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John Angell James

A decent, flowery, down-hill way to eternal destruction!

John Angell James • February, 18 2009 • Audio
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Choice Puritan Devotional

John Angell James's sermon, "A Decent Flowery Downhill Way to Eternal Destruction," addresses the doctrinal issue of worldliness as a perilous foe to the believer's spiritual health. He argues that Christians often become ensnared by a devotion to worldly pursuits, which can be more destructive than overt sins like vice or idolatry. James supports his argument with biblical references, notably 1 John 2:15 ("Do not love the world or anything in the world") and Matthew 10:37, emphasizing that anything—even good things such as family or career—can become an idol if loved more than God. He conveys the practical significance of these warnings, urging believers to prioritize their spiritual condition and eternal salvation above all earthly concerns to avoid the deceptive path leading to destruction.

Key Quotes

“The world contains many things besides the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life, things more decent, more innocent, more rational, more commendable than these vile objects.”

“Anyone who loves his father or mother more than me is not worthy of me.”

“Here, the enemy with which you have to do battle is not vice. It is not profligacy. It is worldly-mindedness.”

“There is a way to hell through the church—a decent, flowery, downhill way to eternal destruction.”

What does the Bible say about loving the world?

The Bible warns against loving the world, stating that if anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him (1 John 2:15).

In 1 John 2:15, the apostle Paul makes it abundantly clear that the love of the world is incompatible with the love of God. This concept extends beyond mere sinful activities; it encompasses everything that distracts us from our commitment to God, including family, career, and personal ambitions. While there are many things in the world that may seem benign or even commendable, when they take precedence over God, they become part of the 'world' that we must be wary of.

1 John 2:15, Matthew 10:37

Why is it important for Christians to prioritize their love for God?

Prioritizing love for God is essential for true Christian living, as it directs our desires and ensures our salvation.

Matthew 10:37 emphasizes the necessity of loving God above all else, stating that anyone who loves family members more than Christ is not worthy of Him. This establishes a clear hierarchical structure in our affections where God must be supreme. When a Christian's primary focus is on earthly matters, it leads to spiritual compromise and a walk that may appear religious yet ultimately leads to destruction. The implications of such misplaced priorities are dire, with the potential for entire lives being devoted to worldly pursuits at the cost of eternal salvation.

Matthew 10:37

How do we know that worldly-mindedness is a threat to Christians?

Worldly-mindedness stifles spiritual desires and can lead to a false sense of security in one's faith.

The sermon highlights a significant danger within the church: the subtlety of worldly-mindedness. It often manifests in believers devoting themselves entirely to their careers, ambitions, and domestic comforts while neglecting their relationship with God. This phenomenon is not blatant vice but rather a complacency that can envelop the heart, burying serious thoughts of salvation and eternity under layers of worldly engagement. The real peril lies in being a 'professor' of religion while simultaneously walking a path that leads to destruction, often without realizing it.

Sermon Transcript

Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors

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A Decent Flowery Downhill Way to Eternal Destruction by John Angel James

Christ is the supreme object of a true Christian's love, the chief source of his felicity, the highest end of his life, The first object of a Christian's desire, pursuit, and expectation is the salvation of his soul. Our great business on earth is to fit for heaven. Our main concern in time is to prepare for eternity.

The world is, indeed, a very dangerous foe to the believer. to very, very many, it is the most destructive one. They are not so likely to be subdued by open vice as by worldly mindedness. Worldliness is the sin of the age and has deeply infected the Church of Christ.

Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 1 John 2 verse 15. This verse ought to ring through all Christendom and make the ears of millions tingle and their hearts to palpitate with fear and alarm.

What is the world? not merely open sin and vice, profligacy, idolatry, infidelity, or heresy, oh no, the world contains many things besides the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life, things more decent, more innocent, more rational, more commendable than these vile objects. Everything on earth, however fair, laudable, and excellent in itself, everything besides God is the world.

Your business is the world. Your family is the world. Your comfortable home is the world. The wife of your bosom is the world. The children whom God has given you are the world. What, then, you exclaim, are we not to love these? Yes, in proper degrees, but not more than God. You are not to seek your highest happiness from them. You are not to be more solicitous to secure them than heaven. It is of a supreme love which the apostle speaks. Anyone who loves his father or mother more than me is not worthy of me. anyone who loves his son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me." Matthew 10, verse 37.

Christian professors, there is need to have these solemn yet righteous demands sent with a voice of thunder into your places of business and scenes of domestic comfort. You have need to be told that all this engrossing solicitude about business, all this eager haste to be rich, all this ambition for larger houses, all this taste for elegance, show, and fashion, all this competition for name and fame, which leads to a neglect of salvation, to departure from God, to indifference to heaven, is the love of the world, which is incompatible with the love of the Father.

And not less so, that supreme concern about domestic enjoyment, that taste for fashionable amusements, or even that more refined and simple love of home-bred delights, which leaves out God, salvation, heaven, and eternity. Here, here, I repeat, is your peril. Here, the enemy with which you have to do battle. It is not vice. It is not profligacy. It is worldly-mindedness.

Do we not see mere professors throwing themselves wholly, body, soul, and spirit into their trade, into the cherished objects of their ambition, into their entire devotedness to a worldly life? In these things, and for them, they live. These things bind around and overgrow their heart, stifle all serious thoughts, smother all heavenly desires.

The road that leads to destruction is broad enough to comprise many parallel paths. And there is one path crowded with professors of religion, walking in company with cheerful appearance and elegant attire, an elastic step, but still walking to perdition. Oh yes, there is a way to hell through the church. a decent, flowery, downhill way to eternal destruction, and there are many who take that road.

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