Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n apostle_n faith_n word_n 1,525 5 4.2834 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 57 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

well as the rest which was a strong engagement to make him full of love to Christ and though he was admonished of it that he should betray him though he heard our Saviour say It had been better for him he had never been born yet from these admonitions he goeth immediately and consummates all iniquity From this man called here a sonne of perdition yet formerly as eminent as the other Apostles many worthy particulars are to be gathered but for the present I shall pitch on this That there are some men so resolvedly and obstinately given to damn themselves that let what will come in the way they will go on Even as Balaam in his purpose to curse the people of Israel sets forward with great resolutions driveth on his Ass though that speak to him which might have been a terrible astonishment yet for all that he pursueth his wicked design till God stop him whether he will or no Or as Saul was wretchedly bent to murder himself and therefore cals upon his Armour bearer to run him thorow which when he refused he desperately fals upon his own spear and kils himself Thus there are thousands of persons that do with as much obstinacy and desperate hardness of heart throw themselves into hell God commands a man To do no murder and self-murder is rare because the care of life and fear of death is implanted in men but self-destruction and self-damnation is very common for men neither have a love to their immortal souls nor yet a fear of eternal damnation No wonder if some persons are thus when we reade of an whole body of people or Nation ready to do this Matth. 23.37 Christ doth there in a melting manner weep over Jerusalem O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets c. How often would I have gathered thee and thou wouldst not This compassionate bewailing of them was enough to turn stones into tears but they would not It is not said they understood not they desired but other things hindred them No They would not There was a pertinacious wilfull obstinacy There are more remedies and means sufficient to have humbled them in sackcloth and ashes but they would not This cursed disposition was of old in them Jer. 18.12 when the Prophet had informed them of Gods purpose to bring evil upon them and that therefore they should return from their evil way See what an obstinate reply they make There is no hope or as some render it it 's a desperate case We will go every one in his evil wayes and after the imagination of our own hearts So truly did the Prophet say Hos 13.9 O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self That as it is from a mans own body diseases grow which afterwards kill him and moths are bred in that linnen which afterwards consume it Thus from a mans one self come those sinnes which tend to his everlasting damnation They will destroy themselves who can stop them or perswade them to the contrary To pursue this because it 's the case of many men who live under the means of grace Let us consider What are the causes that move men thus violently to damn themselves as if they could not do it soon enough And First There are many though glorying in the title of Christians that are prophanely Atheistical They do not believe there is a God or Heaven or Hell they do not firmly assent to Gods Word as true Now what good can all the preaching in the world do though the Ministers were as so many Angels and their voice as terrible as the sound of the trumpet at the last day if men be Atheistical they will not believe what any Minister preacheth They bless themselves in their wicked wayes and will not hearken to any thing Achitophel did not more resolutely go hang himself then those to damn themselves For as faith is the great instrument whereby the Word preached becomes effectual to salvation so unbelief is the great stop and obex in the way This is the door and barre to keep all off which made the Prophet complain Isa 53.1 and the Apostle afterwards alleadgeth it as the cause of mens destruction Who hath believed our report Hence Heb. 4.2 The Word did not profit the Israelites because not mixed with faith A Metaphor from the Physicians potion which doth no good because not mixed with such ingredients This is to be worse then the devils who believe and tremble but thou dost neither As long therefore as men abide in unbelief no Ministry no preaching will do them any good faith is the foundation without this there cannot be any building But though the promises are not made good unless we believe yet know to thy terrour that all the curses and threatnings in Gods Word will be fulfilled upon thee whether thou believe or not Secondly Another cause is Gross bruitish and stupid Ignorance When people have no knowledge or understanding in matters of Religion they fall as easily as blinde men that know not where they go Ephes 4.18 The Apostle speaking of some who gave themselves up to wickedness and were past feeling They had no remorse or sense of conscience as a dead hand though it be runne through with the sword yet feels no pain he makes the cause of this senslesness to be the darkness in their understanding and the blindness which was upon their hearts Thus Hos 4.1 2. when the Prophet complained That the Land was overthrown with swearing lying and murders he makes this the cause There is no knowledge of God in the Land and Jude v. 10. relateth some Who speak evil of those things they know not and what they know naturally they did as bruit beasts corrupt themselves with Is not this the character of many in these dayes Their hellish mouths are opened to rail and deride and so speak malicious words against those that are godly when they are sottish and ignorant in religious things having no knowledge but what is natural and with that they are like bruit beasts corrupting themselves The sottish ignorance and bruitish blindness upon many makes them to venture desperately Oh if their eyes were open Did they but see what the godly see they would not dare to step a step forward in that way which leadeth to death But as mad men feel no pain though instruments be thrust into them so neither do they Men out of their wits venture upon self-murdering practises and thus do those that are void of all spiritual understanding Hence Admonition is called in the Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Thess 5.13 Paul commands them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to warn them that are unruly or to put a minde and wits into them as if they were mad and would destroy themselves not knowing what they did A third cause of such wilfull resolvedness to damn themselves is hardnesse of heart As long as the heart is soft and tender it trembleth at Gods word and is afraid
be full of blemishes yet when we present Christ by Faith then there is no fault to be found Lastly The vertue of this Sacrifice is to make us like Christ himself he thinketh it not enough to be King and Priest himself but he maketh us also Kings and Priests for ever We offer up Praiers and Praises to him and by him we conquer all our spiritual Enemies The devil and our lusts are subdued Such glory have all they that are partakers of this Sacrifice Vse of Terrour to all wicked and ungodly men who by their Unbelief and Prophanesse reject this Sacrifice The Apostle Heb. 10. cals it trampling upon the bloud of Christ and accounting it a prophane thing Oh how many thousand live that have no esteem and make no account of this Sacrifice Oh remember that this is the last and ultimate Sacrifice He that rejects this hath no more hope There remaineth no more oblation for sinne There is not another Christ or another Sacrifice if thou refuse this Vse 2. Of Encouragement to the Godly Come to this Fountain that is set open for Judah and Jerusalem to cleanse in Doe not say because Christ crucified is a stumbling block and foolishnesse to wicked men that therefore thou wilt disesteem him also There is no sore but this blood will heal and cure Oh let the blood of thy soul be stanched with this blood of Christ This blood speaks good and comfortable things better then that of Abel SERMON CI. Of Sanctification as the Effect of Christs Death Shewing That no man truly believeth in Christ for Justification that doth not also for Sanctification JOH 17.19 And for their sakes I sanctifie my self that they also may be sanctified through the Truth WE are now come to the end of Christs Sanctification which is two-fold the finis cui and cujus We shall put them both together for so they are conjoyned in the following clause That they might be sanctified through the Truth Wherein you have 1. The final Cause 2. The Manner of accomplishing it The final Cause That they might be sanctified and from this the Socinian would argue That Sanctification in the former clause was not meant of an oblation by way of Sacrifice because the same word is applied to the Apostles in the Text and they were not to be sacrificed for us To answer this First Some Expositours do expound it of their offering up of themselves by Martyrdom to confirm the truth for Paul professeth his willingnesse herein using the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 2.15 which was used of some kinde of their Sacrifices but we need not runne to that it 's no new thing in Scripture to use the same word in one verse in different significations and it 's a Rule Talia sunt praedicata qualia permittuntur à subjectis The Apostles then needing not such a Sanctification as Christ applied to himself but that for which he prayed in the former verse We must understand it in the same sense as there It 's true by Sanctification some also will have Justification comprehended and so speak of an imputed Sanctification but we need not stretch the word violently but understand it first Of making inwardly holy and then consequently A setting apart and dedicating our selves wholly unto God by living unto him and thence observe That Christ died not only for our Justification but Sanctification also He made himself a Sacrifice not onely to remove the guilt of sinne but to remove and subdue the power of it not onely to make us happy but also holy Let us consider What is implied in this That Sanctification comes by Christs death And First We are to know that Christ is the Cause of our Sanctification several wayes partly efficiently for not only the Father and the Spirit but Christ himself also is the cause of all the holinesse we have and therefore he is called the life because he gives all supernatural life unto his and is compared to the vine Joh. 15. because as the branch separated from the Vine can bring forth no fruit so neither is a man able without Christ to do the least holy action he is also called the Head and John 1. Of his fulnesse we are all said to receive Thus as God in the course of nature is the authour of every natural gift therefore it 's said In him we live and move and have our being Act. 17.28 So in the way of grace Christ is the authour and finisher as of our faith so of every holy work in us The Author Heb. 12.2 and therefore we cannot so much as begin or meet Christ he must prevent us and the finisher for although we have begun yet we have not the same manutenency and powerfull preservation what we have begun to build would immediately fall to the ground Thus Christ is the Alpha and Omega of our spiritual life 2. Christ is the meritorious cause of our Sanctification and therefore not only remission of sin but holinesse and zeal is made the consequent of Christs death And the Apostle doth not only Rom. 7.8 shew that we are justified by Christ but also that the body of sinne is mortified thereby Thus Heb. 10. what Sanctification that Apostate had is attributed to the blood of Christ Christ then hath as efficaciously merited holinesse as happinesse He died to destroy the workes of the devil now our captivity to him was not onely in respect of guilt but that bondage and slavery we were in to all lusts and therefore those two benefits are like Castor and Pollux one cannot be without the other 3. Christ is in some large and improper sense called the formal cause of the good in us an assistant form not informing that is Christ received and applied by faith doth in a most inward and intimate manner live in us and thereby strengtheneth us so the Apostle Gal. 2.20 I no longer live but Christ in me Here you see Christ liveth in a godly man for by faith we are united unto him and thus Christ becomes our Head from whom we have all spiritual influx Now an head is a conjoyned and united cause made one with the body and thus is Christ and his Church and therefore is that similitude of an Head and the Body so often used 4 Christ is the final cause of our Sanctification that is we are made holy to this end both that we might shew forth the praises and glory of Christ as our Redeemer as also that we should live to him and set all our affections and desires upon him desiring with Paul To know nothing but Christ crucified 1 Cor. 2.1 Secondly In that by Christs death we are sanctified there is implied That we of our selves are very impure and unclean that we are like so many noisome dunghils For our being unsanctified doth imply 1. Our filthiness or uncleanness this is the state of every man till sanctified by Christ he is like an unclean leper his
the grace of God No Christ doth not call to men that sin yet laugh and make merry but that are weary and loaden to come unto him and then he will ease them Answ 2 But 2. This Doctrine of special and particular Faith doth not encourage to presumption because it cals not upon sinn●rs abiding and wickedly persevering so to rest on him but mourning over and abhorring their sins Therefore no man is commanded to believe this first that Christ died for him but to believe the word of God threatning and discovering the horrid pollution that is upon us as also the generall contagion in every part the insufficiency and inability to help himself the necessity of hungring thirsting and seeking out after a Saviour So that in this order and method he must by Faith lay hold on Christ Answ 3 3. This special Faith cannot be presumption or encourage thereunto because the object of it is whole Christ a Lord and Soveraign as well as a Saviour The presumer he divides Christ looketh upon him as a Saviour not as a Lord and Law-giver and therefore takes Christ but upon his own terms not in the Scripture-way and so indeed he takes not Christ but an Idol of his own making and by this it is discovered that he doth not truly believe but presume It 's true Christ as the Object of our justifying faith is to be considered as our Surety and Mediatour as a Gift of the Father to us yet he cannot truly be received as a Saviour but as a Lord and King also So that God having inseparably joyned these two together Faith dare not Faith will not divide So that this will prove Jealousie-water to the Hypocrite he professeth a belief on Christ but it is Christ divided or a part of Christ he looks upon the Atonement he made as a Saviour but not on the Obedience he owes to Christ as a King Christ doth not only promise but command he doth not only offer precious Gifts but enjoyneth strict and exact duties and faith taketh in all these Answ 4 4. Faith cannot be presumption because it doth not only receive Christ but this particular doth also cleanse and purifie the heart Act. 15. When Peters Faith was kept up then all his other graces were enlivened therefore Heb. 11. all those notable acts of high Righteousnesse and Obedience are attributed to faith so that the same Faith hath two hands one inward whereby it receiveth and embraceth Christ the other outward whereby it stirreth up and quickeneth to other Graces Justifying faith though it only justifyeth as it embraceth Christ yet at the same time also it worketh by love by patience by zeal by heavenly-mindednesse So that the exercise of all other graces is imperately from Faith though not elicitely It 's true there is a dead Faith and as Luther called it an incarnate faith a dead faith The Apostle James speaketh against c. 2. which is a bare assent and profession without any lively operation and such a kinde of believer is placed by Sebastian Franco in the Catalogue of Heretiques a luke-warm believer but that faith which doth justifie carrieth a man not only to Christ but is a general exciter and promoter to all holy duties and obedience 5. Faith special cannot comply with presumption because it doth not only believe in Christ as the special object but includeth an assent to the whole Word so that it 's as general as the Word is if therefore the Word of God doth not beget security and carnal encouragements to sin neither can Faith For presumption properly consisteth in this to divide the means from the end to think of obtaining one without the performance of the other can never be admitted by faith which in the special application of Christ is guided by the universal direction of the Scripture Vse of Instruction to humbled sinners Be well informed in this that you are not to stand in generals which are accompanied with great fears and dejections of spirit but in a particular manner to lay hold on Christ Oh let thy necessities drive thee that easelesse and restlesse condition thou art in be like a stone from the center like a bone out of joint till thou art fully united to the Lord Christ Know it is a duty That thou sinnest in an high manner while thou dost thus frowardly keep off from him Vse 2. There is the happiness of believers They receive Christ and so in him all things He that hath the Sun hath all the Stars He that hath the Fountain hath the streams if he hath given us Christ with him he will give all things Now God looks on thee in Christ The devil that seeks to devour thee must devour Christ first And O what a poor weak thing is it to doubt about earthly provision when thou hast received Christ for all things SERMON CXI That a Gospel-Ministry is to continue to the end of the world And for what ends JOHN 17.20 That shall believe through their word I Shall now finish this fruitfull Text. The last thing considerable in it is the instrumental cause of faith and that is the Apostles Ministry This faith is wrought by their word To open this Consider 1. That the word which begets faith is called Gods word vers 6. and here the Apostles word in a different sense It 's Gods word originally and efficiently because revealed by him It 's the Apostles word ministerially because they are the Embassadours to publish it Thus Paul cals it his Gospel as in other places it 's the Gospel of God because the Ministers of God are Stewards to whom is concredited the dispensation of the Word therefore it is called their word 2. Whereas Christ prayeth for all that shall believe even to the end of the world and yet they are said to believe by the Apostles word when yet thousands and thousands have believed since the Apostles death and departure It s necessary that by the Apostles we do not understand only their persons but the succeeding Ministry unto them which is to be perpetual in the Church all that now or hereafter shall beleeve though by the present Ministers that lived many hundred years after the Apostles yet may be said to obtain faith by the Apostles word because they sit in the Apostles chair they deliver the Doctrin which they delivered and succeed the Apostles though not in personal and extraordinaries yet in ordinaries in which sense Christ promiseth to be with them to the end of the world The words thus explained we may observe That God hath appointed a perpetual Ministry even to continue as long as there shall be a Church in the world All that shall beleeve are brought thereunto by the Apostles word now they being long since dead it necessarily followeth either that none can now beleeve or else that there is a Ministry to be perpetually succeeding them for this spiritual effect That the Ministry and Word preached is the means of faith
to be considered And they are these 1. It lifteth a man up above his natural reason It addeth many cubits to his stature As reason directs and corrects sense as we see in Astronomy so doth faith direct and correct reason As Zacheus because of a small stature went up into a tree to see Jesus Thus the reason of a man being too low in it self must ascend up to the Scriptures that it may behold divine things so that they wholly overthrow faith and change the nature of it who made it with Abailadus of old to be imagination or with the Socinians strength of reason Certainly Julian and the Heathens of old confound Christian Religion upon this ground because it was faith it was not a science 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was Julians upbraiding now the Christians they gloried in this and Austin to confirm the Christian under many captious doubts saith thus Nomini te esse fidelem not rationalem To bring then divine truths to reasons comprehension is to put the Sunne under a bushell or to think to fit Goliahs shoe to Zacheus his foot 2. Though this faith lifts up reason yet it doth not contradict it When we say faith cometh by revelation not by reason flesh and blood cannot make such things known to us yet when once this revelation is discovered in the Scripture then reason doth wonderfully help to propugn and maintain this truth revelation must lay the foundation and then reason will build upon it so that inlightned reason and instructed reason out of the Word is of excellent use to explicate and clear divine mysteries Even as the Gold-smiths hammer is usefull to dilate and diffuse his golden mettal in many formes and this use all our learned Divines make against all Heretiques They doe by the help of reason and arguments out of the Scripture illustrate and confirm the Doctrine to be believed 3. This general nature of faith hath two excellent properties put together in one place Heb. 11.1 It 's there called The substance of things hoped for and evidence of things not seen It 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We shall not dispute Whether this be a definition of faith it 's enough that two differential marks are given of it And First It 's the substance of things hoped for concerning which word learned men say divers things but it may comprehend these particulars First that Faith is not an empty flying fancy for so Aristotle useth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as opposite to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some manifestation meerly as the colours of the Rainbow or of birds feathers when the Sunne shines These have but an intentional being there is no reall solid being in them but faith is the substance of things hoped for and certainly this is greatly to be endeavoured after that thy faith be a reall substantial thing how many mens faith are but fickle fancies and uncertain notions and therefore with their dogmatical faith they are like the Apostle James his man without faith tossed up and down with every wave Jam. 1. The Apostle Ephes 4.14 saith Be not carried about with every winde of Doctrine that denoteth the levity and emptinesse of a thing Trees that are well rooted are not blowne up and down like feathers What then is the cause of instability and uncertainty of many mens Religion It 's because they have not faith wheresoever that is it is a solid substantial bottoming of the soul 2. The word substance doth imply that it makes the things hoped for though afarre off yet present to the soul and even to subsist in the soul for faith is not hindred in its actings by distance of place for that receiveth Christ enjoyeth Christ though in Heaven and he that believeth hath eternal life Hence we are said to be already translated from death to life John 5.24 because to faith these things are as sure as if they were already done Thus Paul you see him by faith speaking as confidently as if he were in Heaven already Rom 8. Who shall separate us from the love of God shall things present or things to come Shall life or death c Hence faith is called The beholding of things not seen 2 Cor. 3. Faith makes God present Heaven present Christ present as really and truly as bodily objects are present to sense and truly for want of this it is that we are so cold languishing dejected we doe not by faith make these things present if we did they would more divinely affect us and as it is the substance of things hoped for So of things feared likewise Noah by faith moved with fear prepared an Arke Heb. 11.7 Thus faith makes hell and damnation present it doth not look upon hell as a farre off but is affected as if it did see and hear those dolefull howlings in hell and so dare no more sin then if it were in hell already Oh what a mighty change would faith thus realizing things work upon us 3. The word comprehends Assurance Confidence and so indeed is hypostasis used both in Scripture and by humane Authours now this confidence of faith and assurance is seen in the knowing and assenting acts of faith as well as applicatory witnesse those resolute and confident deportments which the Martyrs had Had not they strong assurance of the truth who could endure such exquisite torments against subtil opposers And certainly the Martyrs in Queen Maries dayes are more to be admired then those in the primitive times for they suffered upon undoubted and clear points which only the Heathens gain-said But now these suffered by them that acknowledged a Christ and pretended the Glory of Christ as well as they So that this heavenly confidence and satisfaction of the soul that they care not for further disputing and doubting in the matters they do believe is a great property in faith And this manifesteth there is little faith now in Religion wherein men are apt to think all Religions alike and that one may do as well as another In these dayes to have such a substantiating reallizing and confident assurance is a great wonder The next word describing the generall nature of it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that doth imply First That the things believed bring an objective light with them As the object that is seen brings a visibility though faith in respect of humane reason be obscure and supernatural Arguments be inevident yet compared with the light in the Word it hath much evidence Hence the word of God is so often compared to light and that illumination which God worketh in the minde is partly faith as well as any other grace The things that are believed bring an evidence with them to the soul as the Sunne brings a visibility with it to be seen Therefore this believing is said to be by the Word set home in the demonstration of the Spirit and hence it is a man in some sense is passive
if the Apostle 1 Tim. 3.5 say of every creature for nourishment it is sanctified by Praier when yet the creatures have in themselves a naturall strength to nourish how much more is this to be seen in the means of grace which work not by inherent but instituted efficacy altogether If therefore we would have our preaching and your hearing doe any good be powerfull to an heavenly alteration and change then look up with your eyes to heaven It 's from God that this must do me good It 's from God that this must teach my heart In vain is a Teacher without if there be not also a Teacher within 1 Cor. 3. You see the Apostle there taking beleevers off from all Ministers and Instruments and to rest on Jesus Christ They are necessary but as Ministers by whom we do beleeve not as authours of our faith Let us consider Why Praier is thus necessary in the use of all other means And First From God in these respects 1. He is the sole author and fountain of all grace It 's not the gifts or parts of Men and Angels that remove the stone of the heart that can make the withered dry bones to live again unlesse the Spirit of God breathe upon us Jam. 1. Every good and perfect gift is said to come from above That as the naturall Philosophers say The Sun and Stars are the cause of all the life and perfection which is in these things below insomuch that without them all things would be destroyed This is much more true in heavenly and supernaturall effects therefore he is called the God of all grace and the God of all consolations 2 Cor. 1.3 There is no godlinesse no comfort can stream in the heart but from this Fountain we lie like so many lumps of earth like so many noisome Lazarusses in the grave till God bid us Come forth So then to have any doctrine or truth enter into thy heart to have the Ministry effectuall and powerful to thee is of greater consequence then thou art aware of There must be much strugling and striving with God ere thou canst behold him in his glory in the Ordinances Thou must be Jacob ere thou canst be Israel as an Ancient said Wonder not if you see men living in the same lusts and roving in their former excesse of riot though the clouds drop upon them daily yet they are a barren wildernesse Alas all the rain in the world would not make the Earth spring forth and encrease had not God at first commanded the earth to doe so and certainly if God can by his Word make the dull dead earth so glorious that Solomon is in his greatest state not like the glory thereof how much rather can he make a heavy dull earthly carnall people glorious and admirable in variety of graces he can make them a Paradise who were a parched heath Praier therefore is necessary because God onely hath the command over all Ordinances to blesse as he pleaseth 2. On Gods part we are therefore to pray that so all the glory and praise in every thing may redound to him so 1 Cor. 1. that he who glorieth may glory in God only Hence it is that as in the Old Testament we reade of many good women and they were most of them barren to humble them and that they might see it was not their goodnesse but Gods glory and power to give them children So it is here God many times causeth not the best and choicest Ministers to be fruitfull in conversion of others to be able to say Behold I and the Children which thou hast given me that hereby all the glory may be attributed to God onely 3. Therefore after all doctrinall Instructions is Praier to be used because God in anger many times for mens sins doth blast the Word to them doth not give them a tender and an understanding heart Oh then how much is he to be sought to that hath the key of all mens hearts that openeth and none can shut that shutteth and none can open Rev. 3.7 Observe that expression it denoteth Gods absolute Soveraignty that all the devils in hell and all the wicked Instruments in the world are not able to hinder the good effect that God hath appointed such a Sermon or such a Ministry to produce What then though we sow all the day long though we exhort entreat and beseech yet if God be angry with thee and will let thee alone in thy sins thou shalt die and be damned in thy obstinacy and unbelief Though Solomon with all his wisedom were here to perswade thee thou wouldst be wilful in thy iniquities The seeing eye and the hearing ear are both said to be the gift of God Pro. 20.12 and what a terrible expression is that to the Israelites where after all the miracles and wonderfull works that God had done before them it 's said God had not given them an heart to understand till that day Deut. 19.4 and famous is that place Isa 6. thrice repeated in the New Testament of blinding their eyes and hardening their hearts lest they should understand and be converted Who then is there but must necessarily conclude that God is earnestly to be praied unto lest he be left to a spirit of slumber and giddinesse lest God sware in his wrath that no preaching shall ever do thee good How did Paul rejoice to be at Ephesus because an effectual and large door was opened to him 1 Cor. 16 9 It was opened by God the Ministers themselves nor the people had not ability to doe it Thus on Gods part we have cause to pray Secondly If we consider the nature of all Preaching and what kinde of cause the Word is of conversion that will also compell to Praier It 's disputed among Divines what kinde of causality the Preaching of the Word hath in regenerating of men I shall not now lanch into that deep Ocean but two waies are wholly to be denied 1. The Preaching of the Word doth not convert necessarily as the Fire doth necessarily burn the Sun doth necessarily shine No for then wheresoever the Word is preached all their eyes would be opened all their hearts softened that hear it but experience doth wofully confute this We see Christ who preached as one having authority and no man ever spake like him yet he threw in his Net and catched few fish yea we doe not reade of so many converted by his Ministry as by some of the Apostles 2. As it doth not work necessarily so neither as a natural cause that hath inward power to produce its effects As the fire hath an inherent strength to burn the Earth an inherent power to bring forth fruit or as a two edged Sword pierceth For though the Word be compared to it yet 3. This efficacy is only by Institution according to the command and good pleasure of God Of it self it worketh no more then Exhortations to a
thus bruitish to worship that as a God which they themselves made That they should have no more understanding The Lord gave them up and as it was with the Jews though our Saviour did all those wonderfull miracles amongst them yet they did not see with their eyes or understand with their hearts Why The Lord had put this Veil upon their eyes and thus the Apostle plainly saith 2 Thes 2.11 God shall send them strong delusions to beleeve a lie a wofull curse when God sends this abroad when men shall be so strongly deluded that that which is a very notorious lye and falshood yet they shall beleeve it so that you are to walk with all fear and trembling lest God deliver you up to such strong delusions and these sins do much provoke God 1. Pride and self-conceit this undid the devil at first and this draweth many into the like condemnation The humble and the meek he will teach his way Psa 25. See you a man proud conceited never look for good from him he is not a fit Scholar for Christ It 's pride that lifts up so many to such high Pinacles of dangerous opinions from which they fall headlong God resisteth the proud and giveth grace to the humble man Jam. 4.6 He resisteth the proud by not giving grace to him The proud man hath no grace to fear and tremble lest he be carried away with the errours of the wicked he thinketh not O Lord Am not I swallowing down poyson now Will not this infect me for ever 2. Vnfruitfulnesse under the Gospel Oh when men live wantonly under the Light They love not the Truths of God They do not conform to the practical power of them this seduceth likewise The Apostle in that mentioned place instanceth in this as the cause of that strong delusion Oh wonder not if the Spirit of giddinesse and errour fall upon many for they never had any true love to the Word of God They never had any saving delight in the waies of God so far as they could carnally advantage themselves by the knowledge of Christ have esteem and applause so long as they could be fed with loaves they followed Christ 3 A neglect of the godly and learned Ministry which God hath appointed he runneth into the Whales belly of all errours that runneth from the Ministry God appointeth and dislikes that The Scripture is plain Eph 4. He hath set Pastors and Teachers in his Church Why That henceforth we should not be carried with divers errours Therefore they are called guides and salt and Heb. 13. twice in one Chapter they are commanded to obey them that rule over them This is so plain Scripture that it's wonder men dare go against it but yet it 's no wonder for some deny the Scripture they say How can you prove Scripture Thus do men wilfully run from the light into darknesse from denying one truth and another till at last they deny Christ and the Scripture Vse 2. Hath Christ thus an eternal being then here we see his immutable and unchangeable affections to those that are his He is not as man subject to changes and alterations loving and then casting off again As God is immutable so also is Christ and therefore though the people of God be subject to many changes and variable affections yet they are to comfort themselves in Christ who is yesterday and to day and the same for ever Though thou art not the same yet Christ is the same Thou art sometimes beleeving sometimes again cast down sometimes thou enjoyest Christ and sometimes thou losest him and knowest not where to finde him O but Christ is alwaies in the same love in the same care over thee and this should provoke thee at last to get to the same disposition To be like Christ whatsoever changes conditions or alterations go over thy head still to be the same as the rock in the Sea the Sunne in the heavens 3. Is Christ Eternal then in the midst of all changes and alterarions here is ground of faith Though Instruments die though Ministers die though all supports of thy spiritual comfort fail yet Christ abideth ever Thus Christ promised his disciples he would be with them to the end of the world Mat. 28. How apt are we to think that the death of such Magistrates or such Ministers will wholly ruine the Church of God not considering that the Church hath an eternal head The people of God have alwaies preferred the welfare of the Church above their own particular Thus David preferred Jerusalem above all his joy Psa 137.6 and the remembrancers of the Lord are to give him no rest till he hath made Jerusalem a praise upon the earth Isa 62.7 As Nehemiah was afflicted though he had all personal honour and advantages while Jerusalem lay waste The affairs of the Church have alwaies affected upon the most eminent in godlinesse When godly learned men have died they have cried as he did to the Prophet The horsemen and charets of Israel but this should support under all Christ is eternal Though the Ship of Christ seem to be overwhelmed yet because Christ is in it it cannot suffer shipwrack Though outward violence should encrease Though heresies and errours overflow yet Christ is where he was he is the same he liveth and so the Church cannot lose her Pilot In what sad exigences were the disciples cast when Christ spake of bodily leaving them but as for his spiritual presence he will never forsake them and this is the reason why the Church of God hath been preserved though the whole world hath combined against it had they not had this eternal head in heaven it could not have been supported Hence he is called Isa 9. the eternal Father because he alwaies hath a spiritual seed Vse 4. Is Christ thus an Eternal God then let those wicked men that despise his Law and disobey his Commandments tremble and be afraid All those Jews and Pharisees that refused him to be their Saviour and all wicked men who do so in their lives they will finde they had to do with an eternal God Psa 2. It 's said he will break the Nations with a rod of Iron as easily as men do an earthen vessell You apprehend nothing but meekness and mercy in him but though a Lamb yet the ungodly are brought in crying to the Mountains to cover them from the wrath of the Lamb Rev. 6.16 Though he be thus a glorious God yet there are men that despise his Word that crample under their feet his bloud that will not have Christ reign over them that say Let us break his bonds O such shall know to their terrour that Christ is an eternal God Lastly Here is a Vse of Exhortation Is Christ thus Eternal then get him for thy self for thy children for thy self because he will bring thee to an Eternity Thy body shall be eternal thy life he will make an eternal life
true Sanctification as the Apostle speaks 1 John 2.19 They went from us because they were not of us As leaves fall from the Tree when they have no more of their wonted nourishment and this discovers the falshood of those who appear sanctified onely in some fits and upon some sad afflictions on them 4. Truth of Sanctification is discovered by the purity of our aims and ends They love God they obey him from such holy grounds as are suitable to the sanctified nature As the hungry man loveth his food because of his naturall desire to it Thus a sanctified man loveth and doeth that which is holy for holinesse sake 5. True Sanctification is growing and proficient every day more and more That which hath solid root doth not wither but ripens and flourisheth by the Sunne-beams The Apostles though already sanctified yet are still to be more sanctified and certainly such is the sweetnesse and peace which Sanctification brings that it 's no wonder if the heart be never satisfied but still crieth like the horsleech Give Give 6. True Sanctification will make a man diligently and fruitfully improve all the instituted means for the increase of it because the Spirit of God works holinesse Therefore he is fearfull to grieve it Because the Ministry is to make more holy therefore he prizeth it and labours to profit by it yea because afflictions are sent by God to sanctifie the heart therefore he is humble under them and prayeth more earnestly for the Sanctification of them then the removal of them 7. This Sanctification though inchoate and imperfect here yet shall be perfected hereafter in Heaven Christs prayer Christs Spirit Christs merit will at last obtain their compleat and ultimate effect which is full Sanctification in Heaven when there will be no more need to pray for further Sanctification Vse Hath Christ thus merited and pray'd for Sanctification Then know Christ hath done nothing to encourage prophane and ungodly men Christ died not neither is he a Redeemer or Saviour but to such who are made holy This may amaze and astonish all such as divide the effects of Christs death yea and divide Christ himselfe They look upon him as a Saviour but not as a Sanctifier They would have his blood to wash away the punishment of their sinnes but not the filth and pollution of them Oh let the ungodly know They set up an Idol-Christ There is no such Christ as pardoneth but sanctifieth not also Come then more earnestly to be healed of thy soul-pollution then they did of bodily diseases SERMON CII Sheweth Why Christ who could do all things yet put up Prayers What difference there is between his Prayers and ours And the great advantage Believers have by Christs Praiing for them JOH 17.20 Neither pray I for these alone c. HItherto our Saviour hath praied for his Apostles as they were Apostles But because many things in his Petition for them did a●so concern all Beleevers and lest it should be thought that none but the Apostles were the Object of his Praier he therefore comes to a third part in his Petition which relates to the Catholique Church even the whole number of those who in time by Gods Spirit shall be enabled to beleeve Christ doth represent in his Praier to God the weakest beleever as well as the most Eminent Apostle So that here begins the third principall part of this Chapter Now in this Context we may observe 1. The Object of Christs Praier 2. The Final Cause of it 3. The Reasons enforcing it The Object of the Praier is set down 1. By a Negative limitation Not for these alone 2. By a Posi●ive explication or description But for those who shall beleeve Through their word In the Negative limitation Consider Who it is that is here said to pray The Person is Christ God und man As for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we need say no more to that only we are to adde a further Consideration about Christs Praying Seeing therefore that this is the last place wherein he mentioneth his praying I shall now supply what hath been defective in the consideration of this Point and so Observe That Christ though God yet as man did pray unto the Father as other men This Point about Christs Praying is worthy of our knowledge and right understanding For the Arians and Socinians did from hence argue that Christ was not God it being absurd they say for him to pray who could do what he pleased even as it 's absurd to say that God can pray seeing he is omnipotent and hath no Superiour Yea some of the Ancient Fathers have not spoken so soundly in this Point Hilary makes it to be but a kinde of holy simulation that Christ praied and generally it 's made a reason why he praied that he might give us an example But although this be one subordinate end yet there were other more principal ends 1. Therefore let us Consider upon what ground Christ did pray 2. The difference between his Praier and ours He praied then for himself and his Church 1. Because as man he was not omnipotent and so his humane will was not able to accomplish the things he desired for although as God he could do all things in which respect he wrought Miracles and did them not by Petition as the Apostles but by his own power and in his own Name yet as man so what he desired by his humane will by that he could not simply accomplish it so that in this respect it was that Christ as man did pray 2. As man Christ was subject to the Law of God and so was bound to give that worship and Religious Service to God which the Law did require so that when Christ praied he did it as fulfilling a duty he had voluntarily submitted unto Even as when he came to be baptized he told John it behoved him to fullfill all Righteousnesse Matth. 3.15 It was part of his Righteousnesse to be baptized because as man he was made a member of the Church Therefore Matth. 4. he brings that command of worshiping and serving God alone as reaching to him intimating he was bound by that Command as well as other men So Joh 4. he tels the Woman of Samaria We worship we know not what He puts himself in the Number of Worshipers So that Praier being part of Gods worship and a chief part of it no wonder if Christ was constant in it Hence we reade of spending nights in Praier yea in his Troubles his Prayers were accompanied with strong Cries and Agonies and the more they encreased the more earnestly he praied 3. He praied because though all things were due unto him yet by the Ordination of God he could not be partaker of them but by Praier So that though the Glorification of his body was due unto him from the beginning of his Incarnation yet he is to come to it by way of Prayer Hence in this Chapter he doth by many
