A
Classic Holiness Sermon
The Circumcision of the Heart: Romans 2:29
By John Wesley
(Preached at St. Mary’s, Oxford, before the University,
on January 1, 1733.)
“Circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit,
and not in the letter.” Romans 2:29
1. It is the melancholy remark of an excellent man, that
he who now preaches the most essential duties of Christianity, runs the
hazard of being esteemed, by a great part of his hearers, “a setter
forth of new doctrines.” Most men have so lived away the substance
of that religion, the profession whereof they still retain, that no sooner
are any of those truths proposed which difference the Spirit of Christ
from the spirit of the world, than they cry out, “Thou bringest
strange things to our ears; we would know what these things mean”—Though
he is only preaching to them “Jesus and the resurrection,”
with the necessary consequence of it,—If Christ be risen, ye ought
then to die unto the world, and to live wholly unto God.
2. A hard saying this to the natural man, Who is alive
unto the world, and dead unto God; and one that he will not readily be
persuaded to receive as the truth of God, unless it be so qualified in
the interpretation, as to have neither use nor significance left. He “receiveth
not the” word “of the Spirit of God,” taken in their
plain and obvious meaning; “they are foolishness unto him: Neither”
indeed “can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned.”
3. That “circumcision is that of the heart, in
the spirit, and not in the letter;”—that the distinguishing
mark of a true follower of Christ, of one who is in a state of acceptance
with God, is not either outward circumcision, or baptism, or any other
outward form, but a right state of soul, a mind and spirit renewed after
the image of Him that created it;—is one of those important truths
that can only be spiritually discerned. I design First, particularly to
inquire, wherein this circumcision of the heart consists; and, Secondly,
to mention some reflections that naturally arise from such an inquiry.
I. 1. I am, First, to inquire, wherein that circumcision
of the heart consists, which will receive the praise of God. In general
we may observe, it is that habitual disposition of soul which, in the
sacred writings, is termed holiness; and which directly implies, the being
cleansed from sin, “from all filthiness both of flesh and spirit;”
and, by consequence, the being endued with those virtues which were also
in Christ Jesus; the being so “renewed in the spirit of our mind,”
as to be “perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect.”
2. To be more particular: Circumcision of heart implies humility,
faith, hope, and charity.
Humility, a right judgment of ourselves, cleanses our minds
from those high conceits of our own perfection, from that undue opinion
of our own abilities and attainments, which are the genuine fruit of a
corrupted nature. It convinces us, that in our best estate we are, of
ourselves, all sin and vanity; that confusion, and ignorance, and error
reign over our understanding; that unreasonable, earthly, sensual, devilish
passions usurp authority over our will; in a word, that there is no whole
part in our soul, that all the foundations of our nature are out of course.
3. At the same time we are convinced, that we are not
sufficient of ourselves to help ourselves; that, without the Spirit of
God, we can do nothing but add sin to sin; that it is He alone who worketh
in us by his almighty power, either to will or do that which is good;
it being as impossible for us even to think a good thought, without the
supernatural assistance of his Spirit, as to create ourselves, or to renew
our whole souls in righteousness and true holiness.
4. A sure effect of our having formed this right judgment
of the sinfulness and helplessness of our nature, is a disregard of that
“honor which cometh of man,” which is usually paid to some
supposed excellency in us. He who knows himself, neither desires nor values
the applause which he knows he deserves not. It is therefore “a
very small thing with him, to be judged by man’s judgment.”
5. this is that lowliness of mind, which they have
learned of Christ, who follow his example and tread in his steps. And
this knowledge of their disease, whereby they are more and more cleansed
from one part of it, pride and vanity, disposes them to embrace, with
a willing mind, the second thing implied in circumcision of the heart,—that
faith which alone is able to make them whole, which is the one medicine
given under heaven to heal their sickness.
6. The best guide of the blind, the surest light of
them that are in darkness, the most perfect instructor of the foolish,
is faith. But it must be such a faith as is “mighty through God,
to the pulling down of strong-holds,”—to the overturning all
the prejudices of corrupt reason, all the false maxims revered among men,
all evil customs and habits, all that “wisdom of the world which
is foolishness with God;” as “casteth down imaginations,”
reasoning, “and every high thing that exalteth itself against the
knowledge of God, and bringeth into captivity every thought to the obedience
of Christ.”
