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FIVE SACRAMENTAL
SERMONS
by John Willison
SERMON V. A
SERMON AFTER THE COMMUNION. THE FAINTING BELIEVER
STRENGTHENED FOR HIS WORK.
"He
giveth power to the faint; and to them that have no might, he increaseth
strength"
Isa. xl. 29.
THE prophet having concluded
the preceding chapter with a prophecy of the captivity of the Jews into
Babylon, though it was many years before it came; he in this and the succeeding
chapter, furnishes the church and people of God with a great many precious
promises for their support and comfort, during that long captivity; which
surely would be of great use to them in that cloudy and dark day.
In the latter end of this chapter, the prophet
is reproving the people of God, who are now supposed to be captives at
Babylon, for their unbelief and despondency under their affliction, in
saying or thinking God had either cast them off; or could not help them,
verse 27. For remedying whereof, he puts them in mind of God's power and
all-sufficiency to help in the greatest straits, verse 28. And in the
text and following verses, he assures them of God's compassion, and readiness
to help them under all their sinking discouragements, "He giveth
power to the faint," &c.
More particularly in the text, we may notice
these things: 1. The sad case of many of God's people in captivity, "They
were faint and without might," i.e. They were under pressures and
burdens both outward and inward, that were ready to crush them, and make
them faint away; they were called to several pieces both of service arid
suffering; for which they had no strength nor might of themselves. 2.
We have their mercy and privilege under this sad case ; power and strength;
i.e. spiritual strength mainly, which is graciously promised them for
their encouragement, under all their faintings and trials. 3. The author
of this privilege, "The everlasting God, the Lord Jehovah, with whom
is everlasting strength, who fainteth not, neither is weary. 4. The way
how this mercy is conveyed; it is in a way of free gift, without any worth
or merit on our part; he giveth it, and he increaseth it; he giveth strength
where it is not, and he increaseth it where it is already given in any
measure.
Doctrine,
"That as the Lord's people while here are liable to many fainting
discouragements, under which they cannot support themselves, so the Lord
is pleased to give them suitable strength for all their exigencies."
This is also confirmed from that gracious promise, recorded in the following
chapter, Isa. xli. 10, "Fear thou not, for I am with thee: be not
dismayed, for I am thy God; I will strengthen thee, yea, I will help thee;
yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness."
And the psalmist confirms this truth by his own comfortable experience,
Psal. cxxxviii. 3, "In the day when I cried thou answeredst me, and
strengthenedst me with strength to my soul."
The method I choose for
prosecuting this doctrine, shall be,
- I. To inquire into those fainting
discouragements, which believers labour under while here.
- II. Why 'the Lord doth let
them meet with such trials.
- III. How it is that the Lord
doth strengthen his weak and fainting people.
- IV. What are the great ends
and uses for which the Lord gives such strength to his people.
- V. Give some reasons to prove,
that the Lord will certainly give them this strength.
- VI. Make improvement.
I. As to the first,
viz. To instance some of those fainting discouragements that believers
labour under while here, and which in a special manner, call for divine
support. And these are of two sorts; viz. either of a temporal or a spiritual
nature.
1. Sometimes they meet with external afflicting
providences, which are very discouraging:
As when they are troubled with poverty and
want, so that they know not how to subsist themselves and their families;
this is a great trial, and requires spiritual strength from God to help
them to carry right under it. When they are destitute of earthly friends,
and have none to comfort or sympathise with them in trouble; this is also
a heavy trial that needs strength from God When they are loaded with
reproaches and misrepresentations, and that not only from enemies, but
even from friends; this hath been very sinking to the best of God's people.
When they are vexed with the death and loss of near and dear relations,
pleasant children, and helpful friends; this case has been afflicting
to many. When they are under bodily sickness or racking pains, so that
they "have no rest in their bones, wearisome nights are appointed
for them, and they are full of tossings till the dawning of the day."
