Tuesday, November 21, 2006

PAGTITIIS


Saan man tayo pumaroon
Ang Diablo ay naroroon;
Kaya't tayo'y mangagbantay
Sa tuksong naghihintay.

Anumang kapagsubukan
Ang ating nararanasan;
Nawa'y hindi maging dahilan
Upang bumalik sa kasalanan.

Bagkus ay ating pagka-tiwalaan
Ang Dios na makapangyarihan;
Na kailan ma'y di ka iiwan
Sa oras ng pangangailangan.

Atin lamang paka-ingatan
Ang natamong kaligtasan;
At mamuhay ng may kabanalan
Sa panahong kasalukuyan.

Sapagkat ang Dios ay may habilin
Na lagi nating pakaalalahanin;
"Ang magtiis hanggang sa wakas
Ay siya lamang maliligtas".

Sis. Raquel Ricamara
CYF Philippines

Saturday, November 18, 2006

"BE YE HOLY FOR I AM HOLY"

INTRODUCTION
You can see our theme hanging up here over my head, and when you read the seventh chapter of Ezra and the 23rd verse, you don't find the word exactly in that verse, but you do find it in the marginal reading of the verse. Ezra 7:23, "Whatsoever is commanded by the God of heaven, let it be diligently [or exactly] done." These are the words of King Artaxerxes to Ezra when he was preparing to go to Jerusalem. He was giving Ezra instructions and he said, "Whatsoever is commanded by the God of heaven, let it be [exactly] done." We read in the 10th verse that Ezra had prepared his heart to seek the law of God, or the law of the Lord, and to do it, and to teach in Israel statues and judgments. So we find in Ezra a man who was willing to do what he was instructed to do, for he had prepared his heart. As we think about our theme, I don't want it to come across as something harsh; what I do want us to understand is that God means what He says and He says what He means. The king said, "The God of heaven." When it comes to the God of heaven I'm afraid there are multitudes of people today who have no fear of God before their eyes. That's why there's so much wickedness and ungodliness in the world, because there is no fear of God before their eyes. Now there is a right kind of fear and a wrong kind of fear. The fear that brings torment is not the right kind, but the fear that enables us to reverence, respect and honor Almighty God is proper and right. There is a God in heaven, Daniel said, and I believe it and I'm sure you do to. But even among saints of God, if we're not careful we can take God's commands too lightly. We can disregard them too easily and excuse our self for disobeying them, justifying ourselves. But, let us remember whatever the Lord commands they are to be done exactly.

God told Moses on one occasion to take his rod and strike a rock. The children of Israel were murmuring and complaining. We think we have problems today as pastors, look at Moses. What a people he had to pastor. They were murmuring, they were complaining, and God said, "Take your rod and strike a rock." He did it and water came out of it. They watered not only the people but the cattle as well. Later on they got in the place where again they had no water and God said to Moses, "Speak to the rock." But because the people had provoked Moses, he struck the rock again. That may seem like a rather insignificant thing but if you'll read what God said to Moses, and how that he had disrespected and dishonored God before the people, it was a very, very serious act of disobedience. Yes, the great man Moses disobeyed God, and as a result of his act of disobedience God said, "You shall not be permitted to enter the promised land." So it's a very serious thing to disobey the commands of Almighty God. And, there's always consequences.

Joshua took over the leadership of the children of Israel. They took the city of Jericho. God had said, "Now you are not to take any of the spoils of the city for yourself. All the spoils are to go into the treasury of the Lord." They took the city, a little town the Bible calls Ai, up the road a ways. Joshua sent men up there to spy out and to look around and they came back and said, "It's not necessary to send the whole army up there; just send a small group of men. It's a small city, we'll have no trouble taking it." But whenever the army, the few thousand that went up there, were attacked by the people of the town they fled before them and what was it? 37 Israelites were slain. Joshua threw himself on the ground and said, "Lord, you promised to be with me; you said you'd be with me, what's going on here?" The Lord said, "Get up off your face, Joshua, there's sin in the camp. In spite of all the promises I have given you I will not be with you unless you get this sin out of the camp." You see, most of God's promises are conditional. Joshua had been promised by God, "I'll be with you even as I was with Moses," but sin entering the camp changed the situation. As a result Achan was taken, his family, his cattle and they were stoned. They were piled in a heap and stones were piled over them. Listen Beloved, God means what He says. We need to take Him seriously. That's the introduction to our thoughts.

