The Working of All Things Together for Good
AUTHOR: | Philpot, Joseph Charles |
|
The Working of All
Things Together for Good
Preached at Providence Chapel, London, on July 8, 1849,
by J. C. Philpot.
"And we know that all things work together for good to
those who love God, to those who are called according to his purpose."
Romans 8:28
The child of God seems to me often to resemble a
benighted traveler. He has left his home, and is struggling onward to a
certain destination. He is surrounded on every side with mists and darkness;
still he struggles onward. But looking up into the sky, he sees a star
glimmer through the clouds – by-and-by another appears; and by-and-by
another; until at last all the mist and fog are dispersed, and the stars
shine forth in all their beauty and glory. Thus is it often with the child
of God. He has left the world; he is struggling onward to his heavenly home;
but he often walks in darkness and has no light; little else but mists and
fogs surround the path he is treading. In this state, perhaps he opens the
word of God; or, as he is musing over his many trials, a text, a promise
breaks in upon his mind, and that shows him the mist and fog are breaking
up; by-and-by another portion of God's word, another sweet promise comes
into his soul; and this encourages him still more, until by-and-by the Bible
seems full of promises, shining forth in the pages of the sacred volume more
thickly and gloriously than the stars that spangle the midnight sky.
Among these bright stars that glimmer in the skies of
Scripture, there is scarcely one more resplendent than our text. Let us
travel through the promises upon record, and we can scarcely find one more
sweet or suitable to an exercised child of God than this, "We know that all
things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the
called according to his purpose."
In looking at these words this morning, I shall, for the
sake of greater clearness, somewhat invert the order, and show,
First, who the characters are to whom the promise belongs.
Secondly, the promise itself.
Thirdly, the knowledge of the promise, and of our personal interest in it.
The Lord grant his presence; and enable me to speak such things as he shall
bless to our souls.
I. The characters to whom the promise belongs.
Now it is necessary to make the ground good here; for if we err here,
we err everywhere. Let me illustrate this by an example or two taken from
the things of common life. A man makes a will; when he dies, and the will is
opened and read, the very first thing to be settled is the person in whose
favor the will is made. Until that is settled, there is no going a step
further.
Or, there is a society founded for the relief of certain
poor people. This society has certain objects in view, certain characters on
whom it bestows its liberality. There are prescribed limits; as age,
poverty, being members of the household of faith; and if these
qualifications are not in the individual, he cannot be a candidate.
So it is spiritually. Unless we make the ground good at
first by coming to some clear decision who are the characters whom the
promise belongs, we are all in confusion; we do not make straight paths for
our feet; our eyes do not look onward, nor our eyelids straight before us.
It is absolutely necessary, therefore, in order to make the ground good, to
clear up who the characters are in favor of whom the promise is made.
If we look at these characters, we shall find them
described as bearing two distinct marks, that they "love God;" that
they are "the called according to God's purpose." If a man, then,
does not love God, and be not called according to God's purpose, he has no
manifest interest in this promise. And if, on the other hand, he bear these
two marks, that he loves God, and that he is called according to God's
purpose, the promise is intended for him, and is ready to discharge its full
contents into his heart.
1. First, then, let us look a little more
closely at the character set forth as a lover of
God. We are very certain this never can be true of any man in a
state of nature, for "the carnal mind is enmity against God;" and if so,
there cannot be any love to God in his heart. He is therefore excluded from
the benefit of the promise; his name is not in the will.
But, in order to make this weighty matter more clear and
plain, let us see what the Scriptures say of those who love God. I think we
shall find in the first epistle of John three marks given us of those who
love him; and by these three marks may we try our state. Let us, then, bring
our hearts and consciences to the test of God's unerring word, and see
whether we can find these three marks of the lovers of God in our soul. We
read, "Love is of God, and every one that loves is born of God, and knows
God." 1 John 4:7 Here, then, are two marks which the Holy Spirit has given
of him that loves God, that he is born of God, and that he knows God. And if
we look a little lower down, we shall find a third mark, "This is the love
of God that we keep his commandments." 1 John 5:3
These, then, are the three marks of a man being a lover
of God–
1. that he is born of God;
2. that he knows God;
3. that he keeps God's commandments.
