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CHAPTER I. 

THE INTRODUCTION TO THE WORK, WITH SOME
 ACCOUNT OF THE NATURE OF THE SAINTS' REST. 
 
The important design of the apostle in the text, to which the author earnestly 
bespeaks the attention of the reader. The saints' rest defined, with a general 
plan of the work. That this rest presupposes. The author's humble sense of his 
inability fully to show what this rest contains. It contains, 

1. A ceasing from  means of grace; 
2. A perfect freedom from all evils; 
3. The highest degree of the saints' personal perfection, both in body and soul; 
4. The nearest enjoyment of God, the chief good; 
5. A sweet and constant action of all the powers of soul and body in this enjoyment of God.
 
It was not only our interest in God, and actual enjoyment of him, which was lost 
in Adam's fall, but all spiritual knowledge of him, and true disposition towards 
such a felicity. When the Son of God comes with recovering grace, and 
discoveries of a spiritual and eternal happiness and glory, he finds not faith 
in man to believe it. As the poor man, that would not believe any one had such a 
sum as a hundred pounds, it was so far above what he himself possessed, so men 
will hardly now believe there is such a happiness as once they had, much less as 
Christ hath now procured. When God would give the Israelites his Sabbaths of 
rest, in a land of rest, it was harder to make them believe it, than to overcome 
their enemies, and procure it for them. And when they had it, only as a small 
intimation and earnest of an incomparably more glorious rest through Christ, 
they yet believe no more than they possess, but say, with the epicure at the 
feast, Sure there is no other heaven but this! or, if they expect more by the 
Messiah, it is only the increase of their earthly felicity. The apostle aims 
most of this Epistle against this obduracy, and clearly and largely proves that 
the end of all ceremonies and shadows is to direct them to Jesus Christ, the 
substance; and that the rest of Sabbaths, and Canaan, should teach them to look 
for a further rest, which indeed is their happiness. My text is his conclusion 
after divers arguments; a conclusion which contains the ground of all the 
believer's comfort, the end of all his duty and sufferings, the life and sum of 
all gospel promises and Christian privileges.
What more welcome to men under personal afflictions, tiring duties, 
disappointments, or sufferings, than rest? It is not our comfort only, but our 
stability. Our liveliness in all duties, our enduring of tribulation, our 
honoring of God, the vigor of our love, thankfulness, and all our graces; yea, 
the very being of our religion and Christianity depend on the believing, serious 
thoughts of our rest. And now, reader, whoever thou art, young or old, rich or 
poor, I entreat thee, and charge thee, in the name of thy Lord, who will shortly 
call thee to a reckoning, and judge thee to thy everlasting, unchangeable state, 
that thou give not these things the reading only, and so dismiss them with a 
bare approbation; but that thou set upon this work, and take God in Christ for 
thy only rest, and fix thy heart upon him above all. May the living God, who is 
the portion and rest of his saints, make these our carnal minds so spiritual, 
and our earthly hearts so heavenly that loving him, and delighting in him, may 
be the work of our lives; and that neither I that write, nor you that read this 
book, may ever be turned from this path of life; "lest, a promise being left us 
of entering into his rest," we should "come short of it," through our own 
unbelief or negligence.
The saints' rest is the most happy state of a Christian; or, it is the perfect 
endless enjoyment of God by the perfected saints, according to the measure of 
their capacity, to which their souls arrive at death, and both soul and body 
most fully after the resurrection and final judgment. According to this 
definition of the saints' rest, a larger account of its nature will be given in 
this chapter; of its preparatives, chap. 2; its excellencies, chap. 3 and chap. 
4, the persons for whom it is designed. Further to illustrate the subject, some 
description will be given, chap. 5, of their misery who lose this rest; and 
chap. 6, who also lose the enjoyments of time, and suffer the torments of hell. 
Next will be shown, chap. 7, the necessity of diligently seeking this rest; 
chap. 8, how our title to it may he discerned; chap. 9, that they who discern 
their title to it should help those that cannot; and chap. 10, that this rest is 
not to be expected on earth. It will then be proper to consider, chap. 11, the 
importance of a heavenly life upon earth; chap. 12, how to live a heavenly life 
upon earth; chap. 13, the nature of heavenly contemplation, with the time, place 
and temper most fit for it; chap. 14, what use heavenly contemplation makes of 
consideration, affections, soliloquy and prayer: and likewise, chap. 15, how 
heavenly contemplation may be assisted by sensible objects, and guarded against 
a treacherous heart. Heavenly contemplation will be exemplified, chap. 16, and 
the whole work concluded.
There are some things necessarily presupposed in the nature of this rest: as,
That mortal men are the persons seeking it. For angels and glorified spirits 
have it already, and the devils and damned are past hope:
That they choose God only for their end and happiness. He that takes any thing 
else for his happiness is out of the way the first step:
That they are distant from this end. This is the woful case of all mankind since 
the fall. When Christ comes with regenerating grace, he finds no man sitting 
still, but all posting to eternal ruin, and making haste toward hell; till, by 
conviction, he first brings them to a stand, and then, by conversion, turns 
their hearts and lives sincerely to himself. This end, and its excellency, is 
supposed to be known, and seriously intended. An unknown good moves not to 
desire or endeavor. And not only a distance from this rest, but the true 
knowledge of this distance, is also supposed. They that never yet knew they were 
without God, and in the way to hell, never yet knew the way to heaven. Can a man 
find he hath lost his God and his soul, and not cry, I am undone? The reason why 
so few obtain this rest, is, they will not be convinced that they are, in point 
of title, distant from it and, in point of practice, Contrary to it. Who ever 
sought for that which he knew not he had lost? "They that be whole need not a 
physician, but they that are sick:"

