Communion Sermons
Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Communion Sermon 2
Communion
Sermon 2
By
the
Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Glasgow,
Charles Glass and Co.
85
Maxwell St.
Reprinted
in 1876-1877
Edited,
Updated and Revised by C. Matthew McMahon
A Puritan’s Mind, Inc. Copyright
April 2004
Changes made to this edition do
not affect the overall language of the document, nor do they change the
writer’s intention. Spelling,
grammar and formatting changes have been made, and modernized wording is
used in specific cases to help today’s reader more fully grasp the
intention of the author.
Awake,
O sword, against my shepherd, and against the man that is my fellow,
saith the Lord of hosts: smile the shepherd, and the sheep shall be
scattered; and I -will turn mine hand upon the little ones, &c.—Zechariah
xiii. 7, 8, 9.
AS
the Eunuch, when reading Isaiah liii. asked the question, "O! whom
speaketh the prophet this? of himself, or of some other man?" so
may we of the sufferings of Christ. Christ's sufferings were so
admirable that they made Him a world's wonder! As if a man would say,
What a sight do I see? The like whereof I never saw! I see the Son of
God, the Lord of Life, all mangled in His hands and feet.
There
are three grounds of wonder in our Lord's sufferings, 1. Look at His
Person. 2. Compare Him with others. 3. Look at the rare way of clearing
mercy and justice.
1.
Look on His Person, and wonder that the Way should be weary; Strength,
faint; Life, die; Bread, hungry; and Water, thirsty. Is not this a rare
matter? A wonder! that the God-head should be knit in a personal union
with the Man of Sorrows! For God with His Spirit to bear up a man under
sorrow, is nothing, compared with giving His personal subsistence to
stand connected with wounds, blood, curse, and shame! For the God-head
to breathe, live in, and dwell as one with the person shamed, cursed,
hanging on the cross, dead, and buried, is truly wonderful! Here God is
made a curse, God is made a shame; and the personality of the God-head
still abiding with the shame and the curse, howbeit neither cursed nor
ashamed.
2.
Compare Him with others. It was nothing to see Moses subjected to
scorning; Zechariah slain, between the porch and the altar; and many of
the ancient Fathers rent in pieces: but for Christ, for God, to be so
handled is strange! No wonder though all the world wonder and cry, O
God, what wonders do we see! The hand that spanned the heavens, pierced
with nails! The feet of Him that treadeth on the stars, nailed to a
tree!
3.
What man or angel could have dreamed of this rare work, and strange way
to heaven, that justice would have God-man to suffer? This was a
voluntary work, for God to come down and save men; which He needed not
to do by any necessity of nature. God's own free will was above, beyond,
and before' this set and decreed law of justice. Out of His free good
will, He breathes out goodness, love, mercy, and tender compassion. What
a mystery? The infinite God to suffer for miserable men!
Use.
Then he that counteth little of sin, counteth little of God. The wilful
sinner, who takes sin into his bosom, is cruel to his Maker. If Christ
be your husband, and you His wife; then sin slew your husband. Will the
wife love the knife that cutted her husband's throat? Ye will say, The
wife loveth not the husband, if she take the man into her bosom who
pursued her husband to the death, and helped to execute him on the
gallows. Should the redeemed of the Lord then love their lusts, that
pursued Christ to the death, and nailed Him to the cross? Then beware,
by going on in sin, of saying Amen to the shedding of Christ's blood.
Love,
and learn to look at, Christ in His suffering for His people. O the love
of God, it passeth all knowledge! "For if, when we were enemies, we
were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much more, being
reconciled, we shall be saved by His life" (Romans v. 10). Christ
laid the ground-stone, and foundation of His love very deep; even down
upon the earth, the grave, shame, the curse, hell, and the wrath of God.
Yea, in His love, He maketh all His elect children kings and princes to
God, and they shall reign with Him for ever and ever. O! then what great
fools are they who will not be kings and princes!
