The Trial & Triumph of Faith
Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Sermon 21
THE TRIAL
AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH.
SERMON 21
"Then Jesus answered, and said
unto her, O woman, great is thy faith," etc.
THIS is the last passage of the text,
containing a commendation of the woman, given to her by Christ in her
face. (2.) An answer according to her desire. (3.) The effect of her
praying with instancy and pressing importunity of faith: the devil is
cast out of her daughter.
Christ acknowledgeth here, that instancy
of praying in faith, will overcome God, and Satan, and all the saddest
temptations that can befall the child of God. Hence, observe what acts
of efficacious power instant and earnest prayer putteth forth upon God,
and how the clay-creature doth work upon, and prevail with the great
Potter and former of all things.
1. Prayer is a messenger, and a swift and
winged post dispatched up to court. David sent away this post early in
the morning, with morning wings: "My voice shalt thou hear in the
morning." (Psalm 5:3.) The post is himself, for the word is, I
will address my person, as in battle array. "Set thyself in
order before me, (and) stand up," saith Elihu to Job; or, I will
address my words, (Job 33:5). "Now he hath not directed his words
against me." (Job 32:14.) The seventy render it parastesomai soi;
and David sent himself to heaven, not only as a post, but as the
word (Atsappeh) soundeth, 'I wall look up, or, espy;' as one that
keepeth watch and ward, waiting for an answer from God, as the word is,
(Hab. 2:1, and Psalm 18:6.) "In my distress I called upon the
Lord,—and my cry came before him, even into his ears."
2. Prayer putteth a challenge upon God,
for his covenant's sake and his promise; that is greater boldness, than
to speak to God and wait on; "Our adversaries have trodden down thy
sanctuary: We are thine, thou never barest rule over them, they were not
called by thy name," (Isa. 63:18,19). "Behold, O Lord, and
consider, to whom thou hast done this." (Lam. 2:20.) "O Lord,
why hast thou made us to err from thy ways, and hardened our heart from
thy fear? Return for thy servants' sake, the tribes of thine
inheritance." (Isa. 63:17.) Hence is there a holy chiding with God:
"O my God, I cry in the daytime, and thou hearest not, and in the
night season, and am not silent." (Psalm 22:2.) "How long wilt
thou forget me, O Lord, for ever? How long wilt thou hide thy face from
me?" (Psalm 13:1.)
3. It putteth God to great straits and
suffering, even to the moving of his soul, (Jer. 31). When God heareth
Ephraim bemoaning himself in prayer, it putteth God to a sort of pinch
and condolency: "Is Ephraim my dear son? Is he my pleasant child?
For since I spake against him, I do earnestly remember him still;
therefore my bowels are troubled for him." (verse 20.) Is Isaac, an
earthly father, moved, and his heart rent and torn with the weeping and
tears of Esau, his son, so as he must confer some blessing upon him; far
more must the bowels of our Father, infinite in mercy, be turned within
him, at the weeping and tears of a praying and crying Church.
4. When God seemeth to sleep, in regard
that his work, and the wheels of his providence are at a stand, prayer
awakeneth God, and putteth him on action: "Arise, O Lord, in thine
anger, lift up thyself because of the rage of mine enemies; awake for
the judgment thou hast commanded," (Psalm 7:6). "Awake, why
sleepest thou, O Lord! Arise, cast us not off for ever." (Psalm
44:23.) Both the words (Gnurah and Hakitsa) signify to
awake out of sleep: so prayer putteth God on noble acts of omnipotency,
as to bow the heavens and come down, (Isa. 64:1,) to shake and put on
work all creatures in heaven and earth, for the saving of one poor man,
(Psalm 18); as when the sick child crieth for pain, all the sons and
servants, yea, the father of the house, and mother, are set on work, and
put to business for his health. Hence when David prayed, "The earth
shook, the foundations of the hills were moved, for the Lord was wroth;
smoke and fiery coals went out of his mouth; he bowed the heavens and
came down, he rode upon a cherub, and did fly upon the wings of the
wind." (Psalm 18:6,7.) So it did put the Lord to divide the Red
sea; to break the prison doors and iron chains, to deliver Peter, Paul,
and Silas.
5. It acteth so upon God, that it putteth
the crown upon Christ's head, and heighteneth the footstool of his
throne; so much doth that prayer, "thy kingdom come," hold
forth; and that last prayer of the church, which the Spirit and the
Bride uttereth, "Even so, come, Lord Jesus," (Rev. 22,) is a
hastening of that glorious marriage-day, when the Bride, the Lamb's wife
shall be married on Jesus Christ; and a ripening of the glory of God,
and of Christ the King and Head mystical of his body the Church. The
glory of infinite justice, and saving grace in the redemption of men, is
like a fair rose, but enclosed within its green leaves in this life. But
when Christ shall appear, this rose shall be opened and cast out in
breadth, its fair and beautiful leaves to be seen and smelled openly by
men and angels. In very deed, this prayer, "Even so, come, Lord
Jesus," is summons for the last judgment, for the full
manifestation of the highest glory of Christ, in the final and
consummate illustration of free grace and mercy, in the complete
redemption of all the prisoners of hope, only for the declaration of the
supreme Judge's glory; who shall then do execution on Satan, his angels,
Antichrist, and all slaves of hell: so that though prayer made not the
world, yet it may unmake it, and set up a new heaven and a new earth.
6. Prayer is a binding of God, that he
cannot depart; and layeth chains on his hands, and buildeth a wall or an
hedge of thorns in his way, that he cannot destroy his people: "And
there is none that calleth upon thy name, and stirreth up himself to
take hold of thee;" (Isa. 64:7;) there is none to lay hands on
thee; "And I sought for a man amongst them that should make up the
hedge, and stand in the gap, (or in the rupture made by war,) before me
for the land, that I should not destroy it, but I found none."
(Ezek. 22:30.) If a Moses or a Samuel should intercede by prayer, that
the Lord would spare the land, his prayer should be a hedge or a wall to
stand in the way of justice, to hinder the Lord to destroy his people.
