‘Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ’ (2 Peter 3:18).
The subject of the text which heads this page is one which I dare not
omit in this volume about holiness. It is one that ought to be deeply
interesting to every true Christian. It naturally raises the questions: ‘Do
we grow in grace?’ ‘Do we get on in our religion?’ ‘Do we make progress?’
To a mere formal Christian I cannot expect the inquiry to seem
worth attention. The man who has nothing more than a kind of Sunday
religion — whose Christianity is like his Sunday clothes, put on once a
week, and then laid aside — such a man cannot, of course, be expected
to care about growth in grace. He knows nothing about such matters.
They are foolishness to him (1 Cor. 2:14). But to everyone who is in
downright earnest about his soul, and hungers and thirsts after spiritual
life, the question ought to come home with searching power. Do we
make progress in our religion? Do we grow?
The question is one that is always useful, but especially so at certain
seasons. A Saturday night, a communion Sunday, the return of a
birthday, the end of a year — all these are seasons that ought to set us
thinking and make us look within. Time is fast flying. Life is fast ebbing
away. The hour is daily drawing nearer when the reality of our
Christianity will be tested, and it will be seen whether we have built on
‘the rock’ or on ‘the sand’. Surely it becomes us from time to time to
examine ourselves and take account of our souls? Do we get on in
spiritual things? Do we grow?
The question is one that is of special importance in the present day.
Crude and strange opinions are floating in men’s minds on some points
of doctrine, and among others on the point of growth in grace as an
essential part of true holiness. By some it is totally denied. By others it
is explained away, and pared down to nothing. By thousands it is
misunderstood and consequently neglected. In a day like this it is useful
to look fairly in the face the whole subject of Christian growth.
In considering this subject there are three things which I wish to
bring forward and establish;
1. The reality of religious growth. There is such a thing as growth in
grace.
2. The marks of religious growth. There are marks by which growth in
grace may be known.
3. The means of religious growth. There are means that must be used
by those who desire growth in grace.
I know not who you are, into whose hands this paper may have
fallen. But I am not ashamed to ask your best attention to its contents.
Believe me, the subject is no mere matter of speculation and
controversy. It is an eminently practical subject, if any is in religion. It
is intimately and inseparably connected with the whole question of
sanctification. It is a leading mark of true saints that they grow. The
spiritual health and prosperity, the spiritual happiness and comfort of
every true-hearted and holy Christian, are intimately connected with
the subject of spiritual growth.
1. The reality of religious growth
The first point I propose to establish is this: there is such a thing as
growth in grace.
That any Christian should deny this proposition is at first sight a
strange and melancholy thing. But it is fair to remember that man’s
understanding is fallen no less than his will. Disagreements about
doctrines are often nothing more than disagreements about the meaning
of words. I try to hope that it is so in the present case. I try to believe
that when I speak of growth in grace and maintain it, I mean one thing,
while my brethren who deny it mean quite another. Let me therefore
clear the way by explaining what I mean.
When I speak of growth in grace, I do not for a moment mean that a
believer’s interest in Christ ‘can grow. I do not mean that he can grow in
safety, acceptance with God or security. I do not mean that he can ever
be more justified, more pardoned, more forgiven, more at peace with
God, than he is the first moment that he believes. I hold firmly that the
justification of a believer is a finished, perfect and complete work; and
that the weakest saint, though he may not know and feel it, is as
completely justified as the strongest. I hold firmly that our election,
calling and standing in Christ admit of no degrees, increase or
diminution. If anyone dreams that by growth in grace I mean growth
in justification, he is utterly wide of the mark, and utterly mistaken
about the whole point I am considering. I would go to the stake, God
helping me, for the glorious truth, that in the matter of justification
before God every believer is complete in Christ (Col. 2:10). Nothing
can be added to his justification from the moment he believes, and
nothing taken away.
When I speak of growth in grace I only mean increase in the degree,
size, strength, vigour and power of the graces which the Holy Spirit
plants in a believer’s heart. I hold that every one of those graces admits
of growth, progress and increase. I hold that repentance, faith, hope,
love, humility, zeal, courage and the like may be little or great, strong
or weak, vigorous or feeble, and may vary greatly in the same man at
different periods of his life. When I speak of a man growing in grace, I
mean simply this — that his sense of sin is becoming deeper, his faith
stronger, his hope brighter, his love more extensive, his
spiritual-mindedness more marked. He feels more of the power of godliness in
his own heart. He manifests more of it in his life. He is going on from
strength to strength, from faith to faith and from grace to grace. I leave
it to others to describe such a man’s condition by any words they
please. For myself I think the truest and best account of him is this —
he is growing in grace.
One principal ground, on which I build this doctrine of growth in
grace, is the plain language of Scripture. If words in the Bible mean
anything, there is such a thing as growth, and believers ought to be
exhorted to grow. What says St Paul? ‘Your faith groweth exceedingly’
(2 Thess. 1:3). ‘We beseech you . . . that ye increase more and more’
(1 Thess. 4:10). ‘Increasing in the knowledge of God’ (Col. 1:10).