7. “All things are possible to him that”
thus “believeth.” “The eyes of his understanding being
enlightened,” he sees what is his calling; even to glorify God,
who hath bought him with so high a price, in his body and in his spirit,
which now are God’s by redemption, as well as by creation. He feels
what is “the exceeding greatness of this power,” who, as he
raise up Christ from the dead, so is able to—quicken us, dead in
sin, “by his Spirit which dwelleth in us.”
8. Such a faith as this cannot fail to show evidently
the power of Him that inspires it, by delivering his children from the
yoke of sin, and “purging their consciences from dead works;”
by strengthening them so, that they are no longer constrained to obey
sin in the desires there of; but instead of yielding their members unto
it, as instruments of unrighteousness,” they now “yield themselves”
entirely “unto God, as those that are alive from the dead.”
9. Those who are thus by faith born of God, have also
strong consolation through hope. This is the next thing which the circumcision
of the heart implies; even the testimony of their own spirit with the
Spirit which witnesses in their hearts that they are the children of God.
Indeed it is the same Spirit who works in them that clear and cheerful
confidence that their heart is upright toward God; that good assurance,
that they now do, through his grace, the things which are acceptable in
his sight; that they are now in the path which leadeth to life, and shall,
by the mercy of God, endure therein to the end.
10. By the same discipline is every good soldier of
Christ to inure himself to endure hardship. Confirmed and strengthened
by this, he will be able not only to renounce the works of darkness, but
every appetite too, and every affection, which is no subject to the law
of God. For “every one,” saith St. John, “who hath this
hope, purifieth himself even as He is pure.” It is his daily care,
by the grace of God in Christ, and through the blood of the covenant,
to purge the inmost recesses of his soul from the lusts that before possessed
and defiled it; from uncleanness, and envy, and malice, and wrath; from
every passion and temper that is after the flesh, that either springs
from or cherishes his native corruption: as well knowing, that he whose
very body is the temple of God, ought to admit into it nothing common
or unclean; and that holiness becometh that house for ever, where the
Spirit of holiness vouchsafes to dwell.
11. Yet lackest thou one thing, whosoever thou art,
that to a deep humility, and a steadfast faith, hast joined a lively hope,
and thereby in a good measure cleansed thy heart from its inbred pollution.
If thou wilt be perfect, add to all these, charity; add love, and thou
hast the circumcision of the heart “Love is the fulfilling of the
law, the end of the commandment.” Very excellent things are spoken
of love; it is the essence, the spirit, the life of all virtue. It is
not only the first and great command, but it is all the commandments in
one. The royal law of heaven and earth is this, “Thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all
thy mind, and with all thy strength.”
12. Not that this forbids us to love anything besides
God: It implies that we love our brother also. Nor yet does it forbid
us (as some have strangely imagined) to take pleasure in any thing but
God. To suppose this, is to suppose the Fountain of holiness is directly
the author of sin; since he has inseparably annexed pleasure to the use
of those creatures which are necessary to sustain the life he has given
us. This, therefore, can never be the meaning of his command. What the
real sense of it is, both our blessed Lord and his Apostles tell us too
frequently, and too plainly, to be misunderstood. They all with one mouth
bear witness, that the true meaning of those several declarations, “The
Lord thy God is one Lord;” “Thou shalt have no other Gods
but me;” “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy strength”
“Thou shalt cleave unto him;” “The desire of thy soul
shall be to His name;”—is no other than this: The one perfect
Good shall be your one ultimate end. One thing shall ye desire for its
own sake,—the fruition of Him that is All in All. One happiness
shall ye propose to your souls, even an union with Him that made them;
the having “fellowship with the Father and the Son;” the being
joined to the Lord in one Spirit. One design you are to pursue to the
end of time,—the enjoyment of God in time and in eternity.
13. Have no end, to ultimate end, but God. Thus our
Lord: “One thing is needful:” And if thine eye be singly fixed
on this one thing, “thy whole body shall be full of light.”
