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The Manner in
Which
the Salvation
of the Soul is to be Sought
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GENESIS 6:22
Thus did Noah; according to all that God commanded him, so did he
CONCERNING these words, I would observe three things:
1. What it was that God commanded Noah, to which these words refer. It was the building
of an ark according to the particular direction of God, against the time when the
flood of waters should come; and the laying up of food for himself, his family, and
the other animals, which were to be preserved in the ark. We have the particular
commands which God gave him respecting this affair, from the 14th verse, "Make
thee an ark of gopher wood," &c
2. We may observe the special design of the work which God had enjoined upon Noah:
it was to save himself and his family, when the rest of the world should be drowned.
See ver. 17, 18. We may observe Noah's obedience. He obeyed God: thus did Noah. And
his obedience was thorough and universal: according to all that God commanded him,
so did he. He not only began, but he went through his work, which God had commanded
him to undertake for his salvation from the flood. To this obedience the apostle
refers in Heb. 11:7, "By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen
as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house.
DOCTRINE.
We should be willing to engage in and go through great undertakings, in order to
our own salvation.
The building of the ark, which was enjoined upon Noah, that he and his family might
be saved, was a great undertaking: the ark was a building of vast size; the length
of it being three hundred cubits, the breadth of it fifty cubits, and the height
of it thirty cubits. A cubit, till of late, was by learned men reckoned to be equal
to a foot and a half of our measure. But lately some learned men of our nation have
travelled into Egypt, and other ancient countries, and have measured some ancient
buildings there, which are of several thousand years standing, and of which ancient
histories give us the dimensions in cubits; particularly the pyramids of Egypt, which
are standing entire at this day. By measuring these, and by comparing the measure
in feet with the ancient accounts of their measure in cubits, a cubit is found to
be almost two and twenty inches. Therefore learned men more lately reckon a cubit
much larger than they did formerly. So that the ark, reckoned so much larger every
way, will appear to be almost of double the bulk which was formerly ascribed to it
According to this computation of the cubit, it was more than five hundred and fifty
feet long, about ninety feet broad, and about fifty feet in height.
To build such a structure, with all those apartments and divisions in it which were
necessary, and in such a manner as to be fit to float upon the water for so long
a time, was then a great undertaking. It took Noah, with all the workmen he employed,
a hundred and twenty years, or thereabouts, to build it For so long it was, that
the Spirit of God strove, and the long-suffering God waited on the old world, as
you may see in Gen. 4:3: "My Spirit shall I not always strive with man; yet
his days shall be a hundred and twenty years." All this while the ark was a
preparing, as appears by 1 Pet. 3:20: "When once the long-suffering of God waited
in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing." It was a long time that
Noah constantly employed himself in this business. Men would esteem that undertaking
very great, which should keep them constantly employed even for one half of that
time. Noah must have had a great and constant care upon his mind for these one hundred
and twenty years, in superintending this work, and in seeing that all was done exactly
according to the directions which God had given him.
Not only was Noah himself continually employed, but it required a great number of
workmen to be constantly employed, during all that time, in procuring, and collecting,
and fitting the materials, and in putting them together in due form. How great a
thing was it for Noah to undertake such a work! For beside the continual care and
labor, it was a work of vast expense. It is not probable that any of that wicked
generation would put to a finger to help forward such a work, which doubtless they
believed was merely the fruit of Noah's folly, without full wages. Noah must needs
have been very rich, to be able to bear the expense of such a work, and to pay so
many workmen for so long a time. It would have been a very great expense for a prince;
and doubtless Noah was very rich, as Abraham and Job were afterwards. But it is probable
that Noah spent all his worldly substance in this work, thus manifesting his faith
in the word of God, by selling all he had, as believing there would surely come a
flood, which would destroy all; so that if he should keep what he had, it would be
of no service to him. Herein he has set us an example, showing us how we ought to
sell all for our salvation.
Noah's undertaking was of great difficulty, as it exposed him to the continual reproaches
of all his neighbors, for that whole one hundred and twenty years. None of them believed
what he told them of a flood which was about to drown the world. For a man to undertake
such a vast piece of work, under notion that it should be the means of saving him
when the world should be destroyed, it made him the continual laughing-stock of the
world. When he was about to hire workmen, doubtless all laughed at him, and we may
suppose, that though the workmen consented to work for wages, yet they laughed at
the folly of him who employed them. When the ark was begun, we may suppose that every
one that passed by and saw such a huge bulk stand there, laughed at, it, calling
it Noah's folly.