for our comfort that every believer though yet unborn was in Christs purpose and intention when he laid down his life as if they had been existent in the land of the living In the sixth place By this intention of Christ in his prayer and death it will inevitably and immutably be brought about that they shall in time be converted they shall believe and be brought into communion and fellowship with Christ For seeing as we have heard Christ could not but be heard in what he prayed for and the Father alwayes granted his Petition therefore it cannot be but that all those who are given to Christ shall one time or other be wrought upon by the Word Thus it 's said They believed Act. 13.48 as many as were ordained to eternal life and the Apostles were to go and preach in such places because God had much people there Act. 18. and Rom. 9. the Apostle doth fully shew That Election is the cause of all mercies vouchsafed in time and those who were not elected they were hardened and given up to a spirit of slumber Oh then the admirable love of God to those that are his there shall not be one of them but the Word of grace will finde them out They that were not his people shall be made his people Joh. 10. I have other sheep saith Christ that are not of this fold and those he will bring home Hence Rom. 8. we have that golden Chain which all the Arminian subtilties can never dissolve Whom he hath predestinated he hath called and whom he hath called he hath justified and those he hath justified he hath glorified To expound calling only of vocation to afflictions and to the cross and Justification only of the vindicating of their persons and cause against the calumnies of the world is too dilute and repugnant to the scope of the Apostle in that place we may then absolutely conclude of the conversion and believing of such who belong to Christ and that the Word preached will sometimes or other be effectual upon them In the last place It 's plain from hence That Gods Election and so Christs dying for us is not conditional or upon the supposition of our believing but our belief is the true and genuine effect of Election and Christs death For whereas Christ here prayeth for those who shall believe The Question may be Whether this belief be supposed as a Condition Antecedent to Election and Christs death or as an absolute Effect of both so that Christ doth not only pray for believers but also that they may be believers There is a great Controversie between Arminians and the Orthodox for they say God elected some such persons to eternal life indeed and gave them to Christ as a Mediatour but it was upon a supposition and fore-sight that they would believe and persevere in that faith to the end But the Orthodox do more consonantly to the Scripture and to the greater exaltation of Gods grace and magnifying of Christ affirm That God by one single act of the same time did elect a man both to grace and glory both to salvation and faith So that God did not elect us because he foresaw we would believe but he did elect us to believe as well as to salvation So that faith is not a condition but the effect and fruit of our Election This is a necessary truth to be proved and therefore the next day it is to be considered for the present I take it for granted That those who shall believe are such not who by their own power shall either believe or dispose themselves to it but who by the grace of God shall be inabled thereunto For the present consider the aggravation of this love of God in Christ to us before we had a being And 1. There is remarkable freenesse in it of grace if positively and absolutely considered For what could there be in us to move God to this mercy when we could not think or cry or pray or do any thing for our good even then God set his love upon us It was nothing in us seeing we were in the womb of nothing 2. This freeness is aggravated if comparatively considered for it 's the grace of God that makes some to believe and leaveth others in their natural corruption The Apostle considered this discriminating love of God to Jacob and Esau Rom. 9. before they had done either good or evil Oh then sit and admire the depth of grace the unsearchable riches of grace for what art thou to so many learned and noble men in the world to so many of thy own kindred and family that God hath past by yet took compassion on thee Didst thou not lie equally in the same mass of corruption and bondage to all sin 3. There is the Eternity of this love it was before the beginning of the world So that we cannot imagine any moment of time wherein Gods thoughts were not upon thee Lastly The unchangeablenesse of this love for the Councels of God and his purpose are immutable There is no change or shadow of change in him and therefore if once loved alwayes loved he predestinated thee before the world called thee out of the world justifieth thee in the world and will glorifie thee after the world Vse What infinite cause of praise and glory the people of God have Well mayest thou call upon thy soul and all within thee to praise God Well may this be the burden of every Psalm For his mercy endureth for ever yea if thou hadst the hearts of all men and Angels this were not enough neither can Eternity be long enough to glorifie God in this particular SERMON CVI. Of both the Moving Cause and Effects of Election and of Christs Prayer and Death Against Arminians and others JOH 17.20 But for them also who shall beleeve in me through their Word WE come to a Second Observation from the circumstance of the future tense Who shall beleeve in me For as was intimated there may be a twofold sence of these words 1. That this future Faith is mentioned as an effect and fruit of being given to Christ as also of Christs Prayer and Death for them So that he doth not only pray for them which shall beleeve but also that they may beleeve and in this sense the Orthodox interpret it Or 2. It may be interpreted as if Faith were here supposed as a condition on our part antecedaneous both to Gods Election and also Christs Intercession and death So that the sence should be These were given to Christ and Christ he praied and died for them because it was foreseen by God that such would beleeve upon the means of grace offered and others not In this sence Meisner a Lutheran urgeth it and thus all Arminians and others must take it who hold that we were Elected from a foresight of our Faith and perseverance therein But that this cannot be the meaning of our Saviour is evident because the ground of
him What is thus said of the whole Gospel may also be applied to this Prayer For First Here is the Systeme as it were of most exact and pure Divinity especially the Socinian and Arminian Errours are most powerfully and evidently profligated by it Possevine chargeth it under his head of Atheisme upon the Heretiques that Luther should say There was no other Gospel but that of John as if the Books of the other Evangelists did not deserve that Name but till I can finde that expression in Luther I shall not be sollicitous for an answer This is certain that this very Chapter I am treating of is enough to put to flight and conquer the Armies of the chiefest Heretiques there being scarce any Doctrine of weight in Religion which may not from hence be strongly confirmed Chrysostom maketh this Chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Sermon not a Prayer but it may have this instructing matter in it though poured out prayer-wise Secondly As this Chapter is thus the Compendium and Marrow of Divinity so it is also the Foundation of the Ministry yea and of the Church also For as at the Creation by that word of blessing Increase and multiply all things have their being and are continued therein so from the vertue and efficacie of this Prayer the Ministry the Ordinances the Church it self have their existence and preservation Thirdly Whereas the life and comfort of believers lieth in their Union with Christ and Communion one with another This precious truth is largely mentioned by our Saviour which giveth occasion to treat of a Believers Union with Christ as also of the Unity which ought to be amongst Believers from which Foundation we treat concerning the means to preserve Unity as also the causes of Divisions amongst them and likewise how farre a Forbearance and Toleration in a Church-way for that Question of a Politicall and Civil one is not so pertinent to our Saviours words is to be yeelded unto in respect of erring Brethren Lastly This Prayer of Christ may be compared to a Land flowing with milk and honey in respect of that treasure of Consolation which is contained therein For as Chrysostome Praefat. ad Johan saith Though he be the Sonne of Thunder yet his voice is sweeter than any Melody therefore at the 13th verse he relateth that our Saviour said These things have I spoken in the world that my joy might be fulfilled in them It is observed that when Christ did in a more extraordinary and ardent manner pray unto God he went into some secret place and was alone And Casaubon leaveth it to be considered by the Learned Exerc. 16. cap. 62. Whether our Lord did not also pray this Prayer privately But this expression I speak these things in the world doe plainly demonstrate that it was at least spoken in the presence of the Disciples and that for their Edification and Consolation Seeing therefore this is such a Fountain for healing and refreshing Come with a spiritual thirst to be replenished thereby Seeing here is the Honey and the Honey-comb doe not with Jonathan taste a little onely but eat freely and abundantly thereof thou wilt by a serious and constant Meditation finde this heavenly matter in Christs Prayer make thee heavenly also and assimulate thee into his own likenesse How vain and empty will all the Glory of the world appear to thee when thou shalt be lifted up upon this Mount of Transfiguration They that live under the Torrid Zone never feel any cold and thou who shalt finde this Prayer of Christ active and vigorous in thy breast wilt never have cause to complain of that Dulnesse Formality and Coldnesse which many others groan under The Lord grant that thou mayest finde this savoury Power and experiment all Efficacie upon thy heart in the reading thereof Thy Souls Well-wisher ANTHONY BURGESSE Sutton-Coldfield June 22th 1656. ERRATA PAg. 5. lin 45. made rusty p. 6 l. 24. r. purd pag. 14. lin 18. dele either p. 28. lin 4. r. spiritual pag. 31. lin 17. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 31. l. 51. r. frcer p. 36. l. 11. r. hunc p. 53. l. 2. r. assured l. 21. r. assured l 45. r. Lord. p. 57..31 r. quo p. 65. l. 4. r. this p. 66. l. 40. r. omnis p 76. l. 33. r. have l. 50. r. eundum p. 77. l 35. r. ignoti p. 79. l. 14. r. vides l. 19. r. Christiana p. 84. l. 16. r. Effectus concomitantes p. 89. l. 8. r. animat p. 93. l. 19. r imagunc●la l. 25. r. adoranda p. 97. l. 16. r Nation p. 106. l. 8. dele mention p. 106. l. 35. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 109 l. 26. r. vincemur l. 3● r. rocks p. 112. l. 31. de●e not p. 115. l. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p 123. l. 26. r. is l. 29. r. finished p. 126. l. 5 ● r galling p. 127 l. 46. r. began p. 129. l. 55. r. fibi ipsi p. 131. l. 31. r. Philosophers p. 132. l. 47 r. words p. 135. l. 27. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 29. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 147. l. 8. r. bunches p. 157. l. 42. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 162. l. 6. r. ha shem p. 196. l. 45. r. labour p. 208. l. 39 r. fancy full p. 2 1. l. 15. 1. ● rough whom p. 220. l. 27. r. for p. 232. l. 47. r. homiletical p. 240. l. 53. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 241. l 9. r. and. pag. 243. l. 34. adde of p 244. l. 29. r saith p. 249. l. 28. r. gratuita p. 258. l. 15. r God p. 266. l. 18. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 267. l. 38. adde to p. 273. l. 24. r. excited p. 274. l. 4. r. though p. 275. l. 37. David to p. 27. l. 34. r. ad vera l· 35. r. seeming good p. 279. l. 50. adde Paul p. 280. l. 3. r. world l. 32. r. casteth p. 291. l. 24. r. absence p. 292. l 33. r. many times p. 295. l. 4. r. Trustees p. 301. l. 36. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 301. l. 39. r. Enosh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 308. l. 4. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 317. l. 43. adde et p. 319 l. 7. r. last p. 338. l. 9. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 353. l. 10. adde to recover p. 363. l. 47. r. not p. 369. l. 3. adde lose p. 384. l. 1. r. of p. 391. l. 16. r. what p 397. l. 31. r. milde p. 407. l. 23. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 424. l. 19. r. up p. 425. l. 17. r. powre p. 430. l. 29. r. bitter p. 439 l. 25. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 451. l. 2. r. if l. 4. r. in p. 481. l. 1. r. and. l. 27. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 515. l. 20. adde if p. 516. l. 26. r. Scriptorem p. 520. l. 36. r. people p. 521. l. 11. r. a ●eer p. 528 l. 11. adde may
p 532. l. 35. r. antequam p 543. l. 32. adde of them p. 554. l. 30. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p 579. l. 35. r. sapiens p. 581. l. 19. r. room p. 590. l. 14. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 600. l 40. r. Abailardus l. 53. r. Noveris p. 615. l. 21. r. darkness p. 617. l. 20 r. diligent p. 64● l. 23. r. be loved p 644. l. 17 dele dayes of his suffering p 646. l. 39. r when p. 670. l. 19. adde nature p. 682. l. 17. r. shine l. 30. r. them p. 688. l. 5. r. Obadiah p. 690. l. 53. r. ancient p. 690. l. 53. dele we are THE CONTENTS SERM. I. JOHN 17.1 These words spake Jesus and lift up his eyes to heaven and said Father the hour is come glorifie thy Son that thy Son also may glorifie thee THe Necessity of adding Prayer to Preaching for its good effect Shewing also what kinde of Cause the Word is of Conversion and what are the requisites of Heavenly and Spirituall Prayer SERM. II. The transcendent excellency and efficacy of Christs Prayer in respect of the matter and nature thereof as being Mediatory his person and Relation c. held forth as a ground of unspeakable Comfort to Believers SERM. III. Sheweth how prevalent the Prayers are that are poured out to God as a Father and what disposition and frame of heart this compellation Father may breed in every one that doth fervently pray to God SERM. IV. Of Gods appointing an hour a set time for the dispensing his Mercies and Judgements in reference to particular persons and his Church and Churches Enemies SERM. V. Of the Nature and Manifestations of that Glory which Christ prayed for and is invested with And how comfortable it is to all his Members SERM. VI. Of Heavenly-mindedness Shewing that we should seek both earthly and heavenly Blessings chiefly for this end viz. That God may be Glorified SERM. VII JOHN 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him The Text vindicated from Arians Ubiquitarians and Papists and the power and dominion of Christ observed and applied to the Comfort of his Disciples and Terrour of his Enemies SERM. VIII The Effects and Appearances of the Kingly power and dominion of Christ SERM. IX Christ under the notion of a Head applyed to the Terrour of his Enemies and Comfort of his Members SERM. X. Of Predestination or Gods giving some of mankinde to Christ not all for him to Redeem and what unspeakable grounds of Comfort to Gods people flow from thence SERM. XI Treateth of Eternall Life in the Nature and Properties of it SERM. XII A Consideration of Eternall Life compared with this present Life and with its contrary viz. Eternall Death SERM. XIII Weighty Considerations upon Eternity SERM. XIV JOHN 17.3 And this is 〈◊〉 ●ternall that they might know thee the ●ly true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent The Necessity of Divine Knowledge and arraignment of Ignorance SERM. XV. More Reasons of the Necessity of Divine Knowledge and the Causes of Ignorance SERM. XVI Sheweth what saving Knowledge is in its Concomitants and Effects SERM. XVII Of the Knowledge and Worship of the One true God and the contrary thereto viz. Idolatry SERM. XVIII The Necessity of the Knowledge of Christ Jesus as well as of God the Father SERM. XIX JOHN 17.4 I have glorified thee on the earth I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do Sheweth how a Godly life though it merit no good is a ground of comfort at the hour of Death SERM. XX. Sheweth who they are that cannot at the close of their daies take comfort in this That they have finished the work God gave them to do As also what things if not avoided will much diminish the comfort of the Godly ones at that day SERM. XXI Of Gods being Glorified by mans Salvation Christs chief end in what he did for man was the Glory of God which bespeaks both our imitation and unspeakable Consolation SERM. XXII Of Christs Finishing the work he undertook with the end and properties of it and the great Comfort of i● to Beleevers SERM. XXIII JOHN 17.5 And now O Father Glorifie thou me with thine own self with the Glory which I had with thee before the World was Of a holy working life the Excellency Equity and Necessity thereof in order to Glory SERM. XXIV Of vain Tautology in Prayer and what Repetitions in Prayer are such and what not shewing also what things are absolutely necessary to a good Prayer SERM. XXV Of the Promises and of Prayer SERM. XXVI Of heavenly Glory as opposed to earthly and how the hopes thereof earnestly sought and prayed for will comfort a man against the fear and in the midst of all trials and afflictions SERM. XXVII The Eternall Deity of Christ proved and whence it comes to pass that there are any so vile as to deny it shewing also what sins do much provoke God to give men up to such Blasphemy SERM. XXVIII Proveth That the world was not from Eternity but had its beginning in time and reduceth that Consideration into Practice SERM. XXIX JOHN 17.6 I have manifested thy Name unto the men which then gavest me out of the world thine they were and thou gavest them me and they have kept thy word Of Divine Knowledge its Excellency and Rarity Shewing that God is truly and properly known only by the Godly and wherein their Knowledge of God differs from the knowledge that others have of him SERM. XXX The great End of the Ministry and what should be the End of both Ministers and people in their Preaching and Hearing SERM. XXXI That Gods people are not of though in this world Wherein is also shewed the vast difference between them and the men of the world SERM. XXXII Of the peculiar propriety Gods people have in Him and He in them SERM. XXXIII The truly Godly man only is obedient to Gods Word Or the great Character of a Christian SERM. XXXIV JOHN 17.7 Now they have known that all things whatsoever thou hast given me are of thee Of Growth in Grace the Duty Necessity and Glory of it SERM. XXXV Of Faith in Christ the Mediatour with the Ingredients or Concomitant acts of it SERM. XXXVI JOHN 17.8 For I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me and they have received them and have known surely that I came out from thee and they have believed that thou didst send me Of Obedience to all the Commandments of God shewing That that only is truly Obedience and the property of a Godly man SERM. XXXVII Sheweth That Gods people are ready and willing in Obedience Whence it is that they are so Tending to rouse men up from dulness and formality in Gods service SERM. XXXVIII Of the Excellency and Necessity of Beleeving in Christ as a Mediatour That it 's acceptable to God as well as Obedience to
unto all his Disciples even in this life and of Union with him as the ground of it SERM. CXXIII Practicall Conclusions from the foregoing Doctrine SERM. CXXIV That Jesus Christ though God co-equall with the Father had many things given him by the Father and how that can be SERM. CXXV Unity among Christians is part of that Glory Christ hath purchased for them SERM. CXXVI JOHN 17.23 I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me Of Union with Christ Shewing how or in what respect Christ is in every Beleever and how he is not SERM. CXXVII Shewing somthing of the Nature Manner and Effects of Christs being in Beleevers SERM. CXXVIII Of the Fathers being in Christ of both their being in Beleevers and how that can be and yet they not quite freed from sin and sorrow SERM. CXXIX Of the Unity of Beleevers of the cause and nature of it and what makes to the perfect consummation of it SERM. CXXX Sheweth that every one that beleeveth knoweth the thing that he beleeveth Against the Popish implicit faith and what Knowledge the knowledge of Faith is SERM. CXXXI Of the unspeakable love of God to Beleevers shewing wherein Gods love to Christ and Beleevers is alike and wherein it differs SERM. CXXXII Sheweth of what high concernment it is to the men of the world to know how greatly Beleevers whom they hate and persecute are beloved of God SERM. CXXXIII JOHN 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world Of the Connection between Grace and Glory and that Glory even to the most Godly is the free gift of God SERM. CXXXIV Of immediate Injoyment of and Communion with Christ in Heaven as the Complement of mans Happiness SERM. CXXXV Of an humbled Christians improving in his prayers the sweet Apellation of Father SERM. CXXXVI Of the state of Glory shewing what it is to behold Christs Glory in Heaven SERM. CXXXVII How Christ as Mediatour had his Glory given him although as God he could not properly have it given him except by way of Manifestation Against the Socinians SERM. CXXXVIII Of Gods love to Christ as Mediatour and in him to all Beleevers from all Eternity SERM. CXXXIX JOHN 17.25 O righteous Father the world hath not known thee but I have known thee and these have known that thou hast sent me Of the Righteousness of God as Judge in his Administrations to Devils and Wicked men and as a Father unto his own people SERM. CXL That every unregenerate man whether in or out of the Church is destitute of the true saving Knowledge of God SERM. CXLI Christ is the great Teacher of his Church SERM. CXLII Setting forth the singular Christian cleaving to God though the multitude go another way and how his Godliness in that case endears him to God SERM. CXLIII JOHN 17.26 And I have declared unto them thy Name and will declare it that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them Of Christs teaching Beleevers Shewing what great need the most illuminated Christians have still to be taught SERM. CXLIV Of the powerfull sense and feeling of the Love of God How it is attained and what a great advantage it is to him that hath it both in reference to Duty and Comfort SERM. CXLV Directions how to obtain and alwaies to preserve the Knowledge and Assurance of Gods Love in our Hearts IF any thing in the Contents of this Book appear incongruous either to the Author or his Work let it be hereby known that not the Author but a Friend of his gathered them as well as he could T. U. CXLVI SERMONS Upon the whole Seventeenth Chapter of the Gospel by St JOHN SERMON I. The Necessity of adding Prayer to Preaching for its good effect Shewing also what kinde of cause the Word is of Conversion And what are the requisites of Heavenly and Spirituall Prayer JOHN 17.1 These words spake Jesus and lift up his eyes to Heaven and said c. MY Purpose is God assisting to go through this Chapter being the Praier of Christ immediately before his Passion If the words of a dying man are much to be regarded how much more of a dying Christ And words put up in a Praier way which came from the most serious and heavenly affection within Christs love was sincere and naturall Now as in naturall motions the nearer the body comes to the center the swifter the motion is Thus Christs Love though great alwaies yet the expressions of it were overflowing most at last His best wine was at last And certainly if it be lawfull to preferre Scripture before Scripture we may say Though all be gold yet this is a Pearl in the gold Though all be like the Heavens yet this is like the Sun and Stars Oh that both my heart and your hearts were purified with a coal of fire from the Altar for this Subject Not onely parts but great grace is required both to preach and hear this Subject But let us enter into this Land of Canaan The Apostle John of all the Evangelists is compared to an Eagle because he treateth of the highest and most sublime matter For as it is commonly received He outliving all the other Apostles there were damnable Hereticks risen up that denied Christ to be God at the Churches entreaty therefore he wrote this Book mainly asserting Christs Godhead and handling those things especially which the other Evangelists had left out especially insisting upon those excellent discourses and dialogues Christ had with the Pharisees As also those divine Instructions and consolations he gave his Disciples at his departure from them of which the other Evangelists record nothing at all Now when our Saviour had been large in instructing and confirming them he bends himself to earnest praier for them that what he had said might take place in their hearts so that in the Chapter you may take notice of 1. The Introduction to the matter and 2. The Matter it self The matter is Christs earnest prayer and that for a threefold Object 1. Himself 2. His Apostles 3. All others who in time should beleeve in him For the Introduction there we have 1. The order of Christs Praier and 2. the description of his gesture The Order is These words spake Jesus that is after Christ had finished those admirable and comfortable Instructions then he betakes himself to praier From whence observe That to all Instructions and Consolations Praier is necessary for their good effect Christ himself doth not think it enough to plant but he prays there may be a watering from above Thus all Ministers and all hearers are to take Christs way Even as at other times we reade that Christ spent the day in Preaching and the night in Praying For
dead man but when cloathed with divine authority then it beateth down every thing that opposeth it self If then we are bound to pray to God that he would make naturall causes though with so much inherent pronenesse to cause their effects as that our bread may nourish us our cloaths may warm us how much rather when there is no such naturall efficiency If man lives not by bread alone but by every word proceeding out of Gods mouth much lesse is man converted enlightned or regenerated by Preaching of the Word only without the power of God manifested from heaven Yet oh the security the sencelesnesse of most people herein They do not earnestly contend in praier with God before they come hither What earnest wrastlings and strivings hast thou had with God to day that thy soul might be put into an heavenly travell and Christ be formed in thee This is the true reason why you heare your selves into damnation and we preach you into greater and greater spirituall judgements daily because few are diligent in praying for a blessing upon that which shall be delivered to them In the third place After doctrinal Instruction there is great need of praier to God because of the utter insufficiency and inability that is in every man to what is good Such is the contrariety and enmity in every mans heart against Truth preached that we had need pray and pray again that God would open our eyes and soften our hearts The Scripture in severall places doth describe mans Impotency and his utter aversenesse to what is holy He is a Tyger a Lion a wilde Bear he is a meer briar and bramble There cannot be any good wrought in him till God make dead men to rise out of their sinnes We doe not hear Sermons as the Heathens did their morall Orations for they had some imbred strength to doe those things that were civilly good but when we have to doe with supernatural things there all must be planted in us There is nothing in us to love or embrace it yea whatsoever we are think or will it all riseth up in rebellion against God and certainly if the godly themselves though endowed already with an heavenly life do yet earnestly pray that God would open their eyes Psa 119. That he would quicken them and make them to grow up in an higher stature how much more do men destitute of Gods Spirit need this help yea we may take notice Eph. 6.18 that when the childe of God is fully compleated with the whole Armour of God he hath his helmet his shield his brestplate upon him yet he must not trust to this but after all this he is to pray alwaies with all praier and supplication So that you see in all holy exercises we are to be as the little childe who leaneth only upon his Father we are like the Fowl when we have drunk down a little presently to lift up our heads to heaven that it may work on us Vse of Instruction From this order of Christs learn we in Preaching and you in hearing what we ought to do know it must be Praier that will sanctifie every Sermon According as thou hast laid up Praier beforehand so do thou expect to speed What a wofull thing will it be if God make this Heaven brasse and iron these helps of salvation furtherances to damnation and all because thou dost not carefully seek to him Canst thou pray in other things and not here Is not every Sermon of eternall consequence Is not heaven or hell delivered at this time why then are we such stupid blocks as not to lay fast hold on God and say I will not let thee go till thou givest me a blessing It 's taken up as a sad Question Why in these latter daies the Word preached makes no more wonderfull works At first Propagation of the Gospel so many fish were caught in the Net that it was ready to break And at the first Reformation out of Popery the Kingdom of God suffered violence but now he that is prophane is prophane still the blinde are blinde still the proud proud still What is the matter Is not the Word of God as powerfull as ever Is not the Lords arm as strong as ever Yes but the zeal of people is grown cold There are not such fervent praiers such high esteems of the means of grace Men do not besiege Heaven giving God no rest day or night till he come with salvation into their souls and truly the Spirit of praier is a sure fore-runner of spirituall mercies to be bestowed Optat dare qui mandat orare when God will blesse the Word and Ministery to thee he will stir up thy appetite make thee hungry and thirsty fill thee with daily pantings after his grace And thus much of the order I proceed to the gesture used in praier He lifted up his eyes to heaven In the Scripture we reade of severall gestures in praier one of the Publican clean contrary He cast his eyes upon the earth and that did arise from the great and reall sence he had of his unworthinesse and of the multitude of sins that were upon him but yet that which is most commendable and indeed most natural is to lift up the eyes to Heaven the place of Gods speciall presence though he be also every where for the eye in this case should be the demonstration of the heart Cor in oculis that if it were possible we would both in soul and body while praying be lifted up into heaven Now how our Saviour who was God as well as man could pray and what kinde of Praier this was will hereafter be cleared From this gesture Observe That all our Praiers should come from a spiritual and heavenly heart It 's the very definition of praier that it 's Elevatio mentis ad Deum The lifting up of the minde and of the whole soul to God To pray is a farre more difficult and noble exercise then most are aware of It 's not the running over a few words like a Parrot but the soul is then to be on the Mount of Transfiguration There must be many things meeting together ere thy praier be an heavenly Praier It 's good to set this home for praier is the universall Instrument of all thy good if that be blunted or unprofitable all is marred If a poor man that liveth by his handy labour hath marred his tools that he cannot work by them how shall he subsist Praier is the Key to open heaven if that be empty and unprofitable how canst thou be replenished You ask and pray and have not Jam. 4.2 No sins are removed no spirituall mercies are bestowed on thee and all because thy praier is not heavenly Now these things make an heavenly Praier 1. It 's necessary the Spirit of God do enable and move the soul to this duty Rom. 8. It is the Spirit of God that helpeth against our infirmities and enableth us with
ignorant man not knowing the one must necessarily have the other hid from his eyes Can there be any hope of that mans cure who knoweth not and feels not his disease Thy Ignorance of Christ argueth thou art also ignorant of thy self for didst thou know thy own poverty and guilt nothing could hold thee till thou mightst get some interest in Christ pain of body will make a man cry out for ease but pain of soul through sinne much more Thus you see the ignorant man is in the plain way to hell Thirdly Grosse Ignorance must needs be damnable because it 's immediatly opposite to the sanctified and appointed means that bring to God and Christ viz. the Ministery The Preaching of the Word is instituted by God to bring us to understanding and faith about these things Therefore they are called the Light and Guides But where there is grosse Ignorance there commonly the Preaching of the Word hath least effect and fruit as the Sunne-beams doe no good to the blinde man For seeing the Word of God is a morall Instrument and though potent by the power of God yet it doth by argument convince and perswade where men are bruitish like beasts what improbability is there of doing good Indeed the Word doth give eyes to the blinde and understanding to the simple where God useth it efficaciously for nothing can resist it then because it takes away the actual obstinacy yet the Ignorance of men is that which of it self would make all Preaching to drop like the water upon the rock where no fruit can grow For what doth the ignorant man understand what can he remember what can he meditate upon when he is gone hence Take a knowing though prophane man in his life yet we have something to work upon we speak to wise men that will judge what we say but to the blinde man day and night is all one Preaching and no Preaching To the deaf man Thunder and a still voice is all one Consider then lest thy ignorance doth not damn thee in that all the means and instituted waies of God become altogether unprofitable unto thee That makes all preaching in vain I shall not further enlarge on this Here is an Objection will presently be made Doth not ignorance quite absolve a man from guilt Is he not to be pitied rather then blamed I ●t doth not excuse a toto yet a tanto He doth not sinne so much as knowing men do which doth greatly encourage and comfort them We may answer this by that known distinction of an Ignorance merae negationis and pravae dispositionis It's true meer negative Ignorance doth excuse The Heathens and Pagans that never heard of Christ though they have other sins they are damned for yet the meer ignorance of Christ who was never revealed to them doth not condemn them Infidelitas negativa non damnat but then there is an affected and wilfull Ignorance this doth not excuse but accuse and aggravate and such is the Ignorance of all those that live under the means of grace and where the Name of Christ is preached It 's thy wilful and wicked disposition in thee that makes thee thus blinde You say as those in Job let the knowledge of the most High depart from you Job 21.14 Seeing you will not see and hearing you will not hear Therefore your condemnation is the greater It 's disputed among Casu●sts whether God may not have mercy upon natural fools that cannot know any thing of God or Christ because of a natural incapacity But thou art a voluntary fool and dost wilfully deprive thy self of all knowledge and how then shall God be gracious unto thee In the next place you may say If the estate of an ignorant person be thus dangerous how comes it about that there are so many ignorant persons Why cannot all say with the Apostle We know that we know 2 Cor. 8.1 There are some outward causes or inward causes or causes from the ignorant man himself or in respect of others First Many are therefore so ignorant in matters of Religion because they understand not the damnable estate this ignorance puts them into So that the ignorance of their dangers makes them also ignorant of the remedy As Austin said of Original sinne It was peccatum causa peccati and poena peccati the same is true of Ignorance It 's a sinne in its own nature because contrary to that command of God which doth so often require that we should know him and then it 's a cause of sinne yea of all sinne It 's because men do not know God that therefore they are so bold to transgresse his Laws Lastly It 's the punishment of sinne for all that black darknesse and confusion we are in is because of our revolt from God Ignorance then keeping man off from the true understanding of his misery makes him the more secure and content in it If thou didst know what curses hang over thy head If thou didst know what a gulf is between God and thee In what utter darknesse thou art in here which will be rewarded with utter darknesse hereafter thou wouldst have no rest within thy self 2. Another cause of Ignorance is Slothfulnesse and negligence They strive not they pray not for knowledge whereas this cannot be obtained without praier and diligence Then shall ye know if ye follow on to know the Lord Hos 6.3 and Solomon bids us seek after it more then for gold or the richest treasures Pro. 2.3 8.10 to love it as thy Sister or Mother many people complain they are ignorant God help them for they have little knowledge and where is the fault all this while Is it not thy negligence thy slothfulnesse May we not produce many instances of those who have been very ignorant and stupid yet by praier and hearty endeavour have obtained to a competent measure of knowledge for humane knowledge shall there be so much labour taken sudavit alsit said the Poet and for Christian knowledge wherein is our happinesse and eternel life shall we not be as industrious Why dost thou not rather cry out of thy self every night I goe to bed and yet have got no knowledge I understand such and such things in the world but nothing at all about God and Christ Thus the sluggards Field is full of briars and weeds At the day of judgement when God will call for an account of every day and hour thou wilt bewail thy folly that time was not more redeemed to get knowledge 3. Earthly and worldly affections These do so immoderately possesse the whole man that they regard nothing else Why is it that men ordinary plain men get so much skill and craft in worldly affairs they know the best way for improving every worldy advantage It is because their heart is set upon it They minde and regard this thing They rise with the thoughts of it and so goe to bed If their hearts were thus
these things Hence when Israel did see her vanity by false confidences in the creatures see what God saith of her Hos 13.4 Thou shalt know no God but me for there is no Saviour beside me and Hos 8.2 Israel shall cry unto me My God we know thee Though therefore knowledge be better then the greatest duties performed out of ignorant devotion the same Hosea 6 6. God there desireth knowledge more then burnt offerings yet this is but a lame imperfect knowledge if it breed not dependance on God as on our heavenly and gracious Father The other branch of dependance is on Christ for Justification and Salvation that is the beleeving on him which our Saviour so often promiseth eternall life to Oh when our knowledge of Christ and the fulnesse and sufficiency of a Mediator makes us to cast all our burden on him and to have free accesse to the Throne of Grace by his bloud this is precious knowledge This is that excellency of knowledge Paul Phil. 3. counted all things dung unto comparatively See then what trust and dependance doth the knowledge of God cause in thee for all thy knowledge art thou not as full of cares distractions and diffidence as if God did not rule as if Christ were not the Mediatour as if there were no promises in Gods Word 6. Then is our knowledge saving when it makes us glorifie God as God giving the praise of all things to him Rom. 1. This the Apostle taxeth the Gentiles withall that though they had a knowledge of God by the creatures yet they did not glorifie him according to this knowledge but they made sensible Images of him and worshipped wood and stone the work of mens hands They did not glorifie him as God there is a great deal in that To glorifie God as God is so to honour him as to give him the best and the supremacy in all things When our hearts are as much upon the creature as God or when we would serve God and Mamon this is not to glorifie God as God When we do any thing not principally and chiefly for God we do not honour him as a God These are the inward effects of knowledge Now there are outward effects which will necessarily follow true and saving knowledge even as the beams of the Sunne do the Sunne though they are not called externall as opposite to internall no they both go together for they that know God know him to be a Spirit and that he must be worshipped in Spirit and truth that all outward duties done without the heart are but a meer hypocrisie so that these outward effects are to be taken as streams coming from a full and precious fountain within and they are such as these 1. The true knowledge of God doth make a man effectually purge himself from all filthy and noisome lusts To say we know God and yet give our selves to sin is a lye and it argueth no truth in us 1· John 3.6 He that commits sin hath not known or seen God which is the reason why the Prophets attribute all the ungodlinesse in a Land to the not knowing of God So our Saviour tels the Pharisees that all their wickednesse was because they did not know him and his Father and in this Chapter Christ saith The world hath not known thee but these have known thee Ephes 4. If ye have been taught as the truth is in Jesus and ye have not so learned Christ What is this when we have so learned Christ as to put off the old man with the lusts thereof Never then boast of thy knowledge and thy parts what mortification of sinne what cleansing from thy filth doth it cause in thee if thy Christian knowledge doth not work a Christian life but thou art bruitish and dissolute in thy life tremble at thy estate for thou art out of the way to heaven 1 Pet. 2.20 some are said to have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of God yet these did it externally only They were swine though washed not sheep but thou dost not come thus farre though thou hast the knowledge of God yet thou wallowest in thy mire and lickest up thy vomit Thy condemnation will be the greater because thou knowest thy Masters will and dost it not What sentence then shall we passe upon all the carnall and wicked waies of most men they know well enough they understand well enough but because this knowledge hath no efficacy upon their lives therefore they go in the broad way to hell 2. Saving knowledge as it causeth an avoiding of sinne so a ready and willing obedience unto the commands of God And for this sake all disobedient and rebellious sinners are said in the Scripture not to know God They are excellently put together 1 Thess 1.8 in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God nor obey the Gospel of Jesus Christ What obedience then and conformity to Gods Law doth thy knowledge work in thee this God looketh at he careth not for thy head or thy tongue if he have not thy heart thy hands and thy whole life If so be the Apostle say that he which doubteth whether such a thing be sinne he is damned if he do it Rom. 14. how damnable is that mans condition who knoweth and is assured that he sinneth and yet wilfully persists in it So that our knowledge is not to be carried only to truths to what is to be beleeved and there to sit down No but Rom. 12.2 we are to be transformed in our minde that we may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God We are to consider what is that which is acceptable and well-pleasing to God and when we know it we must readily fullfill it Oh that men of knowledge and parts would think of these things Dost thou that which is well-pleasing to God Doth God accept of such a life as thine Is there not a plain contrariety and opposition between Gods will and thy lusts A man of great knowledge and also great impiety were he not puffed up with self-flattery would easily see the opposition between his life and Gods Word the one is strict his life is dissolute the one calleth to avoid not only sinne but the appearance of it but thy life plungeth thee both into sinne and the occasions of it Oh consider all thy knowledge and understanding helps thee no more then the devils knowledge doth them they are not able to love or delight in God and his will 3. The knowledge of God will make a man keep a good conscience in all things it will make him take heed of sinne in secret as well as publique it will make him do duties in secret as well as openly for whosoever is not afraid to sinne in secret whosoever neglects private duties and holinesse this man knoweth not God he doth not understand that he is omnipresent that his eye is every where beholding all things that
