmony in the
different parts of his life. Hence, he only who directs his life to this end
will have it properly framed; because free from the impulse of rashness, he
will not attempt more than his calling justifies, knowing that it is unlawful
to overleap the prescribed bounds. He who is obscure will not decline to
cultivate a private life, that he may not desert the post at which God has
placed him. Again, in all our cares, toils, annoyances, and other burdens, it
will be no small alleviation to know that all these are under the
superintendence of God. The magistrate will more willingly perform his office,
and the father of a family confine himself to his proper sphere. Every one in
his particular mode of life will, without repining, suffer its inconveniences,
cares, uneasiness, and anxiety, persuaded that God has laid on the burden.
This, too, will afford admirable consolation, that in following your proper
calling, no work will be so mean and sordid as not to have a splendour and
value in the eye of God.
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