THE NATURE
OF THAT FAITH AND OBEDIENCE WHICH THE HOLY SCRIPTURES TEACHES
First, As to faith. Divine faith is a believing of what God
has revealed, because God has said it, or revealed it. People may believe
scripture truths, but not with a divine faith, unless they believe it on that
very ground, the authority of God speaking in his word. And this divine faith is
the product of the Spirit of God in the heart of the sinner, implanting the
habit or principle of faith there, and exciting it to a hearty reception and
firm belief of whatever God reveals in his word. And the faith which the
scripture teaches is what a man is to believe concerning God. This may be
reduced to four heads: What God is; the persons in the Godhead; the decrees of
God relating to everything that comes to pass; and the execution of them in his
works of creation and providence. Now, though the works of creation and
providence show that there is a God, yet that fundamental truth, that God is,
and the doctrines relating to the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Divine
Essence, God's acts and purposes, the creation of all things, the state of man
at his creation, his fall, and his recovery by the mediation and satisfaction of
Christ are only to be learned from the holy scriptures. Hence we infer,
1. That there can be no right knowledge of God acquired in an ordinary way
without the scriptures, Matt.22:29. "ye do err" said Christ to the
Sadducees, "not knowing the scriptures." As there must be a dark night
where the light is gone, so those places of the earth must needs be dark, and
without the saving knowledge of God, that want the scriptures. Thus the Apostle
tells the Ephesians, that, before they were visited with the light of the
gospel, they were "without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of
Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without
God in the world." Eph.2:12. 2. That where the scriptures are not
known, there can be no saving faith. For, says the Apostle, Rom.10:14, 15, 17. "How
shall they call on him whom they have not believed ? And how shall they believe
in him of whom they have not heard ? And how shall they hear without a preacher
? And how shall they preach, except they be sent ? As it is written, How
beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel of peace, and bring glad
tidings of good things ! So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
word of God." 3. That there is nothing we are bound to believe as a
part of faith but what the scripture teaches, be who they propose it, and
whatever they may pretend for their warrant. "To the law and to the
testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no
light in them," Isa.8:20. No man must be our master in these things: "For
one is our master even Christ," Matt.23:10. He is Lord of faith, and we
are bound to believe whatever he has revealed in his word. Secondly,
As to obedience, it is that duty which God requires of man. It is that duty and
obedience which man owes to God, to his will and laws in respect of God's
universal supremacy and sovereign authority over man; and which he should render
to him out of love and gratitude. The scriptures are the holy oracle from
whence we are to learn our duty, Psal.19:11. "By them is thy servant
warned," says David. The bible is the light we are to take heed to, that
we may know how to steer our course, and order the several steps of our life. "Thy
word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light to my path," says the Psalmist,
Psal.119:105. From whence we may infer, 1. That there can be no sufficient
knowledge of the duty which we owe to God without the scriptures. Though the
light of nature does in some measure show our duty to God, yet it is too dim to
take up the will of God sufficiently in order to salvation. 2. That there
can be no right obedience yielded to God without them. Men that walk in the dark
must stumble; and the works that are wrought in the dark will never abide the
light; for there is no working rightly by guess in this matter. All proper
obedience to God must be learned from the scriptures. 3. That there is no
point of duty that we are called to, but what the scripture teaches, Isa.8:20,
forecited. Men must neither make duties to themselves or others, but what God
has made duty. The law of God is exceeding broad, and reaches the whole
conversation of man, outward and inward, Psal.19. and man is bound to conform
himself to it alone as the rule of his life. Thirdly, As to the
connection of these two: faith and obedience are joined together, because there
is no true faith but what is followed with obedience, and no true obedience but
what flows from faith. Faith is the loadstone of obedience, and obedience the
touchstone of faith, as appears from Jam.2. They that want faith cannot be holy;
and they that have true faith, their faith will work by love. Hence we may see,
1. That faith is the foundation of duty or obedience, and not obedience or
duty the foundation of faith, Tit.3:8 "This is a faithful saying, and
these things I will that thou affirm constantly, that they which have believed
in God might br careful to maintain good works. These things are good and
profitable unto men;" and that the things to be believed are placed before
the things to be practiced, in order to distinguish between the order of things
in the covenant of grace, and what they were under the covenant of works. Under
the latter, doing, or perfect obedience to the law, was the foundation of the
promised privilege of life; but under the former, the promise is to be believed,
and the promised life is to be freely received: and thereupon follows the
believer's obedience to the law, out of gratitude and love for the mercy
received. This appears from the order laid down by God himself in delivering the
moral law from mount Sinai. He lays the foundation of faith, first of all, in
these words, "I am the Lord thy God," &c. which is the sum and
substance of the covenant of grace; and then follows the law of the ten
commandments, which is as it were grafted upon this declaration of sovereign
grace and love, Exod.20:2-18. And let it be remembered, that the Apostle Paul
calls gospel-obedience the obedience of faith, as springing from and founded
upon faith. And if we examine the order of doctrine laid down in all his
epistles, we shall find, that he first propounds the doctrine of faith, or what
man is to believe, and upon that foundation inculcates the duties that are to be
practiced. 2. That all works without faith are dead, and so cannot please
God. For whatever is not of faith is sin; and without or separate from Christ
we can do nothing. Faith is principle of all holy and acceptable obedience.
3. That those who inculcate moral duties without discovering the necessity of
regeneration, and union with Christ, as the source of all true obedience, are
foolish builders; they lay their foundation on the sand, and the superstructure
they raise will soon be overturned; and they prevert the gospel of Christ. Such
would do well to consider what the Apostle says, Gal.1:9 "If any man preach
any other gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed."