Sermon 17: And She Says Truth, Lord, Yet the Whelps Eat of the Crumbs That Fall from the Master's Table
Scripture referenced in this chapter 68
- Leviticus 26
- Numbers 5
- Judges 11
- 1 Samuel 15
- 1 Samuel 24
- 2 Samuel 12
- 2 Samuel 18
- Ezra 10
- Nehemiah 9
- Job 7
- Job 9
- Job 14
- Job 22
- Job 40
- Psalms 9
- Psalms 10
- Psalms 22
- Psalms 25
- Psalms 32
- Psalms 40
- Psalms 51
- Psalms 69
- Psalms 72
- Psalms 131
- Psalms 138
- Psalms 143
- Psalms 149
- Proverbs 1
- Proverbs 15
- Proverbs 28
- Isaiah 11
- Isaiah 29
- Isaiah 40
- Isaiah 42
- Isaiah 57
- Isaiah 59
- Isaiah 61
- Isaiah 64
- Jeremiah 2
- Jeremiah 8
- Jeremiah 14
- Jeremiah 31
- Jeremiah 50
- Lamentations 1
- Ezekiel 13
- Daniel 9
- Hosea 14
- Micah 7
- Zechariah 12
- Matthew 5
- Matthew 8
- Luke 15
- Luke 19
- John 1
- 1 Corinthians 1
- 1 Corinthians 4
- 1 Corinthians 15
- Ephesians 3
- Ephesians 4
- Philippians 2
- 1 Timothy 1
- 1 Timothy 4
- Hebrews 5
- James 4
- James 5
- 1 John 1
- Revelation 1
- Revelation 4
Observe 1. The woman's witty answer by retortion in great quickness by concession of the conclusion, and granting she was a dog, she borrows the argument, and takes it from Christ's mouth to prove her question: She argues from the temptation: Let me be a dog, so I be a dog under Christ's feet at his table: Wisdom's scholars are not fools: Grace is a witty and understanding spirit, ripe and sharp; so it's said of Christ (Isaiah 11:3). Grace has a sagacity to smell things excellently; so (Proverbs 1:4) the wisdom of God in the Proverbs gives subtlety to the simple — such as may easily be persuaded: in young ones, reason sleeps, affection rules all: and quickness in all things: and the other word, rendered Discretion, is Thoughtfulness: grace furnishes the soul with quick, sharp, deep thoughts, to know a Devil and an Angel; Heaven and hell; and that stolen waters are not sweet (Hebrews 5:14). Their spiritual senses are as wrestlers experienced, or as learned scholars in universities, acquainted with the knowledge of good and ill. 2. Faith is thus pregnant, as to draw saving conclusions from hard principles, and to extract the spirit of the promises. Christ came to save sinners: then says Paul, to save me: for (1 Timothy 1:15) I am the chief of these sinners, and though a temptation's language be the language of hell and unbelief; as thus, You are a sinner, a lost and a condemned one, and therefore have nothing to do with Christ: Faith argues the language of Heaven, and the Gospel from this: I am a sinner, and a lost one, but one of Christ's sinners, and one of Christ's lost ones, and for that same very cause, I belong to Christ.
