1851
Lecture IV
The Wicked Heart Set to do Evil
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Text.--Eccl. 8:11: "Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil."
This text manifestly assumes that the present is not a state of rewards and punishments,
in which men are treated according to their character and conduct. This fact is not
indeed affirmed, but it is assumed, as it is also everywhere throughout the Bible.
Everybody knows that ours is not a state of present rewards and punishments; the
experience and observation of every man testifies to this fact with convincing power.
Hence it is entirely proper that the Bible should assume it as a known truth. Every
man who reads his Bible must see that many things in it are assumed to be true, and
that these are precisely those things which every man knows to be true, and which
none could know more certainly if God had affirmed them on every page of the Bible.
In the case of this truth, every man knows that he is not himself punished as he
has deserved to be in the present life. Every man sees the same thing in the case
of his neighbors. The Psalmist was so astounded by the manifest injustice of things
in this world, as between the various lots of the righteous and of the wicked, that
he was greatly stumbled, "until," says he, "I went into the sanctuary
of God; then understood I their end,"
It is also assumed in this passage that all men have by nature a common heart. One
general fact is asserted of them all, and in this way they are assumed to have a
common character. "The heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil."
So elsewhere. "God saw that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was
only evil continually." This is the common method in which God speaks of sinners
in His word. He always assumes that by nature they have the same disposition.
The text also shows what the moral type of the sinner's heart is; "fully set
to do evil." But we must here pause a moment to inquire what is meant in our
passage by the term "heart."
It is obvious that this term is used in the Bible in various shades of meaning; sometimes
for the conscience, as in the passage which affirms, "if our heart condemn us,
God is greater than our heart," and may be expected the more to condemn us;
some times the term is used for the intelligence; but here most evidently for the
will, because this is the only faculty of the mind which can be said to be set --
fixed -- bent, determined upon a given course of voluntary action. The will is the
faculty which fixes itself upon a chosen course; hence in our text, the will must
be meant by the term heart; for otherwise no intelligible sense can be put upon the
passage. But in what direction and to what object is the will of wicked men fully
set? Answer, to do evil. So God's word solemnly affirms.
But, let it be said in way of explanation, this does not imply that men do evil for
the sake of the evil itself; it does not imply that sinning, considered as disobedience
to God, is their direct object -- no; the drunkard does not drink because it is wicked
to drink, but he drinks not withstanding it is wicked. He drinks for the present
good it promises -- not for the sake of sinning. So of the man who tells lies. His
object is not to break God's law -- but to get some good to himself by lying; yet
he tells the lie notwithstanding God's prohibition. His heart may become fully set
upon the practice of lying whenever it suits his convenience, and of the good he
hopes thus to gain; and it is in vain that God labors by fearful prohibitions and
penalties to dissuade him from his course. So of stealing, adultery, and other sins.
We are not to suppose that men set their heart upon these sins out of love to pure
wickedness; but they do wickedly for the sake of the good they hope to gain thereby.
The licentious man would perhaps be glad if it were not wicked to gratify his passion;
but wicked though it is, he sets his heart to do it. Adam and Eve ate the forbidden
fruit; why? Because they saw it was beautiful, and they were told it would make them
wise; hence, for the good they hoped to gain, and despite of God's prohibition, they
took and ate. I know it is sometimes said that sinners love sin for its own sake,
out of a pure love of sin as sin, simply because it is disobedience to God. With
a natural relish, as wolves love flesh; but this is not true -- certainly not in
many cases; but the simple truth is, men do not set their hearts upon the sin for
its own sake, but upon sinning for the sake of the good they hope to get from it.
Notice particularly now the language -- "heart fully set to do evil." One
man is avaricious; he sets his heart upon getting rich, honestly, if he can, but
rich anyway; to get money by fair means if possible, but be sure and get it. Another
is ambitious. The love of reputation fills and fires his soul, and therefore, perhaps,
he becomes very religious--if religion is popular, but altogether selfish, and none
the less so for being so very religious.
