True Grace Distinguished
from the Experience of Devils
by
Jonathan Edwards
"You believe that there is
one God. Good! Even the demons believe that—and
shudder."
James 2:19
How do you know if you belong to God? We see in
these words what some people depend on as an evidence of their
acceptance with God. Some people think that they are all right
before God if they are not as bad as some evil person. Other
people point to their family history or church membership to show
that God approves of them. There is an evangelism program in
common use that asks people certain questions. One of the
questions is, "Suppose you were to die today. Why should God
let you into his heaven?" A very common response is, "I
believe in God." Apparently the apostle James knew people who
said the same thing: I know I am in God’s favor, because I know
these religious doctrines.
Of course James admits that this knowledge is
good. Not only is it good, but it is also necessary. Nobody can be
a Christian who doesn’t believe in God; and more than that, the
One True God. This is particularly true for those who had the
great advantage of actually knowing the apostle, someone who could
tell them of his first-hand experience with Jesus, the Son of God.
Imagine the great sin of a person, who knew James, and then
refused to believe in God! Certainly this would make their
damnation greater. Of course, all Christians know that this belief
in the One God is only the start of good things because
"anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that
he rewards those who earnestly seek him." (Heb. 11:6.)
However, James is clear that although this
belief a good thing, it is definitely not proof that a person is
saved. What he means is this: "You say you are a Christian
and you are in God’s favor. You think God will let you into
heaven, and the proof of it is, you believe in God. But that is no
evidence at all, because the demons also believe, and they are
sure to be punished in hell." The demons believe in God, you
can be sure of that! They not only believe that He exists, but
they believe that God is a holy God, a sin-hating God, a God of
truth, who has promised judgments, and who will carry out his
vengeance upon them. This is the reason the demons
"shudder" or tremble— they know God more clearly than
most human beings do, and they are afraid. Nevertheless, nothing
in the mind of man, that devils may experience as well, is any
sure sign of God’s grace in our hearts.
This reasoning may be easily turned around.
Suppose demons could have, or find within themselves, something of
God’s saving grace—proof they would go to heaven. This would
prove James wrong. But how absurd! The Bible makes it clear that
demons have no hope of salvation, and their believing in God does
not take away their future punishment. Therefore believing in God
is not proof of salvation for demons, and it is safe to say, not
for people, either.
This is seen even more clearly when we think
about what demons are like. They are unholy: anything that they
experience, cannot be a holy experience. The devil is perfectly
wicked. "You belong to your father, the devil, and you want
to carry out your father’s desire. He was a murderer from the
beginning, not holding to the truth, for there is no truth in him.
When he lies, he speaks his native language, for he is a liar and
the father of lies." (John 8:44) "He who does what is
sinful is of the devil, because the devil has been sinning from
the beginning." (1 John 3:8 ) Therefore the demons are called
evil spirits, unclean spirits, powers of darkness, and so on.
"For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against
the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this
dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the
heavenly realms." (Eph 6:12)
So it is plain that anything in the minds of
demons cannot be holy, or lead to true holiness by itself. The
demons clearly know many things about God and religion, but they
do not have a holy knowledge. The things they know in their minds
may make impressions in their hearts— indeed we do see that the
demons have very strong feelings about God; so strong, in fact,
that they "shudder." But they are not holy feelings
because they have nothing to do with the work of the Holy Spirit.
If this is true of the experience of demons, it is also true of
the experience of men.
Notice this, that it does not matter how genuine,
sincere, and powerful these thoughts and feelings are. Demons,
being spiritual creatures, know God in a way that men on earth
cannot. Their knowledge of God’s existence is more concrete than
any man’s knowledge could be. Because they are locked in battle
with the forces of good, they have a sincerity of knowledge as
well. On one occasion Jesus cast out some demons. "What do
you want with us, Son of God?" they shouted. "Have you
come here to torture us before the appointed time?" (Mat
8:29) What could possibly be a more clear-cut experience than
this? However, while their thoughts and feelings are genuine and
powerful, they are not holy.
Also we can see that the holy objects of
their thoughts doesn’t make their thoughts and feelings holy.
The demons know God exists! Matthew 8:29 shows they know more
about Jesus than many people do! They are thoroughly that Jesus
will judge them some day, because He is holy. But it is
clear that genuine, sincere, and powerful thoughts and feelings
about holy, spiritual things, is no proof of God’s grace in the
heart. Demons have these things, and look forward to eternal
punishment in hell. If men have no more than what the demons have,
they will suffer in the same way.
