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For when we were yet without strength, in due time Christ
died for the ungodly. Romans 5:6
No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me
draw him. John 6.
We have now had a view of the total corruption of man's
nature, and that load of wrath which lies on him, that gulf
of misery into which he is plunged in his natural state. But
there is one part of his misery that deserves particular
consideration; namely, his utter inability to recover
himself, the knowledge of which is necessary for the due
humiliation of a sinner. What I design here, is only to
propose a few things, whereby to convince the unregenerate
man of this his inability, that he may see an absolute need
of Christ and of the power of His grace.
A man that is fallen into a pit cannot be supposed to help
himself out of it, but by one of two ways; either by doing
all himself alone, or taking hold of, and improving, the
help offered him by others. Likewise an unconverted man
cannot be supposed to help himself out of his natural state,
but either in the way of the law, or covenant of works, by
doing all himself without Christ; or else in the way of the
Gospel, or covenant of grace, by exerting his own strength
to lay hold upon, and to make use of the help offered him by
a Saviour. But, alas! the unconverted man is dead in the
pit, and cannot help himself either of these ways; not the
first way, for the first text tells us, that when our Lord
came to help us, 'we were without strength,' unable to
recover ourselves. We were ungodly, therefore under a burden
of guilt and wrath, yet 'without strength,' unable to stand
under it; and unable to throw it off, or get from under it:
so that all mankind would have undoubtedly perished, had not
'Christ died for the ungodly,' and brought help to those who
could never have recovered themselves. But when Christ comes
and offers help to sinners, cannot they take it? Cannot they
improve help when it comes to their hands? No, the second
text tells, they cannot; 'No man can come unto me,' that is,
believe in me (John 6.44), 'except the Father draw him.'
This is a drawing which enables them to come, who till then
could not come; and therefore could not help themselves by
improving the help offered. It is a drawing which is always
effectual; for it can be no less than 'hearing and learnIng
of the Father,' which, whoever partakes of, come to Christ
(verse 45). Therefore it is not drawing in the way of mere
moral suasion, which may be, yea, and always is ineffectual.
But it is drawing by mighty power (Eph. 1.9), absolutely
necessary for those who have no power in themselves to come
and take hold of the offered help.
Hearken then, O unregenerate man, and be convinced that as
you are in a most miserable state by nature, so you are
utterly unable to recover yourself any way. You are ruined;
and what way will you go to work to recover yourself? Which
of the two ways will you choose? Will you try it alone, or
will you make use of help? Will you fall on the way of
works, or on the way of the Gospel? I know very well that
you will not so much as try the way of the Gospel, till once
you have found the recovery impracticable in the way of the
law. Therefore, we shall begin where corrupt nature teaches
men to begin, namely, at the way of the law of works.
Sinner, I would have you believe that your working will
never effect it. Work, and do your best; you will never be
able to work yourself out of this state of corruption and
wrath. You must have Christ, else you will perish eternally.
It is only 'Christ in you' that can be the hope of glory.
But if you will needs try it, then I must lay before you,
from the unalterable Word of the living God, two things
which you must do for yourself. If you can do them, it must
be yielded that you are able to recover yourself; but if
not, then you can do nothing this way for your recovery.
1: 'If thou wilt enter into life keep the commandments'
(Matt 19.17). That is, if you will by doing enter into life,
then perfectly keep the ten commandments; for the object of
these words is to beat down the pride of the man's heart,
and to let him see an absolute need of a Saviour, from the
impossibility of keeping the law. The answer is given
suitably to the address. Our Lord checks him for his
compliment, 'Good Master' (verse 16), telling him, 'There is
none good but one, that is God' (verse 17). As if he had
said, You think yourself a good man, and me another; but
where goodness is spoken of, men and angels may veil their
faces before the good God. As to his question, wherein he
revealed his legal disposition, Christ does not answer him,
saying, 'Believe and thou shalt be saved;' that would not
have been so seasonable in the case of one who thought he
could do well enough for himself, if he but knew 'what good
he should do;' but, suitable to the humour the man was in,
He bids him 'keep the commandments;' keep them nicely and
accurately, as those that watch malefactors in prison, lest
any of them escape, and their life be taken for those which
escape. See then, 0 unregenerate man, what you can do in
this matter; for if you will recover yourself in this way,
you must perfectly keep the commandments of God.
