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A44439 A second volume of discourses or sermons on several scriptures by Ezekiel Hopkins ... Hopkins, Ezekiel, 1634-1690. 1693 (1693) Wing H2735; ESTC R37910 158,868 429

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serious and pensive to think this is but the Pattern of what must befall themselves and that all this must shortly be acted upon them that they now see done unto others But since this Day presents us with no such Solemnity some perhaps may wonder that I have chosen this Text and Subject of Mortality to treat upon Indeed Custom hath made it almost improper to preach of Death without a Funeral and to speak to Men of their last End and Dissolution without setting before their Eyes an Example of it Look well therefore one upon another what are we all as it were but so many Corpses so many Spectacles of Mortality rather to be numbred among the Dead than among the Living every Day and Hour wears away part of our Lives and so much of them as is already spent so far are we already dead and buried This present moment is the longest measure of our Lives what is past is dead to us and what is to come is not yet born how soon God may put a final Period to our present state how few times more our Pulses may beat and this busie Breath in our Nostrils return to us again we know not so frail and so uncertain are our Lives that this may be truly a Funeral Sermon to some one of us before the close of it Since then we are all of us thus subject to the stroke of Death it can never be unseasonable to warn you that you be not surprized and taken by it unprovided In the Words now read you have the great Statute-Law of Heaven that Law that God hath passed upon all the Chil-of Men and that is That it is appointed to them once to die Now that I may make way to press upon you the serious consideration of your own Mortality let me briefly mark out some things that tend to the Explication of the Words And First In that the Proposition is laid down in the Text indefinitely It is appointed unto men it is that which is equivalent to an Universal and reacheth to all men It is appointed to all men once to die We read of two only in the whole Book of God that were exempted by an extraordinary Grace and peculiar Priviledge from this great Law of Dying and they were Enoch and Elias Of Enoch it is said Gen. 5.24 That he walked with God and he was not for God took him And of Elias it is said 2 Kin 2.11 That he went up by a Whirlwind into Heaven The great God after a strange and unusual manner tackt their temporal and eternal Life together making their Time run it self into Eternity without any period or interruption The Apostle also tells us 1 Cor. 15.51 52. That all shall not die to wit at the last Day at the last appearing of Jesus Christ there shall be a World full of Persons that shall not taste of Death All shall not die but all shall be changed in a moment in the twinckling of an Eye These are exempted and being excepted it is certain all the Generations of Men from the first Creation to the last Consummation of all things are all appointed by God unto Death Secondly All must die once All must die once but Believers do not die the second Death There is frequent mention made in Scripture of the first and second Death The first Death is the separation of the Soul from the Body The second Death is the separation of the Soul from God As the Union of the Soul and Body is the Life of Man so the Union of God with the Soul is the Life of the Soul Now Believers do not die this second Death Rev. 20.8 for on such as the Apostle speaks the second Death hath no power They are still united unto God after an unconceivable and ineffable manner As when Christ lay in the Grave though his Soul was truly separated from his Body yet both Soul and Body were hypostatically united to the Godhead so also though the natural Union between a Believer's Soul and Body be dissolved by Death yet both Soul and Body continue mystically united unto Christ even in their separation one from another It is not therefore this second but the first Death that all are appointed unto The Hand of Death must untie those secret and sweet Bands those vital Knots that fasten Soul and Body together must fall asunder one day in every Man All Men must die because Death is the punishment of Sin Thirdly It is appointed unto every Man to undergo this first Death It is decreed and ordained by God and that not upon the Account of any natural Necessity but for the Punishment of Sin The Apostle tells us plainly That by Sin Death entred into the World Death therefore is not so much a Debt due to Nature as a Debt due to the avenging Justice of God for though Man at first was created in pure Nature yet was he also created in a deathless State and Death siezeth upon us not as we are Men but as we are Sinners liable to the Curse of the Covenant of Works containing in it that Threatning In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die It is true Adam even before he sinned had in him the contemperation of the same contrary Qualities that we now have and so at least had also the remote Principles of Death but yet it is probable that he was created with such a Priviledge that he might by his own Will sway and over-rule the Jars and Discords of his elementary constitution and continue himself in Life as long as he should continue himself in Obedience however whether it was so or otherwise yet certain it is that Death came into the World as the punishment of Sin So then it is not primarily Man's Nature but