Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the wilderness to be
tempted of the devil. And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights, he was
afterward an hungered. And when the tempter came to him, he said, If thou be the
Son of God, command that these stones be made bread. But he answered and said,
It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that
proceedeth out of the mouth of God. Then the devil taketh him up into the holy
city, and setteth him on a pinnacle of the temple, And saith unto him, If thou
be the Son of God, cast thyself down: for it is written, He shall give his
angels charge concerning thee: and in [their] hands they shall bear thee up,
lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone. Jesus said unto him, It is
written again, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God. Again, the devil taketh
him up into an exceeding high mountain, and sheweth him all the kingdoms of the
world, and the glory of them; And saith unto him, All these things will I give
thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me. Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee
hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him
only shalt thou serve. Then the devil leaveth him, and, behold, angels came and
ministered unto him.
Matthew 4:1-11
Matthew 4:1-11
Dearly beloved, today you are invited to take a walk into the
wilderness, to behold, sympathize with, and get instruction and comfort from a
Savior tempted. In the conflict, he approves himself to be God's beloved Son;
and the Father gives demonstrable evidence, that with, and in him he is indeed
well pleased. Let us with serious attention consider when, where, and how, our
great Michael fought with and overcame the dragon. The Evangelist Matthew is
very particular in relating the preparations for, the beginning, process, and
issue of this glorious and important combat.
"Then was Jesus led up of the spirit into the wilderness, to
be tempted of the devil." In the close of the foregoing chapter we are told,
that the blessed Jesus had been publicly baptized, and was also solemnly
inaugurated in his mediatorial office, by the opening of the heavens, by the
Spirit of God descending on him like a dove, and by a voice from heaven, saying,
"This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased;" and then it was, when he
came from the solemn ordinance of baptism; when he was about to show himself
openly unto Israel; when he was full of the Holy Ghost (Luke 4:1); even then was
he led, with a holy unconstrained violence, as a champion into the field, to
engage an enemy, whom he was sure to conquer. But whither is this conqueror led?
Into a lonesome, wide, howling wilderness; probably, says Mr. Henry, into the
great wilderness of Sinai; a wilderness, not only lonesome, but inhabited by
wild beasts, Mark 1:13. Hither was our Lord led, not only that he might prepare
himself by retirement and prayer, but also that he might be alone, and thereby
give Satan all the advantages he could desire. In this combat, as well as that
of his last agony, "of the people, there was to be none with him." Neither does
he content himself with praying, but he fasts also, and that "forty days and
forty nights," (verse 9): as Moses and Elias had done, many years before, it may
be, in the very same place. All these fasts were miraculous; and therefore,
though we are taught hereby, that fasting is a Christian duty, yet, to pretend,
in an ordinary way, to imitate them, by fasting for so long a term together, in
no doubt superstitious , presumptuous, and sinful; but few people, I believe,
need such a caution.
During these forty days, we may suppose, our Lord felt no
hunger; converse with heaven, to him was instead of meat and drink; but
"afterwards he was an hungered:" exceedingly so, no doubt. And now, the
important fight begins. For, then "the tempted," emphatically so called, because
he first tempted our first parents to sin, and hath ever since been unwearied in
tempting their descendants; then the tempter, who in an invisible manner had
been attacking our blessed Lord all the whole forty days, when he saw him
hungering, and in such distressing circumstances, came to him, as it should
seem, in a visible shape, and probably transformed into the appearance of an
angel of light. And what does he tempt him to? To nothing less, than to doubt of
his being the Son of God." "If thou be the Son of God." What! Put an if to this,
Satan, after the glorious Jesus had been proved to be God's son, and repeatedly
too in such a glorious manner? Surely, thou thyself couldst not but see the
heavens opened, and the Spirit descending; surely, thou didst hear the voice
that came to him from heaven, immediately after his baptism, saying, "This is my
beloved Son:" And dost thou now say unto him, "If thou be the Son of God." Yes;
but Satan knew, and believed he was full well; but he wanted to make our Lord to
doubt of it. And why? Because he was in such a melancholy situation. As though
he had said, "If God was thy father, he would never suffer thee to starve to
death in a howling wilderness, among wild beasts. Surely, the voice thou lately
didst hear, was only a delusion. If thou wast the Son of God, especially his
beloved Son, in whom he was so pleased, thou wouldst be taken more care of by
him." Thus he attacked our first parents, by suggesting to them hard thoughts of
their all-bountiful Creator: "Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree
in the garden?" "Hath he placed you amidst such a variety of delicious fruits,
only to tease and make you miserable?" And how artfully now does he labor to
insinuate himself into our Lord's affections, as he then did to ingratiate
himself with our first parents. "If thou be the Son of God, says he, come, prove
it, by commanding these stones (a heap of which, probably, lay very near) to be
made bread: this will demonstrate thy divinity, and relieve thy pressing
necessity at the same time." Thus, as in all his other temptations, Satan would
fain appear to be his very kind friend; but the holy Jesus saw through the
disguised enmity of his antagonist; and scorning either to distrust his
righteous Father on the one hand, or to work a miracle to please and gratify the
devil on the other, although he had the Spirit of God without measure, and might
have made use of a thousand other ways, yet answers him with a text of
scripture: "It is written, that man shall not live by bread alone, but by every
word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." This is a quotation from
Deuteronomy 8:3, and contains a reason given by the great God, why he chose to
feed the Israelites with manna; that they might learn thereby, man doth not live
by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God. This
our blessed Lord here applies to himself; and his being in the wilderness, made
the application of it still more pertinent. Israel was God's son: out of Egypt
was he called to sojourn in the wilderness, where he was miraculously supported.
