Strengthen Faith by Considering that Christ is The Most Credible Witness to Divine Truth - R. Baxter

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Solparvus

Puritan Board Senior
1. The darkness of ignorance and unbelief is the great impediment of the soul that desireth, to draw near to God. When it knoweth not God, or knoweth not man’s capacity of enjoying him, and how much he regardeth the heart of man; or knoweth not by what way he must be sought and found; or when he doubteth of the certainty of the word which declareth the duty of the hopes of man : all this, or any of this, will suppress the ascending desires of the soul, and clip its wings, and break the heart of its holy aspirings after God, by killing or weakening the hopes of its success.

Here then make use of Jesus Christ, the great Revealer of God and his will to the blinded world, and the great Confirmer of the divine authority of his word. Life and immortality are brought more fully to light by the gospel, than ever they were by any other means. Moses and the prophets did bring with their doctrine sufficient evidence of its credibility. But Christ hath brought both a fuller revelation, and a fuller evidence to help belief. An inspired prophet, which proveth his inspiration to us, is a credible messenger: but when God himself shall come down into flesh, and converse with man, and teach him the knowledge of God, and the way to life, and tell him the mysteries of the world to come, and seal his testimony with unquestionable proofs, who will not learn of such a Teacher ? and who will deny belief to such a Messenger, except absurd, unreasonable men?

Remember, then, when ignorance or unbelief would hinder your access to God, that you have the ablest Teacher and the surest Witness to acquaint you with God in all the world. If God had sent an angel from heaven, to tell you what he is, and what he requireth of you, and what he will do for you, would it not be very acceptable to you ? But he hath done much more; he hath sent his Son: the Deity itself hath appeared in flesh: he that hath seen God, and he that is God, hath come among men to acquaint them with God. His testimony is more sure and credible than any angel’s. Heb. i. 1–3, “God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in times past to the fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken to us by his on.” John i. 18, “No man hath seen God at any time; the only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him.” We have “neither heard the voice of God, nor seen his shape,” John v. 37. “No man hath seen the Father, save he which is of God; he hath seen the Father,” John vi. 46. “No man knoweth the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him,” Matt. xi. 27.

What more can we desire, that is short of the sight of the glory of God, than to have him revealed to us by a messenger from heaven, and such a messenger as himself has seen him, and is God himself? Plato and Plotinus may describe God to us according to their dark conjectures; something we may discern of him by observing his works; but Christ hath declared what he saw, and what he knew, beyond all possibility of mistake.

And lest his own testimony should seem questionable to us, he hath confirmed it by a life of miracles, and by rising from the dead himself, and ascending visibly to heaven; and by the Holy Ghost, and his miraculous gifts, which he gave to the messengers of his gospel. Had it been no more than his resurrection from the dead, it had been enough to prove the utter unreasonableness of unbelief.

Christian Directory, Book I, Chapter 3, Direction 2, Sec 1
 
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