7. Prayer is a heavenly violence to God
expressed in divers powerful expressions; as, (1.) The faithful watchmen
pray and cry to God so hard, that they give the Lord no rest, no
silence, till he establish Jerusalem. (Isa. 62:6,7.) (2.) Praying is a
sort of striving with the Lord: "I beseech you,—strive with me,
in prayers to God for me." (Rom. 15:30). (3.) Jacob by prayer
wrestled with the Lord; and the Lord, as if he had been straitened,
saith, "Send me away, dismiss me. And Jacob said, I will not
dismiss thee, till thou bless me:" (Gen. 32.) Which is well
expounded by Hosea, chapter 12:4. Jacob had a princely power over the
Angel, and prevailed, he wept, and made supplication to him. [He] is a
Prince, or as many render it, Rectus fuit cum Deo, or Directus
fuit, vel prosperum successum habuit, Which may note either a
princedom in prayer over God, which is the true reason of the name
Israel; or, as others think, he stood right up, and his prayer did not
bow, nor was broken, when a temptation lay on him as heavy as a
mill-stone: even when the Lord said he would depart from him, yet he
prevailed under that weight. So, (Exod. 32:10,) when Moses was praying
for the people, the Lord said to Moses, "Let me alone that I may
destroy them." The Chaldee translates it, 'Leave off thy prayer
before me.' All which tendeth to this, that prayer is a prince, and a
mighty, wrestling, prevailing king, that hath strong bones, and strong
arms, to be victorious with God. We know the parable of the widow, (Luke
18,) who by importunity obtained of the unjust judge, that he should
avenge her of her adversary. The scope of which parable is, that prayers
without fainting, putteth such a labour and a trouble upon God, that he
must hear and answer the desires of his children. So doth the Lord
resemble himself to a master of a family gone to bed with his children,
who yet being wearied by the knocking of his neighbour, cannot choose
but rise in the night, and lend him bread, to strangers come to his
house.
8. Some also say, that prayer commandeth
God, as Isa. 45:11: "Ask of me things to come concerning my sons,
and concerning the work of my hand command ye me." Which place,
though it may well bear another interpretation, yet is this not beside
the scope of the text; for sure it is, that God hath laid a sort of law
on himself, in regard of his binding promise, to hear the prayers of his
children; and that he cometh down from the throne of his sovereignty, to
submit himself to his own promise of hearing prayers, (Psalm 34:15;
65:2; 145:18,19; Matt. 7:7,8; John 14:13,14).
USE 1. If prayer prevail over God and
Christ, even to the overcoming of the Devil, then much more will a
praying people prevail over hell and malignants. It were wisdom then for
malignants, to yield and strike sail to those, who can by prayer set
Omnipotency on work, and engage the Strength of Israel against them.
Amalek had Omnipotency against them, and a harder party than spears, and
bows, and armed men, in that praying Moses was against them. The third
Psalm was a strong piece against Absalom and Ahithophel, and all that
conspired against David. Christ's prayers for the perfecting of his own
body, and gathering in his first-born, include in them a curse upon all
those that hinder the gathering in of his flock. Woe to the enemies,
then, against whom our Intercessor prayeth curses; the prayers of Christ
against his enemies shall blast them and their counsels, and all their
War-undertakings.
USE 2. Some are discouraged; they can
neither fight for Christ, nor do any thing to promote this cause, as
wanting strength of body and means. Nay, but if thou canst pray, thou
dost set the whole wheels of Omnipotency on work, for the building of
the Lord's house; in which regard, the prayer of a sick and poor man
shall do more in war for the cause of God, than twenty thousand men. It
was not Ahasuerus, nor the grace that Esther found in the eyes of the
king, that saved the whole church of the Jews from destruction, but the
prayers of Esther and her maids. It is true, an angel brought Peter out
of prison, (Acts 12,) but what stirred that wheel in heaven? Here's the
cause, "Prayer was made without ceasing to God for Peter, by the
church:" (verse 5). Prayer, prayer can put a reeling and tottering
on king and court, pope, prelate, and Babylon: we are to pray the
king of the bottomless pit, the man of sin, the graven images of
apostate Rome, out of the world. Prayer can yoke all the swords
in Europe against the Whore. Every one who hath the spirit of adoption,
though poor and rejected of men, by prayer hath powerful influence on
all the nations of the earth, on all Europe, on the ends of the earth,
on the hearts of the Jews, on Turks and Indians. Prayer can reach as far
as Omnipotency, accompanied by the wise decree of our Lord; and the
poorest girl or maid that can pray, doth lend a strong lift to heighten
the footstool of Christ's royal throne. Children and poor maids, by
prayer, may put the crown on Christ's head, and hold up his throne, and
may store and increase heaven by praying, "Thy kingdom come,"
and enlarge hell, and fill the pits with the dead bodies of Christ's
enemies; and may, by prayer, bind kings in fetters, chain up and confine
devils, subdue kingdoms.
"Great is thy faith."
For the clearing of these words, we are to consider three points; (1.)
What faith is. (2.) What a great faith is. (3.) Why he saith 'thy
faith,' appropriating it to the woman. Now, of faith I shall speak, [1.]
A word of preparations for faith; [2.] Of the grounds and necessary
motives to faith; [3.] Of the ingredients of faith; [4.] Of the sinner's
warrants to believe; [5.] Of divers sorts of false and ill rooted
faiths.
There is a preparation going before
faith.
1. There be some preparations which go
before faith: (1.) Faith is a seed of heaven; it is not sown by the
"good husbandman" in unploughed and in fallow ground; Christ
soweth not amongst thorns. We are "builded on the faith;"
stones are hewn, rubbish removed, before one stone be laid. (2.) Every
act of grace in God is an act of Omnipotency, and so requireth not time
or succession: God might have set up the frame of the world in all its
fullness, with less than one thought, or act of his will put forth by
Omnipotency. Yet did our Lord subject the acts of creating the first
world to the rule of time, and to a circle of evening and morning,
nights and days; so doth the Lord set up a new world of faith, in a soul
void of faith, by degrees. There is a time, when there is neither
perfect night nor perfect day, but the twilight of the morning; and God,
notwithstanding, created the morning, no less than the noon-day sun.
There is a half summer, and a half spring, in the close of the spring,
which God made. The embryo, or birth, not yet animated, is neither seed
only, nor a man-child only; so is a convert in his first framing,
neither perfectly untamed corruption, because there is a crack and a
throw in the iron-sinew of the neck; nor is he a thorough child of
light; but as we say, in the dead-throe, "in the place of breaking
forth of children," as Hosea speaketh. A child with his head come
forth of the womb, and no more, and so half born only; so is the
convert, while he is in the making, not taken off Christ's wheels; half
in the borders of hell, and looking afar off at the suburbs of heaven,
not far from the kingdom of heaven.
There's no necessary and
intrinsical connexion between preparations going before faith &
faith.
But, 2. This bridge over the water,
between the kingdom of darkness and the state of saving grace, hath no
necessary connection with that kingdom of the Son of God's love, but
such as it hath from the sole and mere decree of the free election of
grace; and therefore, many reprobates may enter the bridge, and never go
along to the other bank of the river. God breaketh the bridge, this
being the very division and parting of these two unsearchable ways of
election and reprobation, yet so as the sin in cutting the bridge, is
the guilt of the reprobate man;—as many births die in the breaking
forth out of the womb, divers roses in the bud are blasted, and never
see harvest, through the fault of the seed, not of the sun.
Affections going before conversion
and following after differ specifically.
3. It is true, the new creation and life
of God is virtually seminaliter in these preparations, as the
seed is a tree in hope, the blossom an apple, the foundation a palace in
its beginning: so half a desire in the non-converted, is love-sickness
for Christ in the seed; legal humiliation is, in hope, evangelical
repentance, and mortification. But, as the seed and the growing tree
differ not gradually only, but in nature and specifically; as a thing
without life, is not of that same nature and essence, with a creature
that hath a vegetative life and growth; so the preparatory good
affections of desire, hunger, sorrow, humiliation, going before
conversion, differ specifically from those renewed affections which
follow after; the former being acts of grace, but not of saving grace,
which goeth along with the decree of the election of grace, and of like
latitude with it; the latter being the native and con-natural fruits of
the Spirit, of which the apostle speaketh, (Gal. 5:22,23). In which
regard, no man is morally, and in regard of a divine promise, such as
this—Do this, and this, and God shall bestow on you, the grace of
conversion—fitter, and in a nearer disposition to conversion than
another:
All are alike unfit for conversion.
(1.) Because we read not of any such
promise in the gospel; (2.) Because amongst things void of life, all are
equally void of life, and here there are no degrees of more or less
life, no intention, no remission or slacking of the degrees of life. For
even as an ape or a horse are as equally no men, as stones and dead
earth are no men; though an ape or a horse have life common to them with
men, which stones and earth have not, yet they are equally as destitute
of reason and an intellectual life, which is the only life of a man as a
man, as stones and earth are; so Saul, only humbled by the terrors of
the law, and sick of half-raw desires of Christ, is no less yet a
creature void of the life of God, than when he was in the highest pitch
of obstinacy, spitting out blood and murders on the face of that Lord
Jesus whom he persecuted. And in this regard, conversion is no less pure
grace, every way free to Saul humbled, and so, having only half a thirst
and desire of Christ, than if he were yet in the fever of his highest
blasphemy, thirsting after the blood of the saints.
Some nearer conversion than others
are.
4. Yet are the saints thus prepared and
humbled, but not converted materially, physically, or as it were,
passively nearer Christ; and in relation to God's eternal election of
grace, who maketh this a step relative to his eternal love, they are
under the reach of Christ's love, and at the elbow of the right arm of
the Father, who draweth souls to the Son, (John 6:44). And in the
gospel-bounds and fields, or lists of free grace, as the height and rage
of a fever is near a cool and a return to health, and yet most contrary
to health; and the utmost flowing of the sea, when it is at the remotest
score of the coast, is a disposition to an ebbing, though most contrary
to a low ebb; so are the humbled souls who have some lame and maimed
estimative power of light, to put half a price on Christ, and find
apprehended sin, the mouth, throat, and out-entry of hell, in that case
most contrary to Christ. A fish within that circle of the water that the
net casteth, is no less living in its own element of water, than if it
were in the bosom of the ocean, some hundred miles distant from fisher
or net; yet is it in a near disposition to be catched.
Three grounds and motives of
believing.
For grounds of faith to lead us on to
believing, consider, (1.) two words, (Col. 1:27,) spoken of the object
of faith. [1.] It is named "The riches of the glory of this mystery
among the Gentiles;" [2.] "which is," saith Paul,
"Christ in you, the hope of glory."
[1.] Now, faith leadeth us to a mystery
that none knoweth, but such as are the intimate friends of Christ, and
are put upon all Christ's secret cabinet councils. (2.) Glory is so
taking a lover, that it will deprive a natural man of his sleep; but the
glory of a kingdom revealed in the gospel, is the flower, marrow, and
spirits of all glory imaginable. (3.) What is riches of glory?
"That I should preach, the gold mine of the riches of the glory of
Christ," (Eph. 3:8,) so deep, that none can find them out, and so
large, that when they are found out, men and angels shall not find their
bottom. Oh, what foldings, and turnings, and inextricable windings of
glory, are lapped up in Christ! Yea, treasures, all treasures are in
him, (Col. 2:3,) so it is called, (2 Cor. 4:17,) baros doxes, a
weight of glory. But, (2.) A weight eternal, a weight aged, and full of
ages of glory. (3.) An exceeding great weight, and not that only; but,
(4.) a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. Do but weigh how
weighty precious Jesus Christ is, how heavy and how massy and ponderous
the crown is, and what millions of diamonds, rubies, sapphires, and
precious stones do shine, and cast out rays and beams of pure and
unmixed glory out of his crown! What smiles and kisses breathing out
glory on thy now sinful face, shall come out of Christ. Now the light of
faith, even as a lantern, or a day-star in a cloudy dawning, leadeth
thee up to this.
[2.] "Christ in you the hope of
glory." How in them? By faith, (Eph. 3:17). Christ, the hope of
glory, is Christ the glory hoped for, by a figure; that is, faith
putteth Christ and heaven in you by hope. So, in the believer, there is
Christ the Lamb, the throne, the glorified angels, and sinless and
blessed musicians that stand in a circle about the throne, praising Him
that liveth for ever. All these are in the believer by faith; and in him
is heaven, the tree of life, the higher paradise, the river of water of
life; unto all these faith entitleth the soul, and they be all nothing
to Christ, the hope of glory. Even the only-begotten son and heir of a
king, is called the hope of his house, the only hope of his house; but,
in regard the heirs of mortal kings are mortal, the house is weak, and
standeth but upon one foot, when he hath but one mortal heir. Now, it is
the infinite perfection of God, that he can have but one son who is
infinite, and the same eternal and immortal God with the Father, and
that he cannot die. So Christ standeth the only hope of the house of
heaven, a king by hope, the king of hope; and all hope of the captives
and sons of hope, and all the glory of his Father's house hangeth upon
him: Christ hath all the heirs upon his shoulder, and faith investeth
the believer to all this power and glory.
2. Faith's object the marrow of
God's attributes to speak so.
(2.) Faith must be so much the more
precious, as that it layeth hold, for its possession, on God, and on the
garland, marrow (if any comparison here can stand) and flower of all
God's attributes, [1.] the righteousness of Christ. [2.] The free grace
of God, the most taking, heart-ravishing attribute in God, and most
suitable to our sinful condition. [3.] The high and deep love of God,
and love which dwelleth in and with the noble and excellent blood that
satisfieth infinite justice. There is no such glory, by any act of
obedience tendered to God, by Adam in his innocent condition, or by
angels which never sinned.
3. Faith a Catholic Grace required
in our actions natural & civil as well as spiritual.
(3.) There is as great a necessity of
faith as of life; for the justified man must "live by faith."
