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Isaiah 33:14
Subject: The time will come when
fearfulness will surprise the sinners in Zion; because they will know that they
are going to be cast into a devouring fire, which they must suffer forever and
ever, and which none can endure.
SECTION I
Showing who
are sinners in Zion.
THERE
are two kinds of persons among God’s professing people. The one, those who are
truly godly, spoken of in the verse following the text, “He that walketh
righteously, and speaketh uprightly,” etc. The other kind consists of sinners in
Zion, or hypocrites. It is to be observed that the prophet in this chapter
speaks interchangeably, first to the one, and then to the other of these
characters of men, awfully threatening and denouncing the wrath of God against
the one, and comforting the other with gracious promises. Thus you may observe,
in the 5th and 6th verses, there are comfortable promises to the godly. Then in
the eight following verses, awful judgments are threatened against the sinners
in Zion. Again, in the two next verses are blessed promises to the sincerely
godly, and in the former part of verse 17. And then in the latter part of verse
17. and in verse 18 and 19 are terrible threatenings to sinners in Zion. Then in
the verses that follow are gracious promises to the godly.
Our text is
part of what is said in this chapter to sinners in Zion. In verse 10, it is
said, “Now will I rise, saith the Lord; now will I be exalted; now will I lift
up myself,” i.e. Now will I arise to execute wrath upon the ungodly. I
will not let them alone any longer. They shall see that I am not asleep, and
that I am not regardless of mine own honor. “Now will I be exalted.” Though they
have cast contempt upon me, yet I will vindicate the honor of my own majesty. I
will exalt myself, and show my greatness, and my awful majesty in their
destruction. “Now will I lift up myself.” Now I will no longer have mine honor
trampled in the dust by them. But my glory shall be manifested in their misery.
In verse 11,
the prophet proceeds, “Ye shall conceive chaff, ye shall bring forth stubble,”
i.e. Ye shall pursue happiness in ways of wickedness, but you shall not
obtain it. You are as ground which brings forth no fruit, as if only chaff were
sowed in it. It brings forth nothing but stubble, which is fit for nothing but
to be burned.
It seems to
have been the manner in that land where the corn grew very rank, when they had
reaped the wheat, and gathered it off from the ground, to set fire to the
stubble, which is alluded to here. And therefore it is added, “Your breath, as
fire, shall devour you.” i.e. Your own wicked speeches, your wickedness
that you commit with your breath, or with your tongues, shall set fire to the
stubble and devour it.
Then it follows
in verse 12, “And the people shall be as the burnings of lime.” As they are wont
to burn lime in a great and exceeding fierce fire, till stones, and bones, and
other things are burnt to lime, so shall the wicked be burnt in the fire of
God’s wrath. “As thorns cut up shall they be burnt in the fire.” As briers and
thorns are the encumbrance and curse of the ground where they grow, and are wont
to be burnt, so shall it be with the wicked that are among God’s people, and
grow in God’s field. Heb. 6:7, 8, “For the earth which drinketh in the rain that
cometh oft upon it, and bringeth forth herbs meet for them by whom it is
dressed, receiveth blessing from God: but that which beareth thorns and briers,
is rejected, and is nigh unto cursing; whose end is to be burned.”
Then it follows
in verse 13, “Hear ye that are far off, what I have done; and ye that are near,
acknowledge my might.” This implies that God will by the destruction of ungodly
men, manifest his glory very publicly, even in the sight of the whole world,
both in the sight of those that are near, and of those that are far off.
“Acknowledge my might.” Which implies that God will execute wrath upon ungodly
men in such a manner as extraordinarily to show forth his great and mighty
power. The destruction and misery of the wicked will be so dreadful, that it
will be a manifestation of the omnipotent power of God, that he can execute such
misery; agreeable to Rom. 9:22, “What if God, willing to show his wrath, and to
make his power known, endured with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath
fitted to destruction.”
Next follow
these words: “The sinners in Zion are afraid; fearfulness hath surprised the
hypocrites. Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? who among us shall
dwell with everlasting burnings?” The sense is, That the time will come, when
fearfulness will surprise the sinners in Zion, because they will know, that they
are about to be cast into a devouring fire, which they must suffer forever and
ever, and which none can endure.
It may be
inquired, who are the sinners in Zion? — I answer, that they are those who are
in a natural condition among the visible people of God. Zion, or the city of
David of old, was a type of the church. And the church of God in Scripture is
perhaps more frequently called by the name of Zion than by any other name. And
commonly by Zion is meant the true church of Christ, or the invisible church of
true saints. But sometimes by this name is meant the visible church, consisting
of those who are outwardly, by profession and external privileges, the people of
God. This is intended by Zion in this text.
