Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Weeping Mary
A sermon about Mary at the tomb of
Christ.
The
Weeping Mary at the Sepulcher
by Rev. Samuel Rutherford
[Preached upon the Monday after
the fast; that is, evidently the fast August 22, 1640.]
"For as yet they did not know the
Scripture, that He must rise again from the dead. Then the disciples
went away again to their own homes. But Mary stood outside by the tomb
weeping, and as she wept she stooped down and looked into the tomb. And
she saw two angels in white sitting, one at the head and the other at
the feet, where the body of Jesus had lain. Then they said to her,
"Woman, why are you weeping?" She said to them, "Because
they have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid
Him." John 20:9-13.
In these passages of our Lord's Word, beloved in Him, we have first set
down the earthly witnesses that came to the grave to seek our Lord after
He was risen from the dead. And they be of two sorts. The first sort of
them are public men in a public charge, Peter and John, the Lord's
disciples; and how they sought Christ, and what speed they came in
seeking Him! The second sort of persons are private persons coming to
seek our Lord, as Mary Magdalene, out of whom He had before cast seven
devils. And good reason that such think much of our Lord, who have
gotten renewed souls, or any good thing from Him.
Then we have the fruit that follows the apostles' seeking of our Lord.
They go their ways home again and find Him not. Again you have the fruit
of this woman's seeking of Him. She will not give over her seeking Him,
albeit she cannot find Him at the first. Indeed it is a blessed thing
for a poor soul to wait on still at Christ's door till they get Him,
albeit they should die there, waiting for Him. And in her waiting for
Him, first of all she meets with the angels. And after she was comforted
of them, telling her that He was risen from the dead, and was rebuked of
them for her weeping and seeking Him there, she leaves them and goes on
to seek Him. And she meets with Christ Himself, and speaks to Him, but
she mistakes Him for another as many times the children of God are
speaking to Him, and He is speaking to them again, and yet they mistake
Him. She supposes Him to be the gardener, and asks if he had carried Him
away, and where he had laid Him that she might know where He was.
And then our Lord reveals Himself unto her by a short preaching that He
made as our Lord. He is evermore known by His word, and when she hears
Him speak she turns herself to Him, and she being willing to embrace Him
she is forbidden to do it at that time. He would not have her to think
so much of her bodily presence at that time, because there is a
better presence coming when He is ascended to His Father. Only she is
commanded to tell the Lord's disciples of that which she had seen, and
so she is made the first preacher of Christ's rising from the dead.
First: We observe one thing in the general, that concerns the
estate of our Kirk at this time. Herod and Pilate, and Jew and Gentile,
they have all joined themselves together at this time to do the worst
they can to Christ our Lord, and yet, when they have done all that they
can, they cannot mend themselves. For now they had buried Him to hold
Him down, and yet for all that that mends them not. The worst that the
enemies of the Kirk can do to the Kirk is to put her to death, and yet
when they think they have gotten that done, it will not do their turn
when all is done. For wherever our Lord's bride be, albeit she were even
in the grave, she must rise again, and in a triumph over her enemies.
Let our Lord and His Kirk be where they will, He and His Kirk and cause,
albeit they were dead, they must live the third day again, as Christ
Himself did, according to that triumphant and glorious word which He
spake (Rev. i. 17, 18): "Fear not; I am the first and the last: I
am He that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive for
evermore." When John had seen His glory, and fell down dead because
he was afraid thereof, He says that to him. There is news to comfort the
Kirk of God, and to comfort all those who doubt whether our Lord will
lose the battle that He has against His enemies or not. No; He will make
good that word that He speaks there of Himself: "I was dead, but I
am alive; and, behold, I am alive for evermore." Since a dead man
cannot do the turn, He will let it be seen that a living man can do it.
We need not to doubt of it, but the enemies of Christ they thought that
they were rid of Him now, that He would burden them no more; but it is
not so for all that yet, for He shall live when all is done, for all the
ill they have done to Him. And within these few years our adversaries,
they thought with themselves that long or now they should have been rid
of our burden, and that this gospel should [have] been clean borne down
long or now. But with their leave Christ is letting us see this day that
He will not have it to be so, that He will have that gospel which they
thought to bear down so far, to come to some perfection again.
So is the Kirk brought in, speaking in Hosea's prophecy (vi. 2):
"After two days thou wilt revive us again, and the third day we
shall live." This gospel it must live, whoever they be who are
against it, for the bearing down thereof, and the end of it must be
glory to Christ, and so those who are upon His side of it. Now, to say
nothing of the race that Peter and John had in going to Christ's grave,
it is said the other disciple he outran Peter, and came first to the sepulcher.
