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HUMAN POWER DEFEATED
by John Owen
"The
stout-hearted are spoiled, they have slept their sleep; and none
of the men of might have found their hands."
—Ps. lxxvi. 5.
The common circumstances
of this psalm, concerning the penman, title, and the like, I shall
not at all inquire after. The time of its being given to the church
is alone to us considerable; and yet all the knowledge thereof, also,
is but conjectural. What particular time it was wherein it was given
we know not; but that it was given for the use of all times, that
we know. Probable it is, from verse 3, that it was established as
a monument of praise in the days of Hezekiah, when, by the immediate
hand of God, Jerusalem was delivered from the army of Sennacherib.
For a return of which mercy though good Hezekiah came short of the
obligation laid on him, rendering not again according to the benefit
done unto him, yet the Lord himself takes care for his own glory,
setting forth this psalm as a monument of the praise due to his name
unto all generations.
The deliverance of Jerusalem, then,
from so great ruin as that impending over it from the threatening
army of Sennacherib under their walls, being the occasion of penning
this psalm, it cannot but yield us a meet foundation of making mention
of the name of the Lord in a suitable work this day.
In general the whole is eucharistical,
and hath two parts: —first, Narratory, concerning the work of God
for his people; secondly, Laudatory, or the praise of his people for
those works.
The first part hath three particulars?1.
An exordium, by way of exultation and rejoicing, verses 1, 2. 2. A
special narration of the work of God, for which the praise of the
whole is intended, verses 3, 5, 6. 3. An apostrophe to the Lord concerning
the one and the other, verse 4.
The latter containeth, —1. A doctrinal
observation for the use of the church, from the whole, verse 7. 2.
The reasons and confirmation of the doctrine so laid down, taken from
the power and righteousness of God in the actions recounted, verses
8, 9. 3. A threefold use of the doctrine so confirmed: —of instruction,
verse 10; of exhortation, verse 11; of establishment and consolation,
verse 12.
The particulars preceding my text I
shall a little touch upon, that the mind of the Holy Ghost therein
may be the more clear unto you, and the doctrine from thence appear
with the greater evidence: —
1.
In the exordium, verses 1, 2, you have two things: — (1.) The names
of the place wherein the work mentioned was wrought and the praise
returned held forth; —and these are, Judah, Israel, Salem, Zion. (2.)
The relation of God unto this place, which lies at the bottom of the
work he did for them and the praise they returned unto him. He was
known, his name was great amongst them; there was his tabernacle and
his dwelling-place: which may be referred to two heads, —the knowledge
of his will, verse1; and the establishment of his worship, verse 2.
(1.) For the description of the place,
by its several names and titles, I shall not insist upon it; they
are all but various expressions of the same thing. It is the church
of God that is adorned with all these titles and names of singular
endearment: —Judah, that single tribe of which the Messiah was to
come; Israel, a prevailing people, the posterity of him that prevailed
with God; Salem, the place he chose above all the places of the earth
to settle his name therein; and Zion, the choice ornament of that
Salem, —a model wherein the beauty and excellency of all the other
are contracted, whose gates were then so dear unto the Lord. Or perhaps
you have the distribution of the whole into its several parts; —Judah,
the governing tribe; Israel, the body of the people; Salem, the chief
place of their residence and glory; and Zion, the presence of God
in his worship amongst them all. Now, the mention of these titles
of the church, so dear to the Lord, doth front the following narration,
to afford us this observation
Observation. The care of Salem,
of Zion, lies at the bottom of all God's powerful actings and workings
among the sons of men. Every mighty work of God throughout the world
may be prefaced with these two verses. The whole course of affairs
in the world is steered by Providence in reference to the good of
Salem. Zion hath been the rise and downfall of all the powers of the
world; it is her deliverance or trial that is intended in their raising,
and her recompense and vengeance in their ruin. God works not among
the nations for their own sakes. When they are sifted with a sieve,
they are but the chaff; Israel is the corn for whose sake it is done:
whereof not the least grain shall fall to the ground, Amos ix. 9.
She is precious in God's sight and honourable; he loves her: therefore
he giveth men for her, and people for her life, Isa. xliii. 4. The
men of the world are very apt to pride themselves in their thoughts,
as though great were their share and interest in the glorious things
that God is accomplishing; like a fly that sat on the chariot wheel,
and cried, "What a dust have I raised round about!" The
truth is, their names are written in the dust, and they are of no
account in the eyes of the Lord in all he is accomplishing, but only
to exalt his name in their miscarriage and destruction. Was it not
in the thoughts of some lately amongst us, that their right hand had
accomplished the work of the Lord, and that the end of it must he
the satisfaction of their lusts? And hath not the Lord declared that
they have neither part nor lot in this matter? It was Salem, not self—Zion,
not Babylon or confusion, that lay at the bottom of the whole.
(2.) There is a relation
of God unto this place. His will was known there, verse 1; and his
worship was established, verse 2. And these also have their particular
mention.
Observation. In the deliverance
of his people, God hath a special regard to the honour of his ordinances.
Why so great things for Salem— Why, there his word is preached, whereby
his will is known and his name made great; —there his tabernacle is
fixed, and his dwelling-place established; —there he gives his presence
in his worship and ordinances, wherein he is delighted. "Because
of thy temple at Jerusalem shall kings bring presents unto thee,"
Psa. lxviii. 29. Here is the temple, Christ, and then, the worship
of Christ: for their sake it shall be done. When vengeance is recompensed
upon an opposing people, it is the vengeance of the temple, Jer. 1.28.
And it is a voice from thence that rendereth recompense to his enemies,
Isa. lxvi. 6. The great work which the Lord at this day is accomplishing
in the world looks fully on this one thing. Wherefore is it that God
shaketh the powers of this world, and causeth the towers to totter
which they uphold? Is it not that the way of his worship may be vindicated
from all their abominations, and vengeance taken upon them for their
opposition thereunto? And there is no greater sign of God's care for
a people, than when he shows a regard to his ordinances among that
people. The defence he gives is of the glory of the assemblies of
mount Zion, Isa. iv. 5. When the ark departs, you may call the children,
"Ichabod." The taking away of his candlestick, the removal
of his glory from the temple, is an assured prologue to the utter
ruin of a people.