But
alas! that the world is aye picking quarrels with Christ and His
followers. “Let us breaktheir bands asunder, and cast away their cords
from us" (Psalm ii. 3). When Christ came to the nation of the Jews,
they were offended at Him. I assure you he is far forward who finds no
fault with God; who thinks Christ so fair and lovely, that there is no
spot in Him, and loves Christ, even when He seems to be angry at him.
If
it be asked, Should Christ have offered mercy to the Jews? Is it not
against justice, that mercy should be offered to those who trample mercy
under foot?
Ans.
1. If you consider Christ's nature and offices, ye will see that He
behoved to give an offer of mercy to those who spat in His face. Having
man's nature in Him, He behoved to put on bowels of mercy. God's
infinite mercy upon Christ's tender heart, bound Him that He could not
go away and leave His friend's house; but constrained Him to stay still,
and take all the strokes that His friends gave Him. A man has compassion
on his first-born; a woman on the fruit of her womb; a husband on his
wife; a kinsman on his friend; and a faithful king on his people: but
Christ is infinite (even mercy running over the banks) in His nature.
Christ said to Justice, “Stay till I woo My bride:" for justice
(as manifested to us) is a voluntary decree of God to punish sinners;
and justice would have been at us to slay us. Absalom sought to slay
David his father, but David gave command to the captains and officers to
deal gently with the young man Absalom. Be not sore upon my child. So
mercy comes to sinners through Christ
2.
Look to Christ's office, as dying Christ. Our Lord would never say amen
to our forwardness, nor run away and leave us, nor yet would He say amen
to the curse of the law. The law cried, Death upon all sinners; Christ,
as Mediator (to speak so) said, God forbid, My Father! I would rather
give My heart's blood ere it were so. How went the matter then? Thus;
aye the unkinder the world was to Christ, He was aye the kinder to it;
they abused Him, He kissed and embraced them in His arms. Christ, as
Mediator, came and bowed down to go into the house of clay that He had
borrowed from the Jews (to speak so), but they met Him in the door, fell
upon Him and abused Him, and bruised both His hands and His feet.
3.
(Which may be sweetest of all). Upon what terms did Christ make the
bargain with His Father? He got commandment to die, but not continually.
He said, Content, I will die, and be warm-hearted to them; I shall take
a lift of them in My two arms, to pull them out of hell, and from all
their miserable toil. Our Lord says, Let them be as ill as devils to Me,
I will be as good as God to them.
Use.
Then it reproves those who seek a reason why Christ died for them. O,
say they, I am a hardhearted body, so rebellious that Christ would never
die for me! Well, then, do ye think that Christ died for hire? Would you
make Christ a Popish God, who died for sinners only for as good again.
Christ, ere He came out of heaven, knew the worst of it, and said, Let
My friends slay Me, I will die in love for them. Look, then, sour,
unthankful world, what a hold Christ took of your souls, and held them
fast, and would not let them go. So it is a shame to us not to clasp to
Him. This mercy of the Mediator has shamed us all out at the door; we
are ashamed for ever more, if we do not take Christ who would so fain
take us. Come to yourselves, then, and fight no longer against Him. Say,
Woe's me, that my Lord kissed me, but I abused Him! If this move not our
heart, and melt it with love to Christ, God shall break it all to
pieces, and it never shall be healed again. O, my friends, Christ never
got a good turn of His friends. “He came unto His own, and His own
received Him not" (John i. n). The house of Israel crucified Him;
the daughters of Jerusalem stirred Him up before He pleased. The rulers
and teachers of the kirk, and professors are the traitors, who sell
Christ, even the men who pretend friendship with Him. It is a shame to
beguile and be false to any friend, far less should we be false to
Christ. Art thou a professor and in the kirk? Be true to Christ, and
stand to His cause.
"Awake,
O sword, against My shepherd.'''—As if the sword had ears, and were
asleep, the Lord speaks to it. “If I bring a sword upon a land, and
say, Sword, go through the land, to cut off from it man and beast"
(Ezek. xiv. 17). He is speaking to the sword as if it were a messenger
who had ears, whom He sends on an errand. We should be afraid to anger
the Lord who hath so many on His side. Providence and justice have many
friends, and mercy has many servants. If God say, Sword, go to Germany,
go through Scotland, it dare not sit His call: God's providence has a
secret impulse upon all the creatures. If God say, Arise, pestilence,
and set on them; Awake, devils; Come hither, graven images and set on
Scotland; Come hither, whore of Rome, smite Scotland, and make it a den
of dragons, they must obey. He bids the sword awake against His Son, and
Shepherd, Christ, because, by the determinate counsel of God, He was to
be slain.
