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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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Word Mark here one of Satans depths in outward things he tempts men to distrust God and to rely altogether on means but in heavenly things and matters of salvation he tempts men to lay all on Gods Decrees and Gods purposes without any regard had to the means Such men might as well say the Lord hath appointed that we shall live to such a time and till then we shall not die and therefore what need we food in health or physick in sickness Oh take heed of these reasonings Gods Decree doth not remove the use of the means but establish and confirm them 2. The Decree is the same with that book of life wherein are written the names of the Elect Phil. 4 3 Luke 12 20 Rev. 20.12 Paul tells us of some women with Clement and other fellow-labourers whose names are in the book of life And Christ bids his Disciples rejoyce because their names are written in heaven And John saw in his vision the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life As Captains have a book wherein they write the names of their Souldiers and Citizens have a book wherein they record the names of their Burgesses So God hath his Decree or book of life in which he registers all that belongs to him Exod. 32.32 33. Some other texts speak of a book of life as blot me I pray thee out of thy book which thou hast written said Moses in his zeal for Israel to whom the Lord answered whosoever sinneth against me him will I blot out of my book But this was not the book say some of Gods eternal Decree but the book of his providences God hath a double book and both in a figure he hath a book of his resolved Decrees and a book of his acted providences this latter is but a transcript or a copy of the former those huge original volumes of love and blessings which God hath laid up in his heart for his own people from all eternity is the book I mean Indeed this book is writing out every day by the hand and pen of providence in the ordering of all those affairs which concern our salvation 3. This Decree is the very same also with Gods seal the foundation of God standeth sure having this seal the Lord knoweth them that are his A seal is used in three cases 1. To keep things distinct 2. To keep things secret 3. To keep things safe In every of these respects Gods Decrees are seals but especially in the last those souls that are sealed by God they are safe in the love and favour of God as when Job tells us that God sealeth up the stars i.e. say some he preserveth the stars in their Orbs in the places where he hath set them they shall never drop out so God seals up his Saints i.e. he secures them of the eternal love of God so that they shall never drop out of his heart All these titles speak the immutability of Gods eternal emminent acts q. d. I decree I predestinate I book it seal it that such and such persons shall be eternally saved and why all this but to note the certainty and stability of the thing shall great Monarchs of the earth do thus shall they decree and book and seal to shew their greatness and wisdom that they could so resolve as no person or power whatsoever should be strong enough to cause them to change their resolutions and shall not I much more do not I know or foresee all that can or will follow is there any power or ever shall be to take them out of my hands Or is it possible that ever I should have a relenting thought at the saving of th●se souls Can any thing fall out hereafter to make me more provident more powerful more wise more merciful then now I am it may be in some things I may will a change but can I in any thing truly change my will no no I am the Lord I change not therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed Mal. 3 SECT IX The Covenant THE Covenant concerning mans salvation is the last and main particular I instanced in I dare not be too curious to insist on the order of nature and the rather because I believe the Covenant betwixt God Christ from everlasting is interwoven with the Decree fore-knowledge and election above So the Apostle tells us Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the world mark that in Christ There was an eternal plot betwixt the Father and the Son there was a bargain made I speak it with reverence betwixt God and Christ there was a Covenant betwixt the Lord and his Son Jesus Christ for the salvation of the Elect and of this observe we especially these following Texts In Isaiah 49.1 2 3 4. the Prophet seems to set it Dialogue-wise one expresseth it thus First Christ begins and shews his commission telling God how he had called him and fitted him for the work of redemption and he would know what reward he should have of him for so great an undertaking The Lord hath called me from the womb Isa 19 1 2. from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name and he hath made my mouth like a sharp sword in the shadow of his hand hath he hid me and made me a polished shaft in his quiver hath he bid me Upon this God answers him and tells him what reward he should have for so great an