Procrastination, pt. 2
by Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758)
[This is the second part of a two-part study concerning procrastination, written by
the notable Colonial American Christian leader Jonathan Edwards. And though this
study was written some 250 years ago, I dare say that it has application for many of
us in the 20th century.
In part one of this study, Mr. Edwards defined the sin of "procrastination" as living
one's life in such a way so as to depend on another day. What is forbidden is
expressed by Solomon in the text: "Boast not thyself of tomorrow." Mr. Edwards
made a distinction, though, between not depending on another day, and
concluding that we shall not live another day (this also is wrong!). He said: "In
some respects we ought to carry ourselves, as though we know we should not live
another day, and should improve every day as if it were the last. . . But in many
other respects, we are not obliged to behave ourselves as though we concluded that
we should not live another day." Mr. Edwards then went on to resolve this seeming
contradiction, and to further explain what exactly is forbidden by Solomon in the
text. Finally, Mr. Edwards gave examples of behavior that breaks this
commandment. And so, to continue...]--Ed.
Why We Ought Not Boast of Tomorrow
I come now to show, why we ought not thus to boast ourselves of tomorrow; but on
the contrary, to behave ourselves every day as though we had no dependence on
another. And there is this plain and sufficient reason for it, viz. That we have no
grounds of dependence on another day. We have neither any foundation to depend
upon seeing any particular things come to pass another day, which we may hope or
wish for, nor upon enjoying another day in this world. We have nothing for a
foundation of dependence that we shall not be in eternity before tomorrow, as both
reason and experience show.--We have no promise of God that we shall ever see
another day. We are in God's hands; our lives are in His hands; He hath set our
bounds; the number of our months and days are with Him; nor hath He told them
to us. We see that the life of man at longest is very short, and nothing is more
uncertain; and it is a thing universal among mankind, that they know not the day of
their death. We see that great natural abilities, sharpness of wit, and clearness of
discernment, do not help to any discovery in this matter. Wise men are as uncertain
of the term of their lives as others.
There are so many ways and means whereby the lives of men come to an end, that
no circumstances in which a man can be are any security to him from death. That it
is but a very little while till tomorrow, is no good ground of dependence that we
shall live till then. We see that deaths as sudden as our dying before tomorrow
morning, are common in the world. We very often see or hear of sudden deaths.
How many suddenly, in a few minutes, pass from a state of health to a state of
death, in the daytime, by several kinds of disease, which give no warning of their
approach, and by many unforeseen accidents! How many go to sleep in health, and
are found dead in their beds in the morning! So, our present health is no good
ground of dependence that we shall live to see another day.-- That persons are now
in youth is no good ground of dependence upon another day; for sudden
unexpected deaths are common even among those who are in the bloom of youth.
Nor is it any ground of dependence in this case, that a man is of a more than
ordinary healthy and strong constitution. It is found by experience, that such are
liable to sudden death as well as others: "One dieth in his full strength, being
wholly at ease and quiet. His breasts are full of milk, and his bones are moistened
with marrow" (Job 21:23,24).
That persons have already lived to see a great many days, and that after they had
been often in times past told, that they were uncertain of any future time; or that
persons have a strong desire to live longer; or that they are now very unprepared
for death, both on temporal and spiritual accounts; is no ground of dependence on
the future. Death tarries for no man, but comes when and to whom he is sent, and
strikes the deadly blow, whether the man be prepared or not. That men have been
very useful in their day, and that it is of great importance to their families and
neighbours that they should live longer, is no ground of dependence. The most
useful men are often cut down by death, in the midst of their usefulness. The same
may be said, though we cannot see which way death should come at us before
tomorrow. To how many accidents, to how many diseases, are we liable, which
may prove fatal before tomorrow, which yet it is impossible for us to foresee! So, if
we be very careful of our lives, and our health, not to expose ourselves to any
dangers, still this is no ground of dependence as to any future time. Death comes in
many ways which were not thought of. Men foresee not the means of their death,
any more than the fish securely swimming in the water foresee the net, or the bird
that securely feeds upon the bait sees the snare. It is as the wise man observes: "For
man also knoweth not his time; as the fishes that are taken in an evil net, and as the
birds that are caught in the snare; so are the sons of men snared in an evil time,
when it falleth suddenly upon them" (Eccl. 9:12).