And
there be two sweet reasons why He awaketh the sword against Christ, 1.
Because the sword behoved to sleep a while, till Christ's twelve hours
of the day was over. Says He, Luke xiii. 32, "I must work to-day
and to-morrow, and the third day I shall be perfected." So long as
Christ hath the world to teach with the gospel, and any seed to sow, any
soul to convert, as long the sword slept; for His Father gave Him a time
to suit His wife, and O! but our Lord bestirred His time, and hastened
before the sword awaked against Him. 2. The sword behoved to sleep till
the term-day came; and then the sword awaked, for God would not want
payment an hour beyond the time, and that was a black and dreary hour to
Christ. He got not two summons, with continuation of days, but He
behoved to keep the first day, and answer the first summons, Therefore,
when He was to answer peremptorily to the justice of God, and (as it
were) an hour of awakening to the sword (for God would not let the diet
pass the day, nor renew Christ's bond), He said, “Now is My soul
troubled; and what shall I say? Father, save Me from this hour"
(John xii. 27). So Christ desired it not; but for the love He had to us
He was glad of the day, and willing to pay the debt, and had the sum
ready; “For their sakes I sanctify Myself" (John xvii. 19). He
made His soul and body ready for the fire, to be burnt as a sacrifice
for man upon the altar of the cross. And because He was minded not to
play the dyvour, (Bankrupt ) He was willing, with all His heart, to
suffer; therefore, says He, “Arise, let us go hence" (John xiv.
31). He went to that place where He knew they would take Him, and
willingly went to prison for the debt. He was like an honest man who
resolved to pay His debt, and would fain have the money off His hand,
and receive a discharge. O! fain would Christ have had a written
discharge in His hands for Himself, His heirs and assigns. (persons to
whom property is destined.)
Hence,
we are taught to use our time well, our twelve hours of time here, as
Christ did. At the hour of death, at the hour of call, He had nothing to
do; so let us be ready against our hour, that so death and judgment
awake us not. It is an unmeet time to sleep then, while the judge is
before the door; and when we hear the voice of the Lord's feet coming in
wrath against the land, it is not time for us to lay down our head, and
say, "Soul, take thine ease." And yet it is often seen, when
God is crying to the sword to awake against a land, it is midnight with
men therein; then they are sleeping; and it is the fearfulest death of
all to die in a sleep, and unprepared; to be slain in that state and
leap into eternity in a night dream, when we know not where we are
going.
"Awake,
Sword, smite."—Spare that man by no means; Justice, Spare Him
not; Curse of the law, Spare Him not; Men and devils, Take your will of
Him. To hear God say this of Christ was a world's wonder! O sun, hide
thyself, hide thy face! O heavens, put on a mask of darkness! O angels,
go down and dry the sweat off Him! O earth, tremble! O graves, open! O
rocks, rent! Fools mock and laugh at sin, but Christ wept when He
satisfied for it.
"Awake
against my fellow."—Christ who is equal with the Father, “the
image of the invisible God, the first-born of every creature" (Col.
