For taking up the meaning of this text, we need only have recourse to a commentary that the Lord himself makes upon it in the gospel, Mark, xii. 36: for he asked of the Pharisees concerning the Messiaa, Whose son is he?—they answered, The son of David. He replies, If he be the son of David, How is it, then, that David, by the Holy Ghost, calls him his Lord? And so we have here a testimony of the Spirit speaking in David, a thousand years before Christ came in the flesh, that the Word would be made flesh, and that he would set up his tent and tabernacle amongst us; for so is the word that is used in the 1st of the gospel according to St John rendered; and that amongst the children of men he should drink of the brook, i. e., stiff, bitter things, as is expressed afterward in the psalm; and that he having done so, would be exalted above all creatures in heaven, and, in the fulness of his glory and majesty, sit down at the right hand of the Father, and should from thence rule and dispose upon the affairs of his Church magnificently and mightily, according to the worthiness and excellency of so great a king and so glorious a majesty, till at last all his enemies, both foreign and intestine or domestic, should be brought low, and made his footstool; and as they had trodden upon the holy blood of the Son of God, he should tread upon them, and pour shame and confusion upon them, and utter banishment from his face for ever.
Right honourable and well-beloved, we are but short-sighted naturally; we look upon persons and things that are present, and cannot look afar off to things that are past, neither have we a very great prospect to look forward to things that are to come. And as our sight is short, so it is weak also: if we but look upon things here below, our eyes are soon dazzled with the splendour of them, although, when all is done, their lustre be not great; we cannot get in with our sight to things that are above. But if we will take the right view of this text, it would help us both in the one and in the other; for you see it leads from that which is past to that which is to come.
“The Lord said.” This hath an eye to the time to come. There is a time coming when all the enemies of God, the most proud and insolent of them, shall be made the footstool of God, shall be brought low, and made base and contemptible. And it helps us to lift up our eyes from things on earth to things above, especially to Christ himself, who is in the highest heavens, at the top of glory and majesty, the right hand of the Father. “The Lord said unto my Lord, sit thou at my right hand,” &c.
In these words, beloved, we may see three parts, which determine our method of speaking. The first is the calling and ordination of Christ unto his kingdom: “The Lord said unto my Lord.” The second is the dignity and glory to which he is exalted in his kingdom: “Sit thou at my right hand.” The third is that glory and triumph that shall be manifested in him at last: “And his enemies shall be made his footstool.” I shall speak very shortly of these, because ye know preaching is not this day’s principal exercise.
We begin with the first, the calling and ordination of Christ unto his kingdom: “The Lord said unto my Lord.” Here ye would look first unto the saying and then unto the persons: “The Lord said unto my Lord.” Ye know we used to observe, that there be two sorts of speech or sayings: one that is secret within our breasts, and which we keep in silence within ourselves, as long as we think convenient; another is the expression of our thoughts, when we think meet to make them known. Ye know there is one uses to be called λογος ενδιαθεκος προφορικος. Like unto these two, there is in the Lord, (1.) His purpose, counsel, and decree, kept secret within himself. (2.) There is the expression, or the manifestation and proclamation of his purposes and decrees unto the children of men, after what manner and in what measure it seems good unto his wisdom. Of the first, the second psalm speaks, “I have anointed him to be King;” and there the reason is given—“Thou art my son,” &c.; then there is the revelation of it—“I have declared the decree.” Many times was this said before Christ’s coming in the flesh, and the prophets are full of it. I need not spend time on it, especially in such an audience as this. Now, this is laid down as the ground, “The Lord hath said:” his decree, prophecy, and predictions are laid down as a ground of this princely office of the kingdom of Christ, and of that high glory and dignity to which he is exalted; for what the Lord has said, it must be done of necessity.
There is a very great difference between the sayings of men and the sayings of God; for man’s sayings are nothing else but the expression of his thoughts and affections of his mind; but, when the Lord speaks, he not only expresses what he will have done, but also there is an effectual power accompanies his saying, that cannot be resisted, but must of necessity come to pass. Again, when we speak, we must speak to them that are, and that have ears to hear, and understanding to conceive, or else our speech is in vain. But, when the Lord speaks, it is otherwise; he speaks to them that are not, and makes them to be; he speaks to them that have nothing of the second creation, and, by his Spirit, he creates it in them; by his speech, he makes darkness to be light, he speaks to them that are dead in sin, and by his Spirit puts life in them, new sense and understanding. Thirdly, Our speeches and sayings have need to be confirmed by reasons and arguments; and, therefore, we support them as strongly as we can. But when it pleases God to speak, he speaks so as he needs no argument: he bids a man leave his trade, and follow him; and the man will never ask the reason, because he convinces him fully, and persuades him irresistibly. Fourthly, It is in vain for us to speak to any that have no ability or power to do what we desire. But the Lord will bid them do that has no power, because, with the commandment, he infuses strength for the performance of it.
