LECTURE XXI
THE BACKSLIDER IN HEART
The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways. - Proverbs 14:14.
I cannot conclude this course of lectures, without warning converts against
backsliding. In discussing this subject, I will show:
I. What backsliding in heart is not.
II. What backsliding in heart is.
III. What are evidences of backsliding in heart.
IV. What are consequences of backsliding in heart.
V. How to recover from this state.
I. WHAT A BACKSLIDING HEART IS NOT.
- 1. It does not consist in the subsidence of
highly excited religious emotions. The subsidence of religious feeling may be
an evidence of a backslidden heart, but it does not consist in the cooling off
of religious feeling.
II. WHAT BACKSLIDING IN HEART IS.
- 1. It consists in taking back that
consecration to God and His service, that constitutes true conversion.
- 2. It is the leaving, by a Christian, of
his first love.
- 3. It consists in the Christian withdrawing
himself from that state of entire and universal devotion to God, which
constitutes true religion, and coming again under the control of a
self-pleasing spirit.
- 4. The text implies that there may be a
backslidden heart, when the forms of religion and obedience to God are
maintained. As we know from consciousness that men perform the same, or
similar, acts from widely different, and often from opposite, motives, we are
certain that men may keep up all the outward forms and appearances of
religion, when in fact, they are backslidden in heart. No doubt the most
intense selfishness often takes on a religious type, and there are many
considerations that might lead a backslider in heart to keep up the forms,
while he had lost the power of godliness in his soul.
III. WHAT ARE EVIDENCES OF A BACKSLIDDEN
HEART.
- 1. Manifest formality in religious
exercises. A stereotyped, formal way of saying and doing things, that is
clearly the result of habit, rather than the outgushing of the religious life.
This formality will be emotionless and cold as an iceberg, and will evince a
total want of earnestness in the performance of religious duty. In prayer and
in religious exercises the backslider in heart will pray or praise, or
confess, or give thanks with his lips, so that all can hear him, perhaps, but
in such a way that no one can feel him. Such a formality would be impossible
where there existed a present, living faith and love, and religious zeal.
- 2. A want of religious enjoyment is
evidence of a backslidden heart. We always enjoy the saying and doing of those
things that please those whom we most love; furthermore, when the heart is not
backslidden, communion with God is kept up, and therefore all religious duties
are not only performed with pleasure, but the communion with God involved in
them is a source of rich and continual enjoyment. If we do not enjoy the
service of God, it is because we do not truly serve Him. If we love Him
supremely, it is impossible that we should not enjoy His service at every
step. Always remember then, whenever you lose your religious enjoyment, or the
enjoyment of serving God, you may know that you are not serving Him aright.
- 3. Religious bondage is another evidence of
a backslidden heart. God has no slaves. He does not accept the service of
bondsmen, who serve Him because they must. He accepts none but a love service.
A backslider in heart finds his religious duties a burden to him. He has
promised to serve the Lord. He dare not wholly break off from the form of
service, and he tries to be dutiful, while he has no heart in prayer, in
praise, in worship, or in any of those exercises which are so spontaneous and
delightful, where there is true love to God. The backslider in heart is often
like a dutiful, but unloving wife. She tries to do her duty to her husband,
but fails utterly because she does not love him. Her painstaking to please her
husband is constrained, not the spontaneous outburst of a loving heart; and
her relationship and her duties become the burden of her life. She goes about
complaining of the weight of care that is upon her, and will not be likely to
advise young ladies to marry. She is committed for life, and must therefore
perform the duties of married life, but it is such a bondage! Just so with
religious bondage. The professor must perform his duty. He drags painfully
about it, and you will hear him naturally sing backslider's hymns:
- Reason I hear, her counsels weigh, And all
her words approve And yet I find it hard to obey, And harder still, to love.
- 4. An ungoverned temper. While the heart is
full of love, the temper will naturally be chastened and sweet, or at any
rate, the will keep it under, and not suffer it to break out in outrageous
abuse, or if at any time it should so far escape from the control of the will
as to break loose in hateful words, it will soon be brought under, and by no
means suffered to take control and manifest itself to the annoyance of others.
