CHAPTER 12
DIRECTIONS HOW TO
LEAD A HEAVENLY LIFE UPON EARTH.
I. The hinderances to a heavenly life; 1. Living in any
known sin; 2. An earthly mind; 3. Ungodly companions; 4. A notional religion;
5. A haughty spirit; 6. A slothful spirit; 7; Resting in preparatives for a
heavenly life, without the thing itself. II. The duties which will promote a
heavenly life: 1. Be convinced that heaven is the only treasure and happiness;
2. Labor to know your interest in it; 3. And how near it is; 4. Frequently and
seriously talk of it; 5. Endeavor, in every duty, to raise your affections
nearer to it; 6. To the same purpose improve every object and event; 7. Be much
in the angelical work of praise; 8. Possess your souls with believing thoughts
of the infinite love of God; 9. Carefully observe and cherish the motions of
the Spirit of God; 10. Nor ever neglect the due care of your bodily health.
As thou valuest the comforts of a heavenly conversation, I
must here charge thee, from God, to avoid carefully some dangerous hinderances;
and then faithfully and diligently to practice such duties as will
especially assist thee in attaining to a heavenly life.
First. Let us consider those HINDERANCES which are to
he avoided with all possible care.
1. Living in any known sin is a grand impediment to a
heavenly life. What havoc will this make in thy soul! O the joys that this hath
destroyed! the ruin it hath made amongst men's graces! the soul-strengthening
duties it hath hindered! Christian reader, art thou one that hast used violence
with thy conscience? Art thou a wilful neglecter of known duty, either public,
private, or secret? Art thou a slave to thine appetite, or to any other
commanding sense? Art thou a proud seeker of thine own esteem? Art thou a
peevish and passionate person, ready to take fire at every word, or look, or
supposed slight? Art thou a deceiver of others in thy dealings, or one that
will be rich, right or wrong? If this be thy case, I dare say heaven and thy
soul are very great strangers. These "beams in thine eye" will not suffer thee
to look to heaven; they will be "a cloud between thee and thy God." When thou
dost but attempt to study eternity and gather refreshment from the life to
come, thy sin will presently look thee in the face, and say, "These things
belong not to thee. How shouldst thou take comfort from heaven, who takest so
much pleasure in the lusts of the flesh?" How will this damp thy joys, and make
the thoughts of that day and state become thy trouble and not thy delight!
Every wilful sin will be to thy joys as water to the fire; when thou thinkest
to quicken them, this will quench them. It will utterly indispose and disable
thee, that thou canst no more ascend in divine meditation than a bird can fly
when its wings are clipped. Sin cuts the very sinews of this heavenly life. O
man! what a life dost thou lose! What daily delights dost thou sell for vile
lusts! If heaven and hell can meet together, and God become a lover of sin,
then mayst thou live in thy sin, and in the foretastes of glory and have a
conversation in heaven, though thou cherish thy corruption. And take heed lest
it banish thee from heaven, as it does thy heart. And though thou be not
guilty, and knowest no reigning sin in thy soul, think what a sad thing it
would be, if ever this should prove thy case. Watch, therefore especially
resolve to keep from the occasions of sin, and out of the way of temptations.
What need have we daily to pray, "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us
from evil!"
2. An earthly mind is another hinderance carefully to
be avoided. God and mammon, earth and heaven cannot both have the delight of
thy heart. When the heavenly believer is blessing himself in his God, and
rejoicing in hope of the glory to come; perhaps thou art blessing thyself in
thy worldly prosperity, and rejoicing in hope of thy thriving here. When he is
comforting his soul in the views of Christ, of angels and saints, whom he shall
live with for ever; then thou art comforting thyself with thy wealth, in
looking over thy bills and bonds, thy goods, thy cattle, or thy buildings; and
in thinking of the favor of the great, of the pleasure of a plentiful estate,
of larger provisions for thy children after thee, of the advancement of thy
family, or the increase of thy dependants. If Christ pronounced him a fool that
said, "Soul, take thy ease; thou hast much goods laid up for many years;" how
much more so art thou, who, knowingly, speakest in thy heart the same words!
Tell, what difference between this fool's expressions and thy affections?
Remember, thou hast to do with the Searcher of hearts. Certainly, so much as
thou delightest and takest up thy rest on earth, so much of thy delight in God
is abated. Thine earthly mind may consist with thy outward profession and
common duties, but it cannot consist with this heavenly duty. Thou thyself
knowest how seldom and cold, how cursory and reserved thy thoughts have been of
the joys above, ever since thou didst trade so eagerly for the world.