In these days, men are with difficulty brought to do or submit to that which makes
them the objects of the reproach of all their neighbors. Indeed if while some reproach
them, others stand by them and honor them, this will support them. But it is very
difficult for a man to go on in a way wherein he makes himself the laughing stock
of the whole world, and wherein he can find none who do not despise him. Where is
the man that can stand the shock of such a trial for twenty years?
But in such an undertaking as this, Noah at the divine direction, engaged and went
through it, that himself and his family might be saved from the common destruction
which was shortly about to come on the world. He began, and also made an end: "According
to all that God commanded him, so did he." Length of time did not weary him:
he did not grow weary of his vast expense. He stood the shock of the derision of
all his neighbors; and of all the world year after year: he did not grow weary of
being their laughing-stock, so as to give over his enterprise; but persevered in
it till the ark was finished. After this, he was at the trouble and charge of procuring
stores for the maintenance of his family, and of all the various kinds of creatures,
for so long a time. Such an undertaking he engaged in and went through in order to
a temporal salvation. How great an undertaking then should men be willing to engage
in and go through in order to their eternal salvation! A salvation from an eternal
deluge; from being overwhelmed with the billows of God's wrath of which Noah's flood
was but a shadow.
I shall particularly handle this doctrine under the three following propositions.
I. There is a work or business which must be undertaken and accomplished by men,
if they would be saved.
II. This business is a great undertaking. III. Men should be willing to enter upon
and go through this undertaking though it be great, seeing it is for their own salvation.
Proposition. There is a work or business which men must enter upon and accomplish,
in order to their salvation.-Men have no reason to expect to be saved in idleness,
or to go to heaven in a way of doing nothing. No; in order to it, there is a great
work, which must be not only begun, but finished-I shall speak upon this proposition,
in answer to two inquiries.
I. What is this work or business which must be undertaken and accomplished in order
to the salvation of men?
Answer. It is the work of seeking salvation in a way of constant observance of all
the duty to which God directs its in his word. If we would be saved, we must seek
salvation. For although men do not obtain heaven of themselves; they do not go thither
accidentally, or without any intention or endeavors of their own. God, in his word,
hath directed men to seek their salvation as they would hope to obtain it. There
is a race that is set before them, which they must run, and in that race come off
victors, in order to their winning the prize.
The Scriptures have told us what particular duties must be performed by us in order
to our salvation. It is not sufficient that men seek their salvation on in the observance
of some of those duties; but they must be observed universally. The work we have
to do is not an obedience only to some, but to all the commands of God; a compliance
with every institution of worship; a diligent use of all the appointed means of grace;
a doing of all duty towards God and towards man.-It is not sufficient that men have
some respect to all the commands of God, and that they may be said to seek their
salvation in some sort of observance of all the commands; but they must be devoted
to it.
They must not make this a business by the by, or a thing in which they are negligent
and careless, or which they do with a slack hand; but it must be their great business,
being attended to as their great concern. They must not only seek, but strive; they
must do what their hand findeth to do with their might, as men thoroughly engaged
in their minds, and influenced and set forward by great desire and strong resolution.
They must act as those that see so much of the importance of religion above all other
things, that every thing else must be as an occasional affair, and nothing must stand
in competition with its duties. This must be the one thing they do; Phil. 3:13, "This
one thing I do."-It must be the business to which they make all other affairs
give place, and to which they are ready to make other things a sacrifice. They must
be ready to part with pleasures and honor, estate and life, and to sell all, that
they may successfully accomplish this business.
It is required of every man, that he not only do something in this business, but
that he should devote himself to it; which implies that he should give up himself
to it, all his affairs, and all his temporal enjoyments. This is the import of taking
up the cross, of taking Christ's yoke upon us, and of denying ourselves to follow
Christ. The rich young man, who came kneeling to Christ to know what he should do
to he saved, Mark 10:17, in some sense sought salvation but did not obtain it. In
some sense he kept all the commands from his youth up; but was not cordially devoted
to this business. He had not made a sacrifice to it of all his enjoyments, as appeared
when Christ came to try him; he would not part with his estate for him.
It is not only necessary that men should seem to he very much engaged, and appear
as if they were devoted to their duty for a little while; but there must be a constant
devotedness, in a persevering way, as Noah was to the business of the building the
ark, going on with that great, difficult, and expensive affair, till it was finished,
and till the flood came. Men must not only be diligent in the use of the means of
grace, and be anxiously engaged to escape eternal ruin, till they obtain hope and
comfort; but afterwards they must persevere in the duties of religion, till the flood
come, the flood of death. Not only must the faculties, strength, and possessions
of men be devoted to this work, but also their time and their lives; they must give
up their whole lives to it, even to the very day when God causes the storms and floods
to come. This is the work or business which men have to do in order to their salvation.
