| THE OLD AND NEW MAN IN BELIEVERS |
| "So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God." Romans 10:17 |
by Thomas Boston
A Sermon preached, on a sacramental occasion, at Maxton, in the year 1729
"Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with
him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not
serve sin." Romans vi.6
1. The ground insuring holiness of life in believers
united to Christ, "Our old man is crucified with him." This secures
their holiness of life, in such manner as the drying up of the fountain doth the
drying up of the streams.
"Our old man is crucified with him." This
supposeth that Christ was crucified; that in believers there is a twofold man, a
new man, and an old; for while he saith, "our old man," he intimates
that the old man is not the whole man, as in the unregenerate. The new man is
the new creature of grace in the believer, or he as renewed. The old man is the
corruption of nature, or he as unrenewed. This old man is the fountain of sin in
his heart and life.
1st, The final issue, "That the body of sin might be
destroyed."
2. The certainty concerning this ground, "Knowing
this." It is not a matter of uncertain hope, but known for truth. It could
not be known by sense; no bodily eye could discern our old man on the cross with
Christ: nor yet by rational deduction from natural principles; for the whole
mystery of Christ is supernatural. Therefore it is known by faith upon divine
testimony; it is a conclusion of faith to be laid down for invigorating us in
all our endeavours after holiness of life, and to be firmly held and stuck by in
all our struggles with the old man, as ever we would desire to make head against
him.
2. They are called the new and old man, for two reasons.
USE 1. Hence see, that the believer's life while here
cannot miss to be a struggling life, Gal. v. 17. "For the flesh lusteth
against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the
one to the other; so that ye cannot do the things that ye would." The
believer is like Rebekah in another case, the two men struggle in him; and like
the two armies in the Shulamite.
"O wretched man that I am I who shall deliver me
from the body of this death?" This appears from the account of it already given.
As we derive every grace from the second Adam in our regeneration, so every
corruption from the first Adam in our natural generation.
USE 1. This may serve to humble
believers, when they are at their best. There is an entire body of sin in them
while they are here. Do they excel in any grace? yet there is in them a member
of the old man opposite to it, as passion in meek Moses. Have they every grace
in them? They have every corruption too, though every one does not appear, more
than every grace. Therefore they have need to watch against all sin whatsoever;
for there is never a snare in the ill world but there is a member of the old man
ready to fall in with it, Col. iii. 5. "Mortify therefore your members which
are upon the earth; fornication, uncleanness," &c.
2. No wonder the believer groans being burdened, having
a whole body of sin carrying about with him. And they that groan not under it
are certainly all flesh; no new man in them. If ye belong to Christ ye cannot
want an errand to him for sanctification. Ye have a body of sin to lay before
him, which he alone can destroy.
I. Christ was crucified. He not only died for us, but
died for us the cursed, painful, shameful, lingering death on the tree of the
cross; which we are met to commemorate. Christ was put to this death for us,
rather than another kind of death.
1st, That the first sin that let in all sin into the
world might be the more clearly read in the punishment. When ye consider the
awful and tremendous dispensation of the Son of God, the second Adam, hanging
naked on a tree, and dying there at great leisure in exquisite pain, can ye miss
to see the fiery wrath of God against the sin of that naked pair in paradise,
pleasuring themselves in the fruit of the forbidden tree, and in an instant
defacing the image of God in them?
2dly, That the whole world might see what a low and hard
state Christ took on him, putting himself in our room. We were bond-men under
the curse, and Christ took on him our state of servitude, and that under the
curse becoming a bond-man for us under the curse, Philip. ii. 7. "He took
upon him the form of a servant." Hereof the death on the cross was the sign
and badge, being the punishment of slaves, and accursed in the law. And to make
way for this circumstance, the Jews were subjected to the Romans.
USE 1. Remember a crucified Christ,
enter this night deep into the thought of the Son of God hanging, groaning,
dying on a cross for us. Admire the matchless love in it. Behold the severity of
divine justice against sin in it. Prize the salvation so dearly bought, and
receive it with thankfulness.
2. Think not strange, if ye have a crucified life in the
world. If ye are Christians, followers of Jesus, why should ye think strange of
it, to be thus conformed to your head?
