Sermon 13. Truth Hidden when not Sought
After
"They shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall
be turned unto fables." 2 Tim. iv. 4.
{185} FROM these words of the blessed Apostle, written shortly before he
suffered martyrdom, we learn, that there is such a thing as religious
truth, and therefore there is such a thing as religious error. We
learn that religious truth is one—and therefore that all
views of religion but one are wrong. And we learn, moreover,
that so it was to be (for his words are a prophecy) that professed
Christians, forgetting this, should turn away their ears from the one
Truth, and should be turned, not to one, but to many fables. All this
is fulfilled before our eyes; our religious creeds and professions at
this day are many; but Truth is one: therefore they cannot all be
right, or rather almost all of them must be wrong. That is, the
multitude of men are wrong, so far as they differ; and as they differ,
not about trivial points, but about great matters, it follows that the
multitude of {186} men, whether by their own fault or not, are wrong even in
the greater matters of religion.
This is a most solemn thought, and a perplexing one. However, there
is another which, though it ought not to be perplexing, is perplexing
still, and perhaps has greater need to be considered and explained; I
mean that men of learning and ability are so often wrong in religious
matters also. It is a stumbling-block to many, when they find that
those who seem the legitimate guides furnished by God's providence,
who are in some sense the natural prophets and expounders of the
truth, that these too are on many sides, and therefore many of them on
the side of error also. There are persons who can despise the opinions
of the many, and feel that they are not right, but that
truth, if it be to be found, lies with the few; and since men
of ability are among the few, they think that truth lies with
men of ability, and when after all they are told that able men are
ranged on contrary sides in religious questions, they either hastily
deny the fact, or they are startled, and stagger in their faith.
But on the contrary, let us honestly confess what is certain, that
not the ignorant, or weakminded, or dull, or enthusiastic, or
extravagant only turn their ears from the Truth and are turned unto
fables, but also men of powerful minds, keen perceptions, extended
views, ample and various knowledge. Let us, I say, confess it; yet let
us not believe in the Truth the less on account of it. {187}
I say that in the number of the adversaries of the Truth, there are
many men of highly endowed and highly cultivated minds. Why should we
deny this? It is unfair to do so; and not only unfair, but very
unnecessary. What is called ability and talent does not make a man a
Christian; nay, often, as may be shown without difficulty, it is the
occasion of his rejecting Christianity, or this or that part of it.
Not only in the higher ranks of society do we see this; even in the
humble and secluded village, it will commonly be found, that those who
have greater gifts of mind than others around them, who have more
natural quickness, shrewdness, and wit, are the very persons who are
the most likely to turn out ill—who are least under the influence of
religious principles—and neither obey nor even revere the Gospel of
salvation which Christ has brought us.
Now if we consult St. Paul's Epistles to the Corinthians, we shall
find the same state of things existing even in the first age of
Christianity. Even the Apostle speaks of those who were blind, or to
whom his Gospel was hid; and he elsewhere describes them, not as the
uneducated and dull of understanding, but as the wise of this world,
the scribe and the disputer. Even then, before the Apostle's prophecy
in the text was fulfilled, there were many who erred from the truth
even in the midst of light, and in spite of superior intellectual
endowments and acquirements. {188}
Does not our Saviour Himself say the same thing, when He thanks His
Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that He hath hid these things from
the wise and prudent, and revealed them unto babes?
Now it should not surprise us when men of acute and powerful
understandings more or less reject the Gospel, for this reason, that
the Christian revelation addresses itself to our hearts, to our love
of truth and goodness, our fear of sinning, and our desire to gain
God's favour; and quickness, sagacity, depth of thought, strength of
mind, power of comprehension, perception of the beautiful, power of
language, and the like, though they are excellent gifts, are clearly
quite of a different kind from these spiritual excellences—a man may
have the one without having the other. This, then, is the plain
reason why able, or again why learned men are so often defective
Christians, because there is no necessary connexion between faith and
ability; because faith is one thing and ability is another; because
ability of mind is a gift, and faith is a grace. Who
would ever argue that a man could, like Samson, conquer lions or throw
down the gates of a city, because he was able, or accomplished, or
experienced in the business of life? Who would ever argue that a man
could see because he could hear, or run with the swift because he had
"the tongue of the learned"? [Isa. l. 4.] These gifts are
different in kind. In like manner, powers of mind and religious {189} principles and feelings are distinct gifts; and as all the highest
spiritual excellence, humility, firmness, patience, would never enable
a man to read an unknown tongue, or to enter into the depths of
science, so all the most brilliant mental endowments, wit, or
imagination, or penetration, or depth, will never of themselves make
us wise in religion. And as we should fairly and justly deride the
savage who wished to decide questions of science or literature by the
sword, so may we justly look with amazement on the error of those who
think that they can master the high mysteries of spiritual truth, and
find their way to God, by what is commonly called reason, i.e. by the
random and blind efforts of mere mental acuteness, and mere experience
of the world.