Especially will a loving heart confess and break down, if at any time bad
temper gets the control.
- Whenever, therefore, there is an irritable,
uncontrolled temper allowed to manifest itself to those around, you may know
there is a backslidden heart.
- 5. A spirit of uncharitableness is evidence
of a backslidden heart. By this, I mean a want of that disposition that puts
the best construction upon every one's conduct that can be reasonable - a want
of confidence in the good intentions and professions of others. We naturally
credit the good professions of those whom we love. We naturally attribute to
them right motives, and put the best allowable construction upon their words
and deeds. Where there is a want of this there is evidence conclusive of a
backslidden or unloving heart.
- 6. A censorious spirit is conclusive
evidence of a backslidden heart. This is a spirit of fault-finding, of
impugning the motives of others, when their conduct admits of a charitable
construction. It is a disposition to fasten blame upon others, and judge them
harshly. It is a spirit of distrust of Christian character and profession. It
is a state of mind that reveals itself in harsh judgments, harsh sayings, and
the manifestation of uncomfortable feelings toward individuals. This state of
mind is entirely incompatible with a loving heart, and whenever a censorious
spirit is manifested by a professor of religion, you may know there is a
backslidden heart.
- 7. A want of interest in God's Word, is
also an evidence of a backslidden heart. Perhaps nothing more conclusively
proves that a professor has a backslidden heart, than his losing his interest
in the Bible. While the heart is full of love, no book in the world is so
precious as the Bible. But when the love. is gone, the Bible becomes not only
uninteresting but often repulsive. There is no faith to accept its promises,
but conviction enough left to dread its threatening. But in general the
backslider in heart is apathetic as to the Bible. He does not read it much,
and when he does read it, he has not interest enough to understand it. Its
pages become dark and uninteresting, and therefore it is neglected.
- 8. A want of interest in secret prayer is
also an evidence of a backslidden heart. Young Christian, if you find yourself
losing your interest in the Bible and in secret prayer, stop short, return to
God, and give yourself no rest, till you enjoy the light of His countenance.
If you feel disinclined to pray, or to read your Bible; if when you pray and
read your Bible, you have no heart; if you are inclined to make your secret
devotions short, or are easily induced to neglect them; or if your thoughts,
affections, and emotions wander, you may know that you are a backslider in
heart, and your first business is to be broken down before God, and to see
that your love and zeal are renewed.
- 9. A want of interest in the conversion of
souls and in efforts to promote revivals of religion. This of course reveals a
backslidden heart. There is nothing in which a loving heart takes more
interest than in the conversion of souls - in revivals of religion, and in
efforts to promote them.
- 10. A want of interest in published
accounts or narratives of revivals of religion, is also an evidence of a
backslidden heart. While one retains his interest in the conversion of souls,
and in revivals of religion he will, of course, be interested in all accounts
of revivals of religion anywhere. If you find yourself, therefore, disinclined
to read such accounts, or find yourself not interested in them, take it for
granted that you are backslidden in heart.
- 11. The same is true of missions, and
missionary work and operations. If you lose your interest in the work, and in
the conversion of the heathen, and do not delight to read and hear of the
success of missions, you may know that you are backslidden in heart.
- 12. The loss of interest in benevolent
enterprises generally is an evidence of a backslidden heart. I say, "the loss
of interest," for surely, if you were ever converted to Christ, you have had
an interest in all benevolent enterprises that came within your knowledge.
Religion consists in disinterested benevolence. Of course, a converted soul
takes the deepest interest in all benevolent efforts to reform and save
mankind; in good government, in Christian education, in the cause of
temperance, in the abolition of slavery, in provision for the needs of the
poor, and in short, in every good word and work. Just in proportion as you
have lost your interest in these, you have evidence that you are backslidden
in heart.
