Of
Internal Worship;
and
of Godliness the Groundwork of it
By
John Gill
Prefaced
& Edited by Dr. Riktor Von Zhades
Preface:
In summation herein we read by the esteemed seventeenth century theologian John Gill a dissertation on the myriad facets of the worshiping of our Creator. As such it comes down to the words of the prophet in Chapter 29:13:
In summation herein we read by the esteemed seventeenth century theologian John Gill a dissertation on the myriad facets of the worshiping of our Creator. As such it comes down to the words of the prophet in Chapter 29:13:
And Maryah [the
Lord] shall say, "This people make offerings and honor me with
their lips,
but their heart distances itself from me, and their submission to me is through the commandments and the knowledge of men. - Aramaic Translation
but their heart distances itself from me, and their submission to me is through the commandments and the knowledge of men. - Aramaic Translation
Having
considered the object of worship, worship itself is next to be
treated of; and which is either internal or external: internal
worship requires our first attention, it being of the greatest moment
and importance; external worship profits little in comparison of
that; if the heart is not engaged in worship, bodily exercise is of
little advantage, that being only the form without the power of
godliness; yea vain is such worship where the heart is far removed
from God. God is a spirit, and must be worshipped with our spirits,
the better and more noble part of man; if we serve his law, it should
be with our mind, the inward man delighting in it; obedience to it
should flow from a principle of love to God in the heart, and with a
view to his glory; and if we serve him in the gospel of his Son, it
should be with our spirits, with a fervent affection for it; if we
pray to him it should be with the spirit and the understanding also;
if we sing his praise, it should be with melody in our hearts to the
Lord; herein lies powerful godliness; and godliness is the ground
work of internal worship, and without which there can be no
worshiping God aright and therefore it deserves our first
consideration. Godliness is sometimes used for evangelic doctrine,
the doctrine that is according to godliness, and productive of it;
the whole mystery of godliness, respecting the person, office, and
grace of Christ, and salvation by him, which the apostle exhorts
Timothy to exercise himself in, in opposition to fables, and vain and
trifling things, of no moment. Sometimes it signifies a holy life and
conversation, under the influence and power of the grace of God, as
in 2 Peter 3:11: "What manner of persons ought ye to be in all
holy conversation and godliness?" Sometimes it intends some
particular duty of religion, or rather some particular grace, "Add—to
patience, godliness, to godliness, brotherly love", that is,
exercise these. But in the subject I am upon I consider it as an
assemblage of graces, as containing the whole of grace in the heart,
the exercise of which is necessary to serve and worship God with
reverence and godly fear and without this there can be no internal
worship of God. This is no other than the inward devotion of the
mind, a fervency of spirit in serving the Lord; it is a holy
disposition of the soul towards God. This is eusebeia, the true
worship of God, the ground and foundation of it, without which there
can be none. This is "life and godliness", or vital
powerful godliness, and the things pertaining to it are faith, hope,
love, and every other grace, of which it consists, and in the
exercise of which it lies, and in this is all internal religion and
worship.
First,
such a gracious disposition Godward is not to be found in
unregenerate men, only in such who are truly partakers of the grace
of God. It is godliness which distinguishes between one who truly
serves and worships God, and one that serves and worships him not.
The [former] as he is denominated from it a godly man, so likewise
[is] a true worshipper of God. The [latter], as from the want of it,
he is called an ungodly man, one that is without the worship of God.
Such
a gracious disposition of the mind towards God, which is requisite to
the service and worship of him, is not to be found in unregenerate
men; their character is this, that they are "after the flesh",
or are carnal men; and only "mind the things of the flesh",
carnal things, fleshly lusts. [As such] there is no disposition in
their minds towards God and his worship; they savour not the things
of God, but the things which be of men; and therefore having no
inward disposition Godward, they are truly reckoned ungodly men, and
destitute of the worship of him.
