"I will trust in the mercy
of God forever and ever." Ps. 52:8.
In discussing this subject I shall
enquire,
I. What mercy is.
II. What is implied in trusting in
the mercy of the Lord forever.
III. Point out the conditions on
which we may safely trust in God's mercy.
IV. Allude to several mistakes which
are made on this subject.
1. Mercy as an attribute of God, is
not to be confounded with mere goodness. This mistake is
often made. That it is a mistake, you will see at once if
you consider that mercy is directly opposed to justice,
while yet justice is one of the natural and legitimate
developments of goodness. Goodness may demand the exercise
of justice; indeed it often does; but to say that mercy
demands the exercise of justice, is to use the word without
meaning. Mercy asks that justice be set aside. Of course
mercy and goodness stand in very different relations to
justice, and are very different attributes.
2. Mercy is a disposition to pardon
the guilty. Its exercise consists in arresting and setting
aside the penalty of law, when that penalty has been
incurred by transgression. It is, as has been said, directly
opposed to justice. Justice treats every individual
according to his deserts; mercy treats the criminal very
differently from what he deserves to be treated. Desert is
never the rule by which mercy is guided; while it is
precisely the rule of justice.
3. Mercy is exercised only where
there is guilt. It always pre-supposes guilt. The penalty of
the law must have been previously incurred, else there can
be no scope for mercy.
4. Mercy can be exercised no farther
than one deserves punishment. It may continue its exercise
just as long as punishment is deserved, but no longer; just
as far as ill desert goes, but no farther. If great
punishment is deserved, great mercy can be shown; if endless
punishment is due, there is then scope for infinite mercy to
be shown, but not otherwise.
II. I am to show what is implied in
trusting in the mercy of God.
1. A conviction of guilt. None can
properly be said to trust in the mercy of God unless they
have committed crimes, and are conscious of this fact.
Justice protects the innocent, and they may safely appeal to
it for defence or redress. But for the guilty nothing
remains but to trust in mercy. Trusting in mercy always
implies a deep, heartfelt conviction of personal
guilt.
2. Trust in mercy always implies that
we have no hope on the score of justice. If we had anything
to expect from justice, we should not look to mercy. The
human heart is too proud to throw itself upon mercy while it
presumes itself to have a valid claim to favor on the score
of justice. Nay more, to appeal to mercy when we might
rightfully appeal to justice is never demanded either by
God's law or gospel, nor can it be in harmony with our
relations to Jehovah's government. In fact, the thing is in
the very nature of the mind, impossible.
3. Trust in mercy implies a just
apprehension of what mercy is. On this point many fail
because they confound mercy with mere goodness, or with
grace, considered as mere favor to the undeserving. The
latter may be shown where there is no mercy, the term mercy
being applied to the pardon of crime. We all know that God
shows favor, or grace in the general sense, to all the
wicked on earth. He makes his sun to rise on the evil and on
the good, and sends his rain on the unjust as well as on the
just. But to trust in this general favor shown to the wicked
while on trial here is not trusting in the mercy of God. We
never trust in mercy till we really understand what it
is--pardon for the crimes of the guilty.
4. Trust in God's mercy implies a
belief that he is merciful. We could not trust Him if we had
no such belief. This belief must always lie at the
foundation of real trust. Indeed so naturally does this
belief beget that out-going of the soul and resting upon God
which we call trust, that in the New Testament sense it
commonly includes both. Faith, or belief, includes a hearty
committal of the soul to God, and a cordial trust in
him.
5. "Trusting in the mercy of God
forever and ever" implies a conviction of deserving endless
punishment. Mercy is co-extensive with desert of punishment,
and can in its nature go no farther. It is rational to rely
upon the exercise of mercy for as long time as we deserve
punishment, but no longer. A prisoner under a three years'
sentence to State's prison may ask for the exercise of mercy
in the form of pardon for so long a time; but he will not
ask a pardon for ten years when he needs it only for three,
or ask a pardon after his three years' term has expired.
