This preface and the following
sermon was delivered at the parish of Carluke upon Thursday, the
8th of July, being a fast day in 1680, 14 days before Mr. Cameron's death. The sermon was
published in 1733 under the title Good News to Scotland. Richard
Cameron. Now, know ye wherefore ye are
come here today, I think many of you cannot tell more than
these horses beside you. But do not ye look on this as
your principal end that you will have now before you, namely to
sanctify a fast unto the Lord and to turn unto Him with prayer,
fasting and mourning. I am sure it is a necessary and
seasonable duty, and it is at least a great part of this day's
work, to set about these things that the Lord calls for at our
hands, in this day of perplexity and breaking down in the valley
of vision for the Lord God of hosts. Now, I would ask every
one of you this question, though the truth is I am not acquainted
with you all, nor the half of you. There are many of you that
I never saw in the face before, but our Lord knows you all. Now,
beware, for He is very nigh you. He is nearer every one of you
than ye are aware of. He is nearer you than your very
hands and arms are. His eyes are like a flaming fire,
and He knows what you have done privately and secretly. He knows
your down-sitting and your uprisings, and knows and understands all
your thoughts afar off. Now this is the question I would
ask you, man and woman, whether or not you have made conscience
of setting a day apart to the Lord in secret for this end. to wrestle with him for the turning
away of his fierce anger and displeasure that have been burning
like a hot oven so long against this poor land. There are 20s, nay hundreds,
nay thousands in Scotland that will come running to a public
fast that never had a secret fast in their families. Could
you never spare one of the six days of the week from your employment
to the Lord? But I tell you, your public fasting
will do no good, except you have private wrestlings betwixt God
and you. How would you know what you should
fast for? The truth is, I will not take
upon me to tell you at this time what you are to fast for. But
you should fast and humble yourselves in the sight of God, for if I
had begun at six o'clock in the morning, it would have employed
me till six o'clock at night to have told you the causes of
fasting. It might take perhaps as much paper to specify the
particulars of the libel that God hath against us as would
lie betwixt me and Edinburgh. And if you would fast aright
for your private sins and family sins, the husband should fast
for the sins of the wife and the wife for the sins of her
husband. And both should fast for the sins of their children.
And you should fast for your own sins and for your father's
sins. For we and our fathers have sinned against the Lord.
And we may say, O, but there be much sin within us that never
appeared unto the world. And O, that we were trembling
with tears running down from our eyes for all the evils, wickedness,
and abominations that have been committed in general through
the land, and in particular families and in private. We know well
enough that it is a wonder that the earth bears us, The generation
hath exceeded Tyre and Sidon. The wickedness done in Scotland
has come to such a pitch that they contend who shall swear
the greatest oaths and go to the greatest length in villainy.
And from whence come these? They come from our lusts. I will
tell you this. If you would look into your hearts,
you would not think it strange from whence these things come.
For the seeds of these things are in the heart of both men
and women. There are none here who, if they were not more beholden
to God than to themselves, would not have gone to the greatest
length that ever any prophet had gone in this generation.
But truly our rulers may say that they will defy any that
come after them to exceed them in wickedness. Let us, however,
consider our own ways and turn our feet to the ways of His commandments
and testimonies. Unless we be mourning for our
own sins, it sets us but ill to mourn for the land's sins.
But we should first take the beam out of our own eye before
we take the mote out of our brother's eye. I assure you, if ye take
a look at matters this day, ye will see no need to say to the
rest of the land, Stand by, for I am holier than thou. For there
are none of us but what are beholden to the free mercy of God. For
whom he will, he justifieth, and whom he will, he hardeneth.
But as to the sins of the land, I do not intend at present to
enter upon them. We are wearied of speaking of
them and ashamed of them. I think they should hardly be
mentioned among us if we could get them buried. For I think
that the rulers and those who comply with them should not be
much spoken of. We should quit them. And it is
a great question with me whether or not we should mourn for their
sins anymore. It is true. We should mourn over
the dishonors done to God. Hence, says the psalmist, rivers
of water run down mine eyes because they keep not thy law. As for
the great ones of the land, I have for my part given them over.
