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1852
Lecture II
The Fearful Results of a Spiritual Relapse
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Text.--Matt. 12:43-45: "When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh through dry places, seeking rest, and findeth none. Then he saith, I will return into my house from whence I came out; and when he is come, he findeth it empty, swept, and garnished. Then goeth he, and taketh with himself seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there and the last state of that man is worse than the first. Even so shall it be also unto this wicked generation."
The immediate occasion of these words was the manifest and great backsliding of
the Jewish people generally after the temporary awakening which was occasioned by
the preaching of John the Baptist. It is obvious from the history that the nation
had been extensively moved under John's preaching. Great multitudes flocked to hear
him--indeed the historian says, "Then went out to him Jerusalem, and all Judea,
and all the region round about Jordan." Public attention was aroused and a solemn
impression made. More still than this, it should be said that their minds had been
specially directed to One who should come after him--far greater than himself--indeed
the same whom the good men of their nation had long expected as their promised Messiah.
Yet when the great Messiah came, the people were unprepared to receive Him. A great
change had passed over the spirit of the nation. No sooner did Christ begin to preach
than a strong opposition began to be manifested. There had evidently been a great
backsliding. We must suppose that many who had been aroused under John's preaching
were now bitterly hostile to Christ's doctrine.
When this fact became apparent, the Savior illustrated its guilt and danger in the
language of our text, by a figure taken from the then common occurrence of demoniacal
possessions. An unclean spirit has had possession in a man; he goes out; finding
no rest elsewhere, he returns, and here finding all things so well prepared for his
reception, he is encouraged to get more company;--goes and gets to go with him, seven
other spirits more wicked than himself; they all enter in and dwell there, so that
the last state of that man is worse than the first. The poor man did not take advantage
of the absence of the unclean spirit, and put himself at once in a position in which
no such being could ever come near him again, but rather prepared himself the more
for their reception. Consequently he soon had enough of them to make his last state
worse than his first.
Thus does our Lord illustrate the case of the Jewish nation who had temporarily recovered
themselves out of the snare and the power of the devil--had given heed to the words
of life spoken by John, but had suddenly and woefully relapsed, rejecting their great
Messiah, and now were seven fold more under the power of the devil than ever before.
But theirs was no unusual experience. It happens to all who relapse in like manner,
rejecting the truth which they had begun to receive. Hence the text reveals a general
principle.
In discussing this principle and bringing out clearly its present application, we
must,
I. Consider what is represented by the departure of the unclean spirit.
II. That the state of things consequent on his departure cannot continue long.
III. Point out the dangers and results of a spiritual relapse.
I. The first and great thing represented by the departure of the unclean spirit
is, the breaking up of the spell of sin.
Sinners who can live stupidly in sin are spell-bound. Sin has a charm--a power of
infatuation over them. They don't see their sins nor at all understand their spiritual
condition. They can even say--"I am rich and increased with goods and have need
of nothing; but they know not that they are wretched and poor and miserable and blind
and naked." Poor souls! They do not know the first thing about their true condition
as they ought to and need to know it.
But the thing represented by the going out of the unclean spirit is, the breaking
up of this spell of self-delusion. The man becomes troubled on account of his sins.
He is convicted and begins to bestir himself. Perhaps he sets about some external
reformation, taking the greatest pains to make some clean spots on the outside of
the cup and platter, yet leaving the inside full of all uncleanness. Pressed by conviction
of sin, he comes towards the gate of mercy, yet pauses there and lingers long through
indecision. He thinks; he prays some; he waits and deliberates on the very threshold
of the kingdom of heaven. This seems to be precisely the state represented by the
case of the man out of whom the unclean spirit has gone. There is a temporary suspension
of the reign of evil; and a consequent opening for new relations with the good. The
sinner might now have life, and he makes some approximation towards it; perhaps he
does all, but the vital thing, viz., to close in finally and fully with the conditions
of salvation. He is almost persuaded, does everything else but give his whole heart
to God, yet failing of this, nothing is so done as to secure any permanently good
results. The Jewish nation had gone so far that they seemed quite prepared to receive
their expected Messiah--yet when He came, where were they?
