LETTERS TO YOUNG MINISTERS.
LETTER II.
THE CULTIVATION OF PERSONAL PIETY.
by James W. Alexander
[Originally Published in Thoughts on Preaching: Being contributions
to homiletics, 1864]
IT is scarcely possible to treat of some subjects without running
into commonplaces: their very importance has made them trite,
just as we observe great highways to be most beaten. The question has been
much discussed, whether a minister should ever preach beyond his own experience.
In one sense, unquestionably, he should. He is commissioned to preach,
not himself, or his experience, but Christ Jesus, the Lord, and his salvation;
he is a messenger, and his message is laid before him in the scriptures;
it is at his peril, that he suppresses aught, whether he has experienced
it or not. He is, for example, not to withhold consolation to God's deeply
afflicted ones, till he has experienced deep affliction himself. Yet every
preacher of the gospel should earnestly strive to attain the experience
of the truths which he communicates, and to have every doctrine which he
utters turned into vital exercises of his heart; so that when he stands
up to speak in the name of God, there may be that indescribable freshness
and penetrativeness, which arise from individual and present interest in
what is declared.
In every Church there are some aged and experienced Christians.
These are specially regarded by the Master, and require to be fed with
the finest of the wheat. The ministry is appointed with much reference
to such; and they know when their portion is withheld. They may be poor
and unlettered, and incompetent to judge of gesture, diction, or even grammar;
but they know the "language of Canaan," and the " speech of Ashdod:" I
hold them to be the best judges of the ministry. How little does the starched
and elegant, but shallow young divine suspect, that in yonder dark, back
pew, or in the outskirts of the gallery, there sits an ancient widow, who
was in Christ before he was born, and who reads him through and through.
Mr. Summerfield once related to me, that Dr. Doddridge, when other more
learned helps failed, used to consult a poor old woman, living near him,
upon hard passages in his Commentary, and that he generally acquiesced
in her conclusions. There is no teacher like the Paraclete; and the promise
is, "All thy children shall be taught of the Lord." Isaiah liv.
13. To be able to feed such sheep of Christ, if for no other reason, the
young minister should seek to attain high degrees of piety.
The truth is, such are the discouragements of genuine cross-bearing
ministry, and so repugnant to the flesh are many of its duties, that nothing
but true piety will hold a man up under the burden; he will sooner or later
throw it off; and begin to seek his ease, or preach for "itching ears,"
or phonographic reporters. It is an easy thing to go through a routine,
to "do duty," as the phrase of the Anglican establishment is; but it is
hard to the flesh, to denounce error in high places, to preach unpopular
doctrine, to labour week after week in assemblies of a dozen or twenty,
to spend weary hours among the diseased and dying, and to watch over the
discipline of Christ's house. Nothing but an inward enjoyment of divine
truth, and a reference to the final award, will stimulate a man to constancy
in such labours.
You will be called, as a minister, to spend much time in laborious
study, the tendency of which is to draw the mind off from spiritual concerns;
and sometimes in the perusal of erroneous, heretical, and even infidel
works, that you may know what it is you have to combat. Your condition
in this is like that of the physician, who ventures into infection, and
makes trial of poisons. You will need much grace to preserve your spiritual
health in such perils. The freedom with which you must mingle in society
will expose you to many of the common temptations of a wicked world; and
it will require the extreme of reserve, caution, and mortification, on
your part, to prevent your falling into the snare. In the present day,
out of opposition to the ascetic life, we all probably act too much as
if we were "children of the bride-chamber," and too much neglect the subjugation
of the body. That a man is a minister is no token that he shall not be
cast into hell-fire. The instances of apostasy within our own knowledge
stare at us, like the skeletons of lost travellers, among the sands of
our desert-way. No temptation hath befallen them but that which is common
to man. The apparitions of clerical drunkards, and the like, should forewarn
us. "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall!" The apostle
Paul expresses his view of this, in terms of which the force cannot be
fully brought out by any translation: "But I keep under my body," [hupopiazo]
I strike under the eye, so as to make it black and blue, a boxing
phrase, indicative of strenuous efforts at mortification; as who should
say, "I subdue the flesh by violent and reiterated blows, and bring it
into subjection," [doulagogo] "I lead it along as a slave;" having
subjugated it by assault and beating, I treat it as a bondman, as boxers
in the Palaestra used to drag off their conquered opponents. And the reason
for this mortification of the flesh is, "lest that by any means, when I
have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway." 1 Cor. ix. 27.