When they have a near view of meeting with death, that king of terrors,
and terror of kings. When they are under the oppressions and persecution
of cruel enemies. These are trials that the dearest of God's children
are exposed to, and under which they would be ready to faint, if they
were not strengthened from above. And especially those outward pressures
are very sinking and discouraging to them; especially when they think
it is their sin that has brought them into these sad circumstances, or
when their trials are of a long continuance, and it may be something in
them appears to be singular, as it was in the case of the Jews in Babylon.
Then it is that God's people are ready to faint and succumb, and should
look to God to step in with suitable supplies of strength.
2. Sometimes God's people are troubled with
fainting discouragements of a spiritual nature:
As when they find indwelling corruption,
and heart-plagues strong and prevailing: this case was very affecting
and afflicting to David, Psal. lxv. 3, and to Paul, Rom. vii. 24, and
to the church, when they cried out, Isa. lxiv. 6, "Our iniquities
like the wind have taken us away:" q. d. The tide is so strong,
we have no might to stem it. -When the "enemy is exalted over them,"
and Satan doth harrass them with blasphemous injections, horrid atheistical
thoughts, and violent temptations; he sometimes tempts God's children
to the greatest of sins, as he tempted Job to curse God: how is the soul
ready to faint at such a time, if it get not strength from God and crieth
out, "How long shall mine enemy be exalted over me? It is like a
sword in my bones, when the enemy reproacheth me, and saith daily to me,
Where is thy God? O my Rock, why hast thou forgotten me? why go I mourning
because of the oppression of the enemy?"
3. When God hides his face, and they cannot
get access to him in duty; so as they think, they are given up and left
to struggle with Satan and corruption in their own strength. That is a
melancholy case to the soul, under which it would faint, without secret
support from God.
4. When they find their hearts wholly out
of frame for any spiritual duty; by reason of much backwardness to it,
wearying of it, and corruption working in them, which carries them away
from God in time of duty: such as atheism, unbelief; worldly-mindedness,
heart-hardness, &c. Now the soul would faint, and wholly backslide
from God, if he did not secretly uphold it.
5. When the soul is brought back again,
as it were, to the foot of mount Sinai, and made to hear the thunderings
thereof; and the curses of a broken law renewed: the law gets a new commission
to take the man into custody, and put his feet into the stocks: so that
the old wounds are opened, and former guilt is revived, and God seems
to behave to him like a stranger or an enemy. Thus he did to Heman, Psal.
lxxxviii. Now, at such a time the soul is ready to faint, and say, "Is
his mercy clean gone for ever! Will he be favourable no more? Hath he
forgotten to be gracious? Hath he in his anger shut up his tender mercies?
But especially if sickness, or the messenger of death, come and knock
at the man's door, while in such a case, O, how is he distressed with
the melancholy apprehensions of' death and judgment! "Death,"
thinks he, "is near, and I am most unready for it; judgment is approaching,
my accounts are unclear, and the Judge's face all covered with frowns."
Now the soul indeed would faint if God in Christ did not support it.
6. As believers have many fainting discouragements,
upon the account of their own case, so also upon a public account, in
respect of the church, and land wherein they live: As when they see a
spirit of slumber and deep sleep fallen upon professors, so that they
are not moved with the judgments of God, when denounced both by his word
and providence; yea, though "the fire be kindled, and burning round
about them, yet they lay it not to heart." When they see religion
under a great and visible decay among all ranks, many turning daily more
careless and indifferent about duty, more slack about family-worship and
secret prayer, and daily more carnal and worldly in their conversation.
