Sermon 7. The Duty of Self-denial
"Surely I have behaved and quieted myself, as a child that
is weaned of his mother: my soul is even as a weaned child."
Psalm cxxxi. 2.
{86} SELF-DENIAL of some kind or other is involved, as is evident, in
the very notion of renewal and holy obedience. To change our hearts is
to learn to love things which we do not naturally love—to unlearn
the love of this world; but this involves, of course, a thwarting of
our natural wishes and tastes. To be righteous and obedient implies
self-command; but to possess power we must have gained it; nor can we
gain it without a vigorous struggle, a persevering warfare against
ourselves. The very notion of being religious implies self-denial,
because by nature we do not love religion.
Self-denial, then, is a subject never out of place in Christian
teaching; still more appropriate is it at a time like this, when we
have entered upon the forty days of Lent, the season of the year set
apart for fasting and humiliation. {87}
This indeed is not all that is meant by self-denial; but before
proceeding with the subject, I would ask whether the generality of
mankind go as far as this: it is plain that they do not. They do not
go so far as to realize to themselves that religious obedience
involves a thwarting of those wishes and inclinations which are
natural to them. They do not like to be convinced, much less will they
act upon the notion, that religion is difficult. You may hear men of
the world say plainly, and as if in the way of argument, "that
God will not punish us for indulging the passions with which we are
born; that it is no praise to be unnatural; and no crime to be a
man." This, however, may seem an extreme case; yet are there not
a great many decent and respectable men, as far as outward character
goes, who at least fix their thoughts on worldly comfort, as the
greatest of goods, and who labour to place themselves in easy
circumstances, under the notion that, when they can retire from the
business of their temporal calling, then they may (in a quiet,
unexceptionable way of course) consult their own tastes and likings,
take their pleasure, and indulge themselves in self-importance and
self-satisfaction, in the enjoyment of wealth, power, distinction,
popularity, and credit? I am not at this moment asking whether such
indulgences are in themselves allowable or not, but whether the life
which centres in them does not imply the absence of any very deep
views of sanctification as a process, a change, a painful toil, of
{88} working out our own salvation with fear and trembling, of preparing to
meet our God, and waiting for the judgment? You may go into mixed
society; you will hear men conversing on their friend's prospects,
openings in trade, or realized wealth, on his advantageous situation,
the pleasant connexions he has formed, the land he has purchased, the
house he has built; then they amuse themselves with conjecturing what
this or that man's property may be, where he lost, where he gained,
his shrewdness, or his rashness, or his good fortune in this or that
speculation. Observe, I do not say that such conversation is wrong; I
do not say that we must always have on our lips the very thoughts
which are deepest in our hearts, or that it is safe to judge of
individuals by such speeches; but when this sort of conversation is
the customary standard conversation of the world, and when a line of
conduct answering to it is the prevalent conduct of the world (and
this is the case), is it not a grave question for each of us, as
living in the world, to ask himself what abiding notion we have of the
necessity of self-denial, and how far we are clear of the danger of
resembling that evil generation which "ate and drank, which
married wives, and were given in marriage, which bought and sold,
planted, and builded, till it rained fire and brimstone from heaven,
and destroyed them all?" [Luke xvii. 27-29.]
It is strange, indeed, how far this same forgetfulness {89} and
transgression of the duty of self-denial at present spreads. Take
another class of persons, very different from those just mentioned,
men who profess much love for religion—I mean such as maintain, that
if a man has faith he will have works without his trouble, so that he
need be at no pains about performing them. Such persons at best seem
to say, that religious obedience is to follow as a matter of course,
an easy work, or rather a necessary consequence, from having some
strong urgent motive, or from some bright vision of the Truth acting
on the mind; and thus they dismiss from their religion the notion of
self-denial, or the effort and warfare of faith against our corrupt
natural will, whether they actually own that they dismiss it or not. I
say that they do this at best; for it often happens, as I just now
intimated, that they actually avow their belief that faith is
all-sufficient, and do not let their minds dwell at all on the
necessity of works of righteousness. All this being considered, surely
I am not wrong in saying that the notion of self-denial as a distinct
religious duty, and, much more (as it may well be called), the essence
of religious obedience, is not admitted into the minds of the
generality of men.
But let it be observed, I have hitherto spoken of self-denial not
as a distinct duty actually commanded in Scripture, but merely as it
is involved in the very notion of sanctification, as necessarily
attendant on that change of nature which God the Holy Spirit
vouchsafes to work {90} within us. But now let us consider it in the light
of the Scripture precepts concerning it, and we shall come to a still
more serious view of it, serious (I mean) to those who are living to
the world; it is this,—that it is our duty, not only to deny
ourselves in what is sinful, but even, in a certain measure, in lawful
things, to keep a restraint over ourselves even in innocent pleasures
and enjoyments.
