require any service of him, his soul presently yieldeth, and
is content to be framed and fashioned to God's call, and returneth an
obedient answer thereto; he is content to come out of his sins, and out
of himself, and to receive the impressions of the Spirit. This is that
which God requireth, not only of Abraham, but of all believers:
"Whosoever will be my disciple," saith Christ, "must forsake father,
and mother, and children, and houses, and lands"; yea, and he must
"deny himself, and take up his cross and follow me." This is the first
step in Christianity, to lay down our own honors, to trample upon our
own respects, to submit our necks to the block, as it were, and whatever
God commands, to be content that His good pleasure should take place
with us.
Then Abraham, as doth every faithful soul, set forward, in this wise: He
showed that whenever faith cometh powerfully into the heart, the soul
is not content barely to yield to the command of God, but it breatheth
after His mercy, longeth for His grace, prizeth Christ and salvation
above all things in the world, is satisfied and contented with nothing
but with the Lord Christ, and altho it partake of many things below, and
enjoy abundance of outward comforts, yet it is not quieted till it rest
and pitch itself upon the Lord, and find and feel that evidence and
assurance of His love, which He hath promised unto and will bestow on
those who love Him. As for all things here below, he hath but a slight,
and mean, and base esteem of them. This you shall see apparent in
Abraham. "Fear not, Abraham (saith God), I am thy shield, and thy
exceeding great reward." What could a man desire more? One would
think that the Lord makes a, promise here large enough to Abraham, "I
will be thy buckler, and exceeding great reward." Is not Abraham
contented with this? No; mark how he pleadeth with God: "Lord God
(saith he), what wilt thou give me, seeing I go childless?" His eye is
upon the promise that God had made to him of a son, of whom the
Savior of the world should come. "O Lord, what wilt thou give me?" as
if he had said, What wilt Thou do for me? alas! nothing will do my soul
good unless I have a son, and in him a Savior. What will become of me
so long as I go childless, and so Saviorless, as I may so speak? You see
how Abraham's mouth was out of taste with all other things, how he
could relish nothing, enjoy nothing in comparison of the promise, tho
he had otherwise what he would, or could desire. Thus must it be with
every faithful man. That soul never had, nor never shall have Christ,
that doth not prize Him above all things in the world.
The next step of Abraham's faith was this, he casteth himself and
flingeth his soul, as I may say, upon the all-sufficient power and mercy
of God for the attainment of what he desireth; he rolleth and tumbleth
himself, as it were, upon the all-sufficiency of God. This you shall find
in Rom. iv. 18, where the apostle, speaks of Abraham, who "against
hope, believed in hope"; that is, when there was no hope in the world,
yet he believed in God, even above hope, and so made it possible. It
was an object of his hope, that it might be in regard of God, howsoever
there was no possibility in regard of man. So the text saith, "he
considered not his own body now dead, when he was about a hundred
years old, neither yet the deadness of Sarah's womb, but was strong in
faith." He cast himself wholly upon the precious promise and mercy of
God.
But he took another step in true justifying faith. He proved to us the
believer is informed touching the excellency of the Lord Jesus, and that
fulness that is to be had in Him, tho he can not find the sweetness of
His mercy, tho he can not or dare not apprehend and apply it to himself,
tho he find nothing in himself, yet he is still resolved to rest upon the
Lord, and to stay himself on the God of his salvation, and to wait for
His mercy till he find Him gracious to his poor soul. Excellent and
famous is the example of the woman of Canaan. When Christ, as it
were, beat her off, and took up arms against her, was not pleased to
reveal Himself graciously to her for the present, "I am not sent (saith
He) but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel; and it
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