When they see Christian love decay, divisions and animosities increase,
malice, envy, and hatred of one another prevail, and people growing more
selfish, minding their own things, and careless about the things of Jesus
Christ. When they see God's Spirit in a sad measure withdrawn from the
assemblies of his people; ordinances become as a sealed book, dry breasts,
and a miscarrying womb, so that Ichabod may be written on them, or "God
is departed;" when they see communions lifeless, and not what they
wont to be. Christ is absent and yet few sensible of the judgment, or
laying it to heart, so as to lament after the Lord. They see many busy
to sin him away, but few endeavouring to pray him back again. The sincere
seekers of God are often like to faint under this discouragement.When
they see many professors making soul-slips, yea, falling into scandalous
sins, to the reproach of religion, and hardening of the wicked; and but
few like to be found sincere in their profession. When they see those
that are truly godly, tender and conscientious in their walk, public-spirited
and concerned for the interest of Christ, removing and going off the stage:
this is a very melancholy and sinking discouragement to the few that are
left behind, under which they need support from God: hence it was that
the psalmist cries so earnestly, Psal. xii. 1, "Help, Lord, for the
godly man that ceaseth: for the faithful fall from among the children
of men"
II. The second
thing proposed was, to inquire why the Lord lets his people be troubled
with such fainting discouragements.
1. To correct them for their former faults
and miscarriages; hence we read, Jer. iv. 18, when the Lord had threatened
several sad things against his people, he saith, "thy ways and thy
doings have procured these things to thee." God will have his people
to smart for sin; not to make any satisfaction for sin, but to render
sin bitter unto them.
2. To humble and make them low, in the midst
of their great attainments and signal enjoyments: believers are still
apt to be puffed up with these, if they were not kept under by humbling
dispensations. Hence, even Paul himself had a messenger of Satan sent
to buffet him, "lest he should be exalted above measure, through
the abundance of revelations," 2 Cor. xii. 8.
3. To let them know the difference betwixt
earth and heaven, a militant and triumphant state. When things go well
with us in, the world, we are apt to say, with Peter on the mount, "It
is good for us to be here." But when these go ill, God's people turn
their tongue, and say with the psalmist, Psal. lxxiii. 27, "It is
good for me to draw nigh to God." When we live at ease, we are ready
to think ourselves at home: but when trouble comes, we begin to say, "Arise,
let us depart, this is not our rest." It is not easy to wean us from
the comforts of this life: and therefore God many times doth rub gall
and wormwood on the breasts of this present world, to imbitter its comforts,
and take our hearts off it.
4. To awaken the spirit of prayer, and make
them more importunate in their addresses to the throne of grace, Psal.
cxxx. 1. Christ suffered the storm to continue, till the ship was almost
overwhelmed, that the disciples might come and awaken him with their cries
to help them, Matt. viii. 25.
5. That his people may get new proofs of
his love and tender care in strengthening such weak reeds as they are,
to endure such storms; and in his: stepping in so seasonably for their
relief and support, ready to faint and succumb. God's people have much
to speak on this account, to the praise of his free grace, Psal. xciv.
18, "When I said, My foot slippeth, thy mercy, O Lord, held me up."
6. To cause his people long for heaven,
and mend their peace in the way to it, Phil. i. 23. There is a great difference
betwixt our prayers in health and in sickness; our repentings in prosperity
and adversity, Isa xxvi. 16; Hos. v.15. He that in prosperity prayed with
a cold heart and dry eyes, can in affliction cry aloud and mingle his
prayers with tears. Though heaven was much out of sight and out of mind
before, and he had scarce a thought of flitting; yet now when distress
comes, he begins to sigh with David, Psal. lv. 6, "O that I had wings
like a dove; for then would I flee away, and be at rest I would hasten
my escape from the windy tempest."
III. The next thing
is to inquire how it is that the Lord doth strengthen his weak and fainting
people. And here I shall do two things First, Inquire into the nature
of the spiritual strength the Lord gives his people. Second, Into the
way and manner how he conveys it to them.
As to the first, This spiritual strength
supposeth that the soul is made alive and raised out of the grave of sin
and a natural state, by the quickening Spirit of God. And that the soul
is united to Christ by faith, who is the fountain and channel of all grace
and spiritual strength.
But more directly, God's strengthening his
people imports these things:
1. The Lord's creating and implanting the
habits of grace in the soul, which are the strength of the soul: and therefore
called the armour of God, and our shield and helmet, Eph. vi.
2. His increasing of grace in the soul;
for he not only plants these habits, but strengthens them, and gradually
perfects what he has begun, Psal. xcii. 12, 13.