Man's Sin and the Curse of the Law taking hold of him that brought in this necessity of dying Sin is not only the Sting but the Cause of Death and it gives it not only its Terrour but it s very Being also And therefore it is somewhat remarkable that among all the Creatures in the World Man only is termed Mortal most certain it is that other Creatures decay and perish as well as he yet among all perishing things Man only hath that wretched denomination of being Mortal and there is good reason for it since he alone of all perishing things being created immortal voluntarily subjected himself unto Death and by his own Fault brought upon himself that Name of Mortal as a Brand of perpetual Infamy And thus now I come to the Subject that I intend to insist upon and that is The Unavoidableness and Certainty of Death To go about to prove this were to lose so much time every one grants he must die All other Questions about Man are answered by Peradventures If it be demanded Whether such an Embryo shall see the Light What 's the Answer but perhaps it shall perhaps it shall not If it be
born and it be asked Whether it shall live and grow up to Age Why perhaps so perhaps otherwise If it grow up to Age and Enquiry be made Shall it be rich or shall it be poor honourable or despised learned or ignorant What 's the Answer Only perhaps it shall perhaps not But if it be asked Whether it shall die The Answer now is Yes it is certain without any Peradventure there is no doubt at all of this It is appointed by God for Men once to die And therefore though Physicians have written Books of preserving of Health yet never any wrote Books of avoiding of Death We need no other proof of Man's Mortality but only to search into the Records of the Grave there lie Rich and Poor Strong and Weak Wise and Foolish Holy and Prophane the Rubbish of ten thousand Generations heaped one upon another and this Truth that all must die written indelibly in their Dust That therefore that I shall do shall be in an Applicatory Way to make some Reflections upon the brutish Stupidity of Men who though they know themselves Mortal yet thrust from themselves the Thoughts of Death and neglect due Preparations for it Men live in the World as if they were arbitrary of their own Time as if they should never die and come to Judgment Oh the beastly Sottishness of Men who though they see Multitudes cut down daily by the hand of Death round about them yet they live carelesly and presumptuously as if they were priviledged Persons and Death durst not touch them Should we make Enquiry into the Causes of this gross Stupidity and Sottishness perhaps we should find it to proceed from some of these following Reasons why men put off the thoughts of Death Because they are drown'd in the affairs of the World First The generality of men are so immers'd and drowned in the Affairs and pleasures of Life that all serious thoughts of Death and preparations for it are swallowed up and devoured by them Their minds are taken up about other things and their time spent upon other matters like an heap of Ants that busily toil to gather in their Provision not regarding the foot that is ready to tread upon them so is it with most men they are taken up with impertinencies and vain things One contrives how he may melt away his days in Luxury and Pleasure and with variety of invented Delights imp the wings of time that in their apprehensions makes but slow hast that so their days and hours may roll away the faster these are such Prodigals of their time and lavish it away at that rate as if their stock would last as long as Eternity it self Some are busily climbing up the sleep ascent of Honour and Dignity and are so taken up in seeking after promotions and new Titles that they forget their old stile of mortal creatures Others are plotting with the Fool in the Gospel how they may grow rich and lay up goods for themselves for many years as they fansie when yet they know not but God may take away their Souls from them this very night and what then remains to them of all that they have thus greedily scraped together O vain and foolish men are these the things you set your hearts upon must the World drink up all your thoughts and Death that shortly will snatch you from all your enjoyments here below be forgotten by you Secondly Men put off their preparation for Death because they look upon it as a far off Men put off the thoughts of Death and their preparations for it because they generally look upon it as a far off This is the greatest sottishness in the World and yet most men are too guilty of it Those that are young and in the prime of their Days if it be askt them what they think of Death they will readily Answer that they think they ought of right and course to live till they are aged And they that are aged will tell you their weaknesses and decays are not so many or so great but they may well weather away a few more years Those that are healthful and strong think surely they need not prepare for dying till God by some sickness sends them a summons and those whom God is pleased to vouchsafe a summons by Sickness and Distempers alas they think that it is yet possible for them to escape from them again And thus all are ready to thrust Death from them and to put the Evil Day a far off And though God hath told out to them but a few days or hours yet they liberally and bountifully reckon upon Years and Ages as if their time were not in God's hands but their own It is a true saying that usually the hopes of a long Life is the Cause of an Evil Life Suppose now that every one of us knew