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A30241 CXLV expository sermons upon the whole 17th chapter of the Gospel according to St. John, or, Christs prayer before his passion explicated, and both practically and polemically improved by Anthony Burgess ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1656 (1656) Wing B5651; ESTC R13734 964,431 860

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of all gross and prophane ignorance There cannot be any faith all the while this darkness is upon thy minde and if there be no Faith there is no Justification no Salvation Christ is become of no effect unto thee and yet how boldly will many ignorant people talk of their good faith they are not led aside with the giddy errours of many they cleave to the old faith but doest thou know what thy old faith is if it were Turcism and Popery it would be all one to thee SERMON CXXXI Of the unspeakable Love of God to Believers Shewing wherein Gods Love to Christ and to Believers is alike and wherein it differs JOHN 17.23 And hast loved them as thou hast loved me A Two-fold Effect or Event is propounded by our Saviour of the unity which believers have first in Christ and then amongst themselves The first is That the world may know thou hast sent me of which we have briefly treated already because our Saviour had mentioned it v. 21. and indeed our Saviour doth in these verses with so much plainness ingeminate the matter of his Petition that Luther on the place saith These words do pueriliter sonare judicio rationis and that he was wont to say often That he never read a book containing such excellent and sublime matter in such simple and plain words The second Effect or Event is That the world may know that thou hast loved them as thou hast loved me So that in this latter particular there is one truth supposed and another proposed That which is supposed is that it 's of great consequence for the world to know that God loveth believers it would stop much of their malice and violence if they did truly know that such whom they oppose and persecute are the believed ones of God But of that afterwards That which is expresly affirmed is that the Father loveth believers as he loveth Christ himself A wonderfull and amazing expression it is that believers and Christ should be thus coupled together that when there is such an infinite disparity that yet they should both agree in the same love So that in the words you have the mercy and priviledge God vouchsafeth to believers he loveth them Now when we say God loveth it 's to say all things for that is the fountain and treasury of all good things his love is like himself infinite omnipotent and efficacious 2. You have the example or manner of this love and that is said to be as he loveth Christ The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Austin and Calvin do explain not of similitude but of causality and so resolve it into this sense The Father loveth believers because he loveth Christ and indeed this is a grand truth that in Christ only we are accepted of and beloved It 's not because of our selves but of Christ that we are approved of yet there is no necessity of leaving the grammatical interpretation for the Father doth love us as he loveth Christ not in respect of equality but similitude as they are said to be one as the Father and Son are one These words then do contain the very honey and honey-comb of Christianity in that they are loved of the Father as Christ is they need nothing more for Gods love will put him upon all those effects that a believer stands in need of Observ That God the Father loveth believers even as he loveth Christ himself A great truth and as you would think a bold and presumptuous affirmation Therefore to clear it Let us consider wherein the love of God to Christ and believers is not alike and wherein they are like one to another And First The love of the Father to Christ is as to his onely natural begotten Sonne but to believers as to his adopted children And therefore between these there must be a vast difference The love of the Father to the Sonne is like that of the Father to himself because he is of the same essence with him so that he loveth the glory and honour of his Sonne as his own glory but now that love which he beareth to his adopted children is of an inferiour nature they are creatures onely and their holinesse is but imperfect and by way of quality or accident in them but the Sonne is essentially holy so that in this respect there is no comparison to be made between the Sonne and us That love differeth toto genere in this sense from the love bestowed on us even as his filiation is not of the same univocal nature with ours Secondly Therefore the love which the Father sheweth to his Sonne is necessary and natural he could not but love him no more then he could not but beget him whereas to believers it's voluntary and wholly of free dispensation It 's disputed in the Schools Whether the Father did beget the Sonne necessarily or freely and so by consequence Whether his love be necessary or free but the soundest Writers say That a necessity of unitability and freedom do not oppose one another a necessity from natural imperfection contradicts liberty as a perfection but not that which ariseth from the chiefest and highest perfection and so it is in God It 's from his infinite perfection that he cannot but love himself and his Sonne but now in respect of his adopted sons all is of meer grace which he doth to them John 1. It 's he that gives an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a right and priviledge to them to become the sons of God God could have taken infinite delight in his own Sonne that was object satisfying enough there needed no other then him to take his delight in yet he was pleased contrary to the customs of men though he had a natural Sonne of his own to assume adopted ones likewise Thirdly The Father loveth the Sonne originally for his own sake but he loveth believers for Christs sake And this indeed doth mainly put the difference between the Fathers love to us and Christ here Christ is loved for his own sake he needed no Mediator or another Christ to procure his acceptance for so there would have been imperfection in Christ but in us all our hope all our well-pleasing is through him So that as every Starre shineth by the light of the Sunne thus doth every believer appear comely in the robes of Christs righteousnesse only Thus the Apostle Phil. 3. declareth fully When he would not be found in his own righteousnesse but that which is through faith in Christ So that as it was the Temple which made every thing holy thus it is the Lord Christ which makes every creature accepted of Lastly Christ is not capable of some effects of such love which the Father doth vouchsafe believers To us he gives Pardon of sinne Justification by faith in us he works repentance faith and subdueth the reliques of corruption in us but such was the perfection of Christ that he could not have such kinde of love demonstrated to him
