Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n affliction_n lord_n sin_n 1,503 5 4.9511 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

himself delivered from the chains of sin the bondage of Satan the powers of darkness and the flames of hell who in the peace of his conscience can see himself made partaker of the merits of Christs death and the benefits of his intercession can see himself admitted into a covenant of grace with the Lord of life and King of glory received into favor with the God of heaven and earth and so as to be made his child and entituled to the kingdom and the glory of his onely Son Which of us can conceive that has not felt what is the comfort of those thoughts of those meditations in that sweet peace of conscience which the faithful have being reconciled unto God through Christ in the remission of their sins § 20. Let us now joyn together the penitent sinner and the devout Saint in this one exhortation that they approach the Table of the Lord with a secret affliction of soul and that being raised by faith and enlarged by prayer 1 A secret affliction of soul in this consideration that their sins have been the cause of Christs sufferings Luk. 23.21 The Jews cried out of Christ crucifie him crucifie him such was the greatness of their malice that if possible they would have had him twice crucified but yet is not their desire too unhappily fulfilled they crucifying him once with their hands and we even we crucifying him again by our sins Who art thou then that comes to Christ without floods of tears when he comes to thee in streams of blood Who art thou who canst worthily meditate on his wounded body without a wounded soul or view his pierced side without a pierced heart in which our Saviour gives us our true devotion bespeaking us as well as the daughters of Jerusalem Weep not for me but for your selves weep not for me or my sufferings Luk. 23.28 in a fruitless compassion but weep for your selves and your sins in an hearty contrition § 21. Thus affected with contrition 2 Let our hearts be raised by faith that so whatsoever is our affliction and pain we may find an healing vertue in the blood of Christ which is this Sacramental administration is none other then Gileads balm to cure Hermons dew to refresh and Aarons ointment to revive all wounded distressed and drooping souls And as we approach this holy Ordinance with hearts raised by faith So 3 Hearts enlarged in prayer and such prayer as by the paths of its devotion may speak the anguish of our affliction as in the sence of our grosser enormities so of our humane infirmities that so for every sinful distemper in us we may receive an healing vertue from Christ and in our prayers for our selves forget we not the afflictions of the Church the calamities of the Nation and seeing our God pursues us with his judgments send we forth legationem lachrymarum in the language of St. Ambrose send we forth an Ambassage of tears to sue for peace And doubt we not but received into the Court of Heaven they shall have their access to the throne of grace and obtain a gracious audience if not for a publick deliverance yet for our particular salvation having our remission of sins and our peace of conscience confirmed unto our souls by his blessed Sacrament as the seal of grace and the pledge of glory to which glory he preserve us by his mercy who hath purchast it by his merits Jesus Christ the Righteous Amen Vers 19. and part of the 20. Consider mine enemies for they are many and they hate me with a cruel hatred O keep my soul and deliver me § 1. WHat confidence and comfort can there be in pardon of sin when there is not a conscience and care to prevent sin upon humiliation indeed sin forgiven becomes stingless toothless sin the venome and guilt removed but after humiliation sin reacted becomes the most deeply wounding the most closely gnawing sin more wounding then the Serpent more gnawing then the worm Wherefore holy David here having made it his complaint unto God in prayer vers 18. Look upon my affliction and pain and forgive all my sins knowing the number and force eying the multitude and rage of his spiritual enemies his sinful lusts he joyns to that fervent prayer this further petition Consider mine enemies for they are many and they hate me with a cruel hatred O keep my soul and deliver me § 2. To give the sence of our present interpretation together with the sum of our intended discourse take it in this paraphrase upon the words Consider mine enemies and thine enemies O God are mine thy greatest enemy is sin and my greatest enemies then must be my lusts Oh consider those mine enemies for they are many a whole host warring against my soul they besiege me closely and assault me fiercely they hate and fight against thy good spirit in me and to hate that is to hate me and the good of my soul yea their hate is cruel it is a tyrannous hatred though I never willingly suffer them to rule over me yet too too often they over-rule me Rom. 6.12 Though I never let them command me as a King yet they often compel me as a Tyrant Now Lord whereas many in the daies of trial and of trouble beseech thee to keep their bodies their estates their bodies from imprisonment their estates from spoil to me sin is worse then bonds then beggery yea then death then hell wherefore I beseech thee to keep my soul the salvation of it is dearest of more price then all the world Matth. 