Email Newsletter Articles
A Sermon on
Psalm 130:1-4
by Robert Rollock,
Principal of the University of Edinburgh.
The following is a sermon by Robert Rollock (died 1599), Principal of
the University of Edinburgh. He was contemporary with John Knox and
Andrew Melville, and like them he was a firm believer, promoter and
defender of the reformed Christian faith. The sermon is from the Select Works of Robert Rollock, Volume 1, edited by William M. Gunn; published by the Wodrow Society in 1849; pp. 457-470.
The editor, William Gunn, added some explanations of old words in order
to aid readers in his day (1849), in footnotes (here the footnotes have
been placed below the paragraph to which they refer, renumbered and
referred to as notes). In addition, I have added further explanations
of old words in order to aid readers in our day, in [square brackets]
within the text.
The Scripture quotations are taken from the
Geneva Bible. The Scripture references I have translated to the common notation from Roman numerals.
This article was included in our Email Newsletter No.8, 1st May 2007.
1. Out of the deep places have I called unto thee, Lord.
2. Lord hear my voice: let thine ears attend to the voice of my
prayers.
3. If thou, O Lord, straitly markest iniquities, Lord, who shall stand?
4. But mercy is with thee, that thou mayest be feared.
T
HE inscription of this Psalm, brethren, declareth that it is a psalm
most excellent; the excellency of it we remit to the matter contained
therein. It hath been penned by some holy man and prophet of old, but
by whom it is not certain: it is sufficient to us to know that the
Spirit of God was the dyter [i.e., inditer, or composer] of it.
To come to the
matter and parts thereof, the prophet, whoso ever he was, first setteth
down the estate and disposition of his soul in trouble, to wit, that he
ran to the Lord, and prayed to him for delivery: and this he doeth to
the fifth verse. Next, finding in very deed the effects of the prayer
he made, and finding mercy and delivery as he craved, he professeth
before all the world, that as he had before awaited upon God, so he
will await still upon him, and he will put his confidence in him. And
this he doeth to the seventh verse. Lastly, from the seventh verse to
the end, he recommendeth this duty to Israel, that is, to the Church of
God, to wait upon the Lord, and, with the recommendation, he giveth in
forcible reasons to move them. To come to the first part, first, he
saith. that in his greatest danger he cried to the Lord Jehovah. Next,
he setteth down the prayer. To come to the proposition, he saith,
“Out of the deep:” yet more, “Out of the deep places
have I called unto thee, O Jehovah.” By these deep places he
understandeth great miseries, great dangers wherein his body was, great
terror and fear in his conscience for his sin and offending of God: for
the Scripture, as ye may see, (Psalm 69:1,2,) compareth great
afflictions to deep waters, wherein a man is like to drown; and many a
time, when the body is in danger, the soul will be like to drown in
desperation. No doubt, the greatness of the danger, made him to utter
to the Lord voices coming from the very depth of the heart. If we felt
ourselves in great danger we would call from the depth of our hearts to
God: he uttered not a voice only, but a loud voice, with a cry. This is
the meaning of the words. We see here, first, that the children of God,
whom God loveth most entirely, are many times subject to great and
extreme dangers and troubles; and if ever thou thinkest to come to
heaven, make thee [1] in thine own course to suffer
one trouble or other. Let no man, therefore, judge evil of a man
because he suffereth. Next, we see the greater the danger be, the
heavier the distress and the affliction wherewith the godly is
exercised be, the more vehement, fervent and earnest, will their prayer
be they have to God. And how cometh this to pass? Even in this manner,
and by these degrees, oppression and affliction worketh in the hearts
of the faithful a sense of the common misery of nature. When the hand
of the Lord is upon a faithful man then he begins to feel his sin and
corruption; and except the Lord exercise us in this life, either one
way or other, the best of us all will fall into such a sound sleep,
that we will neither remember what we have been, what we are, nor what
we shall be, neither acknowledge our selves to be sinners: so there is
a necessity of afflictions, for affliction bringeth us to a feeling of
our misery. Next, when through affliction the heart is prepared and
