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The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul
Chapter 21
A Caution Against Various Temptations
1. Dangers continue, after the first difficulties (considered
Chap. xvi.) are broken through.--2. Particular cautions--against a sluggish and
indolent temper.--3. Against the excessive love of sensitive pleasure.--4.
Leading to a neglect of business and needless expense.--5. Against the snares of
evil company.--6. Against excessive hurry of worldly business.--7. Which is
enforced by the fatal consequences these have had in many cases.--8. The chapter
concludes with an exhortation to die to this world, and to live to another. And
the young Convert's prayer for Divine protection against the dangers arising
from these snares.
1. THIS representation I have been making of the pleasure and advantage of a
life spent in devotedness to God and communion with him, as I have described it
above, will, I hope, engage you, my dear reader, to form some purposes, and make
some attempt to obtain it. But from considering the nature, and observing the
course of things, it appears exceedingly evident, that, besides the general
opposition which I formerly mentioned as like to attend you in your first
entrance on a religious life, you will find even that, after you have resolutely
broke through this, a variety of hindrances in any attempts or exemplary piety,
and in the prosecution of a remarkably strict and edifying course, will present
themselves daily in your path; and whereas you may, by a few resolute efforts,
baffle some of the former sorts of enemies, these will be perpetually renewing
their onsets, and a vigorous struggle must be continually maintained with them.
Give me leave now, therefore, to be particular in my cautions against some of
the chief of them. And here I would insist upon the difficulties which will
arise from indolence and the love of pleasure from vain company, and worldly
cares. Each of these may prove ensnaring to any, and especially to young
persons, to whom I would now have some particular regard.
2. I entreat you, therefore, in the first
place, that you will guard against a sluggish and indolent temper. The love of
ease insinuates itself into the heart under a variety of plausible pretences,
which are often allowed to pass, when temptations of a grosser nature would not
be admitted. The misspending a little time seems to wise and good men a small
matter; yet this sometimes runs them in into great inconveniencies. It often
leads them to break in upon the seasons regularly allotted to devotion, and to
defer business which might immediately be done, but being put off from day to
day, is not done at all, and thereby the services of life are at least
diminished, and the rewards of eternity diminished proportionably: not to insist
upon it, that very frequently this lays the soul open to farther temptations, by
which it falls, in consequence of being found unemployed. Be therefore
suspicious of the first approaches of this kind. Remember that the soul of man
is an active being, and that it must find its pleasure in activity. "Gird up,"
therefore, "the loins of your mind." (1 Pet. 1:13) Endeavor to keep yourself
always well employed. Be exact, if I may with humble reverence use the
expression, in your appointments with God. Meet him early in the morning; and
say not with the sluggard, when the proper hour of rising is come, "A little
more sleep, a little more slumber." (Prov. 6:10) That time which prudence shall
advise you, give to conversation and to other recreations. But when that is
elapsed, and no unforeseen and important engagement prevents, rise and begone.
Quit the company of your dearest friends, and retire to your proper business,
whether it be in the field, the shop, or the closet. For by acting contrary to
the secret dictates of your mind as to what it is just at the present moment
best to do, though it be but in the manner of spending half an hour, some degree
of guilt is contracted, and a habit is cherished, which may draw after it much
worse consequences. Consider, therefore, what duties are to be dispatched, and
in what seasons. Form your plan as prudently as you can, and pursue it
resolutely; unless an unexpected incident arises, which leads you to conclude
that duty calls you another way. Allowances for such unthought-of interruptions
must be made; but if, in consequence of this, you are obliged to omit any thing
of importance which you proposed behave done to-day, do it if possible
to-morrow; and do not cut yourself out new work, till the former plan be
dispatched; unless you really judge it, not merely more amusing, but more
important. And always remember, that a servant of Christ should see to it, that
he determine on these occasions as in his Master's presence.