John is he who is called the other disciple, and he outran Peter. As it
is among the children of God, all of them have not a like speed. Some of
them get a sight of Christ before others ever get a sight of Him. Christ
has some into His Kirk that are old and experienced with His ways, and
so they run fast in the same; and He has others also, who are His
children and belong to Him, who are young ones, and cannot run so fast.
But whoever they be who have the life of God in them, and so are walking
on towards Him, they shall, either first or last, meet with Him without
doubt. He which came first went into the sepulcher and saw, and he
believed. He might [have] believed that Christ was risen by that which
he had heard, but he believed not till he saw.
Many a time had the Lord said to them that the Son of Man must be
delivered into the hands of sinners, and must suffer many things of
them; that He must die and be buried, but the third day He shall rise
again; but notwithstanding of all that He had said, John believed not
till he had seen tokens that Ho had risen from the dead. However it be,
yet this is sure, that it is good for every one to use the means that
God has appointed for attaining to the knowledge of any thing. For John
get this much good by using the means at this time and coming to
the grave that he was assured that Christ was risen. Who was there ever
that made a race for Christ but get some good by their seeking after
Him? Seek ye and ye shall find, knock and it shall be opened unto you.
Zacchaeus, he had a longing desire to see Christ, and because he was low
of stature, and the throng was great, he ran before the multitude, and
climbed up upon a tree to see Him; and ye have heard what good come of
that, as there comes aye [always] good of seeking Christ rightly: He
says, "Come down, Zacchaeus, this day is salvation come to thy
house." He will not fail, but He will make that word good which He
has spoken Himself, "Ask and ye shall receive, seek and ye shall
find, knock and it shall be opened unto you." Could we be earnest
in seeking our Lord and I am sure ye know that this is a seeking time
now, and never was there more need to be seeking at the hands of God as
the Lord lives, I dare to promise it in His name, if we would seek Him
we should see the salvation of the Lord. And so, albeit ill news should
come unto us, let us not be discouraged for the same. But let us rest
upon this, and put our confidence in the same, that our Lord is' to be
found of them who seek Him; and He has given signs thereof already unto
us, and will do so hitherto if we will seek unto Him. For as yet they
knew not the Scripture that He must rise again from the dead. The rest
of the disciples, they believed not these Scriptures that foretold of
Christ's resurrection from the dead.
Can it be possible that there can be a scholar in Christ's school that
has not learned his lesson that Christ taught him? Can it be that any
who has heard Christ Himself make so many preachings of His
resurrection, that they believe not for all that? Aye, ye may see the
proof of it here. The doctrine that arises from this it is clear, that
it is not the means, nor hearing Christ as a man preach out of His own
mouth, that will do the turn to bring us in to God, and to make us
understand things spiritual. Preaching, indeed, is God's means that He
has appointed for that end, and the way that He ordains for bringing in
souls to Him. But when all is done, it is not the only means of bringing
us to Him. The special thing is that which is spoken by our Saviour
Himself (John iii. 8), that wind that bloweth where it listeth, and no
man knoweth whence it cometh or whither it goeth. We may preach unto you
until our head rive [breaks] and our breasts burst; aye, we may preach
unto you until doom's day, and yet that will not do the turn unless the
inward calling of the Spirit be joined therewith. For an outward sound
to the ear is one thing, and Christ's loosing all knots and removing all
impediments another thing. Christ says Himself while He was in the flesh
(John vi. 44), "No man can come unto Me unless the Father draw
him." Christ is speaking in that place to them who had the outward
means, and yet He says, it is no strange thing that they come not unto
Him, albeit they have the means, because they lack the Father's draught
to draw them to Him. The scribes they heard Christ ofttime preach, and
yet for all that they consented to the slaying of the Lord of glory (1
Cor. ii. 8). Christ is preached there both to the Jew and to the
Gentile, and yet for all that to the Jew He is a stumbling-block, and to
the Grecian the preaching of Christ is foolishness.
