The Trial & Triumph of Faith
Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Sermon 22
THE TRIAL
AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH.
SERMON 22
NOW, a word of a strong and great faith,
and withal, of a weak and fainting faith. For the most, I go not from
the text, to find out the ingredients of a great faith.
1. A strong praying and a crying faith,
is a great faith. So must Christ's faith have been, who prayed with
strong cries and tears. Strong faith maketh sore sides in praying, as
this woman prayed with good will: there is an efficacious desire to be
rid of a sinful temptation, as Paul prayed thrice to be freed of the
prick in the flesh. Their faith is weak, who (1.) dare not pray against
some idol sins; or, (2.) If they pray, it is but gently, with a wish not
to be heard.
2. The woman's crying,—her instant
pleading in faith, yea, 1, above the disciples' care for her; yea, above
Christ's seeming glooms, who denied her to be his, who reproached her as
a dog, argueth great grace, great humility, with strong adherence; and
so, great faith.
2. For faith saileth sometimes with a
strong tide and a fair wind; according as the moon hath an aspect on the
sun, so is it full or not full. When the wheels are set right to the
sun, the clock moveth and goeth right. The fairer and more clear sight
that faith hath of Christ, the stronger are the acts of faith. It cannot
be denied, that faith hath a good and an ill day: because grace is
various, it is no strong proof that it is not grace.
3. To put faith in all its parts in
light, in staying on Christ, in affiance, in adherence, in
self-diffidence, in submissive assenting, forth in all its acts, and to
lift the soul all off the earth, requireth Christ's high spring-tide: it
is not easy to put all the powers that do act in faith afloat,
especially because a strong faith is a great vessel; and therefore, more
of Christ's tide is required for weighing anchor and launching forth.
The wings of a sparrow should not raise an eagle off the earth; the
limbs of a pismire could not suit with a horse or an elephant: there is
need of a strong winged soul to believe, especially against hope.
4. To believe Christ, when midnight
speaketh blackness of wrath, requireth eyes and light of miracles; yea,
it is a greater work than the very miracles of Christ, (John 14:12). But
especially when Christ is absent, it is with the soul, as with a clock,
in which the wheels are broken, the passes or weights are fallen down.
Objection 1. But I aim and
endeavour to believe, but can do nothing, and, without His grace, my
violence to heaven is without fruit.
Answer. It is true the Semipelagians'
halving of the work of believing, and the glory of it, between
co-operating grace and [free-]will, as if nature could divide the spoil
with the grace of Christ, is damnable pride; but it is God's way to
halve the work between Christ within, in regard of the habit of grace,
and Christ without, in regard of the assisting grace of God: "While
he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and ran, and fell on his
neck, and kissed him." (Luke 15:20.) Christ rewardeth not nature's
aims with grace, nor doth he make gifts the work, and grace the hire, or
nature's labour the race, and grace the garland. But he rewardeth grace
with grace, and that of mere grace, (John 15:3). He hath in his decree
and promise marshaled such and such acts of grace to stand beside
others, and that by covenant: and therefore believe, that you may
believe; pray, that you may pray.
Objection 2. But who can act
saving grace, without the blowing of saving grace? I can no more do it,
than I can command the west wind to blow when I list.
Answer. I grant all, nor do I
speak this to insinuate, that free-will sitteth at the helm, or that
grace sleepeth, and will waketh; the contrary is an evident truth. Yet
give me leave to say, there is odds between blowing of the wind, and
making ready the sails. Though seamen cannot make wind, nor is it their
fault to want wind, yet can they prepare the sails, and hoist them up to
welcome the wind. We cannot create the breathings of the Spirit; yet are
we to miss these breathings? and this is a fitting of the sails, and we
are to join with the Spirit's breathings. Christ bindeth up the winds in
his garment, so as, if one look of faith, or half a spiritual groan,
should ransom me from hell, I have it not in stock; therefore hath God
ordered such a dispensation, that in all stirrings of grace, the first
spring, Principium motus, the fountain-rise of calling Jesus
Lord, shall be up in heaven at the right hand of the Father; and the
far end of any gracious thought, is as far above me, as the heart of
Christ, who is in the heaven of heavens, is above the earth, though ye
think nothing of it. And better Christ be my steward, and that the
gospel be at the end of all acts of grace, as that Christ be freewill's
debtor.—More reason that Christ be creditor, than debtor to his
redeemed ones. (2.) I know the child of God may be so far forth lazy, as
that it is his fault that the wind bloweth not, if we speak of a moral
cause. (3.) It is his part to join with the working of assisting grace:
"Whereunto I also labour, striving according to his working, which
worketh in me mightily." (Col. 1:29.) The Lord hath, by free
promise, laid holy bands on himself, to give predeterminating grace to
his own children to persevere to the end, and to prevent apostacy and
heinous sins inconsistent with saving faith; (1 Cor. 1:8; Jude 24, Jer.