The influence of a superior moving Cause is also supposed; else we shall all 
stand still, and not move toward our rest. If God move us not, we cannot move. 
It is a most necessary part of our Christian wisdom, to keep our subordination 
to God, and dependence on him. "We are not sufficient of ourselves to think any 
thing as of ourselves, but our sufficiency is of God." "Without me," says 
Christ, "ye can do nothing."

It is next supposed, that they who seek this rest have an inward principle of 
spiritual life. God does not move men like stones, but he endows them with life, 
not to enable them to move without him, but in subordination to himself, the 
first mover.


And further, this rest supposes such an actual tendency of soul toward it as is 
regular and constant, earnest and laborious. He that hides his talent shall 
receive the wages of a slothful servant. Christ is the door, the only way to 
this rest. "But strait is the gate and narrow is the way;" and we must strive, 
if we will enter; for "many will seek to enter in, and shall not be able; which 
implies, "that the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence." Nor will it bring us 
to the end of the saints, if we begin in the spirit and end in the flesh. He 
only "that endureth to the end shall be saved." And never did a soul obtain rest 
with God whose desire was not set upon him above all things else in the world. 
"Where your treasure is, there will your heart he also." The remainder of our 
old nature will much weaken and interrupt these desires, but never overcome 
them. And, considering the opposition to our desires, from the contrary 
principles in our nature, and from the weakness of our graces, together with our 
continued distance from the end, our tendency to that end must be laborious, and 
with all our might. All these things are pre-supposed, in order to a Christian's 
obtaining an interest in heavenly rest.
Now we have ascended these steps into the outward court, may we look within the 
veil? May we show what this rest contains, as well as what it pre-supposes? 
Alas! how little know I of that glory! The glimpse which Paul had, contained 
what could not, or must not, be uttered. Had he spoken the things of heaven in 
the language of heaven, and none understood that language, what the better? The 
Lord reveal to me what I may reveal to you! The Lord open some light, and show 
both you and me our inheritance! Not as to Balaam only, whose eyes were opened 
to see the goodliness of Jacob's tents, and Israel's tabernacles, where he had 
no portion, and from whence must come his own destruction; not as to Moses, who 
had only a discovery instead of possession, and saw the land which he never 
entered; but as the pearl was revealed to the merchant in the Gospel, who rested 
not till he had sold all he had, and bought it; and as heaven was opened to 
blessed Stephen, which he was shortly to enter, and the glory showed him which 
should be his own possession.