brought to some sense of sin, then it is capable of grace, then it
prayeth to God. (Look never to come to heaven if thou feelest not thy
sin, yea, and that thou art a miserable sinner.) Then, if once thine
heart be prepared with some sense of sin and misery, then cometh in
that holy Spirit of Jesus Christ, which in the Scripture is called the
Spirit of adoption, who, finding the heart dejected and made lowly,
(the Spirit will never look in to a proud heart,) beginneth to work,
and to touch the heart of the miserable sinner with a sweet sense of
mercy through Jesus, he beginneth to shed abroad the love of Christ
into the soul: and when once the heart hath tasted of the sweetness of
mercy, and, as Peter saith, hath tasted how sweet and gracious the Lord
is, and findeth this passing love of God in Jesus Christ, then it
taketh a boldness, and beginneth with confidence and pertness [2] to present itself before God,
and to put up prayers and requests; (Romans 8:26.) When once that
Spirit hath given liberty, then we cry with an open mouth, (for the
heart is wide opened, Abba, Father, (Romans 7:15,) because we have
gotten a sense of that fatherly love in Jesus Christ. The prayer of the
faithful is most effectual when they are in greatest danger, and then
the voice is loudest: for it is the Spirit of God who maketh
intercession for us, with sighs which cannot be expressed; but God
knoweth the meaning of his Spirit.
[Note 1: A Scottish idiom for prepare.]
[Note 2: Boldness.]
Now, Brethren, surely few of us have yet been in this deepness and
extremity of misery. The Lord hath not yet so pressed us with his hand
as he hath done many others; and, therefore, few there is amongst us
who hath this feeling of sin and misery, and, consequently, few of us
can pray so earnestly. How many are there amongst you that dare say,
that ye feel sensible the common misery of nature? Go to your hearts
and look if ye feel it not sleeping in sin; and so long as thou
sleepest thus, and knowest not thy misery, how wilt thou be careful to
feel the love of Christ? And how wilt thou earnestly pray to God? And
certainly I take this coldness in prayer to be a forerunner of a
judgment to overtake this land. No, it were better to be swimming in
the waters of affliction, praying earnestly to God, than to be this way
lying in prosperity without prayer.
Now I go
forward. After he hath proponed, that out of the deepness he cried to
Jehovah, then to let us see his cries, he setteth down the form of
prayer that he used in his great miseries: First, he saith, “O
Lord hear my voice:” Next, in the other words he doubleth over
the same petition, “Attend to the voice of my prayers:” For
he prayeth not coldly, but he crieth earnestly; certainly the doubling
of the cry would be opened up from the ground. We should gripe [3] down to the heart from whence
the prayers of the godly do flow, that when we hear them, or read them,
we may get such a heart and disposition in prayer as they had. The
doubling of the prayer, and the mouth wide opening, cometh of the
doubling of the graces of the Spirit of God in the heart, and of a
double opening of the heart; for, except the heart be opened in prayer,
the mouth cannot be opened with pleasure, otherwise if thou speak any
thing, I will not give one penny for it. So the opening of the mouth
cometh from the opening of the heart. When the Holy Spirit so sweetly
maketh manifest the love of God to the creature, then the tongue is
loosed, and the second cry cometh of the second grace, and of the
second opening of the heart; and so oft as thou criest, so oft is there
a new grace and motion within the heart, wrought by the Holy Spirit,
for it is he only, that openeth the mouth, piece and piece, to speak to
God. For take this for certainty that Paul saith, “there is none
that can call Jesus Lord, without the Spirit come in,” (1 Cor.
12:3.) And again he saith, “we know not what we should pray, or
how we ought to pray, without that Spirit teach us,” (Romans
8:26,) and if he teach not, no man or woman is able once to open the
mouth with confidence and liberty to pray.
[Note 3: Search.]
And so, Brethren, if ye would speak well, pray well, or do well, look
ever to the disposition of the heart, and night and day pray for that
Spirit, who may transchange thee, transform thee, and take thee out of
nature, and plant thee in grace; for so long as thou remainest in
nature, thou canst not think well, thou canst not speak well, thou
canst do nothing well, yea, thou art worse than a very beast.