3. Faith does here contradict the temptation, and modestly refute Christ, if Christ say, You are a transgressor from the womb: Answer: I confess, Lord, but Christ died for transgressors. 2. If he say, You are under a curse: Answer: With a distinction, it is too true, Lord: so I am by nature, but Christ was made a curse for me. 3. If he say, You have held me at the door: I confess, Lord, it is so; but if Christ say, I came not for you, you are a dog, to such belongs not Christ the bread of children: you may then answer, O Lord, with all reverence to your holy Majesty: It is not so, I am yours, you did come for me, the bread belongs to me. When a sinner dare not dispute his actions with Christ, yet he may dispute his estate: the state of sonship is not sin, and therefore we must adhere to this, as Christ did, when he was tempted; If you be the Son of God, etc. He refused to yield that, if then Christ himself should say, You are a reprobate, expound it as a temptation; far more if Satan, if conscience, if the world say it: you are not to acknowledge these to be heralds sent to proclaim God's secrets; Job would not believe his friends in this. Then to be tempted, to deny your sonship and claim in Christ may be your temptation, not your sin; injections of coals to try, may come immediately from God, as well as from Satan. 2. It is good (say Antinomians) to lay the saints under a covenant of works, because it does this good, to make us make sure our evidences, that Christ is ours: indeed some desire a wakened conscience, that the terrors of God may chase them to Christ: but 1. that is a murmuring at God's dispensation: Let Christ tutor me as he thinks good, he has seven eyes I have but one, and that too dim. 2. We are not to make sad, whom God has not made sad (Ezekiel 13:22). Nor to make a lie of grace. Nor 3. to usurp the Devil's office, to accuse a brother, far less yourself.
Truth Lord, the Dogs] Behold where humility sits: 1. Christ cannot put humility lower, it sits in the dust (Luke 15:19). I am not worthy to be called your son: O great Paul — what is less than nothing, and less than the least of all? (Ephesians 3:8). To me who am less than the least of all saints, is this grace given (1 Timothy 1:13). I was a persecutor, a blasphemer (1 Corinthians 15:9). I am the least of the Apostles; humility is no daring grace, it dares scarce seek to be a door keeper in heaven; it sets itself in hell. 2. Though humility be well born, and of kin to sweet Jesus, who is lowly and meek: yet Christ, and Christ only is humility's freehold. The humble soul knows no landlord but Christ, and is only Grace's humble tenant: there is none to him but the Lord Jesus with his rich ransom of blood (1 Timothy 1:16, 17). So there is much humility in heaven: if it were possible that tears could be in heaven, the humble saints that are there should not see Christ reach out a crown to set on their head, but they should weep and hold away their head; indeed, the glorified are ashamed to bear a crown of glory on their head, when they look Christ on the face, and so cannot but cast down their crowns before the Throne (Revelation 4:10). 3. All the saints truly humbled cry up Christ, and down themselves: and in their own books are far from Christ as any (Matthew 8:8, 9). I am not worthy that you should come under my roof, but speak the word only, and my servant shall be healed. Indeed, we gather from Job's pleading, chapter 14, that humble saints think not themselves only below grace and mercy, but also below the glory of justice and wrath (Job 14:2). Man flees also as a shadow and continues not. 3. And do you open your eyes upon such a one, and bring me to judgment with you? 4. Who can bring a clean thing, out of an unclean one? Not one: he would say, I am not only frail by condition of nature being a shadow of clay, verse 1, 2, but also by birth, sinful and unclean, by reason of original sin. I am therefore a party unworthy of the anger of God; as a beggar is not worthy of the wrath of the Emperor, or a worm of the indignation of an Angel. 4. Any man is nearer God than the humble soul, in his own eyes (Psalm 22:24). Our fathers trusted in you, etc. 6. I am a worm and no man: because humility is a soul smoothed, and lying level with itself, no higher than God has set it (Psalm 131:1). I do not exercise myself in great matters, or in things too high for me: the proud soul has feathers broader than his nest. 5. The humble soul is a door-neighbor to Grace: Christ is near a cast-down mourner in Zion; to give him beauty for ashes, the garments of praise for the spirit of heaviness (Isaiah 61:3). Christ has a napkin for the wet face of a humbled sinner. Christ the Surgeon of souls has a wheel to set in joint the broken heart (Isaiah 61:1). There's a Savior's hand in heaven to wheel in an ill-boned soul on earth (Psalm 51:8). O what consolation: Christ does both seek and save the self-lost soul (Luke 19:10). The Lamb — one of the lowliest and meekest creatures — has a bed beside the heart, and in the bosom of Christ (Isaiah 40:11). He shall carry the lambs in his bosom; indeed, he shall deliver the needy when he cries, the poor also, and him that has no helper (Psalm 72:12). The Lord gives more grace, he resists the proud, and gives grace to the humble; grace upon grace is for the humble (James 4:6). 