The Rule and The Riddle
Part 2
By WILLIAM HUNTINGTON
Winchester Row, Dec. 29, 1788
From The Works of Wm. Huntington, 1811,
Vol. 8
- I received my sister's kind epistle, and
have considered her numberless complaints, and the
difficulty of her way. "That which is crooked cannot
be made straight, and that which is wanting cannot be
numbered" says Solomon. Every epistle comes with
heavy tidings; and no wonder, for thou art compassing
about the old mount, and hast got the veil on again and
thou wilt hold it fast enough, unless some evangelical
watchman, or keeper of the walls, be sent to smite thee,
wound thee, and take away thy veil from thee, Song v. 7.
Thy poor husband must have need of patience now to bear
with thee, for thy temper will try him to purpose. There
is no living at peace where Hagar keeps house. Let the
bondwoman once get between thee and the everlasting
Father, and she will soon make you feel the difference
between the yoke of a bondmistress and the freedom of a
married wife. Hagar will soon bear rule, entangle thee in
the yoke of servile fear, and provoke thee to jealousy,
till thy flesh be ready to crawl upon thy bones; and thou
wilt become a burden to thyself, and to all about thee.
And then it is well if thou dost not say, My wrong be
upon thee. It is thy own foolishness that perverteth thy
way, and thy heart fretteth against the Lord, Prov. xix.
3.
-
- Truth has told thee that Hagar is mount
Sinai in the figure, and genders to bondage. But if the
Lamb's wife set no more store by her dignity and honour
than to commit the management of her affairs to a
bondservant, it is a pity but she should bear the yoke
till she knows the worth of her liberty, honour, and
privileges. Hagar was appointed to serve, not to bear
rule. There are three things that disquiet the earth, yea
four that it cannot bear; and the first is, "For a
servant when he reigneth." Thou art not to serve in
the oldness of the letter. Therefore, cast out the
bondwoman and her son, for the bondwoman must not govern
the Lamb's wife, nor shall the bondchild be heir with the
children of promise. This thing will not be grievous to
the Father of the faithful concerning the bondwoman and
her son, for he has told thee that the servant abideth
not in the house forever; but the son abideth ever. And
those sons are free sons, who are delivered from the yoke
of bondage, and stand fast in their, liberty. And the
free woman is one who cleaves to her royal husband,
manages her house with discretion, and keeps her servants
in their place.
-
- Thou hadst not got this yoke on thy neck,
nor this grave-cloth wrapped about thy head, when thou
satest under what is now called Antinomianism: thy soul
seemed then to be healthy, thy conversation savoury, and
thy countenance comely; thy heart was like the chariots
of Amminadib, and thou didst run the race set before thee
with delight. But where art thou now? They have driven
thee with the law till thou art both blind and bound.
"They zealously affect you, but not well;" they
that lead thee cause thee to err and destroy the way of
thy path; thou art not now in Wisdom's pleasant ways, nor
in the paths of peace.
-
- Remember from whence thou art fallen; from
thy first love, from heartfelt union and fellowship with
Christ, from joy and peace in believing, and from the
happy enjoyment of God's free Spirit! Thou didst then
enjoy the liberty of the gospel; now thou feelest the
bondage of the law. The Lord did attend the word with a
marvellous power, and ministered the Spirit among you by
the preaching of faith. Does he the same now by the works
of the law? I know not. Thou hast felt the Saviour's yoke
to be easy, and his burden light; and thou never wast
more holy nor happy within, nor more circumspect without,
than thou wast then. I would have thee try and see what
the law can do for thee: stick to it, and try what love,
life, peace, and holiness, can be fetched from thence;
and, when thou hast perfected the work of sanctification
by that rule, then be so kind as to send me an exact
account of it; explain the operations of it, thy
sensations under it, and a true account of the
superabounding practical holiness that thy family,
fellowmembers, and neighbours, see in thee.
- Not one holy motion, not one divine and
pleasing sensation, not a single flame of pure love to
God or man, wilt thou ever fetch from that covenant.
"The law worketh wrath;" and the carnal mind is
enmity against the lawgiver; nor can it be subject to the
law. Those that are under it may cleave to one another,
but the union is only the bond of natural affections; and
some are held together by corrupt affections, and some
given up to vile affections. But pure love flows freely
from a reconciled God in Christ Jesus; and is shed abroad
in the heart by the Holy Ghost, who is the spirit of life
and of a sound mind.
-
- Thou canst not discern one from the other.