- Your obedience must be perfect, in
respect of the principle of it; that is, your soul, the
principle of action, must be perfectly pure, and
altogether without sin. For the law requires all moral
perfection; not only actual, but habitual: and so
condemns original sin; impurity of nature, as well as of
actions. Now, if you can bring this to pass you will be
able to answer that question of Solomon, so as never one
of Adam's posterity could yet answer it, 'Who can say, I
have made my heart clean?' (Prov. 20.9). But if you
cannot, the very want of this perfection is sin, and so
lays you open to the curse and cuts you off from life.
Yea, it makes all your actions, even your best actions,
sinful: 'For who can bring a clean thing out of an
unclean?' (Job 14.4). And do you think by sin to help
yourself out of sin and misery?
- Your obedience must also be
perfect in parts. It must be as broad as the whole law
of God: if you lack one thing, you are undone; for the
law denounces the curse on him that continues not in
every thing written therein (Gal 3.10). You must give
Internal and external obedience to the whole law, keep
all the commands in heart and life. If you break any one
of them, that will ensure your ruin. A vain thought, or
idle word, will still shut you up under the curse.
- It must be perfect in respect of
degrees, as was the obedience of Adam, while he stood in
his innocence. This the law requires, and will accept of
no less (Matt 22.37), 'Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all
thy mind.' If one degree of that love, required by the
law, be wanting, if each part of your obedience be not
brought up to the greatest height commanded, that want
is a breach of the law, and so leaves you still under
the curse. A man may bring as many buckets of water to a
house that is on fire, as he is able to carry, and yet
it may be consumed, and will be so, if he bring not as
many as will quench the fire. Even so, although you
should do what you are able, in keeping the
commandments, if you fail in the least degree of
obedience which the law enjoins, you are certainly
ruined for ever, unless you take hold of Christ,
renouncing all your righteousness as filthy rags. (See
Rom 10.5; Gal. 3.10).
- It must be perpetual, as the man
Christ's obedience was, who always did the things which
pleased the Father, for the tenor of the law is, 'Cursed
is he that continueth not in all things written in the
law to do them! Hence, though Adam's obedience was, for
a while, absolutely perfect; yet because at length he
failed in one point, namely, in eating the forbidden
fruit, he fell under the curse of the law. If a man were
to live a dutiful subject to his prince till the close
of his days, and then conspire against him, he must die
for his treason. Even so, though you should, all the
time of your life, live in perfect obedience to the law
of God, and yet at the hour of death only entertain a
vain thought, or pronounce an idle word, that idle word,
or vain thought, would blot out all your former
righteousness, and ruin you; namely, in this way in
which you are seeking to recover yourself.
Now, such is the
obedience which you must perform, if you would recover
yourself in the way of the law. But though you would thus
obey, the law stakes you down in the state of wrath, till
another demand of it be satisfied.
2: You must pay what you owe. It is undeniable that you are
a sinner; and whatever you may be in time to come, justice
must be satisfied for your sins already committed. The
honour of the law must be maintained, by your suffering the
denounced wrath. It may be you have changed your course of
life, or are now resolved to do it, and to set about keeping
the commands of God: but what have you done, or what will
you do, with the old debt? Your obedience to God, though it
were perfect, is a debt due to him for the time wherein it
is performed, and can no more satisfy for former sins, than
a tenant's paying the current year's rent can satisfy the
landlord for all arrears. Can the paying of new debts acquit
a man from old accounts? Nay, deceive not yourselves; you
will find these laid up in store with God, and sealed up
among his treasures (Deut. 32.34). It remains then, that
either you must bear that wrath, to which for your sin you
are liable, according to the law; or else you must
acknowledge that you cannot bear it, and thereupon have
recourse to the Surety, the Lord Jesus Christ. Let me now
ask you, Are you able to satisfy the justice of God? Can you
pay your own debt? Surely not: for, as He is the infinite
God, whom you have offended, the punishment, being suited to
the quality of the offence, must be infinite. But your
punishment, or sufferings for sin, cannot be infinite in
value, for you are a finite creature: therefore, they must
be infinite in duration or continuance; that is, they must
be eternal. And so all your sufferings in this world are but
an earnest of what you must suffer in the world to come.