6. The humble cannot complain of God's dispensation (1 Samuel 15:26). Humble David said, "But if the Lord say, I have no delight in you, behold here am I, let him do to me as seems good to him." That I am not fettered with the Prince of darkness is the debt of grace on me: that you are anything less than timber and firewood for Tophet, put it to Christ's account, and strike sail to Christ, and stoop to him. 7. Yet is the hope of the humble green at the root, it shall not be as a broken tree (Psalm 9:18). 1. Because God shall save the humble (Job 22:29). 2. And hear his desire (Psalm 10:17). 3. Revive his spirit (Isaiah 57:15). 4. Beautify him with salvation (Psalm 149:4). 5. Honor him (Proverbs 15:33). 6. Satisfy him (Psalm 22:26). 7. Guide him in judgment (Psalm 25:9). 8. Increase his joy (Isaiah 29:19). 9. Bless him (Matthew 5:5), and give him a sure inheritance. None can extol Grace as the humble soul (1 Corinthians 15:10). Not I, but the grace of God in me (1 Corinthians 4). I have written that you be not puffed up for one against another. 7. For who makes to differ from another? And what have you that you did not receive? (1 Corinthians 1:27, 28, 29). Then because you are little in your own eyes, put not yourself out of Grace's writing, for God puts you in: Grace is mercy given for nothing, and the promise is made to the humble. In the judgment of sense, every one is to esteem another better than himself (Philippians 2:3). Peter is to have a deeper sense of his own sinful condition, than of the sinful condition of Judas the Traitor; though Peter being graced of God, owes more charity to himself than to Judas; when Judas is a known Traitor, yet should not humility decline to that extreme, as to weaken faith, and to say, because I am unworthy of pardon, therefore it is presumption to believe pardon of sins.
Beware of Pride, the elephant's neck and knees that cannot bow, God must break: God knows the proud from afar off (Psalm 138:6), the word [in non-Latin alphabet] Gavoah is the high man, the Scripture word (James 4:6) is [in non-Latin alphabet] the proud man is an appearance, not a real thing, and an appearance more than enough. The phrase imports two: 1. It is borrowed from men, who see things near hand, before they see things afar off, and so more of their eyes is fixed on that which is near hand, and so its more delighted in; we see things afar off with less delight to the sense. Lorinus, Quasi in transitu videre, and with contempt. The humble man lies near God's eye, the proud man is further from his eye, and seen in passing, and with contempt by God. 2. A man sees his enemy afar off, and loves not to come near to him; God has an old quarrel against pride, as one of the oldest enemies born in heaven, in the breast of the fallen angels, and thrown out of heaven, and it seeks to be up at its own element and country, where it was born, as proud men are climbing and aspiring creatures: But God, from afar off, resists the proud, and denies grace, or any thing of heaven, to the proud Pharisee. When God first sees a proud man, he says, Behold my enemy: the lowly man is Christ's friend.
4. Though the woman be a dog in her own eyes, and so a sinner; See, O sinner, rich mercy, that Christ should admit of dogs to his Kingdom: O Grace, that Christ should black his fair hands (to speak so) in washing foul and defiled dogs: How unworthy sinners, and so foul sinners, that they should be under Christ's table, and eat his bread within the King's house: What a motion of free mercy, that Christ should lay his fair, spotless and chaste love upon so black, defiled and whorish souls? O what a favor, that Christ makes the Leopard and Ethiopian white for heaven? These two go together (Revelation 1:5): Who has loved us, and washed us: Humble sinners have high thoughts of free grace; stand not afar off, come near, be washed, for free grace is not proud, when grace refuses not dogs; salvation must be a flower planted without hands, that grows only out of the heart of Christ. Take humble thoughts of yourselves, and noble and high thoughts of excellent Jesus to heaven with you: A curse upon the creature's proud merits, if you make price with Christ, and compound with everlasting grace, you shame the glory of the Ransom-payer. It is no shame to die in Christ's debt, all the angels the Cedars of heaven are below Christ; angels and saints shall be Christ's debtors for eternity of ages, and so long as God is God, sinners shall be in grace's account-book.