Selfishness takes on a thousand forms and types; but each and all are sinful, for
the whole mind should give itself up to serve God and to perform every duty as revealed
to the reason. What did Eve do? Give herself up to gratify her propensity for knowledge,
and for the good of self-indulgence. She consented to believe the lying spirit who
told her it was "a tree to be desired to make one wise." This she thought
must be very important. It was also, apparently, good for food, and her appetite
became greatly excited; the more she looked, the more excited she became, and now
what should she do? God had forbidden her to touch it: shall she obey God, or obey
her own excited appetite? Despite of God's command, she ate it. Was that a sin? Many
would think it a very small sin; but it was real rebellion against God, and He could
not do otherwise than visit it with His terrific frown!
So everywhere, to yield to the demands of appetite and passion against God's claims,
is grievous sin. All men are bound to fear and obey God, however much self-denial
and sacrifice it may cost.
I said that selfishness often assumes a religious type. In the outset the mind may
be powerfully affected by some of the great and stirring truths of the gospel; but
it presently comes to take an entirely selfish view, caring only to escape punishment,
and make religion a matter of gain. It is wonderful to see how in such cases the
mind utterly misapprehends the design of the gospel, quite losing sight of the great
fact that it seeks to eradicate man's selfishness, and draw out his heart into pure
benevolence. Making this radical mistake, it conceives of the whole gospel system
as a scheme for indulgences. You may see this exemplified in the view which some
take of the imputation of Christ's righteousness, which they suppose to be reckoned
to them while they are living in sin. That is, they suppose that they secure entire
exemption from the penalty of violating law, and even have the honors and rewards
of full obedience while yet they have all the self-indulgences of a life of sin.
Horrible! Were ever Romish indulgences worse than this?
Examine such a case thoroughly and you will see that selfishness is at the bottom
of all the religion there is in it. The man was worldly before and is devout now;
but devout for the same reason that he was worldly. The selfish heart forms alike
the basis of each system. The same ends are sought, and sought in the same spirit;
the moral character remains unchanged. He prays perhaps; but if so, he asks God to
do some great things for him, to promote his own selfish purposes. He has not the
remotest idea of making such a committal of himself to God's interests, and having
no interests other than God's to serve at all.
To illustrate this point, let us suppose that a parent should say to his children--"I
will give you my property if you will work with me, and truly identify your interests
with mine; and if you are not willing to do this, I shall disinherit you." Now
some of the children may take a perfectly selfish view of this offer, and may say
within themselves--Now I will do just enough for father to get his money; I will
make him think that I am very zealous for his interests, and I will do just enough
to secure the offered rewards; but why should I do any more?
Or suppose the case of a human government which offers rewards to offenders on condition
of their returning to obedience. The real spirit of the offer goes the length of
asking the sincere devotion of their hearts to the best good of the government. But
they may take a wholly selfish view of the case, and determine to accept the proposal
only just far enough to secure the rewards, and only for the sake of the rewards.
The Ruler wants and expects the actual sympathy of their hearts--their real good-will;
and this being given, would love to reward them most abundantly; but how can He be
satisfied with them if they are altogether selfish?
Now a man may be as selfish in praying as in stealing, and even far more wicked;
for he may more grievously mock God, and more impiously attempt to bribe the Almighty
to subserve his own selfish purposes. As if he supposed he could make the Searcher
of hearts his own tool; he may insolently try to induce Him to play into his own
hands, thus may most grievously tempt Him to His face.
But the text affirms that the heart of men is fully set in them to do evil."
Perhaps some of you think otherwise; you don't believe in such depravity. O, says
that fond mother, I think my daughter is friendly to religion. Do you think she is
converted? O no, not converted, but I think she is friendly;--she feels favorably
towards religion. Does she meet the claims of God like a friend to His government
and to His reputation? I can not say about that. Ask her to repent and what does
she say? She will tell you she cannot.
How striking the fact that you may go through the ranks of society and you will meet
almost everywhere with this position;--the sinner says--"I cannot repent--I
cannot believe." What is the matter? Where is the trouble? Go to that daughter,
thought to be so friendly to religion;--she is so amiable and gentle that she can
not bear to see any pain inflicted;--but mark;--present to her the claims of God
and what does she say? I cannot; no I cannot obey God in one of His demands, I cannot
repent of my sin she says. But what is it to repent, that this amiable lady, so friendly
to religion withal, should be incapable of repenting? What is the matter: Is God
so unreasonable in His demands that He imposes upon you things quite impossible for
you to do? Or is it the case that you are so regardless of His feelings and so reckless
of the truth that for the sake of self-justification, you will arraign Him on the
charge of the most flagrant injustice, and falsely imply that the wrong is all on
His side and none on yours? Is this a very amiable trait of character in you? Is
this one of your proofs that the human heart is not fully set to do evil?