The things contained in heavenly rest are such as these: a ceasing from means of 
grace; a perfect freedom from all evils; the highest degree of the saints' 
personal perfection, both of body and soul; the nearest enjoyment of God, the 
chief good and a sweet and constant action of all the powers of body and soul in 
this enjoyment of God.


1. One thing contained in heavenly rest, is, the ceasing from means of grace. 
When we have obtained the haven, we have done sailing. When the workman receives 
his wages, it is implied he has done his work. When we are at our journey's end, 
we have done with the way. Whether prophecies, they shall fail; whether tongues, 
they shall cease; whether knowledge, it also, so far as it had the nature of 
means, shall vanish away. There shall be no more prayer, because no more 
necessity, but the full enjoyment of what we prayed for: neither shall we need 
to fast, and weep, and watch any more, being out of the reach of sin and 
temptations. Preaching is done; the ministry of man ceases; ordinances become 
useless; the laborers are called in, because the harvest is gathered, the tares 
burned, and the work finished; the unregenerate past hope, and the saints past 
fear, for ever.
2. There is in heavenly rest a perfect freedom from all evils: from all the 
evils that accompanied us through our course, and which necessarily follow our 
absence from the chief good, besides our freedom from those eternal flames and 
restless miseries which the neglecters of Christ and grace must for ever endure; 
a woful inheritance, which, both by birth and actual merit, was due to us as 
well as to them! In heaven there is nothing that defileth or is unclean. All 
that remains without. And doubtless there is not such a thing as grief and 
sorrow known there; nor is there such a thing as a pale face, a languid body, 
feeble joints, helpless infancy, decrepid age, peccant humors, painful or pining 
sickness, griping fears, consuming cares, nor whatsoever deserves the name of 
evil. We wept and lamented when the world rejoiced but our sorrow is turned to 
joy, and our joy shall no man take from us.

3. Another ingredient of this rest is, the highest degree of the saints' 
personal perfection, both of body and soul. Were the glory ever so great, and 
themselves not made capable of it by a personal perfection suitable thereto, it 
would be little to them. "Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered 
into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love 
him." For the eye of flesh is not capable of seeing them, nor this ear of 
hearing them, nor this heart of understanding them: but there, the eye, and ear, 
and heart are made capable; else, how do they enjoy them? The more perfect the 
sight is, the more delightful the beautiful object. The more perfect the 
appetite, the sweeter the food. The more musical the ear, the more pleasant the 
melody. The more perfect the soul, the more joyous those joys, and the more 
glorious, to us, is that glory.


