SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMON XXX. ON THE WORDS OF
THE GOSPEL, MATT. XVII. 19, "WHY COULD NOT WE CAST IT OUT"? ETC., AND ON PRAYER.
SERMON XXX.
[LXXX. BEN.]
ON THE WORDS OF THE GOSPEL, MATT. XVII. 19, "WHY COULD NOT WE CAST IT OUT"?
ETC., AND ON PRAYER.
1. OUR Lord Jesus Christ reproved unbelief even in His own disciples, as
we heard just now when the Gospel was being read. For when they had said, "Why
could not we cast him out?" He answered, "Because of your unbelief."(4) If the
Apostles were unbelievers, who is a believer? What must the lambs do, if the
rams totter? Yet the mercy of the Lord did not disdain them in their unbelief; but
reproved, nourished, perfected, crowned them. For they themselves, as mindful
of their own weakness, said to Him, as we read in a certain place in the
Gospel, "Lord, increase our faith.(5) Lord," say they, "increase our faith." The
knowing that they had a deficiency, was the first advantage; a greater happiness
still, to know who it was of whom they were asking. "Lord," say they, "increase
our faith." See, if they did not bring their hearts as it were to the fountain,
and knocked that that might be opened to them, out of which they might fill
them. For He would that men should knock at Him, not that He might repel those
that knock, but that He might exercise those who long.
2. For do you think, Brethren, that God doth not know what is needful for
you? He knoweth and preventeth our desires, who knoweth our want. And so when
He taught His disciples to pray, and warned them not to use many words in
prayer, He saith, "Use not many words; for your Father knoweth what things ye have
need of before ye ask Him."(6) Now the Lord saith something different from this.
What is this? Because He misliked that we should use many words in prayer, He
said to us, "When ye pray, use not many words; for your Father knoweth what
things ye have need of before ye ask Him." If our "Father knoweth what things we
have need of before we ask Him," why do we use even few words? What is the use of
prayer at all, if "our Father knoweth" already "what things we have need of"?
He saith to one, Do not make thy prayer to Me at great length; for I know what
is needful for thee. If so, Lord, why should I so much as pray at all? Thou
wouldest not that I should use long prayers, yea rather Thou dost even bid me to
use near none at all. And then what meaneth that precept in another place? For
He who saith, "Use not many words in prayer," saith in another place, "Ask, and
it shall be given you."(7) And that thou mightest not think that this first
precept to ask was given cursorily, He added, "Seek, and ye shall find." And that
thou mightest not think that this too was cursorily given, see what He added
further, see with what He finished. "Knock, and it shall be opened unto you:" see
what He added. He would have thee ask that thou mayest receive, and seek that
thou mayest find, and knock that thou mayest enter in. Seeing then that our
Father knoweth already what is needful for us, how and why do we ask? why seek?
why knock? why weary ourselves in asking, and seeking, and knocking, to instruct
Him who knoweth already? And in another place the words of the Lord are, "Men
ought always to pray, and not to faint."(1) If men "ought always to pray," how
doth He say, "Use not many words"? How can I always pray, if I so quickly make
an end? Here Thou biddest me to finish quickly; there "always to pray and not to
faint:" what doth this mean? Now that thou mayest understand this, "ask, seek,
knock." For for this cause is it closed, not to shut thee out, but to exercise
thee. Therefore, brethren, ought we to exhort to prayer, both ourselves and
you. For other hope have we none amid the manifold evils of this present world,
than to knock in prayer, to believe and to maintain the belief firm in the
heart, that thy Father only doth not give thee what He knoweth is not expedient for
thee. For thou knowest what thou dost desire; He knoweth what is good for thee.
Imagine thyself under a physician, and in weak health, as is the very truth;
for all this life of ours is a weakness; and a long life is nothing else but a
prolonged weakness. Imagine thyself then to be sick under the physician's hand.
Thou hast a desire to ask thy physician leave to drink a draught of fresh wine.