There is no grace so catholic: it being of necessity interwoven in all
our actions, as they fall under moral consideration; not only in
supernatural actions, but also in all our natural and civil actions,
insofar as they must be spiritualized, in relation to God's honour, (1
Cor. 10:31). So as Joshua, Baruch, Samson, David, did fight battles,
kill men, subdue kingdoms by faith, (Heb. 11:32,33,) so must the soldier
now fight by that same faith, and so are the saints to eat, drink,
sleep, journey, buy, sell by faith. We are not to put on faith as a
cloak, or an upper garment, when we go to the streets, fields, or
church, and then lay it aside in the house, at table, or in bed; yea,
the renewed man is not to eat and sleep, because the light of reason and
the law of nature teacheth him so to do, or the convenience of a
calling; for then, all those actions shall be resolved in the same
principles, and formal reason of moral performance of them, in the
believer, as in the carnal man, in whom a natural spirit is steersman;
and then we do but, in these actions, "walk in the light of our own
fire, and the sparks that we ourselves have kindled," and shall not
see to go to bed, "but lie down in sorrow," (Isa. 50:11). But
we are to set faith as the plummet and line to regulate these actions,
to do them, (1.) Because He who hath bought us with a price, commandeth
us by the light of nature. (2.) And the light of faith is to moderate us
in eating, drinking, sleeping, according to Christian sobriety, in the
measure of the action. (3.) Faith teacheth us not to eat, that we may
eat, or for a natural or civil end. Grace heighteneth the natural
intention to a supernatural end, and to do all these for God and his
service, (1 Cor. 10:31). And "whatsoever we do" (though but
civil service, as servants to earthly masters in a civil calling, in
trading, in arts), "we are to do all as to the Lord, not unto
men," (Col. 3:23).
Then Christ, acting and moving by the
light of faith, is the formal reason and principle in which lastly and
formally (ultimaté) all our actions are resolved. (2.) Look of
how much worth and price thy soul is; of as great necessity is faith,
except thou wouldst look for the gospel vengeance, the day, or the ages
of eternal vengeance at Christ's appearance, (2 Thess. 1:8; Isa. 61:2;
John 3:18-36; 8:24).
Objection. "But if it be so,
that faith is required in all that I do, the business of salvation (may
some say) is hard and difficult work. Where shall I have faith for every
stirring of my foot?"
Answer. I answer, as all our
actions, except where imagination is principle of the act, must be
deliberate, and so the actions of a rational man, so must they be moral.
Now, there is no morality in a man who is a citizen of the church, but
the morality of faith; for it is a duty laid upon every one within the
visible church, that all his actions moral be watered and lustered with
faith. And the truth is, the work of our salvation being compared to
sailing, (Heb. 6:19,) and to fighting, (2 Tim. 4:7; 2 Tim. 2:3,4,) it is
very like a ship, which requireth many hands, and much attentive
carefulness in the owner and sailors. Now the mast is hurt, then
somewhat wanting in the deck; now the helm is faulty, then the cords are
to be repaired; or the anchor is broken, or she taketh in underwater, or
the sail is torn, or the motion slow. There is charge to the owner, and
much work to all hands. And how many things are required to a huge body
of an army? So many thousand men must be liable to so many thousand
wants. Some are sick, some wounded, some a-dying, some hungry, some
naked, some fall off the army, and are catched by the enemy; some be
faint, some too bold and precipitate; yea, armour, houses, bread, drink,
fire, tents, physicians, workmen, mattocks, spades, bridges, ladders,
homes, engines of war, art and skill, medicine, counsel, courage,
intelligence, and a thousand things of this kind are requisite; and
seldom is an army, but there be some one inconvenience or other in this
needy and cumbersome huge body. And when is the business of salvation
not at a stand one way or other? Is there not either one piece or other,
the shield of faith, or the anchor of hope, or the breast-plate of
righteousness, or some the like, broken or faulty? Is not our Guide, who
hath seven eyes, ten times a-day cumbered with us? Must not Christ
solder our broken weapons, sew our torn sails, repair one breach or
other in us? In a thousand the like, faith is to improve the free grace,
the omnipotence, the unchangeable love of Christ, to promote his own
work, and to "work in us to will, and to do, according to his good
pleasure," (Phil. 2:13).
Now, for the ingredients of faith: (1.)
There be in us, (2 Cor. 10:5,) Logismoi, great forts raised
against the light of faith; these natural discourses in the mind, that
are great works and heights, strongholds builded against Christ. The
prime faculty, reason, the discoursive power (dianoia,) that
thinketh she hath wit enough against Christ, and to keep the man out of
all danger of eternal salvation, overtoppeth and outgroweth all gospel
truths: Christ must overpower carnal, fat, rank and heady soldiers,
called thoughts, every thought, and so kill some that will not be taken,
and lead captive other thoughts to the obedience of faith. Reason
is a predominant bone in itself. The carnal mind neither will, nor can
keep rank as an obedient soldier under the law of God, (Rom. 8:7). It is
much for fine, silken, and golden reason, to say to Christ, Lord, there
is more of a beast in me than of a man, I have not the understanding of
a man. (Prov. 30:2.) The learned, the schoolmen seldom believe, except
grey-haired wit turn a child, and go to school again, to learn from
Christ the new art of believing; for there was never an act of unbelief
in any, but it grew out of this proud and rank stalk of a lofty wit.
Therefore, Christ breaks out a new window in the soul, and brings in a
new sun that flesh and blood never saw, nor heard of before, (Matt.
16:17). (2.) Faith hath low and creeping affections to the creature: but
when the affections are big with child of the creature, as, [1.] They
are strained and swelled in their acts, faith is no faith, but a
delusion. The rich man speaketh with all his heart, and with good-will
of his full barns; and it is clear, he had neither faith nor hope
towards eternity, (Luke 12:19,20). For every word being (as we say) of
the length of a cubit, a foot and a half, he casteth forth words of
pulling down, building greater houses, and scraping in all; his goods
are, Ta gennemata mou, kai ta agatha mou, "my goods, all my
births and bowels, and all my good things;" for he had no other
good things, and there is no apostrophe in the words: he speaketh them
with a full sound, and we speak with good will these things that we tell
to our soul. Faith hath but half words and half affections touching the
world; half acts, or broken acts in the affections, closing with the
creature, smell of a faith with child of eternity. To make the
excellency of the creature a matter of mere opinion; to reckon the
world's witchcrafts of lust, gain, glory, but uncertain and topic
arguments to conclude a Godhead, and a golden heaven in the creature, is
the height of the wisdom of faith. So Paul, "I am crucified with
Christ." (Gal. 2:20.) O then (may some say), Paul, you are a dead
man. He saith, No. "Nevertheless, I live," but I live the life
of faith, "For Christ liveth in me." All his motions toward
the creature were half dead, like the vital motions of a crucified man
half out of the world, and his acts of faith were lively and vital, and
high-tuned, like the highest note in the music-song. Faith cannot break,
and violently rend asunder the two sides of the affections, with too
violent and intense acts of love, joy, fear, desire, sorrow, as these
are terminated upon the creature. It is true, faith clippeth nothing
from the utmost and most superlative pitch of the love of God, of
desire, fear, sorrow, joy, as they act upon God; but addeth wind to the
sails in that flux of the soul's way toward God. But Faith
moderateth and lesseneth all these in relation to the creature; so the
faith, which hath its direct aspect toward eternity, and looketh on the
shortness of sliding away time, and the transient wheeling away of the
poor figure of this world, (1 Cor. 7:29-31,) turneth all these acts into
but half a face on the creature, and into leisurely and leaden motions,
or half to non-acts, as if made up of heavenly contradictions:
"Having wives, having not wives; weeping, not weeping; rejoicing,
not rejoicing; buying, not possessing; using the world, not using the
world." (verses 29-31.) When the saints throng through the press
and crowd of the creatures (for the world is a bushy and rank wood),
thorns take hold of their garments, and retard them in their way. Faith
looseth their garments, and riddeth them of such thorny friends as are
too kind to them in their journey. Who diggeth for iron and tin in the
earth with mattocks of gold? What wise man would make a web of cloth of
gold, a net to catch fish? Expenses should overgrow gains. There is much
of the metal of heaven in the soul. Faith would forbid us to wear
out the threads of this immortal spirit; such as are love, joy, fear,
sorrow, upon pieces of corruptible clay. Alas, is it faith's light that
setteth men a-work to make the soul a golden needle, and the precious
powers and perfections thereof, threads of silver, to sew together
pieces of sackcloth and old rotten rags? What better, I pray you, is the
finest of the web in the whole system of creation? Certainly, the
heavens must be a thread of better wool than the clay earth; yet, if you
should break your immortal spirit, and bend all the acts to the highest
extent of your affections, to conquer thousands of acres of ground in
the heavens, and entitle your soul to that inheritance, as to your only
patrimony without Christ, faith's day-light should discover to you, that
this finest part of that web of creation, with which you desire to
clothe your precious soul, is but base wool, and rotten thread, and
though beautiful and well dyed to the eye, yet, "The heavens, even
all of them, shall wax old like a garment." (Psalm 102:26.) And the
wisdom of faith knoweth a shop, where there is a more excellent suit of
clothes for the soul, and a more precious piece of the heaven to dwell
in; even a house which is from heaven, with which you shall be clothed,
when life shall eat up death and mortality. (2 Cor. 5:1,2.)