We have much for us when the Lord's word is preached to pray to
Him that He would join His Spirit and His wind with His word. Ay, all
means that can be used by ourselves or by others are nothing without
that be joined. It is in vain for us to rise early and to lie down late,
and to eat the bread of sorrow all the day, if the Lord give not the
assistance of His Spirit to the means that we use. And again, we may
learn from this that arms of men are not the thing that will save us, if
so be that the Lord Himself watch not over the camp. God keeps evermore
the issue and the event of all things into His own hand. And this serves
to teach us not to trust in means of any sort whether it be inward or
outward matters, we should not trust in man, nor in weapons, nor any
second causes whatsoever, but only in the Lord Himself, that is the only
strength of His people. And so learn to overlook second causes when you
look that way, and look no lower than heaven, to Him who sits there and
guides and overrules all battles in the world and all things else, and
will let it be seen in the end salvation, salvation, even His salvation
to all them who trust in Him. What gars [causes] that it is not said,
"They believed not Christ," but they "believed not the
Scriptures" concerning this point? For there is no part of
Scripture so clear as the Lord Himself when He is preaching with His own
blessed mouth concerning that article of the resurrection from the dead,
albeit it is true the five books of Moses and other Scriptures spake
also of this article.
The reason of this is to teach us that Christ and the Scriptures they
have but one tongue, and they who believe not the Scriptures they
believe not Christ. It is not the sound of Christ's trumpet that many
who profess to be preachers blow, but a sound from themselves and from
men. This tells us what is Scripture and what is not Scripture. That
only is Scripture and no other that agrees with the will of the Son of
God, and is according to His will revealed to us in His Word. And again,
that is not Scripture, and so not to be believed or practiced, which is
not according to the Word of God. And so we may see that ceremonies and
inventions of men they are but a dumb Bible, and a ground that none
should follow for their salvation. If we have no other ground for our
faith but only this, that the Pope, or the Kirk, has said such a thing,
or the great learned doctors have said it, and therefore we believe it.
As the poor men yonder over in the north, they have been deceived by
believing what grave-like men spake to them, and men who gat the name of
learning. That is a blind guide to follow, and will lead us in the mire.
But these that are indeed the called and the elect of God, they can
discover the voice of Christ from the voice of men, and they only will
follow Christ's voice, and will follow no other, whatever they be. Then
the disciples went away again unto their own home. They were oversoon
tired of seeking, for they might have waited on as well as the poor
woman did. But God has our seeking of Christ, and all our supernatural
works of that kind, into His own hand. We believe, pray, repent, seek
after Christ and His Spirit, praise, hear, read aright, &c., as long
as Christ holds us by the hand, but we do it no longer. A stone that is
up into the air is out of its own element, and so long as it has an
impediment it will stay there. But take away the impediment that holds
the stone from the ground, immediately it falls to it again.
Even so is it with us. When we are employed about these spiritual duties
we are out of our natural element; and if the Lord take away His hand
from the strongest of His children, a woman will go beyond them in doing
good duties. Thank God for any good thing that thou hast, and that thou
art kept in a good estate. They never 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 acquired salvation to all, and when He has 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 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 trust to Christ and His strength for their salvation, and not to such
a changing tutor as their free-will is. But Mary stood without at the sepulcher
weeping.
Here is a strange thing to think on. The Lord's own disciples they ran
away from seeking of Him. One of them that had said, "If all should
forsake Thee, yet shall I never forsake Thee;" and yet here is a
woman more forward, and more constant in seeking Christ nor than he is,
for all his fair profession. It is not fair words and a golden
profession that will take a soul to heaven, and will make us to seek
Christ rightly. We are all much greatly indebted to saving grace in our
seeking Christ. Here is a woman more forward in seeking Christ nor
[than] all His eleven disciples are. Because she get not her errand that
she was seeking, she could not get Christ, and therefore she will not
leave, nor give over, but will wait on and seek Him.
A soul that is in love with Christ, they never get their errand till
they get Christ Himself. Ye that are seeking Christ, never give over
seeking till ye meet with Him, for they shall at last meet with Him who
lie at His door, seeking, as this woman did, who say, "I shall lie
still at Thy door, let me die there if Thou likest, and albeit it should
come to that, I shall die, or I go away and meet not with Him." Ye
may know the ardent desire of a soul after Christ can be satisfied with
nothing but Himself. We use to say the thing that one longs for is the
thing they must have, and no other thing will satisfy them. A man that
is hungry, and longing for meat, he must have meat, and meat only, or
else he is not satisfied, albeit he get some other thing. A man that is
in prison and longs to be free, nothing will satisfy him but liberty.
Even so it is with this woman at this time; albeit the disciples were
with her, yet nothing can comfort her till she get her lovely Lord whom
she was seeking. Learn that lesson of spiritual importunity, never to
give over seeking of Christ when once ye have begun to it. Blessed are
they that ware [spend in this manner] their time this way, in seeking
Christ.