Now, sinner, if you can answer these demands, you may
recover yourself in the way of the law. But are you not
conscious of your inability to do any of these things, much
more to do them all? yet if you do not all, you do nothing.
Turn then to what course of life you will, you are still in
a state of wrath. Screw up your obedience to the greatest
height you can; suffer what God lays upon you; yea, add, if
you will, to the burden, and walk under all without the
least impatience: yet all this will not satisfy the demands
of the law; therefore you are still a ruined creature. Alas,
sinner I what are you doing, while you strive to help
yourself, but do not receive, and unite with, Jesus Christ?
You are labouring in the fire, wearying yourself for very
vanity; labouring to enter into heaven by the door which
Adam's sin so bolted, that neither he, nor any of his lost
posterity, can ever enter by it. Do you not see the flaming
sword of justice, keeping you off from the tree of life? Do
you not hear the law denouncing a curse on you for all you
are doing, even for your obedience, your prayers, your
tears, your reformation of life, and so on; because, being
under the law's dominion, your best works are not so good
as-it requires them to be under the pain of the curse?
Believe it, sirs, if you live and die out of Christ, without
being actually united to Him as the second Adam, the
life-giving Spirit, and without coming under the covert of
His atoning blood, though you should do the utmost that any
man can do, in keeping the commands of God, you will never
see the face of God in peace. If you should, from this
moment, bid an eternal farewell to this world's joys, and
all the affairs thereof, and henceforth busy yourselves with
nothing but the salvation of your souls; if you should go
into some 'wilderness, live upon the grass of the field, and
be companions to dragons and owls; if you should retire to
some dark cavern of the earth, and weep there for your sins,
until you had wept yourselves blind; if you should confess
with your tongue, until it cleave to the roof of your mouth;
pray, till your knees grow hard as horns; fast, till your
body become like a skeleton, and, after all this, give it to
be burnt; the word is gone out of the Lord's mouth in
righteousness and cannot return, that you shall perish for
ever, notwithstanding all this, as not being in Christ (John
14.6), 'No man cometh unto the Father, but by me (Acts
4.12), 'Neither is there salvation in any other.' (Mark
16.16), 'He that believeth not shall be damned!
Objection: But God is a merciful God, and He knows that we
are not able to answer these demands; we hope therefore to
be saved, if we do as well as we can, and keep the commands
as well as we are able. Answer I : Though you are able to do
many things, you are not able to do one thing right: you can
do nothing acceptable to God, being out of Christ (John
15.5), 'Without me ye can do nothing.' An unrenewed man, as
you are, can do nothing but sin, as we have already proved.
Your best actions are sin, and so they increase your debt to
justice: how then can it be expected they should lessen it?
2: Though God should offer to save men, upon condition that
they did all they could do, in obedience to His commands,
yet we have reason to think that those who should attempt it
would never be saved: for where is the man that does as well
as he can? Who sees not many false steps he has made, which
he might have avoided? There are so many things to be done,
so many temptations to carry us out of the road of duty, and
our nature is so very apt to be set on fire of hell, that we
surely must fail, even in some point that is within the
compass of our natural abilities. But, 3: Though you should
do all you are able to do, in vain do you hope to be saved
in that way. What word of God is this hope of yours founded
on? It is founded on neither law nor Gospel; therefore it is
but a delusion. It is not founded on the Gospel; for the
Gospel leads the soul out of itself to Jesus Christ for all;
and it establishes the law (Rom 3.31). Whereas this hope of
yours cannot be established but on the ruins of the law,
which God will magnify and make honourable. Hence it
appears, that it is not founded on the law neither. When God
set Adam working for happiness to himself and his posterity,
perfect obedience was the 'condition required of him; and
the curse was denounced in case of disobedience. The law
being broken by him, he and his posterity were subjected to
the penalty for sin committed; and withal were still bound
to perfect obedience. For it is absurd to think, that man's
sinning, and suffering for his sin, should free him from his
duty of obedience to his Creator. When Christ came in the
room of the elect, to purchase their salvation, the terms
were the same. justice had the elect under arrest: if He is
desirous to deliver them, the terms are known. He must
satisfy for their sin, by suffering the punishment due to
it; He must do what they cannot do, namely, obey the law
perfectly, and so fulfil all righteousness. Accordingly, all
this He did, and so became 'the end of the law for
righteousness, to every one that believeth' (Rom 10.4). And
do you think that God will abate these terms as to you, when
His own Son got no abatement of them? Expect it not, though
you should beg it with tears of blood; for if they
prevailed, they must prevail against the truth, justice, and
honour of God (Gal 3.10). 'Cursed is every one that
continueth not in all things which are written in the book
of the law to do them. (Verse 12), 'And the law is not of
faith: but the man that doeth them shall live in them.' It
is true, that God is merciful: but cannot He be merciful
unless He save you in a way that is neither consistent with
His law nor His Gospel? Have not His goodness and mercy
sufficiently appeared, in sending the Son of His love, to do
'what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the
flesh?' He has provided help for those who cannot help
themselves: but you, insensible of your own weakness, must
needs think to recover yourself by your own works, while you
are no more able to do it than to remove mountains of brass
out of their place.