This leads me to consider,
II. The fact that this state of mind, illustrated by the temporary absence of
the evil spirit, cannot continue long.
But I must hasten to speak,
III. Of the dangers and results of a spiritual relapse.
Of its dangers how can we say less than that it is infinitely fraught with danger,
of the worst kind. The worst forms of evil are sure to follow. Seven other spirits
more wicked than the first are sure to enter in, and what is more, they go in to
dwell there, little expecting to be ever ousted from their secure abode.
The sinner's dangers will be as numerous as his temptations, for probably each temptation
will now get the mastery over him.
After the action of the mind in its convicted state, there naturally comes on a reaction,
and this is generally fatal. When persons, having been partially reclaimed, have
relapsed into any particular vice, there is small reason to hope they will come up
again. How often has this been seen in the progress of the Temperance Reform? Thousands
have been caught hold of by the strong arm of affection and lifted up to the edge
of the awful quagmire; but unless they have themselves caught hold of the arm of
Jehovah's strength, they have in many, many cases slipped from their treacherous
footing and slumped back in to that awful Slough of Death--A Drunkard's Relapse.
You have seen such things. They are developments of a general law of mind. Unless
the effort of reform is backed up by grace, reaction will certainly ensue and its
power will be terrible. Let the dykes once begin to give way and the current set
across the breach--all is over. Relapse bursts these flood gates of death. The power
of the mind to resist temptation seems to be broke down. The mind seems to have given
itself up to be overcome, and the genius of evil is not slow to seize his opportunity
of making his victim sure. Nor is there an encouraging hope of deliverance. The mind
has once met the question--Shall I give myself wholly up to God and take hold of
promised grace to subdue all future sin? It met this question, but failed to decide
it right. It is henceforth averse to meeting the question again. A sense of shame
perhaps forbids. A feeling of self-respect rises up and seems to demand that a position
once taken shall be maintained. The mind is irked and vexed with the perpetual recurrence
of an unwelcome question, once set at rest. Hence there is small reason to hope that
the mind will return to the subject and make a right decision, and thus secure the
deliverance needed and provided.
All these influences combine to put the relapsed soul on an inclined plane, down
which it glides smoothly and swiftly to the gulf of ruin. The house does not stand
long, waiting to be filled; soon a seven-fold evil comes in, and comes to dwell there.
The case as given by our Lord illustrates a great principle. If the Jewish nation
falls back from the moral elevation gained under John's preaching, temptations rush
in again with their augmented returning waves, and the fearful crisis of its moral
ruin hastens on apace. The individual soul that gives way again to temptation after
a partial rescue has less power to resist than before; the mind becomes chafed and
restive, or perhaps discouraged; it hates restraint more then ever, and sometimes
seems to come all suddenly to the decision--"I will not be restrained any longer."
REMARKS.
1. Everyone acquainted with the history of the Jews knows how aptly this illustration
meets their case. Who ever has read Josephus' history of the Jewish Wars, and of
the ensuing destruction of their beloved city, will recognize at once the moral features
of the likeness drawn by Christ in our text. The nation perished because it was too
awfully wicked to live any longer. Who that has read of their awful corruption does
not see the seven other wicked devils in undisputed possession, and the last state
of the nation worse than the first--ah! with a vengeance! Retribution came, as it
always must when the cup of iniquity is full, and none who saw it as it measured
out its terrible judgments upon the doomed city and people could forbear to cry out--"Verily,
the anger of their God is heavy upon them and there is no remedy!" When they
pressed into Pilate's court and cried--"Let Him be crucified."--they recklessly
braved if indeed they did not invoke the vengeance of Jehovah--"His blood,"
they say, "be on us and on our children!" How terribly did it fall on them
ere long!
2. The same principle applies substantially to every reformation that has ever occured.
It has come with its hands full of blessings which some have received, and have found
good, even to the extent of everlasting life; but others, rejecting these blessings,
have become indefinitely worse. Their becoming worse is no fault of the gospel itself,
but is altogether their own. It is no more the fault of the gospel now than it was
in Christ's own age and under His preaching. Then as now, some rejected the counsel
of God against their own souls, and as a consequence what came from God to bless
them they turned into a terrible curse and cursed themselves with it for eternity.