And hath not the Lord had a special
eye this way in the late deliverance? It is his promise, that he well
purge the rebels from amongst his people. And he hath done it. Were
there not children of Edom amongst them, who cried, "Down with
them, down with them even to the ground"— Hath not God magnified
his depised word above all his name? Was it not as an offscouring
to many particular persons among them in the late murmuring for pre-eminence
against those whom the Lord hath chosen? —who, I suppose, have no
other joy in their employment than Moses had in his, who once desired
the Lord to slay him, that he might be freed from his burden. Only
the will of the Lord and the good of a poor thankless people swayed
their hearts unto it And were there here any more discriminating rods
cast in before the Lord, to have that bud and spring which he owned
(as Numb. xvii.) than this one: Scripture, or no Scripture? solemn
worship, or none at all? I speak only as to some particulars, and
that I can upon my own experience. The Lord give their hearts a free
discovery of his thoughts in this business! Doubtless he hath had
respect to his tabernacle and dwelling-place. For my part, they are
to me as the Theban shield; and, notwithstanding all my pressures,
I would labour to say, as Mephibosheth, "Let all go, since I
see the king in peace."
I might farther observe, from both these
things together, that among the people of God alone is the residence
of his glorious presence. This song is held out from Zion. "In
his temple doth every one speak of his glory," Ps. xxix. 9. "Bless
ye God in the congregations, the LORD, from the fountain of
Israel," Ps. lxviii. 26. "Praise waiteth for thee, O God,
in Sion," Ps. lxv. 1. As a lame leg, and as a thorn in the hand,
ungraceful, painful, "so is a parable in the mouth of fools,"
Prov. xxvi. 7, 9. It is the saints who are bid to be joyful in the
Lord; and the high praises of God must be in their mouths, Ps. cxlix.
5, 6. They are high things that beseem only those whom God doth magnify.
If the Lord give us matter of praise, pray know from whom it will
be acceptable, —whose praises they are he delighteth to inhabit. If
you have some defiling lust, the sunshine of mercies will exhale nothing
but the offensive steam of carnal affections. The sacrifices of wicked
hearts are an abomination to the Lord. If your fleshly affections
work this day, without the beatings of a pure heart, and the language
of a pure lip, the Lord will reject your oblations. Would you have
your praise as sweet to the Lord as a mercy is to you? —be assured
that in Christ you are the Israel of God, and your prayers shall prevail,
your praise shall be accepted.
2. The second particular,
as I observed, is a special narration of the works of God,
for which the whole is intended, verses 3, 5, 6. And therein you have
these two things: — (l.) The place where these acts were wrought and
are remembered, "There," verse 3; (2.) The acts themselves
related; which refer, — [1.] To God the worker, verse 3, "He
brake;" [2.] To the persons on whom they were wrought,
verses 5, 6.
(1.) The place where these things
were acted and the monuments of them erected, —that is, "There;"
there, in Salem and Zion, Judah and Israel; there, not so much in
those places, as with reference unto them.
Observation. All the mighty actings
of God regard his church; and there are the monuments and trophies
of his victories against his enemies erected. To the first part of
this I spake before. A word for the latter: —God decketh and maketh
Zion glorious with the spoils of his adversaries. There the glory
of Pharaoh and all his host, drowned in the Red sea, is dedicated,
Exod. xv.; there are the shields of all the mighty men in the host
of Sennacherib, slain by an angel, hung up, Isa. xxxvii 35, 36; there
is the honour, the robes, the crown, and the reason of Nebuchadnezzar
laid up, for the glory of Zion, Dan. iv. 33, 34, himself being changed
into a beast; there is all the pomp and glory of Herod deposited,
Acts xii. 23, when, as a reward of his pride and persecution, he was
devoured of worms; there is the glory of all persecutors, with the
blood of Julian in a special manner, who threw it into the air, and
cried, "Vicisti Galilaee;" there Haman is visibly exalted
upon the gallows by himself erected for the ruin of a prince of the
people, Esth. vii. 10; there the peace and the joy of the church,
their choice frame under the bloody massacres of the inhabitants of
Zion, is set to show, for the glory of it; there all the rochets of
popish prelates, the crowns, and glory, and thrones of the kings of
the earth, —all set apart as monuments and trophies of God's victories
in Zion; there is a place reserved for the man of sin, and all the
kings of the earth who have committed fornication with the mother
of harlots, whose destruction sleepeth not. God will at length certainly
glorify Salem with the arrow of the bow, the shield, the sword, and
all spoils of its oppressors.
(2.) There is what he did describe,
both immediately in the actions themselves, verse 3, and with reference
to the persons towards whom he so acted, verse 5. Now, because the
former is fully contained in the latter, I shall not handle it apart,
but descend immediately to the consideration of the words of my text,
being a declaration of what the Lord hath done for his people in the
day of their distress, with particular reference to the cause of that
distress.
And here we shall
look a little, —1. To the reading of the words; and, 2. To their explication:
—
1. To the reading: The "stout-hearted;"
or, the "strong in heart," the "mighty in heart,"
(so in the original;) —men of stout, stubborn, unpersuadable hearts
and courage, whose epithet is, that they are "far from righteousness,"
Isa. xlvi. 12. The Septuagint have rendered it, asunetoi
th kardia,
—"the foolish in heart." Stubborn-hearted men are
foolish-hearted men: not to yield unto, is worse than not to understand,
what is good. They " are spoiled, — have yielded themselves to
the spoil." So properly, and so rendered by most interpreters;
which sense I shall follow. "They have slept their sleep,"
— "dormitarunt," "They have slumbered their sleep."
What it is "to slumber a sleep" we shall see afterward.