The greater
part of the world are sinners. Christ’s flock is, and ever hath been, but a
little flock. And the sinners of the world are of two sorts: those who
are visibly of Satan’s kingdom, who are without the pale of the visible church;
and those who do not profess the true religion, nor attend the external
ordinances of it. Beside these there are the sinners in Zion. Both are
the objects of the displeasure and wrath of God. But his wrath is more
especially manifested in Scripture against the latter. Sinners in Zion will have
by far the lowest place in hell. They are exalted nearest to heaven in this
world, and they will be lowest in hell in another. The same is meant by
hypocrites. Sinners in Zion are all hypocrites. For they make a profession
of the true religion. They attend God’s ordinances, and make a show of being the
worshippers of God. But all is hypocrisy.
SECTION II
How fearfulness will hereafter surprise
sinners in Zion.
I. They will hereafter be afraid. Now
many of them seem to have little or no fear. They are quiet and secure. Nothing
will awaken them. The most awful threatenings and the loudest warnings do not
much move them. They are not so much moved with them, but they can eat, and
drink, and sleep, and go about their worldly concerns without much disturbance.
But the time will come, when the hardest and most stupid wretches will be
awakened. Though now preaching will not awaken them, and the death of others
will not make them afraid, though seeing others awakened and converted will not
much affect them, though they can stand all that is to be heard and seen in a
time of general out-pouring of the Spirit of God, without being much moved; yet
the time will come, when they will be awakened, and fear will take hold of them.
They will be afraid of the wrath of God. However senseless they be now, they
will hereafter be sensible of the awful greatness of God, and that it is a
fearful thing to fall into his hands.
II. They will be surprised with fear.
This seems to imply two things; viz. the greatness of their fear, and the
suddenness of it.
First, the greatness of their
fear. Surprise argues a high degree of fear. Their fears will be to the degree
of astonishment. Some of the sinners in Zion are somewhat afraid now. They now
and then have some degree of fear. They are not indeed convinced that
there is such a place as hell. But they are afraid there is. They are not
thoroughly awakened. Neither are they quite easy. They have at certain times
inward molestations from their consciences. But they have no such degrees of
fear, as to put them upon any through endeavors to escape future wrath.
However, hereafter they will have fear
enough, as much, and a great deal more, than they will be able to stand under.
Their fear will be to the degree of horror. They will be horribly afraid and
terrors will take hold on them as water. Thus we read of their fear coming as
a desolation, and of distress and anguish coming upon them; Pro. 1:27. It is
also very emphatically said of the wicked, that trouble and anguish shall
prevail against him, as a king ready to the battle. Job 15:24.
The stoutest heart of them all will then melt
with fear. The hearts of those who are of a sturdy spirit, and perhaps scorn to
own themselves afraid of any man, and are even ashamed to own themselves afraid
of the wrath of God, will then become as weak as water, as weak as the heart of
a little child. And the most reserved of them will not be able to hide his
fears. Their faces will turn pale. They will appear with amazement in their
countenances. Every joint in them will tremble. All their bones will shake and
their knees will smite one against another. Nor will they be able to refrain
from crying out with fear, and from rending the air with the most dismal
shrieks.
Second, they will be suddenly
seized with fear. The sinners in Zion often remain secure till they are
surprised, as with a cry at midnight. They will be, as it were, awakened out of
their secure sleep in a dismal fright. They will see an unexpected calamity
coming upon them, far more dreadful than they were aware of, and coming at an
unexpected season.
With respect to the TIME when the wicked
shall be thus surprised with fear.
1. It is often so on a death-bed. Many
things pass in their lifetime, which one would think might well strike terror
into their souls, as when they see others die, who are as young as they, and of
like condition and circumstances with themselves, whereby they may see how
uncertain their lives are, and how unsafe their souls. It may well surprise many
sinners, to consider how old they are grown, and are yet in a Christless state.
How much or their opportunity to get an interest in Christ is irrecoverably
gone, and how little remains. Also how much greater their disadvantages now are,
than they have been. But these things do not terrify them. As age increases, so
do the hardness and stupidity of their hearts grow upon them.
But when death comes, then the sinner is
often filled with astonishment. It may be, when he is first taken sick, he has
great hope that he shall recover; as men are ready to flatter themselves with
hopes, that things will be as they fain would have them. But when the distemper
comes to prevail much upon him, and he sees that he is going into eternity, when
he sees that all the medicines of physicians are in vain, that all the care and
endeavors of friends are to no purpose, that nothing seems to help him that his
strength is gone, that his friends weep over him, and look upon his case as
desperate; when he sees, by the countenance and behavior of the physician, that
he looks upon his case as past hope, and perhaps overhears a whispering in the
room, wherein his friends signify one to another, that they look upon it that he
is struck with death, or wherein they tell one another, that his extreme parts
grow cold, that his countenance and manner of breathing, and his pulse, show
death, and that he begins to be in a cold death-sweat; and when perhaps, by and
by, some one thinks himself bound in duty and faithfulness to let him know the
worst, and therefore comes and asks him whether or no he be sensible that he is
a dying: — then how does fearfulness surprise the sinner in Zion! How does his
heart melt with fear! This is the thing which he feared ever since he was taken
sick. But till now he had hope that he should recover. The physician did not
speak. Or if he despaired, he spoke of such and such medicines as being very
proper. And he hoped that they would be effectual. And when these failed, he
changed his medicines, and applied something new. Then the sinner hoped that
would be effectual. Thus, although he constantly grew worse and worse, still he
hoped to recover.
