| Stephen Charnock |
| "For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus." 1 Timothy 2:5 |
Stephen Charnock (1628 - 1680) was an eminent English Puritan and Nonconformist who was widely regarded as one of the best minds in the history of Christianity. He served for a time as co-pastor with the equally skillful Thomas Watson who had also been ousted by the infamous Act of Uniformity in 1662, wherein some two thousand Puritan pastors refused to adhere to the mandates of the State Church and were thus ejected from its government.
Charnock was decidedly Calvinistic in doctrine, and his treatise, The Existence And Attributes Of God, clearly reflect this. This work is considered by many to be the best work ever written on the subject, and it should be noted that a great deal of his success in this regard can be traced to the fact that this profound treatise was written in the latter part of his life and ministry. Additionally, he was expert in Latin and the biblical languages.
Charnock's Complete Works, now out of print, encompassed nine volumes, and he is quoted extensively by Spurgeon, Pink, Gill, Edwards, Haldane, Moody, and many others. His biographer says of him - "In a word, for weight of matter, for energy of thought, for copiousness of improving reflection, for grandeur and force of illustration, and for accuracy and felicitousness of expression, Charnock is equaled by few, and surpassed by none of the writers of the age to which he belonged."
Stephen Charnock's magnum opus, The Existence And Attributes Of God, is published in hardcover by Baker Books.
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"God does hate His elect in some sense before
their actual reconciliation. God was placable before Christ, appeased by Christ.
But until there be such conditions which God has appointed in the creature, he
has no interest in this reconciliation of God, and whatever person he be in whom
the condition is not found, he remains under the wrath of God, and therefore in
some sense under God's hatred." Works, Vol III
"Christ's offering was of such infinite value
that it perfectly purchased the taking away of sin, both in the guilt, filth,
and power, and was a sufficient price for all the grace believers should need
for their perfect sanctification to the end of the world. There was the
satisfaction of His blood for the removal of our guilt, and a treasure of merit
for the supply of our grace." Works, Vol V
"As the devil charged God with a lie; so, had
no punishment been inflicted, God would have condemned himself, and declared
Satan, instead of a lying tempter, to be the truest counsellor. He had exposed
himself to contempt, and advanced the credit of his enemy, and so set up the
devil as God instead of himself. It concerned God therefore to manifest himself
true, and the devil a liar, and acquaint the world, that not himself, but the
evil spirit, was their deceiver; and that he meant as he spoke." Works, Vol II
"The thoughts of the heart are in the nature of
words to God, though not to men." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The
Existence Of God
"The nature of God is the foundation of
worship; the will of God is the rule of worship; the matter and manner is to be
performed according to the will of God." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On
God's Being A Spirit
"God is a spirit... Before, Christ spake of the
Father personally, the first person in the blessed Trinity; now he speaks of God
essentially: the word Father is personal, the word God essential." The Existence
And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"Since we are dead in sin, a spiritual light
and flame in the heart suitable to the nature of the object of our worship,
cannot be raised in us without the operation of supernatural grace... such a
worship God must have, whereby he is acknowledged to be the true sanctifier and
quickener of the soul." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A
Spirit
"Every creature, even the highest creature, is
infinitely short of the perfection of God; for whatsoever excellency they have
is finite and limited; it is but a spark from the sun, a drop from the ocean;
but God is unboundedly perfect, in the highest manner, without any limitation;
and therefore above spirits, angels, the highest creatures that were made by
him: an infinite sublimity, a pure act, to which nothing can be added, from
which nothing can be taken." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being
A Spirit
"The divine efficacies are signified -- by his
eyes and ears, we understand his omniscience; by his face, the manifestation of
his favour; by his mouth, the revelation of his will; by his nostrils, the
acceptation of our prayers; by his bowels, the tenderness of his compassion; by
his heart, the sincerity of his affections; by his hand, the strength of his
power; by his feet, the ubiquity of his presence." The Existence And Attributes
Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"The image of God in man consisted not in what
is seen, but in what is not seen; not in the conformation of the members, but
rather in the spiritual faculties of the soul; or, most of all, in the holy
endowments of those faculties... The image which is restored by redeeming grace,
was the image of God by original nature." The Existence And Attributes Of God,
On God's Being A Spirit
"If God be a pure spirit, it is unreasonable
to frame any image or picture of God... our hands are as unable to fashion him,
as our eyes to see him... those that think to draw God by a stroke of a pencil,
or form him by the engravings of art, are more stupid than the statues
themselves." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"God inhabits inaccessible light; as it is
impossible for the eye of man to see him, it is impossible for the art of man to
