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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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are said not to be all Israel who are of Israel In the Old Testament we read of many who outwardly submitted to the profession of Gods commands who yet were not found at heart and therefore our Saviour in the course of his Ministry did not direct his preaching more to any subject almost then this viz. to have the internals of grace as well as externals so that we may say There is a called and elected Church and a called Church only not elected and this is to take off all Churches from idolizing and doting upon the Ordinances and external administrations which are in a Church as the Jews did and as most Christians do We are to go further and to see whether we be indeed and really Christs body as well as seemingly For if we do compare a Church called only with the Church called and elected and to the spiritual priviledges that are promised so our Divines use to say That it is but equivocally a Church they have no true acceptance with God If there should be a Society professing faith in Christ and have pure administrations but not one in the Society having true real sanctifying grace this Society in respect of God and Christ hath no true communion with them They have but the name not the nature and so are equivocally not univocally a true Church For why should it be otherwise with a Society then every member of it taken singly Now it 's certain in such a supposed Society where all are professors but not one member truly godly there every individual person notwithstanding all Church enjoyments yet hath no lively interest in Christ he is but as a glass eye or wooden leg in the body that hath no vivifical nourishment or is animated by the soul and therefore such are said to be De corpore Ecclesiae but not de animâ if then this be true of every member of that Church it must be also true of the Church taken collectively Only this is true if we consider such a company relatively to God But then if we consider them quoad nos in respect of men who cannot judge the hearts nor know when true grace is in any mans soul then such a Church or a Society may be called truly a Church For it is the external profession and outward submission to Christs order that doth make a Church visible to us and therefore in such a Church there are true Ordinances true Administrations And this is the rule we must go by in joyning our selves to a Church and keeping external communion with it if it be a called Church though not elected and be so farre orthodox and pure that we may have communion with them without sinne This is a Church to us howsoever God may look upon them as having a name to live but were dead as God said of Sardis Rev. 3. 1. which yet was a Church This distinction is of a two-fold use to prevent two mistakes First Of such who confound an external Church with an elected making Gods call and his election in an equal latitude thinking that because none but predestinated and truly sanctified men are of the invisible Church therefore none but such are also of the visible And then Secondly Of those who if they be of a Church especially cleansed from superstitions and prophaneness if the Church be a Reformed Church they rest in those external administrations and never attend to the work of grace indeed For if among Papists though so greatly polluted yet the Church is made an Idol to them no wonder if the Reformed Churches are prone to put confidence in Church-reformations without attending to internal sanctification But the Apostle tells us Gal. 6. 15. That in Christ Jesus neither circumcision or uncircumcision availeth any thing but a new creature that is no externals in the Church of God though of his own institution avail any thing without regeneration Therefore rest not in this that you are called of God that ye are his Church for many taken out of his Church shall be damned as well as out of the world yea more in the Church that is the visible Society professing of Christ will be damned then saved as appeareth by that expression twice repeated by our Saviour as being of so great concernment being worthy to be heard again and again Many are called but few are saved Mat. 22. 14. and 20. 16. And thus much of the Efficient Cause with the manner Called of God In the next place There is the Instrumental Cause and that is by the preaching of the Word For so we read upon Christs giving his Apostles commission to teach and preach to all Nations there were Churches gathered in every place And this is to be understood of the ordinary way For whether the Word even as read may not in some extraordinary cases be a means to bring some one person or more to the Church of God is not here to be disputed for we speak of the solemn ordinary instituted means of God and so there is no other way but the preaching of the Word Hence Rom. 10. 14 15. you see there a concatenation and chaining of calling upon God and believing together of beliving and hearing together and of hearing and the Ministry together But it 's objected by the Socinians That if the preaching of the Word be an instrument to gather a Church then it cannot be a note of the Church For that which is antecedent to a Church and is before the Church is cannot be a note of it To this we may answer That it is both an instrument to gather a Church and then a note of it when gathered neither is there any absurdity therein It 's true that very numerical preaching which at first made the Church cannot be a mark or note of it but the same specifical preaching or that which is like it that doth truly declare where the true Church is So that by this we may see the dignity and usefulness of the Ministry for by that God is pleased to raise up all the Churches that are in the world God who did immediatly create the world and used no instruments yet in planting of his Church doth and therefore they are workers with him 2 Cor. 6. 1. Neither is the Ministry only necessary to constitute a Church and then afterwards useless as Episcopius saith Where people have the Scriptures there the Ministry is of no necessity Yea the Socinians make it only a matter of order and conveniency For Ministers are not only appointed to gather Churches at first but when they are planted continually to water them Therefore Ephes 4. their usefulness is shewed even to constituted Churches For the further building them up even till they come to a full stature in Christ. And therefore the Apostles thought it not enough to make Churches to erect new spiritual Societies that should profess Christ but Elders were to be ordained in every Church that were to have constant residence amongst
Ministry or preaching should ever do them any good And therefore you see when Isaiah was sent to preach to the people of Israel Chap. 6● it was not to open their eyes or soften their hearts but the clean contrary to shut their eyes and harden their hearts Do not therefore question the Call of a Ministry if the work of conversion be not so general as might be expected For consider the people are they not like the ground the Apostle speaks of that having often drunk in rain yet bringing forth nothing 〈…〉 sing Heb. 6. 7 8. A terrible place it is if they had been a people bringing forth herbs fit for use then God had a blessing for such ground but because they are only briars and thorns the end is to burnt So that though the Ministry doth not work in a saving way yet it 's in a damning way and this discovers the Call to be of God as well as the former because he punisheth people thus for their unthankfulness and unprofitableness But 2. The Ministry of God is not onely for conversion but edification and building up If therefore God makes the Word usefull for further illumination and sanctification this discovers it to be of God Hence Ephes 4. 13 14. There is a two-fold use of the Ministry spoken of One to perfect and to carry forward to an higher stature in Christ and the other to prevent errours and to safeguard against all heretical wayes Now the edifying and building up of the godly is of great importance The Apostles wrote their Epistles chiefly for this end to increase that godliness which was already begun Lastly The Minister whose call is of God and dischargeth it faithfully shall have a great reward from God They that turn others from their sins shall shine as the stars in the firmament The Apostles shall sit upon twelve thrones whereas those who runne without a Call and work without a Commission their labour is in vain and God will ask Who hath required these things at their hands Yea both they and their Office shall be destroyed so that in stead of a reward they will meet with severe punishment Then on the peoples part it is of great consequence for them to be assured of this Let a man esteem of us 1 Cor. 4. as the stewards of God Oh if you receive the Ministers as from God as having commission from him with what reverence and obedience will this be But especially you will take heed of opposing and setting against them lest ye should be found fighters against God Therefore let the Use of this be of Conviction especially to such who acknowledge us the true Ministers of the Gospel You who receive us as your Ministers and cry out against all those that question their Call Now out of your own mouths you will be condemned if you do not receive their Word as it is indeed the word of God and not of man Oh therefore do you discover the experimental work of the Ministry upon your hearts Let it be said of you as of these Corinthians They were his Epistle to be read and seen of all men You are our walking Sermons all may see what we preach by your lives you are our Sermons to be read and seen of all men SERM. VI. Of the proper and appellative Names of our Saviour Jesus and Christ In what sense he is Jesus a Saviour and how Christ the annointed of the Lord. 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. THe second main particular considerable in this inscription is the Efficient Cause or Author of this Apostolical Office he mentioneth and this is said to be Jesus Christ These words may be considered either absolutely as they declare unto us the Lord Christ Or relatively and respectively to Paul's Apostleship And from both these considerations profitable matter will afford it self In the absolute consideration we may take notice of our Lord and Saviours Description 1. Of his proper Name which yet doth denote his Office Jesus 2. His appellative Name Christ We shall conclude both these at this time And For the first word Jesus Osiander otherwise a learned man hath a singular opinion viz. That Jesus comes from Jehovah only the Hebrew letter Shin is interposed because he is called Shiloh Gen. 49. his conceit being that as Christ himself was compounded of two Natures so ought his Name to be of two names the one viz. Jehovah signifying his Divine Nature and the other Shiloh his humane Nature One Argument he urgeth is from Phil. 2. where God is said to give Christ a Name above all Names Now saith he the Name Jesus was common to many others therefore he had such a peculiar name as none ever had But that is a gross mistake as if Name were there taken for a Word and not for the Person or Office signified thereby No less absurd is his notion also That whereas the word Jehovah was ineffable not pronounceable before a figment of the Rabbins by this addition of 〈◊〉 it is made utterable To this purpose almost Castalio likewise who makes the word compounded of Jehovah and Ish vir as if it were God-man but not only the general consent of all but the reason that the Angel gives of this Name makes it evident that Jesus is the same with Joshua for so the Septuagint render that word sutably to a Greek termination and so comes from Jashang to save and therefore the Angel saith He shall be so called because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall save his people from their sinnes So that this name is very expressive In nomine Jesu totum latet Evangelium The whole Gospel lieth in this name of Jesus or a Saviour The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is so comprehensive that Tully saith The Latinists cannot comprehend it in one word sospitator comes neerest to it In the Old Testament we read of two very eminent that had this name and both of them are made Types of Christ Joshua who lead the people of Israel into Canaan when Moses could not do it So Christ brings us to Heaven which was impossible to the Law and Joshua the high Priest mentioned by Zechary who being first accused because of his despicable garments was afterwards covered more gloriously So Christ our high Priest in the time of his Humiliation was condemned and of no reputation but in his Exaltation was magnified and exalted gloriously The word thus explained we observe That the Lord Christ is a Jesus a Saviour to his people This truth should be sweeter than the honey or the honey-comb to the lost sinner Christ hath some names of terrour and dread as when he is called a Lion and a Judge some again of love and comfort as this of Jesus which as Bernard saith is In ore mel in aure melos not that the name or the sound of words is such and therefore that superstitious custome of bowing at
as David when banished from the publick Ordinances lamented it more than banishment from his own house and land and native countrey Thus they cryed out with him As the Hart panteth after the water brooks so pant our souls after thee O God You see then it 's a duty to be of a Church Hence because a Church is a company we are diligently to attend to what is our duty as we are a Church and this you had need hear of often For you must know you are under a two-fold consideration One Absolute as a private and single person and so you have several duties to attend unto 2. Relative as you are a member of a Church or part of such a Society and so there are choice and special duties Your solemn Church-duties such as hearing praying and all other publick worship are to be preferred above all private He can never be a good Christian that is not a good member of that Church he is of As in Politicks it's acknowledged he cannot be bonus vir which is not bonus civis not a good man that is not a good Citizen Now certainly here is a wonderfull neglect and general fault in all our Congregations we attend not to our Church-duties to our Church-communion what God doth require of us as a Society as a spiritual Company there would not be that neglecting of the Assemblies those wicked and ungodly meetings to be drunk to be carnally merry and jolly which are directly contrary to Church-meetings Nothing doth so resemble Heaven as the Church Assemblies spiritually performed and to such meetings God hath promised his more peculiar presence and assistance But of this more in its time In the next place there is added in the Doctrinal Description That it is a Company of persons called of God by the preaching of the Word Wherein are considerable the Efficient Cause and the Instrumental The Efficient is God Called by God And first In that they are said to be called by God This implieth these things 1. That it 's the meer goodness and grace of God that makes a people to be a Church Therefore they are thus named Ecclesia The Grecians called their Assemblies so because of some humane Authority gathering them together but the people of God are called a Church because God calls them So that as there is a difference between a garden and a wilderness the one is naturally so but the other is planted by art and industry nature doth not of it self especially since mans fall bring forth gardens and choice flowers but there is great art and culture required thereunto Thus it is with the Church men are made the Church by Gods grace but they are the world of themselves The world and the Church are two opposites God makes the one and is present in a special manner there but sinne and Satan make and rule in the other When the Psalmist said It is he that hath made us not we our selves we are the sheep of his pasture Calvin understands it of their Church making it was the goodness and power of God that made them so Hence it is that it is often compared to and called the Kingdom of Heaven because it's original is from Heaven and their Laws and Ordinances are heavenly Thus you see to be made a Church is not by our humane will and power as men make themselves Cities and Corporations but by a special grace of God 2. When therefore we are said to be called by God that doth necessarily suppose a terminus from which we are called It 's a company of persons called out from the world wherein once they were Hence the Apostle 1 Cor. 5. doth oppose the world and the Church together and the world is said to be without God then when he gathers a Church He calls them out of the world as Lot was called out of Sodom which was ready to be destroyed with fire and brimstone or as a man is called out from an house that is ready to fall into its fulnes and this it is that makes it to be such an admirable priviledge and blessedness to be of the Church For the world is sure to perish is sure to be damned there is no abiding therein as if an Israelite had continued in an Aegyptians house when the destroying Angel passed by he was sure to be killed Thus there is no way but of damnation in the world without this Ark of the Church every one must necessarily perish But this is that which should make all our hearts ake and tremble at to consider That though the Church be called out of the world yet it 's almost degenerated into the world again Look over the face and conversation of all Churches Are they not become the world Is not a garden made a wilderness Is not the lusts the prophaneness the ignorance the impieties that are in the world to be found in the Church like wise And what hath been the sad occasion of so many to say Our Congregations are no Churches that a man cannot with a good conscience stay amongst you or have communion with you Is it not because of the universalimpiety they see amongst us As if the Church of God which is like the Ark in other things were in this also that all kind of things unclean as well as clean swine as well as sheep vultures as well as doves were to be taken into it We see as it hath been Gods work to turn the world into Churches so it hath been the Devils work to turn the Churches into the world again But wo be to the wicked man that is so in the Church of God God will be sure to punish you A nettle or weed in the garden is sure to be plucked up whereas in the wilderness it may grow and never be medled with SERM XIII Concerning the Efficient Instrumental Formal and Final Cause of a Church 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church at Corinth VVE are describing the nature of a particular visible Church and in that have discussed the Efficient Cause with the manner of his efficiency expressed in those words Called of God what is implied in that hath been examined only there remaineth a necessary distinction to be attended unto of Gods call that it is two-fold either External only or External and Internal also or an Effectual and Ineffectual Calling For though this distinction be hated by some men yet the Scripture is very clear That there are many called who yet are not chosen and when he saith called it is not meant only actively on Gods part as some were called but yet refused and would not so much as outwardly profess obedience but called is to be understood passively on mans part so that he giveth some outward conformity to Gods call There is an external reception and submission to it but yet there is no true inward sanctification Insomuch that some who are called the children of the Kingdom shall be cast forth and they
when they called the Blackmoors 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 silver white Thou art a Saint in that sense he said Auri sacri fames indeed thou art most accursed and art but a mockery in respect of God and man As it is a shame so it is an horrible reproach even as Revel 2. there is the blasphemy of some who said they were Jews and were not Thus it is a blasphemy in thee to be externally a Saint and not really as the Apostle Rom. 2. 24. speaking of such saith The Name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you The mischief of the scandalous prophane lifes in the Church hath been the cause not only of Gods eminent judgements upon it even at last to unchurch them but also hath been like winds in the bowels of the earth making a dreadfull earthquake Heresies in Doctrine have not more molested the Church than prophaneness in life The troubles of the Donatists made in the Church for many years together was it not because of the prophaneness of Christians lives In our dayes What is the great argument against our Churches that they are no true Churches that they are the Synagogue of Satan Doth not this arise wholly from the ungodliness of most mens lives Call such Saints you may as well name darkness light Yea what is the cause that the bringing in of any good Order in a Church the purging out of the old leaven is such a grievous tormenting matter Why do generally people dislike and rage at it Is not all this because though men are contented with the name of a Saint yet they cannot endure the practical power of it So that we may say the real ungodliness of such who are in the Church is the cause of all the evil that comes in the Church Thou blamest this and that way of Government thou sayest Such or such a thing is the cause of all our evil No it 's the love to mens lust men would be of the Church and yet live the life of beasts and Devils And it is for this general impiety that even Heaven and Earth may be astonished Thou cavillest How can this or that Practice or Order be proved Jure Divino But where canst thou prove thy oaths thy lusts thy drunkennesse thy contempt of Godlinesse to be Jure Divino 2. Real Saintship is so acceptable unto God in his Church that let men have 〈…〉 eminent places and esteem therein yet if they walk contrary to this Rule of sanctity and that obstinately Christ hath commanded such to be cast out as utterly unfit to be of such a Society The incestuous person in this Church of Corinth is thought by Chrysostome to be a man of chiefest place and note amongst them yet for all that till he repent and humble himself they are commanded to cast him out from amongst them As the Apostle to this Church saith What communion is there between light and darknesse Christ and Belial The Pythagoreans were so strict about the manners of those who were in their sect that as Origen against Celsus relates when any of their society had fallen into a foul sin they did cast him out of their company and commanded a Coffin to be placed by him as being a dead man But the Lord Christ hath commanded That such who live in the Church obstinately against the manners of a Saint should be thrown out from his people and so delivered up to Satan as being more properly of him and his way But because more may in time be said of the nature of this Church-Saintship I passe it by for the present concluding with a severe Reproof even like thunder and lightning against all such who deride at sanctity and purity Are there not too many sonnes of Belial who make a scoff at such glorious names of a Saint of a Christian of a Brother of a Believer Wherein canst thou demonstrate thy self to be of the Devil more than in this one thing Thy heart rageth thy tongue foameth at sanctity and purity What is this but to blaspheme the Scripture yea God and Christ himself Why do not such cast off their Christianity and live with Pagans and Heathens SERM. XXI Wherefore 't is a Christians Duty to joyn himself to Church-society And in what cases he may be excused What are the false Grounds why some neglect this Duty The Soul of the poorest Saint is to be regarded as well as of the richest 2 COR. 1. 1. With all the Saints that are in all Achaia IT is now full time to conclude this Text. There remain two things more which deserve some consideration The first is occasioned by Calvin's Question upon the place How is it saith he that he distinguished Saints from the Church Did not these Saints imbody themselves that lived in the Province of Achais Was it lawfull for them to live dispersed and single lives not entring into Churchcommunnion To which he answers That the times might be then so turbulent and persecution so hot that they could not gather into a Church nor have any such publick meetings Now this Interpretation is not necessary For the Apostle writing to the Church at Ephesus and Colosse yet doth not use that name but speaks in the general To the Saints and faithfull Brethren when yet without question they were in a Church-state there Yea in his Epistle to the Romans he makes no mention of them as a Church but styleth them Saints which puts Salmeron upon his guesses Why he doth not give the name of a Church to them As also Why he doth not salute Peter their supposed Bishop Neither may we think that when James and Peter inscribe their Epistles to the Believers scattered in several Regions but that they might have occasionally their publick meetings to worship God in Yet though this Exposition be not necessary we may well receive Calvins conjecture as probable For there have been times when the Saints have been forced to hide themselves in Dens and Caves not having opportunity to meet together though even that was an heavy burden and trouble to them This being granted we may observe That although it be a Duty for Saints to joyne themselves in a Church-way yet there may sometimes fall out such just reasons that may excuse them Indeed voluntarily to keep off from the Assemblies and to think a private worshipping of God is enough and that he requireth no more is both against Scripture-command and the example of primitive Christians but when there is some unavoidable necessity than there is a lawfull excuse That it is a duty for Saints to joyn themselves in a Church-way may be made evident from these Grounds briefly First From the name Church ordinarily given to ●olievers Now a Church is a Society or Company met together and therefore it is not lawfull for thee to live alone or be a Minister of Sacraments and all things to thy self Even as Aristotle said of him that would live alone not joyning
this Salutation Some think because the work of the Ministry meets with much malice and froward opposition from wicked men which made Paul pray that God would deliver him from unreasonable absurd men who are led only by humours and passions not by Reason and Religion Therefore seeing those that do faithfully discharge their trust meet with little favour and love from men hence it is that he doth in a peculiar manner pray for mercy to them Others they think the word is inserted because of the great difficulty of the Ministry it being a burden too heavy even for Angels shoulders Insomuch that Chrysostome thought Few Church-officers could be saved Seeing then the work is so great so much grace is required to manage it and the best have failings therefore they need the mercy prayed for But this by the way Come we to the Text. In that we may consider the Matter prayed for And the Efficient Cause from whom it is to come The Matter and Benefit is set down in two words which though but two yet comprehend all that a godly heart can desire the first is Grace the second Peace In the original there is a defect and therefore most do supply it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as our Translators Grace be to you Though the Apostle Peter in the salutations of both his Epistles expresseth the word and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be multiplied and so Estius would supply it here but there is no inconvenience to keep to the former Interpretation 2. There is the Cause of this which is two-fold God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ All these parts shall be opened as we take them in order only let us first take notice of the Manner and End of this Salutation in the general That it is not for any earthly or worldly thing but what is spiritual The Grecians they used commonly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their Salutations as the Latines Salve and are relating only to temporal welfare And indeed the Heathens knew no better but the Apostle would lift up our hearts to higher things The Apostle James Chap. 1. 1. writing to the dispersed Tribes useth the word only Greeting which made Cajetan among other reasons reject it as not Canonical as if such a Salutation savoured of an humane spirit But this is no Argument For the Apostles gathered together in a Councel at Jerusalem sending a Letter to the Churches abroad use no more Salutation than that only in that we are to comprehend whatsoever is more expresly in Pauls Salutation Seeing then it s only spiritual things which Paul here doth wish to them Observe That spiritual mercies and priviledges are to be desired above all earthly and worldly ones what soever The Grace of God and Gospel peace is infinitely to be preferred before any outward advantage Psal 4. 6 7. when David had represented the natural desire of every man unregenerated Who will shew us any good He presently demonstrates the clean contrary disposition of those that are godly and spiritual Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us and Thou hast put more gladness into my heart then they have had when their wine or oyl increaseth By David you may judge of all the faithfull they esteem more of the love of God and the sense or perswasion of this more than the whole world Let the prophane bruitish men of the world say as some did in Chrysostomes time whom he reproveth Give me that which is sweet although it choke me So let me have my pleasures my lusts though they damn me The godly on the other side if raised up to this heavenly transfiguration as it were to have the spirit of Adoption enabling them to call God Father and to walk under the light of his grace and favour they will say It is good to be here So that the desires and earnest longings of mens hearts do divide the world into two parts Some and they are only few who with David say As the Hart panteth after the water-brooks so do their souls after God Yea Their souls break for the longing they have to God at all times But then others they seek the things of this world in the first place Let them have their pleasures their wealth their honours then with the Reubenites they will sit down and go no further because they see the Land is a good and pleasant Land never desiring to go into Canaan To open this Doctrine consider First That all the while a man is meerly natural and dead in his sins he is not affected with nor can he desire any spiritual mercy Even as dead men are not affected with pleasant sights or melodious sounds No wonder then though we do out of the Gospel shew such all the glory of Heaven yet they will not fall down and worship Christ because they are no wayes sensible or apprehensive of a better good Can a Worm that crawleth upon the ground live the life of an Angel or a man Alas that knoweth nothing but to crawl on the ground and feed on the dust of the earth Thus it is with every carnal man speak to him of the savour of God of the light of his countenance he knoweth no more what you mean than the bruit beast doth what reason is Besides sinne hath so infected and polluted the heart and appetite of every natural man that he calleth good evil and evil good he takes sweet for bitter and bitter for sweet That as the Swine loveth to wallow in its mire and delighteth in that more than in the sweetest garden that is Or as they say of those blind Beetles that live in muck and dung but sweet things do presently kill them thus it is with every natural man he is not only not affected but he is contrarily disposed to heavenly things Rom. 8. The wisdome of the flesh is enmity against God The wisdome the best understanding parts and knowledge that he hath is as full of malice against holy things as a Toad of poison The Greek word doth not only signifie his intellectual but his practical wisdom and affection he doth not say He hath savoury knowledge of heavenly things Sapientia est sapida scientia And as Bernard Sapiens est cui res sapiunt prout sunt Heavenly things savour as heavenly earthly things as earthly But in every natural man his appetite and taste is wholly disordered he finds no excellency loveliness in heavenly things which yet to a gracious heart are matter of exceeding delight and ravishment Hence in the second place Till a man be regenerated till he be made a new creature and endowed with an heavenly heart he is no sutable subject for these heavenly things Every one then as he is affected and disposed so he judgeth if earthly then all his affections move that way if heavenly then they are turned the contrary way As you see in mixed and compounded bodies
fancies and opinions making such a grace as we would have and then go to the Scripture to confirm it but the word of God must be the alone Rule in this case So that by the Scripture alone we shall not give too little nor on the other side attribute too much to it making Gods grace to be such a thing not indeed as it is but such as we would have It is good therefore to attend to the Scripture and to lay all our own thoughts and all humane Authorities aside that so the Scripture grace of God may be found out Now these Characters we may have of that grace the Scripture commends in God 1. That the Scripture-grace doth begin all the good in us We do not prevent God but he prevents us Thus our Saviour You have not chosen me but I have chosen you We love him because he loved us first So that the word of God doth still resolve the original of all we have into this grace of God as Rom. 9. and Rom. 11. Ephes 1. Whosoever therefore makes something in us to begin and then Gods grace to be subsequent he setteth not up grace in a Scripture-way Therefore there are no antecedent merits or dispositions in us for which God doth afterwards bestow his grace upon us The very first desire inspiration and least unseigned groans after Christ is from this grace of God Therefore the beginnings of what is good is attributed to God as well as the progressives yea the initials most of all because then we were dead in sin and in a state of enmity against God 2. The grace of God which the Scripture commends as to our Sanctification and conversion is not meerly suasory and by moral arguments or in an universal indeterminate and ineffectual manner till we by our freewill content to it but it 's a grace that takes away the heart of stone and giveth an heart of flesh it 's a grace that gives a new birth and maketh us new creatures Which expressions do suppose that we had not so much power as to consent unto grace till grace doth enable us It is a grace that giveth us both to will and to do It 's a grace that makes us to be what we are and so to differ from another whereas if we did co-operate with grace or make Gods grace effectual then it would be we our selves and not Gods grace that should make this difference 3. The grace of God which the Scripture commends as to our Justification is imputed grace not inherent evangelical grace which justifieth us is external though by faith received into us and made ours And this is greatly to be observed for what godly man when he goeth for Justification and consolation doth not more attend to inherent grace than imputed This truth is the very heart and marrow of the Gospel It is about this that there is so much doctrinal and practical contending Whether grace inherent in us or imputed to us be that which we must rest upon and lean upon when God enters into judgement with us We say only imputed grace others say inherent and that because the Apostle excludeth works not only meritorious work but godly works works of grace done by us And here now the Adversaries seem to insult saying The Apostle excludeth works only of the Law such as are done by our natural strength or perfect works or works that merit but this is to distinguish where the Scripture doth not and whereas it is said that the works of grace cannot be opposed to grace because they flow from it they are effects of it It 's answered that works of grace cannot indeed be opposed to that principle of grace within us from whence they are said to flow but they are opposed to that grace which is said to be the effect of them viz. Justification and remission of sins So that though works of grace do not oppose internal renovation yet they do justification which they say is produced by them Again whereas they say That none extoll grace more than they do because they make grace inherent to make us accepted of with God Whereas the Protestants debate it denying it this noble work For say they will not grace be most advanced in Heaven when we shall be justified by that perfection of holiness which is within us But to this also it 's answered That it's imputed grace which is Evangelical grace and that we are to exalt in this life In Heaven indeed this Evangelical and imputed grace will cease though all glory will be given to that because by it we are brought to perfect inherent grace Lastly The Scripture-grace though it be not for good duties yet doth alwayes require the study of them and diligent attending thereunto So that as we must not with the Papist make our duties thrust out grace so neither must we with the Antinomians make grace to thrust out duties for both these do consist together Therefore as the Scripture speaks of Gods grace so it doth also of those holy duties which if we do not diligently perform we cannot have any portion in everlasting happiness Use of Admonition To pray for that spiritual wisdome that we may joyn Gods grace and our holiness to be conscionable in performing of the later but to relie only upon the former Especially take heed of such wayes and courses that shall put thee out of this warm Sunne that shall make thee to walk in darkness not feeling the comfortable beams thereof Oh remember it is this alone that makes life and death comfortable It is true thou mayest be under this grace of God yet by some cloudy temptations upon thy soul thou not be able to perceive Oh but let thy earnest prayer be That Gods grace may not only be to thee but this may be evidenced to thee Thou canst never have true solid peace and quiet contentation of soul till this be all the food as it were thou livest upon till this be all the cloaths thou coverest thy nakedness with SERM. XXV Of the Nature of true Gospel peace and wherein it chiefly consisteth 2 COR. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ VVE are now come to the second thing which the Apostle doth so cordially wish these Corinthians and that is Peace Grace is the Cause Peace is the Effect Grace is the fountain Peace is the stream This word Peace among the Hebrews comes from a root signifying to be whole and sound because by Peace they did mean all good and prosperity as by Warre the Hebrew word coming from a root signifying to eat and devour they meant all misery and destruction And among the Hebrews this was their ordinary salutation and greeting Peace be to you intending thereby all prosperity and happiness And so some expound it here by Peace understanding a prosperous and successefull proceeding of all their affairs But though this is not to be excluded yet