But we should weep. the vengeance of God that is
coming, and may not long be protracted. Let us then cry unto him to whom
vengeance belongs, Stir up thyself, O thou avenger of blood. We need
not pray much more for them, but let us pray that the Lord
would bring his declarative glory from under that cloud that hath
hung so long over it. Now, we have a great need to
be looking seriously and taking heed what we are doing. For the
eyes of many are upon us. I think there are a few here
that have been preparing rightly for this work. And it may be
there are some of us here of as light a spirit as any in the
land. Oh, but lightness of behavior becomes us ill at this time.
It becomes us rather to be grave and sober. taking heed unto our
ways, for many are waiting for our halting. Now it is likely
you have not been praying for a frame and furniture for this
day, and many are come here and cannot tell what brought them.
However, when you are come, engage heartily in the work of the day,
seeing the Lord threatens either to go away or else to come. in wrath to destroy the land. Let us then cry to Him to spare
a remnant in whom He will be glorified. Sermon text is Isaiah 49, verses
24, 25, 26. Shall the prey be taken from
the mighty, or the lawful captive delivered? But thus saith the
Lord, even the captives of the mighty shall be taken away And
the prey of the terrible shall be delivered, for I will contend
with them that contend with thee, and I will save thy children. And I will feed them that oppress
thee with their own flesh, and they shall be drunken with their
own blood, as with sweet wine. And all flesh shall know that
I, the Lord, am thy Savior and Redeemer, the Mighty One of Jacob. We may claim a special interest
in this place of scripture beyond many other places of it. Look
into the very first verse of this chapter. Listen, O Isles,
and hearken ye people from afar. It would appear that this was
unto Britain. Listen unto me, O Britain and
Ireland. The Lord is crying unto us this
day to listen unto him. You will say, what is the Lord
saying? What will the Lord cry unto us? We cannot now take time
to speak unto all that is in this chapter and make application
of it, but look to the 13th verse. Sing, O heavens, and be joyful,
O earth, for the Lord hath comforted his people and will have mercy
upon his afflicted. He is crying unto us, Sing, O
heaven, that is, sing, O church, and rejoice, O earth. Sing, O
state, sing, both church and state of Scotland. Oh, how should
we sing? Hath not the Lord forsaken and
forgotten us? Nay, though it appears so, yet
it is not really so. A woman may forget her sucking
child, but the Lord cannot forget his people. The purpose of God
is pregnant and about to bring forth a great deliverance unto
the church and state of Scotland. If we saw the days that our Lord
is to bestow upon us in Scotland and had a view of the ministers
that shall be in it, it would make us sing. You think now that
the ministers are gone. Indeed, a great part of them
are so, and the magistrates are rejected by us. We declare before
sun, moon, and stars that this is the case. But the Lord hath
yet ministers that shall be polished shafts in his quiver. And He
will yet give us rulers and He will make out that promise. And kings shall be thy nursing
fathers. So that if we saw the good days
that are coming upon the back of these troubles, we would not
get men and women kept from dancing for joy. We would all go home
with gladness rejoicing as if we were frantic for joy. But
you may say, how can this be? For there are two things that
be objected against it. First, the fewness of them who
have kept straight. But ere long that shall be made
out, the children which thou shalt have after thou hast lost
the others shall say, the place is too straight for me. Give
place to me that I may dwell. Then thou shalt say, who hath
begotten me these and who hath brought up these? Behold, I was
left alone. These, where had they been? Indeed,
the Lord is coming to make this land desolate. There will not
be many men or women or children in it, and the remnant that he
will leave in it will be a poor, afflicted people. But that small
company will leaven the whole lump again so that the number
of the Presbyterians who adhere to Christ's cause and to the
despised and persecuted party in Scotland will not get room
to dwell in Scotland. And the reason will be because
all the neighboring nations will come and take, as it were, a
copy of the doctrine, worship, and discipline of the Church
of Scotland. But you may say, how can that be? You have the
Word of God for it. But this Word hath not been made
out very much to any churches yet. The truth is, it is set
down for the Isles and seems to have a respect to Britain
and Ireland, especially Scotland. Listen, O Isles unto me. Second
objection is from the strength and power of enemies. Well, come
away with that. Make language of your case and
the church's case. What you say as to that, you
will say, is very sad. And you are so impressed with
it that when you go to God with the church's case, you are, as
it were, tongue-tacked and cannot get it properly expressed. Well,
here is your case brought into your hands. There is a question
here proposed by God Himself, and it is just our language,
at least the language of such as would prefer Jerusalem above
their chiefest joy. And it is this, shall the prey
be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captive delivered?
