The Main Labor of Faith
"Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent." -John 6:29 [KJV]
Oh!
how many a living saint is there who wants to believe in Jesus, who
longs to trust in His holy name; and yet he cannot, so plagued, so
pestered is he by the risings of inward unbelief. He knows that he does
not yet so believe in Him as to obtain deliverance; for he has an inward
testimony in his conscience, that if he believed in the Lord Jesus by
the power of the Holy Ghost, it would bring the love of God into his
heart, extract the sting of death, and fill him with joy and peace.
But
as long as he feels condemned by the law and his own guilty conscience,
he has an inward testimony that he has not as yet that living faith in
Christ which, he is persuaded, would save and deliver him from all his
guilty fears and dismal apprehensions. Therefore he labours after this
special, this peculiar faith in the Lord Jesus, that he may attain unto
it, or rather that God would, of His infinite mercy, bestow it upon him.
Here,
then, is the main labour of faith, to believe in Jesus Christ so as to
obtain pardon, peace, and deliverance. Many a poor soul is labouring
hard at this work, yet with a deep and increasing conviction that it is a
work which he cannot perform except by the immediate power of God. So
powerful an antagonist is unbelief, that, with all his attempts, he
feels that he cannot subdue it, nor raise up one grain of that true
faith whereby Christ is experimentally brought into the heart. But this
very struggle plainly shews that there is life within, a work of God on
his soul; for, from the movements of His grace, and the opposition of
his carnal mind to them, all this conflict proceeds.
When, then,
in due time, the blessed Spirit brings Christ near to his eyes and
heart, reveals Him within, takes of His atoning blood, and sprinkles it
on his conscience, brings forth His righteousness and puts it upon him,
and sheds abroad the love of God, then he raises up that special faith
in the Lord Jesus, whereby the soul hangs, and if I may use the
expression, hooks itself upon His Person, as God-man, upon His blood as
cleansing from all sin, upon His righteousness as perfectly justifying,
upon His grace as super-abounding over all the aboundings of evil, and
upon His dying love as a balmy cordial against all the woes and sorrows
by which it is distressed. This is believing in the Son of God;
believing in Jesus Christ to the salvation of the soul.
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802-1869 A.D.)
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