|  Sermon 4. Secret Faults
            "Who can understand his errors? Cleanse Thou
            me from secret faults." Psalm xix. 12.  {41} STRANGE as it may seem, multitudes called Christians
        go through life with no effort to obtain a correct
        knowledge of themselves. They are contented with general
        and vague impressions concerning their real state; and,
        if they have more than this, it is merely such accidental
        information about themselves as the events of life force
        upon them. But exact systematic knowledge they have none,
        and do not aim at it.  When I say this is strange, I do not mean to
        imply that to know ourselves is easy; it is very
        difficult to know ourselves even in part, and so far
        ignorance of ourselves is not a strange thing. But its
        strangeness consists in this, viz. that men should
        profess to receive and act upon the great Christian
        doctrines, while they are thus ignorant of themselves,
        considering that self-knowledge is a necessary condition
        for understanding them. Thus it is not too much to say
        that all those who neglect the duty of habitual
        self-examination are using words without meaning. The
        doctrines of the {42} forgiveness of sins, and of a 
        new birth from sin, cannot be understood without some
        right knowledge of the nature of sin, that is,
        of our own heart. We may, indeed, assent to a form of
        words which declares those doctrines; but if such a mere
        assent, however sincere, is the same as a real holding
        of them, and belief in them, then it is equally
        possible to believe in a proposition the terms of which
        belong to some foreign language, which is obviously
        absurd. Yet nothing is more common than for men to think
        that because they are familiar with words, they
        understand the ideas they stand for. Educated persons
        despise this fault in illiterate men who use hard words
        as if they comprehended them. Yet they themselves, as
        well as others, fall into the same error in a more subtle
        form, when they think they understand terms used in
        morals and religion, because such are common words, and
        have been used by them all their lives.  Now (I repeat) unless we have some just idea of our
        hearts and of sin, we can have no right idea of a Moral Governor, a Saviour or a Sanctifier, that is, in
        professing to believe in Them, we shall be using words
        without attaching distinct meaning to them. Thus
        self-knowledge is at the root of all real religious
        knowledge; and it is in vain,worse than
        vain,it is a deceit and a mischief, to think to
        understand the Christian doctrines as a matter of course,
        merely by being taught by books, or by attending sermons,
        or by any outward means, however excellent, taken by
        themselves. For it is in proportion as we search our
        hearts and understand our own nature, that we understand
        what is meant by an {43} Infinite Governor and Judge; in
        proportion as we comprehend the nature of disobedience
        and our actual sinfulness, that we feel what is the
        blessing of the removal of sin, redemption, pardon,
        sanctification, which otherwise are mere words. God
        speaks to us primarily in our hearts. Self-knowledge is
        the key to the precepts and doctrines of Scripture. The
        very utmost any outward notices of religion can do, is to
        startle us and make us turn inward and search our hearts;
        and then, when we have experienced what it is to read
        ourselves, we shall profit by the doctrines of the Church
        and the Bible.  Of course self-knowledge admits of degrees. No one
        perhaps, is entirely ignorant of himself; and
        even the most advanced Christian knows himself only
        "in part." However, most men are contented with
        a slight acquaintance with their hearts, and therefore a
        superficial faith. This is the point which it is my
        purpose to insist upon. Men are satisfied to have
        numberless secret faults. They do not think about them,
        either as sins or as obstacles to strength of faith, and
        live on as if they had nothing to learn.  Now let us consider attentively the strong presumption
        that exists, that we all have serious secret faults; a
        fact which, I believe, all are ready to confess in
        general terms, though few like calmly and practically to
        dwell upon it; as I now wish to do.  1. Now the most ready method of convincing ourselves
        of the existence in us of faults unknown to ourselves, is
        to consider how plainly we see the secret faults of
        others. At first sight there is of course no reason for {44} supposing that we differ materially from those around us;
        and if we see sins in them which they do not
        see, it is a presumption that they have their own
        discoveries about ourselves, which it would surprise us
        to hear. For instance: how apt is an angry man to fancy
        that he has the command of himself! The very charge of
        being angry, if brought against him, will anger him more;
        and, in the height of his discomposure, he will profess
        himself able to reason and judge with clearness and
        impartiality. Now, it may be his turn another day, for
        what we know, to witness the same failing in us; or, if
        we are not naturally inclined to violent passion, still
        at least we may be subject to other sins, equally unknown
        to ourselves, and equally known to him as his anger was
        to us. For example: there are persons who act mainly from
        self-interest at times when they conceive they are doing
        generous or virtuous actions; they give freely, or put
        themselves to trouble, and are praised by the world, and
        by themselves, as if acting on high principle; whereas
        close observers can detect desire of gain, love of
        applause, shame, or the mere satisfaction of being busy
        and active, as the principal cause of their good deeds.
