The Trial & Triumph of Faith
Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Sermon 27
THE TRIAL
AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH.
SERMON 27
"And when she was come to her
house, she found the devil gone out and her daughter laid upon the bed."—MARK
7:30.
BECAUSE I haste to an end, and shall not
now refute the dream of Papists, from this collecting the lawfulness of
their bastard confirmation, and of confirming children by the unhallowed
blessing of the prelate; only observe the case of the child. Mark saith,
Beblemenen epi tes klines, Cast, in a violent manner, in a bed:
for this is not to be a bed of rest and security, as some Papists
collect, but to express how violent Satan is in his last farewell, as
when he is to be cast out; "When the possessed child is brought to
Jesus, and when he saw him, straightway the spirit tare him, and he fell
on the ground, and wallowed, foaming." (Mark 9:20.) The devil and
the unclean spirits are not thrown out of a person, or land, but they
must rage and foam.
1. The Lord saith, "I will cut off
the names of idols out of the land, and they shall be no more
remembered; and I will cause the prophets, and the unclean spirits, to
pass out of the land;" (Zech. 13:2;) but this cannot be done but
with great violence; the father and the mother shall thrust through
"with a sword the false prophet," even their own son, before
he be put out of the land, (verse 3.) The devil will not be removed
without blood, sweating, and great violence. When the unclean spirits of
men given to curious arts, and the idol, Diana, are preached down in
Ephesus, "That whole great city was full of wrath, and they cry
out, Great is Diana of the Ephesians! And the whole city was filled with
confusion." (Acts 19:18,19.) When Christ cometh to the crown and
the throne, Jews and Gentiles, the kings and rulers of the earth, Herod
and Pilate, with the Gentiles and the people of Israel, are gathered
together, (Acts 4:25-27). The word, Psalm 2:1, (Rageshu,) it is,
to make a great tumult, as a furious multitude gathered together, that
maketh a noise as the noise of a troubled sea. Therefore some, not
without reason, say, the sons of Zebedeus are called Benairegesci, Sons
of Thunder. Luke, (Acts 2,) useth the word after the seventy ephryaxan
which Budeus expoundeth of fierce and wild horses. And certainly
Christ is crowned upon Mount Zion, with garments rolled in blood; this
is a spoiling of, and a triumphing over principalities and powers.
Christ dyed the black cross with red blood, when he performed this noble
act of redemption, (Col. 2:14,15). So, when Christ entereth in any soul
to dwell, there he must first bind the devil, and then spoil his house,
(Matt. 12:29). What wonder is it, that multitudes of heresies and sects,
and many blasphemous and false ways arise now, when the Lord is to build
up Zion? Satan, when Christ is to sail, and his kingdom a coming
kingdom, (as we pray,) raiseth up storms and winds in the broad lake of
brimstone, to drown the church of God. Christ hath not fair weather when
he goeth to sea, (Matt. 8:23,24,) yet his journey is lawful. When Christ
is upon acts of his priesthood, and standeth at the great high altar,
with his censer of gold, to offer up the prayers of the saints to God,
he casteth fire with the same censer down upon the earth, and there be
then thunderings, lightnings, and earthquakes; and hence followeth
terrible judgments upon the earth, as hail, fire mingled with blood, and
a mountain burning with fire, and the third part of the sea becomes
blood; and a clear burning star, like a lamp, called Wormwood, making
the third part of the waters bitter, doth fall from heaven, which is as
much as, when Christ is upon acts of mercy toward his people, pestilent
heresies of the popish clergy, and others, darken the third part of the
sun and moon, that is, of the light of the gospel, (Rev. 8:1-12). Even
as when our Lord Jesus standeth to intercede for the people, and to pray
for fallen Jerusalem, which is as a fire-brand plucked out of the fire,
Satan standeth at his right hand, his working hand, to hinder him,
(Zech. 3:1-3).
