God's Anger Against The Wicked
"God is angry with the wicked every day" Psalm 7:11
In speaking from this text I design to show briefly,
I. Who are wicked in the scripture sense of
this term;
II. That God is angry with them;
III. The nature of this anger;
IV. The reasons for it;
V. Its degree;
VI. Its duration;
VII. The terrible condition of sinners under it.
I. The Bible divides all the human race into two classes
only; the righteous and the wicked. Those are righteous who have true faith in
Christ, whose spirit is consecrated to God, who live a heavenly life on earth,
and who have been renewed by the Holy Ghost. Their original selfishness is
subdued and slain, and they live a new life through the ever present grace of
Christ Jesus.
Right over against them in character are the wicked, who have not been renewed
in heart--who live in selfishness, under the dominion of appetite in some of its
forms, and it matters not in which out of all possible forms, it may be; but
self is the great and only ultimate end of their life; these are in the
scriptural sense, the wicked.
II. God is angry with the wicked. Our text explicitly affirms this. The same
truth is affirmed and implied in numerous other passages. Let the sinner
remember that this is the testimony of God Himself. Who should better know the
feelings of God towards sinners than God Himself does? Who on this point can
gainsay what God affirms?
But this truth is also taught by reason. Every man in the exercise of his reason
knows it ought to be true. If God were not opposed to the wicked, He would be
wicked Himself for not opposing them. What would you think of a judge who did
not hate and oppose law-breakers? Would you think him an honest man if he did
not take sides against transgressors? Everybody knows that this is the dictate
of reason and of common sense. Sinners know this, and always assume it in their
practical judgments. They know that God is angry with them, and ought to
be--though they may not realize it. Sinners know many things which they do not
realize. For instance, you who are in sin know that you must die; but you have
more reason to be assured that God is angry with you than you have to be sure
that you must die; for it is not necessarily so certain that you will die as it
is that God is angry with you for your sin. God may possibly translate you from
this world to another without your death--as He has some others; but there never
was and never can be any exception to the universal law of His anger against all
the wicked. You know this therefore with an absolute certainty which precludes
all possibility of rations doubt.
Sinners do know this, and I have said, and always assume it in their practical
judgments. Else why are they afraid to die--why afraid to meet God face to face
in the world of retribution? Would they have this fear if they did not know that
God is angry with them for their sin? It would be gratuitous therefore to prove
this truth to the sinner; he already knows it--knows it not only as a thing that
is, but as what ought to be.
III. The nature of this anger demands our attention. On this point it is
important to notice negatively,
1. It is not a malicious anger. God is never malicious; never has a disposition
to do any wrong in any way--to any being. He is infinitely far from such
feelings, and from any such developments of anger.
2. His anger is not passion in the sense in which men are wont to exhibit
passion in anger. You may often have seen men whose sensibility is lashed into
fury under an excitement of anger; their very souls seem to be boiling with
fermentation, so intense is their excitement. Reason for the time is displaced,
and passion reigns. Now God is never angry in such a way. His anger against the
wicked involves no such excitement of passion.
3. God's anger can not be in any sense a selfish anger; for God is not selfish
in the least degree, but infinitely the reverse of it. Of course His anger
against the wicked must be entirely devoid of selfishness.
In our attempts to conceive of the mental faculties of the divine mind, we are
under a sort of necessity of reasoning analogically from our own minds.
Revelation has told us that we are "made in the image of God." Of
course the mind of God is the antetype from which ours was cast. The great
constituent elements of mind we must suppose are therefore alike in both the
infinite and the finite. As we have intellect, sensibility, and will, so has
God.
From our own minds moreover we infer not only what the faculties of the divine
mind are, but also the laws under which they act. We know that in the presence
of certain objects we naturally feel strong opposition. Those objects are so
related to our sensibility that anger and indignation are the natural result. We
could not act according to the fixed laws of our own minds if we did not utterly
disapprove wrong-doing, and if our disapproval of it moreover did not awaken
some real sensibility in the form of displeasure and indignation against the
wrong-doer.