[Additionally
there is] such a gracious disposition towards God and his service,
which is rightly called "godliness", is only to be found in
such who are partakers of the grace of God in truth. For their
character is, that they are "after the Spirit", or are
spiritual men; they are born of the Spirit and his grace, and so are
spirit or spiritual, in whom the Spirit of God dwells, and in whom
grace is the governing principle; though they are not without flesh,
and have much carnality in them, yet being renewed in their minds,
their conversations are spiritual; they walk after and live in the
Spirit. Hence, they mind "the things of the Spirit", they
love spiritual doctrines, desire spiritual gifts, especially an
increase of spiritual grace, and a clearer view of interest in all
spiritual blessings; they savour the things of God, and of the Spirit
of God; they have a gust for them, a relish of them, they are sweet
unto them, their taste being changed. Wherefore, the disposition of
their souls is Godward, and to his service; they have an
understanding of him, and desire to know more of him, and follow on
to know him the use of means; their thoughts are employed about him,
they think on his name, his nature, and perfections, and loving
kindness, as displayed in Christ; their affections are set upon him,
and they love him cordially and sincerely; their desires are after
him, and to the remembrance of his name; they pant after more
communion with him, and the manifestations of his love unto them;
they have their spiritual senses exercised upon him; they see him
with the eyes of their understandings opened, his beauty, his power,
and his glory, in the sanctuary; they hear his gospel with pleasure,
it is a joyful sound unto them, and they can distinguish his voice
from that of a stranger; they taste that the Lord is gracious; his
word and the doctrines of it, his fruit and the blessings of his
grace are sweet to their taste, these are savory things which their
souls love; they handle Christ the word of life, and feel the power
of his gospel on them; that effectually working in them through the
demonstration of the spirit.
These
are truly godly persons; persons [that are] well disposed to the
worship of God, and who rightly perform it; these have their minds
powerfully impressed with the doctrine that is according to
godliness, under the influence of which they live soberly,
righteously, and godly; these have all things given them pertaining
to life and godliness, every grace, and every needful supply and
increase of it; in the exercise of which lies internal worship, or
inward, spiritual, experimental, and practical religion; which is
called eusebeia, or "godliness", and stands opposed to
bodily exercise, or external worship.
Secondly,
godliness not in name and profession only, but godliness in the life
and power of it, an inward fervent devotion of the mind, a gracious
disposition of the heart towards God, as hits been explained, is the
ground work of true religion; and without this there can be no
internal worship, nor indeed any external worship rightly performed;
for without the knowledge of God there can be no true worship of him;
the Samaritans worshipped they knew not what, and so their worship
was not right. Whom the Athenians ignorantly worshipped, him the
apostle declared unto them; nor is a natural knowledge of God by the
creatures sufficient to teach men the worship of God and engage them
in it; the wise philosophers, who, by the light of nature, by the
works of creation, knew there was a God, yet they glorified him not
as God. True spiritual, experimental, and evangelical knowledge of
God, is the knowledge of God in Christ; and as our worship of him is
in and by Christ, there can be no true worship of him without such
knowledge of him, even of him as our covenant God in Christ; and as
this will direct us to the right object of worship, and the true
manner of worship, so it will influence and engage unto it.
Without
faith in God, which is another branch of powerful godliness, there
can be no true worship of God; for whatsoever is not of faith is sin;
and without it, it is impossible to please God in any part of worship
and service; all worship performed to God under the Old Testament
dispensation which was agreeable to him, was by faith, as the
instances of Abel and Jacob, of Moses and the children of Israel
show. And under the gospel dispensation, whenever we draw nigh to God
in any part of worship, it must be in faith; whoever comes to God,
and is a worshipper of him, must believe that he is, and that he is a
rewarder of those that diligently seek him; and if we come to the
throne of grace and there ask anything of God, it must be asked in
faith; and if we attend upon him in the ministry of the word, it must
be in the exercise of faith, for the word only profits as it is mixed
with faith by them that hear it. Now faith is one of the things
pertaining to life and godliness, and is a part of it; and therefore
without godliness, or a gracious disposition of the soul towards God,
there can be no true worship of him.