3. His breathing on his work of grace in
the soul, and thereby actuating his people's graces, and drawing them
forth into a lively exercise: for God must not only plant grace and increase
it but also set it at work and bring it into action," Phil. ii. 13,
"It is God that worketh in you both to will and to do."
4. The Lord's strengthening of his fainting
people imports his letting out and conveying of fresh supplies of grace
to his people, in the time of their need. Not only doth he plant, increase,
and actuate grace, but likewise he doth come in with seasonable supplies
and reinforcements to the weak and decayed graces of his people, answerable
to their pressures and exigencies. Grace of itself is but a creature,
and subject to perish, and would soon be destroyed by the frequent attacks
made upon it, if it were not seasonably reinforced with new supplies from
its author. And thus the Lord, from time to time, feeds the believer's
lamp with fresh oil; gives it more faith, more love, more hope, and more
desires; and thus he gives power to the faint, and strengthens these things
which remain when ready to die.
5. It imports the supplying the soul with
experiences of the power, mercy, and faithfulness of God, for the nourishing
and strengthening of faith in the time of trial; and therefore we find
the Lord, when he is strengthening his fainting people, in the text and
context, he refers them to their former experience, ver. 27, 28, "
Hast thou not heard? Hast thou not known?" How then sayest thou,
that God hath forsaken thee! Often do we find David strengthening his
faith this way, Psal. xlii.; cxvi.
6. It lies in the Lord's applying to the
soul his gracious and comfortable promises, and thereby animating his
people with spiritual courage and resolution to grapple with all their
enemies and difficulties. He shows that God is on their side, that his
"grace is sufficient for them, and that he will never leave them,
nor forsake them," Isa. xli. 10; Psal. cxviii. 6; Heb. xiii. 5,6;
2 Cor. xii. 9.
7. The Lord strengthens his people, by giving
them an encouraging view and prospect of a happy outgate from all their
trials and discour-agements, and of a glorious victory over all their
enemies, Job xix. 25; Rom. xvi. 20; 2 Tim. iv. 7, 8.
I come to the second thing; viz. To show
the way and manner how this spiritual strength is conveyed to believers.
And this you may take up in these following propositions:
1. God has treasured up in Jesus Christ
his Son, a fulness of grace and spiritual strength for his people. As
our Mediator is the purchaser of his strength, so he is the trustee to
whom it is given in order to be bestowed upon believers. This is clear
from the promises of God for giving strength, they run in this channel,
Zech. x. 12, "I will strengthen them in the Lord;" i.e. in Christ,
"and they shall walk up and down in his name, saith the Lord. "From
the precepts of God which are in the same strain, Eph. vi. 10, "Be
strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might," 2 Tim. ii. 1,
"My son, be strong in the grace that is in Jesus Christ."
From the practice of the saints, they all look for their strength this
way, Isa. xlv. 24, "Surely, shall one say, In the Lord have I righteousness
and strength." And Paul saith, Phil. iv. 18, "I can do all things
through Christ who strengtheneth me." So that Christ is our head
of influence and store-keeper. The stock of our grace and strength, since
Adam's fall and mismanagement, is all put in Christ's hand; he is the
great steward of heaven, the key of the store-house is in his custody,
and on him we must daily depend for necessary supplies.
2. The way that Christ our head and treasurer
communicates his strength, and gives out the necessary supplies thereof
to his people, is by the ministration of the Holy Spirit, and his gracious
operations and influences on their souls, John xv. 29; xvi. 14, 15, And
for this effect, the Spirit of God dwells in believers, to excite and
draw forth their graces to frequent acts and a lively exercise; and to
give them, those gracious aids and assistances their exigencies call for.
3. The way that the, Holy Spirit gives this
strength to believers is, in the use of appointed means, both public and
private, Psal,lxxxiv. 4-7. Where we see that those who would go from strength
to strength, must dwell in God's house, and attend his ordinances. We
expect not our daily food without labouring, tilling, sowing, and reaping;
so neither can we look for spiritual strength but in the use of the word,
sacraments, and prayer.