This principle is perfectly obvious; where desert of
punishment ceases, there mercy also ceases and our trust in
it. While desert of punishment continues, so may mercy, and
our trust in its exercise. When therefore the Psalmist
trusts in the mercy of God forever, he renounces all hope of
being ever received to favor on the score of
justice.
6. Trusting in mercy implies a
cessation from all excuses and excuse-making. The moment you
trust in mercy, you give up all apologies and excuses at
once and entirely; for these imply a reliance upon God's
justice. An excuse or apology is nothing more nor less than
an appeal to justice; a plea designed to justify our
conduct. Trusting in mercy forever implies that we have
ceased from all excuses forever.
Thus a man on trial before a civil
court, so long as he pleads justifications and excuses,
appeals to justice; but if he goes before the court and
pleads guilty, offering no justification or apology
whatever, he throws himself upon the clemency of the court.
This is quite another thing from self-justification. It
sometimes happens that in the same trial, the accused party
tries both expedients. He first attempts his own defense;
but finding this vain, he shifts his position, confesses his
crime and ill desert, and throws himself upon the mercy of
the court. Perhaps he begs the court to commend him to the
mercy of the executive in whom is vested the pardoning
power.
Now it is always understood that when
a man pleads guilty he desists from making excuses, and
appeals only to mercy. So in any private matter with my
neighbor. If I justify myself fully, I surely have no
confession to make. But if I am conscious of having done him
wrong, I freely confess my wrong, and appeal to mercy.
Self-justification stands right over against
confession.
So in parental discipline. If your
child sternly justifies himself, he makes no appeal to
mercy. But the moment when he casts himself upon your bosom
with tears, and says, I am all wrong, he ceases to make
excuses, and trusts himself to mercy. So in the government
of God. Trust in mercy is a final giving up of all reliance
upon justice. You have no more excuses; you make
none.
III. We must next consider the
conditions upon which we may confidently and securely trust
in the mercy of God forever.
1. Public justice must be appeased.
Its demands must be satisfied. God is a great public
magistrate, sustaining infinitely responsible relations to
the moral universe. He must be careful what He
does.
Perhaps no measure of government is
more delicate and difficult in its bearings than the
exercise of mercy. It is a most critical point. There is
eminent danger of making the impression that mercy would
trample down law. The very thing that mercy does is to set
aside the execution of the penalty of law; the danger is
lest this should seem to set aside the law itself. The great
problem is, How can the law retain its full majesty, the
execution of its penalty being entirely withdrawn? This is
always a difficult and delicate matter.
In human governments we often see
great firmness exercised by the magistrate. During the
scenes of the American Revolution, Washington was earnestly
importuned to pardon André. The latter was eminently
an amiable, lovely man; and his case excited a deep sympathy
in the American army. Numerous and urgent petitions were
made to Washington in his behalf; but no, Washington could
not yield. They besought him to see André, in hope
that a personal interview might touch his heart; but he
refused even to see him. He dared not trust his own
feelings. He felt that this was a great crisis, and that a
nation's welfare was in peril. Hence his stern unyielding
decision. It was not that he lacked compassion of soul. He
had a heart to feel. But under the circumstances, he knew
too well that no scope must be given to the indulgence of
his tender sympathies. He dared not gratify these feelings,
lest a nation's ruin should be the penalty.
Such cases have often occurred in
human governments, when every feeling of the soul is on the
side of mercy and makes its strong demand for indulgence;
but justice forbids.
Often in family government, the
parent has an agonizing trial; he would sooner bear the pain
himself thrice told than to inflict it upon his son; but
interests of perhaps infinite moment are at stake, and must
not be put in peril by the indulgence of his
compassions.
Now if the exercise of mercy in such
cases is difficult, how much more so in the government of
God? Hence the first condition of the exercise of mercy is
that something be done to meet the demands of public
justice. It is absolutely indispensable that law be
sustained. However much disposed God may be to pardon, yet
he is too good to exercise mercy on any such conditions or
under any such circumstances as will impair the dignity of
his law, throw out a license to sin, and open the very
flood-gates of iniquity. Jehovah never can do this. He knows
he never ought to.
