THE SAFETY OF THE VIRTUOUS
Neither shall any man pluck them
out of my hand. John x, 28.
To Thee, almighty and true God, eternal
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, maker of heaven and
earth, and of all creatures, together with Thy Son
our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost to
Thee, the wise, good, true, righteous, compassionate,
pure, gracious God, we render thanks that Thou hast
hitherto upheld the Church in these lands, and graciously
afforded it protection and care, and we earnestly beseech
Thee evermore to gather among us an inheritance for
Thy Son, which may praise Thee to all eternity.
I have in these, our assemblies, often
uttered partly admonitions and partly reproofs, which
I hope the most of you will bear in mind. But
since I must presume that now the hearts of all are
wrung with a new grief and a new pang by reason of
the war in our neighborhood, this season seems to
call for a word of consolation. And, as we commonly
say, “Where the pain is there one claps his
hand,” I could not, in this so great affliction,
make up my mind to turn my discourse upon any other
subject. I do not, indeed, doubt that you yourselves
seek comfort in the divine declarations, yet will
I also bring before you some things collected therefrom,
because always that on which we had ourselves thought
becomes more precious to us when we hear that it proves
itself salutary also to others. And because long
discourses are burdensome in time of sorrow and mourning,
I will, without delay, bring forward that comfort
which is the most effectual.
Our pains are best assuaged when something
good and beneficial, especially some help toward a
happy issue, presents itself. All other topics
of consolation, such as men borrow from the unavoidableness
of suffering, and the examples of others, bring us
no great alleviation. But the Son of God, our
Lord Jesus Christ, who was crucified for us and raised
again, and now sits at the right hand of the Father,
offers us help and deliverance, and has manifested
this disposition in many declarations. I will
now speak of the words: “No man shall pluck
my sheep out of my hand.” This expression
has often raised me up out of the deepest sorrow,
and drawn me, as it were, out of hell.
The wisest men in all times have bewailed
the great amount of human misery which we see with
our eyes before we pass into eternity diseases,
death, want, our own errors, by which we bring harm
and punishment on ourselves, hostile men, unfaithfulness
on the part of those with whom we are closely connected,
banishment, abuse, desertion, miserable children,
public and domestic strife, wars, murder, and devastation.
And since such things appear to befall good and bad
without distinction, many wise men have inquired whether
there were any Providence, or whether accident brings
everything to pass independent of a divine purpose?
But we in the Church know that the first and principal
cause of human woe is this, that on account of sin
man is made subject to death and other calamity, which
is so much more vehement in the Church, because the
devil, from the hatred toward God, makes fearful assaults
on the Church and strives to destroy it utterly.
Therefore it is written: “I
will put enmity between the serpent and the seed of
the woman.” And Peter says: “Your
adversary, the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about
and seeketh whom he may devour.”
Not in vain, however, has God made
known to us the causes of our misery. We should
not only consider the greatness of our necessity, but
also discern the causes of it, and recognize His righteous
anger against sin, to the end that we may, on the
other hand, perceive the Redeemer and the greatness
of His compassion; and as witnesses to these, His
declarations, He adds the raising of dead men to life,
and other miracles.
Let us banish from our hearts, therefore,
the unbelieving opinions which imagine that evils
befall us by mere chance, or from physical causes.
But when thou considerest the wounds
in thy own circle of relations, or dost cast a glance
at the public disorders in the State, which again
afflict the individual also (as Solon says: “The
general corruption penetrates even to thy quiet habitation"),
then think, first, of thy own and others’ sins,
and of the righteous wrath of God; and, secondly,
weigh the rage of the devil, who lets loose his hate
chiefly in the Church.
In all men, even the better class,
great darkness reigns. We see not how great an
evil sin is, and regard not ourselves as so shamefully
defiled. We flatter ourselves, in particular,
because we profess a better doctrine concerning God.
Nevertheless, we resign ourselves to a careless slumber,
or pamper each one his own desires; our impurity, the
disorders of the Church, the necessity of brethren,
fills us not with pain; devotion is without fire and
fervor; zeal for doctrine and discipline languishes,
and not a few are my sins, and thine, and those of
many others, by reason of which such punishments are
heaped upon us.
Let us, therefore, apply our hearts
to repentance, and direct our eyes to the Son of God,
in respect to whom we have the assurance that, after
the wonderful counsel of God, He is placed over the
family of man, to be the protector and preserver of
his Church.
We perceive not fully either of our
wretchedness or our dangers, or the fury of enemies,
until after events of extraordinary sorrowfulness.
Still we ought to reflect thus: there must exist
great need and a fearful might and rage of enemies,
since so powerful a protector has been given to us,
even God’s Son. When He says: “No
man shall pluck my sheep out of my hand,” He
indicates that He is no idle spectator of woe, but
that mighty and incessant strife is going on.
The devil incites his tools to disturb the Church
or the political commonwealth, that boundless confusion
may enter, followed by heathenish desolation.
But the Son of God, who holds in His hands, as it
were, the congregation of those who call upon His
name, hurls back the devils by His infinite power,
conquers and chases them thence, and will one day shut
them up in the prison of hell, and punish them to
all eternity with fearful pains. This comfort
we must hold fast in regard to the entire Church, as
well as each in regard to himself.
If, in these distracted and warring
times, we see States blaze up and fall to ruin, then
look away to the Son of God, who stands in the secret
counsel of the Godhead and guards His little flock
and carries the weak lambs, as it were, in His own
hands. Be persuaded that by Him thou also shalt
be protected and upheld.
