Rev.
Samuel Rutherford
(1600-1661)
He was one of the most influential
Scottish Presbyterians in the Westminster Assembly.

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Biographical Sketch (by John Howie
from his "Scots Worthies"):
Rev. Samuel Rutherford, a gentleman by
extraction, having spent some time at the grammar school, went to the
University of Edinburgh, where he was so much admired for his pregnancy
of parts, and deservedly looked upon as one from whom some great things
might be expected, that in a short time, though then but very young, he
was made Professor of Philosophy in that University.
Some time after this he was called to be
minister at Anwoth, in the shire of Galloway, unto which charge he
entered by means of the then Viscount Kenmuir, without any
acknowledgment or engagement to the bishops. There he labored with great
diligence and success, both night and day, rising usually by three
o'clock in the morning, spending the whole time in reading, praying,
writing, catechizing, visiting, and other duties belonging to the
ministerial profession and employment.
Here he wrote his Exercitationes de
Gratia, for which he was summoned, as early as June 1630, before the
High Commission Court at Edinburgh; but the weather was so tempestuous
as to obstruct the passage of the Archbishop of St Andrews hither, and Mr.
Colvil, one of the judges, having befriended him, the diet was deserted.
About the same time, his first wife died, after a sore sickness of
thirteen months; and he himself was so ill of a tertian fever for
thirteen weeks, that he could not preach on the Sabbath-day without
great difficulty.
Again, in April 1634, he was threatened
with another prosecution at the instance of the bishop of Galloway,
before the High Commission Court; and neither were these threatenings
all the reasons Mr. Rutherford had to lay his account with suffering; for
as the Lord would not hide from his faithful servant Abraham the things
he was about to do, neither would he conceal from this son of Abraham
what his purposes were concerning him. In a letter to the provost's wife
of Kirkcudbright, dated April 20, 1633, he says, that upon the 17th and
18th of August, he got a full answer of his Lord to be a graced
minister, and a chosen arrow hid in his quiver. Accordingly, the thing
he looked for came upon him; for he was again summoned before the High
Commission Court for his non-conformity, his preaching against the five
articles of Perth, and the forementioned book of Exercitationes
Apologeticae pro Divina Gratia, which book they alleged did reflect
upon the Church of Scotland. But "the truth was," says a late
historian, "the argument of that book did cut the sinews of
Arminianism, and galled the Episcopal clergy to the very quick; and so
Bishop Sydserff could endure him no longer." When he came before
the Commission Court, he altogether declined it as a lawful judicatory,
and would not give the chancellor (being a clergyman) and the bishops
their titles, by lording of them. Some had the courage to befriend him,
particularly the Lord Lorne, afterwards the famous Marquis of Argyle,
who did as much for him as was within his power to do; but the Bishop of
Galloway, threatening that if he got not his will of him, he would write
to the King, it was carried against him; and upon the 27th of July 1636,
he was discharged from exercising any part of his ministry within the
kingdom of Scotland, under pain of rebellion; and ordered within six
months to confine himself within the city of Aberdeen, during the King's
pleasure; which sentence he obeyed, and forthwith went toward the place
of his confinement.
From Aberdeen he wrote many of his famous
letters, from which it is evident that the consolation of the Holy
Spirit did greatly abound with him in his sufferings. Yea, in one of
these letters, he expresses it in the strongest terms, when he says,
"I never knew before, that His love was in such a measure. If He
leave me, He leaves me in pain, and sick of love; and yet my sickness is
my life and health. I have a fire within me; I defy all the devils in
hell, and all the prelates in Scotland, to cast water on it." Here
he remained upwards of a year and a-half, by which time he made the
doctors of Aberdeen know, that the Puritans, as they called them, were
clergymen as well as they. But upon notice that the Privy Council had
received a declinature against the High Commission Court in the year
1638, he adventured to return to his flock at Anwoth, where he again
took great pains, both in public and private, amongst the people who
from all quarters resorted to his ministry, so that the whole country
side might be accounted as his particular flock; and (it being then in
the dawning of the Reformation) men found no small benefit by the
Gospel; that part of the ancient prophecy being farther accomplished,
"For in the wilderness shall the waters break out, and streams in
the desert" (Isa. xxxv. 6).