Inquiry 2. Why is it needful that men should undertake to go through such a work
in order to their salvation?
Answer 1. Not to merit salvation, or to recommend them to the saving mercy of God.
Men are not saved on the account of any work of theirs, and yet they are not saved
without works. If we merely consider what it is for which, or on the account of which,
men are saved, no work at all in men is necessary to their salvation. In this respect
they are saved wholly without any work of theirs: Tit. iii. 5, "Not by works
of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the
washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost." We must indeed be
saved on the account of works; but not our own. It is on account of the works which
Christ hath done for us. Works are the fixed price of eternal life; it is fixed by
an eternal, unalterable rule of righteousness. But since the fall there is no hope
of our doing these works, without salvation offered freely without money and without
price. But,
2. Though it be not needful that we do any thing to merit salvation, which Christ
hath fully merited for all who believe in him; yet God, for wise and holy ends, hath
appointed, that we should come to final salvation in no other way, but that of good
works done by us. God did not save Noah on account of the labor and expense he was
at in building the ark. Noah's salvation from the flood was an instance of the free
and distinguishing mercy of God. Nor did God stand in need of Noah's care, or cost,
or labor, to build an ark. The same power which created the world, and which brought
the flood of waters upon the earth, could have made the ark in an instant, without
any care or cost to Noah, or any of the labor of those workmen who were employed
for so long a time. Yet God was pleased to appoint, that Noah should be saved in
this way. So God hath appointed that man should not be saved without his undertaking
and doing this work of which I have been speaking; and therefore we are commanded
"to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling," Philip. 2:12.
There are many wise ends to be answered by the establishment of such a work as prerequisite
to salvation. The glory of God requires it. For although God stand in no need of
any thing that men do to recommend them to his saving mercy, yet it would reflect
much on the glory of God's wisdom and holiness, to bestow salvation on men in such
a way as tends to encourage them in sloth and wickedness; or in any other way than
that which tends to promote diligence and holiness. Man was made capable of action,
with many powers of both body and mind fitting him for it. He was made for business
and not idleness and the main business for which he was made, was that of religion.
Therefore it becomes the wisdom of God to bestow salvation and happiness on man in
such a way as tends most to promote his end in this respect, and, to stir him up
to a diligent use of his faculties and talents.
It becomes the wisdom of God so to order it, that things of great value and importance
should not be obtained without great labor and diligence. Much human learning and
great moral accomplishments are not to be obtained without care and labor. It is
wisely so ordered, in order to maintain in man a due sense of the value of those
things which are excellent. If great things were in common easily obtained, it would
have a tendency to cause men to slight and undervalue them. Men commonly despise
those things which are cheap, and which are obtained without difficulty.
Although the work of obedience performed by men, be not necessary in order to merit
salvation; yet it is necessary in order to their being prepared for it. Men cannot
be prepared for salvation without seeking it in such a way as hath been described.
This is necessary in order that they have a proper sense of their own necessities,
and unworthiness; and in order that they be prepared and disposed to prize salvation
when bestowed, and be properly thankful to God for it. The requisition of so great
a work in order to our salvation is no way inconsistent with the freedom of the offer
of salvation; as after all it is both offered and bestowed without any respect to
our work, as the price or meritorious cause of our salvation, as I have already explained.
Besides, salvation bestowed in this way is better for us, more for our advantage
and happiness both in this and the future world, than if it were given without this
requisition.
II. Proposition. This work or business, which must be done in order to the salvation
of men, is a great undertaking. It often appears so to men upon whom it is urged.
Utterly to break off from all their sins, and to give up themselves forever to the
business of religion, without making a reserve of any one lust, submitting to and
complying with every command of God, in all cases, and persevering therein, appears
to many so great a thing, that they are in vain urged to undertake it. In so doing
it seems to them, that they should give up themselves to a perpetual bondage. The
greater part of men therefore choose to put it off, and keep it at as great a distance
as they can. They cannot bear to think of entering immediately on such a hard service,
and rather than do it, they will run the risk of eternal damnation, by putting it
off to an uncertain future opportunity.
Although the business of religion is far from really being as it appears to such
men, or the devil will be sure, if he can, to represent it in false colors to sinners,
and make it appear as black and as terrible as he can; yet it is indeed a great business,
a great undertaking, and it is fit that all who are urged to it should count the
cost beforehand, and be sensible of the difficulty attending it. For though the devil
discourages many from this undertaking, by representing it to be more difficult than
it really is; yet with others he takes a contrary course and flatters them it is
a very easy thing, a trivial business, which may be done at any time when they please,
and so emboldens them to defer it from that consideration. But let none conceive
any other notion of that business of religion, which is absolutely necessary to their
salvation, than that it is a great undertaking. It is so on the following accounts.