At the same time he cried to God to spare
him, and made promises how he would live, if God would spare him, and he hoped
that God would hear him. He observed also, that his friends, and perhaps the
minister, seemed to pray earnestly for him. And he could not but hope that those
prayers would be answered, and he should be restored. But now how does his heart
sink and die within him! How does he look about with a freighted countenance!
How quick is the motion of his eye, through inward fear! And how quick and
sudden are all his motions! What a frightful hurry does he seem to be in! How
does forever look to him when he sees pale grim death staring him in the face,
and a vast eternity within a few hours or minutes of him!
It may be, he still struggles for a little
hope. He is loth to believe what is told him. He tells his informers that he
hopes they are more affrighted than they need be. He hopes that those symptoms
arise from some other cause. And, like a poor drowning man, he catches at
slender and brittle twigs, and clinches his hands about whatever he sees within
his reach.
But as death creeps more and more on him, he
sees his twigs break, all his hopes of life fail, and he sees he must die. O!
there is nothing but death before him! He has been hoping, but his hopes are all
dashed. He sees this world, and all that belongs to it, are gone. Now come the
thoughts of hell into his mind with amazement. O! how shall he go out of the
world? He knows he has no interest in Christ. His sins stare him in the face. O
the dreadful gulf of eternity! He had been crying to God, perhaps since he was
sick, to save him. And he had some hope, if it were his last sickness, that yet
God would pity him, and give him pardoning grace before he should die. He begged
and pleaded, and he hoped that God would have pity on his poor soul. At the same
time he asked others to pray for him, and he had been looking day after day for
some light to shine into his soul. But, alas! now he is a dying, and his friends
ask him, how death appears to him? whether any light appear? whether God have
not given him some token of his favor? And he answers, No, with a poor,
faltering, trembling voice, if able to speak at all. Or if his friends ask a
signal of hope, he can give none.
Now death comes on him more and more, and he
is just on the brink of eternity. Who can express the fear, the misgivings, and
hangings back, and the horrible fright and amazement, of his soul? Some who, in
such circumstances, have been able to speak, have been known to cry out, O
eternity! eternity! and some, O! a thousand worlds for an inch of time!
O! if they might but live a little while longer! But it must not be. Go they
must. They feel the frame of nature dissolving, and perceive the soul is just a
going. For sometimes the exercise of reason seems to hold to the last.
What, in such a case, is felt in the soul, in
those last moments, when it is just breaking its bands with the body, about to
fetch its leap, on the edge of eternity, and the very brink of hell, without any
Savior, or the lest testimony of divine mercy. I say, what is sometimes felt by
Christless souls in these moments, none can tell. Nor is it within the compass
of our conception.
2. The misery of the departed soul of a
sinner, besides what it now feels, consists in a great part in amazing fears of
what is yet to come. When the union of the soul and body is actually
broken, and the body has fetched its last gasp, the soul forsakes its old
habitation, and then falls into the hands of devils, who fly upon it, and seize
it more violently than ever hungry lions flew upon their prey. And with what
horror will it fall into those cruel hands!
If we imagine to ourselves the dreadful fear
with which a lamb or kid falls into the paws of a world, which lays hold of it
with open mouth; or if we imagine to ourselves the feeling of a little child,
that has been pursued by a lion, when it is taken hold of, and sees the terrible
creature open his devouring jaws to tear it in pieces; or the feeling of those
two and forty children, who had mocked Elisha, when they fell into the paws of
the bears that [tore] them in pieces; I say if we could have a perfect idea of
that terror and astonishment which a little child has in such a case, yet we
should have but a faint idea of what is felt in the departing soul of a sinner,
when it falls into the hands of those cruel devils those roaring lions, which
then seize of it!
And when the soul is carried to hell, and
there is tormented, suffers the wrath of the Almighty, and is overwhelmed and
crushed with it, it will also be amazed with the apprehensions of what shall
yet remain. To think of an eternity of this torment remaining, O how will it
fill, and overbear, and sink down the wretched soul! How will the thought of the
duration of this torment without end cause the heart to melt like wax! How will
the thought of it sink the soul into the bottomless pit of darkness and
gloominess! Even those proud and sturdy spirits, the devils, tremble at the
thoughts of that greater torment which they are to suffer at the day of
judgment. So will the poor damned souls of men. They have already more than they
will be able to bear. How then will they tremble at the thought of having their
misery so vastly augmented!