paint him upon walls, and carve him out of wood. None knows him but himself,
none can describe him but himself. Can we even draw a figure of our own souls,
and express that part of ourselves, wherein we are most like to God?" The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"Suppose we could make such an image of God as
might perfectly represent him; yet since God hath prohibited it, shall we be
wiser than God?" The Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"When men fancy God like themselves in their
corporeal nature, they will soon make a progress, and ascribe to him their
corrupt nature; and while they clothe him with their bodies, invest him also in
the infirmities of them." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A
Spirit
"The nature of God is as much wronged by
unworthy images, erected in the fancy, as by statues carved out of stone or
metals: one as well as the other is a deserting of our true spouse, and
committing adultery; one with a material image, and the other with a carnal
notion of God." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"If God be a spirit, he is active and
communicative... What cannot so great a spirit do for us? What cannot so great a
spirit work in us? God, being a spirit above all spirits, can pierce into the
centre of all spirits; make his way into the most secret recesses; stamp what he
pleases. It is no more to him to turn our spirits than to make a wilderness
become waters, and speak a chaos into a beautiful frame of heaven and earth. He
can act our souls with infinite more ease than our souls can act our bodies; he
can fix in us what motions, frames, inclinations he pleases; he can come and
settle in our hearts with all his treasures." The Existence And Attributes Of
God, On God's Being A Spirit
"As God is a Father of spirits, we may go to
him for the welfare of our spirits; he being a spirit, is as able to repair our
spirits as he was to create them." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's
Being A Spirit
"Who ever heard of a weary angel?" The Existence
And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"We have no correspondence with angels. The
influence they have upon us, the protection they afford us, is secret and
undiscerned; but God, the highest spirit, offers HIMSELF to us in his Son." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"God had no rest from the creation till he had
made man; and man can have no rest in the creation till he rests in God." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"If God be a spirit, let us take heed of those
sins which are spiritual... Spiritual sins are the greatest root of bitterness
within us. As grace in our spirits renders us more like to a spiritual God, so
spiritual sins bring us into a conformity to a degraded devil. Carnal sins
change us from men to brutes, and spiritual sins divest us of the image of God
for the image of Satan... Let us, therefore, behave ourselves towards God in all
those ways which the spiritual nature of God requires us." The Existence And
Attributes Of God, On God's Being A Spirit
"Some attributes require a condition to make the
acts of them necessary; as it is at God's liberty, whether he will create a
rational creature, or no; but when he decrees to make either angel or man, it is
necessary, from the perfection of his nature, to make them righteous. It is at
God's liberty whether he will speak to man, or no; but if he doth, it is
impossible for him to speak that which is false, because of his infinite
perfection of veracity. It is at his liberty whether he will permit a creature
to sin; but if he sees good to suffer it, it is impossible but that he should
detest that creature that goes cross to his righteous nature." The Existence And
Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"Though God hath crowned the angels with an
unspotted sanctity, and placed them in a habitation of glory, yet, as
illustrious as they are, they have an unworthiness in their own nature to appear
before the throne of so holy a God; their holiness grows dim and pale in his
presence. It is but a weak shadow of that Divine purity, whose light is so
glorious, that it makes them cover their faces out of weakness to behold it, and
cover their feet out of shame in themselves." The Existence And Attributes Of
God, On The Holiness Of God
"The holiness of God is so absolutely peculiar
to him, that it can no more be expressed in creatures, than his omnipotence,
whereby they may be able to create a world; or his omniscience, whereby they may
be capable of knowing all things, and knowing God as he knows himself." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"A love of holiness cannot be without a hatred
of everything that is contrary to it. As God necessarily loves himself, so he
must necessarily hate everything that is against himself: and as he loves
himself for his own excellency and holiness, he must necessarily detest
whatsoever is repugnant to his holiness, because of the evil of it." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"Every act of sin is a spiritual adultery,
denying God to be the chief good, and giving that prerogative by that act to
some vile thing." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"God indeed may be reconciled to the sinner,
but never to the sin." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of
God
"Not all the vials of judgments, that have, or
shall be poured out upon the wicked world, nor the flaming furnace of a sinner's
conscience, nor the irreversible sentence pronounced against the rebellious
devils, nor the groans of the damned creatures, give such a demonstration of
God's hatred of sin, as the wrath of God let loose upon his Son. Never did
Divine holiness appear more beautiful and lovely, than at the time of our
Saviour's countenance was most marred in the midst of his dying groans...