16.26 my good name my health my life my friends my estate all may be lost and I safe But oh my soul is my self to cast away it is to cast away me to keep it is to deliver me O then keep my soul and deliver me § 3. Observe in the words two general parts the Subject and the method of Davids prayer The Subject with its description and the method in its gradation 1 The Subject with its description Davids enemies described from the greatness of their number they are many and the violence of their hate it is cruel for they are many and they hate me with a cruel hatred 2. The Method in its gradation which gradation hath its three steps Consider mine enemies Keep my soul and Deliver me § 4. 1. The Subject with its description Davids enemies described from the greatness of their number they are many consider mine enemies for they are many No man may resolve his sins into any other original then his own lusts as for Satan though it be he that tempts it 's we that act and therefore when we commit any wickedness and sin against God though it be by Satans instigation our tongues may not smite him but our hearts must smite our selves as Davids did in 2 Sam. 24.10 We may not accuse the tempter but our selves who let in the temptation Non diabolus voluntatem delinquendi imponit
was not worthy this was that I say which made them endure with chearfulness Heb. 11.26 Hug. Cardin. in loc and persevere with constancie even the respect they had to the recompence of reward Consideratio praemii minuit vim flagelli the consideration of the eternal reward weakened the force of the temporal trouble The Rules of Direction 1. Betake thy self to a sincere repentance in a strict examination of Conscience a solemn humiliation of soul and a true reformation of life 1. A strict examination of Conscience for that the same afflictions may be at once as persecutions for righteousness and trials of grace so also corrections for sin Indeed sin is the cause of all affliction so that Christ he had not suffered had he not took upon him our sin And therefore did Elibu say right Job 36.7 8 9 10. that though God withdraws not his eyes from the righteous yet does he suffer them to be holden in cords of affliction that he may shew them their transgressions and so opening their ear to discipline they may return from their iniquity Requisite then it is that the children of God in their afflictions take up the resolution of the faithful Lam. 3.40 to search and try their ways to find out not only those sins which have procured but which have deserv'd the afflictions of Gods hand And this is no ways done but by str ct examination of Conscience that key which unlocks the Closet of our hearts where all our Books of Accounts lie And when this is done to prevent the subtlety of Satan and the deceitfulness of our own hearts let Davids prayer be a part of our devotion Search me O God and know my heart try me and know my thoughts Ps 139 23. and see if there be yet any wicked way in me and lead me in the way everlasting 2. A solemn ●umiliation of soul Sin is the sting as of death so of suffering And therefore the feeling of our suffering is to lead us to the sense of our sin and so our correction is for our humiliation But if desolation be threatned Isa 26 11 Isa 42 25. Mic. 6.9 and we not instructed if Gods hand be l fted up and we not see it yea if the fire burn and we not feel if the rod speak and we not hear but as we have been wanton in mercies we be sensl●ss too in judgments needs must our ruine be as desperate as our hearts are stupid Whereas he makes an happy advantage to his soul who gains repentance by his trouble for he shall then get salvation by his repentance 3. A true reformation of life The poison taken out of the Viper it becomes an wholsom medicine and the curse taken out of affliction it becomes a divine admonition and is made use of by God upon his children Ps 119 71. not to destroy but to instruct not to plague but to heal Thus saith David It is good for me that I have been afflicted v. 67. and what 's the reason In that before I was afflicted I went astray but now have I kept thy word What wise Patient the● will not more prise the healthfulness then loath the bitterness of that potion which is prescrib'd him by an able careful Physitian And so what dutiful Child of God will not more value the benefit then fear the sufferings of those afflictions which are laid upon him by so wise and indulgent a Father Needs must this administer much comfort to the afflicted Saints of God Isa 48.10 rightly to consider that God casts into the fornace of affliction non ut frangatur sed ut coquatur as S. Augustine not that the vessel may be destroyed but renewed made what S. Paul was Act. 9.15 2 Tim. 2.21 a vessel of election or as S. Paul speaks a vessel of honor meet for the Masters use Seeing this then is one main end of afflictions the overthrow of sin and the renewing in grace be careful