- 13. The loss of interest in truly spiritual
conversation is another evidence of a backslidden heart. "Out of the abundance
of the heart the mouth speaketh" (Matthew 12:34). This our Lord Jesus Christ
announced as a law of our nature. No conversation is so sweet to a truly
loving heart, as that which relates to Christ, and to our living Christian
experience. If you find yourself losing interest in conversing on heart
religion, and of the various and wonderful experiences of Christians, if you
have known what the true love of God is, you have fallen from it, and are a
backslider in heart.
- 14. A loss of interest in the conversation
and society of highly spiritual people, is an evidence of a backslidden heart.
We take the greatest delight in the society of those who are most interested
in the things that are most dear to us. Hence, a loving Christian heart will
always seek the society of those who are most spiritually minded, and whose
conversation is most evangelical and spiritual. If you find yourself wanting
in this respect, then know for certain that you are backslidden in heart.
- 15. The loss of interest in the question of
sanctification is an evidence of a backslidden heart. I say again, the loss of
interest, for, if you ever truly knew the love of God, you must have had a
great interest in the question of entire consecration to God, or of entire
sanctification. If you are a Christian, you have felt that sin was an
abomination to your soul. You have had inexpressible longings to be rid of it
forever, and everything that could throw light upon that question of agonizing
importance was most intensely interesting to you. If this question has been
dismissed, and you no longer take an interest in it, it is because you are
backslidden in heart.
- 16. The loss of interest in those newly
converted, is also an evidence of a backslidden heart. The Psalmist says:
"They that fear Thee will be glad when they see me; because I have hoped in
Thy word" (Psalm 119:74).
- This he puts into the mouth of a convert,
and who does not know that this is true? There is joy in the presence of the
angels of God, over one sinner that repenteth, and is there not joy among the
saints on earth, over those that come to Christ, and are as babes newly born
into the Kingdom? Show me a professor of religion who does not manifest an
absorbing interest in converts to Christ, and I will show you a backslider in
heart, and a hypocrite; he professes religion, but has none.
- 17. An uncharitable state of mind in regard
to professed converts, is also an evidence of a backslidden heart. Charity, or
love, "believeth all things, hopeth all things" (1 Corinthians 13:7), is very
ready to judge kindly and favorably of those who profess to be converted to
Christ, and will naturally watch over them with interest, pray for them,
instruct them, and have as much confidence in them as it is reasonable to
have. A disposition, therefore, to pick at, criticize, and censure them, is an
evidence of a backslidden heart.
- 18. The want of the spirit of prayer is
evidence of a backslidden heart.
- While the love of Christ remains fresh in
the soul, the indwelling Spirit of God will reveal Himself as the Spirit of
grace and supplication. He will beget strong desires in the soul for the
salvation of sinners and the sanctification of saints. He will often make
intercessions in them, with great longings, strong crying and tears, and with
groanings that cannot he uttered in words, for those things that are according
to the will of God. Or, to express it in Scripture language, according to
Paul: "Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities: for we know not what
we should pray for as we ought: but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for
us with groanings which cannot be uttered. And He that searcheth the hearts
knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because He maketh intercession for the
saints according to the will of God" (Romans 8:26, 27). If the spirit of
prayer departs, it is a sure indication of a backslidden heart, for while the
first love of a Christian continues he is sure to be drawn by the Holy Spirit
to wrestle much in prayer.
- 19. A backslidden heart often reveals
itself by the manner in which people pray. For example, praying as if in a
state of self-condemnation, or very much like a convicted sinner, is an
evidence of a backslidden heart. Such a person will reveal the fact, that he
is not at peace with God. His confessions and self-accusations will show to
others what perhaps he does not well understand himself. His manner of praying
will reveal the fact that he has not communion with God; that instead of being
filled with faith and love, he is more or less convicted of sin, and conscious
that he is not in a state of acceptance with God. He will naturally pray more
like a convicted sinner than like a Christian. It will be seen by his prayer
that he is not in a state of Christian liberty - that he is having a Seventh
of Romans experience, instead of that which is described in the Eighth.
