"Awake, thou that
sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light." Ephesians 5:14
In discoursing on these
words, I shall, with the help of God,
First. Describe the sleepers, to whom they are
spoken:
Secondly. Enforce the exhortation, "Awake, thou
that sleepest, and arise from the dead:" And,
Thirdly. Explain the promise
made to such as do awake and arise: "Christ shall give thee light."
1. And first, as to the sleepers here spoken to. By
sleep is signified the natural state of man; that deep sleep of the soul, into
which the sin of Adam hath cast all who spring from his loins: That supineness,
indolence, and stupidity, that insensibility of his real condition, wherein
every man comes Into the world, and continues till the voice of God awakes him.
2. Now, "they that sleep, sleep in the
night." The state of nature is a state of utter darkness; a state wherein
"darkness covers the earth, and gross darkness the people." The poor
unawakened sinner, how much knowledge soever he may have as to other things,
has no knowledge of himself: in this respect "he knoweth nothing yet as he
ought to know." He knows not that he is a fallen spirit, whose only
business in the present world, is to recover from his fall, to regain that
image of God wherein he was created. He sees no necessity for the one
thing needful, even that inward universal change, that "birth from
above," figured out by baptism, which is the beginning of that total
renovation. that sanctification of spirit, soul, and body, "without which
no man shall see the Lord."
3. Full of all diseases as he is, he fancies himself
in perfect health. Fast bound in misery and iron, he dreams that he is at
liberty. He says, "Peace! Peace!" while the devil, as "a strong,
man armed," is in full possession of his soul. He sleeps on still and
takes his rest, though hell is moved from beneath to meet him; though the pit
from whence there is no return hath opened its mouth to swallow him up. A fire
is kindled around him, yet he knoweth it not; yea, it burns him, yet he lays it
not to heart.
4. By one who sleeps, we are, therefore, to
understand (and would to God we might all understand it!) a sinner satisfied in
his sins; contented to remain in his fallen state, to live and die without the
image of God; one who is ignorant both of his disease, and of the only remedy
for it; one who never was warned, or never regarded the warning voice of God,
"to flee from the wrath to come;" one that never yet saw he was in
danger of hell-fire, or cried out in the earnestness of his soul, "What
must I do to be saved?"
5. If this sleeper be not outwardly vicious, his
sleep is usually the deepest of all: whether he be of the Laodicean spirit,
"neither cold nor hot," but a quiet, rational, inoffensive,
good-natured professor of the religion of his fathers; or whether he be zealous
and orthodox, and, "after the most straitest sect of our religion,"
live "a Pharisee;" that is, according to the scriptural account, one
that justifies himself; one that labours to establish his own righteousness, as
the ground of his acceptance with God.
6. This is he, who, "having a form of godliness,
denies the power thereof;" yea, and probably reviles it, wheresoever it is
found, as mere extravagance and delusion. Meanwhile, the wretched self-deceiver
thanks God, that he is "not as other men are; adulterers, unjust,
extortioners": no, he doeth no wrong to any man. He "fasts twice in a
week," uses all the means of grace, is constant at church and sacrament,
yea, and "gives tithes of all that he has;" does all the good that he
can "touching the righteousness of the law," he is
"blameless": he wants nothing of godliness, but the power; nothing of
religion, but the spirit; nothing of Christianity, but the truth and the life.
7. But know ye not, that, however highly esteemed
among men such a Christian as this may be, he is an abomination in the sight of
God, and an heir of every woe which the Son of God, yesterday, to-day, and for
ever, denounces against "scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites"? He hath
"made clean the outside of the cup and the platter," but within is
full of all filthiness. "An evil disease cleaveth still unto him, so that
his inward parts are very wickedness." Our Lord fitly compares him to a
"painted sepulchre," which "appears beautiful without;"
but, nevertheless, is "full of dead men's bones, and of all
uncleanness." The bones indeed are no longer dry; the sinews and flesh are
come upon them, and the skin covers them above: but there is no breath in them,
no Spirit of the living God. And, "if any man have not the Spirit of
Christ, he is none of his." "Ye are Christ's, if so be that the
Spirit of God dwell in you": but, if not, God knoweth that ye abide in
death, even until now.