O the cursed madness of many that seem to be religious! They
thrust themselves into a multitude of employments, till they are so loaded with
labors and clogged with cares, that their souls are as unfit to converse with
God, as a man to walk with a mountain on his back; and as unapt to soar in
meditation, as their bodies to leap above the sun! And when they have lost that
heaven upon earth which they might have had, they take up with a few rotten
arguments to prove it lawful; though, indeed, they cannot. I advise thee,
Christian, who hast tasted the pleasures of a heavenly life, if ever thou
wouldst taste them more, avoid this devouring gulf of an earthly mind. If once
thou come to this, that thou "wilt be rich," thou fallest into temptation and a
snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts. Keep these things loose about
thee like thy upper garments, that thou mayest lay them by whenever there is
need; but let God and glory be to next thy heart. Ever remember that "the
friendship of the world is enmity with God. Whosoever, therefore, will be a
friend of the world, is the enemy of God." "Love not the world, neither the
things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father
is not in him." This is plain dealing, and happy he that faithfully receives
it!
3. Beware of the company of the ungodly. Not that I
would dissuade thee from necessary converse, or from doing them any office of
love; especially not from endeavoring the good of their souls, as long as thou
hast any opportunity or hope; nor would I have thee to conclude them to be dogs
and swine, in order to evade the duty of reproof; nor even to judge them such
at all, as long as there is any hope for the better; much less can I approve of
their practice, who conclude men to be dogs or swine before ever they
faithfully and lovingly admonish them, or perhaps before they have known them,
or spoken with them. But it is the unnecessary society of ungodly men, and too
much familiarity with unprofitable companions, from which I would dissuade you.
Not only the profane, the swearer, the drunkard, and the enemies of godliness
will prove hurtful companions to us--though these indeed are chiefly to be
avoided; but too frequent society with persons merely civil and moral, whose
conversation is empty and unedifying, may much divert our thoughts from heaven.
Our backwardness is such, that we need the most constant and powerful helps. A
stone or a clod is as fit to rise and fly in the air, as our hearts are
naturally to move toward heaven. You need not hinder the rocks from flying up
to the sky; it is sufficient that you do not help them; and surely, if our
spirits have not great assistance, they may easily be kept from soaring upward,
though they should never meet with the least impediment. O think of this in the
choice of your company! When your spirits are so disposed for heaven that you
need no help to lift them up, but, as flames, you are always mounting, and
carrying with you all that is in your way, then, indeed, you may be less
careful of your company; but, till then, as you love the delights of a heavenly
life, be careful herein. What will it advantage thee in a divine life, to hear
how the market goes, or what the weather is, or is likely to be, or what news
is stirring? This is the discourse of earthly men. What will it conduce to the
raising of thy heart to God, to hear that this is an able minister, or that an
eminent Christian, or this an excellent sermon, or that an excellent book; or
to hear some difficult but unimportant controversy? Yet this, for the most
part, is the sweetest discourse thou art like to have from a formal,
speculative, dead-hearted professor. Nay, if thou hadst been newly warming thy
heart in the contemplation of the blessed joys above, would not this discourse
benumb thy affections and quickly freeze thy heart again? I appeal to the
judgment of any man that hath tried it, and maketh observations on the frame of
his spirit. Men cannot well talk of one thing and mind another, especially
things of such different natures. You, young men, who are most liable to this
temptation, think seriously of what I say; can you have your hearts in heaven
while among your roaring companions in an alehouse or tavern? or when you work
in your shops with those whose common language is oaths, "filthiness, or
foolish talking or jesting?" Nay, let me tell you, if you choose such company
when you might have better, and find most delight in such, you are far from a
heavenly conversation that, as yet, you have no title to heaven at all, and in
that state shall never come there. If your treasure was there, your heart could
not be on things so distant. In a word, our company will be a part of our happiness
in heaven, and it is a singular part of our furtherance to it, or hinderance
from it.
4. Avoid frequent disputes about lesser truths, and a
religion that lies only in opinions. They are usually least acquainted with
a heavenly life, who are violent disputers about the circumstantials of
religion. He whose religion is all in his opinions, will be most frequently and
zealously speaking his opinions; and he whose religion lies in the knowledge
and love of God in Christ, will be most delightfully speaking of that happy
time when he shall enjoy them. He is a rare and precious Christian, who is
skilful to improve well-known truths. Therefore let me advise you who aspire
after a heavenly life, not to spend too much of your thoughts, your time, your
zeal, or your speech, upon disputes that less concern your souls; but when
hypocrites are feeding on husks or shells, do you feed on the joys above. I
wish you were able to defend every truth of God, and to this end would read and
study; but still I would have the chief truths to be chiefly studied, and none
to cast out your thoughts of eternity. The least controverted points are
usually most weighty, and of most necessary, frequent use to our souls.
