[BBC List] almost

Mike Abendroth bbcpastor at bbcchurch.org
Fri Mar 2 10:17:12 EASST 2007


The Almost Christian <http://drbrooker.net/?p=690>  Discovered


D.R. Brooker <http://drbrooker.net/?author=1>  February 14th, 2007

Preached as a series of "summer sermons" for his congregation at St.
Sepulchre's in London, in 1661, the Puritan Matthew Mead's book The Almost
Christian Discovered is one I would consider "must reading" for all those
who profess Christ. The natural tendency of the heart is towards
self-deception, hence the many admonitions in scripture to examine ourselves
regularly to make sure we are in the faith (2 Cor. 13:5
<http://net.bible.org/verse.php?book=2co&chapter=13&verse=5> ). One cannot
read this book without turning to such self-examination. Mead's purpose in
preaching these sermons was to cause his hearers to look at the state of
their heart so "that the formal sleepy professor may be awakened, and the
close hypocrite discovered."

It was also Mead's contention that, "every grace hath its counterfeit, and
that the highest profession may be, where true conversion is not." Or, as he
put it more simple to his people, "there are very many in the world that are
almost, and yet but almost Christians." One need only think of that awful
scene pictured in Matthew 7:21-23
<http://net.bible.org/verse.php?book=mat&chapter=7&verse=21>  of those who
will one day stand before God, calling Him 'Lord' and pleading their own
works before Him, yet being told to depart from His presence. Knowing this
is the fate of some within the church, it is a necessity for us to examine
the state of our own hearts continually to see if we are self-deceived into
thinking we have a true interest in Christ.

Mead highlights 20 graces that he believes all have their counterfeits which
may trick or fool the heart. He develops these more fully in the book; I
only give but a brief statement as to the author's intent in each point.
This is but merely an appetizer; for the full buffet one must secure a copy
of Mead's sermons.

1.	A man may have much knowledge, much light; he may know much of God
and His will, much of Christ and His ways, and yet be but almost a
Christian. "There can be no grace without knowledge, yet there may be much
knowledge where there is no grace." In other words, one may be illumined to
the truths of the Word, yet no conversion follows.
2.	A man may have great and eminent gifts, yea, spiritual gifts, and
yet be but almost a Christian. By way of example, Mead says that "a man may
display the gift of prayer, yet the grace of prayer may be absent."
According to scripture, men have prophesied in His name and have cast out
devils, yet remain unknown to the Lord.
3.	A man may have a high profession of religion, be much in external
duties of godliness, and yet be but almost a Christian. Not everyone who
says 'Lord, Lord' shall enter the kingdom of heaven. Not everyone that
professes Christ shall be "owned of Christ as a disciple." Mead later says
that, "Most professors are like lilies, fair in show, but foul in scent.The
finest lace may be upon the coarseth cloth."
4.	A man may go far in opposing his sin, and yet be but almost a
Christian. Conviction may be rational only and not move the affections to
true repentance. Conviction of sin does not necessarily entail conversion
from it.
5.	A man may hate sin, and yet be but almost a Christian. Every man
that has grace hates sin to some degree, but that does not necessarily
entail that every man that hates sin does so because of grace. "A man may
hate sin from other principles."
6.	A man may make great vows and promises-he may have strong purposes
and resolutions against sin, and yet be but almost a Christian. It is not
new promises against sin but a new nature that helps us against sin. It is
not a vow of mortification, but rather, actual mortification, that shows the
reality of a true disciple.
7.	A man may maintain a strife and combat against sin in himself, and
yet be but almost a Christian. There is a striving against sin which is of
grace, and a striving which originates in the will of man. The latter
remains ineffective in the soul.
8.	A man may be a member of the Church of Christ, he may join himself
to the people of God, partake with them in all ordinances, and share of all
church privileges, and yet be but almost a Christian. "Many may be members
of the church of Christ, and yet not members of Christ."
9.	A man may have great hopes of heaven, great hopes of being saved,
and yet be but almost a Christian. Everyone has hopes of heaven, yet "strait
is the gate and narrow is the way which leads to life, and few are they that
find it."
10.	A man may be under great and visible changes, and these wrought by
the ministry of the Word, and yet be but almost a Christian. External
appearances do not necessarily mean internal change has taken place. Demas
appeared to have been a true convert, yet in the end walked away.
11.	A man may be very zealous in matters of religion, and yet be but
almost a Christian. While zeal for the Lord is a necessary fruit of
salvation, one may be religiously zealous and yet be unconverted.
12.	A man may be much in prayer-he may pray often, and pray much; and
yet be but almost a Christian. The Pharisees prayed much, yet were
hypocrites in the eyes of God.
13.	A man may suffer for Christ in his goods, in his name, in his
person; and yet be but almost a Christian. "Every man that bears Christ's
cross on his shoulders doth not therefore bear Christ's image in his soul."
In other words, one may even suffer martyrdom, and yet be unconverted.
14.	A man may be called of God, and embrace this call, and yet be but
almost a Christian. Judas was called by Christ Himself, yet he perished in
his sin.
15.	A man may have the Spirit of God, and yet be but almost a Christian.
By the Spirit Judas cast out demons, yet he was not a Christian.
16.	A man may have faith, and yet be but almost a Christian. These are
alike the stony ground hearers of Matthew 13. Those who have heard and
believed, but only for a time.
17.	A man may have a love to the people of God, and yet be but almost a
Christian. "Love to those who are saints is not proof of our saintship."
18.	A man may obey the commands of God, yea, many of the commands of
God, and yet be but almost a Christian. One may obey as a means of
commending oneself to God and not from a true love of God.
19.	A man may be sanctified, and yet be but almost a Christian. Many are
sanctified that are unrenewed. There is a common, yet ineffectual, work of
sanctification spoken of in the Scriptures which resides in the power of
man. This may help restrain sin, but not truly mortify it.
20.	A man may do all, as to external duties and worship, that a true
Christian can; and when he hath done all, be but almost a Christian. If the
external duties are not done because of an internal reality, then one is a
hypocrite in the eyes of God.