4. The principal part of this rest is our nearest enjoyment of God, the chief 
good. And here, reader, wonder not if I be at a loss, and if my apprehensions 
receive but little of that which is in my expressions. If it did not appear to 
the beloved disciple what we shall be, but only, in general, "that when Christ 
shall appear we shall be like him," no wonder if I know little. When I know so 
little of God, I cannot much know what it is to enjoy him. If I know so little 
of spirits, how little of the Father of spirits, or the state of my own soul, 
when advanced to the enjoyment of him! I stand and look upon a heap of ants, and 
see them all at one view: they know not me, my being, nature, or thoughts, 
though I am their fellow-creature: how little then, must we know of the great 
Creator, though he, with one view, clearly beholds us all! A glimpse, the saints 
behold as in a glass, which makes us capable of some poor, dark apprehensions of 
what we shall behold in glory. If I should tell a worldling what the holiness 
and spiritual joys of the saints on earth are, he cannot know; for grace cannot 
be clearly known without grace; how much less could he conceive it, should I 
tell him of this glory! But to the saints I may be somewhat more encouraged to 
speak, for grace gives them a dark knowledge and slight taste of glory.
If men and angels should study to speak the blessedness of that state in one 
word, what could they say beyond this, that it is the nearest enjoyment of God? 
O the full joys offered to a believer in that one sentence of Christ, "Father, I 
will that they whom thou hast given me be with me where I am, that they may 
behold my glory which thou hast given me!" Every word is full of life and joy. 
If the queen of Sheba had cause to say of Solomon's glory, "Happy are thy men, 
happy are these thy servants, who stand continually before thee, and hear thy 
wisdom;" then, surely, they that stand continually before God, and see his 
glory, and the glory of the Lamb, are more than happy. To them will Christ give 
to eat of the tree of life, and to eat of the hidden manna; yea, he will make 
them pillars in the temple of God, and they shall go no more out; and he will 
write upon them the name of his God, and the name of the city of his God, which 
is New Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from his God, and he will 
write upon them his new name; yea, more, if more may be, he will grant them to 
sit with him in his throne. "These are they who came out of great tribulation, 
and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb; 
therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his 
temple, and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them. The Lamb, 
which is in the midst of the throne, shall feed them, and shall lead them unto 
living fountains of water and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes." O 
blind, deceived world! can you show us such a glory? This is the city of our 
God, where the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and 
they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them and be their God. 
The glory of God shall lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof. And there 
shall be no more curse; but the throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it; 
and his servants shall serve him, and they shall see his face, and his name 
shall be in their foreheads. These sayings are faithful and true, and the things 
which must shortly be done.
And now we say, as Mephibosheth, let the world take all, forasmuch as our Lord 
will come in peace. Rejoice, therefore, in the Lord, O ye righteous! and say, 
with his servant David, "The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance: the lines 
are fallen unto me in pleasant places; yea, I have a goodly heritage. I have set 
the Lord always before me; because he is at my right hand, I shall not be moved. 
Therefore my heart is glad, and my glory rejoiceth; my flesh also shall rest in 
hope. For thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thine 
Holy One to see corruption. Thou wilt show me the path of life; in thy presence 
is fulness of joy; at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore." What 
presumption would it have been, once, to have thought or spoken of such a thing, 
if God had not spoken it before us! I durst not have thought of the saints' 
preferment in this life, as Scripture sets it forth, had it not been the express 
truth of God. How unbecoming to talk of being sons of God--speaking to 
him--having fellowship with him--dwelling in him and he in us--if this had not 
been God's own language! How much less durst we have once thought of shining 
forth as the sun--of being joint heirs with Christ--of judging the world--of 
sitting on Christ's throne--of being one in him and the Father--if we had not 
all this from the mouth, and under the hand of God! But hath he said, and shall 
he not do it? Hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?--Yes, as the Lord 
God is true, thus shall it be done to the man whom Christ delighteth to honor.
Be of good cheer, Christian; the time is at hand when God and thou shalt be 
near, and as near as thou canst well desire. Thou shalt dwell in his family. Is 
that enough? It is better to be a door-keeper in the house of God, than to dwell 
in the tents of wickedness. Thou shalt ever stand before him, about his throne, 
in the room with him, in his presence-chamber. Wouldst thou yet be nearer? Thou 
shalt be his child, and he thy Father; thou shalt be an heir of his kingdom; 
yea, more, the spouse of his Son. And what more canst thou desire? Thou shalt be 
a member of the body of his Son; he shall be thy head; thou shalt be one with 
him, who is one with the Father, as he himself hath desired for thee of his 