The residue of the words are literally rendered, save only in the
placing of the negation; for whereas we set it on the persons, "none
of the men," in the original it is upon the act, "have not
found;" affirming concerning the persons, "all the men of
might have not," —that is, "none of the men of might have:"
a very frequent Hebraism, imitated by John, 1 Epist. iii. 15, pas
anqpwpoktono" ouc ecei zwhn,—" Every man-slayer
hath not life," —that is, "none hath." And so you have
the words, "The stout of heart have yielded themselves to the
spoil, they have slumbered their sleep; and none of the men of might
have found their hands."
2. The words thus
read contain three general heads: —
(1.) A twofold description of the enemies of Salem: —
[1.] In respect of their internal affections:
they were "stout of heart," men of high spirit and haughty
courage, "cedere nescientes," not knowing how to yield to
anything but the dictates of their own proud spirits.
[2.] In respect of their power for outward
acting: "Men of might;" strong of hand, as well as stout
of heart. Courage without strength will but betray its possessor;
and strength without courage is but "inutile pondus," —a
burdensome nothing: but when both meet, —a stout heart and strong
hands, —who shall stand before them? Thus you have the enemies set
out like Goliath, with his spear and helmet, defying the host of the
living God.
(2.) You have a twofold
issue of God's providence in dealing with them, suitably to this their
double qualification: —
[1.] He opposeth himself to the stoutness
of their hearts, and they "yield themselves to the spoil."
Where observe, first, The act itself: they "yield themselves."
Nothing in the world so contrary to a stout heart as to yield itself.
To yield, is a thing of the greatest distance and contrariety to the
principle of a stout heart in the world: it is far more reconcilable
to death than yielding. But this God will effect. Secondly, The extent
of this yielding: it was "to the spoil." This exceedingly
heightens the mighty working of the Lord against them. Should they
be brought to yield to reason, persuasion, and union, it were well;
but that they should be so prevailed on as to yield to the spoil,
—that is, to the mercy of those against whom they rose and opposed
themselves, —this is "digitus Dei."
[2.] He opposeth himself to their actual
might: they "found not their hands." Hands are the instruments
of acting the heart's resolution. The strength and power of a man
is in his hands; if they be gone, all his hope is gone. If a man's
sword be taken from him, he will do what he can with his hands; but
if his hands be gone, he may go to sleep, for any disturbance he will
work. For men not to find their hands, is not to have that power for
the execution of their designs which formerly they had, In former
days they had hands, —power for doing great things; but now, when
they would use them against Salem, they could not find them. And why
so? —God had taken them away; God took away their power, —their strength
departed from them. Samson found not his strength when his locks were
cut; though he thought to do as at other times, yet he was deceived,
and taken. When God takes away men's power, they go forth, and think
to do as in former days; but when they come to exercise it, all is
gone: their hands are laid out of the way, —in allusion to one that
seeketh.
(3.) There is the
total issue of this whole dispensation, placed in the midst of both,
as arising from both " They have slumbered their sleep."
When their hearts yielded, and their hands were lost, courage and
power both taken away, what else should they do'. Some take this for
an expression of death, as it is sometimes used, Ps. xiii. 3, "Lighten
mine eyes, lest I sleep the sleep of death." I rather conceive
it to hold out that condition which God threateneth to bring upon
the enemies of his people, when he sends them a "spirit of slumber,"
Rom. xi. 8. Now, in such a condition two things are eminent: —
[1.] Its weakness. A condition of slumber
and sleep is a weak condition. A sleeping man is able to do nothing.
Jael can destroy a drowsy Sisera.
[2.] Its vanity. Men in their sleep
are apt to have foolish, vain fancies. This, then, is that which the
Lord holds out concerning the enemies of his church, his people, his
ways, when their hearts are gone and their hands gone: —they shall
be brought to a condition of weakness in respect of others; they shall
not be able to beat them: and of vanity in themselves; they shall
feed themselves with vain thoughts, like the dream of a hungry man,
Isa. xxix. 8, "He dreameth, and, behold, he eateth; he waketh,
and, behold, he is empty." They please themselves for a little
season with strong apprehensions of the accomplishment of their hearts'
lusts and cobweb fancies; but the issue is shame and disappointment.
The words, being opened, will yield
us these three observations: —I. Men of stout hearts and strong hands,
of courage and power, are often engaged against the Lord. II. God
suits the workings of providence for deliverance to the qualifications
and actings of his opposers; their stout hearts shall yield, their
strong hands be lost III. Though men have courage, might, and success,
yet when they engage themselves against the Lord, weakness and vanity
shall be the issue thereof. In the brief handling whereof I hope you
shall find the word of God and the works of God exceedingly suited.
I. Men of courage,
power, and success, of eminent qualifications, are oftentimes engaged
against the Lord, and the ways of the Lord.
I shall multiply neither testimonies
nor instances of this truth; for that were but to set up a candle
in the sun; —the experience of all ages has made it good. One or two
places may suffice: —Ps. lxviii. 30, "Rebuke the company of spearmen,
the multitude of the bulls, with the calves of the people." There
are not only "calves of the people," easily deluded, sottish
men; but also multitudes of "bulls," heady, high-minded,
bearing down all before them, throwing up all bounds and fences, laying
all common to their lusts, not easily to be resisted; —these also
are amongst the adversaries of the ways of the Lord. The first open
opposers of the ways of God were giants," mighty men," and
"men of renown," Gen. vi. 4. At once "two hundred and
fifty princes of the assembly, famous in the congregation, and men
of renown," joined themselves in rebellion against the LORD,
Numb. xvi. 2; and that, —
1. Because these very qualifications,
of a stout heart, strong hands, and former success, are apt of themselves,
if destitute of directing light and humbling grace, to puff up the
spirits of men, and to engage them in ways of their own, contrary
to the mind of the Lord. When men take advice of their stout hearts,
strong hands, and former success, they are very evil counsellors.