You cannot repent and love God! You find it quite impossible to make up your mind
to serve and please God! What is the matter? Are there no sufficient reasons apparent
to your mind why you should give up your heart to God? No reasons? Heaven, earth,
and hell may all combine to pour upon you their reasons for fearing and loving God,
and yet you cannot! Why? Because your heart is fully set within you to do evil rather
than good. You are altogether committed to the pleasing of self. Jesus may plead
with you--your friends may plead; heaven and hell may lift up their united voices
to plead, and every motive that can press on the heart from reason, conscience, hope
and fear, angels and devils, God and man, may pass in long and flashing array before
your mind--but alas, your heart is so fully set to do evil that no motive to change
can move you. What is this cannot! Nothing less or more than a mighty will not!
That amiable lady insists that she is not much depraved. O no, not she. She will
not steal! True, her selfishness takes on a most tender and delicate type. She has
most gushing sensibilities; she cannot bear to see a kitten in distress;--but what
does she care for God's rights? What for the rights of Jesus Christ? What does she
care for God's feelings? What does she care for the feelings and sympathies of the
crucified Son of God? Just nothing at all. What then are all her tender sensibilities
worth? Doves and kittens have even more of this than she. Many tender ties has she,
no doubt, but they are all under the control of a perfectly selfish heart
Mother Eve too was most amiable. Indeed she was a truly pious woman before she sinned
-- and Adam no doubt thought she could be trusted everywhere; -- but mark how terribly
she fell! So her daughters. Giving up their hearts to a refined selfishness, they
repel God's most righteous claims, and they are fallen!
So go through all the ranks of society and you see the same thing. Go to the pirate
ship, the captain armed to the teeth and the fire of hell in his eye; -- ask him
to receive an offered Savior and repent of his sins, and he gives the very same answer
as that amiable daughter does -- he cannot repent. His heart too is so fully set
within him to do evil that he cannot get his own consent to turn from his sins to
God.
O this horrible committal of the heart to do evil! It is the only reason why the
Holy Ghost is needed to change the sinner's heart. But for this you would no more
need the Holy Ghost than an angel of light does. O how fearfully strong is the sinner's
heart against God! Just where the claims of God come in he seems to have almost an
omnipotence of strength to oppose and resist! The motives of truth may roll mountain
high and beat upon his iron heart, yet see how he braces up his nerves to withstand
God! What can he not resist sooner that submit his will to God!
Another thing lies in this text, incidentally brought out, -- assumed but not affirmed;
-- viz. that sinners are already under sentence. The test says, "Because sentence
is not executed speedily," implying that sentence is already passed and only
waits its appointed time for execution. You who have attended courts of justice know
that after trial and conviction next comes sentence. The culprit takes his seat in
the criminal's bench. The judge arises - all is still as death; -- he reviews the
case, and comes shortly to the solemn conclusion; -- you are convicted by this court
of the crime alleged, and now you are to receive your sentence. Sentence is then
pronounced.
After this solemn transaction, execution, is commonly deferred for a period longer
or shorter according to circumstance. The object may be either to give the criminal
opportunity to secure a pardon, or if there be no hope of this, at least to give
him some days or weeks for serious reflection in which he may secure the peace of
his soul with God. For such reasons, execution is usually delayed. But after sentence,
the case is fully decided. No further doubt of guilt can interpose to affect the
case; the possibility of pardon is the only remaining hope. The awful sentence seals
his doom -- unless it be possible that pardon may be had, That sentence -- how it
sinks into the heart of the guilty culprit! "you are now," says the judge,
"remanded to the place from whence you came; there to be kept in irons, under
close confinement, until the day appointed; -- then to be taken forth from your prison
between the hours of ten and twelve as the case may be, and hung by the neck until
you are dead. And may God have mercy on your soul!" The sentence has passed
now -- the court have done their work; it only remains for the sheriff to do his
as the executioner of justice -- and the fearful scene closes.