1. It is a business of great labor and care. There are many commands to be obeyed,
many duties to be done, duties to God, duties to our neighbor, and duties, to ourselves.
There is much opposition in the way of these duties from without. There is a subtle
and powerful adversary laying all manner of blocks in the way. There are innumerable
temptations of Satan to be resisted and repelled. There is great opposition from
the world, innumerable snares laid, on every side, many rocks and mountains to be
passed over, many streams to be passed through, and many flatteries and enticements
from a vain world to be resisted. There is a great opposition from within; a dull
and sluggish heart, which is exceedingly averse from that activity in religion which
is necessary; a carnal heart, which is averse from religion and spiritual exercises,
and continually drawing the contrary way; and a proud and a deceitful heart, in which
corruption will be exerting itself in all manner of ways. So that nothing can be
done to any effect without a most strict and careful watch, great labor and strife.
2. It is a constant in business.-In that business which requires great labor, men
love now and then to have a space of relaxation, that they may rest from their extraordinary
labor. But this is a business which must be followed every day. Luke ix. 23, "
If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily
and follow me." We must never give ourselves any relaxation from this business;
it must be continually prosecuted day after day. If sometimes we make a great stir
and bustle concerning religion, but then lay all aside to take our ease, and do so
from time to time, it will be of no good effect; we had even as good do nothing at
all. The business of religion so followed is never like to come to any good issue,
nor is the work ever like to be accomplished to any good purpose.
3. It is a great undertaking, as it is an undertaking of great expense.-We must,
therein sell all: we must follow this business at the expense of all our unlawful
pleasures and delights, at the expense of our carnal ease, often at the expense of
our substance, of our credit among men, the good will of our neighbors, at the expense
of all our earthly friends, and even at the expense of life itself. Herein it is
like Noah's undertaking to build the ark, which, as hath been shown was a costly
undertaking: it was expensive to his reputation among men, exposing him to be the
continual laughing-stock of all his neighbors and of the whole world: and it was
expensive to his estate, and probably cost him all that he had.
4. Sometimes the fear, trouble, and exercise of mind, which are undergone respecting
this business, and the salvation of the soul, are great and long continued, before
any comfort is obtained. Sometimes persons in this situation labor long in the dark,
and sometimes, as it were, in the very fire, they having great distress of conscience,
great fears, and many perplexing temptations, before they obtain light and comfort
to make their care and labor more easy to them. They sometimes earnestly, and for
a long time, seek comfort, but find it not, because they seek it not in a right manner,
nor in the right objects. God therefore hides his face. They cry, but God doth not
answer their prayers. They strive, but all seems in vain. They seem to themselves
not at all to get forward, or nearer to a deliverance from sin: but to go backward,
rather than forward. They see no glimmerings of light: things rather appear darker
and darker. Insomuch that they are often ready to be discouraged, and to sink under
the weight of their present distress, and under the prospect of future misery. In
this situation, and under these views, some are almost driven to despair. Many, after
they have obtained some saving comfort, are again involved in darkness and trouble.
It is with them as it was with the Christian Hebrews, Heb. 10:32, "After ye
were illuminated ye endured a great fight of afflictions. Some through a melancholy
habit and distemper of body, together with Satan's temptations, spend a great part
of their lives in distress and darkness, even after they have had some saving comfort.
5. It is a business which, by reason of the many difficulties, snares, and dangers
that attend it, requires much instruction, consideration, and counsel. There is no
business wherein men stand in need of counsel more than in this. It is a difficult
undertaking, a hard matter to proceed aright in it. There are ten thousand wrong
ways, which men may take; there are many labyrinths wherein many poor souls are entangled
and never find the way out ; there are many rocks on which thousands of souls have
suffered shipwreck, for want of, having steered aright.
Men of themselves know not how to proceed in this business, any more than the children
of Israel in the wilderness knew where to go without the guidance, of the pillar
of cloud and fire. There is great need that they search the Scriptures, and give
diligent heed to the instructions and directions contained in them, as to a light
shining in a dark place and that they ask counsel of those skilled in these matters.
