The Trial & Triumph of Faith
Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Sermon 13
THE TRIAL
AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH.
SERMON 13
"OF ISRAEL." It was then a
privileged mercy, that Christ was sent to the Jews. (1.) The Jew is the
elder brother, and the native heir of Christ. Christ is of their blood
and house. (Rom. 1:2,3, and 9:3.) They were Christ's first bride. Alas!
they killed their husband. There is a born Jew in heaven, in soul and
body: it is sweet to have any relation to Christ. (2.) The catholic
covenant of grace made with the great sister, the Church Universal, was
first laid down in pawn in their hand; they put their hand first to the
contract, in subscribing the marriage contract, (Jer. chapters 2 and 3).
Israel was holy to the Lord, and the first fruits of his increase. Oh,
sweet! the fallen race of mankind was Christ's corn-field, and his
wheat. The Jews were the first sheaf of the field, (Deut. 7:6). They got
Christ's young love, and, (to speak so,) the first handsel of free grace
in a church-way. (3.) Christ, in the Jewish flesh, (yet not excluding
Ruth, Rahab, and other Gentiles of the blood-royal,) acted the whole
gospel. A born Jew redeemed the lost world, offered a sacrifice to God
for sinners: a born Jew is heir of all things, is exalted a prince to
guide and rule all, and shall judge men and angels. (4.) The Lord
Christ, in the flesh, was first offered to them; they had the first
gospel-love, (Matt. 10:5,6; Acts 13:46). (5.) The oracles of God were
committed to them, (Romans 3:1; 9:4); the testator Christ's written
will, was in their keeping. (6.) God was their first crowned King. He
gave Ethiopia, and Egypt, and Zeba, a ransom for them, and was their
lawgiver. (7.) Every male child among the Jews did bear somewhat of
Christ in his flesh, (Col. 2:11,) when all the world was without Christ.
(8.) Their land was Christ's by a special typical right. God saith of
it, "It is my land." Christ was their sovereign landlord, and
they the great King's freeholders. (9.) The Lord never dwelt in a house
made with hands, in a temple, as amongst them, having special respect to
the true Temple, Jesus Christ, (John 2:19).
USE 1. Let us pray our elder sister home
to Christ. They said, "We have a little sister, and she hath no
breasts; what shall we do for our sister in the day that she shall be
spoken for?" (Cant. 8:8.) Now, we have a greater sister, what shall
we, the Gentiles, do for her? There is a day when "ten men shall
take hold, out of all nations, of the skirt of a Jew, saying, We will go
with you; we have heard that God is with you." (Zech. 8:23.)
USE 2. It is the happiness of our land,
that we have a three-fold relation to Christ,—I mean these two
nations—that we have avowed the Lord by a national testimony;
and the nations are public martyrs and witnesses of Christ, in that they
are made a field of blood, for no other quarrel, but because they desire
to stand for Christ's truth against Antichrist. Surely in the intention
of Papists, now in arms against us, there is no cause of war but this
only. (2.) That we have sworn that the Lord shall be our God in a solemn
covenant. (3.) That we are honoured to build the Temple of the Lord, and
reform religion. Oh, that we could see our debt and be thankful!
USE 3. The Jews had the morning market of
Christ, and they would not pay the rent of the vineyard to the Lord
thereof. We have the afternoon of Christ; and know we what a mercy it
is, that "our Beloved feedeth amongst the lilies, till the day
break, and the shadows fly away;" and that "the voice of the
turtle is heard in our land"? God, for our abuse of the gospel,
hath sent among us the bloody pursuivants, and officers of his wrath,
men skilful to destroy; God is now in three kingdoms, arresting the
carcases of men. We are owing much to God; he will now have husbands and
sons from us, and legs and arms of wounded and slain men from us, for
that rent we owe to the Lord of the vineyard,—for our contempt of the
gospel.
"Sheep,"—first a word of
sheep, then of "lost sheep." I take no other reasons
why the redeemed of the Lord are called sheep, than are obvious in
Scripture. (1.) The sheep are passive creatures, and can do little for
themselves; so can believers in the work of their salvation: as,
1. They have not of themselves more
knowledge of the saving way than sheep, and so cannot walk, but as they
are taught and led. "Teach me, O Lord." (Psalm 119:33.)