IV. The fourth
thing in the general method is, To show what are the great ends and uses
for which the Lord gives this spiritual strength to his people.
1. He gives it to them for doing or performing
of duty; for without new supplies of strength we cannot act spiritually,
nor persevere in duty: hence the spouse cries out, Cant. i. 4, "Draw
me, and we will run after thee." And the psalmist saith, Psal. cxix.
32, "I will run the ways of thy commandments, when thou shalt enlarge
my heart." God's work must ever be done in God's strength.
2. He gives it for suffering, and bearing
of crosses and afflictions, and we need God's strength that we may do
it without murmuring or fainting, Col. i. 11.
V. The next thing
was to give reasons, why the Lord will certainly give suitable strength
to his people under all their exigencies.
1. Because it was purchased for them by
their Surety, Christ, and promised to them, in him, Zech. x. 12.
2. Because they were, in the most solemn
and serious manner, recommended to the care of God by his beloved Son
Jesus Christ, when he was leaving the world, John xvii. 11.
3. Because of their near relation to him,
and his great love to them; they are the subjects of his kingdom, the
children of his family; yes, they are, as it were, the wife of his bosom;
and will he not then take special care of them?
4. Because they rely and depend wholly upon
the Lord himself for this strength and support. Isa. xxvi. 3; Psal. Lvii.
2.
5. Because the Lord knows that his people
have many strong and dangerous enemies; and that they have no inherent
strength to hold out against them, having lost all that by the fall. Yea,
he knows that they have a natural inclination to backsliding, that the
seed of the worst sin is in them, and of themselves they cannot stand
before the least spark of temptation; and so would be infallibly undone,
if he did not strengthen them, Hos. ii. 7; Psal. xix. 13.
APPLICATION.
Use I. Of Information.
We may hence see,
1. That worldly prosperity and carnal joy
are no sign of God's favour: for God's people are subject to many fainting
discouragements here. Wicked men receive their good things in this life,
but believers' good things are to come.
2. We may hence be informed of the difference
between the two covenants of works and grace. Adam, by the first was to
do all by his own inherent strength; but believers, under the second,
do all by borrowed strength, and must he constantly beholden to God for
new supplies. And it is well for us that it is so, for our stock is far
surer in God's hand, than in our own. When the prodigal got his stock
in his own hand, he presently left his father's house, "went into
a far country," and squandered all away, and so would we, if God
should trust us with it. Besides, by this gracious method, believers are
kept humble all their days, and put to keep up a constant correspondence
with a throne of grace, and give all the glory of their through-bearing
to God's free grace. BIessed be God for the well ordered covenant.
3. We may hence see, how great security
believers have for their through-bearing: almighty power is engaged for
them; they are strengthened and "kept by the power of God, through
faith, unto salvation." So that everlasting strength must fail before
a believer can finally miscarry.
Use II. Of Reproof.
1. To those who are too secure and confident
when they attain to any spiritual comfort or joy, and do not remember
the fainting discouragements God's people are subject to while in this
world. O communicants, have you been kindly entertained at this feast!
Be not vain or secure, all things here are changeable. How suddenly was
David's case altered! Psal. xxx. One time he is mounted up in prosperity;
but being too confident, he is presently cast down and troubled. And in
Psal. cxix. we find him at one time "rejoicing in God's testimonies,
as much as in all riches;" and very soon after, his "soul is
cleaving to the dust, and melting for heaviness." Go not then to
build too much on sensible consolations, for these come and go at God's
pleasure; it is in heaven only you can have continual day without night
or cloudings; but here you are to look for changes, yea, for fainting
discouragements, therefore prepare for them by securing a title to divine
strength.