1. But what is it to be
born of God? We read of those who were followers of the Lord
Jesus Christ, that they were "born not of blood, nor of the will of the
flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God." John 1:13 A heavenly birth is
contrasted here with the birth of the flesh; the one is set aside, and the
other set up. To be born of God is to be quickened into spiritual life by
the Holy Spirit; to have passed from death unto life; to have faith, hope
and love brought forth in our hearts by the operation of God the Spirit; to
be made new creatures in Christ; to have the kingdom of heaven set up, and
the power of God felt in our souls. If, then, a man can feel that he is born
of God; that a mighty revolution has taken place in his soul; that he is a
new creature in Christ; that old things are passed away and all things
become new – if he has the witness of God in his conscience that this divine
change has taken place in him, and that a measure of the love of God has
been shed abroad in his heart by the Holy Spirit--then he has an evidence
that he is one who loves God, and therefore has an interest in the promise
before us.
2. Our second mark of one that loves God is,
that he knows God. This we cannot know
by nature, for there is a veil of unbelief over our heart. We are born in
darkness and the shadow of death – but when God is pleased to shine into our
souls, and give us "the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the
face of Jesus Christ;" to take the veil of unbelief away, and give us that
knowledge of himself as the only true God, and of Jesus Christ whom he has
sent, which is eternal life--then we know God; we know who he is, and we
fear his great Name.
3. The third mark is, that we
keep his commandments, that we come out
of the world, and are separate from it; that we desire to do his will, to
serve him, and to walk before him in simplicity, humility, and godly
sincerity; that his fear is alive in us; that we obey him, and do those
things that are pleasing in his sight.
But why do I mention these marks? For this reason;
because the children of God are often tried and exercised whether they do
love him. There are so many things in their hearts to oppose the love of
God. There is the world; a going out in their carnal mind after the things
of time and sense; sin working in them, bringing them continually into
bondage; darkness of mind, so as to be unable to see their signs; deadness
of soul, so that the love of God seems reduced to the last spark. All these
things are so opposite to the love of God that they seem at times not to
have one grain of it in their hearts. And when they would gladly look back
to certain spots, times, and seasons, when they did feel the love of God
shed abroad in their hearts, when they could delight themselves in the
Almighty, when his word was sweeter than honey and the honeycomb, and they
could walk before him in holy obedience and love, I say, when they would
gladly look back upon these favorite spots, times, and seasons, they often
cannot. Such is the darkness of their minds they can scarcely see the hill
Mizar, or remember him from the land of Jordan and of the Hermonites.
Therefore, it is necessary to look to certain marks of
God's word. The landmarks in our experience are sometimes swept away, or
clouds of darkness cover them. We therefore must look to the unerring
landmarks of God's word, which, unlike the landmarks of experience, are
never swept away, but stand there firmly fixed by the pen of the Holy
Spirit. If therefore, with all our doubts and fears and misgivings, our
hardness of heart, our unbelief, darkness of mind, and deadness of frame, we
can find these three marks in our souls, that we have been born of God, that
we know him, and that we are keeping his commandments and desiring to do his
will, we have Scripture testimony that we are of those who love God, and
therefore have an interest in this promise.
2. Our second mark is, that such are the
"called according to God's purpose." This seems to be added as a
kind of supplement to clear up the first mark; and added for this twofold
purpose. First, to exclude all men in a state of nature. A man, in a state
of nature, might say, 'I love God; I love to walk abroad, and mark his glory
in the beauties of creation. I look up by night, and as I see the stars in
the sky I recognize in them a heavenly Architect. I am sure I love God.' A
man in a state of nature may do this. Now this phrase seems added to cut off
such. It says, 'No; all those who love God are the called according to his
purpose.' A man must be called; there must be a work of grace upon his soul
before he can be a true spiritual lover of God.