Persons sometimes in this world are afraid of
the day of judgment. If there be an earthquake, or if there be more than common
thunder and lightning, or if there be some unusual sight in the heavens, their
hearts are ready to tremble for fear that the day of judgment is at hand. O how
then do the poor souls in hell fear it, who know so much more about it, who know
by what they feel already, and know certainly, that whenever it comes
they shall stand on the left hand of the judge, to receive the dreadful
sentence. And that then, in soul and body, they must enter into those
everlasting burnings which are prepared for the devil and his angels, and who
probably know that their misery is to be an hundred-fold greater than it is now.
3. Fearfulness will surprise them at the
last judgment. When Christ shall appear in the clouds of heaven, and the
last trumpet shall sound, then will the hearts of wicked men be surprised with
fearfulness. The poor damned soul, in expectation of it, trembles every day and
every hour from the time of its departure from the body. It knows not, indeed,
when it is to be, but it knows it is to be. But when the alarm is
given in hell that the day is come, it will be a dreadful alarm indeed. It will,
as it were, fill the caverns of hell with shrieks. And when the souls of the
damned shall enter into their bodies, it will be with amazing horror of what is
coming. And when they shall lift up their heads out of their graves, and shall
see the judge, it will be a most terrible sight. Gladly would they return into
hell, their former state of misery, to hide themselves from this awful sight, if
that would excuse them.
So those sinners in Zion, who shall then be
found alive on the earth, when they shall see this sight, will be surprised with
fearfulness. The fear and horror which many poor sinners feel when they are
dying, is great, and beyond all that of which we can have any idea. But that is
nothing to the horror that will seize them when they shall come to see this
sight.
There will not be a wicked man upon earth who
will be able to bear it, let him be who he will. Let him be rich or poor, old or
young, male or female, servant or master, king or subject, learned or unlearned.
Let him be ever so proud, ever so courageous, and ever so sturdy. There is not
one who will be able at all to support himself. When he shall see this sight, it
will immediately sink his spirit. It will loose the joints of his loins. It will
make his countenance more ghastly than death. The rich captains, and valiant
generals and princes, who now scorn to show any fear at the face of an enemy,
who scorn to tremble at the roaring of cannon, will tremble and shriek when they
shall hear the last trumpet, and see the majesty of their judge. It will make
their teeth to chatter, and make them fly to hide themselves in the caves and
rocks of mountains, crying to the rocks and mountains to fall on them, and cover
them from the wrath of the judge.
Fearfulness will surprise them when they
shall be dragged before the judgment-seat. The wicked hang back when they are
about to meet death. But in no measure as they will hang back when they come to
meet their great judge. And when they come to stand before the judge, and are
put on his left hand, fearfulness and amazement will surprise them. The majesty
of the judge will be intolerable to them. His pure and holy eye, which will
behold and search them, and pierce them through, will be more terrible to their
souls a thousand times than flashes of lightning piercing their hearts. They
will they stand in a trembling, expectation, that by and by they shall hear the
words of that dreadful sentence proceed out of the mouth of Christ. They will
have a horrible expectation of that sentence. And what shall they do, whither
shall they fly, so as to be out of its hearing? They cannot shut their ears, so
as not to hear it.
Fearfulness will surprise them when the
sentence shall come to be pronounced. At the close of the judgment, that
dreadful doom will be uttered by the judge. And it will be the most terrible
voice that ever was heard. The sound of the last trumpet, that shall call men to
judgment, will be a more terrible sound to wicked men than ever they shall have
heard till that time. But the sound of the last sentence will be much more
terrible than that. There will not be one of all those millions at the left
hand, whether high or low, king or subject, who will be able to support himself
at all under the sound of that sentence. But they will all sink under it.
Lastly, fearfulness will surprise them, when
they shall come to see the fire kindle upon the world, in which they are to be
tormented forever. When the sentence shall have been pronounced, Christ, with
his blessed saints and glorious angels, will leave this lower world, and ascend
into heaven. Then will the flames begin to kindle, and fire will probably be
seen coming down from heaven. And soon will the fire lay hold of that accursed
multitude. Then will their hearts be surprised with fearfulness. That fire will
appear a dreadful fire indeed. O what chatterings of teeth, what shaking of
loins, what distortions of body, will there be at that time, when they shall
see, and begin to feel, the fierceness of the flames! What shall they do,
whither shall they go, to avoid those flames? Where shall they hide themselves?
If they creep into holes, or creep into caves of the earth, yea if they could
creep down to the center of the earth, it will be in vain. For it will set on
fire the bottoms of the mountains, and burn to the lowest hell. They will see no
place to fly to, no place to hide themselves.
Then their hearts will be filled with
fearfulness and will utterly sink in despair. Thus it shall hereafter be with
every one that shall then be found to be a sinner, and especially with sinners
in Zion.
SECTION III
Why sinners in general will hereafter be
surprised with fear.