That Truth, which St. Paul preached, addresses itself to our
spiritual nature: it will be rightly understood, valued, accepted, by
none but lovers of truth, virtue, purity, humility, and peace. Wisdom
will be justified of her children. Those, indeed, who are thus endowed
may and will go on to use their powers of mind, whatever they are, in
the service of religion; none but they can use them aright. Those who
reject revealed truth wilfully, are such as do not love moral and
religious truth. It is bad men, proud men, men of hard hearts, and
unhumbled tempers, and immoral lives, these are they who reject the
Gospel. These are they of whom St. Paul speaks in another Epistle—"If
our Gospel be {190} hid, it is hid to them that are lost, in whom the god of
this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not."
With this agree the instances of turning the ears from the truth which
the New Testament affords us. Who were they who were the enemies of
Christ and His Apostles? The infidel Sadducees, the immoral,
hard-hearted, yet hypocritical Pharisees, Herod, who married his
brother Philip's wife [Matt. xiv. 3.], and Felix, who trembled when
St. Paul reasoned of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come
[Acts xxiv. 25.]. On the other hand, men of holy and consistent lives,
as Cornelius the Centurion, and those who were frequenters of
religious ordinances, as Simeon and Anna, these became Christians. So
it is now. If men turn unto fables of their own will, they do it on
account of their pride, or their love of indolence and
self-indulgence.
This should be kept in mind when Christians are alarmed, as they
sometimes are, on hearing instances of infidelity or heresy among
those who read, reflect, and inquire; whereas, however we may mourn
over such instances, we have no reason to be surprised at them. It is
quite enough for Christians to be able to show, as they well can, that
belief in revealed religion is not inconsistent with the highest gifts
and acquirements of mind, that men even of the strongest and highest
intellect have been Christians; but they have as little reason to be
perplexed at finding other men of ability {191} not true believers,
as at finding that certain rich men are not true believers, or
certain poor men, or some in every rank and circumstance of
life. A belief in Christianity has hardly more connexion with what is
called talent, than it has with riches, station, power, or bodily
strength.
Now let me explain what I have said by a further remark. Is it not
plain that earnestness is necessary for gaining religious truth? On
the other hand, is it not a natural effect of ability to save us
trouble, and even to tempt us to dispense with it, and to lead us to
be indolent? Do not we see this even in the case of children—the
more clever are the more idle, because they rely on their own
quickness and power of apprehension? Is indolence the way to gain
knowledge from God? Yet this surely is continually forgotten in the
world. It is forgotten in a measure even by the best of Christians,
for no man on earth seeks to know God's will, and to do His duty with
an earnestness suitable to the importance of the object. But not to
speak thus rigorously, let us consider for an instant how eagerly men
in general pursue objects of this world; now with what portion of this
eagerness do they exert themselves to know the truth of God's word?
Undeniable, then, as is the doctrine that God does not reveal Himself
to those who do not seek Him, it is certain that its truth is not
really felt by us, or we should seek Him more earnestly than we do.
{192}
Nothing is more common than to think that we shall gain religious
knowledge as a thing of course, without express trouble on our part.
Though there is no art or business of this world which is learned
without time and exertion, yet it is commonly conceived that the
knowledge of God and our duty will come as if by accident or by a
natural process. Men go by their feelings and likings; they take up
what is popular, or what comes first to hand. They think it much if
they now and then have serious thoughts, if they now and then open the
Bible; and their minds recur with satisfaction to such seasons, as if
they had done some very great thing, never remembering that to seek
and gain religious truth is a long and systematic work. And others
think that education will do every thing for them, and that if they
learn to read, and use religious words, they understand religion
itself. And others again go so far as to maintain that exertion is not
necessary for discovering the truth. They say that religious truth is
simple and easily acquired; that Scripture, being intended for all, is
at once open to all, and that if it had difficulties, that very
circumstance would be an objection to it. And others, again, maintain
that there are difficulties in religion, and that this shows
that it is an indifferent matter whether they seek or not as to those
matters which are difficult.