‘Having hope, when your faith is increased’ (2 Cor. 10:15). ‘The Lord
make you to increase . . . in love’ (1 Thess. 3:12). ‘That ye may grow
up into Him in all things’ (Eph. 4:15). ‘I pray that your love may
abound . . . more and more’ (Phil. 1:9). ‘We beseech you, as ye have
received of us how ye ought to walk and to please God, so ye would
abound more and more’ (1 Thess. 4:1). What says St Peter? ‘Desire the
sincere milk of the Word, that ye may grow thereby’ (1 Peter 2:2).
‘Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ’ (2 Peter 3:18). I know not what others think of such texts.
To me they seem to establish the doctrine for which I contend, and to
be incapable of any other explanation. Growth in grace is taught in the
Bible. I might stop here and say no more.
The other ground, however, on which I build the doctrine of
growth in grace, is the ground of fact and experience. I ask any
honest reader of the New Testament, whether he cannot see degrees
of grace in the New Testament saints whose histories are recorded,
as plainly as the sun at noonday. I ask him whether he cannot see in
the very same persons as great a difference between their faith and
knowledge at one time and at another, as between the same man’s
strength when he is an infant and when he is a grown-up man. I ask
him whether the Scripture does not distinctly recognize this in the
language it uses, when it speaks of ‘weak’ faith and ‘strong’ faith,
and of Christians as ‘new-born babes’, ‘little children‘, ‘young men’,
and ‘fathers’? (1 Peter 2:2; 1 John 2:12—14.) I ask him, above
all, whether his own observation of believers nowadays does not
bring him to the same" conclusion? What true Christian would not
confess that there is as much difference between the degree of his own
faith and knowledge when he was first converted, and his present
attainments, as there is between a sapling and a full-grown tree? His
graces are the same in principle; but they have grown. I know not how
these facts strike others; to my eyes they seem to prove, most
unanswerably, that growth in grace is a real thing.
I feel almost ashamed to dwell so long upon this part of my subject.
In fact, if any man means to say that the faith and hope and knowledge
and holiness of a newly-converted person are as strong as those of an
old-established believer, and need no increase, it is waste of time to
argue further. No doubt they are as real, but not so strong; as true, but
not so vigorous; as much seeds of the Spirit’s planting, but not yet so
fruitful. And if anyone asks how they are to become stronger, I say it
must be by the same process by which all things having life increase —
they must grow. And this is what I mean by growth in grace.1
Let us turn away from the things I have been discussing, to a more
practical view of the great subject before us. I want men to look at
growth in grace as a thing of infinite importance to the soul. I believe,
whatever others may think, that our best interests are concerned in a
right view of the question: ‘Do we grow?’
a. Let us know then that growth in grace is the best evidence of
spiritual health and prosperity. In a child or a flower or a tree we are all
aware that when there is no growth there is something wrong. Healthy
life in an animal or vegetable will always show itself by progress and
increase. It is just the same with our souls. If they are progressing and
doing well they will grow.2
b. Let us know, furthermore, that growth in grace is one way to be
happy in our religion. God has wisely linked together our comfort and
our increase in holiness. He has graciously made it our interest to press
on and aim high in our Christianity. There is a vast difference between
the amount of sensible enjoyment which one believer has in his religion
compared to another. But you may be sure that ordinarily the man who
feels the most ‘joy and peace in believing’, and has the clearest witness
of the Spirit in his heart, is the man who grows.
c. Let us know, furthermore, that growth in grace is one secret of
usefulness to others. Our influence on others for good depends greatly
on what they see in us. The children of the world measure Christianity
quite as much by their eyes as by their ears. The Christian who is
always at a standstill, to all appearance the same man, with the same
little faults and weaknesses and besetting sins and petty infirmities, is
seldom the Christian who does much good. The man who shakes and
stirs minds, and sets the world thinking, is the believer who is
continually improving and going forward. Men think there is life and
reality when they see growth.3
d. Let us know, furthermore, that growth in grace pleases God. It
may seem a wonderful thing, no doubt, that anything done by such
creatures as we are can give pleasure to the Most High God. But so it is.
The Scripture speaks of walking so as to please God. The Scripture says
there are sacrifices with which ‘God is well pleased’ (1 Thess. 4:1;
Heb. 13:16). The husbandman loves to see the plants on which he has
bestowed labour flourishing and bearing fruit. It cannot but disappoint
and grieve him to see them stunted and standing still. Now what does
our Lord Himself say? ‘I am the true Vine, and My Father is the
Husbandman.’ ‘Herein is My Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit;
so shall ye be My disciples’ (John 15:1, 8). The Lord takes pleasure in
all His people, but specially in those that grow.
e. Let us know, above all, that growth in grace is not only a thing
possible, but a thing for which believers are accountable. To tell an
unconverted man, dead in sins, to grow in grace would doubtless be
absurd. To tell a believer, who is quickened and alive to God, to grow,
is only summoning him to a plain scriptural duty. He has a new
principle within him, and it is a solemn duty not to quench it. Neglect
of growth robs him of privileges, grieves the Spirit and makes the
chariot wheels of his soul move heavily. Whose fault is it, I should like
to know, if a believer does not grow in grace? The fault, I am sure,
cannot be laid on God. He delights to give more grace; He ‘hath
pleasure in the prosperity of His servants’ (James 4:6; Ps. 35:27). The
fault, no doubt, is our own. We ourselves are to blame, and none else,
if we do not grow.