What will not men say rather then come out of Egypt 2. Is God the only true God then observe the first Commandment Let us have no other Gods besides him for not only the Heathen that worships Stock and Stone is an Idolater but every Christian that puts this hope and confidence in any creature that placeth the chiefest of his affections and desires otherwise then on God he is a spirituall Idoloter Thus covetousnesse is called Idolatry Col. 3.5 Charge them that are rich that they trust not in uncertain riches but in the living God saith Paul 1 Tim. 6.17 If I have made gold my hope saith Job chap. 31.24 There is no earthly covetous man that placeth his affections and trust in wealth but he renounceth the only true God and yet how hard is it to have wealth and not to put confidence in it for whereas our Evangelist saith It 's as hard for a rich man to be saved as a Camel to go through the eye of a needle another saith for a rich man that trusts in his riches Take heed then of this subtill spirituall sinne Is thy heart inwardly supported Do thy spirits rise because of thy wealth this is Idolatry So likewise the voluptuous man he maketh his pleasures his lusts a God Whose belly is their God Phil. 3.9 Yea no godly man can with such hearty affections and joy constantly serve God as the voluptuous man doth his lusts so that whatsoever a mans heart doth inordinately runne out upon that creature he loveth more then God this makes him an Idolater As he said of Baal Why halt ye between two If God be God serve him If Baal be God serve him So we may say Why halt ye between God and the creature If God be the only true God let him have the only true love and joy of thy soul If riches and lusts be God then let them have all thy heart As there is practicall Idolatry so there is doctrinall Idolatry viz. When we attribute that to our own power or free will which belongs only to God Thus all those proud and arrogant opinions which advance free-will make it able to work with God in conversion this is to derogate from God he shall not then be the God from whom every good and perfect gift doth proceed The Apostle 1 Cor. 8.2 saith To us there is but one God the Father from whom are all things and to him are all things so that God is there made the first cause of all the good things we have and the ultimate end to which we do referre all Certainly if it be a forsaking of God to set up any Authors for temporall mercies and temporall salvations then much more for spirituall for which is greater the work of nature or the work of grace Therefore let us walk humbly and because he is the onely true God from whom are all things and to whom let us say Not to our own power but thy grace be all glory given 3. Is God the onely true God Then let those that know him and obey him walk with all comfort and encouragement He is the true God and so will never fail thee he hath a twofold truth first a truth of his essence he is God and none else beside him and opposite to this an Idol is called a lye and nothing How should this support us that the God whom we serve is God indeed How often did the Prophets bid the Idolaters fly to their Idols pray to their Idols and see if they could help them As he is thus true in his Essence called therefore the living God so he is also true in his Promise in his Word and this the Scripture speaks of often and although his Promise be of it self true that we need not doubt yet he added his Oath also that so we might not be shaken in our minde Though it be said of man he is a liar and there is no trust to be put in the great one of the world yet in God there is no change or shadow of change Though therefore the Olive tree fail and the Fig tree do not blossom Hab. 3.17 though every thing in this world lieth and proveth false yet thou maiest put confidence in God 4. Is God the onely true God Then what cause have we who are called to the true knowledge of him to blesse and praise his Name that he suffered us not to perish in our black and horrible darknesse for what are we more then all those Heathens and Pagans that sit in darknesse and have no light Why should God cause the Sun to shine on thee to pity thee and suffer others to walk and stumble in their darknesse What cause have we Christians to honour God! How great will our condemnation be if we neglect so great salvation Our Saviour would have affected the people of Capernaum Mat. 11.23 and other places with this mercy He was the light that came into the world and men love darknesse rather then light John 1. Now in these respects we shall be found very guilty and sinfull 1. If we do not highly prize and esteem the knowledge of the true God if the means of this heavenly wisdom be not more then any other mercy whatsoever But oh how great is our condemnation in this particular The more and the longer we have enjoyed the light of Gods Word the more we have despised it and contemned it This will provoke God to do with us as he did to the Jews and to other Churches who are now made waste and become a wildernesse he will take the light away and carry it to a people sitting in darknesse that will make better use of it 2. Our condemnation will be great if we do not come to the knowledge of God when we have the means Some have not the knowledge of God saith Paul I speak it to your shame 1 Cor. 15. Oh to how many persons to how many families may we say you have not the knowledge of God! What shalt thou be in the School of Christ and yet know no more then an Heathen how inexcusable is it 3. This also will greatly condemn if we do not live according to the knowledge of this true God If our lives are full of Atheism full of ungodlinesse how shall we be able to appear at the dreadfull judgement seat when God shall say You were no Heathens you were no Pagans you cannot plead Lord we have not known thee we have not heard of thee Oh how should our hearts bleed within us to think it will go worse with us then Jews or Heathens because we have enjoyed more 5. Is God the true God Then how great and hainous a sinne is it to have any communion or commerce with the devil or his instruments and yet this is a sin too commonly practised If men have lost any thing if they be in any pain or disease then they presently run to such as they call wise men though
they be indeed the devils fools What is this but to renounce God and to renounce your baptisme If you have lost your goods you will go and lose your souls to We reade of Ahaziah 2 King 1.6 when his childe was sick he would go to Baal to know whether his childe should recover or no but with what a dreadfull message doth Gods Prophet entertain him telling him his childe should die withall saying Is it because there is not a God in Israel that thou doest so May not we say so when you go to the devils instruments witches wise men and sorcerers Is it because there is not a true God in heaven Some have questioned whether such as compact with the devil and use familiar spirits can possibly repent and be saved they doubt whether they are in a capacity of ever having eternall life but that is too rigid for we reade of Manasses a great sinner in this kinde one that was given to witchcraft and used a familiar spirit yet he prayed and humbled himself and God accepted of him So we reade of some converted by the Apostles preaching that brought in all their conjuring books and burnt them Act. 19.19 Though therefore no doubt is to be made but upon their repentance God will forgive yet it is a great and a grievous sinne it 's a renouncing of God and your Baptism Take heed then of ever doing so and if thy heart hath been so gracelesse and wicked heretofore oh abhorre thy self let thy conscience cry out I have committed a great and abominable sinne thou art the chiefest sinner of many thousands We ought to have no communion with the devil though he had power to foretell and so do good to thee as he hath not any further then God may reveal to him When the devils confessed Christ was the true Son of God he rebuked them and would not own such a confession So Paul also Act. 16.16 would not own a confession though true because by one possessed by the devil Be ashamed of the name of a Christian and renounce thy baptism if thou shouldst over do such sins again SERMON XVIII The Necessity of the Knowledge of Christ Jesus as well as of God the Father JOH 17.3 And Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent WE now come to the second Object of this knowledge necessary to salvation and that is Christ This latter Object is added because of the Jews and some Heretiques who though they acknowledge the only true God yet because they are eirher ignorant of or deny Christ therefore they are not in the way to salvation The object to be known is described 1. By his proper Name 2. By his appellative or name of office 3. From the Original and Cause of it His proper name is Jesus Though some learned men have affected to go out of the ordinary way in giving the true root of this word yet certainly the most common derivation of it is most true viz. that it comes from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to save as the Angell plainly interprets it his Name shall be called Jesus because he shall save his people from their sinnes Mat. 1.21 It 's the same with Joshua who was so called because he delivered the people out of their temporal miseries and brought them into Canaan being herein a Type of Christ 2. His Name of office Christ as much as anointed I shall not say much of this word now Though the word be attributed to others yet Jesus is properly called the Messias he is the Vnctus unctorum the anointed of the anointed and this doth especially demonstrate the Priestly and the Kingly office of Christ 3. There is the Original or Fountain of this office It 's from God the Father Now when the Father is said to send him it is not to be understood as if it were against Christs will no but he voluntarily and readily undertook this Office likewise so that if we did know and acknowledge such a person as was called Jesus yet if we did not also acknowledge him to be the Christ the Mediatour appointed by God our knowledge would be insufficient Obs That the knowledge of one true God is not enough to salvatian without the knowledge of Christ also They are both put together and none may separate them Hence it 's so often in Scripture commanded that we should beleeve in Christ That be who beleeveth shall not enter into judgement and our Saviour makes the knowlege of him and the Father inseparably joyned together Ioh. 8.19 To open the Doctrine Consider 1. That we cannot have any knowledge about Christ either that there is such an one or what he is but only by Revelation We told you about God there was a threefold Knowledge by nature by the Creatures by the Scriptures And therefore whereas it might be and is easily granted by all that none can be saved without the knowledge of the true God yet both of old and of late there have been those who have held that the Nations that know not Christ may be saved It 's true they are divided among themselves for some say the Gentiles have some implied or confused knowledge of Christ or else God revealeth it to them extraordinarily but others positively say the knowledge we have by nature and meer light of reason is enough to conduct to heaven As for Cornelius the Centurion whom they instance in the first Heathen converted and baptized under the New Testament it is plain that he had a knowledge of Christ though imperfect Neither is that expression of Peter upon Cornelius his admission Act. 10.35 where he saith God is no accepter of persons but in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse shall be saved any waies favouring salvation without Christ For now the partition wall being broken down and the Gospel to be preached to all Nations which was represented in the vision of a sheet full of clean and unclean beasts the Knowledge of Christ was likewise therewith to be propagated It 's true the Apostle saith they that sinne without the Law shall be judged without the Law Rom. 2. God will not judge them by that they knew not and so they that sinne without the knowledge of the Gospel they shall not be judged for not beleeving in Christ and not receiving of him to whom he was never tendred but then they have a law of conscience within them by which they shall be condemned so that by the Scripture we cannot say there is any other way of salvation but by the Name of Christ and Faith in his Name yea that Text Act. 4.12 is plainly excluding any other way of salvation There is no other Name under Heaven whereby we must be saved Howsoever men may tropically explain and say how can we think so merciful a God can suffer so many thousands and thousands who never heard of Christ to perish yea their poor Infants who committed no actual sinne We must submit to the
sinful soul the world is the valley of death an Hospitall of diseased men and therefore thou art to rejoice at this approaching glory Hence it is that the righteous is said to have hope in his death to be blessed in his death for all his old things passe away a new place new company new happinesse new joy but yet here are cautions to the godly dying man that hath done his work 1. Not to put confidence in his works Sibi isti fidere non est fidei sed perfidia said Bernard Oh Lord All that I have done is an effect and testimony of thy grace not a merit of eternal glory Thou crownest thy gifts not my merits if I have been able to work it was of thy grace so the more I have done the more I am obliged to thee and the reason why there cannot be any hope or confidence put in the works we do is from the imperfection and insufficiency of them Enter not into judgement with thy Servant saith David Psa 143.2 I would be found not having mine own righteousnesse but that by faith in Christ saith Paul Phil. 3. 2. Therefore after all his works though it were Martyrdom it self he is to look for glory by vertue of Gods promise as a meer gift Upon this tenure thou art to plead for it The gift of God is eternal life for though we had done all yet God might deny us eternal life Though we had perfectly done all our duty yet God might annihilate us and there be at an end Therefore it 's wholly of his grace to make a promise of eternal life for by this means though he be not a debtor to us yet he is to himself he is faithful and cannot deny his own words and for this reason as it 's called a gift so sometimes a reward not as if there were any proportion between our work and this glory but because God hath appointed this as a sure consequent upon doing what is well Therefore Ambrose distinguished well of a reward there is merces liberalitatis as if an whole Kingdome should be given a man for lifting up a straw and there it merces debiti of debt and strict justice but that cannot be between the creature and the Creator much lesse the creature fallen and corrupted Vse 2. Of terrour and woe to wicked men who having done the devils work have nothing to do but to take the reward of devils The same hell the same torments that are prepared for the devil and his Angels are for thee Oh that the name of death the thoughts of death should not fill thee with all fear and amazement oh that this should not be like a sword at thy heart whose work am I doing whom have I served and now I am a dying man whose wages am I to receive Oh that thou shouldst not mourn and pray and get all others to mourn and pray for thee if God will deliver thee out of this gall and wormwood Blessed are they that die in the Lord their works follow them Cursed are they that die in their sins for their works shall follow them though your bodies are put in the grave yet your sins cannot be buried there SERMON XXIV Of vain Tautology in Prayer And what Repetitions in Prayer are such and what not Shewing also what things are absolutely necessary to a good Praier JOH 17.5 And now O Father glorifie thou me with thy own self with the glory I had before the world began IN these words have been considered the matter of the Petition described by the nature and external adjunct thereof as also the causal inference In the matter of the Petition we shall not take notice of the matter it self because handled before But 1. Whereas our Saviour within so little a space doth repeat the same Petition twice We observe That Repetition of the same matter in a Praier is not alwaies a sinful Tautology but is sometimes lawful yea useful and necessary None can think that our Saviour in whom is the Treasure of Wisedom and who is the essentiall Word of God who also giveth the gifts of praier to the Church that he himself should be straitned either for matter or words but this ingemination proceeds from some other excellent ground To open this Point Consider 1. That the same matter may be repeated either insence only but in different words or else in the very same sence and words When it 's done the former way we say a man doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the latter way unlesse there be some grave and serious cause it 's a vain Tautology for the former kinde of repetition the Psalms which are accounted like the Stars in the Scripture Firmament are very frequent in it Many verses being the ingemination of the same sence only in some different words and this we do not so commonly call a repetition of the same thing because every new word the holy Ghost hath doth represent some new notion to the understanding so that it 's like the same meat under several dishings that affords a peculiar taste or like the Philasophers matter which they say is alwaies the same though under divers forms Now our Saviour in this praier doth not only use the same matter but the same words Father glorifie thou me 2. That in our prayers which are a communion with the great God wo ought to have a diligent attention to severall things s Praier is not slightly formally and customarily to be hasted over but being a divine worship of God If ever a man would be in an heavenly holy fervent and indistracted disposition it ought to be when he sets himself to this duty Praier is like that curious oyntment to be made by the High-Priest which consisted of many choice ingredients You may call most mens praiers no more praiers then an Ape a man or a picture the person it represents For 1. We must have a diligent attention to the matter that we pray for That it be lawful good and agreeable to Gods will To ask of God any thing that is unlawful and sinful would be to make God a Patron of sinnes as he in the Poet Da mihi fallere da justum sanctumque videri Jupiter So that this made Aquinas say It was hard to know what we are to pray for because it 's hard to know what to desire Hence Rom. 8. we need the Spirit of God to enable us to know what we pray for Some Heathens have been admired for such a praier as this that they entreated the gods to give them not what they would have but what was good for them whether they desired it or not but we that are Christians are not in such darknesse we have the Word of God to direct us and his Spirit to incline us Look then that the matter thou praiest for be such as is agreeable to Gods holy will 2. We are to consider and attend
who by their sins have made themselves as a barren Wildernesse and the heavens like brasse In the next place let us consider why God who hath purposed and promised to do such things yet requireth our praiers for the accomplishment of them And the first may be generall from the goodnesse of God who loveth to communicate himself and therefore though he could do all things without second causes and means yet he is pleased to use them not from indigence but indulgence So that as we see in all natural effects that are produced God doth not those things immediatly himself but hath second causes and means whereby they are compleated So it is here God in the wonderfull things he hath predestinated or promised for his people hath appointed means for the performance of them Hence as he converts by the Word so he bestoweth his mercy upon a praying people This reason is common with all other his works in the world but then the more proper and peculiar Reasons for praier are 1. God will be sought to because hereby he is acknowledged the authour and fountain of all the good we have Did we not pray were we not commanded to come to him it might be doubted whether he was the cause of the good things we desire and this is the reason why we may not pray to Angels or Saints but God only because he alone and none else is the Authour of all good things Jam. 1. From him cometh every good and perfect gift So that if we take praier away we do in effect take God away He that liveth without praier liveth as if there were no God as if all things came by a natural necessity or uncertain chance and not from a wise God so that to pray is to give a solemn Testimony unto the world that we beleeve there is a God who governeth in the world with whom are the treasures of all good things and that there is not the least mercy we want we can have a supply of but from him That as the Scripture saith he hath the Key of the Heavens he shutteth and no man can open so he keeps the Key of all other mercies No wonder then that though God will give us good things yet we must earnestly pray for them for otherwise God would not be owned there would not that glory be given to him as is due 2. As God hath appointed this for his honour so likewise for our honour that we may be admitted into his presence and have holy Communion with him It 's the greatest honour that we are capable of that we are allowed at all times to make our requests known to him For Praier is an heavenly commerce with God God and man cannot meet together unlesse they be agreed how can the consuming fire and stubble be near one another Might not God say to all which he doth to some What hast thou to do to take my words into thy mouth Psal 50. As Christ rebuked the devils and would not own their confession of him though it was true so might God abhorre our Petitions and account it a dishonour for us to come near him yea and that though we had no sinne because we are but finite creatures and so not able to do any thing sutably to his great Majesty Oh then let us not look upon a praier as a burthen as a task farre be it from us to be haled and pulled to it when any such listlisnesse and unwillingnesse is on thee Oh consider can there be more glory and honour put on me Did Haman grudge to come in Ahashuerus his presence and to the Royall Banquet Did he not rather glory of it to his Wife and Friends 3. God will have us pray because Praier is an appointed means by him as well as Faith and Repentance Now Gods purposes and promises they must never be opposed to or seperated from the means so that as God promiseth pardon of sinne and salvation but it is if we repent and beleeve so likewise it is if we earnestly pray and seek to him and this is the very reason why Divines say that though God hath absolutely decreed and promised such mercies yet Praier is not uselesse and unnecessary because God hath decreed and promised praier as well as other things so that it 's a prophane cavil to say What need I pray I cannot alter Gods purposes what he hath purposed shall be whether I pray or no This is false reasoning For as God hath appointed such mercies so also such means whereof Praier is the chief without which they cannot be had as Austin said If Steven had not praied for his Persecutors the Church had never had such a glorious Doctor as Paul was 4. God hath appointed Praier not only for our honour but also for our spirituall advantage and profit By praying fervently the heart is raised up made more heavenly and lifted up even into the third Heavens If there were no other end of Praier but this it were precious that hereby the soul is put into a glorious transfiguration That as it was with Christ while he was praying his countenance was changed and there was great glory fell upon him So it might be with us did we in a right manner draw nigh to God as it was with Moses we see upon his talking with God his face did shine and Saul when he came among the Prophets the Spirit of Prophecy fell upon him so when we come into Gods presence and pray effectually a divine Spirit an heavenly frame of heart may come upon us we shall go from Praier ravished with the Church saying My Beloved is the chiefest of ten thousand It will be like the food that Eliah had from the Angel enabling him to go a long journey How patient in afflictions how heavenly in worldly employments We see those we company with in the world we love and admire we are apt to imitate them and become like them By going in the Sun we get the colour of the Sun By going where oyntment is we get the sweet smell of it May we not say the prophane earthly and carnall life of most men argue they have not Communion with God They are not often in his presence 5. God will have us pray because hereby we must testifie our desire and high esteem we have of the mercy praied for Do we not say that is little worth which is not worth asking Now then should God do all our good things for us and we not pray the desire and esteem of the mercy would not be expressed Hence it is that God loveth wrestling and fervent praiers God loveth importunity and an holy violence as we see by the Parable of the unjust Judge yea the fervent praier of the righteous and that only availeth much Jam. 5.16 Now why doth God delight in such praiers of agony only because hereby we discover our earnest desires hereby we shew our strong affections and hence it is
This should be seriously thought of by thee when thou art dejected and overwhelmed saying How can this be and how can that be Say O Lord what low unworthy thoughts have I of thee Didst not thou create a world and shall I say How shall God help me in this distresse and for this reason is it that in the Psalms and Prophets Gods creating the world is often brought in as an argument to support the Children of God under all miseries Fear not God made the world SERMON XXIX Of Divine Knowledge its Excellency and Rarity Shewing That God is truely and properly known onely by the Godly And wherein their Knowledge of God differs from the Knowledge that others have of him JOH 17.6 I have manifested thy Name unto the men thou gavest me out of the world c. THis sixth Verse begins the second main general part of Christs Petition for whereas before he had praied for himself now he begins to pray for his Disciples as they were in a peculiar manner given to him as afterwards he praieth for all beleevers in the generall so that the words are a beginning of Christs Petition in a peculiar manner for the Apostles for they needed much praier and assistance who were to undertake so great a duty These were set in the forefront of the Battel These were called to labour in the heat of the day therefore there is a peculiar praier for them Now that our Saviours Petition may prevail he first declareth what he had done to them and 2. Their obedience to him in all things what he had done to them is partly related in these words I have manifested thy Name wherein first observe the person or efficient cause spoken of Christ manifested Gods Name to his Diseiples Therefore he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ is not to be considered onely as a Mediatour in which none can imitate him but as a Minister or Prophet The chief Shepherd Heb. 13.20 as the Scripture cals him and herein he discharged his duty in that he manifested and made known God to the world which lay in ignorance So that the Ministers duty is to bring people to know God but of that in its time 2. There is the action it self of this person or efficient I have manifested There is a twofold manifestation 1. Objective only in the externall offer and proposal of the grace of God not only to beleevers but to all the unbeleeving Jews but of this manifestation Christ doth not speak 2. There is a powerfull effectual manifestation such as begets knowledge of God and obedience unto his Word and of this Christ speaks and as for the former many have Christ and God outwardly manifested to them in the preaching of the Gospel but they have no eyes to see as the Sunne though it shineth never so gloriously yet the blinde man receiveth no benefit by it 3. Here is the Object of this action Thy Name By Name is not meant the words or Titles given to God as Adonai Elohim Jehovah as the Rabbins call God Leohem the Name but by Gods Name is meant his nature his properties and those relations especially whereby he becomes a gracious Father through Christ to an humbled sinner Lastly Here is the Subject to whom Christ doth thus manifest God and these are described 1. By their original and descent Gods gracious good will and pleasure Whom thou gavest me 2. From the state or term out of which God then gave them Out of the world I shall put Christs action and the Subject together at this time Whereas then we see though Christ preached God and his properties to all that heard him yet to none was God manifested but to beleevers From whence we observe That God is only truely and properly known by the godly Let men have never such parts knowledge or understanding and that in the Scriptures and Divinity yet none know God God is not manifested to any but to the godly This may seem Paradoxall and incredible but yet the Scripture is very clear at v. 25. The world hath not known thee but I have known thee and these have known thou hast sent me Hence Joh. 14.21 you may see Christs manifesting of himself is a priviledge bestowed only upon those that love God He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will manifest my self to him This doth so affect one of the Disciples that out of a sence of Gods great goodnesse and grace to them rather then the world he saith Lord how is it that thou wilt manifest thy self to us rather then the world What are we more then others The world heard Christ preached They saw his Miracles but Christ was not manifested to them Christ likewise Joh. 8.55 telleth the Pharisees who beleeved the Scriptures and acknowledged one God Creator of the world yea and said God was their God that they did not know God so that this truth will stand good that men may have much knowledge in the Scriptures in Religion and yet no● know God To open this Consider that several waies we may come to have some knowledge of God 1. By inward light of a natural conscience There are imbred notions and dictates about a God which all the wicked affections and lusts of men cannot wholly obscure as the blackest clouds cannot quite darken the Sunne The Apostle Rom. 1. saith God hath manifested this in them There is then a natural manifestation of God in the consciences of men whereby there is an horrour and trembling upon them upon the committing of some evil especially when the stroak of death is upon them Oh the quakings oh the confusions that are sometimes upon men what will become of them what shall they do All this cometh from some generall knowledge of a God 2. Men come to some knowledge of a God by tradition education and hearsay There being no Nation so fierce and barbarous but have told their Children of a God and the Socinians who deny any inward light of nature about a God do make this the only ground of such an apprehension an universal tradition that is upon all Now although this consent of all Nations be a great Testimony yet the other is not to be excluded If then all do acknowledge that there is a God though there be different Religions different opinions yet both Heathen Turk Jew and Christian agree in this the more inexcusable will all wicked men be who live in rebellion and disobedience to him 3. We come to know God by the Creatures All that consider the world aright must needs argue some divine hand made it The Apostle Rom. 1. instanceth in this also Men by reason and science may argue from the effect to the cause we see one man did not make himself but he had a Father and so that Father a Father and because there cannot be an infinite progresse we must stay at one first cause only you must know this Knowledge by the world
Finis operantis the end of the worker and the end of the works as the end of the house built is to dwell in it The end of the Artificer who built is to have wherewith to maintain himself and his Family so it 's in the Preaching of the Word There is the end of the Ministry it self as appointed by God and of the Minister who preacheth Now indeed there should be alwaies the same end of both The Minister should aim at that end for which the Ministry is appointed viz. to enlighten men to bring them to a saving knowledge of God but such are mens corruptions that they many times take the office only for ambition or earthly advantages They preach that they may live they live not that they may preach It 's therefore a dangerous thing for a Minister of Christ to propound any other end principally at least but what is the end of the Ministery and that is wholly spirituall to be able to say Behold here I am and the spirituall Children thou hast given me 2. As the end of the Ministry is thus to bring light in the world so the end of all people that enjoy a Ministry in all their hearing and coming to Church ought to be thus likewise As the Minister sinnes greatly if he preacheth to advance his parts his Name to humour people in their sins so do the people sin dangerously if they come out of formality and custome or if they come to have the ear and fancy pleased but attend not at all to the saving knowledge of God Oh thou foolish and vain man thou makest not a good use or improvement of the Minister till it hath thus wrought upon thee Therefore the Ignorance and prophanesse of most men proclaimeth that they never made a right use of one Sabbath or one Sermon all their life time though they have heard many Oh then that every Sabbath day you would put this quest●on To what end am I going to the publike Assembly Why go I to hear the Word preached If I do not attain to the end I lose my labour Is it not the end of preaching and the end of hearing to deliver me from my former Ignorance my former lusts how then comes it about that I am still as I was It is because I do not consider the end of these things Now the grounds why the Ministers end should be in all Preaching to bring his people to the saving knowledge of God are very weighty First From the necessity of this end which is in divers respects We are to press people to the right knowledge of God because R. 1 1. All by nature are ignorant of God They are in darknesse They have no understanding to doe good Hence it is that Christ and the Word as also the Ministers are called a light because they like the Sunne are able to remove the night of Ignorance Seeing then we are all by nature Bats and Owls not enduring the Light of the Sunne Seeing then we have innate darknesse and much voluntary blindenesse upon our mindes oh how diligent should the Ministers of the Gospel be to bring this light into peoples hearts Therefore our Saviour makes this the condemnation the great cause of condemnation That light is come into the world and men love darknesse rather then light Joh. 3. If then people did think they had a thick cloud upon their hearts or a vail upon their eyes how carefull would they be to attend upon the Word preached that they might of darknesse become light in the Lord. 2. There is a necessity of attending to this end if you consider the aversenesse and unwillingnesse that is in men to get this knowledge How many say with those in Job Let the knowledge of the most High depart from us Job 21.14 that when they are invited have this lust or that sin this or that worldly advantage to look after How many when wisedom crieth aloud do yet with the simple one passe by to their destruction The Prophets and the Apostles all along complained of this wretched disposition that their hearers had a deaf ear a stiffe neck and a rebellious heart and thus it will be to the worlds end Men whose waies are evil and they delight in them will hate the light will run from that Word which alwaies speaks terrible things against them Have not then the Ministers of the Gospel need to stir up themselves to use all holy violence when there is such a general contrariety in all people against the saving knowledge of God and his way That as the wilde beasts hide themselves in their dens when the Sun begins to arise So do wicked men cover and shelter themselves that the beams of the glorious Word of God may not shine into their dark hearts Men know that powerfull Preaching and their wicked lives cannot agree together oh they know that God and his Word are wholly against their conversation Therefore they will not know or understand lest they should be converted All wicked men are as unwillingly brought out of their sins as the Israelites out of Egypt Lot out of Sodom unlesse they be even driven or forced out they will not move 3. There is a necessity of pressing the Knowledge of God because of the horrible negligence and lazinesse that is in most men There being very few that will take pains to get the knowledge of God and his way Though Solomon useth so many arguments that we should seek and dig for this knowledge more then for silver or gold Pro. 3 That we are to say unto her She is our Mother and Sister yet the things of the world the profits hereof do wholly divert and whereas Heathens have taken such excessive pains to get humane knowledge we stir not for divine knowledge This sluggishnesse in men in Families whereby they will not take time that young and old may come to the knowledge of God is an universal reigning sin 4. The necessity of pressing this ariseth in that there is no salvation or eternall happinesse without the knowledge of God This is Eternal Life to know thee the only true God He would have all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the Truth 1 Tim. 2.4 Oh then for people to come to the knowledge of God is more necessary then to eat or to live or to get any earthly profit Oh then that both Ministers and people might be more zealous in this work for both must work together let the Minister of God be never so laborious so active yet if you are carelesse there cannot come any good and if a people be willing and ready and yet they have blinde guides still the work is not done Therefore let both set their hands to this Let Ministers teach Let people hear Let Ministers instruct Let people come with obedient ears otherwise though thou livest under the glorious light of the Gospel yet thy wickednesse and carelesnesse will make thee get
Such a man this world adoreth But if a man be never so wise so excellent yet if powerfully godly will not conform to the evil waies of the world this marreth all This makes him envied and hated Who art thou then that hast some desires to walk in the way to heaven but the opposition the hatred and violence that is used against that way makes thee draw back Oh foolish and deluded wretch was it not thus with Christ with his Apostles Were they not told they should be hated of all men for his Names sake There cannot be a more comfortable sign of thy grace then to have all the wicked men where thou livest either thy hypocritical Friends or thy open enemies Jerome thanked God that he was worthy to be such an one whom the world would hate The Serpents Seed cannot love the Womans Ismaell will persecute Isaac glory therefore and boast in this if the malicious wicked man hath his mouth alwaies open against thee If he be alwaies censuring and backbiting For if thou wouldest be prophane dissolute if thou wouldst be a Minister to prostitute the Ordinances of God to every prophane man thou wouldst be as good as any in the world but now it 's not for thy infirmities but thy graces they malice thee Sixthly They are not of this world because they are members of Christ and incorporated into him Now Christ himself was not of this world nor was his Kingdom of this world Joh. 18.36 he came not with any earthly worldly advantages Now the godly they are to be wholly conformed unto Christ As Christ was so are they They bear the Image of the heavenly so that what life what actions were by Christ the same they are exercised in so that if we would follow the example of Christ make him our patern as our Christianity obligeth us then should we overcome the world not only in the persecuting part of it but the inticing part of it The heart that is united to Christ findes more excellency and sweetnesse in him then in all the pleasures of the world as we see by Paul Lastly They are discovered not to be of the world because their life is a life of faith The Just shall live by Faith Rom. 1.17 We walk by faith and not by sence 2 Cor. 5.7 Now a worldly life is only by sence and carnal reason It moveth only upon sensible grounds coming as far short of faith as a beast doth of reason but the godly man he looketh into the Word of God he seeth the promises and embraceth them This life of faith is a mystery it is a Riddle yea it 's a madnesse to the world To part with all present advantages upon faith for eternal that are to come this is to them extreme folly and truly herein a godly man is discovered exceedingly Doth he not live by his sensible props but by the Promises Doth he overlook all creatures and fix his heart upon God this is more then the world doth If you ask the grounds why the people of God are out of the world though in it There are three pregnant Reasons in one verse Gal. 1.4 Who gave himself for our sins that he might deliver us from this present evil world Observe first it 's an evil wicked world The whole world lieth in wickednesse saith John 1 Joh. 5.19 There is nothing but the works of sin and the devil in it therefore the devil is called the Prince of this world Joh. 16.11 because he reigneth in every mans heart Now how can those whose natures are made holy who will and love what God wils and loveth come to agree with sin how can they who are sanctified by the Spirit of God be where the devil ruleth 2. It 's the present world It 's but for the present the profits are present profits the pleasures are present pleasures whereas the godly man looketh to Eternity D●mas cleaveth to the present world 2 Tim. 4.10 but Paul to the eternal world the world to come 2. Christ died that we might be delivered from it This is a pregnant reason one main reason of the death of Christ was that thou shouldst not be as the world is if the shortnesse and vanity of these things and their fading nature do not move thee let the bloud and death of Christ prevail with thee He was crucified that thou shouldst be crucified to the world he died that thou shouldst be dead to the world Vse of Exhortation To come out of the world in respect of your affections and conversations you cannot abide there no more then Lot in Sodom and be saved yet are not the greatest part of men of the Church thus of the world Oh how unworthy is this that whereas thy Christianity thy Religion engageth thee not to be of the world thy conversation proveth thou art Well as thou art of this world so shalt thou perish with the judgements of the world That lieth in darknesse and will be cast in utter darknesse this will be thy Portion and know thou must go out of the place of the world though thou wilt not out of the wickednesse of the world the world cannot will not hold thee alwaies SERMON XXXII Of the peculiar Propriety Gods People have in him and he in them JOH 17.6 Thine they were and thou gavest them me and they have kept thy Word THE former part of this Verse related Christs care and work to his Disciple This latter part giveth a description of them and all particulars therein are very argumentative to prevail that God should hear praier for them Now here is a threefold description of them wherein indeed is laid down divinely the Cause of mans Salvation with the effects flowing from it The two Causes are these 1. The Eternal Election and absolute purpose of God to save such Thine they were 2. The meritorious cause in and by which all the mercies they are elected to are obtained and that is Christ Thou hast given them me viz. as a Mediatour 3. The blessed effects of these causes that are hidden or at least every one may pretend to them but this is a discovering sign that excludeth many They have kept thy Word At this time I shall treat only of the first cause which indeed may be called causa causae the cause of all causes of our Salvation and that is Gods Election or gracious purpose to take some out of mankinde and to make them his in a peculiar manner For a people may be said to be Gods divers waies 1. By right of Creation and dominion which he hath thereby and so all things are his Psa 69.11 Both the reprobate and the godly are his in this sence it 's impossible but that every creature should be his because he cannot alienate his dominion and property 2. A people may be said to be his by an outward dispensation of the Covenant of grace Thus the people of the Jews are all of them called his people