So the Bible represents the case of the sinner. He is under sentence, but his sentence
is not executed speedily. Some respite is given. The arrangements of the divine government
require no court, no jury; -- the law itself says -- "the soul that sinneth,
it shall die;" "Cursed is every one that continueth not in all the things
written in the book of the law to do them;" so that the mandate of the law involves
the sentence of law on every sinner -- a sentence from which there can be no escape
and no reprise except by a pardon. What a position is this for the sinner!
But next consider another strange fact. Because sentence is not executed speedily;
because there is some delay of execution; -- because Mercy prevails to secure for
the condemned culprit a few days' respite, so that punishment shall not tread close
on the heels of crime, therefore "the heart of the sons of men is fully set
in them to do evil." How astounding! What a perversion and abuse of the gracious
design of the King in granting a little respite from instant execution!
Let us see how it would look in the case of our friend or neighbor. He has committed
a fearful crime, he is arrested, put on trial, convicted, sentenced, handed over
to the sheriff to await the day and hour of his execution. The judge says -- I defer
the execution that you may have opportunity to secure a pardon from the Governor.
I assure you the Governor is a most compassionate man -- he loves to grant pardons;
he has already pardoned thousands; if you will give up your spirit of rebellion he
will most freely forgive you all; I beg of you therefore that you will do no such
thing as attempt a justification; -- don't think of escaping death otherwise than
by casting yourself upon his mercy; don't flatter yourself upon his mercy; don't
flatter yourself that there can be any other refuge.
Now suppose this man begins--" I have done nothing --just nothing at all. I
am simply a martyr to truth and justice! At all events, I have done nothing very
bad--nothing that any government ought to notice. I don't believe I shall be sentenced--(the
man is condemned already!) I shall live as long as the best of you. So he sets himself
to making excuses. He goes to work as if he was preparing for a trial, and as if
he expected to prove his innocence before the court. Nay, perhaps he even sets himself
to oppose and curse the government, railing at its laws and at its officers, deeming
nothing too bad to say of them, indulging himself in the most outrageous opposition,
abusing the very men whose mercy has spared his forfeited life! How would all men
be shocked to see such a case--to see a man who should so outrage all propriety as
to give himself up to abuse the government whose righteous laws he had just broken
and then whose clemency he had most flagrantly abused! Yet this text affirms first
this to be the case of the sinner, and all observation sustains it. You have seen
it acted over ten thousand times; you can look back and see it in your own case.
You know it is all true--fearfully, terribly true.
If it were in some striking, awful manner revealed to you this night that your soul
is damned, you would be thunder-struck. You do not believe the simple declaration
of Jehovah as it stands recorded on the pages of the Bible. You are continually saying
to yourself--I shall not be condemned at last--I will venture along. I will dare
to tempt His forbearance yet. I do not at all believe He will send me to hell. At
least I will venture on a season longer and turn about by and by if I find it quite
advisable--but at present why should I fear to set my heart fully in the way God
has forbidden?
Where will you find a parallel to such wickedness? Only think of a state of moral
hardihood that can abuse God's richest mercies--that can coolly say--God is so good
that I will abuse Him all I can;--God loves me so much that I shall venture on without
fear to insult Him and pervert His long-suffering to the utmost hardening of my soul
in sin and rebellion!
Let each sinner observe--the day of execution is really set. God will not pass over
it. When it arrives, there can be no more delay. God waits not because He is in doubt
about the justice of the sentence--not because His heart misgives Him in view of
its terrible execution; but only that He may use means with you and see if He cannot
persuade you to embrace mercy. This is all;--this is the only reason why judgment
for a long time has lingered and the sword of justice has not long since smitten
you down.
Here is another curious fact. God has not only deferred execution, but at immense
cost has provided means for the safe exercise of mercy. You know it is naturally
a dangerous thing to bestow mercy--there is so much danger lest it should weaken
the energy of law and encourage men to trample it down in hope of impunity. But God
has provided a glorious testimony in favor of law, going to show that it is in His
heart to sustain it at every sacrifice. He could not forgive sin until His injured
and insulted law is honored before the universe. Having done all this in the sacrifice
of His own Son on Calvary, He can forgive without fear of consequences, only provided
that each candidate for pardon shall first be penitent.