2. This resolveth to many their state.
Many are free of the devil. ‘I thank God,’ saith one, ‘I know not
Satan, nor any of his works: I have peace; Satan did never tear me, nor
cause me to fall to the earth, nor doth he torment me.’ But this is a
fearful condition: (1.) It is an argument of a false peace. When the
strong man is within, the house is in peace. Not to be tempted of the
devil, is the greatest temptation out of hell; and if there be any
choice of devils, a raging and a roaring devil, is better than the calm
and sleeping devil. When the devil is within, he sleepeth and is silent,
and the house or soul he is in is silent, and there is a covenant with
Death and Hell, (Isaiah 28:15). Now, hell keepeth true to a natural man
for a time; cessation of arms between the soul and Satan, is security
for a time, but it is not peace. The devil's war is better than the
devil's peace. Carnal hypocrisy is a dumb and silent thing, but it is
terrible to be carried to hell without any noise of feet. The wheels of
Satan's chariot are oiled with carnal rest, and they go without rattling
and noise. The devil carrieth few to hell with shouting and crying;
suspect dumb holiness: when the dog is kept out of doors he howls to be
in again. The covenant of Satan to Eve, ("sin and you shall not
die,") standeth with all men by nature, till Jesus Christ break
peace between us and Satan. (2.) Contraries meeting, such as hot and dry
fire, and cold and moist water, they conflict one with another; and
where Satan findeth a sanctified heart, he tempteth with much
importunity; as at one time, Christ findeth three mighty temptations,
and he departed from him only for a little time, (Luke 4:13). Where
there is most of God and of Christ, there, there are strong injections
and firebrands cast in at the windows, so as some [persons] of much
faith have been tempted to doubt, "Is there a Deity that ruleth
all; and where is he? We see him not." Another is often assaulted
with this, "Is there a heaven for saints? Is there a hell for
devils and wicked men? We never spoke with a messenger come from any of
these two countries." A third is troubled with this, "Such a
business I have expede, whether God will or not." The flower of the
soul, the high lamp of the light of the mind, is frequently darkened
with foggy and misty spirits coming up from the bottomless pit, and
darkening any beams and irradiations of light that come from the Sun of
Righteousness. Faith is more assaulted than any other grace: Satan
shaketh other graces; but this is winnowed between heaven and earth,
(Luke 22:31,32). Satan's first arrow shot at Christ, laboureth to put a
terrible if upon his light; "If thou be the Son of
God." It is as much as, if God be God, if the Son of God be the Son
of God. It is not the evidence and certainty of fundamentals, nor the
strength of grace, that privilegeth souls from Satan's shafts. Strength
of saving light putteth the saints often under the gunshot of Satan,
that he may find a shot at them: there is only law-surety against
temptations, up in heaven, when you are over score out of time, within
eternity's lists; never till then.
3. Not to be troubled thus, argueth a
house not watched. The gates are open night and day, as the gates of
hell, that want key and lock; and the soul so secure, that the person
seeth not what devils come in, what go out. But the watch set by God's
fear, examineth all messengers that come in, all motions, all
suggestions, all angels white and black, all rises, falls, ebbings and
flowings of love, joy, desire, fear, sorrow, come under search and
scrutiny; "Whence come ye? from heaven or hell?" It is time of
war with the saints in this life; and then, all cities keep watch, and
strangers without a pass are examined, searched, and tried, what
correspondence they have with the enemy.
4. God's way of hardening by Satan, is
often mysterious, silent, dumb, and speaketh not. "For judgment I
came into this world," (John 9:39); but what a judgment!—such as
walketh in the dark, and killeth in a midnight sleep, that "they
that see may be made blind." This judgment speaketh not. Oh,
terrible! God hath put out the man's two eyes; but how, or when, he
cannot tell. The nerves and eye-strings of the man's soul are broken;
but there was not a crack, nor any noise heard, when God snapped them in
two pieces. Christ came when the man was sleeping, and his serjeant, the
devil, with him, and put his hand on his heart, and gave the lock, the
sprents, and wards of the heart a thraw and a crook, and all the keys in
heaven and earth cannot shut or open his heart. And this was done
without noise or pain;—the man was never put to his bed for the
business; the conveyance of the business was spiritual, but invisible.
Oh, sleeping world! awake out of your rotten and false peace. Oh, the
Lord bindeth men, and they cry not! and the devil bindeth many and they
cry not. Pharaoh knew not when his heart was hardened; the conscience
saw it not; even as a stone groweth in the bladder without our sense of
it: the business was transacted without one cry, or any witness. Carnal
hellish security is dumb-born. 'Let my child sleep,' saith the devil,
'and awake him not till the heat of the furnace of hell melt away his
false peace.' Why? But men may be deluded, having no bands in their
death, as they lived deluded. Wrath and justice are moving to many souls
sleeping in death, without noise of feet; the sword of God is crying to
souls without any voice; the wheels of the fiery chariots of God's
indignation are moving over slain men in Scotland and England, without
the rattling or prancing of the horses. O pity!—a tempest, a devil
comes, and steals away the man's soul and his conscience out of him in
the night, and he knoweth not. Christ saith, 'Silence, waken him not,
till he be over ears in the lake;' and Satan saith, 'Waken him not, till
I be sure of him!' A dumb judgment is twice a judgment. |
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