But because the
words are very weighty, we will yet consider them better. What meaneth
he when he saith, “Lord let thine ear be attentive to my
prayer?” Thought he that the Lord heard him not, and that the
Lord played the part of a deaf man? No, he meaneth not this; look to
the estate of the godly when the hand of the Lord is upon them, when
the Lord afflicteth us any way, we think that he neither heareth nor
seeth us, nor remembereth upon us: Indeed, I grant it is not so in
effect, for God never altereth his affection towards his own; but the
faithful oftentimes judge and apprehend so, and all the fault of this
is in us. Ye see how David oftentimes complaineth to the Lord, that he
had forsaken him, he had left him, and desireth that he should look
upon him. I ask, is it so indeed, that when the faithful soul crieth,
Lord hear, see, and remember, that he heareth not, he seeth not, he
remembereth not? No question but he doth: “For he that made the
eye, seeth he not? He that made the ear, heareth he not? He that formed
the heart of man, understandeth he not? Remembereth he not?”
(Psalm 94.) Yea, all things are patent [i.e., present and visible] to
his Majesty, albeit, when he maketh it not manifest by some sensible
effects and operation, we think he heareth not, he seeth not, he
remembereth not, his favour and affection is never indeed altered nor
changed from his own children: Then, when they cry for his presence,
are they altogether destitute and deprived of his presence? No, they
want [i.e., lack] it not: For who gave the heart to say, Lord hear me,
Lord see and remember me? If that thou hadst not some presence of the
Lord in thine heart, thou couldest never utter these voices to God.
Then I say, if I have the presence of God when I cry unto him, why cry
I, and pray I, as though I had not his presence? Are not such prayers
in vain? No, for although we have the presence of God when we pray, yet
for all that, our prayers to God are not in vain; for if we had him of
before in any measure by our prayers, he will manifest himself more
sensibly, piece and piece, more and more. And look how much more
strongly thou criest, so much the more will the Lord be drawn to thy
soul, and so much the more shalt thou find the increase and growth of
grace in thy soul. It is impossible that the prayer of a faithful man,
if it were but one word that proceedeth from the Spirit of adoption,
can pass away without comfort: For the Lord giveth his Spirit to no man
in vain, but because he knoweth the meaning of his own Spirit,
therefore he will grant that thing for which he maketh request, there
is nothing more certain; and therefore the Lord, (Matt. 5:6,)
pronounceth them blessed, “who hunger and thirst for
righteousness, for” (saith he,) “they shall be filled and
satisfied:” And so Christ speaketh to that woman of Samaria,
(John 4:13,14,) “If thou soughtest a drink, I should give thee a
drink of the water of life; for the water that I shall give shall be,
in a man (or woman) a well of water springing up into eternal
life;” meaning, generally, that whosoever hath gotten the first
fruits of the Spirit, and the beginnings of grace, desireth and seeketh
for further progress and increase, that the Lord should ever furnish
them with something to quench their thirst, and that because they
should ever have a fountain within their belly, to furnish something to
them when they thirsted; so that when as they should seek refreshment,
they might get it in abundance. And if we felt this thirst and dryness
of the soul, we would seek earnestly; for there was never such a
dryness and such a heat in any man naturally, as there is in us through
sin. Consider thine own experience, when thou hast felt sometimes the
great burden of sin, and the terrors of the wrath of God for sin,
whensoever, in this estate, thou earnest to God, and prayed for mercy,
and said, I am a miserable sinner—Lord give me mercy, hast thou
not felt that the Lord hath answered thee comfortably, and hath filled
thine heart with joy, even when, in thy prayer, thou sighest and
sobbest unspeakably? What meaneth that joy? Even that as soon as thou
openest thy mouth with liberty to seek that water of life, the Lord
convoyeth some portion of it into thine heart to quench thy thirst.
Now, after he
hath cried twice, he subjoineth in the next words, “If thou, O
Lord, straitly inarkest iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?”
