The Trial & Triumph of Faith
Samuel Rutherford (1600-1661)
Sermon 6
THE TRIAL
AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH.
SERMON 6
IN her prayer, as it is expressed by
Matthew, we have, 1st, The manner of it: "she cried." 2nd, The
compellation, or party to whom she prayeth: "O, Lord, thou Son of
David." 3rd, The petition: "have mercy upon me." 4th, The
reason: "for my daughter is vexed with a devil."
"She cried." The poor woman
prayed (as we say) with good will, with a bent of affection. Why is
crying used in praying? Had it not been more modesty to speak to this
soul-redeeming Saviour, who heareth sometimes before we pray, than to
cry out and shout?—for the disciples do after complain, that "she
crieth so after them." Was Christ so difficult to be entreated? The
reasons of crying are, 1st, Want cannot blush. The pinching
necessity of the saints is not tied to the law of modesty. Hunger cannot
be ashamed. "I mourn in my complaint, and make a noise," saith
David, (Psalm 55:2;) and Hezekiah, "Like a crane, or a swallow, so
did I chatter; I did mourn as a dove," (Isa. 38:14). "I went
mourning without the sun; I stood up, and I cried in the
congregation." (Job 30:28.) 2nd, Though God hear prayer,
only as prayer offered in Christ, not, because very fervent; yet fervour
is a heavenly ingredient in prayer. An arrow drawn with full strength
hath a speedier issue; therefore, the prayers of the saints are
expressed by crying in Scripture. "O my God, I cry by day, and thou
hearest not." (Psalm 22:2.) "At noon will I pray, and cry
aloud." (Psalm 55:17,) "In my distress I cried to the
Lord." (Psalm 18:6.) "Unto thee have I cried, O Lord."
(Psalm 88:13.) "Out of the depths have I cried." (Psalm
130:1.) "Out of the belly of hell I cried." (Jonah 2:2.)
"Unto thee will I cry, O Lord, my rock." (Psalm 28:1.) Yea, it
goeth to somewhat more than crying: "I cry out of wrong, but am not
heard." (Job 19:7.) "Also when I cry and shout, he shutteth
out my prayer." (Lam. 3:8.) He who may teach us all to pray, sweet
Jesus, "In the days of his flesh offered up prayers and
supplications, with strong crying and tears," (Heb. 5:7;) he prayed
with war-shouts. 3rd, And these prayers are so prevalent, that
God answereth them: "This poor man cried, and the Lord heard, and
saved him from all his fears." (Psalm 34:6) "My cry came
before him, even to his ears." (Psalm 18:6.) The cry addeth wings
to the prayer, as a speedy post sent to court upon life and death:
"Our fathers cried unto thee, and were delivered." (Psalm
22:5.) "The righteous cry, and the Lord heareth." Psalm
34:17.) We all know the parable of the poor widow, and the unrighteous
judge: if the oppressed be not delivered, Christ, and his Father, and
heaven shall hear of it. Hence, 4th, Importunity in praying,
"I will not let thee go (saith Jacob to his Lord) till thou bless
me." So James calleth it, (chap. 5, verse 16.) "Prayer
possessed with a spirit," but a good spirit; prayer steeled with
fervour of spirit;—so fervent, that David is like the post, who layeth
by three horses as breathless; his heart, his throat, his eyes: "I
am weary of my crying, my throat is dried, mine eyes fail, while I wait
for my God." (Psalm 69:3.) 5th, There is violence offered to
God in fervent prayer. (Exod. 22:10.) Moses is answered, when he is
wrestling with God by prayer for the people, "Now, therefore, let
me alone, that my anger may wax hot against them:" "Let me
alone," is a word of putting violent hands on any. There be bones
and sinews in such prayers; by them the King is held in his galleries,
(Cant. 7:5).
Objection 1. But if so be that
prayers must be fervent, even to vocal crying and shouting, then I
cannot pray, who am often so confounded, that I cannot speak one word. Answer.