WE MUST BE HOLY

The subject this morning (This is the introductory message. They'll be numbers of others the Lord willing.) is, "Be Ye Holy, for I Am Holy." That's one of God's commands. God said that we should be holy. Holiness is the way that God's people are to walk. The prophet said, "And an highway shall be there, and a way, and it shall be called The way of holiness; the unclean shall not pass over it" (Isaiah 35:8). There is a way and it's called the way of holiness and He said, the unclean, in other words, the sinners, the unsaved, shall not travel on this highway. This is the highway of holiness and only those who are redeemed are on this highway. Sinners are not on this highway. This is the way of holiness and this is the way that God's people are to walk. "Now Bro. Alvin, we've heard that before." Well you know, I don't have a new Bible and I'm not looking for one. I believe in trying to follow the one we have. Let me say here before I go on, there is such a thing as false holiness. You know, anything straighter than straight is crooked. Any standard that's higher than what the Word of God holds is false holiness, and any standard that's less than what God's Word holds is false. So there is such a thing as false holiness. There are holiness spirits. Thank God there is a way, one way, that is the right way, the highway of holiness and the unclean are not on it. It is for the redeemed. "For God hath not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness," Paul wrote in I Thessalonians 4:7. God never calls anybody to live an unclean life. Those who are living an unclean life are not following God's calling. Peter said in II Peter 1:4, God has given us great and precious promises. Through these we can be partakers of the divine nature. In obtaining this experience we leave corruption that is in the world behind. God has made it possible through Jesus Christ for man who has gone away from God, who has gone into sin, who has become filthy with sin, defiled with sin, to come back to Him, to be cleaned up, to be made holy, and to be made partakers of the divine nature.

TWO WORKS OF GRACE

I don't expect to preach on justification or sanctification as far as messages is concerned, but I do want to refer to them, because it is through these two experiences that we can have this divine nature and be void of the Adamic nature, the carnal nature, our native depravity, whatever you want to call it. Let me say, Beloved, as far as this congregation is concerned, as far as this ministry is concerned, we still believe man has a depraved nature. We believe there is an experience wherein He has cleansed us, cleaned us and delivered us from that depravity. First of all he has to be justified, he has to be converted. Whenever a person is justified they're just because God pardons them. It is not because of any work or righteousness of our own, but it's because God through Christ pardons us. He forgives us. He wipes our sins out of His remembrance to remember them against us forever no more. He removes them from us as far as the east is from the west. Whenever I hear somebody say, "I'm just a sinner saved by grace," I tell them I'm not; I'm not a sinner saved by grace. I was a sinner and I was saved by grace, but I'm no longer a sinner. No, I'm no longer a sinner, and if you're a child of God neither are you. Whenever we're justified, whenever we're forgiven, whenever we're pardoned, whenever we're taken out of that old horrible pit, there's something we need to do after that. We need to have that nature that is contrary to God, that nature that led us into sin to begin with, eradicated. I know there's people that don't believe in that but they don't believe the Bible.

Now whenever you are justified, whenever you are sanctified you have holiness of heart. Holiness of heart means you're free from selfish pride. You know one of the big problems in the world today is self. We blame this, we blame that, we blame environment, we blame influences, and I know people have an influence on us, but you know, our number one problem is self; selfishness. The world is dominated by a get spirit and that get spirit is selfishness: me, myself and I; I don't care who I push down while I'm trying to climb up. I live in the same world you live in and you know that's the kind of world that's out there today. But I tell you, whenever you're justified and you're sanctified it takes out that old selfish, self-seeking, putting self first. I tell you something else it gets out of your heart and gets you free from and that's envy. So much envy in the world today. Along with envy is jealousy. I believe there is a place for the right kind of jealousy. I read in the Bible where God is jealous of His people. I don't blame a man for being jealous of his wife, but he shouldn't carry it so far that he imagines a bunch of stuff on her, begins to accuse her falsely and let his imagination run away with him, that he's so jealous he can't allow somebody to speak to her and vice versa. Listen to me this morning. What I am talking about, justification and sanctification does something for your heart. It changes your life. It gets rid of some things.

Enmity and carnal strife. I don't like strife, do you? I like peace. And you know, it frees you from the desire to rule or to ruin. One of the things that hinders even the Church of God is some people want to rule that have no authority to rule. Now there is rule in the Church of God, there is government in the Church of God, but there's too many people trying to rule that have no authority to rule. You want to upset me, you try to come and tell me to do something when you don't have any authority to tell me. Yes, I can get upset. I have more than one time. Some times some people in the congregation appoint themselves to go around trying to correct everybody else and they end up making more problems for the pastor. I read in the Bible where it says God places the members in the body as it pleases Him. Let every member fill the place God would have them to fill and we'll have harmony and unity. I'm still talking about being justified and sanctified. I say justification and sanctification takes this kind of thing out of your heart. Let me add to that too since I said it. If somebody has the rule over you and you have the right spirit you're going to let them rule over you. I said before and I say again this morning, no pastor can pastor anybody that's not willing to be pastored. No pastor can pastor a person that's going to be their own pastor. It works both ways. The Bible says to obey those that have the rule over you. That's part of it too.