When Jeremiah advised the Jews from the Lord for their good, the proud
men answered, they would not obey, Jer. xliii. 2. When Pharaoh is
made stout for his ruin, he cries, "Who is the LORD, that I should
obey his voice?" Exod. v.2. And for success, God makes the Assyrian
the rod of his anger, sends him against the people of his wrath, with
charge "to take the spoil, and to take the prey, and to tread
them down like the mire of the streets," Isa. x. 6. He goeth,
accordingly, and prospereth. But when he hath so done, see what a
conclusion he makes! He goes against Jerusalem, and cries, "
'Let not your God deceive you. Have the gods of the nations delivered
them?' and do you think so to be?" Isa xxxvii. 10, 12. From the
success he had from God, he concluded the success he should have against
him; —like those of late amongst ourselves, who having been partners
with others in former successes, whilst they went upon the command
of God, doubtless received in their stout hearts establishment and
strengthening to other undertakings; as if the God of the Parliament
could not help. Amaziah, king of Judah, wages war with Edom, and they
are destroyed before him, 2 Kings xiv. 7. The war was of the Lord.
Upon this he is lifted up, and causelessly provoketh Jehoash, king
of Israel, verse 8, against the mind and will of God. Jehoash sends
him word, that if the thistle pride itself against the cedar, the
wild beast will tread it down, verse 9. But he had former success,
and on he will go to his ruin. The stout-hearted men (for a delivery
from whose fury and folly we desire this day to lift up the name of
the Lord) having received help and assistance against Edom, will needs
lift up the thistle against the cedar, —act out of their own sphere,
turn subjection into dominion, to their shame and sorrow. But it were
better their hearts should be filled with sorrow, than the nation,
and especially the people of God in the nation, with blood and confusion,
ending in bondage and tyranny. And this is the first account of it,
why men of such qualifications are engaged against the Lord. The qualifications
themselves do set up for it, if destitute of divine light and humbling
grace. Such men will run upon God, and the thick bosses of his buckler.
2. God will have it so, that the greater
may be his glory in the powerful protection and defence of his own,
with the destruction, disappointment, and ruin of their enemies. If
his enemies were all sottish, weak, foolish, childish, until he makes
them so, where would be the praise of his great name? when would there
be "Nodus.Deo vindice dignus," —work worthy of the appearance
of the Most High? But when there is a great mountain before Zerubbabel
(Zech. iv. 7), —a high, haughty, oppressing empire, —to level that
to a plain is glorious. When God will get himself a name, he raises
up, not a poor, effeminate Sardanapalus, —a poor, sensual, hypocritical
wretch, as some have been; the Lord will not make an open contest
by such a one, such as some of our sore oppressors have been: but
he will raise up a Pharaoh, a crooked leviathan, a stout-hearted,
cunning-headed, strong-handed oppressor; and he tells him (such a
one as he), "For this cause have I raised thee up, for to show
in thee my power; and that my name may be declared throughout all
the earth," Exod. ix. 16. "Thou art a fit subject,"
saith he, "for me to exalt my glory in thy ruin." The beast
is to make war with the Lamb; and he shall not do it alone: God will
give him in assistance. And who shall these be? —women, and children,
and weak ones? No; he will put it into the heart of the kings of the
earth "to give their power and strength to the beast," Rev.
xvii. 17, to break them in pieces. This will be glory indeed. All
the opposers which formerly have risen, or at least most of them,
have had the power to that height, as they have been exceedingly above
all outwardly appearing means of being resisted. The breaking of the
old monarchies and of papal power is a work meet for the Lord. And
in this shall mainly consist the promised glory of the Church of Christ
in after days; whose morning star, I doubt not, is now upon us —the
Lord will more immediately and visibly break the high, stout, haughty
ones of the earth, for the sake of his people, than in former times.
Look upon all the glorious things that are spoken concerning Zion
in the latter days, and you shall find them all interwoven with this
still, —the shaking of heaven, the casting down of thrones, and dominions,
and mighty ones. I mention this, because indeed I look upon this late
mercy as the after-drops of a former refreshing shower, —as an appendix
of good-will, for the confirming the former work which God had wrought.
"Though," saith he, "'ye have lien among the pots,'—have
been in a poor, defiled condition, a condition of bondage, —' yet
shall ye be as the wings of a dove covered with silver, and her feathers
with yellow gold,'—ye shall be made exceeding glorious" But how
or when shall this be? Why, when the Almighty scattereth kings for
her sake, then shall she be as white as snow in Salmon, Ps. lxviii.
13, 14. When God by his almighty power takes away so great opposers,
then glory and beauty shall arise upon you. And this, in some degree,
lies also at the bottom of the late dispensation of Providence, —men's
hearts were full of fear of a storm; yea, a storm was necessary, that
some evidence might be given of the Lord's continuing his presence
amongst you, that if hereafter we be forsaken, it may appear that
it was for our own unbelief, unthankfulness, and folly, and not for
doing the work of the Lord. Now, how was this expected? "Why,
this poor people, or that, unacquainted with the things of their peace,
will rise and make opposition." "No," saith the Lord,
"you shall not have so easy a trial; you shall have men of stout
hearts and strong hands, with many former successes on their shoulders;
that, when deliverance is given in, my name may be glorious indeed."
Use
1. Be not moved at the most formidable enemies that may arise
against you in the ways of God. "It was told the house of David,
saying, Syria is confederate with Ephraim. And his heart was moved,
and the heart of his people, as the trees of the wood are moved with
the wind," Isa. vii. 2. When strong combinations arise, how apt
are we to shake and tremble before them, especially when they have
some strangeness as well as strength! That Syria should come against
Judah, is no wonder; but what, I pray, makes Ephraim too, their brother,
and fellow in former afflictions? Besides, Syria and Ephraim were
always at a mortal difference among themselves. But they who agree
in nothing else usually consent in opposition to the ways of God.
