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A29912 Twenty five sermons. The second volume by the Right Reverend Father in God, Ralph Brownrig, late Lord Bishop of Exeter ; published by William Martyn, M.A., sometimes preacher at the Rolls.; Sermons. Selections Brownrig, Ralph, 1592-1659.; Martyn, William.; Faithorne, William, 1616-1691. 1664 (1664) Wing B5212; ESTC R36389 357,894 454

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in affliction he besought the Lord his God and humbled himself greatly before the God of his Fathers It was Luther's speech Schola Crucis Schola Lucis And it is the great aggravation of wicked King Ahaz 2 Chron. xxviii 22. In the time of his distress did he trespass yet more and more against the Lord this is that King Ahaz that 's his brand as if he should say Here is a sinner whom Affliction will not tame 'T is to great purpose that Solomon advises us Prov. iii. II. My son despise not the chastening of the Lord. Gentle Corrections must not be despised nor slighted And David his father counted it an happy thing to get good by such chastening Psal. xciv 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastisest and teachest him out of thy Law He shews it will prevent this same Occideret That thou mayest give him rest from the days of adversity until the pit be digged for the wicked verse 13. Happy chastisements that prevent slaying To do as Isaiah speaks chap. xxvi 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee they poured out a prayer when thy chastning was upon them No this wrought not with them Quando castigavit So then here is the unworthy servile baseness of their Repentance no time would serve but quando occidit when he slew them never till their heads were on the block Yes this is Pharoah's Repentance he stood out many a stroke but when it came to a destruction then he seeks to Moses O I have sinned save me from this death onely We condemn it in Pharoah and wonder at it here in the Israelites and yet upon examination we shall find it is the case of many of us Take it 1. Either more collectively and largely for our national Repentance Or 2. More privately and personally for each mans particular 1. Let us look abroad not to censure and descant upon other mens estate but yet we may soberly consider the sins of the times and lay them to heart Have we not passed all the former Quandoes the Seasons of Repentance with small Amendment 1. Not when we sinned God knows many sins stand upon the Score uncancelled by Repentance 2. Not when he blessed us with Deliverances with Peace Plenty Freedom from Annoyances yet small fruits upon it Evidentibus Beneficiis ingrati 3. Not when he hath by his word invited to Repentance Nay that Mannah comes out at our Nostrils we begin to loath it Ye begin to question whether God speaks by us 4. Not when he hath chastised us in measure shot off warning Pieces rather then murdring Cannons Commotions and Plagues and unnatural Discontents we despise those Chastisements 5. When he comes to slay us then we will bethink our selves When the Kingdom is on a light fire and Invasions of Enemies or intestine Rebellions begin to destroy us then it is to be hoped we will repent 2. Let us take it more privately and personally and then ask your hearts what time you set for your Repentance It is cum occidet when we are on our Death-beds and no hope of life when God sends his last Executioner to cut us off from the land of the living then we resolve to repent Well 't is possible you may do so De nemine desperandum quem patientia Dei sinit vivere Yet consider 1. It is Infamis Poenitentia here is a brand set upon it by the Holy Ghost 2. It is Incerta There is small encouragement the Scripture gives to it rather rejects it See what entertainment such Seekers are promis'd to find at God's hand Prov. 1. 26. Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded verse 26. I will also laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear comes when distress and anguish comes upon you verse 28. then they shall call upon me but I will not answer See what encouragement such early Seekers have 3. It is Suspiciosa Poenitentia there is great cause to suspect the goodness of such Repentance which is forced from us cum occideret when the fear of death surprises us A man may deceive himself in judging his Repentance In great affliction he may promise fairly and think he hath good and honest purposes to forsake his sin that he is mortified to it because 1. That lust which reigned in him is nipp'd and forc'd back by his affliction 't is like the sap of a tree in Winter all shrunk to the Root Sorrow and sickness and any great affliction is like Winter-Weather it nips the Branches hinders our Corruption from sprouting and so we think 't is dead but the Root holds life and sap Warm Weather of Prosperity will make it spring again like Iob's tree chap. xiv 8 9. Through the sent of waters it will bud and bring forth boughs like a plant 2. In the fear of death or any sore affliction we may take our selves to be mortified because afflictions will justle out temptations of sinful pleasures he hath lost the relish of them for a time As sick men can find no sweetness in meats which otherwise they delight in because their taste is for a time embittered Let them recover health and they will fall to again 3. In sickness many take themselves mortified not because sin is weakened in them but nature is infeebled that withdraws her strength by which sin was active recover nature and sin will recover As a 〈◊〉 in a tree let the tree spring and that will spring too 'T is not the body of sin that is mortified but the body of nature is infeebled Put not thy Conversion then upon such hazardous adventures stay not till he comes to slay thee by death It is an