Dreadful words! but needed, to deter us from more dreadful destruction.
The tophet of apostate ministers must be doubly severe. It is the "deceitfulness
of sin" which hardens so many of us into carelessness about so great a
danger. Pride goeth before destruction, till suddenly, like Saul, the careless
minister finds himself inveigled into some great sin. This may never be
known to the world, yet it may lead to his ruin. "I am persuaded," says
Owen, "there are very few that apostatize from a profession of any continuance,
such as our days abound with, but there door of entrance into the folly
of backsliding was either some great and notorious sin, that blooded their
consciences, tainted their affections, and intercepted all delight of having
anything more to do with God; or else it was a course of neglect in private
duties, arising from a weariness of contending against that powerful aversation
which they found in themselves unto them. And this also, through the craft
of Satan, bath been improved into many foolish and sensual opinions of
living unto God without and above any duties of communion. And we find
that after men have, for a while, choked and blinded their consciences
with this pretence, cursed wickedness or sensuality hath been the end of
their folly."
Of all people on earth, ministers most need the constant impressions
derived from closet piety. If once they listen to the flattering voice
of their admirers, and think they are actually holy because others treat
them as such; if they dream of going to heaven ex officio; if, weary
of public exercises, they neglect those which are private; or if they acquire
the destructive habit of preaching and praying about Christ without any
faith or emotion; then their course is likely to be downward. Far short,
however, a minister of Christ may be of so dreadful doom, and yet be almost
useless. To prevent such declension, the best advice I know of, is to he
much in secret devotion; including in this term the reflective reading
of Scripture, meditation, self-examination, prayer and praise. And here
you must not expect from me any recipe for the conduct of such exercises,
or rules for the times, length, posture, place, and so forth; for I rejoice
in it as the glory of the Church to which we both belong, that it is so
little rubrical. How often you shall fast or sing or pray, must be left
to be settled between God and your conscience; only fix in mind and heart
the necessity of much devotion.
It is good sometimes to recall the examples of eminent preachers.
John Welsh, the famous son-in-law of Knox, was, during his exile, minister
of a village in France. A friar once lodged under his roof, and on being
asked how he had been entertained by the Huguenot preacher, replied, "Ill
enough; for I always held there were devils haunting these minister's houses,
and I am persuaded there was one with me this night; for I heard a continual
whisper all the night over, which I believe was no other than the minister
and the devil Conversing together." The truth was, it was the Huguenot
preacher at prayer. Welsh used to say, "he wondered how a Christian could
lie in bed all night, and not rise to pray; and many times he prayed, and
many times he watched." Such cases are not altogether wanting in our own
days: Mr. Simeon, of Cambridge, in more than one instance is known to have
spent the whole night in prayer. Let me seriously commend to your notice
a paper contained in his life by Mr. Carus, page 303, entitled, Circumstances
of my Inward Experience. Almost every word of it is golden, and among
other passages you will note the following:
"I have never thought that the circumstance of God's
having forgiven me, was any reason why I should forgive myself; on the
contrary, I have always judged it better to loathe myself the more, in
proportion as I was assured that God was pacified towards me. Ezek. xvi.
63 Nor have I been satisfied with viewing my sins, as men view the stars
in a cloudy night, one here and another there, with great intervals between;
but have endeavoured to get and to preserve continually before my eyes,
such a view of them as we have of the stars in the brightest night; the
greater and the smaller all intermingled, and forming as it were one continual
mass; nor yet, as committed a long time ago, and in many successive years;
but as all forming an aggregate of guilt, and needing the same measure
of humiliation daily, as they needed at the very moment they were committed.
Nor would I willingly rest with such a view as presents itself to the naked
eye; I have desired and do desire daily, that God would put (so to speak)
a telescope to my eye, and enable me to see, not a thousand only, but millions
of my sins, which are more numerous than all the stars which God himself
beholds, and more than the sands upon the sea-shore. There are but two
objects that I have ever desired for these forty years to behold; the one
is my own vileness, and the other is the glory of God in the face of Jesus
Christ; and I have always thought that they should be viewed together;
just as Aaron confessed all the sins of all Israel whilst he put them upon
the head of the scapegoat."
Such exercises as these, you will admit, may well give occasion for more
than usual persistency in prayer.