Now the first proof I shall give of this will at the same time
explain what I mean.
Fasting is clearly a Christian duty, as our Saviour implies in His
Sermon on the Mount. Now what is fasting but a refraining from what is
lawful; not merely from what is sinful, but what is innocent?—from
that bread which we might lawfully take and eat with thanksgiving, but
which at certain times we do not take, in order to deny ourselves.
Such is Christian self-denial,—not merely a mortification of what is
sinful, but an abstinence even from God's blessings.
Again: consider the following declaration of our Saviour: He first
tells us, "Strait is the gate, and narrow is the way which
leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it." And again:
"Strive to enter in, for many, I say unto you, will seek (only
seek) to enter in, and shall not be able." Then He explains to us
what this peculiar difficulty of a Christian's life consists in:
"If any man come to Me, and hate not his father, and mother, and
wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, {91} yes, and his own life
also, he cannot be My disciple." [Matt. vii. 14. Luke xiii. 24;
xiv. 26] Now whatever is precisely meant by this (which I will not
here stop to inquire), so far is evident, that our Lord enjoins a
certain refraining, not merely from sin, but from innocent comforts
and enjoyments of this life, or a self-denial in things lawful.
Again, He says, "If any man will come after Me, let him deny
himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me." [Luke ix.
23.] Here He shows us from His own example what Christian self-denial
is. It is taking on us a cross after His pattern, not a mere
refraining from sin, for He had no sin, but a giving up what we might
lawfully use. This was the peculiar character in which Christ came on
earth. It was this spontaneous and exuberant self-denial which brought
Him down. He who was one with God, took upon Him our nature, and
suffered death—and why? to save us whom He needed not save. Thus He
denied Himself, and took up His cross. This is the very aspect, in
which God, as revealed in Scripture, is distinguished from that
exhibition of His glory, which nature gives us: power, wisdom, love,
mercy, long-suffering—these attributes, though far more fully and
clearly displayed in Scripture than in nature, still are in their
degree seen on the face of the visible creation; but self-denial, if
it may be said, this incomprehensible attribute of Divine Providence,
is disclosed to us only in Scripture. "God so loved the world
that {92} He gave His Son." [John iii. 16.] Here is self-denial. And
the Son of God so loved us, that "though He was rich yet for our
sakes He became poor." [2 Cor. viii. 9.] Here is our Saviour's
self-denial. "He pleased not Himself."
And what Christ did when He came on earth, that have all His saints
done both before and since His coming. Even the saints of the Old
Testament so conducted themselves, to whom a temporal promise was
made, and who, if any, might have surrendered themselves to the
enjoyment of it. They had a temporal promise, they had a present
reward; yet, with a noble faith, and a largeness of soul (how they put
us to shame who have so much higher privileges!) the Jewish believers
grudged themselves the milk and honey of Canaan, as seeking a better
country, that is a heavenly. Elijah, how unlike is he to one who had a
temporal promise! Or take again the instance of Daniel, which is still
more striking,—"They that wear soft clothing are in kings'
houses." Daniel was first in power in the palace of the greatest
monarchs of his time. Yet what do we read of him? First of his living
upon pulse and water, afterwards of his fasting in sackcloth and
ashes, at another time of his mourning three full weeks, eating no
pleasant bread, neither flesh nor wine coming in his mouth, nor
anointing himself at all, till those three weeks were fulfilled. Can
any thing more clearly show the duty of self-denial, even in lawful
things, in the {93} case of Christians, when even God's servants, before
Christ came and commanded it, in proportion as they had evangelical
gifts, observed it?
Or again, consider the words of the text spoken by David, who, if
any, had riches and power poured upon him by the hand of God. He says,
he has "behaved and quieted" himself lest he should be
proud, and made himself "as a weaned child." What an
impressive word is "weaned!" David had put away the
unreserved love and the use of this world. We naturally love the
world, and innocently; it is before us, and meets our eyes and hands
first; its pleasures are dear to us, and many of them not in
themselves sinful, only in their excess, and some of them not sinful
at all;—those, for instance, which we derive from our home, our
friends, and our prospects, are the first and natural food of our
mind. But as children are weaned from their first nourishment, so must
our souls put away childish things, and be turned from the pleasures
of earth to those of heaven; we must learn to compose and quiet
ourselves as a weaned child, to put up with the loss of what is dear
to us, nay, voluntarily to give it up for Christ's sake.