In these and other ways do men deceive themselves into a
carelessness about religious truth. And is not {193} all this varied
negligence sufficient to account for the varieties of religious
opinion which we see all around us? Do not these two facts just
illustrate each other; the discordance of our religious opinions
needing some explanation; and our actual indolence and negligence in
seeking the truth accounting for it? How many sects, all professing
Christianity, but opposed to each other, dishonour this country!
Doubtless if men sought the truth with one tenth part of the zeal with
which they seek to acquire wealth or secular knowledge, their
differences would diminish year by year. Doubtless if they gave a half
or a quarter of the time to prayer for Divine guidance which they give
to amusement or recreation, or which they give to dispute and
contention, they would ever be approximating to each other. We differ
in opinion; therefore we cannot all be right; many must be wrong; many
must be turned from the truth; and why is this, but on account of that
undeniable fact which we see before us, that we do not pray and seek
for the Truth?
But this melancholy diversity is sometimes explained, as I just now
hinted, in another way. Some men will tell us that this difference of
opinion in religious matters which exists, is a proof, not that the
Truth is withheld from us on account of our negligence in seeking it,
but that religious truth is not worth seeking at all, or that it is
not given us. The present confused and perplexed state of things,
which is really a proof of God's anger {194} at our negligence, these men
say is a proof that religious truth cannot be obtained; that there is
no such thing as religious truth; that there is no right or wrong in
religion; that, provided we think ourselves right, one set of
opinions is as good as another; that we shall all come right in the
end if we do but mean well, or rather if we do not mean ill. That is,
we create confusion by our negligence and disobedience, and then
excuse our negligence by the existence of that confusion. It is no
uncommon thing, I say, for men to say, "that in religious matters
God has willed that men should differ," and to support their
opinion by no better argument than the fact that they do
differ; and they go on to conclude that therefore we need not
perplex ourselves about matters of faith, about which, after
all, we cannot be certain. Others, again, in a similar spirit, argue
that forms and ordinances are of no account; that they are little
matters; that it is uncertain what is right and what is wrong in them,
and that to insist on them as important to religion is the mark of a
narrow mind. And others, again, it is to be feared, go so far as to
think that indulgence of the passions, or self-will, or selfishness,
or avarice, is not wrong, because it is the way of the world and
cannot be prevented.
To all such arguments against religious truth, it is sufficient to
reply, that no one who does not seek the truth with all his heart and
strength, can tell what is {195} of importance and what is not; that to
attempt carelessly to decide on points of faith or morals is a matter
of serious presumption; that no one knows whither he will be
carried if he seeks the Truth perseveringly, and therefore, that since
he cannot see at first starting the course into which his inquiries
will be divinely directed, he cannot possibly say beforehand whether
they may not lead him on to certainty as to things which at present he
thinks trifling or extravagant or irrational. "What I do,"
said our Lord to St. Peter, "thou knowest not now, but thou shalt
know hereafter." "Seek, and ye shall find;" this
is the Divine rule, "If thou criest after knowledge, and liftest
up thy voice for understanding; if thou seekest her as silver, and
searchest for her as for hid treasures; then shalt thou
understand the fear of the Lord, and find the knowledge of God."
[Prov. ii. 3-5.]
This is a subject which cannot too strongly be insisted on. Act up
to your light, though in the midst of difficulties, and you will be
carried on, you do not know how far. Abraham obeyed the call and
journeyed, not knowing whither he went; so we, if we follow the voice
of God, shall be brought on step by step into a new world, of which
before we had no idea. This is His gracious way with us: He gives, not
all at once, but by measure and season, wisely. To him that hath, more
shall be given. But we must begin at the beginning. {196} Each truth has its
own order; we cannot join the way of life at any point of the course
we please; we cannot learn advanced truths before we have learned
primary ones. "Call upon Me," says the Divine Word,
"and I will answer thee, and show thee great and mighty things
which thou knowest not." [Jer. xxxiii. 3.] Religious men are
always learning; but when men refuse to profit by light already
granted, their light is turned to darkness. Observe our Lord's conduct
with the Pharisees. They asked Him on what authority He acted. He gave
them no direct answer, but referred them to the mission of John the
Baptist—"The baptism of John, whence was it? from heaven or
from men?" [Matt. xxi. 25.] They refused to say. Then He said,
"Neither tell I you by what authority I do these things."
That is, they would not profit by the knowledge they already had from
St. John the Baptist, who spoke of Christ—therefore no more was
given them.