It is a good ground that is brought here of the exaltation, dominion, and dignity of Christ—“The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou,” &c.—for he having said it, who can say against it? who can resist it? The powers of hell, nor any powers in heaven, or in earth, suppose they were all joined together, cannot obstruct him. If the Lord hath said it, it must come to pass. Christ must be exalted, and his Kirk established also. Ye know that in the 2d of Daniel, the prophet, speaking of the kings of the earth, prophecies of another kingdom that Jesus will set up; and he sets it up with this promise and quality, “that it shall never be destroyed;” he that sets it up, shall uphold it; as sure as it is once exalted and set up, it shall never be destroyed, albeit the devil, and all his accomplices and sophisters, with all their wit, were against it. Dan. vii., 13, 14:—“I saw in the night visions, and behold, one like unto the Son of Man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of Days; and they brought him near before him. And there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that all people, nations, and languages should serve him; his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom that which shall not be destroyed.” Luke i. 33:—“He shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end.” And, Acts ii. 36:—“He hath made him both Lord and Christ.” Then, beloved, let us build upon this ground against all the devices, stratagems, and conspiracies of the world. Certainly he is Lord and King, and he shall endure so world without end.
It were a good thing for us, if we could learn to take up the conjunction that is between God and his Son Jesus Christ in his kingdom. I speak it, beloved, for this cause, that there is a kind of natural theology that men pride themselves in, that they gather partly from the works of God, which a natural man may observe and consider, and partly from natural reason. But this is not all; we must take heed, that although it cannot be denied that there is a natural sort of theology, yet we must advert that there is no natural kind of Christianity; for the natural man, by looking on all the works of God, and blowing up the sparks of nature all that he can, shall never be able to know Christ, or receive him, before it be revealed and proclaimed in the gospel; nay, when he hears it, he will condemn it for the greatest foolishness in the world. Therefore we would not please ourselves with this natural knowledge of God, but seek to know God in Christ. This is true Christianity. He that knows not Christ knows not God; he that resists Christ fights against God; he that believes not in Christ—please himself as he will—he believes not in God; and he that obeys the voice of Christ obeys the voice of God. I am assured many men, both in church and commonwealth, and many that preach theology, and perhaps Christianity, to others, consider not this, but please themselves in a natural sort of knowledge; and they go easily through with their forms; and all because there is nothing in nature to oppose the work they are about; but the children of God find a great difficulty—the infidelity of their heart, and other-like ills, fight against it.
Had the men who are to be censured and excommunicated the knowledge of Jesus Christ—notwithstanding that some of them preached him often, and all of them sometimes—I verily believe they could not have gone on so long in this course, and stood it out with such obstinacy and contumacy. Therefore let us learn, by their example, to search for the knowledge of God through Christ; for they are so joined together, as there can be no separation; and as they are joined betwixt themselves so they must be joined in our knowledge. It is not possible for you to know God but by the knowledge of his Son; and if we know not the consolation, virtue, and power of Christ, we cannot know the comforts, power, and virtue of God himself, but must remain strangers to the knowledge of God; for there is no comfort, virtue, nor power for life everlasting, but only through Christ himself.
“The Lord said unto my Lord.” You see here again, that the ground of the calling of Christ unto his princely office is from the saying of God—“The Lord said unto my Lord.” As he was called of God to be a prophet and a priest, so it was God that called him also to be a King. These three offices are all lawful offices in themselves. And likewise he was lawfully called unto it; for the Lord said it. And these two things, beloved, are necessary for a man that undertakes a calling. One is, that the office itself be lawful, and have warrant from God that the Lord has said, I will be served in such a place, and in such a function and calling. 2. When the office itself is lawful, a man must be lawfully called unto it. For ye know there is a difference between these two: sometimes the office may be lawful, and the man not lawfully called to that lawful office; and sometimes it comes to pass that men are called to unlawful offices; not that any man can be lawfully called to an unlawful office—and this is especially true in churchmen and the office-bearers of the Church. God hath permitted greater diversity of offices, and administration of these offices, to be in the commonwealth, than in his Kirk; because in the government of a state or commonwealth, there may be sundry forms of government and administration of justice, and all lawful. Kings may have governors and others acting under them; but it must not be so in the house of God. All the offices in God’s house, from the highest to the lowest, if I may lawfully say highest and lowest, must have a warrant from God; and men cannot say they are called of God, except their calling be from God, and have warrant from divine authority.