He was before that Venerable Assembly
held at Glasgow in 1638, and gave an account of all these his former
proceedings, with respect to his confinement, and the causes thereof. By
them he was appointed to be professor of divinity at St Andrews, and
colleague in the ministry with the worthy Mr. Blair, who was translated
thither about the same time. And here God did again so second this his
eminent and faithful servant, that by his indefatigable pains both in
teaching in the schools and preaching in the congregation, St Andrews,
the seat of the archbishop, and the nursery of all superstition, error,
and profaneness, soon became forthwith a Lebanon, out of which were
taken cedars for building the house of the Lord, almost throughout the
whole land. Many of those who received the spiritual life by his
ministry he guided to heaven before himself, and many others did walk in
that light after him.
As Rev. Samuel Rutherford was mighty in the
public parts of religion, so he was a great practiser and encourager of
the private duties thereof. Thus, in the year 1640, when a charge was
foisted in before the General Assembly, at the instance of Mr. Henry
Guthrie, minister at Stirling, afterwards Bishop of Dunkeld, against
private society meetings, which were then abounding in the land, on
which ensued much reasoning; the one side yielded that a paper before
drawn up by Mr. Henderson should be agreed unto, concerning the order to
be kept in these meetings; but Guthrie and his adherents opposing this, Mr.
Rutherford, who was never much disposed to speak in judicatories,
threw in this syllogism, "What the Scriptures do warrant, no
Assembly may discharge; but private meetings for religious exercises,
the Scriptures do warrant," "Then they that feared the Lord
spake often one to another" (Mal. iii. 16). "Confess your
faults one to another, and pray one for another" (James v. 16). And
although the Earl of Seaforth there present, and those of Guthrie's
faction, upbraided the good man for this, yet it had influence upon the
majority of the members; so all that the opposite party got done, was an
act anent the ordering of family worship.
Rev. Samuel
Rutherford was also one of the
Scots commissioner.—"appointed in 1643 to the Westminster
Assembly, and was very much beloved there for unparalleled faithfulness
and zeal in going about his Master's business. It was during this time
that he published Lex Rex, and several other learned pieces, against the
Erastians, Anabaptists, Independents, and other sectaries, that began to
prevail and increase at the time; and none ever had the courage to take
up the gauntlet of defiance thrown down by this champion.
It is reported, that when King Charles
saw Lex Rex, he said, it would scarcely ever get an answer; nor did it
ever get any, except what the parliament in 1661 gave it, when they
caused it to be burned at the cross of Edinburgh, by the hands of the
hangman.
When the principal business of the
Westminster Assembly was pretty well settled, Rev. Samuel Rutherford, in
October 24, 1647, moved, that it might be recorded in the scribe's book,
that the Assembly had enjoyed the assistance of the commissioners of the
Church of Scotland, all the time they had been debating and perfecting
these four things mentioned in the solemn league, viz., their composing
a Directory for Worship, a uniform Confession of Faith, a Form of Church
Government and Discipline, and the Public Catechism; which was done in
about a week after he and the rest returned home.
Upon the death of the learned Dematius,
in 1651, the magistrates of Utrecht in Holland, being abundantly
satisfied as to the learning, piety, and true zeal of the great Mr.
Rutherford, invited him to the divinity-chair there; but he could not be
persuaded. His reasons (elsewhere, when dissuading another gentleman
from going abroad) seem to be expressed in these words: "Let me
entreat you to be far from the thoughts of leaving this land. I see it,
and find it, that the Lord hath covered the whole land with a cloud in
his anger; but though I have been tempted to the like, I had rather be
in Scotland beside angry Jesus Christ, knowing He mindeth no evil to us,
than in any Eden or garden on the earth." From this it is evident,
that he chose rather to suffer affliction in his own native country,
than to leave his charge and flock in time of danger. He continued with
them till the day of his death, in the free and faithful discharge of
his duty.