Much more after Christ came does St. Paul give us this same lesson
in the ninth chapter of his first Epistle to the Corinthians:
"Every one that striveth for the mastery is temperate in all
things," i.e. has power over himself, and keeps himself in
subjection, as he presently {94} says. Again, in the seventh chapter,
"The time is short; it remaineth that both they that have wives
be as though they had none, and they that weep as though they wept
not, and they that rejoice as though they rejoiced not, and they that
buy as though they possessed not, and they that use this world as not
abusing it." Here the same doctrine of moderation or temperance
in lawful indulgences is strongly enforced; to weep, to rejoice, to
buy, to possess, to marry, to use this world, are not unlawful, yet we
must not use God's earthly gifts to the full, but in all things we
must be self-denying.
Such is Christian self-denial, and it is incumbent upon us for many
reasons. The Christian denies himself in things lawful because he is
aware of his own weakness and liability to sin; he dares not walk on
the edge of a precipice; instead of going to the extreme of what is
allowable, he keeps at a distance from evil, that he may be safe. He
abstains lest he should not be temperate; he fasts lest he should eat
and drink with the drunken. As is evident, many things are in
themselves right and unexceptionable which are inexpedient in the case
of a weak and sinful creature: his case is like that of a sick person;
many kinds of food, good for a man in health, are hurtful when he is
ill—wine is poison to a man in a fierce fever. And just so, many
acts, thoughts, and feelings, which would have been allowable in Adam
before his fall, are prejudicial or dangerous in man {95} fallen. For
instance, anger is not sinful in itself. St. Paul implies this, when
he says, "Be ye angry and sin not." [Eph. iv. 26.] And our
Saviour on one occasion is said to have been angry, and He was
sinless. Almighty God, too, is angry with the wicked. Anger, then, is
not in itself a sinful feeling; but in man, constituted as he is, it
is so highly dangerous to indulge it, that self-denial here is a duty
from mere prudence. It is almost impossible for a man to be angry only
so far as he ought to be; he will exceed the right limit; his anger
will degenerate into pride, sullenness, malice, cruelty, revenge, and
hatred. It will inflame his diseased soul, and poison it. Therefore,
he must abstain from it, as if it were in itself a sin (though
it is not), for it is practically such to him.
Again, the love of praise is in itself an innocent passion, and
might be indulged, were the world's opinion right and our hearts
sound; but, as things are, human applause, if listened to, will soon
make us forget how weak and sinful we are; so we must deny ourselves,
and accept the praise even of good men, and those we love, cautiously
and with reserve.
So, again, love of power is commonly attendant on a great mind; but
he is the greatest of a sinful race who refrains himself, and turns
from the temptation of it; for it is at once unbecoming and dangerous
in a son of Adam. "Whosoever will be great among you, let him be
your minister," says our Lord; "and whosoever will {96} be chief
among you, let him be your servant." [Matt. xx. 26, 27.] His
reward will be hereafter; to reign with Christ, to sit down with Him
on His throne, to judge angels,—yet without pride.
Again, even in affection towards our relations and friends, we must
be watchful over ourselves, lest it seduce us from the path of duty.
Many a father, from a kind wish to provide well for his family,
neglects his own soul. Here, then, is a fault; not that we can love
our relations too well, but that that strong and most praiseworthy
affection for them may, accidentally, ensnare and corrupt our weak
nature.
These considerations will show us the meaning of our Saviour's
words already cited, about the duty of hating our friends. To hate is
to feel that perfect distaste for an object, that you wish it put away
and got rid of; it is to turn away from it, and to blot out the
thought of it from your mind. Now this is just the feeling we must
cherish towards all earthly blessings, so far as Christ does not cast
His light upon them. He (blessed be His name) has sanctioned and
enjoined love and care for our relations and friends. Such love is a
great duty; but should at any time His guidance lead us by a strange
way, and the light of His providence pass on, and cast these objects
of our earthly affection into the shade, then they must be at once in
the shade to us,—they must, for the time, disappear from our
hearts. "He that {97} loveth father or mother more than Me, is not
worthy of Me." So He says; and at such times, though still loving
them, we shall seem to hate them; for we shall put aside the thought
of them, and act as if they did not exist. And in this sense an
ancient and harsh proverb is true: we must always so love our friends
as feeling that one day or other we may perchance be called upon to
hate them,—that is, forget them in the pursuit of higher duties.