undertaking only at first he offers low viz. onely the elect people of Israel And he said unto me thou art my servant O Israel Ver. 3. in whom I will be glorified or Israel it is in whom I will be glorified by thee Christ who stood now a making his bargain with him thought these too few and not worth so great a labor and work because few of the Jews would come in but would refuse him and therefore he says he should labour in vain if this were all his recompence then said I ver 4. I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for naught and in vain yet withal he tells God that seeing his heart was so much in saving sinners he would do it howsoever for those few comforting himself with this that his work or his reward was with the Lord. Upon this God comes off more freely and opens his heart more largely to him as meaning more amply to content him for his pains in dying ver 6. it is a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the tribe of Jacob and to restore the preserved of Israel that is not worth the dying for I value thy sufferings more than so I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles that thou mayest be my salvation unto the ends of the earth Methinks I imagine as if I heard God speak unto Christ from
as Rev. 20.12 1. The Book must be opened And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the Books were opened and another Book was opened which is the Book of life It is spoken after the manner of men in whose publick Judgments are produced all the writings of the process informations depositions of witnesses to shew that all actions Aug. l. 20. de civitate Dei cap. 14. even the most secret ones shall then be rehearsed and made manifest Augustine thinks these Books to be the Books of the Old and New Testament wherein all things either to be done or omitted are prescribed by God and then shall these Books be opened Rom. 2.16 Orig. Com. ad Rom. 14. because according to them shall sentence be given In that day God shall Judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my Gospel Origen and all most all with him think these Books to be the Books of our consciences which now are shut up and concealed from men but then shall be made manifest to all the world whatever these Books are we find here one Book opened which is proper to the Saints called the Book of Life This Book contains in it the names of all that are elected from first to last Thou John and thou Joseph and thou Judeth and thou Mary and thou Elizabeth c. you are all Book'd down there is the particularity and there is the certainty Your names are written in Heaven rejoyce in it Oh what is the joy of Saints when once they see this book opened and their names inrolled engraven there in letters of glory This very Book clears it to me that God from all eternity made choice of a particular and determinate number of Persons to save them and that none other can be saved but those who were so elected and whosoever are so elected Rev. 13.8 17.8 they shall not fall away All that worship the Beast their names are not written in the Book of life of the Lamb from the foundation of the world On the other side Rev. 3.5 He that overcometh the same shall be written in the Book of life and I will not blot out his name but I will confess his name before my Father and before his Angels This is the day when that book of life shall be opened and Christ shall read the names of every elect person before God and Angels not that Christ needs a book or indeed reads a name but that his Election stands so firm that he knows every predestinated Saint as well as we know their names whom for our memories we commit unto our books and then he will so honour his Saints that he will publish their names to all the world 2. All the actions demeanours graces duties and it may be sins of Saints shall be produced and laid open the holy Ghost tells us that the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the Books It appears hence that not onely names but things were written and these things were produced and accordingly they were judged 1. As to evil things unfruitful works of darkness It is a question and I dare not be too positive in it viz. Whether the sins of God's People shall be manifest at the day of Judgment Some are for the negative because God in his promises speaks so expresly Isa 43.25 44.22.38.17 John 5.24 Of forgiving iniquities of remembring them no more of blotting them out of throwing them into the bottom of the Sea of casting them behind his back in which respect say they the Godly are said not to come into Judgement I suppose this last Text is ill urged for by Judgment is not meant discussion but condemnation and in our best Translations so it is rendred others are for the affirmative upon these grounds 1. Because many of the Godly and wicked men's sins are mingled together and there cannot be a Judgment of discussion preceding that of condemnation unless Godly men's sins are also produced 2. Because it is spoken generally in respect of all sorts that the Books were opened By which Books most understand the consciences of men and by the opening of those Books they