        This may be our condition as well as that of others; or,
        if it be not, still a parallel infirmity, the bondage of
        some other sin or sins, which others see, and we do not.  But, say there is no human being sees sin in us, of
        which we are not aware ourselves, (though this is a bold
        supposition to make,) yet why should man's accidental
        knowledge of us limit the extent of our imperfections?
        Should all the world speak well of us, and good men {45} hail
        us as brothers, after all there is a Judge who trieth the
        hearts and the reins. He knows our real state; have we
        earnestly besought Him to teach us the knowledge of our
        own hearts? If we have not, that very omission is a
        presumption against us. Though our praise were throughout
        the Church, we may be sure He sees sins without number in
        us, sins deep and heinous, of which we have no idea. If
        man sees so much evil in human nature, what must God see?
        "If our heart condemn us, God is greater than our
        heart, and knoweth all things." Not acts
        alone of sin does He set down against us daily, of which
        we know nothing, but the thoughts of the heart too. The
        stirrings of pride, vanity, covetousness, impurity,
        discontent, resentment, these succeed each other through
        the day in momentary emotions, and are known to Him. We
        know them not; but how much does it concern us to know
        them!  2. This consideration is suggested by the first view
        of the subject. Now reflect upon the actual
        disclosures of our hidden weakness, which accidents
        occasion. Peter followed Christ boldly, and suspected not
        his own heart, till it betrayed him in the hour of
        temptation, and led him to deny his Lord. David lived
        years of happy obedience while he was in private life.
        What calm, clear-sighted faith is manifested in his
        answer to Saul about Goliath:"The Lord that
        delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the
        paw of the bear, He will deliver me out of the hand of
        this Philistine." [1 Sam. xvii. 37.] Nay, not only
        in retired life, in severe trial, under ill usage from
        Saul, he continued faithful to his God; {46}  years and years
        did he go on, fortifying his heart, and learning the fear
        of the Lord; yet power and wealth weakened his faith, and
        for a season overcame him. There was a time when a
        prophet could retort upon him, "Thou art the
        man" [2 Sam. xii. 7.] whom thou condemnest. He had
        kept his principles in words, but lost them in his heart.
        Hezekiah is another instance of a religious man bearing trouble
        well, but for a season falling back under the temptation
        of prosperity; and that, after extraordinary mercies had
        been vouchsafed to him [2 Kings xx. 12-19.]. And if these
        things be so in the case of the favoured saints of God,
        what (may we suppose) is our own real spiritual state in
        His sight? It is a serious thought. The warning to be
        deduced from it is this:Never to think we have a
        due knowledge of ourselves till we have been exposed to
        various kinds of temptations, and tried on every side.
        Integrity on one side of our character is no voucher for
        integrity on another. We cannot tell how we should act if
        brought under temptations different from those which we
        have hitherto experienced. This thought should keep us
        humble. We are sinners, but we do not know how great. He
        alone knows who died for our sins.  3. Thus much we cannot but allow; that we do not know
        ourselves in those respects in which we have not been
        tried. But farther than this; What if we do not know
        ourselves even where we have been tried, and
        found faithful? It is a remarkable circumstance which has
        been often observed, that if we look to some of the most
        eminent saints of Scripture, we shall find their {47} recorded
        errors to have occurred in those parts of their duty in
        which each had had most trial, and generally showed
        obedience most perfect. Faithful Abraham through
        want of faith denied his wife. Moses, the meekest
        of men, was excluded from the land of promise for a
        passionate word. The wisdom of Solomon was
        seduced to bow down to idols. Barnabas again, the son
        of consolation, had a sharp contention with St. Paul.