So was the servant of God, in a spiritual kind of praying, in uttering
Psalm 77, when he saith, verse 4, "Thou holdest mine eyes waking; I
am so troubled, that I cannot speak." Yea, groaning goeth for
praying to God: "The Lord looked down from heaven, to hear the
groaning of the prisoner." (Psalm 102:20.) "The Spirit
intercedeth for us with sighs that none can speak." (Rom. 7:26.)
Faith doth sigh prayers to heaven; Christ receiveth sighs in his censer,
for prayer. Words are but the body, the garment, the outside of prayer;
sighs are nearer the heart-work. A dumb beggar getteth an alms at
Christ's gates, even by making signs, when his tongue cannot plead for
him; and the rather, because he is dumb.
Objection 2. I have not so much as
a voice to utter to God; and Christ saith, "Cause me hear thy
voice." (Cant. 2:14.) Answer. Yea, but some other thing hath
a voice beside the tongue: "The Lord has heard the voice of my
weeping." (Psalm 6:8.) Tears have a tongue, and grammar, and
language, that our Father knoweth. Babes have no prayers for the breast,
but weeping; the mother can read hunger in weeping.
Objection 3. But I am often so, as
I cannot weep: weeping is peculiar to a man as laughing is, and
spiritual weeping is peculiar to the renewed man. Answer.
Vehemency of affection doth often move weeping, so as it is but sprit
weeping that we can attain: hence, Hezekiah can but "chatter as a
crane, and a swallow, and moan as a dove," (Isa. 38:14). Sorrow
keepeth not always the road-way; weeping is but the scabbard of sorrow,
and there is often more sorrow where there is little or no weeping;
there is most of fire, where there is least smoke.
Objection 4. But I have neither
weeping one way or other, ordinary nor marred. Answer. Looking up
to heaven, lifting up of the eyes, goeth for prayer also in God's books.
"My prayer will I direct to thee, and I will look up." (Psalm
5:3.) "Mine eyes fail with looking upward," (Psalm 69:3).
Because, 1st, Prayer is a pouring out of the soul to God, and
faith will come out at the eye, in lieu of another door: often
affections break out at the window, when the door is closed; as smoke
venteth at the window, when the chimney refuseth passage. Stephen looked
up to heaven, (Acts 7:55). He sent a post; a greedy, pitiful, and hungry
look up to Christ, out at the window, at the nearest passage, to tell
that a poor friend was coming up to him. 2nd, I would wish no
more, if I were in hell, but to send a long look up to heaven. There be
many love-looks of the saints, lying up before the throne, in the bosom
of Christ. The twinkling of thy eyes in prayer, are not lost to Christ;
else Stephen's look, David's look should not be registered so many
hundred years in Christ's written Testament.
Objection 5. Alas! I have no eyes
to look up. The publican, (Luke 18,) looked down to the earth. And what
senses spiritual have I to send after Christ? Answer. There is
life going in and out at thy nostrils. Breathing is praying, and is
taken of our hand, as crying in prayer. "Thou hast heard my voice;
hide not thy ear at my breathing, at my cry." (Lam. 3:56.)
Objection 6. I have but a hard
heart to offer to God in prayer; and what can I say then, wanting all
praying disposition? Answer. 1st, Therefore pray, that you
may pray. 2nd, The very aspect, and naked presence of a dead
spirit, when there is a little vocal praying, is acceptable to God; or,
if an overwhelmed heart refuseth to come, it is best to go and tell
Christ, and request him to come, and fetch the heart himself. 3rd,
Little of day-light cometh before the sun; the best half of it is under
ground. "We ourselves groan within ourselves." (Rom. 8:23.)
All is here transacted in our own heart. The soul crieth, Oh! when will
my father come, and fetch his children? When shall the spouse lie in her
husband's bosom? 4th, If Christ's eye but look on a hard heart,
it will melt it. 5th, I show here the smallest of prayer in which
the life and essence of prayer may breathe and live. Now, prayer being a
pouring out of the soul to God, much of the affections of love, desire,
longing, joy, faith, sorrow, fear, boldness, comes along with prayer out
to God, and the heart is put in Christ's bosom. And it is neither up nor
down to the essence of sincere praying, whether the soul come out in
words, in groans, or in long looks, or in sighing, or in pouring out
tears to God, (Job 16:20,) or in breathing.
