I.
Illustrate the nature of sin.
An illustration will give us the
best practical view of the nature of sin. You have only to
suppose a government established to secure the highest well-being
of the governed, and of the ruling authorities also. Supposed
the head of this government to embark all his attributes in
the enterprise -- all his wealth, all his time, all his energies
-- to compass the high end of the highest general good. For
this purpose he enacts the best possible laws -- laws which,
if obeyed, will secure the highest good of both subject and
Prince. He then takes care to affix adequate penalties; else
all his care and wisdom must come to naught. He devotes to
the interests of his government all he is and all he has,
without reserve or abatement.
But some of his subjects refuse
to sympathize with this movement. They say, "Charity
begins at home," and they are for taking care of themselves
in the first place; in short, they are thoroughly selfish.
It is easy to see what this would
be in a human government. The man who does this becomes the
common enemy of the government and of all its subjects. This
is sin. This illustrates precisely the case of the sinner.
Sin is selfishness. It sets up a selfish end, and to gain
it uses selfish means; so that in respect to both its end
and its means, it is precisely opposed to God and to all the
ends of general happiness which He seeks to secure. It denies
God's rights; discards God's interests. Each sinner maintains
that his own will shall be the law. The interest he sets himself
to secure is entirely opposed to that proposed by God in His
government.
All law must have sanctions. Without
sanctions it would be only advice. It is therefore essential
to the distinctive and inherent nature of law that it have
sanctions.
These are either remuneratory or
vindicatory. They promise reward for obedience, and they also
threaten penalty for disobedience. They are vindicatory, inasmuch
as they vindicate the honour of the violated law.
Again, sanctions may be either
natural or governmental. Often both forms exist in other governments
than the divine.
Natural penalties are those evil
consequences which naturally result without any direct interference
of government to punish. Thus in all governments the disrespect
of its friends falls as a natural penalty on transgressors.
They are the natural enemies of all good subjects.
In the divine government, compunctions
of conscience and remorse fall into this class, and indeed
many other things which naturally result to obedience on the
one hand and to disobedience on the other.
There should also be governmental
sanctions. Every governor should manifest his displeasure
against the violation of his laws. To leave the whole question
of obedience to mere natural consequences is obviously unjust
to society.
Inasmuch as governments are established
to sustain law and secure obedience, they are bound to put
forth their utmost energies in this work.
Another incidental agency of government
under some circumstances is that which we call discipline.
One object of discipline is to go before the infliction of
penalty, and force open unwilling eyes, to see that law has
a government to back it up, and the sinner a fearful penalty
to fear. Coming upon men during their probation, while as
yet they have not seen or felt the fearfulness of penalty,
it is designed to admonish them -- to make them think and
consider. Thus its special object is the good of the subject
on whom it falls and of those who may witness its administration.
It does not propose to sustain the dignity of law by exemplary
inflictions. This belongs exclusively to the province of penalty.
Discipline, therefore, is not penal in the sense of visiting
crime with deserved punishment, but aims to dissuade the subject
of law from violating its precepts.
Disciplinary agency could scarcely
exist under a government of pure law, for the reason that
such a government cannot defer the infliction of penalty.
Discipline presupposes a state of suspended penalty. Hence
penal inflictions must be broadly distinguished from disciplinary.
We are sinners, and therefore have
little occasion to dwell on the remuneratory features of God's
government. We can have no claim to remuneration under law,
being precluded utterly by our sin. But with the penal features
we have everything to do. I therefore proceed to enquire.
--
II. What are the attributes
of the penal sanctions of God's law?
God has given us reason. This affirms
intuitively and irresistibly all the great truths of moral
government. There are certain attributes which we know must
belong to the moral law, e.g., one is intrinsic
justice. Penalty should threaten no more and no less than
is just. Justice must be an attribute of God's law; else the
whole universe must inevitably condemn it.