Wherefore I conclude, that you are utterly unable to recover
yourself, in the way of works, or by the law. O that you
would conclude the same concerning yourself!
Let us try next what the sinner can do to recover himself,
In the way of the Gospel. It may be you think that you
cannot do all by yourself alone, yet Jesus Christ offering
you help, you can of yourself embrace it, and use it for
your recovery. But, O sinner, be convinced of your absolute
need of the grace of Christ: for truly, there is help
offered, but you cannot accept it: there is a rope cast out
to draw shipwrecked sinners to land, but, alas 1 they have
no hands to lay hold of it. They are like infants exposed in
the open field, who must starve, though their food be lying
by them, unless some one put it in their mouths. To convince
natural men of this, let it be considered,
- That although Christ is offered in
the Gospel, yet they cannot believe in Him. Saving faith
is the faith of God's elect, the special gift of God to
them, wrought in them by His Spirit. Salvation is
offered to them that will believe in Christ, but how can
you believe? (John 5.44). It is offered to those that
will come to Christ; but 'no man can come unto Him,
except the Father draw him.' It is offered to those that
win look to Him, as lifted on the pole of the Gospel
(Isa. 45.22); but the natural man is spiritually blind
(Rev. 3.17); and as to the things of the Spirit of God,
he cannot know them, for they are spiritually discerned
(1 Cor. 2.14). Nay, whosoever will, he is welcome; let
him come (Rev. 22.17); but there must be a day of power
on the sinner, before he can be willing (Ps. 110.3).
- Man naturally has nothing
wherewithal to improve, for his recovery, the help
brought in by the Gospel. He is cast away in a state of
wrath, and is bound hand and foot, so that he cannot lay
hold of the cords of love thrown out to him in the
Gospel. The most cunning artificer cannot work without
tools; neither can the most skilful musician play well
on an instrument that is out of tune. How can anyone
believe, or repent, whose understanding is darkness
(Eph. 5.8), whose heart is a stony heart, inflexible,
insensible (Ezek. 36.26), whose affections are wholly
disordered and distempered, who is averse to good, and
bent to evil? The arms of natural abilities are too
short to reach supernatural help; hence those who most
excel in them are often most estranged from spiritual
things (Matt 11.25), 'Thou hast hid these things from
the wise and prudent!
- Man cannot work a saving change on
himself; but so changed he must be, else he can neither
believe nor repent, nor ever see heaven. No action can
be without a suitable principle. Believing, repenting,
and the like, are the product of the new nature and can
never be produced by the old corrupt nature. Now, what
can the natural man do in this matter? He must be
regenerate, begotten again unto a lively hope; but as
the child cannot be active in his own generation, so a
man cannot be active but passive only, in his own
regeneration. The heart is shut against Christ: man
cannot open it, only God can do it by His grace (Acts
16.14). He is dead in sin; he must be quickened, raised
out of his grave; who can do this but God Himself? (Eph.
2.1-5). Nay, he must be 'created in Christ Jesus, unto
good works' (Eph. 2.10). These are works of omnipotence,
and can be done by no less a power.