2. The creatures are below the affections
of the believer, and his affections conquer them, as having the vantage
of the mount above all the creatures. So Paul maketh an elegant
contrariety, (Phil. 3:19,20,) between those whose heart, senses, mind,
find neither smell, taste, nor wisdom, but in earthly things, and those
who by faith look to heaven, and dwell there. And the temporary's heart
is below the world, and the creatures are up in the mount above him. So
(Matt. 13:7-22,) the thorns or cares of riches have the fore-start of
the earth, add sap above faith, or the good seed: for the seed was cast
in the earth, when the thorns had been there before, and had the vantage
of the season and the soil both. The first love is often strongest. The
martyrs (Heb. 11:35,) had poor and weak thoughts of this life, and would
not accept and welcome life and deliverance from death; but had strong
acts of faith and love toward a better resurrection. It is a soul's
strong faith, that bringeth him to wonder at nothing; never to love
much, nor fear much, nor sorrow much, nor joy much, nor weep much, nor
laugh much, nor hope much, nor despair much, when the creature is the
object of all these acts. There is nothing great, not the world's all
things, to him who is possessed with that "righteousness which is
of God by faith," (Phil. 3:8,9). Men that talk with good will and
all their heart, of their learning, books, of their own acts, good
works, wisdom, court, honour, valour in war, flocks, lands, gold,
monies, children, friends, travels, are to examine if faith be not a
chaste thing, and that acts of whoredom with the creature, and of
believing in Christ, are scarce consistent. Let your affections move
toward the creature without great sound of feet.
3. There must be self-forsaking in
believing. (1.) An affirming, and an Ay to grace, is a negation and
denial to itself: "I laboured more abundantly than they all; yet
not I, but the grace of God, which was with me." (1 Cor. 15:10.) To
deny that you are Christ's, or that you have any grace (if Christ have
any thing of his in you), is not self-denial, but grace-denial, and
God-denial; deny the work of the Spirit, and deny himself. It is a
saying of humility, "I am black;" and of faith, "but
comely as the tents of Kedar, as the curtains of Solomon;" (Cant.
1:5;) and, "I slept, but my heart waked." (Cant. 5:1.) It is
faith to hold fast your state of adoption: "Lord, I am thine."
(2.) When our self maketh a suit to self, and putteth in a bill to the
flesh, "O pity thyself; Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth,"
it is self-renouncing to deny this request to the flesh. And faith only
can give an answer to self-declining the cross: "He that denieth me
before men, him will I deny before my Father and his holy angels,"
saith Christ. And another answer faith giveth, (Rom. 8:12). I am not
debtor to thee, O flesh; I owe thee nothing. And it is faith's word of
answer, "But know thou, that for all these things, God will bring
thee unto judgment." (Eccles. 11:9.) (3.) Faith putteth the soul
into that condition, that self may be plucked from self without great
violence, as an apple full of the tree and of harvest sap is with a
small motion plucked off the stalk. "I am ready," Ego
etoimos echo, I have myself in readiness, "not only to be
bound, but also to die at Jerusalem, for the name of the Lord
Jesus." (Acts 21:13.) Certainly, faith saw here more in Jesus of
excellency and sweetness, than there could be of bitterness in bonds and
death, to self.
4. There is a denial of the creature, and
a bill of defiance sent to all the lovers of the world, when Ephraim is
brought to this act of believing; "For in thee the fatherless
findeth mercy." (Hos. 14:3.) Then it is said, "Ashur shall not
save us; we will not ride upon horses." That creature that we trust
on, we ride upon it, as Israel did upon the horses of Assyria and Egypt.
But, in this regard, faith dismounteth the believer, and abaseth him to
walk on foot. All the creatures are ships to the believer without a
bottom; they are empty and weak. David forbiddeth us to ride on a
prince, (Psalm 146:3,4,) for that horse shall faint, and fall to clay.
God alloweth Scotland to help England, but will not have the souls of
his children in England to ride upon an army of another nation, and to
trust in them for salvation. To make fire, is not so proper to
fire,—to give light, not so kindly to the sun,—as salvation is God's
only due; and, therefore, let England in this, walk on foot, and trust
in the Lord.
5. The fifth ingredient also in faith is,
that it is bottomed upon the sense and pain of a lost condition. Poverty
is the nearest capacity of believing. This is Faith's method,—Be
condemned, and be saved,—be hanged, and be pardoned; be sick, and be
healed; (Matt. 9:13; James 4:7,8; Matt. 11:28; Luke 19:10). Faith is a
flower of Christ's only planting, yet it groweth out of no soil, but out
of the margin and bank of the lake of fire and brimstone, in regard
there be none so fit for Christ and heaven, as those who are self-sick,
and self-condemned to hell. This is a foundation to Christ, that because
the man is broken and has not bread, therefore he must be sold, and
Christ must buy him, and take him home to his fireside, and clothe him,
and feed him. The chased man, pursued upon death and life, who hath not
a way for life, but one nick of a rock; if he miss that, he is a dead
man, had he a hundred lives. So is the believer pursued for blood; there
is but one city of refuge in heaven, or out of heaven; this is only,
only Jesus Christ, the great rock. And it is true, it is in a manner
forced faith, and forced love cast upon Christ, upon a great venture;
yet we may make necessity here the greatest virtue, or the highest
grace, and that is,—to come to Christ. Satan doth but ride upon the
weakness of many, proving that they are not worthy of Christ; which is
the way of a sophist, to prove an evident truth that cannot be denied.