Some suppose that these results of the excited sensibility against wrong would
not develop themselves if our hearts were right. This is a great mistake. The
nearer right our hearts are, the more certainly shall we disapprove wrong, the
more intensely shall we feel opposed to it, and the greater will be our
displeasure against the wrong-doer. Hence we must not only suppose that God is
angry in the sense of a will opposed to sin, but in the further sense of a
sensibility enkindled against it. This must be the case if God is truly a moral
agent.
4. God is not angry merely against the sin abstracted from the sinner, but
against the sinner himself. Some persons have labored hard to set up this
ridiculous and absurd abstraction, and would fain make it appear that God is
angry at the sin yet not at the sinner. He hates the theft, but loves the thief.
He abhors adultery, but is pleased with the adulterer. Now this is supreme
non-sense. The sin has not moral character apart from the sinner. The act is
nothing apart from the actor. The very thing that God hates and disapproves is
not the mere event--the thing done in distinction from the doer; but it is the
doer himself. It grieves and displeases Him that a rational moral agent, under
His government, should array himself against his own God and Father, against all
that is right and just in the universe. This is the thing that offends God. The
sinner himself is the direct and the only object of His anger.
So the Bible shows. God is angry with the wicked--not with the abstract sin. If
the wicked turn not, God will whet His sword; He hath bent His bow and made it
ready; not to shoot the sin however, but the sinner--the wicked man who has done
the abominable thing. This is the only doctrine of either the Bible or of common
sense on this subject.
5. The anger of God against the wicked implies all that properly belongs to
anger when it exists with good reason. We know by our own experience that when
we are angry with good reason, we have strong opposition of will and also strong
feelings of displeasure and disapprobation against the wrong-doers. Hence we may
infer that the same is true of God under the same circumstances.
IV. The reasons of God's anger against the wicked next demand our attention. His
anger is never excited without good reasons. Causeless anger is always sinful.
"Whoever is angry with his brother without a cause is in danger of the
judgment." God never Himself violates His own laws--founded as they are in
infinite right and justice. Hence God's anger always has good reasons.
Good reasons exist for His anger, and He is angry for those reasons. It is not
uncommon for persons to be angry, under circumstances too, which are good
reasons for anger, but still they are not angry for those good reasons, but for
other reasons which are not good. For example, every sinner has good reasons for
being angry with every other sinner for his wickedness against God. But sinners
are not angry against other sinners for those reasons. Although these reasons
actually exist, yet when angry at sinners, it is not for these good reasons, but
for some selfish reasons which are not good. This is a common case. You see
persons angry, and if you reprove them for their anger as sinful, they seek to
justify themselves by affirming that they are angry with the man for his
sins--for his wrong-doing against God. Now this is indeed a good and sufficient
reason for anger, and the justification would be a good one if the anger were
really excited by this cause. But often, although this reason exists, and is
pleaded by the man as his excuse for anger, yet it is not excuse, for in fact he
is not angry for this cause, but has some selfish reason for his anger. Not so
with God. God is angry with the wicked not irrespective of his sins, but for his
sins.
1. Wicked men are entirely unreasonable. Their conduct is at war with all reason
and with all right. God has given them intelligence and conscience; but they act
in opposition to both. God has given them a pure and good law, yet this they
recklessly violate. Hence their conduct is in every point of view utterly
unreasonable.
Now we all know that by a fixed law of our being nothing can be a greater
temptation to anger than to see persons act unreasonably. This is one of the
greatest trials that can occur, and one of the strongest incentives to anger. So
when God looks at the unreasonable conduct of sinners He feels the strongest
indignation and displeasure. If they were not rational beings endowed with
reason, no anger would be awakened and called forth; but since God knows them to
be endowed with reason and to be capable of true and noble-hearted obedience, He
cannot fail of being displeased with their transgression.
