John Newton – The Most Generally Prevailing and Ensnaring Sin

In the following 6-minute video, Newton asks the question, “What is covetousness?” He then provides an answer, beginning with the statement, “a sin from which few people are entirely free.”

Please spend a little time and hear what he has to say on the matter.

Newton based his brief examination on the following verse: Ephesians 5:5 For this you know, that no fornicator, unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an idolater, has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God.

VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS:

  • What is covetousness?
  • A sin from which few people are entirely free
  • It is a deceitful sin – people much more easily see it in others than in themselves, especially when their pastor is preaching on the matter
  • This sin is one of the greatest spiritual hindrances to those who profess Christ
  • One reason it is hard to turn from is because it is seen everywhere around us
  • In our society, we are charmed by wealth chiefly because of covetousness
  • Genuine believers are called to set their affections on heavenly things
  • While we are in the world, it is our honor to manifest the grace that has delivered us from worldliness
  • Christians must eat, drink, buy sell… but they are to do these to the glory of God
  • They know that it is not necessary to be rich, admired, envied by those of the world
  • It is necessary, however, to be in fellowship with the Lord
  • Yet, for many professors of Christianity, their chief mark is attendance of the Sunday morning service
  • That is, in other areas of their lives, they are not easily distinguished from worldlings
  • Their love of money, and desire for ‘more’ are always exercised
  • Many work, in addition to their lawful employment; they seek gain of one sort or another
  • That is, they sacrifice the precious time that could be used for gain in spiritual endeavors
  • Many believe that opportunities of material gain are Providences from God; they don’t realize that many are testings meant to reveal to them their affections
  • They expose themselves to many snares in seeking material gain; and they ensnare their children [teaching them by example]
  • 1Timothy 6:10  For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evils. It is through this craving that some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many pangs
  • If you wish to avoid many snares… beware of covetousness

 

 

The following video is from the YouTube site: Christian Sermons and Audio Books

Link to John Newton videos:  https://www.youtube.com/@ChristisLord/search?query=john%20newton

Ephesians 5:5 For this you know, that no fornicator, unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an idolater, has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God.

John Henry Newton (July 24, 1725 — December 21, 1807) was an English Anglican clergyman and former slave-ship captain. He was the author of many hymns, including “Amazing Grace” and “Glorious Things of Thee are Spoken.”

Newton tells his own story:

“I was born in London the 24th of July, 1725, old style. My parents, though not wealthy, were respectable. My father was many years master of a ship in the Mediterranean trade. In the year 1748 he went Governor of York Fort in Hudson’s Bay, where he died in the year 1750.

“My mother was a dissenter, a pious woman, and a member of the late Dr. Jennings’s church. She was of a weak, consumptive habit, loved retirement, and, as I was her only child, she made it the chief business and pleasure of her life to instruct me, and bring me up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. I have been told, that, from my birth, she had, in her mind, devoted me to the ministry; and that, had she lived till I was of a proper age, I was to have been sent to St Andrew’s in Scotland to be educated. But the Lord had appointed otherwise. My mother died before I was seven years of age.

“I was rather of a sedentary turn, not active and playful, as boys commonly are, but seemed as willing to learn as my mother was to teach me. I had some capacity, and a retentive memory. When I was four years old, I could read, (hard names excepted,) as well as I can now: and could likewise repeat the answers to the questions in the Assembly’s Shorter Catechism, with the proofs; and all Dr. Watt’s smaller Catechisms, and his Children’s Hymns.

“When my father returned from sea, after my mother’s death, he married again. My new mother was the daughter of a substantial grazier at Aveley in Essex. She seemed willing to adopt and bring me up; but, after two or three years, she had a son of her own, who engrossed the old man’s notice. My father was a very sensible, and a moral man, as the world rates morality; but neither he, nor my step-mother, was under the impressions of religion: I was, therefore, much left to myself, to mingle with idle and wicked boys; and soon learnt their ways.”

“I was never at school but about two years; from my eighth to my tenth year. It was a boarding-school at Stratford, in Essex. Though my father left me much to run about the streets, yet, when under his eye, he kept me at a great distance. I am persuaded he loved me, but he seemed not willing that I should know it. I was with him in a state of fear and bondage. His sternness, together with the severity of my schoolmaster, broke and overawed my spirit, and almost made me a dolt; so that part of the two years I was at school, instead of making a progress, I nearly forgot all that my good mother had taught me.

“The day I was eleven years old, I went on board my father’s ship in Longreach. I made five voyages with him to the Mediterranean. In the course of the last voyage, he left me some months at Alicante in Spain, with a merchant, a particular friend of his. With him I might have done well, if I had behaved well: but, by this time, my sinful propensities had gathered strength by habit: I was very wicked, and therefore very foolish; and, being my own enemy, I seemed determined that nobody should be my friend.

“My father left the sea in the year 1742. I made one voyage afterwards to Venice, before the mast; and, soon after my return, was impressed on board the Harwich. – Then began my awfully mad career, as recorded in the Narrative; to which, and to the Letters to a Wife, I must refer you for any further dates and incidents.

“I am truly yours,

John Newton”