And there is no business in which men have so much need of seeking to God by prayer,
for his counsel, and that he would lead them in the right way, and show them the
strait gate. " For strait is the gate and narrow is the way which leadeth unto
life, and few there be that find it;" yea, there are none that find it without
direction from heaven. The building of the ark was a work of great difficulty on
this account, that Noah's wisdom was not sufficient to direct him how to make such
a building as should be a sufficient security against such a flood, and which should
be a convenient dwelling-place for himself, his family, and all the various kinds
of beasts and birds, and creeping things. Nor could he ever have known how to construct
this building, had not God directed him.
6. This business never ends till life ends. They that undertake this laborious, careful,
expensive, self-denying business, must not expect to rest from their labors, till
death shall have put an end to them. The long continuance of the work which Noah
undertook was what especially made it a great undertaking. This also was what made
the travel of the children of Israel through the wilderness appear so great to them,
that it was continued for so long a time. Their spirits failed, they were discouraged,
and had not a heart to go through with so great an undertaking. But such is this
business that it runs parallel with life, whether it be longer or shorter. Although
we should live to a great age, our race and warfare will not be finished till death
shall come. We must not expect that an end will be put to our labor, and care, and
strife, by any hope of a good estate which we may obtain. Past attainments and past
success will not excuse us from what remains for the future, nor will they make future
constant labor and care unnecessary to our salvation.
III. Men should be willing to engage in and go through this business, however great
and difficult it may seem to them, seeing it is for their own salvation. Because,
1. A deluge of wrath will surely come. The inhabitants of the old world would not
believe that there would come such a flood of waters upon the earth as that of which
Noah told them, though he told them often; neither would they take any care to avoid
the destruction. Yet such a deluge did come; nothing of all those things of which
Noah had forewarned them, failed. So there will surely come a more dreadful deluge
of divine wrath on this wicked world. We are often forewarned of it in the Scriptures,
and the world, as then, doth not believe any such thing. Yet the threatening will
as certainly be accomplished, as the threatening denounced against the old world.
A day of wrath is coming; it will come at its appointed season; it will not tarry,
it
shall not be delayed one moment beyond its appointed time.
2. All such as do not seasonably undertake and go through the great work mentioned
will surely be swallowed up in this deluge. When the floods of wrath shall come,
they will universally overwhelm the wicked world: all such as shall not have taken
care to prepare an ark, will surely be swallowed up in it; they will find no other
way of escape. In vain shall salvation be expected from the hills, and from the multitude
of mountains; for the flood shall be above the tops of all the mountains. Or if they
shall hide themselves in the caves and dens of the mountains, there the waters of
the flood will find them out, and there shall they miserably perish. As those of
the old world who were not in the ark perished, Gen. 7:21, 23, so all who shall not
have secured to themselves a place in the spiritual ark of the gospel, shall perish
much more miserably than the old world. Doubtless the inhabitants of the old world
had many contrivances to save themselves. Some, we may suppose, ascended to the tops
of their houses, being driven out of one story to another, till at last they perished.
Others climbed to the tops of high towers; who yet were washed thence by the boisterous
waves of the rising flood. Some climbed to the tops of trees; others to the tops
of mountains, and especially of the highest mountains. But all was in vain; the flood
sooner or later swallowed them all up; only Noah and his family, who had taken care
to prepare an ark, remained alive. So it will doubtless be at the end of the world,
when Christ shall dome to judge the world in righteousness. Some, when they shall
look up and see him coming in the clouds of heaven, shall hide themselves in closets,
and secret places in their houses. Others flying to the caves and dens of the earth,
shall attempt to hide themselves there. Others shall call upon the rocks and mountains
to fall on them, and cover them from the face of him that sitteth on the throne,
and from the wrath of the Lamb.-So it will be after the sentence is pronounced, and
wicked men see that terrible fire coming, which is to burn this world forever, and
which will be a deluge of fire, and will burn the earth even to the bottoms of the
mountains, and to its very centre. Deut. 32:22, "For a fire is kindled in mine
anger, and shall burn to the lowest hell, and shall consume the earth with her increase,
and set on fire the foundations of the mountains." I say, when the wicked shall,
after the sentence, see this great fire beginning to kindle, and to take hold of
this earth; there will be many contrivances devised by them to escape, some flying
to caves and holes in the earth, some hiding themselves in one place, and some in
another. But let them hide themselves where they will, or let them do what they will,
it will be utterly in vain. Every cave shall burn as an oven, the rocks and mountains
shall melt with fervent heat, and if they could creep down to the very centre of
the earth, still the heat would follow them, and rage with as much vehemence there,
as on the very surface.