3. Guard also against an excessive love of
sensitive and animal pleasure, as that which will be a great hindrance to you in
that religious course which I have now been urging. You cannot but know that
Christ has told us, "that a man must deny himself, and take up his cross daily,"
(Luke 9:23) if he desire to become his disciple. Christ, the Son of God, "the
former and the heir of all things, pleased not himself," (Rom. 15:3) but
submitted to want, to difficulties, and hardships, in the way of duty, and some
of them of the extremest kind and degree, for the glory of God and the salvation
of men. In this way we are to follow him; and as we know not how soon we may be
called, even to "resist unto blood, striving against sin," (Heb. 12:4) it is
certainly best to accustom ourselves to that discipline which we may possibly be
called out to exercise, even in such rigorous heights. A soft and delicate life
will give force to temptations, which might easily be subdued by one who has
habituated himself to "endure hardships as a good soldier of Jesus Christ." (2
Tim. 2:3) It also produces an attachment to this world, and an unwillingness to
leave it, which ill becomes those who are strangers and pilgrims on earth, and
who expect so soon to be called away to that better country which they "profess
to seek." (Heb. 11:13,16) Add to this, that, what the world calls a life of
pleasure, is necessarily a life of expense too, and may perhaps lead you, as it
has many others, and especially many who have been setting out in the world,
beyond the limits which Providence has assigned; and so, after a course of
indulgence, may produce a proportionable want. And while in other cases it is
true that pity should be shown to the poor, this is a poverty that is justly
contemptible, because it is the effect of a man's own folly; and when your "want
thus comes upon you as an armed man," (Prov. 6:11) you will not only find
yourself striped of the capacity you might otherwise have secured for performing
those works of charity which are so ornamental to a Christian profession, but
probably will be under strong temptations to some low artifice or mean
compliance, quite beneath the Christian character and that of an upright man.
Many, who once made a high profession, after a series of such sorry and
scandalous shifts, have fallen into the infamy of the worst kind of bankrupts; I
mean such as have lavished away on themselves what was indeed the property of
others, and so have injured, and perhaps ruined, the industrious, to feed a
foolish, luxurious, or ostentatious humor, which, while indulged, was the shame
of their own families, and when it can be indulged no longer, is their torment.
This will be a terrible reproach to religion: such a reproach to it, that a good
man would rather choose to live on bread and water, or indeed to die for want of
them, than to occasion it 4. Guard, therefore,
I beseech you, against any thing which might tend that way, especially by
diligence in business, and by prudence and frugality in expense, which, by the
Divine blessing, may have a very happy influence to make your affairs
prosperous, your health vigorous, and your mind easy. But this cannot be
attained without keeping a resolute watch over yourself, and strenuously
refusing to comply with many proposals which indolence and sensuality will offer
in very plausible forms, and for which it will plead, "that it asks but very
little." Take heed, lest in this respect you imitate those fond parents, who, by
indulging their children in every little thing they have a mind to, encourage
them, by insensible degrees, to grow still more encroaching and imperious in
their demands; as if they chose to be ruined with them, rather than to check
them in what seems a trifle. Remember, and consider that excellent remark,
sealed by the ruin of so many thousands: "He that despiseth small things, shall
fall by little and litt1e." 5. In this view,
give me leave also seriously and tenderly to caution you, my dear reader,
against the snares of vain company. I speak not, as before, of that company
which is openly licentious and profane. I hope there is something now in your
temper and views, which would engage you to turn away from such with detestation
and horror. But I beseech you to consider, that those companions may be very
dangerous, who might at first give you but very little alarm: I mean those who,
though not the declared enemies of religion, and professed followers of vice and
disorder, yet nevertheless have no practical sense of divine things on their
hearts, so far as can be judged by their conversation and behavior. You must
often of necessity be with such persons; and Christianity not only allows, but
requires, that you should, on all expedient occasions of intercourse with them,
treat them with civility and respect; but choose not such for your most intimate
friends, and do not contrive to spend most of your leisure moments among them.
For such converse has a sensible tendency to alienate the soul from God, and to
render it unfit for all spiritual communion with him. To convince you of this,
do but reflect on your own experience, when you have been for many hours
together among persons of such a character. Do you not find yourself more
indisposed for devotional exercises? Do you not find your heart, by insensible
degrees, more and more inclined to a conformity to this world, and to look with
a secret disrelish on those objects and employments to which reason directs as
the noblest and best? Observe the first symptoms, and guard against the snare in
time: and for this purpose, endeavor to form friendships founded in piety, and
supported by it. "Be a companion of them that fear God, and of them that keep
his precepts." (Psa. 119:63) You well know, that in the sight of God "they are
the excellent of the earth;" let them therefore "be all your delight." (Psa.
16:3) And that the peculiar benefit of their friendship may not be lost,
endeavor to make the best of the hours you spend with them. The wisest of men
has observed that when "counsel in the heart of a man is like deep waters," that
is, when it lies low and concealed, `a man of understanding will draw it out.'