2. The course of the wicked is utterly ruinous. No thanks to the sinner if his
influence does not ruin the whole world. By the very laws of mind, the sin of
any one man tends to influence other men to sin, and they spread far and wide
the dreadful contagion of his example. It may truly be said that the sinner does
the worst thing possible to him to ruin the universe. He sets the example of
rebellion against the supreme government of all worlds. And what influence can
be more potent than that of example? What worse thing therefore can the sinner
do to destroy all good than he is doing by his sin? No thanks to him if every
man who sees his sin does not imitate it to his own ruin, and throw the power of
his own example broad-cast over all his associates. No thanks to any sinner if
his own influence for ruin does not run like fire on the prairies over all the
world, and then over every other world of moral beings in the universe of God.
Think of the father of a family, living in his sins and exerting his great
influence over his household to make them all as wicked as himself. Who can
estimate the power of his influence over his wife and his children? Does he pray
with them and seek to lead them to God? No; his example is prayerless. It
proclaims every day to his family -- "You have no occasion at all to pray.
You see I can live without prayer." Does he read the Bible to them or with
them? No; his constant example before them sets the Bible at naught, and
continually suggests that they will be as well off without reading the Bible as
with. His whole influence therefore is ruinous to the souls of his family. No
thanks to him if they do not all go down to hell along with himself. If they do
not scream around him with yells of mingled imprecation and despair, cursing him
as the guilty author of their ruin, he will have other agencies to thank besides
his own. Surely he has done what he well could do to secure results so dreadful
as these. Has not God good reasons to be angry with him? Why not? Would not you
feel that you have good reasons to be angry with a man who should come into your
family to destroy its peace--to seduce your wife and daughters, and to entice
your sons into some pathway of crime and ruin? Certainly you would. Now do not
all families belong to God in a far higher sense than any mans' family belong to
him? Why then has not God as good reasons for anger against a wicked father as
you could have against a villain who should plot and seek to effect the mischief
and ruin of your family? Is it wonderful to you that God should be angry with
every wicked father? Just consider what that father is doing by his bare
example--even supposing that his words are well-guarded and not particularly
liable to objection. Who does not know that example is the very highest and
strongest moral power? It does not need the help of teaching to make its power
felt for terrible mischief. The prayerless husband and father! The devil could
not do worse--nay, more, not so bad, for the devil never had mercy offered
him--never stood related as this wicked father does, to offered pardon and to
the glorious gospel. If then God would have good reason to be angry at the
devil, much more has He for anger against this wicked father.
The same substantially is true of other classes of sinners. It is essential to
their very course as sinners, that they are in rebellion against God, and are
doing the very worst thing in the universe by drawing other moral beings into
sin.
Again, God is so good and sinners are so wicked, He can not help being angry at
them. If He were not angry at the wicked, He would be as much worse than they as
He is wiser than they. Since in His wisdom and knowledge He knows more fully
than they do, the great evil of sin; by so much the more is He under obligation
to be displeased with sin and angry at the sinner. We sometimes hear men say,
"God is too good to be angry at sinners." What do men mean by this
language? Do they mean that God is too good to be opposed to all evil--too good
to be displeased with all evil-doers? This were indeed a strange goodness! God
too good to hate sin--too good to oppose sinners! What sort of goodness can this
be?
I have sometimes heard men say that if God should be angry with sinners, He
would be as bad as the devil himself. Now this is not only horrible language on
the score of its blasphemy; but it is monstrous absurdity on the score of its
logic. The amount of its logic is that God would be Himself wicked if He should
be displeased at wickedness. So wrong it must be to hate the wrong-doer!! Pray
who is it that holds such doctrine? Is it not possible that they feel some
interest in sustaining wrong-doers even against God Himself.
Really there is no force, no plausibility even, in this language about the wrong
of God's being angry at sinners, except what arises from misconceiving and
misrepresenting the true idea of the divine anger in this case. If God's anger
were in itself sinful--as is the case often with man's anger--then of course,
nothing more can be said in its vindication. But since His anger is never
sinful, never selfish, never malicious, never unholy or wrong in any degree
whatever, nothing can be more false, nothing more sophistical, nothing more
ungenerous and vile and Satanic than to imply that it is. But this is just what
men do when they say that for God to be angry at sinners is to be Himself
wicked.