Holiness drew the veil between God's countenance and our Saviour's soul. Justice
indeed gave the stroke, but holiness ordered it." The Existence And Attributes
Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"One that had been from eternity; had laid the
foundations of the world; had been the object of the Divine delight: he that was
God blessed forever, become a curse; he who was blessed by angels, and by whom
God blessed the world, must be seized with horror; the Son of eternity must
bleed to death! When did ever sin appear so irreconcilable to God? Where did God
ever break out so furiously in his detestation of iniquity?" The Existence And
Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"The holiness of God in his hatred of sin
appears in our justification... Our justification is not by the imperfect works
of creatures, but by an exact and infinite righteousness, as great as that of
the Deity which had been offended: it being the righteousness of a Divine
person, upon which account it is called the righteousness of God; not only in
regard of God's appointing it, and God's accepting it, but as it is a
righteousness of that person that was God, and is God." The Existence And
Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"To be desirous to know the reason of all
God's proceedings in the matter of sin, is to second the ambition of Adam, to be
as wise as God, and know the reason of his actings equally with himself... It is
certain that God made man upright; and when man sinned in paradise, God was
active in sustaining the substantial nature and act of the sinner while he was
sinning, though not in supporting the sinfulness of the act: he was permissive
in suffering it: he was negative in withholding that grace which might certainly
have prevented his crime, and consequently his ruin; though he withheld nothing
that was sufficient for his resistance of that temptation wherewith he was
assaulted." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"God could, if he would, savingly enlighten the
minds of all men in the world, and quicken their hearts with a new life by an
invincible grace; but in not doing it, there is no positive act of God, but a
cessation of action... God did not pass by any without the consideration of sin;
so that this act of God is not repugnant to his holiness, but conformable to his
justice." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"As no action could be sinful, if God had not
forbidden it; so no sin could be committed, if God did not will to give way to
it." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"God wills good by a positive decree, because he
hath decreed to effect it. He wills evil by a private decree, because he hath
decreed not to give that grace which would certainly prevent it. God doth not
will sin simply, for that were to approve it, but he wills it, in order to that
good his wisdom will bring forth from it. He wills not sin for itself, but for
the event... Infinite wisdom can be under no error or mistake: to will sin as
sin, would be an unanswerable blemish on God; but to will to suffer it in order
to good, is the glory of his wisdom; it could never have peeped up its head,
unless there had been some decree of God concerning it. And there had been no
decree of God concerning it, had he not intended to bring good and glory out of
it." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"God wills the permission of sin. He doth not
positively will sin, but he positively wills to permit it. And though he doth
not approve of sin, yet he approves of that act of his will, whereby he permits
it." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"As God acts nothing in time, but what he
decreed from eternity, so he permits nothing in time but what he decreed from
eternity to permit... This act of permission is not a mere and naked permission,
but such an one as is attended with a certainty of the event." The Existence And
Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"Since the entrance of the first sin into the
world by Adam, God is more a hinderer than a permitter of it. If he hath
permitted that which he could have prevented, he prevents a world more, that he
might, if he pleased, permit: the hedges about sin are larger than the outlets;
they are but a few streams that glide about the world, in comparison of that
mighty torrent he dams up both in men and devils... If God did not limit sin, as