"Lead me in thy truth." (Psalm 25:5.) (1.) Like a blind man
holding out his hand to his guide, so they: "Lord, lead me in thy
righteousness." (Psalm 5:8.) (2.) It is not common leading, but the
leading of children learning to go by a hold. "When Ephraim was a
child, I loved him." (Hosea 11:1.) "I taught Ephraim also to
go, taking them by their arms;" but Ephraim, like a child, knew not
his leader: "But they know not," saith the Lord, "that I
healed them." (verse 8.) (3.) Leading may suppose some willingness;
but we must be drawn: "No man can come to me, except the Father
draw him," (John 6:44). "Draw me, we will run after
thee." (Cant. 1:4.) (4.) There is a word of special grace, which is
more than teaching, leading, drawing; and that is, Leaning: "Who is
this that cometh up from the wilderness, leaning upon her Beloved?"
(Cant. 8:5.) (5.) There is a word yet more, and that is Bearing: when
the good shepherd hath found the lost sheep, "He layeth it on his
shoulders with joy." (Luke 15:5.) "Hearken to me, O house of
Jacob, and all the remnant of the house of Israel, which are born (by
me) from the belly and carried from the grey hairs:" (Isa. 46:3:)
So also, "God beareth them on eagles' wings." (Deut. 32:11.)
Grace, grace is a noble guide and tutor.
2. The life of sheep, is the most
dependent life in the world: no such dependent creatures as sheep: all
their happiness is the goodness, care, and wisdom of their shepherd;
wolves, lions, leopards, need none to watch over them. Briers and thorns
grow alone; the vine tree, the noble vine, is a tender thing, must be
supported. Christ must bear the weak and lambs in his bosom. (Isa.
40:11.) The shepherd's bosom and his legs, are the legs of the weak
lamb. Even the habit of grace is a creature, and no independent thing;
and so, in its creation, in its preservation, it dependeth on Christ:
grace is as the new born bird; its life is the heat and warmness of the
body, and wings of the dam. It is like a chariot; though it have four
wheels, yet it moveth only, as drawn by the strength of horses without
it. It is a plough of timber only, without iron and steel that breaketh
up no earth. The new seed of God acteth, as acted by God: hence
repenting Ephraim, "Turn thou me and I shall be turned." (Jer.
31:18.) Renewed David is often at this: "Quicken me, quicken
me:" the swooning Church; "Stay me with flagons, and comfort
me with apples." (Cant. 2:5.)
3. Sheep are docile creatures. "My
sheep hear my voice; I know them, and they follow me." (John
10:27.) There is a controversy with Papists, how we know Scripture to be
the word of God. There are two things here considerable; one within, and
another without. How knoweth the lamb its mother amongst a thousand of
the flock? Natural instinct teacheth it. From what teacher or art is it,
that the swallow buildeth its clay house and nest, and every bee knoweth
its own cell and waxen house? So the instinct of grace knoweth the voice
of the Beloved amongst many voices, (Cant. 2:8). And this discerning
power is in the subject. There is another power in the object. Of many
thousand millions of men, since the creation, not one, in figure and
shape, is altogether like another; some visible difference there is:
amongst many voices, no voice like man's tongue: amongst millions of
divers tongues of men, every voice hath an audible difference printed on
it, by which it is discerned from all other. To the new creature, there
is in Christ's word some character, some sound of heaven, that is in no
voice in the world, but in his only: in Christ represented to a
believer's eye of faith, there is a shape, and a stamp of divine
majesty: no man knoweth it but the believer; and in heaven and earth
Christ hath not a marrow [match] like himself. Suppose there were
an hundred counterfeit moons, or fancied suns in the heaven; a natural
eye can discern the true moon, and the natural sun from them all. The
eye knoweth white, not to be black nor green. Christ offered to the eye
of faith, stampeth on faith's eye, little images of Christ, that the
soul dare go to death and to hell with it, that this, this only was
Christ, and none other but he only.
