Anne Dutton's 
    Letters on Spiritual Subjects
 
    Dear Madam,
    It is indeed a very great privilege to be favored with a
    religious parentage and education, but 
    if this were our greatest felicity, we would sink, nevertheless, into 
    eternal misery. But the vessels of mercy—of God's free, rich, sovereign 
    mercy—in order to their preparation for eternal glory, are blessed by Him, 
    with His Holy Spirit sent down into their hearts, as the spirit of 
    regeneration, conviction, and conversion.
    And this blessed Spirit, in His saving work on the heart, 
    when He first begins it, finds the sinner dead in sin, under total darkness, 
    as to spiritual things, in his understanding; in an entire alienation from 
    them, and aversion to them, in his will and affections; and so, afar off 
    from God in Christ, without any apparent right to the covenant of promise, 
    and without any good hope through grace. 
    And at such a time as this, He is pleased, by His 
    almighty and all-gracious energy, to produce a new and holy principle of 
    spiritual life in that soul which lay entirely under the power of spiritual 
    death. This principle, which is instantaneously given, and as to the exact 
    moment of it to us unknown, contains in it all graces, which are afterwards 
    drawn out into their various exercises, under the Spirit's influence, unto 
    the regenerate soul's various privileges. And this gracious work of the Holy 
    Spirit of the heart discovers itself to the soul that is the subject of it, 
    and to others, by a supernatural light set up in the understanding, whence 
    the soul sees itself to be utterly lost and undone by sin, by heart 
    and life-sin, under the curse of God's law, and in danger of the wrath which 
    is to come, that it neither has, nor can, by self-power, attain a perfect 
    righteousness of its own for justification.
    And also, in the soul's discerning, upon the Spirit's 
    revealing, the infinite glory and transcendent excellency of Christ 
    as the great Savior, in His Person and offices, blood and righteousness, and 
    in all His grace-fullness, as God's great provision for the chief of 
    sinners' salvation, and as in the gospel held forth to be received of them 
    by faith. 
    And further, the Spirit's saving work on the will and 
    affections discovers itself by that soul's approbation of the Savior beheld, 
    its desires after Him, its approaches to Him, its laying hold of Him, and 
    casting itself, under the Spirit's sweet and strong attraction, with 
    the whole weight of its everlasting salvation upon Christ alone for all 
    holiness and all happiness, to the present and eternal praise of the God of 
    all grace, and to the soul's present and eternal bliss; upon which, that 
    soul becomes declaratively and apparently a child of God, an heir of God, 
    through Christ, as the God of grace and glory, and is more or less sealed 
    with the Holy Spirit of promise.
    And now, dear Madam, if you are blessed with a precious 
    experience of this happy work on your heart, you are most certainly a new 
    creature in Christ, and a true believer in Him, and "shall be saved in the 
    Lord, with an everlasting salvation," notwithstanding the greatest inward or 
    outward opposition. You are forever safe in the hands of Jesus, and none of 
    the powers of darkness, with all their subtlety and force, shall ever be 
    able to pluck you thence. "Your refuge is the eternal God, and underneath, 
    for your support, are the everlasting arms!" And as an inhabitant of the 
    Rock—the Rock of Ages, who is your strong defense—you may sing and shout 
    salvation from the top of the mountains.
    You tell me, Madam, "that your heart grows worse and 
    worse." To this I reply—The unrenewed part of your heart, in which 
    resides the principle of sin, has in it such a fullness of evil, such 
    heights and depths of wickedness, such putrefaction and rottenness, that it 
    cannot admit of greater degree. "It is deceitful above all things, and so 
    desperately wicked" that none but the Lord Himself can find it out, or 
    search the amazing depths of this bottomless gulf. 
    But though sin as a principle, in the unregenerate part 
    of your heart, cannot grow worse, the ebullitions, or boilings up of 
    corruptions, may be more or less, as they have more or less advantage to 
    show their rage against the God of grace and holiness, and against us as 
    bearing His image. The workings of corruptions have less advantage when we 
    are under present divine influence; but when this is in measure withdrawn 
    from us, they instantly boil over with rage against the principle of grace, 
    and by their subtlety and force, under Satan's influence, entice or hurry us 
    away with rapidity into sinful acts, to God's dishonor and our soul's 
    distress.
    But all the rage of hell and sin within and without us, 
    with all those hellish waters which they cast forth as a flood to swallow us 
    up, shall never quench that spark of heavenly fire, that little grace which 
    is wrought in our hearts by the hand of Omnipotence. No! this, by the same 
    almighty power which enkindled it, shall be maintained and increased amid 
    and by the greatest opposition, until it is raised into a full and eternal 
    flame. The triumphant Captain of our salvation has vanquished all the powers 
    of hell and sin; He has led captivity captive, and dragged all the legions 
    of devils at His chariot wheels, when God, the Redeemer, went up to glory 
    with a shout, the Lord, with the sound of a trumpet, amid thousands and tens 
    of thousands of His holy angels, who saw His triumphs and sung His 
    victories. 
    And as for sin, our worst enemy—the old man, the whole 
    body of sin—it was crucified with Him, and thence, by omnipotent grace—by 
    sin-pardoning and sin-subduing grace—it shall be shortly, totally, and 
    finally destroyed in us. And meanwhile, as our begun holiness increases, we 
    shall see corruptions in their horrid ebullitions, under advancing displays 
    of reigning grace, which gives them greater aggravations, to be worse and 
    worse, and our new hearts shall be to all sin more and more averse, until a 
    complete victory is won, and we are blessed with an immortal crown.
    As to our heart-idolatry, it is a very great iniquity of 
    which the Lord's own people are deeply guilty. But since this is the promise 
    of His rich, free grace, "Ephraim shall say, What have I to do any more with 
    idols?" let us plead it before His throne, and bring our every idol unto Him 
    to be entirely slain, so shall our hearts be separated from them, and our 
    admiration of, and sinful affection to, all glittering glow-worm glories 
    sink and die before the rising attracting display of His all-transcendent 
    and infinite excellences.
    Be assured, dear Madam, that that work of God upon the 
    heart which brings the soul to an entire dependence on Christ, a whole 
    Christ, is no illusion, but shall end in a full and eternal salvation. And 
    as to the 'hope of the hypocrite', which shall perish, that is always 
    founded upon self-worthiness; but that hope which has for its foundation 
    God's free grace, in and through what Christ has done and suffered for us, 
    and is made of God unto us, is good hope that shall not make ashamed, but 
    shall be, in its glorious fruits, to the righteous, gladness unto endless 
    ages.
    As to those precious promises which you so earnestly 
    desire to experience, they are fulfilled in you already, partially and 
    initially, and shall be, shortly, completely and eternally.
    I wish you a rich increase of all grace unto all joy, 
    peace, and holiness, and a massive crown of immortal bliss.