Christian ought to have particular applicative ones It 's not enough to beleeve in the general God is the God of those that fear him that trust in him but also in particular with Thomas to say My Lord My God Ioh. 20.28 Hence are those expressions frequent I am thy God and the Lord your God The childe that walketh in darknesse having no light is exhorted to trust in his God Isa 50.10 Oh it cannot be well with thee while thou art in generals only if God be a stranger to thee if apprehended to be none of thy God or if doubted of all this while thou art in a wildernesse not in the Land of Canaan thou art but in the porch not taken into the presence-chamber It 's a great sin of the godly that they are not more particularly here In other things you take no delight unlesse it be yours a pleasant garden if not yours health if not yours makes no comfort Propriety is the cause of joy Oh then let not Satan nor the black doubts of thy own heart make thee keep at a distance from God Let not Popish or Arminian Doctrines that presse no more then a general faith any waies move thee but as God is thine so labour to beleeve and know he is thine Vse 2 Vse 2. Is God the godly mans God May he say I am thine Lord then what a comfortable support is here what enlargement of heart may this make several waies 1. It should cause holy boldnesse and earnest fervency in praier Thou art not praying to God that is an adversary a stranger or unknown to thee It may be he will hear it may be not Oh such diffidence is very sinful it 's very pleasing to God to pray to him in this propriety because hereby thy hope to speed will be greater Thy thankfulnesse will be more Thy delight and joy in him will encrease and flourish and tormenting fears will be overcome 2. It will uphold against all temptations within in desertions in blackness of soul yet if thou trustest on God as thy God though thou dost not feel him to be so this is good O Lord thou dost but seem to withdraw thy self O Christ thou art my brother Joseph though thou speakest thus roughly 3. In opposition from the world O Lord though all the world hate me yet I rejoyce because I am thine And why do the devils and wicked men hate me Is it not because I am thine If I were one of theirs they would love me Lord am I not thy treasure thy Jewell and if the devil or the world destroy me is it not thy losse as well as mine 4 Contentation in every condition Is God thy God what needest thou more If a man have the Sun doth he need the Stars Oh our froward hearts in this particular If God deny not himself will he deny other things necessary 5. Here is a great argument to duty If God be thine and thou his Oh then live to him why is not thy heart Gods thy tongue Gods Wouldst thou be the Lords in counsel and not in duty Oh think all I have is not mine but Gods Lastly It 's terrour to wicked men this is the Fountain of all their calamity and ruine God is not their God and then mercy is not their mercy pardon is not their pardon heaven is not their heaven Oh it 's a beggarly thing to boast in the wealth thou hast in the pleasures thou hast but as for God he is none of thine That Criples case was miserable who when the Pool stirred had no man to help him Oh but thine is more miserable that hast no God to pity thee no God to pardon thee The God you will cry to the God you will pray to at death the God you must appear before is none of your God SERMON XXXIII The truly Godly man onely is obedient to Gods Word Or The Great Character of a Christian JOH 17.6 And they have kept thy Word WE passe over the second description which is Gods giving of some of mankinde to Christ as a Mediatour so that they are his trust and it lieth upon his faithfulnesse to procure salvation for them Only it 's good to consider that within six Verses he doth thrice use this expression They are given him by the Father for this laieth the Axe to the very root of Arminianism It 's not their free-will nor their good improvement of the means of grace but Gods gracious giving of them to Christ that makes them have an Interest in salvation and the phrase doth imply that there is a stint number and defined of such There cannot be more or lesse so that the Arminian Dagon must needs fall before this Ark but this is spoken to already I therefore passe on to the effect of both these divine causes of our Salvation There was you heard the efficient cause Gods Election the meritorious cause Christ and now we have the effect of these which is by way of signe to describe who they are that are the Lords and thus given to Christ for they being hidden causes and every one apt to pretend to them This is the differencing and evidencing mark They keep the Word of God So that by this we see who are truly and indeed given of God to Christ even such as keep his Word He doth not say that heareth it or remembers it or that understands it but that keeps it The Scripture hath equivalent expressions to this sometimes John 8.31 it 's called continuing in his Word because it 's not enough for a while to cleave to it unlesse we persevere The Scripture giveth sad Instances of many that did not only hear but with joy for a season did receive Christs Word yet they did not hold it fast to the end they did not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is Mat. 13. against all opposition whatsoever The contrary to this is in the same Chapter v. 37. My Word hath no place in you Our Saviour speaks it there as the cause of all the wickednesse that the Jews committed because his Word had no room in their hearts You seek to kill me because my Word hath no place in you This expression seemeth to denote such as are hardened and given up to a reprobate sence for the godly sometimes may not understand or delight and receive the Word but that the Word should at no time finde any place in a mans heart that is the mark of an hardened sinner look to it then and tremble all you who have many years lived under the Word preached and yet to this day it hath had no place in your hearts This is the dreadful condition of many thousand hearers sometimes this keeping of the Word is called hearing of the Word as in the same Chapter v. 43. Ye cannot hear my Word because ye are not of God where hearing the Antecedent is put for the consequent obedience and the reason is because Faith and Obedience comes by hearing and
when some eminent calamity comes near unto thee Then thou cryest out of sinne then thou speakest well of godlinesse but all this is forced It 's a Land-floud It 's a Morning dew why didst thou not in thy prosperity shew forth willing affections to God Vse 2. of Direction To humble the people of God that though there be so eminent and pregnant Reasons for their willing obedience yet they should be so dead so heartlesse so full of excuses as they are Oh is not this the sinne of every godly man May he not cry out of his slothfulnesse and barrennesse Are the things of God and Heaven as operative and lively upon thee as the things of the earth Oh how hard is thy heart many times like the Mountains of Gilboa whereon no dew fals Oh how often do they keep the door shut even when Christ knocketh so that if you ask wherein may the people of God fear their ruine most It may be said In their unwillingnesse in their deadnesse and coldnesse Oh how many times are we not so much as capable of that excuse our Saviour gave the Disciples The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak for how often is thy flesh weak and thy Spirit unwilling also For these things Gods children have cause to have poverty and shame of spirit within them We come to the fourth and last observable particular viz. That these words are such as the Father gave Christ to communicate to his Disciples so that Christ himself did not take upon him any other doctrine or preach any other matter then what he had received Hence he did so often say The doctrine was not his but his Fathers Joh. 7.16 Neither did he speak of himself but what he heard the Father Obs That the Ministers of the Gospel are to preach that and only that which they have out of Gods Word As Paul said That which I have received of the Lord that I delivered unto you And the Prophets Introduction is commonly Thus saith the Lord If Pythagoras Disciples were satisfied with nothing but ipse dixit how much rather must the beleever whose Faith in the very nature of it doth relate to some word or Testimony Hence it is that they are called the Embassadors of God 2 Cor. 4. And such must not go a word from their Commission We are to be Conduits not Fountains The Word of God must exire per te non a te as Bernard It 's the good thing committed to our trust 2 Tim. 1.14 We must therefore give the same that is committed unto us we have received gold we must not deliver copper Thou art not author but custos Religionis not Res ingenii but doctrinae To open this Consider It 's first Their duty So that they will be found guilty of high crimes if they doe otherwise To mint false coin or to forge a mans will are hainous faults amongst men Thine is greater for thou counterfeitest Gods Truth yea thou putst a lye upon God thou attributest that to him which belongeth to thy folly The Apostle saith If it be a mans will or Covenant none may adde to it or disanull it Gal. 3.15 how much rather should this be so in Gods Word Oh then consider thou wilt be found guilty of high Treason against God if thou speakest any thing but his Truth 2. As it 's our duty so it 's our glory It 's the greatest honour we are capable of to have such divine Mysteries committed to us the Truths of God have onely Majesty in them they onely convince the Conscience and awe it They onely breed reverence and admiration so that although humane Learning and parts have a subservient excellency yet if the Word of God and the Truth of God be not principall there is no mastering of the Conscience and captivating of it Hence are those commands to attend to their doctrine 1 Tim. 3.13 15 16. and to give themselves to reading that so they may deliver only Gods will as it is revealed in Gods Word It 's their glory as well as their duty for the glory of a thing lieth in the excellency of its due and proper perfection The glory of a King is a higher thing then the glory of a Peasant and in another nature All arts and Offices have their peculiar Glory Logick in disputing well Rhetorick in speaking well and the Glory of Divinity lieth in divine Arguments and Motives so that those who preach onely humane or moral matter they goe below the Majesty of Divinity Those that study words and fancy-fall things that may tickle the ear these regard not the gravity of their office nor of their emploiment But as in the Ecclesiastical History the Heathen said all the while a Christian argued with reason he could answer him but when he brought forth the Authority of the Word Thus saith the Lord then he had no more to reply Thus it 's here all the while thou hast strains of wit and preachest like an humane Orator not as one speaking the Oracles of God Men will hear thee and applaud thee but they will retain their lusts still they th●nk thou art not in earnest That thou lookest more to an expression that may please then to an Argument that may wound the heart and conscience It 's therefore the glory of a Minister to be potent in divine Scripture Truths 3. It 's his comfort and safety as well as his glory His comfort because his own heart tels him he hath not dealt deceitfully he hath not purloined he hath not corrupted or mixed the Word of God to serve mens lusts and pleasures He did not like the False Prophet daub with untempered mortar Paul found this a great Testimony of Conscience to himself 2 Cor. 3.17 Thou wilt have more comfort in Preaching Gods Word powerfully then in all the applause of hearers for thine own subtle Inventions Now as it 's their comfort so it s their safety They are sure not to do hurt to their flock when they alwaies break of the Bread of Life they may be sure this will nourish but thy own thoughts are many times poison and destruction Lastly It 's most usefull and profitable For they are the Scriptures only that are able to make us wise to Salvation 1 Tim. 3. From this Brook we can only get stones that will kill the Goliah The Word of God is an Hammer and a Fire and a two-eged Sword so that although to the swelling proud fancy of the world it may seem dulnesse and plain simplicity yet to the good and honest heart it 's the power and wisedom of God Vse of Instruction To the Ministers of God how narrowly they are to look to their Commission To preach Scripture-Truths such as will endure a fiery Triall For the Apostle saith Every mans work must be tried and he that builds hay and stubble shall suffer losse and he himself with much ado shall be saved Vse of
appropriated if no man had the light of the Sun but one or few men Oh what a price would be put upon it It 's then proptiety both with God and man that is the Fountain of all good of all care and brings about all the blessednesse that Gods Children have To open this Point and not to fall in with what you have heard already 1. Take notice That a people becomes the Lords peculiar ones his Jewels solely by his grace and goodwill He hath chosen us and not we him he loved us first The great God of heaven who might have made other people other persons his treasure did out of his own meer goodnesse take thee and thee into such a blessed relation The Apostle doth every where in his Epistles reduce it to this cause The counsell of his will and out of his meer grace and certainly if Deut. 9.5 the Lord doth again and again inform the Israelites that it was not for their righteousnesse or any good in them but meerly because be set his love on them that he made them his externall people by an outward Covenant how much rather must it needs be the meer grace of God to make a people inwardly and spiritually his so that whosoever finde themselves thus appropriated to God to be able with the Church to say as she doth many times because our blessednesse lieth in this I am my well-beloveds and my well-beloved is mine Cant. 6.3 Oh let such be deeply humbled and even astonished under the discriminating Grace of God I am the Lords when the devils are not when such men of parts abilities and great Revenues in the world And if the Lord would have looked to any thing in man how many thousands are there that if converted would have been more glorious Instruments of Gods glory then I am 2. As it is the meer goodnesse of God to make a people his so it is not out of any want or any necessity any need that he hath of us that he did thus make us his and this also is a quickning consideration Husbands have Wives because they want such helps Masters have Servants because they need them Even the greatest Monarchs want their people But it is otherwise with God My goodnesse extends not to thee saith David Psa 16.2 And thus Job was told that if he were perfect and righteous he did not advantage God God is the Elshaddai the Allsufficient God blessed and happy enough in himself Though he had never created the world Though he had not appointed one man to Eternal glory yet such was his goodnesse that he would have those Objects to whom he might communicate of his fulnesse And therefore God of many thousands hath made such and such his not that he wanted their graces duties or praiers but that they might partake of his riches 3. When Christ saith here They are thine he doth not exclude himself from having a propriety in them nor the holy Ghost neither For this is the infinite priviledge of the Godly that they are both the Fathers and the Sons and the holy Ghosts not only because whatsoever one person hath the other hath as Christ saith All mine are thine and thine are mine but in an appropriated consideration Thus Christ saith they are the Fathers They are thine in the present tense he had formerly at the sixth Verse used the preterperfect tense Thine they were but now he useth the present tense to shew that though the Father had given them to Christ yet he had not abdicated or quitted himself of his interest in them he had not so given them to the Sonne as that the Father had no dominion or right to them but they did still continue the the Fathers possession though they were given to Christ And as they are the Fathers so they are the Sons purchased people also They belong to Christ in an indeared manner which makes them to be called bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh Eph. 5.30 To be his members and body as he is the head They are also the holy Ghosts and therefore they are said to have the Spirit dwelling in them and they are his Temple and they are led by the Spirit and walk in the Spirit We are the Fathers by meer grace and therefore are given to Christ as a Mediatour We are Christs by merit for he purchased us by his bloud We are the Spirits by operation for he works the holy Image of God in us Oh then that our hearts were enlarged in this matter that we might wonder how and why we who are not worth the owning or the the looking after should yet be made the Lords in such indeared respects 4. When the Godly are said to be the Fathers though it doth not exclude the other persons yet it doth all other creatures By this we are delivered from all other proprieters and interest whatsoever and this makes the phrase to contain in it a Treasure of happinesse as first Seeing we are the Fathers therefore we are no longer the devils We are no more in his possession and under his dominion We may see by the Scripture in what a wofull and cursed state all men by nature are They belong to the devil they are his proper goods The devil hath them as his even as he hath the damned in hell though in this life there may be hope of delivering them whereas the damned have none Eph. 2. The devil who is called the God of this world is said to rule in the hearts of the disobedient Hell is not more the devils place then the heart of a wicked man and therefore 1 Tim. 2.26 they are said to be Captives to the devil to be like tamed birds and our Saviour tels the Pharisees They were of their Father the devil Joh. 8. And why because they did his works So that whosoever doth the works committeth the sins that the devils do the devil is their Father Though they rage and are mad at such a charge and this is the reason in part why the glorious fruit of Christs death is called a Redemption and why he is called a Redeemer because we were wholly in bondage and captivity to the devil We were his he had a proper right to us till Christ redeemed us Oh that the ungodly men of the world should hear this and not tremble Whose art thou To whom dost thou belong Who may challenge thee but the devil There are a cursed sort of men who give themselves to the devil by compact in the waies of witchcrafts Now all wicked men though not by such an expresse Covenant yet implicitely by their wicked waies give themselves up to be the devils Oh what a terrible thing is this to consider that though thou canst say These grounds are mine these Cattell are mine these goods are mine yet thou thy self art the devils Oh consider that the devil will have his own when thou diest he will lose nothing
24.46 It must be so else the Justice of God could not be satisfied else mans Redemption could not be obtained This our Saviour implieth I come to thee but how Even as the Israelites to Canaan through a Sea of bloud That then which our Saviour quickly spake was with great pain and agony undergone I come to thee through fire and bloud The Father doth this to demonstrate the bloudy nature of sinne the unspeakable love of Christ and the order God hath appointed for all beleevers ere they come to glory 1. the bloudy nature of sinne for it was this and nothing else that put Christ to be a Sacrifice for us had not Adam and we in him all apostatized from God There had been no need of his death but now by this transgression and ours superadded without the shedding of his bloud there could be no remission of sinne Yet oh the prophanesse and blindenesse of the world what a little matter do they make of sinne how easily do they think a pardon may be had for it Oh remember the least vain thought or idle word cannot in this world or in the world to come be expiated but by Christs bloud only had there been no other sinne in the world but a vain thought Christ must have undergone all that wrath of God and man ere it could be blotted out Oh think of this you who like Leviathan laugh at the Spear and sport your selves with those sinnes which put Christ to all that Agony Lastly This sheweth the order God hath appointed we must first be on Mount Calvary before we can be on the Mount of Transfiguration As Christ had first a Crown of Thorns here before he had a Crown of glory so it must be with us Rom. 8. We shall be glorified with him if we suffer with him Let this then sweeten all thy afflictions and miseries Though the beginnings of God with thee like those of Joseph to his brethren are harsh and rough yet the endings will be full of sweetnesse and comfort If thou grudest at thy Tribulations say this is to grudge at the Crown of Glory This is to repine at the way to everlasting happinesse In the second general place Consider That when Christ saith he goeth to his Father herein is implied that state of glory and honour he shall have in heaven as if he had said I shall be no more in the state and habit of a Servant no more in a despised and contemned condition but I am going to receive that Majesty and glory which is due unto me Although we told you Christ ascended into Heaven for our good and to pleade our cause yet it was also for his glory and honour This our Saviour excellently presseth Joh. 14.28 If ye loved me ye would rejoyce because I go to my Father The Disciples were troubled and full of fears because they were to lose his corporal presence but saith our Saviour true love to me would make you do otherwise you would regard my honour more then your benefit It is for your good that I abide with you It is for my glory that I go to the Father Now love that is unfeigned lieth in our affections to another not because of the good we have by him but for his own good Thus the Disciples they were to rejoyce because Christ was to be honoured and exalted though they should lose the comfort of his presence See here then who are they that do spiritually love Christ even such as rejoyce in that he is exalted and glorified though it be to their ruine and undoing O Lord Let me have this comfort and that comfort no longer if Christ may be more honoured As Mephibosheth said Let Ziba take all so that King David was returned safe so that the honour and kingdom of Christ may be promoted let good Name wealth and life it self go unlesse we be the true genuine Sons of God we are never able to abide this touchstone Doe not the most holy depend on Christ more for the benefit they receive by him then to honor and glorifie him Hence they bemoan their want of assurance and evidence which is their comfort more then recumbency on Christ which is his glory So then in that Christ went to his Father it 's implied that now there was a period to be put to all sufferings Now he was no more to be like a Servant but to be made the Prince of Glory Therefore observe the reason why he goeth to the Father because the Father is greater then he Not as the Arians would have it essentially but in outward dispensation because Christ here was in the fashion and form of the meanest and most despised of men Thirdly Though this phrase imply Christs Exaltation yet we must know also that in this is the whole Treasury of a Christian The Fountain of all our Comfort is in this that Christ is gone to the Father Therefore let the beleever diligently improve it for the effects are admirable of this his departure 1. Hereby his holy Spirit is given in the more plentifully and abundantly It is said The holy Ghost was not yet given because Christ was not yet glorified Joh. 7.39 The large administration of the gifts of Gods Spirit were reserved till Christ in triumph went up to heaven Ioh. 16.7 If I depart I will send him to you You see the sending of the holy Ghost depends upon Christs departure The Spirit comes to make a spiritual supply of Christs bodily presence There cannot be two Suns together in the Firmament O then let all those who have Gods Spirit dwelling in them enlightening sanctifying and comforting of them acknowledge this the blessed fruit of Christs going to his Father but men are so prophane and sensual that they know not what the Spirits working upon the Soul is no more then a beast knoweth the operations of a rational Soul 2. A second benefit by Christs going to the Father is the enabling of us with all holy and heavenly gifts either in a sanctifying way or a ministerial Thus Eph. 4. Christ when he ascended into heaven gave gifts to men That you have a Ministry and Ordinances with the spiritual effects thereof it 's wholly from this Yea Ioh. 14 12. all miraculous Gifts do descend from this Our Saviour there saith That he who beleeveth on him shall do greater works then he doth that is as some say greater Miracles in themselves for we reade that by Peters handkerchief and his very shadow wonderful things were done which we reade not of Christ or greater in quantity and extension They did them in more places For whereas Christ wrought no Miracles at Ierusalem the Apostles did or greater as others say in regard of the successe because farre more were converted to the faith by the Apostles preaching then by Christs Well let this be how it will Consider the ground why they shall be enabled to do these great things because saith Christ I go to the
Father So that this departure to the Father is the cause of all those dona sanctificantia and ministrantia in the Church Thy Faith thy Repentance thy Love of God and delight in holy things is because of this truth The third Benefit of Christs going to the Father is from one main end of it which is to prepare a place for his Children Indeed heaven was prepared for them from Eternity yet Christ Joh. 14.3 saith He goeth to prepare a place for them in an allusive sence It 's therefore for our infinite Consolation that Christ is gone to the Father for there he prepareth places of glory for us and mark the word v. 2. In my Fathers house are many mansions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is spoken in opposition to ours here where we are but Pilgrims and strangers In the earth we have only Tabernacles in heaven there are mansion places They continue there to all Eternity and further he saith many Mansion places That they might not think there is not room enough and withall it denotes the readinesse of Christ to entertain us as Rebeccah when she invited the strangers said We have straw and Provender and there is room enough So that Christ is gone to heaven to see that Thrones of glory he provided for his people Oh the Godly man dying if in his temptations is ready to think O my Soul whether art thou going What will become of thee where wilt thou lodge this night To this Faith should answer Christ hath prepared a place he hath provided a Rest and a dwelling-place and though thy Soul cannot be alwaies in thy body nor thy body alwaies in these houses we dwell in yet there is a mansion-place from which we shall never be removed 4. Christ goeth to his Father to be an Advocate and pleade our cause 1 Joh. 2. Heb. 7. He ever-liveth to make Intercession for us Christ is not so affected with that glory and honour God hath put upon him that he should forget the meanest of his children he dealeth not as Pharaohs Butler that forgat poor Ioseph when he was promoted No when we are not and cannot think or minde our selves yet Christ is commending our estate to the Father So that we have this glorious Friend speaking for us in the Court of Heaven whensoever any accusation is brought against us So that the godly soul while it sits sighing I am here sinning and offending of God may also remember at that very time there is a potent Advocate preventing all the dangers that may come by sinne 5. Christs departure from the Father is not an eternal departure He is not so gone as to leave us for ever but he will come again and take us to the Father also Ioh. 14.3 I will come again and receive you to my self that you may be where I am This is the utmost happinesse that a beleever can desire If it be such joy for the childe to be with his Father a wife with her Husband how transcendent is this mercy to be with Christ Therefore in this Chapter our Saviour praieth for it that his Disciples be where he is Now this being where Christ is doth comprehend the communication of all glory and blessednesse which Christ bestoweth on his people and that without any intermission Here in this life we have many clouds to intercept the Sun-beams with the Church through our unbelief and slothfulnesse we have lost our beloved so that many times the soul is straitned and crieth out where is he whom my Soul loveth But then and there we have a perpetual communion with him and if so be the enjoying of him by faith fill the soul with so much joy what will the immediate fruition of him do Thus you see that we are in a jejune speculative manner to say Christ by his death went to the Father but to be affectionately possessed with it as being the treasury of all consolation In the fourth general place By this phrase is signified to us that death could not detain Christ in the grave it could not hold him there so as to hinder his going to the Father By this therefore we see Christ hath triumphed over the devil and sin with all the effects of it The devil that prevailed by his Instrumens to put him to death would much more have kept him alwaies in the grave but his resurrection and ascension to heaven there to be with the Father in glory signifieth that he hath now overcome all his enemies and which is the godly mans comfort all his enemies likewise for Christ and the beleever have the same enemies if Christ overcome they overcome The devil is Christs Enemy and death was Christs Enemy as well as thine and it 's good to observe that death is called Christs Enemy 1 Cor. 15. Christ shall put all his Enemies under his feet The last Enemy that shall be destroied is death See then that death which is so terrible to thee which thou lookest on as an Enemy it is Christs and he hath overcome it Oh then what glad tidings should this be in our ears Christ hath ascended to the Father for that is as much as to say Neither sin or devil or grave could prevail over him and therefore he hath fully discharged the work of a Redeemer he hath paid to the utmost farthing so that the love and justice of God cannot but be satisfied by the atonement he hath made 5. It 's worth the observ●ng that this expression of Christs I go to the Father doth put an excellent face upon that which is most terrible for that which was death and death in the most ignominious and cruel manner he expresseth in this lovely and desirable manner I go to the Father Those agonies and drops of bloud Those deep and strong cries My God my God why hast thou forsaken me he covers over with this amiable phrase I go to the Father Thus Christ out of the temptation called it so but in the temptation he asketh why he had forsaken him Not that Christ in his temptation was guilty of any sin or was capable of any sinful imperfection only he had not the same experimental feeling as at other times for when he had told his Disciples all should forsake him and leave him alone yet saith he I am not alone for my Father is with me Joh. 16.32 In his sad temptation he had not the experimental comfortable sense of this No marvel then if the godly finde a great alteration of themselves in a temptation they have not the comfortable sense and perswasion of that which they felt when not tempted for it was thus with Christ only without sin Lastly As Christ himself thus cals his death a going to the Father so may every beleever yea he ought to do so for though God be the Father of Christ by Eternal generation yet he is the Father of the beleever by a gracious Adoption Therefore our Saviour puts them togethe● I go to my
times prayeth God would direct and order his wayes This directive power is of consequence to us for without it we should throw our selves into every pit Fifthly The power of the Lord keeps us applicando by an efficacious applying of the means of grace to us For when we say God's power keeps us in grace that is not to be understood immediately as Angels in Heaven are kept but mediately by the Word and Ordinances Therefore the organical and instrumental cause of our conservation is the word of God as our Saviour afterwards prayeth God would sanctifie them by his truth his Word was truth So that this makes much for the advancement of Christs Ministery and the Gospel preached for by the lively working of these we come to stand fast These are the continual rubbings that keep heat in us These are the Cocks that crow to put us in minde of our sinnes These are the frequent alarms against our spirituall enemies that they surprize us not in our security Sixthly The power of God keeps us corroborando by strengthening and fortifying the powers of the Soul while they do work A man that is paralytical though he hath life in him yet cannot steadily and firmly move the parts of his body but they shake as if they did not belong to the body Thus even while the people of God are acting and working what is good they do it so remisly so faintly that did not the Lord confirm them all their duties would be very uncomfortable to them Hence Paul so often prayeth That God would strengthen and settle them that he would establish and build them on the work It 's a blessed thing to walk in the paths of godliness with an imboldened and confirmed heart Seventhly The power of God doth keep us suaviter alliciendo by putting strong consolations and sweet delights in our soul while we are doing his will Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength We glory in tribulations when we are filled with joy As fear and unbelief make feeble knees and weak hands so joy and heavenly delight doth strengthen and confirm the soul What is that which makes Angels and Saints so inseparably adhere to God and that to all eternity never weary of him Is it not the infinite joy and delight they have in God So while God doth thus give us to taste and feel how good he is while we have an experiment of the preciousness of Christ upon our hearts we stand immovable like so many Rocks in the same place though never so many waves beat on us Eighthly Gods power keeps us from sinne reprimendo by repressing and curbing those reliques of sinne which are within us For from our own selves would arise such noisome lusts that would separate us from God even as from the earth arise such black vapours that hide the Sunne from it The Spirit of God therefore doth mortifie the body of sinne keeps this root from sprouting forth and is ready to crush the Cockatrice in her eggs Lastly The power of God doth keep us arcendo by driving away and keeping of the devil from us How strangely this roaring Lion is set upon us as a prey appeareth by that of our Saviour Luke 12. Satan hath desired to winnow you he would spare no godly man Therefore he is called the Tempter because all the day long it 's his work to seduce to sinne so that herein the necessity of Gods power appeareth Ephes 6. We wrastle with principalities and powers Thou art no fit match for them You see that Adam in the state of integrity was overcome by him It 's God then that keeps these roaring Lions tied up otherwise what could poor Sheep do to oppose so many Lions Vse of Instruction With what thankfulness and joy we should bless God at the close of every day Hast thou not been a Cain a Judas this day Bless God that kept thee Hast thou not by words or works broken thy Communion with God Oh acknowledge his goodnesse to thee Thou mightst have been tempted and seduced by sinne or Satan so that great wounds and gashes might have been made upon thy Conscience Oh say Lord I am amazed at thy power and grace in keeping of me The Godly are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the preserved ones and well may they be called so for did God withdraw his hand you should see them wallowing in filth and made like the vile ones upon the Earth Do not then presume on thy own strength but depend upon Gods power SERMON LVII Reasons proving the Necessity of Gods preserving his Children in Grace That God keeps them by Faith Also why and how Faith keeps them rather then other Graces JOH 17.11 Keep through thy Name those thou hast given me WE have heard how many waies God keeps even converted persons from falling into their first Chaos and confusion Let us Consider the Grounds Why there is such a Necessity of Gods preserving power that so we may be humbled in our selves and God exalted 1. We may be strongly convinced of the great necessity of Gods power in keeping of us by the Apostate Angels and lapsed Adam What can more forcibly teach us this Truth then their Apostacy Did not God create Angels full of Light and Glory like the Starres and yet the Apostle Jude saith They kept not their first habitation Did not also God create Adam after his own Image in Righteousnesse yet how quickly did he become a Prodigall and spent all You see here the most glorious of all Creatures furnished with a rich stock yet in a very little space proved Bankrupts and lost all Oh then what shall the godly man think of himself who hath not such strength of grace as they had And besides they had no corruption or principle of Rebellion within them to betray them as we have Who then is not compelled by this consideration to acknowledge the glorious right hand of God to uphold his Servants from falling every moment for in that all the Angels did not fall as well as some it is to be attributed to the meer confirming grace of God therefore they are called the Elect Angels 1 Tim. 5.21 God did by his power graciously confirm them in what was good and denied such help to those that revolted Oh then let the Godly Soul pray fervently Lord keep me daily Adam yea the glorious Angels could not keep themselves and shall I think my self secure Secondly Therefore need we the power of God to preserve us though furnished with inherent grace because grace abiding in us is but a Creature that needeth help and support as well as other Creatures Though Grace in us be the most glorious thing in the world and the Image of God yet being still a created being it needeth preservation from God So that as in our naturall life we live and breathe and move in God So it is much more in our Spirituall Life So that as our grace because of
by the Apostles Diotrephes he loved to have preheminence Others accounted gain godlinesse and had their hearts exercised with covetous practises There was no heretique ever proved a firebrand in the Church but one of these causes for the most part moved him which made Austin put it in the definition of an heretique that he did alicujus temporalis commodi causâ either invent or propagate false Opinions But of Unity more when we come to the following Verses Vse of Exhortation to follow Christ in this Praier give the great God of heaven no rest by praier till he hath given rest to his Church and the guides thereof Cry out as the Disciples did to Christ to rebuke the windes and tempests for the Ship we are in s●is●nking These divisions are not only sins but sad prognosticks of Gods wrath as if he had a purpose to unchurch us and to make us no more his people as he did to the Churches in Asia SERMON LX. The great Paterne of Vnity The Nature and Properties of the Vnity that is between God the Father and the Sonne against the Socinians That the Ministers of God should endeavour after a perfect Vnity even to be One as the Father and Sonne are Also some Rules guiding thereunto JOHN 17.11 That they may be One as Thou and I are WE are now come to the close of the Prayer which containeth the Example or Patern of that Unity Christ prayeth for It 's not for every kinde of Unity he prayeth for but he would have them imitate that Unity which is most absolute and compleat even the Unity of the Father and the Son Before we raise the Doctrine this particular must be vindicated For the Arians and Socinians think this a pregnant place to overthrow the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all nature of the Father and the Sonne That therefore here cannot be meant an essential Vnity Thus they argue Such an Vnity the Father and Christ have as the Disciples are prai'd for to have But that is a Vnity and Concord and Agreement not of Essence Therefore Christ and the Father are not Essentially One. This seemeth to be very specious and plausible But First Grant that we should interpret the Onenesse spoken of in the Text of consent in Will and Agreement as Calvin doth yet it doth not follow that other places speaking of their Onenesse should be also understood in the same manner yea from the Onenesse of Will between the Father and Sonne is necessarily inferred the Onenesse of their nature So that although we should understand this principally of Unity in accord yet by consequence it would prove Unity of Nature for in free Agents where there is the same will there there is also the same nature where there is the same humane will there is the same humane nature and where is the same divine will there is the same divine nature indeed with men it 's the same specifical nature not numerical but because there is one God onely therefore it must be the same numerical nature But in the second place We are to take the Unity of the Father and the Sonne in as large a sense at least not to exclude it as in other places it is Now in other places especially John 10.30 there we have undeniable Arguments to prove it is an Essential Unity I and my Father are One. Bellarmine though otherwise a Papist yet in this point against the Arians is Orthodox and doth strongly maintain the truth against them Now these three Arguments he brings That the Unity spoken of in that verse is Essential First Because otherwise our Saviours Argument there mentioned would be insufficient for thus Christ argueth None can pluck my sheep out of my hands because none can pluck them out of my Fathers hands Why doth this follow Because I and my Father are one So then if Christ and the Father had not one power and so one Divine Nature the Argument would not hold A second Reason is Because the Jews did understand him in this sense and therefore they took up stones to stone him and mark the reason vers 33. Because thou being a man makest thy self God If our Saviour had meant no more then Vnity of Agreement with Gods will The Jews knew that every godly man had the love of God in this sense written in his heart Therefore they could not think that blasphemy They did not think that David made himself a God when he delighted in the Law of God making his will to accord with Gods Thirdly Because our Saviour upon this accusation doth not deny the thing or charge them with falshood but further proveth it Because he doth the works of the Father therefore he bids them believe his works if they will not believe him which are to make them know that the Father is in him and he in the Father upon which words it's said again vers 39. They sought again to take him implying he had not corrected but confirmed that more which they called blasphemy In the third place Though our Saviour prayeth the Disciples may be One as he and the Father are yet their Argument will not hold unlesse they can shew that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as is alwayes used as a note of equality and not similitude onely but we can shew the contrary in Scripture that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used for similitude not equality Luke 6.36 Be ye mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull There it 's a note of similitude onely for how can a drop be equal to the Ocean So 1 John 3.2 He that hath this hope purifieth himself as God is pure Here it must be a note of similitude for none can be equal to God in purity and thus here in the Text endeavour to be One as the Father and the Sonne not that you can equalize it but propound that absolute and perfect Rule to follow Insomuch that if this place be well considered it makes against all Arians and so is pro testimonio fidei which they perverted in argumentum perfidiae and Austin's observation is not to be neglected Christ saith he prayeth that they may be One as we are he doth not say that they may be One with us or that they and we may be One as we are One but that they may be One as we are One What more may be said upon this is to be spoken unto vers 21. Observe That it 's not enough for the Ministers of the Gospel to be one but they are to endeavour after the most perfect Vnity to be One as the Father and Sonne are Oh this consideration should make us blush and ashamed to see the contentions and differences that are Did the Father and the Sonne ever shew such discord We should never take our eyes off this patern Let us but consider in how many respects we are to aim at such a Unity as is between them First The Vnity between the Father and the Sonne is a
of sinne but when it is turned into a stone and made like an adamant then it 's sensible of nothing Pharaoh though he had such wonderfull miracles wrought before him that never such things were heard of in the world before yet because his heart was hardened therefore doth he sinne presumptuously to his own ruine And thus it was with the Jews when that spirituall judgement spoken of Isa 6. was accomplished in them to have blinde eyes and hard hearts Thus all the Prophets at first and all the Apostles afterwards yea Christ himself with all his miracles did not mollifie them yea by these remedies as all incurable diseases do they grew worse and worse what motions relentings must we expect from stones Lapidi loqueris is a proverb Truly such is all preaching and the whole Ministry to men given up to a hard heart Though the Prophet when he spake to the Altar of stones crying O Altar Altar that immediatly rent yet the hearts of men are more sensless Pray therefore of all judgements not to fall into an hard heart Though thou mayest fall into hard times into hard dealings from others into many hard distresses yet as long as thou hast not an hard heart there are some hopes for thee Fourthly Inordinate and immoderate love to some lust or sinne When a man is once enslaved to some lust though he hath never so much light so much conviction yea though he have never so many afflictions upon him yet he will break thorow all to have his lust satisfied As Nero's mother said Occidat modo imperet Let him kill me so he may reign Thus let such sinnes damn me so that I may have my will and desire satisfied What made Judas though he had received so much love and kindness from Christ Yet so perfidiously betray him into the hands of those who had long sought to kill him but only he was a thief and had an immoderate love to worldly-gain It was thirty pieces that made him lose body and soul Oh it 's an heavy thing to be captivated to any one sin Thou must have such and such sins for thy darling sinne Oh this Dalilah will be thy ruine as it was to Sampson Who would have thought that Sampson a godly man as he is recorded Heb. 11. seeing what deadly enemies the Philistims were would have discovered where his strength was But this Dalilah can perswade him to his ruine And thus Herodias can prevail with Herod to kill John Baptist though he knew him to be a just man and had a reverential fear of him thy lust thy sinne thy whore thy unjust gain can make thee fall down and worship the devil without any trouble of conscience Fifthly Decayings from former expressions of holiness or quenchings and extinguishing of such motions as formerly have greatly affected us These commonly seek the Kingdom of darkness as Christ speaks of the Kingdom of Heaven by force and are violent for hell Heb. 6.4 2 Pet. 2.20 The Scripture speaks of some that have had great gifts of the holy Ghost and have escaped through the knowledge of Christ the pollutions of the world if such are intangled again they are worse then ever and there is no hope of recovery Therefore none are in such a desperate condition as those that once had greater workings of heart and hopefull movings of conscience but since are grosly apostatiz'd the prophanest men that live who never cast an eye towards heaven are in a more hopefull condition then such relapses are more dangerous in the soul then in the body Mat. 12.45 when that unclean spirit was cast out but returned again he brought seven other spirits more wicked then himself and so the last state of that man is worse then the first Look to this and tremble you who have had often checks of conscience and often wounds of heart take heed they plunge thee not into an incurable condition The water once heated if cold again is cooler then ever These frequent aguish fits will at last end in a consumption Take heed lest thou turn a derider and a persecutor of what once thou wert forward for SERMON LXIX Of the Sonne of Perdition Shewing more Causes and Symptomes of such wretched Persons that are desperately bent to damn themselves JOH 17.12 But the Sonne of Perdition THe Words have been Explained and the Doctrine gathered which was That there are some men wilfully and desperately set to damn themselves though they enjoy never such means to the contrary We gave in some Characters of such wretched persons and now proceed to instance in some more And the first in order shall be A long and constant Vnprofitablenesse under means of Grace When men have for a long time sate under the powerfull means of Grace yet are as ignorant as prophane and unreformed as formerly These men commonly are resolute in their damnation They have so often heard and heard they are so accustomed now to the remedies that they despise them and get no good by them This the Apostle affirmeth Heb. 6.8 The ground which often drinketh in rain and yet bringeth forth nothing but briars and thorns is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burnt This was the case even of the whole body of the Jews they being accustomed for many years to the threatnings of the Prophets were so farre from trembling under it that they made a scorn of it Jer. 23.33 because the Prophet Jeremy did so often tell them of the Burden of the Lord that is the heavy Sentence and Judgement of God threatned against them they did impudently and prophanely make a scorn of it Even as many hardened sinners will now adaies at the name of hell and damnation Oh then let all such who for many years together have been under the Sunne of the Gospel fear lest when we speak of a Son of Perdition it be said Thou art the man for as when the body that hath been accustomed to often Physick doth yet remain diseased it 's a great Argument of its incurablenesse Thus it is here When there are daily importunities of thee constant expostulations with thee and yet thou art averse and obdurate this may prove fatall and dreadful to thee 2. Sinful and ungodly prejudices taken up against those Prophets and Ministers of God that do in his Name admonish thee and warn thee against thy sinnes Oh when men instead of hearkening to their Counsels take occasion to slander them to oppose them these men have hastily tumbled into confusion Mat. 23. This Christ complained of O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets c. how often would I have gathered thee and thou wouldst not And it was of old the Jews wickednesse to persecute and oppose all such as came from God to admonish them of their sinnes and therefore at last they crucified the Heir even Christ himself The Wise man speaks peremptorily to this Prov. 29.9 He that being often reproved hardeneth his