Intrinsic justice means and implies
that the penalty be equal to the obligation violated. The
guilt of sin consists in its being a violation of obligation.
Hence the guilt must be in proportion to the magnitude of
the obligation violated, and consequently the penalty must
be measured by this obligation.
Governmental justice is another
attribute. This feature of law seeks to afford security against
transgression. Law is not governmentally just unless its penalty
be so graduated as to afford the highest security against
sin which the nature of the case admits. Suppose under any
government the sanctions of law are trifling, not at all proportioned
to the end to be secured. Such a government is unjust to itself,
and to the interests it is committed to maintain. Hence a
good government must be governmentally just, affording in
the severity of its penalties and the certainty of their just
infliction, the highest security that its law shall be obeyed.
Again, penal sanctions should be
worthy of the end aimed at by the law and by its author. Government
is only a means to an end, this proposed end being universal
obedience and its consequent happiness. If law is indispensable
for obtaining this end, its penalty should be graduated accordingly.
Hence the penalty should be graduated
by the importance of the precept. If the precept be of fundamental
importance -- of such importance that disobedience to it saps
the very existence of all government -- then it should be
guarded by the greatest and most solemn sanctions. The penalties
attached to its violation should be of the highest order.
Penalty should make an adequate
expression of the lawgiver's views of the value of the end
he proposes to secure by law; also of his views of the sacredness
of his law; also of the intrinsic guilt of disobedience. Penalty
aims to bring forth the heart of the lawgiver -- to
show the earnestness of his desire to maintain the right,
and to secure that order and well-being which depend on obedience.
In the greatness of the penalty the lawgiver brings forth
his heart and pours the whole influence of his character upon
his subjects.
The object of executing penalty
is precisely the same; not to gratify revenge, as some seem
to suppose, but to act on the subjects of government with
influences toward obedience. It has the same general object
as the law itself has.
Penal sanctions should be an adequate
expression of the lawgiver's regard for the public good and
of his interest in it. In the precept he gave some expression;
in the penalty, he gives yet more. In the precept we see the
object in view and have a manifestation of regard for the
public interests; in the penalty, we have a measure
of this regard, showing us how great it is. For example,
suppose a human law were to punish murder with only a trifling
penalty. Under the pretence of being very tender-hearted,
the lawgiver amerces this crime of murder with a fine of fifty
cents! Would this show that he greatly loved his subjects
and highly valued their life and interests? Far from it. You
cannot feel that a legislator has done his duty unless he
shows how much he values human life, and unless he attaches
a penalty commensurate in some good degree with the end to
be secured.
One word as to the infliction of
capital punishment in human governments. There is a difference
of opinion as to which is most effective, solitary punishment
for life, or death. Leaving this question without remark,
I have it to say that no man ever doubted that the murderer
deserves to die. If some other punishment than death is
to be preferred, it is not by any means because the murderer
does not deserve death. No man can doubt this for a moment.
It is one of the unalterable principles of righteousness,
that if a man sacrifices the interest of another, he sacrifices
his own; an eye for an eye; life for life.
We cannot but affirm that no government
lays sufficient stress on the protection of human life unless
it guards this trust with its highest penalties. Where life
and all its vital interests are at stake, there the penalty
should be great and solemn as is possible.
Moral agents have two sides to
their sensibility; hope and fear; to which you may address
the prospect of good and the dread of evil. I am now speaking
of penalty. This is addressed only to fear.
I have said in substance that penalty
should adequately assert and vindicate the rightful authority
of the lawgiver; should afford if possible an adequate rebuke
of sin and should be based on a just appreciation of its nature.
God's moral government embraces the whole intelligent universe,
and stretches with its vast results onward through eternity.
Hence the sweep and breadth of its interests are absolutely
unlimited, and consequently the penalties of its law, being
set to vindicate the authority of this government and to sustain
these immeasurable interests, should be beyond measure dreadful.
