sold, and his wife, and children, and all that he
had, and payment to be made. The servant therefore
fell down, and worshipped him, saying, Lord, have
patience with me, and I will pay thee all. Then
the lord of that servant was moved with compassion,
and loosed him, and forgave him the debt” (Matt,
xviii. 28-27). But suppose that that servant had
disputed the claim, and had put in an appeal
to justice instead of an appeal to mercy, upon the
ground that inasmuch as he had lost his property and
had nothing to pay with, therefore he was not obligated
to pay, think you that the king would have conceded
the equity of the claim? On the contrary, he
would have entered into no argument in so plain a case,
but would have “delivered him to the tormentors,
till he should pay all that was due unto him.”
So likewise shall the heavenly Father do also unto
you, and to every man, who attempts to diminish the
original claim of God to a perfect obedience and service,
by pleading the fall of man, the corruption of human
nature, the strength of sinful inclination and affections,
and the power of earthly temptation. All these
are man’s work, and not that of the Creator.
This helplessness and bondage grows directly out of
the nature of sin. “Whosoever committeth
sin is the slave of sin. Know ye not, that to
whom ye yield yourselves slaves to obey, his slaves
ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death,
or of obedience unto righteousness?” (John viii.
34; Rom. vi. 16).
In view of the subject as thus discussed, we invite
attention to some practical conclusions that flow
directly out of it. For, though we have been
speaking upon one of the most difficult themes in Christian
theology, namely man’s creation in holiness and
his loss of holiness by the apostasy in Adam, yet
we have at the same time been speaking of one of the
most humbling, and practically profitable, doctrines
in the whole circle of revealed truth. We never
shall arrive at any profound sense of sin, unless
we know and feel our guilt and corruption by nature;
and we shall never arrive at any profound sense of
our guilt and corruption by nature, unless we know
and understand the original righteousness and innocence
in which we were first created. We can measure
the great depth of the abyss into which, we have fallen,
only by looking up to those great heights in the garden
of Eden, upon which our nature once stood beautiful
and glorious, the very image and likeness of our Creator.
1. We remark then, in the first place, that it
is the duty of every man to humble himself on account
of his lack of original righteousness, and to repent
of it as sin before God.