No; for Paul says the preacher knows not what he says,
nor whereof he affirms; and, if so, the flock, and
thyself among them, must be tossed to and fro with a
temptest; afflicted, and not comforted; nor will be,
until God appears to lay their stones with fair colours;
and, as soon as the elect Foundation, chief Corner Stone,
Stone of Help, and the Living Stone appears with divine
lustre, thou wilt quit the storm, and be glad to embrace
the shadow of that Rock in this weary land. If thou aim
at holiness by the law, remember thou must be perfect in
the flesh as well as in spirit. The law is perfect; it
will allow of no infirmities, no evil thoughts, no
adulterous looks, no anger nor evil tempers, no fire to
be kindled on the Sabbath day; not speaking thy own
words, nor thinking thy own thoughts on that day; thy
neighbor must be loved as thyself; half thy goods must be
given to the poor; one coat of the two must go to them
that have none; and then there is no getting to heaven
but by taking up the cross, and following Jesus. No man
shall ever stand the test of that law without a pure love
to God, divine life in Christ, holiness by the Spirit,
and an everlasting righteousness from the God of his
salvation. When you come to London again we will compare
notes together, and see which has gained most by trading;
until which time pursue your present path, and I will
pursue mine.
-
- Make the law your only rule of life; read
it, keep you eyes upon it, and live by it; and I will
pray that I may be kept dead to the law, and alive unto
God; that I may be crucified with Christ, and yet live;
yet not 1, but that Christ may live in me. If you make
the law your rule of life, you are alive to the law, and
walk in the law. And, if Christ lives in me, I shall be
kept alive unto God, and walk in newness of life.
-
- Go you on with the commandments, and I
will go on with the promises. Make the law your rule of
walk, and I will pray God to perform his promise in me,
for God hath said, "I will dwell in them, and walk
in them." Thus you go on by the law, and I by the
gospel. Do you perform your duty, and I will plead my
privileges. Act thou as an industrious servant; and, by
God's grace, I will act as an affectionate son. Be thou
obedient to the law, and I will pray for grace for
obedience to the faith. Live thou in the fear of thy
master, and I will endeavour to honour my heavenly
Father.
-
- Make the law thy only rule of action, and
act accordingly; and I will depend upon God to work in me
both to will and to do of his own good pleasure; yea, to
fulfill all the good pleasure of his will in me, and the
work of faith with power.
-
- Make the law your only rule of
conversation. Speak of the commandments "when thou
sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way,
when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. And thou
shalt write them upon the door posts of thine house, and
upon thy gates; that your days may be multiplied, and the
days of your children; in the land which the Lord sware
unto your fathers to give them as the days of heaven upon
the earth," And I will pray God to create the fruit
of my lips; to give me a mouth and wisdom that all my
enemies shall not be able to gainsay or resist; and that
it may not be me that speaks, but that the Spirit of my
heavenly Father may speak in me; and then my conversation
will be with power, and my words seasoned with salt,
ministering grace. Thus runs the promise, and the
excellency and the power is of God; and, if God perform
his promise to me He will have all the glory; and, if
thou perform thy task, thou hast whereof to glory, but
not before God, whatever thou dost before men.
-
- Let the ministers of the letter bind all
the grievous burdens upon your shoulders that you can
possibly bear, and I will cast my burdens on the Lord who
has promised to sustain me. Be thou careful to observe
all the grievousness which they prescribe, and I will
cast all my care upon him that careth for me. Walk thou
by sight, and I by faith; walk thou in the letter, and I
in the Spirit. Look thou to the commandments, and I will
look to Jesus.
-
- They that say this doctrine opens a door
to all licentiousness know not what they say. You saw
nothing like that in me; and those that are setting the
law perpetually before your eyes, and enforcing holiness
from that, in order to blind your mind, and prejudice
your soul, against the truth and the preachers of it,
give you no other proof of their superior holiness than
what you hear from their mouth. There is no more power in
their discourses, no more savour in their conversations,
no more knowledge in the word, no more experience of
grace, no more success in their ministry, no more
liberality, no more prevalency with God in prayer, no
more circumspection before men, nor conscientiousness
towards God, than appears in some that are called
Antinomians; nor half so much. Men who have nothing to
recommend them either in heart or life, must do all by
the sound of a trumpet. he that laboured more abundantly
than they all, and much more to the purpose, said,
"It is not 1, but the grace of God that was with
me." But we have some in our days who tell us they
fetch all their comfort from their holiness, and their
holiness from the law: and I believe them; for they seem
to have no fellowship with the God of comfort, nor
experience of the Holy Ghost. Cleave thou to
the Saviour,
and depend on his grace; and, when these fail, then try
the law. The way to Sinai is broader than the way to
Zion; the path is the most beaten, and there are the
greatest number of travellers. It is easier to get law
than gospel; and a throne of judgment is more accessible
than a throne of grace.