infamous 't is an uncertain 't is a suspicious Repentance thou mayest be mistaken in it Come we to III. The third defect of their Repentance that 's falsness and dissembling it was a flattering unsound hypocritical Repentance Nevertheless they did flatter him with their mouth and they ly●…d unto him with their tongue All their conversion and turning to God was but flattery and falshood And this Flattery and falshood will appear 1. In their Professions 2. In their Promises Flattering Professions and false Promises 1. Flattery is seen in Professions 1. A Flatterer will profess a great esteem of goodness and worth in the Person whom he applies himself to ready to ascribe much unto him So did these hollow Converts In their Affliction they acknowledged God was their rock and strength and the high God their Redeemer verse 35. Thus the Herodians flattered Christ Matth. xxii 16. Master we know that thou art true and teachest the way of God in truth and regardest no mans person Christ discovers them Why tempt ye me ye hypocrites Such are the soothings of unsound repentance when affliction presses us Oh! then we will acknowledge God and his goodness As Benhadad did with the King of Israel O the Kings of Israel are merciful Kings but
First What 's the occasion of this sudden Perplexity in the spirit of David He was taken up even now into an heavenly contemplation of the works and word of God and the consideration of both these was always delightful unto him 1. For his works Psal. xcii 4. Thou Lord hast made me glad through thy works and I will triumph in the works of thy hands 2. For his word The meditation of it was delightful to him sweeter then the honey and the honey-comb more pleasant then his appointed food it was his song in the house of his Pilgrimage How then comes all this over-casting in David's soul like a sudden thunder-clap from a clear sky I answer The causes of many perplexities and astonishments in the soul of man are not always discernable The spirit of fear as Christ speaks comes not with observation 1. Non cum observatione peccati Not onely some great notorious sin but even some smaller offence that thou little thinkest of may fret and rankle in thy conscience and breed perplexity The pricking of a pin may rankle and fester and prove as dangerous as the wound of a weapon Thus David's heart smote him for an irreverent touch of Saul as well as for the cruel murder of Uriah Slight not the commission of smaller sins thou mayst hear of them when thou little thinkest of them 2. Non cum observatione personae Indeed for notorious debauch'd wretches for them to be put upon the rack of a perplex'd soul 't is no great marvel but even moderate and restrained men yea even mortified Saints are subject to these pangs not onely Saul but David not onely Iudas but Peter have suffered and felt the anguishes of a guilty conscience 3. Non cum observatione temporis Indeed a sin lately committed while the memory is fresh and the guilt of it haunts a man and stares in his face then 't is no wonder if he be perplexed Nay not onely so but some sin past and forgot that thou hast buried in oblivion a sin of many years past even that may turn in upon thee and perplex and affright thee The Clouds may return after the rain Thus Iob complains Thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possess the iniquities of my youth Iob xiii 26. Thus the Patriarchs many years after the fact were troubled and perplexed with the sin of selling Ioseph Gen. xlii 21. We are guilty concerning our brother say they Thirteen years at least had gone over their heads since that deed was done they had skinn'd up the fore and yet see it breaks out in their soul again and it bleeds afresh These troubles of soul then come not always with observation But yet what might be the occasion of this perplexity in the Prophet David David was now looking into the law of God considering the great light and glory of it and a beam of that light hath darted into his conscience a spark of that fire hath fallen into that fuel and that ●…ets all on fire casts him into a sudden amazement and makes him cry out Who can understand his errours Observe from hence that the word of God hath a secret unavoydable power upon the soul to convince it of sin and to cast it into horrour Good Iosiah at the first reading of this Word had his heart melted with fear and astonishment Thus S. Paul Rom. iii. 20. By the Law is the knowledg of sin And Rom. vii 11. The Commandment slew him and was found to be death unto him vers 10. And there be divers reasons of this Truth 1. In the Scripture is presented a transcendent rule of holiness the infinite purity and sanctity which is in God himself He is holy in his Works but most holy in his Word He hath magnified his Word above all his Name Psal. cxxxviii 2. In it shines the purity of his Nature not capable of blemish or imperfection Now then the soul seeing this transcendent holiness in God is presently convinced of infinite impurity Mine eye seeth thee wherefore I abhor my self and repont in dust and ashes saith Iob chap. xlii 5 6. Probavit aurum reprobavit saith S. Bernard The Angels though as fine as gold are impure in his sight Qui discernit inter Stellas quanto magis inter glebas If the Starrs are not pure in his sight how much less Job xxv 5. man who is but a clod of earth And this makes the holiest men to tremble at his presence Cujus participatione sumus justi ejus comparatione sumus injústi saith S. Augustine They who by derivation from him are made holy in comparison of him are most unholy Nay the holy Angels themselves in their approaches to him do hide their feet and their faces If Sancti Angeli in Propitiatorio quanto magis peccatores prae Tribunali If Angels on the Mercy-Seat tremble what shall sinners do that