understand the manifesting clearing and discovering of consciences at that general day 3. Because the Scriptures are express for the affirmative not but that those Texts are truths that sins are forgiven blotted out thrown away to be remembred no more i.e. as to condemnation but as for exploration or discussion the Lord speaks universally that of every idle word that men speak Mat. 12.36 they shall give an account thereof at the day of Judgment If the ballance weigh down on this side for my part I am not peremptory but shall easily submit to the spirits of the Prophets yet this manifestation shall not be for the shame grief trouble ignominy or confusion of the godly but only for the setting up of God's justice and that the goodness and free grace of God in Christ may be made more illustrious how will Christ then be exalted when all the world shall see his righteousness and goodness his truth and mercy now again meeting together and kissing each other it was so at his first coming and it will be so at his second coming then shall his justice and mercy his righteousness and goodness be manifested to all in that by his own merits notwithstanding their sins he will bring all his Saints to his heavenly glory 2. As for good things whether good works duties or graces there is no question but all these will be that day produced and laid open 1. We see Christ enumerating the good works of them on his right hand for I was an hungred and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in naked Mat. 25.35 26. and ye cloathed me sick and ye visited me in prison and ye came unto me It is true in this catalogue we find nothing of faith but all of works but certainly faith is included as the life of the Tree is included in the fruit not only nor principally are works here mentioned for the goodness of the work considered in it self but as these works did express our faith and love to Jesus Christ in that by saith we could see Christ in a poor beggar or prisoner and could love Jesus Christ in these poor better than all our worldly goods or liberties I do not wonder that Paul adviseth his Corinthians See that ye abound in this grace of contribution to the Saints 2 Cor. 8.7 Phil. 1.9 1 Thes 1.12 and that he prayeth his Philipians And this I pray that your love may abound yet more And that he prayeth for his Thessalonians now the Lord make you to increase and to abound in love one towards another and towards all men and that he praiseth God in their behalf We are bound to thank God always for you brethren as it is
the inward manifestation The Apostle speaking of the Saints he adds Col. 1.27 To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles which is Christ in you the hope of glory O the Riches of the Glory of this mystery consider it Oh my soul God might have shut thee up in blindness with the world or he might only have given thee parts and gifts or at most he might hav enlightened thy reason to have taken in the outward notions of the Gospel but hath he revealed Christ in thee hath he let thee see into the wonders of his Glory hath he given thee the light of his Glory within Oh this argues the witness of Christs Spirit this only the experimental Christian feels Chrysostom sometimes speaking of the more hidden and choice principles of Christianity he useth this phrase Sciunt initiati quid dico those that are initiated or admitted into our mysteries know what I mean so may the Ministers of Christ Preaching of these inward Manifestations say Sciunt initiaty c. it is only the Spiritual man can know these things for they are spiritually discerned O my soul meditate on this untill thou feelest Gods Spirit working in thy Spirit these inward Gracious Glorious manifestations It is Christ in thee is the hope of Glory 5. Consider Christs whipping the buyers and sellers out of the Temple Sometimes O my soul thou art in secret and sometimes thou art in the Assemblies of Gods people and if thou art in duty wheresoever thou art consider the especial presence of Christ and what is that but the presence of his Spirit and the presence of his Angels 1. The presence of his Spirit this we know by his working in us certainly the Spirit doth not only hover over us but worketh in us How in us I answer by his quickning feeding cherishing healing mollifying melting comforting In this manner he works in us when we are in Ordinances Why now is he I hope riding with triumph in the midst of the Assembly now is he in his Chariot in his Throne in the hearts of his people and therefore away away with all buyers and sellers out of that Temple of the holy Ghost 2. The Presence of Christ is the presence of his Angels as a King is where his Court is so is Christ the King of Kings especially present where his blessed Angels pitch their Tents And the presence of Angels is worthy O my soul of thy consideration Certainly they are ministring Spirits that have a work to do upon thy inward man I grant the Spirit of Christ can only enlighten the understanding and determine the will effectually it is he only can bend and turn and form the mind which way soever he pleaseth but the Angels can speak also to thy