i. 15), the "exact character " of His person; is the man who
stands with God ever ready to do His work, and to run for us where ever
the Lord bids Him. Hence learn, that Christ in nature is even the
brightness of God's glory, "the express image of His person"
(Heb. i. 3). We see the printing iron leaves behind it every way, the
print of itself; so the Lord from eternity brought forth another like
Himself, the Second Person of the Trinity, stamped with that same
glorious God-head, with all the essential properties that are in the
Father. As the Father has life, so the Son has life in Himself. As all
men honour the Father, so should they honour the Son. The brightness of
God's glory is a great word, a rare and great mystery. The glancing0
brightness coming from the sun, is not another sun; nor is the glancing
brightness of a precious stone, another stone. And so it is here with
Him. Because, all that is in God is God, and there is nothing in Him but
what is in His nature; therefore the riches and beams of infinite glory,
and that substantial glancing glory, and beauty in God, is God, and the
very nature of God, and the same God with the Father. Only this
substantial glancing of God's glory, has subsistence in itself, to make
it a person distinct from the Father; and, therefore, Christ is God, and
co-equal with God in all things, carrying the substantial stamp and
character of the God-head. Now, this glorious image, being the Lord's
delight from all eternity, He would not enjoy His alone, but put a copy
of the God-head, as it were in print, on the flesh and blood of man,
when The Word was made flesh, that we might take this fellow and
companion of God, to be our fellow and companion. See, then, the dignity
of the elect in Christ, that God and they are made one! are made one in
such a manner that He has (so to speak) parted His own Son betwixt
Himself them. Take Him, take Him, then, with God's blessing. God gave
you Him with good will, take ye Him with heart and good will then.
"Smite
the Shepherd:'— Smite Christ and the apostles shall be offended, run
away and leave Him. Here is a command to the sword to set on Christ
God's Fellow and the chief Shepherd. Even Christ is arraigned before the
judge, for the sins of men. Wherefore should this have been? We would
have been stricken and condemned for ever, had not the Lord stricken and
condemned His own Son. Here we have God taking the sacrifice of His Son,
and letting us go. He knew that His Son would bear the strokes best.
What reason had Christ to be stricken? He came but under the debt; might
He not have gone free? No, no, as He came under the debt, He behoved to
pay. Justice would not let Him away; but smote Him so, that indeed it
struck the Lord's soul from His body. You that live in sin, are ye not
afraid when the God of glory got such a stroke? We make but sport of it,
but God's sword goes through flesh and bones, soul and body. Beware of a
stroke of it out of Justice's hand; for if ye get it ye will never do
well again: ye will be like Moab, a broken and lame pot, and shall curse
the day wherein ye were born (Jer. xx. 15). “He hath hedged me about,
that I cannot get out; He hath made my chain heavy (Lam. iii. 7).
"And
the sheep shall be scattered"—That is, The disciples shall flee
away for fear, and shall start and fall at Christ's sufferings; because
they were thinking He should be an earthly king, and make them great men
in the world. But they were all mistaken: for He came to get strokes,
and not an earthly kingdom.
Doct.
Observe here: The faith of the apostles, when Christ was taken, gets a
crack; the back of it is near broken, and they are at the point of
giving up with Christ, taking Him not to be the Redeemer of the children
of Israel. O, but God's children, in their way to heaven, get many sore
backsets! f Many sore trials have the people of God to encounter with.
They are many times at that of it, that they know not what to do. What
might the disciples now think, but Christ and they were separated never
to meet again? “Wherefore hidest thou thy face, and holdest me for
thine enemy?" (Job xiii. 24). Christ, the true heir, was put to
this, What shall I do? “Now is," says He, "My soul troubled,
and what shall I say?" How-beit He never doubted, though He was put
to tears and strong cries. I think the saints, in their way to heaven,
are like rash children, who get many a fall, and break their face twice
a day. God will give them such a backset and fall under temptations,
that their eyes will reel again, their hands grow weak, and their hearts
faint; so that there is but as a hair-breadth, betwixt them and their
giving up with God. Faith, as it were, goes through fire and water to
heaven: or like a soldier going through an enemy's camp, this one runs
at him with a spear, another discharges a musket at him, one runs him
through the arm or thigh, with a sword; another has well nigh put him
off his horse, and he is very near surrendering; yet he spurs through,
and at last gets away with his life. So the Christian warrior, however
many hazards he may meet with, shall come off victorious at last. This
may be a comfort for all under temptations and down-castings for their
grievous sins. Ye sometimes cry, "No, but God loves me not; I am
often doubting if the dead rise, if there be a heaven," &c.
These are backsets, but take ye no fear, give not over, all shall be
well. Faith must not be like foolish people, to seek law-burrows of
temptations. True faith is an herb that grows best in winter weather.