The truly humble is the most thankful soul that is, unthankfulness is one of the sins of the age we live in: it flows from 1. Contemning and despising God's instruments: The valor of Jephthah is no mercy to Israel, because the Elders hate and despise a bastard (Judges 11:1, 2, 6). The curing of Naaman's leprosy is not looked on as a mercy: Why? Washing in Jordan must do it, and there be better rivers in his own land, in Damascus: Not only God, but all his instruments, that he works by, must be eye-sweet to us, and carry God and omnipotency on their foreheads, else the mercy is no mercy to us. 2. Mercies cease to be mercies when they are smoked and blacked with our apprehensions; David (2 Samuel 18 and 19) receives a great victory and is established on his Throne, which had been reeling and staggering of late, but there's one sad circumstance in that victory, his dear son Absalom was killed, and the mercy no mercy in David's apprehension; Would God I had died for Absalom: so a little cross can wash away the sense of a great mercy: The want of a draught of cold water, strangles the thankful memory of God's wonders done for his people's deliverance out of Egypt, and his dividing the Red Sea. What a price would the godly in England have put on the removal of that which indeed was but a Mass-book, and the burdensome Ceremonies, within these few years? But because this mercy is not molded and shaped according to the opinion of many, with such and such a Reformation, and Church-government, I am afraid there's fretting in too many, instead of the return of praise: and hating of these, for whom they did sometimes pray; God grant that the sufferings of the land, and this unnatural blood-shed may be near an end: except the land be further humbled, I fear the end of evils is not yet come. This is a directing of the Spirit of the Lord, to teach God how to shape and floor his mercies toward us. Is it not fitting there be water in our wine, and a thorn in our Rose? Shall God draw the lineaments and proportion of his favors after the measure of my foot? Shall the Almighty be instructed to regulate his ways of supernatural providence, according to the frame of our apprehensions? O, he is a wise Lord, and wonderful in counsel: Every mercy cannot be overlaid with Sapphires and precious stones, nor must all our deliverances drop sweet smelling myrrh. God knows when, and how to level and smooth all his favors, and remove all their knots, in a sweet proportion, to the main and principal end, the salvation of his own: There is a crook in our best desires, and a rule cannot admit of a crook, even in relation to the creature, far less to him who does all things after the counsel of his own will.
Truly Lord, the Dogs] See and consider this woman, whose faith was great, as Christ says, and so was justified: she confesses, and esteems herself a Dog, and so an unworthy and profane person.
Doctrine. A justified believer is to confess his sins, to have a sense and sorrow for them, though they be pardoned. The word is clear for both confession, and sorrow for sin: though Antinomians make it a work of the flesh in the justified person, either to confess sin, or to sorrow for it, or to crave pardon for it. For confession there is commandment, practice, promise (Numbers 5:6): Speak to the children of Israel, when a man or a woman shall commit any sin that men commit to do a trespass against the Lord, and that person be guilty. Then they shall confess their sin that they have done: this is not a duty of the unconverted only, but binding all the children of Israel, men and women (James 5:16): Confess your faults one to another. Now it is not confession to men only, as if they were sins only before men, which the justified person commits, and not sins in the court of heaven before God, as Libertines teach — therefore it is added, Confess — and pray one for another, that you may be healed, for the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much. Then justified persons are to pray for pardon of sins confessed. I take it to be a precept, that as many as say, Our Father, to God in prayer, should also say, Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us; and so pardon of sins, by a justified person, and a son of God, is to be asked when we pray for daily bread, and the coming of Christ's Kingdom (Hosea 14:2): Take with you words, and turn to the Lord, say to him, Take away all iniquity. This must be a confession, that a people turned to the Lord are in their iniquities.