2. To these believers who give too much
way to fainting discouragements, and do not encourage themselves in their
covenanted God and his strength. I do not marvel, O communicants, though
you are cast down, who are sensible of the hidings of God's face, the
prevailing of heart-plagues, the buffetings of Satan, &c. but only
give not way to excessive discouragement: I call it excessive when it
is ready to make you give over hopes, lay aside endeavours, indispose
you for holy duties, refuse to apply to Christ your all-sufficient help,
or refuse comfort from God's promises of strength and support. Some indeed
think religion lies in desperate unbelieving thoughts, and in making of
complaints: but surely there is no religion there, otherwise we must conclude
Cain, Judas, and the damned, to be godly. Religion rather lies in the
actings of faith, and improving God's promises for strengthening us in
doing his will.
3. To Arminians, who maintain the doctrine
of free-will; viz. That it is in the power of a man's free-will to do
that which is spiritually and savingly good, if he pleases to use his
natural abilities. O, how little do these men know themselves that talk
so! for if it be not in the power of a man's will, when graciously changed
and, renewed to do good, without superadded supplies of grace and strength
from God from time to time, as certainly it is not; far less can a natural
and unregenerate person do it, that is dead in trespasses and sins.
4. To those communicants who look not entirely
to God in Christ for strength for the work and warfare, duties and difficulties
before them; but lean too much to something in themselves, or something
they have got at this occasion.
(1.) Some trust too much to the stability
of their own resolution and engagements. They have vowed and sworn, and
they hope likewise to perform accordingly. But do not depend upon these,
otherwise they will soon fail you; as they did Peter after the first communion.
The psalmist was under many resolutions to keep close to the way of duty,
yet he says, Psal. lxxiii. 2, "My feet were almost gone, and my steps
had well nigh slipt." And he acknowledges it was nothing but God's
mercy that held him up, Psal. xciv. 18.
(2.) Others trust too much to the stability
of their gracious habits, without looking to God for daily renewed influences
of strength, for actuating and recruiting their weak graces. But what
is grace, faith, love, fear of God, repentance, hope? Of themselves they
are but vanishing things, and if they were not seasonably strengthened
and supplied from heaven, they would soon die, Rev. iii. 2.
5. We may here reprove those who make it
an excuse for the neglect of duty, they want strength. O! it is because
they want will. For can you say, that though you have no strength of yourselves;
yet you desire to cast your impotent souls in God's way, and aim at duty
as ye can, looking to God for strength, and pleading his promise? Could
you say this, it were something. Were you like a man rowing up the water,
and still beat back by the impetuous stream, you might have some shadow
of excuse; but when you do not make sincere attempts, you can have none.
QUEST. How shall
we undertake to perform duty, when we are dead, and find influences and
strength withdrawn?
ANS. Whatever be our case
or frame, yet still God's command is of binding force on us, and obliges
us to do it.
2. No pretence of indisposition, can warrant
our not obeying a divine command: for our deadness and indisposition is
our sin, and one sin can never excuse another. Two blacks cannot make
one white. So that in a dead hour, you must essay to do your duty,
though you can do nothing but the very outward form.
3. You must aim at your duty to prevent
greater evils, for if you neglect it wholly, your case grows still worse:
your deadness increases, your hardness, impenitency, darkness, weakness,
and indisposition, will still grow greater.
4. By aiming at duty, you put yourselves
in God's road; and when, like the blind man, you lie in Christ's way,
you are more likely to get a visit or an alms from him than those who
stay at a distance.
5. Duties performed, when we are indisposed,
may be very pleasing to God. It must surely be acceptable to our gracious
Lord and Master, to see one of his weak or lamed servants attempt to go
his errands, though he halt and make but slow progress in his way: nay,
this will move his tender heart to pity him, and give him strength. And
many a time have his servants got supplies of strength on a sudden, when
they have been essaying duty. Their souls, "ere they were aware,
have made them like the chariots of Aminadab," Cant. vi. 12. Therefore,
O discouraged communicant, persist in aiming at thy duty, whatever be
thy present frame. Who knows, when thou art lifting at thy heavy burden,
but God will graciously lend thee aid and lift it for thee.
Use III. Of Trial.