        If then men, who knew themselves better than we doubtless
        know ourselves, had so much of hidden infirmity about
        them, even in those parts of their character which were
        most free from blame, what are we to think of ourselves?
        and if our very virtues be so defiled with imperfection,
        what must be the unknown multiplied circumstances of evil
        which aggravate the guilt of our sins? This is a third
        presumption against us.  4. Think of this too. No one begins to examine
        himself, and to pray to know himself (with David in the
        text), but he finds within him an abundance of faults
        which before were either entirely or almost entirely
        unknown to him. That this is so, we learn from the
        written lives of good men, and our own experience of
        others. And hence it is that the best men are ever the
        most humble; for, having a higher standard of excellence
        in their minds than others have, and knowing themselves
        better, they see somewhat of the breadth and depth of
        their own sinful nature, and are shocked and frightened
        at themselves. The generality of men cannot understand
        this; and if at times the habitual self-condemnation of
        religious men breaks out into words, they think it arises
        from affectation, or from a strange distempered {48} state of
        mind, or from accidental melancholy and disquiet. Whereas
        the confession of a good man against himself, is really a
        witness against all thoughtless persons who hear it, and
        a call on them to examine their own hearts. Doubtless the
        more we examine ourselves, the more imperfect and
        ignorant we shall find ourselves to be.  5. But let a man persevere in prayer and watchfulness
        to the day of his death, yet he will never get to the
        bottom of his heart. Though he know more and more of
        himself as he becomes more conscientious and earnest,
        still the full manifestation of the secrets there lodged,
        is reserved for another world. And at the last day who
        can tell the affright and horror of a man who lived to
        himself on earth, indulging his own evil will, following
        his own chance notions of truth and falsehood, shunning
        the cross and the reproach of Christ, when his eyes are
        at length opened before the throne of God, and all his
        innumerable sins, his habitual neglect of God, his abuse
        of his talents, his misapplication and waste of time, and
        the original unexplored sinfulness of his nature, are
        brought clearly and fully to his view? Nay, even to the
        true servants of Christ, the prospect is awful. "The
        righteous," we are told, "will scarcely be
        saved." [1 Pet. iv. 18.] Then will the good man
        undergo the full sight of his sins, which on earth he was
        labouring to obtain, and partly succeeded in obtaining,
        though life was not long enough to learn and subdue them
        all. Doubtless we must all endure that fierce and
        terrifying vision of our real selves, that last fiery
        trial of the soul [Note 1] before its
          {49} acceptance, a spiritual agony and second death to all who
        are not then supported by the strength of Him who died to
        bring them safe through it, and in whom on earth they
        have believed.  My brethren, I appeal to your reason whether these
        presumptions are not in their substance fair and just.
        And if so, next I appeal to your consciences, whether
        they are new to you; for if you have not even
        thought about your real state, nor even know how little
        you know of yourselves, how can you in good earnest be
        purifying yourselves for the next world, or be walking in
        the narrow way?  And yet how many are the chances that a number of
        those who now hear me have no sufficient knowledge of
        themselves, or sense of their ignorance, and are in peril
        of their souls! Christ's ministers cannot tell who are,
        and who are not, the true elect: but when the
        difficulties in the way of knowing yourselves aright are
        considered, it becomes a most serious and immediate
        question for each of you to entertain, whether or not he
        is living a life of self-deceit, and thinking far more
        comfortably of his spiritual state than he has any right
        to do. For call to mind the impediments that are in the
        way of your knowing yourselves, or feeling your
        ignorance, and then judge.  1. First of all, self-knowledge does not come as a
        matter of course; it implies an effort and a work. As
        well may we suppose, that the knowledge of the languages
        comes by nature, as that acquaintance with our own heart
        is natural. Now the very effort of steadily {50} reflecting,
        is itself painful to many men; not to speak of the
        difficulty of reflecting correctly. To ask ourselves why
        we do this or that, to take account of the principles
        which govern us, and see whether we act for conscience'
        sake or from some lower inducement, is painful. We are
        busy in the world, and what leisure time we have we
        readily devote to a less severe and wearisome employment.
         2. And then comes in our self-love. We hope
        the best; this saves us the trouble of examining.