- 20. A backslidden heart will further reveal
itself in praying almost exclusively for self, and for those friends that are
regarded almost as parts of self. It is often very striking and even shocking
to attend a backsliders' prayer meeting, and I am very sorry to say that many
prayer meetings of the Church are little else. Their prayers are timid and
hesitating, and reveal the fact that they have little or no faith. Instead of
surrounding the Throne of Grace and pouring their hearts out for a blessing on
those around them, they have to be urged up to duty, to "take up their cross."
Their hearts do not, will not, spontaneously gush out to God in prayer. They
have very little concern for others, and when they do, as they say, "take up
their cross and do their duty," and pretend to lead in prayer, it will be
observed that they pray just like a company of convicted sinners, almost
altogether for themselves. They will pray for that which, should they obtain
it, would be religion, just as a convicted sinner would pray for a new heart;
and the fact that they pray for religion as they do, manifests that they have
none, in their present state of mind. Ask them to pray for the conversion of
sinners, and they will either wholly forget to do so, or just mention sinners
in such a way as will show that they have no heart to pray for them.
- I have known professed Christian parents to
get into such a state that they had no heart to pray for the conversion of
their own children, even when those children were under conviction. They would
keep up family prayer, and attend a weekly prayer meeting, but would never get
out of the rut of praying round and round for themselves. A few years since I
was laboring in a revival in a Presbyterian Church. At the close of the
evening sermon I found that the daughter of one of the elders of the Church
was in great distress of mind. I observed that her convictions were very deep.
We had been holding a meeting with inquirers in the vestry, and I had just
dismissed the inquirers, when this young lady came to me in great agitation
and begged me to pray for her. The people had mostly gone, except a few who
were waiting in the body of the church for those friends who had attended the
meeting of inquiry. I called the father of this young lady into the vestry
that he might see the very anxious state of his daughter's mind.
After a short personal conversation with her in the presence of her father, I
called on him to pray for her, and said that I would follow him, and I urged
her to give her heart to Christ. We all knelt, and he went through with his
prayer, kneeling by the side of his sobbing daughter, without ever mentioning
her case. His prayer revealed that he had no more religion than she had, and
that he was very much in her state of mind - under an awful sense of
condemnation. He had kept up the appearance of religion. As an elder of the
Church, he was obliged to keep up appearances. He had gone round and round
upon the treadmill of his duties, while his heart was utterly backslidden. It
is often almost nauseating to attend a prayer meeting of the backslidden in
heart. They will go round, round, one after the other, in reality praying for
their own conversion. They do not so express it, but that is the real import
of their prayer. They could not render it more evident that they are
backsliders in heart.
- 21. Absence from stated prayer meetings for
slight reasons, is a sure indication of a backslidden heart. No meeting is
more interesting to Christians than the prayer meeting, and while they have
any heart to pray, they will not be absent from prayer meeting unless
prevented from attending by the providence of God. If a call from a friend at
the hour of meeting can prevent their attendance, unless the call is made
under very peculiar circumstances, it is strong evidence that they do not wish
to attend, and hence, that they are backsliders in heart. A call at such a
time would not prevent their attending a wedding, a party, a picnic, or an
amusing lecture. The fact is, it is hypocrisy for them to pretend that they
really want to go, while they can be kept away for slight reasons.
- 22. The same is true of the neglect of
family prayer, for slight reasons.
- While the heart is engaged in religion,
Christians will not readily omit family devotions, and whenever they are ready
to find an excuse for the omission, it is a sure evidence that they are
backslidden in heart.
- 23. When secret prayer is regarded more as
a duty than as a privilege, it is because the heart is backslidden. It has
always appeared to me almost ridiculous, to hear Christians speak of prayer as
a "duty." It is one of the greatest of earthly privileges. What should we
think of a child coming to its parent for its dinner, not because it is
hungry, but as a duty. How would it strike us to hear a beggar speak of the
"duty" of asking alms of us. It is an infinite privilege to be allowed to come
to God, and ask for the supply of all our wants. But to pray because we must,
rather than because we may, seems unnatural. To ask for what we want, and
because we want it, and because God has encouraged us to ask, and has promised
to answer our request, is natural and reasonable. But to pray as a duty and as
if we were obliging God by our prayer, is quite ridiculous, and is a certain
indication of a backslidden heart.