But there is no greater vantage can be had against sin and Satan than
this; Because I am unworthy of Christ, and out of measure sinful, and I
find it is so, (Satan and conscience teaching me that truth, to bring me
on a false conclusion,) therefore ought I,—therefore must I,—come to
Christ, unworthy as I am. For free grace is moved from within itself
from God's good will, only without any motion or action from sin, to put
itself forth upon the sinner, to the end, that sin, being exceeding
sinful, grace may be abundantly grace. And no thanks to Satan, for
suggesting a true principle—Thou art unworthy of Christ—to suggest a
false conclusion, Therefore thou art not to come to Christ; for the
contrary arguing is gospel-logic. Satan's reasoning should be good, if
there were no way but the law to give life. But because there is a
Saviour, a gospel, and a new and living way to heaven, the contrary
arguing is the sinner's life and happiness.
6. The sixth ingredient in faith is, that
the sinner can lay hold on the promise, (1.) Not simply, but with
relation to the precept; for presumptuous souls plunge in their foul
souls in fair and precious promises; and this is the faith of
Antinomians: for the promise is not holden forth to sinners as sinners,
but as to such sinners; for we make faith to be an act of a sinner
humbled, wearied, laden, poor, self-condemned. Now, these be not all
sinners, but only some kind of sinners. Antinomians make faith an act of
a lofty Pharisee, of a vile person, applying with an immediate touch,
his hot, boiling, and smoking lusts to Christ's wounds, blood, merits,
without any conscience of a precedent commandment, that the person thus
believing should be humbled, wearied, laden, grieved for sin. I confess
this is hasty hot work, and maketh faith a stride, or one single step;
but it is a wanton, fleshly, and a presumptuous immediate work, to lay
hold on the promises of mercy and be saved. This is the absolute and
loose faith that Papists and Arminians slander our doctrine withal,
because we reject all foregoing merits, good works, congruous
dispositions, preparations moving God to convert this man, because he
hath such preparations, and to reject and to leave another man to his
own hardness of heart, because he hath no such payment in hand, by which
he may redeem and buy conversion, and the grace of effectual calling
especially, they building all upon a Babel of their own brick and clay,
that free will in all acts of obedience before or after conversion, is
absolutely indifferent; to do, or not do; to obey, or not obey; to
choose heaven and life, hell or death, as it pleaseth, as being free and
loosed from all predetermination, and foregoing motion, acting or bowing
of the will, coming either from God's natural, or his efficacious or
supernatural Providence. And so the Papist and Arminian on the one
extremity, enthroneth Nature, and extolleth proud merit, and abaseth
Christ and free grace. The Familist, libertine, and Antinomian, on a
contrary extremity and opposition, turn man into a block, and make him a
mere patient in the way to heaven; and, under pretence of exalting
Christ and free grace, set up the flesh, liberty, license, looseness on
the throne, and make the way to heaven on the other extremity, as broad,
as to comply with all presumptuous proud, fleshly men, walking after
their lusts, and yet, as they dream, believing in Christ.
2. The soul seeth Christ in all his
beauty, excellency, treasures of free grace, lapped up with the curtain
of many precious promises. Now, the natural man, knowing the literal
meaning and sense of the promises, seeth in them but words of gold, and
things afar off; and in truth, taketh heaven to be a beautiful and
golden fancy, and the gospel promises, a shower of precious rubies,
sapphires, diamonds, fallen out of the clouds only in a night dream; and
therefore jeers and scoffs at the day of judgment, and at heaven and
hell, (2 Pet. 3:1-3). For, can every capacity smell and taste the
unsearchable riches of Christ, the fullness of God in the womb of the
promises, by meditating on them, and sending them, in their sweetness
and heavenly excellency, down to the affections to embrace them? No, it
cannot be, that words, and sounds, and syllables, can so work upon a
natural spirit. If you show not to a buyer precious and rare
commodities, and bring them not before the sun, he shall never be taken
so with things hidden in your coffers, as to be in love with them, and
to sell all he hath and buy them. Preachers cannot, nay, it is not in
their power to make the natural spirit see the beauty of Christ. Paul
preacheth it, but the gospel is hidden from the blinded man, (2 Cor.
4:3). If I cannot communicate light, far less can I infuse love in the
soul of a lost man.
3. Literal knowledge of Christ, is not in
the power of natural men; but laying down this ground, that a Pharisee
lend eyes and ears to Christ and his miracles, the light of the gospel
worketh as a natural agent; for, make open windows in a house, whether
the indweller will, or he will not, the sun shall dart in day-light upon
the house. "Then cried Jesus, in the temple, as he taught, saying,
ye both know me, and ye know whence I am." (John 7:28.) And there
is a covering upon the spiritual senses and faculties of the soul of
natural men, that though eyes, and ears, and mind, and soul be opened,
yet it is as impossible for the natural spirit, or the preacher, to
remove that covering, as to remove a mountain, it being as heavy as a
mountain. And therefore, there be three bad signs in a natural
spirit:—
[1.] His light, which is but literal, is
a burden to him; it but vexeth him to know Christ; and if a beam of
light fall in on the apple of the eye of a natural conscience, it is as
a thorn between the bone and the flesh; the man shall not sleep, and yet
he is not sick. I doubt if either Ahithophel or Judas, wakened with
their light, could sleep.
[2.] Though a promise should dispute and
argue Christ in at the door of the natural man's soul, as the gospel, by
way of arguing, may do much, (John 7:28; 12:37; Heb. 11:1), the word of
the gospel being a rational convincing syllogism, as Christ saith,
"But now they have both seen and hated both me and my Father; (John
15:24); yet men may see the principles and the conclusion, and hate and
practically suspend the assent from the conclusion.
[3.] Conversion is feared as a great
danger by natural men, lest the promises put them on the pain, and the
main mill of godliness. For men do flee nothing but that which they
apprehend as evil, dangerous, and so the true object of fear. Now, when
Felix and Agrippa were both upon the wheels, I cannot say that
conversion formally was begun; yet materially it was. The one trembled,
and so was afraid, and fled, and did put Paul away till another time;
then he saw the danger of grace: (Acts 24:25,26:) the other saith, he
was half a Christian, (but it was the poorest half,) and "he arose
and went aside," (Acts 26:28,30,31). The natural spirit may be
convinced by the promises, and have the pap in his mouth, but dare not
milk out the sap and sweetness of the promises: "Their eyes they
have closed, lest at any time they should see with their eyes, and hear
with their ears, and should understand with their heart, and should be
converted, and I should heal them." (Matt. 13:15.) So is it, Isa.
6:10, in which words, conversion is feared as an evil, as is clear. So
one wretch said, he was once in danger to be catched, when a Puritan
preacher, as he said, 'was preaching with divine power, and evidence of
the Spirit of God.'