Thus St. Paul: “This one thing I do; I press toward the mark, for
the prize of the high calling in Christ Jesus.” Thus St. James:
“Cleanse your hands, ye sinners, and purify your hearts, ye double-minded.”
Thus St. John: “love not the world, neither the things that are
in the world. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, the
lust of the eye, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of
the world.”
II. 1. Thus have I particularly inquired, what that
circumcision of heart is, which will obtain the praise of God. I am, in
the Second place, to mention some reflections that naturally arise from
such an inquiry, as a plain rule whereby every man may judge of himself,
whether he be of the world or of God. And, First, it is clear from what
has been said, that no man has a title to the praise of God, unless his
heart is circumcised by humility; unless he is little, and base, and vile
in his own eyes; unless he is deeply convinced of that inbred “corruption
of his nature,” “whereby be is very far gone from original
righteousness,” being prone to all evil, averse to all good, corrupt
and abominable; having a “carnal mind which is enmity against God,
and is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed can be,” unless
he continually feels in his inmost soul, that without the Spirit of God
resting upon him, he can neither think, nor desire, nor speak, nor act
anything good, or well-pleasing in his sight. No man I say, has A title
to the praise of God, till he feels his want of God; nor indeed, till
he seeketh that “honor which cometh of God only;” and neither
desires nor pursues that which cometh of man, unless so far only as it
tends to this.
2. Another truth, which naturally follows from what
has been said, is, that none shall obtain the honor that cometh of God,
unless his heart be circumcised by faith; even a “faith of the operation
of God:” Unless, refusing to be any longer led by his senses, appetites,
or passions, or even by that blind leader of the blind, so idolized by
the world, natural reason, he lives and walks by faith; directs every
step, as “seeking Him that is invisible;” “looks not
at the things that arc seen, which are temporal, but at the things that
arc not seen, which are eternal;” and governs all his desires, designs,
and thoughts, all his actions and conversations, as one who is entered
in within the veil, where Jesus sits at the right hand of God.
3. It were to be wished, that they were better acquainted
with this faith, who employ much of their time and pains in laying another
foundation; in grounding religion on the eternal fitness of things on
the intrinsic excellence of virtue, and the beauty of actions flowing
from it; on the reasons as they term them, of good and evil, and the relations
of beings to each other. Either these accounts of the grounds of Christian
duty coincide with the scriptural, or not. If they do, why are well meaning
men perplexed, and drawn from the weightier matters of the law, by a cloud
of terms, whereby the easiest truths are explained into obscurity? If
they are not, then it behooves them to consider who is the author of this
new doctrine; whether he is likely to be an angel from heaven, who preacheth
another gospel than that of Christ Jesus; though, if he were, God, not
we, hath pronounced his sentence: “Let him be accursed.”
4. Our gospel, as it knows no other foundation of good
works than faith, or of faith than Christ, so it clearly informs us, we
are not his disciples while we either deny him to be the Author, or his
Spirit to be the Inspirer an Perfecter, both of our faith and works. “If
any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is none of his.” He alone
can quicken those Who are dead unto God, can breathe into them the breath
of Christian life. and so prevent, accompany, and follow them with his
grace, as to bring their good desires to good effect. And, as many as
are thus led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.” This
is God’s short and plain account of true religion and virtue; and
“other foundation can no man lay.”
5. From what has been said, we may, Thirdly, learn,
that it none is truly “led by the Spirit,” unless that “Spirit
bear witness with his spirit, that he is a child of God;” unless
he see the prize and the crown before him, and “rejoice in hope
of the glory of God.” So greatly have they erred who have taught
that, in serving God, we ought not to have a view to own happiness! Nay,
but we are often and expressly taught of God, to have “respect unto
the recompense of reward;” to balance toil with the “joy set
before us,” these “light afflictions” with that “exceeding
weight of glory.” Yea, we are “aliens to the covenant of promise,”
we are “without God in the world,” until God, “of his
abundant mercy, hath begotten us again unto a living hope of the inheritance
incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away.