We may make several conclusions based on these
truths. First, that no matter how much people may know about God
and the Bible, it is no sure sign of salvation. The devil before
his fall, was one of the bright and morning stars, a flame of
fire, one excelling in strength and wisdom. (Isa. 14:12, Ezek.
28:12-19) Apparently, as one of the chief angels, Satan knew much
about God. Now that he is fallen, his sin has not destroyed his
memories from before. Sin does destroy the spiritual nature, but
not the natural abilities, such as memory. That the fallen angels
do have many natural abilities may be seen from many Bible verses,
for example Eph 6:12 "For our struggle is not against flesh
and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities,
against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual
forces of evil in the heavenly realms." In the same way, the
Bible says that Satan is "more crafty" than other
created beings. (Gen 3:1, also 2 Cor. 11:3, Acts 13:10) Therefore
we can see that the Devil has always had great mental ability and
is able to know much about God, the visible and invisible world,
and many other things. Since his job in the beginning was to be a
chief angel before God, it is only natural that understanding
these things has always been of first importance to him, and that
all his activities have to do with these areas of thoughts,
feelings, and knowledge.
Because it was his original employment to be one
of the angels before the very face of God, and sin does not
destroy the memory, it is clear that Satan knows more about God
than just about any other created being. After the fall, we can
see from his activities as a tempter, etc., (Matt 4:3) that he has
been spending his time increasing his knowledge and its practical
applications. That his knowledge is great can be seen in how
tricky he is when tempting people. The craftiness of his lies
shows how clever he is. Surely he could not manage his deceit so
well without an actual and true knowledge of the facts.
This knowledge of God and his works is from the
very beginning. Satan was there from the Creation, as Job 38:4-7
shows: "Where were you when I laid the earth’s foundation?
Tell me, if you understand. . .while the morning stars sang
together and all the angels shouted for joy?" So he must know
much about the way God created the world, and how He governs all
the events in the universe. Furthermore, Satan has seen how God
has worked his plan of redemption in the world; and not as an
innocent bystander, but as an active enemy of God’s grace. He
saw God work in the lives of Adam and Eve, in Noah, Abraham, and
David. He must have taken a special interest in the life of Jesus
Christ, the Saviour of men, the Word of God incarnate. How closely
did he watch Christ? How carefully did he observe his miracles and
listen to His words? This is because Satan has set himself against
Christ’s work, and it is to his torment and anguish that Satan
has watched Christ’s work unfold successfully.
Satan, then, knows much about God and God’s
work. He knows heaven first-hand. He knows hell also, with
personal knowledge as its first resident, and has experienced its
torments for all these thousands of years. He must have a great
knowledge of the Bible: at the least, we can see he knew enough to
try tempting our Saviour. Furthermore, he has had years of
studying of the hearts of men, his battlefield where he fights
against our Redeemer. What labours, exertions, and cares the Devil
has used over the centuries as he has deceived men. Only a being
with his knowledge and experience of God’s working, and the
human heart, could so imitate true religion and transform himself
into an angel of light. (2 Cor 11:14)
Therefore we can see that there is no amount of
knowledge of God and religion that could prove a person has been
saved from their sin. A man may talk about the Bible, God, and the
Trinity. He may be able to preach a sermon about Jesus Christ and
everything He has done. Imagine, somebody might be able to speak
about the way of salvation and the work of the Holy Spirit in the
hearts of sinners, perhaps even enough to show others how to
become Christians. All these things might build up the church and
enlighten the world, yet it is not a sure proof of the saving
grace of God in a person’s heart.
It also may be seen that for people to merely
agree with the Bible is no sure sign of salvation. James 2:19
shows that the demons really, truly, believe the truth. Just as
they believe there is one God, they agree with all the truth of
the Bible. The devil is not a heretic: all the articles of his
faith are firmly established in the truth.
It must be understood, that when the Bible talks
about believing that Jesus is the Son of God, as a proof of
God’s grace in the heart, the Bible means not a mere agreement
with the truth, but another kind of believing.
"Everyone who believes that Jesus is the Christ is born of
God." (1 John 5:1) This other kind of believing is
called "the faith of God’s elect and the knowledge of the
truth that leads to godliness." (Titus 1:1) There is a
spiritual holding to the truth, which will be explained later on.
Some people have strong religious experiences,
and think of them as proof of God’s working in their hearts.