Serious Inquiries
I shall improve this doctrine, by putting you upon examining yourselves, whether
you do not boast yourselves of tomorrow, or whether you do not live in such a
manner as you would not, were it not that you depend on future time and future
opportunity in the world. Would not your behaviour be very different from what it
now is, if you every day lived and acted without any dependence on seeing one day
more?--You cannot but acknowledge it to be most reasonable, that you should live
and act thus. You cannot but own, that you have no good ground of dependence on
another day; and therefore that you cannot act wisely any otherwise than in acting
as one who hath no dependence on any such thing. Therefore inquire whether you
act wisely and reasonably in this respect.
1. Do you not set your hearts much more on this world, than you would, if you had
no dependence on the morrow? Is not the language of the rich man in the gospel,
the secret language of your hearts? "Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many
years" (Luke 12:19), etc. Is not this the language of your hearts, with respect to what
you have gotten already; which makes you place your happiness so much in it?
And with respect to what of the world you are seeking and pursuing, is it not with
a dependence on enjoying it for a great while, when you shall have obtained it? Are
not your lands and other possessions which you have gotten, or are about to get, in
your own imagination, yours for a great while?-- Would your mind be so filled
with thoughts and cares about these things, so much to the exclusion of another
world; would you lay yourselves under so great disadvantages for your soul's
good, by involving yourselves in worldly cares; if you had no dependence on
having any thing to do with these things for more than the present day? If you did
not depend on considerably more time in the world, would your inquiry be so
much, "What shall we eat, and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall we be
clothed?", and so little, "How shall we make our calling and election sure? how
shall we be assured that we are upon a good foundation for another world, and that
we are in such a state, that death cannot hurt us? How shall we be sure that we are
ready to appear before the judgment-seat of a heart-searching God?"-- Would there
be so much of your time spent in laying up treasure on earth--and so little in laying
up treasure in heaven, that you might have store against the day of death--were it
not that you put death at a distance? Would you be so much raised at your
temporal prosperity, and so much sunk when you meet with crosses and
disappointments in our worldly affairs, if you did not think that continuance in the
world is to be depended on for more days than the present?-- Let those who very
much affect to adorn their bodies in gaudy apparel, inquire whether they would
think it worth their while to spend so much time to make themselves fine, and to
set themselves forth as gayer than others, if they really had no dependence that
their bodies would be preserved one day longer from being clasped in the cold
arms of death?
2. Inquire, whether you would not much less meddle with the concerns of others,
and be much more employed with your own hearts, if each day you had no
dependence on living another day. If you were sensible that you had had no other
day to depend upon than this, you would be sensible that you had great affairs of
your own to attend to. You would find a great deal of business at home between
God and your own soul; and considering that you cannot depend on another day, it
would seem to you that you have but a short time in which to do it, and that
therefore you have need to be much engaged. You would say as Christ did, I must
work while the day lasts, for the night cometh, wherein no man can work (see John
9:4). You would find so much to be done, and so much difficulty in doing it, that
you would have little leisure, and little heart, to intermeddle with the business of
others. Your business would be confined to a much narrower compass. You would
have so much to do at home in your closets, and with your own hearts, that you
would find no occasion to go abroad for intermeddling business to fill up your
time.
But the truth is, men conceive of a great deal of time which they have to be filled
up, and hence they want business: they depend on tomorrow, and the day
following, and next month, and next year, yea many years to come. When they are
young they depend on living to be middle-aged, and when middle-aged they
depend on old age, and always put far away the day of death. Let them be young or
old, there always seems to them to be a great vacancy between them and death;
hence they wander to and fro for business to fill up that vacancy.--Whereas if they
were sensible of the uncertainty of life, they would, in the first place, make sure of
their own business; the business of their own precious, immortal souls would be
done, before they would attend much to the business of other people. They would
have no desire or disposition to concern themselves with every private quarrel
which breaks out in the neighborhood. They would not think it much concerned
them to inquire into the matter, and to pass their censure on the affair. They would
find something else to do, than to set by the hour together, discussing and
censuring the conduct of such and such persons gathering up or rehearsing the
stories which are carried about to the disadvantage of this and that person.
We seldom, if ever, see men who are upon sick-beds, and look upon themselves
very dangerously sick, disposed to spend their time in this manner; and the reason
that they look upon it doubtful whether they shall live long, They do not, so much
as others, depend on much their own souls' concerns, than about the concerns of
others. So it would be with persons in health, if their health did not make them
depend on a great deal of time in the world.
3. If you each day depend on no other but the present, would you not engage and
interest yourselves much less in party designs and schemes, than you are now wont
to do? Among a people divided into two parties, as this town hath been for a long
time, there is commonly much done by the partisans in forming schemes of
opposition to one another. There is always a strife, who shall get their wills and
carry their point. This often engages them, if not in open quarrels, in secret
intrigues. That there is so much done in these things, is a certain evidence that they
boast themselves of tomorrow, and put death at a distance.