Here, again, then, is an instance of self-denial in lawful things;
and if a person says it is painful thus to feel, and that it checks
the spontaneous and continual flow of love towards our friends to have
this memento sounding in our ears, we must boldly acknowledge that it is
painful. It is a sad thought, not that we can ever be called upon
actually to put away the love of them, but to have to act as if we did
not love them,—as Abraham when called on to slay his son. And this
thought of the uncertainty of the future, doubtless, does tinge all
our brightest affections (as far as this world is concerned) with a
grave and melancholy hue. We need not shrink from this confession,
remembering that this life is not our rest or happiness;—"that
remaineth" to come. This sober chastised feeling is the very
temper of David, when he speaks of having composed and quieted his
soul, and weaned it from the babe's nourishment which this world
supplies.
I hope I have made it clear, by these instances, what {98} is meant by
Christian self-denial. If we have good health, and are in easy
circumstances, let us beware of high-mindedness, self-sufficiency,
self-conceit, arrogance; of delicacy of living, indulgences, luxuries,
comforts. Nothing is so likely to corrupt our heart, and to seduce us
from God, as to surround ourselves with comforts,—to have things our
own way,—to be the centre of a sort of world, whether of things
animate or inanimate, which minister to us. For then, in turn, we
shall depend on them; they will become necessary to us; their very
service and adulation will lead us to trust ourselves to them, and to
idolize them. What examples are there in Scripture of soft luxurious
men! Was it Abraham before the Law, who wandered through his days,
without a home? or Moses, who gave the Law, and died in the
wilderness? or David under the Law, who "had no proud
looks," and was "as a weaned child?" or the Prophets,
in the latter days of the Law, who wandered in sheepskins and
goatskins? or the Baptist, when the Gospel was superseding it, who was
clad in raiment of camel's hair, and ate the food of the wilderness?
or the Apostles, who were "the offscouring of all things"?
or our blessed Saviour, who "had not a place to lay His
head"? Who are the soft luxurious men in Scripture? There was the
rich man, who "fared sumptuously every day," and then
"lifted up his eyes in hell, being in torments." There was
that other, whose "ground brought forth plentifully," and
{99} who said, "Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many
years;" and his soul was required of him that night. There was
Demas, who forsook St. Paul, "having loved this present
world." And, alas! there was that highly-favoured, that
divinely-inspired king, rich and wise Solomon, whom it availed nothing
to have measured the earth, and numbered its inhabitants, when in his
old age he "loved many strange women," and worshipped their
gods.
Far be it from us, soldiers of Christ, thus to perplex ourselves
with this world, who are making our way towards the world to come.
"No man that warreth, entangleth himself with the affairs of this
life, that he may please Him who hath chosen him to be a soldier. If a
man also strive for masteries, yet is he not crowned, except he strive
lawfully." This is St. Paul's rule, as has already been referred
to: accordingly, in another place, he bears witness of himself that he
"died daily." Day by day he got more and more dead to this
world; he had fewer ties to earth, a larger treasure in heaven. Nor
let us think that it is over-difficult to imitate him, though we be
not Apostles, nor are called to any extraordinary work, nor are
enriched with any miraculous gifts: he would have all men like
himself, and all may be like him, according to their place and measure
of grace. If we would be followers of the great Apostle, first let us
with him fix our eyes upon Christ our Saviour; consider the splendour
and glory of His holiness, and {100} try to love it. Let us strive and pray
that the love of holiness may be created within our hearts; and then
acts will follow, such as befit us and our circumstances, in due time,
without our distressing ourselves to find what they should be. You
need not attempt to draw any precise line between what is sinful and
what is only allowable: look up to Christ, and deny yourselves every
thing, whatever its character, which you think He would have you
relinquish. You need not calculate and measure, if you love much: you
need not perplex yourselves with points of curiosity, if you have a
heart to venture after Him. True, difficulties will sometimes arise,
but they will be seldom. He bids you take up your cross; therefore
accept the daily opportunities which occur of yielding to others, when
you need not yield, and of doing unpleasant services, which you might
avoid. He bids those who would be highest, live as the lowest:
therefore, turn from ambitious thoughts, and (as far as you
religiously may) make resolves against taking on you authority and
rule. He bids you sell and give alms; therefore, hate to spend money
on yourself. Shut your ears to praise, when it grows loud: set your
face like a flint, when the world ridicules, and smile at its threats.
Learn to master your heart, when it would burst forth into vehemence,
or prolong a barren sorrow, or dissolve into unseasonable tenderness.
Curb your tongue, and turn away your eye, lest you fall into
temptation. Avoid the dangerous air which relaxes you, and brace
yourself {101} upon the heights. Be up at prayer "a great while before
day," and seek the true, your only Bridegroom, "by night on
your bed." So shall self-denial become natural to you, and a
change come over you, gently and imperceptibly; and, like Jacob, you
will lie down in the waste, and will soon see Angels, and a way opened
for you into heaven.
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