Objection 7. What shall be done
with half-praying, and words without sense? Answer. This is the
woman of Canaan's case: Piscator observeth an ellipsis with words, of
the particle (gar), or because, or for: "Have mercy on me,
my daughter is vexed:" she should have said, "because my
daughter is vexed:" but the mind is hasty, that she lets slip
words. So are broken prayers set down in Scripture, as prayers. "I
love, because the Lord hath heard my voice." (Psalm 116:1,) There
is nothing in the Hebrew but one word, (Ahabti) I love; but he
showeth not whom he loveth. It is a broken word, because, as Ambrose
saith, he loved the most desirable thing. I have love, (he would say)
but its centre and bed is only God. "My soul is sore vexed, but
thou, O Lord, how long?" (Psalm 6:3.) That is a broken speech,
also. "For my love they were mine enemies," (Psalm 109:4,) in
the Hebrew it's Vani Tephilla, at ego oratio: But I prayer;
or, I was all Prayer, as if I in soul and body had been made of Prayer.
The reasons of broken prayers are often, 1st, The hastiness of
the affections; not the hastiness always of unbelief, (Isa. 28:16,) but
often of faith, (2 Pet. 3:10). Love and longing for Christ have eagle's
wings; and love flieth, when words do but creep as a snail. 2nd,
It cometh from a delique in the affections (they are broken as a too
high-bended bow) that there is a swooning and delique of words. Every
part of a supplication to a prince, is not a supplication; a poor man
out of fear may speak nonsense, and broken words that cannot be
understood by the prince; but nonsense in prayer, when sorrow,
blackness, and a dark overwhelmed spirit dictateth words, are well known
in, and have a good sense to God. Therefore, to speak morally, prayer
being God's fire, as every part of fire is fire; so here, every broken
parcel of prayer is prayer. So the forlorn son forgot the half of his
prayers; he resolved to say, "Make me as one of thy hired
servants;" (Luke 15:19,) but (verse 21,) he prayeth no such thing;
and yet, "his father fell on his neck, and kissed him." A
plant is a tree in the potency; an infant, a man; seeds of saving grace
are saving grace; prayer is often in the bowels and womb of a sigh;
though it come not out, yet God heareth it as a prayer. "And he
that searcheth the hearts, knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit,
because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of
God." (Rom. 8:27.) "Lord, thou hast heard the desire of the
humble." (Psalm 10:17.) Desires have no sound with men, so as they
come to the ear; but with God, they have a sound, as prayers have. Then
when others cannot know what a groan meaneth, God knoweth what is under
the lap of a sigh, because his Spirit made the sigh: he first made the
prayer, as an intercessor, and then, as God he heareth it; he is within
praying, and without hearing.
Objection 8. But, are all my
cryings in prayer, works of the Spirit? Answer. The flesh may
come in and join in prayer, and some things may be said in haste, not in
faith; as in that prayer, "Hath God forgotten to be gracious?"
(Psalm 77:9.) Nor is that of Jeremiah to be put in Christ's golden
censer, to be presented to the Father: "Wilt thou be altogether to
me as a liar, and as waters that fail?" (Jer. 15:18.) Nor that of
Job, (13:24,) "Wherefore holdest thou me for thine enemy?"
Christ washeth sinners in his blood, but he washeth not sin: he
advocateth for the man that prayeth to have him accepted, but not for
the upstarts and boilings of corruption and the flesh that are mixed
with our prayer, to have them made white. Christ rejecteth these things
in prayer that are essentially ill; but he washeth the prayer, and
causeth the Father accept it. There be so many other things that are
a-pouring out of the soul in prayer; as groaning, sighing, looking up to
heaven, breathing, weeping; that it cannot be imagined, how far short
printed and read prayers come of vehement praying: for you cannot put
sighs, groans, tears, breathing, and such heart-messengers down in a
printed book; nor can paper and ink lay your heart, in all its sweet
affections, out before God. The service-book then must be toothless and
spiritless talk. |
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