By God's Grace ~ Through God's Word ~ For God's Glory!

 

THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN

By Thomas Boston (1676-1732)

 "Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father,

inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.” -Mt. 25:34

 Having from this portion of Scripture, which the text is a part of, discoursed of the general judgment; and having now to speak of the everlasting happiness of the saints, and the everlasting misery of the wicked, from the respective sentences to be pronounced upon them in the great day, I shall take them in the order wherein they lie before us; and the rather that, as sentence is first passed upon the righteous, so the execution thereof is first begun, though probably the other may be fully executed before it is completed.

 The words of the text contain the joyful sentence itself£ together with a historical introduction thereto, which gives us an account of the Judge pronouncing the sentence; "the King," Jesus Christ; the parties on whom it is given, "them on His right hand;" and the time when, "then," as soon as the trial is over. Of these I have spoken already. It is the sentence itself we are now to consider, "Come, ye blessed of my Father," etc. Stand back, oh ye profane goats! Away all unregenerate souls not united to Jesus Christ! This is not for you. Come, oh ye saints, brought out of your natural state into the state of grace! Behold here the state of glory awaiting you. Here is glory let down to us in words and syllables; a looking-glass, in which you may see your everlasting happiness; a scheme or draft of Christ's Father's house, wherein there are many mansions.

This glorious sentence bears two things. 1. The complete hap­piness to which the saints are adjudged, "the kingdom." 2. Their solemn admission to it, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit," etc.

 1. Their complete happiness is a kingdom. A kingdom is the height of worldly felicity; there is nothing on earth greater than a kingdom. Therefore the hidden weight of the glory in heaven is held forth to us under that notion. But it is not an ordinary king­dom, it is "the kingdom; "the kingdom of heaven, surpassing all the kingdoms of the earth in glory, honor, profit, and pleasure-infi­nitely more than they excel the low and inglorious condition of a beggar in rags, and on a dunghill. 

2. There is a solemn admission of the saints into this their king­dom, "Come ye, inherit the kingdom." In view of angels, men, and devils, they are invested with royalty, and solemnly inaugurated before the whole world, by Jesus Christ, the Heir of all things, who hath "all power in heaven and in earth." Their right to the kingdom is solemnly recognized and owned. They are admitted to it as undoubted heirs of the kingdom, to possess it by inheritance, or lot, as the word properly signifies, because, in biblical times, inheri­tances were designed by lot, as Canaan to Israel, God's "first-born," as they are called (Exod. 4:22). And because this kingdom is the Father's kingdom, therefore they are openly acknowledged, in their admission to it, to be the blessed of Christ's Father: which blessing was given them long before this sentence, but it is now solemnly recognized and confirmed to them by the Mediator, in His Father's name. Observe, He says not, Ye blessed of the Father, but, Ye blessed of my Father; to show us, that all blessings are derived by us from the Father, the fountain of blessing, as He is "the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ," through whom we are blessed (Eph 1:3). And, finally, they are admitted to this kingdom, as that which was "prepared for them from the foundation of the world," in God's eternal purpose, before they; or any of them, were; that all the world may see eternal life to be the free gift of God.

 DOCTRINE

 The saints shall be made completely happy in the possession of the king­dom of heaven. 

Two things I shall here inquire into: 1. The nature of this king­dom. 2. The admission of the saints thereto. And then I shall make some practical improvement of the whole. 

The Nature of the Kingdom of Heaven 

As to the nature of the kingdom of heaven, our knowledge of it is very imperfect; for "Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him" (1 Cor. 2:9). As, by familiar resemblances, parents instruct their little children concerning things of which otherwise they can have no tolerable notion; so our gracious God, in consideration of our weakness, is pleased to represent to us heaven's happiness under similitudes taken from earthly things, glorious in the eyes of men; since discoveries of the heavenly glory, divested of earthly resemblances, would be too bright for our weak eyes, and we would but lose ourselves in them. Wherefore now we can but speak as children of these things, which the day will fully discover. 

The state of glory is represented under the idea of a kingdom, a kingdom, among men, being that in which the greatest number of earthly good things center. Now, every saint shall, as a king, inherit a kingdom. All Christ's subjects shall be kings, each one with his crown upon his head: not that the great King shall divest himself of His royalty, but He will make all His children partakers of His kingdom. 

The saints shall have kingly power and authority given them. Our Lord gives not empty titles to His favorites; He makes them kings indeed. The dominion of the saints will be a dominion far exceed­ing that of the greatest monarch who ever was on earth. They will be absolute masters over sin, which had the dominion over them. They will have a complete rule over their own spirits; an entire management of all their affections and inclinations, which now cre­ate them so much molestation: the turbulent root of corrupt affec­tions shall be forever expelled out of that kingdom, and never be able any more to give them the least disturbance. They shall have power over the nations, the ungodly of all nations, and "shall rule them with a rod of iron" (Rev. 2:26-27). 

The whole world of the wicked shall be broken before them: Satan shall be bruised under their feet (Rom. 16:20). He shall never be able to fasten a temptation on them any more: but he will be judged by them, and, in their sight, cast with the reprobate crew into the lake of fire and brimstone. So shall they rule over their oppressors. Having fought the good fight, and got the victory, Christ will entertain them as Joshua did his captains, causing them to "[come] near, and put their feet upon the necks of them" Josh. 10:24). 

They shall have the ensigns of royalty. For a throne, Christ will grant them to sit with Him in his throne (Rev. 3:21). They will be advanced to the highest honor and dignity that they are capable of; and in the enjoyment of it, they will have an eternal undisturbed repose, after all the tossings which they met with in the world, in their way to the throne. For a crown, they "shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away" (1 Pet 5:4). Not a crown of flowers, as subjects, being conquerors or victors, sometimes have got; such a crown quickly fades, but their crown never fades. Not a crown of gold, such as earthly kings wear; even a crown of gold is often tar­nished, and at best can never make those who wear it happy. 

But the heavenly crown will be a crown of glory. A crown of glory is "a crown of life" (Rev. 2:10), that life which knows no end: a crown which death can never make to falloff one's head. It must be an abiding crown; for it is "a crown of righteousness" (2 Tim. 4:8). It was purchased for them by Christ's righteousness, which is imputed to them. They are qualified for it by inherent righteous­ness. And God's own righteousness, or faithfulness, secures it to them. They shall have a scepter, a rod of iron (Rev. 2:27), terrible to all the wicked world. And a sword too, "a two-edged sword in their hand; to execute vengeance upon the heathen, and punish­ments upon the people" (Ps. 149:6-7). They shall have royal apparel. The royal robes in this kingdom are white robes (Rev. 3:4): "They shall walk with me in white," which, in a very particular manner, points at the inconceivable glory of the state of the saints in heaven. 

The Saints Arrayed in White 

The Lord is pleased often to represent to us the glorious state of the saints, by speaking of them as clothed in "white garments." It is promised to the conqueror, that he shall be "clothed in white rai­ment" (Rev. 3:5). The elders about the throne are "clothed in white raiment" (4:4). The multitude before the throne are "clothed with white robes" (7:9); "arrayed in white robes" (v. 13); "made...white in the blood of the Lamb" (v. 14). 

No more servitude. The Romans, when they set their bond-ser­vants free, gave them a white garment as a badge of their freedom. So shall the saints that day receive their white robes; for it is the day of "the glorious liberty of the children of God" (Rom. 8:21), the day of "the redemption of our body" (v. 23). They shall no more see the house of bondage, nor be any more among the pots. If we compare the state of the saints on earth with that of the wicked, it is indeed a state of freedom, whereas the other is a state of slavery: but, in comparison with their state in heaven, it is but a servitude. A saint on earth is indeed a young prince, and heir to the crown; but his motto may be, "I serve;" for he "differeth nothing from a servant, though he be lord of all" (Gal. 4:1). 

What are the groans of a saint, the sordid and base work which he is sometimes found employed in, the black and tattered gar­ments which he walks in, but the badges of this comparative servi­tude? But from the day the saints come to the crown, they receive their complete freedom, and serve no more. They shall be fully freed from sin, which of all evils is the worst, both in itself; and in their apprehension too; how great then must that freedom be, when these Egyptians, whom they see today, they shall see again no more forever! (cf Exod. 14:13). They shall be free from all temp­tation to sin: Satan can have no access to tempt them any more, by himself; or by his agents. A full answer will then be given to that petition they have so often repeated, "Lead us not into temptation." No hissing serpent can come into the paradise above: no snare or trap can be laid there, to catch the feet of the saints: they may walk there without fear, for they can be in no hazard: there are no lions' dens, no mountains of leopards, in the promised land. 