he doth the sea, and put bars to the waves of the heart, as well as those of the
waters, and say of them -- Hitherto you shall go, and no further -- man hath
such a furious ocean in him, as would overflow the banks; and where it makes a
breach in one place, it would in a thousand, if God should suffer it to act
according to its impetuous current." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The
Holiness Of God
"God's holiness is slighted in depending upon
our imperfect services to bear us out before the tribunal of God... Not to speak
of many among the Romanists who have the same notion, thinking to make
satisfaction to God by erecting an hospital, or endowing a church, as if this
injured perfection could be contented with the dregs of their purses, and the
offering of an unjust mammon, more likely to mind God of the injury they have
done him, than contribute to the appeasing of God... What is all this but a
villifying of the holiness of the Divine nature, as though it would be well
enough contented with our impurities and imperfections, because they look like a
righteousness in our estimation.?" The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The
Holiness Of God
"It is a blasphemy against this attribute
[holiness], to pretend that anything so imperfect, so daubed, as the best of our
services are, can answer to that which is infinitely perfect, and be a ground of
demanding eternal life... Rude and foolish notions of the Divine purity are
clearly evidenced by any confidence in any righteousness of our own, though
never so splendid... alas! the best duties in the most gracious persons in this
life, are but as the steams of a spiced dung-hill, a composition of myrrh and
froth, since there are swarms of corruptions in their nature, and secret sins
that they need a cleansing from." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The
Holiness Of God
"To charge the law with rigidness, either in
language or practice, is the highest contempt of God's holiness; for it is an
implicit wish, that God were as defiled, polluted, disorderly, as our corrupted
selves." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"The Romanists divide sins into venial and
mortal -- mortal, are those which
deserve eternal death; venial, the lighter sort of sins, which rather deserve to
be pardoned than punished; or if punished, not with an eternal, but temporal
punishment. This opinion hath no foundation in, but is contrary to, Scripture.
How can any sin be in its own nature venial, when the due wages of every sin is
death (Rom. vi. 23)? And he who continues not in every thing that the law
commands, falls under a curse (Gal. iii. 10). It is a mean thought of the
holiness and majesty of God to imagine, that any sin which is against an
infinite majesty, and as infinite a purity both in the nature of God and the law
of God, should not be considered as infinitely heinous. All sins are
transgressions of the eternal law, and in every one the infinite holiness of God
is some way slighted." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of
God
"The devil is not more fallen from the rectitude
of his nature and likeness to God, than we are; and that we are not in the same
condition with those apostate spirits, is not from anything in our nature, but
from the mediation of Christ, upon which account God hath indulged in us a
continuance of some remainders of that which Satan is wholly deprived of." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"A hatred of unrighteousness, and consequently
a will to punish it, is as essential to God as a love of righteousness. Since he
is not as an heathen idol, but hath eyes to see, and purity to hate every
iniquity, he will have an infinite justice to punish whatsoever is against
infinite holiness." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"The punishment, therefore, inflicted on the
wicked, shall be, in some respect, as great as the rewards bestowed upon the
righteous." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"The holiness of God will right itself of the
wrongs done to it, and scatter the profaners of it at the greatest distance from
him, which is the greatest punishment that can be inflicted; to be removed far
from the Fountain of Life is the worst of deaths." The Existence And Attributes
Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"God so hated sin, that when it was but imputed
to his Son, without any commission of it, he would bring a hell upon his soul."