Thou art not prohibited from asking, for it may chance to do thee no harm, or
even good to receive it. Do not then hesitate to ask; ask, hesitate not; but if
thou receive not, do not take it to heart. Now if thou wouldest act thus in
the hands of a man, the physician of the body, how much more in the hands of God,
who is the Physician, the Creator, and Restorer, both of thy body and soul?
3. Wherefore, see how the Lord in this passage exhorted His disciples to
prayer, when He said, "Ye could not cast out this devil because of your
unbelief."(2) For then exhorting them to prayer He ended thus; "this kind is not cast
out but by prayer and fasting." If a man must pray, to cast out devils from
another, how much more to cast out his own covetousness? how much more to cast out
his own drunkenness? how much more to cast out his own luxuriousness? how much
more to cast out his own uncleanness? How many things in a man are there, which
if they are persevered in, allow of no admission into the kingdom of heaven!
Consider, Brethren, how a physician is entreated for the preservation of
temporal health, how, if any one is desperately ill, is he ashamed or slow to throw
himself at a man's feet? to bathe in tears the footsteps of any very able chief
physician? And what if the physician say to him, "Thou canst not else be cured,
except I bind thee, and use the fire and knife"? He will answer," Do what thou
wilt, only cure me." With what eagerness does he long for the health of a few
days, fleeting as a vapour, that for it he is content to be bound, and submit to
the fire, and knife, and to be watched, that he neither eat nor drink what, or
when, he pleases! All this he will endure, that he may die a little later;
and yet he will not endure ever so little, that he may never die. If God, who is
the Heavenly Physician over us, saith to thee, "Wilt thou be cured?" What
wouldest thou say but "Yes." Or it may be thou wouldest not say so, because thou
fanciest thyself to be in health, that is, because thou art more grievously sick.
4. For if we suppose two sick persons, one who implores the physician with
tears, the other, who in his sickness with infatuation derides him; he will
hold out hope to the one that weeps, and will deplore the case of the other that
laughs. Why? but because the sounder in health he thinks himself, the more
dangerous his sickness is! This was the case with the Jews. Christ came to them
that were sick; He found them all sick. Let no one then flatter himself on his
healthful state, test the physician give him up.(3) He found all sick; it is the
Apostle's judgment, "For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of
God."(4) Though He found them all sick, yet were there two sorts of sick folk. The one
came to the Physician, clave to Christ, heard, honoured, followed Him, were
converted. He received all without disdaining any, for to heal them, who healed
of free favour, who cured by Almighty power. When then He received them, and
joined them to Himself to be healed, they rejoiced. But there was another sort of
sick, who had already become infatuated through the sickness of iniquity, and
did not know themselves to be sick; they mocked Him, because He received the
sick, and said to His disciples, "Lo, what manner of man is your Master, who
eateth with publicans and sinners." And He who knew what and who they were answered
them, "They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick." And He
showed them who the "whole" were, and who the "sick." "I am not come," He
saith, "to call the righteous, but sinners."(5) If sinners, He would say, do not
come to Me, wherefore am I come? for whose sake am I come? If all are whole,
wherefore hath so great a Physician come down from heaven? why hath He prepared for
us a medicine not out of His stores,(6) but of His own blood? That sort of
sick then who had a milder sickness, who felt themselves to be sick, clave to the
Physician, that they might be healed. But they whose sickness was more
dangerous mocked the Physician, and abused the sick. Whither did their frenzy proceed
at last? To seize the Physician, bind, scourge, crown Him with thorns, hang Him
upon a Tree, kill Him on the Cross! Why dost thou marvel? The sick slew the
Physician; but the Physician by being slain healed the frantic patient.