Men would certainly find themselves very much indisposed to such things, if they
were so sensible of the uncertainty of life, as to depend on no other day than the
present. It is therefore very proper, that you should examine yourselves in this
particular, at this time. If you really depended on no other day than the present,
would your hearts be so much engaged in strife between two parties as they often
are? Would your spirits be so often raised and ruffled? Would you go about with so
much prejudice against such and such men: harbouring so much of the old leaven,
which so often breaks out in heats of spirit; and, as an old sore which was skinned
over, but not cured, sets to raging with a touch which would not have hurt sound
flesh?-- Commonly in the management of a strife between two parties, there is a
great deal of envy. When any who belong to one of the parties seem to prosper, the
other party will envy them; it is a grievous thing to them. So there is also much
contempt; when one of the parties gets the ascendant a little over the other, they are
ready to make the utmost improvement of it, and to insult the other party.-- And
there is commonly in such cases a great deal of mutual secret reproach. When those
of one party get together, then is the time to inveigh against those of the other
party, and to set forth their injustice and their fraudulent practices. Then is the time
for them to pass their censure on their words and actions. Then is the time to
expose their own surmises and suspicions of what the other party intends, what it
aims at in such and such things, what the purposes of individuals are, and what
they suppose their secret actions are.--Then is the time for all that are friends in the
cause, and engaged in the same designs, to entertain one another by ridiculing the
words and actions of the other party, and to make themselves sport of their folly
and disappointments; and much is done at calling one another Raca and fools, or
other names equivalent, if not much more than equivalent. Then is the time to lay
their heads together, to plot and contrive how they shall manage such an affair so
as to disappoint the other party, and obtain their own wills.
Brethren, these things ought not so to be among a Christian people; especially
among a people that has made the profession which we have made. Nor would
they be so if it were not for your dependence on much future time in the world. If
you were so sensible of your continual liableness to death, that every day was the
last you depended upon, these things certainly would not be so. For let us but
consider what are the effects of death with respect to such things. It puts an end to
party-quarrels. Many men hold these quarrels as long as they live. They begin
young, and hold on through many great and sore afflictions and chastisements of
Providence. The old sore remains, when the supporters of nature bow, and the eyes
grow dim, and the hands tremble with age. But death, when that comes puts an end
to all their quarrelling in this world. Death silences the most clamorous, and
censorious, and backbiting tongue. When men are dead, they cease to lay schemes
against those of another party; death dashes all their schemes, so far as they have
any concern in them. "His breath goeth forth, he returneth to his earth; in that very
day his thoughts perish" (Ps. 146:4).
When men are dead, they cease to bite and devour others; as it is said to have been
of old a proverb among the Egyptians, Dead men do not bite. There are many who
will bite and devour as long as they live, but death tames them. Men could not be
quiet or safe by them while alive, but none will be afraid of them when dead. The
bodies of those that made such a noise and tumult when alive, when dead, lie as
quietly among the graves of their neighbors as any others. Their enemies, of whom
they strove to get their wills while alive, get their wills of them when they are dead.
Nothing can please their enemies better than to have them out of their way. It suits
them, that those who were so troublesome to them, are locked up safe in the close
grave, where they will no more stand in their way.-- There are no more effects of
their pride, their craftiness, their hatred and envy. "Also their love, and their hatred,
and their envy is now perished" (Eccl. 9:6).
The time will soon come, when you who have for many years been at times warmly
contending one with another, will be very peaceable as to this world. Your dead
bodies will probably lie quietly together in the same burying place. If you do not
leave off contending before death, how natural will it be for others to have such
thoughts as these, when they see your corpses; What! is this the man who used to
be so busy in carrying on the designs of his party? Oh, now he had done; now he
hath no more any part in any of these things; now it doth not at all concern in, who
get their wills, or what party is uppermost. We shall hear his voice no more in our
town meetings. He will not sit any more to reproach and laugh at others. He is gone
to appear before his Judge, and to receive according to his conduct in life.-- The
consideration of such things as these would certainly have a mighty effect among
us, if we did not put far away the day of death. If all acted every day as not
depending on any other day, we should be a peaceable, quiet people.