Therefore study well such Scripture precepts as these: "Him that is weak in the
faith receive ye, but not to doubtful disputations. Foolish and unlearned
questions avoid, knowing that they do gender strifes. And the servant of the
Lord must not strive." "Avoid foolish questions, and genealogies, and
contentions, and strivings about the law; for they are unprofitable and vain."
"If any man teach otherwise, and consent not to wholesome words, even the words
of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to the doctrine which is according to godliness,
he is proud, knowing nothing, but doting about questions and strifes of words,
whereof cometh envy, strife, railings, evil surmisings, perverse disputings of
men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth, supposing that gain is
godliness; from such withdraw thyself."
5. Take heed of a proud and lofty spirit. There is such
an antipathy between this sin and God, that thou wilt never get thy heart near
him, nor get him near thy heart, as long as this prevaileth in it. If it cast
the angels out of heaven, it must needs keep thy heart from heaven. If it cast
our first parents out of paradise, and separated between the Lord and us, and
brought his curse on all the creatures here below, it will certainly keep our
hearts from paradise, and increase the cursed separation from our God.
Intercourse with God will keep men lowly, and that lowliness will promote their
intercourse. When a man is used to be much with God, and taken up in the study
of his glorious attributes, he abhors himself in dust and ashes; and that
self-abhorrence is his best preparative to obtain admittance to God again.
Therefore, after a soul-humbling day, or in times of trouble, when the soul is
lowest, it useth to have freest access to God, and savor most of the life
above. The delight of God is in "him that is poor, and of a contrite spirit,
and trembleth at his word;" and the delight of such a soul is in God; and where
there is mutual delight, there will be freest admittance, heartiest welcome,
and most frequent converse. But God is so far from dwelling in the soul that is
proud, that he will not admit it to any near access. "The proud he knoweth afar
off;" "God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble." A proud mind
is high in conceit, self-esteem, and carnal aspiring; a humble mind is high
indeed in God's esteem, and in holy aspiring. These two sorts of
high-mindedness are most of all opposite to each other, as we see most wars are
between princes and princes, and not between a prince and a ploughman.
Well, then, art thou a man of worth in thy own eyes? Art thou
delighted when thou hearest of thy esteem with men, and much dejected when thou
hearest that they slight thee? Dost thou love those best that honor thee, and
think meanly of them that do not, though they be otherwise men of godliness and
honesty? Must thou have thy humors fulfilled, and thy judgment be a rule, and
thy word a law to all about thee? Are thy passions kindled if thy word or will
be crossed? Art thou ready to judge humility to be sordid baseness, and knowest
not how to submit to humble confession, when thou has sinned against God or
injured thy brother? Art thou one that lookest strange at the godly poor, and
art most ashamed to be their companion? Canst thou not serve God in a low place
as well as a high? Are thy boastings restrained more by prudence or artifice
than humility? Dost thou desire to have all men's eyes upon thee, and to hear
them say, "This is he?" Art thou unacquainted with the deceitfulness and
wickedness of thy heart? Art thou more ready to defend thy innocence, than
accuse thyself, or confess thy fault? Canst thou hardly bear a close reproof,
or digest plain dealing? If these symptoms be undeniably in thy heart, thou art
a proud person. There is too much of hell abiding in thee, to have any
acquaintance with heaven; thy soul is too like the devil, to have any
familiarity with God. A proud man makes himself his god, and sets up himself as
his idol; how, then, can his affections be set on God? how can he possibly have
his heart in heaven? Invention and memory may possibly furnish his tongue with humble
and heavenly expressions, but in his spirit there is no more heaven than there
is humility. I speak the more of it, because it is the most common and
dangerous sin in morality, and most promotes the great sin of infidelity.
O Christian! if thou wouldst live continually in the presence
of thy Lord, lie in the dust, and he will thence take thee up. "Learn of him to
be meek and lowly; and thou shalt find rest unto thy soul." Otherwise thy soul
will be "like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire
and dirt;" and instead of these sweet delights in God, thy pride will fill thee
with perpetual disquiet. As he that humbleth himself as a little child shall
hereafter be greatest in the kingdom of heaven, so shall he now be greatest in
the foretastes of that kingdom. God "dwells with a contrite and humble spirit,
to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite
ones." Therefore, "humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and he shall
lift you up." And when "others are cast down, then thou shalt say, there is
lifting up; and he shall save the humble person."