man He suffered in his Name in all reproach and ignominy dying a most accursed death and shalt thou be so tender and delicate as not to indure the mocks and rages of men for him Shall Christ be in cruce and thou in luce Christ in convitiis and thou in conviviis Christ in patibulo and thou in Paradiso as Gerhard expresseth it Oh fear left this prove dreadfull at the latter end SERM. XLVII What Qualifications they must be endowed with who suffer in a right manner for Christ 2 COR. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ WHat it is to suffer for Christ ex parte objects in respect of the matter for which hath already been dispatched We now proceed to shew What is required ex parte subjecti What are the qualifications necessary in him who doth truly suffer for Christ When we read of so many glorious priviledges promised to such as are troubled for Christs sake you must know that their bare suffering no not for that which is righteous is enough to entitle them to this blessedness but there must be the Adverb as well as the Nown it must not only be pro bono but benè for that which is good but also in a good manner for suffering and martyrdome it self as all other duties is not integrated of all its causes as it is not enough to pray to hear though these for the matter be commanded but they must be done in an holy and spiritual manner Thus it is not enough to suffer or to be persecuted and that for Christs sake unlesse also we have that holy frame of heart in suffering which Gods word doth require Let us then examine this truth viz. What are the requisites to qualifie a true sufferer for Christ When his cause is good his heart his ends also must be good Therefore that ordinary saying Causa non poena facit Martyrem The cause not the punishment doth make a Martyr must be further limited for the cause doth not unlesse there be also those concomitant graces in the subject as well as there is truth in the object and we shall find this suffering temper to have as curious ingredients into it as there was into that precious ointment made for the high Priest alone and no wonder for it is the highest pitch of love we can arrive at to suffer for him and it is the most contrary to flesh and blood So that ●one can do this for Christ but such who are wonderfully enabled by him First Therefore in a sufferer for Christ there is required Faith in the eminent and powerfull actings thereof It is as impossible to suffer without faith as a bird to flie without wings It 's faith alone that can remove these mountains in the Sea Heb. 11. Those great exploits the Saints did yea and those wonderfull sufferings they underwent is attributed by the Apostle wholly to their faith Now this faith requisite to true suffering for Christ emptieth it self into two chanels there must be a Dogmatical Faith and a Fiducial Faith A Dogmatical Faith is that whereby a man is assured of the truths be suffereth for as divine and because of Divine Authority Faith must be as Heb. 11. 1. an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The substance and evidence of things For if a man have not this faith it 's obstinacy and pertinacy not faith that maketh him suffer as we see in Hereticks Hence also it is that a meer Opinionist or Sceptick in Religion will never suffer for Christ because he hath no faith but opinion in Religion So likewise those who are of a Religion meerly for humane Authority sake because of the custome and Laws where they live commanding such a Religion as those amongst the Graecians that were called Melchitae because they followed the Religion the King was of though indeed the Orthodox were so branded by the Heretical party Vide Hornbeck de Graecis These cannot suffer truly for Christ Indeed they may suffer for their Religion as it 's local and traditional to them as Turks and Jews do but yet this is not from faith which doth necessarily relate to divine testimony This then cuts off the glory which Hereticks and erroneous persons may boast of if they suffer truly they suffer with a true Faith if they have a true Faith that can be proved and demonstrated out of Gods Word And when we say a Dogmatical Faith that must be understood in respect of its compleatnesse and integrity as to Fundamentals No man can suffer truly for Christ that peremptorily denieth any I undamental if he hold the foundation though he build hay and stubble superstructive errours yet if he do not demolish any of the foundation stones he may be saved but so as by fire And truly is this charity be not allowed we shall scarce find any person or Church truly suffering for Christ For where hath there been such a sound faith in Fundamentals circa-fundamentals and praeter-fundamentals as that there hath not been any spot or wrinkle in the face of the Church This prerogative belongs to the Church in Heaven They therefore suffer for Christ who are persecuted for his truths though happily they erre in many things not necessary to salvation But if they deny any Fundamentals I do not say doubt and that for a season as the Apostles did about the nature of Christs Kingdome and his Resurrection and that with persevering obstinacy then though he suffer for one Fundamental yet because he denieth another he doth in effect destroy the whole building of Christ Thus when a Macedonian suffered for holding the Deity of Christ being put to death by an Arian the primitive Church never judged him a Martyr because he denied the Deity of the Holy Ghost There is therefore required a sound Dogmatical Faith for which cause some have doubted Whether the Church did well in making all those infants which were killed by Herod because of Christ in reckoning them among Martyrs For they did not know any thing of Christ neither it may be many of their parents had any true faith about him Certainly ly they cannot be called Martyrs or Sufferers for Christ in an active fense but passively only The second act of faith is a fiducial dependance on the promise of God and his Power which is able to raise up the heart above all fears and discouragements yea to represent prisons palaces and coals of fire beds of roses such a transubstantiating nature is faith of It was faith Heb. 11. which made Moses esteem the reproaches of Christ more than all the glory and honour which was in Pharaoh's court especially faith as it is the substance of things hoped for As it maketh Heaven and glory present so it 's admirably quickning and enlivening the heart of him that suffereth It is therefore called The shield of faith which above all or to all as some expound we
People 1 COR. 1. 14. That we are your rejoycing as ye also are ours THis is the Second particular in the Text and doth contain the Specification wherein this acknowledgment of the Corinthians did consist viz. That he was their Rejoycing However some false teachers had endeavoured to take off their affections from him yet they had acknowledged him to be their Father and Master by whom they were faithfully instructed in the wayes of Godliness and for this they did blesse God and rejoyce that they had such a Teacher which was so great a mercy that few did enjoy the like Now the Apostle addeth That this rejoycing was mutual he did as well rejoyce in such apt and obedient Schollars Chrysostome observeth this Addition to be a great Expression of Pauls Modesty and Humility for that the Corinthians should glory and rejoyce in such an eminent Teacher as Paul was It is no wonder but that he should rejoyce in them who were so inconstant and so uncertain in their affections to him yea who were to be blamed so much in Doctrinalls and practicalls This may make us admire But sayes Chrysostome This Paul doth for humility sake that he might not procure envy us if he thought two arrogantly of himself therefore he assumeth them into a co-partnership with his glory and rejoycing The Original word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lieth already bear opened There is nothing difficult in the words onely when Paul and the Corinthians are thus said to be one anothers rejoycing we are to understand that the Act is here put for the Object of it as often in the Scripture Thus rejoycing is put for the Object Matter and Cause of our rejoycing and if you say We are to rejoyce in God onely in the Lord not in men that is true We are to rejoyce in God onely as the Author of all our good yet we may in men as they are instruments used by God to communicate his benefits to us Thus a people may rejoyce in a faithfull Minister not principally and originally but secondarily as the Instrument which God hath made very successfull to their souls The Observation then is That it is a most happy and blessed thing when Minister and people can upon just and holy grounds rejoyce mutually in each other When the people can bless God for the Ministerial gifts and graces bestowed upon their Pastor and he again can praise God that he hath a willing teachable and obedient people ready to receive the Ordinances of Christ in the power and purity of them This is a rare priviledg Oh there are but few Churches of which the Ministers may say as Paul to the Colossians Chap. 2. That he doth rejoyce in beholding their order and faith in Christ To meet with a people that are neither ignorant heretical nor prophane but willing to walk according to Christs rule and his order this is to see heaven upon earth The Apostle findeth such matter of joy not onely in those Corinthians but in many other Churches For as he had more Labours more Oppositions more Persecutions than others so also God gave him more joy and comefort in beholding the spiritual successe of his Labours for this was the onely comefort of his spiritual heart to see men imbrace Christ and to live worthy of the Gospel it was not his own Glory Honor and greatness that he aymed at which is an excellent example to us Ministers of the Gospel that our Matter of joy should not be any earthly riches or wealth any great fame or worldly esteem but that we are to win people to Christ alone not our selves Thus the Apostle calleth the Philipians his joy and crown Phil. 4. 1. and 1 Thes 2. 19 20. speaking of his ardent affections to see their face by way of interrogation the more emphatically to express himself he saith What is our hope or joy or crown of rejoycing Are not even ye And then addeth positively the same thing for or rather surely certainly ye are our rejoycing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not a note of reasoning for then the Apostle would prove Idem for Idem as they say but of Affirmation and asseveration Ye are our crown of rejoycing Grotius saith It is an allusion to Kings who on their solemn festival dayes have not an ordinary but extraordinary Crown to wear for the greater pomp and glory Such extraordinary honor would the Thessalonians be to Christ at the great day But let us consider this in the general and then amplifie it respectively to Minister and people And First The Relation of Pastor and people is by divine Institution Christ himself hath appointed the Office it self and the application of it to this or that man through the desire of the Church so that as Churches are of Gods gathering They are his creature in a more special manner than the world is so likewise are the Officers and spiritual Guides to teach them 1 Cor. 12. 28. God hath set in his Church Apostles and Teachers Thus Act 20. 28. The Holy Ghost is said to set them Overseers over their flock ●eeing therefore that this relation is built on a Divine Foundation no wonder if managed according to Divine Rules that it is the cause of exceeding great joy These Relations are respectively for supernatural and spiritual ends and effects The Minister is for illumination Conversion Edification for the destroying of the power and Kingdome of Satan as also the establishing and promoting the Kingdome of grace in the hearts of the people The people also they are to be matter of encouragement to him they are to be helpfull and assistant in their way that Godliness may flourish that the ends of the Ministry may not be frustrated The Apostle sometimes taketh notice of the great usefulness and serviceableness even of some women in that kinde For though Ministers be compared to Light to the Sun and Starrs yet in this there is a difference The Starrs give Light and Influence into these sublunary things but receive no benefit at all from them again but the Ministers of the Church even though as eminent as Paul yet they acknowledg the manifold benefits and that in a spiritual way which they may receive from their people again now then how happy is it when there is a reciprocal and circular helping of each other when spiritual guides do convert edifie and quicken up their people and again the people do assist help and quicken up their Officers certainly as spiritual delights are greater than any bodily ones because the objects are more excellent and usefull so should this mutual rejoycing in our spiritual joy surpass all the delight that we take in our natural and civil relation neither the delight of a Wife in her Husband or of a Childe in his Father should be equal to the joy of a people in Faithfull Officers And so è contra the Reason is evident because the effects of this Relation are spiritual heavenly and
thy faith that doth not make thee watch and pray against this day Why doest thou not with Hierome thinke that every moment thou hearest that Trumpet sounding in thy eares Arise and come to judgement Oh be diligent in doing the Lord For blessed is that sarvant whom his Master shall finde him so doing Whereas if thou art doing the Devils worke he will at that day come and demand thee he is mine I challenge him for my owne though I never died for him though I was never crucified for him yet he obeyed me rather than Christ therefore I require my owne Call then to any of the creatures and thy friends and see if they can helpe thee when God shall say Depart ye cursed Will any say Lord he shall not goe I will deliver him I will rescue him I will make an atonement for him No but he must for ever perish and none can help him SERM. CVI. Of the Encouragements a Minister hath from the hopes of doing good to a people 2 COR. 1. 15. And in this confidence I was minded to come unto you before that you might have a second benefit AT this Verse the Apostle taketh an happy occasion for a transition to his Apology or defence against that crime charged upon him by the false Teachers Non saltat saith Cajetan he doth not leap falling upon this matter abruptly but the transition is very genuine Paul it seemeth had promised to come to those Corinthians but for weighty reasons he deferred his coming hitherto The false Teachers they waiting for all advantages to calumniate him did upon this accuse him with levity and inconstancy that with him was yea and nay that he did purpose according to carnal respects accommodating himself to time and outward advantages Now the Apostle is very zealous and vehement in vindicating of himself herein It is true Piscator doth begin this Apologetical Discourse at the 12th Ver. but it seemeth more genuine to make the beginning of it at this verse Estius doth well observe that while Paul was speaking in the commendation and praise of his Conversation he did use the plural number joyning others with him to avoid envy but when he cometh to this Apologetical part being charged with a heynous crime he useth the singular Number and speaketh of himself onely In the words we may take notice First Of Pauls Resolution 2. The Motive of it 3. The Time 4. The End And 5. The Manner how it was to be executed In the Verse following his Resolution is set down in these words I was minded to come unto you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it signifieth such a Resolution and purpose that was made upon good advice and deliberation It was not a rash suddain or presumptuous Decree but made upon good grounds though afterwards he had cause to change his minde From this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some say the word Bulla is derived as being his wise decree and purpose but seldome is there either wisdome or righteousness therein 2. There is the motive in this confidence viz. which was mentioned before of their mutual rejoycing in one another whereby he was perswaded that he might do much good amongst them we have spoken of the word already This he speaketh to shew that the motive of his coming to them was wholly out of love and desire to do them good 3. The Time when and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before some make it a trajection as if it did belong to his mind and purpose he had before determined others to his coming to him as if this coming should have been long before but there is no great matter in either construction though Beza and Grotius go the former way If you say Did the Apostle then change his mind did he alter his purpose if so would not this call in question all his Apostolical Doctrine To this we are to answer in the prosecution of his Apology at the 23d verse he there plainly telleth them what was the cause that made him forbear his comming not any levity or inconstancy in him but their sinfulness It was that he might not execute that Apostolicall severity amongst them as they deserved of which in its time Lastly There is the End of his coming which is wholly spiritual That you might have a second benefit It was for their good not his own Let us consider the Motive in this confidence of your kindness and love as also of my doing good to you I purposed to come to you Observe That where a Faithfull Minister hath good hopes and confidence of doing good to a people there is great encouragement of abiding with such Thus it was with these very Corinthians God in a Vision to Paul Act. 18. 10. commanded him to stay at Corinth and not be afraid which he did a year and half longer then usually he did any where and the reason is Because there was much people in that City to be gathered to God Oh how rejoycing is it to a Faithfull Minister when he seeeth God hath converting work edifying work for him to do amongst such a people Thus you have also Paul resolved upon his tarrying at Ephesus 1 Cor. 16. 9. and why so A great and effectual door is opened to me He did see a likelihood of much spiritual good to be done and this made him willing to abide there To affect our hearts with this truth consider First That all people both by nature and custome have a door fast bolted against the entrance of the Word So that it is as great a miracle for Christ by the preaching of the Gospel to enter into the hearts of Hearers as it was when he came in to his Disciples the doors being shut yea here is a door upon a door a bolt upon a bolt There is first their native corruption and by this they are dead in sin So that our Preaching is like hooting into the ear of a dead man should not the spirit of God change and prepare the hearts of Hearers This is the inward door and then there is an outward door which is Custome and Continuance in sinning and this also hardeneth against the Ministry Therefore people are to tremble under this contrariety to their own spiritual good Remember that as you have a door shut now against the Gospel so God will one day have a door shut against you in the Kingdome of Heaven so that although you shall cry Lord Lord open to us yet it cannot be granted you Luke 13 25. As much intreating as we make to you now to receive the Lord Christ so much will you one day use that Christ would receive you Now we knock and cry and importune that you open the doors of your heart and then you shall howl and cry to Christ to open the doors and gates of Heaven Secondly Because men are thus shut up against the Word hence it is that neither any tractableness or supposed probity in any people nor
complain of such a dull and liveless Ministry yet how little do people think that many times they give the cause so that its Gods punishment upon them in that very thing yea though Ministers be never so faithfull and godly yet as Calvin observeth they cannot go on in their Ministerial work with that vigor and alacrity they ought to do when their hearts are bound up with sorrow and discouragements about their people All cannot attain to Pauls excellency who could have enlarged bowells to that people who had streightened ones towards him SERM. CVII Of the Necessity of a constant Ministry not only for the constituting but to an establishing the Church 2 COR. 1. 15. That you might have a second benefit IN these words we have the End of Pauls purpose to come to them It was wholly spiritual It was not for any advantage any earthly respects but but wholly for their good to encrease and confirm their graces The End is expressed in these words That ye might have a second benefit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some as Chrysostome interpret for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea their are some who would have that to be the word in the Original It is no doubt but that much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or joy did follow upon this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All spiritual effects and heavenly exercises are apt to breed much joy Hence none have true joy but those that are godly and so by consequence none are blessed but they for Joy is a great ingredient to Happiness Hence Aristotle maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceedingly to rejoyce yet is more consonant to other places of Scripture to read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thus Rom. 1. 11. He desired to see them that he might impart to them some spiritual benefit The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is chiefly used in the New Testament for the free grace of God towards us in reference to our Eternal Happiness so that the very name ought to be sweet and precious to such who labour under the sense of their unworthiness and see no power or works of their own any wayes able to save them It is of grace therefore that doth not onely exclude merit but supposeth thee unworthy for such mercies of thy own self It is sometimes in Scripture applyed to such Almes as were freely given for the use of distressed Churches 2 Cor. 8. which is therefore called Grace partly because it is of Gods special goodness to give us such a free and liberal Disposition as the first Verse in that Chapter implyeth I do you to wit saith Paul of the grace of God bestowed on the Churches of Macedonia and that was to be liberal to the other afflicted Saints and partly because it cometh from the bountifull disposition of a man to such as are in want In this Text it is to be applyed to spiritual bounty that is to be willing and ready in all serviceableness to promote the spirituall good of others for there are spiritual almes as well as temporal which lieth in reproof in Admonition and frequent Exhortation to what is good Now this Grace or Benefit is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some translate iterated and repeated though it be more than the Second or third time Chrysostome referreth it to his Epistles and his presence for by both these he communicated spiritual benefit unto them But it is most probably and generally referred to his first and second coming whether Paul did come a third time to those Corinthians is disputed by Commentators because of some passages in the 12 and 13 Chapters of this Epistle of which in its time It is enough that by the first grace or benefit we mean the first work upon them by Pauls Ministry when they were converted from their Paganism and planted a Church of Christ And the second benefit was to confirm them in the same Faith and also to quicken them up unto further degrees of Holiness and this was the second Benefit Paul desired to impart unto them For it appeareth that though this Church of Corinth was a garden planted by Paul yet many weeds and some poysonous ones began to grow up amongst them There were both in Doctrine and Manners many things amiss which needed Pauls presence to reforme Observe That it is not enough to be a Church planted and gathered from out of the world at first but there needeth a constant and dayly Ministry to be tilling and dressing of it That Garden which God planted and put Adam into yet was to be dayly dressed and so it is still with the best Churches even those that are of the Apostolical Plantation yet needed the Apostles care and diligent visitations which was one main cause of writing those several Epistles to several Churches They were not written to convert them or make them Churches but to admonish instruct or confirm and comfort as occasion did require and upon this ground it is that though the office of Apostles and Prophets as also the gift of miracles are now ceased because the Church is now planted yet the office of Pastors and the Ordinances Christ hath instituted are perpetual and must be continued to the end of the world So that the opinion of the Socininians about the Ministry as it were only a thing of order and not of Divine Institution is grosly repugnant to Gods Word as also their Doctrine about Baptism That it was but a temporary Ceremony instituted for the beginning of the Church is full of falshood Churches though constituted yet must be dayly watered neither is it enough for a people once to be brought home to the Faith but they need a second and a third yea a continual benefit For though the Apostle haply did come but the second time to these Corinthians yet he appointed Officers in an ordinary residence amongst them as wel as in other Churches which were continually to watch over them The particulars wherein the Ministry is necessary for perfecting work as well as foundation work for progress as well as ingress for consummation as well as imitation are these First To inform against those Errors which false Teachers do easily insinuate into the hearts of people No sooner hath God sowed his field with precious wheat but the envious one commeth and soweth his tares As the April showers that make grass and flowers to come cause also weeds to grow Thus at the same time God is building the Church the Devil and his instruments are raising their Babel No sooner have the Ministers of God with Isaac digged up Wells but the Philistines have been ready to throw their earth and mud therein If then Errors and damnable Heresies may so quickly infect a Church formerly pure no wonder if there be such necessity of Pastors and Guides who are to lead the people into all truth by their Ministry as the spirit of
therein that do denominate him and seeing they are either the Spirit or the flesh every one either walketh in the flesh or the Spirit let a man faithfully search into his own bosome and observe what hath the predominant efficacy what he may call his principles he purposeth and liveth by and the rather because In the fourth place These principles though efficacious yet are manytimes latent and hidden It is a Rule Principia sunt maxima virtute minima quantitate Therefore being thus secret and inward it is not easily found out what principles we walk by Do those that walk after the flesh know they do so Do they believe so Do they complain of such a rotten and sandy foundation No they rather applaud themselves even the most carnal men that are do judge their principles good and right they have a good heart and good ends No doubt when Paul persecuted the Church opposed so zealously the way of Christ though in all this he was acted by fleshly principles yet he thought them Religion and service of God It is therefore our duty to examine and search into every corner of our hearts to find out the bottome of thy soul For thou art never able to judge of thy condition whether good or evil till thy principles are made manifest in thee How often mayest thou flatter thy self as doing things for God and his glory when it is thy own corrupt self thy own glory thy own advantage Fifthly These principles of the flesh are not onely in our external dealings with men or in grosse bodily sins but in religious duties and our sacred performances Oh consider this diligently A man may pray after the flesh hear after the flesh preach after the flesh and that is when a fleshly motive putteth us upon spiritual duties The Pharisees when they prayed they did walk according to the flesh and those who adored Angels and introduced voluntary worship these had a fleshly mind Col. 2. 18. Men are in the flesh and walk in the flesh not onely in respect of grosse sinnes and bodily iniquities but even when in spiritual duties they are led by sinfull motives Thus Jehu when he purposed the destruction of Ahab and his family the overthrow of Baal and his worship he did all this after the flesh When Judas resolved to follow Christ to be his Disciple all this was a resolving according to the flesh Now this we should hear with trembling and an holy fear my religion may be flesh my holy duties flesh my profession of godlinesse nothing but flesh For though the duties themselves are good and commanded by God yet the principles from which they flow may be the flesh in thee Do not take therefore all holy performances to come from a principle of sanctification in thee Did hypocrites and temporary believers diligently consider this it would be a special means to prevent their final destruction Lastly The principles of the carnal and the spiritual are directly contrary to one another even as light and darknesse and therefore one can never agree with the other Prov. 29. 27. An unjust man is an abomination to the just and he that is upright in his way is an abomination to the wicked Every godly man cannot but abominate the way of the wicked and then the wicked abominateth the way of the godly so that there can never be any agreement Now both strive for their principles dispute for their principles The godly man urgeth his and would bring men off to them The wicked man is as resolute for his principles and is active to have them take place And from hence is that enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent Now it 's a godly mans duty to keep close to his principles not for a moment to depart from them This is to betray God and his conscience But the wicked man he is bound to leave his to come out of them with all haste for they will be his damnation at last In the next place let us consider What are the principles of a godly man by which he thinketh purposeth and liveth So that if at any time he deviateth from this his heart is smitten his soul melteth saying This is not according to my principles I have not thought said or done like my self Now there are two general principles of a godly man whereby he is kept from purposing or living according to the flesh The one I may call Principium cognoscendi The other Principium essendi or rather efficiendi For the first which is the principle of knowledge by which we are to regulate our selves in faith and manners that is the holy Scriptures which are a perfect sufficient and adequate Rule to live by how contemptuously soever the Papists on the one hand and Enthusiasts on the other do speak of it We see the Apostle Paul 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. directing Timothy though so eminent in the Church of God to the Scriptures not to the immediate inspirations but unto them which he had known from his youth giving admirable commendations of them from the efficient cause they were by the inspiration of God who would not regard what God himself saith That will prove true and every thing contrary to it a lie and then the adjunct property holy they are holy Scriptures By these alone thou wilt be enabled to have an holy nature and to live an holy life As those that keep in Apothecaries shops smell of the ointment thus those who exercise themselves in the holy Scriptures they become holy they are conformed thereunto Such a man is like a tree by the water-side bringing forth his fruit in due season Again they are commended from their end which is to make us wise to salvation This is the desirable and ultimate end of all men to be saved But we are ignorant of the way how to attain it we mistake the paths that lead thereunto and therefore the Scripture only giveth us wisdome herein Furthermore they are commended from a four-fold effect For Doctrine correction reproof and instruction in righteousnesse with the consequent thereof That the man of God even Timothy and such who are in holy Offices of the Church may be throughly furnished for every good work By this we see what is the Rule a godly man walketh by it is the Scriptures he believeth according to them he worshippeth according to them he liveth according to them Oh the holinesse and admirable lovelinesse that is in his life who thus walketh according to Scripture Oh remember that you have no other Rule to walk by in reference to heavenly things Thy Religion must be a Scripture-religion thy faith a Scripture-faith thy repentance a Scripture-repentance thy godlinesse a Scripture-godlinesse else at the day of judgement thou wilt have that sentence upon thee which was an hand-writing in the wall against that great King Thou art numbered and weighed in the balance and art found
