The Trial & Triumph of Faith
Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Sermon 11
THE TRIAL
AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH.
SERMON 11
"But he answered her not a word: And his disciples came and
besought him, saying, Send her away, for she crieth after us. But he
answered and said, I am not sent, but unto the lost sheep of the house
of Israel. Then came she and worshipped him, saying, Lord, help me."—MATTHEW
15:23-25.
WE now enter into the dialogue between the
woman and Christ. The first trial is, The woman crieth, but Christ
answereth not a word. I show first, Wherein the temptation standeth.
2nd, The reasons of it; and in what cases Christ answereth not. 3rd,
Bring the uses.
For the first,—God's temptations, and
Satan's, and the flesh's agree in this, that all temptations are of one
colour, viz., white, and seeming good. Even when the skin of temptation
is black as hell, yet there is white in it; as "curse God and
die," that thou mayest be hidden in the grave from misery. The
reason is, temptation were not temptation, if it had not a taking power
to break in upon reason. This is clear in Satan's temptations: he knows
man is a fallen and broken creature like himself; yet that there is
reason left, and that must have a fair object. The first black apple
must be good to the eye, so the devil suiteth a wife ever in his whites;
though, if you should wash the devil and the lie, the bones are always
black. Now, this woman seeth that which she looked not for, and the
affections must be stirred. Is this the Lord, the hearer of prayers?
2nd, Is this he that biddeth us pray, and promiseth to hear? 3rd, Is
this the meek Lamb of God, of whom it is said, "He shall carry the
lambs in his bosom;" and "A bruised reed he shall not break, a
smoking flax he shall not quench"? He answereth me not one word;
yea, he denieth me to be his; as it is hereafter, he reproacheth me with
the name of a dog. Nature would say, I repent that ever I came to him;
let my daughter suffer twenty, one hundred, a legion of devils; I have
done with Christ; I come no more to him; especially, supposing what was
true, that she had a great faith, and faith cannot be but loving and
kind to Christ. "What? my heart saddened and broken; my daughter
vexed with a devil! But oh, alas, my Saviour answereth not one word!
Sweet Jesus rejecteth me; how can I stand under so many hells? He cureth
all that come unto him: I am the first that ever this King sent away
with a sad heart. He casteth none away that cometh, he welcometh all;
only he will not look on me, poor and miserable. Oh, what can I now
do?"
You may know a mother's heart to her
tormented child, and a believer's bowels to a Saviour; here is a burden
above a load. But why answereth he all sinners, but not one word to me? Answer.
1. Few or none are tempted, but the upshot of the temptation is, to
beget big apprehensions of the temptation. Never was man in the
condition I am in. Christ answereth the devils when they cry; he will
not give me one look, one cast of his eye, not one half word. The
temptation must represent Christ as a nonsuch for rough dealing, and the
tempted a nonsuch for misery. Elias must say, "I, even I only, am
left alone, and they seek my life," (1 Kings 19:10). "Our
fathers trusted in thee, they trusted in thee, and were delivered."
(Psalm 22:4.) But I am nobody: "But I am a worm and no man."
(verse 6.) "O passers by, hear, behold, and see if there be any
sorrow like unto my sorrow!" etc. (Lam. 1:12.) "We are made a
theatre, a spectacle to men and angels." (1 Cor. 4:9.) The
temptation must put on the face of hell to drive at this, to cause the
child of God put himself out of the kalendar and society of God's
children. Hence that—"No, there was never a soul since the world
was, like me,—I am alone." (1.) Christ once, first or last, must
be no Christ, and God not God, to the tempted, "Hath he forgotten
to be gracious?" (Psalm 77:9.) A forgetting God, a changed God is
not God; stick by this principle; yet he is Christ, and my Christ too.
(2.) It is said, he answered her not a word; but it is not said, he
heard not one word: these two differ much. Christ often heareth when he
doth not answer; his not answering is an answer, and speaks thus, Pray
on, go on, and cry; for the Lord holdeth his door fast bolted, not to
keep out, but that you may knock and knock. Prayer is to God, worship;
to us, often, it is but a servant upon mere necessity sent on a
business. The father will cause his child say over again, what he once
heard him say, because he delighteth to hear him speak; so God heareth
and layeth by him an answer for Ephraim: "I have heard Ephraim
bemoaning himself," (Jer. 31:18;) but Ephraim heard not, knew not,
that God told all Ephraim's prayer over again behind his back. (3.) No
answer from Christ is hell to a believer, but to kiss and embrace hell,
because it is Christ's hell, is a work of much acceptance;—when you
say, I will pray, and die praying, though I be never heard, because
praying is my duty, and God's glory, let me die in a duty that
glorifieth him. (4.) Wrestling addeth strength to arms and body;
praying, and praying again, strengtheneth faith; customary running
lengtheneth the breath; by much praying faith is well breathed; Jacob is
stronger in the morning, when he hath prayed a whole night, than at
bed-time, "The angel said, Let me go, for the day breaketh: And he
said, I will not let thee go till thou bless me." (Gen. 32:26.)