Now therefore, God's heart of mercy is opened wide and no fear of evil consequences
from gratuitous pardons disturbs the exercise of mercy. Before atonement, Justice
stood with brandished sword, demanding vengeance on the guilty; but by and through
atoning blood, God rescued His law from peril--He lifted it up from beneath the impious
foot of the transgressor, and set it on high in safety and glory; and now opens wide
the blessed door of mercy. Now He comes in the person of His Spirit and invited you
in. He comes to your very heart and room, sinner, to offer you the freest possible
pardon for all your sin. Do you hear that gentle rap at your door? "Behold,
I stand at the door and knock; if any man hear My voice and open the door, I will
come in to him and sup with him, and he with Me." Look at those hands. Have
they not been pierced? Do you know those hands? Do you know where they have been
to be nailed through and through? Mark those locks wet with the dew. Ah, how long
have they been kept without in waiting for the door to open! Who is it that comes?
Is it the sheriff of justice? Has he come with his armed men to drag you away to
execution? Oh no, no; but One comes with the cup of mercy in His hands; He approaches
your prison-gate, His eye wet with the tear of compassion, and through the diamond
of your grate He extends that cup of mercy to your parched lips. Do you see that
visage, so marred more than any man's--and are you only the more fully set to do
evil? Ah, young man! alas, young woman! is such your heart towards the God of mercy?
Where can we find a parallel to such guilt? Can it be found anywhere else in the
universe but in this crazy world?
The scenes and transactions of earth must excite a wonderful interest in heaven.
Angels desire to look into these things. O how the whole universe looks on with inquisitive
wonder to see what Christ has done, and how the sinners for whom He has suffered
and done all, requite His amazing love! When they see you set your heart only the
more fully to do evil, they stand back aghast at such unparalleled wickedness! What
can be done for such sinners but leave them to the madness and doom of their choice?
God has no other alternative. If you will abuse Him, He must execute His law, and
its fearful sentence of eternal death. Suppose it were a human government and a similar
state of facts should occur; who does not see that government might as well abdicate
at once as forbear to punish? So of God. Although He has no pleasure in the sinner's
death, and although He will never slay you because He delights in it, yet how can
He do otherwise that execute His law if He would sustain it? And how can He excuse
Himself for any failure in sustaining it? Will you stand out against Him, and flatter
yourself that He will fail of executing His awful sentence upon you? Oh, sinner,
there is no possibility that you can pass the appointed time without execution. Human
laws may possibly fail of execution: God's laws can fail never! And who is it that
says--"their judgment now of a long time lingereth not, and their damnation
slumbereth not?"
REMARKS.
1. Let me ask professors of religion--Do you think you believe these truths? Let
me suppose that here is a father and also a mother in this house, and you have a
child whom you know and admit to be under sentence of death. You don't know but this
is the very day and hour set for his execution. How much do you feel? Does the knowledge
and belief of such facts disturb your repose? Now your theory is that the case of
your children is infinitely worse than this.
A death eternal in hell you know must be far more awful than any public execution
on earth. If your own son were under sentence for execution on earth, how would you
feel? Professing to believe him under the far more awful sentence to hell, how do
you in fact feel?
But let us spread out this case a little. Place before you that aged father and mother.