stand at the Bar before the seat of Justice 2. As in the Scripture there is a transcendent rule presented so is there also an exact rule of holiness prescribed The Law forbids all sin enjoyns all holiness No passage in the life of man but is ordered in it As Theodoret observes in the Ceremonial Law and in the furniture of the Tabernacle that every particular was curiously prescribed Sitales imagines quales veritates saith he If the Ceremonial Law was so accurate and precise how strict is the Law of moral holiness of which that was but a type The Measures and Weights of the Sanctuary were double as much as the ordinary Measures Thine actions may carry weight and be allowable amongst men in common conversation which yet will be found light in the Sanctuary of God Mensurant se in dolosa statera consuetudinis humanae non in statera Sanctuarii saith S. Augustine Bring thine Actions to this standard and thy defects will be discover'd and then that which seems warrantable and commendable amongst men will appear sinful and abominable before God 3. The Law of God it is a spiritual rule not resting only in an outward conformity but requires the exactness of soul and spirit It keeps secret thoughts under awe and judgeth of outward actions according to the heart not of the heart according to outward actions I the Lord search the heart even to give to every man according to his ways and according to the fruit of his doings Ier. xvii 10. Thus S. Chrysostom discoursing of the exactness of Gods Law in the true intent of it saith The Pharises forbade the outward commission of uncleanness the Law of God forbids the uncleanness of the thought They make the Law like Iohn Baptist he had Zonam pelliceam circa lumbos a leathern girdle about his loyns whereas Christ had Zonam auream circa pectus Rev. i. 13. a golden girdle about his breast repressing the first rise and stirrings and motions of sin This makes the Saints mourn for the first conceptions of sin though they prove abortive Libera me
them 't is his hand that inflicts them And the Prophet Ieremiah makes it a point of Wisdom to acknowiedge this chap. ix 12. Who is a wise man that may understand this for what the land perisheth It is great wisdome to know from whom and for what our Afflictions are come upon us 1. It is an acknowledgement that God expects from us He looks we should see him in all our Sufferings and observe his hand in them Hear the rod and who hath appointed it Mica vi 9. and know whose hand it is that brings it 2. He challengeth these Afflictions to himself as his own special administrations Is there any evil in the City and the Lord hath not done it Amos iii. 6. I form the light and create darkness I make peace and create evil I the Lord do all these things Isai. xlv 7. 3. He takes it hainously as a great indignity offer'd to his Providence that we will not acknowledge him in all our Sufferings Our Prophet complains of it vers 11. Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see it give no testimony to his just proceedings See what construction God makes of this he accounts it no better then a reproach and slander cast upon him Ier. v. 12. They have belyed the Lord and said 'T is not he In all our Sufferings it must make us confess with old Eli It is the Lord and conclud●… of our Affliction as David did of Promotion It comes neither from the East nor from the West nor any other point of the Compass but In the hand of the Lord there is a Cup and he reacheth it to us and pours it upon us A necessary Truth it is and yet we are exceeding backward to learn it And this backwardness in us is grounded upon two difficulties 1. This acknowledgment it is Confessio Fidei and all men have not this Faith to see and discern our calamities and miseries from whence they come Many feel the rod that cannot hear it feel the smart of it that cannot apprehend who hath appointed it With Belshazzar we can see the Hand-writing upon the Wall but we cannot read it and understand the meaning of it As the Jews when God spake from heaven Iohn xii 29. They said it thundred it was but a ratling in the Sky they made no more of it So a natural man without Faiths prospective can hardly look so high as to the hand of God The evil we suffer 't is but some distemper in nature or the malice of men or if it be more immediately from God then it is chance and fortune any thing rather then God that doth afflict us Whereas Faith and Piety overlooks secondary causes and fixes upon God Iob neither mentions Sabeans nor Caldeans in all his losses but acknowledges God in all his sufferings The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away This made Ioseph when he was shamefully entreated by his unnatural brethren acknowledg to them Non vos sed Deus 't was not you but God that lent me into Egypt 2. Men are exceeding loth to acknowledge their sufferings to be Gods judgements upon another difficulty 'T is Confessio reatùs it bewrays our guiltiness it carries with it an acknowledgment that all is not well 'twixt God and us but that he is become our enemy and fights against us Now naturally we are very unwilling to think that God hath any quarrel against us It is a deceit which we are exceedingly subject unto Prone we are to delude our selves with this false perswasion that God and we stand in good terms How hardly could Samuel dispute Saul out of this delusion and make him confess there was a breach 'twixt God and him We are very desirous in all our afflictions if it be possible to prove that God is not the Authour of them but some other cause Iudiciis Dei detrahimus ne peccatores nos esse cognoscamus saith Salvian As Pharaoh laboured a long time to prove that God sent not those plagues upon him but that Moses wrought them some other way his Inchanters could do as much as