CHRIST IS THE HEAD OF THE CHURCH

It enables you whenever you're really saved and sanctified to see Christ as the Head of the Church and you let Him be Lord of your life. Christ is the head of the Church. Some people don't like Hagerstown. I'm talking about this congregation. It's even been printed in some papers that Hagerstown is not the headquarters of the Church of God. Well, I would think anybody that knew anything about the Church of God would know that. If you don't know that Hagerstown is not the headquarters of the Church of God then you don't know anything about the Church of God. I don't belong to a church that has headquarters in Hagerstown, Maryland. I don't know of one but I don't belong to one. I belong to that one where Christ is the head and the head is in heaven; that is where the headquarters are. I say a saved and sanctified life will acknowledge Christ as the head of the Church and Lord of your life. People talk about being saved for years before they let the Lord become Lord of their lives. That's foolishness. When Christ becomes your Savior He becomes your Lord. You can't separate the two. If you really accept Christ as Savior you accept Him as Lord of your life and you accept the fact that He has the right to tell you what to do and what not to do.

Now holiness in heart produces holiness in life. Peter said in I Peter 1:15, "But as he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of [living]." He said conversation but it's living. That's what it means. "As he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of [living]." So holiness of heart produces holiness of life. You can't have holiness of heart and have a sinful life. A corrupt tree cannot bring forth good fruit and a good tree does not bring forth corrupt fruit. A holy heart does not bring forth sinful living; a holy heart produces holy living. We are not to walk as we once did.

HOLY IN BODY AND SPIRIT

I want to take time to read several verses of scripture now from Ephesians, chapter four, beginning with verse 17. "This I say therefore, and testify in the Lord, that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles walk, in the vanity of their mind, Having the understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart: Who being past feeling have given themselves over unto lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness. But ye have not so learned Christ; If so be that ye have heard him, and have been taught by him, as the truth is in Jesus: That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man, which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts; And be renewed in the spirit of your mind; And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness. Wherefore putting away lying, speak every man truth with his neighbor: for we are members one of another. Be ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath: Neither give place to the devil. Let him that stole steal no more: but rather let him labour, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth. Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers. And grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption. Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice: And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you."

We find in this passage of scripture where Paul tells us to lay aside some things, he tells us to put on some things. If we're going to live holy, if we're going to be Christians and live holy, there are things we must put off and there are things we must put on. There are things we must stop doing and there are things we must start doing. We must be holy in body and in spirit. How many times do you hear out in the religious world people talking about, "This old flesh just has to sin"? I read in the Bible where it isn't the flesh that sins. I read in the Bible where it says, "Every sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body." I read in the Bible where it is the soul that sins and it's the soul that dies. And so, that old flesh doesn't sin, it is just flesh. No, that doesn't hold true. That's not supported by the Scriptures. The Bible teaches we are to be holy in body and in spirit. "Having therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God" (II Corinthians 7:1). What is filthiness of the flesh? Filthiness of the flesh is anything that the Word of God forbids for the flesh. It may be 14 caret gold but if it's on your finger it's forbidden. Cleanse yourself. Listen to me. God forgives you of your sins, the blood cleanses from our sins, but Paul is telling us here, there's some things we have to cleanse our self of. If you have a string of beads around your neck don't expect an angel to come down here and take it off. If you have those old things hanging on your ears don't expect an angel to take them off, you take them off. You have your lips painted up black or blue or whatever, don't expect an angel to wipe it off, you wipe it off. Amen! You have a pack of cigarettes in your pocket don't expect God to take them out, you take them out. Cleanse yourself of the filthiness of the flesh. Anything the Word of God forbids for the flesh is filthiness.

He said also to cleanse yourself of filthiness of the spirit. There are some filthy spirits, there are some unclean spirits, and you know some people are going to have to be free from those spirits before they can ever get saved. Some people who are saved and under the influence of the wrong kind of spirits need to get out from under them. "What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's" (I Corinthians 6:19, 20). And then in I Corinthians 3:17, "If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy; for the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are." Isn't it a marvelous privilege to be a temple of the Holy Ghost? Just think of it. The Almighty God in the person of the Holy Spirit is willing to come down here and dwell in this earthen vessel, but He's not going to dwell in an unclean vessel. "The temple of God is holy, which temple ye are." If you defile the temple of God, God said, "I will destroy you." That's why tobacco is killing people; that's why alcohol is killing people. They're defiling the body and they are destroying it through these ungodly things.

HOLINESS AND MODESTY GO TOGETHER

Now holiness and modesty go together. "Bro. Alvin, you have to preach on that?" I'm preaching on holiness and God said, "Be ye holy." We're to do exactly as God said. So holiness and modesty go together. Paul said, "I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God." The word conform means to pattern after. This patterning after the world has wrecked many congregations. It has robbed many people of power with God. There seems to be pressure to conform to the world but Paul said, "Don't do that. Be ye transformed so that you may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God." The Church is not to follow the world. The Church is to set the pattern for the world.

I don't know where Bro. Junior got it, but he was preaching in Grand Cayman a few years ago about the boat in the water. As long as the boat was in the water it was doing all right, but whenever the water got in the boat ... . If enough water gets into the boat it's going to the bottom. I tell you, the Church is in the world but the world is not to be in the Church. When the world gets in the Church it ceases to be the Church. When the world gets in the Church it's no longer the Church. You're not of the world. If you're of the world the love of the Father is not in you.

