The Trial & Triumph of Faith
Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Sermon 9
THE TRIAL
AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH.
SERMON 9
"O LORD, thou Son of David."
The one word "O Lord," holdeth forth Christ's Godhead; the
other, "Son of David," holdeth forth his manhood. Here is the
perfection of our Mediator, in that he is the substantial covenant, and
Emmanuel, God with us, or God us, in a personal union; the substantial
marriage and alliance between the two houses of heaven and earth; God
and clay. (2.) "He is not ashamed to call them brethren,"
(Heb. 2:11). And why would he take part of flesh and blood, but because
he would be a child of our house? (Verse 14.) (3.) He would be of blood
to us: not only come to the sick, and to our bed-side, but would lie
down and be sick, taking on him sick clay, and be, in that condition of
clay, a worm and not a man, that he might pay our debts; and would
borrow a man's heart and bowels to sigh for us, man's eyes to weep for
us, his spouse's body, legs, and arms, to be pierced for us; our earth,
our breath, our life, and soul, that he might breathe out his life for
us; a man's tongue and soul to pray for us: and yet, he would remain
God, that he might perfume the obedience of a High Priest with heaven,
and give to justice blood that chambered in the veins and body of God,
in whom God had a personal lodging.
USE 1. Oh, what love! Christ would not
intrust our redemption to angels, to millions of angels; but he would
come himself, and in person suffer; he would not give a low and a base
price for us clay. He would buy us with a great ransom, so as he might
over-buy us, and none could over-bid him in his market for souls. If
there had been millions of more believers, and many heavens, without any
new bargain his blood should have bought them all, and all these many
heavens should have smelled one rose of life; Christ should have been
one and the same tree of life in them all. Oh, we under-bid, and
undervalue that Prince of love, who did overvalue us; we will not sell
all we have to buy him; he sold all he had, and himself too, to buy us.
USE 2. What an incomparable thing must
the Mediator God-man be? There is no fair creature, no excellent one,
but there is a piece of nothing, and creature baseness and creature
vanity in it; even a thing of blood, to the mother-nothing of the
creation of God. There is no rose, but it hath a briar growing out of
it, except the rose of Sharon, that flower of the field, not planted
with hands; the Son without a father, "and who shall declare his
generation?" A rose that should smell, and cast out odours for a
mile of earth, or for ten miles, could draw to it many beholders; but if
it should smell for the bounds of the half of the earth, it should be
more admirable. The flower that sprang out of the root of Jesse, spreads
his beauty, and the odours of his myrrh through heaven and earth. Could
the darkness of hell stand and look on the face of the sun, blackness of
darkness should be better seen. But convene all the little pieces of the
creation; summon before Christ, fair angels, all the troops of the
sinless glorified spirits; the broad skies, fair heavens, lightsome
stars; all the delicious roses, flowers, gardens, meadows, forests,
seas, mountains, birds; all the excellent sons of Adam, as they should
have been in the world of innocency, and let them all stand in their
highest excellency before Jesus Christ; the matchless and transcendent
glory of that great ALL should turn the worlds all into pure nothing.
What wonder, then, that this same Lord Jesus be the delight, and heaven
of all in it? The Lamb hath his throne in the midst thereof. (Rev.
7:17). "And they shall see his face," (Rev. 22:4.) They do
nothing else, but stare, gaze, and behold his face for ages, and are
never satisfied with beholding: suppose they could wear out their eyes
at the eye-holes in beholding God, they should still desire to see more.
To see Him face to face, hath a great deal more in it, than is
expressed; words are short garments to the thing itself. Your now sinful
face to his holy face, your piece clay face to his uncreated
soul-delighting face, is admirable. We do not praise Christ, and hold
out his virtues to men and angels. The creatures, as the heaven, sun,
moon, are God's debtors, and they owe him glory: but men, who have
understanding and tongues, are God's factors and chamberlains, to gather
in the rent of glory and praise to God. The heavens do indeed
"declare the glory of God," (Psalm 19:1,) but they are but
dumb musicians; they are the harp, which of itself can make no music:
the creatures borrow man's mouth and tongue, to speak what they have
been thinking of God, and his excellency, these five thousand years.