On this point it only need be said at
present, that this difficulty is wholly removed by the
atonement of Christ.
2. A second condition is that we
repent. Certainly no sinner has the least ground to hope for
mercy until he repents. Will God pardon the sinner while yet
in his rebellion? Never. To do so would be most unjust in
God--most ruinous to the universe. It would be virtually
proclaiming that sin is less than a trifle--that God cares
not how set in wickedness the sinner's heart is; he is ready
to take the most rebellious heart, unhumbled, to his own
bosom. Before God can do this he must cease to be
holy.
3. We must confess our sins. "He that
confesseth," and he only, "shall find mercy." Jehovah
sustains such relations to the moral universe that he cannot
forgive without the sinner's confession. He must have the
sinner's testimony against himself and in favor of law and
obedience.
Suppose a man convicted and sentenced
to be hung. He petitions the governor for pardon, but is too
proud to confess, at least in public. "May it please your
Honor," he says, "between you and me, I am willing to say
that I com mitted that crime alleged against me, but you
must not ask me to make this confession before the world.
You will have some regard to my feelings and to the feelings
of my numerous and very respectable friends. Before the
world therefore I shall persist in denying the crime. I
trust however that you will duly consider all the
circumstances and grant me a pardon." Pardon you! miscreant,
the governor would say--pardon you when you are condemning
the whole court and jury of injustice, and the witnesses of
falsehood; pardon you while you set yourself against the
whole administration of justice in the state? never! never!
You are too proud to take your own place and appear in your
own character; how can I rely on you to be a good
citizen--how can I expect you to be anything better than an
arch villain?
Let it be understood then that before
we can trust in the mercy of God, we must really repent and
make our confession as public as we have made our
crime.
Suppose again that a man is convicted
and sues for pardon, but will not confess at all. O, he
says, I have no crimes to confess; I have done nothing
particularly wrong; the reason of my acting as I have is
that I have a desperately wicked heart. I cannot repent and
never could. I don't know how it happens that I commit
murder so easily; it seems to be a second nature to me to
kill my neighbor; I can't help it. I am told that you are
very good, very merciful; he says to the governor; they even
say that you are love itself, and I believe it; you surely
will grant me a pardon then, it will be so easy for you--and
it is so horrible for me to be hung. You know I have done
only a little wrong, and that little only because I could
not help it; you certainly cannot insist upon my making any
confession. What! have me hung because I don't repent? You
certainly are too kind to do any such thing.
I don't thank you for your good
opinion of me, must be the indignant reply; the law shall
take its course; your path is to the gallows.
See that sinner; hear him mock God in
his prayer: "trust in the mercy of God, for God is love." Do
you repent? "I don't know about repentance--that is not the
question; God is love--God is too good to send men to hell;
they are Partialists and slander God who think that he ever
sends any body to hell." Too good! you say; too good! so
good that he will forgive whether the sinner repents or not;
too good to hold the reins of his government firmly; too
good to secure the best interests of his vast kingdom!
Sinner, the God you think of is a being of your own crazy
imagination--not the God who built the prison of despair for
hardened sinners--not the God who rules the universe by
righteous law and our race also on a gospel system which
magnifies that law and makes it honorable.
4. We must really make restitution so
far as lies in our power. You may see the bearing of this in
the case of a highway robber. He has robbed a traveller of
ten thousand dollars, and is sentenced to State's prison for
life. He petitions for pardon. Very sorry he is for his
crime; will make any confession that can be asked, ever so
public; but will he make restitution? Not he; no--he needs
that money himself. He will give up half of it, perhaps, to
the government; vastly patriotic is he all at once, and
liberal withal; ready to make a donation of five thousand
dollars for the public good! ready to consecrate to most
benevolent uses a splendid sum of money; but whose money?
Where is his justice to the man he has robbed? Wretch!
consecrate to the public what you have torn from your
neighbor and put it into the treasury of the government! No;
such a gift would burn right through the chest! What would
you think if the government should connive at such an
abomination? You would abhor their execrable
corruption.