4. Sheep are simple: fancy leadeth them
much, therefore they are straying creatures. (Isa. 53:6; Psalm 119:176;
1 Peter 2:25.) There is nothing of the notion of death, or of another
life in the fancy of sheep; a mouthful of green grass carrieth the sheep
on upon a pit, and the mouth and teeth of lions and wolves. Fancy is
often the guide of weak believers, rather than faith: little care we by
nature, what we shall be in the next generation. Fancy and nature cannot
out-see time, nor see over or beyond death. Fair green-like hopes of
gain, are to us hopes of real good: we think we see two moons in one
heaven. There is a way good-seeming that deceiveth us; but black death
is the night lodging of it. Alas! we are journeying, and know not our
night-inns, and where we shall lodge when the sun is going down: poor
soul! where shall you be all night?
1. If believers be such dependent
creatures, what do libertines and Antinomians teach us?—that the soul
need not go out to Christ, for fresh supply, but is acted by the spirit
inhabiting and dwelling in us: also, that it is the way of the law, not
of the gospel, that we act in the strength of Christ. Both these are
against the gospel: (1.) We are commanded to pray, even the sons who in
faith call God, "Our Father which is in heaven; lead us not into
temptation;" which God doth no other way, than by giving us new
supply of grace to actual resistance. And Christ will have us to pray,
"Lord, increase our faith." The virgins in love with Christ,
pray "draw us." Paul prayeth, that the God of peace would
sanctify the Thessalonians wholly; (1 Thess. 5:23;) and for this, he
boweth his knee, that the believing Ephesians may be strengthened,
"according to the riches of his glory, with might by his Spirit in
the inner man, that Christ may dwell in their hearts by faith; and that,
with all the saints, they may be able to comprehend the transcendent
love of God in Christ," (Eph. 3:15-19.) And that author, "That
the God of peace may make the saints perfect in every good work, to do
his will, working in them that which is well pleasing in his
sight." (Heb. 13:20,21.) (2.) It is against Christ's intercession,
whose it is to keep the faith of the saints from falling, (Luke 22:32,)
and who "finisheth our faith," (Heb. 12:2,) "confirmeth
us to the end," (1 Cor. 1:8,) advocateth for new grace, (1 John
2:1,2,) "appeareth in the presence of God for us," (Heb.
9:24). (3.) This cannot stand with the promise of perseverance, made in
the covenant of grace, (Jer. 32:40,41; Isa. 59:21-24; Ezek. 36:27; John
6:39,40; and 4:13,14). Nor, (4.) with the faith of persuasion of
perseverance, (Rom. 8:38,39; Jude 24,25; Psalm 23:6; 2 Tim. 4:18). And
(5.) This must infer, either that the regenerate do not, and cannot sin,
by not believing and persevering in faith, and perfecting holiness in
the fear of God, (which is blasphemy); or that the saints may finally
fall from grace; or that the use of grace, and willing and doing in the
saints, is not of, or from confirming and assisting grace. (6.) This
putteth our stock of grace in our own hand: as if Christ did literally
only reveal to us the way to heaven, and leave it to our own free will,
to guide well or ill.
USE 1.—And so [according to this false
opinion], we are to thank Christ for beginning in the spirit, and to
thank ourselves that we go on, and grow in grace, or end not in the
flesh? Nay, but Christ's dispensation, in whose grace we are strong,
(Eph. 4:10,) and "can do all things," (Phil. 4:13,) is nothing
but one continued act of free grace, or a long cord or chain of
dependency on Christ: yea, grace is glory on the wheels; it is glory
like wheat in the blade, in the way in the flux and tendency to the ear
and harvest, depending on the continued aspect of the summer Sun of
Righteousness. The new creature is the iron in the fire of heaven in the
moulding and framing, and under the hammer and tools of Christ, and a
rose in the opening, before it cast out its leaves. And in this, we are
to have these considerations:
1. Faith is leisurely to look to Christ,
in bringing his work out of the mould, and taking the new ship off the
stocks as a perfected vessel. We conceive erroneously that faith only
eyeth Christ as pardoning; and that it hath no eye, no activity and
influence on our own gracious acts wrought in us by Christ. But faith is
an agent, as it is a patient, and joineth with Christ and with free
will, to an active purifying of the heart: it believeth heaven, and
worketh heaven.
