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John Newton

Our Sense of Our Sin

Our life is a warfare, but with God on our side, we can overcome our enemies and emerge victorious.
John Newton preaches about the Christian life being a warfare, emphasizing the importance of fighting under the leadership of Jesus, the assurance of victory, and the ultimate reward of a crown of life. He highlights the need to be attentive to the evil within us and the strategies of our enemies, while also stressing the significance of looking to Jesus for strength and assistance. Newton discusses the struggle between our desire for self-sufficiency and God's design for us to be dependent on Him, pointing out that our weakness allows God's power to be displayed. He acknowledges the ongoing battle with indwelling sin in believers, but assures that grace will ultimately triumph and believers will emerge as more than conquerors through Jesus.

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DEAR MADAM,

Our experiences pretty much tally; they may be drawn out into sheets and quires, but the sum total may be comprised in a short sentence, "Our life is a warfare." For our encouragement the apostle calls it a good warfare. We are engaged in a good cause, fight under a good Captain, the victory is sure beforehand, and the prize is a crown, a crown of life. Such considerations might make even a coward bold. But then we must be content to fight; and considering the nature, number, situation, and subtlety of our enemies, we may expect sometimes to receive a wound; but there is a medicinal tree, the leaves of which are always at hand to heal us. We cannot be too attentive to the evil which is always working in us, or to the stratagems which are employed against us; yet our attention should not be wholly confined to these things. We are to look upwards likewise to Him, who is our Head, our Life, our Strength. One glance of Jesus will convey more effectual assistance than poring upon our own hearts for a month. The one is to be done, but the other should upon no account be omitted. It was not by counting their wounds, but by beholding the brazen serpent, the Lord's instituted means of cure, that the Israelites were healed. That was an emblem for our instruction. One great cause of our frequent conflicts is that we have a secret desire to be rich, and it is the Lord's design to make us poor. We want to gain an ability of doing something; and He suits His dispensations, to convince us that we can do nothing. We want a stock in ourselves, and He would have us absolutely dependent upon Him. So far as we are content to be weak, that His power may be magnified in us, so far we shall make our enemies know that we are strong, though we ourselves shall never be directly sensible that we are so; only by comparing what we are, with the opposition we stand against, we may come to a comfortable conclusion, that the Lord worketh mightily in us (Psa. xli. 11).

If our views are simple, and our desires towards the Lord, it may be of use to consider some of your faults and mine, not as the faults of you and me in particular, but as the fault of that depraved nature, which is common with us to all the Lord's people, and which made Paul groan as feelingly and as heartily as we can do. But this consideration, though true and Scriptural, can only be safely applied when the mind is sincerely, and in good earnest, devoted to the Lord. There are too many unsound and half professors, who eagerly catch at it, as an excuse for those evils they are unwilling to part with. But I trust I may safely recommend it to you. This evil nature, this indwelling sin, is a living principle, an active, powerful cause; and a cause that is active will necessarily produce an effect. Sin is the same thing in believers as in the unregenerate; they have, indeed, a contrary principle of grace, which counteracts and resists it, which can prevent its outbreakings, but will not suppress its risings. As grace resists sin, so sin resists grace, Gal. v. 17. The proper tendency of each is mutually weakened on both sides; and, between the two, the poor believer, however blameless and exemplary in the sight of men, appears, in his own view, the most inconsistent character under the sun. He can hardly think it is so with others; and, judging of them by what he sees, and of himself by what he feels, in lowliness of heart, he esteems others better than himself. This proves him to be right; for it is the will of God concerning him, Phil. ii. 3. This is the warfare. But it shall not always be so. Grace shall prevail. The evil nature is already enervated, and ere long it shall die the death. Jesus will make us more than conquerors.

I am, &c.

Sermon Outline

  1. Our Life is a Warfare
  2. The Nature of Our Enemies
  3. The Warfare Within
  4. The Victory
  5. Grace shall prevail
  6. The evil nature shall die
  7. Jesus will make us more than conquerors

Key Quotes

“Our life is a warfare.” — John Newton
“We are to look upwards likewise to Him, who is our Head, our Life, our Strength.” — John Newton
“Jesus will make us more than conquerors.” — John Newton

Application Points

  • We must look upwards to Jesus for effectual assistance in our warfare.
  • We must be content to be weak and dependent on God, that His power may be magnified in us.
  • We must apply the consideration of our faults when our mind is sincerely devoted to the Lord.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the nature of our warfare?
Our warfare is a good cause, fought under a good Captain, with a sure victory and a crown of life as the prize.
How can we overcome our enemies?
We must look upwards to Jesus, who is our Head, Life, and Strength, and behold Him for effectual assistance.
What is the cause of our frequent conflicts?
Our secret desire to be rich and our lack of dependence on God are major causes of our conflicts.
How can we apply the consideration of our faults?
We can safely apply this consideration when our mind is sincerely devoted to the Lord.
Will we always struggle with our evil nature?
No, grace shall prevail, and the evil nature shall die, making us more than conquerors.

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