But lest you think only of sorrowing exercises, let me recall
a passage, which Flavel gives concerning one whom he modestly calls "a
minister," but who is well understood to have been himself; offering it
not so much for imitation, as to show how deep were the experiences of
one who was busied in various learning, and in all the scholastic argumentation
of his day. He was alone on a journey, and determined to spend the day
in self-examination. After some less material circumstances, he proceeds
thus: "In all that day's journey, he neither met, overtook, or was overtaken
by any. Thus going on his way, his thoughts began to swell and rise higher
and higher, like the waters in Ezekiel's vision, till at last they became
an overflowing flood. Such was the intention of his mind, such the ravishing
tastes of heavenly joys, and such the full assurance of his interest therein,
that he utterly lost the sight and sense of this world and all the concerns
thereof; and for some hours knew no more where he was, than if he had been
in a deep sleep upon his bed." Arriving, in great exhaustion, at a certain
spring, sat down and washed, earnestly desiring, if it were the pleasure
of God, that it might be his. parting-place from this world. Death had
the most amiable face, in his eye, that ever he beheld, except the face
of Jesus Christ, which made it so; and he does not remember (though be
believed himself dying) that he had once thought of his dear wife or children,
or any other earthly concernment." On reaching his inn, the same frame
of spirit continued all night, so that sleep departed from him. "Still,
still, the joy of the Lord overflowed him, and he seemed to be an inhabitant
of the other world. But within a few hours, he was sensible of the ebbing
of the tide, and before night, though there was a heavenly serenity and
sweet peace upon his spirit, which continued long with him, yet the transports
of joy were over, and the fine edge of his delight blunted. He many years
after called that day one of the days of heaven, and professed he understood
more of the life of heaven by it, than by all the books he ever read, or
discourses he ever entertained about it."1
Even if you should be disposed to treat this as one of the anomalies
of religious experience, you will nevertheless do well to remark that the
subject of these exercises is John Flavel, a man remote from enthusiasm,
and whose extensive writings are characterised by regular argument and
sound theology; and also that this very narrative was thought worthy of
republication by the cool-headed Jonathan Edwards. The mention of which
name reminds me of an instance given by him, of high religious joy, which
has since his death been ascertained to be that of his own wife.2
The narrative is long; but is worthy of your perusal. Among
other traits were these: the greatest, fullest, longest continued, and
most constant assurance of the favour of God, and of a title to future
glory; to use her own expression, "the riches of full assurance;" the sweetness
of the liberty of having wholly left the world and renounced all for God,
and having nothing but God, in whom is infinite fulness. This was attended
with a constant sweet peace, and calm and serenity of soul, without any
cloud to interrupt it; a continual rejoicing in all the works of God's
hands, the works of nature, and God's daily works of providence,
all appearing with a sweet smile upon them; a wonderful access to God by
prayer, as it were seeing him, and sensibly, immediately conversing with
him, as much oftentimes (she said) as if Christ were here on earth sitting
on a visible throne, to be approached to and conversed with. All former
troubles were forgotten, and all sorrow and sighing fled away, excepting
grief for past sins and for remaining corruption, and that Christ is loved
no more, and that God is no more honoured in the world; and a compassionate
grief towards fellow creatures; a daily sensible doing and suffering everything
for God, and bearing trouble for God, and doing all as the service of love,
and so doing it with a continual uninterrupted cheerfulness, peace, and
joy. This was exempt from any assuming of sinless perfection, the claim
to which was abhorrent to her feelings. Now, though these are the experiences
of a woman, will any one say there is anything in them which would be unreasonable
or undesirable in a minister of Christ? True, we are by no means to make
piety consist in transports, as is irrefragably proved by the great man
who recorded these things: yet there are hours or days in every life of
long continued piety, which are remembered for years, and shed their light
over all the remaining pilgrimage. And who should covet these Pisgah views,
if not ministers of the word? There is among the posthumous papers of the
incomparable Pascal, one, which he long carried about his person, and which
contains the record of a particular visitation of divine love. It is one
of the most seraphic productions of human language: in some places the
joy and rapture and dissolving love seem to defy all ordinary expressions,
and he can only write down such broken phrases as, joy-joy-tears-tears
; "joie-joie-pleurs! pleurs!" The greatest scoffers will hardly
reckon Pascal and Edwards among unreasoning devotees.
Our age is disposed to sneer at high religious passions: it is
perhaps the reason why the pathos of the pulpit has to such a degree departed.
It is not, however, as a homiletic instrumentality that I would urge you
to grow in grace, but far more momentous reasons, which, as a preacher,
you have long since learned.
1 Flavel's Works, fol. ed., vol. i., p. 501.
2 Edward's Works, vol. iii., pp. 304, 399.
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