Is not this our case? In a word, are we not made a
prey, and they that have made us a prey are mighty and we are
captives? lawful captive for the captivity
of the just, or thus we are in captivity according to their
law that is established by iniquity. Now, I shall not be long in speaking
what I intend to say from these words. But as to the question,
there are these two or three things in it. I shall only name
them and not come over them again. First, there is obviously held
out by it that sometimes the people of God are made a prey.
I know well that word, yea, truth faileth, and he that departeth
from evil maketh himself a prey, is made out in our day. I will
tell you that there are many folk in this land that think
by forbearing some practices that some men are forward to
at this time to evite trouble. Nay, but forbearing duty is your
sin. And if ye sin not with others,
ye make yourselves a prey to them. But the providences of
this time are a sufficient commentary upon this. The truth is, they
are not worthy of their room now that are not a prey in Scotland. That man that can keep the crown
of the Qazi is not worthy of a good day or good evening, though
he were the best minister in Scotland. I hardly know a worse
mark of a man or woman than this, than that they are not a prey.
The truth is that any man may shoot us, and we counted our
glory that it is so. Those who are free to buy or
sell, to go to Kirk or market, have their freedom at a dear
rate. While we are a prey and captives,
they have many of the Lord's servants, both men and women,
in prison. and all according to their law. Well, we must not
take it ill that it is so. You see, there is no strange
thing happened unto us but what hath befallen many. Such things
have befallen church before. And the Lord hath warned us,
not only in general, if any man come unto me he must deny himself
and take up his cross. And through many tribulations
we must enter into the kingdom of heaven. but particulars are
condescended upon and cordial suitable to these particulars.
There is a suitable cordial promised in this chapter. Beware of grudging. We are a prey now, but ere long
they that prey upon us shall themselves be preyed upon. Secondly,
the thing that we may here observe is that it is incident to the
church and people of God not only to be made a prey, but to
be made a prey to the mighty, We may say, our persecutors are
stronger than we. We know if we were only a prey
to men as strong as ourselves, we would laugh at them and but
play with them, as we used to say. But the truth is, those
that have led us captive are mighty. They have forces and
armies at their command. Thirdly, the words import this
likewise, that not only is the church sometimes a prey to the
mighty, but also the people of God will be just on the point
of despairing that ever they can be delivered. Again, shall
the prey be taken from the mighty? Shall the prey be taken from
the king, from the council, from the forces, and soldiers, how
can it be? It cannot be. When we look to
our right hand, there is none to care for us. All refuge faileth
us. There is a question here which
I desire all the ministers in Scotland to answer. Ask them,
will yonder prey be taken from the mighty? Nay, say they, we
need not attempt it. and we ourselves who know it
are on the point of despairing. We begin to think it needless
to preach, pray, fast, weep, or fight. For when we attempt
to rise or use the means, the Lord comes and gives such a blow
that we are made to sit down and cleave faster to the ground
than ever before. Nay, if we could get all the
angels of heaven today to ask them this question, it would
puzzle them, Shall the prey be taken from the mighty? It is
true indeed. Believers that attain unto any
intimacy with God may get a sight of this, that God will deliver
his church. But then there comes the matter,
by whom shall Jacob arise? For he is small. Here is one
to answer positively and affirmatively and tell how it shall be accomplished. The Lord even says, I see that
though I should charge ministers and angels to tell how the prey
shall be taken from the mighty, they will not do it. I will then
take it on myself to answer this question. For immediately before
you see, he promiseth to make kings their nursing fathers,
which shows us this, that after God hath promised a thing, he
doth not instantly and immediately perform it. For between God's
giving a promise to his people and the accomplishment thereof
there may follow such things as may make us think it will
never be accomplished, but rather the contrary. When people are
under those things that prognosticate the contrary of what he hath
promised in his word, and on which he hath caused us to hope,
then he comes in himself. But thus saith the Lord, even
the captives of the mighty shall be taken away, which is an answer
to this, shall the prey be taken from the mighty, Say the mighty,
Nay, ye shall never be taken out of our hands. Yea, and most
part of the people think it so. But thus saith the Lord, even
the captives of the mighty shall be taken away, and the prey of
the terrible shall be delivered. Oh, do you believe this? I am
sure if you did, you would be content to suffer affliction
and persecution, to be fined and cast out of your houses,
to wander and take your lives in your hand for a while. There
is as much in this word as may make us go away singing and may
comfort us against all the trouble this time may threaten us with.
