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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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punishes them Job 34.9 10 11 12. Rom. 1.18 19. Gal. 5.17 the flesh lusteth against the Spirit of God therefore God is against them But what is the reason why they cannot challenge their Original from God Reas 1. From the purity of God Hab. 1.8 he is of pure eyes and so abhors all sin What fellowship hath light with darknesse what fellow ship hath filthy lusts of the flesh with a pure God what fellowship hath a ●●vetous heart with a liberal God a proud heart with the great God a proud man will be his first cause and last end and therefore hatefull to God Psal 5.4 5. Reas 2. From the basenesse and indisposednesse of sin to the service of God Jam. 1.13 14. there is nothing in sin for which God should desire it or respect it or make use of it Obj. Doth not the Scripture manifest that there is no sin but God hath a great hand in it why did Josephs Brethren fell him was it not from envy and from pride and yet he saith it was God that fold him Gen. 45.7.8 was it not from envy that the Pharisees crucified Christ and yet it was but what God fore ordained and for Judas was it not from covetousnesse that he betrayed him and yet God had decreed it and for the lusts of the flesh doth not God speake plainly That he would give Davids wives into the hands of Absalom so that no sin but it is from Gods hand nor pride nor covetousnesse nor voluptuousnesse how is it then that no lust can challenge its Original from God they are not of the Father Ans They are of the Father as of the World but not in that sence as they are of the World they are not from him as an Author or Fountaine or causa per se for the good God can worke no evill but yet there is no sin but he is the occasion of it though the cause of no sin all good things come from God as a cause all evill as from an occasion thereof as the Gospel is a Gospel of peace and from the God of Peace yet it is made a fire-brand of contention to set men at variance and strife Mark 10. but it is not the proper worke of the Gospel but of the corrupt distemper of men that abuse it to the contrary end there is no work of sin that doth per se propagate by God but by occasion Now the accidental work of God in sin stands 1 In a leaving men to themselves 2 In leaving them to Satan 3 In propounding good occasions and objects which they pervert to sin First So God would hearden Pharoahs heart How by leaving him to himself as wax left to it selfe will grow hard how much more the stony heart of man God not ruling and working in his heart it grows hard Secondly He left him to Satan he suffered Satan to helpe his South-sayers to doe the like miracles as Moses did Exod. 7.13.22 and because he saw his Enchanters could doe so much he thought they were no better than his Magicians Thirdly He hardens our hearts often by many comforts mercies and outward blessings and these often harden our hearts as respite from Judgements did Pharaohs Exod. 8.15 when it should lead us to repentance Rom. 2.4 5. yet by occasion it hardens our hearts so for other lusts How did God tempt Absalom First by leaving him to his lustfull heart Secondly By leaving him to ill counsell Thirdly By giving the Kingdome into his hand so that he took liberty to commit that wickednesses to lye with his Fathers Concubines So how did God work Josephs selling into Egypt First By turning his Fathers love towards him above his other Brethren Secondly By his dreams which stirre them up to sell him so that God only gives the occasion and propounds objects which they abuse to sin so God stirred up the Pharisees and Judas to Crucifie and betray Christ God left him to himselfe then 1 Satan fil'd his heart Joh. 13.2.27 and God gave a fit opportunity to take him so the Pharisees they envied him they saw he would take away their glory and credit therefore they envied him but those were but such occasions as they might have resisted he laid them by them but rhey needed not have taken them up he tryed them by it but he did not tempt them to doe it So Adams sin God led him into a Temptation but it was but of trial not of seducement it was Temptatio probationis not seductionis he propounded a goodly tree to him and the fruit faire to the eye but the cause of all was their own consent and mutability which they might have resisted And for Gods Decree though they did nothing but what God decreed Gods purpose never decreed any sin should be wrought otherwise than as it is wrought by the propounding objects and occasions and leaving them to themselves and Satan but he never decreed to force any to sin therefore let God and his Throne be guiltlesse let iniquity rest on the wicked but Gods hand is not with it Vse 1. Is a just refutation of the Papists that impute it to us as if we made God the Author of Sin whereas we teach and beleeve that there is no sin in the world that is from the Father but from the world let no man when he is tempted say he is tempted of God for he findes nothing in sin to desire it but his care is to shew the wisdome of his Providence and Justice we say there is no sin but God gives occasion to if Shimei curse David the Lord bid him that is gives him opportunity so the Lord stirred up the Pharisees to Crucifie Christ but all this was not from God as a proper cause Suppose a man were Master of many Horses and one falls lame what shall not the Master ride on him because he halts it is not the Masters fault that the Horse halts but from some distemper or disease in the Horse and he knows it too yet he will not leave off using him for that what if God know if he send showers there will grow as well Weeds as good Corn and Herbs what then must he therefore restrain the showers no it is meet his Providence should be fulfilled what if the dunghill stinke by the Sun beams shall not the Sun therefore shine the Sun causes not the stink properly but the filth in the Dunghil so there is nothing but Gods Providence worketh what if his Providence turn many things to sin the fault is not in Gods Providence but mens corruptions but he is as far ftom the Sin as the Sun from stench Vse 2. To reprove all such foolish men as wrong Gods Providence that if they fall into any sin they impute it to destiny and if it be it is from God hand or else it had not been Deus impulsor fuit what a prophane thing is this for a man to impute his sin to God God is no more the cause
require this the Apostle cals a shew of Religion which is hypocrisie and so at this day among the Fryars they have a shew of Religion they take up worships which God doth dot require of which it may be said Who required those things of you the Galatians did observe dayes and months and years therefore the Apostle is afraid that he hath bestowed his labour in vain upon them Chap. 4.10 11. 3. What was the spirit of their discipline and government they did affect primacy the Apostles were no sooner removed out of the world but this spirit began to spring up yea while some of them lived John 3.9 2. That that spirit did affect and exercise tyranny casting out of the Church such Ministers as were more faithful 3 Epist John 9.10 Diotrephes would not receive John himselfe nor his brethren nor would suffer those that would that spirit hath been in the Church of Rome from that day to this A second part of their tyranny was in imposing upon them unprofitable courses unprofitable they were because they did perish in the using Col. 2.20 to 22. 3. There was a spirit of coveteousnesse in Ministers they did not savour the things of God but did relish wealth and ambition Jude 11. they follow the wayes of sin as Cain did In Cain there was first hypocrisie he offers a sacrifice and when he saw his brothers sacrifice accepted being offered in faith and his not there arose in him a spirit of wrath which ended in bloudshed such was the spirit of Popery in Queen Maries days Some walk in the wayes of Balaam the wayes of coveteousnesse putting stumbling blocks before the people and that for covetousnesse sake Thirdly some have the gainsaying spirit of Korah they gainsay the Ordinances of God like as he rose up against M●ses and Aaron this spirit breathing in Antichristian teachers at this day was hatched in the Apostles time There was a spirit of Schism in the Apostles time some saying I am of Paul and I of Apollo c. 1 Cor. 1.12 and so at this time among the Papists Jude v. 19. Vse 1. See the diligence of Satan to sow tares even in the Apostles times therefore Ministers should watch diligently over their people that no such spirit be sown in their hearts Satan will creep in by dissension the affections being once distempered the judgement will soon be corrupted Wherefore Ministers and people should have a speciall care of dissension for if dissension creep in then soon will you have your worship shut up and then there will be a wofull wast of Religion 2. See the impudence of Heretiques that dare look God in the face and rise up among his many bright and glorious lights in the Apostles times but let no Christians be discouraged by this but rather the more encouraged to contend and strive for the faith of Christ 3. This should teach Schollars not to take any ancient doctrine for truth till they have examined it Though Peter was blessed for the testimony of Christ one part of the day yet he was sharply reproved the same day trust not any doctrine almost in regard of the antiquity of it for it may be Antichristianism though in the Apostles times 4. If we would be growing up in grace from day to day take we heed of the spirit of Antichrist of taking up the worship which God hath not commanded take we heed of hypocrisie a spirit of Popery a shew of devotion Come we to the Sacrament as if we would receive the power of the Lord Jesus vailed in much simplicity take we heed of the spirit of Cain Balaam and Korah gainsaying the Ordinances of God but walk we stedfastly in that Religion we have received 1 JOHN 4.4 Ye are of God little children and have overcome them because greater is he that is in you then he that is in the world AS you had before in the former Verse a sign of the spirit of teachers so in these Verses you have a sign of the spirit of hearers which is double First Sign taken from victory which good hearers have got of bad teachers a good hearer is not overcome of bad teachers but he soon findes them out and overcomes them and this is argued from a double cause First They are of an higher off-spring then corrupt teachers are Secondly From the strength and excellency of their spirits above the spirits of worldly teachers Greater is he that is in you then he that is in the world False Teachers are set forth 1 By their Originall 2 By their false Doctrine He that knoweth God heareth us there is another sign of good hearers they did hear good teachers on the contrary He that is not of God heareth us not You see here First A difference between good and bad teachers good and bad hearers good teachers and good hearers are of God on the contrary bad teachers and bad hearers are of the World Secondly Here is a combat between good and bad teachers and a victory also Good hearers doe overcome bad teachers Thirdly You have the issue of the conflict good hearers overcome Fourthly The cause of the victory is the divine descent and excellency of their Spirit greater is he that is in good hearers then in bad teachers Fifthly Here is a congratulation little children you are of God Doct. That there is in the Church of God two sorts of teachers and two sorts of hearers some of God some of the world Quest Why are good teachers and good hearers said to be of God Answ 1. They are of God because they are of a divine Originall they are born from on high from the seed of the eternall God John 8.23 I am from above saith Christ and such are those that are regenerate they are descended from God whereas those that have no higher off-spring then flesh and blood are of the world 2. They both savour and relish that doctrine Rom. 8.15 They that are of the Spirit of God savour the things of God such as hold forth the mighty power of God veiled in humane frailties they are of God 3. He that is of God hath a place in the Church of God 1 Cor. 12.28 God sets the members of Christ in the Church this is a work of God ver 18. not any member of Christ but the Lord hath set him in that place as all men in the world cannot fit one member to the body but it would be both unprofitable and burthensome except God joyn it to the body so all the men in the world cannot put one member into the spirituall body except God put it in indeed those that are of the world they have a place in the Church too but yet they are not of the Church they are superfluous humors as Christ speaks of the Pharisees Mat 15.13 As it is never well with the body till the noysome humors be purged out so the Church will never be well till those superfluous humors are cut off Vse This