O communicants, examine if you have got any spiritual strength at this
solemn feast. Many a weak believer has found it a strengthening meal to
their fainting souls. Mark, if it be so with you.
1. Do ye find your graces more quick and vigorous than formerly.
As, for instance, 1. Is faith more lively? Are you better pleased with
the contrivance of grace, and method of salvation, than before? And are
you now enabled to abandon your own righteousness, and go to your Surety,
Christ; laying the burden of your sins upon him, and leaning wholly to
him for pardon and acceptance with God: and also looking to him as your
head of influences for heart-purity and sanctifying grace, and strength
to perform duty? 2. Is your repentance and grief for sin increased? Do
you see more of sin's deformity, and abhor it as the enemy of Christ?
And are you more afraid of piercing your Redeemer by it, and more resolved
against wicked company and temptations to sin, than before? 3. Is your
love and desire toward Christ more quickened? Are you more restless without
his presence? Would you part with your best enjoyments in the world, for
a sight of his face? Are you more desirous of heart-holiness, that you
may be capable to serve Christ, and advance the interest of his kingdom?
2. If this ordinance hath been a strengthening
meal to you, then you will find more delight in duty than before, you
will be inclined and enabled to pray more fervently, to hear more attentively,
to praise more affectionately, to receive more believingly, keep the Sabbath
more exactly, watch over your heart and ways more diligently: and, in
a word, to be more humble and pious towards God, more just and righteous
towards man, and more sober and temperate towards yourselves; yea, you
will be more afraid to shift or neglect any known duty, than you were
before.
3. You will be more animated and encouraged
to "fight the good fight of faith," to resist the devil's temptations,
and the world's allurements, to struggle against your lusts, and mortify
indwelling sin. And you will be setting conscience on the watch-tower,
to give warning of the enemy's approach; and you will not be slow to take
the alarm.
4. If you have got more strength, you will
be better reconciled to the cross than formerly; and content with patience
and submission to underly what troubles and afflictions the Lord thinks
fit to try you with for your soul's good; yea, and kiss the rod when it
comes, saying "Good is the will of the Lord concerning me."
Use IV. Of Exhortation.
Let me hence exhort you to several duties.
1. Let those believers, who are not tried
with such fainting discouragements as others, bless God for his tenderness
towards them, and bear their smaller trials the more patiently. How gentle
is your exercise and soul trouble, in respect of Job's, David's, Heman's,
and many others, dear and near to God, who have been ready to faint under
their burdens, and pressed above measure; God is gracious to you, he sees
you are weak, and will not overburden you.
2. Let none misconstruct believers' exercises
of spirit, nor despise them, because they are frequently faint and discouraged:
for the greatest spirits in the world have been thus exercised. David
was a man of singular valor, that had a heart as "the heart of a
lion," 2 Sam. xvii. 10. A man of eminent wisdom, and therefore said
to be "wise as an angel of God," 2 Sam. xiv. 20. A man of a
cheerful temper, and a great master of music, and therefore called the
"sweet singer of Israel," 2 Sam. xxiii. 1. And yet we frequently
find him sore troubled, bowed down, cleaving to the dust, and sharply
exercised under the hidings of God's face, and other soul-distresses.
3. Doth God give suitable strength to his
people in all exigencies? Let none abuse this doctrine, by giving up with
the use of the means that God has appointed; and neglecting to use their
own endeavours. For though believers have Christ to lean to all their
way in their journey to heaven; yet none must expect to be carried thither
upon his shoulders, without setting down a foot. We may warrantably look
to him for strength for every duty; yet it is in our using the means that
this strength is conveyed.
4. Beware of leaning to yourselves, and
neglecting to look for this promised strength. (1.) Lean not to your own
purposes; for your "goodness is like the morning dew." (2.)
Lean not to your gracious habits; for these are but creatures, and ready
to die. (3.) Lean not to your duties and performances; for they are defiled
and unclean. (4.) Lean not to your frames; for they are fleeting and inconstant.