This, no question, followeth by way of preoccupation. It might have
been objected to him in his prayer, (for many are the temptations of
the godly,) by his conscience pleading for God against him, or God
himself might have said, Thou prayest to me, and yet thou art a sinner,
how should I hear thee? How darest thou stand before me? it is a wonder
that, in my fierce wrath, I destroy thee not. To this he answereth,
first, by way of confession, It is true, O Lord, that if thou wilt
straitly mark iniquity that no flesh can stand in thy presence, but
they must be consumed, through the rage of thy displeasure. Then he
answereth, by way of correction, “But mercy is with thee.”
The meaning is, Thou takest no heed to our iniquities, but, of thy free
mercy and grace, thou pardonest them all in thy Son Jesus Christ; for
none of the saints, none of the fathers, none of the prophets ever got
mercy, but through that blood of Jesus Christ, who was slain from the
beginning of the world; through his blood only was the wrath of God
pacified. Except God’s justice be first satisfied, there is no
place left to mercy; therefore, saith he, my refuge is to thy mercy.
Indeed, our estate, who live now, is far better than the estate of them
who lived before Christ came into the world; for they saw the death and
satisfaction of Christ, and remission of sin in his blood, but afar
off; but we see them now already past, and we may say, that now God in
Christ is merciful to us, is become our Father, and hath forgiven all
our sins.
Now, out of
these words, and by this example of the prophet, ye may see what is the
estate of God’s children in prayer, to wit, when, in affliction,
they seek to repair [i.e., to resort; or, to go] to God by prayer, they
will not so soon begin to pray, but as soon their guilty consciences
will begin to knock and challenge them, as unworthy to be heard. The
conscience will stand up, and, if it be not cleansed, it will present
thy sins before thee, and set them in order in all their circumstances.
Albeit thou forget thy sins after thou hast got thy pleasure, yet thou
shalt see that thy conscience hath marked them all; and as a man cannot
read when the book is closed, yet being opened, they may read therein;
even so, albeit when our consciences are benumbed, we see not the
ugliness and guiltiness of sin, yet when God wakeneth them, we will see
sin in the[ir] own colour, and find the ugliness and guiltiness
thereof. Our sins will come in, and stand up as mountains, and will
hide the blessed face and presence of God from thee. Sin goeth betwixt
us and God, and separateth us from God.
The saints find
in experience, that it is not an easy thing to find a familiar access
to God in prayer. Except our consciences first be purged, we can have
no access to God; therefore, whosoever would draw near to God, let him
seek to follow the counsel of the Apostle in the 10th chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrews, and the 22nd
verse, where he saith, “Let us draw near with a true heart in an
assurance of faith, sprinkled in our hearts from an evil
conscience.” No flesh can have a favourable access to God, except
his conscience be first purged from guiltiness; yea, that which we
speak of the guiltiness of sin, we speak also of sin itself, that
except it be quite taken away out of his sight, that he will not look
favourably upon us. And this is that which the prophet saith here,
“If thou, O Lord, straitly markest iniquities, O Lord, who shall
stand?” For, as guiltiness of sin stayeth [i.e., prevents; or,
keeps back] us to behold God, so sin itself stayeth God from beholding
us, miserable wretches, with the eyes of his compassion. So long,
therefore, as thy conscience is not purged, when thou goest to present
thyself before his majesty, if thy conscience be wakened, thou wilt
find God marking thy sins,—laying them to thy charge,—and
wilt find him as a terrible judge, compassed about with burning wrath,
ready to destroy thee: and if he mark thee, thou hast no standing, and
if thou appear not clothed with the righteousness and perfect
satisfaction that Jesus, through his blood, hath purchased for thee,
thou darest not presume to approach, for then his fierce wrath shall be
poured out upon thee.