whose consciences are tormented what course to take for comfort 1 Look at Gods good providence to thee in trying thee and proving thee that he may do thee good in the latter end 2 As you have cause to take all in good part so learn to seek him carefully Again take heed of sin and be doing what good you may strive to be more fruitful in good services to God and offices of love to your brethren and certainly this unfeigned love will lead to peace Vse 5. Hence see the estrangement of wicked men from the wayes of peace Rom. 3.17 The way of peace they have not known 1 They cannot think that torment and fear should be the way of peace if they see a man in this case 2 They would put off such fears with 〈◊〉 company but if they see such a man seeking God earnestly praying and hearing the World carefully they cannot think this is the way of peace will you blesse God and dye when he is ready to swallow you up The way of peace they have not known salvation is far from them Psal 118.155 Vers 18. There is no fear in love c. We come to the fourth thing the exemption of perfect love from all fear Doct. 4. An heart possest with the love of God is dispossest of feare of evill from God He speaks of the fear of death and judgment so much love as is in our hearts so much freedome and boldnesse against the day of judgement a loving heart feares not wrath nor jugement nor hell Psal 23.4 When once I look at God as my Shepheard and love him and follow him Why then though I walke through the vale of the shadow of death I will feare none evill though I walk in neer danger of death for if the shadow follow me the body is not farre off yet I will fear no evill Psal 49 4 5. David makes open proclamation to all men to hear and hearken there is the solemnity of the audience the matter is It 's a parable and dark mystery and yet a word of wisdome and understanding Why what is this parable that all the world should take notice of Why this is it Wherefore should I be afraid when the iniquity of my heels do compasse me about that is the iniquity of my foot-steps the tripping of my steps or the iniquity of my heels that is the fears and dangers that follow him at the heels yet wherefore should I feare An heart possest with the love of God is dispossest of fear of evill from God Psal 3.6 I will not be afraid of ten thousand of people that shall compasse me about Why what makes him so confident Because the Lord is my shield and lifter up of my head vers 3. So that we see that a Christian possest of the love of God stands not in the feare of judgement or hell nay more not of his sinfull failings Psal 49.5 Reas 1. From the nature of fear and the 〈◊〉 oval of it fear is a troblesome affection in the expectation o● 〈◊〉 evill Now 〈◊〉 the removal of feare two things must be done 1 There must 〈◊〉 evill towards him 2 He must 〈…〉 this Now to him that feareth God no evill is towards such a one Psal 〈…〉 There shall no evill befal thee Now to whom is this promise made 〈…〉 Because he hath set his love upon me therefore I will deliver him I will set him on high far above all dangers and evils indeed sicknesses may befall him and 〈…〉 and imprisonments but what ever befals under the nature of evill that shall not come nigh him As no evill is towards him 〈◊〉 ●e must know this that no evill shall befal him Now a Christian that loves God he knows that no evill shall befal him Psal 56.3.9 What time I am afraid I will trust on thee When I cry unto thee thou shalt cause mine enemies to 〈◊〉 their backs this I know for God is for me So that a Christian not onely finds security from danger but knowledge of it too Nay further the childe of God is so farre from fearing any evill to come nigh him that he knows all those things that are counted evill shall turn to his advantage Rom. 8 28. So Phil ● 1● where he tels you what wrong false Apostles did him on purpose to adde afflictions to his bonds Well saith he I know this shall turn to my salvation through your prayers upon a double ground he comforts himself against all their malignities 1 He knows the more they afflict him the more will the Church pray for him 2 That the more he is tempted the more will God supply by his Spirit Quest How do they know that no evill shall befal them Answ 1. From the love of God shed abroad in their hearts Rom. 5.1 to 6. 2 From the presence of God for him in his worst times And if God be for him who can be against him Rom. 8.31 3 From the interest he hath in the blood of Christ which hath cleansed him from all his sins so that he doth know that God will follow him as a deliverer from his sins so that the soule though burthened with many sins yet fears not Psal 44.5 4 From a knowledge he hath of all the promises as belonging to him which are a stay and support to his soul Psal 56.3 4 10 11. Psal 84.11 he knows God will be a Sun and a shield to him 5 From the knowledge that he hath from the integrity of his conscience which is as a brazen wall against all evils 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience 6 The prayers both of his own soule and other Christians are for him so that through them he is confident no evill shall befal him Psal 56.9 Phil. 1.19 7 He is imboldned against dangers from the supportance of Gods Spirit in his worst times Phil. 1.19 Psal 5. So Psal 46. God is a present help in the time of trouble when trouble is near at hand yet God is nearer as it was sometimes with Elisha he saw the Mountain full of Chariots and Horse-men 2 King 6.17 Though there were not such a multitude constantly about him yet when an Army of the enemies come an Army of Angels come as soon It hath been an ancient opinion that every true Christian hath a particular Angel to deliver him why this is certain when dangers come there never want Angels without nor Gods Spirit within nor the prayers of his servants for us and therefore we have no cause to fear Vse 1. This is a notable ground upon which that heavenly truth is built of the perseverance of Saints and a bulwark against Apostasie if a loving heart be without fear of the day of judgement he is without fear of falling away Obj. True as long as he keeps perfect to his love but may he not fall off from his love and so from his good estate Answ The Apostle ●ith there is no
Austin taught this sin to be envy and finall impenitency Origen any sin after Baptisme The Novatians took up the same tenent but that it was an error is evident for Peter sinned after Baptisme and so are all the sins of Gods children if these were sins against the holy Ghost who should be saved 2. Of refutation of Bellarmine and Suarez that say Therefore this sin is said to be unto death not that it is never pardoned but not without much difficulty Whereas it s said to be impossible Heb. 6.4 They answer 1. Impossibile in Aristotle is the same with difficile 2. It s impossible with men not with God But were it a sin that might be pardoned though with never so much difficulty yet we ought to pray for it and so much the more earnestly therefore seeing St John disswades us from the usuall remedy against sin viz. prayer therefore certainly its a sin unto death that cannot be pardoned 3. A third errour hence refuted is of those that conceive this sin is very rarely found and more hardly to be discerned but why doth St John write to common Christians not to pray for them a signe they may be found and discerned Vse 2. To teach all that would live long and see good dayes to take heed of opposing and maligning the known truth Many have conceived that this sin hath hardly been found in the world except in Julian the Apostate and such open enemies of Christ I wish it were so rare but are there not too many in the world that have been enlightned and convinced of the truth of God that those are the wayes and servants of God and yet rise up against them with open spight and disdain and persecute them with malice and scorn Is not this sin found too often in the Church Many indeed of our Saviours persecuters did it out of ignorance and our Saviours prayer was effectuall for them Father forgive them they know not what they doe But there were of them that knew him to be the heir and said Come let us kill him Mat. 21.38 And for such as those there remains no more sacrifice It was Davids prayer Psal 57.5 Be not mercifull to any malicious offenders that transgresse without a cause Psal 25.5 Vse 3. It may teach all the servants of God to strengthen themselves against this sin and to use all good preservatives against this sin unto death 1. Keep constant fellowship with Gods servants and forsake them not for that is the rise of the sin Heb. 10.25 As long as God keeps in thy heart a love to Gods people and a reverent esteem of his grace its impossible thou should fall into this sin 2. Be diligent to adde one grace to another for so thou shalt make thy calling and election sure and shalt never fail 2 Pet. 1.5 10. Psal 73.27 28. 3. Deck thy heart with an humble and awefull respect towards God and his wayes Prov. 28.14 Jer. 32.40 4. Take heed of turning aside to crooked wayes Psal 125.4 5. One sin will draw another Heb. 12.13 Make straight steps to your feet lest that which is same be turned out of the way Sauls once straining his conscience brake the back of his profession Vse 4. To such as fear they have commited this sin which is the case of two sorts of Christians 1. Of such who having found much inlargement after fall into deadnesse and slack-heartednesse and all is dampt and therefore they fear they have sinned against the holy Ghost 2. It is the case of such as have sinned against their consciences For the first sort its true a man may sin against the holy Ghost by vexing and despising and damping the Spirit but yet this is not the sin against the holy Ghost unlesse it be done with spight and scorn against Gods Spirit For the second sort such indeed as have sinned against their consciences they have wronged their own souls and brought much mischiefe upon themselves but yet a man may sin against his conscience and not sin against the holy Ghost for it may either be done out of infirmity or boldnesse as Peters and Davids sins were they sinned not out of spight and malice if therefore thou fear thou hast committed this sin this fear argues thou hast not committed it because thou art afraid and sorry for it Again some answer thus and say it s not a sin against the holy Ghost unlesse it be joyned with an universall apostasie from the whole Gospel of Christ Indeed that was a good mark in the primitive Church when the Church censures were so hot that such were cast out and so being cast out turned open Pagans and enemies to Christ being admitted into the Common-wealth but now this is not so sure a mark in our times wherein such a man should not onely be excluded from the Church but from the Common-wealth too and therefore now they keep themselves from open blaspheming Christ and so would those former Apostates had they lived in our dayes and others would doe as they did fly out as openly had they lived in their dayes and therefore judge not so much by that as how thy heart stands affected to Christ This is certain they that are born of God sin not this sin for they that sin this sin cannot avoid everlasting death whereas they that are born of God shall live for ever Verse 16. last part I doe not say you shall pray for it Doct. The sin unto death or the sin against the holy Ghost we have no warrant to pray for it I doe not say that is I give you no warrant nor any other of the Apostles to pray for it that is for the good or salvation of them that have sinned this sin Though Paul bide us pray for all men 2 Tim. 2.1 yet St. John excepts them that have sinned this sin and Paul himselfe is so far from praying for them that he prays against them 2 Tim. 4.15 Alexander the Coppersmith hath done me much harm the Lord reward him according to his works No more dangerous curse then to be dealt with according to our works Indeed David sometimes desires to be dealt with according to his works Ps 18. but he means according to the innocency of his cause not of his person in case of some particular action he may plead so but if it be spoken at large in generall that the Lord would reward us according to our works no more heavy curse therefore when he prays so against Alexander 2 Tim. 4.14 he means that God would confound him whatever he was no doubt he was a member of the Church for Paul judged not them that were without 1 Cor. 5. ult Whether it were that Alexander spoken of Acts 19 that bec●●ed with the hand as if he would have pleaded for Paul and the people esteemed him an enemy to their superstition or whether it were that Alexander 1 Tim. 1.20 whom Paul delivered to Satan as is likely certainly he had