6. A slothful spirit is another impediment to this heavenly
life. And I verily think there is nothing hinders it more than this in men
of a good understanding. If it were only the exercise of the body, the moving
of the lips, the bending of the knee, men would as commonly step to heaven as
they go to visit a friend. But to separate our thoughts and affections from the
world, to draw forth all our graces, and increase each in its proper object,
and hold them to it till the work prospers in our hands; this, this is the
difficulty. Reader, heaven is above thee, and dost thou think to travel this
steep ascent without labor and resolution? Canst thou get that earthly heart to
heaven, and bring that backward mind to God, while thou liest still and takest
thine ease? If lying down at the foot of the hill, and looking toward the top,
and wishing we were there, would serve the turn, then we should have daily
travellers for heaven. But "the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the
violent take it by force." There must be violence used to get these
first-fruits, as well as to get the full possession. Dost thou not feel it so,
though I should not tell thee? Will thy heart get upward, except thou drive it?
Thou knowest that heaven is all thy hope; that nothing below can yield thee
rest; that a heart, seldom thinking of heaven, can draw but little comfort
thence; and yet dost thou not lose thy opportunities and lie below, when thou
shouldst walk above and live with God? Dost thou not commend the sweetness of a
heavenly life, and judge those the best Christians that use it, and yet never
try thyself? As the sluggard that stretches himself on his bed and cries, O
that this were working! so dost thou talk, and trifle, and live at thy ease,
and say, O that I could get my heart to heaven! How many read books and hear
sermons, expecting to hear of some easier way, or to meet with a shorter course
to comfort than they are ever like to find in Scripture! Or they ask for
directions for a heavenly life, and if the hearing them will serve, they will
be heavenly Christians; but if we show them their work, and tell them they
cannot have these delights on easier terms, then they leave us, as the young
man left Christ, sorrowful.
If thou art convinced, reader, that this work is necessary to
thy comfort, set upon it resolutely: if thy heart draw back, force it on with
the command of reason; if thy reason begin to dispute, produce the command of
God, and urge thy own necessity, with the other considerations suggested in the
former chapter. Let not such an incomparable treasure lie before thee, with thy
hand in thy bosom; nor thy life be a continual vexation, when it might be a
continual feast, only because thou wilt not exert thyself. Sit not still with a
disconsolate spirit while comforts grow before thine eyes, like a man in the
midst of a garden of flowers, that will not rise to get them and partake of
their sweetness. This I know, Christ is the fountain; but the well is deep, and
thou must get forth this water before thou canst be refreshed with it. I know,
so far as you are spiritual, you need not all this striving and violence; but
in part you are carnal, and as long as it is so, there is need of labor. It was
the custom of the Parthians not to give their children any meat in the morning
before they saw the sweat on their faces with some labor. And you shall find
this to be God's usual course, not to give his children the tastes of his delights
till they begin to sweat in seeking after them. Judge, therefore, whether a
heavenly life or thy carnal ease be better; and, as a wise man, make thy choice
accordingly. Yet, let me add for thy encouragement, thou needest not employ thy
thoughts more than thou now dost; it is only to fix them upon better and more
pleasant objects. Employ but as many serious thoughts every day upon the
excellent glory of the life to come, as thou now doest upon worldly affairs,
yea, on vanities and impertinences, and thy heart will soon be in heaven. On
the whole, it is "the field of the slothful that is all grown over with thorns
and nettles; and the desire of the slothful killeth his joy, for his hands
refuse to labor; and it is the slothful man that saith, There is a lion in the
way, a lion is in the streets. As the door turneth upon its hinges, so doth the
slothful man upon his bed. The slothful hideth his hand in his bosom; it
grieveth him to bring it again to his mouth," though it be to feed himself with
the food of life. What is this but throwing away our consolations, and
consequently the precious blood that bought them? For "he that is slothful in
his work, is brother to him that is a great waster." Apply this to thy
spiritual work, and study well the meaning of it.