And besides, it is highly dangerous and provoking to God, for to trust
in any of these; remember the fearful curse that is pronounced against
him "that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart
departeth from the Lord," Jer. xxvii. 5, 6. Whom then shall we trust?
Read Isa. xxvi. 4, "Trust ye in the Lord fore ever; for in the Lord
Jehovah is everlasting strength."
5. Let all believing communicants bless
God for this new and excellent method of salvation through Jesus Christ.
The new covenant is far better than the old. Now, our stock is not in
our hand, but in Christ's, and he manages it for us; which is our great
happiness. As when God brought Israel out of Egypt with a high hand, he
did not set them down on the other side of the Red sea, and then bid them
shift their way to Canaan: no, he led them on their way; yea, "As
a man carries his children, so he bare them all the way they went. So
when God, in a day of his power, brings an elect soul out of spiritual
Egypt; he doth not set him in the way with a stock of strength in his
hand, and then leave him to march through the wilderness alone: no, he
leads and supports him all the way; for he knows that the whole country
rises on him in his march, and if left to go alone, without special and
renewed aid, he would never get to Canaan.
QUEST. But what
course shall I take to get these seasonable supplies of strength from
God, that I may be helped safe through the wilderness, without fainting
and failing?
ANS. Take these directions:
1. Labour to be thoroughly convinced of
your impotence and insufficiency; that you may be weak in your own sane
and feeling; for the way to be strong, is to be weak, according to the
apostles experience, 2 Cor. xii. 10. 'When I am weak, then am I strong."
Hence also it is said of these worthies, Heb. xi. 34, "Out of weakness
they were made strong," i.e., out of weakness felt and apprehended.
2. Humbly represent and bemoan your impotence
before God, like Ephraim, Jer. xxxi. 18, "I heard Ephraim bemoaning
himself, I was a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke." He felt his own
impotence and aversion to what was good; and then he groans and looks
up to God for power: "Turn thou me, and I shall be turned; for thou
art the Lord my God." And, in the next verse, we see how readily
the Lord stept in with pity and help to him. Thus also did Jehoshaphat,
and found help, 2 Chron. xx. 12, "We have no might against this great
company that cometh against us, neither know we what to do; but our eyes
are upon thee; q. d. Though we be weak, yet we know thou art infinitely
powerful, and full of compassion.
3. Use well any small power you have, and
it will increase. The right arm is more strong and vigorous than the left,
because it is more exercised. So grace, the more it is exercised, the
more it grows, Mat. xiii. 12; Prov. x. 29.
4. Wait on the Lord in the diligent use
of the means; for it is promised, Isa. xl. 31, "They that wait upon
the Lord, shall renew their strength." And in Psal. xxvii. 14, "Wait
on the Lord, be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thy heart: wait,
I say, on the Lord." We must use, but not trust to the means, but
to God in the due use of them.
5. Walk tenderly, and guard against every
known sin; for sin lets out the soul's strength, as bleeding lets the
spirit out of the body.
6. Be often looking, in a believing way,
to the Mediator, Christ, your Treasurer and Head of influences; and derive
all your supplies of strength from, and through him alone.
7. Carefully entertain the Spirit's motions,
and fall in with them. "Grieve not the Spirit of Christ, which is
sent to strengthen you; otherwise you will, in so doing, cast away your
strength from you.
Lastly, Acquaint yourselves, O communicants,
with the word of God, and its gracious promises of strength; lay them
up in store against the time of need, and plead them humbly with God:
for prayer, grounded on a promise is likely to prevail. This was David's
argument under his faintings, Psal. cxix. 28, "Strengthen thou me
according to thy word." And he had the experience of its prevailing
with God Psal. cxxxviii. 3, "In the day when I cried, thou answeredest
me, and strengthenedst me with strength in my soul." I shall add
no more, but conclude with the apostle's words, 1 Pet. v.10, 11, "The
God of all grace, who hath called us unto his eternal glory by Christ
Jesus, after that ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, stablish,
settle you. To him be glory and dominion for ever and ever." Amen.
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