2. We often go on, imagining that we are
in a way of backsliding. Deserted souls not conscious of the reflex acts
of believing and longing for Christ, think themselves apostates, when
they are advancing in their way. In great water-works, where there be a
great multitude of wheels, the standing of some five or six is the
advancing of the work in other twenty, or forty wheels. In desertion,
some wheels are at a stand, and move not; as often acts of feeling, joy,
self-delight in the actual beholding of Christ, are at a stand; and then
it is thus:—"I said, I am cast out of his sight;" yet other
wheels are moving, as (1.) Humble and base thoughts of himself. (2.)
Broad and large thoughts of Christ, and his grace. (3.) Hunger and
longing for Christ. (4.) Self-diffidence is much. (5.) Care and
love-sickness: "Saw you him whom my soul loveth?" is vehement.
(6.) Sense of sin, and of wants and spiritual poverty, increaseth now.
(7.) Sense of the misery of the combat, is much more than before:
"O miserable man that I am!" (8.) Believing under hope, and
against hope, is strongest now. (9.) There is more tenderness and humble
fear now than before. (10.) A stronger resolution to entertain Christ
more kindly, when he shall return again in his fullness of presence.
(11.) Sorrow, that remembering, he said, "My head is full of dew,
and my locks with the drops of the night," (Cant. 5:6,) yet the
sleeping soul kept him at the door.
3. We are to adore that dispensation,
which will have us not stepping one foot to heaven, but upon grace, and
upon grace's charges. He could make saints to be sinless angels: but
what haste? We should then, not yet being habituated with glory, nor
confirmed in heaven, think little of Christ.
USE 2.—If we be so dependent on Christ,
we have not ended with all law-directions: the law standeth us yet in
good use; I mean, when Christ hath made us and the law friends, and hath
removed the curse, and made the believer say, "O how love I thy
law!"
Objection 1.—Can you (saith M.
Towne) "separate the directing or commanding power of the law, from
the condemning power of the law? Can the law speak to any but to those
who are under the law? is it law at all if it condemn not?"
Answer. Actual condemnation may
well be separated from the law; as a lion is a lion, and yet being
chained, cannot actually devour. To condemn, may well be removed from
the law; it could not condemn Adam, before sin entered in the world; it
cannot condemn the holy, elect, and sinless angels; yet it had, and hath
a commanding and obliging power to command and direct both: to condemn,
is accidental to the law, as the state of sin is accidental to man. (2.)
The law may speak by way of direction to believers, but cannot speak to
them by way of actual condemnation, because Christ hath removed the
curse.
Objection 2. Holiness, and walking
in the way of holiness, contributeth not one jot to salvation, as
causes, or as the way thereto—Christ hath done that perfectly.
Answer. I pray you consider three
things here: (1.) The will of God to save; yea, and to justify the
ungodly. (2.) The law-right to righteousness and salvation. (3.) Actual
salvation.
(1.) Christ's merits are neither cause,
nor motive, nor condition moving God to will, to choose, or ordain
persons for glory: this is an act of eternal election to glory, which is
not from Christ's merits; nor doth any external work or condition,
either good or evil, in Jacob or Esau, or in the surety Christ, move God
to such an act of free liberty. Libertines are ignorant in so speaking;
yea faith is no condition, cause, or motive of such a will. (2.)