is let me obey him All knowledge that makes thee not more godly that brings thee not into nearer communion with God is to be suspected if it puff thee up if it make thee conceited then 1 Cor. 8. Paul saith Thou knowest nothing as thou oughtest to know Be not a Gnostick oh that it might be said Ye know God or rather are known of God Gal. 4.9 SERMON XVII Of the Knowledge and Worship of the One true God And the contrary thereto viz. Idolatry JOH 17.3 To Know thee the Onely true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent WE have finished that duty which is said to be the Means to Eternall Life We come to the Object which is twofold 1. The true God and thus Heathens and Pagans are excluded 2. Christ Jesus and thus the Jews who though they know the true God yet because they deny Christ are out of the way to heaven and so some Heretiques also who deny Christ to be our Mediator Let us consider the first Object To know thee the only true God by this we see that Opinion which asserts the possibility of the Heathens salvation to fall to the ground because they are wholly ignorant of the true God It 's Christ that saith thus therefore our understandings must be captivated Obs That there is one true God only to be known and served by man Although to us Christians this may seem a needlesse point yet as the Scripture hath recorded this as most usefull to the Church so all Christians may finde much necessity in the opening of it and great practicall use Consider then these particulars 1. There are made and constituted many gods by mans vanity and there is one onely true God indeed The Apostle 1 Cor. 8.4 5. hath given us this distinction where having asserted that an Idol is nothing viz. formaliter though it be made of wood or stone and have rich ornaments yet the thing signified is nothing Though there are Sunne and Starres yet as made Gods so there is no such thing Though there were such men as Saturn and Jupiter yet relatively as Idols representing a God they were a non-entity He brings this verse in by way of accusation to answer the objection There are saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there are many that are called Gods The whole world is full of such they have their Celestes Acrii Terrestes Marini as many Gods as creatures almost but to us viz. Beleevers there is one only true God the Father So that you see there is one reall existent true God and there are many fictitious and constituted Gods made by man which the Scripture cals Idols and that by very significant names Sometimes by a word that signifieth nothing sometimes by a lye and vanity sometimes by dung and dirt that is rowled up and down sometimes by scar-crows or terricula muta and very often by abomination The beginning and progresse of this Idolatry is handled by Learned men and Learned Tractates are written de Diis Syris de Diis Romanorum and Germanorum in all which we may mourn over that horrible blindnesse and folly which doth seize upon all men by nature and we may blesse God for the Christian Religion which hath made us to cast off all those abominable Idolatries 2. We come to have knowledge of the only true God three waies 1. By the book of nature which is called implanted or ingrafted knowledge No man is or can be a naturall Atheist in affections he may be wishing there were no God but in judgement he cannot till by accumulated sinnes he hath given himself up to all stupidity 2. By the book of the creatures and this is called acquired knowledge The Apostle Rom. 1. mentioneth both these This later is obtained by the consideration of the world insomuch that the most Atheisticall men when they have considered the greater world and especially man in all his curious parts have been forced to acknowledge some wise and supream power the maker of these things as it 's said of Galen 3. There is the book of Gods Word and by this we have a revealed knowledge and this only doth direct in the true way to serve him acceptably Therefore all the world is said to lie in darknesse and light comes only by the Scripture This is the great mercy of God to manifest from heaven what he is and how he will be worshipped 3. Consider that our knowledge even at the highest is very imperfect it 's but apprehensive not comprehensive which made an ancient say De Deo etiam vera dicere periculosum est because we are subject to such ignorance and blindnesse God himself doth only comprehend himself we know him obscurely and therefore he is said to dwell in light inaccessible 1 Tim. 6.16 As the eye cannot penetrate into the glorious nature of the Sunne no more can we search into the deep things of God Therefore Divines say we have a twofold way of knowing God the one is affirmative and positive when those perfections we see in creatures we attribute to God in a supereminent manner Thus we say he is wise he is just he knoweth he willeth but after a more transcendent way of perfection then man doth The second way is by negation or removing imperfections from him and this indeed is commended as a better way then the former We can more easily describe God by saying what he is not then what he is he is not a body and when we say a Spirit then we runne to a negative again not a finite limited Spirit In this life every mans knowledge is imperfect we know but in part Paul said so that was wrapped up into the third heavens 1 Cor. 13. And although in heaven our knowledge shall be perfected described by that expression We shall see him face to face yet even then it cannot be comprehensive of the whole nature of God there being no proportion between a finite faculty and an infinite object In the fourth place take notice that this expression the true God may be taken in a twofold sense as truth is divided into veritas rei and veritas conceptus the truth of the thing and the truth of conceiving of it Now the Heathens when they worshipped Jupiter as the chiefest and highest God there was the truth of the thing there was a supream and a chief that they intended but there was no truth in their conceptions and apprehensions about him therefore they added many other gods to him Such a distinction as this the Apostle insinuates Acts 17.23 where reproving them for their Idolatry and telling them of an Altar with this inscription To the unknown God whom saith he you ignorantly worship we declare to you It was a true God they worshipped when they conceived of one supream above the rest but they had no true or right thoughts about him Hence what the Poet said of Jupiter the Apostle owneth as of the true God for
accounts madnesse To be in spiritual desertions to have no sence of Gods favour to fear himself a damned Castaway to have no rest in his bones day or night To be assaulted with the devils buffetings to be filled with hideous thoughts These things the world also knoweth not and therefore they count them melancholy and mad Such as by their too much poring about Sermons and good Books put themselves out of their wits Lastly They are not of the world in respect of their Conversation Rom. 12. they are not conformed to the fashion of the world The one goeth Westward the other Eastward as it were Their words and language are different their actions are contrary What the Righteous man loveth the wicked abominateth and what the wicked loveth the godly man abhorreth Thus as they say of the heavens the primum mobile hath one motion of its own and the inferiour Orbes a contrary motion to that Thus the godly man he moveth one way toward heaven he presseth hard thither The wicked man he maketh as much haste to hell So as there were two strugling in the Mothers womb which encreased her pain Thus there are two striving upon the face of the world an Isaac and an Ismael a Jacob and an Esau the Seed of the Woman and the Seed of the Serpent This enmity will not be extinct in this life Vse of Exhortation to the godly Remember what ye are Not of the world Therefore take heed of worldly affections worldly hearts For where your treasure is there will your heart be also If it be in God in Heaven there the heart will be If in Earth and in earthly things there it will be You tremble at the commission of grosse and grievous sins you think hell it self would immediatly devour you upon such sins Be afraid of the world Let it not be a Dalilah to thee a Judas to thee by kissing thee to destroy thee Consider therefore God hath put gall into all worldly comforts therefore every creature every condition in the world hath a sting in it that thy soul should be more on God Thou canst never live quietly till above the werld In heaven only there are no storms no waves no disquietings and this life thou maist attain unto He that is not of the world The troubles of the world hurt not him the losses of the world grieve not him The vexations of the world disquiet not him But because we are still of the world in part we are not compleatly and perfectly out of disquietnesse Therefore in this life we remain in a combating conflicting way that heaven may be the sweeter Doct. 2 Obs 2. That it is the honour of Beleevers that they are like Christ They are not of the world as he is not What a glorious condescention was this that he who is the God of all the Earth and hath all things at his command yet be in the world hated scorned and at last crucified That it shall be no better with him then it was with us Hence our Saviour added this as I am of the world both for consolation and information Information that they should look for such hatred misery and trouble