THE CHRISTIAN'S WARFARE
Romans 7:22-25

Robert Murray M'Cheyne


"For I delight in the law of God after the inward man; but I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I thank God through Jesus Christ out Lord. So then with the mind I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin" (Romans 7:22-25).

A believer is to be known not only by his peace and joy, but by his warfare and distress. His peace is peculiar: it flows from Christ, it is heavenly, it is holy peace. His warfare is as peculiar: it is deep-seated, agonizing, and ceases not till death. I have chosen the subject of the Christian's warfare, that you may know thereby whether you are a soldier of Christ-whether you are really fighting the good fight of faith.

I. A Believer delights in the law of God: "I delight in the law of God after the inward man.

(1) Unconverted men hate the law of God on account of its purity. "Thy Word is very pure, therefore Thy servant loveth it." For the same reason worldly men hate it. The law is the breathing of God's pure and holy mind. It is infinitely opposed to all impurity and sin. Every line of the law is against sin. But natural men love sin, and therefore they hate the law, because it opposes them in all they love. As bats hate the light, and fly against it, so unconverted men hate the pure light of God's law, and fly against it.

(2) They hate if for its breadth. "Thy commandment is exceeding broad" (Psa. 119:76). It extends to all their outward actions, seen and unseen; it extends to every idle word that men shall speak; it extends to the looks of their eye; it dives into the deepest caves of their hearts; it condemns the most secret springs of sin and lust that nestle there. Unconverted men quarrel with the law of God because of its strictness. If it extended only to my outward actions, then I could bear with it; but it condemns my most secret thoughts and desires, which I cannot prevent. Therefore ungodly men rise against the law.

(3) They hate it for its unchangeableness. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but one jot or one title of the law shall in no wise pass away. If the law would change, or let down its requirements, or die, then ungodly men would be well pleased. But it is unchangeable as God: it is written on the heart of God, with whom is no variableness nor shadow of turning. It cannot change unless God change! It cannot die unless God die. Even in an eternal hell its demands and curses will be the same. It is an unchangeable law, for He is an unchangeable God. Therefore ungodly men have an unchangeable hatred to that holy law.

1st. The law is no longer an enemy. If any of you who are trembling under a sense of your infinite sins, and the curses of the law which you have broken, flee to Christ, you will find rest. You will find that He has fully canceled the demands of the law as a Surety for sinners, that He has fully borne all its curses. You will be able to say, Christ hath redeemed me from the curse of the law, being made a curse for me, as it is written, "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree" (Gal. 3:13). You have no more to fear, then, from that awfully holy law; you are not under the law, but under grace. You have no more to fear from the law, than you will have after the Judgment Day. Imagine a saved soul after the Judgment Day. When that awful scene is past-when the dead, small and great. have stood before the Great White Throne- when the sentence of eternal woe has fallen upon all the uncoverted, and they have sunk into the lake whose fires can never be quenched; would not that redeemed soul say, I have nothing to fear from that holy law; I have seen its vials poured out; but not a drop has fallen on me? So may you say now, O believer in Jesus! When you look upon the soul of Christ, scarred with God's thunderbolts, when you look upon His body , pierced for sin, you can say, He was made a curse for me; why should I fear that holy law?

2nd. The Spirt of God writes the law on the heart. This is the promise: "After those days, saith the Lord, I will put My law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people" (Jer. 31:33). Coming to Christ takes away your fear of the law, but it is the Holy Spirit coming into your heart that makes you love the law. The Holy Spirit is no more frightened away from that heart; He comes and softens it; He takes out the stony heart and puts in a heart of flesh; and there He writes the holy, holy, law of God. Then the law of God is sweet to that soul; he has an inward delight in it. "The law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good." Now he unfeignedly desires every thought, word, and action, to be according to that law. "O that my ways were directed to keep Thy statutes: great peace have they that love Thy law, and nothing shall offend them." The 119th Psalm becomes the breathing of that new heart. Now also he would feign see all the world submitting to that pure and holy law. "Rivers of water run down mine eyes because they keep not Thy law." O that all the world but knew that holiness and happiness are one. Try yourselves by this. Can you say, "I, delight in the law of God after the inward man?" Do you love it now? Do you long for the time when you shall live fully under it— holy as God is holy, pure as Christ is pure?

O come, sinners, give up your hearts to Christ, that He may write on it His holy law! You have long enough had the Devil's law graven on your hearts; come you to the Lord Jesus, and He will both shelter you from the curses of the law, and He will give you the Spirit to write all that law in your heart; He will make you love it with your inmost soul. Plead the promise with Him. Surely you have tried the pleasures of sin long enough. Come now, and try the pleasures of holiness out of a new heart. If you die with your heart as it is, it will be stamped a wicked heart to all eternity: "He that, is unjust, let him be unjust still; and he that is filthy, let him be filthy still" (Rev. 22:11). O come and get the new heart before you die: for except you be born again you cannot see the kingdom of God.

II. A true believer feels an opposing law in his members:

I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members." When a sinner comes first to Christ, he often thinks he will now bid an eternal farewell to sin: Now I shall never sin any more. He feels already at the gate of heaven. But a little breath of temptation soon discovers his heart, and he cries out, "I see another law".

Is Satan ever successful? In the deep wisdom of God the law in the members does sometime bring the soul into captivity. "Noah was a perfect man," and Noah walked with God, and yet he was led captive: "Noah drank of the wine, and was drunken." Abraham was "the friend of God," and yet he told a lie, saying of Sarah his wife, "She is my sister." Job was a perfect man, and that feared God and hated evil, and yet he was provoked to curse the day wherein he was born. And so with Moses, and David, and Solomon, and Hezekiah, and Peter, and the apostles.

Have you experienced this warfare? It is a clear mark of God's children. Most of you, I fear, have never felt it. Do not mistake me. All of you have felt a warfare at times between your natural conscience and the law of God. But that is not the contest in the believer's bosom. It is a warfare between the Spirit of God in your heart, and the "old man with his deeds."

If any of you are groaning under this warfare, learn to be humbled by it, but not discouraged.

III. The feelings of a believer during this warfare:


Robert Murray M'Cheyne

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