6. But if these things are so, it is high time for
those persons to deal faithfully with their own souls who are so far from
finding in themselves this joyful assurance that they fulfill the terms,
and shall obtain the promises, of that covenant, as to quarrel with the
covenant itself, and blaspheme the terms of it; to complain, they are
too severe; and that no man ever did or shall live up to them. What is
this but to reproach God, as if He were a hard Master, requiring of his
servants more than he enables them to perform? — as if he had mocked
the helpless works of his hands, by binding them to impossibilities; by
commanding them to overcome, where neither their own strength nor grace
was sufficient for them?
7. These blasphemers might almost persuade those to
imagine themselves guiltless, who, in the contrary extreme, hope to fulfill
the commands of God, without taking any pains at all. Vain hope, that
a child of Adam should ever expect to see the kingdom of Christ and of
God, without striving, without agonizing, first “to enter in at
the strait gate.” —that one who was “conceived and born
in sin,” and whose “inward parts are very wickedness,”
should once entertain a thought of being “purified as his Lord is
pure,” unless he tread in His steps, and “take up his cross
daily;” unless he “cut off His right hand,” and “pluck
out the right eye, and cast it from him ;”—that he should
ever dream of shaking off his old opinions, passions, tempers, of being
“sanctified throughout in spirit, soul, and body,” without
a constant and continued course of general self-denial!
8. What else than this can we possibly infer from the
above-cited words of St. Paul, who, living “ill infirmities, in
reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses” for
Christ’s sake;—who, being full of “signs, and wonders,
and mighty deeds,”—who, having been “caught up into
the third heaven;”—yet reckoned, as a late author strongly
expresses it, that all his virtues would be insecure, and even his salvation
in danger, without this constant self-denial? “So run I,”
says he, “not as uncertainly; so fight I, not as one that beateth
the air which he plainly teaches us, that he who does not thus run, who
does not thus deny himself daily, does run uncertainly, and fighteth to
as little purpose as he that “beateth the air.”
9. To as little purpose does He talk of “fighting
the fight of faith,” as vainly hope to attain the crown of incorruption,
(as we may, Lastly, infer from the preceding observations,) whose heart
is not circumcised by love. Love, cutting off both the lust of the flesh,
the lust of the eye, and the pride of life,—engaging the whole man,
body, soul, and spirit, in the ardent pursuit of that one object,—is
so essential to a child of God, that, without it, whosoever liveth is
counted dead before him. “Though I speak with the tongues of men
and of angels, and have not love, I am as sounding brass, or a tinkling
cymbal. Though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries,
and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so as to remove mountains,
and have not love, I am nothing.” Nay, “though I give all
my goods to feed the poor, and my body to be burned, and have not love,
it profit me nothing.”
10. Here, then, is the sum of the perfect law; this
is the true circumcision of the heart. Let the spirit return to God that
gave it, with the whole train of its affections. “Unto the place
from whence all the rivers came thither let them flow again. Other sacrifices
from us he would not; but the living sacrifice of the heart he hath chosen.
Let it be continual offered up to God through Christ, in flames of holy
love. And let no creature be suffered to share with him: For he is a jealous
God. His throne will he not divide with another: He will reign without
a rival. Be no design, no desire admitted there, but what has Him for
its ultimate object. This is the way where in those children of God once
walked, who, being dead, still speak to us:” Desire not to live,
but to praise his name: Let all your thoughts, words, and works, tend
to his glory. Set your heart firm on him, and on other things only as
they are in and from him. Let your soul be filled with so entire a love
of him, that you may love nothing but for his sake.” “Have
a pure intention of heart, a steadfast regard to his glory in all your
actions.” “Fix your eye upon the blessed hope of your calling,
and make all the things of the world minister unto it.” For then,
and not till then is that “mind in us which was also in Christ Jesus;”
when, in every motion of our heart, in every word of our tongue, in every
work of our hands, we “pursue nothing but in relation to him, and
in subordination to his pleasure;” when we, too, neither think,
nor speak, nor act, to fulfill our “own will, but the will of him
that sent us;” when, whether we; “eat, or drink, or whatever
we do, we do all to the glory of God.”
Edited by Dave Giles with corrections by Ryan Danker and George Lyons
of Northwest Nazarene University for the Wesley Center for Applied Theology.
Copyright © 1999 by the Wesley Center for Applied Theology. Visit
http://wesley.nnu.edu. Further edited for space.
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