temporal sense 2. He is not a spiritual Saviour only by example 3. He doth not actually save all 4. He is not a Saviour only habitually or upon condition 1. He is a spiritual Saviour 2. He is the sole Saviour 3. He is a full and sufficient Saviour Use Of Instruction Use 2. Exhortation Of the appellative Name of our Saviour Christ In what sense Christ is said to be anointed The Lord Jesus was anointed to be our Saviour What the title Christ implies Use 1. Of encouragement Use 2. Of Exhortation Christ as Head doth appoint all the Officers of the Church A two-sold Kingdom attributed to Christ in Scripture All Church-power radically seated in Christ Church-officers are properly servants to Christ This power of appointing Officers and Laws in the Church belongeth to Christ as King Use Exhortation 1. To Church-officers Church-officers are especially to take heed of 1. That they turn not their Office into matter of pride and earthly interest 2. Of Idleness Use 2. To the people Why Paul styleth himself An Apostle of Jesus Christ Those things are highly esteemed in the Church which are despised by the world As 1. The person of Christ 2. The Officers appointed by him 3. The Duties prescribed by him 4. The Priviledges of the Gospel 5. The due execution of Church-censures Use How many wayes the will of God is taken It is the meer will and good pleasure of God that calls us to any office or priviledge in the Church We have all Church-priviledges from the meer will of God There is a two-fold Call the one general the other particular both which come from God A four-fold distinction concerning the Call of Officers 1. Some are called only by the will of God not at all by the will of man 2. Some have their call of God but by men 3. Some are of men only not at all of God 4. Others have their call neither from God nor men In what sense Paul here saith By the will of God 1. It is more than his permissive will 2. It is not his angry and just will God sometimes doth justly send ungodly Ministers amongst a people 3. It was by the directing will of God not by chance 4. It implieth it was not Pauls merit but Gods will that advanced him to this office Concerning those who enter upon the Ministry only upon carnal and corrupt motives Use The truly godly though eminent in office and grace yet are humble in themselves and condescending to others Wherein the humility of the godly discovers it self to their inferiours Why those who are so exalted above others are yet so humble towards them Use There is a great deal of difference both in the persons that are converted and in the manner of their conversion Why God is pleased to call such different persons and in such a different way None are to rest upon their godly education but all are to search their own hearts to see whether they be wrought upon or no. Use The consent of Church-officers in matters of religion is of great use and moment What are those things that conduce to Unity amongst Church officers It is of great use to young to have the guidance of solid and experienced Ministers What the word Church is used for in Scripture What we are properly to understand by a Church in Scripture Gods call as the efficient cause of the Church is either external only or external and internal also The instrumental cause of the Church is the preaching of the Word The formal cause the solemn observation of Church communion Wherein consisteth the nature of Church communion Object Answ Why needfull to know the Marks of a true Church What things necessary to make a Note or Mark. What are the Notes of a true Church How the form of a thing may be a Note or Mark of it A Church is Gods people in a more special manner than others God amongst the most prophane people sometimes gathers a Church to himself A Church may be a true though defiled one What were the corruptions amongst the Corinthians How 't is lawfull for Christians to go to Law Some observations clearing the truth that a Church though defiled may be the Church of God Reasons shewing the truth of it The Church of God as a Church doth far surpasse all civil Societies and temporal dignities Reasons shewing the truth of it Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Why Paul writeth this second Epistle to the Corinthians It is very hard for the Church of God to keep within their proper bounds in Church-administrations It is a Ministers duty to use all lawfull means to promote the Church he hath relation to How the Apostle could call the Corinthians Saints when many of them were so foully polluted All that are of the Church are Saints by profession and ought to be so in their conversations What is comprehended under Church Saintship External holiness Saintship is not enough to bring us to Heaven without the inward renovation of the whole man Propositions clearing the assertion 1. There are degrees even in real Saintship 2. Therefore is real Saintship alway growing in this life 3. Church-Saintship though real consisteth with many imperfections 4. Holiness or Saintship is the conformity of the will of man to the will of God 'T is a great shame and reproach to have the name without the nature of a Saint 〈…〉 Saints may sometimes have just reason not to joyn themselves to a Church though it be their duty alwayes to endeavour it Reasons convincing it to be each Christians duty to be of a Church What are the causes that may justly excuse us from joyning our selves to publick meetings 2. Unlawfull grounds upon which some do 〈…〉 themselves to any Church-society 1. From corrupt opinions 2. From corrupt dispositions Use Of Instruction The soul of the poorest Saint is as much to be regarded as of the greatest Spiritual mercies are to be desired before temporal What are those things that peculiarly move the godly to preferre spirituals before temporals The Reasons of it The grace of God is to be desired before all other things Propositions discovering the nature of the grace of God What the grace of God implies How grace is called the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ Who are fit subjects to partake of Gods grace without Rules how we may rightly understand and judge of the grace of God The Scripture characters of the grace of God Peace from God and Christ is earnestly to be prayed for as a very choice mercy Wherein this peace consisteth What are the principal causes of a godly mans fears troubles and disquietnesses What are the effects of this Gospel-peace Directions how to attain this peace Of the names attributed to God in Scripture God alone can give grace and peace to his people Reasons God is a Father in a more peculiar manner to those that believe what it is for God to be our Father God is a Father to the
his Office His name Paul His Office an Apostle This is further amplified 1. From the Authour of his Office Jesus Christ Jesus because of the Beneficium conveyed to us by him Christ because of the Officium undertaken by him 2. From the Manner how or impulsive Cause By the will of God In the Inscription there is also mention of a Companion or Person conjoyned with Paul not to dictate this Epistle but as an approver of it who is described from his name Timothy and from his relation a Brother In the next place we have the Subject to whom this Epistle is directed and that is either more special the Church of God described by its local situation at Corinth Or else more generally with the place where they live All the Saints which are in all Achaia The Verse divided into these parts will afford several Observations And 1. Let us consider the Author instrumental for the Spirit of God is the principal described by his name Paul and in that briefly consider his Name and his Person what he was His name is Paul so constantly in his Epistles but in the History of his life in the Acts of the Apostles he was constantly called Saul till Chap. 13. In the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now concerning his name the conjectures of learned men are divers Beza thinketh Saul and Paul to be the same name with a different dialect Others say he had two names and they are different Chrysostom thinketh Christ did in an immediate manner give him this name thereby making Paul his servant in a peculiar manner Imposition of names being a demonstration of dominion Thus he altered Abrahams and Jacobs names Others they say it was in an humane way he was named Paul either because of the conversion of Sergius Paulus mentioned Acts 13. the Proconsul who out of indeared affection to Paul would have him called by his name or as Austin thinketh Paul assumed it himself as signifying one that is little to shew his modesty he calling himself the least of all the Apostles But Sc●ligers conjecture seemeth most probable That when the Jews were brought in subjection to the Romans they had commonly two names one of their own Nation and another Roman to ingratiate themselves and also for more familiar converse and therefore Saul is not called Paul till upon the setting him apart to preach unto the Gentiles But this is not so great a matter as the consideration of his person and his life what he was and by the history of his life which he himself also makes often mention of he was a cruel and bloudy persecutor of the Church of Christ being mad against the Saints and haling them before the high Priest never satisfying his wolvish disposition against the sheep of Christ At last he is converted in a miraculous and wonderfull way and of a persecutor made an eminent Apostle of Jesus Christ So that we may with greater wonder say Is Paul amongst the Apostles then they did once Is Saul amongst the Prophets Here is a wolf made a lamb a vulture become a dove a Bramble made a Mirtle-tree This work of Gods grace in making such a change upon Paul may justly be esteemed as wonderfull a work as those miracles that were wrought upon mens bodies though it were the resurrection from the dead Observe That God may and doth sometimes take of the greatest sinners and make them eminent instruments of his glory The worst of men sometimes his grace maketh to be the best of men we need go no further than these very Corinthians to whom Paul writeth Acts 18. God tells Paul He had much people in that City and yet of all the places in the world you would think the preaching of the Gospel would never have done good there but God even in this wilderness did make to himself a pleasant garden Paul might have wrote this Paul once the greatest of sinners to the Corinthians the greatest of sinners To open this let us take notice of Paul his sinnes his work of grace and his serviceableness after his conversion For his sins how great they were he himself doth aggravate them sufficiently insomuch that he saith he was the chiefest of all sinners 1 Tim. 1. 15. In what sense Paul could say this truly is disputed for it 's plain he was not a greater sinner than such who sinned the sin against the holy Ghost Some therefore restrain it to converted sinners as if Paul meant he was the greatest sinner that ever was converted Others understand it thus that he was in the number of the greatest one of the chiefest and that seemeth most genuine He was a blasphemer a persecuter the blood sighes and groans of many Christians would witness against him And although he saith he did this in ignorance yet that did not excuse him for he confesseth himself a blasphemer and a persecuter for all that for this ignorance was vincible it was affected and wilfull he had means to the contrary Behold then here a worse sinner than Mary Magdalen out of whom seven Devils were cast for her sinnes were carnal and bodily but Paul's sinnes were spiritual and seated principally in his soul so that as the Devils are spiritual wickednesses thus was Paul and because he was thus corrupted in his spirit his disease was the more incurable For If the eye be dark how great is that darkness The prophane gross sinner he is easily convinced he is presently apprehensive of his evil but where sinfullness hath possessed the vital parts of the soul the mind and the heart what hope can remain for such an one This made our Saviour say The Publicans and Harlots entered the Kingdom of Heaven above the Pharisees Now Paul he was a Pharisee and most zealous above others for the tradition of his fathers and therefore thought his wilde zeal to be true love to God A man then so great a sinner and yet so self-confident that he had all the disadvantages in the world yet is converted and that when he had for some while lived in such a way being habituated and rooted in it For as some think he was converted about the thirtieth year of his age 2. The work of grace was admirable and wonderfull Twice the Apostle himself relateth it while he was in the way breathing out threatnings to the Church of God even in this his wicked posture He was striken to the ground and a glorious light shone round about him That as they say of some lightning it melteth the sword while it doth not hurt the scabbard at all Thus Paul's body not being any way hurt in this miraculous Vision his soul was wonderfully melted and changed insomuch that he crieth out Lord what wilt thou have me to do This instance of Paul's conversion is an hammer to beat down the Arminian Doctrine here they labour and sweat to give a clear answer Some
ordinary Pastours succeed the Apostles in what they had as ordinary viz. to preach the Word and dispense the Sacraments Lastly Though thus admirably qualified yet they did not convert all before them But many resisted their Doctrine many grew enemies and opposite to them Insomuch that all but John were put to violent deaths It 's then no wonder if ordinary Pastors do not reform a whole Congregation if they be hated and opposed for can they expect to be better than the Apostles Do not then think with your selves if we had such as the Apostles to preach to us immediately called of God and that could confirme their Doctrine by miracles then we would presently submit This is but deceit and hypocrisie And certainly though the Apostles be taken from us yet we have their Doctrine Paul speaketh by his Epistles to us still We need not with Austin wish to hear Paul preaching SERM. V. The Divine Call of Church-Officers is clearly to be knowne and faithfully to be improved What advantages will follow upon a true Call both to the Officers themselves and the People 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. VVE have considered Paul under the second adjunct attributed to him viz. his Apostleship Paul an Apostle whereupon we treated on the Office of the Apostles We proceed to a second Observation For whereas Paul doth therefore mention his Call to that glorious Office thereby to be received with greater reverence and authority as also to encourage himself against those false Apostles who used their utmost endeavour to bring him into reproach with the Corinthians We may thence observe this That it is of great consequence both to the Ministers of God and the people to be fully informed of that Divine Call which the Officers of the Church have towards them That they who preach may be able to say We come in the Name of the Lord to you It is not we that have obtruded our selves but God that hath invested us with this Office over you And they also who hear may say We esteem of you as the stewards of God we receive you as Embassadors from the Lord to us To pursue this first Consider that there are many large disputes both in old and later writers about the Call of Church-officers As the truth it self is subject to many difficulties So the perverse disputes of men have made it more intricate and intangled onely this we may observe That the several parties which are in Religion that hold any Ministry or such an Office at all and that by Divine Institution for some deny such an Institution they still monopolize and appropriate the Call to themselves with them onely is the true Church with them only are the true Officers of the Church And no doubt that way of Religion which can say with them only is the true Call and the true Church-officers and the right administration of Ordinances doth infinitely excell all other waies For Gods promise and success doth accompany only his own Officers and his own Ordinances As the people of God will not hear a stranger but flee from him so neither will God go along with such strangers It 's only to his Apostles and their Successours that he promiseth to be with to the end of the world Therefore that Church who can upon just grounds say that with us are the true Officers with us are Christs institutions punctually observed no doubt but with them is Christ present and with them is the Kingdom of Heaven This was the great advantage Abijah pleaded in his Remonstrance against Jeroboam who had devised a new Ministry and a new worship 2 Chron. 13. 9 10 11. Where he pleads That in Jerusalem was the true succession of Priests and there was the charge of God kept and that therefore God himself was with them To have therefore a true Call is of so great concernment that all pretend to it The Papist chargeth the Protestant That their Ministers have no true Call The Protestant returneth the same charge to them The Brownist he saith neither Papist nor Protestant have true Calls Yea and the Protestants themselves because of their different opinions in Church-Government have also different opinions about the Call of Church-officers So that it being of such consequence no wonder if the Devil keep up this controveesie as much as may be in the Church especially if he pursue this designe to make the world believe That the faithfull Ministers of God have no true Call for this is to strike at the very root of all Hence it is also That in the several ages of the Church there have been false Prophets and false Apostles Yea our Saviour Mat. 26. saith There will be also false Christs and the Apostle saith The Devil transformeth himself into an angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. But my intent is not at this time to dispute the Nature of a Ministers Call and how you may discern it from false Calls when you may conclude the Minister you live under hath a true Call For all this will be more properly handled towards the the end of this Epistle when the Apostle is compelled to plead his Call against those that questioned it In the second place It 's not enough to plead a Call and that a true one unless there be also a faithfull improving of it unless the Office be executed according to the institution of it Paul doth not glory in the meer Title and Office of an Apostleship but supposeth also his faithfull dispensation of it Yea he was so carefull herein that he professeth He knew nothing by himself viz. of negligent and ill administration in this Office 1 Cor. 4. 2. Yea he saith That he kept his body lest while he preached to others he himself should become a reprobate 1 Cor. 9. 27. Judas was an Apostle yet he had little cause to boast in that Office seeing he was a Devil at the same time Grant therefore that some may make it clear that they have a Call from God yet if they are not faithfull and diligent therein the greater will be their condemnation be Suppose the Pope could prove which yet he can never do that he doth succeed Peter and that in Universal Jurisdiction yet if he did not succeed likewise Peter in his Doctrine in his diligence and life he were inexcusable and well did the Painter draw Peter with too red a colour as blushing at the enormities of his Successours So that two things go to make a compleat Officer in the Church his Divine Call and his faithfull administration thereof and this later is necessary because without diligence therein he cannot expect that promise and assistance of God which otherwise would be communicated unto him These things premised let us consider what are the great practical concernments which will follow those who have a true Call of God And First For the Officers themselves there are these encouragements 1.
sought not himself neither did he mind his own will or his own glory And certainly the higher the Office is the greater will thy account be and thy condemnation the heavier Oh the dreadfull account that is to be made at that day concerning this talent 2. Of laziness and idleness For the work is of great consequence The bloud of souls will speak more terribly than the blood of Abels body How severe was the master in that Parable of our 〈◊〉 to him who hid his talent in a napkin Luke 19. 20. he is called an unprofitable servant and must be cast into utter darkness Use 2. To you that are the people If we have our Commission from Christ then take heed how you reject the Word we speak from him The Apostle makes a comparison between him that refused Moses speaking and Christ speaking and saith How much forer punishment shall he be thought worthy of Heb. 10. 29. Every Sermon your condemnation will rise higher upon you Think not that our words will passe away No God saith by the Prophet They shall not return in vain for if it be not a saving and converting word it will be an hardning and condemning one No wonder if our Saviour spake one Parable to this very purpose and concludeth Take heed how you hear Mark 4. 24. The second thing observable from this relative consideration is That the Apostle intending to beget awe and esteem in the hearts of those he wrote unto he mentioneth his Office and from whom he had it An Apostle of Jesus Christ This was a greater glory saith Chrysostome then if he had styled himself any temporal Officer in the Civil State For he doth saith the same Father as if one next to the Emperour should write to a certain people giving himself that title of honour which was next to the Emperour Thus doth Paul The Apostle of Jesus Christ. This could not but astonish and startle all his opposers and enemies yet if you do consider with a worldly respect what Christ himself was and so any Officer under him you must judge it the most contemptible and despicable thing that can be that which a carnal man would have been ashamed to own for Christ himself was called The Carpenters sonne and bred up at Nazareth a most despicable place and his outward condition was so low that he saith He had not where to lay his head And as for his Apostles what repute they had in the world Paul himself telleth us when he saith They were accounted the off-scouring of all things 1 Cor. 4. 13. Yet see how the Apostle glorieth in this title as that which might justly awe the consciences of those to whom he wrote From this observe That those things are of high account and respect in the Church of God which in the world are very despicable and despised As That which is highly esteemed amongst men is abominable before God Luk. 18. So that which is abominable and loathsom before men is highly esteemed with God We might instance in many things First Christ who is the Head of the Church and the chief corner-stone yet he was rejected by those who by their Office was builders Yea Christ crucified was accounted foolishness to the Gentiles Insomuch that had not God promised Christ To give him the Nations of the Earth and had actually lifted him up above all principalities and powers We should have thought there would not have been one City much lesse one Nation especially not so many Nations adoring him as God We may truly say This is the Lords doing and it is marvellous in our eyes Christ is called by the Apostle The King of Kings and Lord of Lords which 2 Tim. 5. 16. Drusius saith was the Title and Style of the great Kings of Persia but who except the Christian would admire Christ more than the Persian King Therefore it was a wonderfull work upon those Wisemen of the East that they should come and bring such presents and worship Christ though an Infant whom they found in a mean place at Bethlehem and in the meanest place there but where God giveth spiritual eyes there is a spiritual excellency discovered where the world seeth nothing but contemptibleness Secondly For the Officers of Christ In worldly considerations how low and despised are they But to those who are spiritual and acknowledge the Order and Institutions of Christ they esteem them as the Stewards of God and the Ministers of Christ insomuch that it 's the cause of contemning Religion when their Office is despised Paul was so received by the Galatians as if he had been an Angel from Heaven Yea Christ himself They would have pulled out their eyes to have pleasured him And we see in the after ages of the Church how much the Ministers of Christ were had in esteem insomuch that it greew unto an excesse Now though the carnal worldly man beareth no such respect to them yet those who are led by Scripture doe highly esteeme them and that for their workes sake Thirdly The Duties prescribed by Christ they are such as the world condemneth either for folly or pusillanimity as Faith in Christ alone for salvation self-denial readiness to take up our Crosse To love our enemies to do good to those that hate us Are not these such things that the magnanimous and gallant spirits of the world do disdain Fourthly The priviledges and encouragements which Christ also inviteth with they are not such baits as will take in the world Psal 4. Who will shew us any good that is the vote of the world As for the light of Gods countenance justification and assurance of Gods grace these things they do no more esteem than the Swine doth Pearl Lastly The due execution of the Censure of the Church upon just grounds to cast out the impenitent sinner This the world contemneth but yet you see how powerfully it wrought upon the Incestuous person And Matth. 18. when our Saviour had said He that would not heare the Church must be like a Publican and Heathen lest they should despise this he saith Whatsoever ye bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven Use of Exhortation To admire the power and wisdom of God who hath kept up Church-officers Church-ordinances in the world when there are no outward pompous motives to perswade thereunto SERM. VIII In what sense Paul saith of himself He was an Apostle by the will of God Shewing likewise how all Church-Offices and Priviledges come meerly from the will and good pleasure of God 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God c. VVE are now to consider the last particular in this Inscription as it is divided to us and that is the impulsive Cause or rather the Manner how Paul obtaineth this Apostleship which is said to be by the will of God Here is much comprehended in this expression for hereby is declared That it was
zealous was Paul in desiring this for the Jews We read of a notable expression Epist 3. of John ver 2. There he wisheth Gaius as much health to his body as he had in soul How excellent was his soul that was in better condition than his body SERM. XXIII Of the Name Nature and Preheminence of the Grace of God above all other things 2 COR. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace c. THe next thing considerable in these words are the particular mercies prayed for in this Salutation The first whereof and that which is the efficient cause of all other things is Grace The Common-place in Divinity De Gratia Dei of the grace of God is of a very vast extent and most of the Popish Arminian and Socinian errours arise from the mistake of the use of this word in the Scripture but it would be impertinent to grasp that whole controversie I shall not treat any more of it then what may relate to this Text. We may therefore briefly take notice of the use of it to our purpose That the first and most principal signification of it is the favour and mercy of God towards us for it answereth the Hebrew word Chen which comes of a root that signifieth to have mercy So that when the Scripture faith We are justified by grace we are called by grace we are saved by grace The Popish party doth grosly erre taking grace there for something in us wrought by the Spirit of God whereas it is indeed without us even the Attribute of mercy and grace in God So that the meaning is We obtain such glorious priviledges not because of any thing in our selves though never so holy but because of the meer grace and favour of God without us Grace then in the most frequent and principal signification of it denoteth the favour and goodness of God But then In the second place It is used sometimes for the Effects of this Grace For as mercy is sometimes taken for the attribute in God and sometimes for the effects of it So likewise is grace Hence it is that Gods grace is sometimes put for the Gospel and the preaching of the Word This being meerly from his grace that he vouchsafeth such a mercy to his people Act. 20. 24. Tit. 2. 11. Sometimes it is taken for the good success and special assistance that God giveth unto the preachers of it Act. 14. 26. 1 Cor. 15. 10. Yet not I but the grace of God viz. assisting and giving success to my ministerial labours Again It 's applied to those common gifts of Gods Spirit which were so wonderfully vouchsafed in those dayes To speak with tongues to work miracles these are called the grace of God though some would distinguish between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 3. 10. 1 Pet. 4. 10. Yea the very function and offices in the Church are called Gods Grace as Paul did his Apostleship Rom. 1. 5. because it's the meer grace of God that hath appointed such Offices in the Church Lastly That which the Roman Church makes the more ordinary sence that indeed is sometimes but seldom to be found in Scripture viz. to signifie those habits and principles of holiness which are with in us There are some indeed who say The Scripture never useth the word Grace in this sense but some places seem to be clear Col. 3. 16. Col. 4. 6. Heb. 13. 9. 2 Pet. 3. 18. And therefore we may truly call that work of God in us Grace so that we do not make it to justifie or save for that is the grace of God without us Observe That the grace of God is to be desired by every one in the chiefest and first place This we should earnestly pray for that whatsoever God would deny us yet that he would give us his grace and favour We are I say to desire it not only above all temporal and earthly comforts above riches honours and long life but even above the sanctification and holiness of our souls which God worketh We are to desire his grace more than grace in our own hearts for this is the effect of that and this alone being imperfect in us could not justifie or save us Let us discover this rich treasure of Gods grace though the Apostle Ephes 2. 5. calls it The exceeding riches of his grace so that we can never speak to the full of it though we had the tongue of men and Angels still there is more in the grace of God than we are able to fathom We must therefore speak and understand as children about it till in Heaven this imperfection be done away And First We must know that God hath several attributes tending to the same thing yet do not ionally differ There is his Goodness whereby he is willing to communicate of his fulness to the creature Thus he was good to Adam making him so glorious a creature There is his Mercy and that is whereby he pitieth his creature being cast into misery There is also his Patience and Long-suffering which is extended to sinners that do for a long time rebell against him when he could if he pleased destroy them every moment in hell And lastly here is this property of Grace whereby he is called a gracious God And this the Scripture doth speak of as the most glorious and comfortable attribute and that doth imply these things 1. That whatsoever good God doth bestow upon us it cometh solely and originally from his meer bounty and good pleasure So that there is nothing in us that may in the least manner either merit with God or move him to be thus gracious So that we can never hear of this word Grace but it should presently humble and debase us it should make us condemn our selves and give all to God For if it be of grace than there was no motive in us God out of his own bowels doth this for us Rom. 1. 5 6. The Apostle speaketh very fully to this If of grace than it is not of works otherwise grace is no more grace So that to acknowledge the grace of God as Pelagians were forced to do and so Papists and Arminians do yet at last to divide between grace and our selves to make us co-workers with it yea to make it effectual this is to take all away really that we had given verbally before So that if it be Gods grace we must not give so much as the least sigh and desire to our selves all cometh meerly from the good pleasure of his own will 2. Grace doth not only thus imply a pure and only original from God himself excluding us but it supposeth also a manifest unworthiness in us and a contrary desert to what God bestoweth upon us Therefore grace in the Scripture language supposeth sinfulness in us that we deserve to be abhorred and cast out of Gods presence Hence justification and pardon of sinne are attributed to the grace of God
the grace of Adoption yet the Apostle confirmeth that speech because we are all his creatures but the good Angels and good men are the sons of God in a more endeared respect We shall not insist long neither upon this though the Scripture make it the treasury of all our consolation only we may briefly consider What it is to be our Father And First It implieth his spiritual begetting us by the Word For before conversion the Devil is our Father we may say Our Father which art in Hell if we were to pray to him as our Saviour told the Pharisees not Abraham but the Devil was their Father and all because we have his likeness upon us and his works we do But when God by his Spirit doth change us and make us to partake of his Divine Nature then we are sons Sonnes by Adoption and sonnes by Regeneration It is not then every one that God is thus a Father to he must have the Image of God and his likeness Therefore though many call him Father yet he is a Judge and an enemy to them because they are contrary to him in nature and actions Secondly As God is thus a Father in respect of a metaphorical generation so also in regard of all his paternal love and care to those that are his No bowels of father or mother are comparable to his Therefore the Prophet Isaiah makes his love to transcend the mothers love and that to her sucking infant Isa 49. 50. Insomuch that all our doubts and fears may presently be subdued if we consider he is a Father Why art thou so disquieted as if like Melchizedech thou were without father and mother Thou art afraid of hell and condemnation but will a Father do thus Again thou doubtest about many earthly and sensible comforts what thou shalt eat or drink and doth not our Saviour say Matth. 6. 8. Your Father knoweth what ye have need of Improve then the relation of a Father think what care love and bowels God hath put into thy heart who art a father to thy children thou never doubtest of thy affections to them but many times of their affections and dutifulness to thee And is not this fatherly affection much more in God Thirdly He is not only our Father but he sendeth his Spirit into our hearts to assure us of this and to be more affected with it Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 6. For whereas in nature there the child by a natural instinct is carried out to his father and to call upon him It is not thus in grace for when God is become our Father then we need the Spirit of God to assure us of this to make us believe it of our selves we should rather conclude he is our enemy and our Judge but this Spirit of God putteth a filial confidence into us Again it doth not only assure us but inableth us against all those doubts and jealousies we have to the contrary to cry Father that denoteth the soul is in a very great agony many objections and oppositions it hath but yet we are enabled against our hearts and against the Devils temptations thus to do Lastly He is a Father and therefore doth afflict us and chastise us for our good Insomuch that it is from his fatherly love to afflict us as well as to give us of his mercies and if as the Apostle urgeth Heb. 12. 9. We reverenced our fathers after the flesh when they chastized us how much rather our Father after the Spirit which cannot miscarry or erre in his afflictions upon us To this Doctrine let us adde the Extension of it Our Father Paul saith not my Father or the father of Abraham and such eminent Saints but our Father Observe God is a Father to the meanest and weakest believer as well as the strongest Hence our Saviour taught all the godly to say Our Father In this expression is implied First Appropriation and application It is not enough to acknowledge God a Father but we must bring this relation home to our hearts Our Father my Father and thy Father Secondly It implieth That God is so the Father of one believer that he is the Father of all the rest Earthly parents have sometimes so many children that they cannot provide for all at least so liberally but God can do as much for any one child of his as if he had no more his riches and inheritance is given to every one All his children are heirs and have as much as if there had been but one child Thirdly There is implied the unity and agreement of all believers amongstthemselves They have one Father why then should there be such divisions amongst them The Apostle Ephes 4. 6. urgeth this one God and Father of all one Lord one Spirit one God and Father These are brought as arguments of unity not meerly because they are one but one ●o believers All believers have but one Lord one Spirit one God and therefore are to manifest this unity Use From both the Doctrines joyned together of Direction with what Evangelical quiet and joyfull spirits we should live upon this divine truth Gods being our Father should be the Gospel harp to drive out every unbelieving and troublesome thought 1 John 1. 3. Truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Sonne Jesus Christ Our fellowship it should be no new or strange thing to us SERM XXVIII Of the Dominion and Lordship of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 2 COR. 1. 2. And from the Lord Jesus Christ WE are arrived now to the last particular in this verse and that is the second Principle or Cause of this Grace and Peace prayed for which is Jesus Christ So that the Lord Christ is here conjoyned with God the Father in bestowing of these spiritual mercies In the words therefore we have the Description of Christ 1. By his Name Jesus 2. By his Office Christ Both which we have already considered in the former verse There remaineth therefore the Relation by which he is represented to us and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord. Paul here prayeth for Grace and Peace from Christ our Lord as well as from the Father which is a sure and strong argument of the Divine Nature of Christ for it is God alone that can give these spiritual mercies if Christ were not truly God he could not give these divine priviledges And hence also it followeth That it 's our duty to pray to Christ seeing he is the Author of such mercies The blasphemous Hereticks of late have differed among themselves Socinus and Franciscus Davidis about praying to Christ The later denying it lawfull to call upon Christ in prayer The other granting in the New Testament examples of it as when Stephen said Lord Jesus receive my Spirit c. So that it is lawfull but yet he saith There is no precept to command it But no wonder at this seeing he holdeth That prayer in the general was never a duty