the Saving Truths of God are comprehended 1 In Repentance for Sin 2 Some lead on to Faith for pardon 3 Some lead to Mortification of Sin 4 Some tend to Sanctification from Sin to be accomplished in due time now if a man be without sin to what purpose are all such exhortations to Repentance To what purpose are all Scriptures tending to faith in Christ To what purpose are such as tend to Mortification or Sanctification so that he that denies sin to be in him he not onely sins against God and makes him a Lyar but he doth also Heretically erre in overthrowing all saving Truth the Doctrine of Repentance of Mortification of Faith of Sanctification all these are over-thrown If a man apprehend or professe perfection in himselfe it is impossible a man should have any truth of Grace believing he hath no need of Repentance or Faith in Christ or Mortification or Sanctification this is a terrible point St. John may well be called Boanerges a son of Thunder for these are thundering speeches he that saith he hath no sin is a Lyar against himselfe against God a Blasphemer an Heretick Vse 1. To confute perfect obedience to the Law as the Papists hold that Justification is by Works were there no other Errours but this it is Blasphemous Atheisticall and Hereticall and overturns the foundation of Religion for what is the foundation of Religion but the Doctrine of Repentance and Faith and if any be justified by Works he hath neither need of Repentance or Faith if righteousnesse be by the Law then Christ dyed in vain and his bloud is of no effect Gal. 5.14 therefore that opinion is vain that Popish Religion and ours may be reconciled let St. John put in his judgement he tells you that he that saith he hath no sin that he hath fulfilled the Law and is justified by Works there is no truth no saving truth in that Religion that teacheth so therefore it is impossible he should have any saving Religion in him that holds Justification by Works that holds Merits he makes God a Lyar and his Word is not in him For 1 God then should send his Son in vain Gal. 2.19 20. 2 Christ himselfe should be in vain and should lye for he teacheth us to pray Forgive us our debts now if we have none Christ lyes in saying so 3 The Holy Ghost should be a Lyar when he was sent to convince us of sin and there is none in us he should lye unto us 2 It shews the wickednesse of their Opinion who say the Virgin Mary had no sin if she had said so her selfe she had been a Lyar and no truth had been in her 3 It reproves the Catharists of old Vse 2. It shews us a necessity of taking up daily such a perswasion as this that this day we sin this day we have need of Christ and need of Faith we must daily take up this perswasion or else we have no saving truth in our hearts and if every day we be possest with a perswasion that we are subject to sin not onely Venial but Mortall that we have need of Christ of Repentance of Faith and that we can never say This is the day wherein I have not sinned if we be thus possest it will lead us on to all that saving Knowledge of God and of the Word as may keep our hearts alwayes in an holy frame such a man will be ready to think I have need to renew my Repentance to day I have need to lay hold upon Christ I have need of Mortification therefore the Apostle would have us take up a daily continuall perswasion of this that we are sinners therefore we are daily to consider with our selves wherein we have failed and to renew our Repentance and to look up to God for pardon of such and such sins and for sanctification otherwise we shall weaken our grace and Divine truth daily if we daily take not up such a perswasion we shall begin to sit loose from the saving truths of Gods Word and the power of it in our hearts not but that many Christians may sit loose from this truth yet so far as we neglect this so far we dishonour God and weaken our grace Vse 3. It will serve to teach us that whosoever walks in the sence of his own sinfulnesse is possest of it and conscious of it such glorifie Gods Truth and magnifie the power of his Word in their hearts God hath said it and we witnesse it in our hearts we bear witnesse that Christ was not sent in vain that the Holy Gost was not sent in vain Mat. 21.31 Publicans and Harlots enter into the Kingdome of God before you Why because Publicans and Harlots were sensible of their sinfulness and so would soon be convinced of their sinfull estate and so acknowledge their need of Repentance of Faith of Mortification and Sanctification whereas the Pharisees that thought themselves just they were not sensible of their sinfull estate and so saw not the need of Repentance c. Vse 4. And because St. John writes this Epistle that their joy might be full that the joy of a Christian may be always like the Moon in the Full never in the Wain and Eclipse as any Christian therefore desires such fulnesse of joy let him be daily sensible of his sin what is the reason that many Christians faile in thir confidence and fall into doubts concerning their estate I would ask you whether you have walked in a sence of your sinfulnesse daily If not no wonder though your joy be over clouded and Eclipsed Saint John would have us strongly perswaded of this If we say we have no sin we make God a Lyar c. therefore if any Christian can go all the day without any sence or remorse for sin his heart startles him not if it be thus no wonder though his joy be eclipsed On the contrary if you go on continually in a sensible apprehension of your sinfulnesse and so renew your Repentance and Faith and Mortification this will make you still to cleanse your selves daily and so you would keep your joy renewed daily We never had cause to complain of our estate but it was by reason of hardnesse of heart and how come our hearts to be hardned sin gets within us and we perceive it not and so we are hardned by it and then our joy is overclouded Heb. 12.13 14. Heb. 3.13 therefore if we would keep our hearts from hardnesse let us labour to spy out our sins and be humbled for them daily and so you will keep a soft heart and a soft heart is commonly peaceable 1 JOHN 2.1 2. My little Children these things write I unto you that ye sin not And if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours onely but also for the sins of the whole world VPon the former points delivered might arise an
could not have said as much Vse 2. Of reproofe to the Papists who lock up St. Johns writings from the people they may not be suffered to read them why if he write them for this end that they might not sin then they give the reins to sin that deny leave and liberty to read them Vse 3. To teach us the poysonful corruption of our natures that out of the purest soundest Doctrine gathers poyson Saint John fore-saw that from his Doctrine they would be ready to gather false conclusions So Rom. 5.20 when St. Paul had delivered the free Doctrine of Justification see what use they make of it he had taught that as sin abounded so did grace much more abound now he saw that they would be ready to gather false conclusions from this therefore he prevents it Chap. 6.1 shall we then sin that Grace may abound God forbid therefore it must make us out of love with our selves the commonest meats are most nourishing and good other rare meats commonly breed distempers but some stomach will corrupt any meat so the plainest points of Religion are the soundest and best but such is the corruption of our nature that it is ready to gather poyson out of them Vse 4. To teach us when we have made a good use of the Apostles writings viz. when they divert us from sin if you be restained and kept back from any sin by them you make good use of them St. John wrote this Epistle that they might not sin labour therefore by reading thereof to be made more cautelous against sin 1. If we can to doe no sin 2. If we doe to disallow it and hate it and so it will be as no sin to us We come now to the third point viz. the consolation If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father c. as if he had said how can it be that we should not sin he had taught the contrary and told them he wrote those things that they might not sin but yet for all that notwithstanding their best care and indeavour it could not be but they would sin but here is the comfort if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father c. he doth not say any man hath an Advocate with the Father but I and you and such as we are we have an Advocate with the Father now what is an Advocate sometimes it is applyed to the Holy Ghost somtimes to the Son to the Holy Ghost John 14.16 he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both because he is a Comforter and because he is an Advocate how not in pleading our case before the Father but by pleading in our hearts in giving us the Spirit of Grace and Supplication as the Apostle saith Rom. 8.26 as in Law he may be said to be our Advocate that draws our petitions for us the Holy Ghost doth not plead for us in heaven but he draws our petitions for us so that they are accepted in heaven Rom. 8.27 he doth speak good things from God to us and good things from us to God 1 Cor. 2.3 he tells us of our peace with God and our comfort and helps us to plead with God But properly it is the office of the Son to be Advocate an Advocate in Court is a more speciall pleader in the behalfe of another whose person and cause is there to be judged of and so Christ is our Advocate in speciall manner with the Father Doct. Every sinner hath Enemies that before the Father in heaven plead against him If any man sin c. there were no use of an Advocate to plead for us if we had none to accuse us and plead against us we no sooner sin but we have accusations put up in heaven against us and so our Advocate puts in for us what be these adversaries 1 Our own sins they plead against us and accuse us day and night some sins doe in a speciall manner plead against us and those are crying sins Gen. 4.10 the murther of Abel was a crying sin Gen. 18.20 the sins of Sodom cried and Ezek. 16.49 there are four things of Sodom mentioned which cryed to heaven for Vengeance Pride Idlenesse Intemperance Unmercifulnesse to the poor so sometimes detaining the labourers wages James 5.4 so also oppression Exod. 22.22.27 these are speciall crying sins because they will give God no rest till he hath revenged them in this World they will not stay till the last judgment but call for present judgment but all sins doe speake in the Lords ear and call for vengeance against us 2 Another Adversary that accuseth us is the righteous Law of God which we have broken that the word may not be in vain Joh. 5.45 3 The third Enemy is Satan that accuseth us night and day Rev. 12.10 so he did Job Chap. 1.9 10 11. he accused him of hypocrisie because he had no reall reason to accuse him therefore he surmiseth one 4 Our own conscience accuseth us and that is as a thousand witnesses Rom. 2.15 Vse 1 To take heed how we make bold with any sin you may put upon them a pretence of pleasure or profit or credit but there is no sin we commit but pleads against us yea and stirs up the Law and Satan and our own consciences to plead against us too 2 It teacheth us the miserable Estate of a poor sinner that goes on in sin and never takes any care to get Christ to be an Advocate for him he may hope that Christ pleads for him in Heaven but this is a vaine hope so long as he goes on in sin but he may be sure that sin and Satan and the Law and his conscience accuseth him and he having none to plead for him what a wofull case is he in 3 It may stir us up to get an Advocate that may plead for us against our accusers Doct. Every Child of God hath the Lord Jesus Christ in Heaven to plead his cause for him If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the Righteous he doth not say every man that sins hath an Advocate but we have an Advocate that is I and you and such as we are the children of God Rom. 8.34 he makes intercession for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 interpellat pro nobis he interrupts the accusation and strikes in for us Heb. 7.25 because he hath not only dyed for us and risen for us but he follows the buisinesse to the utmost till it be accomplished How doth he make intercession for us 1 He doth not fall down at his Fathers feet but he acts the part of an Advocate by his presence at the Throne of Grace so that his presence cuts off many accusations it being known he is our friend and stands for us they dare not be so bold Heb. 9 24. 2 He not only pleads for us by his presence but he intercedes for us by the merit of his blood and that pleads more powerfully for us than