2. The marks of religious growth
The second point I proposed to establish is this: there are marks by
which growth in grace may be known.
Let me take it for granted that we do not question the reality of
growth in grace and its vast importance. So far so good. But you now
want to know how anyone may find out whether he is growing in
grace or not? I answer that question, in the first place, by Observing
that we are very poor judges of our own condition, and that bystanders
often know us better than we know ourselves. But I answer further,
that there are undoubtedly certain great marks and signs of growth in
grace, and that wherever you see these marks you see a growing soul. I
will now proceed to place some of these marks before you in order.
a. One mark of growth in grace is increased humility. The man
whose soul is growing feels his own sinfulness and unworthiness more
every year. He is ready to say with Job,“I am vile,’ and with Abraham,
‘I am dust and ashes,’ and with Jacob, ‘I am not worthy of the least of
all Thy mercies,’ and with David, ‘I am a worm,’ and with Isaiah, ‘I am
a man of unclean lips,’ and with Peter, ‘I am a sinful man, O Lord’
(Job 40:4; Gen. 18:27; 32:10; Ps. 22:6; Isa. 6:5; Luke 5:8). The nearer
he draws to God, and the more he sees of God’s holiness and
perfections, the more thoroughly is he sensible of his own countless
imperfections. The further he journeys in the way to heaven, the more
he understands what St Paul meant when he says, ‘I am not already
perfect,’ ‘I am not meet to be called an apostle,’ ‘I am less than the
least of all saints,’ ‘I am chief of sinners’ (Phil. 3:12; 1 Cor. 15:9; Eph.
3:8; 1 Tim. 1:15). The riper he is for glory, the more, like the ripe
corn, he hangs down his head. The brighter and clearer is his light, the
more he sees of the shortcomings and infirmities of his own heart.
When first converted, he would tell you he saw but little of them
compared to what he sees now. Would anyone know whether he is
growing in grace? Be sure that you look within for increased humility.4
b. Another mark of growth in grace is increased faith and love
towards our Lord Jesus Christ. The man whose soul is growing finds
more in Christ to rest upon every year, and rejoices more that he has
such a Saviour. No doubt he saw much in Him when first he believed.
His faith laid hold on the atonement of Christ and gave him hope. But
as he grows in grace he sees a thousand things in Christ of which at first
he never dreamed. His love and power, His heart and His intentions, His
offices as Substitute, Intercessor, Priest, Advocate, Physician, Shepherd
and Friend, unfold themselves to a growing soul in an unspeakable
manner. In short, he discovers a suitableness in Christ to the wants of his
soul, of which the half was once not known to him. Would anyone
know if he is growing in grace? Then let him look within for increased
knowledge of Christ.
c, Another mark of growth in grace is increased holiness of life and
conversation. The man whose soul is growing gets more dominion over
sin, the world and the devil every year. He becomes more careful about
his temper, his words and his actions. He is more watchful over his
conduct in every relation of life. He strives more to be conformed to
the image of Christ in all things, and to follow Him as his example, as
well as to trust in Him as his Saviour. He is not content with old
attainments and former grace. He forgets the things that are behind and
reaches forth unto those things which are before, making ‘Higher!’
‘Upward!’ ‘Forward!’ ‘Onward!’ his continual motto (Phil. 3:13). On
earth he thirsts and longs to have a will more entirely in unison with
God's will. In heaven the chief thing that he looks for, next to the
presence of Christ, is complete separation from all sin. Would anyone
know if he is growing in grace? Then let him look within for increased
holiness.5
d. Another mark of growth in grace is increased spirituality of taste
and mind. The man whose soul is growing takes more interest in
spiritual things every year. He does not neglect his duty in the world.
He discharges faithfully, diligently and conscientiously every relation of
life, whether at home or abroad. But the things he loves best are
spiritual things. The ways and fashions and amusements and recreations
of the world have a continually decreasing place in his heart. He does
not condemn them as downright sinful, nor say that those who have
anything to do with them are going to hell. He only feels that they have
a constantly diminishing hold on his own affections, and gradually seem
smaller and more trifling in his eyes. Spiritual companions, spiritual
occupations, spiritual conversation appear of ever-increasing value to
him. Would anyone know if he is growing in grace? Then let him look
within for increasing spirituality of taste.6
e. Another mark of growth in grace is increase of charity. The man
whose soul is growing is more full of love every year — of love to all
men, but especially of love towards the brethren. His love will show
itself actively in a growing disposition to do kindnesses, to take trouble
for others, to be good-natured to everybody, to be generous,
sympathizing, thoughtful, tender-hearted and considerate. It will show
itself passively in a growing disposition to be meek and patient towards
all men, to put up with provocation and not stand upon rights, to bear
and forbear much rather than quarrel. A growing soul will try to put
the best construction on other people’s conduct, and to believe all
things and hope all things, even to the end. There is no surer mark of
backsliding and falling off in grace than an increasing disposition to find
fault, pick holes and see weak points in others. Would anyone know if
he is growing in grace? Then let him look within for increasing charity.