When
the disciples in the ill day forsake Christ, ye need not marvel to see
many blown away with temptations. So long as Christ has fair weather,
and feeds the multitudes with loaves, they seek Him and would make Him
their king (John vi. 15). But when the court changes, and it grows black
in the west, and there comes winter weather; Oh! then, What do they?
They all turn back and flee. Ay, Christ in a day of trial is like (if we
may use the comparison) an old waste dove-house; the doves flee away,
and there is nothing there but old nests. It is just so when Christ has
ought to do: many of His friends prove weak, and get a backset; and many
fall and deny Him: "Will ye also go away?" said He to the
Twelve. Many marry Christ, as some men do rich women, who marry their
riches, but not themselves; and when they have gotten their riches,
their affections are elsewhere, and the women are lightly esteemed. So
has it often been. When Christ's cause came in question, the rulers of
this land suffered Christ and His cause to be wronged, and many of them
took a back-side: but He has been a moth in many of their purses, and
they are worm-eaten for it. When our Lord's Temple was measured, they
suffered lowns and knaves to take acres of His land from Him, and so
Christ got not all His bounds: and they see but little who see not, that
for this, or since that time, God has taken broad lands from them, and
even now is doing it: for they had put lordships in their purses.
"And
I will turn Mine hand upon the little ones"— Christ kept the
faith of the little ones, when they were in Satan's sieve, and prayed to
the Father that their faith should not fail. The turning of Christ's
hand upon them, was much as “Though He had given them a back-stroke,
yet He would lend them a lift for it again." He had scattered, but
He would gather them again; forsaken them, but He would return to them
again. I think I recollect a story of one who had gone to see a dear
friend, whom he found fighting with an enemy, and like to be overcome:
upon which he fell to and helped him, and took the enemy off his hand.
Christ saw the disciples like to be overcome and mastered with the
temptation. He saw that if He helped not, they would be shot through;
therefore He came in as a third man and helped them. Whence ye may see
the privilege of the children of God, under a trouble or heavy sin; God
helps them; so they fight not alone. If ye be God's, in all your fights
Christ is a third man with you. If ye be like to be overcome with
defection, if ye be His, He will bestow three things on you, which none
get but the sons.
1.
Suppose that God would seem to deny them, yet they will not deny Him. I
think they are like noble minded heirs; though their lands are under
thousands of debt, yet they will never sell them without reversion; for
then they would lose all. If they quit the eye-look to the estate, they
lose the place also. So it is with God's children under fear for sins;
when, to their apprehension, their part of Christ is mortgaged, and
under thousands, yet they dare not resign their part of Him. I would
have you doing this. God's children are under many sins; but I pray you
sell not your right of Christ; for if ye do, the devil is at your hand,
to take instruments that you have quit Christ. But let your sins be ever
so many; still stick by this, that you are a son of God, and so Christ
will redeem the inheritance, and make all free. David said he was cast
off, yet still prayed as if he thought not so: Psalm xxxi. 22, "I
said in my haste, I am cut off from before Thine eyes; nevertheless Thou
heardest the voice of my supplications, when I cried unto Thee."
There we may see he thought he was cast off, yet he prays and cries, and
could not be at ease, and that tells us that he had not subscribed a
resignation to his Lord.
2.
God gives to His scattered little ones a sanctified nature. In
opposition to sin, the renewed part cries aye out as a friend to Christ,
“I vote not for that, that's against Christ, that's against me; I will
never say amen to that. I take instruments in God's name, I hate that,
and all other sins." Christ has an advocate in thy soul to plead
for Him.
3.
There is this in God's children, after they seem to have taken their
leave of Christ, they look eagerly after Him. And it is a look over
their shoulders, with a “Woe's me! O to be back at Him again!" So
the disciples, after they had fled, came the third day to the grave to
seek their Lord again. Then learn, under temptations, to keep Christ on
your side, and not to take on the work your alone, lest when you are
wrestling against temptations, ye be left to play the coward. But steal
out of the gripes of sin and Satan, and yoke f them and Christ together,
and He will give them their fill of it; and if He be like to be
overcome, let him take that in his own hand. He who would fain have
amends of his enemies, if he be a man great with the king, uses means to
get a plea raised betwixt them and the king, and then the king takes
them off his hand.