Without
the fear of God, another branch of vital godliness, there can be no
worship of him. The fear of God is sometimes put for the whole of
worship, both internal and external, "God is greatly to be
feared in the assembly of his saints", where his solemn worship
is performed, "and to be had in reverence of all them that are
about him"; and fear and reverence are so necessary to the
service and worship of God, that the Psalmist exhorts men to "serve
the Lord with fear, and rejoice with trembling"; and as for
himself, he says, "in thy fear will I worship toward thy holy
temple". Where there is no fear of God before the eyes and upon
the hearts of men, there is no worship of him; grace in the heart,
and that in exercise, or inward powerful godliness, which is the same
thing, is absolutely necessary to worship God in an acceptable
manner.
Spiritual
internal worship cannot be performed without love to God, another
branch of real godliness. Charity, or love, is the internal principle
from whence obedience to God, and the worship of him, should spring;
hence love to God with all the heart and soul, as well as fear, is
premised unto it, for such affectionate, cordial, and hearty service
is only acceptable to him, and can never be where the heart is
destitute of godliness. And as they are spiritual worshippers that
God seeks, and spiritual worship that is only acceptable to him, it
being suitable to his nature who is a spirit; none but a spiritual
man can perform it, or that is possessed of true grace, or vital
godliness; they that are in the flesh, in a state of nature, carnal
men, who have no disposition Godward, cannot please God, or do that
which is acceptable in his sight.
Nor
can a man worship God sincerely, if he has only the form and not the
power of godliness; if he only draws nigh to God with his mouth, and
honours him with his lips, and his heart is removed far from him, and
his fear towards him taught by the precept of men, his worship will
be in vain and unacceptable to him, from all which it appears how
necessary godliness is to the worship of God, and that it may well be
reckoned the groundwork and foundation of it.
Now
this gracious disposition of the mind Godward, which may therefore be
truly called godliness, and which is so necessary to the worship of
God, that it cannot be performed without it, is not of a man's self,
it is not naturally in man; yea, as has been seen, the bias and
disposition of the minds of men are naturally the reverse; wherefore
this disposition must be owing to the grace of God, and must be a
gift of his; it is he that gives godliness itself, and all things
appertaining to it; and indeed as it is an assemblage of all the
graces of the Spirit, and every grace is a gift, that must be such.
Knowledge of God is a gift of his; faith is not of ourselves, it is
the gift of God. Hope that is good, is a good hope through grace;
love cannot be purchased at any rate; the fear of God is what is
implanted in the heart by the grace of God, and so all others; and
even all supplies of grace to maintain, encourage, increase, and
support such a disposition, are freely given of God; and all grace,
as it comes from God, it points to God again, and disposes the heart
Godward.
Thirdly,
great is the profit, arid many the advantages, that accrue from
godliness to the possessors of it. That itself is said to be gain to
the persons that have it; "Godliness with contentment is great
gain", there were some indeed who "supposed that gain is
godliness", either who thought that godliness was to be gained
with money, as Simon Magus thought the gifts of the Holy Ghost were;
but as not they, so neither the graces of the Spirit are to be
obtained in such a way: or they were such who took up a profession of
godliness, and made an outward show of it, for the sake of present or
future gain; to gain a name in a church of Christ, to get a
reputation among godly neighbours and acquaintance, and for the sake
of worldly interest in godly wealthy relations, or to obtain the
favour of God now, and heaven hereafter; but after all, what will be
the hope and gain of such a person when "God takes away his
soul?", or they are such who think, or at least act as if they
thought, that all religion lay in gain, in getting money; since their
serving God and Christ, and all they do in a religious way, is for
filthy lucre's sake, every one looking for his gain from his quarter.