Thus seasons of reformation in every age of the world are set for the fall and for
the uprising of many in Israel--for the fall of many never to rise again; and for
the uprising of many to life and blessedness eternal. The reformations are themselves
faultless and may be conducted unexceptionably: but he who repels their influence
will soon find his soul beyond the reach of good in this or any other world. There
can be no good to those who scorn God's means of conferring it. How rapidly they
go down to moral destruction when once by resisting truth they have lost the bottom
of their minds, so that hence forth they hear truth only as a tub without a bottom
holds water!
3. The passage before us and the principle it illustrates should be compared with
that fearful declaration of God which speaks of those that "perish, because
they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved," and of whom
He says--"for this cause God shall send upon them strong delusion that they
should believe a lie, that they all might be damned who believed not all the truth
but had pleasure in unrighteousness." Discarding and hating the truth which
God reveals in love to their souls, they were suffered to embrace errors more and
more destructive. They chose darkness rather than light; what therefore could a God
of light and truth do for them more? What else should He do but make them beacons
to warn other sinners against the rocks on which they made shipwreck of their moral
natures and hence of their eternal well-being? Time was in their case when the evil
spirit went out of them also, but they utterly failed to improve their opportunity
for God; the spirit came back, found all things to his mind; took seven spirits indefinitely
worse; they all take up their abode in that sinner's heart; then follow infatuation
and swift damnation.
4. We see the danger incurred by churches and families, if they fail to "know
the day of their visitation."
The fearful woes which fell on the Jewish nation came on them, said their offered
Savior, "Because thou knewest not the time of thy visitation." They had
a visitation of mercy; God came near as He could to bless them; but the mass saw
not, or at least heeded not His coming; practically they "knew not the day of
their visitation." They ought to have known it. It was more their fault than
their misfortune that they failed to know it.
So of churches and families in our day, to whom God comes graciously near but who
fail to notice His presence, or are not quite ready to greet His coming, until He
is gone! Alas! How many such cases occur both in churches and in families! They see
not their hour of mercy till it has past. They are not in the secret counsels of
the Most High--do not abide so near the Lord as to know His near approach. A few
individuals may have such communion with God as to feel His special presence; but
their testimony may be wholly unknown, and if known, may be unheeded by their brethren.
Many such churches have I seen, which seemed in many respects just on the eve of
being blessed with great power; but the cloud of mercy broke and passed off with
only a great wind; Satan came back and with him legions of evil spirits, and their
last state was seven-fold worse than their first.
5. From this point of our subject, we can see the great guilt of those who "come
not up to the help of the Lord against the mighty," until the strength of the
few who are in the battlefield is spent. In all cases where the Lord comes near to
bless a people, many laborers are needed to co-operate in His work. If they are not
on hand, the work flags, and soon the Spirit of God is withdrawn. This is the more
certainly the case if the lack of laborers is the fault of God's professing people.
If it should occur without their fault, the fact would not offend God and would not
be necessarily a reason for the sudden withdrawal of His Spirit.
But as the cases commonly occur, the lack of laborers is wholly attributable to the
spiritual apathy of professed Christians. All appearances indicate that God is about
to work mightily through and by His people; a few observe these tokens and enter
with all their strength upon the work of the Lord; but the many are not ready for
the sacrifice and effort called by the tokens of Jehovah's presence; they do not
come up to the help of the Lord against His mighty foes. The angel of the Lord sends
down His curse upon them. "Curse them bitterly," says He, because in the
hour of need they would not help in the work of the Lord!. God called, but they came
not. The crisis came, and the crisis went: they moved not: now therefore the wrath
of the Lord waxes hot against them for their fearful disobedience to Heaven's high
command.
6. Reaction is disastrous in proportion to the extent of the partial reformation.
It was obviously so in the case of John's preaching. Those who learned from him most
fully the way of salvation and who when Jesus came rejected Him were most deeply
guilty and most awfully cursed by the returning power of other unclean spirits.