When the unhappy difference fell out
between those called the Resolutioners and the Protesters, in 1650 and
1651, he espoused the protesters' quarrel, and gave faithful warning
against the public resolutions; and likewise during the time of
Cromwell's usurpation, he contended against all the prevailing sectaries
that were then ushered in by virtue of his toleration. And such was his
unwearied assiduity and diligence, that he seemed to pray constantly, to
preach constantly, to catechize constantly, and to visit the sick,
exhorting them from house to house; to teach as much in the schools, and
spend as much time with the students and young men in fitting them for
the ministry, as if he had been sequestered from all the world besides;
and yet withal to write as much as if he had been constantly shut up in
his study.
But no sooner did the restoration of
Charles II. take place than the face of affairs began to change; and
after his fore-mentioned book Lex Rex was burnt at the cross of
Edinburgh, and at the gates of the new college of St Andrews, where he
was professor of divinity, the parliament, in 1651, were to have an
indictment laid before them against him; and such was their humanity,
when everybody knew he was a-dying, that they summoned him to appear
before them at Edinburgh, to answer to a charge of high treason! But he
had a higher tribunal to appear before, where his judge was his friend.
He was dead before the time came, being taken away from the evil to
come.
It is commonly said that, when the
summons came, he spoke out of his bed and said, "Tell them I have
got a summons already before a superior Judge and judicatory, and I
behove to answer my first summons, and ere your day come I will be where
few kings and great folks come." When they returned and told he was
a-dying, the parliament was put to a vote, whether or not to let him die
in the college. It was carried, "put him out," only a few
dissenting. My Lord Burleigh said, "Ye have voted that honest man
out of the college, but ye cannot vote him out of heaven." Some
said, He would never win there, hell was too good for him. Burleigh
said, "I wish I were as sure of heaven as he is, I would think
myself happy to get a grip of his sleeve to haul me in."
When on his deathbed, he lamented much
that he was withheld
from bearing witness to the work of
Reformation since the year 1638; and upon the 28th of February, he gave
a large and faithful testimony against the sinful courses of that time;
which testimony he subscribed twelve days before his death; being full
of joy and peace in believing.
During the time of his last sickness, he
uttered many savoury speeches, and often broke out in a kind of sacred
rapture, exalting and commending the Lord Jesus, especially when his end
drew near. He often called his blessed Master his kingly King. Some days
before his death, he said, "I shall shine—I shall see Him as He
is-I shall see Him reign, and all his fair company with Him; and I shall
have my large share. Mine eyes shall see my Redeemer: these very eyes of
mine, and none other for me. This may seem a wide word; but it is no
fancy or delusion; it is true. Let my Lord's name be exalted; and, if He
will, let my name be grinded to pieces, that He may be all in all. If He
should slay me ten thousand times, I will trust." He often repeated
Jer. xv. 16. "Thy words were found, and I did eat them."
When exhorting one to diligence, he said,
"It is no easy thing to be a Christian. For me, I have got the
victory, and Christ is holding out both His arms to embrace me." At
another time, to some friends present, he said, "At the beginning
of my sufferings I had mine own fears, like other sinful men, lest I
should faint, and not be carried creditably through, and I laid this
before the Lord; and as sure as ever He spoke to me in His word, as sure
as His Spirit witnesseth to my heart, He hath accepted my sufferings. He
said to me, Fear not, the outgate shall not be simply matter of prayer,
but matter of praise. I said to the Lord, if He should slay me five
thousand times five thousand, I would trust in Him; and I speak it with
much trembling, fearing I should not make my part good; but as really as
ever He spoke to me by His Spirit, He witnessed to my heart, that His
grace should be sufficient." The Thursday night before his death,
being much grieved with the state of the land, he had this expression,
"Horror had taken hold on me." And afterwards, falling on his
own condition, he said, "I renounce all that ever He made me will
and do, as defiled and imperfect, as coming from me; I betake myself to
Christ for sanctification, as well as justification; repeating these
words (I Cor. i. 30)— "He is made of God to me wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption adding, "I close with
it, let Him be so: He is my all In all."