as they saw him grapling with such a contradiction of sinners as he sustained and then also for consolation They could not think much if the Disciple were not above the Master so could they expect to be more loved of God then he Could they think to walk more wisely and holily then he did It must needs bring much comfort when we shall Consider that it can never be so bad with us but it was worse with Christ Are we hated so he Did he seem forsaken of God So may we be To open this Consider That there is a twofold conformity and likenesse to Christ The first is active the second passive An active conformity consists in the Imitation of Christ and resembling him in our lives That as Christ lived so we endeavour to do Although there be some things wherein it 's impossible for us to imitate him as in his actions which he did as God yet in those things which he did as being under the Law we are to conform to him We are to be humbles meek and patient as he was We are to do Gods Will and to seek Gods glory as he did Let the same minde be in you saith the Apostle which was in Christ Phil. 2.5 Christs life and death was chiefly satisfactory and meritorious but secondarily it was exemplary being as a Copy to write after Thus Paul bids them be Followers of him as he was of Christ Phil 3.17 Heathens have prescribed to have some grave sober man in our mindes alwaies to think him present but behold a greater then all men even Christ himself Check thy self when impatient discontented repining at sufferings saying Did Christ do thus 2. There is a passive Conformity of which the Text speaks To be like him in his Sufferings To have the same hard measure in the world as he had Rom 8. We are said to be predestinate to be conformable unto Christ in this very particular What befell Christ God hath so ordered that it should befal us Not indeed for the same end for Christs Sufferings were not for himself or because he had sinned but to make an atonement to God for us But our sufferings are for our sins not to satisfie Gods justice but to humble us and to make us in some measure to feel how much Christ suffered for us what the wrath and anger of God was he endured for us This passive resemblance then unto Christ in his state of humiliation God hath ordained all beleevers unto That as it behoved Christ to suffer and so to enter into Glory Thus it doth behove every godly man through many Tribulations to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven As he had a Crown of Thorns before a Crown of Glory as he must drink of the Brook and then lift up his head so it must be with all his Disciples and this is matter of Comfort though otherwise grievous to flesh and bloud For 1. Hereby we see that we may be never the lesse loved of God though greatly afflicted in this world For was not Christ though dearly beloved of his Father yet delivered up to the cruell mockings and rage of men Did not he cry out My God why hast thou forsaken me We may reade but of one Sonne of God without sin but not of one without chastisement even Christ himself drank deep of that Cup Do not thou then doubt of thy Sonship or Interest in the Fathers love because of the present afflictions that are upon thee Christ was a man of sorrows and yet God from Heaven said This is my well beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased 2. There is matter of comfort because hereby we are ascertained of our Conquest over them That no tribulation shall separate God and us for Christ hath undergone these conflicts as
CXLV Expository Sermons UPON The whole 17th CHAPTER OF THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO St JOHN OR CHRISTS PRAYER Before his PASSION Explicated AND BOTH Practically and Polemically Improved By Anthony Burgess Minister of the Gospel sometime Fellow of Emanuel-Colledge in Cambridge and now Pastour of the Church of Sutton-Coldfield in Warwickshire LONDON Printed by Abraham Miller for Thomas Underhill at the Anchor and Bible in St Pauls Church-yard MDCLVI TO The Christian READER THe Evangelist John because of that admirable usefull and excellent matter which he hath left on Record for the good of the Church is dignified with some remarkable Titles That which is the principall and most to be observed is the name Christ himself gave him Mark 3.17 He with his brother James are called Sons of Thunder When our Saviour changed Peters Name there is the reason of that mutation expressed but because here is none given therefore the conjectures of Interpreters are various As for the application of it to John Some say It was because of the greatnesse and vehemency of his voice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but it is hard to prove that Grotius thinketh our Saviour doth allude to that of Haggai chap. 2.6 Yet once it is a little while and I will shake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from which he makes Boanerges though other Criticks judge much otherwise the Heavens and Earth c. This Promise was fulfilled in the great Mutation and Change which was made by the Gospel in which this Evangelist was an excellent Instrument Some attribute it to the Secrecy and Sublimity of that matter which he delivereth as having more familiarity with Christ then others for he used to lean on his Breast and so might receive some peculiar instruction from Christ Thus Heinfius making Thunder to be no more then the Hebrew Shechina Gods Presence and Majesty applying that place Psal 81.7 I have heard thee in the secret place of Thunder But that which is most probable is Because of the admirable gravity and weight in the matter delivered as also the short and sudden expressions thereof Those Sentences in the beginning of his first ●hapter are like so many thunderbolts insomuch that if you do regard the Matter and Manner of his expression he might more truly be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then Pericles in his Orations Whatsoever therefore we finde delivered by this Divine Pen-man we are with much reverence and awfull respect to receive it Antiquity also hath in a peculiar manner honoured him with some other names He is called the Heavenly Eagle and that because of the sublime Mysteries manifested by him in reference to the Godhead of Christ And to this purpose he is likewise styled Theologos the Divine where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not used in that sense as afterwards it was in the Church of God for it is opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hence they say the other Evangelists do deliver 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Christ the manner of his Humane Nativity but this Evangelist doth the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Divine Nature of Christ although the Socinians have sacrilegiously perverted the beginning of that first Chapter of John to another sense then of Christs Eternal Deity which yet was used instrumentally to convert Junius from his Atheisme Now although the whole matter delivered thus by this Evangelist be so admirable and excellent yet this Seventeenth Chapter wherein is related the Prayer of Christ for believers not long before his Death and mentioned onely by him hath some appropriated Reasons for a more peculiar Attention and Affection towards it Hence it hath alwayes had a peculiar Presidency in the hearts of Believers So that the opening of this precious Box of Ointment must needs send forth a refreshing fragrant smell to those that are spiritual For it is truly said by Melancthon concerning this Prayer Nec digniorem necsanctiorem nec fructuosiorem nec magis patheticam vocem in Coelo ac Terrâ unquam fuisse auditam quam hanc ipsius Filii precationem There was never a more excellent more holy more fruitfull and more affectionate voice ever heard in Heaven or Earth then this Prayer So that we may call this Chapter as some of the Psalms are A Chapter of Degrees If this reason may be admitted of that Inscription because they did surpasse other Psalmes in Excellency as also thereby the soul was like Elijah carried up in a fiery Chariot to Heaven At the end of every verse we may write Selah There was a very superstitious Custome among Christians in Chrysostome's time which he doth severely inveigh against that they would hang this Gospel