spiritual parts and though the spirit only determine yet their speaking carries a Power with it By way of digression it is a fine skill to know how the Angels can speak to us and how we may know when they speak and how we may discern what is spoken by the immediate inspiration of the spirit and what by the mediation of the Angels 1. How do the Angels speak to us We must conceive if we understand this first that the Images or phantasms of things received by the outward senses are kept and preserved by the inward senses as the species of sounds of shapes or whatsoever else 2. That the images phantasms so kept may be so moved by our spirits or humours or some extrinsecal things as that they may move the fancy and provoke it to represent and conceive such things as neither appear nor are at that time perceived by any outward sence at all This appears 1. In our ordinary course as we can sit in the dark where we hear and see nothing and yet there we can multiply a fancy in infinitum by an act of our own Will 2. This appears in our dreams when though we hear or see nothing yet the humour can stir up the memory of things and provoke our fancies to the apprehension of this or that 3. This appears also in sickness which altering the body and the humours and so troubling the fancy it begets strange fancies and makes dreadful and fearfull representations unto us now this we must know that whatsoever an inferiour Power can do that a superiour Power can do much more whatsoever an act of our own Will or natural Dreams or preternatural sickness can do that the Angels can do most orderly and efficaciously they know exactly how the Spirits and humors must be moved that the images or phantasms may be applyed to such and such conceptions or apprehensions most accommodate and fitted for the knowledg of what truth they would suggest So that to me here is the difference between the converse of Men and Angels Men can speak to our understandings by the mediation of our external senses but Angels go a nearer way to work and speak to the internals first of all they do no more but come into the memory the treasurer of all our phantasms and imaginations and there make such and such compositions even as they please and then the understanding takes them off and reads what is written without more ado 2. How may we know when the Angels speak to us I confess it is an hard question and easily it cannot be solved only some conjecture we may have as in a case of evil thou art in a way of sin and near to fall into it it may be on a sudden thou hearest within thee some contrary whisperings which also are above the whisperings of a natural conscience common to the wicked or in case of good it may be on a sudden thou hearest within thee some independent supernatural perswasions and reasonings to this or that good or to this or that object which may more easily lead thee to chuse the good in these cases thou mayest conjecturally think that these whisperings or motions are of the Angels of God Bodin tells a story of one who desired of God a guidance and assistance of an Angel and accordingly he had sencible manifestations of a Spirit that assisted him and followed him till his death if in company he spake any unwary words he was sure to be advertised and reproved for it by a dream in the night or if he read any Book that was not good the Angel would strike upon the book to cause him to leave it 3. But how should we discern what is spoken by the immediate inspiration of the spirit and what by the mediation of the Angels here indeed we are at a stand and therefore my best resolution is that of Calvin That in such secrets we should keep one rule of modesty and sobriety and that we should neither speak nor think nor yet desire to know any other thing than such as hath been taught us by Gods Word I know not any great use there may be of this
from him O let this be thy wisdom to think much of Christ so as to provoke thee to the imitation of Christ then shalt thou learn to contemn the world to do good to all to injure no man to suffer wrong patiently yea to pray for all those that despightfully use thee and persecute thee then shalt thou learn to condescend to the weak to condole sinners cases to embrace the penitent to obey Superiours to minister to all then shalt thou learn to avoid all boasting bragging scandal immoderate eating and drinking in a word all sin Then shalt thou learn to bear about in thy body the dying of our Lord Jesus Christ that the life also of Jesus may be made manifest in thy body So the Apostle For we which live are alwayes delivered unto death for Jesus sake that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal flesh 2 Corinth 4.10 11. Why this is to follow Christ's steps he descended from heaven to earth for thy sake do thou trample on earthly things Seek after the Kingdom of God and his righteousness for thy own sake though the world be sweet yet Christ is sweeter though the world prove bitter yet Christ sustained the bitterness of it for thee and now he speaks to thee as he did to Peter Andrew James and John Come follow me O do not faint in the way lest thou lose thy place in