- 24. Pleading for worldly amusements is also
an indication of a backslidden heart. The most grateful amusements possible,
to a truly spiritual mind, are those engagements that bring the soul into the
most direct communion with God. While the heart is full of love and faith, an
hour, or an evening, spent alone in communion with God, is more delightful
than all the amusements which the world can offer. A loving heart is jealous
of everything that will break up or interfere with its communion with God.
- For mere worldly amusements it has no
relish. When the soul does not find more delight in God than in all worldly
things, the heart is sadly backslidden.
- 25. Spiritual blindness is another evidence
of a backslidden heart. While the eye is single the whole body will be full of
spiritual light, but if the eye be evil (which means a backslidden heart) the
whole body will be full of darkness.
- Spiritual blindness reveals itself in a
want of interest in God's Word, and in religious truth generally. It will also
manifest a want of spiritual discrimination, and will be easily imposed upon
by the insinuations of Satan. A backslidden heart will lead to the adoption of
lax principles of morality. It does not discern the spirituality of God's law,
and of His requirements generally. When this spiritual blindness is manifest
it is a sure indication that the heart is backslidden.
- 26. Religious apathy, with worldly
wakefulness and sensibility, is a sure indication of a backslidden heart. We
sometimes see persons who feel deeply and quickly on worldly subjects, but who
cannot be made to feel deeply on religious subjects. This clearly indicates a
backslidden state of mind.
- 27. A self-indulgent spirit is a sure
indication of a backslidden heart. By self-indulgence, I mean a disposition to
gratify the appetites, passions, and propensities, to "fulfill the desires of
the flesh and of the mind" (Ephesians 2:3).
- This, in the Bible, is represented as a
state of spiritual death. I am satisfied that the most common occasion of
backsliding in heart is to be found in the clamor for indulgence of the
various appetites and propensities. The appetite for food is frequently, and
perhaps more frequently than any other, the occasion of backsliding. Few
Christians, I fear, apprehend any danger in this direction. God's injunction
is: "Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the
glory of God" (1 Corinthians 10:31). Christians forget this, and eat and drink
to please themselves, consulting their appetites instead of the laws of life
and health. More persons are ensnared by their tables than the Church is aware
of. The table is a snare of death to multitudes that no man can number. A
great many people who avoid alcoholic drinks altogether, will indulge in tea
and coffee, and even tobacco, and in food that, both in quantity and quality,
violates every law of health. They seem to have no other law than that of
appetite, and this they so deprave by abuse that, to indulge it, is to ruin
body and soul together. Show me a gluttonous professor, and I will show you a
backslider.
- 28. A seared conscience is also an evidence
of a backslidden heart. While the soul is wakeful and loving, the conscience
is as tender as the apple of the eye. But when the heart is backslidden, the
conscience is silent and seared, on many subjects. Such a person will tell you
that he is not violating his conscience, in eating or drinking, or in
self-indulgence of any kind. You will find a backslider has but little
conscience. The same will very generally be true in regard to sins of
omission. Multitudes of duties may be neglected and a seared conscience will
remain silent. Where conscience is not awake, the heart is surely backslidden.
- 29. Loose moral principles are a sure
indication of a backslidden heart. A backslider in heart will write letters on
the Sabbath, engage in secular reading, and in much worldly conversation. In
business, such a person will take little advantages, play off business tricks,
and conform to the habits of worldly business men in the transaction of
business; he will be guilty of deception and misrepresentation in making
bargains, will demand exorbitant interest, and take advantage of the
necessities of his fellow-men.
- 30. Prevalence of the fear of man is an
evidence of a backslidden heart.