for a certainty that our lives must run out with the Glass that is before us that at the end of the hour God would strike us all dead upon the place should we not all of us have more lively apprehensions of Death and Eternity than ever yet we have had should we not pour out our Souls before God requires them from us in holy Affections and fervent Prayers should we give scope to the gaddings of our Thoughts and the vanity of our Hearts should we think of such a vain Pleasure or such a worldly Employment if God now from Heaven should speak audibly to us and bid us give an account of our Stewardship for we must be no longer Stewards no certainly it is impossible that men should thus behave themselves And why Sirs is it not so with you always for ought you know that Film and Bubble that holds your Lives may be now a breaking your Graves may be ready to be digging and the last Sand in your Glass may be now a running however certain it is it cannot be long before it will be so with all of us Did we but seriously consider by what small pins this frame of Man is tacked together it would appear to us to be no less than a Miracle that we live one day yea one hour to an end Thirdly The thoughts of Death being terible makes men put off their preparation for it Men generally put off the thoughts of Death and their preparation for it because of those frightful terrors and that insupportable dread that such apprehensions bring with them Death is that which above all things Humane Nature most abhors Oh! to think of the separation of those near and dear companions the Soul and Body of the debasement dishonour and horrour of the Grave that there we must lie in a Bed of stench and rottenness under a coverlet of Worms crawling upon us consuming and mouldring away to dust in oblivion and forgetfulness Oh! these are too sad and Melancholy Thoughts for the Jovial World to entertain and dwell upon But though the consideration of these things are very unwelcome yea
Lives in pursuing such vain things from which we may be snatcht before we can cast another look at them Sowre Death will soon convince us that all is but vanity and vexation of spirit that we here set our eyes and hearts upon And therefore Vse 2 Secondly Seeing by the appointment of God we must all shortly die let us be perswaded to be always in a readiness and preparation for it Our Souls are Immortal and must live for ever and when our Bodies die and fall into the Dust they immediately enter into an Estate that is for ever unalterable Directions to prepare for Death Now here I shall only lay down a few directions and so conclude First Wean your Hearts from an inordinate love of the World Get hearts weaned from the World Death must and will pluck you from it and oh it will be a violent rending if your affections be glewed to it Consider that all things in this present World are fading and perishing but your precious Souls are ever living and Immortal be not therefore unequally yoaked joyn not your ever-living Souls to dying comforts This is a tyranny worse than that which was Exercised by those of old who tied living Bodies to dead Carkasses Oh! what a sad parting hour will it be to thee when thou shalt go into another World and leave behind thee all that thou countest good in this how wilt thou protract and linger and wishly look back again upon all those precious vanities and dear nothings and follies that here thou placedst thy happiness and contentment in But now when the heart sets loose from all these things with what satisfaction shall we be able to Die accounting what we lose by Death to be no great matter because what we gain thereby will be infinitely more to our advantage Secondly Repentance must not be deferred upon hopes of long Life Would you be prepared for Death beware then that you do not defer your Repentance one day or hour longer upon any presumption of the continuance of your Life Death depends not upon the warning of a sickness God doth not always afford it but sometimes he doth execution before he Shoots off his warning Piece why may it not be so with you however it is possible your sickness may be such as may render you uncapable of doing your last good Office for your Soul But if it should be otherwise yet this I am sure of it is the unfittest time in all your Life to be then casting up your Accounts when you should be giving of them up to have your Evidences for Heaven then to clear up to your Souls when you should produce and shew them for your support and comfort Live every day as if it were your last Thirdly Live every day so as if every day were your last and dying day and the very next day allotted to you unto Eternity if it be not so it is more than any of us know and since we have no assurance of one day or hour longer it is but Reason and Wisdom to look upon every day as that which may prove our very last Be constant in the exercise of a holy life Fourthly Be constant in the Exercise of a Holy Life and always doing of that that you would be content Christ should find you doing when he comes to Summon you before his Bar. Think with thy self if thou wer 't now upon thy sick Bed and hadst received the Sentence of Death and sawest thy Friends stand mourning round about thee but cannot help thee what would be thy thoughts and thy discourse then Why let the same thoughts and the same discourse fill up every day and hour of thy Life for thou knowest not whether now this moment thou art not as near Death as if thy Friends and Relations yea and thy Physicians also dispaired of thy Life and had given thee over for Dead Fifthly