II. The old man in believers is crucified together with
him. Here we are to inquire how it is crucified with him; which take in the
following particulars.
1. Christ hung on the cross as a public person, a
representative of his spiritual seed. For he was the second Adam suffering, as
the other the first Adam sinning. So that as they sinned in Adam, they suffered
in Christ; the law having them all on the cross in Christ their representative,
Gal. ii. 20. "I am crucified with Christ."
2. Christ hanging on the cross had the body of all their
sins upon him, your old man, and my old man. They were on him by the imputation
of the guilt of them, though not inherent in him, 2 Cor. v. 21. "For he hath
made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the
righteousness of God in him." Therefore our old man is said to be
crucified, not in him, but with him.
3. While he was hanging on the cross, he was
meritoriously doing away the guilt of them, and consequently the power,
pollution, and very being thereof; inasmuch as the guilt being removed, these
must cease of course. For the strength of sin is the law, whereby it stakes down
the sinner under the curse, 1 Cor. xv. 56.
4. The sinner being united to Christ by faith, the merit
and virtue, of Christ's suffering on the cross is actually applied to him. So
that, his guilt being removed, there is a reigning principle of grace planted in
him, going through the whole man, whereby the dominion of sin is broken, Rom.
vi. 14 and the pollution removed so far as that new man goes, Tit. iii. 5. So
that the believer is an image of Christ on the cross, full of grace in him, and
of sin on him; but the former working off the latter.
USE 1. See then, O communicants, that
the crucifying of the old man, the body of sin in you, depends entirely on your
uniting with Christ by faith. The sacrament is appointed to seal and strengthen
that union. Therefore your great business at the table should be, closely to
knit with a crucified Christ. The more of that, the more will the death of sin
be hastened on. And they that aim not at the destruction of sin in their
communicating, while they pretend to remember a crucified Saviour, forget the
end of his crucifixion, viz, that the body of sin, being crucified with him,
might be destroyed.
2. The old man in believers is in a state of death,
though not dead outright. It is crucified with Christ. It may move and stir in
them, and vehement struggles it may make, as a dying man struggling with the
mortal disease: but whatever efforts it make, it is on the cross, whence it
shall not come down till it breathe out its last.
3. The practice of religion is painful work; and
Christians must not think it strange, that oft-times they are pained to the
heart in it. The saints in glory have no pain in their work; for the old man is
destroyed in them: but the saints here have an unrenewed part; and that is on
the cross, and cannot but pain them. There are right eyes in them to be plucked
out; the man has a painful struggle in denying himself, crossing his own
inclinations, wrestling against his own flesh and blood. Providence thrusts a
spear into the old man's side, by piercing trials and troubles; it breaks his
legs by cutting disappointments from many airths, to forward his death. This
cannot be bat painful.
4. The old man is long a-dying out; for crucifying is a
lingering death. There must be an exercise of patience in the Christian course;
for there may be many a battle ere the complete victory be got. Many a wound the
old man will take ere he fall; and after he is worsted again and again, he will
get up and renew the battle, till he get the final stroke from the Lord's
immediate hand.
I. What destruction is that that is certainly abiding
the old man in believers? It is an utter destruction of it, with all effects of
it, all marks and vestiges of it, all belonging with it to the old Adam.
1. The old man himself shall be destroyed, utterly
destroyed, out of all that are Christ's; so that though he has many a time trode
them like a field of battle, there shall not be in them the least print of his
feet to be discerned, Heb. xii. 23. "The spirits of just men made perfect."
The day will come, when there shall not be the least guilt of it on them, to
draw a frown from their Father's face against them, (Is. xxxiii. ult. "The
people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity"); when it shall
have no power to prevail over them in the least: nay, when it shall no more have
an indwelling in them, Heb. xii. 23. forecited; but shall be utterly cast forth
as an abominable branch. So the new man shall possess all alone, without a
competitor for ever.