See that man of the world. His whole
business career is a course of over-reaching. He slyly
thrusts his hands into his neighbor's pockets and thus fills
up his own. His rule is uniformly to sell for more than a
thing is worth and buy for less. He knows how to monopolize
and make high prices, and then sell out his accumulated
stocks. His mind is forever on the stretch to manage and
make good bargains. But this man at last must prepare to
meet God. So he turns to his money to make it answer all
things. He has a large gift for God. Perhaps he will build a
church or send a missionary--something pretty handsome at
least to buy a pardon for a life about which his conscience
is not very easy. Yes, he has a splendid bribe for God. Ah,
but will God take it? Never! God burns with indignation at
the thought. Does God want your price of blood--those gains
of oppression? Go and give them back to the suffering poor
whose cries have gone up to God against you. O shame to
think to filch from thy brother and give to God! not merely
rob Peter to pay Paul, but rob man to pay God! The pardon of
your soul is not bought so!
5. Another condition is that you
really reform.
Suppose there is a villain in our
neighborhood who has become the terror of all the region
round about. He has already murdered a score of defenseless
women and children; burns down our houses by night, plunders
and robs daily; and every day brings tidings of his crimes
at which every ear tingles. None feel safe a moment. He is
an arch and bloody villain. At last he is arrested; and we
all breathe more easily. Peace is restored. But this
miscreant having received sentence of death, petitions for
pardon. He professes no penitence whatever, and makes not
even a promise of amendment; yet the governor is about to
give him a free pardon. If he does it, who will not say, He
ought to be hung up himself by the neck till he is dead,
dead! But what does that sinner say? "I trust," says he, "in
the great mercy of God. I have nothing to fear." But does he
reform? No. What good can the mercy of God do him if he does
not reform?
6. You must go the whole length in
justifying the law and its penalty.
Mark that convicted criminal. He
doesn't believe that government has any right to take life
for any crime; he demurs utterly to the justice of such a
proceeding, and on this ground insists that he must have a
pardon. Will he get it? Will the governor take a position
which is flatly opposed to the very law and constitution
which he is sworn to sustain? Will he crush the law to save
one criminal, or even a thousand criminals? Not if he has
the spirit of a ruler in his bosom. That guilty man if he
would have mercy from the execution must admit the right of
the law and of the penalty. Else he arrays himself against
the law and cannot be trusted in the community.
Now hear that sinner. How much he has
to say against his ill desert, and against the justice of
eternal punishment. He denounces the laws of God as cruelly
and unrighteously severe. Sinner, do you suppose God can
forgive you while you pursue such a course? He would as soon
repeal His law and vacate his throne. You make it impossible
for God to forgive you.
7. No sinner can be a proper object
of mercy who is not entirely submissive to all those
measures of the government that have brought him to
conviction,
Suppose a criminal should plead that
there had been a conspiracy to waylay and arrest him--that
witnesses had been bribed to give false testimony--that the
judge had charged the jury falsely, or that the jury had
given an unrighteous verdict; could he hope by such false
allegations to get a pardon? Nay verily. Such a man cannot
be trusted to sustain law and order in a community, under
any government, human or divine.
But hear that sinner complain and
cavil. Why, he says, did God suffer sin and temptation to
enter this world at all? Why does God let the sinner live at
all to incur a doom so dreadful? And why does God block up
the sinner's path by his providence, and cut him down in his
sins? Yet this very sinner talks about trusting in God's
mercy! Indeed; while all the time he is accusing God of
being an infinite tyrant and of seeking to crush the
helpless, unfortunate sinner! What do these cavils mean?
What are they but the uplifted voice of a guilty rebel
arraigning his Maker for doing good and showing mercy to his
own rebellious creatures? For it needs but a moment's
thought to see that the temptation complained of is only a
good placed before a moral agent to melt his heart by love.