that came to It is no easie matter to make us acknowledge either our doings of evil to be sins against God or our sufferings of evil to be judgements from God Thy judgements saith David are far out of his ●…ght that makes him tush and puff at all his afflictions So then the point is briefly thus much The evils and calamities which we suffer they are Gods judgements 't is our duty so to esteem them to acknowledge them Acts of Divine Justice And that will draw from us three other Acknowledgments and clear and justifie Gods proceedings from three Imputations Are our afflictions Gods judgements Then 1. They are deserved by us God doth justly inflict them upon us Sine iniquitate 2. They are advisedly decreed and wisely ordain'd he brings them upon us Sine temeritate he doth not cast them upon us at all adventures and unadvisedly 3. They are proportion'd in a just and holy manner with a due measure and moderation he sends them upon us Sine furore not in rage and fury 1. Our miseries and afflictions they are Gods judgements and therefore deserved We must not charge God foolishly but acknowledg him to be righteous in all his proceedings Indeed while we have to deal with men In foro humanae Iustitiae we may have something to say We may charge them with violence and oppression and plead our innocency But when we consider Gods hand is in all that we suffer that will convince us of sin His judgements are evident convictions of our sinful provocations I know O Lord saith David that thy judgements are just Psal. cxix The violence of men doth not impeach the justice of God nor doth the justice of God warrant or excuse the violence of men Iehu must answer for all that bloud which was shed in Iezreel and yet Iezreel by Divine Sentence was devoted to destruction Hos. i. 4. Vos cogitâstis malum sed Deus vertit in bonum You thought evil against me but God meant it to good said Ioseph to his unnatural brethren that sold him into Egypt Their wicked designs were no impeachments to Gods holy purposes Quod homo facit improbè Deus facit justé The malice of men can be no prejudice to the justice of God We owe this dutiful acknowledgement to God in all our afflictions We must accept of the punishment of our iniquity Levit. xxvi 41. Thus the Church of God submits her self to Gods severity I will bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him Micah vii 9. And so again Lam. i. The Lord is righteous for I have rebelled against him In all heavy calamities of warr and blood-shed of dearth and famine of sickness and diseases we may take up the Prophet Habakkuks question Was the Lord displeased against the Rivers Was thine anger against the rivers Was thy wrath against the Sea
excess hath brought this judgment upon you God usually meets with men in their own ways Covetousness and earthly-mindedness luxury and excess all of them are abuses of these good gifts of God To punish us in the loss of these is a proper punishment 3. This calamity of dearth and scarcity the failing of the creatures that the earth doth not give her increase 't is a proportionable judgment The creatures are made to be our servants we are made to be Gods servants As long as we do perform our service to him the creatures shall yield their strength and increase and prove serviceable to us But if we fail God how just is it then that the creatures should fail us As S. Aug. sweetly observes our Reason would not obey God therefore our Sense shall not obey Reason As Hushi said to Absalom Whom all Israel makes King and serves him will I serve excusing his seeming revolt from David so when the creatures start aside and revolt from us prove unserviceable to us 't is their real profession They must serve their grand Lord if we revolt from him they revolt from us The Father's words are these Lib. 13. de Civit. 113. Qui superiorem Dominum deseruerunt inferiorem famulum ad suum arbitrium non tenebant And de Nupt. Conjug lib. 1. cap. 16. Injustum erat ut ei obtemperetur à servo suo qui non obediverat domino suo 4. God oft-times singles out dearth and famine to punish a Nation with it is a deep and evident and apparent judgment War and oppression and captivity many other calamities mans hand is seen in them they are agents and instruments in bringing them upon us And in such calamities we can be content not to see Gods hand in them but to charge our sufferings upon the malice of men as if God and we were in good terms God oft-times loses the glory of such afflictions As indeed the heart of man is exceeding desirous in all afflictions if it be possible to prove that God is not the authour but some other cause As Pharaoh laboured a long time to prove that God sent not those plagues upon him but that Moses wrought them some other way his Enchanters could do as much as that came to till at last they cried out It is the finger of God Now in such a judgment as want and famine to weaken the strength of nature to make that fruitfull womb of the earth barren to us none but God can do it He onely can make the heavens as brass and the earth as Iron and restrain the celestial influences Can man bind the sweet influences of Pleiades or loose the bonds of Orion Iob xxxviii 31. Can any but God forbid the clouds to drop fatness No these Judgments are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we must cry out God fights against us 5. Famine it is a Scourge wherewith he uses to chastise a people as being a comprehensive Judgment like a chain-shot that bears all before it Many other calamities that are brought upon us by humane means are most-what avoidable by humane helps Wisdom or riches or strength may exempt or secure from some other annoyances but scarcity and famine that strikes at the life of every man All must beg daily bread The profit of the earth is for all