And therefore our Lord, knowing that he was typified by this Israel, and that,
like them, he was now in a wilderness, quotes this scripture as a reason why he
should not, at Satan's suggestion, either despair of receiving help from his
Father in his present circumstances, or distrust the validity of his late
manifestations, or make use of any unwarrantable means for his present relief.
For as God was his father, he would, therefore, either in an ordinary way spread
a table for him in the wilderness, or support and sustain him, as he did his
Israel of old, in some extraordinary way or other without it: "For man shall not
live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God."
Thus is the tempter foiled in the first onset; but he hath
other arrows in his quiver, with which he will farther strive to wound the
immaculate Lamb of God. Since he cannot draw him in either to distrust, or
despair, he will not try if he cannot prevail on him to presume. In order to
effect this, "He taketh the blessed Jesus up into the Holy City," or Jerusalem,
called by our Savior, the city of the Great King, and here called holy, because
the holy temple was in it, and, we would hope, many holy people. This was a
populous place, and therefore, would greatly befriend the devil's design. And
not only so, but "he setteth him on a pinnacle," a battlement or wing, "of the
temple," the top of which was so very high, that, as Josephus observes, it would
make a man's head run giddy to look down from it. And some think this was done
at the time of public worship. How the holy Jesus suffered himself to be taken
hither; whether he was transported through the air, or whether he followed Satan
on foot, is uncertain; but certainly it was an instance of amazing condescension
in our Lord, that he would permit so foul a fiend, to carry or lead his holy
body about in this manner. Well! Satan hath now gotten him upon the pinnacle of
the temple, and still harping upon this old string, "If thou be the Son of God,
(says he) cast thyself down," and thereby show to this large worshipping
assembly, (who will assuredly then believe) that thou art God's beloved Son,
under the special protection of heaven, and art the Messiah, "who was to come
into the world." This was artful, very artful. But he seems to improve in
cunning: for he brings his Bible with him, and backs his temptation with a text
of scripture; "For it is written, (says he) he shall give his angels charge
concerning thee, and in their hands they shall bear thee up, lest at any time
thou dash thy foot against a stone." But is Saul also among the prophets? Does
the devil quote scripture, yea, and seemingly such a very apposite [appropriate]
one too? I suspect some design, without doubt: for herein, he would mimic our
Lord, who, he perceived, intended to fight him with this weapon; and not liking
the sharp edge of it, he thought that if he quoted scripture, the Lord Jesus
would not employ it against him any more. "It is written, (therefore said he) he
shall give his angels charge concerning thee, and in their hands they shall bear
thee up, lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone: and therefore,
since thou art sure of such protection, thou needst not fear to cast thyself
down." This was plausible, and by the length of it, one would be apt to imagine,
it was a fair quotation; but Satan takes care, not only to misapply, but also to
maim it, purposely omitting these important words, "in all thy ways." It is
true, God had given charge to his angels, concerning his children in general,
and his beloved Son in particular, that they should keep him in all his ways;
but, if our Lord had at this time, at the devil's request, and to gratify pride,
thrown himself down from the pinnacle, and thereby unnecessarily presumed on his
Father's protection, he would not have been in God' s way, and therefore, would
have had no right to the promised protection at all. Satan was aware of this,
and therefore fitly left out what he knew would not suit his purpose. But is
scripture the worse, for being abused or perverted by the devil, or his
emissaries? No, in no wise. Our Lord, therefore, lets him know, that he should
not throw aside this important weapon upon this account, but puts by this home
thrust, with another scripture: "It is written again, Thou shalt not tempt the
Lord thy God." Still our Lord quotes something out of the book of Deuteronomy,
and hath his eye upon Israel in his wilderness state. Originally these words
were directed to the Israelites in general, and accordingly are in the plural
number; but here our Lord, as before, makes a particular application of them to
himself: Satan bids him cast himself down, assuring him, God had promised in his
word, to order his angels to take care of him. Now, says our Lord, "It is
written in another part of his word, that the Israelites should not tempt the
Lord their God, by distrusting his goodness on the one hand, or presuming on his
protection on the other. And, therefore, as I would not command the stones to be
made bread, needlessly and distrustfully set up to provide for myself; neither
will I now presume unnecessarily upon God's power, by casting myself down,
though placed by thee in such a dangerous situation.