But there is another purpose also. The child of God may
say, 'Do I love God? If so, what love do I now feel? Are my affections now
in heaven? Do I feel my soul now desiring the Lord more than thousands of
gold and silver? Is my heart now softened and melted by the sweet operations
of his grace, mercy, and love? No;' the poor child of God says, 'I feel too
much the contrary--hardness, darkness, carnality--perhaps enmity,
rebellion--how can I, then hope I am the character for whom this promise is
made? Yet if I be not a lover of God, I have no saving interest in it.
To clear up this dark path, it seems added by way of
supplement, "called according to God's purpose." His purpose is not affected
by what we are, or what we have. His purpose is still going on. We may be in
darkness and deadness; but our darkness does not alter God's purpose; our
deadness does not change his decree. We may not have the sweet enjoyment of
his love in our hearts; but still his 'purpose' remains unchanged and
unchangeable, like its divine Author.
But how can we prove we are called according to God's
purpose? Love may flag; evidences may fade; hope may droop; enjoyment may
cease; but the calling still remains. Can we, then, look back to any time or
spot when the Lord signally called us? Can we cast an eye on the path we
have trodden in the ways of grace, and say that none but the Lord could have
separated us from the sins in which we were entangled, the company with
which we were mixed, the course we were pursuing? Can we remember there were
at the time certain feelings which none but God could inspire? certain
operations in our hearts which none but God could perform? certain effects
which nothing but a heavenly hand moving upon the soul could create? If we
cannot now trace distinctly that we are the lovers of God; if we cannot now
feel the love of God shed abroad in our hearts, yet we may compare ourselves
with the three marks I have given, and take some comfort from them; or even
if these three marks be buried in obscurity, we may still cast an eye along
the vista which we have trodden, and see the hand of God stretched out in a
manifestive way to call us out of nature's darkness into his marvelous
light.
I have been thus particular, and dwelt thus long upon
this portion of the text, because I love to make sure ground. Let us make
the ground good – then we can step safely on; but if the ground be sandy,
the foundation uncertain, we are faulty at the very outset. There is no
advancing a single step until the ground be made good. I will suppose, then,
the ground is thus far made good, and that there are in this congregation
those who have some internal testimony that they are lovers of God, and that
they are "called according to God's purpose."
II. But I proceed to
the substance of the promise, "that all things work together for
good" to such characters. Every word here is pregnant with blessed import –
we could not part with a single syllable. And yet, what an exalted view does
it give us of the wisdom, providence, and power of God! Look at this
complicated scene. Here are God's people, surrounded by a thousand
mysterious circumstances, traveling in the various paths of life--station,
age, sex, circumstances, all widely different. Here is the world lying in
wickedness around them--a crafty adversary ever on the watch to beguile or
harass them – a heart full of sin to overflowing, except as kept down by the
mighty power of God! Look at all our varied circumstances; and then to
believe that if we are the lovers of God, all things we experience are
working together for our spiritual good, what a view does it give us of the
wisdom, grace, and power of a wonder-working God! Let us bear with all our
weight upon the text – it will bear all the strain that we can put upon it.
1. "All things!" Look at that! All that
concerns our body and soul; everything in providence, everything in grace;
everything you have passed through, everything you are passing through,
everything you shall pass through. Let each of you who love God, and fear
his name in this congregation, take everything belonging to you, and lay it
upon this text, as you might lay hymn-books and Bibles on the table before
me. There is not a single thing in providence or grace that concerns any
person in this congregation who loves God, that the promise cannot bear.