either sin or the Law or Satan or our own consciences can plead against us Heb. 12.24 His blood speakes better things then the blood of Abel that cryed for condemnation this for absolution 3 He pleads for us in giving us leave to use his name for our helpe and his Spirit to plead for our selves he sends his Spirit to draw our petitions for us and helpe us in his name ro plead for our selves he is our chiefe Advocate he sends the Spirit Joh. 16.23 24. and he promises Zach. 12.10 so that though the Spirit be an Advocate yet he is sent by Christ Joh. 14.16 17. 4 He plays the Advocate in our behalf by expressing his good will towards us to his Father he declares his will to be that we may be cleared from all doubts and be where he is to behold his glory this he did upon earth Joh. 17.24 and this very same doth he expresse for us in Heaven and the reason of it is from Rom. 8.34 where his mediation is made a distinct worke from his death and resurrection and ascention and sitting at his Fathers right hand besides all these he makes requests for us in his own person pleading to God for us for good things as Moses did oft for the people Exod. 32.31 32. and as it was with Moses so it is said it should be with Christ Deut. 18.18 as Moses being a Mediatour put in a word of Peace for the people so doth Christ But doth he thus intercede for every sinner no he doth not say every man hath an Advocate but we have he did not intercede for all when he was upon the Earth I pray not for the World Joh. 17.9.20 for if Christ should have prayed for all men God would have heard him for all men and then his death had been effectuall for all men for he saith thou hearest me alwayes Joh. 11.42 Christ is not an Advocate for all but only for the Children of God Vse 1 Of direction to a Christian that doth sin what course to take for his peace and pardon to look up to Heaven for an Advocate that may stand to plead for him when sin and when Sathan and the Law and conscience plead against him many a poor soul hath his conscience pleading horror against him that he is proud and uncleane and Hypocritical c. why look up to Heaven now for an Advocate to plead for rhee first get into the estate of the children of God My little Children if we sin we have an Advocate it is not any man but we that are as little children lay down all pride and emulation and labour to frame our selves to holy obedience If we sin we have an Advocate c. therefore labour to become little children begotten to God by the Ministers of his Word 2 Cor. 8.5 give up your selves to God and to his Ministers to be taught of them according to his Will and if we be such we have an Advocate Vse 2. Of consolation to all whose consciences strike and gall them and they are disquieted with the bitternesse of their sins when sin accuseth and the Law accuseth and Sathan and conscience accuseth what should comfort a poor soule in this case why consider we have an Advocate with the Father so that though the Law and conscience tell us we have been disobedient yet Christ our Advocate hath fulfilled all obedience though we sin and our sins plead against us yet Christ pleads for us his blood cries for us and speaks better things than the blood of Abel and he sends his Spirit to helpe us to put up our petitions and he himselfe puts in for us and performs our prayers for us Rev. 8.3 by the Angel there is chiefly meant Christ he sweetens them takes all the corruption out of them so that they are a sweet smelling savour to God let us accuse our selves to the lowest acknowledgment of our own unworthinesse and then let us with comfort look up to our Advocate that pleads for us How shall I know that he prays and pleads for me 1 If you be little children to God give up your selves to him and to his Ministers to be obedient to his Ordinances 2 If he send his Spirit into your hearts and that helps you to draw your Petitions it is a sign that he himselfe is about the work by our sins we dampe his Spirit but if God renew his Spirit in us it is a sign that Christ hath our cause in hand 1 JOHN 2.2 And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole World IN these words we have Christ described by his function external 1. Advocate 2. Propitiation for our sin and secondly by his inward qualification righteous Jesus Christ the righteous We have done with his office of Advocation we come now to the second He is the propitiation for our sins and not ours only but the sins of the whole World Doct. Jesus Christ is the propitiation for the sins not only of beleeving Jewes but likewise of beleeving Christians all the World over He is the Reconciliation as some translations render it but that expresseth not the full meaning we must know therefore that Propitiation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 includes Three things 1 That he should expiate our sins that is make satisfaction for our Sins a man may be a means of Reconciliation without satisfaction but he cannot be Propitiation without offering satisfaction for the wrong done now Christ did make satisfaction for our sins Heb. 2.17 and to make satisfaction he did offer a satisfactory sacrifice for our sins 1 Pet. 2.24 he bearing the sin and punishment due thereunto it is as much as if we had done it 2 To be a Propitiation it is required that he make peace and reconciliation for though a man sometimes recompence and satisfie a wrong yet the Party wronged will not be at peace with him and reconciled to him but Christ hath taken upon him to reconcile God to us so as that his wrath is turned from us and favour restored to us Col. 1.21 now this reconciling implies Three things 1 That sometimes we were friends with God 2 That we fell out with God 3 Being fallen out we are reconciled again and made at peace with him Now this is procured by Christ whereas we were once friends with God in Paradise and fell from him and his favour Christ hath come and made up that breach and reconciled us again Thirdly When Christ is said to be a Propitiation for our sins it implies that he hath procured the manifestation of Gods favour to us for suppose a Friend make satisfaction for another and reconcilement with another with whom he is fallen out yet if he know it not his heart is as loose as ever but Christ hath not only procured us Gods favour but he tells us his Father is reconciled with us and at peace with us Job 33.23 and 26. there is the effect
reverently of his name would he have others be silent in your presence much more should you subject your best gifts to God and take heed that you put no dishonour upon your selves by any unseemly carriage old Noah had no sooner committed that shamefull sin of drunkennesse but his own child mocked him Gen. 19.17 Prov. 6.11 Doct. It is the honour of aged men of fathers when they know him which was from the beginning When they know the Father of eternity the Antient of dayes this is that which is an honour to old men both before God and man viz. the knowledg of Christ dispensed from the beginning as 1 Joh. 1.1 From the beginning is not to be understood in relation to time but Eternity he doth not say That was with the beginning but from the beginning before the beginning Joh. 8. Before Abraham was I am he was before the World now the knowledge of Christ is the honour of aged persons There is a two-fold knowledge of Christ 1 A Speculative Historical Knowledge only of the understanding Act. 9.15 2 There is a practical saving Knowledg of Christ and there is a threefold difference between that knowledg that rests in the understanding and this practical and saving kno●ledg of Christ 1 The knowledge that rests in the understanding is only by hearing or reading but the other is got by the Spirit of Christ infused into us 1 Cor. 2.9 partly by inlightning our minds partly by feeling the work of Grace in our hearts Phil. 3.10 hence it is that this experimentall knowledge excells the best knowledge that is got by reading or hearing he knows the worth and vertue of Christ 2 They differ in their effects that knowledge that rests in the understanding breeds pride and carnall confidence Isa 47.10 and scandall and offence to the weak 1 Cor 8.12 but this saving knowledge breeds 1 Prayer Joh. 4.10 2 Faith Psal 8.10 They that know thy name will trust in thee 3 Justification 1 Joh. 2.2 4 Obedience 5 Innocency towards our brethren Isa 11.6 to 9. 6 It works eternall life John 17.3 3 They differ in the adjuncts saving knowledge is joyned with an high esteeme of Christ Phil. 3.7 8. yea a man hath liberty to rejoyce in this knowledge which he may not in any other Jer. 9.24 25. There are two things in the knowledge of Christ which old men have more than other men Jacob expresses them both Gen. 48.6 7. he did now by much experience know the goodnesse of God that he had provided for him at home in Labans house in his journey he had supplyed him in all his wants and delivered him out of all his dangers a young man cannot say so much it seemes not so savoury in a young mans mouth but when an old man comes out with a recitall of Gods favour this is the honour of old age Vse 1. Of direction to old men to take notice of their own Estate whether they know him that was from the beginning hath Gods Spirit brought you to pray to humble your selves to obedience to innocency c. if it be so happy are you you are truly honourable Vse 2. Not to satisfie your selves with any knowledge till you know him that was from the beginning the study of antiquity is pleasing to many especially to old men no knowledge like this when you are able to speake of Gods old mercies to you that he hath fed you all your life when you are able to tell your children of their duty to God could you tell of all Antiquities it is nothing till you know him that was from the beginning 1 JOHN 1.13 The middle Part. I write unto you young men because you have overcome the Wicked one WHy doth he call them young men and not Brethren as before he called old men Fathers Ans Because then he had not distinguished them from others for all Christians are brethren one to another 1 Observe here First their Adversary the wicked one 2 Their Victory They have overcome the wicked one This wicked one is Satan 1 Joh. 5.18 Mark 5.37 Mat. 13.19 Mar. 4.15 he is called Satan he being once one of the noblest creatures nobler than man Doct. The chiefest of the glorious Creatures of God may become the chiefest wicked one He is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that wicked one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and it implies 1 That he excells in wickednesse his Understanding most blind his will most rebellious his affections most corrupt 2 It implies he is the Father of all sin Mat. 5.37 Joh. 13.2 Joh. 8.44 he is called the Father of Lyars 3 It implies That Satan takes pains to doe evill is industrious to doe evill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 labour he traverseth the World goes about continually doing evill 1 Pet. 5.8 Job 1.7 he is insigniter improbus But how comes it to passe that he that was a glorious Angel is now become that wicked one The causes of his deprivation were partly accidentall and outward partly inward accidental as 1 God did not elect him to stand as he did ordain some Angels 1 Tim. 5.21 so that he was left to a possibility of falling though not to a necessity 2 His condition being a creature gave occasion to his fall God being infinitely good his will is the rule of good now he being a creature Gods Will is his rule and he may not attend to the rule and then he doth evil 3 But thirdly There was an inward cause that led him to sin and that was the pride of his nature not made so but he exalted himself 1 Tim. 3.6 which implies that he saw man made after the Image of God and he was a glorious creature attending on God himself and was puft up with his glorious condition and despised man that was to live on the earth and dresse the Garden Vse 1. May teach young Scholars not to please themselves in any gifts of Nature though never so excellent for even an Angel that excelled in Wisdome hath fallen away and become that wicked one Vse 2. It may teach them to take heed how they enter into the calling of the Ministry in their young years especially before they be humbled it was the cause of Satans fall that he was puft up with his office it is a wonder to see when Scholars are admitted into the Ministery in their young times how they despise the people think themselves unmeet to condescend to Peasants but they will rather exercise their Gifts in the University and so fall into the condemnation of Satan 3. Hence you may see part of the Image of Satan why was he called that wicked one because he excells in wickednesse and is the Father of sin and takes pains to doe evill so do you see men excell in wickednesse lead on others to sin take pains in mischiefe such a one bears the Image of Satan upon him When Paul saw Elimas hardned in mischief leading on others
can do nothing even Paul of himself was not able to think a good thought 2 Cor. 3.5 therefore let us exercise our gifts in Christ that is to wait on Christ daily for the renewal of strength according to our daily employments Isa 40.30.31 shall change his strength renew it according to the necessity of his businesse that so he may walk in obedience to him and depend on him for strength and aim at his glory 4 Because we often contract Crudities and ill Humours therefore if wee would increase strength wee must purge out these so if we would get Spirituall strength we must purge out our corruptions Rev. 2.3 4 5. there is need of daily repentance which may cast out all noysome lusts and weaknesses and make us able to perform duties in strength as you desire therefore to be strong and to have your strength acknowledged by God and good men as you desire to do the will of God chearfully diligently laboriously and constantly as you desire to suffer with boldnesse and patience as you desire to stand out against all temptations this God requires of you to grow true hearted to feed heartily on every ordinance to exercise your graces in Christ to depend on him to deny your selves and if you find you have committed any sin cast out all before God by confession and purge it out by repentance and then you shall find your selves to increase in strength as becomes young-men 1 JOHN 2.14 The Word of God abideth in you WE have heard of the strength of Young-men The second cause of their victory is because The Word of God abideth in them Verse 12. he had called all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and he testifies that their sins were forgiven and of those the Fathers knew him which was from the beginning and Young-men had overcome the wicked one and were strong and the word of God did abide in them Doct. Such Young-men as have their sins forgiven them have the Word of God abiding in them Q. What is meant by the Word of God abiding in them 1 He means not part of the Word but the whole Word abides in them both Promises Commands and Threatnings Commands to bind them Threatning to awe them Promises to comfort them good examples to encourage them bad examples to discourage them therefore for men to be carvers and choosers of the Word is not to have the Word abiding in them Herod would have some of Johns words abide in him hut not all but this is the commendation of good young men that not only every kind but every parcel of the Word abides in them 2 When he saith the Word of God it implyes that they receive it as the Word of God and not as the word of man 1 Thes 2.13 and a man then receives the Word as the Word of God when he looks at the Commandments as Gods Commandments and so the Promises and Threatnings as Gods he looks at them as of highest authority so as no word of man shall stand against it all falls to the ground before it it swayes all 3 When he saith the Word abideth it implyes that this Word did not only flash in suddenly and continued for a time but it abideth in them continually Joh. 5.35 Heb. 2.1 2. 