Then you shall have Edom, Ammon, Amalek, and Ashur altogether of one
mind, Ps. lxxxiii. 6-8. And the kings of the west, that perpetually
devour one another, yet have one mind in exalting the beast and opposing
the Lamb, Rev. xvii. 14; —as, in our late troubles, there was a concurrence
not only in the main of Syria and Ephraim, the two grand extremes,
but also of innumerable particular fancies and designs; so that if
a man should have met them, (like him in the fable, the lion, the
ass, and the fox), he could not but wonder "Quo iter una facerent,"
—whither they were travelling together. But, I say, when such combinations
are made, how apt are we to shake and tremble! "They are stout
men, valiant men; and perhaps Ahithophel is with them!" Why,
if they were not such, I pray how should the Lord have any praise
in the close of the dispensation? We would be delivered, but we care
not that God should be glorified. If God's glory were dear to us,
we should not care how high opposition did arise. Precious faith,
where art thou fled? Had we but some few grains of it, we might see
the rising of the greatest mountains to be but a means to make the
name of God glorious, by removing them into the midst of the sea.
Hath it not been thus in the days of old? The Lord humble us for our
unbelief!
Use
2. Let men to whom the Lord hath given stout hearts, strong hands,
and great success, watch carefully over their own spirits, lest they
be led aside into any way against the mind of God. Great endowments
are ofttimes great temptations. "The pride of thine heart hath
deceived thee, thou that dwellest in the clefts of the rock, whose
habitation is high; that saith in his heart, Who shall bring me down
to the ground?" Obad. 3. Was it not the rain of Amaziah, of whom
notwithstanding it was said, "he did that which was right in
the sight of the LORD?" 2 Chron. xxv. 2. He who is heightened
against the king of terrors, if he hath not humility (one of the chief
of graces), will quickly choose himself paths of his own. Alas, poor
creatures! if hearts and hands be, and God be not, what will it avail?
But of this afterward. I now proceed to the second observation.
II. God suits the
workings and actings of providence for deliverance to the qualifications
of the opposers.
Are they stout hearts? —they shall be
made to yield themselves. Are they men of might? —they shall lose
their power, —they shall not find their hands. To this I shall speak
very little. This is the cutting off of Adonibezek's toes and thumbs.
God countermines them in their actings, and blows them up in their
own mine. "In the thing wherein they deal proudly, he is above
them," Exod. xviii. 11. They shall not soar so high on the wings
of their pride, but that still they shall find God uppermost. When
they take counsel, and think to carry it by their advices, God saith,
"I am wise also, and will bring evil," Isa. xxxi. 2. When
they think to carry it by a high hand, his strength shall appear against
them. When Herod owns the blasphemy of being called a god, he shall
rot and be eaten of worms, Acts xii 23. Pharaoh cries, "Come
on, let us deal wisely against Israel," Exod. I. 10. He of all
men shall play the fool, for his own ruin and the ruin of his people,
Exod. xiv. 27, 28. If Sennacherib boasts of his mighty host, be sure
he shall not find his hands. How evidently hath the Lord thus carried
on his providence in the late dispensation! Were not many of the headless,
heady undertakers, "robusti animo," —mighty of heart? and
were they not forced to yield themselves, yea, to "yield themselves
to the spoil?" Were they not deep in their plotting? Doubtless
they or their seducers had digged deep to lay their design; though
of the generality of them it cannot be said, as was of Caesar and
his companions, "Accessere sobrii ad perdendum rempublicam."
They were brought to act things in very folly and confusion. They
were great men of might: whence is it they made no more opposition?
The Lord laid their hands out of the way. Many reasons might be given
of this; but I must pass to the last point.
III. Though men have
courage, might, and former successes to accompany them, yet when they
engage themselves against the Lord, or any way of his, vanity, weakness,
and disappointment will be the issue thereof. "Can your heart
endure, or can your hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal
with you?" saith the Lord, Ezek. xxii. 14. " Let the potsherds
strive with the potsherds of the earth; woe unto him that contendeth
with his Maker!" Isa. xlv. 9. "He is wise in heart, and
mighty in strength: who hath hardened himself against him, and prospered?"
Job ix. 4. "The LORD bringeth the counsel of the heathen to nought;
but the counsel of the Lord standeth for ever. He maketh the devices
of the people of none effect," Ps. xxxiii. 10, 11. Whoever riseth
up without him, or against him, shall fall and come to nothing. This
is a plain point, that we suppose ourselves exceedingly well versed
in. But He who searcheth our spirits, and is acquainted with our inward
parts, knows how great is our unbelief in this very thing; and therefore,
in tender condescension, he hath carefully provided for our support
herein. A man would think one word, once spoken, were enough to convince
and persuade the whole world of this truth; but, the Lord knows, there
must be line upon line, here a little, and there a little, to give
his own people any establishment herein. And therefore it is that
in so many places in his word he hath asserted and affirmed this one
thing, —namely, let men be never so strong, powerful, and successful,
if once they engage against him, they are utterly destroyed, unless
he pluck them out of the snare. "Associate yourselves,"
etc., Isa. viii. 9.
But you will say, "Engage against
the Lord! That is true; whoever engageth against him shall surely
fall. But who is so mad as to do so? Very Rabshakeh himself affirms
that he came not up to Jerusalem without the Lord, but that the Lord
sent him to go up against the land to destroy it," Isa. xxxvi.