the King himself is served by the field Eccles. v. 9. No King can help against this Judgment If the Lord do not help thee whence shall I help thee Out of the barn-floor or out of the wine-press said the King of Israel in the famine of Samaria 2 Kings vi 27. These extremities are unavoidable They will make us look up to heaven and say with Iehosaphat O Lord we have no might against this Judgment that comes upon us Neither know we what to do but our eyes are towards thee 2 Chron. xx 12. III. A third Extraction from the Text is Gods own children and servants are lyable to these extremities of want and scarcity which God brings upon the world as well as others The Prophet here in his own name and in the name of the Church hath a fearfull apprehension of them Indeed sometimes and in some Judgments God vouchsafes a special exemption to his Church and Children Instance in three cases 1. To preserve an holy portion of his People and a Nursery for his Church Isaiah acknowledges it Chap. i. 9. Except the Lord of hosts had left us a small remnant we should have been as Sodom and like unto Gomorrah Still a remnant shall be saved And S. Paul applies it to the preservation of his chosen People Rom. ix 29. Gods Church must remain to all Posterity no Judgment must sweep them all away In this case when common Judgments are sent upon the world he exempts his own When the deluge came upon the old world an Ark was provided to save Noah and the holy seed When he visits them he doth it in measure he makes not a full end of them 2. God exempts his own People from common Judgments when the Judgments are sent in the cause of his Church to manifest and maintain that they are his People and that their sufferings from the world are most unjust then usually he puts a difference and exempts his own from common calamities Thus in all the plagues of Egypt Gosben was priviledged he put a difference betwixt the Hebrews and the Egyptians he passed over them when he plagued their enemies Thus in the case of famine Isaiah tells the enemies of Gods People Behold my servants shall eat but ye shall be hungry Behold my servants shall drink but ye shall be thirsty Behold my servants shall rejoyce but ye shall be ashamed Isai. lxv 13. Malachi assures them of this exemption and that God will make it appear Who are his Chap. iii. 17. In that day when I make up my jewels I will spare them as a man spares his own Son that serves him and then shall ye diseevn between the righteous and the wicked between him that serveth God and him that serves him not 3. In the pùnishment of those sins which his children have withstood opposed protested against and mourned for usually in that case God exempts such Saints and Servants of his This obtained Lot's exemption out of Sodom's overthrow he mourned for the abominations that were done in Sodom and S. Peter makes it a ruling case and argues from it 2 Pet. ii 5. If God spared not the old world but saved Noah the eighth person a Preacher of Righteousness and in the overthrow of Sodom verf. 7. delivered just Lot vexed with the filthy conversation of the wicked thence he gathers this Conclusion vers 9. The Lord knows how to deliver the godly out of temptation This protected Ieremiah and kept him out of captivity This holy carriage exempted Baruch his life was given him for a prey Those that mourned for the abominations of the Land were marked out by God for escapal and deliverance
him and now long since dead before the day of Judgment Christ by his divine knowledge understood well enough that these men should die long before the end of the world and yet he judged not this Caveat unseasonable for those times and men and bids them take heed to themselves lest that day surprize them Admit this day overtook them not de facto yet de possibili and for ought they knew it might have teached them and laid hold on them We are to judge of these events not by enquiring into Gods secret Decree but according to the order and likelihood of causes The general spreadth and ripeness of sin when the Regions look white non tantum albae ad messem sed aridae ad ignem Bern. not like ripe corn ready to be reaped but like drie stubble fit to be burned when the Harvest looks ready for the Sickle when all flesh hath corrupted their ways 't is time then Lord to lay to thine hand We must meditate upon that day Secundum exigentiam justitiae not secundum exigentiam decreti His Justice may now hasten it though his patience delays it and his secret purpose hath set to it a longer date Saint Paul speaks diversly of this day sometimes he sets it forward and sometimes backward both to great purpose 1. To those that would needs be calculating and foretelling that day in a curious ungrounded speculation to them he sets it backward folds it up in obscurity 2 Thes. ii 1 2. I beseech you brethren by the coming of our Lord Iesus Christ that ye be not troubled by spirit or by word or by letter as from us as if the day of Christ were at hand as you love that day so patiently wait for it do not imagine it is now upon coming There is his Caveat against a curious ungrounded calculation But then 2. To quicken up our care and preparation he seems to hasten that day and to set it forward See how he speaks of himself as if he look'd for that day while he continued in the body 1 Thes. iv We that are alive and remain to the coming of the Lord. St. Paul put himself into the thoughts of seeing Christ coming as S. Hierom thought he heard the sound of the last trumpet every day in his ears Ey this thought and expectation of it every day 1. It is Sancta cogitatio Oh how will it damp our lusts quicken our piety keep our hearts in awe 2. It is Tuta cogitatio It is the safest way to expect him too soon then too late and so to be surrprized ere we be aware He that