The true view of this case is not by any means abstruse or difficult of
apprehension. Who does not know that good men are by virtue of their goodness
opposed to wicked men? Surely all wicked men know this well enough. Else why the
fear they have of good and law-abiding men? Why do all horse-thieves and
counterfeiters keep dark from good men--dread their presence--commonly feel a
strong dislike to them and always dread their influence as hostile to their own
wicked schemes?
So wicked men feel towards God. They know that His goodness places Him in
hostile array against themselves. This fact seems to be implied in the
Psalmist's expostulation--"Why boastest thou thyself in mischief, O mighty
man? The goodness of God endureth continually." God is always good; how can
you be proud of your wickedness? God is too good and too constantly good to
afford you any scope for sin--any ground of hope for peace with Him in your
iniquity.
V. The degree of God's anger against sin should be next considered. It is plain
that the degree of God's anger against the wicked ought to be equal to the
degree of their wickedness, and must be if God is what He should be. The times
of heathen ignorance and darkness "God winked at"--the degree of their
guilt being less by as much as their light is less than that of such cities as
Chorazin and Bethsaida. God does not hold them innocent absolutely, but
relatively they might almost be called innocent, compared with the great guilt
of sinners in gospel lands. Against those who sin amid the clearest light, His
anger must burn most intensely; for example, against sinners in this place and
congregation. You may be outwardly a decent and moral man, respected and beloved
by your friends; but if you are a selfish, impenitent sinner the pure and holy
God loathes and abhors you. He sees more real guilt in you than in ten thousand
of those dark-minded heathen who are bowing down to idol gods, and whose crimes
you read of with loathing and disgust. Think of it. God may be more angry
against you for your great wickedness than against a nation of idolaters whose
ignorance He winks at, while He measures your light and consequent guilt in the
balances of His own eternal justice. O are you living here amid the blazing
sun-light of truth--knowing your duty every day and every day refusing to do it;
do you not know that in the eye of God you are one of the wickedest beings out
of hell, or in hell either, and that God's hatred against your sin is equal to
your great guilt? But you say perhaps, Am I not moral and honest? Suppose you
are moral. For whose sake are you moral, and for what reason? Is it not for your
reputation's sake only? The devil might be as moral for such a purpose as you
are. Mark, it is not for God's sake, not for Christ's sake, that you are a moral
man, but because you love yourself. You might be just as moral if there were no
God, or if you were an atheist. Of course if so, you are saying in your heart
let there be no fear of God before my eyes--no love of God in my heart. Let me
live and have my own way as if there were no God. And all this you do not under
the darkness of heathenism, but amid the broadest sun-light of heaven's truth
blazing all around you. Do you still ask, What have I done? You have arrayed
yourself against God, rejected the gospel of His Son, and done despite to the
Spirit of His grace. What heathen has ever done this, or anything that could
compare with this in guilt? The vilest heathen people that ever wallowed in the
filth of their own abominations are pure compared with you. Do you start back
and rebel against this view of your case? Then let us ask again, By what rule
are we to estimate guilt? You pass along the street and you see the lower
animals doing what you would be horrified to see human beings do, but you never
think of them as guilty. You see those dogs try to tear each other to pieces;
you will try perhaps to part them, but you will not think of feeling moral
indignation or moral displeasure against them; and why? Because you
instinctively judge of their guilt by their light, and by their capacity of
governing themselves by light and reason. On nearly the same principle you might
see the heathen reeking in their abominations, quarreling, and practicing the
most loathsome forms of vice and selfishness--but their guilt is only a
glimmering taper compared with yours, and therefore you can not but estimate
their guilt as by so much less than your own as their light is less! Your reason
demands that you should estimate guilt on this principle, and you know that you
can not rightly estimate it on any other. For the very same reason you must
conclude that God estimates guilt on the same principles, and that His anger
against sin is in proportion to the sinners' guilt, estimated in view of the
light he enjoys and sins against. The degree of God's anger against the wicked
is not measured by their outward conduct, but by their real guilt as seen by Him
whose eye is on the heart.