f. One more mark of growth in grace is increased zeal and diligence
in trying to do good to souls. The man who is really growing will take
greater interest in the salvation of sinners every year. Missions at
home and abroad, efforts of every kind to spread the gospel, attempts
of any sort to increase religious light and diminish religious darkness —
all these things will every year have a greater place in his attention.
He will not become ‘weary in well-doing’ because he does not see every
effort succeed. He will not care less for the progress of Christ’s cause on
earth as he grows older, though he will learn to expect less. He will just
work on, whatever the result may be — giving, praying, preaching,
speaking, visiting, according to his position — and count his work its
own reward. One of the surest marks of spiritual decline is a decreased
interest about the souls of others and the growth of Christ’s kingdom.
Would anyone know whether he is growing in grace? Then let him look
within for increased concern about the salvation of souls.
Such are the most trustworthy marks of growth in grace. Let us
examine them carefully, and consider what we know about them. I can
well believe that they will not please some professing Christians in the
present day. Those high-flying religionists, whose only notion of
Christianity is that of a state of perpetual joy and ecstasy, who tell you
that they have got far beyond the region of conflict and soul-humiliation,
such persons no doubt will regard the marks [have laid down as ‘legal’,
‘carnal’ and ‘gendering to bondage’. I cannot help that. I call no man
master in these things. I only wish my statements to be tried in the
balance of Scripture. And I firmly believe that what I have said is not
only scriptural, but agreeable to the experience of the most eminent
saints in every age. Show me a man in whom the six marks I have
mentioned can be found. He is the man who can give a satisfactory
answer to the question: ‘Do we grow?’
3. The means of religious growth
The third and last thing I proposed to consider is this: the means
that must be used by those who desire to grow in grace. The words of
St James must never be forgotten: ‘Every good gift and every perfect
gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights’ (James
1:17). This is no doubt as true of growth in grace, as it is of everything
else. It is the ‘gift of God’. But still it must always be kept in mind that
God is pleased to work by means. God has ordained means as well as
ends. He that would grow in grace must use the means of growth.7
This is a point, I fear; which is too much overlooked by believers.
Many admire growth in grace in others, and wish that they themselves
were like them. But they seem to suppose that those who grow are
what they are by some special gift or grant from God, and that as this
gift is not bestowed on themselves they must be content to sit still. This
is a grievous delusion, and one against which I desire to testify with all
my might. I wish it to be distinctly understood that growth in grace is
bound up with the use of means within the reach of all believers and
that, as a general rule, growing souls are what they are because they use
these means.
Let me ask the special attention of my readers while I try to set
forth in order the means of growth. Cast away for ever the vain thought
that if a believer does not grow in grace it is not his fault. Settle it in
your mind that a believer, a man quickened by the Spirit, is not a mere
dead creature, but a being of mighty capacities and responsibilities. Let
the words of Solomon sink down into your heart: ‘The soul of the
diligent shall be made fat’ (Prov. 13:4).
a. One thing essential to growth in grace is diligence in the use of
private means of grace. By these I understand such means as a man
must use by himself alone, and no one can use for him. I include under
this head private prayer, private reading of the Scriptures, and private
meditation and self-examination. The man who does not take pains
about these three things must never expect to grow. Here are the roots
of true Christianity. Wrong here, a man is wrong all the way through!
Here is the whole reason why many professing Christians never seem to
get on. They are careless and slovenly about their private prayers. They
read their Bibles but little, and with very little heartiness of spirit. They
give themselves no time for self-inquiry and quiet thought about the
state of their souls.
It is useless to conceal from ourselves that the age we live in is
full of peculiar dangers. It is an age of great activity, and of much hurry,
bustle and excitement in religion. Many are ‘running to and fro’, no
doubt, and ‘knowledge is increased’ (Dan. 12:4). Thousands are ready
enough for public meetings, sermon hearing, or anything else in which
there is ‘sensation’. Few appear to remember the absolute necessity of
making time to ‘commune with our own hearts, and be still’ (Ps. 4:4).
But without this there is seldom any deep spiritual prosperity. I
suspect that English Christians two hundred years ago read their Bibles
more, and were more frequently alone with God, than they are in the
present day. Let us remember this point! Private religion must receive
our first attention, if we wish our souls to grow.
b. Another thing which is essential to growth in grace, is
carefulness in the use of public means of grace. By these I understand such
means as a man has within his reach as a member of Christ’s visible
church. Under this head I include the ordinances of regular Sunday
worship, the uniting with God’s people in common prayer and praise,
the preaching of the Word, and the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper.