I. Fearfulness will surprise them because
they will know that they are to be cast into devouring fire. There is
nothing which seems to give one a more terrible idea of torment and misery than
to think of being cast alive into a great fire, especially if we conceive of the
senses remaining quick, and not benumbed by the fire. The wicked will hereafter
have that to make them afraid, that they are not only to be cast into a fire,
but into devouring fire; which implies, that it will be a fire of
extraordinary fierceness of heat, and before which nothing can stand.
The fire into which men are to be cast is
called a furnace of fire. Furnaces are contrived for an extreme degree of
heat, this being necessary for the purposes for which they are designed, as the
running and refining of metals, and the melting of materials into glass. The
fire of such earthly furnaces may be called devouring fire, as the heat
of some of them is such, that in them even stones will presently be dissolved.
Now, if a person should be brought to the mouth of such a furnace, and there
should see how the fire glows, so as presently to make everything cast into it
all over white and bright with fire, and at the same time should know that he
was immediately to be cast into this furnace, would not fearfulness surprise
him?
In some heathen countries, the manner of
disposing of dead bodies is to dig a great pit, to put in it a great quantity of
fuel, to put the dead bodies on the pile, and to set it on fire. This is some
image of the burning of dead souls in the pit of hell. Now, if a person were
brought to the edge of such a pit, all filled with glowing flames, to be
immediately cast into it, would it not surprise the heart with fearfulness?
The flames of a very great fire, as when a
house is all on fire, give one some idea of the fierceness of the wrath of God.
Such is the rage of the flames. And we see that the greater a fire is, the
fiercer is its heat in every part. And the reason is because one part heats
another. The heat in a particular place, besides the heat which proceeds out of
the fuel in that place is increased by the additional heat of the fire all
around it. Hence we may conceive something of what fierceness that fire will be,
when this visible world shall be turned into one great furnace. That will be
devouring fire indeed. Such will be the heat of it, that, as the apostle says,
“the elements shall melt with fervent heat,” 2 Pet. 3:10.
Men can artificially raise such a degree of
heat with burning glasses, as will quickly melt the very stones and sand. And it
is probable that the heat of that great fire which will burn the world, will be
such as to melt the rocks, and the very ground, and turn them into a kind of
liquid fire, so that the whole world will probably be converted into a great
lake, or liquid globe of fire, a vast ocean of fire, in which the wicked shall
be tossed to and fro, having no rest day nor night, vast waves or billows of
fire continually rolling over their heads.
But all this will be only an image of
that dreadful fire of the wrath of God, which the wicked shall at the same time
suffer in their souls. We read in Rev. 19:15 of “the fierceness and wrath
of Almighty God.” This is an extraordinary expression, carrying a terrible idea
of the future misery of the wicked. If it had been only said of the wrath of God
that would have expressed what is dreadful. If the wrath of a king be as the
roaring of a lion, what is the wrath of God? But it is not only said the wrath
of God, but the fierceness and wrath of God, or the rage of his wrath;
and not only so, but the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God. O what is
that! the fierceness and rage or fury of Omnipotence! of a being of infinite
strength! What an idea does that give of the state of those worms that suffer
the fierceness and wrath of such an Almighty Being! And is it any wonder that
fearfulness surprises their hearts when they see this about to be executed upon
them?
II. Another reason given in the text, why
fearfulness will hereafter surprise sinners, is that they will be sensible this
devouring fire will be everlasting. If a man were brought to the mouth of
a great furnace to be cast into the midst of it, if at the same time he knew he
should suffer torment but for one minute, yet that minute would be so
terrible to him, that fearfulness would surprise and astonish him. How much
more, if he were to be cast into a fire much fiercer, the fire in which wicked
men are hereafter to be tormented! And if the thought of suffering this
devouring fire for one minute would be enough to fill one with such surprising
fearfulness, what will seize them, when they shall know that they are to bear
it, not for one minute, nor for one day, nor for one year, nor for one age, nor
for a hundred ages, nor for a million of ages, one after another, but forever
and ever; without any end, and never, never be delivered!
They shall know that the fire itself will be
everlasting fire, a fire that never shall be quenched. Mark 9:43, 44, “To
go into hell, into the fire that never shall be quenched; where their worm dieth
not, and the fire is not quenched.” And they shall know that their torment in
that fire never will have an end, Rev. 14:10, 11. They shall know that they
shall forever be full of quick sense within and without; their heads, their
eves, their tongues, their hands, their feet, their loins, and their vitals,
shall forever be full of glowing melting fire, fierce enough to melt the very
rocks and elements. And also that they shall eternally be full of the most quick
and lively sense to feel the torment.
They shall know that they shall never cease
restlessly to plunge and roll in that mighty ocean of fire. They shall know that
those billows of fire, which are greater than the greatest mountains, will never
cease to roll over them, following one another forever and ever.