- While the heart is full of the love of God,
God is feared, and not man. A desire for the applause of men is kept down, and
it is enough to please God, whether men are pleased or displeased. But when
the love of God is abated, "the fear of man," that "bringeth a snare"
(Proverbs 29:25), gets possession of the backslider. To please man rather than
God, is then his aim. In such a state he will sooner offend God than man.
- 31. A sticklish ness about forms,
ceremonies, and nonessentials, gives evidence of a backslidden heart. A loving
heart is particular only about the substance and power of religion, and will
not stickle about its forms.
- 32. A captiousness about measures in
promoting revivals of religion, is a sure evidence of a backslidden heart.
Where the heart is fully set upon the conversion of sinners and the
sanctification of believers, it will naturally approach the subject in the
most direct manner, and by means in the highest degree calculated to
accomplish the end. It will not object to, nor stumble at, measures that are
evidently blessed of God, but will exert the utmost sagacity in devising the
most suitable means to accomplish the great end on which the heart is set.
IV. THE CONSEQUENCES OF BACKSLIDING IN
HEART.
The text says, that "the backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways."
- 1. He shall be filled with his own works.
But these are dead works, they are not works of faith and love, which are
acceptable to God, but are the filthy rags of his own righteousness. If they
are performed as religious services, they are but loathsome hypocrisy, and an
abomination to God; there is no heart in them. To such a person God says: "Who
hath required this at your hand?" (Isaiah 1:12). "Ye are they which justify
yourselves before men; but God knoweth your hearts: for that which is highly
esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God" (Luke 16:15). "I know
you, that ye have not the love of God in you" (John 5:42).
- 2. He shall be filled with his own
feelings. Instead of that sweet peace and rest, and joy in the Holy Ghost,
that he once experienced, he will find himself in a state of unrest,
dissatisfied with himself and everybody else, his feelings often painful,
humiliating, and as unpleasant and unlovely as can be well conceived. It is
often very trying to live with backsliders. They are often peevish,
censorious, and irritating, in all their ways. They have forsaken God, and in
their feelings there is more of hell than of heaven.
- 3. They will be filled with their own
prejudices. Their willingness to know and do the truth has gone. They will
very naturally commit themselves against any truth that bears hardly upon a
self-indulgent spirit. They will endeavor to justify themselves, will neither
read nor hear that which will rebuke their backslidden state, and they will
become deeply prejudiced against every one that shall cross their path, who
shall reprove them, accounting him as an enemy. They hedge themselves in, and
shut their eyes against the light; stand on the defensive, and criticize
everything that would search them out.
- 4. A backslider in heart will be filled
with his own enmities. He will chafe in almost every relation of life, will
allow himself to be vexed, and to get into such relations with some persons,
and perhaps with many, that he cannot pray for them honestly, and can hardly
treat them with common civility. This is an almost certain result of a
backslidden heart.
- 5. The backslider in heart will be full of
his own mistakes. He is not walking with God. He has fallen out of the Divine
order. He is not led by the Spirit, but is walking in spiritual darkness. In
this state he is sure to fall into many and grievous mistakes, and may get
entangled in such a way as to mar his happiness, and, perhaps, destroy his
usefulness for life.
- Mistakes in business, mistakes in forming
new relations in life, mistakes in using his time, his tongue, his money, his
influence; indeed, all will go wrong with him as long as he remains in a
backslidden state.
- 6. The backslider in heart will be filled
with his own lustings. His appetites and passions, which had been kept under,
have now resumed their control, and having been so long suppressed, they will
seem to avenge themselves by becoming more clamorous and despotic than ever.
- The animal appetites and passions will
burst forth, to the astonishment of the backslider, and he will probably find
himself more under their influence and more enslaved by them than ever before.
- 7. The backslider in heart will be filled
with his own words. While in that state, he will not, and cannot, control his
tongue. It will prove itself to be an unruly member, full of deadly poison. By
his words he will involve himself in many difficulties and perplexities, from
which he can never extricate himself until he comes back to God.
- 8. He will be full of his own trials.