8. This is another character of the sleeper here
spoken to. He abides in death, though he knows it not. He is dead unto God,
"dead in trespasses and sins." For, "to be carnally minded is
death." Even as it is written, "By one man sin entered into the
world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men;" not only
temporal death, but likewise spiritual and eternal. "In that day that thou
eatest," said God to Adam, "thou shalt surely die;" not bodily
(unless as he then became mortal), but spiritually: thou shalt lose the life of
thy soul; thou shalt die to God: shalt be separated from him, thy essential
life and happiness.
9. Thus first was dissolved the vital union of our
soul with God; insomuch that "in the midst of" natural "life, we
are" now in spiritual "death." And herein we remain till the
Second Adam becomes a quickening Spirit to us; till he raises the dead, the
dead in sin, in pleasure, riches or honours. But, before any dead soul can
live, he "hears" (hearkens to) "the voice of the Son of
God": he is made sensible of his lost estate, and receives the sentence of
death in himself. he knows himself to be "dead while he liveth;" dead
to God, and all the things of God; having no more power to perform the actions
of a living Christian, than a dead body to perform the functions of a living
man.
10. And most certain it is, that one dead in sin has
not "senses exercised to discern spiritual good and evil."
"Having eyes, he sees not; he hath ears, and hears not." He doth not
"taste and see that the Lord is gracious." He "hath not seen God
at any time," nor "heard his voice," nor "handled the word of
life." In vain is the name of Jesus "like ointment poured forth, and
all his garments smell of myrrh, aloes, and cassia." The soul that
sleepeth in death hath no perception of any objects of this kind. His heart is
"past feeling," and understandeth none of these things.
11. And hence, having no spiritual senses, no inlets
of spiritual knowledge, the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit
of God; nay, he is so far from receiving them, that whatsoever is spiritually
discerned is mere foolishness unto him. he is not content with being utterly
ignorant of spiritual things, but he denies the very existence of them. And
spiritual sensation itself is to him the foolishness of folly. "How,"
saith he, "can these things be? How can any man know that he is
alive to God?" Even as you know that your body is now alive. Faith is the
life of the soul; and if ye have this life abiding in you, ye want no marks to
evidence it to yourself, but elegchos pneumatos, that divine
consciousness, that witness of God, which is more and greater than ten
thousand human witnesses.
12. If he doth not now bear witness with thy spirit,
that thou art a child of God, O that he might convince thee, thou poor
unawakened sinner, by his demonstration and power, that thou art a child of the
devil! O that, as I prophesy, there might now be "a noise and a
shaking;" and may "the bones come together, bone to his bone!"
Then "come from the four winds, O Breath! and breathe on these slain, that
they may live!" And do not ye harden your hearts, and resist the Holy
Ghost, who even now is come to convince you of sin, "because you believe
not on the name of the only begotten Son of God."
1. Wherefore, "awake, thou that sleepest, and
arise from the dead." God calleth thee now by my mouth; and bids thee know
thyself, thou fallen spirit, thy true state and only concern below. "What
meanest thou, O sleeper? Arise! Call upon thy God, if so be thy God will think
upon thee, that thou perish not." A mighty tempest is stirred up round about
thee, and thou art sinking into the depths of perdition, the gulf of God's
judgements. If thou wouldest escape them, cast thyself into them. "Judge
thyself, and thou shalt not be judged of the Lord."
2. Awake, awake! Stand up this moment, lest thou
"drink at the Lord's hand the cup of his fury." Stir up thyself to
lay hold on the Lord, the Lord thy Righteousness, mighty to save! "Shake
thyself from the dust." At least, let the earthquake of God's threatenings
shake thee. Awake, and cry out with the trembling jailer, "What must I do
to be saved?" And never rest till thou believest on the Lord Jesus, with a
faith which is his gift, by the operation of his Spirit.