I firmly believe that the manner in which these public means of grace
are used has much to say to the prosperity of a believer’s soul. It is
easy to use them in a cold and heartless way. The very familiarity of
them is apt to make us careless. The regular return of the same voice,
and the same kind of words, and the same ceremonies, is likely to make
us sleepy and callous and unfeeling. Here is a snare into which too
many professing Christians fall. If we would grow we must be on our
guard here. Here is a matter in which the Spirit is often grieved and
saints take great damage. Let us strive to use the old prayers, and sing
the old hymns, and kneel at the old communion rail, and hear the
old truths preached, with as much freshness and appetite as in the
year we first believed. It is a sign of bad health when a person loses
relish for his food; and it is a sign of spiritual decline when we lose our
appetite for means of grace. Whatever we do about public means, let us
always do it ‘with our might’ (Eccles. 9:10). This is the way to grow!
c. Another thing essential to growth in grace is watchfulness over
our conduct in the little matters of everyday life. Our tempers, our
tongues, the discharge of our several relations of life, our employment
of time — each and all must be vigilantly attended to if we wish our
souls to prosper. Life is made up of days, and days of hours, and the
little things of every hour are never so little as to be beneath the care of
of a Christian. When a tree begins to decay at root or heart, the
mischief is first seen at the extreme end of the little branches. ‘He that
despiseth little things,’ says an uninspired writer, ‘shall fall by little and
little.’ That witness is true. Let others despise us, if they like, and call
us precise and over careful. Let us patiently hold on our way,
remembering that ‘we serve a precise God’, that our Lord’s example is
to be copied in the least things as well as the greatest, and that we must
‘take up our cross daily’ and hourly, rather than sin. We must aim to
have a Christianity which, like the sap of a tree, runs through every twig
and leaf of our character, and sanctifies all. This is one way to grow!
d. Another thing which is essential to growth in grace is caution
about the company we keep and the friendships we form. Nothing
perhaps affects man's character more than the company he keeps. We
catch the ways and tone of those we live and talk with, and unhappily
get harm far more easily than good. Disease is infectious, but health is
not. Now if a professing Christian deliberately chooses to be intimate
with those who are not friends of God and who cling to the world, his
soul is sure to take harm. It is hard enough to serve Christ under any
circumstances in such a world as this. But it is doubly hard to do it if
we are friends of the thoughtless and ungodly. Mistakes in friendship or
marriage engagements are the whole reason why some have entirely
ceased to grow. ‘Evil communications corrupt good manners.’ ‘The
friendship of the world is enmity with God’ (1 Cor. 15:33; James 4:4).
Let us seek friends that will stir us up about our prayers, our Bible
reading, and our employment of time, about our souls, our salvation,
and a world to come. Who can tell the good that a friend’s word in
season may do, or the harm that it may stop? This is one way to grow.8
e. There is one more thing which is absolutely essential to growth in
grace, and that is regular and habitual communion with the Lord Jesus.
In saying this, let no one suppose for a minute that I am referring to the
Lord’s Supper. I mean nothing of the kind. I mean that daily habit of
intercourse between the believer and his Saviour, which can only be
carried on by faith, prayer and meditation. It is a habit, I fear, of which
many believers know little. A man may be a believer and have his feet
on the rock, and yet live far below his privileges. It is possible to have
‘union’ with Christ, and yet to have little if any ‘communion’ with Him.
But, for all that, there is such a thing.
The names and offices of Christ, as laid down in Scripture, appear to
me to show unmistakably that this communion between the saint and
his Saviour is not a mere fancy, but a real true thing. Between the
Bridegroom and His bride, between the Head and His members, between
the Physician and His patients, between the Advocate and His clients,
between the Shepherd and His sheep, between the Master and His
scholars, there is evidently implied a habit of familiar intercourse, of
daily application for things needed, of daily pouring out and
unburdening our hearts and minds. Such a habit of dealing with Christ is clearly
something more than a vague general trust in the work that Christ did
for sinners. It is getting close to Him, and laying hold on Him with
confidence, as a loving, personal Friend. This is what I mean by
communion.
Now I believe that no man will ever grow in grace who does not
know something experimentally of the habit of communion. We must
not be content with a general orthodox knowledge that Christ is the
Mediator between God and man, and that justification is by faith and
not by works, and that we put our trust in Christ. We must go further
than this. We must seek to have personal intimacy with the Lord Jesus,
and to deal with Him as a man deals with a loving friend. We must
realize what it is to turn to Him first in every need, to talk to Him
about every difficulty, to consult Him about every step, to spread
before Him all our sorrows, to get Him to share in all our joys, to do all
as in His sight, and to go through every day leaning on and looking to
Him. This is the way that St Paul lived: ‘The life which I now live in the
flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God.’ ‘To me to live is Christ’
(Gal. 2:20; Phil. 1:21). It is ignorance of this way of living that makes
so many see no beauty in the book of Canticles. But it is the man who
lives in this way, who keeps up constant communion with Christ - this
is the man, I say emphatically, whose soul will grow.