Here some, not rightly instructed,
will exclaim: “Truly I could wish to commend
myself to such a keeper, but only His sheep does He
preserve. Whether I also am counted in that flock,
I know not.” Against this doubt we must
most strenuously contend, for the Lord Himself assures
us in this very passage, that all who “hear
and with faith receive the voice of the gospel are
His sheep”; and He says expressly: “If
a man love me, he will keep my words, and my Father
will love him, and we will come to him and make our
abode with him.” These promises of the Son
of God, which can not be shaken, we must confidently
appropriate to ourselves. Nor shouldst thou,
by thy doubts, exclude thyself from this blest flock,
which originates in the righteousness of the gospel.
They do not rightly distinguish between the law and
the gospel, who, because they are unworthy, reckon
not themselves among the sheep. Rather is this
consolation afforded us, that we are accepted “for
the Son of God’s sake,” truly, without
merit, not on account of our own righteousness, but
through faith, because we are unworthy, and impure,
and far from having fulfilled the law of God.
That is, moreover, a universal promise, in which the
Son of God saith: “Come unto me, all ye
that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you
rest.”
The eternal Father earnestly commands
that we should hear the Son, and it is the greatest
of all transgressions if we despise Him and do not
approve His voice. This is what every one should
often and diligently consider, and in this disposition
of the Father, revealed through the Son, find grace.
Altho, amid so great disturbances,
many a sorrowful spectacle meets thine eye, and the
Church is rent by discord and hate, and manifold and
domestic public necessity is added thereto, still let
not despair overcome thee, but know thou that thou
hast the Son of God for a keeper and protector, who
will not suffer either the Church, or thee, or thy
family, to be plucked out of His hand by the fury of
the devil.
With all my heart, therefore, do I
supplicate the Son of God, our Lord Jesus Christ,
who, having been crucified for us, and raised again,
sits at the right hand of the Father, to bless men
with His gifts, and to Him I pray that He would protect
and govern this little church and me therein.
Other sure trust, in this great flame when the whole
world is on fire, I discern nowhere. Each one
has his separate hopes, and each one with his understanding
seeks to repose in something else; but however good
that may all be, it is still a far better, and unquestionably
a more effectual, consolation to flee to the Son of
God and expect help and deliverances from Him.
Such wishes will not be in vain.
For to this end are we laden with such a crowd of
dangers, that in events and occurrences which to human
prudence are an inexplicable enigma, we may recognize
the infinite goodness and presentness of God, in that
He, for His Son’s sake, and through His Son,
affords us aid. God will be owned in such deliverance
just as in the deliverance of your first parents, who,
after the fall, when they were forsaken by all the
creatures, were upheld by the help of God alone.
So was the family of Noah in the flood, so were the
Israelites preserved when in the Red Sea they stood
between the towering walls of waters. These glorious
examples are held up before us, that we might know,
in like manner, the Church, without the help of any
created beings, is often preserved. Many in all
times have experienced such divine deliverance and
support in their personal dangers, as David saith:
“My father and my mother have forsaken me, but
the Lord taketh me up”; and in another place
David saith: “He hath delivered the wretched,
who hath no helper.” But in order that we
may become partakers of these so great blessings,
faith and devotion must be kindled within us, as it
stands written, “Verily, I say unto you!”
So likewise must our faith be exercised, that before
deliverance we should pray for help and wait for it,
resting in God with a certain cheerfulness of soul;
and that we should not cherish continual doubt and
melancholy murmuring in our hearts, but constantly
set before our eyes the admonition of God: “The
peace of God which passeth all understanding keep your
heart and mind”; which is to say, be so comforted
in God, in time of danger, that your hearts, having
been strengthened by confidence in the pity and presentness
of God, may patiently wait for help and deliverance,
and quietly maintain that peaceful serenity which
is the beginning of eternal life, and without which
there can be no true devotion.
For distrust and doubt produce a gloomy
and terrible hate toward God, and that is the beginning
of the eternal torments, and a rage like that of the
devil.
Now you must guard against these billows
in the soul, and these stormy agitations, and, by
meditation on the precious promises of God, keep and
establish your hearts.
Truly these times allow not the wonted
security and the wonted intoxication of the world,
but they demand that with honest groans we should
cry for help, as the Lord saith, “Watch and pray
that ye fall not into temptation,” that ye may
not, being overcome by despair, plunge into everlasting
destruction. There is need of wisdom to discern
the dangers of the soul, as well as the safeguard
against them. Souls go to ruin as well when,
in epicurean security, they make light of the wrath
of God as when they are overcome by doubt and cast
down by anxious sorrow, and these transgressions aggravate
the punishment. The godly, on the other hand,
who by faith and devotion keep their hearts erect and
near to God, enjoy the beginning of eternal life and
obtain mitigation of the general distress.
We, therefore, implore Thee, Son of
God, Lord Jesus Christ, who, having been crucified
and raised for us, standest in the secret counsel of
the Godhead, and makest intercession for us, and hast
said: “Come unto me, all ye that labor
and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
I call upon Thee, and with my whole heart beseech
Thee, according to Thine infinite compassion, forgive
us our sins. Thou knowest that in our great weakness
we are not able to bear the burden of our woe.
Do Thou, therefore, afford us aid in our private and
public necessities; be Thou our shelter and protector,
uphold the churches in these lands, and all which
serves for their defense and safeguard.