2. The sinful vile body derived from old Adam, which
brought him down from Adam to us, Psal. li. 5. and continues to the end the best
friend he has in believers, shall be destroyed for his sake. The soul shall
leave the sinful flesh to be carried into the grave, where it shall rot and
consume, till it return to the dust again, so as not the least lineament of old
Adam's image or likeness shall be discerned on it. And Christ will take the same
dust thus purified, and form it anew after his own likeness as second Adam,
Phil. iii. 21.
3. The visible heavens that covered him, and this earth
that bore him, and furnished fuel to his lusts, shall for his sake be set on
flames, and reduced to ashes, 2 Pet. iii. 10. "But the day of the Lord will
come as a thief in the night, in the which the heavens shall pass away with a
great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and
the works that are therein shall be burnt up." Compare Gen. iii. 17.
"Cursed is the ground for thy sake." So that it shall no more for ever be
to be said, There is the earth where the old man some time lived, and there the
heavens that gave him light and air. But Christ will make new heavens and a new
earth for the new man, 2 Pet. iii. 13. "Nevertheless we, according to his
promise, look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness."
4. Lastly, All that shall remain of him shall be buried
in hell, Rev. xx. 14. "And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire."
Old Adam brought in the old man into the world, and he spread his poisonous
efficacy over all: so that look where ye will, ye shall not see in all this
world that in which there is not sin, or some effect of sin. But then all shall
be gathered from off believers, and from off the now groaning creatures, and
cast into the lake of fire; so that there shall not be the least sin, nor effect
of sin, without the boundaries of hell.
II. When will the old man be thus destroyed? You will
easily conceive, from what is said, that destruction will have two periods.
1. At the death of the believer, and not till then. Till
then the child of God must wrestle on with it; for so did Christ with it as
imputed to him, till death set him, free. It is a grave question, how come
believers to die being freed from the curse of the covenant of works? ANSWER.
They die in conformity to Christ their head; that as death came in by sin, sin
may go off by death. It is not dying that does it indeed; for sin goes through
death in them that are out of Christ, not moved from off them for all that death
can do. But at death, Christ gives the redding stroke betwixt the new and old
man, kills the old man outright, as 2 Sam. i. 10. And he does it, by letting in
a full measure of every grace from himself into the believer, which takes up the
whole man wholly; and so the old man is gone in a moment, as the darkness upon
the sun's displaying his beams over all.
2. At the end of the world. Then comes the utter
abolition of all vestiges of it out of hell.
III. The certainty of it. It is even as sure as the
death of Christ could merit its destruction, and as the end of his death cannot
be frustrated, and as he rose again from the dead free from the imputed guilt of
it, and sits in heaven to-day without sin so much as imputed to him.
USE. Let the saints then take courage,
and renew the battle vigorously with the old man; for the victory will
undoubtedly fall to their side. And as for you that are still for keeping the
old man's head and heart hale; as ye do interpretatively desire none of Christ's
cross, it is an argument ye have as little saving interest in it.
DOCTRINE V. In the meantime, till the
old man be destroyed quite and clean by virtue of the cross of Christ, by virtue
of the same cross the believer shall not be a servant to the old man more. That
is the present piece of freedom from it the believer has.
1. The believer has heartily given up with him for a
master. Some time he said, as Exod. xxi. 5. "I love my master, -- I will not
go out free." But now he hates him mortally, and would fain be altogether
free at any rate, Rom. vii. 24. "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver
me from the body of this death?" The very being in the house with the old
man is a burden.
2. He will get no work, but forced work, off his hand
more, Rom. vii. 15. "For that which I do, I allow not," &c. He will not
yield his members to the old man voluntarily, as before, chap. vi. 13.
"Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin."
He will never get work with whole good will at his hand more, but half will at
most.
USE. This writes death to such as have
given their hand to Christ at his table, and are ready to go back into the
service of their lusts. If from henceforth ye enter not into a struggling life
against sin, ye have not felt the virtue of Christ's cross.
DOCTRINE VI. ult. Believers should go
out against the old man in acts of holiness, in the faith that he is a crucified
man; i.e. Believe your old: man is crucified with Christ, and in this belief
bestir yourself against him in the use of appointed means. If you believe it
not, how can your hands be strong, having all to do yourself alone? But believe
it firmly, and it will make you as a giant refreshed with wine.