of John or part of it about their necks as an Anulete nor a Spell against malignant things But certainly a gracious heart preserving this Prayer of Christ and making a wise and skilfull improvement thereof will finde it wonderfully advantagious both for the increase of Godlinesse and Comfort here will be both Bread to nourish and Wine to refresh and comfort Although therefore multitude of Books be complained of as glutting the world So that we may justly think there are more Books then Readers yet the Excellency perpetual Usefulnesse and ravishing Consolations of the matter delivered by our Saviour in this Valedictory Prayer have prevailed with me to publish these Expository Sermons to the world and the rather not knowing of any English Writer who hath purposely made it his businesse to explicate and practically improve this Chapter whereas some other parts of Scripture have been diligently discussed In the managing of this Work I have occasionally entered into some Socinian and Arminian Disputes some Verses in this Chapter being the proper subject for them Although the greatest part of my Work is to make Honey rather then to sting to informe us how to believe and walk in a Christian life then to dispute and digladiate about Controversies for we seldome gather Grapes from such Thistles Yea sometimes in stead of Conviction they work confirmation in those Errours the mindes of men are prepossessed with And here I shall take leave to enter into a short Digression which would have come out more seasonably long before this time but I had no opportunity till this occasion was offered to me Not long since I published The Second Part of the Treatise of Justification wherein among other particulars my Work was to prove That Works though done by Grace are not the Condition of our Justification but that we are justified alone by Faith as the Means or Instrument receiving of it These two kindes of Justification viz. by Faith receiving or Faith and Workes as a Condition I conceive to differ specifically one from the other and that he who is justified the one way cannot be the other The former way as the Scripture doth maintain so generally the Reformed Churches have readily insisted in The latter way the Remonstrants have vehemently pleaded for opposing Faiths instrumentality in
he part with his bloud and wilt not thou with a sinne which will breed nothing but torment hereafter Though it be now honey in thy mouth yet it will be gravell in the belly 2. This supposeth the security and safety of the godly Nothing can hinder them of this salvation Our life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 They must pull Christ out of heaven overthrow the power of God the Father ere they can be destroied and their security stands upon a twofold bottome 1. His faithfulnesse to discharge his trust What doubt may be made seeing Christ hath undertaken the work of thy salvation Not that thou shouldst live in ease and eat and drink and take no care for thy soul This is to adde hony to poison but in respect of the meritorious and satisfactory part so Christ hath undertaken all when thou art required to believe and repent it is not to merit to satisfie it 's upon other grounds Now then will it not be blasphemy to say Christ will be found unfaithful in his trust To say that Christ should lose any of those jewels that were put into his custody indeed if our salvation and happinesse were in our keeping we should be prodigal of it every day we are found unfaithful in every temptation but so is not Christ As he is yea and Amen the same yesterday and to day and for ever so is thy salvation sure to be It must needs be sure because of the power of Christ Joh. 19.30 I and my Father are one said Christ even to this particular Now none is greater then my Father None can pluck them out of his hands Consider that they are in Gods hands he keeps them alwaies as a precious jewell and he that will destroy them must pluck them out of Gods hands whether he will or no he must be stronger then God that can do this It was Caesars boast that he had ten Legions of such valiant Souldiers that could vel ipsum coelum diruere pull down even heaven it self a vain and wicked boast but no power of men or devils are able to take these treasures out of Gods hands Vse of Examination Try whether thou art one of those that are thus given to Christ and in this I mean not thou shouldst climbe up into heaven see whether thy Name be written in the Book of Life but know this by the infallible property of him who is thus given to Christ and that is to come to him What my Father hath given me will come to me and the Father will draw him Now coming to Christ is not pedibus but affectibus Dost thou take him for thy Lord and King Art thou willing to renounce all those lusts and sins which have had dominion over thee Dost thou cry out and say Oh blessed Lord my sins my oaths my pride my uncleannesse have kept me from thee Conscience bid me come the Word of God bid me come but still this sinne or the other kept me back But now Lord I have broken all the snares here I am to do what thou wilt have me oh it 's to be lamented with bitter lamentations to see how few come to him though he giveth such encouragements SERMON XI Treateth of Eternall Life in the Nature and Properties of it JOH 17.2 That he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him HAving dispatched the Subject to whom this fruit of Christs power is to be vouchsafed we come now to the Fruit and benefit thereof and that is Eternal Life In which we will also comprehend the manner of obtaining it viz. by way of gift He will give The greatnesse of the gift though it may be apprehended yet it cannot be comprehended Though we had the tongue of Angels and the understanding likewise yet we should but speak as a childe and think as a childe when this matter of Divinity is our Theme Every thing is inviting Its life No rich man no poor man but desireth this It 's Eternal Life and so can be much lesse rejected and it 's by way of gift Nothing can be more welcome It 's life there is the necessity of it It 's eternal life there is the excellency of it It 's given there is the freenesse of it so that this gift here supposed is not within this Horizon nor is it made for this Meridian but it extends to the world to come The wisest of the Philosophers were in a misty darknesse about this matter It was much debated whether any happinesse did remain after this life and although sometimes confused thoughts did work on them as on that man who reading a Book of Immortality was so transported that he killed himself immediatly to enjoy it yet these were but generall indigested notions only the Scripture doth give us a distinct and accurate account of this blessednesse after our lives in this world so then we see here an unspeakable priviledge and that most certainly to be bestowed on them whatsoever their lives be here though poor though miserable though afflicted though troubled yet they shall have an eternal life Obs That Christ will give to those that are his Eternal life I shall not enlarge my self according to the vast nature of this Subject which cannot be well understood but by the fruition of it and if you should ask what it is we should desire time still to expresse it as he did what God was yet I shall limit my Discourse to a threefold general head 1. To speak of it positively what it is 2. Comparatively to this temporal and present life 3. Oppositely to eternal death And these three particulars will tend to manifest the greatest excelleneies of it Though when we have fully satisfied you with this bread it will so multiply that many fragments may be taken up First therefore positively This Eternal Life doth essentially lie in the immediate fruition and enjoyment of God This the Scripture doth often call seeing of God for howsoever it be disputed by the Learned whether the bodily eye shall be elevated so supernaturally that it shall be able to see the divine essence though spirituall and immaterial yet so farre as seeing doth imply enjoying and immediate fruition of God so farre they are sure to partake of it Now then consider how great a mercy this is To have God the Object of all our love joy and delight For he only is that universal and infinite object which can satiate and comfort the heart All these earthly comforts they are too narrow too little for the soul Divines say The soul of a man hath an infinite appetite it desireth this and it desireth that and nothing but God is such an universal good that can fully replenish it Now David even in this life he saith Whom have I in heaven and earth but thee Psa 13.35 how much rather will this be true in heaven God is the center of the soul it is unquiet and