Further, we
learn hereof, that whenever we would have our prayers accepted, we
should begin with an humble confession, of our sins and unworthiness,
and with an earnest prayer to forgive the same. Yea, we must aggreadge [4] our sins by all circumstances,
as the prophet doeth here. No, none; not the holiest saints, fathers,
nor prophets, could be able to stand, if he marked their iniquity, let
be himself, who was such an unworthy wretch, who was laden with so many
and great sins. Thou must not extenuate thy sins before God, if thou
wouldest find favour with God, as many men commonly do, saying, We are
all sinners; yea, many men have sinned more, and have done worse deeds
than I have done.
[Note 4: Aggravate.]
That is not the way to find God’s favour. Thou must be very
abject, vile, and contemptible in thine own account, if thou wouldest
have the Lord to account of thee. Then where shall we get a remedy to
help an evil conscience? For sin taketh away all joy and confidence in
prayer.
The next words
furnish a fair remedy—“But mercy is with thee.” Lord,
it is not thy justice I look to, but thy mercy; thy justice holdeth me
aback, but thy mercy allureth me. I flee from thy justice, and I claim
to thy mercy. So when a man desireth his prayers to be heard, he must
first have a sight of his own misery, guiltiness, and unworthiness, and
of the fierceness of the Lord’s wrath for the same; and in all
humility he must confess the same. Next, he must have a sight of the
Lord’s mercy, and hope that it is possible that God be reconciled
with him; except that these two be joined together he cometh not duly
prepared. The one without the other will not serve; both are necessary.
For without the knowledge, sight, and feeling of our misery, of sin,
and of the wrath of God for the same, we will never be earnest in
prayer. Who will ask, except he find his want? And without an humble
confession there is no coming before God. Thou must not do as the
Pharisee did. Read that parable of the Pharisee and of the Publican,
(Luke 18.) The Pharisee was so blinded with self-love, that he could
not see the filthiness and corruption of his own heart; and, therefore,
not only in the presence of man, whom he might deceive, would he
justify himself, but also in the very presence of God, who cannot be
deceived, and who searcheth the hearts, he would boast of his
righteousness, and condemn the poor Publican. But what found he? It is
said he went home not justified, that all men might fear thereafter to
come before God with a conceit of their worthiness. Thou must follow
the example of the poor Publican, who, being ashamed of himself, would
not look up to heaven, but looked down and smote his breast, and said,
“O God be merciful to me a sinner.” Next, if thou have no
more but a sight, sense, and confession of thy misery, will that be
sufficient? No, for albeit thou sawest all thy sins, and foundest the
burden thereof, and foundest the Lord as a judge in a judgment pursuing
thee, and heaping daily judgment upon judgment, and wrath upon wrath,
that will never make thee to draw near to the Lord, but by the
contrary, will make thee to turn thy back upon the Lord; for, as a
malefactor hath no pleasure to behold the face of a judge, because his
countenance is terrible, no more can the sinner abide the countenance
of God. His judgments and his wrath may make us astonished and
stupified, but, if there be no more, they will never make us to come to
God. Then if this be not sufficient, what more is requisite? Even a
sight of the Lord’s mercy, for that is most forcible to allure,
as the prophet saith here, and as the Church of God sayeth, (Cant.
[i.e., Song of Solomon] 1:2,) “Because of the savour of thy good
ointments, therefore the virgins love thee.” This only is
forcible to allure the sinner; for all the judgments of God, and curses
of the law, will never allure him. What was the chief thing that moved
the Prodigal son to return home to his father? Was it chiefly the
distress, the disgrace, and poverty wherewith he was burdened, or the
famine that almost caused him to starve? No, but the chief thing was
this, he remembered that he had a loving father. That maketh him to
resolve with an humble confession to go home. (Luke 15.) Even so is it
with a sinner; it is not terrors and threatenings that chiefly will
move him to come to God, but the consideration of his manifold and
great mercies. Therefore, if the Lord waken thy conscience, present thy
sins before thee, threaten thee, and heap judgments on thee, then say,
Lord, I deserve to be threatened, and always to be plagued; but, Lord,
thou knowest my nature, these things will not make me to come to thee,
but will put me away from thee. Therefore, let me see thy manifold
mercies towards sinners, to allure me, and then I shall come unto thee.