Thus our great Michael comes off conqueror in the second
assault. And doth not the serpent feel his head bruised enough yet? Not at all:
on the contrary, being more and more enraged at such unusual opposition, and
want of success, "He again taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, (what
mountain is not very material) and showeth him all the kingdoms of the world,
and the glory of them," St. Luke adds, "in a moment of time:" which confirms the
common conjecture, that Satan did not show our Lord really the kingdoms of the
world, (for that must have taken up more time) but only took him up into an
exceeding high mountain to humor the thing, and by exerting his utmost art,
impressed on our Lord's imagination all at once, a very strong, and to any but
innocence itself, a very striking prospect of the kingdoms of the world, and the
glory of them; not the cares: that would not serve Satan's turn. He showed our
Savior crowns, but never told him those crowns were gilded [inlaid] with thorns;
"He showed him, (says Mr. Henry, my favorite commentator) as in a landscape, or
airy representation in a cloud, such as that great deceiver could easily frame
and put together, the glorious and splendid appearance of princes, their robes
and retinue, their equipage and lifeguards; the pomps of thrones and courts, and
stately palaces; the sumptuous buildings in cities; the gardens and fields about
the country feats, with the various instances of their wealth, pleasure, and
gaiety; so as might be most likely to strike the fancy, and excite the
admiration and affection. Such was this show." Our Savior very well knew it,
only lets Satan go to the full length of his string, that his victory over him
might be the more illustrious. And now, says the devil, "All these things ( a
mighty all indeed; a mere imaginary bubble!) will I give thee, if thou wilt fall
down and worship me. He would fain have it taken for granted, that he had
succeeded in the two preceding temptations: "Come, thou seest thou art not the
Son of God, or if thou art, thou seest what an unkind Father he is; thou art
here in a starving condition, therefore take my advice, disown thy relation to
him, set up for thyself, call me father, ask of me blessings, and all these will
I give thee; while all that I desire in return, is but a bow, only fall down and
worship me." Here Satan discovers himself with a witness: this was a desperate
parting stroke, indeed. It is not high time for thee, O thou enemy of souls, to
be commanded to depart! Filled with a holy resentment at such hellish treatment,
and impatient of the very thought of settling up for himself, or alienating the
least part of his heart and affections from his Father, or dividing them between
his God and the world; "Then said Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan, (I know
thee who thou art, under all thy disguises) get thee hence, thou grand
adversary; for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only
shalt thou serve; this is the great commandment of the law; this is the
commandment my Father gave unto his Israel of old, and wouldst thou have me, who
came to fulfill the law and the prophets, thus shamefully be a transgressor of
it? Get thee hence, I will bear thy insolence no longer: thy other temptations
were hellish, like thyself, but this intolerably so; get thee therefore hence,
Satan: my heavenly Father is the Lord my God, and him only will I serve."
And now the battle is over; the important combat is ended;
Jesus hath won the field: Satan is routed and totally put to flight. "Then,"
when the devil found that Jesus could withstand even the golden bait, the lust
of the eye and pride of life, in the two last, as well as the lust of the flesh
in the first temptation, despairing of the least success, and quite stunned with
that all-powerful GET THEE HENC, SATAN, "he leaveth him."