Yet against this the sinner murmurs, and pours out his
complaints against God. Be assured that unless you are
willing to go the full length of justifying all God does, he
never can give you pardon. God has no option to pardon a
self-justifying rebel. The interests of myriads of moral
beings forbid his doing it. When you will take the ground
most fully of justifying God, and condemning yourself, you
place yourself where mercy can reach you, and then it surely
will. Not before.
8. You must close in most cordially
with the plan of salvation. This plan is based on the
assumption that we deserve everlasting death and must be
saved, if ever, by sovereign grace and mercy. Nothing can
save but mercy--mercy which meets the sinner in the dust,
prostrate, without an excuse or an apology, giving to God
all the glory and taking to himself all the guilt and shame.
There is hope for thee, sinner, in embracing this plan with
all the heart.
IV. We now notice some mistakes into
which many fall.
1. Many really trust in justice and
not in mercy. They say, "God is just--God will do me no
injustice--I mean to do as well as I can, and then I can
safely leave myself in the hands of a just God." True, God
will do you no injustice. You never need fear that. But how
terrible if God should do you strict justice! How fearful if
you get no mercy! If God does not show you infinite mercy,
you are forever lost, as surely as you are a sinner! This
trusting in God's justice is a fatal rock. The sinner who
can do it calmly has never seen God's law and his own heart.
The Psalmist did not say, I trust in the justice of God
forever and ever.
2. Many trust professedly in the
mercy of God without fulfilling the conditions on which
only, mercy can be shown. They may hold on in such trusting
till they die--but no longer.
3. Sinners do not consider that God
cannot dispense with their fulfilling these conditions. He
has no right to do so. They spring out of the very
constitution of his government, from his very nature, and
must therefore be strictly fulfilled. Sooner than dispense
with their fulfillment, God would send the whole race, yea,
the whole universe, to hell. If God were to set aside these
conditions and forgive a sinner while unhumbled, impenitent,
and unbelieving, he would upset his throne, convulse the
moral universe, and kindle another hell in his own
bosom.
4. Many are defeating their own
salvation by self-justification. Pleas that excuse self, and
cavils that arraign God stand alike and fatally in the way
of pardon. Since the world began it has not been known that
a sinner has found mercy in this state.
5. Many pretend to trust in mercy who
yet profess to be punished for their sins as they go along.
They hope for salvation through mercy, and yet they are
punished for all their sins in this life. Two more absurd
and self-contradictory things were never put together.
Punished as much as they deserve here, and yet saved through
mercy! Why don't they say it out that they shall be saved
after death through justice? Surely if they are punished all
they deserve as they go along, justice will ask no more
after death.
6. Persons who in the letter plead
for mercy, often rely really upon justice. The deep
conviction of sin and ill-desert does not sink into their
soul till they realize what mercy is, and feel that they can
rely on nothing else.
7. Some are covering up their sins,
yet dream of going to heaven. Do they think they can hide
those sins from the Omniscient Eye? Do they think to cover
their sins and yet it "prosper," despite of God's awful
word?
8. We cannot reasonably ask for mercy
beyond our acknowledged and felt guilt, and they mistake
fatally who suppose that they can. Without a deep conviction
of conscious guilt we cannot be honest and in earnest in
supplicating mercy. Hear that man pray who thinks sin a
trifle and its deserved punishment a small affair. "O Lord,
I need a little mercy, only a little; my sins have been few
and of small account; grant me, Lord, exemption from the
brief and slight punishment which my few errors and defects
may have deserved." Or hear that Universalist pray: "O Lord,
thou knowest that I have been punished for my sins as I have
passed along; I have had a fit of sickness and various pains
and losses, nearly or quite enough, thou knowest, to punish
all the sins I have committed; now therefore, I pray thee to
give me salvation through thy great mercy." How astonishing
that some men should hold such nonsense! How can a
Universalist pray at all? What should they pray for? Not for
pardon, for on their principles they have a valid claim to
exemption from punishment on the score of justice, as the
criminal has who has served out his sentence in the State's
prison. The only rational prayer that can be made is that
God will do them justice and let them off, since they have
already been punished enough. But why should they pray for
this? God may be trusted to do justice without their praying
for it. I don't wonder that Universalists pray but little;
what have they to pray for? Their daily bread? Very well.