- Man, in his depraved state, is
under an utter inability to do any thing truly good, as
was proved before at large: how then can he obey the
Gospel? His nature is the very reverse of the Gospel:
how can he, of himself, fall in with that plan of
salvation, and accept the offered remedy? The corruption
of man's nature infallibly includes his utter inability
to recover himself in any way, and whoso is convinced of
the one, must needs admit the other; for they stand and
fall together. Were all the purchase of Christ offered
to the unregenerate man for one good thought, he cannot
command it (2 Cor 3.5), 'Not that we are sufficient of
ourselves, to think any thing as of ourselves! Were it
offered on condition of a good word, yet 'how can ye,
being evil, speak good things?' (Matt 12.35). Nay, were
it left to yourselves to choose what is easiest, Christ
Himself tells you (John 15.5), 'Without me, ye can do
nothing!
- The natural man cannot but resist
the Lord's offering to help him; yet that resistance is
infallibly overcome in the elect, by converting grace.
Can the stony heart choose but to resist the stroke?
There is not only an inability, but an enmity and
obstinacy in man's will by nature. God knows, O natural
man, whether you know it or not, that 'thou art
obstinate, and thy neck is an iron sinew, and thy brow
brass' (Isa. 48 4), and cannot be overcome, but by Him
who hath 'broken the gates of brass, and cut the bars of
iron in sunder.' Hence, humanly speaking, there is such
hard work in converting a sinner. Sometimes he seems to
be caught in the net of the Gospel; yet quickly he slips
away again. The hook catches hold of him; but he
struggles, tin, getting free of it, he goes away with a
bleeding wound. When good hopes are conceived of him, by
those that travail in birth for the forming of Christ in
him., there is oft-times nothing brought forth but wind.
The deceitful heart makes many contrivances to avoid a
Saviour, and cheat the man of his eternal happiness.
Thus the natural man lies sunk in a state of sin and
wrath, utterly unable to recover himself.
Objection 1: If we be under an utter
inability to do any good, how can God require us to do it?
Answer: God making man upright (Eccl. 7.29), gave him a
power to do everything that He should require of him; this
power man lost by his own fault. We were bound to serve God,
and do whatever He commanded us, as being His creatures; and
also, we were under the superadded tie of a covenant, for
that purpose. Now, we having, by our own fault, disabled
ourselves, shall God lose His right of requiring our task,
because we have thrown away the strength He gave us whereby
to perform it? Has the creditor no right to require payment
of his money because the debtor had squandered it away, and
is not able to pay him? Truly, if God can require no more of
us than we are able to do, we need no more to save us from
wrath, but to make ourselves unable for every duty, and to
incapacitate ourselves for serving God any manner of way, as
profane men frequently do. So the deeper a man is plunged in
sin, he will be the more secure from wrath, for where God
can require no duty of us, we do not sin in omitting it; and
where there is no sin there can be no wrath. As to what may
be urged by the unhumbled soul, against the putting our
stock in Adam's hand, the righteousness of that dispensation
was explained before. But moreover, the unrenewed man is
daily throwing away the very remains of natural abilities,
that rational light and strength which are to be found
amongst the ruins of mankind. Nay, further, he will not
believe his own utter inability to help himself; so that out
of his own mouth, he must be condemned. Even those who make
their natural impotency to good a covert to their sloth, do,
with others, delay the work of turning to God from time to
time, and, under convictions, make large promises of
reformation, which afterwards they never regard, and delay
their repentance to a death- bed, as if they could help
themselves in a moment; which shows them to be far from a
due sense of their natural inability, whatever they pretend.
Now, if God can require of men the duty they are not able to
do, He can in justice punish them for their not doing it,
notwithstanding their inability. If He has power to exact
the debt of obedience, He has also power to cast the
insolvent debtor into prison, for his not paying it.
Further, though unregenerate men have no gracious abilities,
yet they want not natural abilities which nevertheless they
will not improve. There are many things they can do, which
they do not; they will not do them, and therefore their
damnation will be just. Nay, all their inability to do good
is voluntary; they will not come to Christ (John 5.40). They
will not repent, they will die (Ezek. 18.31). So they win be
justly condemned, because they will neither tam to God, nor
come to Christ, but love their chains better than their
liberty, and darkness rather than light (John 3.19)
Objection 2: Why do you then preach Christ to us, call us to
come to Him, to believe., repent, and use the means of
salvation? Answer: Because it is your duty so to do. It is
your duty to accept of Christ, as He is offered in the
Gospel, to repent of your sins, and to be holy in all manner
of conversation; these things are commanded you of God; and
His command, not your ability, is the measure of your duty.