Let us look at that word modest. It covers more than our manner of dress, although it covers that, but I'll touch on that later, Lord willing. This word modest means "having or showing a moderate or humble estimate of one's merit, importance, etc." One of the things that can cause a Christian to be shipwrecked is to begin to think more highly of themselves than they ought to think. Now, we're not slamming our young people this morning. I have no intention. I heard one time the story of a young preacher who went up in the pulpit so bold and he made a flop, he made a failure. Afterwards he came down off the platform with his head down. An older brother preacher went up to him and said, "Now, Young Man, if you would have went up like you came down you could have come down like you went up." We need to always remember if anything is accomplished through our life who did it, for God said, "Without me ye can do nothing." We can't even make a hair white or black. We certainly cannot save a soul, we can't sanctify a believer, we can't heal a body. So part of the meaning of the word modest is "having or showing a moderate or humble estimate of one's merit and their importance; free from vanity." Have you ever heard of vanity kits? Ladies used to have what they call vanity kits. "Egotism; boastfulness or great pretensions." It frees us from these things. Modesty frees us from this showing extravagance. Modesty is "having or showing regard for the decency of behavior in speech and dress." It frees us from those things which are objectionable, which are disagreeable to the Word of God, and it enables us to show regard for the decency of behavior in speech and dress. "Decent; a modest neckline on a dress; pure; virtuous." Modest "implies a becoming shyness, sobriety and proper behavior; a modest self respecting person." Now part of that is from Random House Dictionary but I think it's a pretty good definition. So modesty is more than just dress. It covers a lot more than that. Holiness and modesty go together.

The Psalmist said in the 93rd Psalm, and the fifth verse, "Thy testimonies are very sure: holiness becometh thine house [or church], O LORD, for ever."

I want to quote something here and I want to enlarge on it. "God designed clothing to cover, not draw attention to the sexuality of either men or women. Modesty begins in the heart. Modesty is an attitude and a way of thinking that exhibits the values by which we live." Now, I do not profess to have the authority to tell you ladies that your dress has to be X numbers of inches from the floor but I can tell you this, the Bible teaches modesty. Whenever a dress or a skirt is so short and you happen to bend over a little bit and somebody standing behind you can see half way up, you have on an immodest garment. Whenever you have a neck cut in such a way that you're beginning to expose the upper part of your body you have on an immodest garment. Now I know back in D. S. Warner's day they had their sleeves to their wrists and they came up under their chins and all you could see was their hands and their faces. I am not saying we have to go back to the days of D. S. Warner to be modest, but I am going to say there are some people among us that are not dressing as modest as they need to. [....] I'm still preaching on holiness. Holiness and modesty go together. You can't have real modesty without holiness and you can't have holiness without modesty.

[....] I read in the Bible that whenever Adam and Eve sinned and realized they were naked they put on some bikini's, but that wasn't accepted by God. [...] I don't know if it was that much or not. But there's one thing about it, God wasn't satisfied. He took animal skins and clothed them, and the Hebrew word means "covered." What are you talking about, Bro. Alvin? I'm talking about living in a world where there's a spirit of lust, and saints of God have no business feeding that spirit of lust. Some men are so degenerate. "O I want people to see what I've got. I want them to see." I don't. I want my wife to be covered. I want her to be modest. I don't want other men looking at her, lusting after her, and I don't want her being responsible for men doing that. We're all headed for the judgment and we're going to give an account to God for the life we live. Let me quote that again. "God designed clothing to cover, not draw attention to the sexuality of either men or women." Some women and men wear clothes so tight you wonder how they ever squeezed into them. They must wiggle and twist and turn and pull and jerk and I don't know what all else to get in them. I know I'm in a mixed audience this morning but I tell you, whenever you dress in such a way that you know you're tempting men there's something lacking in your heart, there's something lacking in your experience. So holiness and modesty go together, and if you are pure in heart, holy in heart, you want your life to be holy.

THE RIGHT KIND OF FRIENDLINESS

I also realize people can be too friendly. Now there's a right kind of friendliness and there's another kind. Some people can be too familiar, and some men can let their hands go places they have no business. I'd rather for somebody to say I have a dishrag handshake. You know what they mean by that? You don't squeeze their hand all that tight. I'd rather for somebody to say I have a dishrag handshake than to say, "You see how long he held on to her hand?" I know there's a ditch on both sides of the road and the devil don't care which ditch he gets you into, fanaticism or compromise. I know that, but I'd tell you one thing, I'd rather be a little more conservative than necessary than to be too liberal. God's not going to condemn me for wearing my long sleeves. I didn't say you had to. I said God's not going to condemn me for it, but if I have them too short He would condemn me. "Now, Bro. Alvin, you're just picking on little things." I read in the Bible where it says something about the little foxes that spoil the vine.