If anything beyond and more dreadful than the threatened penalty
could be conceived, all minds would say, "This is not
enough." With any just views of the relations and the
guilt of sin, they could not be satisfied unless the penalty
is the greatest that is conceivable. Sin is so vile, so mischievous,
so terribly destructive and so far-sweeping in its ruin, moral
agents could not feel that enough is done so long as more
can be.
III. What is the penalty of
God's moral law?
Our text answers, "death."
This certainly is not animal death, for saints die
and animals also, neither of whom can be receiving the wages
of sin. Besides, this would be no penalty if, after its infliction,
men went at once to heaven. Such a penalty, considered as
the wages of sin, would only be an insult to God's government.
Again, it cannot be spiritual
death, for this is nothing else than a state of entire
disobedience to the law. You cannot well conceive anything
more absurd than to punish a man for disobedience by subjecting
him to perpetual disobedience -- an effort to sustain the
law by dooming such offenders to its perpetual violation --
and nothing more.
But this death is endless misery,
corresponding to the death-penalty in human governments. Everybody
knows what this is. It separates the criminal from society
forever; debars him at once and utterly from all the privileges
of the government, and consigns him over to hopeless ruin.
Nothing more dreadful can be inflicted. It is the extreme
penalty, fearful beyond any other that is possible for man
to inflict.
There can be no doubt that death
as spoken of in our text is intended to correspond to the
death-penalty in human governments.
You will also observe that in our
text the "gift of God" which is "eternal life
through Jesus Christ our Lord," is directly contrasted
with death, the wages of sin. This fact may throw light on
the question respecting the nature of this death. We must
look for the antithesis of "eternal life."
Now this eternal life is not merely
an eternal existence. Eternal life never means merely an eternal
existence, in any case where it is used in Scripture; but
it does mean a state of eternal blessedness, implying eternal
holiness as its foundation. The use of the term "life"
in Scripture in the sense of real life -- a life worth
living i.e., real and rich enjoyment, is so common as to supersede
the necessity of special proof.
The penalty of death is therefore
the opposite of this viz., eternal misery.
I must here say a few words upon
the objections raised against this doctrine of eternal
punishment.
All the objections I have ever
heard amount only to this, that it is unjust. They
may be expressed in somewhat various phraseology, but this
is the only idea which they involve, of any moment at all.
(1.) It is claimed to be unjust
because "life is so short."
How strangely men talk! Life so
short, men have not time to sin enough to deserve eternal
death! Do men forget that one sin incurs the penalty
due for sinning? How many sins ought it to take to make one
transgression of the law of God? Men often talk as if they
supposed it must require a great many. As if a man must commit
a great many murders before he has made up the crime of murder
enough to fall under the sentence of the court! What? shall
a man come before the court and plead that although he has
broken the law to be sure, yet he has not lived long enough,
and has not broken the law times enough, to incur its penalty?
What court on earth ever recognized such a plea as proving
any other than the folly and guilt of him who made it?
(2.) It is also urged that "man
is so small, so very insignificant a being that he cannot
possibly commit an infinite sin." What does this objection
mean? Does it mean that sin is an act of creation, and to
be measured therefore by the magnitude of that something
which it creates? This would be an exceedingly wild idea of
the nature of sin. Does the objection mean that man cannot
violate an obligation of infinite strength? Then his meaning
is simply false, as everybody must know. Does he imply that
the guilt of sin is not to be measured by the obligation violated?
Then he knows not what he says, or wickedly denies known truth.
What? man so little that he cannot commit much sin! Is this
the way we reason in analogous cases? Suppose your child disobeys
you. He is very much smaller than you are! But do you therefore
exonerate him from blame? Is this a reason which nullifies
his guilt? Can no sin be committed by inferiors against their
superior? Have sensible men always been mistaken in supposing
that the younger and smaller are sometimes under obligations
to obey the older and the greater? Suppose you smite down
the magistrate; suppose you insult, or attempt to assassinate
the king -- is this a very small crime, almost too excusable
to be deemed a crime at all, because forsooth, you are in
a lower position and he in a higher? You say, "I am so
little, so very insignificant! How can I deserve so great
a punishment?" Do you reason so in any other case except
your own sins against God? Never.