Father: "that they all may be one, as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, 
that they also may be one in us; and the glory which thou gavest me, I have 
given them, that they may be one, even as we are one; I in them, and thou in me, 
that they may be made perfect in one, and that the world may know that thou hast 
sent me, and hast loved them as thou hast loved me."
5. We must add, that this rest contains a sweet and constant action of all the 
powers of the soul and body in this enjoyment of God. It is not the rest of a 
stone, which ceaseth from all motion when it attains the centre. This body shall 
be so changed, that it shall no more be flesh and blood, which cannot inherit 
the kingdom of God; but a spiritual body. We sow not that body which shall be, 
but God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him, and to every seed his own body. 
If grace makes a Christian differ so much from what he was, as to say, I am not 
the man I was; how much more will glory make us differ! As much as a body 
spiritual, above the sun in glory, exceeds these frail, noisome, diseased bodies 
of flesh, so far shall our senses exceed those we now possess. Doubtless, as God 
advances our senses, and enlarges our capacity, so will he advance the happiness 
of those senses, and fill up, with himself, all that capacity. Certainly the 
body would not be raised up and continued, if it were not to share in the glory. 
As it hath shared in the obedience and sufferings, so shall it also in the 
blessedness. As Christ bought the whole man, so shall the whole partake of the 
everlasting benefits of the purchase. O blessed employment of a glorified body! 
to stand before the throne of God and the Lamb, and to sound forth for ever, 
"Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory, and honor, and power. Worthy is the 
Lamb that was slain, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and 
honor, and glory, and blessing; for thou hast redeemed us to God, by thy blood, 
out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and hast made us unto 
our God kings and priests. Alleluia; salvation, and glory, and honor, and power, 
unto the Lord our God. Alleluia, for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth." O 
Christians! this is the blessed rest; a rest, as it were, without rest; for 
"they rest not day and night, saying, Holy, holy, holy Lord God Almighty, who 
was, and is, and is to come." And if the body shall be thus employed, O how 
shall the soul be taken up! As its powers and capacities are greatest, so its 
actions are strongest, and its enjoyments sweetest. As the bodily senses have 
their proper actions, whereby they receive and enjoy their objects, so does the 
soul in its own actions enjoy its own objects, by knowing, remembering, loving, 
and delightful joying. This is the soul's enjoyment. By these eyes it sees, and 
by these arms it embraces.
Knowledge, of itself, is very desirable. As far as the rational soul exceeds the 
sensitive, so far the delights of a philosopher, in discovering the secrets of 
nature, and knowing the mystery of sciences, exceed the delights of the 
drunkard, the voluptuary, or the sensualist. So excellent is all truth. What, 
then, is their delight who know the God of truth! How noble a faculty of the 
soul is the understanding! it can compass the earth; it can measure the sun, 
moon, stars, and heaven; it can foreknow each eclipse to a minute, many years 
before. But this is the top of all its excellency, that it can know God, who is 
infinite, who made all these--a little here, and more, much more, hereafter. O 
the wisdom and goodness of our blessed Lord! He hath created the understanding 
with a natural bias and inclination to truth, as its object; and to the prime 
truth, as its prime object. Christian, when, after long gazing heaven-ward, thou 
hast got a glimpse of Christ, dost thou not sometimes seem to have been with 
Paul in the third heaven, whether in the body or out, and to have seen what is 
unutterable? Art thou not, with Peter, ready to say, "Master, it is good to be 
here?" "O that I might dwell in this mount! O that I might ever see what I now 
see!" Didst thou never look so long upon the Sun of Righteousness till thine 
eyes were dazzled with his astonishing glory? And did not the splendor of it 
make all things below seem dark and drear to thee? Especially in the day of 
suffering for Christ, when he usually appears most manifestly to his people, 
didst thou never see one walking in the midst of the fiery furnace with thee, 
like the Son of God? Believe me, Christians, yea, believe God; you that have 
known most of God in Christ here, it is as nothing to what you shall know: in 
comparison of that, it scarce deserves to be called knowledge. For as these 
bodies, so that knowledge must cease, that a more perfect may succeed. 
"Knowledge shall vanish away. For we know in part. But when that which is 
perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away. When I was a 
child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but, 
when I became a man, I put away childish things. For now we see through a glass 
darkly, but then face to face; now I know in part, but then shall I know, even 
as also I am known." Marvel not, therefore, Christian, how it can be life 
eternal to know God and Jesus Christ. To enjoy God and Christ is eternal life; 
and the soul's enjoying is in knowing. They that savor only of earth, and 
consult with flesh, think it a poor happiness to know God. "But we know that we 
are of God, and the whole world lieth in wickedness; and we know that the Son of 
God is come, and hath given us an understanding, that we may know him that is 
true; and we are in him that is true, even in his Son Jesus Christ. This is the 
true God and eternal life."

