True zeal has much self-denial in it

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MW

Puritanboard Amanuensis
Hugh Binning (Practical Sermons), Works, p. 574:

Zeal is a vehemency of affection in any earnest pursuit, or opposition of a thing; and to make it good, it must not only be fixed upon a commendable and good object, but must run in the right channel, between the banks of moderation, charity, and sobriety. If it overflows these, certainly that excess proceeds not simply and purely from the love of God, or the truth, but from some latent corruption or lust in our members, which takes occasion to swell up with it. I find in scripture the true zeal of God hath much self-denial in it. It is not exercised so much concerning a man’s own matters, as concerning the matters that are purely and merely concerning God’s glory. It is the most flexible, condescending, and forbearing thing in those things that relate to ourselves and our own interests. Thus Moses is commended as the meekest man, when Aaron and Miriam raise sedition against him, Num. 12:3. He had not affections to be commoved upon that account. But how much is he stirred and provoked upon the apprehension of the manifest dishonour of God, by the people’s idolatry? How many are lions in their own cause, and in God’s as simple and blunt as lambs? And how much will our spirits be commoved when our own interest lies in the business, and hath some conjunction with God’s interest; but if these are parted, our fervour abates, and our heat cools? I lay down this, then, as the fundamental principle of true zeal: it is like charity that seeketh not its own things.
 
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