2. This is set down as a commendable practice (Ezra 10:1): Ezra confessed and wept (Nehemiah 9:1-2): And the seed of Israel separated themselves from all strangers, and stood and confessed their sins, and the iniquity of their fathers. (Daniel 9:4): I prayed to the Lord, and made my confession. So David (2 Samuel 12:13): I have sinned against the Lord. (Isaiah 64:5): The Church confesses, You are angry, for we have sinned — 6. But we are all as an unclean thing. (Isaiah 59:12): For our transgressions are multiplied before you, and our sins testify against us. (Job 7:20): I have sinned against you, O preserver of man. (Psalm 40:12): My sins are more in number than the hairs of my head. (Jeremiah 14:7): Our iniquities testify against us — our backslidings are many. It is a vain shift to say, the Church prays and confesses in name of the wicked party, not in name of the justified ones; for as many as were afflicted, confess their sins, for which the hand of God was upon them; now God's hand was upon all: Daniel and Jeremiah were carried away captive: indeed, the whole seed of Jacob (Isaiah 42:24-25; Isaiah 64:5-7), and Jeremiah (Lamentations 1:16), in name of the whole captive Church, says, The Lord is righteous, for I have sinned. 3. There is a promise made to those that confess (Proverbs 28:13): Whoever confesses and forsakes their sins, shall have mercy. (Psalm 32:3): When I kept silence (and confessed not) my bones grew old, etc. Verse 5: I said I will confess my transgression to the Lord, and you forgave the iniquity of my sin. And this is not an Old Testament spirit only, for the same promise is (1 John 1:8-9): If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive (Leviticus 26:40): If they shall confess their iniquity, 42. Then will I remember my covenant with Jacob. 3. Not to confess is held forth as a guilt (Jeremiah 2:35): Yet you said, Because I am innocent, surely his anger shall turn from me, behold, I will plead with you, because you say, I have not sinned. It is a token of impenitence (Jeremiah 8:6): No man repented him of his wickedness, saying, What have I done?
2. Ephraim, God's dear child, is brought in, as commended of God, and the Lord tells over again Ephraim's prayers and sorrowing for sin (Jeremiah 31:18): "I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself," etc. We have a precept for it in the New Testament (James 4:9): "Be afflicted and mourn and weep: Let your laughter be turned to mourning, and your joy to heaviness. 10. Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and he shall lift you up." Now there is better reason to mourn for sin, because they did lust, war, and were contentious, than because there were afflictions on them. Nature will cause any to cry when punishment is on them; but not nature, but grace, not the flesh, but the Spirit, causes men sorrow for sin as sin (Leviticus 26:41): "If then their uncircumcised hearts be humbled, and they then accept of the punishment of their iniquity. 42. Then I will remember my covenant with Jacob." 2. To mourn for sin is a grace promised under the New Testament (Zechariah 12:10): "And I will pour upon the house of David, and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem, the spirit of grace and supplication, and they shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and they shall mourn as one mourns for his only begotten son." 3. Those for whom the consolations of Christ are ordained are the mourners in Zion; but the consolations of Christ are not for legal mourners, and such as are weary and laden for sin, and yet never come to Christ, nor believe: there is no promise made to such mourners as Cain and Judas were. Can we say that God promises grace and mercy to any acts of the flesh, or of unbelief? 