thousands abide under the power of Satan and sinne Therefore when Gods mercy is spoken of in pardoning of sinne it is perpetually in respect of us not of Christ Thus you see judging of Gods mercy without Scripture-light into how many Doctrinal errors it may plunge us 4. For want of Scripture-direction the Papist and Antinomian oppose the mercy of God but in extream contrary wayes Though God be mercifull yet he hath so ordained that none shall partake of his mercies in time but those who by his grace are inabled to believe and repent as the way to salvation Now the Papist injureth the mercy of God for he will have his Faith Repentance with other holy works the merit and cause of his salvation disdaining to have eternal life as meer alms from God But the Antinomian to avoid this Scilla falls into Charybdis he affirmeth a mercy and that of Justification even while we are sinners before we do either believe or repent But the Scripture-mercy lieth between both In the next place Let us consider What Practical Danger we are in by conceiving of God as a mercifull God without Scripture-information And First We are apt to flatter our selves with Gods mercy though we allow our selves in our sins and iniquities whereas the Scripture speaks not a drop of mercy to such Have you not many dreadfull examples of Gods anger and terrour as well as mercy What was the casting of all the Angels into eternal blackness for one sinfull thought and that the first which they were guilty of giving them no space to repent no day of grace affording no means for their recovery Is not this an instance of Gods severity But you will say This was to Angels he is more mercifull to man But consider that example of Gods Justice in drowning the whole world save eight persons Doth not that proclaim God is just and angry against sinne as well as mercifull not to spare the whole world because it had corrupted its wayes but to drown such an innumerable company of men women and children yea to destroy the whole earth as it were Oh who can stand before the anger of God! Have we not also a formidable demonstration of Gods anger against Sodome and Gomorrah when fire and brimstone was rained from Heaven to destroy those Cities and all that did belong to them What had the little children done They could not be guilty of those unclean vices but God cutteth off all Many other instances of Gods wrath we have in Scripture especially the day of Judgement will be a dreadfull manifestation of it to the wicked and therefore the Scripture will informe us in that as well as of Gods mercy A second Practical Errour I shall conclude with that necessarily accompanieth the thoughts of Gods mercy without Scripture-direction is to encourage a mans self in his sinnes because God is mercifull Every wicked person turneth this honey into gall Paul speaketh of some who made those wretched inferences Let us sinne that grace may abound Take heed then of having any such wicked thought arising in thy heart God is mercifull therefore I will go to my lusts again Oh no the Scripture represents Gods mercies for another end to repent and be converted from thy evil wayes Rom. 2 Knowest thou not the goodnesse of God would lead thee to repentance Oh then do not abuse the mercy of God! for there is a time coming when there will be no more mercy It 's called the day of wrath thou shalt meet with nothing but terrour Ezek. 8. 18. The Scripture speaks of vessels of mercy and vessels of wrath and there is no greater sign of a vessel of wrath one fitted and prepared for destruction then to grow wanton by the mercies of God to be evil because he is good so much mercy abused will one day be turned into so much vengeance SERM. XXXVI That God not only can but doth actually comfort his People and how he doth it 2 COR. 1. 4. Who comforteth us in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble by the comfort wherewith we our selves are comforted of God IN the former verse we had the Reasons of our blessing of God set down by the description of that glorious attribute of his The Father of mercies c. In this verse the Apostle doth further amplifie the cause of this duty of Thanksgiving viz. from the effect and fruit of this property of his He is not only a God of consolation habitually and potentially as it were He is not a fountain sealed up but this Sunne doth alwayes irradiate its beams As he is a God of consolation so he doth comfort So that in the words we have the Effect or Causality attributed to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who is comforting that doth never cease to do it that never withdraweth his consolations It 's his nature to be alwayes comforting As the Devil is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because he is alwayes tempting The word in humane Authors is used frequently of him who calleth another to him but in the New Testament either of him that intreateth and prayeth or of him that exhorteth or as in the Text of him that comforteth 2. The Subject of this consolation us That is either generally all believers or us Apostles and Officers in the Church For the Apostle might speak this to obviate that scandal which many were ready to take at the afflictions and persecutions of the Apostles as if they were hated of God and were nothing but impostors Therefore some part of this Chapter is a narrative of his pressures and apologetical in declaring the great goodness of God thereby to the Church 3. The particular wherein in tribulation Light can come into this dark dungeon 4. The Extent of this All our tribulation God can turn the hardest stones into bread All either of mind or body 5. The consequent Effect of this That we may be able to comfort them c. God many times doth in an exemplary manner exercise the Ministers of the Gospel that they may experimentally be able to instruct such who are tempted We begin with that efficiency given to God who comforteth is comforting and observe That as God is the God of all comfort so he doth actually put forth this comfort to those that are his Gods attributes may be truly affirmed of him though they never be put forth into act God would have been Omnipotent Mercifull Wise though he had not created the world only the creation of the world did demonstrate those Attributes Thus God may be called The God of comfort or a mercifull Father in respect of his Nature and Inclination though actually he doth not comfort any but God is a fountain communicating himself into streams of comfort he will make his people taste and feel what he is by Nature Now when it 's said That God comforteth you must understand this both in temporal and spiritual comforts
publick interest which belongs to all the godly then it followeth what comforts one may and should comfort another The Scripture which was spoken peculiarly to Joshua Paul applieth Heb. 13. to every true believer Christ is a Christ equally to one believer as well as another The godly cannot strive about Christ as those women before Solomon about a childe one said It was mine and the other It is mine one cannot say It is my Christ and not thine but Christ is every believers and yet not divided Let the Use be of Direction to the godly In their application of comforts not to observe personal considerations so much To say a Paul may take comfort a David may but shall such an one as I This is to impropriate where God hath made common SERM. XLV The true and unfeigned owning of Christ is alwaies accompanied with some sometimes with great Afflictions 2 COR. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation aboundeth by Christ THe Apostle doth still amplifie that necessary and special truth viz. of Gods comforting those who are in trouble For the troubles which do constantly follow the waies of Christ are a great stumbling block and offence to many If therefore this be received as a fundamental maxime Christs Consolations are more then our sufferings then we shall no longer be afraid but see that the Lyon is killed and we may find honey in him In the text therefore the Apostle is illustrating this precious Doctrine shewing that God doth not only comfort but he comforteth proportionably If great afflictions if overflowing afflictions then great comforts and overflowing comforts So that in the words we may observe two Propositions first absolutely considered and then secondly comparatively The first Proposition absolute is That the sufferings of Christ abound in us The second That our Consolation aboundeth by Christ Christ is the cause of our afflictions and Christ is the cause of our joy Thirdly The Comparison lyeth in the terms of similitude and proportion As our sufferings abound so our consolation also aboundeth Let us consider the first Proposition absolutely The sufferings of Christ abound in us The sufferings of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes used for the affections of sinne as Rom. 7. 5. Gal. 5. 24. And indeed these were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to Paul in another sense for he suffered and groaned under them But here in the text and in many other places it 's applied to afflictions and sufferings This is of various acception for sometimes it may be taken subjectively for those sufferings which Christ himself indured For though he was without sinne yet being our Surety he suffered for that yea he suffered every way God and man so that his sufferings were more dreadfull then the sufferings of all men put together In these sufferings is contained the treasure of all our peace and joy of which the Scripture speaketh abundantly and fully But with this our text doth not meddle Therefore in the next place The sufferings of Christ may be understood indeed of those he is affected with but yet it is in his Members not in his own Person This is a very comfortable truth that the sufferings of a godly man for Christs Cause Christ accounts them as his sufferings he taketh it as done to himself Thus Christ though glorified in Heaven saith Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Act. 9. 4 5. Christ is imprisoned Christ is buffetted Christ is reproached and mocked in them As it is comfortable to the godly so it is as terrible to all those who trouble and revile the godly for Christs sake as too many do though they think with Pilate to wash their hands and say they are innocent I mean the carnal and prophane ones of the world whose rage if God did not restrain would be as that Haman to the whole Nation of the Jews not leave one alive But this is not chiefly meant here though this be not to be excluded 2. The sufferings of Christ may be understood exemplarily by way of conformity to Christ That we suffer as he suffered In which particular Rom. 8. we are said to be conforme unto his Image 1 Pet. 4. 13. we are commanded to rejoyce when we are partakers of Christs sufferings That is when we have a communion and fellowship with him For if we suffer with him we shall also be glorified with him This is part of the meaning But then 3. That which is the principal and chiefest meaning of the phrase is to understand it causally those sufferings we indure because of Christ For owning his way for continuance in his Discipleship For the way of Christ being contrary to the course of the world hence it is that they are stirred up as so many hornets They are the Serpents seed and are of their Father the devil who was a murderer from the beginning and therefore if the godly will cleave to Christ they must expect no mercy from the world The second thing in the Proposition is the attribute 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abounds It is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the plural number but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostome understands it comparatively to Christ as if the meaning were We suffer more then Christ Christ indeed said of his Disciples they should do greater works and miracles then he did but it is impossible they should suffer more then he did For his death was not only a Martyrdome but a Propitiation being a Sacrifice offered up for the sinnes of many The word then only sheweth That the Sons of God may not only suffer but their sufferings may abound may overflow so that both in number and weight they may greatly exceed Lastly In the Proposition it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in the reddition it followeth which may be thought emphatical although it is usuall so to change Prepositions and Cases 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words thus explained Observe That a true and faithfull owning of Christ and his way is accompanied with sufferings yea sometimes overflowing and excessive sufferings The Apostle takes it here for granted supposeth it as a received truth that Christs way and sufferings are alwaies together As the Sun and shadow as the Rose and prickes So that what was said of Christ is true also of every Member It behoved him to suffer and so enter into glory Christianus is Crucianus said Luther of old I only adde in the Doctrine A true and unfeigned receiving of Christ For if so be we take only some truths and some parts of Christs way and leave those which most enrage and trouble the world if we take his Doctrine and not his Discipline his truth and not his godly order the world is lesse moved So if of his truths we take some that are more speculative and leave the
Only First Lay this as a foundation that when we say Our salvation is promoted by afflictions you must not understand this as if they of themselves did it but it is solely by the power and grace of God For in many Apostates and such who had not deep rooting sufferings did not promote their salvation but their damnation Even as to herbs not well rooted the heat of the Sun doth wither them So that some men falling into afflictions are like noisome herbs thrown into the fire which make the more unsavoury smell like earthen vessels that break in the fire They never discover their rottennesse their love to the world their unbelief so much as in those times It is true the Apostle saith Rom. 5. 3. That tribulation worketh patience But that is not to be understood of it self for in many it worketh impatience and unbelief but by the power of God moving in these waters there doth come healing So that the presence of God and his assistance is that alone which can turn these stones into bread Hence also afflictions do not advance our salvation as the Word preached doth for that alone is properly the instrumental cause in Gods hand both for sanctification and glorification as afflictions are onely occasional and set home by the Word It is true the Word it self doth not convert or save by any inherent virtue as the fire burneth but by the co-operation of God with it yet afflictions have not that efficacy or respect in the same way as the Word hath By sufferings then we are as the stone by its hewing and sawing prepared for that everlasting building in Heaven but it is the grace and power of God that doth polish and smooth us otherwise through tribulations we should enter even into the kingdom of hell But let us examine Wherein these heavenly sufferings do thus carry on our salvation And First They are a special means to humble us to bring us low in our own eyes to repent of all the evil we have done and to turn unto God As mad men are cast into prison kept in the dark and under all hardship to bring them to their mind again Thus doth God with those that are his So that it is an effect of his love to bring us into tribulations It is his love that maketh him to chastise us Heb. 12. O beatum cui Deus dignatur irasci Tertul. lib. de patientiâ O blessed is he to whom the Lord vouchsafeth to be angry And this is true not onely in afflictions meerly for sins but also in our sufferings for Christ For though the motive be thy faithfulnesse in owning of Christ and his way though it be not for thy sinnes principally but thy graces that thou art thus exercised yet God hath some respect to thy sinnes also Therefore such tribulations they are of a mixed consideration thy gracious love to Christ provoketh the adversary yet thy sinnes also God looketh at in this fiery tryal to purge them away Hence 1 Pet. 4 16 17. the Apostle encouraging believers to suffer as Christians and that by many arguments he bringeth one amongst the rest that relateth to their sinnes For judgement must begin at the house of God These persecutions he calls them judgements and that in respect of the godly which denoteth That although God did honour them as suffering for his truth yet he did also judge them in those sufferings for their sinnes It is then the duty of all Champions and sufferers for Christ as to rejoyce because they are accounted worthy to suffer for him So also by those tribulations to humble themselves to condemn and judge every sinne that they can discover It is a false and sinfull opinion of some mentioned by Raynardus Lib. de Martyrio that affirmed Whosoever did suffer for the faith of Christ his very Martyrdome was enough to cleanse him so that he was not bound in or before his sufferings to repent for such sinnes as his conscience might re-mind him of No were it possible for a man to give his body to be burnt for the truth and yet not to mourn for and bewail the sinnes he was guilty of such Martyrdome would not profit him So that as God commands the Israelites when they went to warre that they should cleanse the Camp of unclean things Thus also all those who suffer for Christ and in some sense may be said to fight the battels of the Lord it is their duty to arraigne themselves for their sinnes and to pray That this washing of them may take away their spots and filthinesse Secondly These afflictions for Christ do much promote our salvation Because they are a School to every believer whereby to know more of God and Christ of his grace and power then ever they did before These sufferings lead us into much experimental knowledge of God and his wayes These see the wonders of God in the depths A man not afflicted knoweth not what the experiences are that usually the godly find in such exercises Hence as David acknowledged Psal 119. Before he was afflicted he went astray Those afflictions did him more good than his mercies Thus also the godly who as Joh come like gold out of the fire they can truly say They would not be without those teachings those experiences they have had not for all the world especially this they are experimentally to observe How the power of God as Paul speaketh was perfect in his infirmities that the more his troubles did grow the more were the supports and comforts of God Insomuch that the afflicted soul wondereth and is amazed to see and feel the presence and power of God with it It hath that comfort that courage which it thought had been impossible for him ever to enjoy For as formerly you heard as afflictions abound so also do consolations and supports So that you must not expect God should give such extraordinary discoveries of himself but in extraordinary cases As we read of a notable instance of a woman Martyr in the primitive Heathenish persecutions who being great with child was delivered the day before she was to suffer and in her travail sending forth great and grievous groans The Jailor reproved her saying That if she did thus cry out about the bringing forth of a child how would she be able to suffer a cruel and tormenting death To whom she well replied That her present exercise was natural and ordinary and therefore expected but common supply in that case whereas her Martyrdome was extraordinary and therefore looked for extraordinary help and comfort from God This is to shew That the discoveries we have in our exercises and troubles under the unusual presence and consolations of God make us to say with Job They had heard of God with the ear but now they see him with the eye They did but know in a riddle now they do as it were face to face Thirdly These afflictions do promote and quicken to more grace
and more grace will have more glory In these trials and heavenly conflicts their faith their patience their crucified affections to the world are more inhanced As Grapes in the wine-presse send forth juice and sweetnesse As fragrant Herbes in the fire send forth a sweeter smell The Frankincense needeth fire to make it more refreshing In the race a man puts forth his swiftnesse In the fight fortitude and valour is more manifested Natural exercise increaseth the health of the body So also doth spiritual the health and graces of the soul Seeing then that these afflictions heat thy soul seven times hotter than they were before seeing they make thy five to gain ten No wonder if our salvation be exalted by them Lastly Our salvation is advanced by these sufferings Because of the glorious promises which are made to such Some indeed have doubted Whether there be Degrees of Glory or no in Heaven But that may be fully proved that those Starres in Heaven doe differ from one another in Glory And certainly those that suffer more shall have greater Glory Insomuch that some learned men have concluded from Revel 20. 4 5. That the Martyrs onely shall have a peculiar Glory bestowed on them to reign with Christ a thousand yeares here on Earth But that being not so clear we may firmly conclude That if a drop of cold water be given for Christs sake will be so greatly rewarded How much more many drops of their owne warme blood Doe not then repine under temporal losses for Christ it is abundantly made up spiritually here and will be eternally hereafter SERM. LIII Afflictions not in themselves but as improved by Patience conduce to our Salvation What goes to the producing of Patience 2 COR. 1. 6. Which is effectual in enduring of the same afflictions which we also suffer THe second part considerable in this amplification of the divine advantage and heavenly profit we have by afflictions for Gods cause is the manner how this salvation is promoted and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the enduring or in patience under sufferings It is not simply and barely sufferings for murderers suffer robbers suffer but it must be for God there must be a good cause And yet further a good cause is not enough there must be an humble patient and meek deportment in those that do suffer For if they suffer with grudging and repining thinking God is a severe Master who imposeth such hard tasks upon them then they lose their reward neither is salvation advanced hereby The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is translated sometimes tolerantia enduring and thus in the Text Even as the Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes Matth. 10. 22. Heb. 12. 3. But for the most part it is rendred patientia patience Thus Luk. 21. 19. Rom. 5. 3. It is also taken by some for perseverance and constancy so that is explained Heb. 12. 1 Let us runne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with patience we render it or rather with perseverance and constancy that we faint not or be weary ere we come to the end of our race Although therefore many other graces are necessarily required to go through afflictions so that our salvation may be exalted thereby yet the Apostle here and in many other places instanceth impatience as that which is the most proper and genuine grace for the improving of our sufferings Therefore from hence observe That sufferings not barely of themselves but as improved by patience do conducē to our salvation Without patience our corruptions and our damnation is furthered by all the tribulations we groan under So that patience is like the salt to season this Sacrifice that it may be acceptable If we struggle and strive against God complain plain and murmur because we meet with such hardship this depriveth us of our glory We are not to be like the Sacrifice that did struggle and strive and therefore must be bound to the Altar but we are to deny ourselves to take up the crosse which argueth voluntariness and readiness and then we must follow him Holy obedience must accompany this bearing of the crosse Luk. 9. 23. yea it is added He must take it up daily implying that though this crosse be put upon thy shoulders every day though it be from week to week from year to year thou must not repine but take it up daily You must not carry the cross of Christ as the Philistims heifers did the Ark lowing as they went for their young ones where patience is there is also a quiet meek and ready resignation of our selves even as was in Christ Behold I come to do thy will O God which will of God was partly to suffer most dreadfull things to flesh and blood Contranitency then and contrapugnancy to the will of God bringing tribulations upon us doth deprive us of all that soul-saving benefit we might have by them It is true indeed there is a conditional will in every sufferer for Christ arising necessarily from nature within us which desireth to preserve it self and by this we would deprecate that cup which God is giving us to drink Even Christ himself in this conditional manner prayed Father if it be possible let this cup passe away from me but then with their absolute will they do submit and say Not our will but the will of God be done Thus we have a notable expression John 21. 18. where Christ speaking of the death and martyrdom Peter should suffer for his name he saith Another shall gird thee and carry thee whether thou wouldst not not that Peter suffered against his will absolutely not that he repined at it but rather rejoyced in it only it was against his conditional will nature of itself would have desired rather freedom from those torments But let us proceed to enquire into the Nature or Properties of this Patience and I shall not enlarge my self on this subject in this place because it will come in more expresly and explicitely some where else 1. Therefore take we notice That although humane Philosophers by their several Sects did greatly oppose one another yet they did agree in the commending of patience Indeed Aristotle doth not reckon patience nor humility amongst the moral virtues but the Stoicks especially they did so commend patience as that thereby they would have a man turned into a meer stone as it were and an unnatural dedolency but no Philosophical patience not that of Anaxarchus who cried out so stoutly to the Tyrant who caused him to be brayed and pounced to death Tunde tunde Anaxarchum non tundis or of others so greatly applauded by humane Writers is worthy of the name of Christian patience There is a vast difference in the principles in the end in the effects in the concomitants as might be shewed but I shall not dilate at this time This particular is brought in to make us examine What is the grace of patience and what may be Natural or
Moral Patience Natural Patience I call that which cometh much from the constitution and complexion of their bodies they are more mild quiet and enduring of grief than others Moral patience I call that when men by wisdom and reading of moral precepts can harden themselves heroically to bear the tribulations up on them but Christian patience is that which comes from a regenerated and sanctified nature eying Gods glory his will and command only not regarding other sinister respects So that a Natural Patience a Moral Patience under thy sufferings will not advance thy salvation but that which is Christian You have a notable place for this 2 Pet. 1. 6. To patience godlinesse The Apostle doth there exhort to have the chain of graces linked together not to think it enough to have one grace unless he have all And therefore patience must be added to temperance for that requireth the denial of our pleasures the crucifying of our delights which cannot be without patience but then to this patience we must adde godlinesse implying that though we be never so meek so still so Lamb-like under our troubles yet if godliness be not added to this patient deportment if it be not from divine principles and to divine ends then our patience is greatly defective Look we therefore that when we quietly and patiently suffer it came from the grace of patience not from a counterfeit patience for this is not true gold and so will not enrich us This distinction being premised whereby a Christian may be inabled to know when it is Nature and when it is Grace that doth bear when flesh and blood doth suffer and when a divine Nature within him In the next place let us consider What goeth to the producing of this grace of patience for we cannot of our selves perform this duty of patience no more than a wildernesse can bringforth roses Therefore First The efficient cause of patience is God only The heart of man under any afflictions is like a wild bull in a net there is nothing but raging and repining under every exercise till God give a patient spirit Hence Rom. 15. 5. he is called The God of patience For what a wild unruly bedlam is an unsanctified man under any pressure upon him Like Cain he crieth out It is greater than he can bear Like Jobs wife he is tempted to curse God and so die Doest thou therefore under thy trials want patience Doth it grieve and sadly afflict thee to see thy self so passionate so impassionate Then let this make thee to run to the throne of grace improve this title God is the God of patience Say Oh God it is but speaking the word it is but saying Let there be patience and there will be patience How often have I resolved for patience How often prayed for patience and yet Lord my heart is tormented and tossed up and down like that Lunatick which could not be bound by any chains Not only my tongue but my heart are worse than unruly and savage beasts they may be tamed but this no man only God can tame it It 's God only therefore that maketh in us patience The grace of patience is farre above our power Tertullian wrote a Book of Patience but in the very beginning he apologizeth for himself why he should write of that subject which he had so little experimentally and practically attained unto and he excuseth it thus That he doth as those who are sick they delight to be talking and praising of health So I saith he who am Aeger caloribus impatientiae sick with feavorish impatient heats do delight to write of patience Thus do thou seeing it is more then of thy self thou art able to do The least tryal the least affliction is ready to heat thee with impatience pray to God importunately let him not alone till he blesse thee with this composed patient spirit Say with the same Tertullian Pereat seculum dummodo patientiam lucrifaciam Let the whole world perish so that God will give me patience Secondly As God is the efficient cause so the word of God that is instrumental The Word is like Davids harp to drive out this evil spirit So the Apostle Rom. 15. 14. That we through patience of the Scriptures might have hope When thy impatient flesh doth suggest this and that argument to discontent and repining Oh remember what the word of God saith It is for want of Scripture-consideration of Scripture-arguments that thy heart is so clamorous and unruly such a command such a promise would presently have made all calm and quiet The Heathen adviseth an angry furious man to look in the glasse while he is in those passionate fits that he may see how deformed he is made thereby but how much rather when thy heart hath boiled over with impatient repining thoughts art thou to recover thy self immediately and to look into the Word See what that faith what that requireth and then thou wilt be ashamed and abhorring thy self as a very beast Thirdly Afflictions themselves according to Scripture-expression they work patience also Thus Rom. 5. 3. Tribulation worketh patience Jam. 1. 3. The trying of your faith worketh patience Here you see afflictions are said to work patience but not of themselves it 's the power of God in and through them only as the beast accustomed to the yoke is more tame than at first so when we are constantly exercised with afflictions that they seem to be no new thing then through Gods grace we come to be more ready and willing in a patient enduring of them It is said of Christ himself He learned obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5. 8. not that he could grow properly in grace or be more obedient than he had been formerly but it is spoken in regard of experimental obedience he had the sense and feeling of it more than before but the adopted sons of God they do increase in obedience and patience by the things that they suffer Therefore thou who hast more afflictions than others it is a reproach to thee if they have not taught thee more patience and meeknesse than others Fourthly The exemplary or ideal cause of patience is God and Christ From them we have a most exact and compleat rule of patience Mat. 5. 48. Be ye therefore perfect as your heavenly Father is To be perfect is there to be patient for he had before instanced in the patience of God that even to the unjust he causeth the Sunne to arise and from this inferreth Be ye therefore perfect To be patient and that to enemies may be called perfection because this alone is taught in Christianity To love our friends is acknowledged a duty by all Nations but to love enemies is only professed by Christians Well then may we be patient under all the persecutions reproaches and vexations the enemies of God bring upon us For is not God patient towards them and yet they are more his enemies then