So when wicked men, who neglect their great work in their lifetime, who are not willing
to go through the difficulty and labor of this work, draw near to death, they sometimes
do many things to escape death, and put forth many endeavors to lengthen out their
lives at least a little longer. For this end, they send for physicians, and perhaps
many are consulted, and their prescriptions are punctually observed. They also use
many endeavors to save their souls from hell. They cry to God;. they confess their
past sins; they promise future reformation; and, Oh what would they not give for
some small addition to their lives, or some hope of future happiness! But all proves
in vain: God hath numbered their days and finished them; and as they have sinned
away the day of grace, they must even bear the consequence, and forever lie down
in sorrow.
3. The destruction, when it shall come, will be infinitely terrible. The destruction
of the old world by the flood was terrible; but that eternal destruction which is
coming on the wicked is infinitely more so. That flood of waters was but an image
of this awful flood of divine vengeance. When the waters poured down, more like spouts
or cataracts, or the fall of a great river, than like rain; what an awful appearance
was there of the wrath of God! This however but an image of that terrible outpouring
of the wrath of God which shall be forever, yea forever and ever, on wicked men.
And when the fountains of the great deep were broken up, and the waters burst forth
out of the ground though they had issued out of the womb (Job38:8), this was an image
of the mighty breakings forth of God's wrath, which shall be, when the flood gates
of wrath shall be drawn up. How may we suppose that the wicked of the old world repented
that they had not hearkened to the warnings which Noah had given them, when they
saw these dreadful things, and saw that they must perish! How much more will you
repent your refusing to hearken to the gracious warnings of the gospel, when you
shall see the fire of God's wrath against you, pouring down from heaven, and bursting
on all sides out of bowels of the earth!
4. Though the work which is necessary in order to man's salvation be a great work,
yet it is not impossible. What was required of Noah, doubtless appeared a very great
and difficult undertaking. Yet he undertook it with resolution, and he was carried
through it. So if we undertake this work with the same good will and resolution,
we shall undoubtedly be successful. However difficult it be, yet multitudes have
gone through it, and have obtained salvation by the means. It is not a work beyond
the faculties of our nature, nor beyond the opportunities which God giveth us. If
men will but take warning, and hearken to counsel, if they will but be sincere and
in good earnest, be seasonable in their work, take their opportunities, use their
advantages be steadfast, and not wavering; they shall not fail.
APPLICATION.
The use I would make of this doctrine, is to exhort all to undertake and go through
this great work, which they have to do in order to their salvation, and this let
the work seem ever so great and difficult. If your nature be averse to it, and there
seems to be very frightful things in the way, so that your heart is ready to fail
at the prospect; yet seriously consider what has been said, and act a wise part.
Seeing it is for yourselves, for your own salvation; seeing it is for so great a
salvation, for your deliverance from eternal destruction; and seeing it is of such
absolute necessity in order to your salvation, that the deluge of divine wrath will
come, and there will be no escaping it without preparing an ark; is it not best for
you to undertake the work, engage in it with your might, and go through it, though
this cannot be done without great labor, care, and difficulty, and expense?
I would by no means flatter you concerning this work, or go about to make you believe,
that you shall find an easy light business of it: no, I would not have you expect
any such thing. I would have you sit down and count the cost; and if you cannot find
it in your hearts to engage in a great, hard, laborious, and expensive undertaking,
and to persevere in it to the end of life, pretend not to be religious. Indulge yourselves
in your ease; follow your pleasures; eat, drink, and be merry; even conclude to go
to hell in that way, and never make any more pretenses of seeking your salvation.
Here consider several things in particular.
1. How often you have been warned of the approaching flood of God's wrath. How frequently
you have been told of hell, heard the threatenings of the word of God set before
you, and been warned to flee from the wrath to come. It is with you as it was with
the inhabitants of the old world. Noah warned them abundantly of the approaching
flood, and counseled them to take care for their safety, 1 Pet. 3:19, 20. Noah warned
them in words; and he preached to them. He warned them also in his actions. His building
the ark, which took him so long a time, and in which he employed so many hands, was
a standing warning to them. All the blows of the hammer and axe, during the progress
of that building, were so many calls and warnings to the old world, to take care
for their preservation from the approaching destruction. Every knock of the workmen
was a knock of Jesus Christ at the door of their hearts: but they would not hearken.
All these warnings, though repeated every day, and continued for so long a time,
availed nothing.
Now, is it not much so with you, as it was with them? How often have you been warned!
How have you heard the warning knocks of the gospel, Sabbath after Sabbath, for these
many years! Yet how have some of you no more regarded them than the inhabitants of
the old world regarded the noise of the workmen's tools in Noah's ark!