Christ's merits, not faith, not holiness in us, must be the cause of our
law-right to righteousness and glory: Christ alone gave the price of
redemption for us; no garments were rolled in blood, for a patent and
right to heaven, but his only; he alone trod the wine-press of God's
wrath. In these two notions, works of holiness have no footing in the
work. But (3,) As touching actual salvation, the way to it is holiness,
without which none can see God. It is expressly commanded, "Be ye
holy, as I am holy," (1 Pet. 1:19,20). "But being now made
free from sin, and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto
holiness, and the end life everlasting," (Rom. 6:22). "If ye
do these things ye shall never fall, for so an entrance shall be
ministered unto you abundantly, unto the everlasting kingdom of our Lord
and Saviour Jesus Christ," (2 Pet. 1:10). "To him that
overcometh I will give to eat of the tree of life, which is in the midst
of the paradise of God," (Rev. 2:7). "To him that overcometh
will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I also overcame, and
am set down with my Father on his throne." (Rev. 3:21.) They
answer, "Overcoming is by faith." But I reply; faith, to
libertines, is but a believing that Christ hath overcome in their person
and place; for faith is no more to them a condition or way to salvation,
than good works: For faith (say they) is not Christ; Christ only is the
way to heaven. But this were a vain promise, if overcoming were not,
(1.) A duty required of us in time, upon the performance whereof, we
have an entrance made to life eternal. (2.) If overcoming be but only
believing, and so an act of the soul only, those to whom the promise is
made, are to do no more, but believe Christ hath overcome the
persecuting world for them, and yield; and in profession deny the faith,
and accept of conditions of life, and so be foiled, and yet claim right
to the promise, contrary to the intent of Christ, who commendeth
Pergamus for not denying the faith. (Rev. 2:13.) Now, in all this, as
the walking in the way to a fair palace to dwell in it, in honour and
happiness, cannot be the price, the ransom, the sum given to buy right
to that place, and to the honour and happiness thereof; so neither can
our walking in the way to glory, be the price of glory.
Objection 3. But we are saved by
Christ's merits before we can do any good works; then good works come
not, to perfect and make up salvation.
Answer. So are we, in regard to
right of purchase, saved before we believe; yet that hindereth not, but
faith is a way to salvation. (2.) This concludeth, that good works are
no cause, or way, or mean of obtaining the right of purchase to
redemption, which we yield; but not, that we are actually saved without
walking in the way, called the "way of holiness, which the unclean
shall not pass over." (Isa. 35:8.)
Objection 4. We are to do good
works, from the principle of the love of Christ constraining us, not
from the law commanding, or directing us.
Answer 1. These are no way
contrary: the regenerate, from both principles, are to walk in love and
holiness as Christ did. The law directing is not abolished by grace, or
by love to Christ, and this is no other than the reasoning of old
libertines. Paul said, "Now we are delivered from the law."
(Rom. 7:6.) O, then, said libertines, "we may sin, and fleshly
walking shall not prejudge salvation, nor condemn us." "What
shall we say then? Is the law sin? God forbid;" (verse 7;) and
"Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound." (Rom. 5:20.)
Then said the libertine, "What shall we then say? shall we continue
in sin, that grace may abound? God forbid." (Rom. 6:1,2.) Then the
law commandeth and directeth not to sin; and Christ and grace being
friends, speak with the same mouth, "God forbid that we sin."
We are not so freed from the commanding power of the law, as that we sin
not. When we do what is contrary to God's law, we are so far under the
law, as not to sin, because the rule of the law is removed; nay, the law
backs a man till he come to Christ and to glory; and Christ backs the
law, and saith, The law forbiddeth you sin; I say, Amen. Grace saith,
Sin not; and Christ also layeth new bands of love, and obligation to
thankfulness on us, not to sin, but removeth not the ancient bounds.
Grace and condemnation are opposite, but not grace and the commanding
power of the law.
Objection 5. The law is a letter
of death and bondage, and can never convert the soul—only the gospel
doth that; for in the gospel, grace is given to obey what is commanded:
Therefore, your law-preachers lead men from the foundation, Christ.
Answer 1. The letter of the law,
without the spirit of Christ, cannot convert any, nor can the letter of
the gospel, or gospel threatenings without the spirit of grace, convert
any. Both law and gospel, separated from the spirit, are alike in this;
and neither law nor gospel, according to this reasoning, should be
preached. Antinomians do in downright terms teach this: for they say,
(1.) That the due searching and knowledge of the Scriptures, is not a
safe and sure way of searching and finding Christ:
The word saith the contrary, (Ps. 19:7-9; Acts 10:43; Rom. 3:21; John
5:39; Luke 1:70,71). (2.) To do any thing by virtue of a commandment,
is a law-way, not a gospel obedience:
this is contrary to Ps. 119:6,11,43,44; and 2 Pet. 1:19,20; 2 Tim. 3:16.