(Prov. 20:5) 5. Endeavor, therefore, on such
occasions, so far as you can do it with decency and convenience, give the
conversation a religious turn. And when serious and useful subjects are started
in your presence, lay hold of them, and cultivate them; and for that purpose
"let the word of Christ dwell richly in you," (Col. 3:1) and be continually made
"the man of your counsel." (Psa. 119:24) 6. If
it be so, it will secure you not only from the snares of idleness and luxury,
but from the contagion of every bad example. And it will also engage you to
guard against those excessive hurries of worldly business, which would fill up
all your time and thoughts, and thereby "choke the good word" of God, and render
it in a great measure, if not quite, unfruitful. (Matt. 13:22) Young people are
generally of an enterprising disposition: having experienced comparatively
little of the fatigue of business, and of the disappointments and incumbrances
of life, they easily swallow them up and annihilate them in their imagination,
and fancy that their spirit, their application, and address, will be able to
encounter and, surmount every obstacle or hinderance. But the event proves it
otherwise. Let me entreat you, therefore, to be cautious how you plunge yourself
into a greater variety of business than you are capable of managing as you
ought, that is, in consistency with the care of your soul and the service of
God, which certainly ought not on any pretence to be neglected. It is true
indeed, that a prudent regard to your worldly interest would require such a
caution; as it is obvious to every careful observer, that multitudes are undone
by grasping at more than they can conveniently manage. Hence it has frequently
been seen, that, while they have seemed resolved to be rich, they have "pierced
themselves through with many sorrows," (1 Tim. 6:10) have ruined their own
families, and drawn down many others into desolation with them. Whereas, could
they have been contented with moderate employments and moderate gains, they
might have prospered in their business, and might, by sure degrees, under a
divine blessing, have advanced to great and honorable increase. But if there
were no danger at all to be apprehended on this bend, if you were as certain of
becoming rich and great, as you are of perplexing and fatiguing yourself in the
attempt, consider, I beseech you, how precarious these enjoyments are. Consider
how often "a plentiful table becomes a snare, and that which should have been
for a man's welfare, becomes a trap." (Psa. 69:22) Forget not that short lesson,
which is so comprehensive of the highest wisdom: "One thing is needful." (Luke
10:42) Be daily thinking, while the gay and the great things of life are
glittering before your eyes, how soon death will come, and impoverish you at
once: how soon it will strip you of all possessions but those which a naked soul
can carry along with it into eternity, when it drops the body into the grave.
ETERNITY! ETERNITY! ETERNITY! Carry the view of it about with you; if it be
possible, through every hour of waking life; and be fully persuaded that you
have no business, no interest in life, that is inconsistent with it; for
whatsoever would be injurious in view of eternity. is not your business, is not
your interest. You see indeed, that the generality of men act as if they thought
the great thing which God requires of them, in order to secure his favor, was to
get as much of the world as possible: at least as much us they can without any
gross immorality, and without risking the loss of all. Such persons may tell
others, and perhaps flatter themselves, that they only seek opportunities of
greater usefulness. But in effect, if they mean any thing more by this than a
capacity of usefulness, which, when they have it, they will not exert, they
generally deceive themselves; and, one way or another, it is a vain pretence. In
most instances men seek the world--either that they may hoard up riches for the
mean and scandalous satisfaction of looking upon them while they are living, and
of thinking, that, when they are dead, it will be said of them that they have
left so many hundreds or thousands of pounds behind them; very probably, to
ensnare their children, or their heirs, (for the vanity is not peculiar to those
who have children of their own)--or else that they may lavish away their riches
on their lusts, and drown themselves in a gulf of sensuality in which, if reason
be not lost, religion is soon swallowed up, and with it all the noblest
pleasures which can enter into the heart of man. In this view, the generality of
rich people appear to me objects of much greater compassion than the poor:
especially as, when both live (which is frequently the case) without any fear of
God before their eyes, the rich abuse the greater variety and abundance of their
favors, and therefore will probably feel, in that world of future ruin which
awaits impenitent sinners, a more exquisite sense of their misery.
7. And let me observe to you, my dear reader,
lest you should think yourself secure from any such danger that we have great
reason to apprehend there are many now in a very wretched state, who once
thought seriously of religion, when they were first setting out, in lower
circumstances of life; but they have since forsaken God for Mammon and are now
priding themselves in those golden chains, which, in all probability. before it
be long, will leave them to remain in those of darkness. When, therefore, an
attachment to the world may be followed with such fatal consequences, "let not
thine heart envy sinners," (Prov. 23:17) and do not, out of a desire of gaining
what they have, be guilty of such folly as to expose yourself to this double
danger or failing in the attempt, or of being undone by the success of it.