But the mercy of God they need not on their scheme; for they
suffer all they deserve. Pleasing delusion; flattering
enough to human pride, but strange for rational minds, and
horribly pernicious! Restoration takes substantially the
same ground, only leaving a part of the penalty to be worked
out in purgatory, but claiming salvation on the ground of
justice and not mercy. Mercy can have no place in any system
of Universalism. Every form of this system arrays God in
robes of justice, inflexible, fearful justice;--yet these
men trust they say in the mercy of God! But what have they
done with the gospel--what with all the Bible says about
free pardon to the guilty? They have thrust it out of the
Bible; and what have they given us instead? Only justice,
justice; punishment enough for sin in this world, or at
least in a few years of purgatory: sin a trifle,--government
a mere farce,--God a liar--hell a bugbear and a humbug; what
is all this but dire blasphemy as ever came from
hell?
If we ask for but little mercy, we
shall get none at all. This may seem strange, but is none
the less true. If we get any thing we must ask for great
blessings. Suppose a man deserved to be hung, and yet asks
only for a little favor; suppose he should say so, can he be
forgiven? No. He must confess the whole of his guilt in its
full and awful form, and show that he feels it in his very
soul. So, sinner, must you come and confess your whole guilt
as it is, or have no mercy. Come and get down, low, lower,
infinitely low before God--and take mercy there. Hear that
Universalist. All he can say at first is, "I thank God for a
thousand things." But he begins to doubt whether this is
quite enough. Perhaps he needs a little more punishment than
he has suffered in this life; he sees a little more guilt;
so he prays that God would let him off from ten years of
deserved punishment in hell. And if he sees a little more
guilt, he asks for a reprieve from so much more of
punishment. If truth flashes upon his soul and he sees his
own heart and life in the light of Jehovah's law, he gets
down lower and lower, as low as he can, and pours out his
prayer that God would save him from that eternal hell which
he deserves. "O," he cries out, "can God forgive so great a
sinner!" Yes, and by so much the more readily, by how much
the more you humble yourself, and by how much the greater
mercy you ask and feel that you need. Only come down and
take such a position that God can meet you. Recollect the
prodigal son, and that father running, falling on his neck,
weeping, welcoming, forgiving! O! how that father's heart
gushed with tenderness!
It is not the greatness of your sins,
but your pride of heart that forbids your salvation. It is
not anything in your past life, but it is your present state
of mind that makes your salvation impossible. Think of
this.
You need not wait to use means with
God to persuade him to save you. He is using means with you
to persuade you to be saved. You act as if God could
scarcely be moved by any possible entreaties and submissions
to exercise mercy; Oh, you do not see how his great heart
beats with compassion and presses the streams of mercy forth
in all directions, pouring the river of the waters of life
at your very feet, creating such a pressure of appeal to
your heart, that you have to brace yourself against it, lest
you should be persuaded to repent. O, do you see how God
would fain persuade you, and break your heart in penitence,
that He may bring you where He can reach you with forgiving
mercy--where He can come and bless you without resigning his
very throne!
To deny your desert of endless
punishment is to render your salvation utterly impossible.
God never can forgive you on this ground, because you are
trying to be saved on the score of justice. You could not
make your damnation more certain than you thus make it, if
you were to murder every man you meet. You tie up the hands
of mercy and will not let her pluck you from the jaws of
death. It is as if your house were on fire, and you seize
your loaded rifle to shoot down every man that comes with
his bucket to help you. You stand your ground amid the
raging element until you sink beneath the flames. Who can
help you? What is that man doing who is trying to make his
family believe Universalism? It is as if he would shoot his
rifle at the very heart of Mercy every time she comes in
view. He seems determined to drive off Mercy, and for this
end plies all the enginery of Universalism, and throws
himself into the citadel of this refuge of lies! O! what a
work of death is this! Mercy shall not reach him or his
family; so he seems determined--and Mercy cannot come. See
how she bends from heaven--Jehovah smiles in love--and weeps
in pity--and bends from the very clouds and holds out the
pierced hand of the crucified One--But no! I don't deserve
the punishment; away with the insult of a pardon offered
through mere mercy! What can be more fatal, more damning,
more ruinous to the soul?