O thou afflicted soul Gen. 35.1 c. in this even the reformation of life Thus it was with good Jacob when he was afflicted with the cruelty of his sons and the fear of the Canaanites he then remembers his vow and fulfils it he then orders his houshold and reforms it then the strange gods are put away and in zeal to Gods worship he goes to build him an Altar at Bethel Doubtless he loseth the benefit of affl●ctions that is not better'd by them for that like Jonathan's arrows they are not intended to the godly to wound 1 Sam. 20.20 but to warn not to kill but to admonish Outward afflictions become like the cloudy pillar they have a dark side to the Egyptians that is wrath and vengeance to the obstinate but a light side to the Israelites that is correction and instruction to the penitent The metal and the dross have the same fire but not the same effect the metal is refin'd and the dross is consumed yea the same judgments of God are to the godly corrections and trials which to the wicked are vengeance and punishment The sufferings of the godly though materially the same yet differ much from those of the wicked even as much as chastisements of love differ from judgments of wrath or healing medicines from destructive potions To illustrate this Suppose two men have their hands cut off the one by sentence of the Judge the other by the advice of the Chyrurgion the matter of the suffering is the same not the manner and form for to the one it is a cure to the other a punishment to the one an healing of a sore to the other an executing of justice The afflictions then of Gods children they are not formal punishments for that though they be occasioned by sin yet are they not inflicted by way of revenge which is the true nature of punishment properly so called Indeed God cannot be rightly said to punish those sins which he forgives for that Christ being our Mediator takes away guilt and punishment too Jer. 31.34 And therefore God so forgives iniquity that he remembers it no more But sure remember it he does if after forgiveness he yet punish it Whereas then 2 Sam. 12.14 notwithstanding God had told David by the Prophet that he had put away his sin yet he both threatens and afterwards executes wrath against him by reason of his sin And whereas Numb 14.23 notwithstanding God had told Moses that he had pardoned the people yet he tells him that none of them that murmured should enter Canaan In both these we may not think that there was any punishment by way of satisfaction unto God but chastisement by way of admonition both to themselves and others For where there is remission there is perfect reconciliation and where there is perfect reconciliation there must needs be full satisfaction So that Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus and if
Catastrophe How being set in slippery places v. 18 19. God casts them down to destruction and they are brought to desolation as in a moment Tolluntur in altum c. they are lifted up to the greater height that they may be crusht in their greater fall and by how much their precipice is the more steep by so much is their ruine the more desperate Yea which is most dreadful be the wicked ne'r so lofty and high yet is there but a trap-door betwixt them and hell which when death throws open they drop into the infernal lake where nothing remains of their glorious pomp their vast wealth their large dominion their high dignity nothing remains but the worm and the fire Mar. 9.44 the guilt and the punishment It may be for the present presumption and pride have made them secure in their sin and they see no danger they feel no misery but when they come to be awakened from their security oh the weight of that milstone that mountain that lies upon their backs oh the piercings of that sharp sword that poison'd arrow which sticks in their hearts oh what are the stings the flames the furies of a guilty Conscience how do their knees tremble their lips quiver their tongues falter their throats roar their hearts languish and their whole man become fill'd with horror and amazement Who art thou then that find'st thy self gtiev'd at the prosperity of the wicked Let this still thy murmurings and quell thine impatience that entring the Sanctuary of the Lord thou understandest their latter end 2. Mortifie sin by a sincere repentance This this shall weaken the force quell the pride and blast the prosperity of the Churches enemies for that as S. Hierom of old Nostris vitiis Barbari facti sunt fortes c. The sins of the Christians did strengthen the Barbarians And even now without all doubt the sins of the Orthodox do give strength and success to the present Heresies and Schisms The best purging then of the waters is with the Prophet Elisha 2 King 2 21. at the spring-head the best curing a wound is with the skilful Chyrurgion at its festered root The best heali●g of a Nations miseries is by removing the cause in mortifying the sin and so seeking reconciliation with God by repentance Thus Moses when he stands in the gap to divert Gods wrath and recover his love Num. 14.19 he does it by confessing the sin and bewailing its gu●lt And so when David seeks to stay the violence of