Often these experiences give people a sense of the importance of
the spiritual world, and the reality of divine things. However,
these, too, are no sure proof of salvation. Demons and damned
human beings have many spiritual experiences which have a great
effect on their heart attitudes. They live in the spiritual world
and see first-hand what it is like. Their sufferings show them the
worth of salvation and the worth of a human soul in the most
powerful way imaginable. The parable in Luke chapter 16 teaches
this clearly, as the suffering man asks that Lazarus might be sent
to tell his brothers to avoid this place of torment. No doubt
people in hell now have a distinct idea of the vastness of
eternity, and of the shortness of life. They are completely
convinced that all the things of this life are unimportant when
compared to the experiences of the eternal world. People now in
hell have a great sense of the preciousness of time, and of the
wonderful opportunities people have, who have the privilege of
hearing the Gospel. They are completely aware of the foolishness
of their sin, of neglecting opportunities, and ignoring the
warnings of God. When sinners find out by personal experience the
final result of their sin there is "weeping and gnashing of
teeth." (Matt 13:42) So even the most powerful religious
experiences are not a sure sign of God’s grace in the heart.
Demons and damned people also have a strong
sense of God’s majesty and power. God’s power is most clearly
displayed in his execution of divine vengeance upon his enemies.
"What if God, choosing to show his wrath and make his power
known, bore with great patience the objects of his wrath—prepared
for destruction?" (Rom 9:22) Shuddering, the devils await
their final punishment, under the strongest sense of God’s
majesty. They feel it now, of course, but in the future it will
show to the greatest degree, when the Lord Jesus "is revealed
from heaven in blazing fire with his powerful angels." (2
Thess 2:7) On that day, they will desire to be run away, to be
hidden from the presence of God. "Look, he is coming with the
clouds, and every eye will see him, even those who pierced him;
and all the peoples of the earth will mourn because of him."
(Rev 1:7) So everyone will see him in the glory of His Father.
But, obviously, not all who see him will be saved.
Now it is possible that some people might object
to all this, saying that ungodly men in this world are quite
different from demons. They are under different circumstances and
are different kind of beings. An objector might say, "Those
things that are visible and present to demons are invisible and
future to men. Besides, people have the disadvantage of having
bodies, which restrain the soul, and keep people from seeing these
spiritual things first-hand. Therefore, even if demons do have a
great knowledge and personal experience of the things of God, and
have no grace, the conclusion does not apply to me." Or, put
another way: if people have these things in this life, it may very
well be a sure sign of God’s grace in their hearts.
In reply, it is agreed that no man in this life
has ever had the degree of these things as the demons have
them. No person has ever shuddered, with the same amount of fear
that the demons shudder with. No man, in this life, can ever have
the same kind of knowledge that the Devil has. It is clear that
demons and damned men understand the vastness of eternity, and the
importance of the other world, more than any living person, and so
they crave salvation all the more.
But we can see that men in this world can have
experiences of the same kind as those of demons and damned
people. They have the same mental outlook, the same opinions and
emotions, and the same kind of impressions on the mind and heart.
Notice, that for the apostle James it is a convincing argument. He
claims that if people think believing in one God is proof of God’s
grace, it is not proof, because demons believe the same. James is
not referring to the act of believing only, but also to the
emotions and actions that go along with their belief. Shuddering
is an example of emotions from the heart. This shows that if
people have the same kind of mental outlook, and respond from the
heart in the same way, it is no sure sign of grace.
The Bible does not state how much people in this
world may see God’s glory, and not have God’s grace in their
hearts. We are not told exactly to what degree God reveals himself
to certain people, and how much they will respond in their hearts.
It is very tempting to say that if a person has a certain amount
of religious experience, or a certain amount of truth, they must
be saved. Perhaps it is even possible for some unsaved people to
have greater experiences than some of those who have grace in
their hearts! So it is wrong to look at experience or knowledge in
terms of amount. Men who have a genuine work of the Holy
Spirit in their hearts have experiences and knowledge of a
different kind.
At this point, someone might answer these
thoughts by saying, "I agree with you. I see that believing
in God, seeing His majesty and holiness, and knowing that Jesus
died for sinners is not proof of grace in my heart. I agree that
demons can know these things as well. But I have some things they
don’t have. I have joy, peace, and love. Demons can’t have
them, so that must show that I am saved."