so farre as their presence was comfortable and necessary to us we may grieve God would not have the old bird killed with her young ones and he that would have mercy shewed to the fowls of the air will much more shew it to his people It is true God in his wisdome many times takes his own children betimes out of the world even too soon for them we would think being in the prime of their service and too soon also for their children and dependents on them but therein God is even mercifull though for the present we do not perceive it For this you know God hath determined in mercy the time of our abode in this world Thou canst not follow me now said Christ to Peter but he should in his time John 13 3● Lastly It 's not alwayes best to have the best good immediately but in it's time It 's true to be with the Lord to be freed from sinne is best in it self absolutely considered but then respectively if this and that be considered quoad hic nunc it 's not best God doth every thing beautifull in his season None could be more loved of the Father then Christ himself he came from the bosome of his Father yet till he had finished his course he is kept from him We say even the best and holiest thoughts or desires may come in unseasonably into our hearts and so not be best at that time As the childs duty is not to learn the best book at first but what he is most capable of Though Heaven and glory be best yet not at this time for thee partake of it So that when it 's best to go out of this world must be left to the wisdom of God But you will ask Is it never lawfull to pray unto God that he would take us out of the world May we not desire to die and to be freed from sin Are we not to pray that Christ would come To this I answer First It 's never lawfull to desire to go out of the world from impatiency or discontent because we have troubles and vexations in this world Thus Elijah sinned when he prayed to God to take away his life for this was through the discontent then upon him So Job when he breaketh forth into those dreadfull imprecations about himself expostulating with God Why life was continued to such who sought for death more then for hid treasures Look then to this that no impatient discontented thoughts make thee weary of this world Secondly Earnest desires to be with God and hearty affections for eternal glory are lawfull and a special duty Thus we are to pray Gods kingdom may come and thus the Saints are said to long for and hasten to the coming of Christ 2 Pet. 3.12 Thus if we speak abstractedly take the thing in it self Our hearts ought to be so heavenly that we are to be as pilgrims here longing for heaven our rest Thirdly It 's never lawfull absolutely and peremptorily to desire of God that he would take us out of this world though our hearts be heavenly but with submission and resignation If Lord I have done my work I have finished my course as we see Christ in this Chapter I have done the work thou gavest me to do therefore glorifie me Austin expresseth this disposition well when he said O Lord if I be yet necessary to my people I do not refuse to live not refuse because in another place he saith Some godly men have need of patience to live as others to die It must be alwayes therefore conditionally If you object Many Martyrs for I mention not those Circumcelliones that would force men to kill them hereby glorying in a contempt of death who willingly offered themselves to the persecutors when none accused them To this some say They were some Hereticks that did so not the true Christians But yet Histories record it of true Christians and then that was an extraordinary spirit in them which as we cannot condemn so neither must we imitate we must live by precepts not examples no not of holy men Vse Do not thou break out into impatient discontents about any exercise or temptation thou art afflicted with say not Why doth not God remove it from me or me from it Consider this in the Text I pray not thou shouldst take them out of the world What did Christ say when Peter drew out his sword Could not I pray for legions of Angels and the Father would send them to help me but the Scripture must be fulfilled So do thou say God could deliver me from all these troubles he hath thousands of ways to put me into rest but I open not my mouth because thou Lord dost it Indeed if they should never be taken out of this world if thy troubles were eternal as the torments of the damned in hell thou mayest justly cry out in the horrour of thy soul But God hath put a period he hath set his time for thy being in this world when thou art ripe thou shalt be cut down and carried into Gods barn When thy service is done then God will call thee to glory SERMON LXXXVI That it is a greater Mercy to be kept from Sinne and all Evil in our Afflictions and Troubles then from the Afflictions themselves JOH 17.15 But that thou shouldst keep them out of the Evil. THis is the positive part of Christs Explication of himself in his Petition for his Disciples viz. to keep them from the evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes this is applied to the thing or matter which is evil as in the Lords Praier Mat. 6.13 Deliver us from evil 2. To Persons Thus often in the Scripture Mat. 12.45 So it shall be to that wicked generation in that day Sometimes it 's applied to the devil as the Original of all wickednesse who also tempts to it So Matth. 13.19 Then comes the wicked one 1 Joh. 2.13 Ye have overcome the evil one Now there are some who limit this to the devil keep them from the devil because it is with the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that is not necessary as appeareth Matth. 5.37 Whatsoever is more then this cometh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Mat. 5.49 Resist not evil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that cannot be the devil for we are commanded to resist him but we may take the word generally both for sinne and the devil and sinful persons That the sence may be thus Though I pray not that thou should keep them free from all evil and afflictions yet I pray that they may be preserved from sinne thereby that whatsoever may befall them yet they may not sinne and here we see also that it's Gods gift to keep men in their afflictions that they sin not Otherwise they would undo themselves and through many tribulations they would go not into the Kingdom of Heaven but of hell from misery here to misery hereafter Obs That it 's a greater mercy to
times they are like that happy man Cui sine lassitudine peractum est iter Now that it is God that continueth and takes out of the world appointing every one their set time appeareth by evident Texts of Scripture Job 14.5 where a mans dayes in particular are said to be determined the number of his moneths and his bounds beyond which he cannot pass he speaks here of every man in particular it is not worth while to answer the cavils against this place So that as God hath appointed a set time for governments and when that period is come then all the world cannot hinder a change as Dan. 5.25 God hath numbred thy kingdom and given it away Thus he doth also to every particular person Not that men may neglect means or do what they list but he hath ordained this in and by the use of the means Thus Act. 17.26 God is said to determine the seasons and the bounds of our habitation 2. God hath appointed the time of our abode in this world because he is the daily preserver and keeper of us Should not he continue the breath of life we should presently fall into the dust out of which we came Thus Act. 17.28 In him we live and move and have our being Thus we could not stir the foot nor move the tongue did not God inable us conservation is a daily creation Hence Daniel tels that great Belteshazzar though a mighty Monarch Dan. 5.23 