the plague 2 Sam. 24. he does it by an attonement on the Altar God indeed still directs his arrows of wrath against the mark of sin and therefore if sin be in us no wonder if wrath be upon us For where indeed should the arrow stick but where the mark is fastened If then we will divert the arrow we must remove the mark if we will turn away wrath we must take away sin Sin it is which corrupts our best of duties and taints our best of blessings Corrupts our best of duties like leaven it turns a solemn Passover into a very pollution it makes our very prayers unprofitable God covering himself as with a thick cloud Lam. 3. ●4 through which they cannot pass to the Throne of grace Yea our sin it is that taints our best of blessings blessings temporal turning our sweetness of earthly comforts into the bitterest of earthly curses even honor wealth wit learning plenty peace which should make us more serviceable unto God how does sin make them even tributary unto Satan in the advancement of his kingdom Wherefore in the calamities of our Church and Nation be we no longer like the silly Hart to mourn and bleed and faint and yet take no care for what would happily be our cure the plucking out the fatal dart that sticks in our side the removing the sinful guilt that cleaves unto our souls which gu lt is none other way to be removed but by a sincere repentance Which repentance is sincere when free and full 1. When free not so much extorted by the rack or compell'd by horror as being the willing purpose of a relenting heart Oh how is it with some They are won with the Gospels sweetness and Mercy 's allurements Others they are driven with the Laws curse and Judgments terrors The former is like water from a Spring it flows with freeness the latter like water from a Still which is forc'd with fire And when men repent as Pharaoh in Egypt Exod 9.27 34 35. Ps 78.34 35 36 c or as Israel in the Wilderness only on the rack of judgment and wrath it is much to be suspected when once the scourge is taken off the judgment respited they then will return to their former pride and impenitence What metal is it that will not melt in the furnace and what heart so hard which in the furnace of divine wrath will not melt in mournful penitence But hereby is their insincerity and hypocrisie discovered that when taken out of the fire they return to their former obduracie Thus formal and hypocritical persons they melt in the heat and harden in the cold Clem. Alex. Strom. l 2. they thaw in the sun and freeze in the shade These repentings Clemens of Alexandria aptly calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when men ring Changes as it were they sin and are punish'd being punish'd they repent And as upon the duty of repentance their punishment is removed so upon the removal of their punishment their sin is renewed If our Repentance then be sincere it is free the willing and resolved purpose of a relenting heart 2. Full as extended to all sin whatsoever Even the smallest sin in its degree is deadly in its nature Of Vipers the least is poisonous and to coin pence is a treasonable act as well as to coin pounds Every degree of sin as every degree of treason is a violation of the Soveraign Majesty and therefore Capital Yea as one leak in the Keel one breach in the bank unrepair'd is enough to sink the ship and drown the Country so one sin allowed of is enough to destroy the man and one sin generally unrepented of is enough to ruine a Kingdom Indeed who can think to obtain his Princes favour whilst he harbours a Rebel against him in his house Who can think to partake of the merit of Christs blood whilst he hugs the murderer of him in his bosom Who can think to avoid Gods wrath whilst he cherisheth the sin that provokes him Had Christ been our Saviour as most men are his servants had he dyed for sin as most men die to sin that is to the halfs or in part our whole salvation had only been a less damnation But if we expect Christ should save us to the utmost of a gracious deliverance we must serve him to the utmost of a faithful repentance crucifying sin as he was crucified for sin not in some members
Many there are then who bear the name of Christians ay and of Catholicks too who yet are in Christ John 15.2 6 but as withered branches in the Vine yea they are in the Church as Wens in the Body not in a vital and internal communion but in a formal and external profession Thus speaking of the Authors of Heresie and Heads of Faction which separated themselves from the communion of the Church They went out from us says the Apostle but they were not of us 1 John 2.19 for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us They went out from us as to the external and accidental form of the Church as it is the visible company of Professors but they were not of us as to the internal and essential form of the Church as it is the invisible Body of Christ Very fitly then is the visible Church compared in Scripture unto a field in which there grows up together Wheat and Tares Matth. 13.29 30. Matth 3.12 Matth. 