"Two
parts shall be cut off and die; but the third part shall be left
therein"—For the slaying of Christ, and the contempt of the
gospel, the land shall be divided. Learn, Scotland (for I may not stay
to amplify the doctrine), learn to make much use of Christ. Are ye not
more obliged to God than His beloved people the Jews were, the Lord's
first bride, the wife of His youth? The sorest stroke that ever a land
gets, is a stroke for rejecting Christ and the gospel. The third part
shall be left therein. Two parts are cut off. Take them out of my sight.
Jer. xv. 2, “Such as are for death, to death; and such as are for the
sword, to the sword; and such as are for the famine, to the famine; and
such as are for the captivity, to the captivity." Chap. ix. 13, 14,
15, “Because they have forsaken my law, and walked after the
imagination of their own heart, and after Balaam,—Behold, I will feed
them, even this people, with wormwood, and give them water of gall to
drink." For oppression, see Amos viii. 7. And for vanity, see
Isaiah iii.
When
the workers of iniquity are taken out of this life, it is said to be a
cutting off; but it is not said so of the godly. Isaiah lvii. i,
“Merciful men are taken away." God taketh away merciful men in
His arms as children; but He cuts the wicked off like the trees of the
field, and pulls them up by the roots. "They shall drive out Ashdod
at noon-day," as so many cattle out of the corn, "and Ekron
shall be rooted up" (Zeph. ii. 4). God sends sword, famine, and
pestilence, as so many dogs, against the wicked, to destroy them. But He
needs not to hunt these out after the godly, nor summon them, for they
go willingly. Says Joshua, xxiii. 14, “I go the way of all the
earth." A good preparation before God's anger come to cut us off,
is to get peace made up with Him. O to be ready to lie down under His
feet. When the king calls some to judgment, He does not summon them, but
writes them with His own hand. In Ezekiel viii., He denounces judgment
in four several places against idolaters; but in chap. ix. -He bids them
see the judgment. But how gets Christ His “third part” He must fight
for them; and kindle a fire, and cast them into it, before He get them.
He draws the sword, kindles a fire, and casts them into the furnace, and
courts His wife there. Now Christ is like no other captain: many
captains get towns without stroke of sword, which surrender willingly to
them; but Christ never took in a town, nor got a people, but by a strong
hand. He is like a captain who gets His living by His sword. The rod,
the sword, the fire, and pulling, drawing, and storming the conscience,
are used, and yet they stand out. (See Hosea vi. 4, 5, 6, 7). God has a
church here, but He cannot get His third part separated from the rest,
but by stroke of sword. It is a sore matter or He conquer! (Ere He
conquer, much must be borne.) He must first fill the places with dead
bodies, (Psalm ex. 6). And ere our Lord get His third part in this land,
to be as He would have them, it will cost Him to plead the quarrel of
the covenant with fire and sword. I have chosen thee in the fire, I have
set my love upon thee; and ere I could have thee, thou wast cast into
the furnace. He will refine thee as silver. Though the house should be
burnt, God will have a care of the silver and the jewels, the godly,
whom He gathers into His treasury.
Now,
there are two sorts of metal, which our Lord will not admit into the
treasury, i. Light clipped metal. The clipped silver that wants so much
due weight, that is the money God refuses. So it is said of the king of
Babylon, Thou art weighed in the balance, and art found light. Such are
the men that are found light in God's balance, windy, light, and soft
men: when God puts His hand to them, they cannot abide a touch, but go
all to pieces among His hands; they cannot suffer trouble, but they melt
in the fire, and are worse after a downfall than before: these God casts
away. Now, see that ye have the two weights that God seeketh; I mean, be
answerable to your profession. When ye are weighed, the balance will
tell you better than the eye. God's weights will try if you have true
grace.
2.