If you talk of news, here is good news. The prey shall be
taken from the mighty and the lawful captive delivered. But,
say ye, there is little appearance of it. Where is the man to do
it? I know no gentleman or common
to do it. We had these to go within these
few years, but now the commons are involved in the same guilt
with the gentlemen and are lying by as well as they. There is
no minister or professor to do it. Indeed, the Lord will not
entrust the work of our deliverance to one of us. Thanks be to Him
for that. For if it were so, we would lie
under troubles always, and the work would be raised to the foundation,
so that there would be no memory of it transmitted to posterity.
Then say ye to the Lord, how shall the prey be taken from
the mighty? And this will be his answer,
I will contend with them that contend with thee, and I will
save thy children. and will feed them that oppress
thee with their own flesh. Never think that ye will get
salvation till God come and contend with his enemies. Many would
invert the Lord's order and method. They would first have salvation,
and then contending with enemies. But that is not God's way, and
take it in hand, who will, it shall not prosper. Those who
take outward salvation and preservation in time of trouble, in the church's
distress, before the Lord comes to contend, shall find that when
the Lord comes to contend with enemies, He will contend with
them too. Oh, how many ministers and professors
will God have to contend with when He comes back to Scotland
to contend with them that contend with Him and His people. Many
think that if we had such an army as we had last year, we
would contend with them. Well, the Lord God of hosts will
contend with them ere long, and He will feed them that oppress
His own people with their own flesh. But many folk may think this
is cruelty. If ministers only and professors
had said it, it might have been thought cruel, but it is the
Lord's Word. When our Lord comes, He will
be severe. He will, to speak after the manner
of men, be cruel. but he is just and righteous.
The instruments he will make use of, whether they be his own
people or not, must handle enemies after another sort than they
have been handled. Yea, they will take pieces out
of their flesh and make them eat it, and make them drink their
own blood as sweet wine. This will the Lord do, and make
them know that he is the Lord and Redeemer of his church and
people. He is not known to be the Lord
now, but is mocked and lightly esteemed. But when He comes to
execute justice and judgment on the land, He will make all
know that He is the Redeemer of His people and that His lovingkindness
has been remaining with them all along. And be they who they
will, whom the Lord will raise up to execute judgment in this
land. They will reward them as they
have rewarded or done unto us. They will not spare. As he lives,
he will bring cruel foreigners ere he want. But we may say, we need not trouble
ourselves about it, since the Lord will do it. We may lie by. We need not trouble ourselves
about it. Many would be at that. Indeed, the Lord will do it,
but we must be in the use of the means that are incumbent
upon us. I shall speak to several means
to be used in order to hasten the Lord's delivery of the captives
and his contending with them that contend with his people."
The first two or three of them, of those means, you may see in
Revelation 12, 11. In the tenth verse it is said,
the accuser of our brethren is cast down. What is meant by that? It means that the devil hath
got a sore stroke. How got he that? and they overcame
by the blood of the Lamb. What is that? It is believing
in Jesus Christ and employing Him and giving Him much credit
who is the captain of our salvation and was made perfect through
suffering. Oh, sad that there is so little faith exercised
in our days. For faith will say to this mountain,
remove to yonder place and it will be removed. There is nothing
impossible to him that believes. They overcame by the blood of
the Lamb Indeed, he that believes will overcome if it were on a
scaffold or even lying on the ground in the fields and his
blood gushing out. For his blood, when it had gone,
is by virtue of the blood of Jesus Christ, crying for vengeance.