So we see the
remedy against an evil conscience, to wit, an humble confession of sin
and unworthiness, and a fleeing from the justice of God, to his mercy.
The fairest and sweetest thing in the world is to feel the mercy of
God. But herein there is great hardness and difficulty. It is not so
easily attained unto, as men commonly think; for his mercy is compassed
about with his justice, and with his wrath against sinners, as with a
wall of fire; and he who will come to grace, he must come through a
consuming fire; and, when he presseth to come near, the fire of
God’s wrath will hold him off, and will strike out and burn up
the impenitent sinner, as fire doeth the stubble; so it is a harder
thing than many think it to be, to win God’s mercy. And how shall
this be remedied? By what means shall we get through this wall of fire?
Truly, he who would mean to pass through fire had need to be well
armed; the man who presseth to approach near to that inviolable
majesty, who can abide no sort of uncleanness, and would draw near to
the throne of his grace, must be well armed against the justice and
wrath of God, which debarreth sinners. Surely there is none armour in
the world, that can preserve us from that raging and consuming fire, of
the justice and wrath of God, but only the righteousness and
satisfaction of Jesus Christ. Let a man use all the means in the world,
and he be not found in Christ, he shall have none access to come
through the justice and wrath of God, to the throne of grace; yea, his
soul and his conscience must be sprinkled and purged from dead works,
with that blood which was offered up to God to that end, by his eternal
Spirit, (Heb. 9.) Without he be dipped in that blood, he will find God
a terrible judge. And[5] after that, through faith in the
death and blood of Jesus, thou comest to that throne of grace, thou
shalt hear the sweetest and most comfortable voice that ever was, that
is, All thy sins are for given thee in that blood. And if a man were
condemned to die for some heinous crime, if the king would say, I
absolve thee, I forgive thee, thou shalt live: what joy and comfort
would that voice bring to the heart of him who was condemned. The
Apostle saith, (Heb.10:22.) “Let us go to the throne of grace
with a true heart, and purged from an evil conscience through the blood
of Jesus Christ,” that is, think not to come to that throne of
grace, except first thou be purged with that blood. Therefore, as ever
thou wouldest be in heaven, or see the face of God to thy comfort, seek
to have faith in Christ Jesus; look what necessity is laid upon a
sinner; either must he be banished from the presence and face of God
for ever and be casten [i.e., thrown] into the society of the damned,
or else if he would be saved, he must be imped [i.e., implanted] and
engrafted by a true and lively faith in Jesus Christ. Make thee for it
with all thy main, to get a gripe [i.e., a grip] of Christ as ever thou
wouldest be saved.
[Note 5: Throughout these sermons,
and is often used,
Scottice, [i.e., as per the old Scottish] for
if. ]
Now after he hath met this objection, which God, or his own conscience
in God’s cause, might have casten [i.e., thrown] in, that he was
unworthy to be heard, by an humble confession of unworthiness, and by
fleeing from his justice, and claiming to his great mercies, he setteth
down the end of this mercy and free forgiveness of sin when he saith,
“But mercy is with thee, that thou mayest feared.” The end
wherefore the Lord granteth mercy and forgiveness of sins to sinners,
is that they may obey, serve and worship God with pleasure and alacrity
[i.e., liveliness, or a willing spirit]. No man can ever be able
glorify God, and to serve him cheerfully, but the man who hath
assurance that his sins are freely forgiven him in that eternal love of
God, through the blood of Jesus; for none can glorify God, except first
he be glorified of God. Albeit the natural man got never so many and
great benefits, yet because he hath none assurance of the forgiveness
of his sins he can never glorify God nor be thankful to him. On the
other part. It is impossible, and thou have a sure persuasion that thy
sins are forgiven thee, but thou wilt be careful in some measure to
meet the Lord God in love, to pleasure him, and to thank him. For the
first effect that floweth from the remission of sins, is sanctification
or glorification: And it is not possible but if thou be glorified, thou
must glorify the Lord again. But the question may be here proponed
[i.e., proposed], wherein standeth our glorifying of God? Hath he need
of our glorification? Can our service be profitable to him? Can our
well-doing extend to him? Hath he need of any thing that we can do? I
answer; Indeed it is true, our well-doing cannot extend to him, as
David confesseth of himself in the 16th Psalm and the 2nd verse. All the kings and monarchs in the world cannot do any thing that is profitable and steadable
[6]
to God. We are not able to add anything to the glory of God, for his
glory is infinite, and to an infinite thing, nothing can be added, for
if any thing could be added it were not infinite. The Father, the Son
and the Holy Spirit perfectly glorified one another from all eternity.