Hell, we may well suppose, like the Philistines of old, was
confounded, and gave a horrible groan, when they saw their great Goliath, in
whom they had so long trusted, thus shamefully and totally defeated in no less
than three pitched battles. The first Adam was attacked but once, and was
conquered; but the second Adam, though thus repeatedly assaulted, comes off
without the least sin, not only conqueror, but more than conqueror. Think you
not, that there was joy, joy unspeakable in heaven, upon this glorious occasion?
Think you not that the angels, those sons of God, and the multitude of the
heavenly host, who shouted so loud at our Lord's birth, did not repeat, if
possible, with yet greater ecstasy, that heavenly anthem, "Glory be to God in
the highest." For a while they were only spectators, orders, we may suppose,
being issued out, that they should only wait around, but not relieve their
praying, fasting, tempted Lord; but now the restraint is removed: Satan departs,
and "behold, angels came and ministered unto him;" they came to administer to
his bodily necessities, and to congratulate him upon the glorious and complete
victory which he had gained: some of them, it may be, had done this kind office
for Elijah long ago; and with unspeakably greater joy, they repeat it to the
Lord of Elijah now. His Father sends him bread from heaven; and by this lets him
know, that notwithstanding the horrid temptations with which he had been
attacked, he is his own beloved son, in and with whom he was well pleased.
And was there joy in heaven on this happy occasion? What
equal, and if possible, what infinitely greater joy ought there to be among the
children of God here on earth? For we should do well to remember, that our
blessed Lord in this great fight with, and conquest over the dragon, acted as a
public person, as a federal head of his mystical body the church, even the
common representative of all believers. We may therefore from this blessed
passage gather strong consolations; since by our Lord's conquest over Satan, we
are thereby assured of our own, and in the mean while can apply to him as a
compassionate High Priest, who was in all things tempted as we are, that he
might experimentally be enabled to succor us when we are tempted.
Who, who after hearing of or reading this, can think
themselves hardly used, or utterly cast off by God, because they are tempted to
self-murder, blasphemy, or any other horrid and shocking crimes? Who can wonder
at wave being permitted to come upon wave, and one trial to follow upon the back
of another? Who can admire, that Satan follows them to holy ordinances, and
tempts them to doubt of the reality of all their manifestations, and of their
being God's children, even after they have enjoyed the most intimate and
delightful communion with their heavenly Father? Was not our Lord treated thus?
And "shall the servant be above his Lord, or the disciple above his Master?" No,
it is sufficient that the servant be as his Lord, and the disciple as his
Master.
But not to dwell on a general improvement, let us see what
particular lessons may be learned from this affecting portion of holy writ.
And FIRST, was our Lord thus violently beset in the
wilderness? Then we may learn, that however profitable solitude and retirement
may be, when used in due season, yet when carried to an extreme is hurtful, and
rather befriends than prevents temptation. Woe be to him that is thus always
alone; for he hath not another to lift him up when he falleth, or to advise with
when he is tempted. As a hermit in America once told me, when I asked him
whether he found that way of life lessened his temptations: "Dost not thou know,
friend, (said he) that a tree which grows by itself, is more exposed to winds
and storms than another that stands surrounded with other trees in the woods?"
Our Lord knew this, and therefore he was LED BY THE SPIRIT into the wilderness
to be tempted of the devil. Lord, keep us from leading ourselves into this
temptation, and succor and support us whenever led by thy providence into it!
Then, and then only, shall we be safe amidst the fiery darts of the grand enemy
of our souls.
SECONDLY, Did our Lord by prayer, fasting, and temptation,
prepare himself for his public ministry? Surely then, all those who profess to
be inwardly moved by the Holy Ghost to take upon them the office and
administration of the church, should be prepared in the same manner. For though
the knowledge of books and men, are good in their places, yet without a
knowledge of Satan's devices be superadded, a minister will be only like a
physician, that undertakes to prescribe to sick people, without having studied
the nature of herbs. And hence, it is to be feared, many heavy laden and
afflicted souls have been sent by certain ministers, to surgeons, to be blooded
in the arm, instead of being directed to apply to the blood of Christ to cleanse
their hearts. Hence, conviction is looked upon as a delirium, and violent
temptations censured as downright madness. Hence, souls that are truly and
earnestly repenting of their sins, and as earnestly seeking after rest in
Christ, have been directed to plays, novels, romances, and merry company, to
divert them from being righteous over-much. Miserable comforters are such blind
guides! Surely, they deserve not better titles than that of murderers of souls!