Objection. But here possibly it may be objected by some, that though it be true they
have often been told of hell, yet they never saw any thing of it, and therefore they
cannot realize it that there is any such place. They have often heard of hell, and
are told that wicked men, when they die, go to a most dreadful place of torment;
that hereafter there will be a day of judgment, and that the world will be consumed
by fire. But how do they know that it is really so? How do they know what becomes
of those wicked men that die? None of them come back to tell them. They have nothing
to depend on but the word which they hear. And how do they know that all is not a
cunningly-devised fable?
Answer. The sinners of the old world had the very same objection against what Noah
told them of a flood about to drown the world. Yet the bare word of God proved to
be sufficient evidence that such a thing was coming. What was the reason that none
of the many millions then upon earth believed what Noah said, but this, that it was
a strange thing, that no such thing had ever before been known? And what a strange
story must that of Noah have appeared to them, wherein he told them of a deluge of
waters above the tops of the mountains! Therefore it. is said, Heb. 11:7, that "Noah
was warned of God of things not seen as yet." It is probable, none could conceive
how it could be that the whole world should be drowned in a flood of waters; and
all were ready to ask, where there was water enough for it; and by what means it
should be brought upon the earth. Noah did not tell them how it should be brought
to pass; he only told them that God had said that it should be: and that proved to
be enough. The event showed their folly in not depending on the mere word of God,
who was able, who knew how to bring it to pass, and who could not lie.
In like manner the word of God will prove true, in threatening a flood of eternal
wrath to overwhelm all the wicked. You will believe it when the event shall prove
it, when it shall be too late to profit by the belief. The word of God will never
fail; nothing is so sure as that: heaven and earth shall pass away, but the word
of God shall not pass away. It is firmer than mountains of brass. At the end, the
vision will speak and not lie. The decree shall bring forth, and all wicked men shall
know that God is the Lord, that he is a God of truth, and that they are fools who
will not depend on his word. The wicked of the old world counted Noah a fool for
depending so much on the word of God, as to put himself to all the fatigue and expense
of building the ark; but the event showed that they themselves were the fools, and
that he was wise.
2. Consider that the Spirit of God will not always strive with you; nor will his
long suffering always wait upon you. So God said concerning the inhabitants of the
old world, Gen. 4:3 "My Spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he
also is flesh; yet his days shall be a hundred and twenty years." All this while
God was striving with them. It was a day of grace with them, and God's long-suffering
all this while waited upon them: 1 Peter 3:20, "Which sometime were disobedient,
when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was
a preparing." All this while they had an opportunity to escape, if they would
but hearken and believe God. Even after the ark was finished, which seems to have
been but little before the flood came, still there was an opportunity; the door of
the ark stood open for some time. There was some time during which Noah was employed
in laying up stores in the ark. Even then it was not too late; the door of the ark
yet stood open.-About a week before the flood came, Noah was commanded to begin to
gather in the beasts and birds. During this last week still the door of the ark stood
open. But on the very day that the flood began to come, while the rain was yet withheld,
Noah and his wife, his three sons, and their wives, went into the ark; and we are
told, Gen. 7:16, that "God shut him in. Then the day of God's patience was past;
the door of the ark was shut; God himself, who shuts and no man opens, shut the door.
Then all hope of their escaping the flood was past; it was too late to repent that
they had not hearkened to Noah's warnings, and had not entered into the ark while
the door stood open.
After Noah and his family had entered into the ark, and God had shut them in, after
the windows of heaven were opened, and they saw how the waters were poured down out
of heaven, we may suppose that many of those who were near came running to the door
of the ark, knocking, and crying most piteously for entrance. But it was too late;
God himself had shut the door, and Noah had no license, and probably no power, to
open it. We may suppose, they stood knocking and calling, Open to us, open to us;
O let us in; we beg that we may be let in. And probably some of them pleaded old
acquaintance with Noah; that they had always been his neighbors, and had even helped
him to build the ark. But all was in vain. There they stood till the waters of the
flood came, and without mercy swept them away from the door of the ark.
So it will be with you, if you continue to refuse to hearken to the warnings which
are given you. Now God is striving with you; now he is warning you of the approaching
flood, and calling upon you Sabbath after Sabbath. Now the door of the ark stands
open. But God's Spirit will not always strive with you; his long-suffering will not
always wait upon you. There is an appointed day of God's patience, which is as certainly
limited as it was to the old world. God hath set your bounds, which you cannot pass.
Though now warnings are continued in plenty, yet there will be last knocks and last
calls, the last that ever you shall hear. When the appointed time shall be elapsed,
God will shut the door, and you shall never see it open again; for God shutteth,
and no man openeth.-If you improve not your opportunity before that time, you will
cry in vain, "Lord, Lord, open to us," Matt. 25:11, and Luke 23:25, &c.