VI. As to the duration of God's anger against the wicked, it manifestly must
continue as long as the wickedness itself continues. As long as wicked men
continue wicked, so long must God be angry at them every day. If they turn not,
there can be no abatement, no cessation of His anger. This is so plain that
everybody must know it.
VII. The terrible condition of the sinner against whom God is angry.
This dreadful truth that God is angry with the wicked every day, sinners know,
but do not realize. Yet it were well for you who are sinners to apprehend and
estimate this just as it is.
Look then at the attributes of God. Who and what is God? Is He not a Being whose
wrath against you is to be dreaded? You often feel that it is a terrible thing
to incur the displeasure of some men. Children are often exceedingly afraid of
the anger of their parents. Any child has reason to feel that it is a terrible
state of things, when he has done wrong and knows it must come to the knowledge
of his father and his mother, and must arouse their keenest displeasure against
himself--this is terrible, and no wonder a child should dread it. How much more
has the sinner reason to fear and tremble when by his sin he has made the
Almighty God his enemy! Think of his state; think of the case of the sinner's
exposing himself to the indignation of the great and dreadful God! Look at God's
natural attributes. Who can measure the extent of His power? Who or what can
resist His will? He taketh up the isles as a very little thing, and the nations
before Him are only as the small dust of the balance. When His wrath is kindled,
who can stand before it, or stay its dreadful fury?
Think also of His Omniscience. He knows all you have done. Every act has passed
underneath His eye; and not every external act, merely, but what is far more
dreadful to you, every motive lying back of every act--all the most hidden
workings of your heart. O, if you were only dealing with some one whom you could
deceive, how would you set yourself at work to plan some deep scheme of
deception; but all in vain here, for God knows it all. If it were a case between
yourself and some human tribunal you might cover up many things; you might
perjure yourself, or might smuggle away the dreaded witnesses; but before God,
no such measures can avail you for one moment. The whole truth will come out,
dread its disclosure as much as you may. The darkness and the light are both
alike to Him, and nothing can be hidden from His eye.
Again, not only does God know everything you have done, and not only is He
abundantly able to punish you, but He is as much disposed as He is able, or
omniscient. You will find He has no disposition to overlook your guilt. He is so
good that He never can let sin unrepented of pass unnoticed and unpunished. It
would be an infinite wrong to the universe if He should! If He were to do it, He
would at once cease to be a good and holy God!
O, sinner, do you ever think of God's perfect holiness--the infinite purity of
His heart! Do you ever think how intensely strong must be His opposition to your
sin--to those sins of yours which are so bad even in your own view that you
cannot bear to have many of your fellow men know them? How do you suppose your
guilty soul appears in the eye of the pure and holy God?
You often hear of God's mercy. You hope for some good to yourself, perhaps, from
this attribute of His nature. Ah, if you had not spurned it, and trampled it
under your feet! If you had not slighted and abused its manifestations to you,
it might befriend you in your day of need; but ah, how can you meet insulted
mercy! What can you say for yourself in defense for having sinned against the
richest mercy the world ever saw? Can you hope that God's injured mercy will
befriend you? Nay, verily; God has not one attribute which is not armed against
you. Such is His nature, and such is His character that you have nothing to
hope, but everything to fear. His dreadful anger against you must be expressed.
He may withhold its expression for a season to give the utmost scope for efforts
to reclaim and save you; but when these efforts shall have failed, then will not
justice take her course? Will not insulted Majesty utter her awful voice? Will
not the infinite God arise in His awful purity, and proclaim--"I hate all
wickedness, My anger burns against the sinner to the lowest hell"? Will not
Jehovah take measures to make His true position towards sinners known?
REMARKS.
1. God is much more opposed to sinners than Satan is. Doubtless this must be so,
for Satan has no special reason for being opposed to sinners. They are doing his
work very much as he would have them. We have no evidence that Satan is
displeased with their course. But God is displeased with them, and for the best
of reasons.