Instead of keeping out of temptation, he will run right into it. He will bring
upon himself multitudes of trials that he never would have had, had he not
departed from God. He will complain of his trials, but yet will constantly
multiply them. A backslider feels his trials keenly, but, while he complains
of being so tried by everything around him, he is constantly aggravating them,
and, being the author of them, he seems industrious to bring them upon himself
like an avalanche.
- 9. The backslider in heart shall be full of
his own folly. Having rejected the Divine guidance, he will evidently fall
into the depths of his own foolishness. He will inevitably say and do
multitudes of foolish and ridiculous things. Being a professor of religion,
these things will be all the more noticed, and of course bring him all the
more into ridicule and contempt. A backslider is, indeed, the most foolish
person in the world.
- Having experimental knowledge of the true
way of life, he has the infinite folly to abandon it. Knowing the fountain of
living waters, he has forsaken it, and "hewed out to himself cisterns, broken
cisterns, that can hold no water" (Jeremiah 2:13). Having been guilty of this
infinite folly, the whole course of his backslidden life must be that of a
fool, in the Bible sense of the term.
- 10. The backslider in heart will be full of
his own troubles. God is against him, and he is against himself. He is not at
peace with God, with himself, with the Church, nor with the world. He has no
inward rest. Conscience condemns him. God condemns him. All that know his
state condemn him.
- "There is no peace, saith my God, to the
wicked" (Isaiah 57:21). There is no position in time or space in which he can
be at rest.
- 11. The backslider in heart will be full of
his own cares. He has turned back to selfishness. He counts himself and his
possessions as his own. He has everything to care for. He will not hold
himself and his possessions as belonging to God, and lay aside the
responsibility of taking care of himself and all that he possesses. He does
not, will not, cast his cares upon the Lord, but undertakes to manage
everything for himself, and in his own wisdom, and for his own ends.
Consequently, his cares will be multiplied, and come upon him like a deluge.
- 12. The backslider in heart will be full of
his own perplexities. Having forsaken God, having fallen into the darkness of
his own folly, he will be filled with perplexities and doubts in regard to
what course he shall pursue to accomplish his selfish ends. He is not walking
with, but contrary to God. Hence, the providence of God will constantly cross
his path, and baffle all his schemes. God will frown darkness upon his path,
and take pains to confound his projects, and blow his schemes to the winds.
- 13. The backslider in heart will be filled
with his own anxieties. He will be anxious about himself, about his business,
about his reputation, about everything. He has taken all these things out of
the hands of God, and claims them and treats them as his own. Hence, having
faith in God no longer, and being unable to control events, he must of
necessity be filled with anxieties with regard to the future. These anxieties
are the inevitable result of his madness and folly in forsaking God.
- 14. The backslider in heart will be filled
with his own disappointments.
- Having forsaken God, and taken the attitude
of self-will, God will inevitably disappoint him as he pursues his selfish
ends. He will frame his ways to please himself, without consulting God. Of
course God will frame his ways so as to disappoint him. Determined to have his
own way, he will be greatly disappointed if his plans are frustrated; yet the
certain course of events under the government of God must of necessity bring
him a series of disappointments.
- 15. The backslider in heart must be full of
his own losses. He regards his possessions as his own, his time as his own,
his influence as his own, his reputation as his own. The loss of any of these,
he accounts as his own loss. Having forsaken God, and being unable to control
the events upon which the continuance of those things is conditioned, he will
find himself suffering losses on every side. He loses his peace. He loses his
property.
- He loses much of his time. He loses his
Christian reputation. He loses his Christian influence, and if he persists he
loses his soul.
- 16. The backslider in heart will be full of
his own crosses. All religious duty will be irksome, and, therefore, a cross
to him. His state of mind will make multitudes of things crosses that in a
Christian state of mind would have been pleasant in a high degree. Having lost
all heart in religion, the performance of all religious duty is a cross to his
feelings. There is no help for him, unless he returns to God. The whole course
of Divine providence will run across his path, and his whole life will be a
series of crosses and trials. He cannot have his own way. He cannot gratify
himself by accomplishing his own wishes and desires. He may beat and dash
himself against the everlasting rocks of God's will and God's way, but break
through and carry all before him he cannot. He must be crossed and recrossed,
and crossed again, until he will fall into the Divine order, and sink into the
will of God.