Contract your desires; endeavor to be easy and content with a little; and if
Providence call you out to act in a larger sphere, submit to it in obedience to
Providence, but number it among the trials of life, which it will require a
larger proportion of grace to bear well. For be assured, that, as affairs and
interests multiply, cares and duties will certainly increase, and probably
disappointments and sorrows will increase in an equal proportion.
8. On the whole, learn, by divine grace, to
die to the present world: to look upon it as a low state of being, which God
never intended for the final and complete happiness, or the supreme care of any
one of his children: a world, where something is indeed to be enjoyed, but
chiefly from himself; where a great deal is to be borne with patience and
resignation; and where some important duties are to be performed, and a course
of discipline to be passed through, by which you are to be formed for a better
state, to which, as a Christian, you are near, and to which God will call you,
perhaps on a sudden, but undoubtedly, if you hold on your way, in the fittest
time and the most convenient manner. Refer, therefore, all this to him. Let your
hopes and fears, your expectations and desires, with regard to this world, be
kept as low as possible; and all your thoughts be united, as much as may be, in
this one centre: what is it that God would, in present have you to be: and what
is that method of conduct by which you may most effectually please and glorify
him.
The Young Convert's Prayer for Divine Protection against the Danger of
these Snares.
"Blessed God! in the midst of
ten thousand snares and dangers, which surround me from without and from within,
permit me to look up unto thee with my humble entreaty, that thou wouldst
`deliver me from them that rise up against me,' (Psa. 59:1) and that `thine eyes
may be upon me for good.' (Jer. 24:6) When sloth and indolence are ready to
seize me, awaken me from that idle dream, with lively and affectionate views of
that invisible and eternal world to which I am tending! Remind me of what
infinite importance it is, that I diligently improve those transient moments
which thou hast allotted me as the time of my preparation for it.
"When sinners entice me, may I not consent!
(Prov. 1:10) May holy converse with God give me a disrelish for the converse of
those who are strangers to thee, and who would separate my soul from thee! May I
`honor them that fear the Lord,' (Psa. 15:4) and walking with such wise and holy
men, may I find I am daily advancing in wisdom and holiness! (Prov. 13:20)
Quicken me, O Lord! by their means; that by me thou mayest also quicken others!
Make me the happy instrument of enkindling and animating the flame of divine
love in their breasts; and may it catch from heart to heart, and grow every
moment in its progress! "Guard me, O Lord!
from the love of sensual pleasure! May I seriously remember, `that to be
carnally-minded is death!' (Rom. 8:6) May it please thee, therefore, to purify
and refine my soul by the influence of thine Holy Spirit, that I may always shun
unlawful gratifications more solicitously than others pursue them; and that
those indulgences of animal nature which thou hast allowed, and which the
constitution of things renders necessary, may be soberly and moderately used!
May I still remember the superior dignity of my spiritual and intelligent
nature, and may the pleasures of the man and the Christian be sought as my
noblest happiness! May my soul rise on the wings of holy contemplation to the
regions of invisible glory; and may I be endeavoring to form myself, under the
influences of divine grace, for the entertainments of those angelic spirits that
live in thy presence in a happy incapacity of those gross delights by which
spirits dwelling in flesh are so often ensnared, and in which they so often lose
the memory of their high original, and of those noble hopes which alone are
proportionable to it! "Give me, O Lord! to
know the station in which thou hast fixed me, and steadily to pursue the duties
of it! But deliver me from those excessive cares of this world, which would so
engross my time and my thoughts, that `the one thing needful' should be
forgotten! May my desires after worldly possessions be moderated, by considering
their uncertain and unsatisfying nature; and, while others are laying up
treasures on earth, may I be `rich towards God!' (Luke 12:21) May I never be too
busy to attend to those great affairs which lie between thee and my soul; never
be so engrossed with the concerns of time, as to neglect the interests of
eternity! May I pass through earth with my heart and hopes set upon heaven, and
feel the attractive influence stronger and stronger as I approach still nearer
and nearer to that desirable centre; till the happy moment come, when every
earthly object shall disappear from my view, and the shining glories of the
heavenly world shall fill my improved and strengthened sight, which shall then
be cheered with that which would now overwhelm me! Amen."
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