Bootstrap
John Newton

Pains, infirmities, loss of sleep, the failure of sight and hearing

Ecclesiastes 12; Psalm 71:9
John Newton April, 4 2011 Audio
0 Comments
Choice Puritan Devotional

Sermon Transcript

Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors

100%
. Pains, infirmities, loss of sleep, the failure of sight and hearing. From the letters of John Newton. Do not cast me away when I am old, do not forsake me when my strength is gone. Psalm 71 9. I am drawing nearer and nearer to the season, which the psalmist either expected or felt. Many reasons teach the aged believer the need of this prayer. As his graces are still imperfect, so his powers are feelingly upon the decline. It was but little he could do at his best, and now less and less. He feels other props and comforts dropping off apace. When he was young he had warm spirits and pleasing prospects, but now what a change of the friends in which he had once delighted, in some he had found inconstancy, they have forsaken and forgotten him, and others have been successively taken away by death, they have fallen like the leaves in autumn, and now he stands almost a naked trunk, if any yet remain, he is expecting to lose them likewise, unless he is first taken from them. Old age abates and gradually destroys the relish of such earthly comforts as might be otherwise enjoyed. Pains, infirmities, loss of sleep, the failure of sight and hearing, and all the senses, are harbingers, like Job's messengers, arriving in close succession to tell him that death is upon his progress and not far distant. If youth has no security against death, then old age has no possibility of escaping the grim monster, but though friends fail, cisterns burst, gourds wither, strength declines, and death advances, if God does not forsake me, then all is well. even to your old age and grey hairs, I am He who will sustain you, I have made you, and I will carry you, I will sustain you, and I will rescue you. â€" Isaiah 46
John Newton
About John Newton
John Newton (1725-1807) was an English Anglican clergyman, staunch Calvinist, and abolitionist, most widely known for authoring the hymn Amazing Grace.
Broadcaster:

Comments

0 / 2000 characters
Comments are moderated before appearing.

Be the first to comment!

Joshua

Joshua

Shall we play a game? Ask me about articles, sermons, or theology from our library. I can also help you navigate the site.