You see very clearly why all are not
saved. It is not because God is not willing to save all, but
because they defeat the efforts God makes to save them. They
betake themselves to every possible refuge and subterfuge;
resist conviction of guilt, and repel every call of mercy.
What ails those young men? What are they doing? Has God come
down in His red wrath and vengeance, that they should rally
all their might to oppose Him? O, no, He has only come in
mercy--this is all--and they are fighting against his mercy,
not his just retributions of vengeance. If this were his
awful arm of vengeance, you would bow right soon, or break
beneath its blow. But God's mercy comes in its soft
whispers, (would you but realize it) it comes to win your
heart--and what are you doing? You band yourselves together
to resist its calls--you invent a thousand excuses--you run
together to talk, and talk away all solemn thought--you run
to some infidel or Universalist to find relief for an uneasy
conscience. Ah, sinner this can do you no good. You flee
away from God--why? What's the matter? Is God pouring down
the floods of his great wrath? No, no; but Mercy has come,
and would fain gather you under her outspread wings where
storms of wrath can never come. But no, the sinner pleads
against it--cavils, runs, fights, repels the angel of
mercy--dashes from his lips the waters of life. Sinner, this
scene is soon to close. The time is short. Soon God
comes--death shakes his dart--that young man is sick--hear
his groans. Are you going to die, my young friend? Are you
ready? O, I don't know, I am in great pain. O! O! how can I
live so? Alas, how can I die? I can't attend to it now--too
late--too late! Indeed, young man, you are in weakness now.
God's finger has touched you. O, if I could only tell you
some of the death-bed scenes which I have witnessed--if I
could make you see them, and hear the deep wailings of
unutterable agony as the soul quivered, shuddered, and fain
would shrink away into annihilation from the awful eye--and
was swept down swift to hell! Those are the very men who ran
away from mercy! Mercy could not reach them, but death can.
Death seizes its victim. See, he drags the frightened
shrieking soul to the gate-way of hell; how that soul
recoils--groans--what an unearthly groan--and he is gone!
The sentence of execution has gone out and there is no
reprieve. That sinner would not have mercy when he might;
now he cannot when he would. All is over now.
Dying sinner, you may just as well
have mercy today as not. All your past sins present no
obstacle at all if you only repent and take the offered
pardon. Your God proffers you life. "As I live, saith the
Lord, I have no pleasure in your death, turn ye, turn ye,
for why will ye die?" Why will you reject such offered life?
And will you still persist? Be astonished, O ye heavens!
Indeed if there ever was anything that filled the universe
with astonishment, it is the sinner's rejection of mercy.
Angels were astonished when they saw the Son of God made
flesh, and when they saw him nailed to a tree--how much more
now to see the guilty sinner, doomed to hell, yet spurning
offered pardon! What do they see! That sinner putting off
and still delaying and delaying still, until--what? Until
the last curtain falls, and the great bell tolls, tolls,
tolls the awful knell of the sinner's death eternal! Where
is that sinner? Follow him--down he goes, weeping, wailing,
along the sides of the pit--he reaches his own final home;
in 'his own place,' now and forevermore! Mercy followed him
to the last verge of the precipice, and could no longer. She
has done her part.
What if a spirit from glory should
come and speak to you five minutes--a relative, say--perhaps
your mother--what would she say? Or a spirit from that world
of despair--O could such a one give utterance to the awful
realities of that prison house, what would he say? Would he
tell you that the preacher has been telling you lies? Would
he say, don't be frightened by these made-up tales of
horror? O, no, but that the half has not been told you and
never can be. O, how he would press you if he might to flee
from the wrath to come!
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