At the same time they will have a more lively
sense of eternity than we ever can have here. We can have but a little sense of
what an eternal duration is. And indeed none can comprehend it. It swallows up
all thought and imagination. If we set ourselves to think upon it, we are
presently lost. But they will have another and far clearer sense of it than we
have. O how vast will eternity appear to them, when they think of spending it in
such burnings! This is another reason that fearfulness will surprise them. The
thoughts of eternity will always amaze them, and will sink and depress them to a
bottomless depth of despair.
III. The third reason given in the text why
fearfulness will surprise them at the apprehension of this punishment is that
they will know they shall not be able to bear it. When they shall see
themselves going into that devouring fire, they will know that they are not able
to bear it. They will know that they are not able to grapple with the fierceness
and rage of those flames. For they will see the fierceness of the wrath of God
in them. They will see an awful manifestation of Omnipotence in the fury of that
glowing furnace. And in those views, their hearts will utterly fail them. Their
hands will not be strong, nor can their hearts endure. They will see that their
strength is weakness, and that they can do nothing in such a conflict.
When they shall have come to the edge of the
pit and of the burning lake, and shall look into the furnace, then they will cry
out with exclamations like these: O! what shall I do? How shall I bear the
torments of this fire? How can I endure them? Who can endure? Where is the man
so stout-hearted, where is the giant of such strength and such courage, that he
can bear this? O! what shall I do? Must I be cast in thither? I cannot bear it.
I can never endure it. O that I could return to my first nothing! How can I
endure it one moment? How much less can I endure it forever and ever! And must I
bear it forever? What! forever and ever, without any end, and never find any
refuge, never be suffered to return to my first nothing, and be no nearer to the
end of these sufferings after millions of ages? O what dismal contentions and
shrieks, and shaking of loins, and gnashing of teeth, will there be then! No
wonder that fearfulness will then surprise the wicked.
SECTION IV
Why it will be especially thus with
sinners in Zion, who dwell among God’s visible people.
There will hereafter be a very great
difference between sinners in Zion and other sinners; a great difference
between the most pointed hypocrite of them all, and the drunkards, the
adulterers, the Sodomites, the thieves, and murderers among the heathen, who sin
against only the light of nature. The fearfulness which will be in no measure so
amazing and horrible, as that which will seize the sinners in Zion. That
fierceness and wrath of Almighty God, which they will suffer, will be mild and
moderate in comparison with that which the sinners in Zion will suffer.
The wrath of God is in his word manifested
against the wicked heathens. But it is ten times as much manifested against
those sinners who make the profession and enjoy the privileges of the people of
God; and yet remain enemies of God. Both the Old Testament and the New are full
of terrible denunciations against such. Read the books of Moses, read the
prophets, and you will find them full of dreadful threatenings against such.
Read over the history of Christ’s life and the speeches which he made when upon
earth. There you will see what woes and curses he frequently denounced against
such. How often did he say, that it should be more tolerable for Sodom and
Gomorrah in the day of judgment, than for the cities in which most of his mighty
works were done! Read over the history of the Acts of the Apostles, and their
epistles. There you will find the same. It is the sinners in Zion, or
hypocrites, that are always in Scripture spoken of as the people of God’s wrath.
Isa. 10:6, “I will send him against a hypocritical nation, against the people of
my wrath will I give him a charge, to take the spoil.” — The reasons are chiefly
these:
I. That they sin against so much greater
light. This is often spoken of in Scripture as an aggravation to the sin and
wickedness of sinners in Zion. He that knows not his Lord’s will, and doeth it
not, is declared not to be worthy of so many stripes, as he who, being informed
of his Lord’s will, is in like manner disobedient. If men be blind, they have
comparatively no sin. But then they see, when they have light to know their
duty, and to know their obligation, then their sin is great, John 9:14. When the
light that is in a man is darkness, how great is that darkness! And when men
live in wickedness, in the midst of great light, that light is like to be the
blackness of darkness indeed.
II. That they sin against such professions
and vows. The heathens never pretended to be the worshippers of the true
God. They never pretended to be Christ’s disciples. They never came under any
covenant-obligations to be such. But this is not the case with sinners in Zion.
Now, God highly resents falsehood and treachery. Judas, who betrayed Christ with
a kiss, was a greater sinner, and much more the object of God’s wrath, than
Pilate, who condemned him to be crucified, and was his murderer.
III. That they sin against so much greater
mercy. They have the infinite mercy of God, in giving his own Son, often set
before them. They have the dying love of Christ represented to them. They have
this mercy, this glorious Savior, his blood and righteousness, often offered to
them. They have a blessed opportunity to obtain salvation for their souls. A
great price is put into their hands to this end. They have that precious
treasure, the Holy Scriptures, and enjoy Sabbaths, and sacraments, and the
various means of grace. But all these means and advantages, these opportunities,
offers mercies, and invitations, they abuse, despise, and reject.