Now, all the glory of God, and the glory of the creatures, are made new
by Christ, (Rev. 21:5,) and made friends with God. (Col. 1:20,) and are
in a special manner in the Mediator Christ; he is, Apaugasma tes
doxes, "the irradiation or brightness of the glory, and the
character or express image of his person," (Heb. 1:3). All
creatures, by Adam's sin, lost their golden lustre, and are now
vanity-sick, like a woman travailing in birth, (Rom. 8:22). All the
creatures by sin, did less objectively glorify God, than they should
have done, if sin had never been in the world; and so, they were at a
sort of variance and division with God. "And it pleased the Father
in Christ, Apokatallaxai ta panta, to make friendship between God
and all things," (Col. 1:20,) that is to confirm angels, to
reconcile man, to restore the creatures to be more illustrious objects
of his glory. Now, the income of the rents of glory is more due to
Christ, and the debt the greater, in that Christ hath made all things
new; and why should we not, in the name of sun, moon, earth, heaven,
which are all loosed from the arrestment of vanity by Christ, and in the
name of angels and of saints redeemed, hold forth the praises and the
glory of God in Christ? Pay, pay what you owe to Christ, O, all
creatures! but especially, you redeemed ones.
USE 3. If Christ the Mediator be so
excellent a person, we are to seek our life the gospel-way in Christ. We
often conceive legal or law thoughts of Christ, when we conceive the
Father just, severe, and Christ his Son to be more meek and merciful;
but the text calleth him Lord, and so, that same God with the Father;
nor hath Christ more of law, by dying to satisfy the law, nor is he more
merciful than the Father, because he and the Father are one. There are
not two infinite wills, two infinite mercies, one in the Father, another
in the Son; but one will, one mercy in both; and we owe alike love and
honour to both, though there be an order in loving God, and serving him
through Christ.
USE 4. Infinite love, and infinite
majesty, concur both in Christ. Love and majesty in men, are often
contrary to one another, and the one lesseneth the other; in Christ, the
infinite God breatheth love in our flesh. (1.) If we see but little of
Christ, we know not well the gospel spirit. We rest much on duties, to
go civil saints to heaven; but the truth is, there be no moral men and
civilians in heaven, they be all deep in Christ who are there. We are
strangers to Christ and believing. (2.) The spirit of a redeemed one can
hardly hate a redeemed one, or be bitter against them; Christ in one
saint, cannot be cruel to Christ in another saint. (3.) Christ cannot
lose his love, or cast it away: the love of Christ is much for
conquering hearts; "his chariot is bottomed and paved with
love." Duties bottomed on Christ's love, are spiritual. As the
Father accepteth not duties, but in Christ, so cannot we perform them
aright, when the principal and fountain-cause is not the love of Christ.
(John 21:15.)
USE 5. The Ancient of Days, the Father of
Ages, taketh a style from his new house, the Son of Man: he hath an old
house, from whence he is named, the Son of God. He must affect us, and
his delight be with the sons of men, when he taketh a name from us: we
should affect him, and affect a communion with him, and strive to have
Christ's new name, as he taketh our new name, the Son of Man, of David.
"Son of David, have mercy upon me."
The second article of her prayer is conceived under the name of
mercy.—Why? God's mercy is a spiritual favour: deliverance to her
daughter is but a temporary favour that may befall a reprobate. The
devil may be cast out of the daughter's body, and not out of the
mother's soul. Yea, but to the believer, all temporal favours are
spiritualised, and watered with mercy.
1. They are given as dipped in Christ's
bowels, and mercy, wrapt about the temporary favour. Jesus cured the
leper. (Mark 1:41.) But how? "Jesus, moved with compassion, put
forth his hand and touched him." So is the building of the temple
given, but oiled with mercies, "Therefore, thus saith the Lord, I
am returned to Jerusalem with mercies: my house shall be builded in
it." (Zach. 1:16.) Epaphroditus recovered health, but with it some
of God's heart and bowels also, "For indeed he was sick, near to
death, but God had mercy on him." (Phil. 2:27.)
2. The ground of it is God's mercy; the
two blind men, put this in their bill: they cry, "Have mercy on us,
O Lord, thou Son of David." (Matt. 20:30.) They will not have
seeing eyes, but under the notion of mercy. David, pained with sore
sickness, as some think, or under some other rod of God, desireth to be
healed upon this ground, "Have mercy upon me, O Lord, for I am
weak." (Psalm 6:2.)
3. Faith looketh to temporal favours, as
faith, with a spiritual eye, as Christ and his merits goeth about them.
"By faith, Joseph, when he died, made mention of the children of
Israel's departure:" (Heb. 11:22,) "By faith, Moses, come to
age, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter." (verse
24.)—Why? and that was but a civil honour: Moses' faith looked at it
in a spiritual manner.
4. That same ground that moveth God to
give Christ, is enough to move him to give all other things with Christ.
As by what right? even by the right of a son. A father giveth the
inheritance to his son; by that same, he giveth him food, raiment,
protection, physic. There are not two patents here, but by one and the
same covenant. The Lord giveth to his people remission of sins. (Ezek.