The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"God cannot but be holy, and therefore cannot
but be just, because injustice is a part of unholiness." The Existence And
Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"There must be a reparation made of the honor of
God's holiness; by ourselves it could not be without condemnation; by another it
could not be without a sufficiency in the person: no creature could do it. All
the creatures being of a finite nature, could not make a compensation for the
disparagements of Infinite Holiness... It must, therefore, be such a
compensation as might be commensurate to the holiness of the Divine nature and
the Divine law, which could not be wrought by any, but Him that was possessed of
a Godhead to give efficacy and exact congruity to it... The punishment due to
sin is translated to that person for the righting Divine holiness, and the
righteousness of that Person is communicated to the sinner for the pardon of the
offending creature... There was therefore a necessity of such a way to manifest
his purity, and yet to bring forth his mercy: that mercy might not alway sigh
for the destruction of the creature, and that holiness might not mourn for the
neglect of its honor." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of
God
"That righteousness which God hath set fort
for justification, is not our own, but a righteousness which is of god, of God's
appointing, and of God's performing; appointed by the Father, who is God, and
performed by the Son, who is one with the Father; a righteousness surmounting
that of all the glorious angels, since it is an immutable one which can never
fail, an everlasting righteousness; a righteousness wherein the holiness of God
can acquiesce, as considered in itself, because it is a righteousness of one
equal with God." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"Those that never had a sense of their own
vileness, were always destitute of a sense of God's holiness." The Existence And
Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"Purity is the flash of his [God's] revenging
sword." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"It is not the pattern of angels, or archangels,
that our Saviour, or his apostle, proposeth for our imitation; but the original
of all purity, God himself; the same that created us, to be imitated by us." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"As in abstinence from intemperate courses,
not because the holiness of God in his law hath prescribed it, but because the
health of our bodies, or some noble contentments of life, require it; then it is
is not God's holiness that is our rule, but our own security, conveniency, or
something else which we make a God to ourselves." The Existence And Attributes
Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"As the law is the transcript, so Christ is the
image of his holiness: the glory of God is too dazzling to be beheld by us: the
acute eye of an angel is too weak to look upon that bright sun without covering
his face: we are much too weak to take our measures from that purity which is
infinite in his nature. But he hath made his Son like us, that by the imitation
of him in that temper, and shadow of human flesh, we may arrive to a resemblance
of him." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"It was the honor of the human nature of our
Saviour, not only to be united to the Deity, but to be sanctified by it." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"No greater glory can be, than to be a
conspicuous and visible image of the invisible, and holy, and blessed God... We
are not so beautiful by being the work of God, as by having a stamp of God upon
us." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"The creature must be stripped of his
unrighteousness, or God of his purity, before they can come together." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"We cannot be satisfied with the likeness of God
at the resurrection, unless we have a righteousness wherewith to behold his
face. It is a vain imagination in any to think that heaven can be a place of
happiness to him, in whose eye the beauty of holiness which fills and adorns it,
is an unlovely thing; or that any can have a satisfaction in that Divine purity
which is loathsome to him in the imitations of it... Holiness fits us for
communion with God." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness Of God
"God makes not the creature so powerful as he
might, but he delights to make the creature that waits upon him as holy as it
can be; beginning it in this world, and ripening it in the other. It is from him
we must expect it, and from him that we must beg it, and draw arguments from the
holiness of his nature, to move him to work holiness in our spirits; we cannot
have a stronger plea... Let us also go to God, to preserve what he hath already
wrought and imparted. As we cannot attain it, so we cannot maintain it without
him. God gave it Adam, and he lost; when God gives it us, we shall lose it
without his influencing and preserving grace; the channel will be without a
stream, if the fountain doth not constantly supply them. Let us apply ourselves
to him for holiness, as he is a God glorious in holiness; by this we honor God,
and advantage ourselves." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Holiness
Of God
"A fool is one that hath lost his wisdom, and
right notion of God and divine things which were communicated to man by
creation; one dead in sin, yet one not so much void of rational faculties as of
grace in those faculties, not one that wants reason, but abuses his reason." The
Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Existence Of God
"The thoughts of the heart are in the nature
of words to God, though not to men." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The
Existence Of God
"There is something of a secret atheism in all,
which is the fountain of the evil practices in their lives, not an utter
disowning of the being of a God, but a denial or doubting of some of the rights
of his nature." The Existence And Attributes Of God, On The Existence Of God