But real godliness is itself true gain; it may be said of it as it is
of wisdom, "the merchandise of it is better than the merchandise
of silver, and the gain thereof, than fine gold". Such who,
while in a state of ungodliness, were "wretched, and miserable,
and poor, and blind, and naked", being possessed of godliness,
come into good circumstances; who before were in debt, owed ten
thousand talents, and had nothing to pay, and were liable to a
prison, all their debts are freely forgiven them, and the whole score
of them cleared; who before were in rags, and had nothing to cover
their naked souls before God, are now clothed with change of raiment,
with a robe of righteousness and garments of salvation; who before
were starving, and would have been glad of husks which swine do eat,
are now fed with the finest of the wheat, with angels' food, at
Christ's table, as with marrow and fatness; these are come into very
affluent circumstances, to great riches, durable and unsearchable;
and to great honour also, being raised as beggars from the dunghill,
to sit among princes, and to inherit the throne of glory; yea are
made kings and priests unto God, have a kingdom of grace now, and are
heirs of the kingdom of glory; they who lived without God in the
world, and were aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, are now in a
good family, fellow citizens with the saints and of the household of
God; and being children of God are heirs of God and joint heirs with
Christ, possessed of the riches of grace, and entitled to the riches
of glory; their gain is great indeed, and sufficient to give them
full contentment.
[Also],
godliness is said to be "profitable unto all things”, whereas
bodily exercise, or a presentation of the body only in an attendance
of public worship, "profiteth little", or "for a
little time;" for sometimes such sort of religion and worship
lasts but for a little while, as in temporary believers, and in the
stony ground hearers, and where it continues, it profits not in
matters of the greatest importance; it may be profitable to others,
by way of example, as to children and servants in a man's family, and
to a community with whom he attends for the secular support of it;
and it may be profitable to himself, to keep him from being
elsewhere, in bad company, which might lead into many snares and
temptations, and hurtful lusts; but is of no profit to obtain eternal
life, since a man may constantly hear the word, and attend on and
submit unto all ordinances, and yet Christ may say to him at the last
day, "Depart from me, I know you not"; for there may be
such bodily exercise or external worship, where there is no true
grace nor vital religion: but "godliness", powerful vital
godliness, internal religion, is "profitable unto all things";
it is even profitable to the health of a man's body, for the fear of
the Lord, which is the same thing, is "health to the navel",
and "marrow to the bones"; whereas by an ungodly course of
life men bring upon themselves diseases painful and incurable; but
more especially godliness is profitable to promote the welfare of the
soul; for by means of that, and in the exercise of it, the soul of a
good man, as of Gaius, prospers and is in good health; he finds it
always good for him to draw nigh unto God, where he has much
communion with him, and receives much from him: and such a man is
profitable to others, for godly men are made a blessing to all about
them, they are the light of the world, and the salt of the earth;
though indeed no man can be profitable to God by all his external and
internal religion, as he that is wise and good may be profitable to
himself and others; for when he has done all he can, or by the grace
of God is assisted to do, he is but an unprofitable servant.
Godliness
has "the promise of the life that now is, and of that which is
to come". Of the present life, both temporal and spiritual. A
godly man has the promise of temporal life, of the blessings of it,
of good things in it, yea that he shall want no good thing that is
needful for him; and of a continuance of this life, when an ungodly
man does not live out half his days; God satisfies the godly man with
long life, and shows him his salvation, and of the present spiritual
life, of all things pertaining to it, of all needful supplies of
grace to maintain and support it, and of the continuance of it, and
of its springing up into and issuing in everlasting life, and of the
future life of happiness and glory. It is most certain that there is
a future life, and that there is a promise of eternal life in it,
made by God who cannot lie; this promise is made to the godly man
(Read James 1:12), not to be enjoyed by him through any merit of his,
for that is the gift of God through Christ; and a promise being made
of it, and its being by promise, show that it is not of the works of
men but of the grace of God; and when godliness is said to have the
promise of it, it is a promise God has made to his own grace, and not
to the merits of men. However, it is a plain case, that real
godliness is of great avail to men, both with respect to time and
eternity.
Now
as inward powerful godliness is, as has been seen, a disposition of
the soul Godward, from whom all grace comes and to whom it tends, and
as it is an assemblage of every grace, in the exercise of which all
internal worship and experimental religion lies, I therefore begin
with it, and shall in the following chapters consider the branches of
it in which it opens; as the knowledge of God, repentance towards
God, fear of him, faith and trust in him, the hope of things from
him, love to him, joy in him, humility, self-denial, patience,
submission, and resignation to the will of God, thankfulness for
every mercy, with every other grace necessary to the worship of God,
and which belongs to experimental religion and godliness.
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