that he did not glorifie God in whose hand his breath was If God do but blow upon the richest greatest and healthfullest man that is he is immediately scattered as when we blow upon a little dust yea neither food would nourish us or the creatures afford any sustenance did not God give a blessing to them as you may see Exod. 23.25 He will bless thy bread and thy water and take away thy infirmities from thee Thus when the pillars of the house are removed that must presently fall into rubbish so when God takes away his arm man runneth into nothing and be David be even to admiration so affected with Gods providence in his constitution shall not the same care be shewed to his dissolution Ps 139.16 he speaks there how curiously his body was wrought even like any tapestry or needle work and that all his members were in Gods book Solomon saith There is a time to be born and a time to die But as the one is from Gods appointment so must the other be 3. It 's God only that appoints the time of our being in the world because even those deaths that seem to be the most casual and so we would think not at all under Gods providence yet are expresly attributed to him All casual murders they are by the peculiar appointment of God though men that are instruments did not intend the death of such that God is the God of death as well as of life appeareth Ps 68.20 To him belong the issues of death if by issues be meant the evasions and escapes from death it asserts this truth That it's God only who appoints when a man shall die and when he shall not some are now taken out of the world some at another time and all at the meer pleasure of God But if you understand it as some learned men do in this sense To God belongs the goings out to death then it 's more plain and indeed this is more consonant to the text for the Preposition ● will perswade this and the use of the phrase Jer. 15.1 2. where some are said to go out to death and others to captivity so that the Psalmists meaning will then be To God belongs salvation which he will shew to his people but as for the wicked he hath many wayes to bring them to death Thus you see to God belongs the whole disposing of us the continuing or taking us out of the world To this we may adde a parallel place Psal 31.15 My times are in thy hand save me from mine enemies They cannot destroy me when and where or how they please that as it was with our Saviour he had his hour wherein he was to suffer so that till then all the power of men and devils could not apprehend him Thus it is with all men they have their hour Even those that by the greatest hap come to their death are yet said to be delivered to it by God himself Exod. 21.13 cum Deu. 19.4 5 6. If a man cutting of wood have the head of his hatchet flie off and kill another God there saith He delivered that man into his hand 4. We must acknowledge God doth set bounds to every mans life because the time of their death is called their day in a peculiar manner viz. that day God had appointed for them Jer. 50.27 Wee unto them when their day shall come that day wherein God had appointed them for slaughter and Ps 37.13 The Lord will laugh for he seeth that his day is coming That look as God hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the whole world so he hath appointed a particular day for every man which is his particular day of judgement then he is adjudged either to hell or heaven Thus Nathan tels David When thy daies shall be finished and certainly this is of dreadful consideration to every wicked man Thou hast thy day of death appointed thy hour of dissolution is coming it 's thy day Now thou hast a day of jollity of mirth and quietnes but remember this thy day is coming Thou hast heard of the day of such a mans death and such an one and so thou hast thy day of death likewise 5. If Gods providence reach to the least and minute things that are much more to the taking of a mans life out of the world Mat. 6. The Sparrow fals not to the ground without Gods providence Not a bird is killed without his appointment and shall man die without it yea the hairs of our head are numbred and shall not an hair fall from an head without his appointment and shall the head it self This is so clear that we would wonder any learned men should deny a prefixed term of our life Lastly Our abiding in this world must be of Gods appointment because all the providential passages and works of God are subservient to his predestination So that our predestination might have been frustrated if God did not appoint all our lives in this world so Paul and Manasses and Austin with many others might have died before they were converted or else when converted but plunged into foul sins with David and Peter then they might die in them and not recover out of them but Gods predestination will prevent this because our birth our living and dying are to the godly effects of their predestination But let us come to the practical Use of this because it 's very fruitfull and as for the second Observation That the world aboundeth in wickedness
state of men afterwards The former of these especially could never be discovered by natural light even Adam though created after Gods image yet needed a revelation of these We have no innate or acquired knowledge about them and though many worthy Divines have indeavoured to prove the Trinity by reason and humane similitudes yet the surest and most evident way is the Scripture so that we may say of them all which Austin speaks of one of them viz. Of Christs being God and man If you can give a reason it would not be mirabile and if an example it would not be singulare It 's true there are many things in Scripture which we know by natural reason as that there is a God but the knowledge by reason is nothing so evident and firm as that by Revelation so that the truth of God being in the chiefest parts of it supernatural It 's no wonder that the wisest Heathens became vain in their imaginations and that their greatest Religion was their highest impiety and within the Church The more men have forsaken Scripture and pleased corrupt reason in the doctrinal part and corrupt fancies in the worshipping part They have been very erroneous and absurd hence the truth of God is called a mystery and said to be revealed because mans reason could no more attain unto it then a dwarf can reach to the heavens Zacheus must get upon this Tree to see Christ Hence no others have been able to endure the glorious lustre of the Scripture because errours are natural the Scripture supernatural All heresies have runne up and down from one age to another like Cain fearing least every Text of Scripture should kill them Do not then judge of Scripture-truths by thy carnal reason The work is above thy natural understanding 6. It 's a godly holy Truth The holy Scriptures they are called and well may they be so called for nothing is a stronger argument to demonstrate the Divine Authority of Scriptures than the holiness thereof Take all the moral books in the world they do as much come short of the holiness of the Scripture as coals do of the glory of the Sunne Plutarch Seneca Epictetus these will teach you to have the clean skin of morality but not the inward life and sound vitals of holiness What transcendent holiness doth the Scripture teach us such as the men of the world know not Holiness in our natures first of all Regeneration neither the name nor the nature of it was known amongst the Heathens they knew not mans natural pollution neither did they see a necessity of such an internal renovation Again Such holy duties the Scriptures teach that not only the doctrinal but the practical part of it is a mystery to flesh and bloud such are faith in Christ love to our enemies self-denial and a readinesse to take up the Crosse Many of these duties are accounted folly and madness by wise men after the flesh It teacheth an heavenly life fellowship and communion with God to do all things from holy principles and to holy ends so that the holinesse that is in the truth of Scriptures should much affect us But oh how few reade and delight in the Scriptures because of the holinesse in them You reade them for dispute or to know the History and to be able to hold up Arguments but who is there that thinketh this the truths