I leave the subject of growth in grace here. Far more might be said
about it, if time permitted. But I have said enough. I hope to convince
my readers that the subject is one of vast importance. Let me wind up
all with some practical applications.
1. This paper may fall into the hands of some who know nothing
whatever about growth in grace. They have little or no concern about
religion. A little proper Sunday church-going or chapel-going makes up
the sum and substance of their Christianity. They are without spiritual
life, and of course they cannot at present grow. Are you one of these
people? If you are, you are in a pitiable condition.
Years are slipping away and time is flying. Graveyards are filling up
and families are thinning. Death and judgement are getting nearer to us
all. And yet you live like one asleep about your soul! What madness!
What folly! What suicide can be worse than this?
Awake before it be too late; awake, and arise from the dead, and live
to God. Turn to Him who is sitting at the right hand of God, to be your
Saviour and Friend. Turn to Christ, and cry mightily to Him about your
soul. There is yet hope! He that called Lazarus from the grave is not
changed. He that commanded the widow's son at Nain to arise from his
bier can do miracles yet for your soul. Seek Him at Once: seek Christ, if
you would not be lost for ever. Do not stand still talking and meaning
and intending and wishing and hoping. Seek Christ that you may live,
and that living you may grow.
2. This paper may fall into the hands of some who ought to know
something of growth in grace, but at present know nothing at all. They
have made little or no progress since they were first converted. They
seem to have ‘settled on their lees’ (Zeph. 1:12). They go on from year
to year content with old grace, old experience, old knowledge, old
faith, old measure of attainment, old religious expressions, old set
phrases. Like the Gibeonites, their bread is always mouldy and their
shoes are patched and clouted. They never appear to get on. Are you
one of these people? If you are, you are living far below your privileges
and responsibilities. It is high time to examine yourself.
If you have reason to hope that you are a true believer and yet do
not grow in grace, there must be a fault, and a serious fault somewhere.
It cannot be the will of God that your soul should stand still. ‘He giveth
more grace.’ He takes ‘pleasure in the prosperity of His servants’ (James
4:6; Ps. 35:27). It cannot be for your own happiness or usefulness that
your soul should stand still. Without growth you will never rejoice in
the Lord (Phil. 4:4). Without growth you will never do good to others.
Surely this want of growth is a serious matter! It should raise in you
great searchings of heart. There must be some ‘secret thing’ (Job 15:11).
There must be some cause.
Take the advice I give you. Resolve this very day that you will find
out the reason of your standstill condition. Probe with a faithful and
firm hand every corner of your soul. Search from one end of the camp
to the other, till you find out the Achan who is weakening your hands.
Begin with an application to the Lord Jesus Christ, the great Physician
of souls, and ask Him to heal the secret ailment within you, whatever
it may be. Begin as if you had never applied to Him before, and ask for
grace to cut off the right hand and pluck out the right eye. But never,
never be content, if your soul does not grow. For your peace’s sake,
for your usefulness’ sake, for the honour of your Maker’s cause, resolve
to find out the reason why.
3. This paper may fall into the hands of some who are really
growing in grace, but are not aware of it, and will not allow it. Their
very growth is the reason why they do not see their growth! Their
continual increase in humility prevents them feeling that they get on.9
Like Moses, when he came down from the mount from communing
with God, their faces shine. And yet, like Moses, they are not aware of
it (Exod. 34:29). Such Christians, I grant freely, are not common. But
here and there such are to be found. Like angels’ visits, they are few
and far between. Happy is the neighbourhood where such growing
Christians live! To meet them and see them and be in their company, is
like meeting and seeing a bit of ‘heaven upon earth’.
Now what shall I say to such people? What can I say? What ought I
to say? Shall I bid them awake to a consciousness of their own growth
and be pleased with it? I will do nothing of the kind. Shall I tell them
to plume themselves on their own attainments, and look at their own
superiority to others? God forbid! I will do nothing of the kind. To tell
them such things would do them no good. To tell them such things,
above all, would be useless waste of time. If there is any one feature
about a growing soul which specially marks him, it is his deep sense of
his own unworthiness. He never sees anything to be praised in himself.
He only feels that he is an unprofitable servant and the chief of sinners.
It is the righteous, in the picture of the judgement day, who say, ‘Lord,
when saw we Thee an hungred, and fed Thee?’ (Matt. 25:37).
Extremes do indeed meet strangely sometimes. The
conscience-hardened sinner and the eminent saint are in one respect singularly alike.
Neither of them fully realizes his own condition. The one does not see
his own sin, nor the other his own grace!
But shall I say nothing to growing Christians? Is there no word of
counsel I can address to them? The sum and substance of all that I can
say is to be found in two sentences: ‘Go forward!’ ‘Go on!’
We can never have too much humility, too much faith in Christ, too
much holiness, too much spirituality of mind, too much charity, too
much zeal in doing good to others. Then let us be continually forgetting
the things behind, and reaching forth unto the things before (Phil.