said My Master 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 defers his coming you know how it went with him 3. It is Officiosa cogitatio He purposely conceals it that we may always expect it Christians must be adversitores Servants appointed to meet their Master whensoever he cometh 4. It is Vera cogitatio in the equivalence The day of thy death it is the day of thy judgment then thy doom is past upon thee It is all one for thee whether thy trial be at the Quarter-Sessions or be put off to the Grand Assizes To conclude this point of the fixed time of Christs coming to Judgment S. Aug. makes the best resolution and he lays it down in three assertions 1. Qui dicit citiùs venturum He that saith the Lord will come speedily he speaks most comfortably Even so come Lord Iesus come quickly 2. Qui dicit tardius venturum He that saith it will be long ere he cometh he in some sense speaks more warily but 3. He who saith he knows not the certain time of his coming but believes it firmly desires it earnestly expects it most watchfully he speaks most soberly That is the second Vobis vivis praesentibus 3. Vobis discipulis credentibus You that are my Disciples and Believers holy and sanctified men though justified and so passed from death to life yet for all that take heed to your selves this Caveat concerns you 1. Dies The day of Judgment concerns you And that not onely the hopes and comforts of that day but the dread and terrour of it must deeply afflict you Nullus intrepidus vadit ad judicium Domini habens conscientiam peccatorum Hier. Lib. 2. contra Pelagian The Saints of God are to consider and lay to heart not onely the Promises of God but his Comminations and Threatnings also Not onely the hope of Heaven but the fear of Hell also must have its work on them S. Paul reminds himself and other Christians of that dreadful Day We must all appear before the Iudgment-seat of Christ Rom. xiv 10. And Heb. xii Our God is a consuming fire Thus holy Iob kept himself in awe Destruction from God was a terrour to me Iob xxxi 23. The thought of that day made him afraid Moses at the giving of the Law said I exceedingly fear and quake How should we tremble at the day of reckoning for the breaches of this Law 2. Morbus The danger of the distemper concerns them they may fall into this disease Christ forewarns them of gravedo cordis the surcharge of the heart Snares and Temptations may surprise them if they look not to it Consider thy self saith Saint Paul speaking to the spiritual man lest thou also be tempted Many a good Christian hath slumbred securely and fallen into these sins that Christ gives warning of if that day had then surprised them it had been woe with them Noah Lot David how were they surcharged with the distemper of these sins Warnings and Caveats and earnest Exhortations they are not unuseful or unseasonable to the most holy men They are in tuto as long as they are in cauto no longer safe then they are circumspect The safety of a Christian from sin it is like the safety of men in a Ship not like the safety of men on the Shore Let the Ship be never so strong if the Mariners slumber and sleep watch not carefully they may dash upon a Rock 3. The mischief and miscarriage concerns them if they look not to it That day may come upon them unawares and the sad sequels of it The best Christians are liable to these surprisals and so stand in need of these comminations Rom. viii Though S. Paul assures the true believers that There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus yet he thought it necessary to add this Caveat Vers. 13. If ye live after the flesh ye shall die The Promises of Heaven and the Assurance of it they hold onely in studio praxi bonorum operum Hold on in the track of piety and then lay hold on the Promises But if thou turnest aside into the ways of iniquity the threatnings then will lay hold on thee and the day of Judgment will prove dismal to thee Now follows III. The greatness and strictness of this heed and caution to be used that is expressed in this busie and watchful word of circumspection
yet thou mayst have a proneness and inclination to them The seeds of those evils are in our nature Inbred Concupisence is as the materia prima to all sorts of sins susceptive of any unlawful Impression The Spirit that is in thee may be willing but the flesh is weak nay willful too 2. It must make us watch over Satans temptations Take heed of them Art thou not given to these sins of Voluptuousness and Covetousness yet if thou look not to thy self Satan may surprise thee by some temptation Consider thy self saith St. Paul lest thou be tempted Let our hearts seem never so empty of these sins Satan can fill our hearts with these lusts as he did to Ananias and Sapphira Why hath Satan filled your hearts with covetousness Acts v. 3. Though thy heart be not habitaculum for Satans temptations yet it may prove hospitium 3. We must watch over all occasions Take heed of them shun not onely these sins but the occasions that may bring thee unto them As Solomon speaks of unlawful haunts Avoid it pass not by it turn from it come not near it He that fears a distemper will forbear all meats that may dispose him to it A wise man will not onely shun poyson but all unwholsome meats Even lawful liberty lawful company lawful employments must be warily used So much of the Caveat Come we Secondly to the Distemper to be avoided And in it 1. The Causes that breed it And then 2. The Disease it self Gravedo cordis The Causes that breed this surcharge are three 1. Surfetting 2. Drunkenness 3. The Cares of this life And then the Enquiry must be 1. Why doth Christ so forewarn them against these sins 2. Why especially with reference to the day of Judgment The Scripture tells us there are other great sins that will