4 In you that implyes the whole man in their judgment they understood the word in their wills they embraced it in their affections they rejoyced in it in their lips the law was in their mouths in the whole man the word of God abode and that not for a time but continually Q 2 What is the reason why those that have their sins forgiven them have the Word of God abiding in them Reas The ground of this is because whose sins soever are forgiven them their eyes have been opened to see the weight and danger of sin the VVord hath opened and affected the heart and hath made such deep impression that it cannot be rooted out Psal 119.93 those promise that have comforted his soul he shall never forget Psal 119.129 and hence he looks at them as sweeter than the honey and the honey combe and those threatnings that have awed his soul he still trembles at them because he hath found the VVord wonderful to humble him and to comfort him therefore he still keeps it Vse 1 Of tryal unto us whether our sins be forgiven us or no nothing more necessary to know nor nothing more comfortable how then shall I know this Why onsider what place the Word of God takes if the Word of God abide in you the whole Word there is no Commandment but you would obey it no Threatning but you humble at it no Promise but you look at it as the Word of God do you find your whole man submitting to it your minds understanding it your wills embracing it your affections rejoycing and delighting in it as the Word of God it is an evident signe of the remission of your sins this could not have been had not the Word of God been wonderfull to humble you and comfort you Obj. I have a brittls memory and cannot retain the Word therefore how can the Word be said to abide in me Ans Dost thou remember other things well and not the Word then it is dangerous but if thy memory bebrittle in other things then it argues the lesse danger though the Word do so also but though it slip out of thy memory doth it not abide in thine heart dost thou not delight in and desire more and more after it if it be so it may be said to abide in thee Vse 2 Of exhortation to young men whosoever have found your sins forgiven this God requires of you that you give up your hearts to the whole word of God to be wholly guided by it for ever if you sit loose from the word you shall find the pardon of your sins sit loose from your souls he will take away the comfort of the pardon of your sins therefore let the Word of God abide in you richly and plentifully that so you may have the comfort of such a benefit as pardon of sins Doct. Such young men as have the Word of God abiding in them are strong young men they are connexed together Reas 1 They are strong first because the Word of God wheresoever it abides abides not in the letter but in the power and efficacy and the Word of God is mighty and powerfull and therefore where it dwells it conveyes strength and power Rom. 1.16 2 Cor. 10.4 it is mighty to cast down the strong holds of Satan mighty to overwrestle lusts mighty to overcome the World Psal 119.9 11. Vse 1 May serve to shew you what poor weak young men they be that have not the Word of God abiding in them if you see such a young man write on him he is a weak young man if if the Word of God abide not in him every company every temptation will carry him away 2 Learn hence if you desire to
of any sins than the Sun is the cause of the stench of a Dunghil God forbids it hates it and punishes it was Absalom therefore innocent because God gave his Fathers Wives into his hands No God punishes his sin before all the people because be committed his sin openly before them all Vse 3 To teach every man and woman to abhor all these sins all Pride Gluttony Adultery Covetousnesse detest them why because they are not of the Father God takes no pleasure in high looks what pleasure takes he in unclean lusts in covetousnesse he detests them and abhors them therefore if they be not from God what should good men have to doe with them what should we meddle with that which we have no Word or Commandement for abhor these lusts therefore and detest them let those follow them whose chief good is in the World but live you as become Gods Servants Vse 4. May teach us to cloath our selves with the contrary Graces if those lusts be not from the Father then surely contrary Graces are therefore deck your seves with humility God resisteth the proud but gives grace to the humble Mat. 11.28 Learn of me for I am humble and meek Humility is of me but Pride that is not of the Father but of the world so for heavenly-mindednesse Col. 3.1 If ye be risen with Christ seek those things that are above heavenly mindednesse that is from Christ therefore be of an higher minde than the world Alas are these worldly things your highest things it is a sign you are not risen with Christ and so for the lusts of the flesh there is other meat than bodily food John 6.29 John 4.34 we may make use of our bellies but we may not make them our gods 1 Cor. 6.9 10. deck your selves with sobriety chastity temperance liberality humility thus walk and you shall finde rest to your souls Doct. That which is not of the Father the love of young men and old is to be weaned from The Syllogism stands thus Whatsoever is not of the Father the love of old and young must be weaned from But these lusts are not of the Father Ergo. All the comforts of this world if they come not from the Father our love must be weaned from them if honour come not from God and people affect it it hinders their Faith they cannot believe John 5.44 what kept Joseph from the lusts of the flesh but Gods providence in with-holding his Mistris from him if God with-hold a thing it is not for us to put forth a reaching desire to it this satisfied Jacob Gen. 30.2 If God with-hold such a blessing why should our desires be set upon it Shall we take it unkindly that Gods hand with-holds it so for profit this was the claim that Jephtah made when the King of Ammon contended with him Judg. 11.24 he told him What God gives us we will possesse if God had not given it he had usurped it as did the King of Ammon so if our God give us not a thing let us not reach after it and to this a promise is made to him that shakes his hand against any unjust thing Isa 33.15 vers 16 17. such though they have lesse yet they shall be confirmed in it it shall be like strong foundations Obj. What is there that any man receives but it is from Gods hand good and evill come from him 2 Sam. 12.7 8. I gave thee thy Masters house and thy Masters Wives into thy bosome and I gave them up to their hearts lusts so Zech. 11.16 Lo I will raise up a Shepheard in the Land which shall not visit those that be cut off c. So that we cannot be given to our lusts but it is from God Ans It is one thing when God gives us a blessing in his Providence another when he gives us a blessing in his Ordinances we may have many things by way of Gods providence and yet have little comfort in them it was his providence to give them up to their lusts it was Gods providence that sent Monarchs against Nations that they had no right to so Gods providence you will say sends a Bribe I never fought after it but we must not reason thus for these are but tryalls of our obedience and not for seduction so if a Bribe comes God tries whether you will shake your hands against it so if an Harlot presse on you God tries your chastity by this this is Gods providence but if God offer us a thing in an Ordinance that is either by his Command or our Calling that we may safely take Heb. 5.4 so that Gods Command and our Calling are Gods Ordinances whatsoever he calls us to receive he ordains and whatsoever he calls us not to receive he ordains not so that whatsoever is ordained by God in his Ordinance that we may take but what comes not thus let us shake it off Vse 1. To teach us to take heed of all unlawfull Honours and Riches for though they may comfort us a while yet they shall doe us no good if they come not from God all lawfull Honour and Riches come from God 1 Chr. 29.12 and that as a Father We need not be afraid to receive any lawfull Honour so for pleasures 2 Cor. 1.3 he is the God of all comfort if it be a lawfull comfort so that these we are not to be weaned from but from all the lusts of the World though we may receive Honour yet we must not be ambitious so Riches they are Gods gifts but let us not use ill means to come by them so for Pleasures if we cannot come by them but by violating Gods Command why let not your hearts reach to them and this should be a notable motive to mortifie all lusts because they come not from the Father of Lights but from the Prince of Darknesse if no Ambition or Pride or Covetousnesse be from God mortifie it so if there any love to pleasure and wantonnesse root it out for it is not of the Father therefore what should Christians have to doe with it Mens Children may lawfully take gifts from others besides their Fathers because they are not able to give us all kinde of blessings but Gods Children must take nothing that comes not from their Father whatsoever is not from him is a lust and our love must be weaned from it and the reason is from the amplitude of Gods bounty there is no good gift but comes from God and that in his Ordinance and God will bestow upon his Children whatsoever is good and needfull for them Vse 2. May quiet our hearts in the want of all such blessings as come not from God as God gives us not you see you cannot have such riches or such pleasures or profits but Gods Providence or Ordinance with-holds them why wean your hearts from them and be content without them it is the wisdome of men to follow an occasion when they see Gods providence leading them to
and drinking for then it is a lust of the flesh Gen. 27.3 4. Go and take thy Bow and take some Venison and make me savoury meat such as my soul loveth What did he onely look to please his appetite no but that I may eat and blesse thee that being refreshed by thy provision I may be strengthned to blesse thee a lively Pattern for all Christians so to eat savoury meat as that we may be fitted for prophecy if God call fit to pray if God call fit to hear fit for any duty God shall call us to and not to make us more dull and heavy Thus we see intemperance is a lust of the flesh and wherein it consists Next to that follows incontinency which is an affection to women which is inordinate Mat. 5.28 and that is a lust to be avoided of all And this lust expresses it selfe in three kinds 1 When it is carried to a wrong object 2 When it exceeds measure 3 When it aimes not at a right end For the first Sometimes the heart is carried to beastly unnaturall lusts against nature and order as with beasts Lev. 18. secondly If it be carried to kindred as when Ammon defiled his Sister Tamer and this lust lies in carrying it selfe to a wrong object thirdly When it is carried in women to men or men to women before consent of Parents though it may be a fit match yet it must be with consent of Parents though the Angell prospered Abrahams Servant in his way yet he durst not ask Rebeccahs good-will before he asked the good-will of her Parents 2 It is a lustfull affection in conjugall affection when it exceeds measure as when for it he omits his duty to God or denies his profession sometimes a man hath a good affection to Religion but the love of his wife carries him away Luke 14.26 a man may be so transported to his wife that he dare not be forward in Religion lest he displease his wife and so the wife least she displease her husband and this is an inordinate love when it exceeds measure 3 It is a lust of the flesh when they are so transported with affection that they look at no higher end than marriage it selfe to have conjugall affection 1 Cor. 7.29 the meaning is let such as have wives look at them not for their own ends but to be better fitted for Gods service and bring them nearer to God and then we so have wives as if we had them not every man is to look at his wife as a Talent sent from God and therefore he must look to restore it better by twofold at least that I may say Lord here is the wife thou gavest me and I am the more wise and humble and gracious and so Children and Servants when we affect them onely to doe our businesse and look at no higher end but our selves