and Lastly Get an assurance of a better Life Labour to get an assurance of a better Life and this will prepare you for a temporal Death When you and all things in the World must take leave of one another and part forever than to have the sense of the Love of God of an interest in Jesus Christ and the sight and view of your own Graces these will bear up your Heart in a dying hour these things are Immortal as your Souls are and will enter into Heaven with you and abide there with you to Eternity O whom will it not comfort to think that Death will change his Bottle into a Spring though here our Water sometimes fails us yet in Heaven whither we are going we shall bath our selves in an infinite Ocean of Delights lying at the breasts of an infinite Fountain of Life and Sweetness Whoever hath such an assurance as this is cannot but welcome Death embracing it not only with contentment but with Delight And while the Soul is strugling and striving to unclasp it self and to get loose from the Body it cannot but say with Holy Longings and Pantings Come Lord Jesus come quickly THE GREAT EVIL and DANGER OF Little Sins IN FOUR SERMONS ON St. MATTH V. 19. Whosoever therefore shall break any one of these least Cammandments and shall teach Men so he shall be called the least in the Kingdom of Heaven By EZEKIEL HOPKINS late Lord Bishop of London-Derry LONDON Printed by E. H. for NATHANAEL RANEW at the King's Arms in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1693. THE GREAT EVIL and DANGER OF LITTLE SINS FROM St. MATTH V. 19. Whosoever therefore shall break any one of these least Commandments and shall teach Men so he shall be called the least in the Kingdom of Heaven AMongst those many Points that our Saviour handles in this his Sermon on the Mount An Introduction one is the Stability and Permanency of the Moral Law the Obligation of which he affirms to be as perpetual as Heaven and Earth Verse 18. Verily verily I say unto you till Heaven and Earth pass one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the Law till all be fulfilled This Assertion Christ lays down in opposition to the common and corrupt Doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisees the Jewish Teachers who by their Traditions sought to make void the Law of God Now says Christ unless they can remove the Earth and rowl up the Heavens and carry the World without the World it is but a vain Attempt for it is decreed in Heaven That till Heaven and Earth pass not a tittle of the Law shall fail but all shall be fulfilled As it is in this lower World notwithstanding it is maintained by a continual flux and vicissitude by the perpetual change of one being into another one corrupting and another rising up in a new form and shape out of its Ruines and yet not the least dust of Matter is or can be consumed but the same Matter and the same Quantity still continues which were at first created
the future to shun such Snares and Intanglements as these are thy sins will be judged by God at the last Day to be wilful and presumptuous Sins for they are so if not in themselves considered yet at least in their Cause for you presumptuously run into those Occasions and Temptations whereby in all likelihood you will be overcome and this is to sin presumptuously If when we are tempted we yield without vigorous resistance we then sin presumptuously Thirdly Suppose that we are strongly tempted without the betraying of our selves to the Temptation Why then consider If you commit the Sin to which you are tempted without vigorous and resolute resistance if you do this is a certain sign you sin presumptuously Let the Temptation be never so strong and irresistible yet if you yield to it without opposition and resistance made against it to your utmost you then sin presumptuously A Child of God when he acts like himself falls fighting the Devil gets not a foot of ground upon him but by main force and strength though Principalities and Powers though the Rulers of the Darkness of this World and spiritual Wickednesses in high Places set themselves all in array against him why yet he encounters them all and wrestles with them all and though sometimes through weakness he is overcome yet he never basely yields he fights standing and he fights falling and he fights rising and therefore when he sins it is through Weakness and not through Presumption but now others though they are very bold and presumptuous against God yet they are very Cowards against their Lusts and against the Temptations of the Devil when a Temptation assaults them they dare not presume to oppose that but they dare presume to offend and provoke God himself that they dare do Believe it Sirs you must be bold and resolute either against the Devil or against the great God one of these you must grapple with chuse which you think you may best oppose and soonest conquer the Devil stands before you armed with his fiery darts God follows you armed with everlasting vengeance If you will not engage against Satan and resolutely oppose him and all his force what do you else but turn upon God and challenge him to the Combat and make him your Enemy that is able to destroy both Soul and Body in Hell-fire for ever Why what a most daring presumption is this that ever we should basely surrender up our selves to the Devil without striking one stroke in our own defence and yet at the same time we should dare to provoke that God that can with one look and frown sink us into the lowest Hell And thus in these Three Particulars we see when a Sin is presumptuous in respect of Temptations when it is committed