5. For first, not forgetting on the Cross His own character,(1) and
manifesting forth His patience to us, and giving us an example of love to our
enemies; as He saw them raging round Him, who had known their disease, seeing He was
the Physician, who had known the frenzy by which they had become infatuated, He
said at once to the Father, "Father, forgive them; for they know not what they
do."(2) Now suppose ye that those Jews were not malignant, cruel, bloody,
turbulent, and enemies of the Son of God? Suppose ye that that cry, "Father, forgive
them, for they know not what they do," was ineffectual and in vain? He saw
them all, but He knew amongst them those that should one day be His. In a word, He
died, because it was so expedient, that by His Death He might kill death. God
died, that an exchange might be effected by a kind of heavenly contract, that
man might not see death. For Christ is God, but He died not in that Nature in
which He is God. For the same Person is God and man; for God and man is one
Christ. The human nature(3) was assumed, that we might be changed for the better; He
did not degrade the Divine(4) Nature down to the lower. For He assumed that
which He was not, He did not lose that which He was. Forasmuch then as He is both
God and man, being pleased that we should live by that which was His, He died
in that which was ours. For He had nothing Himself, whereby He could die; nor
had we anything whereby we could live. For what was He who had nothing whereby
He could die? "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God."(5) If thou seek for anything in God whereby He may die, thou
wilt not find it. But we all die, who are flesh; men bearing about sinful flesh.
Seek out for that whereby sin may live; it hath it not. So then neither could
He have death in that which was His own, nor we life in that which was our own;
but we have life from that which is His, He death from what is ours. What an
exchange! What hath He given, and what received? Men who trade enter into
commercial intercourse for exchange of things. For ancient commerce was only an
exchange of things. A man gave what he had, and received what he had not. For
example, he had wheat, but had no barley; another had barley, but no wheat; the former
gave the wheat which he had, and received the barley which he had not. How(6)
simple it was that the larger quantity should make up for the cheaper sort! So
then another man gives barley, to receive wheat; lastly, another gives lead, to
receive silver, only he gives much lead against a little silver; another gives
wool, to receive a ready-made garment. And who can enumerate all these
exchanges? But no one gives life to receive death. Not in vain then was the voice of
the. Physician as He hung upon the tree. For in order that He might die for us
because the Word could not die, "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among
us."(7) He hung upon the Cross, but in the flesh. There was the meanness,(8) which
the Jews despised; there the dearness,(9) by which the Jews were delivered. For
for them was it said, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."(2)
And that voice was not in vain. He died, was buried, rose again, having passed
forty days with His disciples, He ascended into heaven, He sent the Holy Ghost
on them, who waited for the promise. They were filled with the Holy Ghost,
whom they had received, and began to speak with the tongues of all nations. Then
the Jews who were present, amazed that unlearned and ignorant men, whom they had
known as brought up among them with one tongue, should in the Name of Christ
speak in all tongues, were in astonishment, and learnt from Peter's words whence
this gift came. He gave it, who hung upon the tree. He gave it, who was
derided as He hung upon the tree, that from His seat in heaven He might give the Holy
Spirit. They of whom He had said, "Father, forgive them, for they know not
what they do," heard, believed. They believed, were baptized, and their conversion
was effected. What conversion? In faith they drank the Blood of Christ, which
in fury they had shed.
6. Therefore, to finish this discourse with that with which we began it,
let us pray, and let us rely on God; let us live as He enjoineth; and when we
totter in this life, let us call upon Him as the disciples called, saying, "Lord,
increase our faith."(10) Peter both put his trust in Him, and tottered; but
notwithstanding he was not disregarded and left to sink, but was lifted up and
raised. For his trust whence was it? Not from anything of his own; but from what
was the Lord's. How? "Lord, if it be Thou, bid me come unto Thee on the water."