3. If I speak to any one of you, more than to
another, it is to thee, who thinkest thyself unconcerned in this exhortation.
"I have a message from God unto thee." In his name, I warn thee
"to flee from the wrath to come." Thou unholy soul, see thy picture
in condemned Peter, lying in the dark dungeon, between the soldiers, bound with
two chains, the keepers before the door keeping the prison. The night is far
spent, the morning is at hand, when thou art to be brought forth to execution.
And in these dreadful circumstances, thou art fast asleep; thou art fast asleep
in the devil's arms, on the brink of the pit, in the jaws of everlasting
destruction!
4. O may the Angel of the Lord come upon thee, and
the light shine into thy prison! And mayest thou feel the stroke of an Almighty
Hand, raising thee, with, "Arise up quickly, gird thyself, and bind on thy
sandals, cast thy garment about thee, and follow Me."
5. Awake, thou everlasting spirit, out of thy dream
of worldly happiness! Did not God create thee for himself? Then thou canst not
rest till thou restest in him. Return, thou wanderer! Fly back to thy ark, This
is not thy home. Think not of building tabernacles here. Thou art but a
stranger, a sojourner upon earth; a creature of a day, but just launching out
into an unchangeable state. Make haste. Eternity is at hand. Eternity depends
on this moment. An eternity of happiness, or an eternity of misery!
6. In what state is thy soul? Was God, while I am yet
speaking, to require it of thee, art thou ready to meet death and judgement?
Canst thou stand in his sight, who is of "purer eyes than to behold
iniquity"? Art thou "meet to be partaker of the inheritance of the
saints in light"? Hast thou "fought a good fight, and kept the
faith"? Hast thou secured the one thing needful? Hast thou recovered the
image of God, even righteousness and true holiness? Hast thou put off the old
man, and put on the new? Art thou clothed upon with Christ?
7. Hast thou oil in thy lamp? Grace in thy heart?
Dost thou "love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy mind
and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength"? Is that mind in thee,
which was also in Christ Jesus? Art thou a Christian indeed, that is, a new
creature? Are old things passed away, and all things become new?
8. Art thou a "partaker of the divine
nature"? Knowest thou not, that "Christ is in thee, except thou be
reprobate"? Knowest thou, that God "dwelleth in thee, and thou in
God, by his Spirit, which he hath given thee"? Knowest thou not that
"thy body is a temple of the Holy Ghost, which thou hast of God"?
Hast thou the witness in thyself? the earnest of thine inheritance? Hast thou
"received the Holy Ghost"? Or dost thou start at the question, not
knowing "whether there be any Holy Ghost"?
9. If it offends thee, be thou assured, that thou
neither art a Christian, nor desirest to be one. Nay, thy very prayer is turned
into sin; and thou hast solemnly mocked God this very day, by praying for the
inspiration of his Holy Spirit, when thou didst not believe there was any such
thing to be received.
10. Yet, on the authority of God's Word, and our own
Church, I must repeat the question, "Hast thou received the Holy
Ghost?" If thou hast not, thou art not yet a Christian. For a Christian is
a man that is "anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power." Thou art
not yet made a partaker of pure religion and undefiled. Dost thou know what
religion is? --that it is a participation of the divine nature; the life of God
in the soul of man; Christ formed in the heart; "Christ in thee, the hope
of glory;" happiness and holiness; heaven begun upon earth; "a kingdom
of God within thee; not meat and drink," no outward thing; "but
righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost;" an everlasting
kingdom brought into thy soul; a "peace of God that passeth all
understanding;" a "joy unspeakable, and full of glory"?