this is a lust of the flesh when in any thing we enjoy we look no higher but to please our selves therein 4 There is a lust of the flesh which is a lust of pastime or pleasure inordinately and this God threatens with poverty Prov. 21.17 There is a threefold lust in pastime 1 When we are set on unlawful Objects unlawful Games 2 In excessive Manner 3 To a wrong end 1 Our pastimes are unlawfull in respect of the Object if we make a pastime of every thing of such things as should be matters of devotion and sorrow and humiliation we may not jest in Scripture phrase neither may we make shews and pageants of Scripture stories as of Christ or other holy men this is unlawfull to make pastime of holy things when Moses drew near to God and God called to him I am the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob Exod. 3.5 God bid him put of his shooes for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground when men come into the presence of God you should put off your shooes that is your unclean affections if we come near to God we must not come with common ordinary affections we must not come with our old shooes so cards and dice we may not make a pastime of them if they be lots it is an ordinance of God and therefore not to be made a pastime of Obj. There are some religious lots some civill some indifferent if we should deal with divine lots we should use more devotion but the other a man may take more liberty in Ans I say all lots are religious whether they be about holy things as choosing Apostles or civill as casting lots about division of lands or any other thing to determine a controversy or the like as they cast lots on Christs Garments for it is not the object that makes a thing lawfull or unlawfull as whether we swear in Religious or Civill matters or Lusory because whatsoever we swear about we call God to be a witnesse so in all kinde of lottery whatsever it be about we appeal to God who is disposer of all things Prov. 16.33 for man being but causa per accidens of the event of the lot there must be some cause per se and that is God so that whatsoever it be about though matters of pastime or lusory it is a religious ordinance because it appeals to divine providence and therefore to be avoided 2 It is a wrong object when we set our pastime on other mens sins which should be matter of griefe and sorrow 2 Pet. 2.3 it was prophanenesse in Cham to make a mock at his Fathers nakednesse so it is prophanesse to make others drunk and then make a pastime of it and so for stage-playes to put on womens apparrell to make pastime so to make pastime by them who live without a calling 3 When men play with the Judgements of God Psal 119.120 if you see Gods Judgements on another make not a pastime of other mens infirmities in this regard it hath been thought unmeet for great men to keep fools and mad-men to make them pastime 1 Sam. 21.14 15. he thought it unmeet for the gravity of a King to make pastime of his folly not but that a man may smile at the simplicity of an Ideot but yet he should see Gods hand in it and be thankfull to God that he is not such a one so it is unlawfull to make a mear recreation of hawking and hunting seeing the enmity between the Creatures came for our sins and therefore it should be a matter of compassion 2 Pastime is unlawfull when it exceeds measure 1 Of time Ephes 5.16 when men spend whole nights and dayes in pastime 2 When men make an occupation of recreation as stage-players and musicians men should have a calling besides so then it is prophanesse for a man altogether to follow his pastime and recreation according to the Proverb What hath a Gentlemen but his pleasure six dayes should be imployed in the works of our callings 3 When we abuse it in excesse of our affections that our hearts are overwhelmed therewith
gives them such unfeigned humiliation and broken-heartednesse and such castisements that they recover themselves that all the World may see neither doth the church allow it nor God but as they were patterns of sin so they shall be patterns of Repentance 2 Sam. 12 11 if David doe fall into scandalous sins God will follow him with such chastisements that God will manifest he is no approver of such courses and David himself shall proclaim that he repents unfeignedly so that he was not so carefull before to cover it as he is now to divulge it and declare that it was the cause of bitter anguish to him so that neither God nor the church nor themselves approve of their sin but are against it Vse 3. It may teach Gods servants to make an holy use of other mens falls Dost thou see Professors fall into loose wicked courses and give no testimony of their repentance why God hereby would manifest that thou art sincere and upright God hereby prevents thy mis-leading by their evill counsell or practise blesse God that hereby he purifies his Ordinances and wipes away the soyle of his church he wipes their face by casting out such and especially make this use Be not high minded but fear fear that God that is able to cast men from one sin into another Isa 6.2 3. Why did the Angel there sing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Holy Holy Holy c. why because he was to send the Prophet on a Message to harden the wicked and make their hearts fat Vse 4. To exhort all in a speciall manner to take heed of Hypocrisie if we take up a course of Religion and good duties at home and abroad we think that God will be mercifull to us but let us see that what we doe we doe in spirit and in truth Heb. 12.13 Lev. 10.3 God will certainly discover us scarce ever any lived that dyed in Hypocrisie but he was uncased before his death there is nothing so secret but it shall be revealed Hypocrisie must be manifest to all men though there were good hopes of them yet God washes off the spots of his church and not only at the last day but in this World therefore let it not suffice you to live in the church for you may be as ill Humours and so annoy the church of God and it will be well that you be cast out or at the best though you be ornaments and supporters to the church yet you are but as glasse eyes and wooden leggs why God may stay long for the good of his church but certainly he will lay you open to some corrupt Doctrine or way that you shall be manifest 2 Tim. 3.9 why vers fifth he tells you what they were They had a form of godlinesse c implying it is a mad course to be an Hypocrite for by his outward profession he gets the ill will of wicked men and for want of sincerity he gets the ill will of God There are sundry signs of this Hypocrisie 1 If thou findest in thy self an hatred of admonition Mat. 14.4 Herod was impatient of admonition therefore he put John in prison and thereby manifested his hypocrisie 2 If thou beest given to praise wicked men and accompany with them Prov. 13.20 Prov. 28.4 that is a fore-runner of forsaking of the Law 3 When a man makes no conscience of his tongue but lets his tongue run at random to passion oc rayling or slandering Jam. 1.26 4. If you see any man living in any known sin and delighting in it it is such a link as the Devil will chain him fast by 5 When a man shall make use of Religon to any other end than for Gods glory if you make Religion a stalking-horse to your own ends certainly you will fall off Joh. 6.26.60.66 those that followed Christ for the Loaves not one of them continued with him 2 King 10.29 Acts 8.17 to 23. When Simon Magus would make use of Spiritual gifts to get money he was in the gall of bitternesse and bond of iniquity his heart was not right therefore as you desire to have fellowship with God be sincere and upright 1 JOHN 2.20 But ye have an Vnction from the holy one and know all things THe Apostle having instructed little Children that Antichrist would come and described him vers 18 19. in this verse and the next he propounds some means to help them 1 An Unction within themselves whereby they know all their seducements and snares vers 20 21. 2 The second means is from the corrupt and false doctrin of these Teachers who is Antichrist but he that denies the Son whose doctrin perverted that unction which they had received vers 22 23. In the first means observe 1 A benefit received an Unction 2 The Author from Christ 3 The vertue of it whereby you know all things you know the truth and that no lye is of the truth To begin with the first the benefit Ye have an Vnction Doct. There is not the least of the Children of God but they are partakers of an Oyntment of Christ you little Children have it Vers 27. There were three sorts of Functions in the Old Testament into which they were instituted by Oyntment Kings Priests and Prophets Kings 1 Sam. 13.10 11. so Priests Exod. 29.7 so Prophets 1 King 19.16 now Christ being ordained to be King Priest and Prophet therefore he is called the Anoynted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 12.15 Luke 1.32 33. Heb. 6.20 Heb. 7.24 Acts 3.22 23. all other Unctions were but types of him therefore he is said to be annoynted with the oyl of gladnesse above his fellows Psal 45.7 he was not only gladded himselfe but all the ends of the earth were made glad by him therefore he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now because he was not a type but the person typified he was not anyonted with material oyl but with the Spirit of God which is the true Unction Acts 10.38 Luke 4.18 Dan. 9.24 hence called Messiah in Hebrew the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greek from this Oyntment of Christ we are annoynted by the same Unction as Psal 133. so that spirit which was poured on his head descended to his lowest members 2 Corinth 1.21 22. yea to the skirts of his garments so then we are annoynted by the Spirit Now fitly are we laid to be annoynted by the Spirit as it were by Oyl in a Four fold respect 1 As Oyl hath been used for healing Wounds Luke 10.34 so when the Spirits of men are wounded by the sence of sin God poures in such an Oyl of his Spirit that he heals and binds them up 2 Oyl hath a suppleing softning and lithni●g power so Gods Spirit makes us nimble and agile to every good work in the East Countries they used to annoynt Wrestlers and Runners to make them more nimble and quick such use is the Spirit of to make us quick and ready to run the wayes of Gods Commandements Ezek. 36.27
of a Christian is the way of Truth and goodnesse but the wayes of the wicked are deceitfull and will certainly seduce us but a Christian hath fellowship with the Spirit of Truth Vse 2. It must therefore stir up men to labour to be partakers of this excellent Spirit this Spirit of truth the way of righteousnesse will not deceive us It may be many times by following the Spirit we run into dangerous wayes the way of truth is a straight narrow way but it is a safe way keep your way and it will keep you the Spirit of Christ will carry you on strongly Jer. 20 10. men thinke that Christians walk in dangerous wayes set like Christ on the top of a pinacle but we shall find that these wayes of truth will not fail us but lead us on to eternall happinesse therefore get this Spirit of Truth Vse 3. A ground of comfort to all them that have received this Spirit this Spirit will not deceive you if Gods Spirit were not in you you were of all men most miserable but we have a Spirit that will not fail us as Policarpus said These eighty six years have I served Christ and he never deceived me therefore now I will not leave him Doct. 6. The anoyntment of Gods Spirit teacheth us our perseverance in Christ i. e. doth assure us that we shall abide in him Rom. 8.16 17. The same Spirit beareth witnesse with our Spirits two Spirits bear witnesse Gods and ours and both co-witnesse our adoption our spirit that is our renewed regenerate Spirit for Gods Spirit would not joyn with our corrupt Spirit but with our renewed Spirit and this makes us become the Sons of God for there is a manifold difference between the fruits of the Spirit and the flesh but besides this renewed Spirit of ours Gods Spirit witnesseth the other indeed was the fruit and effect of Gods Spirit but Gods Spirit it selfe is some lively and comfortable witnesse which speaks more clearly and fully than the created graces of God in us if you would speak of an immediate work of the Spirit it doth it by such peace of Conscience and joy as passeth understanding Phil. 4.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it shall so guid your hearts this peace that Gods Spirit immediately poures into the heart is without understanding and the witnesse Gods Spirit gives to our spirits makes us that we never doubt more as formerly 2 It works in us joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1.8 there is such a witnesse as fills our hearts with glorious Consolation Rom. 14.17 and this fills our souls so that a man tasts of the first fruits of Heaven in his light we shall see light Psal 36.8 9. there are certain times when God sends this into our spirits and that is usually in the end of many Conflicts God abundantly recompenseth our work 3 Sometimes when we are preparing for some great triall then God sends some more special help of his Spirit as it was with our Saviour when he was to be tempted forty dayes immediately before he had a testimony from Heaven Thou art my beloved Son c. presently after he was led into the Wildernenesse to be tempted of the Devill Matth. 