Men sometimes say--"If God is angry with the wicked He is worse than
Satan." They seem to think that Satan is a liberal, generous-hearted being.
They are rather disposed to commend him as on the whole very charitable and
noble-hearted. They may think that Satan is bad enough, but they can not be
reconciled to it that God should be so hard on sinners.
Now the facts are that God is too good to be otherwise than angry with sinners.
The devil is so bad himself that he finds no difficulty in being well enough
pleased with their vileness. It does not offend him. Hence from His very nature
God must hate the sinner infinitely more than Satan does.
2. If God were not angry with sinners, He would not be worthy of confidence.
What would you think of a civil governor who should manifest no indignation
against transgressors of the law? You would say of course that he had not the
good of the community at heart, and you could have no confidence in him.
3. God's anger with sinners is not inconsistent with His happiness. Why should
it be, if it is not inconsistent with His holiness? If there were anything wrong
about it, then it would indeed destroy all His happiness; but if it be
intrinsically right, then it not only can not destroy His happiness, but He
could not be happy without anger against the wicked. His happiness must be
conditioned upon His acting and feeling in accordance with the reality of
things. Hence, if God did not hate sin and did not manifest His hatred in all
proper ways, He could not respect Himself. He could not retire within the great
deep of His own nature, and enjoy eternal bliss in the consciousness of infinite
rectitude.
4. God's opposition to sinners is His glory. It is all-glorious to God to
manifest His anger towards wicked men and devils. Is not this the fact with all
good rulers? Do they not seize every opportunity to manifest their opposition to
the wicked, and is not this their real glory? Do we not account it their glory
to be zealous and efficient in detecting crime? Most certainly. They can have no
other real glory. But suppose a ruler should sympathize with murderers, thieves,
robbers. We should execrate his very name!
5. Saints love God for His opposition to sinners, not excepting even His
opposition to their own sins. They could not have confidence in Him if He did
not oppose their own sins, and it is not in their hearts to ask Him to favor
even their own iniquities. No, where they come near Him, and see how He is
opposed to their own sins, and to them on account of them, they honor Him and
adore Him the more. They do not want any being in the universe to connive at
their own sins, or to take any other stand towards themselves as sinners, than
that of opposition.
6. This text is to be understood as it reads. Its language is to be taken in its
obvious sense. Some have supposed that God is not really angry with sinners, but
uses this language in accommodation to our understandings.
This is an unwarrantable latitude of interpretation. Suppose we should apply the
same principle to what is said of God's love. When we read, "God so loved
the world as to give His only begotten Son," suppose we say, this cannot
mean real love, such as we feel for each other--no, nothing like this; the
language is only used by way of accommodation, and really has no particular
sense whatever. This sort of interpretation would destroy the Bible, or any
other book ever written. The only sound view of this matter is that God speaks
as sensible men do--to be understood by the reader and hearer, and of course
uses language in its most obvious sense. If He says He is angry against the
wicked, we must suppose that He really is.
It is indeed true that we are to qualify the language as I have already shown by
what we absolutely know of His real character, and therefore hence infer that
this language cannot imply malicious anger, or selfish anger, or any forms of
anger inconsistent with infinite benevolence. But having made the necessary
qualifications, there are no more to be made, and the cardinal idea of anger
still remains--a fixed eternal displeasure and opposition against all sinners
because of their great guilt.
7. God's anger against the sinner does not exclude love--real, compassionate
love. Not however the love of complacency, but the love of well-wishing and
good-willing; not the love of him as a sinner, but the love for him as a
sentient being who might be infinitely happy in obedience to his God. This is
undoubtedly the true view to be taken of God's attitude towards sinners. What
parent does not know what this is? You have felt the kindlings of indignation
against the wickedness of your child, but blended with this you have also felt
all the compassionate tenderness of a parent's heart.