10. It is true he said so; and by this observation you have an answer
to the Scripture. For though he said so, he lied before the Lord,
and belied the Lord; his undertaking was against the Lord, and against
his mind, as the sequel fully manifested. Many suppose they engage
for God, when they engage against him, To engage against the Lord,
is to engage against his mind and will. To undertake without the will
of God, is enough to be the ruin of the best and stoutest; as we see
in the case of Josiah; but to engage against him! —who can do it,
and stand when he is provoked? This, then, is that which neither stout
hearts nor strong hands shall ever be able to go through withal. For
instance, to engage against that authority which God will own and
defend, is successlessly to engage against the Lord. Now, because
these are the days wherein the Lord will shake heaven and earth, beat
the nations with a rod of iron, breaking much of the power of the
world, it may be asked by some, how it shall be known that any authority
is such as the Lord will not destroy and overturn, but own it as a
way of his own? I answer, To omit the rule of reason, law, and common
established principles amongst men, all which give a great light unto
the rule of walking in this case, I shall give you six scriptural
significations, "a posteriori," of such an authority as
the Lord will make as a brasen wall, or a rock in the sea, against
which the waves dash with noise and fury, but are themselves broken
to pieces: —
1. If it be such as the Lord hath honoured
with success and protection in great, hazardous, and difficult undertakings
for himself. Thus was it with Moses. Never had a leader of a people
more murmurings, revilings, and rebellions against him. The story
is obvious unto all. He was envied, hated, reproached of all sorts,
from the princes of the congregation to the mixed multitude. But Moses
had travelled through the sea and the desert with the Lord, and was
encompassed with success and protection; and therefore all attempts
against him shall be birthless and fruitless. This is one; but it
will never do alone, unless conjoined with those that follow.
2. If the persons enjoying that authority
abide to act for God, and not for themselves, after such success and
protection. Saul began to act for God, and he vexed all his enemies,
which way soever he turned himself; but afterward, turning to himself,
God left him to himself. Cyrus, how honoured, how anointed was he
for his great undertaking against Babylon but afterward, pursuing
his own ambition, he was requited with blood for the blood he sought.
The Lord is with them that are with him, and whilst they are so. The
establishment of the house of Saul is far from the Lord: for "those
that honour him, he will honour; and they that despise him shall be
lightly esteemed," 1 Sam. ii. 30. There is no more certain sign
in the world of persons devoted to ruin, or at least of their being
divested of their authority, than that having followed God for a season
in their enjoyment of success and protection, they turn aside to pursue
their own ends, like Jehu. I could give you an example of this, as
yet not much above half a year old. But when men undertake with the
Lord, and for him, and having known his assistance therein, shall
contniue to lay out themselves in his ways; the Lord will then build
them a house like David, which shall not be prevailed against.
Here I must give one caution by the
way —that I am very far from countenancing any to move against just
and righteous authority, who discern not these things: the Lord forbid.
Let men look to the rule of their obedience, which I have nothing
to do withal at this time. I only describe such as unto whom, if any
dare to make opposition, in an ordinary dispensation of providence,
it will prove fruitless and vain.
3. The third thing is, that they subject
their power to the power of the Lord Christ, who is Lord of lords,
and King of kings. The psalmist tells the rulers of the earth, that
the reason of their spoiling is, that they do not "kiss the Son,"
Ps. ii. 12, or yield unfeigned obedience to the mighty King whom God
hath set on his holy hill. God hath promised that he will give in
the service of kings and nations to Christ in his kingdom; and therein
shall be their security. When God puts it into the heart of rulers
to rule according to the interest of Christ and his gospel, and to
seek the advancement of his Sceptre, they shall surely be as a fenced
wall. I cannot stay to show what this interest of Christ is. In a
word, it is the ordering, framing, carrying on of affairs as is most
conducible to the unravelling and destruction of the mystery of iniquity.
4. If they are supported by the prayer
of a chosen people, who seek their welfare, not for their own interest
and advantage, but for the advantage of the gospel and the ways of
Christ, by them asserted. If God's own people pray for them in authority,
that under them they may enjoy some share of their own, and obtain
some ends suited to any carnal interest of theirs, God will reject
those prayers. But when they seek their welfare, because it is discovered
to them that in their peace the gospel shall have peace and prosperity;
surely the Lord will not cast out their prayers, nor shame the face
of his poor supplicants.
5. If in sincerity, and with courage
and zeal, they fulfil the work of their magistracy, in the administration
of righteous judgment; especially in those great and unusual acts
of justice, in breaking the jaws of the wicked and terrible, and delivering
the spoil out of the teeth of the mighty, Job xxix. 17. Innumerable
are the demonstrations of God's owning such persons.
6. If they have not the qualifications
of that power which in these latter days God hath promised to destroy.
Now these are two; I will but name them unto you. First, Drinking
the cup of fornication that is in the hand of the harlot; that is,
practising any false worship and forms invented besides the word.
Secondly, Giving their power to the beast, or engaging in any ways
of persecution against any of the ways of God, or his saints in those
ways. That the Lord is about to shake, break, and destroy all such
powers as these, I did not long since, by his assistance, here demonstrate.
And
so have I completed my instances that they who engage against such
an authority as is attended with these qualifications, engage against
the Lord. I could also give other instances, in other ways and institutions
of God; but I chose these as most accommodated to the season. If now
I should tell you, that, notwithstanding all clamours to the contrary,
these things, for the main, are found in your assemblies, thousands
in the world would (yet I hope your own consciences would not) return
the lie for so saying. But yet, though the Lord seems to bear witness
to some integrity in his late dispensations, I shall only pray that
what is wanting may be supplied; —that you may never want the like
protection in the like distress.
Come
we now briefly to the reasons why these who oppose such authority
shall not succeed. And it were an easy labour to multiply reasons
hereof. The sovereignty, the power, all the attributes of God would
furnish us with arguments. I shall omit them all; [and] only touch
upon two that are couched in the text.
They shall have no better issue, because,
— (1.) The Lord will take away their stout hearts, whereby they are
supported; (2.) He will take away their strong hands, whereby they
are confirmed: and when hearts and hands are gone, they also are gone.
(1.) He will take away their stout hearts,
that they shall no more be able to carry them out to any success in
their great undertakings. He will break that wheel at the very fountain,
that it shall no more be the spring of their proceedings.