7. Contentment with the mere preparatives to the heavenly
life, while we are utter strangers to the life itself, is also a dangerous
and secret hinderance; when we take up with the mere study of heavenly things,
and the notions of them, or the talking with one another about them; as if this
were enough to make us heavenly. None are in more danger of the snare, than
those that are employed in leading the devotions of others, especially
preachers of the Gospel. O how easily may such be deceived! while they do
nothing so much as read and study of heaven; preach, and pray, and talk of
heaven: is not this the heavenly life? Alas! all this is but mere preparation;
this is but collecting the materials, not erecting the building itself; it is
but gathering the manna for others, and not eating and digesting it ourselves.
As he that sits at home may draw exact maps of countries, and yet never see
them nor travel toward them; so may you describe to others the joys of heaven,
and yet never come near it in your own hearts. A blind man, by learning, may
dispute of light and colors; so may you set forth to others that heavenly light
which never enlightened your own souls, and bring that fire from the hearts of
your people which never warmed your own hearts. What heavenly passages had
Balaam in his prophecies, yet how little of it in his spirit! Nay, we are under
a more subtle temptation than any other men to draw us from this heavenly life.
Studying and preaching of heaven more resembles a heavenly life than thinking
and talking of the world does; and the resemblance is apt to deceive us. This
is to die the most miserable death, even to famish ourselves because we have
bread on our tables; and to die for thirst while we draw water for others;
thinking it enough that we have daily to do with it, though we never drink for
the refreshment of our own souls.
Secondly, Having thus showed what hinderances will
resist the work, I expect that thou resolve against them, consider them
seriously, and avoid them faithfully, or else thy labor will be vain. I must
also tell thee that I here expect thy promise, as thou valuest the delights of
these foretastes of heaven, to make conscience of performing the following
DUTIES; particularly,
1. Be convinced that heaven is the only treasure and happiness,
and labor to know what a treasure and happiness it is. If thou do not believe
it to be the chief good, thou wilt never set thy heart upon it; and this
conviction must sink into thy affections; for if it be only a notion, it will
have little efficacy. If Eve once supposes she sees more worth in the forbidden
fruit than in the love and enjoyment of God, no wonder if it have more of her
heart than God. If your judgment once prefer the delights of the flesh before
the delights of the presence of God, it is impossible your heart should be in
heaven. As it is ignorance of the emptiness of things below that makes men so
overvalue them; so it is ignorance of the high delights above which is the
cause that men so little mind them. If you see a purse of gold, and believe it
to be but counters, it will not entice your affections to it. It is not the
real excellence of a thing itself, but its known excellence, that excites
desire. If an ignorant man see a book containing the secrets of arts or
sciences, he values it no more than a common scroll, because he knows not what
is in it; but he that knows it, highly values it, and can even forbear his
meat, drink and sleep, to read it. As the Jews killed the Messiah while they
waited for him, because they did not know him; so the world cries out for rest,
and busily seeks for delight and happiness, because they know it not; for did
they thoroughly know what it is, they could not so slight the everlasting
treasure.
2. Labor also to know that heaven is thy own happiness.
We may confess heaven to be the best condition, though we despair of enjoying
it; and we may desire and seek it, if we see the attainment but probable; but
we can never delightfully rejoice in it till we are in some measure persuaded
of our title to it. What comfort is it to a man that is naked, to see the rich
attire of others? What delight is it for a man that hath not a house to put his
head in, to see the sumptuous buildings of others? Would not all this rather
increase his anguish, and make him more sensible of his own misery? So, for a
man to know the excellencies of heaven, and not know whether he shall ever
enjoy them, may raise desire and urge pursuit, but he will have little joy. Who
will set his heart on another man's possessions? If your houses, your goods,
your cattle, your children were not your own, you would less mind them, and
less delight in them. O Christian! rest not till you can call this rest your
own: bring thy heart to the bar of trial; set the qualifications of the saints
on one side, and of thy soul on the other, and then judge how nearly they
resemble. Thou hast the same word to judge thyself by now, as thou must be
judged by at the great day. Mistake not the Scripture's description of a saint,
that thou neither acquit nor condemn thyself upon mistakes. For as groundless
hopes tend to confusion, and are the greatest cause of most men's damnation; so
groundless doubts tend to and are the great cause of the saints' perplexity and
distress. Therefore, lay thy foundation for trial safely, and proceed in the
work deliberately and resolutely, nor give over till thou canst say either thou
hast or hast not yet a title to this rest. O if men did truly know that God is
their own Father, and Christ their only Redeemer and Head, and that those are
their own everlasting habitations, and that there they must abide and be happy
for ever; how could they but be transported with the forethoughts thereof! If a
Christian could but look upon sun, moon and stars, and reckon all his own in
Christ, and say, "These are the blessings that my Lord hath procured me, and
things incomparably greater than these;" what holy raptures would his spirit
feel!