4. It is a mark of a conscience in a right frame, to be affected with the sense of the least sin as David was — one in whose conscience there remained the character of a stripe, when he but cut the lap of Saul's robe (1 Samuel 24:5). And when wicked men sin, their conscience is past feeling (Ephesians 4:19), and seared with a hot iron (1 Timothy 4:2). It is not an argument of faith, apprehending sin pardoned, not to mourn for sin and confess it; for if this be a good argument, that if we being justified, cannot but out of unbelief, sorrow for a sin that before God is no sin, as it is (Jeremiah 50:20) fully removed and taken away, (John 1:29; Micah 7:19) cast in the depths of the sea, (as Libertines argue) — for then (say they) we were both to believe that that sin remains and makes the justified person liable to eternal wrath, and so to sorrow for it as sin before God; and also to believe that it is taken away, and makes the person not liable to eternal wrath, which are contradictory. If this (I say) were a good argument, then were we not to avoid evil, and to be averse to the acting of sin, before it be committed; for by the doctrine of Antinomians, all sins, even before they be committed, indeed from eternity (say some) are as fully taken away and pardoned, as after they be committed, and as when we do now believe and repent. For if we were to have a will averse to the acting of sin, before it be committed, it must be upon this ground, that it is sin before God, and not taken away by Christ's death, else we should not abstain from it as sin; but this is a false ground to Antinomians, and inconsistent with the object of faith, which is to believe this truth, that all sins past, present, and to come, are equally removed, pardoned, indeed, and in Christ taken away, as if they never had been. And so sorrow for sin committed, being an act of the sanctified will displeased with sin, if it be unlawful, the will of the justified person is not to be displeased with it before it be committed; but on the contrary, if he is not to be displeased with sin committed, but rather to will its commission — not to sorrow for it, because he believes it is pardoned, and in God's court it is no sin to him, being in Christ — by the same ground, before it be committed, in God's court it is no sin; and so, neither can he be displeased with it before it be committed, but may also will it, and believe it is pardoned, and he ought to have no act of remorse, nor reluctance of conscience, which is God's solicitor, before the committing of it. For how is it not equally an act of the flesh and unbelief to fear sin to be committed as not pardoned in Christ, as to fear sin already committed as not pardoned? 2. If it be a lie and an act of unbelief for any justified person to say, "Lord I have sinned — O God, you know my foolishness, and my sins are not hid from you" — as justified David says (Psalm 69:5), in regard all his sins are pardoned, and the man in faith, contrary to the sense of his weak flesh, is to believe that they are all taken away. Upon the same pretended ground of faith, he is to say, "Lord, I shall never sin, though I am to commit adultery, and to murder innocent Uriah tomorrow, yet you, O God, neither tomorrow, nor at any time, do see my foolishness and sins" — because the sins to come are equally removed, and taken away in the free justification of grace, as the sins already past. Master Eaton says, "To hold that when GOD has justified both us and our works, God yet sees us in the imperfection of our sanctification, is another evident mark of a hypocrite, that was never yet truly humbled for the imperfection of his sanctification" — but these imperfections of our sanctification are left in us to our sense and feeling, that they may be healed in our justification. And he brings, page 375, diverse reasons to prove that we are not both righteous in the sight of God, and yet sinners in ourselves. Let me answer, that Antinomians in this join hands with the Council of Trent, who curse us Protestants, because we say, the guilt of original sin is taken away in Baptism, but that sin, and that which is essentially sin, dwells in us while we are here, as the sad complaints of justified saints do testify, as Chemnitius observes. Indeed, Andradius says, as Antinomians do, that we put blasphemy upon Christ's merits and grace, as if he could not in a moment wash us perfectly from all sin. And what arguments Papists in this point use, the same does Eaton and Antinomians use also. Indeed, but justified Job says (Job 9:30-31): "If I wash myself with snow-water, and make my hands never so clean; yet shall you plunge me in the ditch, and my own clothes shall abhor me." (Job 40:4): "Behold, I am vile, what shall I answer you?" This Job, after he was by God's pen declared an upright man, says of his own ways in his sufferings. And David, a justified man, says (Psalm 143:2): "Enter not in judgment with your servant, for in your sight shall no flesh be justified." Yet Job and David were no hypocrites.