4. Inquire, whether or no you do not allow yourselves in some things, and
endeavour to flatter yourselves that there is no evil in them, which you would by
no means dare to do if you had not a dependence on living till tomorrow. It is very
common among men, when they are strongly enticed to some sinful practice, by
their worldly interest, or by their carnal appetites, to pretend that they do not think
there is any evil in it; when indeed they know better. Their pretence is only to serve
a present turn. And if they expected to have their souls required of them that night,
they would by no means dare to persist in the practice.--Therefore examine the
liberties you take by this test. What would you think of them, if you now should
have the following news sent you by some messenger from heaven; John, or
Thomas, (or whatever your name be,) this night shall thy soul be required of thee.
How would such tidings strike you! How would they alter the face of things!
Doubtless your thoughts would be very quick; you would soon begin to reflect on
yourselves, and to examine your past and present conduct. And in what colors
would the liberties you now take, appear to you in the case now supposed? Would
you then conclude, that there is no evil in them? Would you not be less bold to go
forward and meet death, for having continued in such practices? Would you dare
to commit such acts again before you die, which now you pretend are lawful?
Would not the few hours which you would have to live, be at all the more
uncomfortable to you for having done such things? Would you not presently wish
that you had let them alone? Yea, would they not appear frightful and terrifying to
you? If it be thus, it is a sign that the reason why you now allow yourselves in them,
and plead for their lawfulness, is that you put death at a distance, and depend on
many other days in the world.
5. Inquire, whether you do not some things on the presumption, that you shall
hereafter repent of them. Is not this the very thing which causes you to dare to do
some things? Is it not the very ground on which you venture to gratify your lusts?
Let young people examine all their secret carriage; what they do alone in the dark
and in secret corners. God knoweth, and your own hearts know, though men do
not. Put the question impartially to your own consciences; is not this the very thing
that gives you courage, that God is very merciful, and that He often of His
sovereign mercy gives repentance of great sins, and even willful sins, and in
consequence of repentance forgives? And so you hope that one day or other He will
do so to you. You intend some time hereafter earnestly to seek; and you hope you
shall be awakened. And if you be very earnest, as you intend to be, you hope you
shall be converted, and then you shall be forgiven, and it will be as well as if you
had never committed such sins.
If this be the case, consider how you boast of tomorrow, and foolishly depend on
future opportunity to repent, as well as foolishly presume on the mercy of God to
give you repentance, at the same time that you take a course to provoke God,
forever to give you up to a sealed hardness and blindness, and to a most fearful
damnation; not considering that God will glorify His revenging justice as well as
His mercy; nor remembering the sad example of Esau, "who for a morsel of meat
sold his birthright; and afterwards, when he would have inherited the blessing, he
was rejected, for he found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully
with tears" (Heb. 12:16-17).
6. Inquire, whether you improve this day, as one who doth not depend upon ever
having opportunity to keep another sabbath, or to hear or read another discourse. It
appears from what hath been already said, that you have no grounds to depend on
any more such opportunities. Now this day is present, and so you are in the better
capacity to determine how it is with you. It is but for you to reflect upon yourselves,
to look inward, and see how it is with you at this present time. And how is it? Are
you as strict and as diligent in keeping this sabbath, watching your thoughts,
keeping your hearts, striving in duties both public and private, and improving
ordinances, as might be expected of one who hath no dependence on ever enjoying
such an opportunity anymore; one who doth not depend on ever setting foot again
within the walls of God's house?-- Do you attend to this address with that care, and
desire, and endeavor to improve it for your good, as you would, if you did not
depend upon it, that your bodies would not be in the grave, and your souls fixed in
eternity, in their unalterable state, before the next sabbath?
7. Are you careful to see to it that the grounds of your hope are good? A man who
hath some hope of being in a state of acceptance with God, but is not sure, if he had
no dependence on any other day's opportunity of making it sure, would be very
strict in examining himself and searching the grounds of his hope, and would not
rest in an uncertainty. He would be very thorough in informing himself what might
be depended on as good evidence of an interest in Christ, and what not; and would
be exceedingly strict in searching his own heart, to see whether there was anything
in him that comes up to the requisites laid down in the Scriptures.-- If what appears
hopeful in him were dim and obscure, he would set himself very earnestly to obtain
that which would be more clear and manifest, and would cry earnestly to God for
it, and would apply himself to a diligent use of means in order to it. And good
reason why; for he depends on no other opportunity to make his calling and
election sure, than what he hath today. Inquire therefore whether you be thus
thorough in examining your hope. And are you thus careful effectually to see to it,
that you are on a sure foundation? If not, then you behave yourselves as those that
depend on tomorrow.