The more do they sin against their own comforts, as well as
against the grace of the Gospel, who plead for their unbelief, and cherish
distrustful thoughts of God, and injurious thoughts of their Redeemer; who
represent the covenant as if it were of works, and not of grace; and Christ as
an enemy rather than a Savior; as if he were willing they should die in their unbelief,
when he hath invited them so often and so affectionately, and suffered the
agonies that they should suffer. Wretches that we are! to be keeping up
jealousies of our Lord when we should be rejoicing in his love. As if any man
could choose Christ before Christ hath chosen him; or any man were more willing
to be happy than Christ is to make him happy. Away with these injurious if not
blasphemous thoughts! If ever thou hast harbored such thoughts in thy breast,
cast them from thee, and take heed how thou ever entertainest them more. God
hath written the names of his people in heaven, as you use to write your names
or marks on your goods; and shall we be attempting to raze them out, and to
write our names on the doors of hell? But blessed be "God, whose foundation
standeth sure;" and who "keepeth us by his power, through faith, unto
salvation."
3. Labor to apprehend how near thy rest is. What we
think near at hand, we are more sensible of than that which we behold at a
distance. When judgments or mercies are afar off, we talk of them with little
concern; but when they draw close to us, we tremble at, or rejoice in them.
This makes men think on heaven so insensibly, because they conceive it at too
great a distance; they look on it as twenty, thirty, or forty years off. How
much better were it to receive "the sentence of death in ourselves," and to
look on eternity as near at hand! While I am thinking and writing of it, it
hasteneth near, and I am even entering into it before I am aware. While thou
are reading this, whoever thou art, time posteth on, and thy life will be gone,
"as a tale that is told." If you verily believed you should die tomorrow, how
seriously would you think of heaven to-night! When Samuel had told Saul,
"Tomorrow shalt thou be with me," this struck him to the heart. And if Christ
should say to a believing soul, "Tomorrow shalt thou be with me," this would
bring him in spirit to heaven beforehand. Do but suppose that you are still
entering into heaven, and it will greatly help you more seriously to mind it.
4. Let thy eternal rest be the subject of thy frequent
serious discourse, especially with those that can speak from their hearts,
and are seasoned themselves with a heavenly nature. It is pity Christians
should ever meet together without some talk of their meeting in heaven, or of
the way to it, before they part. It is a pity so much time is spent in vain
conversation and useless disputes, and not a serious word of heaven among them.
Methinks we should meet together on purpose to warm our spirits with
discoursing of our rest. To hear a Christian set forth that blessed, glorious
state, with life and power, from the promises of the Gospel, methinks should
make us say, "Did not our hearts burn within us while he opened to us the
Scriptures?" If a Felix will tremble when he hears his judgment powerfully
represented, why should not the believer be revived when he hears his eternal
rest described? Wicked men can be delighted in talking together of their
wickedness; and should not Christians then be delighted in talking of Christ,
and the heirs of heaven in talking of their inheritance? This may make our
hearts revive, as did Jacob's to hear the message that called him to Goshen,
and to see the chariots that should bring him to Joseph. O that we were furnished
with skill and resolution to turn the stream of men's common discourse to these
more sublime and precious things! and, when men begin to talk of things
unprofitable, that we could tell how to put in a word for heaven, and say, as
Peter of his bodily food, "Not so, for I have never eaten any thing that is
common or unclean!" O the good that we might both do and receive by this
course! Had it not been to deter us from unprofitable conversation, Christ
would not have talked of our "giving an account of every idle word in the day
of judgment." Say, then, as the Psalmist, when you are in company, "Let my
tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief
joy." then you shall find it true, that a "wholesome tongue is a tree of life."