For on the water was the Lord walking. "If it be Thou, bid me come unto Thee
on the water." For I know that if it be Thou, Thou biddest, and it is done. "And
He saith, Come." He went down at His bidding, but in his own weakness he was
afraid. Nevertheless when he was afraid, he cried out, "Lord, save me." Then the
Lord took him by the hand, and said, "O thou of little faith, wherefore didst
thou doubt?"(1) He first invited him, He delivered him, as he tottered, and
stumbled; that it might be fulfilled which was said in the Psalm, "If I said my
foot hath slipped, Thy mercy, O Lord, aided me."(2)
7. There are then two kinds of blessings, temporal and eternal. Temporal
blessings are health, substance, honour, friends, a home, children, a wife, and
the other things of this life in which we are sojourners. Put we up then in the
hostelry of this life as travellers passing on, and not as owners intending to
remain. But eternal blessings are, first, eternal life itself, the
incorruption and immortality of body and soul, the society of Angels, the heavenly city,
glory(3) unfailing, Father and father-land, the former without death, the latter
without a foe. These blessings let us desire with all eagerness, let us ask
with all perseverance, not with length of words, but with the witness of groans.
Longing desire prayeth always, though the tongue be silent. If thou art ever
longing, thou art ever praying. When sleepeth prayer? When desire groweth cold.
So then let us beg for these eternal blessings with all eager desire, let us
seek for those good things with an entire earnestness, let us ask for those good
things with all assurance. For those good things do profit him that hath them,
they cannot harm him. But those other temporal good things sometimes profit, and
sometimes harm. Poverty hath profited many, and wealth hath harmed many; a
private life hath profited many, and exalted honour hath harmed many. And again,
money hath profiled some, honourable distinction hath profited some; profiled
them who use them well; but from those who use them ill, the not withdrawing them
hath harmed them more. And so, Brethren, let us ask for those temporal
blessings too, but in moderation, being sure that if we do receive them, He giveth
them, who knoweth what is expedient for us. Thou hast asked, and what thou hast
asked, hath not been given thee? Trust thy Father, who would give it thee, were
it expedient for thee. Lo! judge in this case by thine own self. For such as
thy son who knows not the ways of men is in regard to thee, such in regard to the
Lord art thou thyself, who knowest not the things of God. Lo, thy son cries a
whole day before thee, that thou wouldest give him a knife, or a sword; thou
dost refuse to give it him, thou wilt not give it, thou disregardest his tears,
lest thou shouldest have to bewail his death. Let him cry, and beat himself, or
throw himself upon the ground, that thou mayest set him on horseback; thou wilt
not do it, because he does not know how to govern the horse, he may throw and
kill him. To whom thou refusest a part, thou art reserving the whole. But that
he may grow up, and possess the whole in safety, thou givest him not that
little thing which is full of peril to him.
8. And so, Brethren, we say, pray as much as ye are able. Evils abound,
and God hath willed that evils should abound. Would that evil men did not abound,
and then evils would not abound. Bad times! troublesome times! this men are
saying. Let our lives be good; and the times are good. We make our times; such as
we are, such are the times. But what can we do? We cannot, it may be, convert
the mass of men to a good life. But let the few who do give ear live well; let
the few who live well endure the many who live ill. They are the corn, they are
in the floor in the floor the can have the chaff with them, they will not have
them in the barn. Let them endure what they would not, that they may come to
what the), would. Wherefore are we sad, and blame we God? Evils abound in the
world, in order that the world may not engage our love. Great men, faithful
saints were they who have despised the world with all its attractions;(4) we are
not able to despise it even disfigured as it is. The world is evil, lo, it is
evil, and yet it is loved as though it were good. But what is this evil world? For
the heavens and the earth, and the waters, and the things that are therein,
the fish, and birds, and trees, are not evil. All these are good: but it is evil
men who make this evil world. Yet as we cannot be without evil men, let us, as
I have said, whilst we live pour out our groans before the Lord our God, and
endure the evils, that we may attain to the things that are good. Let us not find
fault with the Master of the household; for He is loving to us. He beareth us,
and not we him. He knoweth how to govern what He made; do what He hath hidden,
and hope for what He hath promised.