(3.) All verbal covenants, and the word written, is but a covenant of
works, and taketh men off from Christ;
and the whole letter of the Scripture holdeth forth a covenant of
works.
All doctrines, revelations, and spirits, are to be tried by Christ,
rather than by the Word.
Those that go from the sun, must at length walk in darkness. Anabaptists
of old, said, the covenant of grace was written in the inward parts,
and in the heart, and therefore, there was no need of word or ministry:
but when Satan knocketh, his knock is dumb and speechless; he bringeth
not the word, and speaketh not according to the law and testimony,
because he is a dumb devil: Christ bringeth the word with him. To all
those, we can say no other, than that they condemn the Scriptures and
the preaching of the Word; because nothing can avail us to salvation
without the Spirit. This is, (1.) To condemn the wisdom of our Lord, who
hath appointed, that faith should come by hearing, and that the things
that are written, are written, "that we in believing might have
eternal life," (John 20:31). (2.) It is to fetter the free
operation of the Spirit, whose wind bloweth when he listeth, to the
preaching of the Word. (3.) Yea, to make Christ's death, resurrection,
ascension, and intercession at the right hand of God, which all must be
the marrow of the evangel, things merely legal, and things belonging to
the covenant of works; because all those, without the grace of the
Spirit, are merely fruitless to many thousands.
Objection 6. But repentance in the
New Testament, is nothing else but the change of the mind, and to be of
another mind, than to seek righteousness by the works of the law; even
to seek it in Christ alone: and mortification, is but the apprehension
of sin slain by Christ, and so, repentance is a part of faith, though
repentance in the Old Testament was to bewail sin, and forsake it.
Answer. But this is to dally with
Christ. All mortification and dominion over our lusts, that fighteth
against mercy and justice, and the duties of the second Table, must be,
by this means, an act of faith, and the new light of Christ in the mind,
believing our righteousness to be in Christ; and so, an act of internal
worship belonging to the first Table. Then, as the Scripture saith, the
sinner is justified by faith, apprehending Christ's righteousness; so
might we well say, that we are justified by repentance and by
mortification. (2.) That repentance layeth hold on Christ's
righteousness. (3.) That as to believe only, without works, doth justify
and save; so to repent only (that is, to change the mind, and apprehend
righteousness, not in works, but in Christ) without all holiness and
forsaking of sin, should save us. But this is to acquit men from all
duties of the second Table, yea, and of all the first Table; loving of
God, praying, praising, hearing, etc., except only we are to believe:
This is clearly the way of the old Gnostics, who placed all holiness in
mere knowledge and apprehension of God's will, without love or
obedience. Repentance is sorrow according to God, (1 Cor. 7:9,10; James
4:9,) and eschewing evil, and doing good, (1 Pet. 3:11,) and the
"crucifying of the old man, and the lusts thereof, as fornication,
uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence,
covetousness," (Col. 3:5). And these are commanded in the New
Testament, as the very lesson of the grace of God, (Tit. 2:11). It is
true, in the Old Testament, the people were under tutors and bondage;
but that was in regard of the carnal commandment of ceremonies, the
cognisance of our bloody demerit held forth in bloody sacrifices. (2.)
In regard, less of Christ and the sweetness of the gospel was then
known, and the law chased harder the guilty to Christ. But (1.) Servile
obedience, through apprehension of legal terrors, was never commanded in
the spiritual law of God to the Jews, more than to us. (2.) The Jews
were not justified by the works of the law more than we; but by faith in
Christ, as well as we, (Acts 15:11; Acts 10:42,43; Heb. 11; 1 Cor.
10:1-3). Yea, we are justified as David and Abraham were, (Rom. 4:3-8).
Yea, the Jews' seeking of righteousness by the works of the law, is a
stumbling at the stone laid in Zion, (Rom. 9:31-33). Yea, it is
blasphemy to say, repentance in the Old Testament was a sorrow for sin,
and a forsaking of it; as if under the New Testament, we were licensed
to sin, and turn grace into wantonness. |
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