Nay, they shall be set beyond the possibility of sinning, for they shall be confirmed in goodness. It will be the consummate freedom of their will, to be forever unalterably determined to do good. And they shall be freed from all the effects of sin: "there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away" (Rev. 21:4). 

What kingdom is like unto this? Death makes its way now into a palace, as easily as into a cottage: sorrow fills the heart of one who wears a crown on his head: royal robes are no defense against pain, and crying by reason of pain. But in this kingdom no misery can have place. All reproaches shall be wiped off: and never shall a tear drop any more from their eyes, They shall not complain of deser­tions again; the Lord will never hide His face from them: but the Sun of Righteousness shining upon them in his meridian bright­ness, will dispel all clouds, and give them an everlasting day, with­out the least mixture of darkness. A deluge of wrath, after a fearful thunder-clap from the throne, will sweep away the wicked from before the judgment-seat, into the lake of fire: but the righteous are, in the first place, like Noah, brought into the ark and out of harm's way. 

Unspotted purity. White raiment was a token of purity. Therefore the Lamb's wife is "arrayed in fine linen, clean and white" (Rev. 19:8). And those who stood before the throne "washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb" (7:14). The saints shall then put on the robes of perfect purity, and shine in spotless holiness, like the sun in its strength, without the least cloud to intercept its light. Absolute innocence shall then be restored, and every appearance of sin banished far from this kingdom. The guilt of sin, and the reigning power of it are even now taken away in the saints. Nevertheless, sin dwells in them (Rom. 7:20). But then it shall be no more in them: the corrupt nature will be quite removed; that root of bitterness will be plucked up, and no vestiges of it left in their souls: their nature shall be altogether pure and sinless. There shall be no darkness in their minds; but the understanding of every saint, when he is come to his kingdom, will be as a globe of pure and unmixed light. 

There shall not be the least aversion to good, nor the least incli­nation to evil, in their wills, but they will be brought to a perfect conformity to the will of God; blessed with angelic purity, and fixed therein. Their affections shall not be liable to the least disorder or irregularity; it will cost no trouble to keep them right: they will get such a fixed habit of purity as they can never lose. They will be so refined from all earthly dross as never to savor more of any thing but of heaven. Were it possible for them to be set again amidst the ensnaring objects of an evil world, they would walk among them without the least defilement-as the sun shines on the dunghill, yet is untainted, and as the angels preserved their purity in the midst of Sodom. Their graces shall then be perfected; and all the imper­fections now cleaving to them done away. There will be no more ground for complaints of weakness of grace. None in that kingdom shall complain of an ill heart, or a corrupt nature. "It doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him" (1 Jn. 3:2). 

An eternal priesthood. Among the Jews, those who desired to be admitted into the priestly office, being tried, and found to be of the priest's line and without blemish, were clothed in white, and enrolled among the priests. This seems to be alluded to: "He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life" (Rev. 3:5). So the saints shall not be kings only, but priests also; for they are "a royal priesthood" (1 Pet. 2:9). 

They will be priests upon their thrones. They are judicially found descended from the Great High Priest of their profession, begotten of Him by His Spirit, of the incorruptible seed of the Word, and without blemish: so the trial being over, they are admit­ted to be priests in the temple above, that they may dwell in the house of the Lord forever. There is nothing upon earth more glo­rious than a kingdom; nothing more venerable than the priesthood; and both meet together in the glorified state of the saints. "The gen­eral assembly of the first-born" (Heb. 12:23), whose is the priest­hood and the double portion, appearing in their white robes of glory, will be a reverend and glorious company. That day will show them to be the persons whom the Lord has chosen out of all the tribes of the earth, to be near unto Him, and to enter into His tem­ple, even into His holy place. Their priesthood, begun on earth, shall be brought to its perfection, when they shall be employed in offering the sacrifice of praise to God and the Lamb forever and ever. They got not their portion in the earth with the rest of the tribes; but the Lord Himself was their portion, and will be their double portion, through the ages of eternity. 

A triumphant throng. They were wont to wear white raiment in a time of triumph; to which also there seems to be an allusion: "He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment" (Rev. 3:5). And what is heaven but an everlasting triumph? None get thither but such as fight, and overcome too. Though Canaan was given to the Israelites as an inheritance, they were required to conquer it, before they could be possessors of it. The saints, in this world, are in the field of battle; often in red garments, garments rolled in blood. But the day approaches in which they shall stand "before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands" (Rev. 7:9), having obtained a complete victory over all their enemies. 

The palm was used as a sign of victory, because that tree, though oppressed with weights, yet yields not, but rather shoots upward. And palm trees were carved on the doors of the most holy place (1 Ki. 6:32), which was a special type of heaven; for heaven is the place which the saints are received into as conquerors. 

Behold the joy and peace of the saints in their white robes! 

The joys arising from the view of past dangers, and of riches and honors gained at the very door of death, do most sensibly touch one's heart: and this will be an ingredient in the everlasting happi­ness of the saints, which could have had no place in the heaven of innocent Adam, and his sinless offspring, supposing him to have stood. 

Surely the glorified saints will not forget the entertainment which they met with in the world; it will be to the glory of God to remember it, and will also heighten their joy. The Sicilian king, by birth the son of a potter, acted a wise part, in that he would be served at his table with earthen vessels; which could not but put an additional sweetness in his meals, not to be relished by one born heir to the crown. Can ever meat be so sweet to any as to the hun­gry man? Or can any have such a relish of plenty as he who has been under pinching straits? The more difficulties the saints have passed through in their way to heaven, the place will be the sweeter to them when they come to it. 

Every happy stroke, struck in the spiritual warfare, will be a jewel in their crown of glory. Each victory obtained against sin, Satan, and the world will raise their triumphant joy the higher. The remembrance of the cross will sweeten the crown; and the remem­brance of their travel through the wilderness will put an additional verdure on the fields of glory, while they walk through them, look­ing back on the day when they went mourning without the sun. 

And now that they appear triumphing in white robes, it is a sign they have obtained an honorable peace; such a peace as their ene­mies can disturb no more. So everything peculiarly adapted to their militant condition is laid aside. The sword is laid down; and they betake themselves to the pen of a ready writer, to commemorate the praises of Him by whom they overcame. 

Public ordinances, preaching, sacraments, shall be honorably laid aside; there is no temple there (Rev. 21:22) .On earth these were sweet to them: but the travelers being all got home, the inns, appointed for their entertainment by the way, are shut up; the can­dles are put out when the sun is risen; and the tabernacle used in the wilderness is folded up, when the temple of glory is come in its room. 

Many of the saints' duties will then be laid aside, as one gives his staff out of his hand, when he is come to the end of his journey. Praying shall then be turned to praising: and there being no sin to confess, no wants to seek the supply of, confession and petition shall be swallowed up in everlasting thanksgiving. 

There will be no mourning in heaven. They have sown in tears: the reaping time of joy is come, “And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes" (Rev. 21:4). No need of mortification there; and self-examination is then at an end. They will not need to watch any more; the danger is over. Patience has had its perfect work, and there is no use for it there. Faith is turned into sight, and hope is swallowed up in the ocean of sensible and fun enjoyment. All the rebels are subdued, and the saints quietly sit on their throne. The forces, needful in the time of the spiritual warfare, are disbanded, and they carry on their triumph in the profoundest peace. 

A perpetual Sabbath festival. White garments were worn on fes­tival days, in token of joy. And so shall the saints be clothed in white raiment; for they shall keep an everlasting Sabbath to the Lord (Heb. 4:9). "There remaineth therefore a rest," or keeping of a Sabbath, "to the people of God." The Sabbath, in the esteem of saints, is the queen of days; and they shall have an endless Sabbath in the kingdom of heaven, so shall their garments be always white. 

They will have an eternal rest, with an uninterrupted joy; for heaven is not a resting place, where men may sleep out an eternity; there they rest not day nor night, but their work is their rest, and continual recreation. Toil and weariness have no place there. They rest there in God, who is the center of their souls. Here they find the completion, or satisfaction, of all their desires, having the full enjoyment of God, and uninterrupted communion with Him. 

This is the point to which, till the soul come, it will always be restless: but that point reached, it rests; for God is the last end, and the soul can go no further. It cannot understand, will, nor desire more; but in Him it has what is commensurable to its boundless desires. This is the happy end of all the labors of the saints; their toil and sorrows issue in a joyful rest. 