without Temptations when we run into Temptations and Occasions of Sin and when we make no vigorous opposition against them To sin under eminent judgments and afflictions is to sin presumptuously In the Fifth Place another Trial is this When Men will dare to sin under eminent and remarkable Judgments and Afflictions that God brings upon them then they sin presumptuously What is this else but when God stands visibly in your way yet you will desperately run upon the thick Bosses of his Buckler he hedges up your way with thorns and yet you will break through though it be to the tearing of your Flesh he strikes at you by his Judgments and oh the Madness and Presumption of vile Dust and Ashes that they dare to strike at God again by their Sins what is this else but even to dare God to do his worst When God treads upon us should such vile Worms as we are turn the Tail and threaten to take revenge upon the Almighty This is Presumption and Boldness that God takes special notice of In 2 Chron. 28 and 22. Ahaz was brought very low says the Text and yet in the time of his distress he trespassed yet more against the Lord This is that Ahaz God sets a Mark and Brand upon him that he may be known to all posterity for a most daring Sinner that when God had brought him so low when so many Enemies waged War against him and distressed him yet even then he provoked a greater Enemy than them all and challengeth God against him This is that King Ahaz Truly may it not be said of many among us This and this is that person who when God afflicted them instead of humbling themselves under the mighty hand of God grew enraged at their Sufferings and sinned yet more and more against him Oh it is dreadful when those punishments that should break and melt us prove only to harden our hearts and to exasperate and embitter our Spirits against God What can reform us when we offend under the very smart of the Rod Hereby therefore judge of your Sins if so be God be gone out against you if he hath laid his hand heavy upon you and yet you regard it not but still persevere in your old Sins and still add new iniquities to them if instead of humility and brokenness of heart your hearts rise up against God and you are ready to say with that wicked King This Evil is of the Lord why should I wait upon the Lord any longer conclude upon it you are those desperate presumptuous Sinners that scorn to shrink for whatever God can lay upon them To encourage our selves with hopes of Mercy while we live impenitently in Sin is to sin presumptuously Sixthly and lastly When we can encourage our selves with hopes of Mercy though we live in Sin impenitently this is to sin presumptuously You that know your selves to be Sinners what is it that makes you to bear up with so much peace and confidence why do you not every moment fear lest Hell should open its mouth and swallow you up lest God should suddenly strike you dead by some remarkable Judgment lest the Devil should fetch you away alive to Torments Why do you not fear this since you know your selves to be Sinners Why truly you still hope for Mercy and it is only from this very presumption that men cry Peace Peace to themselves when yet God is at enmity with them they flatter themselves that it shall be well with them in the latter end though God swears he will not spare them but his Wrath and Jealousie shall smoke against them In Deut. 29.19 20. says God there If any Man shall encourage himself when he goes on presumptuously in the way of his own heart adding Drunkenness unto Thirst I will not spare him says God but my Wrath and my Jealousie shall smoke against him and all the Curses that are written in this Book shall fall upon him Were but Sinners truly apprehensive of their wretched Estate how they stand liable every moment to the stroke of Divine Justice how that there is nothing that interposeth betwixt them and Hell but only God's temporary forbearance of them
observe these following particulars First Consider this that we and all Mankind were in Adam not only as in our common Parent from whom we received our Being but as in our Common Head Surety and Representative from whom we were to receive either our well or our ill Being he was the Head of the Covenant both he and we were Parties in the Covenant he obeying we obeyed and he sinning we transgressed what he did as in this publick capacity was not alone his Personal Act but it was ours also Now what Right Adam had to Indent for his Posterity and to oblige them to the Terms of the Covenant I have long since opened to you on another occasion and I shall therefore pass it by now Secondly The Threatning annexed to the Covenant of Works was Death In the Day thou Eatest thereof says God thou shalt surely Die Gen. 2.17 Now there is a Threefold Death that by the violation of this Command Man was subject unto A Temporal Death onsisting in the Miseries of this Life and at last a separation of the Soul from the Body An Eternal Death consisting in the everlasting separation of the Soul from God and a Spiritual Death consisting in the loss and separation of God's Image from the Soul And upon Adam's Sin this Threefold Death was Threatned namely Temporal Spiritual and Eternal Of these Three the Spiritua● Death was presently inflicted upon Man's Fall consisting in the separation of the Image of God from the Soul Man wa● immediately deprived of that Holiness and perfect Righteousness wherein the Image of God did consist Then Thirdly Observe No Action can be Holy that doth not flow from the Image of God in the Soul as from its principle Every Action is sinful