13 47. to a floor on which there lies together Corn and Chaff to a draw not in which are contained good Fish and bad for that in the Church as it is visible there are Hypocrites mixt with true Believers the wicked with the godly And therefore the Apostle compares the visible Church to a great house 2 Tim. 2.20 where there are not onely Vessels of Gold and of Silver but also of Wood and of Earth yea Some to honor and some to dishonor Thus in the visible Church there are not onely strong Believers but also weak Christians not onely those who are more eminent in the gifts and graces of the Spirit but also those who are weaklings and of less spiritual abilities then others Yea further as there are some to honor that is some who through the Election of Grace shall at last inherit eternal glory so some to dishonor Rom. 2.5 that is some who through their impenitence and hardness of heart treasure up to themselves wrath against the day of wrath and shall be plunged in eternal misery And thus ye have seen in its several particulars What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head 3. How the Church of which Christ is the Head is said to be a Body viz. Especially from the communion of the faithful as Members Eph. 4.4 a communion so near that they are all said to have but one Spirit Acts 4.32 yea one heart and one soul and all this from the efficacy of love Col. 3.14 that bond of perfectness and knot of unity A Sacramental representation of this Mystical Communion 1 Cor 10.17 is given us in the holy Eucharist according to that of the Apostle We being many are one Bread and one Body for we are all partakers of that one Bread That Bread which exhibites to us the flesh of Christ our quickning and enlivening Food Food not which we convert by any carnal digestion into the nature of our body but which converts us by a spiritual operation into the nature of Christs Body making us to be heavenly and spiritual as he is spiritual and heavenly We change not it but it changeth us for so is the powerful operation of spiritual Food to convert into the nature of its self action still following the stronger force and spirituals are more powerful then corporals grace more active then nature By vertue of this communion of the Faithful the Church is said to be Corpus compactum connexum Eph. 4.16 a Body fitly joyned together and compacted no rents of Schism but every member hath its proper place Vers 13. and its peculiar connexion in the whole and this Till we all meet in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Unto a perfect man this does intimate the near and full communion of Christs Church all the Faithful being as one political person in Christ Gal. 3.28 according to that There is neither Jew nor Greek there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female but all are one in Christ Jesus and it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not one Body but one Person Now to grow up to a perfect man according to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ is the increase of the Church till consummate in its communion of Members and fulness of perfection which shall be at the last day when the whole number of the Elect is gathered and so Christ in the Church and the Church in Christ have mutually their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their compleat growth like that of the Head in the Body and the Body in the Head and all in one political person and perfect man To close then such is the communion of the Faithful one with another as Members and all in Christ as their Head that he who by Schism separates from the Church though never so seeming a Saint he cuts himself off from Christ and in the prosecution of this separation though he should zealously give up his life unto death his goods unto the spoil his body unto the fire 1 Cor. 13.2 3. yet all this would not be fidei corona Cypr. de Unit Eccles n. 12. but paena perfidia as St. Cyprian speaks not a crown of Faith but a punishment of unfaithfulness the suffering not of a Martyr but of a Malefactor For let the cause be what it will to die in Schism without the Pale of the Church is to perish in sin without the Gate of Heaven Indeed as the Branch withers which is broken off from the Root the River dries up which is cut off from the Fountain so the Soul shall perish which is divided from Christ And that Soul is certainly divided from Christ the Head which separates from the Church which is his Body His Body in a communion of the faithful as Members Here it will be a seasonable service to resolve you these four Questions 1. Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall away 2. What is meant by that common saying That out of the Church there is no Salvation 3. What have we to answer those who say We have no Church 4. Seeing we are to hold communion with the Church how may we know which is a true Church with which we may hold communion First Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall Quest 1 away We see in the World such a general defection from truth and holiness that some may haply propose this Question as well worthy our present resolution Indeed Polutheism a worshipping many gods hath ever been an argument for Atheism a not worshipping any God And in these our days whilst men see so many