Oh, the noble victories that have been won on scaffolds and
other places in this land by our Lord over the dragon and
his angels. The dragon and his angels have
fought with Michael and his angels, but the dragon has been cast
down. A second means is their testimony. They overcame by the word of
their testimony. It is a shame for this generation
that they are so much for silence and against a testimony when
the Lord is extorting it from them. And if they appear for
a testimony, the rest are afraid and offended thereby. they overcame
by the word of their testimony. Had we openly, plainly, and avowedly
pleaded with our Mother Church and testified against the sins
of our rulers, we should not have lain so long under the feet
of the usurper, of him who is the stated enemy of Jesus Christ,
nor under the feet of those under him. Indeed, it is a testimony
at this time to come out to preach and to hear preaching in this
manner. But oh, that's such a testimony. We're in our power. We should
see about it. For my part, I would think it
our duty were there a possibility that we could get away to go
and tell them to their face that they are traitors to God and
abominable persons. This we have often said in the
fields that our chief ruler is a traitor to God and our mother
church. And when we go to the market
crosses to declare it by papers, the most part are offended in
our Lord at this time. But I will tell you, I desire
not to take the praise to myself. But I say, if that testimony
be adhered unto, it will give them a sore blow, even that testimony
or paper that have accidentally fallen into their hands and have
been left at crosses. If the testimony given at Rutherglen,
May 29, 1679, had been adhered to, we would have seen other
things of that people than we have seen. The Lord would have
countenanced his people and owned their testimony. I say, set about
the giving of a testimony. This will hasten the Lord to
come out of his place to save his children. Third, they overcame
by not loving their lives unto the death, that is, by suffering. And indeed, suffering gives a
noble dash to enemies. We never lost anything by suffering
cleanly, but gained much by those who have lost their lives on
fields and scaffolds. Many folk will say, indeed, we
should suffer, but say they we should not fight. But let me
see the man that says he is not for fighting. It is true, if
the Lord call not to it, it should be so. But for suffering, it
may be confined in the breadth of a farthing, that that man
will suffer. For those that cry down defensive
arms in these times, when they see it comes to this, you must
do this or suffer, will suffer the wrongs done to Jesus Christ,
but they will never suffer the least loss as to their own matters.
They will suffer the gospel to go away. We are ashamed of such
folk as pretend to suffer for Christ while in the meantime
they submit to every temptation. There is never an act made by
the enemies for some years past but that they yield to it. Some
will say, I could not help taking the bond and paying the cess
and locality. I think well, says each of them. I did it against my will. so
that it was my affliction and suffering. But as for such suffering,
the Lord will not thank you for it. It is not suffering. It is
yielding. There is a fourth means we would
prescribe to you in order to the doing what ye can to hasten
the Lord's contending with them that contend with you. And you
may read it in Luke 18, verse 7. Pray always and faith not. Will not God avenge His own elect
that cry unto Him day and night, though He bear long with them?
He must never give over praying. Refuse to give Him rest. or keep
silence till he establish truth and make Jerusalem a praise in
the whole earth. Many of you, it may be, have
prayed long and come little speed. You have been in pain but brought
forth wind, yet you must continue. Continue this month or this year
and you may get deliverance the next. We cannot set a time, but
we know not how soon our deliverance may appear to the view of all,
to the terror of enemies, the confusion of them that reproach
us, and to the joy of all his people who wait for it. For he
is in all appearance coming, then cry, come forward. He will
avenge his elect, but if he quits your duty in prayer before he
comes, he will get no thanks when he comes for what you have
done. If the righteous man commits sin, his righteousness shall
be forgotten. There are many such righteous men in Scotland.
When our Lord comes, as for such as turn aside unto their crooked
ways, He shall lead them forth with the workers of iniquity.
Up, therefore, and be doing. Up to your prayers, and the Lord
will be with you. Another means to hasten the Lord's
return you have in Psalm 76.10. Surely the wrath of man shall
praise thee. The remainder of his wrath shalt
thou restrain. Would you have the remainder
of man's wrath restrained? Would you have greater things
than, verse 11, vow and pay to the Lord your God? That is the
first. But what follows? He will cut
off the spirit of princes. He is terrible to the kings of
the earth. Would you have the Lord cut off
the spirit of princes, cut off that base and abominable family
that have been tyrannizing over these kingdoms? Would you have
him terrible to King Charles, James, Duke of York, and the
Duke of Monmouth too? Then vow and bring yourselves
under engagements to the Most High. Let us never imagine that
ever a party in Scotland will thrive or that our Lord will
give success unto them, even using other lawful means, except
they vow to the Lord and endeavor to perform what you may say,
did not that party who arose and appeared in the fields in
1666 renew the covenant at Lanark? And yet they were broken at Pentland
and never looked so prosperous like afterwards as they did before.