The Chaldeans, measuring the natural day, put the day first, and the night last: but the Jews counted the night first, and the day last. So the wicked begin with a day of rest and pleasure, but end with a night of everlasting toil and sorrow. But God's people have their gloomy night first, and then comes their day of eternal rest. This, Abraham, in the parable, observed to the rich man in hell (Lk. 16.25): "Son, remember that thou in thy lifetime receivedst thy good things, and likewise Lazarus evil things: but now he is com­forted, and thou art tormented." 

A Whole Different Realm 

If any inquire where the kingdom of the saints lies, it is not in this world; it lies in "a better country, that is, a heavenly" (Heb. 11:16), a country better than the best of this world; namely, the heavenly Canaan, Immanuel's land, where nothing is wanting to complete the happiness of the inhabitants. This is the happy country, blessed with a perpetual spring, and yielding all things for necessity, con­venience, and delight. 

There men shall eat angels' food; they shall be entertained with "the hidden manna" (Rev. 2: 17) without being set to the painful task of gathering it. They will be fed to the full, with the product of the land falling into their mouths, without the least toil to them. 

That land enjoys everlasting day, for there is "no night there" (Rev. 21:25). Eternal sunshine beautifies this better country, but there is no scorching heat there. No clouds shall be seen there for­ever: yet it is not a land of drought; the trees of the Lord's planting are set by the rivers of water, and shall never want moisture, for they will have an eternal supply of the Spirit, by Jesus Christ, from His Father. 

This is the country whence our Lord came, and where He is gone again; the country which all the holy patriarchs and prophets had their eye upon while on earth; and which all the saints, who have gone before us, have fought their way to; and to which the martyrs have joyfully swum through a sea of blood. This earth is the place of the saints' pilgrimage; heaven is their country, where they find their everlasting rest. 

New Jerusalem. The royal city is that great city, the holy Jerusalem, described at large in Revelation 21:10-27. The saints shall reign in that city, whose wall is of '1asper" (v. 18); 'And the foundations of the wall of the city [are] garnished with all manner of precious stones" (v. 19); and "the street of the city [is] pure gold" (v. 21)-so that their feet shall be set on that which the men of this world set their hearts upon. 

This is the city which God has "prepared for them" (Heb. 11:16); "a city which hath foundations" (v. 10); a "continuing city" (13:14), which shall stand and flourish, when all the cities of the world are laid in ashes; and which shall not be moved, when the foundations of the world are overturned. 

It is a city that never changes its inhabitants. None of them shall ever be removed out of it; for life and immortality reign there, and no death can enter into it. It is blessed with a perfect and perpetual peace, and can never be in the least disturbed. Nothing from with­out can annoy it; the gates therefore are not shut at all by day, and there is no night there (Rev. 21:25). There can nothing from within trouble it. 

No want of provision there, no scarcity, no discord among the inhabitants. Whatever contentions are among the saints now, no vestige of their former jarrings shall remain there. Love to God and to one another shall be perfected; and those of them who stood at the greatest distance from one another here will joyfully embrace and delight in one another there. 

The Father's house. The royal palace is Christ's Father's house, in which "are many mansions" Jn. 14:2). There shall the saints dwell forever. This is the house prepared for all the heirs of glory, even those of them who dwell in the meanest cottage now, or have not where to lay their heads. As the Lord calls His saints to a king­dom, He will provide them a house suitable to the dignity He puts upon them. Heaven will be a convenient, spacious, and glorious house for those whom the King delights to honor. 

Never was a house purchased at so great a rate as this, being the purchase of the Mediator's blood; and for no less could it be afforded to them. 

Never was there so much to do to fit the inhabitants for a house. The saints were, by nature, utterly unfit for this house, and human art and industry could not make them meet for it. But the Father gives the designed inhabitants to the Son, to be by Him redeemed. The Son pays the price of their redemption, even His own precious blood. Justice gives them access to the house. And the Holy Spirit sanctifies them by His grace; that they may be meet to come in thither, where no unclean thing can enter. 

And no wonder, for it is the King's palace they enter into (Ps. 45:15). Here is where the great King keeps his court, where He has set His throne, and shows forth His glory in a singular manner, beyond what mortals can conceive. 

Limitless delights. Paradise is their palace garden. "To day shalt thou be with me in paradise," said our Savior to the penitent thief on the cross (Lk. 23:43). Heaven is a paradise for pleasure and delight, where there is both wood and water: “A pure river of water of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb. In the midst of the street of it, and on either side of the river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month" (Rev. 22:1-2). 

How happy might innocent Adam have been in the earthly par­adise, where there was nothing wanting for use or delight! Eden was the most pleasant spot of the uncorrupted earth, and paradise the most pleasant spot of Eden: but what is earth in comparison of heaven? The glorified saints are advanced to the heavenly paradise. There they shall not only see, but "eat of the tree of life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God" (Rev. 2:7). 

They shall behold the Mediator's glory, and be satisfied with His goodness. No flaming sword shall be there, to keep the way of that tree of life. But they shall freely eat of it, and live forever. They shall "drink of the river of [God's own] pleasures" (Ps. 36:8), the sweetest and purest delights which Immanuel's land affords, and shall swim in an ocean of unmixed pleasures for evermore. 

Treasures in heaven. They shall have royal treasures, sufficient to support the dignity to which they are advanced. Since the street of the royal city is pure gold, and the twelve gates thereof are twelve pearls, their treasure must be of that which is better than gold or pearl. It is "a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory" (2 Cor. 4:17). Oh, precious treasure! A treasure not liable to insensi­ble corruption, by moths or rust; a treasure which none can steal from them (Mt. 6:20). 

Never did any kingdom afford such a precious treasure, nor a treasure of such variety; for "He that overcometh shall inherit all things" (Rev. 21:7). No treasures on earth are stored with all things. If all the treasures of earth were put together in one store, there would be far more valuable things missing there than found in it. 

This then is the peculiar treasure of the kings who inherit the kingdom of heaven. They shall want nothing that may contribute to their full satisfaction. Now they are rich in hope; but then they will have their riches in hand. Now all things are theirs in respect of right; then all shall be theirs in possession. They may go forever through Immanuel's land and behold the glory and riches thereof, with the satisfying thought that all they see is their own. Christians should never be uneasy under the want of earthly good things; because they may be sure they shall inherit all things at length. 

Heavenly worship. Though there is no material temple therein, no serving of God in the use of ordinances, as here on earth; yet, as for this kingdom, "the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it" (Rev. 21:22). As the temple was the glory of Canaan, so will the celestial temple be the glory of heaven. The saints shall be brought in thither as a royal priesthood, to dwell in the house of the Lord forever; for Jesus Christ will then make every saint "a pil­lar in the temple of...God, and he shall go no more out" (Rev. 3: 12), as the priests and Levites did, in their courses, go out of the material temple. 

There the saints shall have the cloud of glory, the divine pres­ence, with most intimate, uninterrupted communion with God. There they shall have Jesus Christ, as the true Ark, wherein the fiery law shall be forever hid from their eyes. He is also the mercy­ seat, from which nothing shall be breathed but everlasting peace and goodwill toward them. The cherubim, the society of holy angels, shall join with them in eternal admiration of the mystery of Christ. The golden candlestick, with its seven lamps, "the glory of God [will] lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof" (Rev. 21:23). The incense altar, in the intercession of Christ, who "ever liveth to make intercession for them" (Heb. 7:25), eternally exhibit­ing the manner of His death and suffering, and efficaciously will­ing forever, that those whom the Father has given Him, be with Him. And the shewbread table, in the perpetual feast they shall have together in the enjoyment of God. 

Life in This Kingdom 

What would royal power and authority, ensigns of royalty, richest treasures, and all other advantages of a kingdom, avail without com­fortable society? Some crowned heads have had but a wretched life, through the want of it. Their palaces have been unto them as pris­ons, and their badges of honor, as chains on a prisoner. Hated of all, they had none they could trust in, or whom they could have comfortable fellowship with. 

But the chief part of heaven' s happiness lies in the blessed soci­ety which the saints shall have there. 

Fellowship with one another. The society of the saints among themselves will be no small part of heaven's happiness. The com­munion of saints on earth is highly prized by all those who are trav­eling through the world to Zion. Companions in sin can never have such true pleasure and delight in one another as sometimes the Lord's people have in praying together, and in conversing about those things to which the world is a stranger. 