11. Knowest thou, that "in Jesus Christ, neither
circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision; but faith that worketh by
love;" but a new creation? Seest thou the necessity of that inward change,
that spiritual birth, that life from the dead, that holiness? And art thou
throughly convinced, that without it no man shall see the Lord? Art thou
labouring after it? --"giving all diligence to make thy calling and
election sure," "working out thy salvation with fear and
trembling," "agonizing to enter in at the strait gate"? Art thou
in earnest about thy soul? And canst thou tell the Searcher of hearts,
"Thou, O God, art the thing that I long for! Lord, Thou knowest all
things; Thou knowest that I would love Thee!"
12. Thou hopest to be saved; but what reason hast
thou to give of the hope that is in thee? Is it because thou hast done no harm?
Or, because thou hast done much good? Or, because thou art not like other men;
but wise, or learned, or honest, and morally good; esteemed of men, and of a
fair reputation? Alas! all this will never bring thee to God. It is in his
account lighter than vanity. Dost thou know Jesus Christ, whom he hath sent?
Hath he taught thee, that "by grace we are saved through faith; and that
not of ourselves: it is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should
boast"? Hast thou received the faithful saying as the whole foundation of
thy hope, "that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners"?
Hast thou learned what that meaneth, "I came not to call the righteous, but
sinners to repentance? I am not sent, but unto the lost sheep"? Art thou
(he that heareth, let him understand!) lost, dead, damned already? Dost
thou know thy deserts? Dost thou feel thy wants? Art thou "poor in
spirit"? Mourning for God, and refusing to be comforted? Is the prodigal
"come to himself," and well content to be therefore thought beside
himself" by those who are still feeding upon the husks which he hath left?
Art thou willing to live godly in Christ Jesus? And dost thou therefore suffer
persecution? Do men say all manner of evil against thee falsely, for the Son of
Man's sake?
13. O that in all these questions ye may hear the
voice that wakes the dead; and feel that hammer of the Word, which breaketh the
rocks in pieces! "If ye will hear his voice to-day, while it is called
to-day, harden not your hearts." Now, "awake, thou that
sleepest" in spiritual death, that thou sleep not in death eternal! Feel
thy lost estate, and "arise from the dead." Leave thine old
companions in sin and death. Follow thou Jesus, and let the dead bury their
dead. "Save thyself from this untoward generation." "Come out
from among them, and be thou separate, and touch not the unclean thing, and the
Lord shall receive thee." "Christ shall give thee light."
1. This promise, I come, lastly, to explain. And how
encouraging a consideration is this, that whosoever thou art, who obeyest his
call, thou canst not seek his face in vain! If thou even now "awakest, and
arisest from the dead," he hath bound himself to "give thee
light." "The Lord shall give thee grace and glory;" the light of
his grace here, and the light of his glory when thou receivest the crown that
fadeth not away. "Thy light shall break forth as the morning, and thy
darkness be as the noon-day." "God, who commanded the light to shine
out of darkness, shall shine in thy heart; to give the knowledge of the glory
of God in the face of Jesus Christ." On them that fear the Lord shall
"the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in his wings." And in
that day it shall be said unto thee, "Arise, shine; for thy light is come,
and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee." For Christ shall reveal
himself in thee: and he is the true Light.
2. God is light, and will give himself to every
awakened sinner that waiteth for him; and thou shalt then be a temple of the
living God, and Christ shall "dwell in thy heart by faith;" and,
"being rooted and grounded in love, thou shalt be able to comprehend with
all saints, what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height of that love
of Christ which passeth knowledge."
3. Ye see your calling, brethren. We are called to be
"an habitation of God through his Spirit;" and, through his Spirit
dwelling in us, to be saints here, and partakers of the inheritance of the
saints in light. So exceeding great are the promises which are given unto us,
actually given unto us who believe! For by faith "we receive, not the
spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God" --the sum of all the
promises-- "that we may know the things that are freely given to us of
God."
4. The Spirit of Christ is that great gift of God,
which at sundry times, and in diverse manners, he hath promised to man, and
hath fully bestowed since the time that Christ was glorified. Those promises,
before made to the fathers, he hath thus fulfilled: "I will put My spirit
within you, and cause you to walk in My statutes" (Ezek. 36:27). "I
will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground; I
will pour My Spirit upon thy seed, and My blessing upon thine offspring (Isa.