Mary stayed there weeping for want of Him, and yet looking into the
grave to see if He were there. That is a good and blessed desire, and
sorrow that is accompanied with doing. That is heaven's sorrow indeed
that is accompanied with doing and using the means. There are two things
said of Jacob (Hos. xii. 4), that he wept and wrestled in prayer with
God. What is the matter of a dumb sorrow for the want of Christ? But
that is a right sorrow for want of Christ that is joined with using the
means to get Him. As it is in Solomon's Song iii. 3, the spouse is
wanting Christ there; she uses all means to get Him again. She goes to
the watchmen, and says to them, "Watchmen, saw ye Him whom my soul
loveth?" She goes round about the city, and to the daughters of
Jerusalem, and charges them. That proves her sorrow to be a right sorrow
for the want of Christ.
And ye know what sort of tears the Scripture says Christ had (Heb. v.
7). He shed tears while He was in His flesh, and withal He offered up
prayers and strong cries to Him who was able to save Him, and was heard
in that He feared. And that is the grief and sorrow that will only hold
the feet when men are sorrowful for want of Christ, and withal use the
means to get Him; and not only has a mere wish for Christ, and will not
want a morning nor a night's sleep to meet with Him. That sorrow that is
so is but a vain sorrow, and will do no good. What followed upon this?
She saw two angels in white sitting, the one at the head, the other at
the feet, where the body of Jesus had lain. What needs this guard to be
here now when the Lord is risen from the dead? They stay here to be
witnesses of Christ's resurrection, and to preach the same to this woman
and to the disciples.
And Matthew, he has a circumstance of this preaching of the angels that
John has not. "Why seek ye the living among the dead?" Why are
ye papists, to seek Christ at the holy grave now when He is risen? You
may see that the work of man's redemption it is a very glorious and a
very honourable work, for the angels in all the parts thereof are
appointed to attend Christ and to wait. When He is born they must speak
to Joseph and His mother to flee for His safety, they foretell His
birth, when they are to return with Him again they tell them, and when
He was in the garden the angels are appointed to wait upon Him, to wipe
the bloody sweat off His face. And now, when He is in the grave, they
are set to be a guard to His blessed and glorious body, and to preach of
His resurrection. When Ho shall come again at the last day to judge the
quick and the dead, He shall come with innumerable multitudes of angels
to let us see that the work of our salvation it is a very honourable
work; and the angels they wait well upon it, and upon us. Even like a
loving brother, who has his brother lying sick: O but he will run many
errands for him in the time of his sickness, and will make all the house
ado [stirred up] to get him well and at ease.
Even so do the angels to us. They run many errands for us, and O but
they are glad of our welfare; and (Heb. i. 10) it is said the angels are
ministering spirits for the good of the heirs of salvation. Count ye
little or much of your salvation as ye will, yet it is the angels'
great task that they are employed about. They are appointed to wait on
Christ, when is about the working thereof, both in His birth, in His
agony, in His burial, in His ascending to heaven, and shall attend Him
in His coming again to judge the quick and the dead. The Lord has them
sent out to all the parts of the world to bring in His elect ones. Woe
to ye who think little of salvation, since the Lord employs such
honourable messengers about the same. Alas! the work of our salvation is
little thought upon by many. Twenty a hundred thoughts will come in
men's heads from morn to night, and scarce have we one thought of this
great work at any time. And what think ye shall become of them who are
so careless of the work of the salvation of mankind whereof the angels
are so careful.
Thir [these] witnesses, they were clad in white. The angels, they have
not our common country clothes, but they are like heaven in their
apparel; to teach all those who are looking to be heirs of heaven to be
clad like their country. The angels, they are clad with glory and with
majesty, and therefore a sight of them will make a sinner to fall to the
ground dead. If we think to be heirs of God in Christ, let us not be
like the rest of the corrupt world. The apostle, he has a word for this
(Rom. xii. 2): "Be not conformed to the world, but be ye
transformed in the spirit of your mind." When ye are drunkards, and
swearers, and break the Lord's day, as the rest of the world does, that
proves you to be of the world, and not to have your affections up above.
If ye would prove yourselves to be heirs of heaven, strive to be like
your father, and like your country, and wear the livery of the house
which is holiness; "Holiness becomes Thy house, O Lord." Mind
the things that are above. And they say unto her, Woman, why weepest
thou? This would seem to be a needless question to propose to her, for
she might [have] said, "I have tint [lost] my Saviour; who can
blame me to weep? Who can reprove me for it, seeing I want my Lord? But
there is something in this question that is unseen, that is the reason
wherefore they ask it, and this is it: "Your salvation is now
finished, and the devils are cast out of you, and so what gars [makes]
you weep now?" Our Lord would tell us by this, that ofttimes we
weep when we have cause to rejoice. She should have said, "This is
the day which the Lord hath made, we will be glad and rejoice in
it." "This is a day when a the final sentence of a judge is
passed in heaven in your favours, that the lost seed of Adam is
redeemed; and thou also art in the decree of redemption among the rest,
therefore thou should not weep."