Now, this the Lord usually doth one
or more of these four ways: — [1.] He fills them with fury and madness;
so taking away their order. [2.] He fills them with folly and giddiness;
so taking away their counsel. [3.] He fills them with terror and amazement;
so depriving them of their courage. Or, [4.] with contrition and humility;
so changing their spirits: —
[1.] He fills them with fury and madness,
taking away their order, which is the tie and cement of all societies,
in all undertakings. "'Though all the people of the earth,' saith
the Lord, 'he gathered together against Jerusalem,' they shall not
prosper." And why so? "I will smite every horse with astonishment,
and his rider with madness," Zech. xii. 4. Madmen have often
great strength, and with it great fury; but know not how to use it,
except to their own ruin: when they think to do the greatest mischief,
they cut and gash themselves. Thus the Lord threateneth those who
in outward profession are his own people, when they walk contrary
to him: "The LORD shall smite thee with madness of heart, and
thou shalt not prosper in thy ways," Deut. xxviii. 28, 29. Because
smitten with madness, therefore they shall not prosper. This is that
untameable fury whereby men are carried out to sinful, destructive
enterprises, as the horse rushes into the battle; —a judgment which
some men vocally, as well as actually, at this day proclaim to be
upon their spirits. They cry their blood boils, and their hearts rage
for revenge; reviling those in authority, whereby to foment, Acts
xix. Hence they stir up men for the engaging in such designs as, if
accomplished, in the judgment of all men not mad like themselves,
would certainly prove ruinous to themselves and others. And in this
frame they delight, of it they boast; not once considering that it
is a badge and character of men whom God will disappoint and destroy
in their proceedings; it being nothing but the working of that evil
spirit which came upon Saul, stirring him up to rage and fury, when
once the meek, calming Spirit of the Lord departed from him.
[2.] He will fill them with folly and
giddiness; so taking away their counsel. Foolish and giddy undertakers
do but conceive chaff, and bring forth stubble. "The princes
of Zoan are become fools, the princes of Noph are deceived; they have
also seduced Egypt. The LORD hath mingled a perverse spirit in the
midst thereof; and they have caused Egypt to err in every work thereof,
as a drunken man staggereth in his vomit" Isa. xix. 13, 14. This
he calls taking away the spirit of Egypt, and destroying the counsel
thereof, verse 3. There is no means of ruin, destruction, and disappointment,
that God doth more frequently threaten than this, —he will take wisdom
from the wise, and then pour contempt upon the spirit of princes.
When to their madness he adds blindness; to their fury, folly; to
their rage, giddiness; —what can be the issue but such as is expressed:
"They shall stagger like a drunken man in his vomit"? Stand
before him, and he'll pour his filth upon you; let him alone, and
he and it will quickly tumble to the ground. What, I pray, can be
expected from mad, blind, furions, foolish, raging, giddy men? Should
a man use these expressions of any, it would be said he railed; yet
God hath taken it, that all undertakers against him shall b e so,
and no otherwise. Now, hence ariseth upon the spirits of such men
a twofold effect; —first, they shall not be able to advise
rationally against others; nor, secondly, shall they be able to receive
suitable advice from others. They shall be able neither to make out
counsel to support them in the way wherein they are, nor to take in
counsel for their reducing to better paths. If this were not evident
in the late dispensation of the Lord towards poor creatures setting
up themselves against the Lord, then never did any providence speak
plain in any latter age.
[3.] He will fill them with fear and
amazement; so taking away their courage. This God caused to fall upon
a whole host at one time; [so] that, without seeing an enemy they
ran and fled, and lost all they had, and the spoil, 2 Kings vii. 6,
7. And he threatens that in such a condition he will make men like
women, —they shall be afraid and fear, Isa. xix. 16. Yea, this is
the way of God's usual dealing; first, he overcomes the spirit of
his enemies, and then their armies or force: and the Lord is magnified
therein; as is fully set out, Exod. xv. 14-16. The hearts and spirits
of men are all in the band of God; he can pluck them in, or let them
out, as seems good unto him; make him that was mighty one day, the
next day to he of no power: what is left of fury, folly shall devour;
and what is left of folly, fear shall consume; and the purpose of
the Lord shall be established.
[4.] If he have any favour for them,
and so will not proceed in these ways of revenge against them, which
would end in their speedy ruin; he will give them contrition and humility,
so changing them. What a clear testimony of this did he give in the
business of Jacob and Esau! Esau resolves and threatens his death
upon the first opportunity, Gen. xxvii. 41; an opportunity is put
into his hands by Jacob's return into Canaan, chap. xxxii.; means
of revenge he is ready furnished withal, and comes out, accordingly,
with a band of cut-throats for the purpose, in the same chapter. What
should any man now rationally expect, but that poor Jacob must certainly
be ruined, and the mother slain with the children? In an instant the
Lord toucheth the heart of Esau, and all his menaces of revenge issue
in tears and expressions of love and joy! chap. xxxiii. 4. It is to
be rejoiced in, that the stout hearts of some men are changed upon
their disappointment: and the issue of the mercy is no loss to you,
to the nation, and themselves therein; though truly to them it had
been an argument of greater love, had the Lord graciously bent their
spirits unto it before. But by his infinite wisdom he hath accomplished
his holy will.
Now, in one, more, or all of these ways,
will the Lord proceed with the mighty of heart, that set up themselves
against him, until he take away their hearts, and make them useless;
that, either willingly or unwillingly, they shall yield themselves"
even "to the spoil."
(2.) He will not only take away their
hearts, but also their hands; be will not only dispirit them, but
he will also disarm them; he will take not only wisdom from their
hearts, but the wheels from their chariots. He is the God of the power
of men, as well as of the spirits of men. Will he continue power and
strength unto men, to use it against him that gives it?
Use
1. To discover the ground of God's late dispensation, in taking
away the hearts from the stout and hands from the mighty, —bringing
them into a condition of weakness and vanity. Their undertakings were
against the Lord, and their hearts could not endure, neither could
their hands be strong.