Wilderness They grant he provided water for them even out of the Rock the streames overflowed But can he give bread can he give flesh also Oh blind and foolish unbelief Is it not as easie for God to provide bread as water in a dry Wilderness but they limited God to their own thoughts and wayes Now this sinne of limiting God to such humane helps and wayes as we propound to our selves doth insinuate very much into the hearts of those those that are godly What was that expression of David I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul but bitter fruite from that bitter root Oh how often do the people of God in their extremities say Can God furnish a Table in the Wilderness Those millions of thoughts which eat thee up in a dividing distrusting way how shall this difficulty be overcome how shall that want be supplyed what if God suffer such a thing to be then where am I Is not all this to say Cen God prepare bread in the Wilderness And this way Paul's desponding thought in this trouble The extremity is great death is at hand there is no way to escape it but that which deceiveth him is because he looketh only to sensible helps he considers the instruments not the hand in which they are This is a very secret insinuating sinne and therefore the godly are more diligently to watch and pray against it that it do not at any time overcome them Take heed of living by sense The Apostle disclaimeth such a life in the behalf of the godly 2 Cor. 5. 7. We walk by faith and not by sense Did faith make us overlooke instruments second causes and all Creatures how certain and constant would the hopes of the godly man be The Sun would alwayes go down upon a peaceable fixed serene frame of heat but when faith prevaileth and for that composeth the soul and maketh it like the Rock which though one wave after another fiercely assault yet that abideth in the same place still so though conditions alter though unheard causes and helps be mutable yet because God is the same and the promise is the same he therefore continueth the same Let then the Children of God examine and search their hearts more in this particular see if the cause of all thy disquietness of all thy troubles and feares do not arise from this that thou art deceived that thou passest false judgement upon thy self certainly the Devill is enemy enough to thy comfort he indeavours to seduce thee and deceive thee Do not thou joyn with him against thy own true and solid comfort But let us proceed to examine the grounds of this truth And The first is Because the godly are apt to be hasty and too quick in judgeing these things They do not consider and well weigh all things together They do not compare Gods promises and his providences together They do not set Gods word and his workes together Insipientis est aspicere ad pauca they cast their eyes only upon that which is discouraging They look upon the dead wombe and not on the power of God and this inconsiderateness makes them pass false judgement Psal 31. 22. I said in my haste I am cut off from before thy eyes and again Psal 116. 11. I said in my haste all men are liars You see what hasty and sudden thoughts and words may come from those that feare God Oh do not judge in thy rashness do not conclude this or that in thy haste but consider debate and compare all things together Moses though so meek a man and the faithfull Servant of God yet in a suddain haste spake unadvisedly with his lips Examine then whether most of those thoughts whereby thou hast wronged God and wronged thy self have not risen from unadvised hastiness Thou saist in thy haste God forsaketh thee thou saist in thy haste thou shalt be undone 2. Another reason why the godly are so apt to be deceived in Gods administrations is because they are apt to be passionately transported with anger and feare and these are like a misty foggy vapour to the Sun that doth obnubilate it and obscure the light When David doth conclude he is cast off and cut off he doth not only this in his haste but in his passions also It is anger maketh him say so it is grief maketh him say so his spirit is often troubled leavened and overwhelmed within so that as when the water is bemuddied we are not able to see those little stones in the bottome which when clear we might do Thus it is here when the heart is moved with fear and grief when it is in sad commotions then it is no wonder if it judge erroneously anima sedendo quiescendo sit sapiens Let reason and wisdome or faith rather meet thy passionate heart as Abigal did David and this may prevent many sad things which prove a trouble to thee afterwards let it therefore be thy wisdome when thou art ready to give this censure and pass that sentence about thy affaires or Gods dealings with thee to stay till the heat and commotions of thy soul be over fear and anger and grief these are ill counsellours erect such a Tribunall in thy self as they say that of the Areopagite was no man was to move the affections by any Rhetoricall indeavours least thereby the judgement might be perverted 3. Therefore the godly may misjudge and conclude contrary to what God intendeth because of the want of that spirituall skill and wisdome which is requisite when we are to inquire or determine about Gods proceedings Clouds and darkness saith the Psalmist Psal 29. 7. are round about his pavilion and as his essence is a light that none can draw nigh unto so also his administrations do far exceed our naturall capacity and therefore we are not able to comprehend his counsell and wayes Now although this be so yet as the Scripture is a Directory to us how we are to conceive of his nature so it doth also teach us how we are to understand his actions The Scripture is a Key that doth in some particulars even open the deep things of God and as Sampson out of love did disclose to Dalilah such secret things that none else did or could know so setting aside many imperfections in the comparison doth God out of his love to his Church reveale to them wherein his strength lyeth how she may prevaile with him which way if she take she is sure to have good acceptance with him but to receive this there is a Heavenly wisdome and skill required When the Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 14 15 16. made a distinction between a naturall man and a spirituall as to their judgement and discerning for by the naturall man cannot be meant a weake Christian as a late Writer would have it which is the greater wonder because those of his way I mean the Arminians think they strongly conclude Paul doth not speak Rom. 7. in
especially when we speake of spirituall mercies such as justification and reconciliation with God Aegid Coninck de arteb supernat de spe a Popish Writer maketh a threefold hope or trusting in God One he calleth Pelagian and that is when we rest upon God only because of our own merits and our own strength and this he doth reject as well he may for this is not to trust in God but in our selves A second hope he calleth Lutheran and that is when he trusteth only in the grace of God excluding all merits this also he rejects and thereby also the only hope the Scripture commends to us The third hope he cals the Catholick trusting in God and that is partly upon the grace of God and partly upon our own merits yet wrought also by the grace of God But to think of merits or to speak of merits when we come into the presence of so great and holy a God whose Law we break daily and in all our best duties faile exceedingly is to play the Pharisee and not the Publican who yet only was accepted with God The second way of trusting therefore viz. only in the grace of God excluding all our own strength is that which is approved of by the Word of God So that till we be sound in our judgement about this Point we cannot rightly trust in God In the next place a second main particular to cleare the Doctrine about this trusting is to consider the excellency of their grace that so we may thereby be the more exercised therein For 1. It is many times put for the whole worship of God because he that doth trust in God he will be sure to performe all those other duties God doth require Thus Psal 115. 9 10. when the house of Israel and Aaron are exhorted to trust in the Lord by that is meant the whole worship of God even as to fear God is sometimes also put for the whole service of God The excellency and dignity of the grace appeareth herein 2. It is therefore excellent because the Lord so delighteth to put us upon the daily practice of it Insomuch that whatsoever he doth for his people either in spirituall or temporall mercies they do obtaine it wholely by trusting What is that great way whereby we are justified before God how come we to obtain this blessed priviledge It is only by faith And what is this faith but a trusting and resting upon Christ alone So that the most noble and essentiall consideration in justifying faith is that it doth make the soul rest and depend on the Lord Jesus God would not justifie us by any other way by working by doing but by trusting which doth greatly demonstrate the acceptableness of this grace to God So also for temporall mercies that assertion twice or thrice used The just shall live by faith doth in part relate to those temporall promises which God maketh for the preservation and support of his people and now God will have these performed to such who wait on him who trust on him It is not the just shall live by love by repentance but by faith God therefore would have us wholly depend upon him for every mercy we have hence we are commanded to pray for our daily bread trust not in thy store or treasure trust not in thy labour and skill but be every day at the Throne of grace begging for every mercy thou desirest Oh but what dishonour is there to God in this respect Doth not the rich man look more to his revennues then Gods promise Doth not the Tradesman look more to his custome and his gaines then Gods power yea the labouring man is apt to trust in his health and strength as if he needed not to depend upon God all the while he hath that Sanitas pauperis est patrimonium a poore mans health is his patrimony his freehold and he is apt to make it his god to trust in What excellency then is in this grace when no mercy either spirituall or temporall can be obtained but by the exrecise thereof For the soul you must trust God and the mercies thereof for the body you must trust God and the mercies thereof And observe the deceitfullness of thy heart herein who trusteth in Christ for thy justification and salvation but art full of disquieting cares and feares about thy externall preservation and maintenance Oh foolish and unwise which is greater salvation then rayment and food and yet thou art perswaded God will do the greater but doubteth about the lesser 3. It is excellent because it doth indeare God to us and in a peculiar manner obligeth God to look to us For when the soul can say O Lord I renounce all other helps I trust not in any other support I leave all things to adhere to thee this doth in particular manner ingage God to look upon us as his own and so to defend us Thus David argueth Psal 16. 1. Preserve me O Lord for I trust in thee Psal 7. 1. In thee O Lord I put my trust save me so 1 Chron. 5. 20. it is said of the Sons of Reuben when they were in great distress yet the Hagarens were delivered into their hands because they did put their trust in God It is also attributed unto Hezekiah as a great and glorious honour to him 2 Kings 18. 5. That he trusted in the Lord God of Israel and Verse 7. The Lord was with him and he prospered Therefore the committing of our selves into Gods hands is a speciall way to secure us 4. The excellency of this grace is seen in the difficulty of it and transcendency to flesh and blood for if Aristotle could say homo was magis sensus quam intellectus more sense then understanding putting forth the acts thereof more then of reason we may say much rather he is more reason then faith The difficulty of it maketh the People of God oftner in distracting feares and carking cares then in any other sinnes David who professeth his trust in God yet how often tempted to difidence Asa a good man 2 Chron. 16. 12. is blamed that in his disease he sought not to God but to the Physicians It was lawfull for him to seek to them but because he rested wholly on them and not on God therefore is he thus taken notice of seeing then it s our duty to use meanes and not to expect that God will in a miraculous and immediate manner work all things for us Hence is the great difficulty in this matter so to use them as not to put confidence in them Alas all the Creatures all the second causes by their own power without Gods blessing could do us no good our cloathes would not warme us our food nourish us unless God command it Hence our Saviour saith Man doth not live by bread alone but by every word proceeding out of Gods mouth Matth. 4. 4. It is not then the Creatures it is not the conditions and
seeke out fit words that may be as so many Nailes fastned by the Master of the Assemblies so it is your duty to be as diligent in prayer for a blessing upon it That to your selves to your families to your neighbours it may be a quickning and converting word Thus Paul in that forementioned place pray for us that the Gospell may have a free course and be glorified Oh what auditor doth his duty in this respect thou complainest of the dullness and frowardness of people how much good seed falleth upon stony ground see if thy soul may not be charged with negligence herein hadst thou prayed more earnestly hadst thou sought the Lord more there might have been a more plentifull harvest When the Ministers faithfull Preaching and the Peoples fervent Prayer go together then Satan will fall like lightning before them 3. You are to Pray for their qualifications that their gifts and graces may be quickned That they may be filled with boldness and the spirit of power not fearning man or sinfully pleasing him It is a very hard thing to be qualified with all abilities and graces for the ministeriall imployment who is sufficient for these things and the work we have to do is unpleasing and distrustfull to all naturall men Now how difficultly can men subject to weaknesses and infirmities do such angelicall work Thus Paul himself who professed he dyed daily and attained to such a measure of grace as to bid others follow him yet see the reason Eph. 6. 20 21. why he desireth the Ephesians to pray for him viz. that I may open my mouth boldly that I may speak boldly as I ought to speak Lastly You are to pray even for their salvation for their office being so great and they standing accountable for their own and the peoples soules their salvation is the more improbable Chrysostome speaketh very sadly to this point as if very few Ministers would be saved because of their office however we find Paul awing his heart with this and keeping down his body using all meanes to suppress the very begining of sin 1 Cor. 9. 17. lest when he had Preached to others he himself might be a cast-away These offices in the Church though some do ambitiously intrude into them looking for glory and advantage thereby yet such who consider the difficulty of the office the necessary qualifications and due administrations thereof do tremble under it and like Moses and Jeremy are affraid to take such an office upon them but men whose spirits are hardy and confident matter not the danger thereof As you see in great high Buildings how Masons and other Artificers can stand upon an high Pinacle and their head never be giddy nor have any feare but those who are not accustomed to that way do exceedingly tremble thus men who are accustomed to high thoughts of themselves that have great confidence of their own abilities they can work on these Battlements and their heads never go round whereas men of deep modesty and humility are afraid to climbe so high Use of Admonition to our people generally how greatly is this duty neglected how many instead of praying for them curse and revile them but no wonder at this seeing many never pray for themselves they never pray nor their families pray and then how can you help us by your prayers Let this particular move thee that by prayer for a blessing upon our Ministeriall labours thou wilt find the benefit redound upon thy own soul It will be a quickning ministry to thee whatever it be to others to thee it will be soul-saving Do you pray that your corporall bread may nourish your body and will you not much rather that your spirituall bread may be the bread of life to you All lyeth not in hearing writing and repeating but add to these effectuall prayers SERM. LXXXI How and why we should praise God for all his Mercies vouchsafed to us 2 COR. 1. 11. That for the gift bestowed upon us by meanes of many persons thanks may be given by many on our behalf THis latter part of the Verse containeth the reason or finall cause of his request for the unanimous publick paryers of the Corinthians viz. That as by the prayers of many his deliverance hath been obtained so also by them publick praises and thanksgivings may be given to God in his behalf The sense of the words is very plaine and clear only the Grammaticall Construction hath caused great variety of Interpretations I shall indeavour to clear every obscurity as it cometh in order In the words there is 1. The end it self and that is that thanks may be given 2. The Object matter for which and that is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gift viz. of deliverance from that great death 3. The Subject by whom this gift is obtained and that is by many 4. The Persons who are to give thanks and that is also many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Lastly In whose behalf and that on our behalf Let us take these parts of division as they come in order And First We meet with the finall cause That thanks may be given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is in the passive sense and therefore noted to be an unusuall and a very rare phrase it being every where else used actively Observe That when by prayers we have obtained mercy it is our duties by praises and thankfullness to acknowledge the same to God Prayer must not be alone when it hath prevailed with God like Castor and Pollux prayer and praises must go together Phil. 4. 6. In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God Here you see supplication and thanksgiving must go hand in hand It s no less Gods command to praise him for mercies then to pray to him and this truth is the more to be pressed because of our horrible negligence herein In our distresses in our exigences we call and cry unto the Lord but in our mercies and deliverances we forget him and do not own the Author of our favours and benefits This is notably represented in that History Luke 17. 17 18. Where often Lepers that were cleansed there was but one did returne and give glory to God by thanksgiving and he was a Samaritan also So that those from whom it was expected did neglect this duty We see by this how backward we are to praise God though very forward and earnest to pray to him in our miseries Those nine Lepers that regarded not to praise God yet they lifted up their voices and said Jesus Master have mercy on us and thus while we are in any exigences then our hearts are very hot and lively Then we cry and pray Lord hear us our trouble is great but if the Lord do vouchsafe his mercy to us then God may say where is the man where is the woman that was cleansed that was healed that had this or that mercy and deliverance
assemble themselves together You see even in the Apostles dayes the Devil tempted some in this kind yet they are reproved though private Christians in those dayes had greater gifts and abilities then now ordinarily men have yea they are reproved though some think the cause was not voluntary but that it was fear of danger and persecution It was criminal to meet together and therefore fear of death and other miseries might make some forbear to assemble themselves yet for all this they are censured by the Apostle Let this then be laid to heart by thee look that no reason keep thee from this publick worship of God but what God himself will allow of For in some cases God hath condescended that his own worship shall rather be omitted then mens necessities not supplied Secondly As God is more honoured so hereby The love and charity of the people of God is greatly quickened to one another This publick and holy meeting together is a special means to enflame the affections of one believer to another Hence you have it so often noted That the Disciples met together with one accord and they had one heart And therefore diversities of opinions and alienation of affections do cause commonly a publick rent and division in Church-societies David doth with affection expresse the advantage of the publick Ordinances We went to the house of the Lord and we took sweet counsel together Psal 55. 14. This is the visible communion of the Saints wherein as members of the same body they are so firmly and nearly compacted together There is nothing that the Devil doth so much design as rents schismes and differences in the Church of God knowing that these if not healed will certainly destroy all at last Now a right and orderly meeting in these publick Assemblies are a special means to preserve love How shall those mouths speak against one another that joyned together to pray to God and to praise God You that called upon one Father as Brethren How shall ye disagree as if one had not the same God and the same Father with another Therefore our Saviour directs to say Our Father not my Father hereby commanding our publick meetings together and also our union and brotherly love Thirdly Therefore are these publick duties to be the more prized Because of Gods special presence and power there Mat. 18. You have a peculiar promise for two or three meeting together in Christs name even as by way of type God had promised his peculiar presence in the Temple And for this reason you have David with such ardent and passionate affections expressing his esteem of the Ordinances of God Psal 63. 1 2. My soul thirsteth and my flesh longeth as in a dry land where no water is to see thy power And at another time How amiable are thy tabernacles O Lord of hosts And As the Hart panteth after the brooks so doth his soul after God in the Ordinances Though David when he was banished and by force could not come to the publick Congregation no doubt did enjoy God in a most comfortable and full manner yet still he is not satisfied but breaths for his presence in those Ordinances And therefore for thee to think that thou mayest meet God as well at home is as if a cripple should have looked to be healed by going into some other water then that of the pool of Bethesda Lastly These publick Ordinances are therefore to be highly esteemed Because those who are quickened and enlivened may prevail for those who are indisposed and unfit for prayer So that the coldnesse and dulnesse of one man may be supplied by the zeal and fervency of another Insomuch that happily the prayer which if performed by thy own self would not be successefull being now joyned with others doth obtain its desired effect yea it may be in that publick service when thou through temptations canst or darest not pray for thy self others accompanying of thee do put up thy own thoughts and speak the desires of thy own heart So that thou art even astonished to see how God ordereth the gracious gifts of others to be helpfull unto thee As it was with Job his whole body though full of ulcers and pains yet because his mouth was free that could plead with God in behalf of the whole body Thus it may be when many are gathered together that Christian who could not speak for it self which could not pray for it self findeth the hearts and mouths of others opened in his behalf So that as when many coals are laid together some live ones may revive those that are ready to decay Thus the zeale of others may helpe thy coldnesse The life of others may quicken thee up against deadnesse and thou find that spiritual heat come upon thee from others which thou wouldst not have had alone Use of Exhortation To prize these publick Assemblies more than thou hast done Pray for such strong and earnest affections as thou findest David manifesting after them Oh let these publick meetings raise up thy heart as if thou were in Heaven The beholding of the faces of the affections and of the graces of others let it assimilate thee also into them As when Saul came among the Prophets the spirit of prophecy fell upon him likewise Oh let the Congregation of those who feare God worke upon thee also Be in these Assemblies as Peter on the Mount of transfiguration saying in an holy excesse of spirit It is good to be here What high expressions are those of David in reference to the solemne Ordinances Psal 65. 4. Blessed is the man thou choosest and causest to approach unto thee that he may dwell in thy Courts we shall be satisfied with the goodnesse of thy house even of thy holy Temple Here is sweetnesse and fullnesse that the people of God find in these publick approaches All the merry meetings all the fairs and markets are nothing to this spiritual society And Psalm 84. 10. A day in thy Courts is better than a thousand otherwhere Hence he had rather be a door-keeper in the house of God then dwell in the tents of wickednesse Oh heavenly and gracious frame A Sabbath day is better than all the dayes of the week he hath more rejoycing there then a thousand dayes can afford that are spent in worldly affaires But when these publick duties are thus advanced as you hear you must alwayes look that they be done holily spiritually fervently that they be not turned into a meer custome and external fashion as it too often falleth out in Church-assemblies their bodies are present but their souls are absent and therefore they have no more than the carkasse and out-side Such prayers and praises God will not accept The third and last particular is to be spoken to in a word and that is In whose behalf these publick prayers and praises are and that is said In our behalfe Some Copies have read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but
us Secondly We may rejoyce in them so farre as thereby to bear up our hearts against all accusations whether internally from Satan or externally from the malice of men Is there any greater temptation in the world then that when Satan accuseth the children of God that they are hypocrites that there is no truth of grace in them that what they do is not from a right principle but sel●seeking Even as he accused Job to God that he served God for carnal ends because God had hedged him about but if he were touched in these things and stript of them then he would betray his hypocrisie Now it is lawfull for the children of God to defie these accusations of Satan to rejoyce in the sense of their uprigtness though the Devil rage at it While he roareth do thou be glad and praise God Oh how often are believers shaken in this very particular They are afraid to own what God hath done for them they think it their humility and lowliness thus to be in doubts and to be perplexed with fears not remembring how necessary it is to acknowledge thankfully what God hath done for us and to walk with joy triumphing over all the fiery darts of Satan It is the great blame of Christs Disciples that they do not more glory and rejoyce in this respect And then 2. This rejoycing is lawfull when we have to do with malicious enemies that are ready to charge us with hypocrisie and self-seeking that for all our religious pretences we have rotten and earthly hearts then is a time for thee to make use of rejoycing in the sincerity of thy soul And this indeed is one great part of the Apostles meaning The false Apostles they calumniated him they made the cause of all his afflictions and troubles to be his evil life and Gods displeasure upon him Now the Apostle hath this brazen wall within as the Heathen called it He hath the witnesse of a good conscience As Austin to Secundinus Senti de Augustino quid velis c. Think of Austin what you will so that my own conscience doth not condemn me This rejoycing therefore is necessarily seen in this particular In the third place Let us see wherein this rejoycing in our graces may be unlawfull And 1. It is when we dare rejoyce and that in the sight of God as if there were no blemish or damnable matter in them To rejoyce as Perfectionists do in their holiness daring to hold it up to God himself in his strict justice this is highly provoking God Hence this Apostle 1 Cor. 4. 3 4. Though he regarded not mens judgement concerning him because he knew nothing by himself yet he saith He was not thereby justified because it was God that judgeth God that knew more evil and saw more sinne in him then he could do in himself Therefore though we may rejoyce in them yet take heed of opposing them to the strict and righteous judgement of God And it is in this sense that Paul Rom. 3. saith All boasting is excluded and that Abraham in the matter of justification had not wherewith to boast 2. It is not lawfull to rejoyce in them as if they had any inherent dignity or worth to rest upon When we approach to God we must rest alone upon Gods grace as the efficient cause and Christ as the meritorious cause These are the only foundation we can build upon When therefore we have given Gods grace and Christs merits their full due then may we rejoyce in our holiness It is true we read of Hezekiah David Nehemiah and Paul here as also in other places pleading even in prayer their righteousness and desiring God to remember them and not wipe out their good deeds But these instances are partly in some particular wherein they were innocent as in David Or else they onely plead these as the qualifications in them to which Gods promises are made they are such to whom God hath vouchsafed his promises and therefore they may plead them in their prayers in this sense otherwise to urge them as having dignity they could not For at that very time Nehemiah prayeth God would spare him and have mercy on him 3. We must not rejoyce in these graces as if we had them of our selves as if they were not the gift of God Therefore Chrysostom's note upon the place is dangerous saying The reason why this good conscience is called glorying is because we obtain it by our own strength otherwise it would not be our glorying But the Apostle directly opposeth this 1 Cor. 4. 7. Why doest thou glory as if thou hadst not received But you may then say The Papists are not to be found fault with in their rejoycing in their good works for they make them the gifts of Gods grace and presuppose Christs merits But this will not acquit them For the Apostle maketh that a contradiction If of grace then not of workes It cannot be of grace and works together Besides they make grace only an universal cause and our own will to be the particular determining cause and thereby give much more to that then the grace of God If then we take heed of these three rocks we are allowed to rejoyce in our graces Use 1. Of severe and sharp reproof to such who do indeed rejoyce but it is in their lusts in the pleasures of sinne which is to rejoyce in their shame and that which will be terrour and torment to them What can these wretches say But our rejoycing is an evil and a seared conscience that we have lived in all prophaneness and impiety Oh remember into what howling and gnashing of teeth these short pleasures will at last be changed Use 2. Of Admonition to the godly to take this rejoycing which God doth allow them Why do they stand aloof off and trembling Why do they nourish doubts and fears Why will ye not own what God hath done for you Take an holy boldness call that grace which is grace Let not the Devil and thy fears dispute thee out of what thou art Be not so easily baffled and driven out of thy integrity Because hypocrites do deceive themselves do the sincere also Because Copper may appear splendidly is there therefore no gold Because a dreamer deceiveth himself shall he that is awakened SERM. LXXXV What is required to a good and well ordered Conscience 2 COR. 1. 12. The testimony of our conscience THe second particular which is also the ground of that rejoycing which Paul had doth in the next place come to be treated of and that is said to be The testimony of his conscience The object matter whereof is afterwards declared Let us consider this as it is in the general set down Concerning the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 also the nature of the conscience what it is I have elsewhere at large shewed It is enough to re-mind you of thus much That in the Old Testament it is generally called the heart
is it How slavish and unbelieving Hence is it that the people of God need so many instructions and informations Hence is it that they are often in prayers and groans unutterable ere they can truly and cordially call God Father They fear him as a Judge and flie from him rather as an enemy Even as if there be never such glorious and delightfull objects to refresh the eyes with yet if a man be in the dark he cannot take any pleasure therein Thus many of Gods dear children who walk with a tender conscience who are diligent in all the wayes of holiness yet have not this testimony of conscience to comfort them it is hid from their eyes only because the Spirit of God doth not enable them thereunto Now the Apostle telleth us 1 Cor. 2. 17. It is the Spirit of God whereby we know the things that we have freely received of God 2. The Spirit of God doth witness unto us Objectively as I may so call it and that is by some effects and fruits of his grace upon our hearts by which we gather as by so many sure signes that we are in the state of grace and not hypocrites But because this will come in more fully in the ensuing particulars I shall only touch upon those effects by which the testimony of our conscience is rightly guided in witnessing to us And First By having a full and serious purpose to avoid all sinne as it shall become manifested to us As David professed That he did hate every evil way Psal 119. 104. He that doth allow and indulge himself in any known sinne cannot have the testimony of this good conscience It is true as is to be shewed there is no man living though never so holy but his conscience convinceth him of much sinne and many infirmities and this maketh him so highly esteem Christ and a Gospel-righteousness but yet it doth not witness to him that he liveth in the customary acting of grosse sinnes if it doth the Spirit of God never witnesseth with such a mans conscience that he is the child of God No if thou livest quietly without the smitings and condemnations of conscience it is because it is stupid and the Devil hath deluded and hardened thee for Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience and by this effect that we have a tender respect to avoid all known sinne Secondly Another effect is A zeal for the glory of God to honour him to magnifie Christ and to set up his Kingdome as much as we are able The more zeal and fervency men have had for Gods honour the more powerfull testimony of a good conscience they alwayes enjoyed As we see in this Paul in his whole ministerial course with what burning zeal did he flame forth continually and on the contrary so much remisness so much negligence and lukewarmness so much is the abating of consciences testimony Thirdly An holy confidence and boldnesse in our approachings to God And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. The Spirit of Adoption removing our fears our unbelief and dejection raising us up also with an holy confidence and humble boldness doth hereby testifie with our consciences that we are the children of God Hence the more distrustfull fears the more tormenting doubts that we groan under the weaker and more feeble is the witness of our conscience yea if those prevail and are predominant then our conscience is set against us and witnesseth against us and then the child of God is in sad desertions when his heart witnesseth against him that he is an hypocrite that he did serve the Lord without integrity For though this be false yet till Gods Spirit remove this darknesse and fill thee with an Evangelical confidence thou art not able to hold up thy head Fourthly Another effect by which Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience is An unfeigned love to the brethren a delight in all those that love God Where this is that thou lovest godly men for their godliness sake this demonstrateth thou art born of God and hast the same Image in thee as they have And if thy love also extend to thy enemies if thou findest that thou canst pray for them that curse thee do good to them that revile especially thou pitiest their souls and wouldst be helpfull to them in the way to Heaven though they are enraged adversaries to thee and that without cause By this frame of heart the conscience doth give a full and precious evidence Fifthly In daily and faithfull exercises of self-denial in the wayes of God doth the Spirit of God greatly assure the conscience In sufferings for Christ in enduring the losse of name liberty and li●e it self for Gods cause is the clearest testimony of our conscience Hence the Martyrs had so much serenity of spirit such unspeakable consolations because they found they loved Christ better than all things As they gave a testimony to the word of God called therefore Martyrs so God also gave them a testimony within whereby they did glory in tribulations and triumph over all aduersaries We see that if men suffer in false wayes if they be Martyrs for the Devil if they die for that which is highly offending God they many times glory in the comfort they have from the testimony of their conscience Now if a deluded conscience if deluded joyes can do so much what shall not the Spirit of God do sealing and confirming his love to us by our patient sufferings for him Thus when happily the world doth witness against thee wicked men they condemn thee and lay many heavy accusations against thee as the false Apostles did here concerning Paul yet this testimony with in will answer all and God doth come in with fuller evidences of his love in such passages of self denial Lastly The Spirit of God doth witness to our spirit in this blessed effect viz. When we do with delight and joy meditate think and speak about heavenly things when the Ordinances of God are matter of pleasure to us David doth often pro●efs what delight he had in the Ordinances of God how the word of God was more precious than gold more sweet than the honey-comb Now when the heart is thus affected to holy things that they find more joy as David professeth Psal 4. in the things of God then worldly men do in their corn and wine when these increase By this excellent heavenly temper the Spirit of God witnesseth with our conscience that we are the children of God But I shall enlarge no more on this because the Doctrine of Assurance will follow upon the next words We shall now lay down some distinctions to clear this truth to you because it is plain That many times the people of God being cast down with black thoughts that cannot say with Paul The testimony of our conscience is our rejoycing And on the other side many heretical pharisaical and self-deluded persons will at least outwardly boast