O that we could learn to accommodate our affections, and all that is in
us, to God; to weep when He weeps, and to rejoice when He rejoices. And
when our Lord is without in the fields, it is not time for us then to
laugh, and to rejoice, and to be feasting. It is a time matter for
mourning, now when our Lord is out into the fields, and when His armies
are out, and are in scarcity. And yet we trust that our Lord is keeping
a day for us of this land, wherein we shall say, "This is the day
that the Lord has made, let us be glad and rejoice in it." Whom
seekest thou? This question is asked at her to make her hunger to be the
greater, for the greatest hunger that any has for Christ they may, aye
[always], be more hungry for Him. And so learn to rap out [quickly to
throw out] all your desires and affections for Christ, not only love
Him, but be sick of love for Him. That is more than ordinary love to be
like to die for love of Him.
And so all your desires and longing for Christ, strive to make them
more, ay, till you come to that which the spouse has; "I charge
you, O daughters of Jerusalem, if ye find my beloved, tell Him that I am
sick of love. I charge you, as ye will answer to God, that ye tell
Christ I am sick of love for want of Him," and till ye come to
heaven to sing songs of Him eternally. "They have taken away my
Lord, and I know not where they have laid Him." This is her apology
that she uses for justifying of herself in her weeping, "Why may
not I weep, who once had Christ, and now I want Him?" That is a
sorrow that may be avowed before God and before the world, to be
sorrowful for the want of Christ. There are some who are sorrowful, and
it is a shame to hear of it, the cause thereof not being good. Sorrow
for want of my bairns [children], for want of my husband; sorrow for the
loss of something of the world, or giving out something for Christ,
&c.; that is a shameful sorrow that cannot be avowed.
But that is an honest sorrow that comes from the want of Christ. Look
that ye ware [spend] all your affections that way as ye may avow them,
and avow the cause of them before God and man. That is a sorrow that may
be avowed that a soul has for want of Christ. What is the matter and
cause of her sorrow? "They have taken away my Lord, and I know not
where they have laid Him." " He is out of my sight, and yet He
is my Lord for all that; He is dead, and yet He is my Lord; for that she
says, "They have taken Him away, and know not where they have laid
Him," is as much as if she doubted yet of His resurrection.
And a little after she says to Christ Himself, supposing Him to be the
gardener, "Sir, if thou hast borne Him away, tell me where thou
hast laid Him, and I will take Him away." "I will think Him a
sweet burden to come upon my back for all the pounds weight of spices
that are about Him."
The doctrine is clear. To the children of God, lost Christ is their
Christ when all is done. In Cant. v. the Lord's party, the Kirk of
Christ, is there sleeping in her bed, and Christ, her husband, standing
at the outside of the door knocking, and she says, "I slept, but my
heart waked; it is the voice of my beloved." Thy beloved, and, yet
for all that, He is out of thy sight. Let the believer's Christ be where
He will, yet He is theirs. If they were in hell and He up in heaven, the
believer will say, "He is my Christ, albeit Christ should cast me
off, and not count me to be His, yet He is mine." So does David's
word as the type, and Christ's word as the antitype, testify, "My
God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me? " He is a forsaking Lord,
and yet He is their Lord when all is done. Ay, the believer will say,
"He is my Lord, albeit He forsake me, and I will come to Him."
Then true faith when it has the back at the wall will claim to Christ,
and count Him to belong to them. And that is a very good mark of faith,
that when one is setting Christ a asking on all quarters, and cannot get
Him for no seeking [notwithstanding seeking], yet to count Him to be
their Christ. This is the thing that the devil would fain be in hands
with, to make you to doubt that He is your Christ or your Lord.
This was the temptation wherewith he assaulted Christ our Lord. "If
Thou be the Son of God, cast Thyself down from the pinnacle of the
temple," &c. All that the devil would be at in his temptations
is to make us doubt that Christ is ours. But never give it over when all
is done, but evermore take Christ for thine. And, oh, that this land
would believe this now, that He is our God, and the God of this land.
Then suppose that our armies were put to the worst that are now out into
the fields-as we trust in God it shall not be but albeit it should be
so, I say, yet seeing He is Scotland's Lord, if so be that we will wait
upon Him, and trust in Him and in His salvation, it shall be found that
it is not a vain thing to do so, but that He shall grant us His
salvation who trust in Him. And to this Lord, &c.
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