4. The true believer's soul hath
influence on the promises to act upon them, to draw comfort out of them:
"Unless thy law had been my delight, I should have perished in mine
affliction." (Psalm 119:92.) "My soul fainteth for thy
salvation: but I hope in thy word." (verse 81.) And there is a
reciprocation of actions here; the word acteth upon the soul again:
"This is my comfort in my affliction, for thy word hath quickened
me." (Psalm 119:50.) A dead faith is like a dead hand; a living
hand may lay hold on a dead hand: but there is no reciprocation of
actions here, the dead hand cannot lay hold on the living hand. So the
living wife may kiss and embrace the dead husband, but there can come no
reciprocal act of life from the dead husband to her, nor can he kiss and
embrace her. The promise may act upon the natural spirit, to move and
affect him; but he can put forth no vital act upon the promise to
embrace it, or lay hold upon the promise. But the promise acteth upon
the believer to quicken him, and he again putteth forth an act of life
to embrace the promise, and putteth forth on it some act of vital heat
to adhere and cleave to, and with warmness of heart to love it. And here
the case is as when the living hand layeth hold on the living hand; they
warm one another mutually, according to that which Paul saith, "But
I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am
apprehended of Christ Jesus." (Phil. 3:12.) Here be two living
things, Christ, and believing Paul, acting mutually one upon another;
there is a heart and a life upon each side.
5. Faith under fainting, and great
straits, can so improve the promise, as to put an holy and modest
challenge upon God. So afflicted David saith, "Remember the word
unto thy servant, upon which thou hast caused me to hope;" (Psalm
119:49;) and the Church, "Do not abhor us, for thy name's sake; do
not disgrace the throne of thy glory; remember, break not thy covenant
with us." (Jer. 14:21.) And the Lord commanded that this challenge
be put on him, "Put me in remembrance, let us plead together:"
(Isa. 43:26). Then he giveth Faith leave to plead on the contrary with
God. Natural spirits faint, and cannot so far own the promise, as to
plead with God by their right and just claim to the promise.
Now, the fourth point concerning faith
is, What grounds and warrants the sinner hath to believe?
4. It is an ordinary challenge made by
Satan, conscience, and the Arminian. Since Christ died not for all and
every one of mankind; and all are not chosen to life eternal, but only
those on whom the Lord is pleased, according to the free decree of
election to confer the grace of believing; what warrant can the unworthy
sinner have to believe, and to own the merits of Christ; for he knoweth
nothing of the election or reprobation that are hidden in God's eternal
mind? For answer,
1. It is no presumption in me to believe
in Christ before I know whether I be chosen to salvation or not; for
nothing can hinder me in this case to believe, save only presumption, as
the adversaries say. But it is not presumption; because presumption is,
when the soul is lifted up, and towered like an high building, as the
word is, (Hab. 2:4). And therefore, the lifted up man, (Gnophel),
is he that hideth himself in a high castle, as every unbelieving
presumptuous soul hath his own castle: the unbeliever hath either one
Ophel, or high tower, or other; either the king, friends, riches, or his
own wisdom, for his God on which he resteth, beside the God that the
Scripture recommendeth to us, as our only rock and soul-confidence. All
men on earth live, and do all moral actions, even when they go on in a
wicked life, as slaves of hell, to work all uncleanness with greediness,
upon some ground of faith, though a most false and counterfeit faith,
that they shall prosper by evil doing, and that sin shall make them
happy. So, "The wicked man praiseth the wicked man;" (Psalm
10:3); then he must believe that wickedness maketh men praiseworthy; and
this belief is but presumptuous confiding, and resting on a tower of his
own building. Now, to believe in Christ, though the decree of election
be not revealed to me, is no presumption; for I am not obliged, before I
believe, to know that I am elected to glory; it being one of God's
secrets not revealed in the word, but made manifest to me, after I
believe, and am sealed unto the day of redemption. And, therefore, in a
humble resting on Christ, though the soul know not his election, which
is not revealed in the word, in that condition there can be no pride nor
presumption; for he is self-wise and presumptuous, who intrudeth
"into those things that he hath not seen," (Colos. 2:18,)
knoweth not that which God hath revealed, and so which he ought to know.
Now the believer ought not to know that he is elected to glory, he being
yet an unbeliever; so his knowledge cannot deviate from a rule which
doth not oblige to conformity therewith, as with a rule. The portrait of
Cæsar doth not err from the sampler, because it is not like a bull or a
horse, because neither a bull nor a horse is the due sampler.
2. To warrant an unworthy humble sinner
to believe, there is no need of a positive warrant, or of a voice to
say, Thou art elected to glory, therefore believe. The word is near thee
in thy mouth; yea, there is a commandment laid upon the humbled sinner:
Come, O weary and laden sinner, to Christ, and be eased. Now, when the
wind bloweth sweetly and fair upon an humbled sinner who is elected to
glory, there goeth the spirit of the gospel along with this commandment:
and the word of commandment, and the spirit united in one, acteth and
worketh so upon the soul, that the humbled sinner cannot be deluded and
led on a rock of presumption; for this spirit joineth and closeth with
his spirit, and he, as one of Christ's sheep, knoweth this to be the
voice of Christ. I grant, when the same command of faith cometh to the
ears of a reprobate, he may, upon a false ground, believe, or rather
presume; he neither being rightly humbled and fitted for Christ; nor can
the reprobate know and discern the wind of the Spirit, breathing with
the command, and acting upon his spirit, because that wind neither can,
nor doth breathe upon any reprobate. And there is no need of any
positive warrant, to ascertain a child of God to believe, beside the
commandment of faith, enlivened and quickened with the Spirit going
along with it; for that command, so quickened, doth put such a real
stamp of an evident testimony that he hath claim to Christ, on whom the
Spirit and the command doth so act, that he seeketh no more any other
evidence to prove his claim to Christ, than the lamb needeth any
evidence to prove, that of ten hundred sheep, this only that offereth to
it her paps and milk, must be its dam or mother, and none of the rest of
the flock.
Objection. But how do I know, that
it is the Spirit that goeth along with the commandment of believing? It
may be a delusion.
Answer. (1.) Beside that a
deluding spirit, for the most part, doth not go every way along with the
word, if this spirit keep God's order, to work upon the humbled and
self-despairing sinner, who is willing to receive Christ upon his own
condition, it is not like to a deluding spirit; for if the word of
commandment to believe, and the spirit agree in one, it cannot be a
delusion; fancy leadeth no man to faith. (2.) When objects of life work
upon life, they cannot deceive, especially all the senses, hearing,
seeing, tasting, feeling, smelling. The excellency and sweetness of
Christ going along with the word, cannot be delusion: a man may imagine
that he seeth and heareth, and yet his senses may be deceived; but that
all the senses, especially all the spiritual senses, and that a man
imagineth that he liveth a natural life, and is dead, is rare.