Examining the heart continually is an absolute necessity for all of us. It
is only through an earnest striving after holiness that we are able to
determine if the Spirit's at work in us. I hope these thoughts of Matthew
Mead's will cause some to locate a copy of this book to read and examine. As
the author rightly notes, "most men are good Christians in the verdict of
their own opinion," but this will mean nothing come the judgment.

As a word of caution, Mead feared that this book would be read by "weak
believers" and would thereby be a discouragment to them. When I first read
it, I was myself in that category and it really caused me to despair (for
several months). It was only after meditating on the various promises of
God, and re-reading Psalm 51 over and over, that I finally found peace. This
is a hard book to read honestly, yet one that may be of eternal profit.

[Soli Deo Gloria reprinted this work in several editions and it is readily
available. 19th-Century editions are also not too hard to come by.]

"As many go to heaven by the very gates of hell, so more go to hell by the
gates of heaven; in that the number of those that profess Christ is greater
than the number of those that truly close with Christ." -Matthew Mead

 

 

Thanks.

 

Charis,

 

Mike Abendroth

 

 <http://www.bbcchurch.org> www.bbcchurch.org

 

2 Tim 1:2b  "Grace, mercy and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our
Lord."

 

"Faith is not our physician; it only brings us to the Physician ... Faith is
not our saviour. It was not faith that was born at Bethlehem and died on
Golgotha for us. It was not faith that loved us, and gave itself for us;
that bore our sins in its own body on the tree; that died and rose again for
our sins.

It is a sin-bearer that we need, and our faith cannot be a sin-bearer. Faith
can expiate no guilt; can accomplish no propitiation; can pay no penalty;
can wash away no stain; can provide no righteousness. It brings us to the
cross, . but in itself it has no merit and no virtue. 

Faith is not Christ, nor the cross of Christ. Faith is not the blood, nor
the sacrifice; .

Our faith does not divide the work of salvation between itself and the
cross. It is the acknowledgment that the cross alone saves, and that it
saves alone. Faith adds nothing to the cross, nor to its healing virtue. It
owns the fulness, and sufficiency, and suitableness of the work done there,
and bids the toiling spirit cease from its labours and enter into rest.
Faith does not come to Calvary to do anything. It comes to see the glorious
spectacle of all things done, and to accept this completion without a
misgiving as to its efficacy. It listens to the "It is finished!" of the
Sin-bearer, and says, "Amen."   

NOT FAITH, BUT CHRIST 

by Horatius Bonar 
(1808-1889) 

 

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