Here on earth the saints are but few in a company at best. And some of them are so situated that they seem to themselves to dwell alone, having no access to such as they would freely embosom themselves to in spiritual matters. They sigh and say, 'Woe is me! for I am as when they have gathered the summer fruits. ...There is no cluster to eat. ...The good man is perished out of the earth" (Mic.7:1-2). 

But in the general assembly of the firstborn in heaven, none of all the saints who ever were or will be on the earth shall be miss­ing. They will be all of them together in one place, all possess one kingdom, and all sit down together to the marriage supper of the Lamb. 

On earth even the best of the saints struggle with sinful imper­fections, making their society less comfortable. But there they shall be perfect-"not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing" (Eph. 5:27). All natural, as well as sinful, imperfections will be done away; they "shall shine as the brightness of the firmament" (Dan. 12:3). 

There we shall see Adam and Eve in the heavenly paradise, freely eating of the tree of life; Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and all the holy patriarchs, no more wandering from land to land, but come to their everlasting rest; all the prophets feasting their eyes on the glory of Him of whose coming they prophesied; the twelve apostles of the Lamb, sitting on their twelve thrones; all the holy martyrs in their long white robes, with their crowns on their heads; the godly kings advanced to a kingdom which cannot be moved; and those that turn many to righteousness, shining as the stars for­ever and ever. 

There we shall see our godly friends, relations, and acquain­tances, pillars in the temple of God, to go no more out from us. And it is more than probable that the saints will know one another in heaven; at least they will know their friends, relatives, and those they were acquainted with on earth, and such as have been most eminent in the Church; yet that knowledge will be purified from all earthly thoughts and affections. This seems to be included in that perfection of happiness to which the saints shall be advanced. If Adam knew who and what Eve was, at first sight, when the Lord God brought her to him (Gen. 2:23-24), why should one question but husbands and wives, parents and children, will know one another in glory? 

If the Thessalonians, converted by Paul's ministry, shall be his hope, and joy, and crown of rejoicing "in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming" (1 Thess. 2:19), why may we not con­clude that ministers shall know their people, and people their min­isters, in heaven? And if the disciples, on the Mount of Transfiguration, knew Moses and Elijah, whom they had never seen before (Mt. 17:4), we have reason to think that we shall know them too, and such as them, when we come to heaven. 

The communion of saints shall be most intimate there. We "shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven" (Mt. 8:11). Lazarus was carried by the angels into Abraham's bosom (Luke 16:23), which denotes most intimate and familiar society. 

And though diversity of tongues shall cease (1 Cor. 13:8), I make no question, but there will be the use of speech in heaven; and that the saints will glorify God in their bodies there, as well as in their spirits, speaking forth His praises with an audible voice. As for the language, we shall understand what it is, when we come thither. When Paul was caught up to the third heaven, the seat of the blessed, he heard there unspeakable words, which it is not lawful for a man to utter (2 Cor. 12:4). Moses and Elijah, on the mount with Christ, talked with Him (Mt. 17:3), and "spake of his decease which he should accomplish at Jerusalem" (Lk.9:31). 

Fellowship with the angels. The saints will have the society of all the holy angels there. An innumerable company of angels shall be companions to them in their glorified state. Happy were the shep­herds who heard the song of the heavenly host when Christ was born but thrice happy they, who shall join their voices with them in the choir of saints and angels in heaven, when He shall be glo­rified in all who shall be about Him there! Then shall we be brought acquainted with those blessed spirits who never sinned. How bright will those morning stars shine in the holy place! They were ministering spirits to the heirs of salvation: loved them for their Lord and Master's sake; encamped round about them, to pre­serve them from danger. How joyfully will they welcome them to their everlasting habitations, and rejoice to see them come at length to their kingdom, as the tutor does in the prosperity of his pupils! 

The saints shall be no more afraid of them, as at times they were wont to be: they shall then have put off mortality, and the infirmi­ties of the flesh, and be themselves as the angels of God, fit to enjoy communion and fellowship with them. And both being brought under one head, the Lord Jesus Christ, they shall join in the praises of God and of the Lamb, saying, with a loud voice, "Worthy is the Lamb that was slain," etc. (Rev. 5: 11-12). 

Whether the angels shall, as some think, assume ethereal bod­ies, that they may be seen by the bodily eyes of the saints, and be in a nearer capacity to converse with them, I know not: but, as they want not ways of converse among themselves, we have reason to think that conversation between them and the saints shall not be forever blocked up. 

Fellowship with the Lord. They shall have society with the Lord Himself in Heaven, glorious communion with God in Christ, which is the perfection of happiness. I choose to speak of commu­nion with God and the man Christ, together; because, as we derive our grace from the Lamb, so we shall derive our glory from Him too, the man Christ being, if I may be allowed the expression, the center of the divine glory in heaven, from whence it is diffused unto all the saints. 

This seems to be taught us by the Scriptures which express heaven's happiness by being with Christ: "To day thou shalt be with me in paradise" (Lk. 23:43). "Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am" John 17:24). And remarkably to this purpose is what follows: "that they may behold my glory." "So shall we ever be with the Lord" (1 Thess. 4:17) ­that is, the Lord Christ, whom we shall meet in the air. 

This also seems to be the import of the Scriptures wherein God and the Lamb, the slain Saviour, are jointly spoken of in point of the happiness of the saints in heaven: "For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them unto liv­ing fountains of waters: and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes" (Rev. 7:17). "Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them" (21:3)-as in a tabernacle. The same word signifies the flesh of Christ (cf John 1:14). "The Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it" (Rev. 21:22). 

The Blessing of the Divine Presence 

Here lies the chief happiness of the saints in heaven, without which they never could be happy, though lodged in that glorious place, and blessed with the society of angels there. What I will venture to say of it, shall be comprised in three things: 

The perpetual presence of God and Christ in full glory. First, the saints in heaven shall have the glorious presence ofGod and of the Lamb: God Himself shall be with them (Rev. 21:3), and they shall ever be with the Lord. 

God is everywhere present in respect of His essence. The saints militant already enjoy His special gracious presence. But in heaven they have His glorious presence. There they are brought near to the very throne of the great King, and stand before Him, where he shows His inconceivable glory. 

There they have the actual heavenly tabernacle of God, on which the cloud of glory rests, the all-glorious human nature of Christ, wherein the fullness of the Godhead dwells; not veiled, as in the days of His humiliation, but shining through that blessed flesh, that all His saints may behold His glory; and making that body more glorious than a thousand suns-so that "the city [has] no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine in it: for the glory of God [will] lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof"-literally, "the candle thereof" (Rev. 21 :23) . 

That is, the Lamb is the luminary or luminous body, which gives light to the city, as the sun and moon now give light to the world, or as a candle lightens a dark room. And the light proceed­ing from the glorious luminary of the city is the glory of God. Sometimes on earth that candle burned very dimly; it was hid under a bushel in the time of His humiliation; only now and then it darted out some rays of this light, which dazzled the eyes of the spectators: but now it is set on high, in the city of God, where it shines, and shall shine forever in perfection of glory. It was some­times laid aside, as a stone disallowed of the builders: but now it is and forever will be, "the light," or luminary of that city; and that "like unto a stone most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal" (21:11). 

Who can conceive the happiness of the saints in the presence chamber of the great King, where He sits in His chair of state, mak­ing His glory eminently to appear in the man Christ? His gracious presence makes a mighty change upon the saints in this world. His glorious presence in heaven, then, must needs raise their graces to perfection, and elevate their capacities. 

The saints here on earth experience something of the presence of God, now with them in His grace, and know how it can make a little heaven of a sort of hell. How great then must the glory ofheaven be, by His presence there in His glory! If a candle, in some sort, beautifies a cottage or prison, how will the shining sun beau­tify a palace or paradise! The gracious presence of God made a wilderness lightsome to Moses; the valley of the shadow of death, to David; a fiery furnace, to the three children: what a ravishing beauty then shall arise from the Sun of Righteousness, shining in His meridian brightness on the street of the city paved with pure gold! 

This glorious presence of God in heaven, will put a glory on the saints themselves. The most pleasing garden is devoid of beauty when the darkness of the night sits down on it; but the shining sun puts a glory on the blackest mountains: so those who are now as bottles in the smoke, when set in the glorious presence of God, will be glorious both in soul and body. 

Perfect satisfaction. The saints in heaven shall have the full enjoy­ment of God and of the Lamb. This is it that perfectly satisfies the rational creature; and here is the saints' everlasting rest. 