When Bro. Ollen and I were boys on the farm we built us a little dirt dam to back up the water so we could make us a swimming pool. You'd go down there some time and you'd see a little leak in your dam, just a little, but if you didn't do something about it you'd go back in a few days and the whole dam was washed out. What am I talking about? I'm talking about a little bit of worldliness, a little bit of compromise, a little bit of leaven coming in here and coming in there. "O, that's so trivial." Let me ask you a question this morning. Do you think God would withdraw fellowship from a person for eating a little bit of fruit? Do you think He would? Whether you think He would or not, He did. I know some people call it an apple, well I don't know what it was. It wasn't the fruit anyway, it was the act of obedience or disobedience. So it isn't whether it's a thousand dollars you steal or it's a nickel you steal; it isn't a matter of whether you tell a white lie or a black lie as they call it, they're all lies. We're the one that likes to graduate this stuff but God demands that we obey His word. Whatsoever the Lord commands do exactly! I believe when a person is really saved and sanctified and has the Word of God in their heart they want to do what's right. It's not a matter of having to, they want to.

CONCLUSION

Let me close by saying this: Doing exactly as God commands is not bondage, it's freedom.

"If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." Truth liberates. We had that as a theme one year. Truth liberates, error binds you. So doing exactly as God commands is not bondage, it's freedom. The Lord bless you.

2003 I.C.C message by Bro. Alvin Craig
Alvin Craig is the editor of "The Way of Truth" magazine.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

COMMENT FROM UNCLE ALVIN CRAIG

Dear Sister Judith,

Greetings in Jesus name, I trust this will find you well and enjoying the blessings of the Lord. We thank the Lord for his blessings to us. I tried to send Brother Jet and the Young People a message from their Web page, but it did not go through, I do not know why; but anyway, I will send it through you. I think they have a very good Web sight, and they are doing a good job. I appreciated reading your testimony on it. I also thank Brother Jet for putting "The Way Of Truth" Web Page, as one of the "Links." Lord willing we will be leaving Monday to go to Cayman for the convention there--starting Tuesday morning. I trust dear Brother Victor is doing well, please extend to him my greetings.

Yours in His grace,
Uncle Alvin

Thursday, November 09, 2006

OBEDIENCE TO PARENTS

The Sermons of John Wesley 1872 Edition(Thomas Jackson, editor)
SERMON NINETY-SIX

On Obedience To Parents

"Children, obey your parents in all things." Col. 3:20

1. It has been a subject of controversy for many years, whether there are any innate principles in the mind of man. But it is allowed on all hands, if there be any practical principles naturally Unplanted in the soul, that "we ought to honour our parents," will claim this character almost before any other. It is enumerated among those universal principles by the most ancient authors and is undoubtedly found even among savages in the most barbarous nations. We may trace it through all the extent of Europe and Asia, through the wilds of Africa, and the forests of America. And it is not less, but more observable in the most civilized nations. So it was first in the eastern parts of the world, which were for so many ages the seat of empire, of learning and politeness, as well as of religion. So it was afterwards in all the Grecian states, and throughout the whole Roman Empire. In this respect, it is plain, they that "have not the" written "law, are a law unto themselves," showing "the work," the substance, "of the law" to be "written in their hearts."

2. And wherever God has revealed his will to man, this law has been a part of that revelation. It has been herein opened afresh, considerably enlarged, and enforced in the strongest manner. In the Jewish revelation, the notorious breakers thereof were punishable with death. And this was one of the laws which our blessed Lord did not come to destroy, but to fulfil. Accordingly he severely reproved the Scribes and Pharisees for making it void through their traditions; clearly showing that the obligation thereof extended to all ages. It is the substance of this which St. Paul delivers to the Ephesians: (Eph. 6:1:) "Children, obey your parents in the Lord;" and again in those words to the Colossians, "Children, obey your parents in all things." [Col. 3:20]

3. It is observable, that the Apostle enforces this duty by a threefold encouragement: First. To the Ephesians he adds, "For this is right:" It is an instance of justice as well as mercy. It is no more than their due: it is what we owe to them for the very being which we have received from them. Secondly. "This is acceptable to the Lord;" it is peculiarly pleasing to the great Father of men and angels that we should pay honour and obedience to the fathers of our flesh. Thirdly. It is "the first commandment with promise;" the first to the performance whereof a peculiar promise is annexed: "that it may be well with thee, and that thy days may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee." This promise has been generally understood to include health and temporal blessings, as well as long life. And we have seen innumerable proofs, that it belongs to the Christian as well as the Jewish dispensation: Many remarkable instances of its accomplishment occur even at this day.But what is the meaning of these words, "Children, obey your parents in all things?" I will endeavour, by the assistance of God, First, to explain, and, Then to apply them.

I. 1. First. I will endeavour to explain these words; and the rather, because so few people seem to understand them. Look round into the world, not the heathen but the Christian world, nay, the Reformed part of it; look among those that have the Scriptures in their own tongue; and who is there that appears even to have heard of this? Here and there a child obeys the parent out of fear, or perhaps out of natural affection. But how many children can you find that obey their fathers and mothers out of a sense of duty to God? And how many parents can you find that duly inculcate this duty upon their children? I doubt, a vast majority both of parents and children are totally ignorant of the whole affair. For the sake of these I will make it as plain as I can: But still I am thoroughly sensible, those that are not willing to be convinced will no more understand what I say than if I was talking Greek or Hebrew.