"All things! all things!" What! is there not a single
thing, however minute, however comparatively unimportant, that is not for my
good if I love God? No, not one. If there were a single thing, this text
would not be true; God would speak an untruth. If there were a single thing
which befalls me, be it in providence, or be it in grace, that is not
working together for my good, if I am a child of God, I say it with
reverence, that this would be a lie in God's book. And yet, when we consider
the variety of things that affect us--to believe that all of them are
working together for our good, how must we admire the wonderful wisdom, and
power, and government of God.
But let us, by the way of casting a clearer light upon
the words, "all things," look at them more minutely. All things that take
place are either according to God's decretive appointment, or according to
his permissive appointment. Many things that try your mind, and exercise
your souls, are according to God's decretive appointment. Everything with
which sin or Satan are not intermingled, we may say, comes from God's
decretive appointment; and if we are lovers of God, they are working
together for our good. Are we tried in our circumstances? This is according
to God's decretive appointment. Is it the Lord's will and pleasure to bring
us down in the world, by sorrows and adversities in providence? This is
still according to God's decretive appointment. Have we afflictions in the
family? It is still according to God's decretive appointment. It comes from
him. Nothing can happen in body, in property, in family, that does not
spring from God's decretive appointment. Are children taken away? They are
taken by the hand of God. "The Lord gives, and the Lord takes away." Is wife
or husband afflicted? The hand of God is in it. Is the body brought down
with sickness? It comes from God. Is the mind tried with a thousand
perplexities, anxieties, and cares? It is still the hand of God. All these
matters spring from his decretive appointment!
But is Satan permitted to harass and distress our minds?
This is only by God's permissive appointment. He could do nothing against
Job until God gave him permission. Have we enemies in the church or in the
world? Have we to endure persecution for Christ's sake? slander, calumny,
and opposition? Shimei was permitted to curse David; and Jeroboam was raised
up in consequence of the idolatry of Solomon. All is still according to
God's permissive appointment. Are we tried by the evils of our fallen
nature? It is still according to God's permissive appointment; for nothing
can take place, either in providence or in grace, except as God in his
infinite wisdom has decreed to perform, or decreed to allow.
2. But all these things, however trying to our
minds, however hard to bear, however painful to our flesh, are decreed to
"work together". They do not work
singly, but they work together with something else. It is like my watch. The
wheel that turns the hand is not the same wheel that is moved by the spring;
but one wheel works within another wheel, and one cog catches in another
cog, until at length, the time of day is shown upon the dial. So with
respect to our afflictions, our exercises, the trials of our minds, the
various disappointments and perplexities we have to endure; they do not work
singly, but together with something else; and it is by this working together
with something else that they produce a divine and blessed result.
But what is that with which they work? The grace of God
in the soul. The wheel of providence works with the wheel of grace; and the
wheel of grace works with the wheel of providence; and together a blessing
is the result. For instance. Some affliction befalls your body; you are laid
upon a sick bed. That affliction will do you no good in itself; but it works
together with the grace of God in your soul; and by its working together
with the grace of God in your soul, a blessing is the result. Or, you are
brought down in circumstances – you have a very difficult path to tread in
providence. This will do you no good in itself; there are thousands of
people in bad circumstances who get no good from them. But it works together
with the life and power of God in your soul; and so it produces a blessing.
Or, you may lose a wife, or a child, or have sickness in your family; in
themselves no good is produced by these things; but they work together with
the life and power of God in your soul; and this brings about the blessing.
In this word lies the mystery--they work together.
3. But what do they work together for?
"For good." But what do we call good? We
must not take our idea of good, but God's idea of the matter.
We must not take what we fancy to be good, but what is really and truly so
in his eyes. For instance. A man may say, it is very good to have health; it
may be so in his eyes, but not so in God's. Another may say, it is a very
good thing to get on in the world, to have a flourishing business, and
prosperous trade; that may be good in his eyes, but not in God's. Another
may say, it is good for me to have a family growing up in health and
strength, and well provided for – it may be so in his eyes; but it does not
follow that it is good in the Lord's. Another may say, it is good to have no
troubles, no temptations, no wicked heart, no devil to beguile or harass; it
may seem very good in his eyes, but it does not follow that it is so in
God's eyes. He is judge in these matters.