(3.) Again, some men say, "Sin
is not an infinite evil." This language is ambiguous.
Does it mean that sin would not work infinite mischief if
suffered to run on indefinitely? This is false, for if only
one soul were ruined by it, the mischief accruing from it
would be infinite. Does it mean that sin is not an infinite
evil, as seen in its present results and relations? Suppose
this admitted; it proves nothing to our purpose, for it may
be true that the sum total of evil results from each single
sin will not all be brought out in any duration less than
eternity. How then can you measure the evil of sin by what
you see today?
But there are still other considerations
to show that the penalty of the law must be infinite. Sin
is an infinite natural evil. It is so in this sense, that
there are no bounds to the natural evil it would introduce
if not governmentally restrained.
If sin were to ruin but one soul,
there could be no limit set to the evil it would thus occasion.
Again, sin involves infinite guilt,
for it is a violation of infinite obligation. Here it is important
to notice a common mistake, growing out of confusion of ideas
about the ground of obligation. From this, result mistakes
in regard to what constitutes the guilt of sin. Here I might
show that when you misapprehend the ground of obligation,
you will almost of necessity misconceive the nature and extent
of sin and guilt. Let us recur to our former illustration.
Here is a government, wisely framed to secure the highest
good of the governed and of all concerned. Whence arises the
obligation to obey? Certainly from the intrinsic value of
the end sought to be secured. But how broad is this obligation
to obey; or, in other words, what is its true measure? I answer,
it exactly equals the value of the end which the government
seeks to secure, and which obedience will secure, but which
sin will destroy. By this measure of God the penalty must
be graduated. By this the lawgiver must determine how much
sanction, remuneratory and vindicatory, he must attach to
his law in order to meet the demands of justice and benevolence.
Now God's law aims to secure the
highest universal good. Its chief and ultimate end is not,
strictly speaking, to secure supreme homage to God, but rather
to secure the highest good of all intelligent moral beings
-- God, and all His creatures. So viewed, you will see that
the intrinsic value of the end to be sought is the real ground
of obligation to obey the precept. The value of this end being
estimated, you have the value and strength of the obligation.
This is plainly infinite in the
sense of being unlimited. In this sense we affirm obligation
to be without limit. The very reason why we affirm any obligation
at all is that the law is good and is the necessary means
of the highest good of the universe. Hence the reason why
we affirm any penalty at all compels us to affirm the justice
and necessity of an infinite penalty. We see that intrinsic
justice must demand an infinite penalty for the same reason
that it demands any penalty whatever. If any penalty
be just, it is just because law secures a certain good. If
this good aimed at by the law be unlimited in extent, so must
be the penalty. Governmental justice thus requires endless
punishment; else it provides no sufficient guaranty for the
public good.
Again, the law not only designs
but tends to secure infinite good. Its tendencies are
direct to this end. Hence its penalty should be infinite.
The law is not just to the interests it both aims and tends
to secure unless it arms itself with infinite sanctions.
Nothing less than infinite penalty
can be an adequate expression of God's view of the value of
the great end on which His heart is set. When men talk about
eternal death being too great a penalty for sin, what do they
think of God's efforts to restrain sin all over the moral
universe? What do they think of the death of His well-beloved
Son? Do they suppose it possible that God could give an adequate
or a corresponding expression to His hatred of sin by any
penalty less than endless?
Nothing less could give an adequate
expression to His regard for the authority of law. O, how
fearful the results and how shocking the very idea, if God
should fail to make an adequate expression of His regard for
the sacredness of that law which underlies the entire weal
of all His vast kingdom!