2. You will easily observe, that by parents the Apostle means both fathers and mothers, as he refers us to the Fifth Commandment, which names both the one and the other. And, however human laws may vary herein, the law of God makes no difference; but lays us under the same obligation of obeying both the one and the other.

3. But before we consider how we are to obey our parents, it may be inquired, how long we are to obey them. Are children to obey only till they run alone, till they go to school, till they can read and write, or till they are as tall as their parents, or, attain to years of discretion? Nay, if they obey only [because they cannot help it, only] because they fear to be beaten, or because otherwise they cannot procure food and raiment, what avails such obedience? Those only who obey their parents when they can live without them, and when they neither hope nor fear anything from them, shall have praise from God.

4. "But is a man that is at age, or a woman that is married, under any farther obligation to obey their parents?" With regard to marriage, although it is true that a man is to leave father and mother, and cleave unto his wife; and, by parity of reason, she is to leave father and mother, and cleave unto her husband; (in consequence of which there may be some particular cases wherein conjugal duty must take [the] place" of filial;) yet I cannot learn, either from Scripture or reason, that marriage either cancels or lessens the general obligation of filial duty. Much less does it appear that it is either cancelled or lessened by our having lived one-and-twenty years. I never understood it so in my own case. When I had lived upwards of thirty years, I looked upon myself to stand just in the same relation to my father as I did when I was ten years old. And when I was between forty and fifty, I judged myself full as much obliged to obey my mother in everything lawful, as I did when I was in my leading-strings [or hanging-sleeve coat].

5. But what is implied in, "Children, obey your parents in all things?" Certainly the First point of obedience is to do nothing which your father or mother forbids, whether it be great or small. Nothing is more plain than that the prohibition of a parent binds every conscientious child; that is, except the thing prohibited is clearly enjoined of God. Nor indeed is this all; the matter may be carried a little farther still: A tender parent may totally disapprove what he does not care flatly to forbid. What is the duty of a child in this case? How far is that disapprobation to be regarded? Whether it be equivalent to a prohibition or not, a person who would have a conscience void of offence should undoubtedly keep on the safe side, and avoid what may perhaps be evil. It is surely the more excellent way, to do nothing which you know your parents disapprove. To act otherwise seems to imply a degree of disobedience, which one of a tender conscience would wish to avoid.

6. The Second thing implied in this direction is, Do every thing which your father or mother bids, be it great or small, provided it be not contrary to any command of God. Herein God has given a power to parents, which even sovereign princes have not. The King of England, for instance, is a sovereign prince; yet he has not power to bid me do the least thing, unless the law of the land requires me so to do; for he has no power but to execute the law. The will of the king is no law to the subject. But the will of the parent is a law to the child, who is bound in conscience to submit thereto unless it be contrary to the law of God.

7. It is with admirable wisdom that the Father of spirits has given this direction, that as the strength of the parents supplies the want of strength, and the understanding of the parents the want of understanding, in their children, till they have strength and understanding of their own; so the will of the parents may [should] guide that of their children till they have wisdom and experience to guide themselves. This, therefore, is the very first thing which children have to learn, -- that they are to obey their parents, to submit to their will, in all things. And this they may be inured to, long before they understand the reason of it; and, indeed, long before they are capable of understanding any of the principles of religion. Accordingly, St. Paul directs all parents to bring up their children "in the discipline and doctrine of the Lord." For their will may be broken by proper discipline, even in their early infancy; whereas it must be a considerable time after, before they are capable of instruction. This, therefore, is the first point of all: Bow down their wills from the very first dawn of reason; and, by habituating them to submit to your will, prepare them for submitting to the will of their Father which is in heaven.

8. But how few children do we find, even of six or eight years old, that understand anything of this! Indeed, how should they understand it, seeing they have none to teach them? Are not their parents, father as well as mother, full as ignorant of the matter as themselves? Whom do you find, even among religious people, that have the least conception of it? Have not you seen the proof of it with your own eyes? Have not you been present when a father or mother has said, "My child, do so or so?" The child, without any ceremony, answered peremptorily, "I won't." And the parent quietly passes it by, without any further notice. And does he or she not see, that, by this cruel indulgence, they are training up their child, by flat rebellion against their parents, to rebellion against God? Consequently they are training him up for the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels! Did they duly consider this they would neither eat, nor drink, nor sleep, till they had taught him a better lesson, and made him thoroughly afraid of ever giving that diabolical answer again.