I shall give some instances in their
undertaking against the Lord: —
(1.) In their declared enmity to the
ministry of the gospel —not to the persons of ministers, because engaged
in some faction in the state, wherein, perhaps, many may he opposed,
and that from the Lord; —nor yet because of their persuasion for the
administration of ordinances after this or that form; which often
ariseth to very great animosities, —the Lord pardon them unto his
people: but because in general they do administer ordinances. Now,
certainly there is so much of God in that administration, that if
they be opposed, not for other causes, or upon other pretences, but
"eo nomine," as administrators of ordinances, that opposition
is made to God himself. It was part of the end of Christ's ascension,
that he might bestow those gifts upon them which they do enjoy, Eph.
iv. 8. And shall the fury of men make the work of God, the purchase
of Christ, of none effect? Doubtless in this respect God will make
as many as are sincere "a fenced brasen wall," Jer. xv.
20. Men may batter their hands, and beat out their brains against
them; but they shall not prevail. It is true, as many of them are
pleased in these days to engage themselves in several parties; so,
if they do close and act with them that are pernicious to the commonwealth,
all inconvenience that lighteth upon them is from themselves, —their
profession gives them no sanctuary from opposition: but when they
are envied, "eo nomine," as administrators of ordinances,
not in such or such a way, but as ordinances, —shall not the Lord
plead for this thing?. Now, that this was aimed at by some, I suppose
none can doubt. The Lord open the eyes of them who in this deliverance
have received deliverance, but will not see it! I fear some men had
almost rather perish, than be delivered not in their own way. Envy
in some men will outbalance safety. Alas! we are proud beggars, when
we will refuse the mercy of God if we may not appoint the hand whereby
it shall be bestowed.
(2.) Against the spiritual ordinances
of God themselves. These are the carved work which they aimed to break
down with their axes and hammers. Christ hath said, " I will
build my church." Their voice was, "Down with it! down with
it even to the ground.'" Poor creatures! they dashed themselves
against the rock. Is this a time, think you, to engage against all
ordinances, when the Lord Jesus is joining battle with all the world
for their abuse of them; and is vindicating them in order to more
purity, beauty, lustre, power, efficacy, and peace, than ever yet
he adorned them withal? You were not wise, poor souls, to discern
the seasons. What no time to pluck down, but when Christ himself is
building! Ah! turn your weapons against Babylon; it will prove far
the more thriving warfare. Let Zion alone, if but for your own sakes.
Jerusalem will prove a burdensome stone to all that take her up. You
have received more loss in a week of days from Christ in this nation,
than you would have done in a week of years from Antichrist in another.
God will make them that shall go for Ireland sensible of this truth.
See Ps. xlviii. 12-14.
(3.) Principally and immediately against
magistracy; if not in the abstract, yet openly as established in the
hands of those whom the Lord hath owned in the darkest day that ever
this nation saw. It is the hope of my soul, that the Lord hath borne
witness that they have the sixfold qualification before mentioned.
And why would they have at once destroyed the Parliament and their
own commander? Look upon the end of their common workmen: was it not
that every one might have enjoyed their lust for a season? Of the
more crafty: was it not to get themselves power to attempt their folly,
and execute their fury? Look upon the end of the work: was it not
to have wrapped us in confusion for a few months, and then to have
given us up to the revengeful will of enraged enemies? So that, truly,
there is but one thing wonderful to me in all this business, that
God should take away the hearts and hands of these men in this enterprise;
and that is, that he should do it in mercy for such an unthankful,
unworthy, unbelieving people as we are. In this is he for ever to
be admired and blessed. At thy rebuke, O God of Jacob, both the chariot
and the horses have failed.
Use
2. If this be the cause why "they have slumbered their sleep,"
be instructed, ye that are rulers of this nation, in the ways of peace,
protection, and safety; —be in the ways of God, and do the things
of God, and no weapon that is formed against you shall ever prosper.
Many protections and deliverances you have had in your actings for
him. Hath he not deserved at your hands to be trusted and feared all
your days, with all your power? As my heart hath always been towards
the governors in Israel, who willingly offered themselves among the
people; so truly my heart never more trembled over them than now.
Oh! where shall we find hearts fit to receive so many mercies as have
been given into our bosoms? Oh! where shall we have hearts large enough
to receive all these mercies? The oil ceased when the vessel would
hold no more. All my hope and confidence is, that God will work for
his name's sake. I could exhort you to sundry particulars, and lay
down several paths of God, walking wherein you shall be sure to find
peace and safety; as especially, that you would regard that which
God hath honoured, whereunto the opposition which he had resolved
to make void was made.
Use
3. You that are men of courage, and might, and success, stout
of heart and strong of hand, be watchful over yourselves, lest you
should in any thing be engaged against the Lord. The ways of the Lord
are your locks; —step but out of them, they will be cut, and you will
become like other men, and be made a prey and a mocking to the uncircumcised
that are round about. These eminencies you have from God are eminent
temptations to undertakings against God, if seasoned with grace and
watchfulness. Ah! how many baits have Satan and the world suited to
these qualifications! Samson shook himself and went out, saying, "I
will do as at other times;" but he knew not that the Lord was
departed from him. You may think, when you are walking in paths of
your own, that you will do as at other times; but if your strength
be departed away, what will be the end?
Use
4. Our last use should be of instruction in respect of God; that
you may see both what he can do and trust him, and consider what he
hath done and bless him. For the first; —weapons of all sorts, men
of all sorts, judgments of all sorts, are at his command and disposal:
see it in this psalm. And for what he hath done; —if there be any
virtue in the presence of Christ in his ordinances, —if any worth
in the gospel, —if any sweetness in carrying on the work of Christ's
revenge against Babylon, —if any happiness in the establishment of
the peace and liberty of a poor nation, purchased with so much blood
and so long a contest, —if any content in the disappointment of the
predictions and threats of God's enemies and his people's, —any refreshment
to our bowels that our necks are yet kept from the yoke of lawless
lust, fury, and tyranny, —if any sweetness in a that a poor, distressed
handful in Ireland may yet be relieved, —if any joy that God hath
given yet another testimony of his presence amongst us, —if it be
any way valuable that the instruments of our deliverance be not made
the scorned object of men's revengeful violence, —if any happiness
that the authority under which we enjoy all these mercies is not swallowed
up, —is it not all in the womb of this deliverance? And who is he
that hath given it into our bosom?
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