Their son went years ago to sea. Of a long time they have not seen him nor even heard
a word from him. How often have their troubled minds dwelt on his case! They do not
know how it fares with him, but they fear the worst. They had reason to know that
his principles were none too well fixed when he left home, and they are afraid he
has fallen into worse and still worse society until it may be that he has become
a bold transgressor. As they are talking over these things and searching from time
to time all the newspapers they can find to get, if they can, some clue to their
son's history, all at once the door bell rings; a messenger comes in and hands a
letter; the old father takes it, breaks the seal--reads a word and suddenly falls
back in his seat, the letter drops from his hand;--Oh he can't read it! The mother
wonders and inquires; she rushes forward and seizes the fallen letter;--she reads
a word and her heart breaks with agony. What's the matter? Their son is sentenced
to die, and he sends to see if his father and mother can come and see him before
he dies. In early morning they are off. The sympathizing neighbors gather round;
all are sorrowful, for it is a sad thing and they feel it keenly. The parents hasten
away to the prison, and learn the details of the painful case. They see at a glance
that there can be no hope of release but in a pardon. The governor lives near, they
rush to his house--but sad for them--they find him stern and inexorable. With palpitating
hearts and a load on their aching bosoms, they plead and plead, but all seems to
be in vain. He says, Your son has been so wicked and has committed such crimes he
must be hung. The good of the nation demands it and I cannot allow my sympathies
to overrule my sense of justice and my convictions of the public good. But agonized
parents must hold on. O what a conflict in their minds! How the case burns upon their
hearts! At last the mother breaks out. Sir, are you a father? Have you a son? Yes,
one son. Where is he? Gone to California. How long since you heard from him? Suppose
he too should fall! Suppose you were to feel such grief's as ours, and have to mourn
over a fallen son! The governor finds himself to be a father. All the latent sensibilities
of the father's heart are roused within him. Calling to his private secretary, he
says, make out a pardon for their son! O what a flood of emotions they pour out!
All this is very natural. No man deems this strange at all.
But right over against this, see the case of the sinner, condemned to an eternal
hell. If your spiritual ears were opened, you would hear the chariot wheels rolling--the
great Judge coming in His car of thunder; you would see the sword of Death gleaming
in the air and ready to smite down the hardened sinner. But hear the professedly
Christian father pray for his ungodly son. He thinks he ought to pray for him once
or twice a day, so he begins; but ah, he has almost forgot his subject. He hardly
knows or thinks what he is praying about. God says, pray for your dying son! Lift
up your cries for him while yet Mercy lingers and pardon can be found. But alas!
Where are the Christian parents that pray as for a sentenced and soon-to-be-executed
son! They say they believe the Bible, but do they? Do they act as if they believed
the half of its awful truths about sentenced sinners ready to go down to an eternal
hell? Yet mark--as soon as they are spiritually awake, then how they feel! And how
they act!
What ails that professor who has no spirit of prayer and no power with God? He is
an infidel! What, when God says he is sentenced to die and His angel of death may
come in one hour and cut him down in his guilt and sin, and send his spirit quick
to hell, and yet the father or the mother have no feeling in the case? They are infidels;
they do not believe what God has said.
2. Yet make another supposition. These afflicted parents have gone to the governor;
they have poured out their griefs before him and have at last wrenched a pardon from
his stern hands. They rush from his house towards the prison, so delighted that they
scarcely touch the ground; coming near they hear songs of merriment, and they say,
how our son must be agonized with company and scenes so unsuited and so uncongenial!
They meet the sheriff. Who, they ask, is that who can sing so merrily in a prison?
It is your own son. He has no idea of being executed; he swears he will burn down
the governor's house; indeed he manifests a most determined spirit, as if his heart
were fully set on evil. Ah, say they; that is distresing; but we can subdue his wicked
and proud heart. We will show him the pardon and tell him how the governor feels.
We are sure this will subdue him. He cannot withstand such kindness and compassion.
They come to the door; they gain admittance and show him the pardon. They tell him
how much it has cost them and how tenderly the governor feels in the case. He seizes
it, tears it to pieces and tramples it under his feet! O, say they, he must be deranged!
But suppose it is only depravity of the heart, and they come to see it and know that
such must be the case. Alas, they cry, this is worst of all! What! not willing to
be pardoned--not willing to be saved! This is worse than all the rest. Well, we must
go to our desolate home. We have done with our son! We got a pardon for him with
our tears, but he will not have it. There is nothing more that we can do.
They turn sadly away, not caring even to bid him farewell. They go home doubly saddened--that
he should both deserve to die for his original crimes, and also for his yet greater
crime of refusing the offered pardon.
The day of execution comes; the sheriff is on hand to do his duty; from the prison
he takes his culprit to the place of execution; the multitude throng around and follow
sadly along; suddenly a messenger rushes up to say to the criminal--You have torn
in pieces one pardon--but here is yet one more; will you have this? With proud disdain
he spruns even this last offer of pardon! And now were are the sympathies of all
the land? Do they say, how cruel to hang a young man, and for only such a crime?