44:3).
5. Ye may all be living witnesses of these things; of
remission of sins, and the gift of the Holy Ghost. "If thou canst believe,
all things are possible to him that believeth." "Who among you is
there that feareth the Lord, and" yet walketh on" in darkness, and
hath no light?" I ask thee, in the name of Jesus, Believest thou that his
arm is not shortened at all? That he is still mighty to save? That he is the
same yesterday, to-day, and for ever? That he hath now power on earth to
forgive sins? "Son, be of good cheer; thy sins are forgiven." God,
for Christ's sake, hath forgiven thee. Receive this, "not as the word of
man; but as it is indeed, the word of God;" and thou art justified freely
through faith. Thou shalt be sanctified also through faith which is in Jesus,
and shalt set to thy seal, even thine, that "God hath given unto us
eternal life, and this life is in his Son."
6. Men and brethren, let me freely speak unto you,
and suffer ye the word of exhortation, even from one the least esteemed in the
Church. Your conscience beareth you witness in the Holy Ghost, that these
things are so, if so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious. "This is
eternal life, to know the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom he hath sent."
This experimental knowledge, and this alone, is true Christianity. He is a
Christian who hath received the Spirit of Christ. He is not a Christian who
hath not received him. Neither is it possible to have received him, and not
know it. "For, at that day" (when he cometh, saith our Lord),
"ye shall know that I am in My Father, and you in Me, and I in you."
This is that "Spirit of Truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it
seeth him not, neither knoweth him: but ye know him; for he dwelleth with you,
and shall be in you" (John 14:17).
7. The world cannot receive him, but utterly reject
the Promise of the Father, contradicting and blaspheming. But every spirit
which confesseth not this is not of God. Yea, "this is that spirit of
Antichrist, whereof ye have heard that it should come into the world; and even
now it is in the world." He is Antichrist whosoever denies the inspiration
of the Holy Ghost, or that the indwelling Spirit of God is the common privilege
of all believers, the blessing of the gospel, the unspeakable gift, the
universal promise, the criterion of a real Christian.
8. It nothing helps them to say, "We do not deny
the assistance of God's Spirit; but only this inspiration, this receiving
the Holy Ghost: and being sensible of it. It is only this feeling
of the Spirit, this being moved by the Spirit, or filled with it,
which we deny to have any place in sound religion." But, in only
denying this, you deny the whole Scriptures; the whole truth, and promise,
and testimony of God.
9. Our own excellent Church knows nothing of this
devilish distinction; but speaks plainly of "feeling the Spirit of
Christ" [Article 17]; of being "moved by the Holy Ghost" [Office
of consecrating Priests] and knowing and "feeling there is no other name
than that of Jesus," [Visitation of the Sick] whereby we can receive"
life and salvation. She teaches us all to pray for the "inspiration of the
Holy Spirit" [Collect before Holy Communion]; yea, that we may be
"filled with the Holy Ghost" [Order of Confirmation]. Nay, and every
Presbyter of hers professes to receive the Holy Ghost by the imposition of
hands. Therefore, to deny any of these, is, in effect, to renounce the Church
of England, as well as the whole Christian revelation.
10. But "the wisdom of God" was always
"foolishness with men." No marvel, then, that the great mystery of
the gospel should be now also "hid from the wise and prudent," as
well as in the days of old; that it should be almost universally denied,
ridiculed, and exploded, as mere frenzy; and that all who dare avow it still
are branded with the names of madmen and enthusiasts! This is "that
falling away" which was to come--that general apostasy of all orders and
degrees of men, which we even now find to have overspread the earth. "Run
to and fro in the streets of Jerusalem, and see if ye can find a man," a
man that loveth the Lord his God with all his heart, and serveth him with all
his strength. How does our own land mourn (that we look no farther) under the
overflowings of ungodliness! What villanies of every kind are committed day by
day; yea, too often with impunity, by those who sin with a high hand, and glory
in their shame! Who can reckon up the oaths, curses, profaneness blasphemies;
the lying, slandering, evil-speaking; the Sabbath-breaking, gluttony,
drunkenness, revenge; the whoredoms, adulteries, and various uncleanness; the
frauds, injustice, oppression, extortion, which overspread our land as a flood?