Yes, it is true that you have something more
than a demon can have, but it is nothing better than a
demon could have. A person’s experience of love, joy, etc., may
not be because they have any cause in them different from a demon,
but just different circumstances. The causes, or origins, of their
feelings are the same. This is why these experiences are no better
than those of demons. To explain further:
All the things that were discussed before about
demons and damned people, arise from two main causes, natural
understanding and self-love. When they think about themselves,
these two things are what determine their feelings and response.
Natural understanding shows them that God is holy, while they are
wicked. God is infinite, but they are limited. God is powerful,
and they are weak. Self-love gives them a sense of the importance
of religion, the eternal world, and a longing after salvation.
When these two causes work together, demons and damned men become
aware of the awesome majesty of God, whom they know will be their
Judge. They know that God’s judgment will be perfect and their
punishment will be forever. Therefore, these two causes together
with their senses will bring about their anguish on that judgment
day, when they see the outward glory of Christ and His saints.
The reason many people feel joy, peace, and love
today, while demons do not, may be more due to their
circumstances, rather than any difference in their hearts. The
causes in their hearts are the same. For example, the Holy Spirit
is now at work in the world keeping all of mankind from being as
wicked as they could be (2 Thess 2:17). This is in contrast to
demons, who are just as wicked as they can be all the time.
Furthermore, God in his mercy gives gifts to all people, such as
the rain for crops (Matt 5:45), heat from the sun, etc. Not only
that, but often people receive many things in life to bring them
happiness, such as personal relationships, pleasures, music, good
health, and so on. Most important of all, many people have heard
news of hope: God has sent a Saviour, Jesus Christ, who died to
save sinners. In these circumstances, the natural understanding of
people can cause them to feel things that demons never can.
Self-love is a powerful force in the hearts of
men, strong enough without grace to cause people to love those who
love them, "But if you love those who love you, what credit
is that to you? For even sinners love those who love them."
(Luke 6:32) It is a natural thing for a person who sees God being
merciful, and who knows that they are not as bad as they
could be, to therefore be sure of God’s love for them. If your
love for God comes only from your feelings that God loves you, or
because you have heard that Christ died for you, or something
similar, the source of your love to God is only self-love. This
reigns in the hearts of demons as well.
Imagine the situation of the demons. They know
they are unrestrained in their wickedness. They know God is their
enemy and always will be. Although they are without any hope,
still they are active and fighting. Just think, what if they had
some of the hope that people have? What if demons, with their
knowledge of God, had their wickedness restrained? Imagine if a
demon, after all his fears about God’s judgment, was suddenly
led to imagine that God might be his Friend? That God might
forgive him and let him, sin and all, into heaven? Oh the joy, the
wonder, the gratitude we would see! Would not this demon be a
great lover of God, since, after all everybody loves people who
help them? What else could cause feelings so powerful and sincere?
Is it any wonder, that so many people are deceived this way?
Especially since people have the demons to promote this delusion.
They have been promoting it now for many centuries, and alas they
are very good at it.
Now we come to the question, if all these
various experiences and feelings come from nothing more than
demons are capable of, what are the kinds of experiences that are
truly spiritual and holy? What do I have to find in my own heart,
as a sure sign of God’s grace there? What are the differences
that show them to be from the Holy Spirit?
This is the answer: those feelings and
experiences which are good signs of God’s grace in the heart
differ from the experience of demons in their source and in
their results.
Their source is the sense of the overwhelming
holy beauty and loveliness of the things of God. When a person
grasps in his mind, or better yet, when he feels his own heart
held captive by the attractiveness of the Divine, this is an
unmistakable sign of God’s working.
The demons and damned in hell do not now, and
never will experience even the tiniest bit of this. Before their
fall, the demons did have this sense of God. But in their fall,
they lost it, the only thing they could lose of their knowledge of
God. We have seen how the demons have very clear ideas about how
powerful God is, his justice, holiness, and so on. They know a lot
of facts about God. But now they haven’t a clue about
what God is like. They cannot know what God is like any
more than a blind man can know about colors! Demons can have a
strong sense God’s awesome majesty, but they don’t see his
loveliness. They have observed His work among the human race for
these thousands of years, indeed with the closest attention; but
they never see a glimmer of His beauty. No matter how much they
know about God (and we have seen that they know very much indeed)
the knowledge they have will never bring them to this higher,
spiritual knowing what God is like. On the contrary, the
more they know about God, the more they hate Him. The beauty of
God consists primarily in this holiness, or moral excellence, and
this is what they hate the most. It is because God is holy that
the demons hate Him. One could suppose that if God were to be less
holy, the demons would hate Him less. No doubt demons would hate
any holy Being, no matter what He was like otherwise. But surely
they hate this Being all the more, for being infinitely holy,
infinitely wise, and infinitely powerful!