3:13). The best of Christians in these matters is infinitely below the
perfect pattern of his Lord. Whatever the world may please to say, we
may be sure there is no danger of any of us becoming ‘too good’.
Let us cast to the winds as idle talk the common notion that it is
possible to be ‘extreme’ and go ‘too far’ in religion. This is a favourite
lie of the devil, and one which he circulates with vast industry. No
doubt there are enthusiasts and fanatics to be found who bring an evil
report upon Christianity by their extravagancies and follies. But if
anyone means to say that a mortal man can be too humble, too charitable,
too holy or too diligent in doing good, he must either be an infidel or a
fool. In serving pleasure and money it is easy to go too far. But in
following the things which make up true religion, and in serving Christ
there can be no extreme.
Let us never measure our religion by that of others, and think we are
doing enough if we have gone beyond our neighbours. This is another
snare of the devil. Let us mind our own business. ‘What is that to thee?’
said our Master on a certain occasion, ‘Follow thou Me’ (John 21:22).
Let us follow on, aiming at nothing short of perfection. Let us follow
on, making Christ’s life and character our only pattern and example.
Let us follow on, remembering daily that at our best we are miserable
sinners. Let us follow on, and never forget that it signifies nothing
whether we are better than others or not. At our very best we are far
worse than we ought to be. There will always be room for improvement
in us. We shall be debtors to Christ’s mercy and grace to the very last.
Then let us leave off looking at others and comparing ourselves with
others. We shall find enough to do if we look at our own hearts.
Last, but not least, if we know anything of growth in grace, and
desire to know more, let us not be surprised if we have to go through
much trial and affliction in this world. I firmly believe it is the
experience of nearly all the most eminent saints. Like their blessed
Master they have been men of sorrows, acquainted with grief, and
perfected through sufferings (Isa. 53:3; Heb. 2:10). It is a striking
saying of our Lord, ‘Every branch in Me that beareth fruit [my Father]
purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit’ (John 15:2). It is a
melancholy fact, that constant temporal prosperity, as a general rule, is
injurious to a believer’s soul. We cannot stand it. Sicknesses and losses
and crosses and anxieties and disappointments seem absolutely needful
to keep us humble, watchful and spiritual-minded. They are as needful
as the pruning-knife to the vine, and the refiner’s furnace to the gold.
They are not pleasant to flesh and blood. We do not like them, and
often do not see their meaning. ‘No chastening for the present seemeth
to be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the
peaceable fruit of righteousness’ (Heb. 12:11). We shall find that all
worked for our good when we reach heaven. Let these thoughts abide
in our minds, if we love growth in grace. When days of darkness come
upon us, let us not count it a strange thing. Rather let us remember that
lessons are learned on such days, which would never have been learned
in sunshine. Let us say to ourselves, ‘This also is for my profit, that I
may be a partaker of God’s holiness. It is sent in love. I am in God’s
best school. Correction is instruction. This is meant to make me grow.’
I leave the subject of growth in grace here. I trust I have said enough
to set some readers thinking about it. All things are growing older: the
world is growing old; we ourselves are growing older. A few more
summers, a few more winters, a few more sicknesses, a few more
sorrows, a few more weddings, a few more funerals, a few more
meetings and a few more partings, and then — what? Why the grass will
be growing over our graves!
Now would it not be well to look within, and put to our souls a
simple question? In religion, in the things that concern our peace,
in the great matter of personal holiness, are we getting on? Do we grow?
1‘True grace is progressive, of a spreading, growing nature. It is with grace as it is
with light: first, there is the daybreak; then it shines brighter to the full noonday.
The saints are not only compared to stars for their light, but to trees for their
growth (Isa. 61:3; Hos. 14:5). A good Christian is not like Hezekiah‘s sun that
went backwards, nor Joshua's sun that stood still, but is always advancing in
holiness, and increasing with the increase of God.’ (Thomas Watson, minister of St
Stephen’s Walbrook, A Body of Divinity. Banner of Truth Trust, 1974.)
2‘The growth of grace is the best evidence of the truth of grace. Things that have
not life will not grow. A picture will not grow. A stake in a hedge will not grow.
But a plant that hath vegetative life will grow. The growing of grace shows it to be
alive in the soul.’ (Thomas Watson: A Body of Divinity, Banner of Truth Trust,
1974.)
3‘Christian, as ever you would stir up others to exalt the God of grace, look to
the exercise and improvement of your own graces. When poor servants live in a
family, and see the faith and love and wisdom and patience and humility of a
master, shining like the stars in heaven, it draws forth their hearts to bless the
Lord that ever they came into such a family. . . . When men’s graces shine as
Moses’ face did, when their life, as one speaketh of Joseph’s life, is a very heaven,
sparkling with virtues as so many bright stars, how much others are stirred up to
glorify God, and cry, “These are Christians indeed! These are an honour to their
God, a crown to their Christ, and a credit to their gospel! Oh, if they were all
such, we would be Christians, too!"’ (T. Brooks, 1661. Unsearchable Riches.)