of Scripture are holy They are to make heavenly and pure they will forewarn of sin they quicken to grace they inflame to faith and love Oh minde this all Scripture-truth is for holiness As meat is not to be looked upon but eaten and digested 7. They are precious excellent Truths and therefore compared by David to fine gold and by Solomon preferred above all jewels Prov. 3.15 The Apostle also compareth true Doctrine to gold silver and precious stones 1 Cor. 3.12 and they are called precious promises as a precious faith 2 Pet. 1.1 4. These shew in what high degree and dignity the truths of Scripture should be with us Austin said Veritas Christianorum was incomparabiliter pulchrior Helenâ Graecorum If they did strive about her How much more ought we for the truth of God The Prophet complained of old None pleaded for the truth Isa 59 4. neither were valiant for the truth Jer. 9.3 The truths then of the Scripture should be more unto us then any earthly comforts whatsoever You see Christ makes this one main end of his coming into the world to bear witness unto the truth John 18 37. Ann thus the Martyrs they thought Gods truth more worth then their lives and how many millions have willingly endured the worst of deaths to bear witness to the truths of the Scripture So that it 's very strange how such a spirit of delusion should be upon men to make no matter of true Doctrine to think Heresies and Errours are nothing Certainly the godly Martyrs that burnt at the stake had other thoughts of it and the Scripture doth commend it as the great mercy of God unto a people Therefore God promiseth Jer. 33.6 He will reveal abundance of peace and truth and in many places truth is still joyned unto peace as if all the peace and earthly advantages in the world were nothing if we might not have the truths of God also Therefore the Apostle John told that elect Lady He had no greater joy then to see her children walking in the truth and the Spirit of God is promised as the greatest mercy we can have John 16.13 That he will guide us into all truth Natural truth is precious What pains and travel have many used to finde that out They have dispossessed themselves of their goods to finde it out yea they have been so ravished in the contemplation thereof that they have forgotten to eat their bread and have wholly neglected themselves and all pleasure Hence in their Sacrifices to Apollo whom the Heathens made God of truth they cried out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Truth is sweet Truth is sweet Truth is the natural food to the soul as meat is to the body but then divine supernatural truth which doth so immediately concern our salvation and eternal happiness how precious and dear should that be to us In other things ignorance is not damnable but here to misse of the truth is to fall into destruction It profits not a man to measure the heavens and the motions thereof To understand all the Laws of Nations with their cases thereupon or with Solomon to be able to speak of the nature of all things if a man want the knowledge of Scripture-truths Lastly This truth though precious yet because it 's opposite to a corrupt heart It 's very bitter and makes most men enemies to it It 's a truth requiring holiness hatred of sinne mortification of lusts and because it 's so therefore the vain corrupt hearts of men love errours and lies or deceits by the devil and sinne rather then the
Canst thou say of an earthly comfort or help that it is like an eternal God Again for thy Children thou many times thinkest what will become of them when thou art dead in the grave Thou thinkest thou hast no friend in the world will be a Father to them still remember that Christ is Eternal if they be his spirituall seed he will be an Eternal Father Oh that expression is full of comfort when you can say to your Children You have a mortal Father and a mortal mother but there is an eternal Father bring them up for Christ give them up to Christ then have you provided well for them if Christ be for them SERMON XXVIII Proveth That the world was not from Eternity but had its beginning in time And reduceth that Consideration into Practice JOH 17.5 Glorifie me with the glory I had before the world began WE come to the last particular observable in the Text Before the world began Here is briefly laid down that position which the great and wise Philosophers of the world did boldly gainsay for it tels us This great Vniverse had a beginning The world was not from Eternity This Truth will tend much to particular Edification for I shall not handle it in a meer speculative and metaphysicall way as some Philosophers doe while they debate this Point Obs That the world was not from Eternity but had its beginning in time The Sun and Stars though such glorious creatures yet began to be in time yea those glorious Angels which have no principle of corruption within them they were also made in time although it was the general opinion of most of the Ancients that the Angels were made long before this visible and corporeal world but that is not so consonant to Scripture For the proof of this Point we might alledge the first Chapter of Genesis where there is not only a relation of the worlds Creation but an exact description of the manner how and also all the effects of this Creation so that that Chapter hath more divinity and philosophy in it then all the books of the wisest Heathens put together and indeed whatsoever the Heathens have of Antiquity they have it from Moses though they have added thereunto many foolish Fables I shall adde one pregnant Text to confirm this Heb. 11.3 where the Apostle intending to commend faith in all the several effects of it begins with this as the foundation By faith we understand the worlds were made There is much spoken by the Apostle in few words 1. He saith By faith we understand the world was made for howsoever some Philosophers held the world was not from Eternity yet those that did hold it was made did grosly and foolishly mistake about the manner of it and though by true Philosophy we may prove the world could not be from Eternity yet the Word of God affirming this is the best Argument Therefore faith is better then all reason and philosophy in this matter Again he saith By faith we understand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so that you see Faith hath knowledge in it and is not as the Papists would have it to be defined by Ignorance He that beleeveth knoweth Therefore ignorant people have no faith because no knowledge Hence it is 〈◊〉 faith and knowledge are so often put for one another 3. He saith We understand the worlds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the plural number Not that there are many worlds but it 's usuall in Scripture to describe the world in the plural number because of the many ages and revolutions that are in the world one generation passing and another succeeding 4. He saith were framed This denoteth the excellent wisedom of God ordering all things therein called therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mundus 5. The manner how not as Artificers make a house by handy labour but by the Word of his mouth only And lastly here is the matter of which of things that did not appear that is either of nothing or else it 's an allusion to Gen. 1.2 where the earth is said to be without form and void darknesse covered it Thus here is a noble description of the Original of the world This being fully confirmed let us open the Doctrine And 1. Consider That the Christian faith doth only clearly and fully inform us of the beginning of the world It 's an expression the Scripture hath often Before the foundations of the earth were laid As for those Philosophers called Peripateticks whose Master was Aristotle they generally affirmed the world was from Eternity indeed it 's doubted what Aristotles minde was but it 's plain in his Topicks he makes this Proposition whether the world be eternall only a dialecticall Probleme a Proposition that might be disputed either way as having no certainty in it and indeed how can it be otherwise for that is a received Maxime with them Ex nihilo nihil fit This is the foundation of all their Philosophy and therefore grant this then the world could not be made but how ignorant