[Of acting
our faith on the almighty power of God.]
Doctrine First. It should be
the Christian's great care in all temptations and trials to strengthen
his faith on the almighty power of God. When God holds forth
himself as an object of the soul's trust and confidence in any great strait or
undertaking, commonly this attribute of his almighty power is presented in the
promise, as the surest holdfast for faith to lay hold on. As a
father in rugged way gives his child his arm to lay hold by, so doth God
usually reach forth his almighty power for his saints to exercise their faith
on, [as He did for] Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, whose faith God tried above most
of his saints before or since, for not one of those great things which were
promised to them did they live to see performed in their days. And
how doth God make known himself to them for their support, but by displaying
this attribute? 'I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto
Jacob, by the name of God Almighty,’ Ex. 6:3. This was all they had to keep house with all their days:
with which they lived comfortably, and died triumphantly, bequeathing the
promise to their children, not doubting, because God Almighty had promised, of
the performance.
Thus, Isa. 26, where great mercies are promised to Judah, and a song penned
beforehand to be sung on that gaudy day of their salvation; yet because there
was a sharp winter of captivity to come between the promise and the spring-time
of the promise, therefore, to keep their faith alive in this space, the prophet
calls them up to act their faith on God Almighty. ‘Trust ye in the
Lord for ever: for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength,’ ver. 4. So when his saints are going to the
furnace of persecution, what now doth he direct their faith to carry to prison,
to stake, with them but this almighty power? ‘Let them that suffer
according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to him in well
doing, as unto a faithful Creator,’ I Pet. 4:19. Creator is a name of almighty power; we shall now give some
reasons of the point.
Reason
First. Because it is no easy work to make use of this truth, how plain
and clear soever it now appears, in great plunges of temptation, that
God is almighty. To vindicate this name of God from those evil
reports which Satan and carnal reason raise against it, requires a strong faith
indeed. I confess this principle is a piece of natural
divinity. That light which finds out a Deity will evince, if
followed close, this God to be almighty; yet in a carnal heart, it is like a
rusty sword, hardly drawn out of the scabbard, and so of little or no
use. Such truths are so imprisoned in natural conscience, that they
seldom get a fair hearing in the sinner's bosom, till God gives them a
jail-delivery, and brings them out of their house of bondage, where they are
shut up in unrighteousness with a high hand of his convincing
Spirit. Then, and not till then, the soul will believe [that] God is
holy, merciful, almighty; nay, some of God's peculiar people, and not the
meanest for grace amongst them, have had their faith for a time set in this
slough, [and] much ado to get over these difficulties and improbabilities which
sense and reason have objected, so as to rely on the almighty power of God,
with a notwithstanding. Moses himself [was] a star of the first
magnitude for grace, yet see how his faith blinks and twinkles till he wades
out the temptation: ‘The people, among whom I am, are six hundred thousand
footmen; and thou hast said, I will give them flesh, that they may eat a whole
month.
Shall the flocks and the herds be slain for them, to suffice
them?’ Num. 11:21, 22. This
holy man had lost the sight for a time of the almighty power of God, and now he
projecting how this should be done; as if he had said in plain terms, How can
this be accomplished? For so God interprets his reasoning: ‘And
the Lord said unto Moses, Is the Lord's hand waxed short?’ ver. 23. So Mary, 'Lord, if thou hadst been here, my
brother had not died,’ John 11:32. And her sister Martha, 'Lord, by this time he
stinketh,’ ver. 39. Both
[were] gracious women, yet both betrayed the weakness of their faith on the
almighty power of Christ; one limiting him to place—‘f thou hadst
been here,’ he had not died; as if Christ could not have saved his life absent
as well as present—sent his health to him as well as brought it with him;—the
other to time —‘now he stinketh;’ as if Christ had brought his
physic too late, and the grave would not deliver up its prisoner at Christ's
command. And thou hast such a high opinion of thyself, Christian,
that thy faith needs not thy utmost care and endeavour for further
establishment on the almighty power of God, when thou seest such as these dash
their foot against this kind of temptation?
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