He casts away the dross, the tin, and the brass, and will put none of it
in His treasury. Whether it be guilded or washen brass, and put in a bag
beside the gold, God will see what is but copper. Gold is gold now. Go
therefore, each man, and see what metal ye are of, for God is kindling a
fire in this land to try us; and when God's trial is come, we will see
who burneth, and who glanceth in the fire (Ezek. xxii. 18). Many will
appear like gold, and yet in reality are but wateredt copper: they look
like gold, they glitter and are yellow coloured, but when they are cast
into the fire, the watering will go off, and there comes out nothing but
dross. Demas and Ahithophel were of brass, which a little knock of the
hammer broke all to pieces, and the devil comes to gather up the
fragments. Joseph stood a temptation to lust, and did not yield (Gen.
xxxix. 9). Ye make a wide profession, yet art not like Joseph, who said,
“How then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?"
Fill up your chair, and fill up your coat; fill it up; the trial is
near! God has taken up His balance to weigh you. Look what you want, and
run to Christ's golden mine and get it. See that ye be in Christ, and
when Christ and you are put in the balance together, you and He will be
good weight. His righteousness will be weighed with you, and it is no
clipped metal.
"They
shall call on My name, and I will hear them" —See then, that this
is the way to get relief from troubles and temptations, when ye are
trysted with them. Call on God by prayer, and ye shall obtain mercy.
Thus the fire at last brings out mercy: and prayer in the fire is one of
those sweet smells that God's spices cast forth. In the fire, the smoke
of prayer, sighing and groaning that comes forth, goes up to heaven. See
then what comes of trouble. It looks not unlike that, Rom. v. 3, 4, 5,
“Knowing that tribulation worketh patience; and patience, experience;
and experience, hope; and hope maketh not ashamed." We would not
have so many errands to the Lord, if we wanted trouble. An afflicted
church is a praying church, and we need not be afraid of a praying
church, if we could attain to this. If ye ask, Why the Lord tries His
children so hard? Answer. Because they are slack in prayer. God gets not
that worship of prayer that is due to Him by fair means: He useth law
against us, and what mercy they shall have, says He, they shall have the
sense of My favour. "I will say, It is My people; and they shall
say, The Lord is my God"—There is (if we may so speak) a shaking
of hands on both sides. There God claims kindness to His people, and
they claim kindness to Him; He takes hold of them, and they cleave to
Him; He loveth them, and they love Him. Kindness between God and His
people, stands never on one side, it is on both sides. However, God must
begin. Love is not an herb that grows with the root uppermost, and the
top down: it grows not up, but comes down from God, and the beams of it
spring up to Him again. See this meeting, Song i. 4, the church says,
Draw me. She speaks to Christ to draw her; then says Christ, chap. ii.
10, "Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away." He seeks
her, and she seeks Him. She says, “Tell me, O Thou whom my soul
loveth, where Thou feedest," chap. i. 7. I will be where thou
dwellest, I will be where thou art. Christ seeks you in the sacrament,
seek ye Him again, and though the devil should say the contrary, there
shall be a meeting. She says, chap. iii. 3, “Saw ye Him whom my soul
loveth." He says, chap. iv. 8. “Come with Me from Lebanon."
He calls her. She says, chap. i. 4, “We will remember Thy love more
than wine!" He says, chap. iv. 10, “How much better is thy love
than wine!" He calls her, “His love and fair one," chap. ii.
10. She calls Him, chap. v. 10, "White and ruddy, the chiefest
among ten thousand!" Let His love get a meeting; He fought through
death and hell to find you; seek ye Him through all troubles. He bought
you dear; say ye, O that I could buy Him, and give all that I have or
could do for Him. There is not any blessed marriage otherwise. Love ye
not Christ clearly? Would ye not suffer and die for Him, as He suffered
and died for you? It is not marriage-love if it is not so; it is but
feigned love. Now Christ is holding forth His love to you this day, will
ye not accept of the offer, and will ye return nothing again? I like not
that kindness when there is no taking and giving, no borrowing and
lending betwixt Christ and you. May the Lord Jehovah persuade you to
embrace the offer, and flee into lovely Christ Jesus, the glorious
Prince of renown, and to Him be praise for ever and ever.
Amen. |
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