9. Let me reason this case a little farther with you parents that fear God. If you do fear God, how dare you suffer a child above a year old to say, "I will do" what you forbid, or, "I won't do" what you bid, and to go unpunished? Why do not you stop him at once, that he may never dare to say so again? Have you no bowels, no compassion for your child? No regard for his salvation or destruction? Would you suffer him to curse or swear in your presence, and take no notice of it? Why, disobedience is as certain a way to damnation as cursing and swearing. Stop him, stop him at first, in the name of God. Do not "spare the rod, and spoil the child." If you have not the heart of a tiger, do not give up your child to his own will, that is, to the devil. Though it be pain to yourself, yet pluck your offspring out of the lion's teeth. Make them submit, that they may not perish. Break their will, that you may save their soul.

10. I cannot tell how to enforce this point sufficiently. To fix it upon your minds more strongly, permit me to add part of a letter on the subject, printed some years ago: --"In order to form the minds of children, the first thing to be done is to conquer their will. To inform their understanding is a work of time, and must proceed by slow degrees; but the subjecting the will is a thing which must be done at once; and the sooner the better. For by our neglecting timely correction they contract a stubbornness which is hardly ever to be conquered, and never without using that severity which would be as painful to us as to the children. Therefore, I call those cruel parents who pass for kind and indulgent; who permit their children to contract habits which they know must be afterwards broken."I insist upon conquering the wills of children betimes; because this is the only foundation for a religious education. When this is thoroughly done, then a child is capable of being governed by the reason of its parent, till its own understanding comes to maturity.
"I cannot yet dismiss this subject. As self-will is the root of all sin and misery, so whatever cherishes this in children, ensures their after-wretchedness and irreligion; and whatever checks and mortifies it, promotes their future happiness and piety. This is still more evident if we consider that religion is nothing else but the doing the will of God, and not our own; and that self-will being the grand impediment to our temporal and eternal happiness, no indulgence of it can be trivial; no denial of it unprofitable. Heaven or hell depends on this alone. So that the parent who studies to subdue it in his children, works together with God in the saving of a soul. The parent who indulges it does the devil's work, makes religion impracticable, salvation unattainable; and does all that in him lies to damn his child, soul and body, for ever!"This, therefore, I cannot but earnestly repeat, -- break their wills betimes; begin this great work before they can run alone, before they can speak plain, or perhaps speak at all. Whatever pains it cost, conquer their stubbornness: break the will, if you would not damn the child. I conjure you not to neglect, not to delay this! Therefore, (1.) Let a child, from a year old, be taught to fear the rod and to cry softly. In order to this, (2.) Let him have nothing he cries for; absolutely nothing, great or small; else you undo your own work. (3.) At all events, from that age, make him do as he is bid, if you whip him ten times running to effect it. Let none persuade you it is cruelty to do this; it is cruelty not to do it. Break his will now, and his soul will live, and he will probably bless you to all eternity.

11. On the contrary, how dreadful are the consequences of that accursed kindness which gives children their own wills, and does not bow down their necks from their infancy! It is chiefly owing to this, that so many religious parents bring up children that have no religion at all; children that, when they are grown up, have no regard for them, perhaps set them at nought, and are ready to pick out their eyes! Why is this, but because their wills were not broken at first? -- because they were not inured from their early infancy to obey their parents in all things, and to submit to their wills as to the will of God? -- because they were not taught from the very first dawn of reason, that the will of their parents was, to them, the will of God; that to resist it was rebellion against God, and an inlet to all ungodliness?

II. 1. This may suffice for the explication of the text: I proceed to the application of it. And permit me, First, to apply to you that are parents, and, as such concerned to teach your children. Do you know these things yourselves? Are you thoroughly convinced of these important truths? Have you laid them to heart? and have you put them in practice, with regard to your own children? Have you inured them to discipline, before they were capable of instruction? Have you broken their wills from their earliest infancy; and do you still continue so to do, in opposition both to nature and custom? Did you explain to them, as soon as their understanding began to open, the reasons of your proceeding thus? Did you point out to them the will of God as the sole law of every intelligent creature; and show them it is the will of God that they should obey you in all things? Do you inculcate this over and over again till they perfectly comprehend it? O never be weary of this labour of love! and your labour will not always be in vain.

2. At least, do not teach them to disobey, by rewarding them for disobedience. Remember! you do this every time you give them anything because they cry for it. And herein they are apt scholars: If you reward them for crying, they will certainly cry again. So that there is no end, unless you make it a sacred rule, to give them nothing which they cry for. And the shortest way to do this is, never suffer them to cry aloud. Train them up to obedience in this one instance, and you will easily bring them to obey in others. Why should you not begin to-day? Surely you see what is the most excellent way; best for your child, and best for your own soul. Why then do you disobey? Because you are a coward; because you want resolution. And doubtless it requires [no small resolution to begin and persist herein. It certainly requires] no small patience, more than nature ever gave. But the grace of God is sufficient for you; you can do all things through Christ that strengtheneth you. This grace is sufficient to give you diligence, as well as resolution; otherwise laziness will be as great a hindrance as cowardice. For without much pains you cannot conquer: Nothing can be done with a slack hand; labour on; never tire, lay line upon line, till patience has its perfect work.