I dare say it in my Master's name and in His strength will
make it out that the reason, the only one I know, that the
covenant then sworn to had so little increase in success was
because they took in the King's interest. notwithstanding his
having declared himself before a stated enemy to Jesus Christ
and his interest. You may read and always observe
that in the several reformations that were in Judah or in the
Church of the Jews, they always entered into covenant with accommodations
to the circumstances, sins and duties of the time. I do not
desire to reflect upon our fathers for bringing home Charles Stewart
to get the crown. Indeed, some of them, and amongst
others, the Reverend and worthy Mr. Livingston did regret and
go mourning to the grave for it. Yea, his actions since and
the connivances of those who had his favor or any power under
him, evidence that it is impossible to manifest or maintain the royal
prerogatives of Jesus Christ and yet maintain the king's civil
rights. Since it is so declared that
we must either quit him as king or Christ, indeed, for my part,
I am for no king but Jesus Christ, since they will have none but
Caesar. When Christ is seated upon his
throne and his crown upon his head, Let such magistrates be
appointed in every particular station as will employ their
power for the advancement of His kingdom and for destroying
the kingdom of darkness in this land and in every place where
Christ shall reign. And then let them be owned. We
are constrained to say this and can say in our Lord and Master's
name that ye should not stumble at vowing and giving testimony
But let vows and covenant go through the land. Yea, though
we should not have an army in Scotland, yet as the Lord lives,
though he had not a party to back him, he will bring down
all about us. Bow and pay to the Lord, and
he will cut off the spirit of princes and be terrible to the
kings of the earth. Yea, they shall bring gifts and
presents to our king, for he will make them all shake and
quake. was observed by old Bishop Spotswood in Edinburgh when the
last bishops were brought down, when he heard that some noblemen
and gentlemen were for renewing the national covenant. Oh, says
he, we have done with it since the people are renewing their
covenant with God. And oh, that there were personal
entering into covenant and that there were general and national
vowing to God. that they would have none to
be head of His church but Christ, and that they would have none
to rule over them but such as are fearers of God and a terror
to evil doers, haters of covetousness, and a praise to them that do
well. If it were so, we durst pawn
our soul for it, if we had it at our disposal, that our Lord
would soon arise out of His place and let us see our desire on
our enemies, Oh, that we were so wise now, but poor people,
they are much disheartened and discouraged. They think that
no means will do good. Oh, that we were come to acknowledge
that we have been walking contrary to him. and he unto us. He would
soon in this case appear for our deliverance. If you ask me
how I can speak so confidently of the Lord's appearing and contending
with his enemies, since there is so little appearance of it,
I answer there is more appearance of it now than there was in the
beginning of June a year when we had an army before the break
at Bothwell. If he were near God And if these
things were said about that we have spoken to, he would see
delivery very soon. And I will tell you why I cannot
think that the time can be far off in which the Lord is coming
to contend with them that contend with his people. I will tell
you the symptoms of it in these two things. The first is that
the people of God are very low. And second is that the enemies
of God are very high. It may be that they will be higher
yet. The army is nothing that they have compared to what they
may have. God will have all his enemies gathered together and
then bring a fatal stroke upon them. For our part, we should
not care that not only this army that they have were in a body,
that all our Lord's enemies in Europe were gathered together,
that he might cut them off. It is true, our power is gone.
But he will not want ways to do it, though his people should
never draw a sword. There is none now shut up or
left, but the nearer is his coming. For the Lord shall judge his
people and repent himself for his servants, when he seeth that
their power is gone, and there is none shut up or left. Now I advise you to look much
over the prophetical sermons of worthy Mr. William Guthrie,
for he spake clearly of what is now our lot and many things
he pointed out as marks of the Lord's return. All outward things
that we looked on, looked to, are laid by. Great men and multitudes
of ministers, professors, now have gone. Indeed, it is sad
to think on the ways they have gone. Yea, many ministers are
saying, yonder people will get leave to stand or fall to themselves.
None will join with them. Some may think, oh, but it would
be a hopeful business if all the ministers, professors, and
people would join in one. Indeed, if I saw them all coming
to join in one, as matters now stand, I would think it a good
wisdom to run away from that union. It would be a black mark. God will not give His glory to
another. He will have few means, and these
despicable ones, that His glory may the more conspicuously appear.