The memory will not be idle, or useless, in this blessed work. From that height 
the saint can look behind him and before him. And to compare past with present 
things must raise in the blessed soul an inconceivable esteem and sense of its 
condition. To stand on that mount, whence we can see the Wilderness and Canaan 
both at once; to stand in heaven and look back on earth, and weigh them together 
in the balance of a comparing sense and judgment, how must it needs transport 
the soul, and make it cry out,

"Is this the purchase that cost so dear as the blood of Christ? No wonder. O 
blessed price and thrice blessed love, that invented and condescended! Is this 
the end of believing? Is this the end of the Spirit's workings? Have the gales 
of grace blown me into such a harbor? Is it hither that Christ hath allured my 
soul? O blessed way, and thrice blessed end! Is this the glory which the 
Scriptures spoke of, and ministers preached of so much? I see the Gospel is 
indeed good tidings, even tidings of peace and good things, tidings of great joy 
to all nations! Is my mourning, my fasting, my sad humblings, my heavy walking, 
come to this? Is my praying, watching, fearing to offend, come to this? Are all 
my afflictions, Satan's temptations, the world's scorns and jeers, come to this? 
O vile nature, that resisted so much, and so long, such a blessing! Unworthy 
soul! is this the place thou camest to so unwillingly? Was duty wearisome? Was 
the world too good to lose? Couldst thou not leave all, deny all, and suffer any 
thing for this? Wast thou loth to die, to come to this? O false heart, thou 
hadst almost betrayed me to eternal flames, and lost me this glory! Art thou not 
now ashamed, my soul, that ever thou didst question that love which brought thee 
hither? that thou wast jealous of the faithfulness of thy Lord? that thou 
suspectedst his love, when thou shouldst only have suspected thyself? that ever 
thou didst quench a motion of his Spirit? and that thou shouldst misinterpret 
those providences, and repine at those ways which have such an end? Now thou art 
sufficiently convinced that thy blessed Redeemer was saving thee as well when he 
crossed thy desires, as when he granted them; when he broke thy heart, as when 
he bound it up. No thanks to thee, unworthy self, for this received crown; but 
to Jehovah and the Lamb be glory for ever."
But, O! the full, the near, the sweet enjoyment, is that of love. "God is love, 
and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him." Now the poor soul 
complains, "O that I could love Christ more!" Then thou canst not but love him. 
Now, thou knowest little of his amiableness, and therefore lovest little: then, 
thine eyes will affect thy heart, and the continual viewing of that perfect 
beauty will keep thee in continual transports of love. Christians, doth it not 
now stir up your love, to remember all the experiences of his love? Doth not 
kindness melt you, and the sunshine of Divine goodness warm your frozen hearts? 
What will it do then, when you shall live in love, and have all in Him, who is 
all? Surely love is both work and wages. What a high favor, that God will give 
us leave to love him! that he will be embraced by those who have embraced lust 
and sin before him! But more than this, he returneth love for love; nay, a 
thousand times more. Christian, thou wilt be then brim-full of love; yet, love 
as much as thou canst, thou shalt be ten thousand times more beloved. Were the 
arms of the Son of God open upon the cross, and an open passage made to his 
heart by the spear; and will not his arms and heart be open to thee in glory? 
Did not he begin to love before thou lovedst, and will not he continue now? Did 
he love thee, an enemy? thee, a sinner? thee, who even loathedst thyself? and 
own thee, when thou didst disclaim thyself? And will he not now immeasurably 
love thee, a son? thee, a perfect saint? thee, who returnest some love for love? 
He that in love wept over the old Jerusalem when near its ruin, with what love 
will he rejoice over the new Jerusalem in her glory!
Christian, believe this, and think on it: thou shalt be eternally embraced in 
the arms of that love which was from everlasting, and, will extend to 
everlasting; of that love which brought the Son of God's love from heaven to 
earth, from earth to the cross, from the cross to the grave, from the grave to 
glory; that love which was weary, hungry, tempted, scorned, scourged, buffeted, 
spit upon, crucified, pierced; which did fast, pray, teach, heal, weep, sweat, 
bleed, die; that love will eternally embrace thee. When perfect created love and 
most perfect uncreated love meet together, it will not be like Joseph and his 
brethren, who lay upon one another's necks weeping; it will be loving and 
rejoicing, not loving and sorrowing. Yes, it will make Satan's court ring with 
the news that Joseph's brethren are come, that the saints are arrived safe at 
the bosom of Christ, out of the reach of hell for ever. Nor is there any such 
love as David's and Jonathan's, breathing out its last into sad lamentations for 
a forced separation. Know this, believer, to thy everlasting comfort, if those 
arms have once embraced thee, neither sin nor hell can get thee thence for ever. 
Thou hast not to deal with an inconstant creature, but with Him with whom is no 
variableness nor shadow of turning. His love to thee will not be as thine was on 
earth to him, seldom, and cold, up, and down. He that would not cease nor abate 
his love, for all thine enmity, unkind neglects, and churlish resistances, can 
he cease to love thee, when he hath made thee truly lovely? He that keepeth thee 
so constant in thy love to him, that thou canst challenge tribulation, distress, 
persecution, famine, nakedness, peril, or sword, to separate thy love from 
Christ, how much more will he himself be constant! Indeed thou mayest be 
"persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor 
powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any 
other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in 
Christ Jesus our Lord." And now, are we not left in the apostle's admiration: 
"What shall we say to these things?" Infinite love must needs be a mystery to a 
finite capacity. No wonder angels desire to look into this mystery. And if it be 
the study of saints here "to know the breadth, and length, and depth, and height 
of the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge;" the saints' everlasting rest 
must consist in the enjoyment of God by love.