Then in the dawning he hath prayed harder, and used his arms with
greater violence than before; by this, hunger groweth fatter, sense
stronger; it is here, "eat and be hungry; pray, and desire more
strongly to pray."
2. Reasons of God's not hearing prayer,
are, (1.) Superstitious and false worship. "Moab wearied of his
high places, comes to his sanctuary to pray, but prevaileth not."
(Isa. 16:12.) Wild-fire cannot roast raw flesh. (2.) God hears not
sinners, (John 9:31.) "Let his prayer be sin." (Psalm 109:7.)
Yea, the prayers of Britain are not heard, nor their solemn fasts
accepted, "For iniquity hath separated between God and us,"
(Isa. 59:2). (3.) God heareth not, when there is a heart-love to vanity,
(Psalm 66:18; Job 35:45). (4.) God heareth not malignants, nor us, when
many are heart-enemies to the cause, (Psalm 18:41). (5.) He heareth not
bloody men, (Isaiah 1:15). Now for the saints, sense maketh
non-answering a merciful judgment; it is here as in riches; he is rich
who thinketh himself rich and desireth no more: so, not to be answered
is a plague; but to find you are not answered, and be sad for it, hath
much of Christ. The saints are heavier, because God answereth not, than
because the mercy is denied.
Question.—How shall we know we
are answered? Answer. Hannah knew it, by peace after prayer. (2.)
Paul knew it, by receiving new supply to bear the want of that he sought
in prayer; he is answered that is more heavenly after prayer. (3.)
Liberty and boldness of faith, is a sign of an answered prayer. The
Intercessor at the right hand of God cannot lose his own work; his
Spirit groaneth in the saints. Doth not my head accept what I set my
heart on work to do? (Rom. 8:23,26,27, compared with Rev. 8:3.) (4.) We
are heard and answered of God, when we are not heard and answered of
God. I pray for a temporal favour—victory to God's people in this
battle; they lose the day. Yet I am heard and answered, because I prayed
for that victory, not under the notion of victory, but as linked with
mercy to the church, and the honour of Christ. So, the formal object of
my prayers, was a spiritual mercy to the church, and the honour of Jesus
Christ. Now, the Lord, by the loss of the day, hath shown mercy to his
people in humbling them, and glorifieth his Son, in preserving a fallen
people. So he heareth that which is spiritual in my prayers; he is not
to hear the errors of them. Christ putteth not dross in his censer of
gold. (5.) We are heard, whenever we ask in faith; but let faith reach
no further than God's will. When we make God's will our rule, he will do
his own will; if he do not my will, it is to be noted, that the
creature's will, divided from God's will, in things not necessary for
salvation and God's glory, is no part of God's will, and no asking of
faith. Therefore, faith frequently, in the Psalms, prayeth, and
answereth, "Attend unto me, and hear me." (Psalm 6 verse 4,
compared with verse 9; Psalm 55:2.) "God shall hear and afflict
them." (verse 19.) "Be merciful unto me, O God," etc.
(Psalm 57:1.) "He shall send from heaven, and save me from the
reproach of him that would swallow me up." (verse 3.) "Deliver
me from mine enemies, O my God." (Psalm 59:1.) "Deliver me
from the workers of iniquity." (verse 2.) "The God of mercy
shall prevent me, God shall let me see my desire upon mine
enemies." (verse 10.) "O God, thou hast cast us off, thou hast
scattered us," etc. (Psalm 60:1.) But in the end, "Through God
shall we do valiantly." (verse 12.) The prophesying of faith is not
dead with the prophets. Faith seeth afar off as yet. To see things that
God shall do, either by himself or by angels, is an act of prophecy, and
differeth not in nature from the prophetical light of the prophets. Now,
the light of faith seeth as yet the same, viz., that Christ shall raise
the dead, and send his angels to gather in his wheat into his barn.
Especially hope of glory is prophetical. (6.) Patience to wait on, till
the vision speak, is an answer. (7.) Some letters require no answer, but
are mere expressions of the desires of the friend. The general prayers
of the saints, that the Lord would gather in his elect, that Christ
would come and marry the bride, and consummate the nuptials, do refer to
a real answer, when our husband, the King, shall come in person at his
second appearance.
USE 1.—You take it hard, that you are
not answered, and that Christ's door is not opened at your first knock.
David must knock, "O my God, I cry by day, and thou hearest not,
and in the night season I am not silent." (Psalm 22:2.) The Lord's
church, "And when I cry and shout, he shutteth out my prayer."
(Lam. 3:8.) Sweet Jesus, the heir of all, prayed with tears and strong
cries, once, "O my Father," again, "O my Father,"
and the third time, "O my Father," ere he was heard. Wait on,
die praying, faint not.
USE 2.—It is good to have the heart
stored with sweet principles of Christ, when he heareth not at the
first. It is Christ, he will answer. It is but Christ's outside that is
unkind. |
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