Moreover, these calls and exhortations are the means that
God is pleased to make use of, for converting His elect, and
working grace in their hearts: to them, 'faith cometh by
hearing' (Rom 10.17), while they are as unable to help
themselves as the rest of mankind are. Upon very good
grounds may we, at the command of God, who raises the dead,
go to their graves, and cry in His name, 'Awake, thou that
sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give
thee light' (Eph. 5. 14). And seeing the elect are not to be
known and distinguished from others before conversion, as
the sun shines on the blind man's face, and the rain falls
on the rocks as well as on the fruitful plains, so we preach
Christ to all, and shoot the arrow at a venture, which God
Himself directs as He sees fit. Moreover, these calls and
exhortations are not altogether in vain, even to those who
are not converted by them. Such persons may be convinced,
though they be not converted: although they be not
sanctified by these means, yet they may be restrained by
them from running into that excess of wickedness, which
otherwise they would arrive at. The means of grace serve, as
it were, to embalm many dead souls, which are never
quickened by them; though they do not restore them to life,
yet they keep them from putrefying, as otherwise they would
do. Finally, though you cannot recover yourselves, nor take
hold of the saving help offered to you in the Gospel, yet
even by the power of nature you may use the outward and
ordinary means, whereby Christ communicates the benefit of
redemption to ruined sinners, who are utterly unable to
recover themselves out of the state of sin and wrath. You
may and can., if you please, do many things that would set
you in a fair way for help from the Lord Jesus Christ. You
may go so far on, as not to be far from the kingdom of God,
as the discreet scribe had done (Mark 12.34), though, it
should seem, he was destitute of supernatural abilities.
Though you cannot cure yourselves, yet you may come to the
pool, where many such diseased persons as you are have been
cured; though you have none to put you into it, yet you may
lie at the side of it: 'Who knows but the Lord may return,
and leave a blessing behind Him?' as in the case of the
impotent man (recorded in John 5.5-8). I hope Satan does not
chain you to your houses, nor stake you down in your fields
on the Lord's day; but you are at liberty and can wait at
the posts of wisdom's doors if you will. When you come
thither he does not beat drums at your ears, that you cannot
hear what is said; there is no force upon you, obliging you
to apply all you hear to others; you may apply to yourselves
what belongs to your state and condition.. When you go home,
you are not fettered in your houses) where perhaps no
religious discourse is to be heard, but you may retire to
some separate place, where you can meditate, and exercise
your consciences with suitable questions upon what you have
heard. You are not possessed with a dumb devil, that you
cannot get your mouths opened in prayer to God. You are not
so driven out of your beds to your worldly business, and
from your worldly business to your beds again, but you
might, if you would,, make some prayers to God upon the case
of your perishing souls. You may examine yourselves as to
the state of your souls, in a solemn manner, as in the
presence of God; you may discern that you have no grace, and
that you are lost and undone without it, and you may cry to
God for it. These things are within the compass of natural
abilities, and may be practised where there is no grace. It
must aggravate your guilt, that you will not be at so much
pains about the state and case of your precious souls. If
you do not what you can, you will be condemned, not only for
your want of grace, but for your despising it.
Objection 3: But all this is needless, seeing we are utterly
unable to help ourselves out of the state of sin and wrath.
Answer: Give not place to that delusion, which puts asunder
what God has joined, namely, the use of means and a sense of
our own impotency. If ever the Spirit of God graciously
influence your souls, you will become thoroughly sensible of
your absolute inability, and yet enter upon a vigorous use
of means. You will do for yourselves, as if you were to do
all, and yet overlook all you do, as if you had done
nothing. Will you do nothing for yourselves because you
cannot do all? Lay down no such impious conclusion against
your own souls. Do what you can; and, it may be, while you
are doing what you can for yourselves, God will do for you
what you cannot. 'Understandest thou what thou readest?'
said Philip to the eunuch; 'How can I,' said he, 'except
some man should guide me?' (Acts 8.30-31). He could not
understand the Scripture he read, yet he could read it: he
did what he could, he read; and while he was reading, God
sent him an interpreter. Ile Israelites were in a great
strait at the Red Sea; and how could they help themselves,
when on the one hand were mountains, and on the other the
enemy in pursuit; when Pharaoh and his host were behind
them, and the Red Sea before them? What could they do?