raign and prevail in the world about that time Infidelity which is Atheism against the Gospel that will then prevail When the Son of Man comes shall he find Faith on the earth Luke xviii 9. Want of Charity that will then abound in the world The Charity of many shall then wax cold Matth. xxiv Apostasie giving over Religion Antichristianism and Idolatry and corruption in Religion that shall prevail in the world at Christs coming 2 Thes. ii 'T is true these and many outragious sins shall prevail then Iniquity shall then abound Matth. xxiv but yet we see Christ forewarns them especially of these evils in the Text. I. Why so 1. These sins of Voluptuousness and Worldly-mindedness they are more natural to us Heresie and Idolatry and Bloud and Oppression men are not so prone to these but to be overtaken with excess in pleasures and profits our nature is exceeding subject to these evils 2. As they are more natural so these sins are most general and universal Outragious villanies many will abstain from them but all the world almost is taken either with Voluptuousness or Covetousness He is counted a strange Monster among men that is not addicted and given to pleasures 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith S. Peter 1 Pet. iv 4. They think it strange a man runs not with them into excess and riot Iohn came neither eating nor drinking and they counted him a devil Otherwise he would have done as other men did and plaid the good-fellow Survey the whole world and all almost are taken with one of these two Young men they are for Pleasures old men they are for Profits They will haunt the same man in a succession as when a Quartane leaves him he falls into a Dropsie Hydropi●…am habent conscientiam so when Pleasure forsakes him Covetousness layes hold upon him 3. These are such sins as Professors of Religion will venture upon They will be no Hereticks no Idolaters nor yet unnatural monsters but security and tasting too much of pleasures and profits men that would be counted for good Christians will be overtaken with them Thus in the old world the Sons of God the true Worshippers fell by Voluptuousness S. Paul tells us of loose-living Christians Whose God is their belly and that mind earthly things 4. These sins Christ forewarns them of as being unworthy and unsutable with the Faith and Hope and Religion of Christians The prevailing of these sins wrung tears from S. Paul I tell you weeping they are enemies to the Cross of Christ. Enemies to his Cross. Christ's Religion it is a Religion of Sobriety and Moderation When the world offers us these delights and profits we should answer as Christ did when they offerd him meat I have other meat which you know not of So should a Christian say We have other pleasures and treasures which the world knows not of which our Religion affords us Ey but Christs Cross that 's of the greatest force to mortifie these sins Christians profess they serve a crucified God Sub spinato capite membra delicata That Cross should crucifie us to the world Gal. vi and make us dye to it Lovers of pleasures more then lovers of God What a great indignity is that to our Religion And for worldly-mindedness our Saviour tells us plainly 't is inconsistent with piety Matth. vi 24. Ye cannot serve God and Mammon O yes We can mind the world and Gods service too Such quick and large-parted men there are that can deal in divers businesses Well Christ tells us We cannot serve two Masters 1. It will breed a distraction God requires this service of thee the world will forbid it God saith Relieve the poor No Spare thy purse saith the world God saith Set daily some time apart to pray to thy God and to mind thy soul No the world saith Thou canst not spare so much time thou hast other business It will breed distraction 2. Christ adds Thou must love the one and hate the other that is more then a distraction it implyes a contrariety We cannot serve two at all much less two that are in contrariety and enmity So is God and the world The love of the world is enmity to God Iam. iv 4. Denias hath forsaken me and loved this present world 2 Tim. iv If you love the world you must hate God Will a man abide such a servant that shall live in his house and yet hold a close correspondency with his utter enemy mind his affairs and leave his Master 's undone O but we may bear good-will to both No therefore saith Christ 3. You must cleave to the one and despise the other If you serve the world you must cleave to it addict your selves wholly to it neglect despise God Serving loving cleaving to the world all these will not suffer us to apply our selves to God and the world too II. Christ principally forewarns them of these sins with a special reference and eye to the day of Judgment and that for three causes 1. These sins of voluptuousness and worldliness they are Peccata praecurrentia The prevailing of these sins are a certain prognostick of that day these sins
will then over-spread the world There are in Scripture two great Judgments which Christ and S. Peter make types and resemblances of the day of Judgment And Christ notes these sins as the symptoms and fore-runners of this Judgment 1. He instances in the Deluge and Flood that drowned the old World See what Christ saith of that Matth. xxiv 37. As the dayes of Noah were so shall the coming of the Son of Man be For as in the dayes that were before the Flood they were eating and drinking marrying and giving in marriage and knew not till the Flood came and took them all away so shall also the coming of the Son Man be 2. He instances in the Overthrow of Sodom Christ makes that a type of the day of Judgment What saith he of that Luke xvii 28. As it was in the dayes of Lot they did eat they drank they bought they sold they planted they builded and then it rained fire