3. Faith can stand upon one foot, even on
a general word; hence, this is a gospel word in the Prophets, which
requireth faith, Turn to the Lord for he is merciful, (Jer. 3:12;
Joel 2:13; John 4:2). And because a general promise received with
heart-adherence and confidence giveth glory to God; and if it be holden
forth to a humbled soul, who is now within the lists and bounds of
grace, and, for any thing that the person thus laden with sin knoweth on
the contrary, (for the secrets of election and reprobation belong to the
Lord) Christ mindeth and intendeth to him salvation, therefore he is to
believe.
4. This would be considered, that
unbelief breaketh with Christ first, before Christ break with the
unbeliever; and the elect of God findeth no more, nor any higher favour
in the kind of external means to open the Lamb's book of life, which is
sealed and closed with God's own hand, than the commandment of
believing. Now, when our Lord maketh offer of the kingdom of sons, to
slaves, and casteth his jewel of Christ offered in the gospel, in the
lap and bosom of a bastard, whatever be the Lord's secret decree and
purpose in so doing, the bastard is to take God at his word, and to
catch the opportunity of God's love in so far; and if he do it not, the
gospel offer to the reprobate being a treaty of peace, then the treaty
breaketh off first upon his side; for Christ cometh within a mile of
mercy, to meet the sinner, and the sinner cometh not the fourth part of
a mile, yea, not half a step of love and thankful obedience, to meet
Christ; and so, Christ killeth the unbeliever with the sweetness of the
preventing courtesy of offered mercy.
5. But if the sinner be wearied and
laden, and seeth, though through a cloud only, Christ only must help
and save, if not, he is utterly and eternally lost, What is there
upon Christ's part to hinder thee to believe, O guilty wretch? Oh,
(saith he,) I fear Christ only offereth himself to me, but he mindeth
no salvation to me.—Answer. Is not this to raise an evil
report and slander on the holy One of Israel? For Christ's offer is
really an offer, and in so far, it is real love, though it cannot infer
the love of election to glory, yet the total denial of this offer
openeth up the black seal of reprobation to heathens without the church.
And therefore it is love to thee, if thou be humbled for sin; (2.) And
have half an eye to the unsearchable riches of gospel mercy; (3.) And be
self-condemned; (4.) And have half a desire of Christ: thou mayest
expound love by love, and lay hold on the promise, and be saved. An
error of humble love to Christ, is no error.
That which is next, is a word of the
essential principle of true faith, and that is a proportionable measure
of grace, required in faith. (Phil. 1:29.) Men naturally imagine, that
faith is a work of nature; hence (1.) that speech of a multitude of
atheists, "I believe all my days, I believe night and day;"
but they never believe at all, who think and say, they believe always.
The Jews asserted, that they believed Moses always, and so oppose
themselves to the man altogether born in sin, (John 9:28,29, compared
with verse 34). But Christ told them, they neither believed the Messiah
nor Moses, (John 5:35-37.) Nature worketh always alike, and without
intermission or freedom. The floods always move, the fountain always
casts out streams, the fire always burneth, the lamb always fleeth from
the wolf; but the wind of the Spirit doth not always enact the soul to
believe. They are not in an ill case, who wrestle with unbelief, and
find the heart and take it, in the ways of doubting and terrors, as
feeling that believing is a motion up the mount, and somewhat violent.
Facile and con-natural acts cannot be supernatural acts of faith. It is
no bad sign, to complain of a low ebb sea, and of neither moonlight nor
starlight. (2.) It is impossible they can submit to give the glory of
believing to God, in whose heart there is a rotten principle destructive
of faith, and that is, an ambitious humour of seeking glory from men,
(John 5:44). Little faith there is in kings' courts; faith dwelleth not
in a high spirit. (3.) Such as take religion by the hand upon false and
bastard motives, as the summer of the gospel, and fame, ease, gain,
honour, cannot believe. A thorny faith is no faith, (Matt. 13:22). A
carnal man's faith must be true to its own principles, and must lie
level with externals; so as court, ease, the world, and its sweet
adjuncts, are a measuring line to a rotten-rooted faith neither longer
nor broader than time, it goeth not one span length within the lists of
eternity. (4.) Fancy cannot be faith. Such as have not gospel knowledge
of Christ, cannot believe; but must do as the traveler, who unawares
setteth his foot on a serpent in the way, and suddenly starteth backward
six steps for one, (John 6:66). So do they that fancy all the gospel to
be a carnal or a moral discourse. (5.) Those cannot have faith, in whose
heart the gospel lieth above ground, devils and sin having made the
heart hard like the summer streets, with daily treading and walking on
them. (Matt. 13:19.) A stony faith, or a faith that groweth out of a
stone, cannot be a saving faith. There is a heart that is a daily walk,
in which the devil (as it were) aireth himself. (6.) If Christ have
given the last knock at the door, and all in-passages be closed up, and
heart inspirations gone, there can be no more any sort of faith there,
(Eph. 4:19; 2 Tim. 4:2). The heart is like a dried-up arm in some; all
the oil in the bones is spent. (7.) Loose walking with greediness,
argues, that hell hath taken fire on the outworks of the soul. Hell in
the hands and tongue, as in the out-wheels, must argue hell and unbelief
in the heart and the in-wheels. [1.] Loose believers go to heaven by
miracles; I dare go to hell for a man, if such a one go to heaven, who
liveth profanely, and saith, he hath a good heart within. [2.] The going
in ways of blood, extortion, covetousness, idolatry, belieth the decree
of election to glory. Grace leadeth no man to the east, with his face
and motion close to the west. [3.] This way of working by contraries is
not God's way: God can work by contraries; but he will not have us to
work by contraries. There is some heaven of holiness in the court-gate
to the heaven of happiness. (8.) Faith overlooketh time, (Heb. 11:10).
Abraham looked for another city. Faith in Moses was great with child of
heaven; (verse 25,) he had an eye to the recompence of reward. Eternity
of glory is the birth of faith. Oh! we look not to the declining of our
sun; it is high afternoon of our piece of day; eleven hours are gone,
and the twelfth hour is on the wheels, and I see not my own grey-hairs.
It is upon the margin and borders of night, and I know not where to
lodge. We are like the man swimming through broad waters, and he knoweth
not what is before him; he swimmeth through deeper and deeper parts of
the river, and at length, a cramp and a stitch cometh on arms and legs,
and he sinketh to the bottom, and drowns. We swim through days, weeks,
months, years, winters, and are daily deeper in time; till at length
death bereave us of strength of legs and arms, and we sink over head and
ears in eternity. Oh! who, like the sleepy man, is loosing his clothes,
and putting off the garments of darkness, and would gladly sleep with
Christ? Men are close-buttoned, and like day-men, when it is dark night.
It is fearful to lie down with our day-clothes, (Job 20:11). Sin is a
sad winding-sheet. Oh! what believer saith, I would have a suit of
clothes for the high court and throne, to be an assay, to see how a suit
of glory would become me?—This much for faith. |
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