Samuel Rutherford eBook

Alexander Whyte
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about Samuel Rutherford.

Samuel Rutherford eBook

Alexander Whyte
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about Samuel Rutherford.

As to the merchandise of the poor man’s market,—­that embraces everything that any man can possibly need or find any use for either in this world or in the next.  Absolutely everything is found in the poor man’s market—­everything, from God Himself, the most precious of all things, down to the sinner himself, the most vile and worthless of all things.  The whole world, and all the worlds, are continually thrown into this market, both by the seller and by the purchaser.  The seller holds nothing back from this market, and the purchaser comes to this market for everything.  Even what he already possesses; even what he bought and paid for but yesterday; even what everybody else would call absolutely the poor man’s own, he throws it all back again upon God every day, and thus holds all he has as his instant purchase of the great Merchantman.  The poor man’s market is as far as possible from being a Vanity Fair, but the catalogues and the sale-lists of that fair may be taken as a specimen of the things that change hands continually in the poor man’s market also.  For here also are sold such merchandise as houses, lands, trades, places, honours, preferments, pleasures and delights of all sorts; wives, husbands, children, masters, servants, lives, blood, bodies, souls, gold, silver, and what not.  All these things God sells to poor men every day; and for all these things, as often as they need any of them, His poor men come to His market for them.  And, as has been said, even after they have got possession of any or all of these things, as if the market had an absolute fascination for them, like gamblers who cannot stay away from the wheel, they are back again, buying and selling what, but yesterday, they took home with them as the best bargain they had ever made.  Yes, the things that, once possessed, either by inheritance or by purchase or by gift, you would think they would die rather than part with—­a patrimony in ancient lands and houses, a possession they had toiled and prayed and waited for all their days, Christ on His cross, their own child in his cradle—­absolutely everything they possess, or would die to possess, they part with again, just that they may have the excitement, the debate, the delight, the security, and the liberty of purchasing it all over again every day in the poor man’s market.

Over all this merchandise God Himself is the Master Merchant.  It all belongs to Him, and He has put it all into the poor man’s purchase.  He owns all the merchandise, and He has opened the market:  He invites and advertises the purchasers, fixes the prices, and settles the conditions of sale.  And the first condition of sale is that all intending purchasers shall come to Himself immediately for whatever they need.  All negotiation here must be held immediately with God.  There are no middlemen here.  They have their own place in the markets of earth; but there is no room and no need for them here.  The producer and the purchaser meet immediately

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Samuel Rutherford from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.