whereby we are called If Achan do secretly steal a wedge of gold when Joshua comes to know it he shall be troubled that troubled Israel and glory shall be given to God 1 Cor. 5. They are commanded to cast out from amongst them that wicked person and if any walk disorderly 2 Thes 3.14 Note that man and have no communion with him that he may be ashamed Such are a burthen a grief to those that are truly godly David can even weep Rivers of tears because of such That place is observable Joh. 13.21 Christ was troubled in Spirit and testified and said One of you shall betray me Judas was a trouble and a grief to Christs Spirit think not then that the truly godly own such any more then Job did the ●●res upon his body or the Israelites did the Jebusites that were thorns and goads in their side Lastly Religion it self is the more to be prized for this sheweth the authority and command it hath over mens Consciences that none do ordinarily commit hainous trespasses but they are willing to put the vail of Religion upon them certainly this is so farre from disparaging that it rather advanceth Piety as being that which hath an universall Command every where men cannot commit iniquity before they blinde their eyes with some religious arguments The Pharisees made account they did all for the glory of God But you will say how cometh it about that any prove thus scandalous in the way of Religion Is not the way of it as comfortable and as blessed as it did at first promise Hath any thing that Christ said for our encouragement to follow him proved false Hath he deceived any so that they could say The Land of Canaan was not better then their old Egypt No in no wise only This is one great cause of mens miscarriage They take not up Religion at first upon pure and sincere motives It 's not from a renewed and regenerated principle within and therefore it being not from a good and sure foundation no wonder if at last all fall to the ground Our Saviour spake often to this Point as being indeed the summe of all What is that which perswadeth thee and prevaileth with thee to follow Christ Is it from an heavenly principle to an heavenly End Go on and God will be with thee But if some other carnal or insincere motive put thee on know that when the temptation comes thou wilt prove an offence Painting will melt away when it comes near the fire The un-rooted Tree will fall to the ground when the Windes shall shake it mightily SERMON LXXII Of the Sonne of Perdition JOHN 17.12 But the Sonne of Perdition I Shall at this time finish the good Observations from so bad an instance For as through the perfidiousness of this sonne of perdition though he intended it not God wrought the greatest salvation that could be insomuch that in this sense we may call his fact an happy sinne So through a divine consideration of this sad example we may receive the greatest good and with an holy skill turn this poison into nourishment for the sins and destructions of wicked men are written for our instruction as well as the good life and mercies of the godly As Abel though dead speaks ●o Judas though damned crieth to all to take warning from him Two Observations I shall briefly dispatch at this time The first whereas you see Judas thus hopefully and forwardly beginning leaving all with the other Apostles to follow Christ and that in a contemned persecuted manner yet at last dreadfully and finally to revolt from all Observe That unlesse men are carefull at first to look to their grounds and motives why they take upon them the profession of Christs way they will never hold out but one time or other forsake and revolt from all A sure and sound beginning will ever have a blessed and happy ending but when men upon slight and insincere motives look towards Christ at first such build upon the sand and their fall will be great Our Saviour spake many Parables especially that of the foolish builder and of the stony and thorny ground for this end that men should be well advised upon what terms they at first undertake for him Hence it is that when some voluntarily profered their service and obedience to Christ Christ presently informeth them of the difficulty of that work of the contrariety of it to flesh and blood that they had better never begin then afterwards to fall off hence he so solemnly bids them to remember Lots wife Luk. 17.32 and that he who hath put his hand to the plow and looks back is not fit for the kingdome of Heaven Seeing therefore this is often to be seen though it be very sad That many who have been once zealous and hopefull for Gods way yet afterwards decline totally and are not the men they were Let us consider what it is to set rightly at first upon the owning of Christ to lay a sure foundation at first And First Then are our beginnings hopefull when the Spirit of God in the Ministry or other means of grace did work upon us When it was not meer education under good Governours when it was not the acquaintance and company we had with those that feared God but some inward experimental work of Gods grace upon our own hearts Alas let a man be never so fervent so overtopping others and even to admiration shew himself in holinesse yet if it hath not been the work of Gods Spirit effectually moving upon his heart he is but like a Land-flood which though swelling high upon much rain yet when a drought comes will be presently dried up It 's not meer nature or externall restraint from sinnes or any sudden motions in our own spirit that will ever hold out We reade 2 Chron 24.22 of Joash who in his latter age did most wickedly degenerate when yet in his former times he was very forward in repairing the Temple of God and shewed more zeal to Gods glory then the Priests did But what was the ground Jehoiada the high Priest had a great hand over him he helped him to the Kingdom and engaged him to God several wayes but when this good man was dead he becomes a Wolf and puts Zachariah Jehoiada his sonne that had been such a kinde Uncle to him to death and that meerly because he reproved them for their sinnes So that though here was some external restraining of Joash yet there was no internal renovation by Gods Spirit Now I make a sure foundation to lie in these two The Spirits work by the Ministry in an ordinary way because one is the efficient and the other the subordinate and instrumental cause Hence our conversion our regeneration and spiritual begetting anew is constantly attributed to the Word preached as the ordinary cause and the Word preached is but as a dead letter without the Spirit Oh then runne to the fountain of thy owning of
is so useful must not be laid aside But then that joy in the Creatures which at another time would be lawfull is in such a season sinful It 's not lawful then to joy in Wives in Children in outward comforts but to mourn before God as those who by their sins have deserved the losse of all So then there may be a time when this outward worldly though lawful joy is to be denied and in this sence Solomon saith It 's better to go to the house of mourning then of laughter because such sad objects may be sanctified to spiritual meditations 2. Consider this That spiritual Joy may then most abound when that soul-humiliation and godly mourning is put in practise No grace of Gods Spirit is contrary to one another The same spirit that worketh joy doth also prove the spirit of Supplication and mourning on his people Now as joy and trembling may stand together Psa 2. and joy and fear Act. 9.31 So may godly sorrow and joy consist together so that it is never unlawful to rejoyce in God no more then to love or to beleeve in him Vse of Instruction To inform us of the great concernment of spiritual Joy We may say it 's the life and marrow of Religion It 's the Spurre and goad to all holinesse Therefore how deceived is the world that looketh for joy and consolation some other way Honours Wealth and Greatnesse will afford thee no true solid joy yea all these things will turn to gravell and wormwood in thy belly As the Manna that was preserved for the Sabbath day did onely last If any kept that which fell in one of the six daies above the Command it turned to pollution immediatly and thus it is here Whatsoever Joy is treasured up in reference to heaven that will alwaies abide it will never forsake thee but what is only in reference to these earthly things it will vanish Oh then say thy Beloved is the chiefest of ten thousand above all other worldly Comforts whatsoever SERMON LXXX That the Word of God preached and received doth inrage the wicked world And Reasons thereof JOHN 17.14 I have given them thy Word and the world hath hated them because they are not of the world IN this 14th verse our Saviour urgeth a special and powerfull reason why God the Father should in a peculiar manner keep them which was hinted vers 11. and that is the worlds hatred of them So that this Petition hath a great deal of equity and righteousnesse in it They will be exposed to the malice of the world and that for thy cause because they have believed in thy Word The world will be no preserver or conservator of them therefore do thou keep them In the words therefore we have 1. The Argument of the Petition The world hateth them 2 The Causes of this which are two-fold 1. Their Receiving of and Obedience unto Gods Word 2. Their Segregation or Separation from the world the life and manners of it which is amplified by the patern or example thereof Even as I am not of the world I shall take the Heads in their order And First The Cause of their hatred in the world in those words I have given them thy Word where by the antecedent is necessarily meant the consequent for Christs giving or preaching the Word of God unlesse they received and obeyed it was not enough to procure hatred Therefore they are both expressed vers 8. Christs giving them and their receiving of the Word For the Pharisees and many enemies to Christ who were of the world and the greatest part of those that did oppose did yet hear The Gospel was tendered to them though they made themselves unworthy thereof And thus when the Orthodox say That the pure preaching of the Word is a note of the Church By that they understand also a visible external accepting of it otherwise the Word may be preached to Barbarians and Heathen who may hear but scorn and reject the Gospel and therefore cannot be a Church This then being supposed we see the cause of the Apostles miseries and oppositions in the world not because they were thieves robbers or seditious persons But because they did imbrace the Doctrine of Christ all the words of this reason are emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have delivered them so that Christ herein doth faithfully discharge his duty he did not neglect it And 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Given or delivered them which implieth that the Apostles themselves could never by their own strength have found out this heavenly Doctrine There must be a revelation of ●t from above Christ must come from the bosome of the Father to give it unto them They themselves could not have invented it No though in stead of illiterate Fishermen they had been the Grandees of knowledge the Platoes and Aristotles of the world 3. I have given them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that is the true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word of God doth deliver Gods Word and he saith not mine but thine partly because Christ in his mediatory administration referreth all to God to the Father My Doctrine is not mine but his that sent me and I come to do my Fathers will and partly hereby to engage God the Father more for being it was because of his Word and in reference to him the more was he to preserve them From the words explained observe That the Word preached and received by people doth greatly enrage the wicked of the world No other reason is here mentioned of the worlds hatred but this Who would think that the men preaching of so holy a Doctrine and such glad tidings of salvation and men obeying it not wronging injuring or troubling others yet should meet with so much opposition But thus it hath been and thus it will be In Tertullian's time To be a Christian was to be a Publicus hostis and though as that acute Father pleaded The Christians were no Albinians or Barutians such as embroyled the Civil Estate with warres yet because they were Christians this was enough The very name was a crime and this made so many Fathers make such excellent Apologies in their behalf Of this opposition from the world our Saviour informeth them when he first gave them their Commission to preach They should be hated of all men Never any went about such an unwelcome and unthankfull peece of service as they did Therefore they were as sheep amongst wolves and whereas it might be thought That the Apostles being men though greatly assisted by God might miscarry through ignorance inconsiderate passion c. We shall finde it befell even Christ himself that he in his Ministry though he wrought such wonderfull miracles that might astonish them yea though those miracles were usefull and profitable not for curiosity yet what reproaches what slanders did they cast on him calling him a wine-bibber a friend to sinners yea an Imposture one that had a devil and never ceased
till at last they put him to death in the most scornfull and reproachfull manner Consid I To open this consider That God out of his great love to mens souls hath appointed a Ministry and Officers in his Church that should be as Embassadours to intreat Reconciliation with God But because there could not be any commerce or communion between God absolutely considered and man fallen therefore the Lord Christ interposed and made peace but that what he had merited and purchased might effectually be applied to such as shall be saved among other instruments he set up Officers in his Church whose whole study and care should be to informe and reforme men So that people do enjoy the Ministers of God upon a two-fold special account First Gods great and special love to them That God hath taken care to send such is more then the creating of a world for you or vouchsafing all the temporal mercies you enjoy Hence it 's so often spoken of 2 Chron. ult and in other places that God sent his Prophets rising up early This is spoken as the great love of God to them And then Consid II The second Foundation of the Ministry is Christs Death and Resurrection his Ascending into Heaven as Ephes 4.11 He gave some Apostles some Pastours and Teachers Oh then how ingratefull and wicked is the world which doth no more regard this love of God and purchase of Christ in the Ministry Hence by the Prophet God promiseth That he would give them Pastours after his own heart Jer. 3.4 Though he feed them with the bread of adversity and drave them into corners Isai 30.20 Hence when God threatens a people with his uttermost wrath it is to remove the Candlestick and to make the Vision cease and to make no Clouds to rain upon them How much would people complain under a drought and want of Rain if for many years together there should not be so much as a Cloud seen But the gracious heart would think the removing of Christs Ministers not onely the taking away of Clouds but of the Sun and Stars in Heaven Secondly God and Christ who are thus the cause of their Office hath appointed them their worke and endowed them with abilities thereunto Their imployment is to publish the Word of God which is two-fold 1. The Word of the Law to convince men of sinne to inform of duty to make them sensible of their undone and damnable estate they are in Thus they are first to be wise Phisicians to detect and discover the disease the danger and cause of it Then secondly There is the Word of the Gospel which are the glad tidings of Gods favour and Reconciliation with those that are humble and contrite before him This is to publish the acceptable year of Jubilee to such as were spiritually indebted and under the thraldome of Gods wrath This is a work in it self absolutely necessary for what doth a sinner more want then these two things the Law in it's use and the Gospel in it's use Men in their temporal necessities respect the Physicians the Lawyers but soul necessities are not apprehended And as the necessity of it is so cogent so the dignity and excellency is admirable As the Soul and Heaven do farre exceed all earthly things so doth this subject all other Consid III Therefore in the third place God and Christ do justly expect that the world should with all gladnesse and obedience receive these his Messengers For shall God purpose so great love and Christ at so dear a rate purchase such Officers and must not the world set open the doors to receive them Shall not they cry Blessed are the feet of such as bring the glad tidings of the Gospel Are they not to be affected as the Galatians once to Paul To pull out their very eyes to serve him Certainly if David did so celebrate Gods goodnesse in creating Heaven and Earth and appointing the fowls of the air and the beasts of the field for mans use much more ought we in this great matter of the Church Consid IV Yet in the fourth place Though so much love be in this Institution and God expects so much thankefulnesse and obedience because of it it may make us tremble to see how little entertainment their Office and work hath in the world We speak not in regard of their outward honour and esteem For as Paul saith so ought we pray men might do no evil though we be accounted as reprebates 2 Cor. ult but we complain of the unsuccessefulnesse of it in respect of the divine operations of it We take up our Saviours complaint That light is come into the world and men love darknesse rather then light John 3. Oh this is that which the Scripture doth so bitterly complain of Who hath believed our report and I told them the wonderfull or great and honourable things of my Law and they accounted them a strange thing Psal 119. This sad usage in the world made Paul cry out That they were the off-scouring of the world worse then the dust of the feet and were made a spectacle to the world and Angels 1 Cor. 4.9 Consid V Fifthly The Devil knowing the excellent end and use of this Office and worke doth by himself and all his instruments oppose it He rageth and the world rageth when this work is set up So that as when Christ sent his Disciples to preach he saw Satan fall like lightning Thus if it were in his power he would have Christ and his Officers be thrown down As they are to destroy his works and dispossess him so he labours to do to them It being thus thou that in the Ministry we may see Gods great love and mans great wickednesse Let us consider the cause why it should thus stirre up the wrath of men that they should be moved like so many hornets And First This work of the Ministry is contrary to the Nature and inclination of the world That as the Sunne is burdensome to the Owl and other night-birds and sweet smels to swinish creatures Thus is the glorious Gospel and the precious favour thereof abominable to corrupt men They can no more love godly and holy preaching then fire and water can agree therefore the more thy heart and tongue is set against it the more thou discoverest that hell which is in the bottome of thy heart Now the true preaching of the Word of God is contrary unto the world in these respects 1. The very nature and frame of their hearts admits not of Christs word till regenerated The old house must be pulled down even with the very foundation of it Thus Jam. 1. God is said to beget by his Word and our Saviour here Sanctifie them by thy truth Now this is directly contrary to mans nature to account all that he is and all that he doth damnable to judge every thing he hath done fit fuell for hell so as to have no comfort in any thing he hath
done It was a mystery to Nicodemus a master of Israel but it 's not only a mystery to natural men it 's that which they hated they cannot abide For Solomon saith Every mans way is clean in his own eyes Prov. 16.2 To come then to people and tell them you are all out of the way to Heaven There is nothing good in you unlesse you be new creatures even all new you cannot be saved new hearts new affections new thoughts Will not this be a two-edged sword in their hearts Shall they leave their former course Shall not they speed as well as others This is a Doctrine not to be born this is durus Sermo when indeed they are duri auditores and so let not the Word have that penetrating power it would 2. As it 's opposite to their natures so to their lives and conversations Ephes 2. Paul there describes what kinde of men the Ephesians were and that it might not be thought their peculiar wickednesse he saith They walked after the course of this world and therefore Rom. 12. The command is not to be conformed to the fashion of this world Can flesh and blood then endure that the Ministers of God should damn to hell The lives the manners the daily customs and practises that generally men live in When Moses did but in a fair way reprove two Israelites that were quarrelling how frowardly did they answer Who made thee a Judge over us Exod. 2.14 And so the Sodomites to Lot they judged it all Lordliness and domineering and is not the same stubbornnesse still reigning every where All reproofs all denunciations out of Gods Word are judged to be the pride the lordlinesse or the malice of the Minister Wonder not then if the faithfull preaching of Gods word meeteth with such violent opposition for they perswade a life a way directly contrary to what the world delights in 3. It 's opposite to that way of worship which men take up by natural reasonings The Prophets did not only reprove for morall impieties but Idolatry and superstitious Worship Who hath required these things at your hands And our Saviour his Doctrine was salt to the Pharisees it corroded and fretted their sore hearts he layeth the axe of his Ministry to the root of all their superstition and proveth that to be abominable which they did so highly advance before men Insomuch that Christs first coming into the world because of his severe Doctrine and reprehensions is Mal. 3. described to be as terrible as the day of Judgement Who shall abide the day of his coming And why Because he shall sit as a refiner to purge the house of Levi. Austin did much complain what a difficult matter it was to take off people from their superstitions and vain customs Veh tibi torrens moris humani quis resistet Certainly such will say no lesse to powerfull and faithfull Ministers then the devils to Christ Why art thou come to torment us before our time Again fourthly The preaching of the Word must be opposed because the powerfull obedience thereunto brings all calamity and persecution They shall be hated as well as the word is hated Now to be troubled reproached and despised is contrary to mens temper who loveth applause and glory Hence some though they are said to believe John 2. yet would not confesse Christ because they loved the praise of men more then of God And our Saviour saith How can ye beleeve who seek glory one of another Pride and love to be esteemed of in the world doth disdain all good preaching 5. The Word preached meeteth with opposition because the instruments are men subject to infirmities especially if faithfull So that though they do not hate them for their infirmities yea the more prophane and dissolute the Minister is they like it the better yet because the Apostle saith We have this treasure in earthen vessels they are men and not Angels therefore they quarrel and oppose Paul himself though an Apostle and giving mighty demonstrations of Gods Spirit in him yet he was despised and slandered though not so guilty of humane infirmities and that because he was faithfull Am I become an enemy because I tell you the truth Gal. 3. Oh this is it because we preach the truth because we meet with mens corruptions and cannot bear sin This is that which raiseth up malice Lastly The world hath not received the Spirit of God and therefore all the glorious and wise things of Christ are but foolishnesse and uselesse to them They have not that spiritual annointing they are not taught of God Hence it is that they rage and revile those things they know not or understand Therefore till God give them eye-salve and seeing eyes no other thing can be expected Vse of Instruction Wonder not if in all ages this be true the Word is purely preached and obeyed by some therefore the world hateth and rageth For what will a Tyger and a Wolf lay aside their natures Will the Devil cease to be a Devil But wo be to those that make Christ the foundation-stone to be a stone of stumbling and offence Woe to thee that findest light made darkness and life death to thee SERMON LXXXI Of Suffering for Christs Cause And how it engageth God to take care of such as so suffer Also the Duty of Ministers about Preaching Gods Truth JOH 17.14 I have given them thy Word and the world hath hated them c. A Second Observation may be That when the People of God suffer not for any Faults of their own but because they own God and professe his Truth This is a great obliging of God to take care of them For our Saviours Petition is founded upon this equitable and just Consideration The world hateth them But why Not for any wickednesse or injuries they have done but meerly because they have beleeved in thy Word If so be they had opposed and rejected the Word of God and had ordered their lives according to the course of this world They would have been the worlds darlings all men would have spoken well of them but now it was for Gods sake and his Gospels sake that they were thus maligned so that if we be hated in the world upon Christs account and because of Gods Interest we are sure to have his special care and protection To open this doctrine Consider these things First That it 's possible for those who acknowledge Christ to be hated and persecuted in the world not for their Christianity but for their other grosse impieties and if so then they cannot take that joy or expect that protection which God doth promise to his Therefore the Apostle Peter speaks excellently to this 1 Pet. 4.14 15 16. where having shewed how happy yea and how g●orious a thing it is to be reproached for Christs Name because the Spirit of Glory resteth upon them The world scorneth and despiseth them in their low estate but the Spirit of Glory resteth
our head he hath taken the sting out of all They are not judgements they are not to destroy the nature of them is wholly altered through Christ for as Christ would be baptized to sanctifie that Ordinance for us so he would be afflicted and troubled to sanctifie them to us Thus we may argue if no troubles or afflictions could overcome him neither can they us 3. Here is matter of comfort because hereby Christ is fitted to help us and pity us He himself knoweth what the worlds reproaches are and therefore will the more compassionate us This the Apostle urgeth Heb. 5. We have a High-Priest that is tempted like us in all things sin only excepted Vse of Instruction What cause the people of God have to triumph in all their hard usages from the world Say not were ever any thus contemned and abused as I am yea a better then thou even Christ the only Son of God Do thou rather look on it as an honour to be made like unto him he blessed when he was reviled Be like Christ in his graces as thou art in his tribulations thus shalt thou be hereafter like him in glory SERMON LXXXV Sheweth Why God continueth his Children in this world of Sinne and Sorrow and doth not take them immediately to Heaven And also How farre it is lawfull for a man to pray for or desire to be taken out of this world JOHN 17.15 I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world but that thou shouldst keep them from the evil IN the former verses our Saviour having prayed for the preservation of his Disciples he doth in this verse in a particular manner expresse the Manner of that preservation he prayeth for Not that God the Father needed any such instruction but this is spoken for the edification of his Disciples and the building them up who happily did not yet understand how they were to be preserved Now this preservation is set down two wayes 1. Negatively then Positively 1. Negatively I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world 2. Positively but that thou wouldst keep them from the evil In the negative part we may consider the thing denied in his prayer That God should take them out of the world for so God might take them either by a miraculous and sudden translation as he did Henoch and Eliah or by a violent death through the hands of their persecutors or in a natural ordinary course but saith our Saviour I pray not for this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is for the most part used of an interrogation to question about any thing but sometimes simply for rogation or a meer bare asking and petitioning as often by this Evangelist From this Negative part we may observe First That though God love his people yet that doth not necessarily inferre he must keep them from all misery in this world and place them immediately in happinesse with himself This is good to be taken notice of for we are ready to think that if God love his children he should presently do that for them which will be their chiefest happinesse especially this being in his power to do it when he will to suffer his children to be grapling and conflicting with troubles in this world when it 's but his word speaking and crowns of glory may be set upon their heads seemeth inconsistent with Gods love as she argued to Sampson How canst thou love me and hide any thing from me So saith humane reason How can God love me when yet he keepeth Heaven and eternal glory from me But Gods love and his childrens calamities in this world may well agree together You see our Saviour when he intended the greatest good for his Disciples in his Petition yet corrects and moderateth his prayer not as if he would have them mediately translated to glory he is content they should be awhile in the fire to have their drosse purged away God could do many things for his people which yet he will not he could immediately upon their conversion crown them with eternal glory or else give them perfect and throughly sanctified hearts that they should not complain and groan under any distemper of soul he could make the world to be a Paradise to them so that the way to Heaven should be no longer straight and narrow but broad and easie Thus God could do but it pleaseth his wisdome to take another course and to appoint a Wildernesse to go through ere we can enter in Canaan Now let us consider Why Gods love doth not immediately take the godly out of this world for seeing God loveth them and they love God we should think that love would not rest till it had the nearest conjunction that could be In this matter we may give several Reasons First Because there is a necessity of the presence of godly men in the world that they may promote the Kingdom of God and bring others to the knowledge of God This is especially true of the Apostles as Apostles and so of all those that have any Office and Ministry in the Church of God These are as necessary as the Sunne to the world as the Starres in a dark night as salt to season and preserve from putrefaction and even all believers in a private way are to use their gifts for the reducing of others and by their examples to give such a glorious light that others may glorifie God in the day of their visitation but this doth principally relate to them as Apostles had they been immediately carried up to Heaven where would have been the leaven put into the three pecks of meal Where the mustard-seed sown that would grow up into a great Tree If the Apostles were the Planters and Founders of the Church it was necessary that they should continue for some time in the world The world was a wildernesse that could not immediately be made a garden It was the Devils habitation he could not suddenly be dispossest So that God having service for his people to do no wonder if they must continue in this valley of misery Paul speaks fully to this Phil. 1.14 To abide in the flesh is necessary for you but for him it was better to be dissolved and to be with Christ and between these two he was in a great straight So certainly it were better for the people of God especially for the Ministers of the Gospel who are like Vriah in the fore-front of the battel and exposed to more hatred to be with Christ in Heaven there they shall be free from all this virulence and oppositions of the ungodly but yet if we regard the world and the people with whom they live then their life and presence is very necessary This then is the first reason Gods people have work to do a course to finish and so they must not look to have wages before they have laboured in the Vineyard Secondly God will not presently take them out of this
of the world not to think it strange if there are some who dare not run into the same excesse of Riot with them Do not complain of their rigidnesse and singularity that they have no good fellowship with them and so are not fit to live in the world How can two walk together except they be agreed vnlesse there were the same natures the same principles never think there can be the same hearts yea do thou by them be admonished and hasten out of this world by an heavenly change upon thee It 's no staying in this Sodom in this Babylon SERMON LXXXIX Of growth in Grace shewing that and how many wayes a Godly man may be more sanctified JOHN 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth HItherto our Saviour hath pray'd for the preservation of his Disciples in this world from the evil thereof We now proceed to the second main general part of his Petition which is their Sanctification So that in this verse we are to take notice of the Matter it self prayed for Sanctifie 2. The Subject Them 3. The Instrumental cause Through thy truth 4. The Description or Explication of this Thy Word is Truth We will conjoyn the Matter prayed for and the Subject together Sanctifie them The word to sanctifie is of a large signification in the Scripture but to our purpose here are two principal ones First To sanctifie is often to consecrate and set apart to an holy use and thus many expound it that our Saviour doth by this prayer commend them unto God in their Ministerial labour That as the Priests of old were sanctified by many external Rites so are the Disciples in a spiritual manner by Christ at this time and this appeareth probable by the verse following As thou hast sent me into the world even so have I also sent them into the world This therefore is part of the meaning but I shall referre the considering of that notion to the next verse The second general and frequent use of the word is to make inwardly holy by renewing all the parts and abilities of the soul to walk in an holy manner and in this sense it is partly to be taken here because the Word of God is the instrumental cause of it And if you ask How could Christ pray for the sanctification of his Disciples who were already sanctified To this the Answer is easie That he prayeth for the continuance of and increase in sanctification That they may be more and more increasing in holinesse for no man is come so farre that he cannot go further he is not at the utmost of holinesse Hence we see the Scripture speaking of or supposing persons already godly doth yet exhort and command Sanctification still 1 Thess 5 23. I pray God sanctifie you wholly and preserve your whole spirit soul and body blamelesse Here those that are already sanctified yet are prayed for to have a further degree and deeper rooting of Sanctification So Ephes 4.23 24. There he writeth to such as are already converted That they be renewed in the spirit of their minde and that they put on the new man yea to these Disciples our Saviour speaketh Matth. 18.3 Except ye be converted c. By this you see That even those who are sanctified or converted may be more sanctified and converted more closely to God For although it be true That if Sanctification be strictly taken for the same with Regeneration then it 's the infusion of a supernaturall life at once So that as a man is born but once naturally so we may say he is regenerated and sanctified but once yet take it more largely for the improving and increasing of grace thus put into us then we are to be more converted and more sanctified daily and in this respect Sanctification is said to differ from Justification because the former doth admit of degrees and is more or lesse but so is not Justification Observ That whereas the Disciples though already sanctified and made holy yet are prayed for that they may be more sanctified We may gather That the most holy men that are are yet to be more holy It 's not enough to be once called or converted but we are to grow in grace As it is not enough for a childe to be borne but he must grow up to be a man Thus Revel 22.11 He that is holy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him be holy still and 1 Cor. 7.1 Perfecting holinesse This is a very necessary point for our Saviour John 15. saith He chooseth us that we may bring forth more fruit Doest thou increase in thy faith in thy heavenly-mindednesse in thy zeal Thou canst blesse God when thou findest thy health and bodily strength better when thou findest thy estate increase and why then art thou not more desirous and rejoycing to see thy heart grow better to see thy soul more sanctified And indeed concerning the former things our Saviour saith Which of you by taking care can adde one cubit to his stature But here by fervent and constant prayers we may adde many cubits But to open this Doctrine Let us consider How many waies a godly man may be more sanctified and that is seen in several particulars First He may be more sanctified intensively by adding more and more degrees to the grace he hath received Our Love our Faith our Patience even all our Graces are capable of augmentation It 's not with us as with Christ who received the Spirit without measure so that Christ could not be more holy then he was he could not do any thing more obedientially to God then he did nor love God more then he did but we may all cry out with that man Lord I believe help my unbelief Lord I love help my want of love Therefore James 1.4 we are exhorted to let patience have her perfect work Even as Apelles upon all his Pictures would write Faciebat non fecit because he would still be perfecting it thus are we to all our graces Hence are those daily exhortations To grow in Grace Even a Paul even the tallest Gyants are to grow in Grace Paul saith He knoweth but in part 1 Cor. 13. and then he can but love in part and believe in part Oh then this is of great concernment to think that thy best graces may yet be made farre better Thy Grace is nothing to a Pauls and a Pauls is nothing to the Law or the Rule Look to it then and be as desirous to grow in Grace as ever thou wert to get into the state of Grace Secondly We may be more sanctified extensively in regard of the Objects about which our Graces are to be exercised and in respect of our Relations 1. There is an extension in respect of our Objects of Grace As we are bound to do better then we doe so to do more then we doe What godly man is there that can say he hath done all things God required
Graece This distinction is greatly to be marked for a Christian through bodily distempers and old Age may decay in parts not have the memory nor the activity or the hot affections he had once and yet be a more mortified and solid Christian for Grace will not cure a man of bodily Diseases or of Old Age and because the Soul doth work dependantly upon the body as the body it 's Instrument doth decay so are the Souls Operations impaired thereby But be not discouraged this is not a decay in Grace it 's only in parts and gifts or a bodily constitution which though comfortable mercies yet are not Essentials to grace On the other side there are too many that encrease in Knowledge that are enlarged in parts but decay in grace yea their corruptions and lusts grow with them 4. Distinguish between a further Sanctification in respect of the solidity of it and the affectionatenesse of it Every decay in affection is not presently an abating in grace for godlinesse lyeth chiefly in the minde and will If these be solidly established and really bent for God Though affections be not passionately and sensiby put forth yet thou maist grow a more sound and firm Christian 5. There is difference between a further Sanctification and the certainty and evidence of it Many a Christian groweth in holinesse yet he is not sensible of his growth as in nature a man groweth yet doth not perceive it What our Saviour spake of the spreading and growing of the Gospel is true also in respect of Sanctification Mar. 4.27 It 's as if a man should cast Seed in the ground and should sleep and rise night and day and the Seed spring up and grow he knoweth not how Thus the godly they shoot out in grace when yet they do not perceive it yea sometimes they are tempted to the clean contrary 6. Grant it be true that thou art lesse sanctified then before thou hast decaied sadly Let this then quicken thee up to make the more haste for the future Let this stumbling make thee get ground Sometimes a David a Peter are left to fall that they may rise and go the faster After some diseases the childe groweth more then ever The Traveller that hath overslept himself doubles his pace Thus let thy very decaies do good to thee In the third place Let us Consider the Reasons why that it 's not enough to be sanctified but we must be more and more holy every day And 1. We are not sanctified to stand still there We are yet in the way we are not yet come to our journeys end Hence our Christianity whilst in this Life is compared to running in a Race We are not come to the term and end of our Sanctification when we are first converted We are but put into the right way to happinesse we are but beginners We have much work to doe ere we shall receive a Crown of Glory You see that glorious Saint Paul who laboured more then they all yet Phil. 3.14 I presse towards the mark forgetting the things that are behinde 2. We are further to be Sanctified because there remain Reliques of corruption still to be subdued Sanctifying grace doth expell sinne but by degrees Even as the heat by degrees doth expell the cold Now the Apostle tels us Gal. 6. what is in the hearts of all the godly There are lusts rebelling against the Spirit and there is a law of sinne in our members If then Sanctifying grace do not encrease sin will encrease If we be not further sanctified we shall be further corrupted The heart of a man is immediatly susceptible of one of these either grace or sin If then there be not more grace there will be more sin you cannot stand at a stay If you swim not against the stream the stream will bear thee down 3. This is the end of all those afflictions and chastisements which God laieth upon us that we should be more sanctified John 15. Every branch is purged that it may bring forth more fruit These are like the compost laid on the ground these are the plowing and the harrowing of the ground to make it more fruitful The fire is to make the gold more pure from drosse The winnowing is to separate the Chaff from the Wheat and thus are all Gods Dispensations which come in Severity to thee They are to sanctifie thee more to make thee more Heavenly-minded 4. This is one great end of the Word and the Preaching thereof Sanctifie them by thy Word and Eph 4. We are to be edified to a full stature in Christ by the Officers in his Church So that as the Sun and the Clouds help to make the Ground fruitful as the Winde filling the Sails of the Ship makes it go more swiftly So should the Ministry and Ordinances Oh what knowledge and grace shouldest thou have attained to by this time Let thy profiting appear to all as Paul said to Timothy 5. The sweetnesse and excellency of grace if once tasted of should make thee insatiable to have more Shall the hydropical man the more he drinketh the more desire it and the earthly man the more wealth he hath be the more covetous of it What a shame then is it if the more gostlinesse thou hast thou art not the more desirous still to have more 6. It 's Gods promise that such who are godly shall grow more holy Isa 40.29 30 51. They shall renew they shall mount up like Eagles So Hos 14.6 7. That as it is a curse upon the wicked to grow worse and worse so it 's a blessing to the godly to grow better If God will blesse their outward store make their oyl encrease much more their graces Vse of Exhortation to stir up your selves in holinesse Endeavour after more grace then thou hast yet oh bewail thy leannesse thy barrennesse In how many things maist thou be bettered still Thou dost greatly deceive thy self if thou thinkest now I may sit down I have gone far enough Vse 2. to confute corrupt Opinion of most men that do not like this forwardnesse and strictnesse in the way to Heaven Can a man be too godly then he may be too happy as well and have too much of Heaven Doth not our Saviour pray here for his Disciples sanctified already yet to be more sanctified Do we not daily pray that Gods grace may come more into our hearts why then are we displeased to see it doth encrease SERMON XCI Of the Causes of Sanctification and in particular of Gods Word as the Instrumentall Cause JOHN 17.17 Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is Truth WE are now come to the Manner or rather the Instrumentall Cause of our Sanctification and that is Truth Sanctifie them by thy truth Some understand this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truly sincerely and so those that limit this Sanctification to their Ministerial Separation for to preach the Word of God