But there is no wrath like that which arises
from mercy abused and rejected. When mercy is in this way turned into wrath,
this is the fiercest wrath. — Sinners in Zion, beside their fall by the first
Adam, have a fall also by the second. He is a stone of stumbling and a rock of
offense, at which they stumble and fall. And there is no fall like this. The
fall by the first Adam is light in comparison with it.
On these accounts, whenever we see the day of
judgment, as every one of us shall see it, we shall easily distinguish between
the sinners in Zion and other sinners by their shriller cries, their louder,
more bitter, and dolorous shrieks, the greater amazement of their countenances,
and the more dismal shaking of their limbs, and contortions of their bodies.
SECTION V
An earnest exhortation to sinners in Zion,
now to fly from the devouring fire and everlasting burnings.
You have often been exhorted to fly from the
“wrath to come.” This devouring fire, these everlasting burnings, of which we
have been speaking, are the wrath to come. You hear of this fire, of
these burnings, and of that fearfulness which will seize and surprise sinners in
Zion hereafter. And O what reason have you of thankfulness that you only hear of
them, that you do not as yet feel them, and that they have not already taken
hold of you! They are, as it were, following you, and coming nearer and nearer
every day. Those fierce flames are already kindled in the wrath of God. Yea, the
fierceness and wrath of Almighty God burn against you. It is ready for you. That
pit is prepared for you with fire and much wood, and the wrath of the Lord, as a
stream of brimstone, does kindle it.
Lot was with great urgency hastened
out of Sodom, and commanded to make haste, and fly for his life, and escape to
the mountains, lest he should be consumed in those flames which burned up Sodom
and Gomorrah. But that burning was a mere spark to that devouring fire, and
those everlasting burnings, of which you are in danger. Therefore improve the
present opportunity.
Now, God is pleased again to put out his
Spirit upon us. And he is doing great things amongst us. God is indeed come
again, the same great God who so wonderfully appeared among us some years ago,
and who has since, for our sins, departed from us, left us so long in so dull
and dead a state, and has let sinners alone in their sins, so that there have
been scarcely any sins to be seen of any such work as conversion. That same God
is now come again. He is really come in like manner, and begins, as he did
before, gloriously to manifest his mighty power, and the riches of his grace. He
brings sinners out of darkness into marvelous light. He rescues poor captive
souls out of the hands of Satan. He saves persons from the devouring fire. He
plucks one and another as brands out of the burnings. He opens the prison-doors
and knocks off their chains and brings out poor prisoners. He is now working
salvation among us from this very destruction of which you have now heard.
Now, now, then, is the time, now is the
blessed opportunity to escape those everlasting burnings. Now God has again set
open the same fountain among us, and gives one more happy opportunity for souls
to escape. Now he has set open a wide door, and he stands in the door-way,
calling and begging with a loud voice to the sinners of Zion: Come, saith he,
come, fly from the wrath to come. Here is a refuge for you. Fly hither for
refuge. Lay hold on the hope set before you.
A little while ago, it was uncertain whether
we should ever see such an opportunity again. If it had always continued as it
has been for some years past, almost all of you would surely have gone to hell.
In a little time fearfulness would have surprised you and you would have been
cast into that devouring fire and those everlasting burnings. But in infinite
mercy God gives another opportunity. And blessed are your eyes, that they see
it, if you did but know your own opportunity.
You have had your life spared through these
six years past, to this very time, to another outpouring of the Spirit. What
would you have done if you had died before it came? How doleful would your case
have been ! But you have reason to bless God that it was not so, and that you
are yet alive, and now again see a blessed day of grace. And will you not
improve it? Have you not so much love to your poor souls, as to improve such an
opportunity as this?
Some, there is reason to think, have lately
fled for refuge to Christ. And will you be willing to stay behind still, poor
miserable captives, condemned to suffer forever in the lake of fire? Hereafter
you will see those of your neighbors and acquaintance who are converted,
mounting up as with wings, with songs of joy, to meet their Lord. And if you
remain unconverted, you at the same time will be surprised with fear and horror
will take hold of you, because of the devouring fire, and the everlasting
burnings.
It is an awful thing to think of, that there
are now some persons in this very congregation, here and there, who will be the
subjects of that very misery of which we have now heard, although it be eternal!
There are probably some now reading or hearing this discourse, who shall be seen
at the day of judgment, among the devils, at the left hand of the judge, with
freighted, ghastly countenances, wringing their hands, gnashing their teeth,
shrieking and crying out.
Now we know not their names, nor where to
look for them. But God knoweth their names, and now seeth and knoweth what they
think, and how much they regard the warnings which are given them this day. We
have not the least reason to suppose any other than that some of you will
hereafter see others entering into glory with Christ, and saints, and angels,
while you, with dreadful horror, shall see the fire begin to kindle about you.