You would insist that He shall
regard the violation of His law as Universalists do. How surely
He would bring down an avalanche of ruin on all His intelligent
creatures if He were to yield to your demands! Were He to
affix anything less than endless penalty to His law, what
holy being could trust the administration of His government!
His regard to the public good forbids
His attaching a light or finite penalty to His law. He loves
His subjects too well. Some people have strange notions of
the way in which a ruler should express his regard for his
subjects. They would have him so tender-hearted toward the
guilty that they should absorb his entire sympathy and regard.
They would allow him perhaps to fix a penalty of sixpence
fine for the crime of murder, but not much if anything more.
The poor murderer's wife and children are so precious you
must not take away much of his money, and as to touching his
liberty or his life -- neither of these is to be thought of.
What! do you not know that human nature is very frail and
temptable. and therefore you ought to deal very sparingly
with penalties for murder? Perhaps they would say, you may
punish the murderer by keeping him awake one night -- just
one, no more; and God may let a guilty man's conscience disturb
him about to this extent for the crime of murder! The Universalists
do tell us that they will allow the most High God to give
a man conscience that shall trouble him a little if he commits
murder -- a little, say for the first and perhaps the second
offence; but they are not wont to notice the fact that under
this penalty of a troubling conscience, the more a man sins,
the less he has to suffer. Under the operation of this descending
scale, it will soon come to this, that a murderer would not
get so much penalty as the loss of one night's sleep. But
such are the notions that men reach when they swing clear
of the affirmations of an upright reason and of God's revealing
Word.
Speaking now to those who have
a moral sense to affirm the right as well as eyes to see the
operation of law, I know you cannot deny the logical necessity
of the death-penalty for the moral law of God. There is a
logical clinch to every one of these propositions which you
cannot escape.
No penalty less than infinite and
endless can be an adequate expression of God's displeasure
against sin and of His determination to resist and punish
it. The penalty should run on as long as there are subjects
to be affected by it -- as long as there is need of any demonstration
of God's feelings and governmental course toward sin.
Nothing less is the greatest God
can inflict, for He certainly can inflict an endless and infinite
punishment. If therefore the exigency demands the greatest
penalty He can inflict, this must be the penalty -- banishment
from God and endless death.
But I must pass to remark that
the Gospel everywhere assumes the same. It holds that by the
deeds of the law no flesh can be justified before God. Indeed,
it not only affirms this, but builds its entire system of
atonement and grace upon this foundation. It constantly assumes
that there is no such thing as paying the debt and canceling
obligation and therefore that the sinner's only relief is
forgiveness through redeeming blood.
Yet again, if the penalty be not
endless death, what is it? Is it temporary suffering?
Then how long does it last? When does it end? Has any sinner
ever got through; served out his time and been taken to heaven?
We have no testimony to prove such a case, not the first one;
but we have the solemn testimony of Jesus Christ to prove
that there never can be such a case. He tells us that there
can be no passing from hell to heaven or from heaven to hell.
A great gulf is fixed between, over which none shall ever
pass. You may pass from earth to heaven, or from earth to
hell; but these two states of the future world are wide extremes,
and no man or angel shall pass the gulf that divides them.
But you answer my question -- What
is the penalty? by the reply -- It is only the natural consequences
of sin as developed in a troubled conscience. Then it follows
that the more a man sins the less he is punished, until it
amounts to an infinitesimal quantity of punishment, for which
the sinner cares just nothing at all. Who can believe this?
Under this system, if a man fears punishment, he has only
to pitch into sinning with the more will and energy; he will
have the comfort of feeling that he can very soon get over
all his compunctions, and get beyond any penalty whatever!
And do you believe this is God's only punishment for sin?
You cannot believe it.
Universalists always confound discipline
with penal sanctions. They overlook this fundamental distinction
and regard all that men suffer here in this world as only
penal. Whereas it is scarcely penal at all, but is chiefly
disciplinary. They ask, What good will it do a sinner to send
him to an endless hell? Is not God perfectly benevolent; and
if so, how can He have any other object than to do the sinner
all the good He can?