were the great and learned men in the world of Gods power that which the least babe almost in Christianity doth know As for those disputes of some who though they acknowledge de facto that the world was created in time yet question whether it was possible that it might have been from the beginning It 's a needlesse and unprofitable Question What cause then have we to blesse God for Scripture-light when the great learning of the world was wholly in darknesse in this respect 2. Although Scripture be the surest and choicest argument yet there are many convictions from reason likewise that may convince men that it had a beginning As in the first place If it had been from Eternity so many thousands and thousands years would have been past that we should have had some reliques at least of some things done so long ago whereas it 's observed by the learned that even in all the heathen Antiquities though they brag much yet they record nothing that was done before the Floud The utmost of their antiquity reacheth but to persons and things that were done since the Floud and therefore Moses his History hath the most antiquity in it Now if the world had been so many millions of years before how comes there to be such a deep silence of all things done formerly as for that of the Aegyptians who speak of things done an hundred thousand years agoe Besides the fabulousnesse of that people it 's thought they accounted a year but for a moneth because the course of the Sun was not perfectly understood 2. This may convince the world had a beginning because it could not make it self and God was not a naturall Agent necessitated to make it For upon these two supposed grounds it might be thought that the world had no beginning and as for making it self that's plain it could not no more then an house or a musical Instrument or a Book
Hence it is that the Apostle Rom. 1. makes these creatures the Looking glasse to represent the wisedom and power of God and certainly the world had it made it self would have given a more glorious being to all the parts thereof so that it 's plain it was limited in its nature and parts as the authour thereof pleased and in the next place God was not necessitated to make it As the fire cannot but burn as the Bee necessarily makes it's curious honeycomb so that although some have said that as soon as the Sunne is so necessarily and immediatly the Sun beams will be also so as soon as God is there must necessarily be a world yet we must not conceive a lesse perfection in God then is in man who is a free Agent and works his effects of art when he pleaseth The Artificer is not necessitated to make a house or a garment then certainly much more must be allowed to God himself who doth in heaven and in earth what he pleaseth and this should satisfie those curious Questions why God made the world no sooner what he did in that long imaginary time before the world was the freedom of God and his absolute Soveraignty with his infinite wisedom may easily stop such mouths 3. To be from Eternity is the property of God God only is eternal and therefore no finite limited thing can thus be without a beginning The world is finite in its number it 's but one world whereas God might create more worlds as well as one It 's finite in nature It 's finite in its parts It 's finite in its use and it 's finite in duration Hence all the Nations of the world comparatively to God are laid to be but as a drop and as a little light dust Isa 40 15. Seeing therefore the world is not infinite but is every way limited it cannot be eternal and this is the reason why we Christians should lift our hearts above the world which had a beginning unto God who is God from everlasting to everlasting 4. The world was not without beginning but made in time because it 's corruptible It 's subject to a dissolution Now what is without a beginning is without an end If it had a beginn●ng it 's subject to an end though God indeed may perpetuate it as we see he doth Angels and Men Now that the world is subject to destruction some have proved it from this because there is a decay in nature They say the very Sun and heavens have not that power and influence they had formerly but I finde learned men utterly disavowing such a Position and they maintain that nature is still the same and is as constant and powerful in operation as ever Therefore from the Scripture we see clearly the corruptibility of it Rom. 8. The whole Creation is said to be subject unto vanity and corruption so that it groaneth for a freedome and 2 Pet. 3. We have there a large description of the Funerals of the whole world The heavens shall passe away with a noise and the Elements with a burning heat c. Indeed the learned do dispute whether the world in all the choice parts of it shall suffer an utter abolition or only a perfective alteration But whatsoever it be a wonderful change shall be made of it and therefore the Apostle from this amazing dissolution inferreth Seeing these things shall be what manner of persons ought we to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even to admiration So that the consideration of the worlds beginning and so by consequence its end is not a cold bitten Subject You may not sit and run or sleep or wander in your hearts but excellent practical Uses may be made thereof and so we proceed to them As Vse 1 1. Did God make the world and that not from Eternity but in time about almost six thousand years agoe and no longer Then here we see he made it not because he needed it because he wanted it for if it had been necessary to God it would have been from Eternity but now seeing there is such a vast distance between Eternity and the beginning of the world It 's plain that he made it not for his use but mans use It was his goodnesse communicating himself to the creature not any want of it God then had been happy sufficient and blessed though he never had created any world for by what reason he staid so long and did not make the world he might have staied alwaies So that this serveth to magnifie the glorious nature of God that all the world with all the creatures therein make not at all to his happinesse They adde not to him All the obedience of Angels and men doth not profit God This should teach us great humility even under our best and rarest duties Think with thy self if God had never created me if he had never given me any being he would have been glorious howsoever What then is my drop to this Ocean Vse 2 2. Did God give the world a beginning whatsoever excellency usefulnesse and lovelinesse there is therein Did it come wholly from God then how might this raise us up to be with God and set our hearts upon him that hath all this perfection eminently in him Oh how unreasonable is it that we should delight in the world and not in God the Authour of the world if there be so much excellency in the creatures what in the Creator Therefore when the Psalmist speaks of all the Creatures in the world he cals upon them to blesse God How foolish and vain did the wise men of the world become in their imaginations when they robbed God of his divine glory and gave it to the Sunne and Stars and such Idolatry do we commit in our affections when we place them principally upon the creature and not on God himself Oh check thy self and say Who gave this delight this comfort this usefulnesse to the creature did not God What delight then must be in the fountain or Ocean if there be so much in a stream Vse 3 3. Did God create and make the world then it 's blasphemy and impudency to quarrell and repine at the things which are in the world This hath been a great Objection with many If God made the world why are there any evil or troublesome things in it How cometh it to be such a miserable wicked world This made the Manichees hold there were two eternal principles The one good from which cometh all good things The other bad from which comes all the sinnes and miseries that are in the world but you must know that the word world is used divers waies in Scripture by which this Objection may be answered Sometimes for the Fabrick of the Universe with all the parts thereof Sometimes for the wickednesse that is in the world and for wicked men because they are the greater part of the world Now if we speak of the world