While you shall stand at the door with your piteous cries, the flood of God's wrath
will come upon you, overwhelm you, and you shall not escape. The tempest shall carry
you away without mercy, and you shall be forever swallowed up and lost.
3. Consider how mighty the billows of divine wrath will be when they shall come.
The waters of Noah's flood were very great. The deluge was vast; it was very deep;
the billows reached fifteen cubits above the highest mountains; and it was an ocean
which had no shore; signifying the greatness of that wrath which is coming on wicked
men in another world, which will be like a mighty flood of waters overwhelming them,
and rising vastly high over their heads, with billows reaching to the very heavens.
Those billows will be higher and heavier than mountains on their poor souls. The
wrath of God will be an ocean without shores, as Noah's flood was: it will be misery
that will have no end. The misery of the damned in hell can be better represented
by nothing, than by a deluge of misery, a mighty deluge of wrath, which will be ten
thousand times worse than a deluge of waters; for it will be a deluge of liquid fire,
as in the Scriptures it is called a lake of fire and brimstone.-At the end of the
world all the wicked shall be swallowed up in a vast deluge of fire, which shall
be as great and as mighty as Noah's deluge of water. See 2 Pet. 3:5, 6, 7. After
that the wicked will have mighty billows of fire and brimstone eternally rolling
over their poor souls, and their miserable tormented bodies. Those billows may be
called vast liquid mountains of fire and brimstone. And when one billow shall have
gone over their heads, another shall follow, without intermission, giving them no
rest day nor night to all eternity.
4. This flood of wrath will probably come upon you suddenly, when you all think little
of it, and it shall seem far from you. So the flood came upon the old world. See
Matt. 24:36, &c. Probably many of them were surprised in the night by the waters
bursting suddenly in at their doors, or under the foundations of their houses, coming
in upon them in their beds. For when the fountains of the great deep were broken
up, the waters, as observed before, burst forth in mighty torrents. To such a sudden
surprise of the wicked of the old world in the night, probably that alludes in Job
27:20, "Terrors take hold on him as waters; a tempest stealeth him away in the
night." So destruction is wont to come on wicked men, who hear many warnings
of approaching destruction, and yet will not be influenced by them. For "he
that is often reproved, and hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and
that without remedy," Prov. xxix. 1. And "when they shall say, Peace and
safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child,
and they shall not escape," 1 Thess. 5:3.
5. If you will not hearken to the many warnings which are given you of approaching
destruction, you will be guilty of more than brutish madness. The ox knoweth his
owner, and the ass his master's crib." They know upon whom they are dependent,
and whom they must obey, and act accordingly. But you, so long as you neglect your
own salvation, act as if you knew not God, your Creator and Proprietor, nor your
dependence upon him. The very beasts, when they see signs of an approaching storm,
will betake themselves to their dens for shelter. Yet you, when abundantly warned
of the approaching storm of divine vengeance, will not fly to the hiding-place from
the storm, and the covert from the tempest. The sparrow, the swallow, and other birds,
when they are forewarned of approaching winter, will betake themselves to a safer
climate. Yet you who have been often forewarned of the piercing blasts of divine
wrath, will not, in order to escape them, enter into the New Jerusalem, of most mild
and salubrious air, though the gate stands wide open to receive you. The very ants
will be diligent in summer to lay up for winter: yet you will do nothing to lay up
in store a good foundation against the time to come. Balaam's ass would not run upon
a drawn sword, though his master, for the sake of gain, would expose himself to the
sword of God's wrath; and so God made the dumb ass, both in words and actions, to
rebuke the madness of the prophet, 1 Pet. ii. 16. In like manner, you, although you
have been oft warned that the sword of God's wrath is drawn against you, and will
certainly be thrust through you, if you proceed in your present course, still proceed,
regardless of the consequence.
So God made the very beasts and birds of the old world to rebuke the madness of the
men of that day: for they, even all sorts of them, fled to the ark while the door
was yet open: which the men of that day refused to do; God hereby, thus signifying,
that their folly was greater than that of the very brute creatures.-Such folly and
madness are you guilty of; who refuse to hearken to the warnings that are given you
of the approaching flood of the wrath of God.
You have been once more warned to-day, while the door of the ark yet stands open.
You have, as it were, once again heard the knocks of the hammer and axe in the building
of the ark, to put you in mind that a flood is approaching. Take heed therefore that
you do not still stop your ears, treat these warnings with a regardless heart, and
still neglect the great work which you have to do lest the flood of wrath suddenly
come upon you, sweep you away, and there be no remedy.
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