What, then, are we to say is "good?" Whatever produces
spiritual profit and a blessing; that which is really good in the eyes
of a heart-searching God.
Now just see whether all these things do not in this
sense work together for good to those who love God, and are the called
according to his purpose. You have had an afflicted body. Well, that in
itself did you no good; for it incapacitated you for business, troubled your
mind, made you a burden to yourself and a burden to all around you. There
was no good in that. But suppose it weaned you from the world; suppose it
set death before your eyes, made you die daily, stirred up a spirit of
prayer and supplication in your heart; suppose it opened up those promises
of God which are suitable to his afflicted family; suppose it was the means
of blessing your soul with some sweet manifestation of your saving interest
in the love and blood of the Lamb--are you then to say, that your sickness,
your affliction has not been for good, when it worked together with the
grace of God in your soul to bring forth a real blessing?
Or, you have had reverses in the world, have lost money
in trade, and are now in distressed circumstances. There is no good in these
things considered abstractly; but do they stir up the life and power of God
in your soul? do they give you an errand to the throne of grace? do they
show you what is in your heart? do they call forth confession before God? do
they make Jesus near and dear to your souls? do they wean you from the
world? Then they have worked together for your good.
You have lost a child, or have an afflicted wife, and
unhealthy family; there is no good in that; for "the sorrow of the world
works death." But suppose that this wife or child has become your idol; that
you have worshiped it instead of worshiping God – why, then, this affliction
works together for good, if through it your heart's affections are now fixed
on the Lord Jesus alone.
Thus we are to measure this good, not by what the
creature thinks, but by what God himself has declared to be good in his
word, and what we have felt to be good in our soul's experience. Have your
trials humbled you, made you meek and lowly? They have done you good. Have
they stirred up a spirit of prayer in your bosom, made you sigh, cry, and
groan for the Lord to appear, visit, or bless your soul? They have done you
good. Have they opened up those parts of God's word which are full of mercy
and comfort to his afflicted people? They have done you good. Have they
stripped off the covering that is too narrow? They have done you good. Have
they made you more sincere, more earnest, more spiritual, more
heavenly-minded, more convinced that the Lord Jesus can alone bless and
comfort your soul? They have done you good. Have they been the means in
God's hand of giving you a lift in hearing the preached word, of opening
your ears to hear none but the true servants of God, those who enter into a
tried path, and describe a gracious experience? They have done you good.
Have they made the Bible more precious to you, the promises more sweet, the
dealings of God with your soul more prized? They have done you good.
Now this is the way, that "all things work together for
good." Not by puffing you up with pride, but by filling your heart with
humility; not by encouraging presumption, but by raising your affections to
where Jesus sits at the right hand of God; not by carrying us into the
world, but by bringing us out of it; not by covering us with a veil of
ignorance and arrogance, but by stripping this veil off, and bringing light,
life, and power into the soul. In this way, "all things work together for
good to those who love God, and are the called according to his purpose."
III. The knowledge of the promise, and of our personal
interest in it. "We know that all things work together for
good." How do we know it? We know it in two ways. We know it, first, from
the testimony of God's word – and we know it secondly, from the testimony of
God in our own conscience.
1. Let us look at the record of God's word.
See the saints of old; how afflicted they were! But did not all things work
together for good to them? Look at Jacob! What sorrows, trials and
afflictions the aged patriarch went through! his whole life one continued
scene of trouble and sorrow. But did not all work together for his good? Was
there one too many, or one too heavy? Could he not in the end lay his head
upon his dying pillow, and bless and thank God for them all?