They go not into the kingdom of heaven themselves, and those who are entering in
they would by this means hinder. Go not after them, all ye young men who would
be able ministers of the New Testament; but on the contrary, if you would be
useful in binding up the broken hearted, and pouring the oil of consolation into
wounded souls, prepare yourselves for manifold temptations. For as Luther says,
"prayer and meditation, reading and temptation, make a minister." If now
exercised with spiritual conflicts, be not disheartened, it is a good sign that
our Lord intends to make use of you. Being thus tempted like unto your brethren,
you will be the better enabled to succor and advise those who shall apply to you
under their temptations. What says the apostle Paul? "If we are afflicted, it is
for your sake." And if you are afflicted, it is only that you may save your own
souls, and help to save the souls of those who shall be committed to your
charge. Be strong therefore in the grace which is in Christ Jesus, and learn to
endure hardness, like good soldiers, that are hereafter to instruct others how
they must fight the good fight of faith.
THIRDLY, Did the tempter come to Christ when he saw him an
hungered? Let those of you that are reduced to a low estate, from hence learn,
that an hour of poverty is an hour of temptation, not only to murmuring and
doubting of our sonship and the divine favor, but also to help ourselves by
unlawful means. "If thou be the Son of God, said Satan, command that these
stones may be made bread." This is what Agur dreaded, "lest I be poor and
steal." Learn, ye godly poor, to be upon your guard, and remember that poverty
and temptations are no marks of your being cast off by God. Your Lord was an
hungered; your Lord was tempted on this account to doubt his sonship, before
you. Learn of him not to distrust, but rather to trust in your heavenly Father.
Angels came and ministered unto Christ; and he who is Lord of the angels, will
send some kind messenger or another to relieve your wants. Your extremity shall
be the Redeemer's opportunity to help you. Make your wants known unto him, he
careth for you. Though in a desart [desert?], though no visible means appear at
present, yet you shall in God's due time find a table spread for you and yours;
"For man doth not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of
the mouth of God."
And may not such among you, who are exalted, as well as those
who are brought low, from Satan's taking the Lord Jesus, and placing him upon a
pinnacle of the temple, learn also a lesson of holy watchfulness and caution.
High places are slippery places, and are apt to make even the strongest heads
and most devout hearts to turn giddy. How necessary therefore is that excellent
petition in our Litany, "in all time of our wealth, (as well as in all time of
our tribulation) good Lord deliver us!" Agreeably to this, Agur prays as much
against riches as poverty; if he was poor, he feared he should be tempted to
steal, if rich, that he should trust in uncertain riches; and say, who is the
Lord?
I charge, therefore, all of you, who are rich and high in
this world, to watch and pray, lest ye fall by Satan's temptation. Those
especially of you, that are placed as on the pinnacle of the temple, exalted
above your fellows in the church of God, take heed in an especial manner unto
yourselves, lest by spiritual pride, vanity, or any other sin that doth most
easily beset persons in such eminent stations, ye cast yourselves down. This is
what Satan aims at. He strives to make us destroyers of ourselves. And he hath a
particular enmity against such as you; he knows, that your name is Legion; and
that if you cast yourselves down, he shall gain a great advantage over many
others; you cannot fall alone. O that it may be said of us, as the papists use
to say of Luther, "That German beast doth not love gold." May the fire of divine
love burn up all the love of this present evil world, and pride of life, out of
your hearts! This, Satan reserved for his last, as thinking it was the most
powerful and prevailing temptation, "He took our Lord up into an exceeding high
mountain, and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them."
He cares not how high he exalts us, or how high he is obliged to bid, so he can
but get our hearts divided between God and the world. All this will he offer to
give us, if we will only fall down and worship him. Arm us, dear Lord Jesus,
with thy Spirit, and help us under all such circumstances, to learn of thee, and
say unto the tempter, "Get thee hence, Satan; for it is written, thou shalt
worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve."
