Thursday, June 15, 2006
From 'The Godly Man's picture' by Thomas Watson
1 Secret sins. Some are more modest than to commit gross sin. That would be a stain on their reputation. But they will sit brooding upon sin in a corner: 'Saul secretly practised mischief' (1 Sam. 23:9). All will not sin on a balcony but perhaps they will sin behind the curtain. Rachel did not carry her father's images like a saddle cloth to be exposed to public view, but she put them under her and set on them (Gen. 31:34).
But a godly man dare not sin secretly:
(i) He knows that God sees in secret (Psalm 44:21). As God cannot be decieved by our subtlety, so he cannont be excluded by our secrecy.
(ii) A godly man knows the that secret sins are in some sense worse than others. They reveal more guile and atheism. The curtain-sinner makes himselfe believe that God does not see: 'Son of man, hast thou seen what the ancients of the house of Israel do in the dark, for they say, The Lord seeth us not' (Ezek. 8:12). Those who have bad eyes think that the sun is dim. How it provokes God, that man's atheism should give the lie to his omniscience! 'He that formed the eye, shall he not see? (Psalm 94:9).
(iii) A godly man knows that secret sins shall not escape God's justice. A judge on the bench can punish no offence but what is proved by witnesses. He cannot punish the treason of the heart, but the sins of the heart are visible to God as if they were written upon the forehead. As God will reward secret duties, so will he revenge secret sins.
p. 146-147
Watson was a puritan preacher. His works are good and should be read. His works are not as hard to read as John Owen's.
God sees all of our sins. Nothing we do is hidden from Him.
Related Tags: God, Thomas Watson, godly man, sin, omniscience, Puritan
I liked the poison analogy.
Where do you get the time to peruse so many brilliant works and authors?
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