Nor does joy share least in this fruition. It is this which all we have 
mentioned lead to, and conclude in; even the inconceivable complacency which the 
blessed feel in seeing, knowing, loving, and being beloved of God. This is "the 
white stone which no man knoweth, saving he that receiveth it." Surely this is 
the joy with which a stranger doth not intermeddle. All Christ's ways of mercy 
tend to and end in the saints' joys. He wept, sorrowed, suffered, that they 
might rejoice; he sends the Spirit to be their comforter; he multiplies 
promises; he discovers their future happiness, that their joy may be full. He 
opens to them the fountain of living waters, that they may thirst no more, and 
that it may spring up in them to everlasting life. He chastens them that he may 
give them rest. He makes it their duty to rejoice in him always, and again 
commands them to rejoice. He never brings them into so low a condition that he 
does not leave them more cause of joy than sorrow. And hath the Lord such a care 
of our comfort here? O what will that joy be, where the soul being perfectly 
prepared for joy, and joy prepared by Christ for the soul, it shall be our work, 
our business, eternally to rejoice! It seems the saints' joy shall be greater 
than the damned's torment; for their torment is the torment of creatures, 
prepared for the devil and his angels; but our joy is the joy of our Lord. The 
same glory which the Father gave the Son, the Son hath given them, to sit with 
him in his throne, even as he is set down with his Father in his throne. Thou, 
poor soul, who prayest for joy, waitest for joy, complainest for want of joy, 
longest for joy; thou then shalt have full joy, as much as thou canst hold, and 
more than ever thou thoughtest on, or thy heart desired. In the meantime walk 
carefully, watch constantly, and then let God measure out to thee thy times and 
degrees of joy. It may be he keeps them until thou hast more need. Thou hadst 
better lose thy comfort than thy safety. If thou shouldst die full of fears and 
sorrows, it will be but a moment, and they are all gone and concluded in joy 
inconceivable. As the joy of the hypocrite, so the fears of the upright are but 
for a moment. God's "anger endureth but a moment; in his favor is life; weeping 
may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning." O blessed morning! Poor, 
humble, drooping soul, how would it fill thee with joy now, if a voice from 
heaven should tell thee of the love of God, the pardon of thy sins, and assure 
thee of thy part in these joys! What then will thy joy be, when thy actual 
possession shall convince thee of thy title, and thou shalt be in heaven before 
thou art well aware!