4. and as the Angels rejoyce at our conversion Luke 15.10 so when God hath any great Temptation for us he poures down more enlargement and comfort of the Spirit so when Christ was to be Crucified he was a little before gloriously Transfigured and when he came riding to Jerusalem exulting and rejoycing presently after he went to be Crucified Rom. 5.8 and often in the midst of tribulation so oft after Afflitions and Conflicts God comes to comfort us with happy enlargements 1 Pet. 4.14 not onely a spirit of grace but a spirit of glory as it did on Steven Acts 6. ult 1 John 3. ult hereby we know that we abide in Christ even by the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.9 10 11 12. Reas 1. From the names and titles given to the Spirit in Scripture three names all which witnesse this truth 1 It is called the Comforter Joh. 14.16 17. not so much comforting us in outward Crosses but specialy because he comforteth our hearts by assuring us we are Sons and Daughters of God and Heirs of life for else it were not above the world for the world can comfort us in temporall things but here is a comforter that far transcends the world 2 The Spirit is called the seal and earnest of our inheritance Ephes 1.13 14. Ephs 4.30 2. Cor. 1.21 now a seal hath a three-fold use 1 It hath an use to keepe secret or distinguish 2 Not only so but to confirme us in all Leases Bonds Covenants so the Spirit not only keeps us sure and distinguisheth us from all Hypocrites but seales us by confirming the happinesse of our estate present and future 3 It is a seal alluding to the seals of Princes wherein their person is pourtrayed so this Spirit is the very Character of Gods Image and fashions us after the Image of God and hereby he confirms and establisheth all the Promises to us 2 Cor. 1.20 and Ephes 6. the Article shews that not only the gift of the Spirit but the person of the Spirit witnesseth 3 He is called the earnest whereof three Uses 1 It bindes and asures a man 2 An earnest is part of the payment though small in regard of the whole so the Spirit of grace is part of the payment and shall remain with us till the full payment 3 Because it abides with us after the whole payment Vse May serve to comfort the hearts of all that have received the Unction of the Spirit they have an assurance of their state of Grace here and Glory hereafter Obj. How comes it to passe then that so many Christians are so troubled 1 There is a double Reason First Sometimes by imaginary causes when there is no such cause as 1 In case of desertion we think we have quenched and grieved the Spirit and therefore it hath left us but God doth not assure us that the Spirit in a full and glorious measure shall abide in us but some fruites of it shall alwayes remain 2 Sometimes outward Crosses and Afflictions make us doubt as David Psal 73. surely I have cleansed my heart in vain 3 Sometimes Melancholy may so distemer us that we will hardly be perswaded of that whereof we have no cause to doubt Secondly There are some real Causes as 1 If we live in any known sin that breaks the very bones Psal 51.8 deprives us of the vigour of the Spirit 2 The high prizing of earthly contentments when we exceedingly delight our selves in Husbands or Wives or Children which much benumbs and dims the light of the Spirit Matth. 13.44 45. when a man so prizes this Pearl he keeps it with him in comfort 3 The proud frame of our spirit hinders our peace we are all naturally of proud ●ofty spirits and if God see not in us an
not of God Of whom then John 8.41 of the Devill To be of the Devill is to be of him as a Father to be begotten of him So Elimas when he would have kept the Deputy from the faith Reas 1. From the imitation of the Devill which those exercise and put forth in such works When a man is freely carried into evill he imitates Satan and so is his childe Gen. 4.20 So they were called Fathers who were first in any act of all them that imitate them 2. By spiritual propagation begotten of his seed those are called the seed of Satan There is a seed of Satan which stirrs them up to this imitation Gen. 3.15 The seed of Satan expresseth it self in obstinacy and efficacy in sin When a man is willing to take pains in sin John 8.44 Ye are of yur father the devill How will that appear his work ye will doe So the Devill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 takes pains and is industrious in sin Elimas sought to pervert the Deputy who attended to the Word Vse 1. Of triall Here we may see of what parentage we are of We may see whether we be so ill as to be born of Satan Let us examine our selves What is our businesse in this world if it be to follow the lust of our owne hearts to regard our profits and pleasure and we delight in sin and what crosseth us we maligne and are at enmity with it The Scripture doth not call a man the child of the Devill when he is but meerly naturall deprived of grace and prone to sin men are then called the children of the devill when as they are in the bosome of the Church and see the way they should walk in and that their estate is not good and yet are resolved to do evill to take pains in it and if any crosse them they will be at enmity with them there will be private grudges between many but when it is for righteousnesse sake then they are of the seed of Satan Now such men as are the children of the devill may possibly become better 2 Tim. 2. two last verses They may be delivered out of the snares of Satan But this God never doth but with such conflicts as it may be seen there hath been strife between Micael and his Angels and the Devill and his angels Take a man meerly naturall and it is an easie matter to bring him home Jude vers 22 23. shews that when we are meerly naturall tendernesse of compassion prevails much There is lesse opposition against grace then when the Devill is come into the heart and joyns with sin The Devill cast a thought into Judas heart to betray Christ John 13.2 he did not presenly consent to it but ●after he had eaten the sop Satan entred into him verse 27. The Deill had possession of him before setting his heart in a course of covetousnesse but now he had a farther possession of him now he resolves to betray Christ and now he spies a time to bring it about The Devill findes us flesh and blood at the first then he tempts us to sin if we begin to run to him then he enters and sets us in that way When a new temptations comes and we consider whether we shall do it or no when we break off we are the better and get strength against sin But if we yeeld and commit sin willingly then we are the children of the Devill Take we heed of pleasing our selves in any sinfull estate If we have committed sin willingly and the Devil come with full sail into our souls if we now lye down in peace we shall be the children of Satan This is to give our souls and hearts to the Devill 1 Sam. 15.15 16. Sin of rebellion is not of ignorance but through depravation of will when out of resolution a man will sin against God he will make bold with God this is a sin of witchcraft As in a sin of witchcraft a man or woman give their souls to the devill so when a man commits sin willingly he gives his foul to the Devill You would think it a strange thing to be called a Witch therefore rest not in this condition How shall we get out of it 1. Henceforth resolve that through the strength of Gods grace you wil never commit any sin again Listen more diligently to the Word of GOd give up your heart to God and his word 2 Cor. 8.5 Lay open all your rebellion confessing your sins and rebellions to God tell him of those passages of your lives wherein you have rebelled against him 1 John 2.9 Vse 2. To magnifie the freenesse of Gods grace that hath delivered you out of darknesse into light from Satan to God when you have sinned against knowledge and conscience Doct. The devill keeps a constant and continuall course of sinning from the beginning to this day The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies an accuser yet that is not his onely word for he is sometimes called Satan an adversary this is one of his ordinary works to accuse the brethren Sometimes he doth accuse God to us as he did God to Adam He accuseth God to the conscience of a poor sinner that God hath cast him off for ever 2. Sometimes he doth accuse us to God as he did Job 1.9 10. Doth Job fear God for nought 3. He accuseth them to those that are in stead of God as to the Magistrates and he accuseth them to other men he puts slanderous speeches in the mouthes of others without any ground or cause How is he said to sin from the beginning It implyeth that he transgresseth the law and that by a constant act he sins daily and provokes others to sin that hath been his constant course from the beginning from the beginning is not meant from his first creation for it is evident that he stood till the sixt day else God would not have said Omnia valde bona There are five things wherein Satan hath sinned from the beginning wherein he transcends all sinners besides 1. He was the eldest sinner the first in sin 2. He is the most industrious painfull sinner he comes from compassing the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. He is the Father of sin John 8.44 If a man can utter any vain word any sinfull practice it 's from the devill because generally he doth so watch over the wayes of men and he is casting in blasphemous thoughts against God and envious thoughts against our Brother 4. Every sin he hath committed hath been a sin against the Holy Ghost For to that sin is required illumination and malice of heart 5. He transcends others in the perpetuity and constancy of sinning He is called an unclean spirit 2 Cor. 1.1 when he lyes he speaks of his owne accord John 8.44 If at any time he speak true it is by the over-ruling hand of God 1 Sam. 28.19 Reas As is the tree so is the fruit Mat. 7.18 Vse It shews us that Satan
hath the Law of God in his heart else he could not sin for sin is the transgression of the Law Satan at first had the image of God stamped upon him he was created in holinesse and righteousnesse having all the Commandements of the first and second Table written in his heart Job 1.6 They are called the Sons of God but sinning against holinesse and righteousnesse they did transgresse the Law of God 2. It confutes the Anabaptists that say by the parents sin enters into the world not by propagation but by imitation onely whence it follows that children sin not tiill they are capable of imitation But why doth David then complain he was born in sin 3. It exhorts us all to a threefold duty 1. It teacheth us for to walk more circomspectly against Satan for he knows all the wayes and methods of the Sons of men therefore we had need pray daily deliver us from evill and lead us not into temptation 2. It teacheth us to loath sin and all the wayes of it You cannot walk in a way of sin but you have Satan for your companion 3. Take heed especially of continuing long in any sin Many there are who not onely now and then fall into sin but ever from the beginning to the end walk in sin Are they not herein truly patterns of the devill Vse 4. This may teach Gods servants never to be weary of well-doing The Devill is not weary of sin he is alwayes imployed therein and yet is not weary It is his meat and drink to sin to draw in others to sin And if Satan find such pleasure in sin then you may much more finde comfort in well-doing If he be not weary to aggravate his own sin and misery be not you weary in getting grace and peace to your selves and others As he is industrious in sinning and accusing the brethren so let Gods servants take heed of accusing their brethren Take heed of slander do not beleeve Satan he is a deceiver he is an accuser he is your enemy In the former verses seducers were crept into the Church now to prevent the seducement of the people of God to prevent future delusion and withdraw them from present errors St. John sets down two principles of Christian practice 1. He that doth righteousnesse is righteous 2. He that sins is of the devill First because the devill sinned from the beginning The second argument is from the contrary end of Christ comming Thirdly from the practcie of every child of God vers 9. From the second argument taken from the end of Christs coming note Doct. The end of Christs coming into the world was to dissolve and loose the works of Satan This was expresly foretold Gen. 3.15 The seed of the woman shall break the Serpents head that is the projects and plots of Satan When as the devill did plot to bring our first parents into sin and so into eternall misery and fellowship with him therein Head is taken for dominion and power which he hath in our hearts What is it to loose and dissolve It implieth that the work of the Devill was knit in divers hnots A three fold knot 1. He had tyed our nature to sin that you cannot draw mere nature but you must draw his corruption Gen. 6.5 John 3.6 Rom. 7.14 2. There is a binding of one sin to another Draw one sin and you draw all Deut. 29.19 3. If we draw sin we shall inevitably draw punishment Rom. 6. ult Gen. 2.17 Gal. 3.10 What is a curse That is a curse that sets us further off rom God Heb. 2.14 Prov. 1.32 Christ came into the world to loose these knots But how did Christ coming into the