I reply, Punishment is not designed
to do good to that sinner who is punished. It looks to other,
remoter, and far greater good. Discipline, while he was on
earth, sought mainly his personal good; penalty looks to other
results. If you ask, Does not God aim to do good to the universal
public by penalty? I answer, Even so; that is precisely what
He aims to do.
Under human governments, the penalty
may aim in part to reclaim. So far, it is discipline. But
the death-penalty -- after all suspension is past and the
fatal blow comes, aims not to reclaim, and is not discipline,
but is only penalty. The guilty man is laid on the great public
altar and made a sacrifice for the public good. The object
is to make a fearful, terrible impression on the public mind
of the evil of transgression and the fearfulness of its consequences.
Discipline looks not so much to the support of law as to the
recovery of the offender. But the day of judgment has nothing
to do with reclaiming the lost sinner. That and all its issues
are purely penal. It is strange that these obvious facts should
be overlooked.
There is yet another consideration
often disregarded, viz., that, underlying any safe dispensation
of discipline, there must be a moral law, sustained by ample
and fearful sanctions, to preserve the law-giver's authority
and sustain the majesty and honour of his government. It would
not be safe to trust a system of discipline, and indeed it
could not be expected to take hold of the ruined with much
force; if it were not sustained by a system of law and penalty.
This penal visitation on the unreclaimed sinner must stand
forever, an appalling fact, to show that justice is realized,
law vindicated, God honoured; and to make an enduring and
awful impression of the evil of sin and of God's eternal hostility
against it.
REMARKS.
We hear a great many cavils against
future punishment. At these we should not so much wonder,
but for the fact that the Gospel assumes this truth, and then
proposes a remedy. One would naturally suppose the mind would
shrink from those fearful conclusions to which it is pressed
when the relations of mere laws are contemplated; but when
the Gospel interposes to save, then it becomes passing strange
that men should admit the reality of the Gospel, and yet reject
the law and its penalties. They talk of grace; but
what do they mean by grace? When men deny the fact of sin,
there is no room and no occasion for grace in the Gospel.
Admitting nominally the fact of sin, but virtually denying
its guilt, grace is only a name. Repudiating the sanctions
of the law of God, and labouring to disprove their reality,
what right have men to claim that they respect the Gospel?
They make it only a farce -- or at least a system of amends
for unreasonably severe legislation under the legal economy.
Let not men who so traduce the law assume that they honour
God by applauding His Gospel!
The representations of the Bible
with regard to the final doom of the wicked are exceedingly
striking. Spiritual truths are revealed by natural objects:
e.g., the gates and walls of the New Jerusalem, to
present the splendours and glories of the heavenly state.
A spiritual telescope is put into our hands; we are permitted
to point it towards the glorious city "whose builder
and Maker is God;" we may survey its inner sanctuary,
where the worshipping hosts praise God without ceasing. We
see their flowing robes of white -- the palms of victory in
their hands -- the beaming joy of their faces -- the manifestations
of ineffable bliss in their souls. This is heaven portrayed
in symbol. Who supposes that this is intended as hyperbole?
Who arraigns these representations as extravagant in speech,
as if designed to overrate the case, or raise unwarrantable
expectations? No man believes this. No man ever brings this
charge against what the Bible says of heaven. What is the
object in adopting this figurative mode of representation?
Beyond question, the object is to give the best possible conception
of the facts.
Then we have the other side. The
veil is lifted, and you come to the very verge of hell to
see what is there. Whereas on the one hand all was glorious,
on the other all is fearful, and full of horrors.
There is a bottomless pit. A deathless
soul is cast therein -- it sinks and sinks and sinks, going
down that awful pit which knows no bottom, weeping and wailing
as it descends, and you hear its groans as they echo and re-echo
from the sides of that dread cavern of woe!