This will make up all their wants, and fill the desires of their souls, which, after all here obtained, still cry, "Give, give," not with­out some anxiety, because though they do enjoy God, yet they do not enjoy Him fully. As to the way and manner of this enjoyment, our Lord tells us: "This is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent" Jn. 17:3) .Now there are two ways in which a desirable object is known most perfectly and satisfyingly; the one is by sight, the other by experience. Sight satisfies the understanding, and experience satis­fies the will. 

An Intimate Knowledge of God 

Accordingly, one may say that the saints enjoy God and the Lamb in heaven, by an intuitive knowledge; and by an experiential knowledge; both of them perfect (I mean in respect of the capacity of the crea­ture; for otherwise a creature's perfect knowledge of an infinite Being is impossible.) 

The saints below enjoy God, in that knowledge they have of Him by report, from His holy Word, which they believe; they see Him likewise darkly in the glass of ordinances, which do, as it were, represent the Bridegroom's picture, or shadow, while He is absent. They have also some experiential knowledge of Him; they taste that God is good, and that the Lord is gracious. But the saints above shall not need a good report of the King, they shall see Him; therefore faith ceaseth. They will behold His own face; therefore ordinances are no more. There is no need of a glass. They shall drink, and drink abundantly, of that whereof they have tasted; and so hope ceaseth, for they are at the utmost bounds of their desires. 

We will see Him face to face. But the saints in heaven shall enjoy God and the Lamb by sight, and that in a most perfect manner: "For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known" (1 Cor. 13:12). Here our sight is but mediate, as by a glass, in which we see not things themselves, but the images ot-things! But there we shall have an immediate view of God and the Lamb. Here our knowledge is but obscure. There it shall be clear, without the least mixture of darkness. The Lord now converses with His saints through the lattices of ordinances; but then shall they be in the presence chamber with Him. There is a veil now on the glorious face, as to us. But when we come to the upper house, that veil, through which some rays of beauty are now darted, will be found entirely taken off; and then shall glorious excellencies and perfec­tions, not seen in Him by mortals, be clearly discovered, for we shall see His face: "And they shall see his face" (Rev. 22:4). The phrase seems to be borrowed from the honor put on some in the courts of monarchs, to be attendants on the king's person. We read of seven men that were "near the king's person" Jer. 52:25-lit., "seers of the king's face"). Oh, unspeakable glory! the great King keeps His court in heaven: and the saints shall all be His courtiers ever near the King's person, seeing His face. "The throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it; and his servants shall serve him: and they shall see his face" (Rev. 22:3-4). 

The vision of Christ. They shall see Jesus Christ, God and man, with their bodily eyes, as He will never lay aside the human nature. They will behold that glorious, blessed body, which is personally united to the divine nature, and exalted above principalities and powers and every name that is named. There we shall see, with our eyes, that very body which was born of Mary at Bethlehem and cru­cified at Jerusalem between two thieves: the blessed head that was crowned with thorns; the face that was spit upon; the hands and feet that were nailed to the cross; all shining with inconceivable glory. The glory of the man Christ will attract the eyes of all the saints, and He will be forever "admired in all them that believe" (2 Thess.1:10). 

Were each star in the heavens shining as the sun in its merid­ian brightness, and the light of the sun so increased, as the stars, in that case, should bear the same proportion to the sun, in point of light, that they do now; it might possibly be some faint resemblance of the glory of the man Christ in comparison with that of the saints; for though the saints "shine forth as the sun,"yet not they but the Lamb shall be "the light of the city." 

The wise men fell down, and worshiped Him, when they saw Him a young child, with Mary His mother (Mt. 2:11). But oh, what a ravishing sight will it be to see Him in His Kingdom, on His throne, at the Father's right hand! "The Word was made flesh" (John 1:14), and the glory of God shall shine through that flesh, and the joys of heaven spring out from it, unto the saints, who shall see and enjoy God in Christ. For since the union between Christ and the saints is never dissolved, but they continue His members for­ever; and the members cannot draw their life but from their head, seeing that which is independent of the head, as to vital influence, is no member; therefore Jesus Christ will remain the everlasting bond of union between God and the saints; from whence their eternal life shall spring. '~ thou hast given him power over all flesh, that he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him. And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent" an. 17:1-2). “And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them; that they may be one, even as we are one: I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one" (vv.22-23). 

Wherefore the immediate enjoyment of God in heaven is to be understood in respect of the laying aside of Word and sacraments, and such external means as we enjoy God by in this world; but not as if the saints should then cast off their dependence on their Head for vital influences: nay, "The Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters" (Rev. 7: 17). 

Now when we shall behold Him, who died for us, that we might live for evermore, whose matchless love made Him swim through the Red Sea of God's wrath, to make a path in the midst of it for us, by which we might pass safely to Canaan's land; then we shall see what a glorious One he was, who suffered all this for us; what entertainment He had in the upper house; what hallelu­jahs of angels could not hinder Him from hearing the groans of a perishing multitude on earth, and from coming down for their help; and what glory He laid aside for us. Then shall we be more "able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; and to know the love of Christ, which pass­eth knowledge" (Eph. 3:18-19). 

When the saints shall remember that the waters of wrath which He was plunged into are the wells of salvation from whence they draw all their joy; that they have got the cup of salvation in exchange for the cup of wrath His Father gave Him to drink, which His sin­less human nature shivered at; how will their hearts leap within them, burn with seraphic love, like coals of juniper, and the arch of heaven ring with their songs of salvation! 

The Jews, celebrating the feast of tabernacles, which was the most joyful of all their feasts, and lasted seven days, went once every day about the altar, singing hosanna, with their myrtle, palm, and wil­low branches in their hands (the two former being signs of victory; the last, of chastity) in the meantime bending their boughs toward the altar. When the saints are presented as a chaste virgin to Christ, and as conquerors have got their palms in their hands, how joyfully will they compass the altar evermore, and sing their hosannas, or rather their hallelujahs about it, bending their palms toward it, acknowledging themselves to owe all unto the Lamb that was slain, and who redeemed them with His blood! To this agrees what John saw: “A great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues, stood before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands; and cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God which sit­teth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb" (Rev. 7:9-10). 

The vision of God. They shall see God (Mt. 5:8). They will be happy in seeing the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, not with their bodily eyes, in respect of which, God is invisible (1 Tim. 1:17), but with the eyes of their understanding; being blessed with the most perfect, full, and clear knowledge of God, and of divine things, which the creature is capable of This is called the beatific vision, and is the perfection of understanding, the utmost term thereof It is but an obscure delineation of the glory of God, that mortals can have on earth; a sight, as it were, of his "back parts" (Exod. 33:23). But there they will see His face (Rev. 22:4). 

They shall see Him in the fullness of His glory, and behold Him fixedly; whereas it is but a passing view they can have of Him here (cf. Exod. 34:6). There is a vast difference between the sight of a king in casual attire, quickly passing by us; and a fixed leisurely view of him, sitting on his throne in his royal robes, his crown on his head, and his scepter in his hand. Such a difference will there be between the greatest manifestation of God that ever a saint had on earth, and the display of His glory in heaven. 

There the saints shall eternally, without interruption, feast their eyes upon Him, and be ever viewing His glorious perfections. And as their bodily eyes shall be strengthened, and fitted to behold the glorious majesty of the man Christ, as eagles gaze on the sun with ­out being blinded thereby, so their minds shall have such an eleva­tion as will fit them to see God in His glory: their capacities shall be enlarged, according to the measure in which He shall be pleased to communicate Himself to them, for their complete happiness. 

This blissful sight of God being quite above our present capac­ities, we must needs be much in the dark about it. But it seems to be something else than the sight of that glory, which we shall see with our bodily eyes, in the saints, and in the man Christ, or any other splendor or refulgence from the Godhead whatever; for no created thing can be our chief good and happiness, nor fully satisfy our souls; and it is plain that these things are somewhat different from God Himself. 

Therefore I conceive, that the souls of the saints shall see God Himself So the Scriptures teach us that we shall see face to face, and know even as we are known (1 Cor. 13:12); and that we shall see Him as He is (1 John 3:2). 

A field of delights to walk in forever Yet the saints can never have an adequate conception of God. They cannot comprehend that which is infinite. They may touch the mountain, but cannot grasp it in their arms. They cannot, with one glance of their eye, behold what grows on every side. But the divine perfections will be an unbounded field, in which the glorified shall walk eternally, seeing more and more of God, since they can never come to the end of that which is infinite. They may bring their vessels to this ocean every moment, and fill them with new waters.