It may be, that the persons are now blessing themselves in their own hearts, and
each one saying with himself, Well, I do not intend it shall be I. Every one
hopes to go to heave. None would by any means miss of it. If any thought they
should miss of it, they would be greatly amazed. But all will not go thither; it
will undoubtedly be the portion of some to toss and tumble forever among the
fiery billows of God’s wrath.
It is not to be supposed, but that there are
some here who will not be in earnest. Let them have ever so good an opportunity
to obtain heaven, they will not thoroughly improve it. Tell them of hell as
often as you will, and set it out in as lively colors as you will, they will be
slack and slothful. And they will never be likely to obtain heaven while they
are sleeping, and dreaming, and intending, and hoping. The wrath of God, which
pursues them, will take them by the heels. Hell, that follows after, will
overtake them. And a tempest will steal them away.
Nor is it to be supposed, that all who are
now seeking will hold out. Some will backslide. They will be unsteady. If now
they seem to be pretty much engaged, it will not hold. Times will probably alter
by and by, and they having not obtained grace, there will be many temptations to
backsliding, with which they will comply. The hearts of men are very unsteady.
They are not to be trusted. Men are very short-winded. They cannot tell how to
have patience to wait upon God. They are soon discouraged. Some that are now
under convictions may lose them. Perhaps they will not leave off seeking
salvation at once. But they will come to it by degrees. After a while, they will
begin to hearken to excuses, not to be quite so constant in duty. They will
begin to think that they need not be quite so strict. They will say to
themselves, they see no hurt in such and such things. They see into but they may
practice them without any great guilt. Thus giving way to temptations, and
hearkening to excuses, they will by degrees lose their convictions, and become
secure in sin.
There were some who were guilty of
backsliding, the last time of the revival of religion among us. While the talk
upon religious subjects was generally kept alive, they continued to seek. But
when this began to abate, and they saw others less zealous than they had been,
and especially when they saw some miscarriages of professors, they began to grow
more careless, to seek less earnestly, and to plead these things as an excuse.
And they are left behind still. They are to this day in a miserable condemned
state, in danger of the devouring fire, and of everlasting burnings, in twice so
dangerous a state as they were in before they were awakened. And God only knows
what will become of them. And as it was then, so we dread it will be now.
Some who are now in a natural condition, are
doubtless near death. They have not long to live in the world. And if they seek
in a dull way, or if, after they have sought for a while, they are guilty of
backsliding, death will come upon them long enough before there will come such
another opportunity. When they leave off seeking, it will not be without a
design of seeking again some time or other. But death will be too quick for
them. It is not the manner of death to wait upon men, while they take time to
indulge their sloth, and gratify their lusts. When his appointed time comes, he
will do his work. Will you put off in hope of seeing another such time seven
years hence? Alas! how many of those who are now in a natural condition may be
in hell before another seven years shall have elapsed!
Therefore now let every one look to himself.
It is for your own souls’ salvation. If you be foolish, and will not hearken to
counsel, will not improve the opportunity when it is given you, and will not
enter into such an open door, you alone must bear it. If you shall miss this
opportunity, and quench your convictions now, and there shall come another time
of the outpouring of the Spirit, you will be far less likely to have any profit
by it. As we see now God chiefly moves on the hearts of those who are very
young, who are brought forward upon the stage of action since the last
outpouring of the Spirit, who were not then come to years of so much
understanding, and consequently not so much in the way of the influences of the
Spirit. As to those who were grown up, and had convictions then, and quenched
them, the most of these are abundantly more hardened, and seem to be more passed
over. So it will probably be with you hereafter, if you miss this opportunity,
and quench the convictions of the Spirit which you have now.
As to you who had awakenings the last time of
the outpouring of the Spirit, and have quenched them, and remain to this day in
a natural condition, let me call upon you also, now that God is giving you one
more such opportunity. If passing in impenitence through one such opportunity
has so hardened you, and has been such a great disadvantage to you, how sad will
your case be, if you shall now miss another! Will you not thoroughly awake out
of sleep, bestir yourselves for your salvation, and resolve now to begin again,
and never leave off more? Many fled for refuge from the devouring fire before,
and you were left behind. Others have fled for refuge now, and still you are
left behind. And will you always remain behind? Consider, can you dwell with
devouring fire? Can you dwell with everlasting burnings? Shall children, babes
and sucklings, go into the kingdom of God before you?
How will you hereafter bear to see them
coming and sitting down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of God,
when yourselves are thrust out, and are surprised with fearfulness at the sight
of that devouring fire, and those everlasting burnings, into which you are about
to be cast? Take heed lest a like threatening be fulfilled upon you with that
which we have in Num. 14:22, 23, “Because all those men which have seen my
glory, and my miracles which I did in Egypt, and in the wilderness, and have
tempted me now these ten times, and have not hearkened to my voice; surely they
shall not see the land which I sware unto their fathers; neither shall any of
them that provoked me see it.” Together with verse 31, “But your little ones,
which ye said should be a prey, them will I bring in, and they shall know the
land which ye have despised.”
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