The Riches of Bunyan eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 591 pages of information about The Riches of Bunyan.

The Riches of Bunyan eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 591 pages of information about The Riches of Bunyan.

But what will God now do?  Will he take this advantage to destroy the sinner?  No.  Will he let him alone in his apostasy?  No.  Will he leave him to recover himself by the strength of his now languishing grace?  No.  What then?  Why, he will seek this man out till he finds him, and bring him home to himself again:  “For thus saith the Lord God, Behold I, even I, will both search my sheep, and seek them out, as a shepherd seeketh out his flock in the day that he is among the sheep that are scattered; so will I seek out my sheep, and will deliver them out of all places where they have been scattered.  I will seek that which was lost, and bring again that which was driven away; I will bind up that which was broken, and will strengthen that which was sick.”  Ezek. 34:11-16.

Of God’s ordinary way of fetching the backslider home I will not now discourse; namely, whether he always breaketh his bones for his sins, as he broke David’s, or whether he will all the days of his life for this leave him under guilt and darkness; or whether he will kill him now, that he may not be condemned in the day of judgment, as he dealt with them at Corinth.  I Cor. 11:  30-32.

God is wise, and can tell how to imbitter backsliding to them he loveth.  He can break their bones and save them; he can lay them in the lowest pit, in darkness and the deep, and save them; he can slay them as to this life, and save them.  And herein appears wonderful grace, that Israel is not forsaken.

8.  But suppose God deals not either of these ways with the backslider, but shines upon him again, and seals up to him the remission of his sins a second time, saying, “I will heal their backslidings, and love them freely.”  What will the soul do now?  Surely it will walk humbly now, and holily all its days.  It will never backslide again, will it?  It may happen it will not; it may happen it will.  It is just as his God keeps him; for although his sins are of himself, his standing is of God; I say, his standing while he stands, and his recovery if he falls, are both of God.  Wherefore, if God leaves him a little, the next gap he finds, away he is gone again:  “My people,” says God, “are bent to backsliding from me.”

Here is grace.  So many times as the soul backslides, so many times God brings him back again—­I mean the soul that must be saved by grace; he renews his pardons and multiplies them.  Yea, for aught I know, there are some saints, and they not long-lived either, that must receive, before they enter into life, millions of pardons from God for these; and every pardon is an act of grace, through the redemption that is in Christ’s blood.

The first step to the cure of a wounded conscience is for thee to know the grace of God, especially the grace of God as to justification.

Grace can pardon our ungodliness and justify us with Christ’s righteousness; it can put the Spirit of Jesus Christ within us; it can help us when we are down; it can heal us when we are wounded; it can multiply pardons, as we through frailty multiply transgressions.

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Project Gutenberg
The Riches of Bunyan from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.