        Self-love answers for our safety. We think it sufficient
        caution to allow for certain possible unknown faults at
        the utmost, and to take them into the reckoning
        when we balance our account with our conscience: whereas,
        if the truth were known to us, we should find we had
        nothing but debts, and those greater than we can
        conceive, and ever increasing.  3. And this favourable judgment of ourselves will
        especially prevail, if we have the misfortune to have
        uninterrupted health and high spirits, and domestic
        comfort. Health of body and mind is a great blessing, if
        we can bear it; but unless chastened by watchings and
        fastings [Note 2], it will commonly seduce a man
        into the notion that he is much better than he really is.
        Resistance to our acting rightly, whether it proceed from
        within or without, tries our principle; but when things
        go smoothly, and we have but to wish, and we can perform,
        we cannot tell how far we do or do not act from a sense
        of duty. When a man's spirits are high, he is pleased
        with every thing; and with himself especially. He can act
        with vigour and promptness, and he mistakes {51} this mere
        constitutional energy for strength of faith. He is
        cheerful and contented; and he mistakes this for
        Christian peace. And, if happy in his family, he mistakes
        mere natural affection for Christian benevolence, and the
        confirmed temper of Christian love. In short, he is in a
        dream, from which nothing could have saved him except
        deep humility, and nothing will ordinarily rescue him
        except sharp affliction.  Other accidental circumstances are frequently causes
        of a similar self-deceit. While we remain in retirement
        from the world, we do not know ourselves; or after any
        great mercy or trial, which has affected us much, and
        given a temporary strong impulse to our obedience; or
        when we are in keen pursuit of some good object, which
        excites the mind, and for a time deadens it to
        temptation. Under such circumstances we are ready to
        think far too well of ourselves. The world is away; or,
        at least, we are insensible to its seductions; and we
        mistake our merely temporary tranquillity, or our
        over-wrought fervour of mind, on the one hand for
        Christian peace, on the other for Christian zeal.  4. Next we must consider the force of habit.
        Conscience at first warns us against sin; but if we
        disregard it, it soon ceases to upbraid us; and thus
        sins, once known, in time become secret sins. It seems
        then (and it is a startling reflection), that the more
        guilty we are, the less we know it; for the oftener we
        sin, the less we are distressed at it. I think many of us
        may, on reflection, recollect instances, in our
        experience of ourselves, of our gradually forgetting
        things to be wrong which once shocked us. Such is the
        force of habit. By {52} it (for instance) men contrive to
        allow themselves in various kinds of dishonesty. They
        bring themselves to affirm what is untrue, or what they
        are not sure is true, in the course of business. They
        overreach and cheat; and still more are they likely to
        fall into low and selfish ways without their observing
        it, and all the while to continue careful in their
        attendance on the Christian ordinances, and bear about
        them a form of religion. Or, again, they will live in
        self-indulgent habits; eat and drink more than is right;
        display a needless pomp and splendour in their domestic
        arrangements, without any misgiving; much less do they
        think of simplicity of manners and abstinence as
        Christian duties. Now we cannot suppose they always
        thought their present mode of living to be justifiable,
        for others are still struck with its
        impropriety; and what others now feel, doubtless they
        once felt themselves. But such is the force of habit. So
        again, to take as a third instance, the duty of stated
        private prayer; at first it is omitted with compunction,
        but soon with indifference. But it is not the less a sin
        because we do not feel it to be such. Habit has made it a
        secret sin.  5. To the force of habit must be added that of custom.
        Every age has its own wrong ways; and these have such
        influence, that even good men, from living in the world,
        are unconsciously misled by them. At one time a fierce
        persecuting hatred of those who erred in Christian
        doctrine has prevailed; at another, an odious
        over-estimation of wealth and the means of wealth; at
        another an irreligious veneration of the mere
        intellectual powers; at another, a laxity of morals; at
        another, disregard of the {53} forms and discipline of the
        Church. The most religious men, unless they are
        especially watchful, will feel the sway of the fashion of
        their age; and suffer from it, as Lot in wicked Sodom,
        though unconsciously. Yet their ignorance of the mischief
        does not change the nature of their sin;sin it
        still is, only custom makes it secret sin.  6. Now what is our chief guide amid the evil and
        seducing customs of the world?obviously, the Bible.