And it is not thy joy only; it is a mutual joy as well as a mutual love. Is 
there joy in heaven at thy conversion, and will there be none at thy 
glorification? Will not the angels welcome thee thither, and congratulate thy 
safe arrival?--yes, it is the joy of Jesus Christ; for now he hath the end of 
his undertaking, labor, suffering, dying, when we have our joys; when he is 
"glorified in his saints, and admired in all them that believe;" when he "sees 
of the travail of his soul, and is satisfied." This is Christ's harvest, when he 
shall reap the fruit of his labors; and it will not repent him concerning his 
sufferings, but he will rejoice over his purchased inheritance, and his people 
will rejoice in him.--Yea, the Father himself puts on joy, too, in our joy. As 
we grieve his Spirit, and weary him with our iniquities, so he is rejoiced in 
our good. O how quickly does he now spy a returning prodigal, even afar off! How 
does he run and meet him! And with what compassion does he fall on his neck and 
kiss him, and put on him the best robe, and a ring on his hand, and shoes on his 
feet, and kills the fatted calf, to eat and be merry! This is indeed a happy 
meeting; but nothing to the embracing and joy of that last and great meeting. 
Yea, more; as God doth mutually love and joy, so he makes this his rest, as it 
is our rest. What an eternal Sabbatism, when the work of redemption, 
sanctification, preservation, glorification, is all finished and perfected for 
ever! "The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty; he will save, he will 
rejoice over thee with joy, he will rest in his love, he will joy over thee with 
singing." Well may we then rejoice in our God with joy, and rest in our love, 
and joy in him with singing.

Alas! my fearful heart scarce dares proceed. Methinks I hear the Almighty's 
voice saying to me, "Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without 
knowledge?" But pardon thy servant, O Lord. I have not pried into unrevealed 
things. I bewail that my apprehensions are so dull, my thoughts so mean, my 
affections so stupid, and my expressions so low and unbecoming such a glory. I 
have only heard by the hearing of the ear: O let thy servant see thee, and 
possess these joys; then shall I have more suitable conceptions, and shall give 
thee fuller glory; I shall abhor my present self, and disclaim and renounce all 
these imperfections. "I have uttered that I understood not, things too wonderful 
for me, which I knew not." Yet "I believed, and therefore have I spoken." What, 
Lord, canst thou expect from dust, but levity? or from corruption but 
defilement? Though the weakness and irreverence be the fruit of my own 
corruption, yet the fire is from thine altar, and the work of thy commanding. I 
looked not into thy ark, nor put forth my hand unto it without thee. Wash away 
these stains also in the blood of the Lamb. Imperfect, or none must be thy 
service here. O take thy Son's excuse, "the spirit is willing, but the flesh is 
weak." 
 
 



        
  
  




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