We who are parents may see what you have to expect if you allow this spiritual relapse
to come upon your children. Perhaps you will not realize their danger and will fail
to press them to the final and full decision for Christ until the precious season
is past: until the unclean spirit returns and legions more, yet worse, come in and
dwell there. Depend upon it, you will find the illustration given in our text but
too fearfully true. Just in proportion to the light sinned against and to the nearness
with which the kingdom of heaven is brought to their hearts, will be the terribleness
of their relapse and the uncertainty of their being ever again brought even so much
as near to Christ's kingdom. O how fearful a thing for a Christian parent to suffer
a child to slip past the sealing time, and go on his broad and easy way towards remediless
woe. How carefully should they watch the hour when the unclean spirit is gone out,
and bar the door forever against his return! For, once returned and admitted--once
reinforced with the presence of seven other more wicked spirits, the state of one
who is even a child of praying parents becomes fearfully perilous. Let parents think
much of their responsibility to seize now the favoring moment. Never wait till sin
gets entrenched in the heart. Take care against even one relapse from a convicted
state into unconcern and stupidity. You can scarcely conceive how terribly one such
relapse augments the difficulties in the way of sound conversion ever afterwards.
7. The relapse is usually more or less sudden, always more or less obvious and apparent,
according to the tone of general influence which prevails in the place. For under
a strong moral influence, the most hardened sinners are often kept morally decent
for a long time. But go into a place where sin takes to itself free scope and ranges
at will; there you will see the legitimate workings of a spiritual relapse. There
you will see how terrible is the tendency of sin to drag its victim downward, downward,
to the very depths of hell. You can there mark the fearful reaction which follows
deliberate rejection of offered mercy, especially if done despite of the powerful
action of divine influence, seeking to persuade the sinner to repent. If you have
never seen these developments in so strong a light as I have represented them, you
need only go where external restraint is chiefly or wholly withdrawn, and you will
surely see it, and will say the half had never been told you.
8. How terrible, therefore, must be the moral state of those who profess to be religious,
but who yet have relapsed entirely in heart and are only kept in moral decency by
the force of involuntary habits or that of public sentiment. How appalling is their
danger! Every physician knows what a relapse is in his patient; he has seen them
till he has reason to dread them as his most dangerous adversaries. He thought the
crisis of danger was nearly past--all seemed to be doing well; hope had sprung up
in his bosom and become almost settled into assurance, when suddenly the awful fact
of relapse--flashes upon his eye! Ah, now there is peril! Now let medical skill do
its utmost; there is scant hope at the very best. There is scarce a more fearful
event in the whole range of medical practice than this of relapse. The system has
perhaps rallied itself to its utmost strength to throw off disease and it seemed
about to conquer; but now, its powers exhausted, its enemy charges again as with
fresh forces and the conflict if not fatal is at least terrible.
Not less so is the conflict between the seven-fold forces of sin and the retreating
and half-crushed moral energies that remain after a spiritual relapse. Alas, how
many have found the conflict short and feeble, and the issue forever fatal. My dear
hearers, it is a fearful thing to suffer a deep moral relapse. Woe to those upon
whose backsliding souls it shall fall!
What then will you do? What will you do today? Are you aware of the state of things
among yourselves, of the degree in which the Spirit's power is manifested here even
among you? If you were fully so, you must see that this is no time for spiritual
trifling. You would see a stronger emphasis than ever you have seen before in the
language--"Behold, now is the accepted time; behold now is the day of salvation."
From many of you the unclean spirit has gone out, and in the deep calm which ensues,
you might with hopeful ease, escape the snares of Satan and place yourselves under
the shadow of the Savior's wing; will you do it? If still you are tempted to linger,--I
say unto you, beware of those seven other spirits, more wicked than the first, for
they need only this very lingering of yours to be their signal for returning with
more awful power to take such a possession of your soul as your efforts, thenceforward
faint and feeble, will never avail to disturb.
GLOSSARY
of easily misunderstood terms as defined by Mr. Finney himself.
Compiled by Katie Stewart
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