11. And even among those who have kept themselves
pure from those grosser abominations; how much anger and pride how much sloth
and idleness, how much softness and effeminacy how much luxury and
self-indulgence, how much covetousness and ambition, how much thirst of praise,
how much love of the world, how much fear of man, is to be found! Meanwhile,
how little of true religion! For, where is he that loveth either God or his
neighbour, as he hath given us commandment? On the one hand, are those who have
not so much as the form of godliness; on the other, those who have the form
only: there stands the open, there the painted, sepulchre. So
that in very deed, whosoever were earnestly to behold any public gathering
together of the people (I fear those in our churches are not to be excepted)
might easily perceive, "that the one part were Sadducees, and the other
Pharisees": the one having almost as little concern about religion, as if
there were "no resurrection, neither angel nor spirit;" and the other
making it a mere lifeless form, a dull round of external performances, without
either true faith, or the love of God, or joy in the Holy Ghost!
12. Would to God I could except us of this
place! "Brethren, my heart's desire, and prayer to God, for you is, that
ye may be saved" from this overflowing of ungodliness; and that here may its
proud waves be stayed! But is it so indeed? God knoweth, yea, and our own
consciences, it is not. Ye have not kept yourselves pure. Corrupt are we also
and abominable; and few are there that understand any more; few that worship
God in spirit and in truth. We, too, are "a generation that set not our
hearts aright, and whose spirit cleaveth not steadfastly unto God." He
hath appointed us indeed to be "the salt of the earth: but if the salt
hath lost its savour, it is thenceforth good for nothing; but to be cast out,
and to be trodden underfoot of men."
13. And "shall I not visit for these things,
saith the Lord? Shall not My soul be avenged on such a nation as this?"
Yea, we know not how soon he may say to the sword, "Sword, go through this
land!" He hath given us long space to repent. He lets us alone this year
also: but he warns and awakens us by thunder. His judgements are abroad in the
earth; and we have all reason to expect the heaviest of all, even that he
"should come unto us quickly, and remove our candlestick out of its place,
except we repent and do the first works;" unless we return to the
principles of the Reformation, the truth and simplicity of the gospel. Perhaps
we are now resisting the last effort of divine grace to save us. Perhaps we have
well-nigh "filled up the measure of our iniquities," by rejecting the
counsel of God against ourselves, and casting out his messengers.
14. 0 God, "in the midst of wrath, remember
mercy!" Be glorified in our reformation, not in our destruction! Let us
"hear the rod, and him that appointed it!" Now that Thy
"judgements are abroad in the earth," let the inhabitants of the
world "learn righteousness!"
15. My brethren, it is high time for us to awake out
of sleep before the "great trumpet of the Lord be blown," and our
land become a field of blood. O may we speedily see the things that make for
our peace, before they are hid from our eyes! "Turn Thou us, O good Lord,
and let Thine anger cease from us. O Lord, look down from heaven, behold and
visit this vine;" and cause us to know "the time of our
visitation." "Help us, O God of our salvation, for the glory of Thy
name! O deliver us, and be merciful to our sins, for Thy name's sake! And so we
will not go back from Thee. O let us live, and we shall call upon Thy name.
Turn us again, O Lord God of Hosts! Show the light of Thy countenance, and we
shall be whole."
"Now unto him that is able to do exceeding
abundantly above all that we can ask or think, according to the power that
worketh in us, unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all
ages; world without end. --Amen!"
Acknowledgements
[Edited anonymously at the Memorial University of Newfoundland, with
corrections by George Lyons of Northwest Nazarene College for the Wesley Center for Applied Theology.]
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