Ah, no; no such thing at all. They see the need of law and justice; they know that
law so outraged must be allowed to vindicate itself in the culprit's execution. And
now the sheriff proclaims--"Just fifteen minutes to live;"--and even these
minutes he spends in abusing the governor, and insulting the majesty of law.
The dreadful hour arrives, and its last moment--the drop falls; he trembles a minute
under the grasp of Death, and all is still forever! He is gone and Law has been sustained
in the fearful execution of its sentence. And all the people feel that this is righteous.
They cannot possibly think otherwise. Even those aged parents have not a word of
complaint to utter. They approve the governor's course; they endorse the sentence.
They say, we did think he would accept the pardon! But since he would not, let him
be accursed.! We love good government, we love the blessings of law and order in
society more than we love iniquity and crime. He was indeed our son, but he was also
the son of the devil!
3. But let us attend the execution of some of these sinners from our own congregation
You are sent for to come out for execution. We see the messenger; we hear the sentence
read,--we see that your fatal hour has come. Shall we turn and curse God? No, NO!
We shall do no such thing. When your drop falls, and you gasp, gasp, and die--and
your guilty, terror-stricken soul goes wailing down the sides of the pit, shall we
go away to complain of God and of His justice? No! Why not? Because you might have
had mercy, but you would not. Because God waited on you long, but you only became
in heart more fully set to do evil. The universe look on and see the facts in the
case; and with one voice that rings through the vast arch of heaven, they cry--"Just
and righteous are Thou in all Thy ways, Thou most Holy Lord God!"
Who says, this is cruel? What! Shall the universe take up arms against Jehovah? No.
When the universe gather together around the great white throne, and the dread sentence
goes forth--"Depart, accursed;" and away they move in dense and vast masses
as if old ocean had begun to flow off--down, down, they sink to the depths of their
dark home; but the saints with firm step yet solemn heart proclaim--"God's law
is vindicated; the insulted majesty of both Law and Mercy is now upheld in honor,
and all is right!"
Heaven is solemn, but joyful; saints are solemn, yet they cannot but rejoice in their
own glorious Father. See the crowds and masses as they move up to heaven. They look
back over the plains of Sodom and see the smoke of her burning ascend up like the
smoke of a great furnace. But they pronounce it just, and have not one word of complaint
to utter.
4. To the yet living sinner, I have it to say today that the hour of your execution
has not yet arrived. Once more the bleeding hand offers Mercy's cup to your lips.
Think a moment;--your Savior now offers you mercy. Come, O come now and accept it.
What will you say? I'll go on still in my sins? Then all we can say is that the bowels
of divine love are deeply moved for you--that God has done all to save you that He
wisely can do; God's people have felt a deep and agonizing interest in you and are
ready now to cry, How can we give them up? But what more can we do--what more can
even God do? With bleeding heart and quivering lip has Mercy followed you. Jesus
Himself said--"How often would I have gathered you--O Jerusalem, Jerusalem!
How often I would have saved you, but ye would not." Shall Jesus behold and
weep over you,and say, "O that thou hadst known, even thou in this thy day--but
now it is hidden from thine eyes." What, O dying sinner, will you say? Shall
not your response be--"It is enough--I have dashed away salvation's cup long
and wickedly enough--you need not say another word. O that bleeding hand! Those weeping
eyes! Is it possible that I have withstood a Savior's love so long? I am ready to
beg for mercy now; and I rejoice to hear that our God has a father's heart."
He knows you have sinned greatly and grievously, but O, He says--My compassions have
been bleeding and gushing forth towards you these many days. Will you close in at
once with terms of mercy and come to Jesus? What do you say?
Suppose an angel comes down, in robes so pure and so white; unrolls his papers,and
produces a pardon in your name, sealed with Jesus' own blood. He opens the sacred
book and reads the very passage which reveals the love of God, and asks you if you
will believe and embrace it? What will do do?
And what shall I say to my Lord and Master? When I come to report the matter, must
I bear my testimony that you would not hear? When Christ comes so near to you, and
would fain draw you close to His warm heart, what will you do? Will you still repeat
the fatal choice, to spurn His love and dare His injured justice?
GLOSSARY
of easily misunderstood terms as defined by Mr. Finney himself.
Compiled by Katie Stewart
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