“Glorify me,” saith Christ, “with that glory which I
had with thee before the foundation of the world was laid.” That
blessed Trinity was as perfect in glory before the creation of the
world as it hath been ever since. Our glorifying of God standeth only
in this, when the Lord illuminateth our minds that we may see his glory
in all his properties, that we in our hearts, with pleasure and
cheerfulness consent thereunto, allow of it, and with our mouths
proclaim that glory which we see to be in him. And it lieth not in man
nor angel to impair his glory. The good and the evil, the weal [i.e.,
wealth] and the wo [i.e., woe, or suffering], the commodity and
incommodity of all, cometh to our own selves; and happy is that man
that glorifieth God, and miserable is he that glorifieth him not, for
our felicity [i.e., happiness and satisfaction in achieving our
purpose, our “chief end”] standeth not in that that we
ourselves be glorified, but in this, that we glorify our Lord
eternally, for that end were we created, and to that end were we
redeemed with that precious ransom, even that we should glorify the
Lord; and happy is that creature that hath some purpose, thirst and
desire to glorify God in this life, for he may be assured that one day
the Lord shall glorify him eternally in heaven. That soul, I say, shall
be perfected in the life to come, and without all impediment shall cry
with the blessed angels, “Holy, holy, holy, is the God of heaven,
the whole world is full of his glory.” There shall it find
“in his countenance satiety of joy, and at his right hand
pleasures for ever.”
[Note 6: Available.]
Mark here last, (and I shall end with it,) that the feeling of the
mercy of God in Jesus Christ bringeth out obedience and cheerful
service of God; yea, of all arguments to move a man to abstain from
sin, and to serve the Lord with pleasure, that is the most pithy and
forcible. The shame of the world, the fear of temporal judgment, the
horror of conscience, and the fear of the pains of hell, will not be so
steadable [i.e., available] ; it may be that they repress raging lusts
and furious affections for a time, but they will not mortify sin and
slay corruption, and will never cause a man with pleasure to serve and
obey God. But if a man hath found that God hath loved him so well that
he hath given his only [S]on to die, that he might live, it is not
possible but that man, in some measure will set himself with alacrity
and cheerfulness to serve God. Therefore, the Apostle, when he would
persuade Christians to abstain from sin, and to serve God, what
argument useth he chiefly? Read Rom. 7:1, he proponeth [i.e., proposes;
or, expounds] the mercy of God offering Jesus to die for them, for
there he saith, “I beseech you, brethren, through the mercies of
God, that ye offer up yourselves a living sacrifice.” Therefore,
if thou wouldest covet to do the Lord’s will cheerfully, pray the
Lord, that he would not so much threaten thee, and propone terrors to
thee as that he would make thee sensible of his mercies in Jesus
Christ. The vain Papist speaks little, or nothing almost, to the people
of this mercy of God in Jesus Christ, but propones to the people the
pains of Hell and fire of Purgatory, to stay them from sin and to make
them serve God, and do good works; but if there be no more, it will
never make them to bring forth such obedience, as either is acceptable
to God, or yet profitable to themselves. The Lord, therefore, make us
to be sensible of his unspeakable love in Jesus, that we may set
ourselves with pleasure to serve and glorify him here, that so we may
be assured that he shall glorify us, in the kingdom of heaven, which
Jesus hath purchased to us by his precious blood. To this Jesus, with
the Father, and the Holy Spirit, be all praise, honour and glory, for
now and ever. So be it.