Look at Joseph! Did not all things work together
for his good? His brethren's enmity; his being sold into Egypt; the wicked
conduct of his master's wife – his being cast into prison – his interpreting
the chief butler's and baker's dreams. How all these things worked together
for his good, and brought him out to occupy the next place to Pharaoh
himself, and be the means in the hand of God of keeping alive the people of
Israel.
Look at David! Hunted on the mountains like a
partridge; continually exposed to the spear of Saul; on every hand nothing
but persecution and distress – on all sides affliction and sorrow. Yet all
things worked together for his good. What blessed Psalms we have in
consequence! What a sweet treasury of comfort for God's people through David
being thus hunted about on the mountains and in the wilderness! How suitable
they are to God's poor tried and tempted family! If David had not had all
these persecutions and afflictions, he never could have written the Psalms,
nor would there have been in them such treasures of consolation.
Look at Job's troubles and afflictions! Children
taken away; property swept off in a moment; his body plagued with boils; his
friends turned to enemies; and God himself appearing to be against him. Yet,
how all things worked together for good in his case!
2. We know it from the testimony of God in our own
conscience. And have we not in our measure proved the same? When
trials came, we could not see that they were working together for good. No –
perhaps you have sometimes been, as I have felt, in such a state as to
believe we never would see the day when they would prove for our good. They
were so dark in themselves, so mysterious, so painful, so trying, so
perplexing, that in the unbelief of our mind, we could scarcely believe that
God himself could ever convince us they were working together for our
spiritual good.
But has there been any trial, any temptation, any
exercise, any affliction, any sorrow, which has not in some way or other
worked together for our spiritual good--in humbling us, showing us more of
what we are, opening up the Scriptures to us, stirring up a spirit of
prayer, making Jesus precious, throwing light upon God's truth, or applying
that truth with a measure of sweetness and comfort to our souls? Thus, we
know from our own experience as well as Scripture, that "all things work
together for good to those who love God, and are the called according to his
purpose."
But, you may say, 'I do not see it now.' No; there
is the trying point. 'I do not feel it at this present moment.' No! Did you
see your past trials at the very moment--that they were working together for
your good? When the Lord afflicted your body, brought you down in
circumstances, sent disease into your family, allowed your mind to be tried
with the fiery darts of the devil, and a thousand temptations and
perplexities--I want to know whether at the time you could speak
confidently, 'I know that what I am now passing through will work together
for my spiritual good.' If you could say that, then I will add this--it was
not half a trial. If you are passing through any trial, sorrow, or
temptation; and can look up unto God, and say, 'I know and am persuaded that
this very thing is working together for my spiritual good--if you can say
that, you have got through more than half the trial. It is this which
aggravates the trials, temptations, and exercises of God's people for the
most part--that when they are in them they have not this blessed confidence.
When we can look back and say, 'there has not been a
single trial that has not worked in some measure for my good'--that
experience encourages us to look forward, and to believe that present trials
will have the same result--and that all things are working together for good
to us as far as we love God, and are the called according to his purpose.
Thus we may resolve it all. There is no man that can say,
'I can make my trials work together for good.' He cannot manage that. He
must have them; and it is a mercy to have them. It is a mercy when we are
enabled to bring our trials, our exercises, our temptations to the Lord's
feet, and say, 'Lord, here I am, with all my trials, troubles, exercises; I
cannot manage them; they are too much for me; you must undertake for me; you
must bring me off more than conqueror; you must appear for me; you must
bless me; you must cause all my trials, exercises, and temptations to work
together for my spiritual good; let the trial be sharp, let the affliction
be heavy, let there be nothing in it but what is most painful and grievous,
yet, Lord, if I can but believe that they are working together for my
spiritual good, I can bear them all!'
If we have found that this has been the result of all
that has passed, it may enable us at times to believe it for all that is to
come, and to look up in confidence that nothing can happen to us, be it in
providence or in grace – but can and will "work together for good to those
who love God, and are called according to his purpose." |