but yet how common is it for such who know and read the Word of God yet not to be reformed in their lives thereby Though they look in this glass yet they wash not those loathsome spots that are upon them conclude the Scriptures are not in their proper use to thee till they have reformed thee from such sins as thou didst formerly live in 3. The people of God though they have a spiritual life within them yet under desertions and temptations finde not the Word of God effectual for joy and consolations till God bring such texts and such promises close to their soul That we saith Paul through the Scriptures might have consolations 2 Cor. 1. And David doth often acknowledge That the word of God did comfort and revive him but let a godly man groaning under the guilt of sinne hear the sound of the Gospel a thousand times over yet he will remain like dried bones and a parched wilderness till God sanctifie it Oh how often have the people of God desired comfort and assurance read over the promises again and again gone to the Ministers of the Gospel to have oyl poured in their wounds yet not the Law but even the Gospel hath been made a dead letter till the Spirit of God doth comfort in and by it the Word then of God though instrumental yet is but instrumentall it 's not a principal Fourthly When we say it 's Instrumentall to Sanctification we are to distinguish of instrumental causes For there are Physical and Natural Instruments which work by an inherent and natural power and there are Moral Instruments which work by the sole institution and appointment of another Now the Word of God is not instrumental to Sanctification in the former but in the later way The Word doth not by any inherent vertue and efficacy in a natural manner purifie the heart but by Gods appointment and his voluntary co-operation when and where he will For if it did work thus naturally then wheresoever the Word is preached it would sanctifie it would heal As the fire whereever it is in one Countrey as well as in another it doth burn but experience doth confute this Are there not two hearing the Word of God the one is sanctified the other not At the same Sermon one is humbled made tender The other is more obstinate and hardened Whence comes all this diversity under the Word preached but because it is not a natural instrument Again If the word of God did convert and sanctifie naturally then the grace of God could not so much be amplified and magnified which yet the Scriptures do Though it be Gods goodness that the Sunne shineth the fire burneth yet we do not speak of it or call it his grace but if the Word of God ever touch and heat any mans heart if it ever reform his life this is the meer grace of God By which it appeareth That the Word of God is instrumental only by Gods institution and where he commands it to work there it works where he requireth it to break down all oppositions there it hurrieth all down before it Insomuch that sometimes the most unlikely and prophanest enemies to godliness they are changed by the Word and those that are very ingenuous and civilly disposed remain in a perverse opposition 5. When we say The Word of God is instrumentall to our Sanctification this is not to be opposed to those other causes which God hath appointed Grace is the efficient cause and Christ the meritorious cause onely this is the medium God who could convert immediately and reach home to our souls as he did to the Prophets by an immediate Revelation hath taken this way That as it 's the goodness of God in natural things though he be the first and universall cause and so could do all things immediately himself yet he hath ordained second causes who have their derived causality Thus it hath pleased God in the Government of his Church to use means and external helps the Word and Sacraments thereby to work grace when yet he could change the hearts of men immediately or communicate himself to his Church as he did once without Scriptures When therefore you hear many oppose the Scripture to the Spirit and the Ministry in the Church to Christs teaching this is absurd and tends to the division of those causes which God hath so wisely joyned together The Spirit and the Scripture must not be opposed nor Christs teaching and the Ministers for that Rule is true here Quando duorum unum est propter aliud sunt ut unum Sixthly The Word thus made known is the ordinary means both of our beginning and increase in Sanctification Two things are couched in this particular 1. It 's the ordinary means so that what God may do in extraordinary cases is not for us to dispute but ordinarily there is no other way to beget and increase grace but this Neither may we say this is dishonourable to God to binde him to one way for it hath pleased himself to appoint the communication of his grace by the Word ordinarily so that as in naturall things he will give light to the world only by the Sunne though he could do otherwise Therefore the Sunne was not made till the fourth day to shew us that God could give light to the world without a Sunne Thus it is also in spiritual things though God could otherwise communicate his graces yet he hath pleased to appoint this ordinary way So that there is no expectation of the Spirit but in the Word as the Word can no wayes avail without the Spirit and it 's the goodness of God that he hath commanded all spirits to be tried by this Rule and if not conforming to it to reject them which could not be if the voice of the Spirit could be heard any other way but in and by the Scriptures we then are bound to come to this pool if we will have the divine moving not of an Angel but of the Spirit of God As the Israelite that would escape death was to keep within his doors and those within the Ark who would enjoy Gods Protection Thus must such keep within the bounds of the Scripture who expect Gods Spirit to guide them But although we are thus bound to expect Sanctification onely in this means yet we cannot say that God hath bound himself to work these effects alwayes for though he will not ordinarily dispense his grace but in this way yet he will not alwayes accompany this way yea it 's the savour of death to many 2 Cor. 2 16. Hence in the seventh place The word of God though it be ex se and quoad institutionem an instrument of Sanctification yet to some accidentally through their corruption it becomes an instrument of greater sinfulnesse and wickednesse So that commonly there are no greater sinners under Heaven then in the Church and in the Church none greater then where the best and
at this time to prove the Verity of the Scriptures I am only to shew in what sence and wherein it is true and the nature of this Truth We take it for a principle granted by Christians that the Word of God is true and although Learned men have by unanswerable Arguments demonstrated the Truth of the Scriptures yet that was to Heathens and Pagans or that were not Beleevers of it It is true the work is necessary also to those that are Christians to make their faith more solid certain and clear and the rather because there are some wretched men rose up of late that cry down the Scriptures and that pretend to be above them yea that bid us prove the Scriptures to be Gods Word but I am not to deal with such at this time Certainly every good Christian having received this principle into him doth finde such authority and Divine Majesty coming from the Word that he doth no more desire Arguments to prove the Scripture to be the Word of God then he would have another Sunne to see this Sunne-shine Austin long agoe speaks of such a disposition with great Indignation O Lord Thou hast taught me to abhorre all such who say Vnde scis hos Libros esse Canonicos This then being laid down as a sure Foundation Let us proceed to shew in how many particulars Gods Word is true And First It 's Truth in regard of the Efficient Cause God and Christ who are the Authour of it so that the Scripture can no more lye then God or Christ could The Scriptures then are the Truth of him who is the Supream Truth So that as Truth it self cannot be false so neither can Gods Word Humane Truth is Truth but yet because every man may erre Therefore we cannot have such a Faith in it Cui non potest subesse falsum but when we come unto Gods Word and his Truth it is impossible that there should he any Errour Secondly It is the Rule of all Truth That as God is the primum principium essendi of giving being to all Truth so the Scripture is the primum principium cognoscendi the first principle to teach and inform us The Scripture then is true because all Divine Truth floweth from that and every thing is true so farre as it is commensurated according to that Rule Whatsoever men say whatsoever Reason saith whatsoever Traditions and Customes say yet if against Scripture away with all This is the Standard of all Truth all Truth I say necessary to Salvation It is the Christians Metaphysicks Ethicks and Politiques the Rule of all Speculative and Practicall Truth To the Law and to the Testimony if they speak not according to this it is because there is no light in them Isaiah 8.20 Therefore it is so often called a Light unto our Feet If this principle were kept too Neither Superstitious Traditions on the one hand nor subtle Delusions of pretended Revelations on the other hand could ever have molested or troubled the Church Thirdly It 's true materially that is all the matter contained therein is true The Historical part The Dogmatical part The morall part The predicting part all contain un-erring Truth in them Whatsoever Doctrine is there revealed it is to be received without any further disputing or asking How can it be so The first Truth hath said it therefore the Understanding must submit If it be made clear Thus saith the Lord then all must yeeld and so for the Threatnings of it whatsoever God saith against the wicked man all the evil that is there said to come upon him doubt not of the Truth of it though for the while a wicked man may live in all ease and jollity It is not so much a Threatning as the Truth of it that makes it so dreadfull what were the Names of Hell and Damnation of a Day of Judgement if there were not Truth in them and thus the promissory part is full of Truth Though a Godly man be cast down with many Temptations weaknesses and Discouragements yet the Truth of Gods Promises should be a Pillar of Marble to him and a brazen wall He may sooner fear the falling of the Heavens and the removing of the Earth out of its place then doubt in the least of the Truth thereof Hence Gods Word is said to be like Silver seven times refined So that there is no errour no drosse or falshood mixed with it It it true in the matter of the Scripture in the Historicall part especially there are some appearing Contradictions and to some Learned men they have been insoluble but this ariseth from the weaknesse of our Understanding not from the Scripture it self As there is no defect in the Sunne because the Owles Eye cannot stedfastly look upon it yea as God himself So the Scriptures because they have most Truth in them so are most intelligible if there were capacious Subjects as the Sunne is Maximè visibilis if there were a fit Eye to behold it Fourthly It is true in respect of the Adjunct or quality of it Truth is an affection cleaving to a Proposition and thus the Word of God is true qualitatively yea the Truth of the Scripture is affirmed by all to be more firm and strong though not so evident then any thing in the world Those things we receive by Reason or by Sence are nothing so true and firm as those that we receive by Faith It is said indeed that all Truth consists in indivisibili and so nothing can be truer then another This is graeted in respect of Truth it self But then if you do regard the Foundation or the Cause of Truth so is one more certain then another Thus all the Truths of Faith are transcendant to those of Reason and Sence We are more securely to rest in what God saith then in what we know or feel and the reason is because the Truth of these latter things is founded only upon a Creature but of the former upon a Creator upon God himself Oh that we did thus beleeve Gods word what manner of persons should we be who could terrifie the Godly who could trouble their Spirits if this were received And for the wicked with what Fear and Trembling would he go up and down Oh the Scripture is true that speaks against such sins that discovers my wickedness it is so true I cannot deny it Fifthly It is true Instrumentally Because the Spirit of God directs us into all Truth and this is chiefly the intendment here The Scripture is in Gods hand and by the Spirits working leadeth us into all Truth we are all in darknesse till the Scripture like the Sunne doth arise Man liveth in Errours he is nothing but a Lye till the Scripture inform but though the Scripture doth shine yet as the Sunne cannot make a blinde man to see so neither doth the Scripture of it self till God give a Seeing Eye The Scripture works onely Objectively but the
say here is a greater then a Pythagoras here Deus dixit Therefore observe the Prophets they do often repeat this Thus saith the Lord because nothing could amaze and humble their hearers so much as that God said it and indeed when once it 's received as Gods truth then the heart doth readily obey as 1 Thess 2.13 you may there see wherein the truth preached doth work in it's due and proper manner even when it 's received not as the word of man but of God Divine truth will have divine operations but when received as mans truth it hath but humane effects such as Tullies Orations or Demosthenes had upon their auditors which is like the influence of the Moon that doth not give true heat and life but the word of God works like the Sun not only in respect of penetrating light reaching into all the inwards of the soul but also vivifical heat It makes men live a spiritual and heavenly life whereas moral truths help only to an external honesty It 's true that which Ambrose said Omnis veritas est à Spiritu sancto Every truth is of the holy Ghost even natural and humane truths are But as God is the author of nature and yet of grace in a more special way so the Spirit of God is the author of all truth but in a more peculiar manner of Scripture truths Therefore all Scripture is said to be given by inspiration 2 Tim. 3.16 Consider then the truths we deliver you out of Gods word are his truth Thus saith the Lord against the heretical person Thus saith the Lord against the prophane person Oh if it were only men that say thus it might be easily rejected but it 's God that speaks it and therefore none may oppose 2. Because it's Gods truth therefore it 's infallible it 's so certain that we can never be deceived whosoever believed according to Scripture and lived according to Scripture that a man was never confounded or ashamed he will never have cause to wish Oh that he had taken another way Oh that I had done otherwise Thus David Psal 119. Then I shall not be confounded when I have respect to all thy Commandments Have a conscientious respect to Gods Word in thy Religion and in thy conversation this will prove infallible this is the Israelites cloud and pillar upon their Tabernacle we are to go when that goeth we are to stand still when that stands still This is the Star that will certainly guide us to Christ All divine faith is infallible in Philosophy in humane Authorities we may be deceived but in the Scripture we cannot Venture all upon the truth of Scripture it will never deceive thee when thou wilt finde Satan and the world liars 3. It 's an eternal Truth Even as God doth abide for ever so will his truth Mat. 5. Heaven and earth shall sooner pass away then one iota or tittle of it Truth will abide when these heavens and earth shall not abide at least not in the same manner as they are now and excellently to this purpose speaks 1 Pet. 1.23 24 25. being born of the incorruptible word of God for all flesh is grass but the word of God abideth for ever and this is the Word which by the Gospel is preached to you Scripture-truth abideth for ever whereas all errours and false ways though they have overflowed for a while yet presently they withered again What is become of the Manichees Arrians Pelagians Nestorians and those thousands of Heretiques They had a time of glory a shew in the world but then died neither lamented nor desired Scripture-truth will prevail even as Christ the essential Truth As the Sun will at last get the better of all clouds and foggy mists and cannot alwayes be in an eclypse so it 's with the truth of God All errors are like men mortal they pass away if any error be so strong as to hold to threescore years it begins like man to be full of pain and sorrow They are compared to hay and stubble these will not long continue They are like Davids rich and great men in the world like the grass upon the house top not only homo but haereticus est bulla Truth will continue in the field when all errours will lie prostrate and conquered and have no other burial but that of an Ass as that despised King had 4. It 's an universal Truth within the bounds of Religion I do not say that all philosophical and mathematical truths are in the Scripture but all soul-saving truths are as 2 Tim. 3. The Scriptures are able to make thee wise to salvation There is nothing for doctrine or for practice but that can guide thee This sufficiency and perfection of Scripture-truth we do justly maintain against the Papists who as they foolishly set up their lighted tapers at noon-day so they add their traditions to the Scripture but it 's often said we may neither adde to it nor detract from it therefore it 's abundantly sufficient Now it 's good with Tertullian to adore this fulness of the Scripture for thy faith and doctrine to believe as thou readest to worship God as thou readest As the childe in the womb is nourished only by the mother through her nourishing Thus the Church of God is instructed nourished and enlivened only from God by the Scriptures We read the Manna fell from heaven but there fell a dew before it to constringe and bind the earth Thus truth fals from God but the Scripture is like the dew to keep it together that it may be for our use Let not then tradition custom antiquity multitudes nor such Gorgons heads lifted up by men terrifie thee but follow the word in thy faith and worship where that stands still do not thou go further where that goeth do not thou stand still And as for faith so for thy life know that hath all practical truth in it necessary to salvation that teacheth and that only how to repent how to be converted how to believe in Christ how to pray how to hear how to be in the world yet to have a conversation in heaven That teacheth thee how to be godly in thy relations a godly father a godly childe a godly master a godly servant Now this most people are greatly faulty in they will be of no Religion but what the Scripture commands yet they will live otherwise and do otherwise When thou seest an heretick thou will bring Scripture against him And is not Scripture against thy prophaneness and impiety as well as there are damnable heresies so are there damnable wickednesses in mens lives 5. It 's a supernatural Truth Many of the truths revealed in Scripture are such as no Plato's no Aristotles no wisdom of man though raised beyond Solomons could ever have attained unto such as the doctrine of the Trinity of the Nature Person and Office of Christ of the Resurrection of a day of Judgment and the
that History many things are remarkable For 1. In the raising of Lazarus though he could have done it by an immediate Word yet he wept and was sorely troubled yea he groaned twice which were not simply groans of his Body in a natural way but such as were accompanied with Praier Therefore he addeth I know that thou hearest me alwaies Though we do not reade of any Praier of Christs at that same time yet the groans and the desires of his Heart they were Praier 2. It is Observable how thankfull Christ was for having his Prayer heard The same Person who is obliged to give thanks is also bound to pray Thus John 6. Christ gave Thanks about that Refreshment though it was by Barley and some small Fish Christ himself giveth God thanks for that poor and course Diet Oh what Thankfullnesse should this teach us and stirre us up to expresse And so in this History though the good he praied for did not immediately redound to him but to Lazarus and his Sisters yet Christ giveth thanks for it so that Christ who prayeth for the good of Beleevers as his own good So he giveth thanks likewise to God for Mercies and Blessings bestowed on them as though they were his own mercies If thou canst not give God Thanks large and hearty enough for his discriminating Mercy in opening of thy Eyes and passing by and leaving the Eyes of more prudent and honoured in the world blinde and shut up Know that Christ hath also thanked the Father for this Luke 10.21 Christ that praieth for all thy spiritual blessings doth also praise the Father for them But 3. That for which I brought this place is That Christ doth not only say That the Father heard him but I know demonstrating the Assurance of this and that he heareth him alwaies This supposeth Christ is alwaies praying for he that is alwaies heard is supposed to be alwaies powring forth his Petitions And further If you say that Christ praied That the Cup might passe away yet he was not heard in that prayer it is easily answered That was not Christs Absolute but his Conditionall prayer It was an Expression of his Will ut natura not ut ratio Therefore he addeth Not my Will but thy Will be done Hence Hebrews 5.7 it is said He offered up Prayers with strong Cryes to him that was able to save him from Death and was heard in what he feared Though he dyed yet was heard in that Prayer because Death had not any Dominion over him Now Christ must needs be heard alwaies 1. Because he is the Mediatour and High Priest and so powreth out his praiers in his own Name If Christ should not be heard for himself then he would need another Mediatour for himself and he must also pray in anothers Name which is highly derogatory unto his honour to imagine or think of 2. His Prayer is meritorious as well as his death and so in justice nothing can be denied him 3. He is infinitely beloved of the Father and so when he appeareth nothing can be denied him Lastly He doth not absolutely pray for any thing but what is conformable to his Fathers Will and if so be we who are the Sonnes of God by Adoption only are sure to speed and to prevail when we keep close unto that Rule how much more then shall the Naturall Sonne of God! Vse 1. To reprove those who either through pride think themselves above praier or else through prophanesse neglect it Christ praied alone and with his Disciples and thou hast neither Family-Praier or private prayer Christ gave thanks though for barley bread and thou constantly eatest thy Food without acknowledging God to be the Authour of that mercy Vse 2. of Direction To the Godly Make up the Defects and Insufficiency of thy own prayers with the Fullnesse Excellency and infinite worth that is in Christs Prayer Christ prayed not with such defects and failings as thou dost they are thy prayers for thy good farre better then if thou hadst offered them up for thy self SERMON CIII In what respects the Benefits of Christs Mediation extend to all Believers alike and in what not For the Comfort of weak Christians and such of them as are most contemptible in the eyes of the World JOHN 17.20 But for them also which shall believe in me through their word FRom the Negative Limitation we come to the Positive Explication and Description of such as are the Object of Christs prayer And in this Description we may take notice First Of the adversative particle But also Not onely the Apostles such as were eminent and pillars but even for all the rest though never so mean and inconsiderable Secondly There is the Description of the persons 1. By their inherent properties that shall believe 2. By the Circumstance of the future time That shall believe though not yet born and so could not think or desire good for themselves yet Christ doth here pray for them 3. There is the Object of this belief Who shall believe in me 4. The instrumental Cause Their word All these particulars have their respective usefulnesse And First Let us consider the adversative particle not onely the Apostles but every believer also Obs That Christ in his Mediatory-Office had respect to the meanest and weakest believer as well as to the choisest and most eminent Even as the High-priest was to pray for all the people the poorest as well as the greatest so doth Christ regard the soul of the most contemptible believer as well as of such who are more conspicuous This might be represented in that custom amongst the Jews when the soul of every man whether rich or poor did pay the same ransome Exod. 30.12 Though among men there be poor and rich learned and unlearned yet in respect of Christ and grace there is no such difference To this purpose notably the Apostle Gal. 3.28 There is neither Jew or Greek b●nd or free but all are one in Christ Jesus Christ in his Mediatory works looks upon all as one Even as it is with Gods providence in this universe It 's fully intent upon every one creature There is not the lest worm or flie but Gods providence preserveth it as well as it doth the most glorious Angel and as it is said usually Gods providence is so intent upon all the whole Word universis as if he did not attend singulis to every particular and yet on the other side it 's so incumbent on singulis as if it were not to the universis Even thus it is with Christ his care and love is so indulged to any one beleever that you would think there were no other believers you would think his thoughts were not upon the Church in general but on this particular and yet at the same time Christs inspection ●nd watchfulnesse is so over the whole Church that one would think that he had not time or leisure to minde the condition of every private Christian To
Christs Prayer even in respect of those who shall beleeve is because They were given to him by the Father as appeareth vers 9. I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast given me Seeing therefore the Foundation of Christs Intercession is because they were given by Election to Christ as a people to be saved through him it 's plain that Christ praied not because he foresaw that they would beleeve but because they were Elected It 's true the Arminians do in a most violent and strange manner wrest that phrase of being given to Christ They understand it not of an action of the Father but of the disposition of the Subject Hence it is they speak so much of a probum ingenium or a docilis indoles as if it were some towardly disposition in man that fitted him for grace but thus it would be rather who have given themselves to Christ rather then that the Father had given them and indeed this is such a thorn in their sides that they cannot pull out if by such who shall beleeve were to be understood those that upon Gods foresight were known to improve the means of Faith better then others then all the difference from others and the utmost resolution of salvation yea and Election would be unto a mans self when yet the Apostle doth expresly stop such mouths What hast thou that thou hast not received and who made thee to differ from another 1 Cor. 4.7 The Text thus vindicated and explained I gather this Observation That Christ died not and so we were not Elected because we will beleeve but our beleef is the effect and fruit of Christs death and our Election Our Faith is not a condition upon which our Election or Christs Death stands suspended and indeterminate but these do make us infallibly and effectually to beleeve in time There are two common Opinions The one holding That God from all Eternity knew who would beleeve in time and persevere therein and thereupon they were Elected and Christ died for us This way go Arminians and others But 2. The Orthodox they affirm that God did from all Eternity choose some out of the corrupt masse to Eternall glory and for this end to give them Faith and holinesse as the means thereunto So that God did not elect us because we did or would beleeve but that we might beleeve we beleeve because we are Elected not Elected because we beleeve This Doctrine is very useful because it tends to humble and debase man and wholly to exalt the grace of God and therefore the more diligently to be confirmed because of late so greatly opposed And before we bring Scripture-Arguments Let us Consider some few things that will clear the state of the Question As 1. There is a difference of those who hold our Election and so Christs Death to be upon the foresight of something in us Some are more grosse then others For there are some that hold a man is Elected to glory upon the foresight of his cooperation with the grace of God as a true merit deserving this Election so that with them God did behold who by his free will would improve the offer of grace and for this as a meritorious cause they say God did Elect them unto Eternal Glory But this is so highly injurious to the Grace of God that though some Papists have maintained it yet Bellarmine Valentia and other Jesuites wholly disclaim it at least in words making no other cause of predestination in respect of all the effects of it but the sole and meer good pleasure of God 2. There are others and they say the foresight of the good or better use of our free-will then others is not a meritorious but a moving cause with God of our Election to Happinesse So that our Faith and Holinesse though they were not a meriting Cause yet were a moving Cause of our predestination but this is also too grosly repugnant and contradictory to Scripture 3. There are those who refine it more subtlely and that is That God did foresee who would beleeve and persevere therein to Death and such are peremptorily chosen to Eternall Life not that their Faith or Perseverance is any merit or moving Cause but a Conditio sine quâ non without which God would not choose such to happinesse so that say they it 's not for any intrinsecall Dignity or excellent worth in Faith but because of the many possible waies and means to Salvation God appoints this way of beleeving rather then another and thus the Arminians Only they acknowledge Holinesse of Life and Obedience to God to be thus a Condition foreseen as well as Faith though they would seem utterly to deny it 4. There are the Lutherans and they indeed hold Faith fore-seen as a Condition in our Election Only they say It 's not considered as a merit or a Cause no nor as a work but as an Instrument apprehending Christs merits and therefore make Election to be by Faith in the same sence as we are justified by Faith Hence they deny Holinesse or Obedience to be a condition ingredient to Election because Christ is not laid hold upon by that as by Faith although herein they contradict themselves because they acknowledge not Faith singly as so but Perseverance in Faith to be the Condition and that must be necessarily looked upon as a work not as an Instrument receiving Christ But the Orthodox they affirm consonantly to Scripture and sutably to the Glory of Gods Grace That God did from all Eternity choose some men out of that corrupt masse in which all were to Eternall Glory and by the same Act did prepare and appoint all those means which would effectually produce the same So that this Election is the Originall and Fountain of all Spirituall mercies because Elected Christ is appointed a Mediatour Because Elected they are called and enabled to beleeve in time So that we deny there are two Elections One to Glory another to Grace But God by the same single Act doth will both and therefore that there is not the same Reason of Election and of Justification or Salvation for these being Acts done in time do require Faith and Holinesse as antecedent but Election being an Act of God from all Eternity cannot presuppose any thing in us Now the Arguments to confirm us in this Truth they are these following First Because the Scripture when it speaketh of this great and wonderfull work of Election it doth still resolve all into the Counsell of his will not into any thing fore seen in a man Ephes 8. Roman 8. Roman 9. and in many other places it is still said He hath chosen us according to his Will according to his purpose Now if so be it were for any thing foreseen in us it would be rather according to the Counsell of our will and according to our purpose There cannot any rationall Answer be given unto this Argument for according to the Adversaries
God doth not Elect or choose any untill he foresee what every man will do and if he do well and persevere in this then he is predestinated but this doth at once dash out all the Prepositions Prae and turn them into Post it is not prae-destination but post-destination not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this administers a second Argument Secondly If so be that God did Elect and choose to Eternall Life because he did fore-see our Faith then the whole difference of one Beleever from another would be attributed solely to mans Power For to say That this is Gods Decree and his Appointment that whosoever shall beleeve shall be saved doth not in the least work upon any person no more then that Decree of God Whosoever shall do this shall live doth suppose any that will exactly keep the Law so that no man in the world may beleeve for all this Decree And thus when Christ prayed for those who shall beleeve he might have praied for a Non ens a thing which might never have been Therefore all the Question is How come some to beleeve and not others How is it that of many who live under the same means of Grace some are called effectually and others grow more wicked and sinnefull Certainly the Scripture doth not give this unto mans Will but to Gods free-grace and Love as Matthew 13. To you it is given to know the Mysteries of the Kingdom of God and unto others not Thus Christ also Matthew 11. solemnly blessed and thanked God That he had hid these things of Heaven from the wise and prudent ones of the world and that he had revealed them unto Babes And the Apostle expresly Who hath made thee to differ from another 1 Corinth 4.7 Therefore it 's horribly injurious unto the Grace and goodnesse of God to say That under the same Means of Grace I made my Self to beleeve to repent rather than another Certainly such an Opinion as this is so grosse and absurd that well may Arminianism be said not only to be repugnant to many places of Scripture but even to the common sence and experience of all beleevers They have a witnesse within their own breasts That they were as unwilling as froward as opposite to the work of Grace as any That it was God that made them of unwilling willing Even as there were many others that heard Paul yet God is said to open the heart of Lydia rather then others Thirdly Faith and all holinesse is the Effect and Fruit of our Election and also of the Death of Christ and therefore it cannot be an antecedent Condition That is plain that the same thing cannot be an Effect and Consequent of Election and yet an antecedent Condition at least in the same Respects for then it should be considered as before and after at the same time which is a plain Contradiction Now that Faith is a Consequent and an Effect of Election and that we are Elected to Faith and Holinesse not because we have Faith and Holinesse is clear by severall Texts of Scripture as Act. 13.48 They beleeved as many as were ordained to Eternall Life Here is plainly set down the Effect and the Cause They beleeved and why Because ordained to Eternall Life As for that Cavill to understand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intransitively as if it were no more than dispositi and so did imply some inherent probity that is not worth the answering For how were the Gentiles disposed to beleeve who were said to be dead in sinnes and plunged into all manner of impiety untill Grace had converted them Besides this disposednesse to beleeve whence doth it arise Either from our selves and so all Glory is due to us or from the Grace of God And if so How cometh it to passe that some have it and not others but because of Election And it is further to be added That it is not said in the Text They beleeved that were ordained Or as they say disposed to beleeve but to Eternall Life which doth necessarily suppose an Action of God in whose power alone it is to dispose of Eternall Life Thus also Ephes 1. There are very emphaticall Expressions to shew that we are Elected to be holy and unblameable in the sight and presence of God And whereas they would referre this to our glorious Estate in Heaven that cannot be because unblameable doth properly relate to our being here upon the Earth It is true we will readily grant That both Faith and Holinesse they doe enter into the Decree of Election taken terminatively as it ends in Everlasting Happinesse Therefore it is a meer Calumny to say We hold such an absolute Election to Glory and Happinesse as hath no respect to Christ or to Faith For although we deny that Christ was the meritorious Cause of our Election yet it 's plain by Scripture we are chosen in him as the Head and so the Cause of all the Benefits that come by Election And God had respect unto Faith He chose Beleevers to Salvation onely this Faith was not looked upon as an antecedent Condition in us but as a qualification which God by Election doth work in the hearts of those that shall be saved We say God hath Elected such to Salvation whom in time he will by that Decree make Beleevers For he that wils an end doth thereby will the means that tendeth thereunto only we deny they were supposed Beleevers first and then God Elected them Fourthly God doth not Elect upon the fore-sight of Perseverance in Faith Because the Scripture every where makes Election to be the Origina●l and Causall Fountain or Womb of all other Benefits That Ninth Chapter to the Romanes is pregnant to this purpose where Election is made to be that which bringeth about all blessed Eff●cts in time Election hath obtained and it is not of him that willeth or runneth but of God that sheweth mercy Whereas Austin of old urged by the Adversaries Opinion replied We might as well say according to them it is not of him that calleth but of him that willeth And Rom. 8. The Apostle maketh predestination the cause of Vocation Justification and Glorification not Vocation the Cause of Predestination Fifthly If the humane Nature of Christ was not chosen to the personall Union for any fore-seen merit much lesse may any meer man be Elected to Glory because of any supposed worth This was an Argument urged of old by Austin and is very strong By what Grace that particular man was made Christ by that we are made Christians Now the Apostle saith expresly that Christ 1 Peter 1.20 he was fore-ordained and appointed before the Foundation of the world and all will readily grant that this was not for any fore-seen worth and Excellency in the Humane Nature of Christ Lastly Not to mention all that may be brought If we are Elected upon Faith fore-seen and Perseverance therein then none are Elected until they come to die and
that we may say as Musculus there is a good Schism and a bad Schism a good schism is when we divide malè unita things evilly joyned a bad when benè unita things well united 2. If there be many corruptions in government and administrations yet thou art not to make sinfull Breaches and Rents for these do plus perturbare infirmos bonos quam corrigere animosos malos as Austin well Therefore two things thou hast to do First As thy calling and relation is so to reprove and oppose the corruptions that abound Thus the Prophets of old and Christ with his Apostles they did with great Zeal rebuke the corruptions then prevailing and although carnal and Athiestical Politicians call this Schisme and Faction yet this is to condemn the generation of all the godly Prophets in their ages and to justifie Ahab as if not he but Elijah had indeed been the troubler of Israel 2. When you have thus done your Duty and still corruptions are suffered leave your Complaints with God who hath promised at last to take all scandals out of the Church and in the mean while patiently sigh and groan under that burthen for we may have a sinfull impatience in this kinde as Elijah in part had and those Disciples who would needs have fire immediatly consume the Samaritans because they would not receive Christ Lastly To prevent Schism in the Churches order take heed of pride ambition and seeking great things in the Church It 's reported that most of those who made the greatest Rents in the Church did it upon discontent missing of that preferment they looked for The spirit of Diotrephes who loved preheminencies made great divisions Even the Disciples began to quarrell with one another de primatu Who should be the chiefest Therefore doth our Saviour so often presse humility and enjoyn every one to become like a little Childe The last particular wherein divisions are amongst the godly is in their particular civil deportments and those are the quarrellings and wranglings the Apostle James speaks against Now to prevent these first remove the cause kill the Serpent in its Egge and that is the lust of the soul The Apostle asketh From whence comes jars and fightings Is it not from your Lusts James 4.1 There is warring within against your own souls first and then one with another Dry up this Fountain of lust and then the streams will quickly runne no more Now any kinde of lust unmortified is spark great enough to set the Church on fire a covetous lust when men are immoderately given to the world that causeth great discord As the Philistims and Isaac strived about the Well till at last Isaac came to a place which he called Rehoboth that is Rome Gen. 26.22 Thus here on earth we fall out about earthly things because the creature is too scant to give content to all but in heaven there will be room enough So a proud envious lust that breaks all Union insomuch that till there be a mortification of coveting within there will never be Union without We might mention the excellency of this Union to prevent heat but that hath been done already Let the Sum of all be as much as in us lieth to put this prayer of Christ into practise Peace is so great a matter that it 's called the peace of God and God is called the God of peace and Christ is called our peace seeing Christ praieth for it We see it 's not all the Sermons all the irenicall books can do any good till God give one heart Be importunate therefore with God and strive with him for this unspeakable mercy SERMON CXVII Of the Distinction of Persons and Vnity of Essence in the Deity against the Socinians JOHN 17.21 As thou Father art in me and I in thee THe second thing considerable in this Text is the Patern and Example of Vnity It 's not all kinde of unity he prayeth for but that which is the most absolute and perfect even such unity as is between the Father and Sonne Not as if this did denote equality but similitude only Because this patern was mentioned in the prayer for the Apostles unity I shall not repeat what then was delivered Only this must be acknowledged That there is a two-fold Interpretation of this being of the Father in the Son and the Son in the Father The Ancients they understand this of the Divine Nature as if the unity here spoken were homeousial But Calvin saith Huc eos abripuit contentio cum Arianis the heat of dispute with the Arians carried them off from the sense So that he giveth a second interpretation making the speech to be understood not of the son in respect of his Divine Nature but of his Mediatorship for by that he is made one with God the Father and one with us For whereas before Christs Mediatorship there was a miserable confusion and dissipation of mankinde God the Father against man and man against God Through Christ there is an happy unity obtained So that in Calvins judgement this unity is that of a Mediatour whereby Christ as Head of his Church being joyned to us doth thereby also joyn us to the Father In this sense also he explaineth that known place John 10. I and my Father are one Neither may we think as some have calumniated that Calvin doth Judaize or Arianize for though he deny this to be the sense of these places yet otherwise he doth firmly propugn the true Doctrine about Christs Divine Nature But there is no solid ground to make these interpretations distinct for one doth necessarily suppose the other Christ could not be our Mediatour and Head to make us one with the Father unlesse he were God and so of the same nature with the Father and therefore the unity of their Nature must be understood as the foundation So that we have in the words The distinctions of their Persons by their peculiar proprieties and the unity of their Nature Their personal proprieties are Father and Sonne The oneness of their Nature is in those words Thou in me and I in thee From whence observe That the Father and Sonne are two distinct Persons yet one in Nature and Essence I speak not of the holy Ghost which in other places is made the third person but of these two only because they alone are mentioned in the Text. To open this Consider some things in general and then what is implied in their peculiar relations 1. That God is absolutely known as God 2. Relatively as in these three Persons God absolutely considered may be known by the book of nature relatively only by the Scripture and revelation By the creatures we only can come to know that there is a God maker of all things but that this God is distinguished by three personal proprieties is not matter of investigation but faith only Therefore howsoever some learned men have endeavoured to illustrate this mystery from humane Philosophers especially