4‘The right manner of growth is to grow less in one's own eyes. “I am a worm
and no man" (Ps. 22:6). The sight of corruption and ignorance makes a Christian
grow into a dislike of himself. He doth vanish in his own eyes. Job abhorred
himself in the dust (Job 42 :6). This is good, to grow out of conceit with oneself.’
(Thomas Watson: A Body of Divinity, Banner of Truth Trust, 1974.)
5‘It is a sign of not growing in grace, when we are less troubled about sin. Time
was when the least sin did grieve us (as the least hair makes the eye weep), but
now we can digest sin without remorse. Time was when a Christian was troubled
if he neglected closet prayer; now he can omit family prayer. Time was when vain
thoughts did not trouble him; now he is not troubled for loose practices. There is
a sad declension in religion, and grace is so far from growing that we can hardly
perceive its pulse to beat.’ (Thomas Watson: A Body of Divinity, Banner of
Truth Trust, 1974.)
‘If now you would be rich in graces, look to your walking. It is not the
knowing soul, nor the talking soul, but the close-walking soul, the obediential
soul, that is rich. Others may be rich in notions, but none so rich in spiritual
experience, and in all holy and heavenly graces, as close—walking Christians.’
(T. Brooks. 1661.)
6‘It is a sign of not growing in grace, when we grow more worldly. Perhaps once
we were mounted into higher orbits, we did set our hearts on things above and
speak the language of Canaan. But now our minds are taken off heaven, we dig
our comforts out of these lower mines, and with Satan compass the earth. It is a
sign we are going downhill apace, and our grace is in a consumption. It is
observable when nature decays, and people are near dying, they grow more
stooping. And truly when men’s hearts grow more stooping to the earth, and they
can hardly lift up themselves to an heavenly thought, if grace be not dead, yet it is
ready to die.’ (Thomas Watson: A Body of Divinity, Banner of Truth Trust, 1974).
7‘Experience will tell every Christian that the more strictly and closely and
constantly he walketh with God, the stronger he groweth in duty. Infused habits
are advantaged by exercise. As the fire that kindled the wood for sacrifices upon
the altar first came down from heaven, but then was to be kept alive by the care
and labour of the priests, so the habits of spiritual grace are indeed infused from
God, and must be maintained by daily influences from God, yet with a
concurrence also of our own labours, in waiting upon God, and exercising ourselves
with godliness; and the more a Christian doth so exercise himself, the more strong
he shall grow.’ (Collinges on ‘Providence’. 1678.)
8‘Let them be thy choicest companions, that have made Christ their chiefest
companion. Do not so much eye the outsides of men as their inside: look most to
their internal worth. Many persons have their eyes upon the external garb of a
professor. But give me a Christian that minds the internal worth of persons, that
makes such as are most filled with the fulness of God his choicest and chiefest
companions.’ (T. Brooks. 1661.)
9‘Christians may be growing when they think they do not grow. “There is that
maketh himself poor, yet he is rich" (Prov. 13:7). The sight that Christians have
of their defects in grace, and their thirst after greater measures of grace, makes
them think they do not grow. He who covets a great estate, because he hath not
so much as he desires, thinks himself poor.’ (T. Watson, 1660. A Body of Divinity,
Banner of Truth Trust, 1974.)
‘Souls may be rich in grace, and yet not know it, not perceive it. The child is
heir to a crown or a great estate, but knows it not. Moses’ face did shine, and
others saw it, but he perceived it not. So many a precious soul is rich in grace, and
others see it and know it and bless God for it, and yet the poor soul perceives it
not. Sometimes this arises from the soul’s strong desires of spiritual riches. The
strength of the soul’s desires after spiritual riches doth often take away the very
sense of growing spiritually rich. Many covetous men’s desires are so strongly
carried forth after earthly riches, that though they do grow rich, yet they cannot
perceive it, they cannot believe it. It is just so with many a precious Christian: his
desires after spiritual riches are so strong, that they take away the very sense of
his growing rich in spirituals. Many Christians have much worth within them, but
they see it not. It was a good man that said, “The Lord was in this place and l
knew it not." Again, this ariseth sometimes from men neglecting to cast up their
accounts. Many men thrive and grow rich, and yet, by neglecting to cast up their
accounts, they cannot tell whether they go forward or backward. It is so with
many precious souls. Again, this ariseth sometimes from the soul's too frequent
casting up of its accounts. If a man should cast up his accounts once a week, or
once a month, he may not be able to discern that he doth grow rich, and yet he
may grow rich. But let him compare one year with another, and he shall clearly
see that he doth grow rich. Again, this sometimes ariseth from the soul’s mistakes
in casting up its accounts. The soul many times mistakes: it is in a hurry, and then
it puts down ten for a hundred, and a hundred for a thousand. Look, as
hypocrites put down their counters for gold, their pence for pounds, and always
prize themselves above the market, so sincere souls do‘often put down their
pounds for pence, their thousands for hundreds, and still prize themselves below
the market.’ (Thomas Brooks. Unsearchable Riches, 1661.)