of this Therefore First We may take notice That there is a two-fold testimony of our conscience which doth afford matter of rejoycing either particular as to some matter of fact or one particular business especially when calummated by adversaries Or secondly General which is to the whole frame of our heart and our whole conversation These two are greatly to be distinguished For we see David in many places praying to God That he would reward him according to his innocency and deal with him according to the righteousnesse of his hands and he doth many times appeal to God concerning his integrity Now this was from a testimony of his conscience to a particular fact Saul and others did maliciously accuse him laying to his charge things that he never did Of this Paul speaketh also 1 Cor. 4. 2. I know nothing by my self He did not matter those crimes that the false Apostles burdened him with because his conscience did clear him as to any grosse neglect in his ministerial course Now you must know that many a natural or moral man may have in some cases this particular testimony of his conscience and receive comfort from it and yet be farre enough from the state of grace How many persons in the world are slandered by some malicious adversaries as guilty of such crimes which are altogether false Now happily thou art pure and free from them thy conscience justifieth thee and thou hast comfort from this but this is not all which God requireth Therefore there is a second testimony of the conscience which is General and that speaketh to the whole man witnessing that thy whole conversation is unblameable and that thy heart in the universal inclination thereof is wholly for God and against sinne It is this general testimony that is the foundation of true comfort A man may be free and innocent as to some particular sinnes and yet the state of his soule be in gall and bitternesse Secondly This testimony of the conscience even in general witnessing unto thee thy state of grace may be considered two wayes For either it may be supposed or expected that it should testifie unto thee an heart and life free from all sinne failing in nothing at all Or else To witnesse sincerity and uprightnesse for the main though failing in many things If then a Christian should resolve to take no joy unlesse his conscience can witness perfection and an immunity from any failings such an one must resolve to have no comfort all his life time but if it witness the main bent and frame of thy heart to be for God though carried aside often through the violence and deceitfulnesse of temptations from this thou mayest rejoyce This is much to be observed for why are the discouragements and disconsolateness of Gods own children so great but because their conscience telleth them of several failings and they desire some testimony of a perfection Satisfie your selves therefore and regulate your thoughts in this particular And thus we must expound that place 1 John 3. 20 21. which at first appearance seemeth to speak very terribly If our hearts condemn us God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things This Text if not rightly understood is enough like Belshazzars writing in the wall to strike us with trembling For is there any man living whose heart doth not condemn him for sinne Doth not this very Apostle say 1 John 1. 8. If we say we have no sinne we deceive our selves and no truth is in us If then we have sinne how can our hearts but condemn us And then God knowing our hearts and seeing more evil and errour in us then we can understand must condemn us much more What is this then but to fill every godly man with despair But that the Apostle himself may not speak a contradiction we must have recourse to the mentioned distinction viz. That our hearts condemn us justly for the main that our foundation is rotten that we love sinne more than God then we have cause to be wholly cast down but if our hearts do not condemn us for the main only for those imperfections and frailties which we cannot perfectly be purged from in this life then we may have confidence towards God Thirdly Our conscience may be considered as Habitually able to testifie or as Actually and immediately prepared This is necessary to be observed For every regenerate man having his conscience sanctified is thereby habitually able to give a good testimony but many things may intervene that hinder it in its actings Even as the Sunne is able to give a clear light to the whole world but clouds and mists may hinder the actual communication of it And thus it is often with the children of God their conscience is sanctified but many doubts arise many scruples and fears do interpose so that they have not that actual witness in their conscience which they might have So that as in sanctification there are the principles of grace though the exercise of them may be stopt So it is in matter of consolation there is the foundation and fountain of it though the stream may be troubled And this should make us wary so to walk as not to put stops and checks in the way of conscience especially to labour for a sound judgement and a full perswasion in things to be done For the more doubtfull and scrupulous we are the less firm and clear is the testimony of our conscience as appeareth Rom. 14. 22 23. Fourthly We are to distinguish of the testimony of conscience as alone and separate or relating wholly to the blood of Christ in whom alone all our acceptance and cause of comfort is contained Whereas if a man should attend to the testimony of conscience alone though to his best actions he would have more cause to fear and tremble from that then rejoyce Therefore the Scripture attributeth the purging of our conscience to the blood of Christ there is no mans conscience can be good and truly peaceable that doth not look to Christ that saith not with John Behold the lamb of God that taketh away thy sinne as well as behold the holy duties thou hast lived in Heb. 9. 14. How much rather shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from dead workes Let conscience then alwayes eye Christ look to him as well as to our graces For the goodness of an evangelical conscience lieth not in this to testifie thou hast not been such a sinner or thou hast not such failings but though thou hast been such yet repenting and believing through the blood of Christ thy conscience is not to condemn thee for them because pardoned Now the conscience of a civil and pharisaical man which comforts from works done doth not at all relate to Christ and by this thou mayest find the deceitfulness of it seeing that by Christs blood alone it cometh to be truly purified Use 1. Of Instruction How few they are that have this
Prophets presence as if all had been well Oh then how vain is it to hide thy designs and intentions to men to make protestations and professions of thy integrity to men if the all-seeing eye of God behold other things in thee What greater obligation can there be to have all the motions and turnings of thy heart cordial and faithfull towards God seeing no man can more perfectly behold the outward gestures of thy body then he doth the inward motions of thy soul Oh say God knoweth what I think what my heart is upon what is the spring of every duty I do Secondly Sincerity respecteth God As he is the first cause and the last end The Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end of whom are all things and to whom are all things Rom. 11. 36. Now this two-fold property in God the sincere man doth greatly improve First As he is the Efficient cause so that he expects all-sufficiency and power from the grace of God alone The Scripture dot frequently affirm That it is by the grace of God alone that we are able to do any good thing therefore the sincere man dareth not sacrifice to his own nets dare not give any thing to his own power and free-will neither dare he rob Christ of his glory by setting up Angels and Saints as Mediators under any nice distinctions whatsoever he trembleth to dispute against the grace of God lest he want the blessed effects of it in the greatest necessities You may observe David and Paul who expresse such remarkable sincerity towards God that they go out of themselves depend on God alone and not onely do they acknowledge God the supream giver of all the good they enjoy but also they make him the ultimate end to whom they referre all things remembring the Apostles rule 1 Cor. 10 31. Whether ye eat or drink or whatsoever ye do do all to the glory of God This is a very hard lesson to do a very difficult duty to be performed but yet the sincere man he overlooketh all second causes and instruments with his Eagles-eye he gets up as it were into the mountain and leaveth all his carnal interests below as Abraham did his beasts and servants when he went to sacrifice Isaac This single and pure intention of Gods glory is not so easily accomplished as it is quickly and commonly pretended Oh how rare a thing is it to eat and drink to study and preach that hereby God may be glorified How closely doth some carnal respect or vain-glorious motive follow thee in the duty as Asahel did Joab which thou canst not make depart from thee till thou thrust it as it were thorow the fift rib till thou give it its mortal blow by mortification Thirdly The sincere heart relateth all to God In regard of his Sovereignty and dominion over him Because God is the supream Lord and Lawgiver who only can impose Laws upon the conscience therefore in his obedience he doth principally look to the will and authority of the Lawgiver This is a notable character of since●ity to obey because thus saith the Lord it is his will and as the supream orb doth carry along with it the inferiour orbs though against their particular inclination Thus doth the will of God because supream bring the creatures will into obedience when corrupt inclinations do propound a contrary way It is the matter of our prayer which we are constantly to pour forth unto God That his will may be done his will not our will Therefore if sincerity have a throne in thy heart thy sense will be as soft wax to receive any stamp or impression from God what God commands though against pleasures profits and all the inclinations of thy corrupt heart thou doest readily submit unto Thus thou offerest up thy self as an whole burnt-offering unto God Lastly This sincerity doth respect the wisdome of God in all those sharp and bitter providential temptations that a man may be exercised with for his faithfull service to God The Scripture doth frequently inform of this what cups of wormwood they must drink that will be Christs Disciples what crowns of thorns they must endure upon their heads who expect crowns of glory from him Now the heart that is sincere doth not cavil and murmur at Gods dispensations herein though so unpleasing to flesh and blood but doth wholly acquiesce in the wisdom of God filencing the impetuous motions of his Spirit God is wiser than I he knoweth this is better for me then I think it is For certainly all discontents do arise from this we think God might have shewed more love to us and more wisdome if he did not suffer such and such things to come upon us Therefore afflictions and persecutions are the special Touchstone to discover our sincerity This fire will manifest whether we be gold or drosse these winnowings whether chaffor wheat The hypocrite wanting root doth commonly begin to wither when the Sunnes scorching heat doth arise and if they are at any times afflicted for Christ it is against their wils so that with Simon they are compelled to carry the crosse of Christ but sincerity doth not only admire the wisdome of God in such dispensations but justifieth him and condemneth its self Thus you see what are those high and sublime things a sincere man looketh at in all his religious wayes That whereas in a bodily way the beast looketh to the ground when man hath an upright look towards Heaven So even every natural man hath a soul bowed down only to earthly respects while the sincere heart ascends up to God himself Therefore it is that he doth prudently escape all those ambushments that low inferiour ends are apt to lay in his way thereby to intercept him from arriving at God himself We cannot reckon all the inferiour and unworthy ends that are apt to interpose no more than the creeping things in the Sea onely some few we may instance in As 1. Vain-glory and Self-applause that many times clippeth the wings of our souls that while we are moving to Heaven this maketh us fall to the ground This made the Pharisees lose the heavenly reward of all their religious duties And how often have the holiest of men complained of this Dalilah this sweet poison this flattering enemy Is it not the worme that devoureth the sweetest flowers and the ripest fruit This maketh death in the pot even damnation in excellent duties therefore the sincere man doth constantly watch and ward keeping a strict search into his heart that no such thief enter in and steal away his treasure A second inferiour and base end which would corrupt us in the service of God is The external greatnesse of honour or the seeming profit of wealth This dust hath often blown into the eyes that they have not been able to look up What glorious things did Jehu do for God If you look upon the external actions only But his heart was not sincere
the property of those who are godly to take nothing to themselves but to give all to the grace of God You see here though Paul was so eminent for godlinesse and so admirable for gifts yet he maketh the grace of God to be alone the sole Authour of all spiritual successe This subject the Apostle doth very willingly enlarge himself upon wheresoever he hath occasion Hence in the fore-mentioned place 1 Corinth 15. 10. he saith By the grace of God I am what I am The grace of God made him an holy man The grace of God made him an eminent Apostle he had nothing as a private Christian or as an Officer but by the grace of God and because many may have grace in a common way bestowed upon them that yet abuse it as Judas he addeth This grace was not in vain Yet lest it should be thought that it was his improvement of the grace bestowed that made it so effectual he presently correcteth his expression Yet not I but the grace of God which was with me As it is not the pen but the Writer that is a cause of fair Characters Let us discover this Doctrine And First We see the Apostle rejoycing in the sincerity of his heart and yet acknowledging all to the grace of God so that these two may well stand together to take comfort from our holinesse yet to put our trust in nothing but the grace of God It is true this is a very hard lesson to performe there is required much skill and prudence herein for we are apt to runne into extreames Either through unbelief and peevishnesse we nourish doubts and perplexing thoughts in our selves not taking notice of the grace of God in us Or else if we doe behold it and rejoyce in it we are presently in a secret manner lifted up and confident thereby But we see by the Apostles practice both are consistent together So that the people of God are diligently to labour after this heavenly frame of heart To be in doubts and fears about thy condition is to live in the jaws of hell and to be presuming or carnally confident of thy graces is the next door to a sad and miserable downfall Secondly It is not enough to acknowledge the grace of God in the general but so to set up grace as to give all to it The Apostle maketh an immediate opposition between grace and workes Rom. 11. 6. there cannot be a reconciling of grace and workes together This hath been often attempted but as unhappily as the building up the walls of Jericho again The Pelagian Arminian the Socinian and Papist all these doe acknowledge grace but when we come to the root of the matter it 's nothing at last but the free-will and workes of a man It is his good use of grace that doth determine and make all things effectual not grace it self And this is the rather to be noted because Stapleton would antidote against Calvin's poison as he speaketh from this Text. For whereas Calvin taking notice of the Apostles glorying in the testimony of his conscience concernin his sincerity doth shew that Paul hereby doth not oppose that command Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord because Paul giveth all to the grace of God and resteth alone upon that From this Stapleton would excuse the Papists also because they acknowledge all good workes to come from grace Their merits are founded onely upon Christs merits Even as it doth not derogate from the power of God that he useth second causes in natural things because they are subordinate to him both in their being and operation but it doth illustrate as his bounty so his power the more to make other things powerfull Thus saith he it is not injurious to the grace and merits of Christ if we attribute merit to our workes seeing this cometh onely from Christ but it argueth his fullnesse and rich grace the more that communicateth of it to us So that saith he to put trust in the workes of grace as the proxim and immediate cause but in the grace of God as the chiefe and universal cause is no derogation to the honour and glory of Christ But that of the Apostle must be alwayes remembred If of grace then not of workes otherwise grace is no more grace It is not grace unlesse it be grace every way And therefore to make our workes the second causes to trust in though it be not so high a wickednesse as to exclude Christ throughly yet it doth in part and therefore as in the matter of worship we admit of no primary and secondary worship no more than a primary and secondary God So it is in matter of trusting we must depend only upon Christ not but that holinesse and godly works are necessarily required but not as causes under any subtil distinctions whatsoever These two things premised let us now consider What is that grace which the Apostle doth here exalt against all fleshly wisdome And First As the ground-work of all there is to be understood That grace of God whereby he was called out of that pharisaical estate and condition of enmity against Christ to be a faithfull and ready servant to him This wonderfull grace of God to him doth often melt the heart of Paul he speaketh of it with aggravating particulars as much as may be Thus Galat. 1 15. When it pleased God who called me by his grace to reveale his Sonne in me c. And therefore 1 Tim. 1. 15 16. he acknowledged himself an instance Because the chiefest of sinners of the long-suffering of Christ In Paul's conversion there were no preparations no merits of congruity there was no docible and fitted dispositions Insomuch that the adversaries to Gods grace do acknowledge Paul's conversion to be an extraordinary thing In the midst of his persecuting sury when God might have struck him dead with thunder and lightnings from Heaven and so send him quick as it were to Hell God did visit him with his grace and give him another heart to his own amazement and of all those who heard of it So if you look upon Paul in a single capacity as a private person in the whole course of his life he giveth all to the grace of God Secondly The grace of God which Paul doth also greatly exalt is In the setting of him apart to be an Apostle and an eminent Officer in the Church of God This crooked and rough timber that was onely fit for the fire God doth not onely polish and smooth by grace but advanceth it to be an eminent part in the building notwithstanding all Paul's former unworthinesse God doth not onely by his grace call him but maketh him an honourable vessel in his house This our Apostle doth likewise with great enlargement in many places take great notice of See how emphatically is he affected with this grace of God towards him Ephesians 3. 7 8. Whereof I was made a Minister according to the gift of
salvation which at first began to be spoken by the Lord and afterwards was confirmed by others God bearing them witnesse by signes and many wonders So that now the things of Religion cannot be more abundantly confirmed to you than they are you are not to expect more powerfull means to convert you than have been used and this will make Hell seven times hotter for all ungodly and prophane persons who are so under these Gospel-dispensations SERM. XCIX Of the convincing Nature of Godliness in Ministers and private Christians 2 COR. 1. 13. For we write no other things unto you then what you read or acknowledge and I trust that you shall acknowledge even to the end THe Apostle having formerly asserted the sincerity and holy simplicity of his conversation and that more abundantly to the Corinthians lest this should be a vain boasting of himself and that in giving testimony of himself that would not be valid or sufficient He doth in this verse appeal to the very consciences of the Corinthians likewise So that not only the testimony of his own conscience but of their consciences also must needs justifie him And indeed this is a good demonstration of that uprightness which is within us when we can appeal to the consciences of others For although men especially such as are prejudiced and alienated from us may suffocate and smother as much as lie in them that they have any such convictions of our integrity yet secretly their consciences cannot but bear witness to us The matter then wherein he doth appeal as it were to their own consciences is set down in the beginning of the verse For we write no other things unto you c. There is one expression in this passage that hath much perplexed Interpreters and made them go different wayes it is that we write no other things unto you then what you do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read so we translate it and likewise many others Now this is wondered at by some yea by Calvin accounted Nimis fligidum ne dicam ineptum saith he in loc It is too frigid and absurd to make this the sense I write to you no other things then what you read c. For who doubted of that And how could any man read otherwise than he wrote saith Musculus Estius also doth confess that the rendring the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ye read did cause great perplexity to Expositors and therefore sheweth that Theophylact when he could not satisfie himself about that sense of the word did runne to another Yet there are learned men that endeavour to make a good sense of it though it be translated Ye read For Beza though he taketh notice of what Calvin saith against it yet followeth this translation and would make this Paul's meaning That he did not write cunningly artificially what they did read in the plain letter of the words that he did write he had no equivocations nor intended any delusions by his words Cajetan in loc he maketh this expression to referre to the former Epistle and also to this part of the second which we are now upon We write no more now then what ye have read formerly Therefore some render it in the preterperfect tense Others they make the general sense to be this Our words and our actions do agree we write no more than what may be read and acknowledged by all Though these interpretations may passe very well yet because the expression is not so full and proper to say We write no other things then what you read I shall rather go with those who say the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though it many times signifieth to read yet it doth also to take notice of to know to remember c. Indeed I find it not in this sense used in the New Testament but constantly for to read yet Varinus he maketh it to signifie as well 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To know to call to mind to remember to be convinced of a thing So that the meaning is We write to you no other things then what you know what you remember yea what ye are experimentally convinced of And thus it differeth from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which followeth and signifieth more For a man may know and remember yea and be convinced of many things which yet through some corruption within he will not acknowledge for that is when we do with a ready and willing consent approve and own such a thing The Pharisees were often convinced about Christs Doctrine yet they would not acknowledge it But the Apostle attributeth both these to the Corinthians for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendered Or Erasmus suspects it crept in for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which things Vorstius preferreth that reading which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so paraphraseth If so be you do acknowledge but there is no necessity of this From the words thus explained we observe That a godly convincing life in a Christian especially in a Minister is of special advantage for many excellent effects Every Christian and much more every Minister are by their lives and examples so to convince that others may acknowledge verily God is with them verily the Spirit of Christ dwelleth in them This is no more then what our Saviour expresseth Let your light so shine before men Mat. 5. 16. that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in Heaven Some make this exhortation given to Christians in the general Others to the Ministers of the Gospel in particular However by this we see that God cannot bear meer titles names and opinions unlesse there be an holy life accompanying of them he saith That they may see your good works not titles not professions not your ceremonious and instituted worship but good works good works then are necessary but such as flow from men enlightned by the Gospel-truth Many mistake about good works not knowing what the nature of them is and then Christ sheweth the end of these good works That they may glorifie your Father which is in Heaven not that they may glorifie you and honour you We are not to do good things for applause and esteem neither doth he say that ye may merit a reward in Heaven Vain-glory and merit with self-confidence are the end why pharisaical men cause their light to shine before others but the Evangelical Christian he doth it That God may be glorified But let us cause the light of this Doctrine also to shine before you And First We are to know That godlinesse and exact holinesse hath a convincing and converting effect with it The sincere practice of it doth awe and conquer the conscience even of the vilest men Godliness is the image of God Now when God created man in that he gave him dominion over all the beasts of the field they stood in awe of him And thus where the image of God is repaired there it hath a convincing work upon the conscience of the
found unprofitable and is adjudged unto a terrible doom that had but one talent and was negligent therin Would not Christ teach us by this that none should slight their mean and low estate thinking that such are poor and inconsiderable creatures as they are alas they can do nothing for God It is for Magistrates and Ministers for rich men or men in place and of interest to lay out themselves but God doth not look they should do any thing Oh take heed of this temptation If thou doest but set thy self to consider in this matter thou mayest find thy self in capacity to promote the glory of God and to further the Gospel of Christ in many particulars that thou art now negligent in This is our great sinne that none are contented with the several relations and conditions they are in One thinketh if he were in such a mans estate he could serve God better than he doth The private Christian thinketh a Minister can do it better A Minister thinketh a private Christian hath not the temptations and sad eares that he hath As Luther speaketh Comment in Gen. cap. 17. of himself how he thought other mens callings happier than his who endured so much envy and hatred for the Gospel They live without vexations their labour is sweet but I am exercised saith he with great dangers But we must take heed of impatiency and know we may all serve God and so be at last saved in our respective lawfull callings We would think the hands or feet were in a worse condition than the tongue for they are worn out with labour whereas the tongue doth taste of sweet and pleasant things and is not w●aried with pain and yet these partake of the same happiness with the body as the eyes or tongue do Secondly This you also are to understand that all the lawfull actions in your several callings may be improved for Gods honour as well as those that are in their nature religious and immediately applied to himself Our plowing and sowing our marrying and bringing up of children if done according to Scripture-rules please God in their way as well as religious duties It may be holy plowing holy sowing holy buying and selling as well as holy praying and holy preaching It is the Apostles command 1 Cor. 10. 31. Whether ye eat or drinke or whatsoever ye do do all to the glory of God In Popery there was an horrible mistake about this which was the cause of bringing in much superstition which made Luther as appeareth in his Comments on Genesis so often speak of the good pleasure that God taketh in the civil actions of our calling when done out of obedience to Gods command And indeed men are hardly perswaded that the doing of such things in our relations are serving of God whereas all such things done from good principles and to right ends are holiness as well as other duties Holinesse to the Lord is to be written upon all thy natural civil and moral actions as well as religious It is true here lieth the difficulty to do these ordinary actions of our calling upon holy grounds to eat to drink to labour that God may be exalted and not to make riches gain and outward blessedness the utmost end of all doings in this kind So that till a man be regenerated he is but a worm crawling upon the ground he cannot do any thing but upon humane motives And it is no wonder for such men in all their religious duties are but carnal and earthly whether they pray or heare it is not for the glory of God Custome formality and self-respects are the Locusts and Caterpillars that do devour our hopefull buds Therefore In the third place It behoveth every Christian often to meditate about the ultimate end of all his actions As the Heathen would have a man say to himself Cui bono for what good is this I do So much more should believers propound this to themselves I labour I take pains I rise early I go to bed late but to what end is all this What is it that my soul doth principally aim at in all these things If we had asked Paul saying Paul Why will you go to Macedonia He would have said to promote Christs Kingdom to have been beneficial to mens souls And then again Why to Corinth It was to carry on the work of the Gospel there Many did begin to fall off so that it was necessary there should be information and admonition And further Why do you go to Jerusalem It is to refresh the bowels of the poor Saints there By which you see that as the Heliotropium that flower of the Sunne doth follow the Sunne and openeth and shutteth according to the presence of the Sun and its absence Thus doth the heart of Paul wholly move after God divine considerations are the Loadstone that drew out his heart And indeed in all moral actions the end is first to be concluded Hence Aristotle in his Ethicks beginneth with the end of humane actions What is the white that all men are to shoot at What is the mark they are to levell at Whereupon some Divines likewise concluding that Divinity is practical and not speculative meerly that therefore the most approved and genuine method in all Systems of Divinity is first to begin with that end which all men ought to aim at in their whole life and that is known to be the glory of God and the salvation of our souls Now when a man hath fixed his end and resolveth upon that he doth all things proportionably and sutably thereunto Hence when a man acteth according to a Divine Rule If you ask him Why do you take such pains Why do you ride up and down and travail so much Why do you study and devour books His answer will be It is for Gods glory and the salvation of my soul Till therefore a man hath centered his soul upon the right end till his heart be constantly upon that he either propounds cursed and wicked ends to himself or at the best he maketh intermedious ends ultimate that which is the secondary to be the principal For it 's lawfull to take pains to be diligent in our calling that our family may be provided for our children be brought up it were an unnatural and great sinne to be negligent herein but then you must remember to make this a comma not a colon This must be your Inne not your home you must look beyond all these even to God and your souls This truth is so necessary that though we should preach six hundred Sermons about it to quicken you up in the meditation thereof it would not be useless But I am not now to insist upon it The sum is this He that would both in soul and body in health wealth parts and all he hath be imployed for God must often make this Question to his soul Oh my soul what is thy end in all these things What moveth thee to
pains and torments of sin and yet wilt venture on the committing of it who will pitty thee If a man should be brought out of Hell torments to live here upon earth and yet would commit sin again would any have compassion on such a man if afterwards he should be damned Thus it is with that man who hath the beginnings of Hell already upon him its Gods mercy that he giveth thee such a taste of Hell in thy conscience that thou mayst fly from sin But if for all this thou wilt be worse than a fool that no experience will teach thee then how just is it with God to deliver thee up irrecoverably unto Eternal wrath 3. This Inconstancy is nothing but a mocking of God and dallying in soul-matters What a Thunderbolt should this be in thy heart to think I have but mocked God as much as lyeth in me though he will not be mocked I have been but an Hypocrite and dissembler with them my Repentance was a lye my Tears were a lye for I am the same man again that I was The Scripture indeed maketh every man a lyar but to be a lyar in thy Repentance a lyar in thy sorrow for sin This is the most abominable and detestable of all Take heed then of having an heart and a heart as the Scripture calleth it in these things An heart to cry out of sin and an heart to receive and imbrace it again Hence In the 4th place Because of this Hypocrisie and false-dealing with God it may be just with him for ever to forsake thee so as to deliver thee up to an impenitent heart never to have the least fear or sorrow about sin any more Pharaoh that sometimes had relentings upon him yet at last was so hardened that he never melted more and the nearer he grew to his destruction the more stupid he was Thus the people of Israel who had so often dealt unfaithfully with God in a seeming manner repenting but afterwards turning back to their lusts again were at last delivered up to blinde eyes to deaf ears to hard hearts never to understand and to be converted as we have it Isa 6. 9 10. As Aguish Fits holding very long at last end in a Consumption Thus thou who hast often had troubles and workings of heart about sin yet falling often into them again may become forsaken for ever as Saul was the Lord never meeting thee more in any Ordinance The Last Particular wherein lightness and Inconstancy is a great sin as it relateth to spirituall things is In the Promises and Resolutions or Vowes that may be made to God I shall not treat of a Religious Vow or a Promise by Oath at this time only I shall insist upon such Promises and Purposes as we may make unto God at any time as First In times of great Afflictions and streights when the fear of death or any other judgment is upon us how ready are we to make Promises both to men and God that if ever he will recover us if ever he will give health again then we will walk more carefully abstain from the sinnes we were addicted unto as Pharaoh cryed out Take away this judgment this once Thus we say if God will try me once more then what a Reformed man will I be But if God spare thee then how quickly are such holy Purposes forgotten Now you are to know this is a great aggravation of thy sin to promise thus to God to purpose thus before God and then to deal falsly Yet what slight and formal thoughts have people concerning such Promises But one day thou wilt finde the heynousness of thy false heart herein A second time when we are to make Promises to God is at the Sacrament of the Lords Supper where the consciences of men are so far awed that they engage themselves to God and renew their Covenant with him to walk with more care and fear than ever before But how much Yea and Nay is therein many Communicants Who would think thou shouldest be so careless and negligent man after such solemn Stipulations made with God Oh how little are these Promises thought of that we frequently make to God And if it be ●o sinfull to break a Promise made to man how much more to God Thou hast not lyed to man said Peter to Ananias Act. 5. 4. And Satan is said to fill his heart to make him do so To how many may we say alter such Promises made to God but broken why hath Satan filled thy heart to lye unto God It is Solomons Advice concerning Vowes and Promises made to God That we should not be hasty and rash in such things Eccles 5. 2. with this Reason For God is in heaven and thou in earth He is an Insuate glorious God and thou a poor worm upon the earth Surely this negligence in people generally to fullfill their Promises made to God should be more seriously bewailed than it is Your Baptismy The Lords Supper they are Covenants made with God there is a renewed Promise made to God in Sacramental Administrations that we will be the Lords that we will not live to the world or sin but to God alone Now take heed of perfidiousness in this particular Thou takest Gods Name in vain in this case and he will not hold such guiltless Yea there is never a Prayer that we pray unto God but there is implicitely a Promise made to God that if he will grant our Requests we will gloryfie his name by an holy and godly life Take heed then of being judged out of thy own mouth God at that Day of Judgment will bring thy own words thy own Promises against thee Oh be able to say with Paul in the Text even to God himself When I thus purposed to reform to become a new man did I then use lightness did I purpose according to the flesh SERM. CXII Of walking according to the flesh 2 COR. 1. 17. Or the things that I purpose do I purpose according to the flesh IN these words the Apostle doth remove the Second sinfull Cause from himself that useth to make men change their purposes and that is A respect to carnal Considerations Men that look only to their Profits to their Greatness and Honor such must needs be mutable and inconstant like the Camelion turning into the colour of every object they come nigh which Aristotle attributeth to fear in that creature if there be any such thing And thus when men purpose and design but fear of losing some carnal Advantages their hearts are set upon causeth them to be Yea and Nay to resolve and then to unresolve to promise and then to break promises For as in Speculatives Conclusions are according to the nature of Principles from when they flow so in all Practicalls our Actions are coloured according to the Ends we propound to our selves Now the corrupt Principle which Paul doth here disavow is To purpose things according to the flesh