All of us may learn a lesson here, for all of us are in danger of
hastily finding fault with others, and condemning their opinions or
practices; not considering, that unless we have faithfully obeyed our
conscience and improved our talents, we are no fit judges of them at
all. Christ and His Saints are alike destitute of form or comeliness
in the eyes of the world, and it is only as we labour to change our
nature, through God's help, and to serve Him truly, that we begin to
discern the {197} beauty of holiness. Then, at length, we find reason to
suspect our own judgments of what is truly good, and perceive our own
blindness; for by degrees we find that those whose opinions and
conduct we hitherto despised or wondered at as extravagant or
unaccountable or weak, really know more than ourselves, and are above
us—and so, ever as we rise in knowledge and grow in spiritual
illumination, they (to our amazement) rise also, while we look at
them. The better we are, the more we understand their excellence; till
at length we are taught something of their Divine Master's perfections
also, which before were hid from us, and see why it is that, though
the Gospel is set on a hill in the midst of the world, like a city
which cannot be hid, yet to multitudes it is notwithstanding hid,
since He taketh the wise in their own craftiness, and the pure in
heart alone can see God.
How are the sheep of Christ's flock scattered abroad in the waste
world! He came to gather them together in one; but they wander again
and faint by the way, as having lost their Shepherd. What religious
opinion can be named which some men or other have not at some time
held? All are equally confident in the truth of their own doctrines,
though the many must be mistaken. In this confusion let us, my
brethren, look to ourselves, each to himself. There must be a right
and a wrong, and no matter whether others agree with us or not, it is
to us a solemn practical concern not to turn {198} away our ears from the
truth. Let not the diversity of opinion in the world dismay you, or
deter you from seeking all your life long true wisdom. It is not a
search for this day or that, but as you should ever grow in grace, so
should you ever grow also in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ. Care not for the perplexing question which many will put
to you, "How can you be sure that you are right more than
others?" Others are nothing to you, if they are not holy and
devout in their conversation—and we all know what is meant by being
holy; we know whom we should call holy; to be holy is to be like an
Apostle. Seek truth in the way of obedience; try to act up to
your conscience, and let your opinions be the result, not of mere
chance reasoning or fancy, but of an improved heart. This way, I say,
carries with it an evidence to ourselves of its being the right way,
if any way be right; and that there is a right and a wrong way
conscience also tells us. God surely will listen to none but those who
strive to obey Him. Those who thus proceed, watching, praying, taking
all means given them of gaining the truth, studying the Scriptures,
and doing their duty; in short, those who seek religious truth by
principle and habit, as the main business of their lives, humbly not
arrogantly, peaceably not contentiously, shall not be "turned
unto fables." "The secret of the Lord is with them that fear
Him;" but in proportion as we are conscious to ourselves that we
are indolent, and transgress {199} our own sense of right and wrong, in the
same proportion we have cause to fear, not only that we are not in a
safe state, but, further than this, that we do not know what is a safe
state, and what an unsafe—what is light and what is darkness, what
is truth and what is error; which way leads to heaven and which to
hell. "The way of the wicked is in darkness; they know not at
what they stumble." [Prov. iv. 19.]
I know we shall find it very hard to rouse ourselves, to break the
force of habit, to resolve to serve God, and persevere in doing so.
And assuredly we must expect, even at best, and with all our efforts,
perhaps backslidings, and certainly much continual imperfection all
through our lives, in all we do. But this should create in us a horror
of disobedience, not a despair at overcoming ourselves. We are not
under the law of nature, but under grace; we are not bid do a thing
above our strength, because, though our hearts are naturally weak, we
are not left to ourselves. According to the command, so is the gift.
God's grace is sufficient for us. Why, then, should we fear? Rather,
why should we not make any sacrifice, and give up all that is
naturally pleasing to us, rather than that light and truth should have
come into the world, yet we not find them? Let us be willing to endure
toil and trouble; and should times of comparative quiet be given to
us, should for a while temptation be withdrawn, or the Spirit of
comfort {200} poured upon us, let us not inconsiderately rest in these
accidental blessings. While we thank God for them, let us remember
that in its turn the time of labour and fear, and danger and anxiety,
will come upon us; and that we must act our part well in it. We live
here to struggle and to endure: the time of eternal rest will come
hereafter.
"Blessed are the undefiled in the way, who walk in the law of
the Lord. Blessed are they that keep His testimonies, and that seek
Him with the whole heart." [Ps. cxix. 1, 2.] "The path of
the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the
perfect day." [Prov. iv. 18.]
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