March 17. Three gentlewomen came to see
him; and after exhorting them to read the Word, and be much in prayer,
and much in communion with God, he said, "My honourable Master and
lovely Lord, my great royal King, hath not a match in heaven or in
earth. I have my own guilt, even like other sinful men; but He hath
pardoned, loved, washed, and given me joy unspeakable and full of glory.
I repent not that ever I owned His cause. These whom ye call protesters
are the witnesses of Jesus Christ. I hope never to depart from that
cause, nor side with those who have burnt the "Causes of God's
Wrath." They have broken their covenant oftener than once or twice,
but I believe the Lord will build Zion, and repair the waste places of
Jacob. Oh! to obtain mercy to wrestle with God for their salvation. As
for this presbytery, it hath stood in opposition to me these years past.
I have my record in heaven. I had no particular end in view, but was
seeking the honour of God, the thriving of the Gospel in this place, and
the good of the new college; that society which I have left upon the
Lord. What personal wrongs they have done me, and what grief they have
occasioned to me, I heartily forgive them, and desire mercy to wrestle
with God for mercy to them. and for the salvation of them all."
The same day James M'Gill, John Wardlaw,
William Vilant, and Alexander Wedderburne, all members of the same
presbytery with him, coming to visit him, he made them welcome, and
said, "My Lord and Master is the chief of ten thousand, none is
comparable to Him in heaven or earth. Dear brethren, do all for Him;
pray for Christ, preach for Christ, feed the flock committed to your
charge for Christ, do all for Christ; beware of men-pleasing—there is
too much of it amongst us. The new college hath broken my heart; I can
say nothing of it; I have left it upon the Lord of the house; and it
bath been, and still is, my desire that He may dwell in this society,
and that the youth may be fed with sound knowledge." After this he
said, "Dear brethren, it may seem presumptuous in me, a particular
man, to send a commission to a presbytery;"—and Mr. M'Gill,
replying, that it was no presumption, he continued,—" Dear
brethren, take a commission from me, a dying man, to them to appear, for
God and His cause, and adhere to the doctrine of the covenant, and have
a care of the flock committed to their charge. Let them feed the flock
out of love, preach for God, visit and catechize for God, and do all for
God; beware of men-pleasing—the chief Shepherd will appear shortly. .
. . I have been a sinful man, and have had mine own failings; but my
Lord hath pardoned me and accepted my labors. I adhere to the Cause and
Covenant, and resolve never to depart from the protestation against the
controverted Assemblies. I am the man I was. I am still for keeping the
government of the Kirk of Scotland entire, and would not for a thousand
worlds have had the least hand in the burning of the 'Causes of God's
Wrath.' Oh! for grace to wrestle with God for their salvation."
Mr. Vilant having prayed at his desire,
as they took their leave he renewed his charge to them to feed the flock
out of love. The next morning, as he recovered out of a fainting, in
which they who looked on expected his dissolution, he said, "I
feel, I feel, I believe, I joy and rejoice, I feed on manna—" Mr.
Blair, whose praise is in the Churches, being present, when he took a
little wine in a spoon to refresh himself, being then very weak, said to
him, "Ye feed on dainties in heaven, and think nothing of our
cordials on earth." He answered, "They are all but dung; but
they are Christ's creatures, and, out of obedience to His command, I
take them. Mine eyes shall see my Redeemer; I know He shall stand the
last day upon the earth, and I shall be caught up in the clouds to meet
Him in the air, and I shall ever be with Him; and what would you have
more? there is an end." And stretching out his hands, he said
again, "there is an end." And a little after, he said, "I
have been a single man, but I stand at the best pass that ever a man
did; Christ is mine, and I am His;" and spoke much of the white
stone and new name. Mr. Blair, who loved with all his heart to hear
Christ commended, said to him again—" What think ye now of
Christ?" To which he answered, "I shall live and adore Him.