and brimstone from heaven and destroyed them all so shall it be in the day of Christ. See here the practises that Christ instances in In the old World eating and drinking marrying and giving in marriage So in Sodom they ate and drank they bought and sold builded and planted Why the Scripture charges both those times and places with farr greater sins 1. The old World is charged with bloud and violence and heavy oppressions Men lived like Giants oppressing and devouring others That is a crying sin So 2. Sodom is charged with other kind of sins of unnatural abominations Yet observe Christ instanceth not in the oppressions and violence of the old World nor in the abominations of Sodom but in their eating and drinking and buying and selling and driving after the world to teach us That when the world comes to this state and condition to be voluptuous and covetous let their voluptuousness be natural eating and drinking and the enjoyment of marriage let their covetousness be without oppression they bought and they sold traded fairly paid for what they took yet a secure giving over our selves to these courses is a fore-runner of judgment As some sicknesses Morbi symptomatici are more fearful not in themselves but because they are fore-runners of plague and pestilence so are these sins dreadful When the World lyes in them in a careless security when men say Peace and Safety every man chears up his neighbour Be not afraid all shall be well then shall come upon them sudden destruction 1 Thes. v. 3. The Meteor called Malacia it is a certain sign of a storm and tempest 2. These sins they are Peccata accelerantia when these sins are overspreading come to a ripeness and predóminancy they do not onely foretel and prognosticate but they hasten the day of Judgment and bring it upon the world And so they are more considerable Bare signs are not to be neglected But these sins are not onely ominous signs but effectual provocations and speeders of judgment S. Paul tells Timothy that these sins will make the last times perilous times 2 Tim. iii. 1 2. This know also that in the last dayes perilous times shall come for men shall be lovers of their own selves covetous lovers of pleasures more then lovers of God These and the like sins will be dangerous sins make perilous times expose the world to vengeance provoke judgment Should we see the Sun darkned the heavens to tremble the Stars to fall the Sea to roar it would make us to look about us Why to see the world drown'd in voluptuousness and security and greediness of gain loving pleasures and profits more then God to a spiritual man are indeed more fearful Those onely foretel these hasten and ripen and pull down vengeance and judgment 3. Christ bids us beware of these sins respectively to the day of Judgment because these sins they are Derisoria Iudicii they will beget a profane spirit of deriding and scoffing at the day of Judgment Voluptuousness that is a mocker Solomon tells us so Prov. xx And Covetousness that is a mocker too Luke xvi 14. All these things heard the Pharises which were covetous and they derided him And Security that is a mocker too They mocked Gods Messengers saying securely These things shall happen to themselves No doubt Noah had many a flout put upon him for talking of the Deluge and building his Ark. So Lots sons-in-law made but a jest of the tidings of destruction Lot seemed as one that mock'd And the threatnings of Captivity were but derided by the secure ones in Isaiah's time Let him make speed and hasten his work that we may see it And answerably S. Peter tells us there will be mockers at the last day There will come at the last scoffers walking after their own lusts and say Where is the promise of his Coming 2 Pet. iii. 3. And mocking that is a most dismal provoker of judgment Trembling at threatnings even in Ahab did set back Gods judgments but mocking and deriding Gods threatnings that hastens judgments Take but two places for it 1. One place is 2 Chron. xxxvi 16. They mock'd the Messengers of God and despised his threatnings until the wrath of the Lord rose against his people till there was no remedy Salvation it self could not save such 2. Another place is Isai. xxii 12. In that day the Lord did call to weeping and mourning and behold joy and gladness slaying oxen and killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine Let us eat and drink for tomorrow we shall dye yes I warrant you that was their Song And it was revealed in mine ears by the Lord of Hosts Surely this iniquity shall not be purged till they dye He would not be merciful to such Voluptuous Sensual Secure Mockers A SERMON ON GEN. iv 3 4 5. And in process of time it came to pass that Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto the Lord. And Abel he brought also of the firstlings of his flock and the fat thereof and the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering But unto Cain and to his offering he had not respect and Cain was very wroth and his countenance fell THis Story which we have now entred upon is the first relation that the Scripture makes of any publick Worship that by man-kind was offered up to God And so it carries with it a Type and Representation of the Practice of Religion which in succession of times should be used and performed in the Church of Christ. And this solemn Service it is observable and exemplary in divers respects 1. In the Condition of the Persons that perform this Service Who were they Cain and Abel both Husbandmen Cain a Tiller of the ground Abel a Keeper of Sheep Vers. 2. 1. These two though the first-born Patriarchs of mankind though the Heirs of the world yet were they brought up in a plain honest laborious Calling 2. Though their Profession were secular yet they accounted the matters of God and duties of