others but for a season onely The summe then of this speech amounts to this Christ therefore prayeth that believers may be united amongst themselves because hereby a wide door is opened for the progresse of the Gospel Hereby the world may be perswaded that Christ was the true Messias because he had brought such true peace amongst his Disciples From whence observe That Vnity amongst believers is a special means to enlarge the Kingdome of Christ There is no such obstruction to the Gospel and scandal to the world keeping it off from faith in Christ as to see those who professe Christ divided and subdivided into many Sects and opinions Is it not imbred in all to think that truth cannot be contrary to it self That Christ cannot be divided That the Spirit of God is the same Spirit and therefore men do very speciously conclude certainly these men are not of Christ have not his Spirit they are so contrary to one another No wonder therefore if Christ thus earnestly pray for believers unity as being the most effectual means to propagate and preserve the Gospel which made the Apostle Rom. 16.17 when he had spent the Chapter chiefly in saluting of the Saints an expression of dear love he doth in a most fervent manner break out thus I beseech you Brethren mark them which cause divisions and offences and avoid them We are in a special manner to take heed of such turbulent and dividing persons The Apostle gives this general character of all such They serve not Jesus Christ but their own lusts and ends But to open this Consider First That though our Saviour presse Vnity of believers as a sign of his Disciples and a means to winne others to the Faith yet Vnity simply as so is not an inseparable note of the true Church The Papists indeed they professedly maintain this That where we see a Church in it's members all united together and that under one visible Head and Pastour there we are to conclude is the true Church and on the contrary when we see divisions and multiplicities of Sects and Opinions as they say there are almost an hundred amongst the Protestants there cannot be any true Church And indeed they have no fairer way to intangle men and to fill the hearts of people with prejudices against the truth then because of the many opinions that are amongst us But to this we answer these things First Vnity as Vnity without true Doctrine cannot be any distinctive Note of a true Church A whole Church as that of Israel may be universally corrupted so that neither the Worship or Truths of God were in any visible way received and yet in this universall corruption they were all as one man Thus the Jewes and Turks they have wonderfull unity amongst themselves yet who will conclude the Truth is amongst them Although the Heathens had multiplicity of Gods and religious wayes yet the Jewes are at great consent in the main things amongst themselves It is necessary therefore that to Unity there must be joyned true and sound Doctrine In the second place We say There is no such cause for Papists to boast of Vnity amongst themselves For our Divines doe abundantly shew That these Philistims doe not onely fight against the Israelites but even one with another Their Swords are often set one against another witnesse the Jesuites and Dominicans and that in great controversal points so also between Thomists and Scotists Now to this Bellarmine hath these answers First That their differences are not in substantial things they are only in secondary points But First So we say The Protestants truly so called for we cannot tell how to call the Socinians Christians do agree in Fundamentals so that although there be great disputes in their circa fundamentalia yet the foundation it self they fall not upon Secondly We say They have dissented in Fundamentals for is not that a principle of Religion with them Whether the Pope be above the Councell And yet there have been hot differences amongst them in this point And therefore some have asserted The Pope may be deposed by the Councel and deputed for an Heretique Now certainly with them either the Pope or a Councell is the generall Head of the Church and it 's of the necessity of salvation to be in obedience to such an Head yet they cannot agree who that is In the next place Bellarmine hath this evasion If saith he our Church have any divisions they arise from the meer malice of the Devil not for want of a remedy to keep the unity for we have a visible Judge to determine all controversies whereas saith he among Protestants their differences do arise from the very Genius of their Doctrine because they hold no visible efficacious remedy to such contentions But to this also it s answered easily That all the differences amongst the people of God come from the Devil without and corruptions within The Devil is not wholly conquered nor are our corruptions altogether vanquished and therefore it cannot be but that breaches and wounds will sometimes be made Yet in the second place We have a more sure and efficacious remedy to compose all differences then they have for they indeed alledge the Pope or a Councell as a visible Judge to end all controversies but these being men are subject to ignorance and passions and so cannot perform the Office of an infallible visible Church because not sufficiently qualified thereunto Again They have not de facto silenced all those debates that are amongst them Some of the fore-mentioned Disputes are as fervent as ever Neither hath the Pope yet interposed to decide Whether those Doctrines about scientia media and absolute predefinitions with the dependent controversies thereon be true on the Dominicans side or their adversaries Therefore thirdly We hold The Scriptures to be the infallible and unerring Rule and therefore have a proper and sufficient means to end all controversies And although it be said That many differences arise about the sense of the Scripture therefore that cannot be a Judge but the Church We reply That many controversies also may arise about the Church the Authority of it and it's infallibility and therefore they who acknowledge the Scripture the only adequate Rule of faith do thereby confesse a powerfull remedy to remove all differences Further That Vnity is not de facto alwayes a note of the Church appeareth from the opposition of Satan against the peace and quietnesse of it And therefore as it is in matter of practice peace and quietnesse is not alwayes a signe of a good conscience for our Saviour saith The Devil keepeth all things quiet while he ruleth Luke 11.21 Thus it is also in respect of Churches many times a false superstitious Church hath more plenty and ease then a true one because the Devil will not disturb his own but where the Kingdome of Christ is there the Devil doth also desire to erect his Throne Thus when the good
and we in him by Christ our Mediator Now if we had perfection and freedom from sin we needed not a Mediator So that as Sacraments suppose imperfection in the Communicant thus doth also Christ in the person he is in for if sin were not there How could he be in thee as reconciling thee to God as further sanctifying thee as healing thy corruptions Therefore though in heaven as some say the mystical union of Christ as Head and the Church as his body shall never cease yet the manner of his presence will cease he will not then be in us by faith nor shall we appear in him before God as mediating for us and covering our imperfections for then shall all be done away if then you observe how Christ is in his people to what end you will conclude if I were such as I desire and groan to be then I did not need Christ to be after that manner present in me at all 2. Though God and Christ be in us yet they are in us as free agents communicating efficacy and power according to that measure and degree they please If Christ were in us as a natural agent as the fire burneth or the Sun shineth then he being also omnipotent would produce the greatest effects of grace possible in every beleever because he is free and worketh according to his own councel therefore he distributeth grace as he pleaseth to some more to some lesse to none according to what shall be hereafter Therefore though he might sanctifie thee perfectly yet he will not 3. Christ is not only in us thus freely working in us but he hath also bounded and ordered the way of dispensations of his grace so that he doth not put forth power in us after we are regenerated as if we were so many bruit creatures but he requireth our co-operation and stirring up of our selves Though in the initials of grace we are passive yet not in the progress and though it be Christ that doth daily quicken and preserve us yet we so distemper our selves that some obstructions may be put to his operative presence As 1. Vnbelief Christ worketh in us yet so as by faith insomuch that we are not onely justified by faith but we are in the progress of holiness sanctified by faith Hence Ephes 3.17 Christ is said To dwell in our hearts by faith It 's by faith we receive of the fulness and fatness of Christ insomuch that where faith is not there Christ doth not put forth his power So that as our Saviour said to Mary If thou doest believe thou shalt see the glory of God Joh. 10. so if thou actest faith and dost put that on working then thou wilt both see and feel the glorious presence of Christ Therefore there is no blame in Christ his arm is not shortned This fountain would send forth such living streams it useth to do only thou dammest it up that it cannot run 2. Dulness and slothfulness this doth much withstand Christs operations The Church in the Canticles when she was lazy and pretended excuses not letting in Christ when he desired to come in made her at losse and be without his presence to her dear loss when Christ therefore hath quickned thee by preventing grace he hath many times knocked at the door and there hath been no entrance this hath greatly hindred the course and flourishing of grace 3. When thou givest way to any gross sin this makes Christ with-draw so that little appeareth of him This is like winter to the trees that maketh all the sap withdraw to the root so that outwardly it appeareth a dead tree Therefore cast away that abominable thing and then Christ will come and work as formerly in thee 4. Christ may live and work in thee yet thou not be sensible and apprehensive of it It 's Christ but thou mistakest him for something else as to the Disciples when Christ approached on the waters to them he appeared to be a Spirit at which they trembled not thinking him to be Christ and as Mary Magdalen thought it had been the Gardner when it was her Lord. Thus the godly soul though Christ at that very time doth evidently work in it yet through black distempers doth not indeed judge Christ to be there Lastly Christ sometimes purposely withdraws his operative presence to try us that we might see our own infirmities that we might the more earnestly prize his power and grace Even as in the ship Christ did on purpose sleep that the Disciples being in extremity might the more earnestly awaken him Thus Dormit in te Christus and as Joseph to his brethren discovers not who he is that so he may be the more welcome afterwards And as for the second Question How can Christ be in thee and yet thou have no comfort and assurance You may see the possibility of that in Christ himself who though so dearly beloved of the Father and the Father was in him yet for the present those heavenly consolations were suspended Vse of Instruction to demonstrate the happy condition of such as do believe They have God and Christ within them Though contemptible vessels yet they have a glorious treasure within Though the Cabinet have no excellency yet the Jewel hath Take heed then of grieving such a noble guest within thee when a noble person enters into thy house how doth it trouble thee that any offensive object should come before him Be thou as much carefull left any vain thought any evil action should molest him SERMON CXXIX Of the Vnity of Believers Of the Cause and Nature of it And what makes to the perfect Consummation of it JOHN 17.23 That they may be made perfect in one THose words contain the effect and fruit of that former Unity specified viz. Christ in us and the Father in him for our Saviour here speaks of a three-fold Unity 1. Of the Father with Christ as Mediator 2. Of Christ as Mediator and Head with his Church 3. Of believers amongst themselves and the Vnity of Christ with believers as their Head is the cause of the Members union and communion one with another Now this is the last time our Saviour repeateth this particular of unity for our Saviour doth in this prayer for believers four times repeat it which demonstrateth his exceeding ardent affections for it only every expression seemeth to rise higher then the former The first is That they may be one 2. That they may be one in us 3. That they may be one even as we are one 4. That they may be made perfect in one and this is here mentioned Now what it is to be made perfect in one will appear afterwards onely the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used sometimes of performing and consummating a thing with perfection sometimes it 's used of sanctification and consecration Heb. 2.10 Heb. 5.9 Heb. 7.28 Now although it be true that all believers are consecrated and set apart as holy
after that heavenly unity to have it with the Church here in grace as it shall be with the Church hereafter in glory And certainly if this were not accomplished in Heaven then there would not be all tears wiped away nor would the reproach of Jerusalem cease Thus you have heard what it is that makes this unity of believers consummate and perfect Now let us consider What is the cause of this and that we shall finde to be no humane strength or outward wisdome and policy but the lively communication of grace inabling thereunto by Christ himself Though the Papist pleades That the acknowledgement of one visible Head in the Church is the onely means to preserve unity yet experience sheweth the falsenesse of it The divisions and breaches of the godly like those of Reuben have made sad workings of heart and many have come running in with their water to quench this fire Several Antidotes have been prescribed against this corruption but yet when all is done It 's the onely power of Jesus Christ as Head of his Church that workes this sweet Harmony It 's true indeed many rules and pacificall means are commended by wise and godly men to make an unity but these work onely morally and swasorily that which doth as it were physically and really worke it is the Lord Christ himselfe as the fountain of this unity And the reason is because this unity among believers is not onely externall but internall and spirituall Now no man can worke this unity in the hearts of the godly any more then he can worke purity and holinesse Therefore we see in the Text That because Christ is in us and the Father in Christ therefore are the godly perfected in one so that it requireth a Divine Supernaturall power to make the godly at heavenly accord even as it doth to make them godly Hence it is that in this prayer Christ commendeth it to God to work it as being beyond all humane power to effect it Now Christs being in a believer is a cause of these things in reference to their unity First He is thereby a cause of the Vnity it self For we told you This unity though externall yet is chiefly spirituall and internall viz. The harmonious knitting and joyning of all the Members of Christ together in him their Head Now this being wholly spirituall none can effect it but God alone for naturally we are dis-joyned from God and full of contrariety to him Therefore to be made a member of Christ and implanted into him cannot be by any other but the Spirit of God As those dry bones in Ezekiel could not of themselves gather together nor can a Cyen graft it self into a stock Thus it is here till the Spirit of God joyne us to Christ we are enemies and adversaries unto him That power therefore which gives grace that onely unites As in the naturall body the same cause which makes a member makes it also a united member Insomuch that in all the fractions and divisions we see amongst the godly we ought to have our eyes up more to God to consider that power which makes them holy must unite them and indeed to make them gracious and holy is the greater work yea unity would flow by a necessary resultancy from our membership in Christ but that still our corruptions are too strong and apt to disturb all Secondly Christs being in us is not onely the cause of our Vnity but also of the harmonious sutable proportion to each other We have an admirable description of this harmonious sutablenesse in the unity of Christs body Colos 2.19 Ephes 4.15 16. For the first It 's a Text full of rich and glorious matter and to understand it consider What it is that the Apostle makes the cause why those false Teachers did advance the worship of Angels introduce humane traditions and all to set up other means and wayes of Justification then the Scripture hath appointed It is saith he because they hold not the Head So that every Christian in the matter of all spirituall concernments is still to look up to Christ as the Head and not to let him goe and this he amplifieth from a two-fold precious effect of this Head The first respects the union of beleevers to Christ and so the body is said by joynts to receive nourishment that as the body hath it's nourishment suppeditated by those natural helpes so hath every Christian from Christ Now the joynt that suppeditates these spirituall helps is chiefly the Spirit of God So Romans 8.9 If any man have net the Spirit of Christ he is none of his So that as that is not a member truely united to the Head which is not informed with the same forme the Head is so neither is that Christian really united to Christ which wants the Spirit of Christ Now the Spirit of Christ is here said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To administer nourishment The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth properly signifie to supply all those ornaments which were necessary to such as kept their sacred dancings and festivities but here it signifieth the supply of those things that are necessary for our spirituall end and the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added amplifieth it denoting the full plentifull and abundant supply it giveth So that you see it 's Christs Spirit not ours which doth thus inable us The second benefit flowing from Christ our Head is of the Members themselves They by bands are knit together Now the band here is chiefly also the Spirit of God though gifts and graces doe ordinarily unite So the Apostle 1 Cor. 12.13 For we all by one Spirit are baptized into one body So that the Spirit of God which is in Christ doth also work in all beleevers inflaming and exciting to such graces whereby they have intimate communion one with another Now from these two benefits conjoyned we have the admirable fruit thereof that the body groweth with the increase of God The spirituall growth of Christians as in the body is called The increase of God partly because God onely is the efficient and cause of it partly formally because the nature of this increase is divine and heavenly partly finally because it is to the glory and honour of God So that by all this we see Every true member of Christ is a thriving and growing member and that harmoniously according to it's respective nature and all this comes wholly by the Spirit of Christ so that an unity in the harmonious increase of it depends solely upon him By this Explication the other fore-mentioned Text may also be discovered Lastly Christs being in us is the cause of the perpetuity and constancy of that Vnity the godly have This Union in Christs body can never be dissolved As the Personall Union of Christ could never be divided so neither the mysticall Therefore our sound Divines doe well from Christs in-dwelling in us propugne and assert the perseverance of the Saints Vse of Instruction
prayed to Christ they said Master we will But seeing this prayer of Christs is from him as a Mediator we may well acknowledge that there is more then a meer humble supplication such as meer men make but some powerfull declaration of his will that he will have it so For to this purpose he speaks Joh. 12.26 Where I am there also shall my servant be Christ by his own power and authority will cause it to be From whence I shall touch only on this Doctrine That Christs prayer for his people will certainly and infallibly prevail for them I will saith Christ that they be where I am Though we may many times doubt of the efficacy and successe of our own prayers yet there is no cause at all to question the successe of Christs Intercession and the grounds are these 1. Because he hath merited and purchased at Gods hands those benefits he prayeth for Therefore though whatsoever God doth to us be of grace in respect of us yet it is of justice and right to him so that it can no more be that Christs prayer for us should not speed then that God should be unjust and that not in respect of promise only to Christ for he hath likewise promised to us but of justice So that now Christ may well say Father I will their glory and happiness because I have purchased it at so dear a rate 2. Christs prayer must needs be effectual because it lieth in his power also to do that and accomplish for us which he doth desire Though therefore as man he prayeth yet as God he can fulfill and bring about what we stand in need of If therefore Christ saith Father I will that they be sanctified that they be glorified who shall withstand this 3. Christs prayer will alwayes take effect because his will and the will of the Father are the same So that as Christ argued None could take his sheep out of his hand because he and the Father are one So also it followeth Christs will in prayer cannot be gainsaid or hindred by any because the Father and he are one if indeed the Father had one will and Christ a contrary will to it then we might justly doubt of the successe of it but it is not as Christ wils the Sanctification and glorification of his people so doth the Father also So that all our confidence is to be in Christs prayer and not ours Vse 1 Vse of Consolation and comfort to the children of God who mourn under the sinfull imperfections of their prayers yea are ready to cry out that God shutteth out their prayers Oh let them remember what a glorious treasure is here laid up for them Though their own prayers are weak yet Christs are not Look therefore again and again see the things Christ hath prayed for and then doubt not but they will be accomplished in thee Oh let not thy heart sink and be troubled within thee when thou seest such a remedy provided for thee Urge Christs name urge Christs prayer Vse 2 Vse 2. Of Terrour to wicked men who have no interest in Christs prayer or intercession If it were so terrible a judgement not to have Samuel or Jeremiah pray for some persons it argued their incurable condition how much more may it strike horrour and amazement into the hearts of all wicked men as Christ minded thee not in his death so neither in his prayer I pray not for the world But into the hardned and impenitent heart no terrible woe can enter SERMON CXXXVI Of the State of Glory Shewing what it is to behold Christs Glory in Heaven JOH 17.24 That they may behold the glory that thou hast given me IN these words is contained the final cause or end of our Saviours Petition in behalf of his Disciples He praieth that they may be with him in Heaven and why That they may behold the glory which the Father hath given him In which words take notice of the Act the Object and the Cause of it The act is that they may behold ut videant saith Austin non ut credant because Eternal vision in Heaven is the reward of faith here on earth Here it 's believing in Heaven it's beholding Although there are some that limit the sence to this life as if here they were by the experience of Faith to behold the glory and majesty of Christ as Mediatour but the context doth principally relate to the enjoying of glory in Heaven Others they observe Non dixit ut habeant sed ut videant he did not say That they might have but that they might behold for Christs glory is incommunicable but the word is not to be limited for it comprehends 1. To behold and see and that immediatly opposite to the way of faith and knowledge which we have of God in this life which is but darkly 2. It denoteth fruition and enjoyment of this glory for we shall be glorified with Christ and thus the word videre is often used for frui To see life is to live To see death is to die To see the Kingdom of Heaven is to enjoy it So that the godly shall not be meer idle Spectators of this Glory but they shall be taken into fellowship with it 3. It denoteth all the effects and consequents of such a beholding of this Glory which are infinite delight and joy Immortality and Eternity So that there shall never be any end of it all this is comprehended in seeing but the greater Question is about the glory that is mentioned What is understood by that and some relate it to that infinite and incomprehensible Glory which he hath as God but generally it 's understood of that Glory which he hath as Mediatour for so the Father after his sufferings did infinitely exalt him and give him a name above all names So that Christ as Mediatour is glorified in a transcendent manner by God So that Christ hath his essential glory as God and his Mediatory glory as Mediatour Now these two kindes of glory do not differ really but only in several waies of administration for he that is Mediator must needs also be God Obs That the great end of our being in Heaven is to behold and enjoy the Glory of Christ As the Queen of Sheba took a long journey to behold the glory of Solomon which did so ravish her that her spirit even fainted within her which yet was but a temporall fading and earthly glory how much more transcendent and ravishing will that heavenly Glory be to us when we shall behold the Majesty and Greatnesse that Christ shall then be in sitting upon his throne at the right hand of God To behold and to be ravished with this glory of Christ is the great work we have to do to all Eternity for our Saviours will to have us where he is is not for any want or necessity that he had of us Christs glory would have been admired by Angels though we should never be
of the Petition our Saviour doth further confirm it by continuing this prayer with several arguments more whereof the first is from the opposition or antithesis that is between the wicked damned world and believers expressed in these words The world hath not known that is their Character 2. You have the Description of believers These have known thou hast sent me 3. The fontal cause and original of it I have known thee 4. The Compellation given to God suiting the argument in hand righteous Father This is the sixt time that Christ cals him Father in this prayer and no wonder because as you heard it 's so sweet a relation producing all love delight joy and confidence in God by him that practically improveth it but that I have dispatched only I must not passe by that adjunct or title further qualifying this Father viz. righteous righteous Father formerly when he prayed for the sanctification of his Disciples then he said holy Father making use of that attribute which is the cause of all holiness in the creature but now speaking of that dreadfull and wonderfull dispensation of God whereby to some he revealeth himself and others again he suffers to perish in their rebellion therefore it is that he pitcheth on a sutable attribute Righteous Father It 's true indeed the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes used of a man in respect of his universal rectitude and uprightness and so some take it here and then it 's no more then that former compellation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holy Father but the altering of the word with the context may incline us to understand it differently Now you must know righteousness may be attributed to God generally and particularly generally as it comprehends the whole rectitude and universal purity of his whole nature or particularly and that several wayes 1. The righteousnesse of his fidelity and promise whereby he doth make good to all believers whatsoever he hath said even to the meanest and lowest act of grace Thus 1 Tim. 4.8 Paul saith The righteous Judge will give him a Crown of glory And 1 Joh. 1.9 If we confess our sins God is faithfull and righteous to forgive them Here is righteousness and the godly may plead heaven because of Gods righteousness but it 's only a righteousness of promise or fidelity in God not any strict remunerative righteousness as if from the good works themselves God were bound to reward them Indeed Maldonate he would fasten this interpretation upon the word as if our Saviour did plead the merits of believers but this is so proud and presumptuous that we will not spend time to confute it 2. There is a punitive and vindicative righteousness which God exerciseth to the wicked impenitent world and that both in spiritual and temporal punishment of which Revel 16.7 19.2 Righteous are the judgements of God Now I shall comprehend both these kinds of righteousness righteousness of God as a Father in respect of those who believe in him and righteousness of God as a Judge in respect of the world which doth not know him Observ That God whether considered as a Judge of the world or a Father to believers is righteous in all his wayes This truth is of great use if duly improved for what will silence all thy disputes all thy murmurings What will rebuke those winds and waves of thy soul but this The Lord is righteous Let us take notice of Gods righteousness in this two-fold consideration for both are aimed at in the expression by our Saviour And First The righteousness of God as a Judge of the world and as his administrations to wicked men they are so righteous and just that even the devils and wicked men though they may blaspheme yet cannot say God is unjust or doth them any wrong And although the Arminians and such infected persons who with their whole strength indeavour to overthrow Gods absolute Election of some to eternal life and the preterition and passing by of others bring specious Arguments as if the Orthodox by this Doctrine made him unjust and more cruel then any man yet such can prevail only with those that leave Scripture and consult with humane affections and indulge too much to natural reason For R. 1 1. When the Scripture is so positively and clear that some are elected some are given by the Father to Christ some are vessels of honour and mercy and others not loved by God to eternal life but left to themselves and so become by their sinfulness vessels of wrath and when not onely Scripture but experience also doth confirm this That the greatest part of the world yea and the Christian Church die in their sins and do eternally perish For many are called but few are chosen When I say Scripture and experience is clear for such a thing it 's presumption in us to argue from thence unrighteousness in God For can we search into the deep counsels of God Do we comprehend the purposes and ends of God We should rather conclude There is righteousness in all these things though we cannot pierce into it The Apostle in Rom. 9. doth beat down such presumptuous cavillings with God and we may observe That though David and Jeremiah were greatly disquieted with anxious disputes about Gods proceedings in his administrations yet they lay down this as a peremptory conclusion and they fortifie themselves with this against all insurrections of spirit The Lord is righteous Gods will is the law of righteousness and none but God himself whose understanding is infinite can comprehend his own wayes R. 2 2. God is not unrighteous in passing by some and leaving others Because he hath an absolute soveraignty and dominion over all He is not subject to any as a superior Neither is he bound by any Laws imposed upon him only his own holiness is that eternal Rule and Law by which he doth all things and if none may say unto a King why doest thou so Much less to the King of Kings Therefore learned Divines make Election neither an act of mercy or of justice but of soveraignty and dominion only R. 3 3. God is not unjust Because if he had not saved one man but left all in their undone estate he had done no more then he might do For why should it be unjust in reference to man more then in reference to the apostate Angels for of that whole number of them which fell there is not one redeemed from their eternal miseries and are we of more noble consideration then those spirits yea one of them might have done God more service if restored then many men could do So that this consideration should bridle our unruly thoughts and we should rather admire and praise the goodness and grace of God that any one is saved rather then charge God sinfully and foolishly as we are apt to do because no more R. 4 Lastly There is no injustice in God he is a righteous Judge of the
wickednesse is said not to know him and thus generally in the Scripture the wicked are said not to know God Oh then let such who have strong convictions and also strong corruptions tremble at this Let such who live against knowledge fall down for fear at this Is it not the condition of all such who live in grosse and prophane waies Do ye not commit the sins you know ye ought not Do ye not omit the duties that the light of the Scripture enjoyneth thee Oh that men should in the day stumble and not know whither they go Follow then all thy knowledge into a gracious practical improvement of it lest thou perish with the world SERMON CXLI Christ is the great Teacher of his Church JOH 17.25 But I have known thee IN these words are contained the cause and fountain of all that saving knowledge which beleevers have viz. because Christ knoweth God For whereas the immediate opposition should have runne thus The world hath not known thee but these have known thee This is inserted as the cause I have known thee The word is in the Preterperfect tense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the Present as John 8 55. I know him and keep his saying Now Christs knowledge may be considered two wayes either 1. Subjectively or immanent in him Or 2. Transitively or by way of communication unto others as the fountains fulnesse may be considered either absolutely in it self or as originally redundant and diffusive to it's streams Now though the first kinde of knowledge be necessarily presupposed yet the latter is chiefly aimed at as appeareth by those words I have declared unto them thy Name and will declare unto them In these words therefore our Saviour doth manifest himself to be the Mediator and in a more peculiar manner the Prophet of his Church whereby he communicates saving knowledge unto all beleevers and that he is the Sunne which enlightneth every one that cometh into the Church That as God hath put all material light into the body of the Sunne and all other things are enlightned by it Thus it is with Christ the Sun of righteousnesse all spiritual knowledge is given unto him and that without measure from whom there are several emanations and irradiations whereby all that know spiritually are enlightned by him Thus he is the truth and the way Obs That Christ is the original and fontal cause of all the knowledge that believers have There is not the least ray or beam of any spiritual illumination that doth not descend from him There are pregnant Texts to confirm this John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosom of the Father he hath declared him Where we have an opposition of Christ to Moses who yet talked to God face to face and to all other Prophets though they had immediate inspirations and revelations yet none of these saw God at any time that is perfectly and comprehensively They were but servants and had no more manifested to them then what was convenient but Christ he is the only begotten Son of God and in the bosom of the Father he knoweth the minde the secrets all the whole counsel and purpose of God and that of himself and this he doth not keep close in himself as Paul when caught up into the third heavens heard things not to be uttered but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those things that otherwise were hidden and obscure he had made clear and known Thus you see that first Christ hath a full and perfect knowledge of the minde of God and that he hath it not in such a manner as the holy Prophets sometimes received it but of himself and that this knowledge he doth not keep to himself no more then the Sun doth its light but he hath it to reveal and declare it to his people so that we have the minde of God because Christ hath revealed it Therefore some say he is called the word of God because he doth manifest the inward purposes of God for our salvation and the means to attain thereunto This truth also is abundantly confirmed Joh. 3.31.32 where all the Prophets and John himself is debased in respect of Christ He that cometh from heaven is above all All others come of the earth but Christ because coming from heaven the bosom of the Father therefore he is above all but it followeth What he hath seen and heard he testifieth so that he communicateth this knowledge to the world Therefore the unbelief of the world is heavily taxed No man receiveth his testimony Although Christ be to be preferred above all that were ever sent by God for they were only infallible directively and by outward assistance only but Christ essentially and internally yet the world doth not receive his testimony If then it be thus That Christ only knoweth God and from him knowledge is derived to all others Even the Doctors and Teachers in the Church do strive by his light then it 's no wonder if God from heaven doth take us of all others and bid us attend to him Mat. 17.5 Hear ye him So that we are not to regard what the wisest the learned or the most ancient say but what Christ saith To open this truth Consider these things 1. That Christ a● God hath omnisciency knowing all things 1 Cor. 2.11 What is there attributed to the Spirit of God is true also of the Sonne of God The Spirit searcheth the deep things of God Thus Christ as God must needs comprehend all the things of God and so there is nothing hid from him And this Omnisciency of his was often manifested especially Joh. 2. when it 's said He knew what was in man and needed not that any should tell him 2. The humane Nature of Christ or Christ as man knew not all things but according as the Divine Nature revealed the hidden things of God so he came to perceive him Therefore the Doctrine of the Lutherans seem to confound the Natures when they say The properties of the Divine Nature are communicated to the humane Nature Omniscience and Vbiquity c. This cannot be and yet Christ abide a true man Hence he is said to grow in knowledge yea as Son of man he is said Not to know the day of Judgement Mat. 24.36 which cannot be explained as some would he knew it not viz. to reveal it for in that sense the Father also might be said not to know it yet the humane nature of Christ though it was capable of nesciency yet not of ignorance for as he was without all sin so without all ignorant defects in minde he wanted no perfection that was due to him it was an experimental knowledge he grew in 3. Even the humane Nature of Christ is now lifted up to know many things without which as the Judge of the world he could not accomplish that work For seeing that Christ God-man is appointed to judge the world it 's necessary that
millions of Christians for the Christian Faith If then David did so much prize his Worthies and those who were valiant men venturing their lives for him were so indeared how much more will God highly esteem such as are couragious and venturous for him Therefore there is such encouraging promises made to such as are willing to lose for him Mat. 19.29 he shall receive an hundred fold and shall inherit eternal life Is not this plain that God is very tender of and remunerative of such who are couragious and ready to lose any thing for his sake 3. Herein the godly manifest their love to God In this time of adversity they discover their kinde affections towards God Now love of God is abundantly rewarded with love from God What a happy exchange is this for thy poor finite creatures love which is not able to make God more blessed and happy to have the infinite effectual and unspeakable love of God towards thee If we love the inanimate creatures they do not love us again Thou lovest riches riches do not love thee again Thou lovest honours but honours cannot love thee again but if we place our love upon God then God will powr out his love abundantly upon us again love obtains love and where God loveth his love is infinite like himself and withall it 's efficacious his love while we are sinners made him send his Son to die for us much more will his love be operative since reconciled with us Lastly All such true believers who acknowledge Christ in the midst of an ungodly world they do betake themselves to Gods faithfulness and rest only upon that They take up this resolution all the world will prove malicious and ungrateful they cannot expect better measure then what Christ himself had who yet did so much good where he came Now having these expectations they fortifie themselves with Gods promise and fidelity he will not leave them nor forsake them You see how often David professeth his trust in God making him his fortresse and strong tower We see among men if any one betake himself to another mans fidelity and say he will trust on him he will depend upon him if such an one have any ingenuity or spark of goodness in him to be sure he will not fail such he will not deceive how much rather then will God abide sure and faithful to all those that depend on him Vse 1. of Exhortation not to be infected or poisoned with the common iniquity of others though others grow wicked yet let not thy love grow cold for this will be a remarkable aggravation of grace when the world was obstinate and would not know God yet thou didst Do not think that multitude of sins can be any patronage to thee at all Though thou art but one man or one Family for God in the whole Parish do not shrink at this but think that God doth the rather take notice of thee It 's a more difficult task to be godly in some places then others It will cost more there will be more sufferings but still remember never did any lose by losing for God Vse 2. of Comfort to the godly Though they have so little from the world for God he takes notice of all the hard speeches all the hard practises that ungodly men are guilty of towards them but let them know the more this Pharaoh this Egypt doth oppress them the more graciously will God at last hear all their groan and they shall enter into a Canaan that will make amends for all Think not of thy conflicts and fightings but of the Crown of glory Oh that the godly would consider who it is that looks on them while they run in this race while they are striving for an holy victory SERMON CXLIII Of Christs teaching Believers Shewing what great need the most illuminated Christians have still to be taught JOH 17.26 And I have declared unto them thy Name and will declare it c. OUr Saviour having in the former verse affirmed himself to be the cause of all that saving knowledge beleevers have he doth in this verse manifest that he is the conservant cause as well as the efficient that as God is both the Authour of Creation and Preservation in the order of nature So Christ is in the order of grace We have therefore in the words 1. The gracious action of Christ toward his people 2. The efficient cause 3. The Subject to whom 4. The final Cause hereof The gracious action of Christ is set down both by the Preterperfect and Future tense ushered in with the part cle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some make causal in this conn●xion They have known thou hast sent me for I have declared thy Name unto them And thus it may very well be taken in this place and thence we may observe That the saving knowledge of Christ cometh not by our own natural strength or abilities but by the meer revelation and will of Christ But I shall not insist on that In the next place the Benefit ascribed to us is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at the sixth verse he used the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is sometimes used of Gods making a thing known to us Luke 2.15 Sometimes of our making a thing known to God as Phil. 4.6 Let your requests be made known to God Not that God is ignorant of any thing but as much as lieth in us we spred them in Gods presence to take notice of them Sometimes of one mans making known a thing to another as 1 Cor. 15.1 Ephes 6.21 In this place it 's attributed to Christ as the efficient cause I have declared In the next place there is the diversity of time I have and will declare it Austin referreth this to the present life and the life to come but it rather denoteth the constant and daily revelation or manifestation of Christ himself and his truth to belevers 3. There is the Object declared thy Name that is God himself 4. The Subject to whom that is not the Apostles but to all believers Now I have already handled the benefit mentioned Christs declaring the Name of God to believers I shall onely take notice of the Necessity of continuing this Benefit even to Believers though Apostles though never so eminent in gifts and graces yet Christ doth still keep up and encrease their saving knowledge Observ That believers do not only at their first conversion but in the whole progress of their life need constant illumination and teaching from God There is none can learn so much in Gods School that God himself can teach him no longer This truth will be of great use to keep the most knowing Christians very humble and low in their own eies as also to make them continually depend upon Christ in the Word and Ministry that they may grow in knowledge This truth is abundantly confirmed by that notable prayer of the Apostle for