that hath not the Glory of God for its end now no Action can have the Glory of God for its end that hath not the Image o● God for its principle and therefore Man being despoiled of this Image of God there is no Action of any Man in the state of Nature but what is sinful and corrupt And hence it is that in Regeneration God again stamps his Image upon the Soul not indeed so perfectly as at Man's first Creation but yet in such a degree as doth thorough Grace enable him to Act Holily and in some measure according to the will of God Fourthly Though Man be despoiled of the Image of God and cannot Act Holily yet he is a busie and active Creature and must and will be still acting he hath an active Nature and he hath active Faculties still left him though the Image of God that should make those Actions Holy is justly taken from him And here at last we have traced out the true cause of that strong propension that there is in all Men unto Sin While the Soul enjoyed the Image of God it sought especially to do all in reference unto God but now that it hath lost that Image it cannot any longer raise up its Actions to a suitableness to the Will of God and therefore now it sinks them and seeks only to please its own Carnal Desires and Appetite Take the whole resolution of it in Two or Three Words The Nature of the Soul makes it prone and inclined to Act for it is a busie active Creature and if it Acts it must Sin because it hath not the Image of God to raise its Actions to a Holy and Divine conformity to the Will of God and therefore now to be prone to act is to be prone to sin and this is the true ground of that strong Propension that is in all Men to that which is evil and sinful Quest But You will say if this proneness to sin be from the loss of God's Image how comes it to pass that those who are renewed again according to the Image of God do still complain of this strong proneness and propension to sin Answ To this I answer that those of fallen Mankind to whom God is pleased to restore his Image in regeneration accordingly as this Image is more or less perfect so is this proneness to sin more or less strong but because the best are but in part renewed therefore this sinful proneness is but in part destroyed in the best Grace weakens it but Grace doth not quite remove it and therefore the holiest Christian hath and shall have as long as he lives in this World ' cause to complain with the Apostle Romans 7. 23. I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind there is a carnal sensual inclination in him strongly swaying him to sin contrary to the bent and inclination of his renewed part and therefore he shall have cause still to cry out with the Apostle Oh wretched Man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death because the Image of God is but in part restored in him therefore there is partly also an inclination in him to sin Yea but you will say possibly this inclination in the best Christians may be to smaller and lesser sins Object but it cannot be thought that a Child of God who is renewed again according to the Image of God should have a strong proneness and inclination to those foul sins that the wicked of the World lie in To this I answer Answ the most that Grace doth in the best of God's Children in this life is to weaken and lessen that natural propension that is in a Child of God to every sin but not to destroy that Propension to any one sin at all no not to the foulest and vilest sins The Old Man in this life never loseth one limb though it be weakned and consuming away in his whole body Take a Child of God that before his Conversion had a strong Propension to any sin suppose what sin you will though never so foul and horrid the same Propension still remains It is not indeed so violent and raging as it was but there it is it is abated and overcome by Grace but still there is the same proneness to sin it may be a Christian is not so sensible of this Propension to sin not so frequently as formerly he hath but yet the experience of the best sometimes can inform them that even to the worst sins and most horrid temptations they find a faction and party in their hearts to promote them and it is as much work as Grace can do to subdue and quell these great sins I now come to enquire into the grounds and reasons why God should suffer this proneness to sin to continue in his dearest Saints and Children after their Conversion and Regeneration possibly some may think it would have been far more conducible to God's glory as well as their own peace and comfort if God had at once at their first Conversion utterly destroyed all the seeds and remainders of corruption in them and at first made them as perfectly holy as they shall be at last hereby God would not have been so