thy Country that Kingdom of glory Thus far we have looked on Jesus as our Jesus in his life during the whole time of his Ministry our next work is to look on Jesus carrying on the great work of man's salvation during the time of his suffering and dying on the cross until his resurrection from the dead LOOKING UNTO JESUS In His Death The Sixth Book PART III. CHAP. I. Lam. 1.12 Is it nothing to you all ye that pass by behold and see Heb. 12.3 Consider him who hath endured such contradiction of sinners against him SECT I. Of the day of Christ's Sufferings divided into parts and hours THe Son of Righteousness that arose with healing we shall now see go down in a ruddy Cloud And in this Piece as in the former we must first lay down the Object and then direct you to look upon it The Object is Jesus carrying on the work of mans Salvation during the time of his Sufferings now in all the transactions of this life we shall observe them as they were carried on successively in those few hours of his Passion and death As this work of mans salvation was great so we cannot but observe how every piece of it was carried on in its due time even from eternity to eternity The very time of Christ's passage depended not on the will of man for his enemies sought many a time before to slay him as Herod in his Infancy Matth. 2.16 The Jews in his riper age when sometimes they took up stones to stone him John 8.59 and sometimes they would have broke his neck from an hill Luke 4.29 but his time was not then come We read of the Paschal Lamb that it was to be slain on the fourteenth day of the first Moneth called Abib or Nisan Exod. 12.2 ● at the full of the Moon in the evening or between the evenings some think this Moneth answers to our March others to our April I shall not be too curious in the Inquisition for I think it not worth the while only this I cannot but observe that the same day that the Lamb must be slain must our Paschal Lamb begin his sufferings and as then it was full Moon so it notes unto us the fulness of time which now was come and as it was in such a Month as when light prevails against darkness and every thing revives and springs so Christ by his sufferings was to chase away our darkness and death and to bring in light and life and a blessed spring of Grace and Glory and as it was to be slain in the evening or between the evening so must Christ the true Paschal Lamb be sacrificed about the very same hour that the Mystical Lamb was slain to understand which we must know that the Jews distinguished their Artificial day into four parts from six to nine from nine to twelve from twelve to three from three to eight this last part was counted the Evening of the Day and the next three hours the Evening of the Night now in this last part of the Day used the Paschal Lamb to be slain and after it was slain some time was taken up to dress it whole for Supper so Christ at the fourth part of the day at their nineth hour that is at our three of the Clock in the afternoon between the Evenings Mat. 27.50 with a loud voice yielded up the Ghost For the whole time of these last and extream sufferings of Christ I shall reduce them to somewhat less than one natural day or if we may take the whole day before us consisting of twenty four hours and begin with the Evening according to the beginning of natural dayes from the Creation as it is said Gen. 1.5 the evening and the morning made the first day In this revolution of time I shall observe these several passages As. 1. About six in the Evening Christ celebrated and eat the Passover with his Disciples at which time he instituted the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and this continued till the eighth hour 2. About Eight in the Evening he washed his Disciples feet and then leaning on the Table he pointed out Judas that should betray him and this continued until the nineth hour 3. About Nine in the Evening the second Watch in the night Judas that Traytor went from the Disciples and in the mean time Christ made that spiritual Sermon and afterwards that spiritual Prayer recited only by John John 14 15 16 17 chapt and this together with a Psalm they sung continued at least until the tenth hour Thus far we proceeded before we had done with the Life of Christ That which concerns his Passion follows immediately upon this and upon that only I shall take notice in my following Discourse This Passion of Christ I shall divide between the night and day 1. For the night and his sufferings therein we may observe these periods or thereabouts As 1. From ten to twelve he goes over the Brook Cedron to the Garden of Gethsemani where he prayed earnestly and sweat water and blood 2. From twelve till three he is betrayed and by the souldiers and other Officers he is bound and brought to Jerusalem and carried into the house of Annas who was one of the chief Priests 3. From three till six they led him from Annas to Caiaphas when he and all the Priests of Jerusalem sate upon Jesus Christ and there it was that Peter denied Christ and at last the whole Sanhedrim of the Jews gave their consent to Christ's Condemnation 2. The Night thus dispatcht at six