5. Endeavor, in every duty, to raise thy affections nearer
to heaven. God's end in the institution of his ordinances was that they
should be as so many steps to advance us to our rest, and by which, in
subordination to Christ, we might daily ascend in our affections. Let this be
thy end in using them, and doubtless they will not be unsuccessful. How have
you been rejoiced by a few lines from a friend, when you could not see him face
to face! And may we not have intercourse with God in his ordinances, though our
persons be yet so far remote? May not our spirits rejoice in reading those
lines which contain our legacy and charter for heaven? With what gladness and
triumph may we read the expressions of divine love, and hear of our celestial
country, though we have not yet the happiness to behold it! Men that are
separated by sea and land can by letters carry on great and gainful trades; and
may not a Christian, in the wise improvement of duties, drive on this happy
trade for rest? Come, then, renounce formality, custom and applause, and kneel
down in secret or public prayer, with hope to get thy heart nearer to God
before thou risest up. When thou openest thy Bible, or other book, hope to meet
with some passage of divine truth, and such a blessing of the Spirit with it as
will give thee a fuller taste of heaven. When thou are going to the house of
God, say, "I hope to meet with somewhat from God to raise my affections before
I return; I hope the Spirit will give me his presence and sweeten my heart with
those celestial delights; I hope Christ will 'appear to me in that way, and
shine about me with light from heaven;' let me hear his instructing and
reviving voice, and cause the scales to fall from my eyes, that I may see more
of that glory than I ever yet saw. I hope, before I return, my Lord will bring
my heart within the view of rest, and set it before his Father's presence, that
I may return as 'the shepherds' from the heavenly vision, 'glorifying and
praising God for all the things I have heard and seen.'" When the Indians first
saw that the English could converse together by letters, they thought there was
some spirit enclosed in them. So would by-standers admire, when Christians have
communion with God in duties, what there is in those Scriptures, in that
sermon, in this prayer, that fills their hearts so full of joy, and so
transports them above themselves. Remember, therefore, always to pray for your
minister, that God would put some divine message into his mouth, which may
leave a heavenly relish upon your spirit.
6. Improve every object and every event to remind thy
soul of its approaching rest. As all providences and creatures are means to our
rest, so they point us to that as their end. God's sweetest dealings with us at
present would not be half so sweet as they are, if they did not intimate some
further sweetness. Thou takest but the bare earnest and overlookest the main
sum, when thou receivest thy mercies and forgettest thy crown. O that
Christians were skilful in this art! You can open your Bible; learn to open the
volumes of creation and providence, to read there also of God and glory. Thus
we might have a fuller taste of Christ and heaven in every common meal than
most men have in a sacrament. If thou prosper in the world, let it make thee more
sensible of thine eternal prosperity. If thou art weary with labor, let it make
the thoughts of thy eternal rest more sweet. If things go cross, let thy
desires be more earnest to have sorrows and sufferings for ever cease. Is thy
body refreshed with food or sleep? remember the inconceivable refreshment with
Christ. Dost thou hear any good news? remember what glad tidings it will be to
hear the trump of God and the applauding sentence of Christ. Art thou delighted
with the society of the saints? remember what the perfect society in heaven
will be. Is God communicating himself to thy spirit? remember the time of thy
highest advancement, when both thy communion and joy shall be full. Dost thou
hear the raging noise of the wicked and the confusions of the world? think of
the blessed harmony in heaven. Dost thou hear the tempest of war? remember the
day when thou shalt be in perfect peace, under the wings of the Prince of Peace
for ever. Thus, every condition and creature affords us advantages for a
heavenly life, if we had but hearts to improve them.
7. Be much in the angelic work of praise. The more
heavenly the employment, the more it will make the spirit heavenly. Praising
God is the work of angels and saints in heaven, and will be our own everlasting
work; and if we were more in it now, we should be more like what we shall be
then. As desire, faith and hope are of shorter continuance than love and joy,
so also preaching, prayer, and ordinances, and all means for expressing and
confirming our faith and hope, shall cease, when our triumphant expressions of
love and joy shall abide for ever. The liveliest emblem of heaven that I know
upon earth, is when the people of God, in the deep sense of his excellency and
bounty, from hearts abounding with love and joy, join together, both in heart
and voice, in the cheerful and melodious singing of his praises. These
delights, like the testimony of the Spirit, witness themselves to be of God,
and bring the evidences of their heavenly parentage along with them.
Little do we know how we wrong ourselves by shutting out of
our prayers the praises of God, or allowing them so narrow a room as we usually
do, while we are copious enough in our confessions and petitions. Reader, I
entreat thee, remember this: let praises have a larger room in thy duties; keep
matter ready at hand to feed thy praise, as well as matter for confession and
petition. To this end study the excellencies and goodness of the Lord as
frequently as thy own wants and unworthiness; the mercies thou has received, and
those which are promised, as often as the sins thou hast committed. "Praise is
comely for the upright. Whoso offereth praise, glorifieth God. Praise ye the
Lord, for the Lord is good; sing praises unto his name, for it is pleasant. Let
us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our
lips, giving thanks to his name." Had not David a most heavenly spirit, who was
so much in this heavenly work? Doth it not sometimes raise our hearts when we
only read the song of Moses and the psalms of David? How much more would it
raise and refresh us to be skilful and frequent in the work ourselves! O the
madness of youth, that lay out that vigor of body and mind upon vain delights
and fleshly lusts, which is so fit for the noblest work of man! And O the
sinful folly of many of the saints, who drench their spirits in continual
sadness, and waste their days in complaints and groans, and so make themselves,
both in body and mind, unfit for this sweet and heavenly work! Instead of
joining with the people of God in his praises, they are questioning their
worthiness and studying their miseries; and so rob God of his glory and
themselves of their consolation. But the greatest destroyer of our comfort in
this duty, is our taking up with the tune and melody, and suffering the heart
to be idle which ought to perform the principal part of the work, and use the
melody to revive and exhilarate itself.