shall unfold it in these following Particulars First Pardon and Remission of sin Pardon of sin an Act of God's only is no Act of ours but an Act of God's only It is nothing done by us or in us but an Act of God's free Grace meerly without us and therefore God ascribes it wholly unto himself I even I am he And when our Saviour cured the Paralytick the Scribes storm at him as a Blasphemer thou blasphemest say they to him not knowing him to be God for who say they can forgive sins but God only But be it an Act of God's only and not ours and an Act wholly without us what Comfort is there in this yes much and that upon these Grounds because God's Acts within us are always imperfect in this Life but God's Acts without us are always perfect and consummate Sanctification is a work of God's Grace within us Now this because it meets with much opposition in every Faculty from inherent sin which spreads it self over the whole Soul therefore this work is always in this Life kept low and weak But Pardon of sin is an Act without us in the breast of God himself where it meets with no opposition nor allay nor doth it increase by small degrees but is at once as perfect and intire a● ever it shall be I do not mean a● some have thought and taught That God at once pardons all the sins of true Believers as well those they do or shal commit as those that they have already committed but only That what sin God pardons he doth not pardon then gradually There is nothing left o● Guilt upon the Soul when God pardons it but there is something left o● Filth upon the Soul when God sanctifies it And therefore as it is the grief of God's Children That their inherent Holiness is so imperfect here that they are so assaulted with Temptations so dogg'd by Corruption so oppressed and almost stifled to Death by a body of sin that lies heavy upon them yet this on the other side may be for their Comfort and Encouragement That God's pardoning Grace is not as his sanctifying Grace is nor is it granted to them by the same stint and measure A sin truly repented of is not pardoned to us by halves half the Guilt remitted and half retained as the Papists fansie to establish their Doctrine of Purgatory but it is as fully pardon'd as it shall be in Heaven it self And hence it follows First Though the Guilt of sin be removed yet it is not our Repentance that removes it for then as no Man's Repentance is absolutely perfect so no Man's Sins should be fully pardon'd but still there would be remainders of Guilt left upon the Conscience as there is still a mixture of Impenitency in the best Christians But Pardon and Remission is not mingled with Guilt as Grace is with Sin because it is an Act of Mercy wrought not in our breast but arising in God's only where it meets with nothing to allay or abate it and it is infinitely more perfect than our Repentance can be Secondly Hence we may inferr Pardon of Sin more sure than our Assurance of it can be That our Pardon is infinitely more sure than our Assurance of it in our own Consciences can be satisfactory for the sense of Pardon is a work of God's Spirit within us which commonly is mixed with some Hesitations Mis-givings Doubts and Fears And therefore tho our Comforts be never so strong tho it be Spring-Tide with us yet our ground for Comfort is still much more Oh what rich and abundant Grace is this in God towards us that exceeds both our Grace and our Comfort And therefore though O Christian thy Sanctification be the best Evidence of thy Justification and Pardon yet is it not the best Measure of it for thou art justify'd and thou art pardon'd much more than thou art sanctified Sanctifying Grace in thee indeed is in its first Rudiments and Inchoation but Pardoning-Grace in thy God is consummate and perfect And that is the first thing Secondly Remission of Sin makes Sin to be as if it had never been committed Things that are forgotten are no more to us than if they had never had a being Now God tells us he forgets our sins their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more Nor is there any long Tract of Time required to wear the Idea of them out of his Memory as is necessary among Men to make them forget the Wrongs and Injuries done to them by their fellow-Creatures for God forgets the sins of his Children as soon as they are repented of yea sometimes sooner than our Consciences do for many times a Christian after a heart-breaking-Repentance for some great Sin lies under the upbraidings of Conscience when God hath forgiven it yea and forgotten it also God's Officer is not so ready to acquit them as God himself is He forgets as though no Provocation or Offence had ever been committed He retains not his Anger for ever says the Prophet Micah 7.14 not for ever but so soon as ever we grow displeased with our selves he begins to be well-pleased with us no sooner doth Sorrow and Grief overspread our Faces but Favours and Smiles clear up his Face to us See this gracious Disposition of God in Jerem. 31.20 Ephraim is there brought in bewailing his sin Surely says he after I was turned I repented after I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth Now what doth God but presently embrace him with most tender and most melting Expressions of Love as if he had never been angry nor had any cause for it Is Ephraim my dear Son is he a pleasant Child since I pass against him I do earnestly remember him still my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. And therefore O Christian thou who now perhaps cryest out in the bitterness of thy Soul Oh that I had never committed this or that sin against God! Oh that I had never offended him in this or that manner Why thou hast thy Wish O Sinner herein for God when he pardons sin makes it as if it had never been committed against him Remission of Sin makes God account of us as just and righteous Thirdly hence it follows That upon Remission of Sin God no longer accounts of us as Sinners but as Just and Righteous It is true after a Pardon is received we still retain sinful Natures still Original Corruption is in us and will never totally be dis-lodged out of us in this Life but when God pardons us he looks not upon us as Sinners but as Just and Righteous A Malefactour that is discharged by satisfying the Law or by the Prince's Favour to him is no more look'd upon as a Malefactour but as Just and Righteous as if he had never offended the Law at all so is it here