| J.C. RYLE Evangelical Religion This may be best described by dwelling upon its chief characteristics. These I consider to be five in number. (a) The first leading feature in Evangelical Religion is the absolute supremacy it assigns to Holy Scripture, as the alone rule of faith and practice, the alone test of truth, the alone judge of controversy. Its theory is that man is required to believe nothing, as necessary to salvation, which is not read in Gods Word written or can be proved thereby. It totally denies that there is any other guide for mans soul, co-equal or co-ordinate with the Bible. It refuses to listen to such arguments, as the Church says sothe Fathers say soprimitive antiquity says soCatholic tradition says sothe councils say sothe ancient liturgies say sothe Prayer-book says so, unless it can be shown that what is said is in harmony with Gods Word. The supreme authority of the Bible, in one word, is one of the corner-stones of our system. Show us anything plainly written in that Book and, however trying to flesh and blood, we will receive it, believe it, and submit to it. Show us anything, as religion, which is contrary to that Book, and, however specious, plausible, beautiful, and apparently desirable, we will not have it at any price. It may come before us endorsed by Fathers, schoolmen, and catholic writers; it may be commended by reason, philosophy, science, the inner light, the verifying faculty, the universal conscience of mankind. It signifies nothing. Give us a few plain texts. If the thing is not in the Bible, deducible from the Bible, or in manifest harmony with the Bible, we will have none of it. Like the forbidden fruit, we dare not touch it lest we die. Our faith can find no resting place except in the Bible, or in Bible arguments. Here is rock: all else is sand. (b) The second leading feature in Evangelical Religion is the very great prominence it assigns to the doctrine of human sinfulness and corruption. Its theory is that in consequence of Adams fall, all men are as far as possible gone from original righteousness, and are of their own natures inclined to evil. They are not only in a miserable, pitiable, and bankrupt condition, but in a state of guilt, imminent danger, and condemnation before God. They are not only at enmity with their Maker, and have no title to heaven, but they have no will to serve their Maker, no love to their Maker, and no meetness for heaven. We hold that a mighty spiritual disease like this requires a mighty spiritual medicine for its cure. We dread giving the slightest countenance to any religious system of dealing with mans soul, which even seems to encourage the notion that his deadly wound can be easily healed. We dread fostering mans favourite notion that a little church-going and sacrament-receivinga little patching, and mending, and whitewashing, and gilding, and polishing, and varnishing, and painting the outsideis all that his case requires. Hence we protest with all our heart against formalism, sacramentalism, and every species of mere external or vicarious Christianity. We maintain that all such religion is founded on an inadequate view of mans spiritual need. It requires far more than this to save, or satisfy, or sanctify, a soul. It require nothing less than the blood of God the So applied to the conscience, and the grace of Go the Holy Ghost entirely renewing the heart Man is radically diseased, and man needs a radical cure. I believe that ignorance of the extent of the fall is one grand reason why man can neither understand, appreciate, nor receive Evangelical religion. Next to the Bible, as it foundation, it is based on a clear view of original sin. (c) The third leading feature of Evangelical Religion is the paramount importance it attaches to the work and office of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to the nature of the salvation which He has wrought out for man. Its theory is that the Eternal Son of God, Jesus Christ, has by His life, death, and resurrection, as our Representative and Substitute, obtained a complete salvation for sinners, and a redemption from the guilt, power, and consequences of sin, and that all who believe in Him are, even while they live, completely forgiven and justified from all thingsare reckoned completely righteous before Godare interested in Christ and all His benefits. We hold that nothing whatever is needed between the soul of man the sinner and Christ the Saviour, but simple, childlike faith, and that sacraments, means of grace, ministers, and ordinances are useful just so far as they help this faith, but no further; but that rested in and relied on as ends and not as means, they become downright poison to the soul. We hold that an experimental knowledge of Christ crucified, risen, and interceding, is the very essence of Christianity, and that in teaching men the Christian religion we can never dwell too much on Christ Himself, and never speak too strongly of the fulness, freeness, presentness, and simplicity of the salvation there is in Him for every one that believes. Not least, we hold most firmly that the true doctrine about Christ is precisely that which the natural heart most dislikes. The religion which man craves after is one of sight and sense, and not of faith. An external religion, of which the essence is doing somethingand not an inward and spiritual one, of which the essence is believingthis is the religion that man naturally loves. Hence we maintain that people ought to be continually warned not to make a Christ of the Church, or of the ministry, or of the forms of worship, or of baptism, or of the Lords Supper. We say that life eternal is to know Christ, believe in Christ, abide in Christ, have daily heart communion with Christ, by simple personal faithand that everything in religion is useful so far as it helps forward that life of faith, but no further. (d) The fourth leading feature in Evangelical Religion is the high place which it assigns to the inward work of the Holy Spirit in the heart of man. Its theory is that the root and foundation of all vital Christianity in any one, is a work of grace in the heart, and that until there is real experimental business within a man, his religion is a mere husk, and shell, and name, and form, and can neither comfort nor save. We maintain that the things which need most to be pressed on mens attention, are those mighty works of the Holy Spirit, inward repentance, inward faith, inward hope, inward hatred of sin, and inward love of Gods law. And we say that to tell men to take comfort in their baptism or Church-membership when these all-important graces are unknown, is not merely a mistake, but positive cruelty. We hold that, as an inward work of the Holy Ghost is a necessary thing to a mans salvation, so also it is a thing that must be inwardly felt. We admit that feelings are often deceptive, and that a man may feel much, and sorrow much, and rejoice much, and yet remain dead in trespasses and sins. But we maintain firmly that there can be no real conversion to God, no new creation in Christ, no new birth of the Spirit, where there is nothing felt and experienced within. We hold that the witness of the Spirit, however much it may be abused, is a real true thing. We deem it a solemn duty to be no less jealous about the work of the Holy Ghost, in its place and degree, than we are about the work of Christ. And we insist that where there is nothing felt within the heart of a man, there is nothing really possessed. (e) The fifth and last leading feature in Evangelical Religion is the importance which it attaches to the outward and visible work of the Holy Ghost in the life of man. Its theory is that the true grace of God is a thing that will always make itself manifest in the conduct, behaviour, tastes, ways, choices, and habits of him who has it. It is not a dormant thing that can be within a man and not show itself without. The heavenly seed is not corruptible, but incorruptible. It is a seed which is distinctly said to remain in every one that is born of God (1 Peter 1:23; 1 John 3:9). Where the Spirit is, He will always make His presence known. We hold that it is wrong to tell men that they are children of God, and members of Christ, and heirs of the kingdom of heaven, unless they really overcome the world, the flesh, and the devil. We maintain that to tell a man he is born of God, while he is living in carelessness or sin, is a dangerous mistake, and calculated to do infinite mischief to his soul. We affirm confidently that fruit is the only certain evidence of a mans spiritual condition; and that if we would know whose he is and whom he serves, we must look first at his life. Where there is the grace of the Spirit there will be always more or less fruit of the Spirit. Grace that cannot be seen is no grace at all, and nothing better the Antinomianism. In short, we believe that where there is nothing seen, there is nothing possessed Such are the leading features of Evangelical Religion. |
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