32:39-41; Is. 54:10; 59:21,22; Luke 22:32; 1 John 2:1,2,) yet so as he
hath reserved a liberty to himself, to co-operate with them in
particular acts, as it shall be their sin, not his withdrawing of grace
that maketh them guilty, to the end we know we are in graces debt, in
all good and supernatural acts. So (2 Chron. 32:31,) Hezekiah was tried
of God in the business of the king of Babylon's ambassadors, that the
king might see, that he could not walk to heaven on clay legs, or by his
own strength. And the reason is clear: (1.) God cannot make a promise of
contributing this bowing and predeterminating grace, but in a way
suitable to free grace; for God cannot change grace unto natural debt,
it remaining grace, for so it should be grace, and no grace, which is a
contradiction. (2.) The Lord hath reserved liberty to himself in this
promise, that in this or that particular act (the omission whereof may
consist with perseverance in grace), he may contribute his influence of
grace, or not contribute it. So David hath not actual grace at his will
and nod, to eschew adultery and murder as he pleaseth; nor Peter to
decline an evil hour, when he shall be tempted to forswear his Saviour
Christ; nor hath Heman in his hand, (Psalm 88,) nor the deserted church
power, (Psalm 77,) to pray, and believe, and rejoice in the salvation of
God, at the disposition of free-will: but the key is up in the hands of
the kingly Intercessor, at the right hand of the Father, that must open
the heart. It is far to fetch, as far as the heaven of heavens, to make
wind and sailing to Christ-ward; therefore, (3.) Seasons of acts of
grace to believe, to walk in any warmness of love to Christ and his
members, are fruits of royal liberty and free grace. Who hath the key of
the house of wine, to stay the soul with the flagons and apples of love?
Certainly, it is the king himself, that taketh the spouse into his
banqueting house, (Cant. 2:4). And yet, so as the omission of all
supernatural duties, yea, our laziness in the manner of doing, our
failings and sins, are imputed to ourselves, and not to the not blowing
of the wind of the Holy Spirit, nor to the want, of the efficacious
motion of the Spirit, as Libertines teach, with Arminians;
for we so sin through the want of the motions of efficacious grace, as
through the want of a physical, not of a moral cause; and so, as we are
most willing to want that influence, and so are guilty before the Lord.
(4.) God hath reasons strong and
convincing why he worketh thus; [1.] It suiteth not Grace to work by
engagement; the spirit of the living creatures is within every wheel of
Christ, that it must move from an inward principle: the motion of saving
grace, is Christ's heart wheeled about by itself, and by no foreign
cause without itself: love worketh as love without boon or bribe from
men or angels. Grace is both wages and work, the race and the gold to
itself. [2.] God delights to have men and angels his debtors. Grace
holdeth an open and a free inn, with all the dainties that Christ can
make, to all comers and goers, for nothing but thanks, and heartily
welcome. Grace maketh no gain of my work. The sweating of angels, and of
the thousand thousands that sing up the glory of Christ before the high
throne, is no income to Christ's rent. Grace would not be grace, if it
could traffic, or buy, or sell with a creature. Angels and men stand in
the books of free grace for millions of borrowed sums. Christ's blood
and deep love may be praised, but never recompensed. Christ's love hath
filled this world, and the new paradise with debtors; and angels can
neither read, nor sum, nor cast up the accounts of free grace. [3.] That
we cannot be masters of one good act, without His preventing grace,
evidenceth what nature is, and maketh grace both my staff and my convoy
in at heaven's gates; nature and free-will must stoop and do homage to
Christ. There is a glory active, and a glory passive, as there is also
grace active and passive; free-will is active under grace, and passive
also; and therefore, grace and mercy is to the saints and upon the
saints: nature emptieth its lamp upon the golden pipe, the rich grace of
the Mediator, and free-will moveth and runneth, but not but as moved,
driven, and breathed upon by free grace. But as concerning glory, it
hath a more eminent and noble relation: glory shall be on the saints as
a garment, as a crown, for they shall be glorified. But no glory to the
saints, but only to the Lamb, to the flower of the glory of glory,
Jesus, the celebrated, eminent, most high and adored Prince of the kings
of the earth. And, therefore, there is room and place left for sin and
shame to free-will in the business of predeterminating grace, that
nature can but sigh and sin, and grace sing, and be spotless and
innocent. Christ so draweth, as we sin in not being drawn; Christ so
taketh and allureth, that it is our guilt that we are not taken and
overcome with the smell of the King's ointments. So is sin the field out
of which springeth the rose, the flower of free and unhired grace. Sin
must go with us as near to heaven, as to the threshold of the gates,
that the sinner may halt and crook, when he moveth his foot on the
threshold-stone of glory; that so, pardoning grace may enter the new
city with us. [4.] The Lord will have us take to heaven with us, a book
of the psalms and praises of grace, that in that land we may extol and
advance free grace, and may hold the book in our hand all the way, and
sigh, and weep, and sing, and adore the Saviour of free grace, and may
take grace's bill in our hand into heaven with us. Oh, how sweet to be
grace's drowned and over-burdened debtor! It is good here to borrow
much, and profess inability, for eternity, to pay, that heaven may be a
house full of broken men, who have borrowed millions from Christ, but
can never repay more, than to read and sing the praises of grace's free
bill, and say, Glory, glory, to the Lamb that sitteth upon the throne
for evermore: praising for ever in heaven, must be in lieu of paying
debt. {1.} God is not behind, nor wanting to the gracious soul, for
there is a promise of grace here. {2.} There is an intercession at hand,
and that more mighty now, than at Christ's first ascension, and shall be
more mighty when all Israel shall be converted. {3.} There is a stirring
required in a gracious spirit, but with sense of nature's weakness, so
as he is "to arise, and be doing, and the Lord shall be with
him;" and he is so to blow upon the coals, as if he could do his
alone, though not without the faith of dependence upon an immediate
acting from heaven.
Objection 3. Adam, yet sinless,
was to believe weakness and sin in himself, before he sinned.
Answer. Not so, but he was to have
that which, by analogy, answereth to sense of sin, that is, a sinless
consciousness and solicitude, that if God should withdraw his stirring
and predeterminating influence of corroborating him to will and to do
(you may call it grace), he should fall; and that legs in paradise,
without actual assistance, could not bear the bulk and weight of Adam's
con-natural and constant walking with God, that Adam might know, before
he was a debtor to justice, that he had need of mercy, or the free
goodness of a surety, such as Jesus Christ, to prevent debt, no less
than to pay debt; even as angels are debtors to Christ their head, for
redemption from all possible sins, no less than we are (though the
degrees of altitude of grace varieth much), the obliged underlings of
such a bountiful landlord, for redemption from actual misery.
3. That is a great faith, that is not
broken with a temptation, but (1.) Taketh strength from a temptation; as
some run more swiftly after a fall, that they may recompense their loss
of time; and that is great faith, that argueth from a temptation, as
this woman doth. (2.) That is Job's great faith, (chap. 2:3). "That
he still holdeth fast his integrity;" the word (Hazak) is,
to hold with strength and power: he keepeth fast, and with violence, his
innocency, and faith maketh him stronger than he was. The word is used,
(Psalm 147:13), for making stronger the bars of ports. And it is Job's
praise, (chap. 1:22,) "In all this Job sinned not, nor charged God
with folly." (3.) It is a strong faith in this woman, that, in a
manner, conquers Omnipotency by believing. Yea, Satan, winds, fire from
heaven, wife, Sabeans, yea, apprehended wrath, cannot prevail with Job
to subdue his faith: in all he standeth by this, "Though the Lord
should slay me, I will trust in him." (Job 15:13.) It is great
faith to be at holding and drawing with God; and yet believe and pray,
(Hosea 12:3; Gen. 32:26,) and not let the Lord alone, nor give him any
rest, (Isa. 62:6,7,) till he answer. As suppose thy prayers were never
heard, and the acts of believing were but darts thrown at heaven and the
throne without any effect; yet because prayer and believing are acts of
honouring God, though they never benefit thee, it argueth strong grace,
and so great faith, that it can be said, there be ten years, twenty
years of reiterated acts of faith, and prayers of such a man lying up
before the throne, yea, in Christ the High Priest's bosom. Let God make
of my faith what he will, yet am I to believe: continued believing is
Christ's due, though it should never be to me gain of comfort or
success. That is a weak man who is thrown down on his back with a blast
of wind, or made to stagger with the cast of a straw, or a feather. The
temporary faith is in this seen to be soft, that it is broken with
persecution: "When the sun riseth anon, he is offended, and
withereth quickly." (Matt 13:21.) Some spirit of soft clay for a
scratch with a pin on his credit, casteth away all his confidence,
despaireth, and hangeth himself as Ahithophel. Such a temptation would
not once draw blood of a strong believer. Straws, and feathers, and flax
do quickly take fire, and are made ashes in a moment; but not so gold:
there is bones and metal in strong faith; so the martyr's faith, that
could not be broken with torments, is proved to be a great Faith, Heb.