36:25,26.) And "He multiplieth the fruit of the trees, and removeth
the famine." (verse 30.) In the same spiritual capacity of sons, we
pray, that our Father would forgive us our sins, and give us our daily
bread. Get Christ first, the great ship, and then all other things: the
cock-boat saileth after him, with the same motion and wind; they be not
two tides and two winds that carry on the ship and the boat. Christ,
enjoyed by faith, traileth after him death, life, the world, things
present, and things to come. If God give you Christ, in the same charter
all things are yours, "because ye are Christ's, and Christ
God's." (1 Cor. 3:23.) Christ watereth with his blessing all
things. If all that a saint hath be blessed, and every thing (to speak
so), mercied and christianed, even his basket and his dough, (Deut.
28:5,) his inheritance must be blessed: much more, all Christ's
inheritance must be blessed; because he is the seed, the spring, and
abstract of blessings. Now, Christ "is appointed the heir of all
things." (Heb. 1:2.) Then he is the heir of a draught of water, of
brown bread, of a straw bed on the earth, and hard stones to be the
pillow. To the saints, to the children of God, hell (to speak so), is
heavened, sorrow joyed, poverty riched, death enlivened, dust and the
grave animated and quickened with life and resurrection. God save me
from a draught of water without Christ! Peace and deliverance from the
sword, without Christ and the gospel, are linked and chained to the
curse of God. Alas! if men have the single creature, they make no
account how other things go. Give us peace upon any terms, say they. You
may have the earth, peace, and the creature, and the devil to salt them
to you with the curse of God. Judas had the bag at his girdle, but
withal, the devil in his heart. The creature wanteth life and blood
without Christ. (2.) All mercy—that is, graced mercy, is to be sought
in Jesus Christ; every mercy is mercy, because it is in Christ; every
stream is water, because it is of the element of water. Every thing in
its own element and nature is most copious. Water is nowhere so abundant
as in the sea; so in Christ the great treasure of heaven, there is
fullness, (John 1:16). But (Col. 1:19,) there is a pleroma, a fullness
in Christ. But [2.] A pan to pleroma, fullness, that
fullness, that all-fullness. And [3.] That all-fullness is not in
Christ, as a stranger in an inn, coming in, and going out; "but it
pleased the Father that it should dwell and remain in him." The
grace and mercy that is in Christ must be sought, and no other, upon
these grounds: [1.] It is a special choice mercy that is in Christ. For,
(1.) No person could serve God's ends in such a way as Christ did, being
so complete as he is. God, out of the depth of his wisdom, found out
such a Mediator, and so graced. Isaac should have been undutiful, if he
had refused a wife of his father's choosing, for both out of love and
much wisdom he choosed her. Now, when God, out of infinite love and deep
wisdom, hath chosen to us an husband, an head, such a head, such a
captain and leader, in whom there is such fullness, shall we refuse him,
and shall we not seek the best things in him? Now, Christ is a husband
of God's choosing, "Behold my chosen one in whom my soul delighteth."
(Isa. 42:1.) (2.) It is not from God that we now receive mercy
immediately, but from Christ, God in the Mediator. Though grace and
mercy be every way free, yet now mercy is a flower that groweth in our
land, in him who is our blood-friend: so now, we have mercy by nature,
as well as by good will; we must have it by an act of the man Christ's
will; and when our writs are waxen old, why seek we not that which God
hath laid by for us? Grace is more con-natural to us now, in that it is
in the bosom of our brother, and ours by derivation. (3.) There is a
difference between mercy and purchased mercy; it is paid-for mercy that
we receive, and so, more excellent than angel mercy. As some waters that
run through metals have a more excellent virtue than those that spring
from pure earth, mercy is so much the more desirable, that it is a river
issuing through that more than golden and precious Redeemer; and so, to
us it is twice mercy, to the angels it is but once mercy. Even as the
bee gathers sweetness out of various and divers flowers, yet it is so
composed, that the liquor resulting out of them all, hath not any
particular taste from the sundry flowers, the violet, the pink, the
rose, the woodbine, the clover, but it tastes of honey only;—so all we
have meeting in Christ, wife, children, houses, lands, honour, to the
saints have not their own natural taste, but out of all there is in them
a spiritual resultance of some heavenly composure of Christ's sweetness,
and are so sprinkled, and dipt in grace and mercy, that as fresh rivers
do borrow a new taste from the sea, when they flow into its bosom, so
all earthly favours borrow a new smell and relish from the fountain
Christ. What do they say, then, that teach, that a man may have all
graces, yea, and poverty of spirit, and yet want Christ; as if these
could be separated? He that believeth hath the Son: Grace and Christ
cannot be separated. (Eph. 1:2; Gal. 1:3; John 1:16.) These byways
sunder souls and the foundation Christ. |
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