And if they be such as attract the eyes of the people, I will
warrant you that they shall be laid by also, though He will
make use of some means and instruments. Oh, to wait on Him for counsel,
wisdom, courage, and furniture of every sort for doing and suffering
anything He may be calling us to. His and our enemies are laughing
at us. Well, go to the Lord and put
Him to make out His word. Thus thou hast said, and be as
good as thy word. Thou hast heard the blasphemy
of thine enemies. Plead with Him. You may plead
more familiarly with Him than with any man on the countryside.
As thou not said for the oppression of the poor and sighing of the
needy, thou wilt arise. Oh, that we were but groaning
to the Lord and telling Him what He hath promised. We would get
wonderful things made out by Him concerning my sons and my
daughters. Command ye me. Nay, there are
as great things to be got from the Lord now as ever. He never
said to the house of Jacob, seek ye my face in vain. Let us make
use of prayer, and that will not hinder us to make use of
other means. I will assure you that you will make all your enemies
to tremble and shake yet. What have we to fear? Is not
the Lord on our side? And if so, it matters not who
be against us. Have we not the word of God to
be our delight and our support in the time of our affliction?
Unless the law of the Lord had been our delight, we had fainted.
We had either declined to that which is sinful, or we had been
careless, or had lain down in despair, which would have been
sinful also. Now, on the whole, you see our
case. Proposed in a word to God. shall
the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captive delivered?
With his answer, thus saith the Lord, the prey shall be taken
from the mighty, and the prey of the terrible shall be delivered.
For I will contend with him that contendeth with thee, and I will
save thy children. Now go with the answer of this
question from the Lord, believing that he is to arise and contend
with them, that contend with his people. Please stand with me in prayer. We thank Thee, Heavenly Father,
for Thy matchless Word, which gives us strength and encouragement,
and for the promise that Thou wilt contend with blasphemers,
with gainsayers, with the enemies of Thy truth. We pray that Thou would forgive
us for lacking in doing our duty of prayer, of spending that time
which to the flesh seems so unprofitable. Thou has commanded it. There will be no reformation unless
God's people pray. There will be no change. Though
we put out literature, though we speak, though we shout, we
must have prayer. We pray that thou would put this
in our hearts and cause it to be practiced in our lives. We ask these things in Jesus'
name. Amen. This Reformation audio track
is a production of Stillwater's Revival Books. You are welcome
to make copies and give them to those in need. SWRB makes
thousands of classic Reformation resources available, free and
for sale, in audio, video, and printed formats. It is likely
that the sermon or book that you just listened to is also
available on cassette or video, or as a printed book or booklet.
Our many free resources, as well as our complete mail order catalog,
Thank you. at SWRB at SWRB.com by phone
at 780-450-3730 by fax at 780-468-1096 or by mail at 4710-37A Avenue
Edmonton that's E-D-M-O-N-T-O-N Alberta abbreviated capital A
capital B Canada T6L3T5. You may also request
a free printed catalog. And remember that John Calvin,
in defending the Reformation's regulative principle of worship,
or what is sometimes called the scriptural law of worship, commenting
on the words of God, which I commanded them not, neither came into my
heart, from his commentary on Jeremiah 731, writes, God here
cuts off from men every occasion for making evasions. since he
condemns by this one phrase, I have not commanded them, whatever
the Jews devised. There is then no other argument
needed to condemn superstitions than that they are not commanded
by God. For when men allow themselves to worship God according to their
own fancies, and attend not to His commands, they pervert true
religion. And if this principle was adopted
by the Papists, all those fictitious modes of worship in which they
absurdly exercise themselves, would fall to the ground. It
is indeed a horrible thing for the Papists to seek to discharge
their duties towards God by performing their own superstitions. There
is an immense number of them, as it is well known, and as it
manifestly appears. Were they to admit this principle,
that we cannot rightly worship God except by obeying His word,
they would be delivered from their deep abyss of error. The
Prophet's words, then, are very important. When he says, that
God had commanded no such thing, and that it never came to his
mind, as though he had said that men assume too much wisdom when
they devise what he never required, nay, what he never knew.