The sinner sometimes says--"It can not be that God is angry with me, for He
watches over me day by day; He feeds me from His table, and regales me with His
bounties." Ah sinner, you may be greatly mistaken in this matter. Don't
deceive yourself. God is slow to anger indeed: that is, He is slow to give
expression to His anger, and Himself assigns the reason,--because He is
long-suffering towards sinners, "not willing that any should perish, but
that all should come to repentance." But take care that you do not
misconceive His real feelings towards you. Beware lest you misinterpret His
great forbearance. He waits, I know; but the storm of vengeance is gathering.
How soon He may come forth out of His place and unlock suddenly all the
whirlwinds of His vengeance! Ah sinner, this once done, they will sleep no more!
8. It is plain that sinners do not realize God's anger, though they know it. If
they do both know and realize it, they manifest a degree of hardihood in
iniquity which is dreadful. But the fact is, they keep the thought of God's
anger from their minds. They are reckless about it, and treat it as they do
death. Sinners know they must die, but they do not realize this fact. They do
not love to sit down and commune with death--thinking how soon it may come, how
certainly it will come--how the grave-worms will gnaw the flesh from their
cheek-bones, and consume those eyes now bright and sparkling. These young ladies
don't love to commune with such thoughts as these, and realize how soon these
scenes will be realities.
So you don't love to think of God's anger against sin; of His reasons for His
anger, and of His great provocations. You probably don't' like to hear me preach
about it, and yet I preach as mildly as I can. You can't bear to hear the
subject brought forward and pressed upon your attention. Tell me, are you in the
habit of sitting down and considering this subject attentively? If you were to
do so, you could not contemn God and treat Him as if you had no care for Him.
9. Are you aware sinner, that you have made God your enemy, and have you thought
how terrible a thing this is? Do you consider how impotent you are to withstand
God? If you were in any measure dependent on any one of your fellow men you
would not like to make him your enemy. The student in this college is careful
not to make the faculty, or any one of them his enemy. The child has the same
solicitude in regard to his parent. Now consider what you are doing towards
God--that God who holds your breath in His hands--your very life in His power.
Let Him only withdraw His hand and you sink to hell by your own gravity. On a
slippery steep you stand, and the billows of damnation roll below! O sinner, are
you aware that when you lie down at night with your weapons of rebellion against
God in your very hands, His blazing eye is on you--are you well aware of this?
You may recollect the case of a Mr. H. once a student here. For a considerable
time he had been rebellious against the truth of God as presented here to his
mind, and this spirit of rebellion rose gradually to a higher and yet higher
pitch. It seemed to have made about as much head as he could well bear, and in
this state he retired to bed, and extinguished his light. All at once his room
seemed full of dazzling splendor--he gazed around--there stood before him a
glorious form--with eyes of unearthy and most searching power; gradually all
else disappeared save one eye which shone with indescribable brilliancy and
seemed to search him through and through. The impression made on his mind was
awful. O, said he, I could not have lived under it many minutes if I had not
yielded and bowed in submission to the will of God.
Sinner, have you ever considered that God's searching eye is on you? Do you
think of it whenever you lie down at night? If you should live so long and
should lie down again on your bed, think of it then. Write it down on a little
card and hang it where it will most often catch your eye--"Thou, God, seest
me." Do this; and then realize that God's eye is penetrating your very
heart. O that searching, awful eye! You close your eyes to sleep--still God's
eye is on you. It closes not for the darkness of night. Do you say, "I
shall sleep as usual--I am not the sinner who will be kept awake through fear of
God's wrath--Why should I be afraid of God? What have I to fear? I know indeed
that God says 'Give Me thine heart,' but I have no thought of doing it. I have
disobeyed Him many years and see no flaming wrath yet. I expect He will feed me
still and fill my cup with every form of blessings."
O sinner, for these very reasons have you the more cause to dread His burning
wrath! You have abused His mercy well nigh to the last moment of endurance. O
how soon will His wrath break forth against thee, and no arm in all the universe
can stay its whelming floods of ruin! And if you don't believe it, its coming
will be all the more sure, speedy and awful!