What a ravishing sight would it be, to see all the perfections and lovely qualities that are scattered here and there among the crea­tures, gathered together into one! But even such a sight would be infinitely below this blissful sight the saints shall have in heaven. For they shall see God, in whom all these perfections shall eminently appear infinitely more, whereof there is no vestige to be found in the creatures. In Him shall they see everything desirable, and nothing but what is desirable. 

Satisfied with His love. Then shall they be perfectly satisfied as to the love of God toward them, which they are now ready to ques­tion on every turn. They will no more find any difficulty to per­suade themselves of it, by marks, signs, and testimonies. They will have an intuitive knowledge of it. They shall, with the profound­est reverence be it spoken, look into the heart of God, and there see the love He bore to them from all eternity, and the love and good­ness He will bear to them for evermore. 

Living in the light of His truth. The glorified shall have a most clear and distinct understanding of divine truths, for in His light we shall see light (Ps. 36:9). The light of glory will be a complete com­mentary on the Bible, and untie all the hard and knotty questions in divinity. There is no joy on earth comparable to that which arises from the discovery of truth, no discovery of truth comparable to the discovery of Scripture truth, made by the Spirit of the Lord to the soul. "I rejoice at thy word," says the psalmist, ''as one that findeth great spoil" (Ps. 119: 162) .Yet, while here, it is but an imperfect dis­covery. How ravishing then will it be, to see the opening of all the treasure hid in that field! They shall also be led into the under­standing ot-the works of God. The beauty of the works of creation and providence will then be set in due light. Natural knowledge will be brought to perfection by the light of glory. The web of prov­idence, concerning the church, and all men whatever, will then be cut out, and laid before the eyes of the saints. And it will appear a most beautiful mixture; so as they shall all say together, on the view of it, "He hath done all things well" (cf. Mk. 7:37). 

Celebrating forever our redemption. But, in a special manner, the work of redemption shall be the eternal wonder of the saints, and they will admire and praise the glorious contrivance forever. Then shall they get a full view of its suitableness to the divine perfections and to the case of sinners, and clearly read the covenant that passed between the Father and the Son from all eternity concerning their salvation. They shall forever wonder and praise, and praise and wonder, at the mystery of wisdom and love, goodness and holiness, mercy and justice appearing in the glorious scheme. Their souls shall be eternally satisfied with the sight of God Himself; of their election by the Father, their redemption by the Son, and applica­tion thereof to them by the Holy Spirit. 

Partakers of the divine nature. The saints in heaven shall enjoy God in Christ by experiential knowledge, which is, when the object itself is given and possessed. This is the participation of the divine good­ness in full measure; which is the perfection of the will, and utmost term thereof "The Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters" (Rev: 7: 17). These are no other but God Himself; "the fountain of living waters," who will fully and freely communicate Himself to them. He will pour out of His goodness eternally into their souls. 

Then shall they have a most lively sensation, in the innermost part of their souls, of all that goodness they heard of, and believe to be in Him, and of what they shall see in Him by the light of glory. This will be an everlasting practical exposition of that word which men and angels cannot sufficiently unfold, namely, "He will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God" (Rev. 21:3). 

God will communicate Himself to them fully. They will no more be set to taste of the streams of divine goodness in ordinances, as they were wont, but shall drink at the fountain head. They will be no more entertained with sips and drops, but filled with all the fullness of God. And this will be the entertainment of every saint. For though, in created things, what is given to one is withheld from another, yet this infinite good can fully communicate itself to all, and fill all. Those who are heirs of God, the great heritage, shall then enter into a full possession of their inheritance. And the Lord will open His treasures of goodness to them, that their enjoyment may be full. They shall not be stinted in any measure, but the enjoyment shall go as far as their enlarged capacities can reach. As a narrow vessel cannot contain the ocean, so neither can the finite creature comprehend the infinite good. 

But no measure shall be set to the enjoyment, but what ariseth from the capacity of the creature. So that, although there be degrees of glory, yet all shall be filled, and have what they can hold; though some will be able to hold more than others. There will be no want to any of them; all shall be fully satisfied, and perfectly blessed in the full enjoyment of divine goodness, according to their enlarged capacities. As when bottles of different sizes are filled, some contain more, others less; yet all of them have what they can contain. The glorified shall have all in God, for the satisfaction of all their desires. 

No created thing can afford satisfaction to all our desires; clothes may warm us, but they cannot feed us; the light is com­fortable, but cannot nourish us. But in God we shall have all our desires, and we shall desire nothing without Him. They shall be the happy ones, that desire nothing but what is truly desirable; they shall have all they desire. God will be all in all to the saints: He will be their life, health, riches, honor, peace, and all good things. He will communicate Himself freely to them. The door of access to Him shall never be shut again for one moment. They may, when they will, take of the fruits of the tree of life, for they will find it on each side of the river (Rev. 22:2). There will be no veil between God and them, to be drawn aside; but His fullness shall ever stand open to them. No door to knock at in heaven; no asking to go before receiving; the Lord will allow His people an unrestrained familiar­ity with Himself there. 

Now they are in part made "partakers of the divine nature" (2 Pet. 1:4), but then they shall perfectly partake of it. That is to say, God will communicate to them His own image, make all His goodness not only pass before them, but pass into them, and stamp the image of all His own perfections upon them, so far as the creature is capa­ble of receiving the same; from whence shall result a perfect like­ness to Him in all things in or about them; which completes the happiness of the creature. 

This is what the psalmist seems to have had in view: "I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeness" (Psa. 17:15). The per­fection of God's image follows upon the beatific vision. And so says John: 'We shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is" (1Jn. 3.2). Hence there shall be a most close and intimate union between God and the saints. God shall be in them, and they in God, in a glorious and most perfect union: for then shall their dwelling in love be made perfect. "God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him" (1 In. 4:16). 

How will the saints be united to God and He to them, when He shall see nothing in them but His own image; when their love shall arrive at its perfection, no nature but the divine nature being left in them; and all imperfection being swallowed up in their glo­rious transformation into the likeness of God! Their love to the Lord, being purified from the dross of self-love, shall be most pure; so as they shall love nothing but God, and in God. It shall no more be faint and languishing, but bum like coals of juniper. It will be a light without darkness, a flaming fire without smoke. As the live coal, when all the moisture is gone out of it, is all fire, so will the saints be all love, when they come to the full enjoyment of God in heaven, by intuitive and experiential knowledge of Him, by sight and full participation of the divine goodness. 

Fullness of joy. From this glorious presence and enjoyment shall arise an unspeakable joy, which the saints shall be filled with. "In thy presence is fulness of joy" (Ps. 16:11). The saints sometimes enjoy God in the world; but when their eyes are held, so as not to perceive it, they have not the comfort of the enjoyment. But then, all mistakes being removed, they shall not only enjoy God, but rest in the enjoyment with inexpressible delight and satisfaction. The desire of earthly things causes torment, and the enjoyment of them often ends in loathing. But though the glorified saints shall ever desire more and more of God, their desires shall not be mixed with the least anxiety, since the fullness of the Godhead stands always open to them. Therefore they shall hunger no more, they shall not have the least uneasiness in their eternal appetite after the hidden manna. Neither shall continued enjoyment cause loathing. They shall never think they have too much; therefore it is added, "Neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat" (Rev. 7:16). 

The enjoyment of God and the Lamb will be ever fresh and new to them, through the ages of eternity: for they shall drink of living fountains of waters, where new waters are continually springing up in abundance (v. 17). They shall eat of the tree of life, which, for variety, affords twelve manner of fruits, and these always new and fresh, for it yields every month (Rev. 22:2) .Their joy shall be pure and unmixed, without any dregs of sorrow; not slight and momentary, but solid and everlasting, without interruption. They will enter into the joy of the Lord (Mt. 25:21). 

The expression "enter into joy" is somewhat unusual, and brings to my recollection this word of our suffering Redeemer: "My soul is exceeding sorrowful unto death" (Mk. 14:34). His soul was beset with sorrows, as the word there used will bear; the floods of sorrow went round about Him, encompassing Him on every hand. Wherever He turned His eyes, sorrow was before Him; it flowed in upon Him from heaven, earth, and hell, all at once. Thus was He entered into sorrow, and therefore saith, "I am come into deep waters, where the floods overflow me" (Ps. 69:2). 