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is spoken oppositely to the willing of things according to the Principles of Godliness revealed in the Word or as in other places to the Spirit for to walk in the flesh and to walk in the Spirit Rom. 8. are made immediately opposite to one another Now this Phrase According to the flesh hath a Threefold signification in Scripture First it signifyeth That which is done according to the meer humane nature without any corruption Thus Christ is said Rom. 1. 3. to be born of the seed of David according to the flesh That Opposition doth evidently demonstrate against Socinians that there is another nature in him which is his Godhead so 1 Pet. 3. 18. he is said to be put to death in the flesh 2. This Expression doth sometimes singnifie The External Priviledges whether civil or Ecclesiastical and the glorious Respects that may accompany them Thus the Apostle 2 Cor. 5. 16. We know no man after the flesh no not Christ himself That is We do not attend to any External or sensible Considerations that may be had from Christ but our hearts are wholly carryed out in a way of believing on him even as our Saviour saith Luke 8. 21. My Mother and my brethren are they which hear the word of God and do it Thus some are said to glory and to have confidence in the flesh which Paul renounceth Phil. 3. 4. and that was in the Priviledges of the Church of Israel So that any external thing in Religion though it be vouchsafed as a Priviledg by God yet it is but flesh in respect of the gracious works of Gods Spirit Thus there is a Jew and Circumcision in the flesh and a Jew and Circumcision in the Spirit which is good to be observed for of too many mens Religion may you apply that which is spoken in another case it is flesh and not spirit This we are to press much upon you that in prayer in Ordinances in all approaches to God you be a spiritual people not carnal resting upon Externals only 3. This Expression according to the flesh is most frequently for a corrupt Principle within us according to which we direct and order our course Thus flesh in the Scripture signifieth the whole man as it is corrupt comprehending in it not onely the Sensitive and inferior part of a man but his Rational also hence Col. 2. 18. We have a fleshly minde and Gal 5. Idolatries Heresies which are in the minde are said to be the fruit of the flesh It is true Ephes 2. 3. there seemeth to be a Distinction because it is said fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the minde but even there the minde is flesh and the meaning of the Apostle is to distinguish of sinnes some whereof arise from the Sensitive Appetite as Drunkenness Uncleanness others from the Understanding as desire of Vain-glory Idolatry Heresie c. all which are the flesh in a large comprehension Now in this sense the Apostle taketh it here He did not purpose according to the flesh that is according to corrupt and sinfull Principles within him but in all such things was guided by the Spirit of God determining upon those things wherein he might most promote Gods honour and the Churches good We see this Apostle 2 Cor. 10. 3. speaking very affectionately in this point against those Corinthians who accused him as walking according to the flesh which he denyeth saying That though he walk in the flesh yet he doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after it he did not use carnal weapons such as humane wisdome ex●… worth and greatness with carnall Policy to destroy what opposed it self against the Gospel From the Words thus explained Observe That a purposing and walking according to sinfull Carnal Principles must needs make a man very instable and mutable The Apostle in this defence doth plainly suppose that this is an ordinary cause to make men inconstant in all their wayes hope of getting and fear of losing doth cause a continual ebbing and flowing in our affections where 〈◊〉 have not one immoveable Principle fixed and settled to walk by there must be frequent variations for new lusts do beget new actions and the creature being driven up and down with uncertainties so they must be that adhere thereunto A man cannot stand steadfastly upon a round running bowl or upon slippery ice and such are all the Creatures Insomuch that he that would be as is said of Christ The same yesterday and to day and for ever must take the word of God for his Rule which is unchangeable invariable and abideth for ever To discover this Truth more fully let us instance in some particulars of the Principles of flesh which all by nature according to their reipective temptations are prone to follow And first Earthly Profit and Worldy advantages are a sweet bait of the flesh which allure many Insomuch that they resolve and purpose upon no other thing than what is accommodated thereunto and therefore are pro and contra for and against even as this Principle of earthly Profit doth move them These make the world their God Mammon their God and as the Godly submitteth all his Purposes and Resolutions to Gods will this he intendeth if God will this he supposeth to do if God permit so doth a man inflamed to this carnal Principle of Profit order all things with subordination thereunto this he will do if his Profit require it This he will do if his Profit command it the Papacy of Rome may notoriously be charged with this Principle of flesh in all their designes which are only to advance the Popes Crown and to nourish the Moncks bellies The Apostle speaketh of some who accounted gain godliness 2 Tim. 6. 5. Such ought to be so odious to us that the Apostle commands us to turn away from them The same Apostle at another time doth even with weeping speak of others who minde earthly things Phil. 3. 19. Wonder not then if those who walke by this Principle of the flesh they will get profit and wealth though they lose God Heaven and their own soules that they those soules as well as their bodies seem to be of the dust if they are driven away as the dust before every winde having no consistency atall Did not this desire of profit make Judas turn such an Apostate of a Disciple of Christ to be a perfidious Traytor Did not the Love of this present world make Demas to forsake Paul So that you see all those must necessarily be unconstant in Religion who have no better Principle to move them than eartly Respects and Advantages These are like Esau called therefore a prophane Person Heb. 12. 16. because for a morsel of meat he sold his Birthright This argueth a man to be prophane when he hath an higher esteem of Mony of Riches and Wealth than of Religious things Oh say rather Let mony perish than my soul perish let wealth and profit
temporal life and loose a spiritual life Fourthly Whereas sinnes according to Divines are distributed into sinnes of the heart of the tongue and of the hand Cordis oris operis Lying is a sinne of the tongue So that as by the tongue we come to know the disease sometimes of the body that is within so by the tongue we may discerne a sinfull wicked heart A lying tongue doth argue a deceitfull heart So that as the pureness and foulness in the fountain doth quickly empty it self into the streams Thus as the heart is either holily or sinfully affected so it emptieth it self into the tongue and hands Hence in the fifth place All those who would abstaine from the way of lying must study the spiritual government of the tongue Nature indeed hath inclosed it with lips and teeth but Grace must have a more powerfull and predominant curb over it The Apostle James doth notably speak of the sinfulnesse of the tongue James 3. 6. calling the tongue though a little member yet a world of iniquity an unruly evil full of deadly poison Certainly the Apostles zeal discovered in that Chapter against a sinfull tongue should make us with much diligence watch against it especially in that it is so unru y that no man can tame it Now among many sinfull evils of the tongue this of lying and falshood is not the least So that he who hath an holy meek just and faithfull tongue is called by the Apostle a perfect man vers 2. not but that he hath still much imperfection in him onely we are so apt to sinne by that to offend by that What is in the heart is so quickly in that that the Christian hath arrived at a great proficiency in godlinesse who hath this power over his tongue Hence David as sensible of this work above his own strength maketh his earnest addresse in prayer unto God Psal 141. 3. Set a watch O Lord before my mouth and keep the door of my lips Grace must be the spiritual porter to watch the mouth else such sins will come out thereat that will both greatly offend God and man Hence in the sixth place That this government of the tongue against lying or any other sin may be attained unto it is necessary 1. To cleanse the heart that is the original and source of all evil and therefore it is in vain to heal the outwards unlesse the inwards also be first purged Therefore David in the fore-mentioned prayer addeth another Petition to the former Psal 141. 4. Incline not my heart to any evil thing Therefore when Solomon had first given that counsel Chap. 4. 23. To keep the heart with all diligence then he speaketh of the duties about the eyes hands and feet No man can in an holy manner keep his tongue from lying cursing and swearing with other sinnes thereof unlesse he first endeavour that the inward frame of the heart be made pure and holy The old man must be put off and the new man put on as the Apostle speaketh and then we lay aside the way of lying In the next place Let us consider what are the causes of lying of yea and nay I doe not mean the general ones for the Text nameth them to be inconstancy and a corrupt heart but the particular ones And 1. Some have a strong inclination and peculiar propensity to it they love and delight in telling of lies Yea this lying disposition is noted to be the property of some Countreys as the Poet said of the Cretians They were alwayes liars Titus 1. 12. which witnesse the Apostle saith is true And no wonder at this for the same Apostle maketh it the quality of every man by nature and that wherein he doth oppose God whose Attribute is truth God is true and every man a lyar Rom. 3. 4. Seeing then the nature of man is thus prone to it and some have a more peculiar inclination to it no wonder if lyes as well as oaths do make a Land mourn Do we not see it in children how they are more forward to lie than to speak They come both together only lying seemeth more natural A second cause of lying is want of dependance upon God as if he would not fulfill his promises without our lies and unlawfull means that we use In this Rebecca failed Genes 27. 6 7. though she knew of Gods promise to Jacob yet because Isaac's affections were set upon Esau the elder brother she saw no visible way how the promise should be accomplished therefore she used lying and dissimulation but though she got the blessing for her sonne yet many sad afflictions did befall both her and Jacob thereby 3. Another cause is The captivity and bondage that we are in by nature to Satan for he being 〈◊〉 lyar from the beginning we imitate him and follow our father in this particular This our Saviour telleth the Jewes John 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Devil when he speaketh a lie he speaketh of his own for he is a lyar and the father of it Mark that the father of it implying that by the Devil we are sollicited and tempted to lies and if there were no other consideration but this it were enough to make us with David Psal 119. 163. To abhorre the way of lying because it cometh from the Devil we thereby demonstrate the Devil to be working in us to move our tongues And truly the name of a lie is a very reproachfull thing How hardly can men endure the name of it who yet are constant in the practice of it So that the reproach especially the cause from whence it cometh may perswade us to leave it off which is hell it self we shall then quickly hear every man speaking truth with his neighbour 4. An inordinate desire of profit and gain doth many times put men upon lying They wil● commend and praise that which in their conscience they know to be bad and all to get a little profit Thus Ananias and Saphira they lied to Paul and all to reserve a little profit to themselves Lastly A sinfull and immoderate fear that many times provoketh to lying It was thus with Abraham and Isaac about their wives they lied to save themselves out of dangers And although David did abhorre the way of lying yet we see him in several exigencies degenerate from his principles It is true in case of a mans life to choose rather to die than to tell a lie must needs be an argument of heroical grace in a man but we see in Peter how difficult it is to abstain from lies when thereby we can preserve our selves out of danger So that if at any time we find the godly overtaken with this sinne we must not from thence conclude the lawfulnesse of it but rather bewail our pronenesse thereunto For if those that are godly in an eminent manner are thus apt to fall what shall the little Trees do
to charge it upon all other Ministers as if they were all alike It was for this that Paul doth not only apologize for himself but his Associates also But how unreasonable is this grant that some were truly blame-worthy must all be so If in the Old Testament there were many false prophets that daubed with untempered mortar that cried peace peace to sinners when destruction was at hand shall we therefore condemn the good Prophets who reproved even the greatest and most mighty for their sins Because Judas was a thief and for filthy lucre sake betrayed Christ shall we condemn all the Apostles making them to be no better Must Sylvanus and Timotheus be accused Because they thought Paul was inconstant and light yet thus it falleth out continually and that from these Grounds First The policy and enmity of false teachers who like Haman think it a small matter to destroy one Mordecai unlesse they root out the whole race of the Jews Thus the false Apostles concluded Though Paul was disgraced and vilified yet if Sylvanus and Timotheus be in esteem and authority our Kingdom will fall to the ground It is therefore the adversaries design to cast dung in the faces of all the faithfull Ministers of Christ that so there might not one be left that should be usefull in their place A second Ground is From the injudiciousnesse and indiscretion of people who are credulous and apt to believe all rumours and reports How could it be that the Pharisees by their calumniating Christ as an Impostor and a Blasphemer should prevail with the greater part of the people to be on their side because they were blinde and led by the blinde they would not make use of their own judgement they would not examine and try whether things were so or no. And then the third Ground is From the natural enmity that is in all wicked men to the Office of the Ministry when faithfully discharged That is a burden to them they must needs say with Ahab to such faithfull Michaiahs We hate him because he alwayes prophesieth evil Alas godly Ministers cannot give any comfort cannot promise peace to such ungodly persons therefore they have hatred against them and are glad to receive any false report concerning them Ministers are compared to Light and to salt now the Light must needs be offensive to distempered eyes and Salt to soars Thus if the Ministery be powerfull to enlighten to convince to reprove no ungodly man can endure this Therefore it is that the office of the Ministery when faithfully managed is so great a trouble to wicked men They are thievs therefore cannot endure this light they cry out with Ahab hast thou found mee O my enemy Every Sermon that is powerfull is as bitter as gall and wormwood to them and therefore there being such an enmity and ill-will against them it is no wonder if they be quickly prejudiced and will not believe there is a godly or faithfull Minister in the whole Church of God But I hasten to the Last Observation and that is It is a most blessed and happy thing when all the Ministers of God agree with one consent to advance Christ As Luke calleth it chap. 1. The mouth of all the holy Prophets which have been since the beginning of the world It was but one mouth as it were They all agreed in the same Doctrine Paul and Sylvanus and Timotheus they all preach the same Christ they were not yea or nay This accord and agreement among the Ministers of the Gospel is of so great concernment that our Saviour in his valedictory prayer doth with much efficacy and vigor press this Petition That his Disciples may be one and one in the most near manner imaginable even as the father and son are one I shall not enlarge on this because heretofore much spoken off only I shall instance in some usefull Effects and consequences of this happy Agreement Only before I do that we have cause to take notice of the goodness of God and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 manifold wisdome of God whereby he hath provided many Offices many Officers for his Church and those variously gifted and all for the spiritual benefit of our soules some are Barnabasses some are Boanergeses Thus as the Kings Daughter is said to be cloathed with needle work of divers colours so hath God richly adorned his Church with variety of abilities that if men be not converted the greater will be their condemnation For whereas Auditors are of divers appetites some are for doctrinal Preaching some for affectionate some are for legal terrible Sermons others for sweet Evangelical discourses if Christ send Embassadours thus qualified every way what can they look for who are not by these several baits allured and taken For this cause we have Christ himself upbraiding the Jews that no kinde of heavenly way would please no kinde of dressing the Word of life was acceptable to their palates Matth. 11. 18. John came neither eating nor drinking and they say he hath a devil The son of man came eating and drinking and they say Behold a friend of publicans and sinners Hereupon he compareth them to children playing in the markets saying we have piped to you and ye have not danced we have mourned unto you and ye have not lamented Thus nothing would do any good to them Admire then Gods goodness that hath thus abundantly provided for thee Do not simply and enviously compare one Ministers gifts above another but adore the mercy of God that useth all the different abilities of men for the Churches good This premised we may from the harmony and Agreement of Ministers in advancing Christs Kingdom see First The greater Confirmation of the truth If out of the mouth of two or three witnesses then how much more out of the mouth of many thousand witnesses is every truth abundantly confirmed How canst thou give way to any atheistical thoughts whether there be a God or a day of Judgment or an heaven or an hell when thou shalt hear so many thousands of Gods servants in all ages witness to this thing All the Prophets and Apostles men renouned for holiness for miracles they all preached the same Doctrines that we do to you And therefore consider with thy self what a cloud of witnesses thou gainsayest by thy unbelief 2. The greater consent and harmony the greater defence there is for the truth The old rule is vis unita fortior Our Saviour confirmeth it when he saith A Kingdome divided against it self cannot stand What advantages do the enemies of Gods Church make by the Divisions and different Judgments of men in the Reformed Church The Papist doth confidently conclude that all will turn to them at last for say they you have so many Sects amongst you and one saith he hath the spirit of God and another he hath but all contrary to one another Now although it were easie to recriminate yet this difference
into nothing Thus it is with the promises recorded in the Scripture they all move and act as it were in him They all live and worke in him were it nor for his merit and his Spirit they would be but as empty words or as a tinkling cymball Therefore In the fourth place The Covenant of Grace which is virtually all the promises of God it is not onely called a Covenant and a Promise but a Testament likewise And that for this end because it doth necessarily relate to the death of the Testatour So that Gods promise is not to be conceived as when one man maketh a promise to another absolutely and without any thing intervening For here we have God indeed promising from his meer absolute goodnesse and mercy but then the execution of this cannot be without the blood of Christ so that all the force of the promise ariseth from the death of Christ The Apostle therefore argueth the validity of this Covenant from that which is amongst men Galat. 3. 15. A mans testament when it is confirmed cannot be disanulled or added unto how much rather then must the testament of Christ be confirmed for ever The Apostle doth excellently consider this Heb. 9. 15. For this cause Christ is a Mediatour of the New Testament that by meanes of death they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance For where a testament is there also must of necessity be the death of the testatour By which it appeareth that the promises of God are established upon a sure and unchangeable foundation even the blood of Christ and therefore as sure as Christ died so sure will those promises of God be made effectual to thee Indeed if Gods promises were Yea and Amen according to thy workes to thy worth and dignity woe would be unto thee Yea though God doth require faith and repentance yet the promises are not setled upon these as a foundation but on Christ and therefore it is that our hopes our comforts can never be shaken The promises then of God have two Pillars to bear them up though one be enough The first is The immutability and verity of Gods Nature he cannot change he cannot lie The other is From the Merit and Efficacy of Christs death whereby the things promised are deserved and that at a dear rate even Christs blood Now then can any godly soule give way to unbeliefe to sinfull dejections seeing that God cannot lie and the blood of Christ cannot but obtaine God cannot deny himselfe neither can he deny his onely Sonne Therefore let the godly soule remember this Gods promise is not onely a bare promise but Christs Testament also Insomuch that all spirituall benefits are the fruit of his death and shall we thinke that blood will be shed in vain Shall we give no more to Christs Testament then we will to a mans But this Doctrine deserveth further enlarging SERM. CXXVII Of the usefulnesse and unchangeablenesse of the Promises of God 2 COR. 1. 20. For all the Promises of God in him are yea and in him amen ALl the promises of grace you have heard are established upon two immovable pillars Gods unchangablenesse and the bloud of Christ To proceed from this followeth First That Deus absolutus as Luther was wont to say or Deus in praedicamento substantiae is a consuming fire and we are nothing but stubble before him it must be God as in praedicamento relationis as he is a God promising mercy unto us in Christ that is the ground of all our commerce and fellowship with him We are not to appear before God in confidence of our obedience to his commands but by faith in his promises insomuch that the only foundation we have to build upon in all our approaches unto him is Gods promise alone in Christ The godly soul is to look with as much or more chearfulnesse on that than Rahab could do on the scarlet thread held out as a commemorative signe to preserve her life were it not for this promise in Christ who could who might who dare draw nigh to God the Father So that it is through Christ that the way is opened for us to come unto God We may see this notably prefigured as it were in Gods dispensation with the people of Israel Exo. 33. 2 3. for when they had by their sinnes greatly provoked God the Lord denied his presence to go along with them I will not go up with thee lest I consume thee in the way this sheweth that such was Gods anger against their iniquity that he could not bear it It 's a speech taken from the humour of men otherwise the anger of the Lord is subject to his own power only this is spoken to shew what distastefull objects they were to him But though his anger be thus against them yet see what he promiseth ver 2. I will send my Angel before thee Here God would not go but his Angel now this Angel is Christ as appeareth Exod. 22. 20 21 22. where he is described as one in whose power it is to pardon iniquities with this addition for my Name is in him Observe then here a sweet Oeconomy or dispensation of Gods dealing with the people of Israel as a President to inform us about all mankinde God would not look upon mankinde neither would he behold as it were if he did he should immediatly destroy them all but he sends an Angel he sendeth Christ into the world and so in and through him he becomes propitious to us Now how little is this understood by Christians who do go to the promises upon their own obedience they think they beleeve they repent and in the mean while Christ is not all in all as if in our graces in our performances The promises of God were yea and Amen and not in God himself It is a long while ere the ministery of the Law hath any efficacy upon mens hearts ere they are sensible of the weight and the heavinesse of sinne ere they go bowed down because of this burden and when that hath broken them it is many times longer ere they are directed to an Evangelicall life ere they can tell how to make use of the proper remedy which is the promise of God in Christ for all their disputes and doubts arise from this as if the fullfilling of the promises were established upon themselves and not upon Christs bloud Truly if the humbled sinner were well instructed in this principle it would be like the rising of the Sunne to dispell all darknesse for either the promises are made good because of thy faith and of thy repentance or because of Christs bloud and atonement through that if because of the former then no wonder thou art no more quieted in thy minde no wonder thy heart is so full of fears for how weak is thy faith how strong and heavy is thy heart if thou must be justified by their worth thou art undone But then if Christ be
if you ask Have all the sanctified persons of God this sealing Have none the sanctification of the Spirit but they must also have the witnessing of the Spirit I answer this Question because of great practical importance shall God assisting be handled by it self after the description hath been explained That which I shall here take notice of is That sanctification is necessarily presupposed to this sealing A great Prince will not set his seal to dung to make an impression there neither will God to an heart unsanctified For as in matter of Doctrine God will not vouchsafe miracles to confirm that which is a lie neither in practicals will the Spirit of God witnesse to that heart which is not made holy For indeed it should witnesse a lie in such a case informing such they are the sonnes of God when indeed they are the children of the Devil This order of Gods Spirits first sanctifying and then sealing is clear Ephes 1. 13. In whom after ye believed ye were sealed Those eminent Divines who defined faith to be assurance making it the same with the sealing of Gods spirit are gravelled at this Text and therefore make this Objection If faith be assurance be the sealing how doth the Text say After we believed we were sealed To this therefore Piscator answereth not yeelding that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be rendred Having beleeved as of a thing past but beleeving as in the present but there is too much forcing in this interpretation Others they consider of faith as it hath two parts Illumination of minde and fiducial assurance Now say they the Apostle meaneth by faith the former work of faith and so the meaning is After you were enlightned to know the truth you were confirmed and assured but that opinion making faith justifying to be an assurance that Christ is mine is justly refused It is plain then that when the Spirit of God hath in order of nature for in time they may be both together sanctified a man throughout whereby he is made a new creature then the Spirit of God maketh this glorious stamp upon him then he giveth him this seal as an honourable priviledge whereby he may know himself to be the Lords Even as in antiquity none might have seals but persons of honour and dignity So that the natural and unregenerate person is to stand aloof off thou hast nothing to do in this priviledge thou art not the man whom the great King of Heaven and earth doth purpose thus to honour We proceed in the Description and there we meet with the formal Nature of it wherein it doth essentially consist with the object thereof The Nature of it is In confirming and establishing the heart of a man For this is the chief and usual end of seals to ratifie a thing and to make it no longer uncertain and doubtfull And to this property doth the Scripture chiefly attend For whereas the soul though sanctified is apt to be in daily fears and doubts about Gods favour and grace towards it it fluctuateth up and down having no subsistency the Spirit of God cometh and consolidateth the soul inabling it to rest satisfied in this that God is his God that his sinnes are pardoned that he is become a reconciled Father in Christ And if you say Why do we not need the Spirit of God to do this Cannot we by our graces by our repentance and holy life sufficiently establish our own souls in peace No by no means we need the Spirit of God to comfort as you heard as well as to sanctifie and that for these Reasons First It is very hard for a man whose guilty conscience doth presse him and condemn him daily telling him that he hath deserved at Gods hands to be eternally tormented in hell not to thinke because God may doe thus that therefore he will do so In such terrours and affrights we look more to what we have deserved we look more to what God may do then what he will we are naturally suspicious and think the worst of God even as we doe to man If we have offended a man greatly and it lieth in his power to undo us we are never quiet we cannot but think when ever the opportunity is he will be avenged and therefore we dare not trust him Yea though we have given no just cause if others have taken up an unkind spirit towards us we expect nothing else from them but our ruine when it is in their power Therefore for all Saul's tears and good works to David yet he would never trust him Now although there be no cause for us to have such suspicious thoughts about God for he hath graciously promised that he will receive us insomuch as not to believe him herein is to give more credit to a man whose words many times satisfie us than to God who is truth it self yet the heart being guilty and full of fears doth work in this doubtfull manner about God How hard is it to bring the afflicted sinner to good perswasions about God and that though by promises and other wayes God hath so abundantly provided against such distrust Here then is the reason why we need the sealing of Gods Spirit we cannot perswade our selves but God will doe what he may do and what we have deserved And A second Reason followeth upon the former We can hardly be perswaded that the great and good things which we stand in need of God will ever bestow upon us who are so unworthy of them Can a beggars daughter be perswaded that a great King will marry her But here is a farre greater disproportion What will the great God of Heaven so holy so full of majesty look graciously upon me and not only forgive me my sinnes but advance me to eternal glory These things are very improbable Shall Joseph be freed not only from the prison but promoted to the greatest honour in the Land next to the King Who would have believed it And thus it is here the soul having low and humble thoughts of it self cannot be perswaded that the great God of Heaven will look upon such despicable wretches as they are 3. The way of evangelical confidence with the comfortable effects thereof are wholly supernatural And therefore no wonder if we need the Spirit of God to help us therein Not only holinesse and grace is supernatural but assurance and joy are likewise supernatural As we cannot pray without the Spirit helping our infirmities so neither are we able to call God Father If faith in Christ by which we are justified be supernatural then also is the comfort and peace flowing from the knowledge thereof As the Doctrine of the Gospel is by divine revelation flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto us that Christ is the Sonne of God so neither can flesh and blood enable us to the perswasion of this Mediator as loving me and giving himself for me Certainly if it be the gift of