11:35, Etympanisthesan, Their bodies were racked out as a drum,
and beaten to death after racking, and they would not accept a
deliverance. Why? Faith looked to a better resurrection. He who sweateth,
panteth up the brow of the mount after Christ, and carrieth death on his
back, must have this strong faith, that Christ is worthy of tortures. A
strong faith can bear hell on its shoulders, the grave and the sorrows
of death, and not crack, nor be broken, (Psalm 18:4-6; 116:3,4).
4. That faith is argued to be strong,
that hath no light of comfort, but walketh in darkness upon the margin
and borders of a hundred deaths, and yet stays upon the Lord, (Isa.
50:11). So this woman had no comfort, nor ground of sense of comfort
from Christ, except rough answers and reproaches; yet she believeth, and
so, must be strong in the faith, (Psalm 3:6). David's faith standeth
straight without a crook, when ten thousand deaths are round about him;
(and Psalm 23:4,) he feareth no ill, when he walks in the cold and dark
valley of the shadow of black death. Heman, (Psalm 88:7,) "Thy
wrath lieth hard on me, thou hast afflicted me with all thy waves:"
then, in his sense, God could do no more to drown him; not waves, but
all waves, all God's waves were on him, and above him; yet (verse 9,)
"Lord, I have called daily upon thee." Then he believed daily.
Hezekiah's comforts are at a hard pinch, (Isa. 39:14,) "Mine eyes
fail with looking upward, O Lord, I am oppressed;" yet praying,
argueth, believing, "Lord, undertake for me." We must think
Christ's sense of comforts was ebb and low when he wept, cried, (Heb.
5:7,) and was forsaken of God; yet then his faith is doubled, as the
cable of an anchor is doubled, when the storm is more than
ordinary,—"My God, my God." David chideth his cast-down soul
when there is no glimpse of comfort, with strong faith, "Hope thou
in God, for I shall yet praise him." (Psalm 42:11.) In swimming
well, the less natural helps to hold up the chin and head, the greater
wave, if the swimmer be carried strongly through, as it were in despite
of the stream, there is the more art. Art may counterbalance strength,
and sometimes wisdom is better than strength. The less comfort, if yet
you believe at midnight, when the spirit is overwhelmed, the more is the
art of believing. When an inward principle is weak, we help it with
externals. That the child must be allured with rewards, as with apples,
a penny, or the like, it is because his sight and desire of the beauty
and excellency of learning and arts, is but weak or nothing at all.
Sense and comforts are external subsidies and helps to faith, and those
that cannot believe but upon feelings, and sense of the sweetness of
comforts, are hence argued to have weak and broken inclinations and
principles of faith. The more freeness and ingenuity of spirit that is
in believing, the more strength of faith; for that is most connatural,
that hath least need of hire. You need not give hire, reward, or bribes
to the mother's affection, to work upon her, and cause her to love her
child: love can hardly be hired; nature is stronger than rewards or any
externals. Comforts are but the hire of serving of God, and the results
of believing in a sad condition.
There be some cautions here that are
considerable. (1.) God leadeth some strong ones to heaven, whose
affections are soft as David's were, (Psalms 35:13; 119:25,28; 136:53;
6:6). And yet faith is strong, (Psalm 22:1). God possibly immediately
working upon the assenting, or believing faculty, leaving the affections
to their own native disposition. (2.) God useth some privileged
dispensations, so as a strong believer shall doubt upon no good ground,
(Psalm 116:11), God so disposing, that grace may appear to be grace, and
the man but flesh. (3.) Softness of affection, and light of comfort, may
by accident concur with strong acts of believing; for, with these, in
many, there is little light, much faith, and they should, without those
apples given to children, strongly believe; and God, to confirm his own,
of mere indulgence sweeteneth affections.
But if God give comforts, ordinarily it
is a sort of indulgence of grace, or the grace of grace. It is true,
rejoicing falleth under a gospel commandment, (Phil. 4:4,) yet so, as
God hath not tied the sweet of the comfort of believing to believing,
that you may know its strength of faith, that is, the principle of
strong faith, as intense and strong habits make strong acts. God keepeth
some in a sad condition all their life, who are experienced believers,
and they never feel the comfort of faith till the splendour of glory
glance on their eyes; as one experienced believer, kept under sadness
and fear for eighteen years, at length came to this 'I enjoy and
rejoice, with joy unspeakable and glorious;' but he lived not long
after. Another living in sadness all his life, died with comforts
admirable. And (3.) Let this be put as a case of conscience, why divers
believing, and joying much in God's salvation all their life, yet die in
great conflicts, and, to beholders, with little expression of comfort
and feeling; as divers of the saints die. Certainly, God, [1.] walketh
in liberty here. [2.] He would not have us to limit the breathings of
the Holy Ghost to jump with our hour of dying. [3.] We may make an idol
of a begun heaven, as if it were more excellent than Christ. To
conclude, little evidence, much adherence, speaketh a strong faith. |
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