Now, wherefore all this, but that His own might enter into joy? Joy sometimes enters into us now, but has much to do to get access, while we are encompassed with sorrows. But then joy shall not only enter into us, but we shall enter into it, and swim forever in an ocean of joy, where we shall see nothing but joy wherever we turn our eyes. The presence and enjoyment of God and the Lamb will satisfy us with pleasures for evermore. And the glory of our souls and bodies, arising from thence, will afford us everlasting delight. The spirit of heaviness, however closely it cleaves to any of the saints now, shall drop off then. Their weeping shall be turned into songs of joy, and bottles of tears shall issue in rivers of pleasure. Happy they who now sow in tears, which shall spring up in joy in heaven, and will encircle their heads with a weight of glory. 

Perfect security. This kingdom will endure forever. Since every­thing in heaven is eternal, the saints shall have undoubted certainty, and full assurance, of its eternal duration. This is a necessary ingre­dient in perfect happiness; for the least uncertainty causes fear, anx­iety, and torment-and therefore is utterly inconsistent with perfect happiness. 

But the glorified shall never have fear, nor cause of fear. They shall be "ever with the Lord" (1 Thess. 4:17). They shall all attain the full persuasion, that nothing shall be able to separate them from the love of God, nor from the full enjoyment of Him forever. The inheritance reserved in heaven is incorruptible; it has no principle of corruption in itself: to make it liable to decay, but endures for evermore. It is undefiled; nothing from without can mar its beauty, nor is there any thing in itself to offend those who enjoy it. Therefore it fades not away; but ever remains in its native lustre, and primitive beauty (1 Pet. 1:4). 

Entrance into the Kingdom 

We now proceed to speak of the admission of the saints into this their new kingdom. Their admission, the text shows, is by a voice from the throne-the King calling to them, from the throne, before angels and men, to come to their kingdom. Come and go are but short words: but they will be such as will afford matter of thought to all mankind, through the ages of eternity; since everlasting hap­piness turns upon one, and everlasting misery on the other. 

Come. Now our Lord bids the worst of sinners, who hear the Gospel, Come; but the most part will not come unto Him. Some few; whose hearts are touched by His Spirit, embrace the call, and their souls within them say, "Behold, we come unto Thee." They give themselves to the Lord, forsake the world and their lusts for Him. They bear His yoke, and cast it not of£ no, not in the heat of the day when the weight of it, perhaps, makes them sweat the blood out of their bodies. "Behold the fools!" says the carnal world. "Where are they going?" But stay a little, oh foolish world! From the same mouth whence they had the call they are now following, another call shall come, that will make amends for all: "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world" (Mt. 25:34). 

The saints shall find an inexpressible sweetness in this call, "Come." Hereby Jesus Christ shows His desire for their society in the upper house, that they may be ever with Him there. Thus He will open His heart to them, as sometimes He did to His Father concerning them, saying, "Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am" (Jn. 17:24). Now the tra­vail of His soul stands before the throne, not only the souls, but the bodies He has redeemed; and they must come, for He must be com­pletely satisfied. 

Hereby they are solemnly invited to the marriage supper of the Lamb. They were invited to the lower table by the voice of the ser­vants, and the sacred workings of the Spirit within them; and they came, and did partake of the feast of divine communications in the lower house. But Jesus Christ in person shall invite them, before all the world, to the higher table. 

By this He admits them into the mansions of glory. The keys of heaven hang at the girdle of our royal Mediator. "All power... in heaven" is given to Him (Mt. 28:18). And none get in thither but whom He admits. When they were living on earth with the rest of the world, He opened the doors of their hearts, entered into them, and shut them again, so that sin could never re-enter, to reign there as formerly. Now He opens heaven's doors to them, draws His doves into the ark, and shuts them in; so that the law, death, and hell can never get them out again. 

The saints in this life were still laboring to enter into that rest; but Satan was always pulling them back, their corruptions always drawing them down, insomuch that they have sometimes been left to hang by a hair of promise (if I may be allowed the expression) not without fear of falling into the lake of fire. But now Christ gives the word for their admission, they are brought in, and put beyond all hazard. 

He speaks to them as the person introducing them into the kingdom, into the presence-chamber of the great King, and to the throne. Jesus Christ is the great Secretary of heaven, whose office it is to bring the saints into the gracious presence of God now, and to whom alone it belongs to bring them into the glorious presence of God in heaven. Truly heaven would be a strange place to them ifJesus were not there; but the Son will introduce His brethren into His Father's kingdom; they shall go in with Him to the Marriage (Mt.25:10). 

Ye blessed of my Father. Consider in what quality they are intro­duced by Him: "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the king­dom prepared for you from the foundation of the world" (Mt. 25:34). It is Christ's Father's house they are to come into. Therefore He puts them in mind that they are blessed of the Father, dear to the Father, as well as Himself This it is that makes heaven home to them, namely, that it is Christ's Father's house, where they may be assured of welcome, being married to the Son, and being His Father's choice for that very end. 

He brings them in for His Father's sake, as well as for His own. They are the blessed of His Father; who, as He is the fountain of the Deity, is also the fountain of all blessings conferred on the chil­dren of men. They are those whom God loved from eternity. They were blessed in the eternal purpose of God, being elected to ever­lasting life. At the opening of the book of life, their names were found written therein: so that by bringing them to the kingdom, He does but bring them to what the Father, from all eternity, designed for them. 

Being saved by the Son, they are saved according to His (that is, the Father's) purpose (2 Tim. 1:9). They are those to whom the Father has spoken well. He spoke well to them in His Word, which must now receive its full accomplishment. They had His promise of the kingdom, lived and died in the faith of it; and now they come to receive the thing promised. Unto them He has done well. A gift is often in Scripture called a blessing; and God's blessing is ever real, like Isaac's blessing, by which Jacob became his heir. 

They were all by grace justified, sanctified, and enabled to per­severe to the end; now they are raised up in glory, and being tried, stand in the judgment. What remains, then, but that God should crown His work of grace in them, in giving them their kingdom, in the full enjoyment of Himself forever? 

Finally, they are those whom God has consecrated; which also is a Scripture term of blessing (1 Cor. 10:16). God set them apart for Himself to be kings and priests unto Him; and the Mediator intro­duces them, as such, to their kingdom and priesthood. 

Joint heirs with Christ. Christ introduces them, as heirs of the kingdom, to the actual possession of it. "Inherit the kingdom pre­pared for you from the foundation of the world." They are the chil­dren of God by regeneration and adoption. “And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ" (Rom. 8:17). 

Now is the general assembly of the firstborn before the throne . Their minority is overpast; and the time appointed of the Father for their receiving their inheritance is come. The Mediator purchased the inheritance for them with His own blood; their rights and evi­dences were drawn long ago, and registered in the Bible; nay, they have investment of their inheritance in the person of Christ, as their proxy, when He ascended into heaven, 'Whither the forerunner is for us entered" (Heb. 6:20). 

Nothing remains, but that they enter into personal possession thereof which, begun at death, is perfected at the last day, when the saints in their bodies, as well as their souls, go into their kingdom. 

The kingdom prepared for you. They are introduced to it as those it was prepared for, from the foundation of the world. The king­dom was prepared for them in the eternal purpose of God, before they, or any of them, had a being; which shows it to be a gift of free grace to them. It was from eternity the divine purpose that there should be such a kingdom for the elect; and that all impediments which might oppose their access to it should be removed out of the way. By the same eternal decree, everyone's place in it was deter­mined and set apart, to be reserved for him, that each of the chil­dren coming home at length into their Father's house, might find his own place awaiting him, and ready for him, as at Saul's table David's place was empty when he was not there to occupy it him­self (1 Sam. 20:25). And now the appointed time is come, they are brought in, to take their several places in glory. 

USE 

I shall conclude my discourse on this subject with a word of appli­cation. 

To All Who Claim a Right to This Kingdom 

Since it is evident there is no promiscuous admission into the king­dom of heaven, and none obtain it but those whose claim to it is solemnly tried by the great judge, and, after trial, supported as good and valid; it is necessary that all of us impartially try and examine whether, according to the laws of the kingdom contained in the Holy Scriptures, we can verify and make good our claim to this kingdom. The hopes of heaven which most men have, are built on such sandy foundations as can never abide the trial. Having no ground whatever but in their own deluded fancy, such hopes will leave those who entertain them miserably disappointed at last. Wherefore, it is not only our duty, but our interest, to put the mat­ter to a fair trial in time. 