not perfect grace yet thou hast not perfect holinesse yet but thou waitest upon the Lord till it be accomplished and so do here Oh but I am afraid I shall never have it I shall dye without it that is more than thou knowest how suddenly and graciously doth God use to rebuke these windes and waves when we little think of it yet know thy interest to heaven is not shaken Thou wilt indeed want much comfort but not thy title to heaven Thou art as sure to go to heaven as if thou wert assured of it And withall remember that the faith of dependance and recumbency upon Christ only is more noble than assurance in that thou givest God most glory In this thy own interest is satisfied And lastly know that heaven is coming to thee and thou going to it when not only sin but all fears shall be removed away Thou shalt then dispute thy condition no more thou shalt not then question thy graces or Gods grace to thee but shall put on the Crown of glory never to be molested and disquieted any more SERM. CXXXVIII Of Grace as it is the Earnest of Eternall Glory 2 COR. 1. 22. And given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts THis is the third and last similitude by which that gracious confirmation of beleevers in Gods promises is declared and if we consider them relatively to the discourse precedent we shall easily see what great reason there is that the promises should not be only yea and Amen in themselves but in bs also Seeing we have this special work of Gods spirit anointing sealing and giving us an earnest of the things that are promised Now as you heard though the same prividedge be meant under this threefold similitude yet every one hath its proper notion and therefore the earnest here spoken of may differ from sealing thus That the sealing of Gods Spirit doth assure of us that which is already wrought in us as seals confirm contracts that are already made though hereby also is implyed a certain continuance and perseverance in that state which is sealed but the earnest spoken of in the text doth principally relate to the future So that whereas the childe of God might object what if I be sealed and assured for the present of my good condition yet who knoweth what may fall out thereafter I may apostatize I may provoke God to leave me and so this seal be as it were defaced But though the word sealing doth also imply continuance for it is till the day of redemption yet the word earnest doth more properly speak to that Objection Thou hast the earnest given thee of that inheritance which shall be hereafter So that in the words we may take notice of the mercy it self the efficient cause of it and the subject receiving it The mercy it self is said to be an earnest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is used in two other places in the New Testament as is to be shewed It is properly an Hebrew word though from the Hebrews communicated to the Phenicians which being great Merchants brought it into Greece so that the Grecians adopted it for their ordinary wood yea some Latinists as Plautus and Terentius do use it as Grotius on the place affirmeth Varro speaketh of it lib. 4. de ling. latinà where he saith the same mony for divers respects may be called dos merces arrabo and corollarium and addeth the word arrabo is brought from the Grecians but Scaliger in his Notes upon the place correcteth him for that saying Ne graecum verbum quidem sed merum Syriacum The Hebrew root from whence it groweth is gnarub to mingle and so by a metaphor it signifieth to buy and sell to make contracts and to assure them by earnests because in this action the buyer and the seller are as it were mingled together Some have translated it pignus which the Grecians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a pledge pignus It is so called either à pugno say some because the pledge is delivered by the hand or else as Martinius Lexi pignus from pago or pango because in such covenants and contracts there is an agreement established But Hierom of old and others of late do no waies approve of rendring it a pledge but an earnest for there is this difference in the civil law between arra and pignus an earnest and a pledge an earnest is part of the price that is to be paid down and so goeth to make it up but a pledge is given for security by the debtor to the creditor and taken away again when the debt is paid Now this metaphor doth no waies hold in this case for God is not a debtor to us when he giveth us his grace he doth not borrow of us neither when the promise is fullfilled is this grace taken away for in heaven grace is not abolished but perfected Indeed Aquinas upon the place maketh this Observation That as a pledge must be saith he equivalently worth to the debt so it is here grace wrought in us especially the Spirit of God bestowed upon us is equivalent to glory But that is false that in our graces wrought by Gods Spirit there is an intrinsecall condignity and equality to everlasting glory It 's therefore more proper and suitable to call it an earnest which was commonly used two waies either in civill commerce or matrimoniall contracts called therefore in the latter subarrhatio The end and use of it was to secure the full payment of the debt or fullfilling of any promise made and in this sense it is true in the Text God knowing our pronenesse to doubt about his promises as also how uncertain and fearfull we are doth give us his grace here as a sure earnest of our eternal happinesse So that by this earnest we are not to understand extraordinary and miraculatous gifts of Gods Spirit for many had them who yet never could enter into glory but the special works of grace sanctifying These are fitly called an earnest though there be also some dissimilitudes as is to be shewed insomuch that he who findeth he hath grace here may certainly conclude he shall have glory hereafter for though there be some who hold that some may have true faith and yet totally fall off and that only the elected beleever shall persevere yet that is built upon a sandy foundation In the second place you have the efficient cause of this and that is the spirit of God Some indeed make this by way of apposition The earnest which is the spirit as if the spirit it self both in this and the other Text were the earnest which may be received provided that by the spirit we mean not only the person of the spirit but the gracious operations thereof for the people of God partake of both Eph. 1. 13. They are said to be sealed with that holy spirit of promise called so not because it is the spirit promised for that is too frigid though it be
so Is this lawfull To which Suarez answereth Disput. de Juramento saying That it is not onely an improper and absurd speech but also very ungodly and highly wicked It is improper and absurd for it confounds a vow with an oath A vow is not properly used to confirme a thing for that is the nature of an Oath But if there were impropriety onely in it that were not so hainous but it is abominable irreverence making such things the object of a vow which are light and triviall And thereupon some conclude There is more prophanenesse and irreverence in it then in using an oath yea they say it is a very great Oath But then secondly The great Question is Whether these expressions in faith and by faith are oaths or not To which I say First When there is a doubt and dispute whether such a forme of speech be an Oath then the safest way for thy conscience is to abstaine from expressions as the Apostle argueth Romans 14. Whatsoever is done doubting is a sinne If then there be a dispute and that amongst learned men Whether in faith for most grant by faith to be one be an Oath Is it not farre better for thee to leave off such forme of words If there were nothing but the scandall to others it is a just cause to make thee avoid such expressions So that the disputes about the thing is argument enough to make thee leave these words there being no necessity to use them But in the second place lest you might say Perhaps they are some Precisians and Doctors of that strictnesse that may thinke in faith to be Oaths Even amongst the Popish Authours there are those who judge so Onely they distinguish about faith What faith doe you meane say they when you say in faith If the Christian faith that is a sacred thing and so it 's an Oath if a moral faith that is nothing but humane veracity or a civil faith as we may call it the faith of a Nobleman or Gentleman then they say it is no Oath But who is there that saith in faith doth consider what faith he meaneth Nay some perhaps if they were asked that Question could not tell how to answer it Onely because not onely men of the greater ranke but of the inferiour sort doe use that expression and because they doe it for further confirmation it is to be presumed that they meane the Christian faith and if so according to some Popish Authours it is an Oath Neither is that any thing considerable to say we doe not use the Preposition by we doe not say by faith but in faith as Soto the Papist saith To say by faith is an Oath but not to say in faith For Suarez an acuter Jesuite saith Disp. de Juram That such an exception is vaine and that by faith and in faith is all one Neither doth the Preposition make an Oath We conclude then that in faith as well as by faith are Oaths It 's true Doctor Ames opinion is That in faith is no more than an asseveration Onely he addeth We must abstaine from the Preposition by But as I said in and by are all one in this case And if you say Why should in faith be more an Oath than in deed or in sincerity To this Doctor Sanderson giveth a considerable answer De Juram Praelect 1. Sect. 8. he maketh foure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or markes by which we may discover some formes of speech to be Oaths and one of them is The custome and use of the Countreyes language where we live So that although it may fall out that if we doe regard the words there is no reason why one should be not an Oath more than another yet the custome and use of the Countrey must carry it because words doe not signifie naturally but by meere institution So that as that may be money in one Countrey which may not be in another Thus that expression may signifie an Oath in one Countrey which doth not in another We grant therefore that if we doe respect the meere words there is no argument can be given why in deed should not be an Oath as well as in faith but the custome of speech in this Land at least amongst those who are more sober and desire to feare an Oath is to judge of it as an Oath And no doubt but those that use it doe for the most part intend so Yea why doe many use that expression in faith but because they would not be thought too precise For by this they would be distinguished from others who are more strict This is the Shibboleth as it were by which they would be notified Besides it is a Rule amongst Casuists That Juramentum est stricti juris because of the danger that may be therein And Quando verbum est ambiguum praesumendum est in salutem animae It being better if we doe erre to abstain from words that may be an Oath than to venture upon them because of our particular perswasion I shall therefore conclude this with that Authour above-mentioned He that while he doth attend onely to the forme or force of words indulgeth himselfe in a liberty of using such expressions in his common discourse without any choice or scruple which by long use have obtained with us the esteeme of an Oath doth violate the command of Christ concerning not swearing giveth a scandall to his brother and exposeth himselfe to the danger of perjury This is very good and grave counsell Therefore whatsoever the Dispute may be about these termes whether oaths or not let him who loveth his soule who would not give a just scandal to his brother and is knowne by his character that he feareth an Oath with all diligence and circumspection avoid such expressions for the future SERM. CXLII It is lawfull in some Cases to swear how and when it is thus lawfull 2 COR. 1. 23. Moreover I call God to record upon my soul c. THe definition of an oath being delivered we now come to satisfie that party which holdeth an oath is absolutely unlawfull under the Gospel as also to shew you how it is lawfull and when it is lawfull that so common swearers may be ashamed and confounded to see what guilt they daily bring upon themselves and yet never lay it to heart As for those who have abstained from an oath as unlawfull we finde the sect of Essen's among the Jews reckoned by learned men as remarkable This sect was at the same time with the Pharisees and Sadduces whose manners and way Josephus relateth at large yet say some our Saviour did not reprove their superstitions because they lived solitary in places remote from Towns and commerce of men Eusebius upon a mistake doth suppose them to be Christians Now their opinion was that it did not beseem a man to swear They thought a mans word should be as firm as an oath yet that they were not absoluely a-against swearing
Because perhaps by our sins we have deserved it 3. God often denies comforts for the that they may be the more welcome when they come 4. And often to try whether my obedience be pure 5. To teach us how we are beholding to Christ 6. Whensoever it is necessary we are sure to have it The afflictions we suffer for Christ are not only for our own but for the Churches good The sufferings of Christ of two sorts 1. In his Person 2. In his members Propositions clearing the truth 1. The sufferings of Saints for the good of the Church are still to be distinguished from Christs sufferings How Christian Martyrs sufferings differ 1. His death was not only a Martyrdom but a propitiation 2. In the efficacy 2. Our sufferings for the Churches good are not meritorious either for our selves or others 3. That our sufferings turn to others good is not from themselves but from the power and grace of God 4. Hence we may admire the wisdom power and goodness of God turning our enemies wicked intentions unto our good What is the general good promoted by the Churches sufferings 1. The glory of God Christ and believers 2. The propagation and enlargement of the Gospel Sufferings for Christ help much our comfort and salvation 1. The sufferings of others work good only occasionally not efficiently or meritoriously 2. Hence we may bewail the supersti●ion of the Church about the Martyrs 3. The sufferers for Christ may encourage us but we are to be sure they are indeed the sufferers for Christ How the afflictions of others for Christ work our comfort and salvation 1. Hereby we shall have greater assurance of these divine truths for which they suffer 2. Hence we may be encouraged to trust in God and depend upon him to enable us also if he should call us thereunto 3. Hereby we may take occasion to rejoyce in God as enabling them and as having promised to do so to us 4. Hence we may inform our selves they were in earnest and real for Christ 5. Hence we may learn to mortifie our hearts to the world The salvation of believers is promoted by their sufferings for Christ How sufferings advance our salvation 1. They help to make us mourn for sin and turn to God 2. They inform us more of God and Christ of his grace and power then we knew before 3. These afflictsons quicken us to more grace 4. Because of the glorious promises which are made to such Sufferings not barely in themselves but as improved by patience conduce to our salvation Humane Philosophers agreed in the commending of patience What goeth to the producing of patience 1. The efficient cause is God 2. The word of God is the instrumental cause 3. Afflictions they also work patience 4. God and Christ are the exemplary cause Motives to patience 1. We should consider and be affected with what we have deserved 2. Consider Gods great goodness in changing the nature of thy afflictions 3. Consider that God will be with thee 4. Consider what good will redound to thee by thy afflictions 1. What spiritual good 2. Eternal 5. Consider by patience thou maist promote the good of others A two-sold salvation temporal and spiritual Spiritual salvation is either inchoate or consummate God doth by all his dispensations carry on and further the salvation of his people What this salvation doth imply 1. It is Negative 2. Positive Two sorts of dispensations from God which further the salvation of a believer 1. The direct means appointed by God for this end 2. The occasional means as 1. Their sins 2. Their afflictions What is that hope and perswasion which Paul had of other men A two-fold hope Divine and Moral What is the Divine hope What Moral hope is 'T is a great encouragement to the Ministers of God to have good grounds for the hope of grace and stedfastnesse in their people What things they were which made Paul hope so well of the Corinthians 1. Their amendment and repentance by his former Epistle 2. Their setting up that good and holy order which was thrown down 3. Because they did communicate with Paul in a patient suffering for Christ A double communion 1. In what is evil 2. In what is good The communion with those who suffer for Christ is a fair way to their joy and glory 1. A two-fold communion with the afflicted 1. When a man living in peace and quietness himself yet is affected with their sufferings 2. When a man is cast into the same outward condition 2. It is as glorious and acceptable to be a companion to sufferers as to suffer Reasons why partaking with the Saints afflictions doth interest us in their glory 1. This demonstrates our faith in Christ to be upon spiritual grounds 2. Because this is suffering for Christ Of the compellation which Paul useth brethren Of the expression I would not have you ignorant 'T is of great use to know the afflictions of those who suffer for Christs sake Reasons 1. Hereby we shall be more provoked to pray for them 2. Hereby they will be more encouraged to bless God when they are delivered 3. Hereby we may learn patience zeal and heavenly mindedness and other graces Qu. What use is to be made of preaching about such afflictions which Paul and other Christians suffered from Heathens Answ 1. Answ 2. Answ 3. Answ 4. Answ 5. The faithfull Ministers of the Gospel are sure to meet with opposition from the world Two sorts which oppose the truth and wayes of Christ 1. Such as take the true Religion to be blasphemy and idolatry or superstition the true service of God 2. Such who professe religion meerly because it suits with their carnal interests Hence the Ministers of the Gospel are not only opposed to those who are without but by some within the Church Who are they which profess Religion meerly for carnal ends 1. Such as live in their lusts 2. Such as intend to advance themselves by it More characters of such who professe Religion only upon worldly respects 1. Such who in time of temptations prove adversaries to the Gospel and Ministry of it 2. Such as maintain doctrines which overthrow the foundation of Religion 3. Such as make parties and factions in the Church 4. Such who make use of the Doctrine of the Gospel only to shew their parts and learning 5. Such as do not own Religion upon divine principles and holy motives How the afflictions of the godly may be called heavy and yet light Godly men judge otherwise of their afflictions from sense and flesh then from grace and reason Propositions clearing the truth There are two selves in every regenerate man 2. These two selfs oppose one another 3. Hence 't is good to observe from which of those principles our actions proceed How we may know when faith and when flesh speaketh in our afflictions 1. Flesh argues from afflictions that God hath forsaken us 2. Flesh saith afflictions will undo us
joy and comfort 3. Thankfulnes Caut. 1. Caut. 2. Godly simplicity and singleness of heart affords much comfort Of the uature of godly simplicity 1. It flows from a sanctified heart 2. It looks upon Gods will as the only motive to obedience 3. It is fixed upon God only 4. It is not compounded 5. 'T is uniform in its obedience 6. It s outwards and inwards are all the same 7. It doth not cover any sin 8. It makes a man free in the service of God More propositions of the nature of simplicity 1. It humbly submits to the truths of God 2. It submits to the commandments of God 3. It boldly reproveth sin Of simplicity towards men 1. It makes a man blameless as to others 2. It is accompanied with ingenuity and truth Use 1. Use 2. Godly sincerity carrieth a man above all other things to God himself What it is in God that a sincere heart looks upon 1. His Omniscience 2. His being the first cause and the last end 3. His sovereignty and dominion 4. The wisdom of God What are those inferiour ends which interpose betwixt God our souls which we are apt to look upon 1. Vain-glory. 2. Honour and riches Propositions concerning godly sincerity 1. 'T is universal 2. Sincerity goeth to the bottom of sin 3. Hence it is that it is so hard to be a Christian 4. Sincerity is the proper difference betwixt a temporary professour and a true believer 5. Sincerity carries us through duties with delight 6. Sincerity makes a man find grace to be a reall thing Why carnal wisdom called fleshly Ministers ought not to use fleshly wisdom Why this truth is to be treated of 1. Because professors are charged with it 2. Because all professours would be thought clear from it 3. To take off prejudices from true believers Principles of fleshly wisdom 1. To defend errours from Scripture wrested 2. To hide our errours or else secretly to infect others with them More principles of fleshly wisdom in propagating Religion 1. To advance those of their own way and disgrace others 2. To maintain false doctrines that overthrow humane society 3. To indulge men in sin and to increase Disciples 4. To propound fleshly ends The godly ascribe all to the grace of God 1. A man may take comfort in his own holinesse and yet trust only in Gods grace 2. All is to be given unto grace What is that grace the Apostle exalteth against fleshly wisdom 1. That grace whereby he was converted 2. That grace whereby he was made an Apostle 3. That grace whereby he was enabled and prospered in his Ministry As 1. It was the grace of God that made Paul sincere What were those graces which the Apostle acknowledged in his Ministry 1. Faithfulness 2. Humility 3. Guidance and direction in his preaching and meditations 4 His patience self-denial zeal and courage 5. His heavenly wisdome 6. His successe in his Ministry It is universal holinesse which is the ground of comfort There is a two-fold conversation the one natural The other is an heavenly and godly conversation What is required to a good conversation 1. Principles of grace 2. A predominancy in the heart to Christ 3. Actual Improvements of grace 4. Pure and heavenly motives Whose conversation is not holy notwithstanding some good things in it The more evidently Gods presence hath been with the Ministry the more inexcusable is the unprofitableness of the people under it 1. The longer time a people have enjoyed the means of grace they 'll be more inexcusable if they answer not Gods expectations 2. The more faithfull the Minister is the more in excusable will the people be 3. Where the Ministry is more succesfull the impenitent are more inexcusable Wherein the success of a faithfull Ministry is seen A godly convincing life is of great advantage specially in a Minister 1. Godlinesse hath a convincing and converting effect with it 2. The efficacy of the Ministry depends not upon the piety of the Minister 3. Yet such Ministers as are not godly cannot expect comfort from God nor acceptance with him 4. A godly life is convincing either potentially or actually What are the causes that make godly lives oft not convincing 1. Prejudice 2. Corrupt affections 3. Mistake about the way and nature of godliness An hopefull beginning in holiness is not enough without perseverance 1. A man that would set upon an holy life must first look to his foundation 2. Sincere beginnings are the cause of perseverance 3. Therefore the grace of God is not only necessary to begin but also to continue holiness in us 4. Perseverance promised doth not exclude but include fear watchfulnesse and diligence The best Churches are full of changes in their affections to their spiritual guides though never so faithfull 1. It is an imbred corruption for all inferiours to be mutable to their inferiours 2. This inclination to this changeablenes hath more temptations in great than small places What are the causes of this changeablenes 1. Inconstancy and fickleness 2. An overhasty receiving of the Ministers 3. Curiosity 4. Mistakes about the Doctrine delivered 5. A faithfull discharge of the Ministers office 6. The importunity of deceivers It is a happy thing when Minister and people can rejoyce in one another 1. The relation betwixt Pastor and people is by divine Institution 2. Therefore doth the Devil endeavour to make differences betwixt Minister and beople How and why may a people rejoyce in their Pastor 1. As the instruments whereby God hath instructed and converted them 2. For their works sake 3. In the spiritual success of the Minister Wherein a faithfull Pastor hath cause to rejoyce over his people 1. When they are tractable and teachable Motives to knowledg in spiritual things 1. Consider the Necessity of it 2. The usefulness of it 2. When people believe and receive the Word as Gods Word 3. When they are converted by the Word 4. When they are ready to all duties 5. When they are ready to submit to the whole order of Christ Christ hath a solemn day wherein great changes will be made 1. There will be a great change as to the comforts of a godly Minister and people 2. A great change in the prophane sinners 3. A great change to the godly 4. A great change in mens judgements and apprehensions of sinne and holiness There will be a great change in wicked mens thoughts 2. Of good men as 1. That they are fools 2. Hypocrites 3. In respect to their outward estate 3. Their thoughts will be changed as to Christ 1. They will then behold him the chiefest good 2. As a Judge as well as a Saviour There will be at the great day a great change as to Gods providence Lastly There will be a special change made upon some sinners as the jolly secret and self-righteous Where a Faithfull Minister hath hopes of doing good he hath good encouragement to remain 1. All people naturally have a door bolted
is the Prince of darkness and a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devour and those that are afflicted they are almost in his jaws The room is almost ready swept and garnished for him How many in their troubles hath he prevailed upon to despair to self-murder to destroy themselves Thus he is watching at his advantage to provoke thee in thy troubles to impatience to discontent and from these to rage and fretting against God and from these to final despair Shall then the Devil be thus busie to assault a poor soul and wilt thou not be as diligent to recover him Lastly Though God be the God of all comfort and so he can if he please comfort without any Paul ' s any Ministers or Christians yet he hath appointed their service as a means by which he will comfort us It might be thought a vain thing to send for Minister or Christians to comfort seeing it is God onely that can do this but you must know God will do it by his instituted means Whereas therefore it is the Devils great temptation to keep off such afflicted ones from coming to the publick Ordinances from Prayer from revealing and manifesting their temptations to those that are holy and wise Let such troubled souls know that this is the way to throw themselves irrecoverably into the Devils mouth and therefore though God will comfort yet it must be in the use of the means appointed by the Ministry by Prayer by Conference Therefore though thou complainest thou darest not pray thou darest not come to the Ordinances for then thy temptations are most violent and fiery yet give not them over for in and through these God will at last communicate comfort to thee God is the God of comfort through the instituted and appointed means of comfort Indeed if by an absolute necessity thou art deprived of all means of comfort from others as many of the Martyrs have been then thou mayest expect immediate consolations from God and that he will be in stead of all Ministers and godly friends to thee And so much for the second general head In the third place The dispensation of comfort to those that are in trouble is of two sorts Charitativè and Potestativè Charitativè is that which every Christian in the way of love is bound to do to another When the Apostle commanded the Th●ssal●nians to comfort one another he speaketh to them as private Christians Potestativè is that whereby the Ministers of the Gospel who are in Power and Office do administer consolation to others And as the Minister in Office hath a peculiar promise from God in the discharge of his Office so may the private Christian expect a greater success in his labours when faithfully discharged For the Office is not enough unless it be dispensed in Gods way Hence to them is given the Keyes or Power to bind and loose with this addition that what they do shall be ratified that is as they say Clave non errante provided that they bind or loose in a Scripture-way The Minister then of the Gospel is by his Office to comfort as well as to terrifie to loose as well as to bind not that he doth these things authoritatively but ministerially and declaratively only yet so that in the declaration of this a specia success may be expected from God Hence James 5. 14 15. Those who are sick are commanded to call for the Elders to pray for them and in that is included all other duties requisite to the saving of that sick mans soul Yea some have been so greatly disconsolate and tempted by Satan that learned and pious Divines have though is convenient to give a particular absolution and private application of the Gospel to such an humbled sinner and that in a ministerial way as in the name of Christ Fourthly We say in the Doctrine That it 's a duty in a right manner to administer comfort to such as are in trouble Now that right manner comprehends very much for an unseasonable and unwise or unfaithfull comfort doth destroy rather than do good even as Physick unseason by given To a right manner there is required 1. A skill and knowledge of the temptation as also the disposition of him who is thus exercised To be a Physician of souls requireth admirable prudence and wisdome above what is in the master of the body Every temptation is not cured by every comfort neither is every exercised man the same he appeareth to be he may be an hypocrite he may live in known sinnes to himself yet secret to others and if comfort be given to every one that complaineth this will be to give pearl to swine Job's friends though wise and godly did mistake in the nature of Job's affliction thinking it was for some extraordinary sinne or his hypocrisie in the wayes of God whereas it was for the trial of his graces They also mistook about his person condemning him for an hypocrite when yet he was full of integrity Thus you see we may mistake on the right hand and on the left 2. The right way of comforting lieth in taking the Scripture-way and that is by discovering sinne and searching to the very bottome and then to give comfort as you do in wounds go to the bottome before you heal The Scriptures do sadly complain of those Priests that daubed with untempered morter that cryed Peace when there was none and no doubt many Ministers shall answer for their applying of false comforts as well as teaching false Doctrines Every sick man looketh that the Minister should only comfort him if he speak of sinnes and damnations he is counted cruel and one that will drive men to despair But content your selves we must not we dare not comfort but in the Scripture-way and that is to such only as do mourn for their sinnes and that upon true grounds For every Pharaoh and Ahab can humble themselves while the hand of God is upon them and they think they shall die but these are not the mourners that God would have comforted thou must bewail thy sinnes from spiritual principles and heavenly motives such as will hold in thy health as well as in thy sickness This then is the soul of this Doctrine It 's a duty to comfort those who are in a trouble but in a wise faithfull Scripture-way Otherwise those damned souls thrown into hell will to all eternity curse those Ministers that cryed Peace peace to them Oh that ye had cryed hell hell damnation damnation to us that might have done us more good SERM. XLIV That the same Grounds of Comfort which revive the Hearts of one Godly man may do the same likewise to another 2 COR. 1. 4. By the comfort wherewith we our selves are comforted of God WE shall at this time finish the Text. For whereas two things remain in the Division The Manner how the Apostles do comfort others and that is By the comfort wherewith they themselves are comforted
And the Fontal Cause of all who is said to be God Of this later we have said enough already We shall therefore at this time dispatch the former That comfort by which the Apostles themselves were refreshed by that did they revive others even those that were farre inferiour to them both in gifts and graces So that as by the same Sunne both the rich and the poor do see one finds the sweetness of the light as well as the other Thus also by the same grounds of comfort that any godly man may be supported all may be Observe That those grounds of comfort which revive the heart of one godly man may also do another That which is wine to make glad the heart of Paul will also exhilarate the hearts of others who believe in Christ That which is honey to one cannot be gall to another This truth hath its great practical use And First Let us consider That there are general grounds of comfort for all the godly in all their tribulations and there are special particular ones The general grounds of comfort are such that all the godly may make use of at all times be they Jew or Gentile bond or free eye or foot in the body of Christ there is no difference no exemption this fountain is set open Neither is it like the pool of Bethesda wherein the first only that stept in could be healed for here all are invited to drink first and last and that abundantly There are Catholicon comforts that let our diseases be what they will be these are proper to cure us There are some promises so full of general comfort for every condition that they are made for the meridian of every godly man Let us give you some summary draught of them As 1. That all afflictions do come from the love of a Father to such as believe So that although they be grievous to flesh and bloud and have a bitter taste yet they come from a sweet root These thorns do grow upon a vine These bitter streams come from a sweet fountain Now this ground of comfort belongs to all that have an unfeigned love to God Canst thou make out thy evidence of being in Christ Is thy name to be found in the book of life Then this comfort thou mayest apply to thy self be thy condition or quality what it can be thou mayest boldly take this cordial and it is as proper for thee as a David or Paul any of those who are pillars in godliness Heb. 12. 6. For whom he loveth he chasteneth So that you see here is such an argument of comfort that every member of the body of Christ may use 2. Another general ground of comfort is The end and fruit of afflictions As they come from Gods love so they are to subdue sinne to bring us nearer to God Hence afflictions are compared to the fire that purgeth away the dross to winnowing that driveth away the chaff to pruning that cuts off the luxuriant branches and makes the other branches more fruitfull They are given by Christ the wise Physician of our souls as heavenly physick and admirable remedies to crucifie to sinne and to quicken to righteousnesse If God denieth thee such outward comforts thou desirest know that this very denial is for thy good and darest thou say Lord let me have them though they damn me Let me not be afflicted though it will do me good Quid ●…sit v●l prosit novit medicus non egrotus Thus the Apostle Rom. 8. All things shall work together for the good of those who love God The Apostle also speaketh notably of these afflictions in respect of the issue of them as well as of the original whence they flow Heb. 12. 9 10 11. where a three-fold advantage is said to come by them 1. By yeelding to the Father of Spirits chastising us we live Tribulations therefore are the way to make us live spiritually here and eternally hereafter If it were not for afflictions thou mightst die and be damned They have prevented much sinne They have been like a file to the iron to get off the rust They have been like the plowing and harrowing of the ground to fit thee to bring forth fruit And 2. God is said to chastise us for our profit which is expressed to be That we might be partakers of holinesse Tribulations then are very profitable and advantagious things though flesh and blood can hardly say so It may be thy afflictions have done thee more good than all the mercies thou ever hadst And therefore under every exercise examine What profit have I got Wherein am I made more holy And then 3. At the 11th verse after the grievous and burdensome way of them for the present afterwards they will yeeld a peaceable fruit of righteousnesse The chastening doth but seem grievous and that for the present but afterwards it makes more holy which is said to be the peaceable fruit of it The soul that raged and fretted finding the benefit begins then in a peaceable quiet manner to blesse and praise God for it This is a General comfort Every godly man may say this belongs to me in my afflictions as well as to any other 3. Not to be too large here The benefits and heavenly advantages which come from Christ being ours these also are comforts in common There is no fiery sword to keep out of this Paradise Rom. 8. Doth not the Apostle conclude those great priviledges of Justification of Perseverance in that state of conquest over all spiritual enemies and that from such general grounds as all the people of God may claim to it Because Christ died and because Christ is risen because he hath given us Christ and how then not with him all things else Is there any believer so weak so contemptible that Christ did not die for and rise for Is there any to whom the Father hath not given Christ If so you see that what comforted Paul may comfort you It is a vain Position of Papists that Paul speaketh so assuredly in that condition because of an extraordinary revelation that he had that Christ was his for he grounds his perswasion upon those general arguments which belong to every godly man Christ then and his presence with all his benefits is a cordial to every believer This Sunne of Righteousnesse ariseth with healing in his wings to the least believer as well as the greatest The The Dwarfe as well as the Gyant may hold this pearle in his hand But In the second place besides such general comforts which are as some say of Manna answering all dainties and was to every mans palate that which he most delighted in There are special and particular comforts for special and particular temptations So that as every disease needeth a peculiar remedy so every temptation a proper comfort And therefore that special comfort will not serve one in his temptation which doth another in a different one And hence