        "The world passeth away, but the word of the Lord
        endureth for ever." [Isa. xi. 8. 1 Pet. i. 24, 25. 1
        John ii. 17.] How much extended, then, and strengthened,
        necessarily must be this secret dominion of sin over us,
        when we consider how little we read Scripture! Our
        conscience gets corrupted,true; but the words of
        truth, though effaced from our minds, remain in
        Scripture, bright in their eternal youth and purity. Yet,
        we do not study Scripture to stir up and refresh our
        minds. Ask yourselves, my brethren, what do you know of
        the Bible? Is there any one part of it you have read
        carefully, and as a whole? One of the Gospels, for
        instance? Do you know very much more of your Saviour's
        works and words than you have heard read in church? Have
        you compared His precepts, or St. Paul's, or any other
        Apostle's, with your own daily conduct, and prayed and
        endeavoured to act upon them? If you have, so far is
        well; go on to do so. If you have not, it is plain you do
        not possess, for you have not sought to possess, an
        adequate notion of that perfect Christian character which
        it is your duty to aim at, nor an adequate {54} notion of your
        actual sinful state; you are in the number of those who
        "come not to the light, lest their deeds should be
        reproved."  These remarks may serve to impress upon us the
        difficulty of knowing ourselves aright, and the
        consequent danger to which we are exposed, of speaking
        peace to our souls, when there is no peace.  Many things are against us; this is plain. Yet is not
        our future prize worth a struggle? Is it not worth
        present discomfort and pain to accomplish an escape from
        the fire that never shall be quenched? Can we endure the
        thought of going down to the grave with a load of sins on
        our head unknown and unrepented of? Can we content
        ourselves with such an unreal faith in Christ, as in no
        sufficient measure includes self-abasement, or
        thankfulness, or the desire or effort to be holy? for how
        can we feel our need of His help, or our dependence on
        Him, or our debt to Him, or the nature of His gift to us,
        unless we know ourselves? How can we in any sense be said
        to have that "mind of Christ," to which the
        Apostle exhorts us, if we cannot follow Him to the height
        above, or the depth beneath; if we do not in some measure
        discern the cause and meaning of His sorrows, but regard
        the world, and man, and the system of Providence, in a
        light different from that which His words and acts
        supply? If you receive revealed truth merely through the
        eyes and ears, you believe words, not things; you deceive
        yourselves. You may conceive yourselves sound in faith,
        but you know nothing in any true way. Obedience to God's {55} commandments, which implies knowledge of sin and of
        holiness, and the desire and endeavour to please Him,
        this is the only practical interpreter of Scripture
        doctrine. Without self-knowledge you have no root in
        yourselves personally; you may endure for a time, but
        under affliction or persecution your faith will not last.
        This is why many in this age (and in every age) become
        infidels, heretics, schismatics, disloyal despisers of
        the Church. They cast off the form of truth, because it
        never has been to them more than a form. They endure not,
        because they never have tasted that the Lord is gracious;
        and they never have had experience of His power and love,
        because they have never known their own weakness and
        need. This may be the future condition of some
        of us, if we harden our hearts today,apostasy.
        Some day, even in this world, we may be found openly
        among the enemies of God and of His Church.  But, even should we be spared this present shame, what
        will it ultimately profit a man to profess without
        understanding? to say he has faith, when he has
        not works [Note 3]? In that case we shall remain
        in the heavenly vineyard, stunted plants, without the
        principle of growth in us, barren; and, in the end, we
        shall be put to shame before Christ and the holy Angels,
        "as trees of withering fruits, twice dead, plucked
        up by the roots," even though we die in outward
        communion with the Church.  To think of these things, and to be alarmed, is the {56} first step towards acceptable obedience; to be at ease,
        is to be unsafe. We must know what the evil of sin is
        hereafter, if we do not learn it here. God give us all
        grace to choose the pain of present repentance before the
        wrath to come! Top | Contents | Works
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 Notes1. 1 Cor. iii. 13.Return to text
 2. 2 Cor. xi. 27.Return to text
 3. James ii. 14.Return to text
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