-
- We have legions of unconverted preachers
of the letter, but ministers of the Spirit are few. Most
men will proclaim their own goodness, but a faithful man
who can find? Men who are unacquainted with the power of
godliness must enforce the letter, for that is all their
stock. With the letter, a great noise, and a fair shew in
the flesh, they deceive the simple. The mystery of faith
is a puzzling thing to an unexperienced heart and an
unenlightened head: when they attempt this they only
betray their ignorance. The gentleman was right;
"Without holiness no man shall see the Lord;"
and, if he has no holiness but what he gets from the law,
he will never see the Lord with acceptance; for
"Except a man be born again (of the Holy Ghost) he
cannot see (much less enter into) the kingdom of
God." This kingdom of God is in power: regeneration
enlightened us into it, and gives us a sensible enjoyment
of it; for it stands in righteousness, peace, and joy, in
the Holy Ghost; nothing of which comes to us from the
law.
-
- If enforcing the law as the only rule of
life, and setting it before thee as thy only standard of
holiness, be accompanied with power; if it produce love
to God and man; if it promote true holiness; if it
refresh the new man, and clothe the soul with humility
and self loathing; if it endear Christ, and strengthen
faith; if it produce spiritual life and peace; if it
enlighten the eyes, enlarge the heart, wean from the
world, purify the soul, encourage diligence, and make
God, in his ways and worship, the delight of thy soul,
thou mayest well bear with them; for these things come
from God, and do accompany salvation. But I know there is
nothing of all this attends such preaching; and this
letter of yours is a sufficient proof of it.
-
- I have set before my sister the law and
the gospel, commandments and promises, life and death, a
blessing and a curse. If thou cleave to the letter of the
law, and make that thy rule of life, walk, actions, and
conversation; then thy obedience will be the obedience of
the law, not of faith; they will be thy fruits, not the
fruits of the Spirit. By the law you work, by the gospel
God works in me. You produce fruit in obedience to the
letter; in Christ is my fruit found. You work by the law,
by the gospel God works all my works in me. By the law
you must make a new heart, and a new spirit; by the
gospel God creates me anew in Christ Jesus. By the law
you must love God; by the gospel God's love is shed
abroad in my heart. By the law you must wash you, and
make you clean; by the gospel God cleanses me from all
filthiness both of flesh and spirit. Thus God works by
the gospel, and by the law you work: by the one self is
denied, and Christ is all in all; by the other, self is
exalted, and you are all in all. One of these agents must
give way: grace must be grace, and works no more works;
or works must be all, and grace nothing at all.
-
- "I do not frustrate the grace of God;
for, if righteousness come by the law, Christ is dead in
vain." And as righteousness did not come by the law,
so neither did holiness, life, or sanctification come by
the law. Christ is made of God unto us wisdom, life,
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption; and he
doth sanctify and cleanse his church, and present it
without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing. If this opens
a door to all licentiousness, then it follows that man's
dead works are true holiness; and all God's works, which
are perfect, licentiousness. Will not this be bitterness
in the end? God tells me that I am become dead to the
law, am delivered from the law, and that I am not under
the law. And what is all this death and deliverance for?
That we might live in sin? Nay, we are become dead to the
law, that we may live unto God; we are delivered from it,
that we may serve God in newness of the Spirit; and we
are brought from under it that we might be under grace.
But why living unto God, serving in the Spirit, and being
under grace, should be called a door to all
licentiousness, I know not: I must refer this to the
hearing of the great God when the year of revenges comes
on for the controversy of Zion.
-
- But, if my sister chooses to live to the
law, be under it as her only rule of life, walk, and
action, not accepting deliverance, she is welcome: let
her bow her shoulders to bear, and become a servant to
tribute; she will find, ere long, that the lamp will go
out, and then she will be calling for oil. She is poor
and needy now; but the legal veil sometimes blinds the
eyes to that degree, that a person may be poor and
wretched, miserable, blind, and naked, and yet not know
it. If thou wast to adhere to the voice of Christ in the
promises, and to the voice of the Spirit in thy
conscience, if it be there, thou wouldst find a living
rule much preferable to a killing letter and a yoke of
bondage. On the other hand, she is at full liberty; I
have no dominion over her faith. Let her take the portion
of goods that fall to her, and gather all together, and
trade away with her rule of action; it will not be long
before she will find the law, with its gendering yoke,
will bring her into the wilderness; and when in a far
country and a dry land, she may remember her first
husband, turn beggar, and be glad to live by faith on the
fatted calf and bread of life. Until when I shall leave
Mrs. Instability to make the most of her two opinions:
only adding that, should she ever fail in business;
should the citizen of that country turn swindler; should
she waste her present substance; should the ministers of
the letter starve her with husks; when she comes to
herself. when her belly is in want, when she is humbled
to beg, and longs to come home, I shall not be offended
at the music and dancing, but remain the willing servant
of Mrs. Prodigalis when the father makes merry.
- WILLIAM HUNTINGTON "S.S." (Sinner
Saved)
Please direct your comments to Mike Krall.
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