3. But there is another hindrance that is full as hard to be conquered as either laziness or cowardice. It is called fondness, and is usually mistaken for love: But, O, how widely different from it! It is real hate; and hate of the most mischievous kind, tending to destroy both body and soul in hell! O give not way to it any longer, no, not for a moment. Fight against it with your might! for the love of God; for the love of your children; for the love of your own soul!

4. I have one word more to say to parents; to mothers in particular. If, in spite of all the Apostle can say, you encourage your children by your example to "adorn" themselves "with gold, or pearls, or costly apparel," you and they must drop into the pit together. But if they do it, though you set them a better example, still it is yours, as well as their fault; for if you did not put any ornament on your little child that you would not wear yourself, (which would be utter distraction, and far more inexcusable than putting it on your own arms or head), yet you did not inure them to obey you from their infancy, and teach them the duty of it, from at least two years old. Otherwise, they would not have dared to do anything, great or small, contrary to your will. Whenever, therefore, I see the fine-dressed daughter of a plain-dressed mother, I see at once the mother is defective either in knowledge or religion. Either she is ignorant of her own or her child's duty, or she has not practised what she knows.

5. I cannot dismiss this subject yet. I am pained continually at seeing religious parents suffer their children to run into the same folly of dress, as if they had no religion at all. In God's name, why do you suffer them to vary a hair's breadth from your example? "Why, they will do it?" They will! Whose fault is that? Why did not you break their will from their infancy? At least do it now; better late than never. It should have been done before they were two years old: It may be done at eight or ten, though with far more difficulty. However, do it now; and accept that difficulty as the just reward for your past neglect. Now, at least carry your point, whatever it costs. Be not mealy-mouthed; say not, like foolish Eli, "Nay, my children, it is no good report which I hear of you," instead of restraining them with a strong hand; but speak (though as calmly as possible, yet) firmly and peremptorily, "I will have it so;" and do as you say. Instil diligently into them the love of plain dress, and hatred of finery. Show them the reason of your own plainness of dress, and show it is equally reasonable for them. Bid defiance to indolence, to cowardice, to foolish fondness, and at all events carry your point; if you love their souls, make and keep them just as plain as yourselves. And I charge you, grandmothers before God, do not hinder your daughters herein. Do not dare to give the child anything which the mother denies. Never take the part of the children against their parent; never blame her before them. If you do not strengthen her authority, as you ought to do, at least do not weaken it; but if you have either sense or piety left, help her on in the work of real kindness.

6. Permit me now to apply myself to you, children; particularly you that are the children of religious parents. Indeed if you have no fear of God before your eyes,"I have no concern with you at present; but if you have, if you really fear God, and have a desire to please him, you desire to understand all his commandments, the fifth in particular. Did you ever understand it yet? Do you now understand what is your duty to your father and mother? Do you know, at least do you consider, that by the divine appointment their will is law to you? Have you ever considered the extent of that obedience to your parents which God requires? "Children, obey your parents in all things." No exception, but of things unlawful. Have you practised your duty in this extent? Did you ever so much as intend it?

7. Deal faithfully with your own souls. Is your conscience now clear in this matter? Do you do nothing which you know to be contrary to the will either of your father or mother? Do you never do anything (though ever so much inclined to it) which he or she forbids? Do you abstain from everything which they dislike, as far as you can in conscience? On the other hand, are you careful to do whatever a parent bids? Do you study and contrive how to please them, to make their lives as easy and pleasant as you can? Whoever you are that add this to your general care to please God in all things, blessed art thou of the Lord! "Thy days shall be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee."

8. But as for you who are little concerned about this matter, who do not make it a point of conscience to obey your parents in all things, but sometimes obey them, as it happens, and sometimes not; who frequently do what they forbid or disapprove, and neglect what they bid you do; suppose you awake out of sleep, that you begin to feel yourself a sinner, and begin to cry to God for mercy, is it any wonder that you find no answer, while you are under the guilt of unrepented sin? How can you expect mercy from God till you obey your parents? But suppose you have, by an uncommon miracle of mercy, tasted of the pardoning love of God, can it be expected, although you hunger and thirst after righteousness, after the perfect love of God, that you should ever attain it, ever be satisfied therewith, while you live in outward sin, in the wilful transgression of a known law of God, in disobedience to your parents? Is it not rather a wonder, that he has not withdrawn his Holy Spirit from you? that he still continues to strive with you, though you continually grieve his Spirit? O grieve him no more! By the grace of God, obey them in all things from this moment! As soon as you come home, as soon as you set foot within the door, begin an entirely new course! Look upon your father and mother with new eyes; see them as representing your Father which is in heaven: Endeavour, study, rejoice to please, to help, to obey them in all things: Behave not barely as their child, but as their servant for Christ's sake. O how will you then love one another! In a manner unknown before. God will bless you to them, and them to you: All around will feel that God is with you of a truth. Many shall see it and praise God; and the fruit of it will remain when both you and they are lodged in Abraham's bosom.