If we find we have no right to heaven, we are yet in the way, and what we have not, we may obtain; but if we find we have a right to it, we shall then have the comfort of a happy prospect into eternity, which is the greatest comfort one is capable of in the world. If you inquire how you may know whether you have a right to heaven or not, I answer, you may know that by the state you are now in. 

If you are yet in your natural state, you are children of wrath, and not children of this kingdom; for that state, to those who live and die in it, issues in eternal misery. 

If you are brought into the state of grace, you have a just claim to the state of glory; for grace will certainly issue in glory at length. This kingdom is an inheritance which none but the children of God can justly claim. We become the children of God by regener­ation, and union with Christ His Son; “And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ" (Rom. 8:17). These, then, are the great points upon which our evidences for the state of glory depend. Therefore, I refer you to what is said on the state of grace, for satisfying you as to your right to glory. 

If you be heirs of glory, "the kingdom of God is within you" (Lk. 17:21) by virtue of your regeneration and union with Christ. The kingdom of heaven has the throne in your heart, if you have a right to that kingdom. Christ is in you, and God is in you; and hav­ing chosen Him for your portion, your soul has taken up its ever­lasting rest in Him, and gets no true rest but in Him; as the dove, until she came into the ark. To Him the soul habitually inclines, by virtue of the new nature, the divine nature, which the heirs of glory are partakers of "Whom have I in heaven but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire beside thee" (Ps. 73:25). 

The laws of heaven are in your heart, if you are an heir of heaven: "I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts: and I will be to them a God, and they shall be to me a peo­ple" (Heb. 8: 10). Your mind is enlightened in the knowledge of the laws of the kingdom by the Spirit of the Lord, the instructor of all the heirs of glory; for whoever may lack instruction, surely a true heir to a crown shall not lack it. "It is written in the prophets, and they shall be all taught of God" (Jn. 6:45). Therefore, though father and mother leave them early, or be in no concern about their Christian education, and they be soon put to work for their daily bread, yet they shall not lack teaching. 

Your heart is changed, and you bear God's image, which con­sists in "righteousness and true holiness" (Eph. 4:24). Your soul is reconciled to the whole law of God, and at war with all known sin. In vain do they pretend to the holy kingdom, who are not holy in heart and life; for "without [holiness] no man shall see the Lord" (Heb.12:14). 

If heaven is a rest, it is for spiritual laborers, not for loiterers. If it is an eternal triumph, they are not in the way to it who avoid the spiritual warfare, and are in no care to subdue corruption, resist temptation, and to cut their way to it through the opposition made by the devil, the world, and the flesh. 

The treasure in heaven is the chief in your esteem and desire; for it is your treasure, and "For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also" (Mt. 6:21). If it is not the things that are seen, but the things that are not seen, which your heart is in the greatest care and concern to obtain; if you are driving a trade with heaven, and your chief business lies there; it is a sign that your treasure is there, for your heart is there. But if you are of those who wonder why so much ado is made about heaven and eternal life, as if less might serve the turn, you are like to have nothing to do with it at all. Carnal men value themselves most on their treasures upon earth; with them, the things that are not seen are weighed down by the things that are seen, and no losses so much affect them as earthly losses. But the heirs of the crown of glory value themselves most on their treasures in heaven, and will not put their private estate in the balance with their kingdom; nor will the loss of the for­mer go so near their hearts as the thoughts of the loss of the latter. 

Where these first-fruits of heaven are to be found, the eternal weight of glory will surely follow after; while the want of them must be admitted according to the Word, to be an incontestible evi­dence of an heir of wrath. 

To Those Who Have Indeed a Right To It 

Let the heirs of the kingdom behave themselves suitably to their character and dignity. Live as having the faith and hope of this glo­rious kingdom: let your conversation be in heaven (Phil. 3:20). 

Let your souls delight in communion with God while you are on earth, since you look for your happiness in communion with Him in heaven. Let your speech and actions savor of heaven; and in your manner of life, look like the country to which you are going-so that it may be said of you, as of Gideon ' s brethren "each one resembled the children of a king" (Judg. 8:18). 

Maintain a holy contempt of the world, and of the things of the world. Although others, whose earthly things are their best things, set their hearts upon them, yet it becomes you to set your feet on them, since your best things are above. This world is but the coun­try through which lies your road to Immanuel's land. Therefore pass through it as pilgrims and strangers; and dip not into the encumbrances of it, so as to retard you in your journey. It is unwor­thy of one born to a palace, to set his heart on a cottage to dwell there-and of one running for a prize of gold, to go off his way to gather the stones of the brook. But much more it is unworthy of an heir of the kingdom of heaven to be hid among the stuff of this world, when he should be going on to receive his crown. 

The prize set before you challenges your utmost zeal, activity, and diligence. Holy courage, resolution, and magnanimity become those who are to inherit the crown. You cannot come at it without fighting your way to it, through difficulties from without and from within: but the kingdom before you is sufficient to balance them all, though you should be called to resist even unto blood. Prefer Christ's cross before the world's crown, and wants in the way of duty, before ease and wealth in the way of sin. Choose rather to suf­fer affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season (Heb. 11:25). 

In a common inn, strangers perhaps fare better than the chil­dren; but here lies the difference: the children are to pay nothing for what they have got; but the strangers get their bill, and must pay completely for all they have had. Did we consider the after-reck­oning of the wicked for all the smiles of common providence they meet with in the world, we should not grudge them their good things here, nor take it amiss that God keeps our best things last. Heaven will make up all the saints' losses, and there all tears will be wiped away from their eyes. 

It is worth observing, that there is such a variety of Scripture notions of heaven's happiness, as may suit every afflicted case of the saints. Are they oppressed? The day cometh in which they shall have the dominion. Is their honor laid in the dust? A throne to sit upon, a crown on their head, and a scepter in their hand, will raise it up again. Are they reduced to poverty? Heaven is a treasure. If they be forced to quit their own habitations, yet Christ's Father's house is ready for them. Are they driven to the wilderness? There is a city prepared for them. Are they banished from their native country? They shall inherit a better country. If they are deprived of public ordinances, the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple there, whither they are going; a temple, the doors of which none can shut. If their life be full of bitterness, heaven is a paradise for pleasure. If they groan under the remains of spiritual bondage, there is glorious liberty abiding them. Do their defiled garments make them ashamed? The day is coming in which their robes shall be white, pure, and spotless. The battle against flesh and blood, principalities and powers, is indeed sore: but a glorious triumph awaits them. If the toil and labors of the Christian life be great, there is an everlasting rest for them in heaven. Are they judged unwor­thy of the society of angels in heaven? Do they complain of fre­quent interruptions of their communion with God? There they shall go no more out, but shall see His face for evermore. If they are in darkness here, eternal light is there. If they grapple with death, there they shall have everlasting life. 

And, to sum up all in one word, "He that overcometh shall inherit all things" (Rev. 21:7). He shall have peace and plenty, profit and pleasure, everything desirable; full satisfaction of his most enlarged desires. Let the expectants of heaven, then, lift up their heads with joy; let them gird up their loins, and so run that they may obtain, trampling on everything that may hinder them in their way to the kingdom. Let them never account any duty too hard, nor any cross too heavy, nor any pains too great, so that they may attain the crown of glory. 

To Those Who Have No Right Thereto 

Let those who have no right to the kingdom of heaven be stirred up to seek it with all diligence. Now is the time wherein the chil­dren of wrath may become heirs of glory. 

When the way to everlasting happiness is opened, it is no time to sit still and loiter. Raise up your hearts toward the glory that is to be revealed; and be not always in search of rest in this perishing earth. What can all your worldly enjoyments avail you, while you have no solid ground to expect heaven after this life is gone? The riches and honors, profits and pleasures, that must be buried with us, and cannot accompany us into another world, are but a wretched portion, and will leave men comfortless at length. Ah! Why are men so eager in their lifetime to receive their good things? Why are they not rather careful to secure an interest in the king­dom of heaven, which would never be taken from them but afford them a portion to make them happy through the ages of eternity? 

If you desire honor, there you may have the highest honor, which will last when the world's honors are laid in the dust; if riches, heaven will yield you a treasure; and there are pleasures for evermore. Oh, be not despisers of the pleasant land, neither judge yourselves unworthy of eternal life; close with Christ, as He is offered to you in the Gospel, and you shall inherit all things. Walk in the way of holiness, and it will lead you to the kingdom. Fight against sin and Satan, and you shall receive the crown. Forsake the world, and the doors of heaven will be opened to receive you.  

[This piece was excerpted from Boston’s classic work Human Nature in Its Fourfold State which was first published in 1720]

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