Here is another image. You have
a "lake of fire and brimstone," and you see lost
sinners thrown into its waves of rolling fire; and they lash
its burning shore, and gnaw their tongues for pain. There
the worm dieth not, and their fire is not quenched, and "not
one drop of water" can reach them to "cool their
tongues" -- "tormented in that flame."
What think you? Has God said these
things to frighten our poor souls? Did He mean to play on
our fears for His own amusement? Can you think so? Nay, does
it not rather grieve His heart that He must build such a hell,
and must plunge therein the sinners who will not honour
His law -- will not embrace salvation from sinning through
His grace? Ah, the waves of death roll darkly under the eye
of the Holy and compassionate One! He has no pleasure in the
death of the sinner! But He must sustain His throne, and save
His loyal subjects if He can.
Turn to another scene. Here is
a death-bed. Did you ever see a sinner die? Can you describe
the scene? Was it a friend, a relative, dear, very dear to
your heart? How long was he dying? Did it seem to you the
death-agony would never end? When my last child died, the
struggle was long; O, it was fearfully protracted and agonizing
-- twenty-four hours in the agonies of dissolving nature!
It made me sick I could not see it! But suppose it had continued
till this time. I should long since have died myself under
the anguish and nervous exhaustion of witnessing such a scene.
So would all our friends. Who could survive to the final termination
of such an awful death? Who would not cry out, "My God,
cut it short, cut it short in mercy!" When my wife died,
her death-struggles were long and heart-rending. If you had
been there, you would have cried mightily to God, "Cut
it short! O, cut it short and relieve this dreadful agony!"
But suppose it had continued, on and on, by day and by night
-- day after day, through its slow moving hours, and night
after night -- long nights, as if there could be no morning.
The figure of our text supposes an eternal dying. Let us conceive
such a case. Suppose it should actually occur in some dear
circle of sympathizing friends. A poor man cannot die! He
lingers in the death -- agony a month, a year, five years,
ten years -- till all his friends are broken down, and fall
into their graves under the insupportable horror of the scene:
but still the poor man cannot die! He outlives one generation
-- then another and another; one hundred years he is dying
in mortal agony, and yet he comes no nearer to the end! What
would you think of such a scene? It would be an illustration
-- that is all -- a feeble illustration of the awful "second
death!"
God would have us understand what
an awful thing sin is, and what fearful punishment it deserves.
He would fain show us by such figures how terrible must be
the doom of the determined sinner. Did you ever see a sinner
die? and did you not cry out -- Surely the curse of God has
fallen heavily on this world! Alas, this is only a faint emblem
of that heavier curse that comes in the "second death!"
The text affirms that death is
the "wages of sin." It is just what sin deserves.
Labour earns wages, and creates a rightful claim to such remuneration.
So men are conceived as earning wages when they sin. They
become entitled to their pay. God deems Himself holden to
give them their well-deserved wages.
As I have often said, I would not
say one word in this direction to distress your souls, if
there were no hope and no mercy possible. Would I torment
you before the time? God forbid! Would I hold out the awful
penalty before you, and tell you there is no hope? No. I say
these things to make you feel the need of escaping for your
life.
Think of this: "the wages
of sin is death!" God is aiming to erect a monument that
shall proclaim to all the universe -- Stand in awe and
sin not! So that whenever they shall look on this awful
expression, they shall say -- What an awful thing sin is!
People are wont to exclaim -- O, how horrible the penalty!