time reveal even this truth unto them also SERMON CXLIV Of the powerful sense and feeling of the love of God How it 's attained And what a great advantage it is to him that hath it both in reference to duty and comfort JOHN 17.26 That the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them IN these words we have the necessary Consequent or Effect of believing in Christ and resting on him as Mediatour and that is the love of God towards them So that we have here the description of Gods love to Beleevers and that in the highest degree which is imaginable the love wherewith thou lovest me Criticks note a Graecism in the relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Mar. 4.41 2 Tim. 4.7 which Austin also on the place takes notice of though Maldonate call it a light Observation The Truth it self is of infinite comfort that God loves believers with that love wherewith he loveth Christ himself But this hath been discoursed of already 2. You have the subject of this love with the manner of participation of it That this love may be in them that is in true believers and in them only Some by love understand the holy Ghost but we may take it for the gracious favour of God and as Zanchy well observeth he doth not say that this love may be towards them though that also be true but in them Gods love was to his people by way of purpose and decree from all Eternity but it was not in them Now when Gods love is said to be in them that is to be understood of the Effects of his love and more especially of the sence and assurance of his love Lastly There is the cause of all this expressed in these words And I in them where Christs mystical Union with and indwelling in us is made the cause of all the love of God to believers but of this also we have already treated So that there remaineth no new thing but the manner of participation of this love of God to them and that is said to be in them which although as was said may be true of the several gracious effects of Gods love yet I shall pitch on that which is the most obvious viz. Gods love in a beleever by way of sence and assurance for God not only loveth them but they may feel this and be perswaded thereof Obs That it is not enough for the people of God to be loved by him but they are to endeavovr after the sence and apprehension of this in their own hearts This is the Emphasis the Selah as it were in this expression that Gods love may be in them our Faith in Christ is not only to produce those direct acts whereby we are perswaded of Gods love in the generall but also those reflex acts whereby we know and feel that his love is in us As a man under the Sun-beams feeleth and enjoyeth the comfortable influence thereof So that herein lieth the compleat happinesse of a Christian to be loved of God and to perceive and feel this To open this you must Consider 1. That the love of God is taken in Scripture two waies either actively for that whereby we love him or passively for that whereby we are loved of him and so some Texts do receive different Interpretations because of the different application of that love of God Now it 's true our love to God is inherent in us and we may perceive and feel it as fire sometime working in us for his glory and honour but the love of God whereby he loveth us we cannot feel in us but by the Spirit of God manifesting and evidencing this unto our souls We have a notable Text Rom. 5.5 where the love of God is said to be shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given us which although some expound of that love inherent in us whereby we love God yet it seemeth more consonant to the words preceding that it is to be understood of that love of God whereby he loveth us for this being diffused in our hearts and we thereby affected with it do rejoyce in tribulations and have such hope that will never make ashamed This then is said to be a special mercy vouchsafed to Gods Children that his love is plentifully powred upon them as Aarons Oyle upon his head and so descending to other parts So that by this Love of God they can triumph and be confident in all tribulations and exercises whatsoever This is an heaven upon the Earth to live in such discoveries and evidences of Gods love 2. Gods love may be greatly towards us yea and the effects of it in us yet for all this we discern and feel them not As it was with the Lord Christ our Head though dearly beloved of his Father yet in respect of any sense and perceivance of Gods love at that time he was destitute of it David doth often bewail his condition in respect of this spirituall desertion and indeed there cannot be an heavier temptation upon the godly heart then the clean contrary in the Text That the wrath and anger of God whereby he is drawn out against the wicked they should apprehend to be upon them They who esteem the light of his countenance above all things to finde the frowns and wrath of God to apprehend his displeasure towards them this is a burthen greater then they can bear So that although this be made the connex to their believing in Christ yet it is a separable Consequent it is that which may be divided from it sometimes At that very time when the godly do believe on Christ in a dependent way they may walk in sad apprehensions knowing nothing of the love of God towards them yea in a very dreadful manner questioning of it 3. Although the love of God towards believers may not be perceived by them yet they are to press forward they are to pray and wrestle with God that they may not continue in darknesse but be brought to this comfortable light The Apostle Peter presseth it as a necessary duty 2 Pet. 1.10 Give all diligence to make your Calling and Election sure and the Apostle Paul 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether ye be in the Faith or no So that this happy priviledge is possible and many of the people of God without any immediate revelation have attained unto it Insomuch that it is for the most part our sin that we walk not in the sence of it It is true indeed God sometimes out of his Soveraignty and for wise ends of his own doth withdraw this sense and evidence of his favour but for the most part it is from our selves that such black clouds arise which keep the light of the Sun from us 4. The sence and perceiving of Gods love may be either in an immediate manner or mediate Immediately and thus Christ discovered his love to
some while he was here on earth or mediately and that is by the discovering of the work of grace upon our souls whereby we gather Gods love toward us and this is the ordinary safe way that we are to take otherwise under the pretence of immediate revelations we may fall into sad delusions and this way the Scripture suggests viz. that by our love to the brethren by keeping his Commandements we may gather that we are loved of God Do not then expect as if thou shouldst hear a voice from heaven in a glorious manner as Christ did Thou art my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased but begin at the work of grace and Sanctification in thy heart by which thou maist certainly conclude of Gods love as by the Sun-beams we may conclude the Sun risen yet this must be necessarily added that we can neither discern of the work of grace in us or have such full perswasions of Gods love thereby but by the spirit of God as in Rom. 5.5 we of our selves through the sight of the imperfections of our graces would run from the presence of God only it 's the spirit of adoption given unto us which makes us have an Evangelical boldness before him Lastly This love of God perceived and felt by the godly is of a transcendent and incomprehensible nature So that if we should spend our whole life in the meditating of it yet we are never able to go to the bottom of it This is admirably expressed Eph. 3 19. that ye may know the love of Christ which passeth all knowledge from whence followeth that we are filled with the fulness of God for this love to us is the same in kinde though not in degree with that whereby he loveth Christ himself Christ and his members are comprehended in the same act of love what an unspeakable consideration is this to a poor believer Again the love of God is such that he gave his only begotten Son to the vilest and most ignominious death for them which the Apostle puts also upon it Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world and this love was to us while enemies while adversaries and it 's not to bring about a temporall mercy for us but eternal even everlasting glory and lastly this love is immutable and unchangeable God will never alter his love or cease to love such Certainly such a love is that which the heart of a man can never sufficiently comprehend must needs infl●me the soul there cannot be any cold Ice under this torrid Zone Therefore in the next place let us consider the great advantages that a believer hath which hath this powerful sence and feeling of Gods love within his heart And 1. It doth in a wonderful manner encourage and embolden the soul and that under the thoughts of death and the day of Judgement If so be this were to be the next moment if this voice were heard Arise and come to judgement yet the experimental feeling of Gods love would keep the heart so far from being dejected and perplexed that it would rather rejoyce a man and make him lift up his head 1 Joh. 4.17 Herein is love made perfect that is not our love but Gods love to us as the Greek intimateth that we may have boldnesse in the day of judgement That day which is so terrible to the wicked the very name of it is dreadful to them that bringeth much comfort to him who is loved of God Now what a desirable life is this who would not give the whole world to enjoy it viz. that he may walk in such powerful apprehensions of Gods favour that though death come though the day of judgement come yet his heart is not terrified within him The Apostle John speaks of Gods love perfected in us 1 Jo. 4.12 that is in respect of manifestation and discovery as Gods power is said to be perfected in our infirmities or faith to be perfected by love which sheweth that though God doth love us yet till this be manifested and discovered to us his love is not perfected to us 2. The sence and feeling of Gods love doth make us patient and contented yea even rejoycing under all tribulations the more grudgings and discontents thou art assaulted with under any exercises it 's an argument thou hast the less feeling of Gods love upon thee for if this did diffuse it self thou wouldst be more then a conquerour in all these things and certainly if Calvin said gravely from the former consideration out of the place mentioned in John That so far a man is proficient in faith as he is well composed in his heart for the expectation of the day of judgement We may also speak in this particular that so far a man hath profited in Christianity as he can from the sence of Gods favour rejoyce and be above all tribulations whatsoever This the Apostle mentioneth Rom. 5.5 the cause of all those glorious graces mentioned viz. patience and glorying in tribulations as also hope which will not make ashamed all cometh from that love of God shed abroad in their souls and Rom 8 It 's the love of God which he felt in his soul that made him triumph in so glorious a manner that he challengeth all things as not able to hinder him from this love of God 3. This sence of Gods love is a notable inflamer and quickner of the heart unto all godliness to all holy duties How dull how cold and lukewarm are all such performances that flow not from this fire within All is but formality and a meer outside in Religion till we have some apprehension of Gods love toward us yea those that are truly loved of God but yet not assured of it how heavily do they move in any holy duties how sad and divided with unbelieving thoughts how prone to yield to such temptations that because God doth not love them therefore it 's a vain thing to seek his face any longer but if once God let this love shine in upon his heart then it 's like oyl to his bones then it 's like Ezechiels spirit in the wheels then many waters cannot quench this love So that any duty performed out of the apprehension of Gods love is in some respect worth a thousand of those done without it Oh therefore labour to keep this fire alwaies upon the Altar of thy heart 2 Cor. 5.14 the Apostle there saith that the love of Christ constraineth him the word is thought to be used of those Prophets who being immediatly wrought upon by the spirit of God could not keep in what they felt but they must deliver it and thus it is with a man strongly possessed with the feeling of Gods love he cannot keep it in he is in an holy extasie and ravishment he praieth he heareth he doth all things with all his might 4 This apprehension of Gods love will make us wonderfull heavenly It will take us from all things here below As a man on
558 A Ministry is appointed for spiritual ends 558 Arguments to prove the perpetuity of the Ministry ibid. N Name WHat is meant by Name in Phil. 2. 28 All Church-meetings Censures and duties should be done in the Name of Christ 28 All things have their successe in Christs Name ibid. What is meant by Gods Name 162 Nature All by Nature are in a state of enmity against God 14 The humane Nature was assumed by the divine 666 The Father and Sonne are two distinct Persons yet one in Nature and Essence 582 Natural Natural knowledge insufficient to guide us in the worship of the true God 92 O Obedience THat is proper Obedience that hath the word of God requiring of it 198 There are five grounds of it 200 Oblation Two things admirable in Christs Oblation of himself 503 Office The substance of the Ministerial Office is the same with that which every Minister hath 492 That there is a distinct Office of the Ministry 498 That none may enter into that Office without an authoritative mission 499 How shall we know what is an extraordinary Office and what is an ordinary Office 558 Offices Christ is fitted in respect of his Offices to be a Prophet Priest and King 503 504 Vide Priestly P People GOds People called out of the world 172 How many wayes a People may be said to be Gods 176 The godly are Gods People in a peculiar manner 177 The opening of this in five particulars 177 178 They are the Lords upon several titles 178 179 There ought to be a practical improvement of it 180 It is a sure Character of Gods People to be a willing People 204 Seven Reasons of this 205 c. Perseverance Several particulars about Perseverance that will be as so many answers to Objections made against that truth 352 353 c. Arguments to prove those that have true grace shall persevere 357 c. Power Power as it is expressed in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 35 It is not enough to be put into a state of grace unlesse by Gods Power we are kept therein 307 How many wayes the Power of God doth keep us 309 Why there is such a necessity of Gods preserving Power 312 Pray Whether it be lawfull to Pray for any one man in particular 229 Whether it be lawfull to Pray for a reprobate as such 229 Whether we may Pray in faith for others as for our selves 230 It is our duty to Pray for ungodly men 231 Motives to move thereunto 231 232 Prayer The matter of Christs Prayer 1. Himself 2. Apostles 3. Others who in time should believe 2 To all instructions c. Prayers is necessary ibid. Reasons on Gods part on the Words part on mans part 4 It should come from a spiritual and heavenly heart 5 Four Requisites to spirituall Prayer 6 It s a hard thing to Pray 6 Customary Prayer receiveth nothing from God 7 Prayer is mental vocal 8 Ends in Prayer 12 Praying It is good and comfortable Praying for them that discover the signes of grace in them 229 Predestination The Doctrine of Predestination should be preached warily 52 Diligently ibid. So as not to discourage humble penitents ibid. Predictions Three sorts of Predictions 396 Priest Christ was not only Priest but Sacrifice it self 510 Priestly Concerning Christs Priestly Office consider these things 508 The Adjuncts of his Priestly Office ibid. Priesthood Propositions concerning Christs Priesthood 510 Principles Principles that do constitute a gracious disposition 32 Vniting Principles in Doctrine 577 Vide Uniting Priviledges Priviledges that come by Christs death 245 Promised Things Promised must be prayed for 137 This is explained in seven particulars 137 138 c. Six Reasons why it is so 139 What are the conditions of such a prayer 141 c. Propriety They only can plead a Propriety in God and Christ who are carefull to keep his Word 182 Gods peculiar Propriety in his people is the ground of all good that accrueth to them 255 Propositions concerning Gods Propriety in his people 255 256 Gods Propriety excludeth all other creatures ib. How the Propriety of God is the cause of all good 258 Properties The Characteristical Properties of the Persons in the God-head 584 Properties in the godly which maketh them lovely and precious in Gods sight 687 Protect The grounds why God will Protect such as are hated for his Names sake 423 Protection Christs Protection is to one believer as well as to another 527 Q Qualifications THe Qualifications of such to whom Christs death is made savingly advantagious 245 Question The great Question that all ought to put is How may I get eternal life 67 We must take the right way to answer this Question 68 Vide Eternal Life R Reading WHether Reading be preaching 496 Redeemed That not all but some of mankinde are Redeemed by Christ 51 Redemption Our Redemption obtained by Christ is a glorifying of God 113 How the maintainers of Universal Redemption differ among themselves 241 Vide Universal Relation It is of great consequence for the humbled Christian in his prayers to improve this Relation of a Father 658 Religion We are not to condemn the way of Religion though some amongst them prove scandalous 377 Some considerations to bring this home 378 The unreasonableness and sinfulness of condemning Religion for some hypocrites therein 379 Repetitions Repetions of the same matter in prayer may be usefull 133 Vide Tautology When the ground of Repetition is good 133 c. When Repetitions are forbidden 135 Reprobates Reprobates receive much benefit by Christs death 239 Righteous God whether considered as a Judge of the world or as a Father to believers is Righteous in all his wayes 674 Reasons why God is Righteous in all his administrations 674 Righteousnesse It is a dangerous sinne to trust to our own Righteousnesse as it appeareth in four particulars 219 Means to drive them out of self-Righteousnesse 220 221 How Righteousnesse may be attributed to God 674 The Righteousnesse of God as a Father to his people in all their afflictions 676 S Sacrifice THat Christ set himself apart to be a Sacrifice for us 502 What things are necessary to a Sacrifice 510 The Properties of Christs Sacrifice 511 Salvation Salvation is to be desired in subordination to Gods glory 32 The everlasting Salvation of men determined 51 Salvation is of grace 253 The Reasons of it 253 The Causes of Salvation 679 Sanctification Growth in Sanctification illustrated by the contraries unto it 464 The Word of God is the instrument of our Sanctification 468 The Explication of the Point 469 The Word is the ordinary means of our beginning and increase in Sanctification 471 Christ died not only for our Justification but Sanctification also 515 How many wayes Christ is the cause of our Sanctification 515 Sanctified How many wayes a godly man may be more Sanctified 459 Reasons why it is not enough to be Sanctified but we must be more and more holy 466 What is
15 16 463 Acts. 17 23 91 17 27 585 20 27 424 26 22 388 Romans 1 21 92 1 17 174 6 19 206 9 5 99 10 2 77 12 1 456 12 10 431 1 Corinthians 1 14 115 1 2 516 2 17 424 3 8 563 6 20 257 6 7 587 8 4 5 90 8 2 94 11 19 389 15 22 44 15 47 435 2 Corinthians 2 15 348 4 6 606 5 16 334 11 20 17 Galatians 1 4 175 3 28 524 4 16 430 6 17 126 Ephesians 2 2 189 2 3 363 4 1 3 4 571 5 2 502 Philippians 2 10 28 2 2 407 2 15 514 3 1 401 3 20 454 3 9 549 4 18 502 Colossians 1 16 150 2 20 45 2 20 171 2 5 596 2 9 629 2 19 635 3 1 454 1 Thessalonians 2 13 478 2 Thessalonians 1 3 189 3 2 254 1 Timothy 1 16 532 4 16 484 5 10 424 6 20 424 6 2 526 2 Timothy 1 9 149 1 9 533 3 16 390 3 15 479 Hebrews 2 7 46 4 9 126 5 14 633 10 29 464 11 26 32 11 24 18 11 3 155 13 18 151 James 2 11 201 4 3 7 4 6 153 5 16 141 1 Peter 1 3 146 1 5 307 1 23 24 479 2 20 554 2 7 686 4 18 355 4 12 389 4 14 15     16. 421 2 Peter 1 6 273 3 17 316 3 12 456 1 John 2 20 513 2 2 278 2 19 360 3 8 344 3 19 552 5 16 230 3 John   2 460 Jude   3 316 Revelation 3 4 364 21 27 364 22 12 464 FINIS * Of the reason why Christ imposed on some new names see Casau● ad Annal. Exerc. 13. In his Apology pag. 8. To all Instructions and Consolations Praier is necessary for their good effect Reasons I. On Gods part 1. God is the sole fountain and authour of all grace 2. That all the praise may redound to him 3. Because God in anger many times doth blast the Word to men for their sins II. From the nature of Preaching and what kinde of cause the Word is of conversion 1. The Word converts not necessarily 2. Nor as a natural cause 3. It s efficacy is only by Gods Institution according to his command and good pleasure III. Because of mans inability to what is good Vse Doct. That all our praiers should come from a spiritual and heavenly heart The requisites to spiritual praier 1. The Spirits enabling and moving the soul to this duty 2. An heavenly heart 3. When the heart and affections are purified and made fit for the enjoyment of God 4. Heavenly praier moveth the heart to more love and delight in heavenly things Vse Why we should pray with the tongue In vocal praier there must be a threefold attention How Christ being God could pray Doct. That all the godly are under the benefit of Christs Mediatory praier I. The matter of Christs praier for his Children 1. All grace 2. Pardon of sin 3. 4. Glorification II. The nature of his praier by way of Mediation III. The dignity of the Person praying IV. His relation to God the Father Whether Christ was heard in every thing he praied for or no. V. Christs praier had all the qualifications requisite to acceptation VI. A condition or medium of good things Why Praier is needfull notwithstanding Gods knowledge and unchangeableness VII Christs praier sanctifieth our praiers Doct. Those praiers successefull that are put up to God as a Father To open this Consider 1. All by nature are in a state of enmity against God 2. The state of Sonship is purchased by Christ 3. We cannot call God Father but by the Spirit of Adoption What frame of heart this compellation Father may breed in every childe of God Why the Title Father so much prevails with God Vse Doct. That God doth appoint times and seasons for his great works I. In relation to Christ II. Gods other dispensations 1. A time is set for the Reformation of his Church 2. God lets wicked men have their time 3. A set time for judgement 4. The hour of every mans death is set 5. There is a remarkable set time of grace wherein God may be found 6. The times of the Churches troubles and deliverances are set Vse How Christ who is God can be glorified Whether Christ did merit glory for himself Doct. It was the holy and wise will of God to glorifie Christ Christs being invested with glory redounds to the advantage of his members 1. It 's a demonstration of his conquest over all our enemies 2. Because of rhat near relation that is between us 3. His glorification a cause of ours 4. In his glorified esta●e he is pleading for us 5. It encourageth us to lift up our hearts to heaven The nature of this glory which Christ praied for There were three degrees to it Wherein this glory of Christ doth consist Doct. We should desire comforts and advantages chiefly that God may be glorified I. Christ did so 1. In his humiliation 2. In his exaltation II. Much more should all men be affected more with Gods glory then their own good The goods of a godly man 1. Heavenly 2. Earthly The principles constituent of such a gracious disposition 1. He must be born again that can do it 2. He must have great love to God 3. And be mortified to the world Reasons 1. God doth all things for his own glory 2. From the nature of Gods glory and all earthly comforts respectively 3. Because of the greatnesse of Gods glory and the value of it 4. Else we are guilty of spirituall Idolatry Vse The Text vindicated against 1. The Arians 2. The Ubiquitarian Lutherans 3. Papists Doct. Observe these particulars to clear the nature of Christs power I. Christs dominion universal II. The administration of Christs power is by his Spirit III. Of Christs dominion over the consciences of men IV. The chief effects of Christs power are spirituall V. It is infinite power VI. It is arbitrary in the use of it In what particulars Christs dominion appears 1. In appointing a Ministry for the conversion of souls 2. In giving successe to the means of grace III. Enlightning the Understanding IV. V. The Fountain of Grace VI. The giver of glory VII Forgive and pardon sin VII The great Law-giver IX And supporter and comforter of his people X. The Judge of the world XI And the subduer of his and his Churches enemies Vse 2. Vse 3. Vse 4. Vse 5. Vse 6. Vse of Consolation Doct. That not all but some of mankinde are given by God the Father to Christ to be redeemed by him How warily the doctrine of predestination should be preached The Doctrine repeated Corollaries from hence I. From the Father giving 1. The Father is the original Fountain of all good 2. That the Father expects the salvation of those he hath given to Christ 3. No cause to doubt of Gods accepting of Christs Mediation 4. All that the Father gives to Christ shall
upon this will bring much Consolation Considering 1. Gods taking the more care of them 2. Their being quaiified as that come under Christs Fraier 3. And that God will ere long take them out of the world Quest Answ Observ How many wayes a godly man may be more sanctified 1. Inrensively 2. Extensively 3. In the deeper radication of grace in our hearts 4. Subjectively 5. Efficienter Growth in Sanctification illustrated by the contraries unto it which are these Reasons Vse Observ That the word of God is the instrument of our sanctification The explication of the point The necessity of learned officers in the Church The Word is Gods instrument and faith is mans The Word is not the principal or efficient but the instrumental cause The necessity of Gods efficiency Without Gods blessing men may by the Scriptures through interpretation be corrupted Instrumentall Causes are physical natural or moral One cause must not be opposed to other causes The Word is the ordinary means The word to some through their wickednes becomes an instrument of greater sinfullness Doct. The Word of God is Truth In how many particulars Gods Word is true I. In regard of the efficient Cause God II. It 's the Rule of all Truth III. It 's true materially IV. Qualitatively V. It 's true Instrumentally There is a threefold Truth we cannot attain to without the Scripture 1. True Doctrine 2. True Piety 3. True Consolation VI. The Scripture is true oppositely to all the Opinions Doctrines and Religions that men set up by their own fancy The excellent properties of the truth of Scripture 1. It 's the truth of God 2. It 's infallible 3. Eternal 4. Universal 5. Supernaturall 6. A holy truth 7. A precious truth 8. A bitter truth Doct. Truth and holinesse are requisite in Ministers of the Gospel Why it is requisite Ministers should be endowed with soundnesse of judgement Why Ministers must be holy Vse T Doct. 2. That Christ hath a peculiar love of those who are in Church-Office according to his rule and way In what particular Christs care is shewed to his Ministers Observ Christ was sent of the Father and did not of himself undertake that office he was imployed in while on the earth Of Christs Commission consider these things The necessity of Christs being sent Observ None may undertake the publike Office of the Ministry without a lawful Call thereunto Dist 1. There is a two-fold sending Mediate and Immediate Dist 2. The substance of the Ministerial Office is the same with that which every Minister hath Rules for private Christians exercising their Gifts Whether reading be preaching Heinsius Grotius Vocation to the Office of the Ministry consists in these things I. Inward qualifications II. Outward Distinct ult That there is a distinct O●fice of the Ministry That none may enter into this Office without an authoritative mission Doct. That Christ set himself apart to be a Sacrifice for us In my Treatise of justification What Christs sanctifying himself implieth I. His purity and holinesse II His ready offering himself for us III. His fitnesse for the office of a Mediatour 1. The fitnesse of his Person 2. His fitnesse in regard of his Offices 1. Prophetical 2. Priestly 3. Kingly IV. He is prepared for this work Benefits of Christs sanctifying himself V. That he was wholly set apart for us VI. That if by faith we improve him not for those ends God appointed him we make him a Christ in vain VII It denotes him a sinner by imputation VIII That he was a Priest to make atonement for us Concerning Christs priestly-office Consider these things Wherein this prayer and his intercession in heaven differ The ad●unct of his Priestly Office Observ That Christ was not only the Priest but the Sacrifice it self Propositions concerning Christs Priesthood I. That Christ was both Priest Sacrifice and Altar II. What things are necessary to a Sacrifice III. He offered himself to God IV. It was by way of Expiotion V. The necessity of it The properties of Christs Sacrifice I. It hath infinite worth in it II. Though Christ offered himself as a Sacrifiae yet the application must be as God hath appointed III. Christs bloud washeth away not only the guilt of sin but the filth of it IV. The vertue of his Sacrifice abides for ever V. It 's continually useful VI. It 's prevalent with God VII It 's that Christ presents to his Father VIII The purity of it IX The vertue of it Observ Christ died not only for our justification also Concerning this point consider I. How many wayes is the Christ is the cause of our Sanctification II. What is implied in our being sanctified by Christ III. What may be inferred from our being sanctified by Christs sanctifying himself IV. Wherein the truth of Sanctification lieth Doct. That Christ though God yet as man did pray unto the Father Upon what grounds Christ who was God as well as man did pray The difference between Christs praier and ours What advantage Beleevers have by Christ Doct. In what respects Christ did as much for one believer as another There is some difference between beleevers in respect of Christs Death Observ That such is Christs care and love to his remembred in his prayer and death even before they had a being Doct. Reasons Doct. That the faith which ●ustififieth and saveth us maketh us wholly to depend on Christ The several kinds of faith The object of faith It 's an act of the will as wel as the understanding The seat of faith These things are required to justifying faith I. Of faith under the notion of receiving Christ The receiving of Christ implyeth 1. That we have nothing of our own 2. That we are wholly passive in justification 3. That faith doth not justifie for any intrinsecal worth in it 4. Faith is excluded as it is a work 5. And why faith and no other grace doth justifie II. This receiving is not a bare receiving but an imbracing also III. In this act of faith there is a fiducial reposing of the soul upon Christ IV. An application of Christ V. This recumbent act of faith may not only thus receive Christ but we may be assured that Christ is ours Faith hath two acts a direct and a reflex Quest Observ God hath appointed a perpetual Ministry to the end of the world Quest Answ Doct. Consider That there is a two-fold Unity among the godly I. Invisible II. Visible III. 1. The excellency and necessity of unity among Christians appears by the vehement and affectionate praier for it 2. It s a means to bring the world to believe the truth 3. It s promised as a special part of the Covenant 4 Hereby a serviceable helping of one another in spiritua●l things is preserved 5. God suffers sad persecutions to befall them that thereby their discords may be removed 6. Unity strengthens 7. It is beautifull and comely 9. Divisions are the fruit of the flesh 10. Because all things
worship Thus all is done in a corporal manner and whereas of old it was sursum corda now it is deorsum corda None are more devoid of spirituall Understanding then those that are thus busied in a visible carnal way of Religion 3. The corrupt Opinions about Sacramenes as if they did conveigh Grace and Christ by the very work done This is also to know Christ after a carnall manner for it 's not the Ordinances but the Spirit of God in and by them that doth us any good Joh. 6. The flesh profiteth little but the Spirit yet this hath been the universal disease of Gods Church in all Ages In the Old Testament there they rested upon the Sacrifices upon the Temple upon their external Rites Oh how often do the Prophets labour to convince them of this errour Hence Paul speaks of a Jew in the flesh and in the Letter and a Iew in the Spirit Rom 2. and all the Jewish rites are called carnal Ordinances and beggarly They bring no real good to them that are exercised therein without the Spirit and may we not say that almost all Christianity is but a religious carnality a resting and relying upon Ordinances so farre as they are bodily and visibly performed When the Apostle 1 Pet. 3. had said Baptism serveth to prevent all mistakes he addeth Not the washing of the body but the answer of a good conscience When a man upon good examination of himself can say O Lord thou knowest that I do in truth and uprightness keep to those duties I am solemnly by Baptism engaged unto Thus for the Lords Supper is not it the very receiving of it judged the very saving of men Do not commonly people take it as if in the very bread and wine there were some Sacrifical vertue as when they take Physick they judge some Physical inherent vertue in that to help them Oh what Ieremy hath his head full enough of water to bewail this carnall grosse and ignorant Christianity that is in the world which judgeth the very Sacraments or any bodily worship in praiers or singing of Psalmes though they be but as Parrats in these things to be great evidences for heaven But as the body without the soul is dead and a lothsome Carkasse thus is all thy Religion worship and Ordinances a dead lothsome thing in the presence of God without the Spirit This the Apostle cals serving of God in the oldnesse of the letter not the newnesse of the Spirit Rom. 7.6 And in this sence we may say the Letter killeth and damneth but the Spirit giveth life Oh then be afraid thou art not one of those that split their souls at this Rock This is the common poison that devoureth most Even as the Scripture speaks contemptibly of the Egyptian Army Isa 31.3 They are flesh and not spirit The same may be said of all that Religion and devotion which most put confidence in But yet take heed of another extream errour that crieth down the Ordinances and under pretence of a spirituall high attainment which they think they have wholly lay aside these visible Ordinances and performances which Christ hath appointed in his Church till the end of the world 4. Then men would have Christ after a visible manner when they pretend Revelations and Miracles For what is this but to leave the Word and the promises as if that were not sufficient God indeed hath condescended to support sence as when he vouchsafed Miracles in the Infancy of the Church yea the Sacraments he hath appointed are a kinde of relief to our sence he considered our weaknesse in appointing such visible Signs but when we are not contented with Gods Institutions but desired such sensible supports which he will not afford This proceeds from a carnal disposition in us This is the cause in Popery why they tell us of such miraculous apparitions they will tell you of Crucifixes bleeding of Christs visible appearing of such great wonders done upon the Invocation of such and such Saints and all this is to humour the carnal part of a man for spiritual things are supernatural and very hard and difficult to flesh and bloud 5. This is to know Christ after a corporal manner when we professe his Truth and acknowledge his waies only for earthly advantages as he said Fac me Episcopum Romanum ere Christianus Thus they did of whom Paul made mention with weeping that they were enemies to the Crosse of Christ that their God was their belly that they minded earthly things Phil. 3.19 Such Disciples were those that followed Christ because of the Loaves Now the Lord Christ he cals to such duties that are opposite to flesh and bloud that are against the incilination of our nature To pull out the right eye To deny our selves To take up the Cross We are not to be of those that love Christs Crown of gold but not his Crown of Thorns How greatly did Mahumetan Religion prevail by such Doctrines as were pleasing to the corrupt inclinations and sinful pleasures of men and because Christs Doctrine was accompanied with so much difficulty Lastly There is in the godly sometimes an inordinate desire after Christ in a sensible manner and that is when they cannot rest upon the promises beleeve on Gods Word barely unlesse they have also evident and sensible Consolations Bare acts of depending faith and constant waitings on God in the way of his promise argue thee to be more spiritual in thy Christian warfare Vse of Instruction how much it becometh all Christians to be a spirituall people for all things in Christ are spiritual and all benefits to be received by him are in a spiritual manner How comes Christs Death Christs Resurrection effectual to thee but in a spirituall manner You cannot now do so much as the Woman in the History touch the hem of his garment You cannot with Thomas put your fingers in the print of nails No here is the Eye of Faith required to behold Christ Christ bid the Woman touch him not for he was not yet ascended but we may say Because he is ascended do not thou have carnal imaginations about him It is for want of a spiritual heart that so many titular Christians have no real vertue or efficacy from him He is not an Head he is not a Vine he is not Wisedom Righteousnesse and all things to thee because thou art not a spiritual Subject to entertain him SERMON LXIII Of the Saints Lord-Keeper Shewing how safe the Godly are kept to Salvation by Christ as a Trust committed to him JOH 17.12 While I was with them in the world I kept them in thy Nam● c. HAving dispatched the Circumstances of time and place we proceed to the Benefit it self which is expressed with the efficient cause of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the manner how In thy Name Because something hath already been spoken to this I shall be the briefer in both the particulars First The Benefit with the cause
of it is to be considered I have kept them The Word is used sometimes for an outward violent detaining of a man in prison or other custody Act. 12.5 6. Thus the Jailors are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 28.4 Heinsius understands the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we render observe Herod observed John in a corporal manner of keeping him in a safe hold because Mar. 6.19 it is said Herodias would have killed him but could not Sometimes the word is applied to an Obedientiall Observation of the Commands of God Ioh. 14.15 21. Joh. 15.10 Hence also it is applied to the observing of the Sabbath Joh. 6.16 Sometimes it is applied to the reservation of a thing Joh. 2.10 Thou hast kept the best wine to the last But in the Text it is applied to the preservation or custody that is vouchsafed to such as need it as v. 11. and v. 15. So in this place Now our Saviour by this expression I have kept them signifieth that the Father had given them to Christ as so many precious Iewels and an excellent treasure and that Christ did undertake to preserve them insomuch that if any should be lost the fault would be charged upon Christ and he would be found blame worthy Obs That all those who shall be saved are given to Christ and committed to his trust that they may be kept to Eternal Salvation That look as the devils 2 Pet. 2.4 have the beginning of hell already and are said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 kept in chains of darknesse to judgement so that they can never evade or escape it Thus the godly they have the beginning of heaven they are interested in Christ and therefore Iude 1. are called the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Crown or inheritance of glory they are to receive is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 kept safe in heaven So that all the power in hell and the world are not able to deprive them of it This is very comfortable news to the people of God to hear they are kept if they were left to their own selves how horrible and irrecoverable would their fall be Let us Consider how much is implied in this Truth That Christ keeps them as his charge And first Here is plainly denoted their own infirmity and insufficiency For why should Christ thus earnestly pray the Father to keep them and say he had kept them hitherto but because they were weak and unable to preserve themselves So that Christ speaks of them as some tender young Infants that are given from arm to arm to be kept as being not able to go themselves and truly if the Apostles who were Christs first born as we may so say and although Christ knew that he was to endow them with the power of the holy Ghost afterwards in an extraordinary manner yet if these that seem to be Giants cannot help themselves what shall we Dwarfs do If the Pillars are not able to stand of themselves what can Reeds do God to shew the Church her miserable impotency compareth it to a childe new born that is not only lothsome but feeble and necessarily perishing without some aid Eze. 16.5 6. Even thus are we all in our own strength and power Secondly As it implieth their insufficiency so also the precious account and esteem God puts upon them Men are not said to keep their pebble stones or their Weeds but their Treasure their Jewels And thus God Mal. 3. exp●esly cals them Hence all the godly are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a peculiar people The only Treasure God hath and they being his Treasure his heart is upon them so that howsoever the worlds esteem of them is reproachful and malicious enough they are the off-skowring and the worst of men yet with God they are precious Nay though to their own souls many times they are as castawaies as lothsome branches they abhorre themselves and therefore they think God will do so much more yet with God they are of high account Thirdly There is implied a more peculiar care and attendance to their good then of the whole world besides For they are said to be given to Christ out of the world that he may keep them This giving of them to Christ supposeth an Election or choice of such from all others God is a preserver and keeper of all Iob 7.20 called therefore the preserver of men Yea Psa 36.6 he is said to preserve man and beast God is every where essentiâ presentiâ and potentiâ and thus he cannot but be every where but he hath a gracious presence with his Children which is not from his infinitenesse or necessity but from his meer love so that if God were not infinite and immense pardon the Supposition yet his grace and goodnesse would make him abide and dwell with those that are his You see by this that Gods keeping extends even to inanimate Creatures he keepeth the very Sparrows that they fall not to the ground but there is a more excellent and choice way of preservation to those that are given in speciall charge to Christ The eyes of the Lord are said to runne to and fro in the behalf of the upright in heart 2 Chron. 16 9. What can be more comfortable then that expression Hence the Lords peculiar is compared to a Bird flying over the nest where her young ones are Isa 31.5 Only the Bird is silly and weak hath no power to defend but she sheweth her desire and affection Thus God is pleased to compare himself to encourage our Faith for we are apt to look more at what is against us then for us We consider the devils Subtlety the worlds danger our own corruptions but do not attend to Gods mercifull Preservation Fourthly This phrase doth imply the safety that the people of God are in For though in respect of the world and their Corruptions they may say with Iehosaphat A great Army is against us and we know not what to do or they may be afraid as the man Elisha led into the midst of the Enemies Camp yet for al this they are safe for there is a fourfold cord that holds in them which cannot easily be broken There is first Christs power which is omnipotent the same with the Fathers power Ioh. 10. I and my Father are one None can take them out of Christs hands because none can take them out of the Fathers hand Therefore Col. 3. their life is said to be hid with Christ in God And it is a crown laid up in heaven Now what men or devils can break into Heaven Who can rob and steal from thence if there be a stronger then God more powerful then God then doubt of thy preservation but else not 2. There is his fidelity and immutability He is the Amen He is the Alpha and Omega for we might think though we are never so well to day as it was with Adam and the Angels apostatizing