FOURTHLY, Whether beset with this or any other temptation,
let all us learn of our Lord to fight the devil with the sword of the Spirit,
which is the word of God. Though he had the Spirit without measure, yet he
always made use of this. We pray say of it, as David did of Goliath's sword,
"none like this," none like this. And supposing Satan should be permitted to
transform himself into an angel of light, and by false impressions, and delusive
applications of misquoted texts, attempt to turn this weapon upon us against
ourselves; let us not therefore be prevailed on to let go, but by comparing
spiritual things with spiritual, as our Lord did, find out God's mind and our
duty. Had Christ's children and ministers only observed this one lesson, how
much strange fire would quickly have been extinguished? How much real enthusiasm
been easily stopped? How may imaginary revelations have been detected? How many
triumphs of Satan and his emissaries been prevented? And how much more would the
comforts of Christ's people and ministers been continued and increased, not only
in this present, but also in every age of the Christian church? But let us not
be discouraged or think worse of Christ, his cause, or his word, because through
Satan's subtlety, any of us, or others, may have been drawn in to make some
wrong applications of it; others have been thus tempted and mistaken before us.
However, let us be humbled before God and man, and be excited by our past
ignorance of Satan's devices, to adhere more closely to the written word, and to
pray more earnestly for God's holy Spirit to give us direction by it. "Then will
it still be a lantern unto our feet, and a light unto our path;" we shall yet be
enabled to behave more skillfully under all our future trials. Many we must yet
expect; nay, perhaps our severest temptations are yet to come; Satan left our
Lord, after his attacking him in the wilderness, "only for a season," as St.
Luke has it, until the season of his death and passion. And thus he may be
permitted to deal with us. We are not yet come to our complete rest; the King of
terrors is yet to be grappled with, and the valley of the shadow of death to be
passed through; long before that, we may be called to endure many a fiery trial,
and be beset with manifold temptations, under which we may be as ignorant how to
behave, as under those with which we have already been visited. Alas! we know
not what remaining corruptions are in our hearts, which time and temptation may
draw out and discover. Perhaps Satan hath not yet attacked us on our weakest
side; when he does, if left to ourselves, how weak shall we be? It is said of
Achilles, that he was invulnerable, except in the heel, and by a wound in that,
at last he died. Let not him, therefore, that putteth on the harness, boast as
though he had put it off." Neither, on the other hand, let us be faint-hearted
or dismayed. Satan may tempt, but cannot force; he may sift, but Christ will
pray. He who hath helped us already, will help us to the end. He who conquered
for us in the wilderness, will ere long make us also more than conquerors over
all trials and temptations, inward and outward, and over death and hell itself,
through his almighty, everlasting and never-failing love. We now sow in tears;
in a very little time, and we shall reap with joy; we may now go on our way
weeping, by reason of the enemy oppressing us; but, ere long, angels shall be
sent, not to minister to us in this wilderness, but to carry us to an heavenly
Canaan, even to Abraham's bosom. Then shall we see this accuser and tempter of
our Lord, of our brethren, and of ourselves, cast out: this wicked one, as well
as the wicked world, and wicked heart, will no more be permitted to vex, disturb
or annoy us.
"But woe unto you that laugh now; for you shall then lament
and weep." Woe unto you, who either believer there is no devil, or never felt
any of his temptations. Woe unto you that are at ease in Zion, and instead of
staying to be tempted by the devil, by idleness, self-indulgence, and making
continual provision for the flesh, even tempt the devil to tempt you. Woe unto
you, who not content with sinning yourselves, turn factors for hell, and make a
trade of tempting others to sin. Woe unto you, who either deny divine
revelation, or never make use of it but to serve a bad turn. Woe unto you who
sell your consciences, and pawn your souls for a little worldly wealth or honor.
Woe unto you who climb up to high places, when in church or state, by
corruption, bribery, extortion, cringing, flattery, or bowing down to, and
soothing the vices of those by whom you expect to rise. Woe unto you! For
whether you will own the relation or not, surely you are of your father the
devil; for the works of your father you will do; I tremble for you. How can you
escape the damnation of hell?
But I have not time to follow such as you any farther. This
discourse, and the present frame of my mind, lead me rather to speak to those,
who by feeling Satan's fiery darts, know assuredly that there is a devil.
Comfort thou, comfort thou, these afflicted ones, O Lord. O thou all-merciful
and all-bountiful God, and thou compassionate High-Priest, thou once tempted,
but now triumphant Savior, as thou once didst not disdain to be ministered unto
by angels, bless we pray thou this discourse, to the support and strengthening
of thy tempted people, though delivered by the meanest messenger thou didst ever
yet employ in thy church!
I add no more. The Lord bless you and keep you! The Lord lift
up the light of his countenance, stablish, strengthen, and settle you, and bring
you to his eternal kingdom!
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