How to Spend Every Day
God hath concealed from us the day of our death, without doubt, partly for this
end, that we might be excited to be always ready, and might live as those that are
always waiting for the coming of their Lord, agreeably to the counsel which Christ
gives us (see Matt. 24:42-44; Matt. 25:13; Mark 13:32; etc.).-- That watchman is not
faithful who, being set to defend a house from thieves, or a city from an enemy at
hand, will at any hour venture to sleep, trusting that the thief or the enemy will not
come. Therefore it is expected of the watchman, that he behave himself every hour
of the night, as one who doth not depend upon it that the enemy will tarry until the
next hour. Now therefore let me, in Christ's name, renew the call and counsel of
Jesus Christ to you, to watch as those that know not what hour your Lord will
come. Let me call upon you who are hitherto in an unrenewed condition. Depend
not upon it, that you will not be in hell before tomorrow morning. You have no
reason for any such dependence; God hath not promised to keep you from it, or to
withhold His wrath so long.
How can you reasonably be easy or quiet for one day, or one night, in such a
condition, when you know not but your Lord will come this night? And if you
should then be found, as you now are, unregenerate, how unprepared would you
be for His coming, and how fearful would be the consequence! Be exhorted
therefore, for your own sakes, immediately to awake from the sleep of sin, out of
sleep, and sleep no more, as not depending on any other day.-- Let me exhort you
to have no dependence on any future time; to keep every sabbath, and to hear every
sermon, as if it were the last. And when you go into your closet, and address
yourself to your Father who seeth in secret, do it in no dependence on any future
opportunity to perform the same duty. When you that are young go into company
for amusement and diversion, consider that it may be the last opportunity of the
like nature that ever you may have. In all your dealings with your neighbours, act
as if you were never to make another bargain. Behave in your families every day, as
though you depended on no other.--Here I shall offer you two motives.
1. Consider, if you will hearken to this counsel, how much it will tend to your
safety and peace in life and death. It is the way really and truly to be ready for
death; yea, to be fit to live or fit to die; to be ready for affliction and adversity, and
for whatever God in His providence shall bring upon you. It is the way to be in, not
only and habitual, but actual preparedness for all changes, and particularly for your
last change.-- It is the way to possess your souls in a serene and undisturbed peace,
and to enable you to go on with an immovable fortitude of soul, to meet the most
frightful changes, to encounter the most formidable enemies, and to be ready with
unshaken confidence to triumph over death whenever you meet him; to have your
hearts fixed, trusting in God, as one that stands on a firm foundation, and hath for
him habitation the minition of rocks, that is not afraid of evil tidings, but laughs at
the fear of the enemy. It will be the way for you to possess that quietness and
assurance spoken of: "The work of righteousness shall be peace, and the effect of
righteousness, quietness and assurance forever" (Isa. 32:17). -- The servant who
always stands watching, will not be at all surprised at the news that his Lord is
coming. This will be the way for you to live above the fear of death. Yea, if heaven
and earth should shake, you may stand firm and unshaken, being settled on a rock,
which cannot be removed but abideth forever. O how happy are such persons, who
have such safety and peace! What a blessed peace is that which arises from such a
constant preparation for death! How happy therefore is that servant whom his
Lord, when he cometh, shall find so doing!
2. What dismal calamities and miseries mankind are subject to for want of this, for
want of behaving themselves every day, as not depending on any future day! The
way of the world is, one day foolishly to depend on another, yea on many others.
And what is the consequence? Why, the consequence with respect to the greater
part of the world is, that they live all their days without any true peace or rest of
soul. They are all their lifetime subject to bondage through fear of death. And when
death sensibly approaches they are put into a terrible fright. They have a dismal
view of their past lives; the ill improvement of their time, and the sins they have
been guilty of, stand staring them in the face, and are more frightful to them than so
many devils. And when they look forward into that eternity whither they are going,
how dismal is the prospect! O how do their hearts shrink at the thought of it! They
go before the judgment-seat of God, as those that are dragged thither, while they
would gladly, if they could, hide themselves in the caves and dens of the earth.
And what is worse yet than all the disquietude and terror of conscience in this
world; the consequence of a contrary behavior, with respect to the bulk of mankind,
is their eternal perdition. They flatter themselves that they shall see another day,
and then another, and trust to that, until finally most of them are swallowed up in
hell, to lament their folly to all eternity, in the lake that burneth with fire and
brimstone.-- Consider how it was with all the foolish virgins who trusted to the
delay of the bridegroom's coming: when He came they were surprised, and found
unprepared, having no oil in their lamps; and while they went to buy, those who
were ready went in with Him to the marriage; and the door was shut against them,
and they came afterwards crying in vain, "Lord, Lord, open to us" (Matt. 25:11).
Footnotes
9. All Scriptures cited in this study are taken from the King James Version.
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