Wicked people, including those alive today, will
on the day of judgment see all there is to see of Jesus Christ,
except His beauty and loveliness. There is not one thing about
Christ that we can think of, that will not be set before them in
the strongest light on that brilliant day. The wicked will see
Jesus "coming in clouds with great power and glory."
(Mark 13:26) They will see his outward glory, which is far, far
greater than we can possibly imagine now. You know the wicked will
be thoroughly convinced of all who Christ is. They will be
convinced about His omniscience, as they see all their sins
replayed and evaluated. They will know first-hand Christ’s
justice, as their sentences are announced. His authority will be
made utterly convincing when every knee will bow, and every tongue
confess Jesus as Lord. (Phil 2:10,11) The divine majesty will be
impressed upon them in quite an effective way, as the wicked are
poured into hell itself, and enter into their final state of
suffering and death (Rev 20:14,15) When that happens, all their
knowledge of God, as true and as powerful as it may be, will be
worth nothing, and less than nothing, because they will not see
Christ’s beauty.
Therefore, it is this seeing the loveliness of
Christ that makes the difference between the saving grace of the
Holy Spirit, and the experiences of demons. This sight or sense is
what makes true Christian experience different from everything
else. The faith of God’s elect people is based on this. When a
person sees the excellence of the gospel, he senses the beauty and
loveliness of the divine scheme of salvation. His mind is
convinced that it is of God, and he believes it with all his
heart. As the apostle Paul says in 2 Cor 4:3-4, "even if our
gospel is veiled, it is veiled to those who are perishing. The god
of this age has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they
cannot see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is
the image of God." That is to say, as was explained before,
unbelievers can see that there is a gospel, and understand the
facts about it, but they do not see its light. The light of the
gospel is the glory of Christ, his holiness and beauty. Right
after this we read, 2 Cor 4:6 "For God, who said, ’Let
light shine out of darkness,’ made his light shine in our hearts
to give us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the
face of Christ." Clearly, it is this divine light, shining
into our hearts, that enables us to see the beauty of the gospel
and have a saving belief in Christ. This supernatural light shows
us the superlative beauty and loveliness of Jesus, and convinces
us of His sufficiency as our Saviour. Only such a glorious,
majestic Saviour can be our Mediator, standing between guilty,
hell-deserving sinners such as ourselves, and an infinitely holy
God. This supernatural light gives us a sense of Christ that
convinces us in a way nothing else ever could.
When a most wicked sinner is caused to see
Christ’s divine loveliness, he no longer speculates why God
should be interested in him, to save him. Before, he could not
understand how the blood of Christ could pay the penalty for sins.
But now he can see the preciousness of Christ’s blood, and how
it is worthy to be accepted as the ransom for the worst of sins.
Now the soul can recognize that he is accepted by God, not because
of who he is, but because of the value God puts on the blood,
obedience, and intercession of Christ. Seeing this value and worth
gives the poor guilty soul rest which cannot be found in any
sermon or booklet.
When a person comes to see the proper foundation
of faith and trust with his own eyes, this is saving faith.
"For my Father’s will is that everyone who looks to the Son
and believes in him shall have eternal life." (John 6:40)
"I have revealed you to those whom you gave me out of the
world. They were yours; you gave them to me and they have obeyed
your word. Now they know that everything you have given me comes
from you. For I gave them the words you gave me and they accepted
them. They knew with certainty that I came from you, and they
believed that you sent me." (John 17:6-8)
It is this sight of the divine beauty of Christ
that captivates the wills and draws the hearts of men. A sight of
the outward greatness of God in His glory may overwhelm men, and
be more than they can endure. This will be seen on the day of
judgment, when the wicked will be brought before God. They will be
overwhelmed, yes, but the hostility of the heart will remain in
full strength and the opposition of the will continue. But on the
other hand, a single ray of the moral and spiritual glory of God
and of the supreme loveliness of Christ shone into the heart
overcomes all hostility. The soul is inclined to love God as if by
an omnipotent power, so that now not only the understanding, but
the whole being receives and embraces the loving Saviour.