Glory! glory to my Creator and my Redeemer for ever! Glory shines in
Immanuel's land." In the afternoon of that day, he said, "Oh!
that all my brethren in the land may know what a Master I have served,
and what peace I have this day. I shall sleep in Christ, and when I
awake I shall be satisfied with His likeness. This night shall close the
door, and put my anchor within the vail; and I shall go away in a sleep
by five of the clock in the morning;" which exactly fell out.
Though he was very weak, he had often this expression, "Oh! for
arms to embrace Him! Oh! for a well-tuned harp!"
He exhorted Dr. Colvil, a man who
complied with prelacy afterwards, to adhere to the government of the
Church of Scotland, and to the doctrine of the Covenant; and to have a
care to feed the youth with sound knowledge. And the Doctor being the
professor of the new college, he told him that he heartily forgave all
the wrongs he had done him. He spake likewise to Mr. Honeyman,
afterwards Bishop Honeyman, who came to see him, saying, "Tell the
presbytery to answer for God, and His cause and covenant. the case is
desperate; let them be in their duty." Then directing his speech to
Dr. Colvil and Mr. Honeyman, he said, "Stick to it. You may think
it an easy thing in me, a dying man, that I am now going out of the
reach of all that men can do; but He, before whom I stand, knows I dare
advise no colleague or brother to do what I would not cordially do
myself upon all hazard; and as for the 'Causes of God's Wrath,' that men
have now condemned, tell Mr James Wood, from me, that I had rather lay
down my head on a scaffold, and have it chopped off many times, were it
possible, before I had passed from them." And then to Mr. Honeyman
he said, "Tell Mr. Wood, I heartily forgive him all the wrongs he
hath done me; and desire him, from me, to declare himself the man that
he is still for the government of the Church of Scotland."
Afterwards, when some spoke to him of his
former painfulness and faithfulness in the ministry, he said, "I
disclaim all that; the port that I would be at is redemption and
forgiveness through His blood; 'Thou shalt show me the path of life, in
Thy sight is fulness of joy:' there is nothing now betwixt me and the
resurrection, but "to-day thou shalt be with Me in paradise."'
Mr. Blair saying, "Shall I praise the Lord for all the mercies He
has done and is to do for you?" He answered, "Oh ! for a
well-tuned harp." To his child he said, "I have again left you
upon the Lord; it may be you will tell this to others, that 'the lines
are fallen to me in pleasant places; I have got a goodly heritage.' I
bless the Lord that He gave me counsel."
Thus, by five o'clock in the morning, as
he himself foretold, it was said unto him, "Come up hither;"
and he gave up the ghost, and the renowned eagle took its flight unto
the mountains of spices.
Thus died the famous Rev. Samuel Rutherford,
who may justly be accounted among the sufferers of that time; for surely
he was a martyr, both in his own design and resolution, and by the
design and determination of men. Few men ever ran so long a race without
cessation; so constantly, so unweariedly, and so unblameably. Two things
rarely to be found in one man, were eminent in him, viz., a quick
invention and sound judgment; and these accompanied with a homely but
clear expression, and graceful elocution; so that such as knew him best,
were in a strait whether to admire him most for his penetrating wit, and
sublime genius in the schools, and peculiar exactness in disputes and
matters of controversy, or for his familiar condescension in the pulpit,
where he was one of the most moving and affectionate preachers in his
time, or perhaps in any age of the Church. To sum up all in a word, he
seems to have been one of the most resplendent lights that ever arose in
this horizon.
In all his writings he breathes the true
spirit of religion; but in his every way admirable Letters, he seems to
have outdone himself, as well as everybody else. These, although jested
on by the profane wits of this age, because of some homely and familiar
expressions in them, it must be owned by all who have any relish for
true piety, contain sublime flights of devotion, and must ravish and
edify every sober, serious, and understanding reader.