8. Ever keep thy soul possessed with believing thoughts of
the infinite love of God. Love is the attractive of love. Few so vile, but
will love those that love them. No doubt it is the death of our heavenly life
to have hard thoughts of God, to conceive of him as one that would rather damn
than save us. This is to put the blessed God into the similitude of Satan. When
our ignorance and unbelief have drawn the most deformed picture of God in our
imaginations, then we complain that we cannot love him, nor delight in him.
This is the case of many thousand Christians. Alas, that we should thus
blaspheme God and blast our own joys! Scripture assures us that "God is love;
that fury is not in him; that he hath no pleasure in the death of the wicked,
but that the wicked turn from his way and live." Much more hath he testified
his love to his chosen, and his full resolution to save them. O that we could
always think of God as we do of a friend; as of one that unfeignedly loves us,
even more than we do ourselves; whose very heart is set upon us to do us good,
and hath therefore provided for us an everlasting dwelling with himself! it
would not then be so hard to have our hearts ever with him. Where we love most
heartily, we shall think most sweetly and most freely. I fear most Christians
think higher of the love of a hearty friend than of the love of God; and what
wonder, then, if they love their friends better than God, and trust them more
confidently than God and had rather live with them than with God?
9. Carefully observe and cherish the motions of the Spirit
of God. If ever thy soul get above this earth, and get acquainted with this
heavenly life, the Spirit of God must be to thee as the chariot to Elijah; yea,
the very living principle by which thou must move and ascend. O, then, grieve
not thy guide, quench not thy life, knock not off thy chariot wheel! You little
think how much the life of all your graces and the happiness of your souls
depend upon your ready and cordial obedience to the Spirit. When the Spirit
urges thee to secret prayer; or forbids thee thy transgressions; or points to
thee the way in which thou shouldst go; and thou wilt not regard; no wonder if
heaven and thy soul be strange. If thou wilt not follow the Spirit while he
would draw thee to Christ and thy duty; how should he lead thee to heaven, and
bring thy heart into the presence of God? What supernatural help, what bold
access shall the soul find in its approaches to the Almighty, that constantly
obeys the Spirit? And how backward, how dull, how ashamed will he be in these
addresses, who hath often broke away from the Spirit that would have guided him?
Christian reader, dost thou not feel sometimes a strong impression to retire
from the world and draw near to God? Do not disobey, but take the offer, and
hoist up thy sails while this blessed gale may be had. The more of the Spirit
we resist, the deeper will it wound; and the more we obey, the speedier will be
our pace.
10. I advise thee, as a further help to this heavenly life, neglect
not the due care of thy bodily health. Thy body is a useful servant if thou
give it its due, and no more than its due; but it is a most devouring tyrant if
thou suffer it to have what it unreasonably desires; and it is as a blunted
knife if thou unjustly deny what is necessary to its support. When we consider
how frequently men offend on both extremes, and how few use their bodies
aright, we cannot wonder if they be much hindered in their converse with
heaven. Most men are slaves to their appetite, and can scarcely deny any thing
to their flesh, and are therefore willingly carried by it to their sports, or
profits, or vain companions, when they should raise their minds to God and
heaven. As you love your souls, "make not provision for the flesh, to fulfil
the lust thereof," but remember, "to be carnally minded is death; because the
carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God,
neither indeed can be. So, then, they that are in the flesh cannot please God.
Therefore, brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh, to live after the flesh.
For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die; but if ye, through the Spirit, do
mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live." There are a few who much hinder
their heavenly joy by denying the body its necessaries, and so making it unable
to serve them: if such wronged their flesh only, it would be no great matter; but
they wrong their souls also; as he that spoils the house injures the
inhabitants. When the body is sick and the spirits languish, how heavily do we
move in the thoughts and joys of heaven.