They are but too apt to overlook the horrible guilt and
ill-desert of sin! When God lays a sinner on his death-bed
before our eyes, He invites us to look at the penalty of
sin. There he lies, agonizing, groaning, quivering, racked
with pain, yet he lives, and lives on. Suppose he lives on
in this dying state a day, a week, a month, a year, a score
of years, a century, a thousand years, a thousand ages, and
still he lives on, "dying perpetually, yet never dead:"
finally, the universe passes away; the heavens are rolled
together as a scroll -- and what then? There lies that sufferer
yet. He looks up and cries out, "How long, O HOW
LONG?" Like the knell of eternal death, the answer comes
down to him, "Eternally, ETERNALLY." Another
cycle of eternal ages rolls on, and again he dares to ask,
how long? and again the answer rolls back, "Eternally,
ETERNALLY!" O how this fearful answer comes down thundering
through all the realms of agony and despair!
We are informed that in the final
consummation of earthly scenes, "the judgment shall sit
and the books shall be opened." We shall be there, and
what is more, there to close up our account with our Lord
and receive our allotment. Which will you have on that final
settlement day? The wages of sin? Do you say, "Give me
my wages -- give me my wages; I will not be indebted to Christ?"
Sinner, you shall have them. God will pay you without fail
or stint. He has made all the necessary arrangements, and
has your wages ready. But take care what you do! Look again
before you take your final leap. Soon the curtain will fall,
probation close, and all hope will have perished. Where then
shall I be? And you, where? On the right hand or on
the left?
The Bible locates hell in the sight
of heaven. The smoke of their torment as it rises up forever
and ever, is in full view from the heights of the Heavenly
City. There, you adore and worship; but as you cast your eye
afar off toward where the rich man lay, you see what it costs
to sin. There, not one drop of water can go to cool their
burning tongues. Thence the smoke of their torment rises and
rises for evermore. Take care what you do today!
Suppose you are looking into a
vast crater, where the surges of molten lava boil and roll
up, and roll and swell, and ever and anon belch forth huge
masses to deluge the plains below. Once in my life, I stood
in sight of Etna, and dropped my eye down into its awful mouth.
I could not forbear to cry out "tremendous, TREMENDOUS!"
There, said I, is an image of hell! O, sinner, think of hell,
and of yourself thrust into it. It pours forth its volumes
of smoke and flame forever, never ceasing, never exhausted.
Upon that spectacle the universe can look and read, "The
wages of sin is death! O, sin not, since such is the doom
of the unpardoned sinner!" Think what a demonstration
this is in the government of God! What an exhibition of His
holy justice, of His inflexible purpose to sustain the interests
of holiness and happiness in all His vast dominions! Is not
this worthy of God, and of the sacredness of His great scheme
of moral government?
Sinner, you may now escape this
fearful doom. This is the reason why God has revealed hell
in His faithful Word. And now shall this revelation, to you,
be in vain and worse than in vain?
What would you think if this whole
congregation were pressed by some resistless force close up
to the very brink of hell: but just as it seemed that we are
all to be pushed over the awful brink, an angel rushes in,
shouting as with seraphic trump, "Salvation is possible
-- Glory to God, GLORY TO GOD, GLORY TO GOD!"
You cry aloud -- Is it possible?
Yes, yes, he cries, let me take you up in my broad, loving
arms, and bear you to the feet of Jesus, for He is mighty
and willing to save!
Is all this mere talk? Oh, if I
could wet my lips with the dews of heaven, and bathe my tongue
in its founts of eloquence, even then I could not describe
the realities.
Christian people, are you figuring
round and round to get a little property, yet neglecting souls?
Beware lest you ruin souls that can never live again! Do you
say -- I thought they knew it all? They reply to you, "I
did not suppose you believed a word of it yourselves. You
did not act as if you did. Are you going to heaven? Well,
I am going down to hell! There is no help for me now. You
will sometimes think of me then, as you shall see the smoke
of my woe rising up darkly athwart the glorious heavens. After
I have been there a long, long time, you will sometimes think
that I, who once lived by your side, am there. O remember,
you cannot pray for me then; but you will remember that once
you might have warned and might have saved me."
O methinks, if there can be bitterness
in heaven, it must enter through such an avenue and spoil
your happiness there!
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