Among the posthumous Works of the
laborious Mr Rutherford, are, his Letters; the Trial and
Triumph of Faith; Christ's Dying and Drawing of Sinners; a
discourse on Prayer; a discourse on the Covenant; on Liberty
of Conscience; a Survey of Spiritual Antichrist; a Survey
of Antinomianism; Antichrist Stormed; and several other
controversial pieces, such as Lex Rex; the Due Right of Church
Government; the Divine Right of Church Government; a Peaceable
Plea for Presbytery; as also his Summary of Church Discipline,
and a treatise on the Divine Influence of the Spirit. There are
also many of his sermons in print, some of which were preached before
both Houses of Parliament, 1644 and 1645. He wrote also upon Providence;
but this being in Latin, is only in the hands of a few, as are also the
greater part of his other works, being so seldom republished. There is
also a volume of Sermons, Sacramental Discourses, etc.
- An Epitaph on His Grave-Stone
- What tongue, what pen, or skill of
men
- Can famous Rutherford commend!
- His learning justly rais'd his fame
- True goodness did adorn his name.
- He did converse with things above,
- Acquainted with Immanuel's love.
- Most orthodox he was and sound,
- And many errors did confound.
- For Zion's King, and Zion's cause,
- And Scotland's covenanted laws,
- Most constantly he did contend,
- Until his time was at an end.
- At last he won to full fruition
- Of that which he had seen in
vision.
Rev. Samuel
Rutherford says:
Thank God for any good thing that thou hast, and that thou art kept in a
good estate. They never kent [knew] Christ's help well who put man in
such a tutor's hand as free-will, to be kept by it; who say that Christ
has conquershed [acquired] salvation to all, and when He has conquershed
[acquired] it, He puts it in the hand of free-will to be disposed of as
it pleases, to keep or not to keep it. This is to make Christ a fool
merchant, and not to take accompt [account] whether it be misspent or
not; but Christ is not so. He knows what shall become of all whom He has
bought. You know it is evermore the happiness of the weaker to depend
upon the stronger. So it is the happiness of the poor soul to depend
upon Christ and upon free grace. The happiness of the ship stands in
that to have a good pilot; the happiness of the lost weak sheep depends
on a good shepherd to seek it in again, and to keep it from the enemies
thereof; the happiness of the weak, witless orphans depends in a good,
wise tutor. Even so the happiness of lost and tint [perishing] souls
depend on this, to lippen [trust] to Christ and His strength for their
salvation, and not to such a changing tutor as their free-will is.
Christian Directions
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
1. That hours of the day, less or more
time, for the Word and prayer, be given to God; not sparing the twelfth
hour, or mid-day, howbeit it should then be the shorter time.
2. In the midst of worldly employments,
there should be some thoughts of sin, death, judgment, and eternity,
with at least a word or two of ejaculatory prayer to God.
3. To beware of wandering of heart in
private prayer.
4. Not to grudge if ye come from prayer
without sense of joy. Downcasting, sense of guiltiness, and hunger, are
often best for us.
5. That the Lord's Day, from morning to
night, be spent always either in private or public worship.
6. That words be observed, wandering and
idle thoughts be avoided, sudden anger and desire of revenge, even of
such as persecute the truth, be guarded against; for we often mix our
zeal with our wild-fire.
7. That known, discovered, and revealed
sins, that are against the conscience, be avoided, as most dangerous
preparatives to hardness of heart.
8. That in dealing with men, faith and
truth in covenants and trafficking be regarded, that we deal with all
men in sincerity; that conscience be made of idle and lying words; and
that our carriage be such, as that they who see it may speak honourably
of our sweet Master and profession.
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Samuel Rutherford
Christian
Directions
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Memoirs of the Scottish
Presbyterians on
Rev.
Rev. Samuel Rutherford
The
Trial and Triumph of Faith (27 Sermons)
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
14
Communion Sermons
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
The
Deliverance of the Kirk
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Lex
Rex
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Weeping
Mary
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Crying
Unto Jesus
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Selections
from Rutherford's Letters
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
The
Sands of Time are Sinking
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Christ
Dying and Drawing Sinners to Himself
: Soul Trouble & Sorrow for Sin
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
God's
Will and the Gospel Offer
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Preparations
Before Conversion
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
Mr.
Rutherford's Testimony To The Covenanted Work Of Reformation
(From 1638 To 1649) in Britain and Ireland.
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
A
Free Disputation Against Pretended Liberty of Conscience
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
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