'Speak unto the children of Israel,' said the Lord to Moses,
'that they go forward' (Exod. 14.15). For what end should
they go forward? Can they make a passage to themselves
through the sea? No; but let them go forward, saith the
Lord: though they cannot turn the sea to dry land, yet they
can go forward to the shore. So they did; and when they did
what they could) God did for them what they could not do.
Question: Has God promised to convert and save those who, in
the use of means, do what they can towards their own relief?
Answer: We may not speak wickedly for God; natural men,
being strangers to the covenants of promise (Eph. 2.12),
have no such promise made to them. Nevertheless they do not
act rationally unless they exert the powers they have, and
do what they can. For, I. It is possible this course may
succeed with them. If you do what you can, it may be, God
will do for you what you cannot do for yourselves. This is
sufficient to determine a man in a matter of the utmost
importance, such as this is (Acts 8.22), 'Pray God, if
perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee.'
(Joel 2.14), 'Who knoweth if he will return?' If success may
be, the trial should be. If, in a wreck at sea, all the
sailors and passengers betake themselves each to a broken
board for safety, and one of them should see all the rest
perish, notwithstanding their utmost endeavour to save
themselves, yet the very possibility of escaping by that
means would determine that one still to do his best with his
board. Why then do not you reason with yourselves, as the
four lepers did who sat at the gate of Samaria? (2 Kings
7.3-4). Why do you not say, 'If we sit still,' not doing
what we can, 'we die;' let us put it to a trial; if we be
saved, 'we shall live;' if not, 'we shall but die?' 2. It is
probable this course may succeed; God is good and merciful;
He loves to surprise men with His grace, and is often 'found
of them that sought him not' (Isa. 65.1). If you do this,
you are so far in the road of your duty, and you are using
the means, which the Lord is wont to bless for men's
spiritual recovery: you lay yourselves in the way of the
great Physician, and so it is probable you may be healed.
Lydia went, with others, to the place 'where prayer was wont
to be made;' and 'the Lord opened her heart' (Acts
16.13-14). You plough and sow, though nobody can tell you
for certain that you win get so much as your seed again: you
use means for the recovery of your health, though you are
not sure they will succeed. In these cases probability
determines you; and why not in this also? Importunity, we
see, does very much with men. Therefore pray, meditate,
desire help of God, be much at the throne of grace,
supplicating for grace, and do not faint. Though God regard
you not, who in your present state are but one mass of sin,
universally depraved, and vitiated in all the powers of your
soul, yet He may regard prayer, meditation, and the like
means of His own appointment, and He may bless them to you.
Wherefore, if you will not do what you can, you are not only
dead, but you declare yourselves unworthy of eternal life.
In conclusion then, let the saints admire the freedom and
power of grace, which came to them in their helpless
condition, made their chains fall off, the iron gate to open
to them, raised the fallen creatures, and brought them out
of the state of sin and wrath., wherein they would have lain
and perished, had not they been mercifully visited. Let the
natural man be sensible of his utter inability to recover
himself. Know, that you are without strength: and cannot
come to Christ, till you be drawn. You are lost, and cannot
help yourself. This may shake the foundation of your hopes,
if you never saw your absolute need of Christ and his grace,
but think to contrive for yourself by your civility,
morality, drowsy wishes, and duties, and by a faith and
repentance which have sprung out of your natural powers,
without the power and efficacy of the grace of Christ. 0 be
convinced of your absolute need of Christ, and His
overcoming grace, believe your utter inability to recover
yourself, that so you may be humbled, shaken out of your
self-confidence, and lie down in dust and ashes, groaning
out your miserable case before the Lord. A proper sense of
your natural impotence, the impotence of depraved human
nature, would be a step towards a delivery.
Thus far of man's natural state, the state of entire
depravity.
END
This article was been extracted from Boston's classic work
Human Nature In Its Fourfold State (Chapter 3, pp. 183-197).
This text, which was first published in 1720, is now in the
public domain and may be freely copied and distributed. The
material was scanned and edited by Shane Rosenthal from
Reformation Ink.
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