- 17. The backslider in heart will be filled
with his own tempers. Having forsaken God, he will be sure to have much to
irritate him. In a backslidden state, he cannot possess his soul in patience.
The vexations of his backslidden life will make him nervous and irritable; his
temper will become explosive and uncontrollable.
- 18. The backslider in heart will be full of
his own disgraces. He is a professor of religion. The eyes of the world are
upon him, and all his inconsistencies, worldly-mindedness, follies, bad
tempers, and hateful words and deeds, disgrace him in the estimation of all
men who know him.
- 19. The backslider in heart will be full of
his own delusions. Having an evil eye, his whole body will be full of
darkness. He will almost certainly fall into delusions in regard to doctrines
and in regard to practices. Wandering on in darkness, as he does, he will,
very likely, swallow the grossest delusions. Spiritism, Mormonism,
Universalism, and every other ism that is wide from the truth, will be very
likely to gain possession of him. Who has not observed this of backsliders in
heart?
- 20. The backslider in heart will be filled
with his own bondage. His profession of religion brings him into bondage to
the Church. He has no heart to consult the interests of the Church, or to
labor for its up-building, and yet he is under covenant obligation to do so,
and his reputation is at stake. He must do something to sustain religious
institutions, but to do so is a bondage. If he does it, it is because he must,
and not because he may.
- Again, he is in bondage to God. If he
performs any duty that he calls religious, it is rather as a slave than as a
freeman. He serves from fear or hope, just like a slave, and not from love. A
gain, he is in bondage to his own conscience. To avoid conviction and remorse,
he will do or omit many things, but it is all with reluctance, and not at all
of his own cordial goodwill.
- 21. The backslider in heart is full of his
own self condemnation. Having enjoyed the love of God, and forsaken Him, he
feels condemned for everything. If he attempts religious duty, he knows there
is no heart in it, and hence condemns himself. If he neglects religious duty,
he of course condemns himself. If he reads his Bible, it condemns him. If he
does not read it, he feels condemned. If he goes to religious meetings, they
condemn him; and if he stays away, he is condemned also. If he prays in
secret, in his family, or in public, he knows he is not sincere, and feels
condemned.
- If he neglects or refuses to pray, he feels
condemned. Everything condemns him. His conscience is up in arms against him,
and the thunders and lightnings of condemnation follow him, whithersoever he
goes.
V. HOW TO RECOVER FROM A STATE OF
BACKSLIDING.
- 1. Remember whence you are fallen. Take up
the question at once, and deliberately contrast your present state with that
in which you walked with God.
- 2. Take home the conviction of your true
position. No longer delay to understand the exact situation between God and
your soul.
- 3. Repent at once, and do your first works
over again.
- 4. Do not attempt to get back, by reforming
your mere outside conduct.
- Begin with your heart, and at once set
yourself right with God.
- 5. Do not act like a more convicted sinner,
and attempt to recommend yourself to God by any impenitent works or prayers.
Do not think that you must "reform, and make yourself better" before you can
come to Christ, but understand distinctly, that coming to Christ, alone, can
make you better. However much distressed you may feel, know for a certainty
that until you repent and accept His will, unconditionally, you are no better,
but are constantly growing worse. Until you throw yourself upon His sovereign
mercy, and thus return to God, He will accept nothing at your hands.
- 6. Do not imagine yourself to be in a
justified state, for you know you are not. Your conscience condemns you, and
you know that God ought to condemn you, and if He justified you in your
present state, your conscience could not justify Him. Come, then, to Christ at
once, like a guilty, condemned sinner, as you are; own up, and take all the
shame and blame to yourself, and believe that notwithstanding all your
wanderings from God, He loves you still - that He has loved you with an
everlasting love, and, therefore, with loving-kindness is drawing you.
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Revival Lectures by Charles G. Finney - Public Domain [Copy Freely]