This sense of the beauty of Christ is the
beginning of true saving faith in the life of a true convert. This
is quite different from any vague feeling that Christ loves him or
died for him. These sort of fuzzy feelings can cause a sort of
love and joy, because the person feels a gratitude for escaping
the punishment of their sin. In actual fact, these feelings are
based on self-love, and not on a love for Christ at all. It is a
sad thing that so many people are deluded by this false faith. On
the other hand, a glimpse of the glory of God in the face of Jesus
Christ causes in the heart a supreme genuine love for God.
This is because the divine light shows the excellent loveliness of
God’s nature. A love based on this is far, far above anything
coming from self-love, which demons can have as well as men. The
true love of God which comes from this sight of His beauty causes
a spiritual and holy joy in the soul; a joy in God, and exulting
in Him. There is no rejoicing in ourselves, but rather in God
alone.
The sight of the beauty of divine things will
cause true desires after the things of God. These desires are
different from the longings of demons, which happen because the
demons know their doom awaits them, and they wish it could somehow
be otherwise. The desires that come from this sight of Christ’s
beauty are natural free desires, like a baby desiring milk.
Because these desires are so different from their counterfeits,
they help to distinguish genuine experiences of God’s grace from
the false.
False spiritual experiences have a tendency to
cause pride, which is the devil’s special sin. "He must not
be a recent convert, or he may become conceited and fall under the
same judgment as the devil." (1 Tim 3:6) Pride is the
inevitable result of false spiritual experiences, even though they
are often covered with a disguise of great humility. False
experience is enamored with self and grows on self. It lives by
showing itself in one way or another. A person can have great love
for God, and be proud of the greatness of his love. He can be very
humble, and very proud indeed of his humility. But the emotions
and experiences that come from God’s grace are exactly opposite.
God’s true working in the heart causes humility. They do not
cause any kind of showiness or self-exaltation. That sense of the
awesome, holy, glorious beauty of Christ kills pride and humbles
the soul. The light of God’s loveliness, and that alone, shows
the soul its own ugliness. When a person really grasps this, he
inevitably begins a process of making God bigger and bigger, and
himself smaller and smaller.
Another result of God’s grace working in the
heart is that the person will hate every evil and respond to God
with a holy heart and life. False experiences may cause a certain
amount of zeal, and even a great deal of what is commonly called
religion. However it is not a zeal for good works. Their religion
is not a service of God, but rather a service of self. This is how
the apostle James puts it himself in this very context, "You
believe that there is one God. Good! Even the demons believe that—and
shudder. You foolish man, do you want evidence that faith without
deeds is useless ?" (James 2:19-20) In other words, deeds, or
good works, are evidence of a genuine experience of God’s grace
in the heart. "We know that we have come to know him if we
obey his commands. The man who says, "I know him," but
does not do what he commands is a liar, and the truth is not in
him." (1 John 2:3-4) When the heart has been ravished by the
beauty of Christ, how else can it respond?
How excellent is that inner goodness and true
religion that comes from this sight of the beauty of Christ! Here
you have the most wonderful experiences of saints and angels in
heaven. Here you have the best experience of Jesus Christ Himself.
Even though we are mere creatures, it is a sort of participation
in God’s own beauty. "Through these he has given us his
very great and precious promises, so that through them you may
participate in the divine nature." (2 Pet 1:4) "God
disciplines us for our good, that we may share in his
holiness." (Heb 12:10) Because of the power of this divine
working, there is a mutual indwelling of God and His people.
"God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in
him." (1 John 4:16)
This special relationship has to make the person
involved as happy and as blessed as any creature in existence.
This is a special gift of God, which he gives only to his special
favorites. Gold, silver, diamonds, and earthly kingdoms are given
by God to people who the Bible calls dogs and pigs. But this great
gift of beholding Christ’s beauty, is the special blessing of
God to His dearest children. Flesh and blood cannot give this
gift: only God can bestow it. This was the special gift which
Christ died to obtain for his elect. It is the highest token of
his everlasting love, the best fruit of his labours, and the most
precious purchase of his blood.
By this gift, more than anything else, the
saints shine as lights in the world. This gift, more than anything
else, is their comfort. It is impossible that the soul who
possesses this gift should ever perish. This is the gift of
eternal life. It is eternal life begun: those who have it can
never die. It is the dawning of the light of glory. It comes from
heaven, it has a heavenly quality, and it will take its bearer to
heaven. Those who have this gift may wander in the wilderness or
be tossed by waves on the ocean, but they will arrive in heaven at
last. There the heavenly spark will be made perfect and increased.
In heaven the souls of the saints will be transformed into a
bright and pure flame, and they will shine forth as the sun in the
kingdom of their Father. Amen.