world loose works of Satan By Christs manifestation you must understand the whole worke of Christs meditation Christ by his innocent birth holy life righteous and holy suffering hath procured pardon of sin and having gotten it sin and punishment is dissolved But may not our natures be corrupt though our sins are pardoned Gal. 4.4 5. The same Spirit that makes us cry Abba Father Rom. 8.14 15 16. leads us into all wayes of holinesse righteousnesse Hence our wayes are healed and our course of sin broken off But though God hath broken off the wicked course of a mans life Luke 19.48 Yet we are still bittery intangled with the corruptions of our owne hearts Hos 4.8 9. Vse 1. To teach such as live in any sin or are the Authors of any sin that this is a sign that they are of the Devill because they tye those knots which Christ came to loose 2. Of tryall whether we be indeed born of God or not Would you know whether Christ came effectually for you if he did then he hath untyed those knots and snares 3. This may be a ground of exhortation to two or three severall duties 1. Take heed of all sin and allow not your selves in any If you do the work of Satan you dissolve the work of Christ 2. This exhorts all that finde their souls so intangled to labour to dissolve the work of Satan Now none can dissolve it but Christ he came for this end therefore make we our moan to him And because this will not serve unlesse we give up our selves wholly to be ruled by him therefore let us resigne up our souls to him wholly to be wrought upon by the Word of God 3. To exhort us to comfort our selves who have given up our selves to Chirst If we see that Christ hath begun to pardon our sins to cut us off from sin and to mortifie it he will perfect this good worke Deut. 32.4 Rom. 16.22 1 JOHN 3.9 Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin for his seed remaineth in him and he cannot sin because he is born of God THE third argument whereby St. John proveth that he that committeth sin is of the Devill is taken from the common practice of Gods children who are so far from gratifying the Devill by commission of sin that whosoever is born of God sinneth not In the Verse there are three things 1. The course of a childe of God He doth not commit sin 2. The cause of it The seed of God is in him 3. This is amplified from an impossibility of sinning which is in regard of his new birth Doct. The seed of God in the hearts of Gods children preserves them not onely from sin but from possibility to sin To be born of God is the same with the seed of God What is this seed of God 1 Pet. 1.23 The Word of God is an immortall seed and that not in the letter but in the spirit To be born again is when the Word and Spirit hath framed a man to the image of God A man is then born again when the Word and Spirit hath done the work of seed For many a man knows the Word is true the Devill knows the Word well enough but the Word is then seed when the soule of a man doth
came to good And they that did not love Joseph for his goodnesse sake could not love Jacob nor Abraham A man may hate and distaste some injury offered but if once the corruption of any childe of God shall prevaile with me to hate him more then his goodnesse to love him it is a sign there is a distemper in my heart Vse 1 See a manifest difference between the children of God and of the Devil If there be any Brother thou lovest not from whom thy heart is girded up whom thou canst not affect thou art not born of God I know provocations may be such as may weaken affections and turn the streams as that it shall not run so fully nor strongly yet a childe of God dares not allow himselfe but he doth take a course to remove matters of enmity and he takes himselfe as much bound to hate himselfe for neglect of his Brother as he found cause to neglect his Brother A man may be angry towards those he loves without sin But this want of love will do more injury to your spirit then the injury that is done to you A man may be angry but when his passion is over his love returns again What is it not to love any brother There are two things in love 1. A Communion with them 2. A communication of good to them In some things a man desires communion with others other things there be wherein though a man desires not communion with them yet he desires communication of good to them Vse 1. This should exhort us to stretch our love universally to every soul You were better bestow your love upon some base hypocrite then restraine your love from some poor Christian You cannot neglect one Christian but it will hazard your whole generall estate In judgement of Charity if they abstain from grosse sins and do good duties we think well of them and we had better lose our love upon them then neglect a childe of God Psal 35.12 14. And indeed it is not lost for it shall return into his bosome It is a signe I love a man if I love his picture so though a man should be an hypocrite yet if we love the shew of grace it is a signe we love grace indeed Never say thou lovest a Christian unlesse thou lovest the picture of a Christian What a miserable thing is the want of this such a man is not born of God but of the Devill And what a poor case is a man in that makes his spirit the spirit of Satan 1 JOHN 3.11 For this is the message that ye heard from the beginning that we should love another THe Apostle in the former verse had given us two manifest differences between the children of God and of the Devill The latter mark the Apostle proves to be a manifest difference It is a message and an ancient one which we have received of God as who should say He that is born of God will hear the Word of God But this is a message The duty of brotherly love is set out by a message and that by its adjunct from the beginning Doct. That when we read or hear the Word of God we should look at it as a message sent from God This Phrase is no where used but in 1 John 1.5 And what saith Saint John of it shewing what Christ delivered at large The Apostle sets the stamp of message upon it Reas 1. From the scope of all the Scripture Whatsoever is written is written for our instruction Rom. 15.4 There is not in Scripture something for some men of parts and other things for meaner men but all things are for our comfort and instruction If we read the Magistrate to be called to such and such duties it is for our instruction for our comfort that we may know what care God hath of us no calling but redounds to our benefit Whether I read threatnings commandements promises they are all a message to me though every threatning belong not to me yet thus far it doth to keep me from such and such sins and terrifie others And so though promises belong not to thee because thou art not in the state of grace yet 't is good for thee to know them that those promises may break thy heart to see what mercies thou neglectest 2. From the office and calling of the Pen-men of Scripture Mal. 2.7 2 Cor. 5.10 Vse 1. Of direction to those that either hear or read the Word Deut. 17.14 God calls the King to read it once a day If thou takest up the Book of God thou takest a bundle of messages as if God should round thee in the ears Understandest thou what thou readest Thou shalt read it in vain if thou look not at it as a mess a ge We are wont to receive the message so much the better by how much it comes from great men or friends 2. In hearing or reading the Word of God we must be led on to a twofold duty 1. To receive all with reverence Judg. 3.20 Acts 10.33 2. Whensoever thou hearest the Word of God consider how far it pertains to thee though all Scripture be for my comfort to know yet I must apply it to my selfe so far as it concerns me receive it as bread of my portion chew upon it Heb 4.3 God requires of us that we doe mix the Word with faith Obj. The Minister doth not know the frame of my heart therefore how should he know what to say to me I am a stranger to him Answ It is true If he speak out of his own minde and fancy many times we think that things are spoken by suggestion from neighbours true oft-times it is so but God knows better how such a thing is useful to us then we do 2 Kings 9.5 3 This should teach us conscionably to obey the Word it is a message sent from God therefore take it not ill at the messengers hands nor cavil at it For a Prince is not so to doe though an Herald of Arms come and pronounce open Wars against him he comes and goes peaceably telling the message of his Prince The Lord makes this a cause of captivity 2 Chron. 36.15 16. 4. This should exhort all to get them Bibles if they have none and if they have them every day to read something There are two wayes of parley between God and our selves 1. When we speak to God in prayer 2. When God speaks to us in his Word It is a fearefull thing when there is such strangenesse between God and us that he should seldome hear of us and we seldome hear of him Doct. The love of another is an ancient message that God hath sent us and hath continued to send us from the beginning He saith not in the beginning but from the beginning which implyeth a continuance of it I Theff 4.9 Rom. 15.10 Writing a Law he wrote nothing else but a Law of God Gen. 4.6 Thus God complains of Cain why dost thou lowre
gives a reason of this above all there is no surer argument then this A Christian may reason thus If I that have but a little sparke of grace can forgive injuries how shall not the Ocean of love much more forgive me Mat. 18. ult God will never have us to think that if we cannot forgive one injury he will forgive us a thousand Yet a man is not alwayes bound to expresse his forgivenesse unlesse a man come and say it repents him yet from his heart he must doe it Vse 1. Shewes the dangerous and fearfull estate of a man that dares live in envy and malice against his brethren A man thinks he hath cause he will not receive the Sacrament nor suffer them What a poor thing is this Thou hast not thy sins forgiven thou lovest not God nor any Christian soul in obedience to God A Christian dares not allow himselfe in hatred of any Brother but looks at it as an enemy to his soul 2. It exhorts every Christian to enlarge the bowels of his affection to every Brother Psal 119.63 I am a companion to all them that fear thee He doth not pick and choose Psal 66.16 Gal. 6.10 If to all men then especially to the houshold of faith 3. It is a ground of thankfullnesse to God that hath taken care for weakest Christians for want of love to such God will either discharge a man for an hypocrite or else his own corruption shall take him by the throat and make him beleeve that many sins are not forgiven and that he shall hardly get pardon of sins 1 JOHN 3.15 Whosoever hateth his Brother is a murtherer and ye know that no murtherer hath eternall life abiding in him THe Apostle having said in the former verse that he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death he proves it by a Syllogisme taken from a Murtherer Doct. He that hates his Brother is a Murtherer As he that looks upon a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery so he that hates his brother is a murtherer Reas 1 From the wrapping up and infolding this in the heart as the seed of a tree in the root though it breake not forth So sin hah its seed in the heart Mat. 15.19 No murther could spring from the heart if it were not there A fountaine could not flow over unlesse water were in it Prov. 4.23 2 From the foul murther hatred commits to give offence is a destroying of our Brother now who hates his Brother makes no scruple of giving offence Rom. 14.15 1 Cor. 8.11 3 It is a foul murther in regard of withdrawing many good offices A man shall be unwilling to doe any good office either for soul or body Ill will never speakes nor doth well Vse 1 Teacheth us the spiritualnesse of the Word of God It doth transcend the words of men they never reach farther then speeches and actions they make no Lawes for the hearts of men But the Word of God hath special regard to the heart 1 Sam. 16.7 As it is with wise parents they look not only to the guidance of their childrens speeches but that their countenance and carriage be well framed Gen. 4.6 So soon as God saw hatred in Cains heart and expressing it selfe in his countenance he reproves him for it he will not have so much as a wrinkle in the face 2 Hence we may see a just ground of Divines referring all sins and virtues to the ten Commandements Mat. 5.21 22. Before God unadvised anger is killing so of adultery verse 28. 3 See the wisdome of God in putting such foule names upon the beginnings of sin to make us afraid He that hateth his Brother is a Murtherer As if a Father should say Doe not hate your Brother you will be a murtherer He puts bad words upon the seeds of sin 4 This should be a means to cleanse us from all hatred of our Brother look at it as an ugly and loathsome vice If there be a spirit of envy in thy heart what though thou lift not up thy hand against thy Brother this is murther Doct. That it is a known truth amongst Gods children every murtherer is devoyd of eternall life Rev. 21.8 Reas 1 Because of the injury done to Gods image If a man deface the image of a Prince it deserves death then the defacing of Gods image much more eternall death Gen. 9.6 2 From the seed of all murtherers vers 12. he makes every murtherer to be of the posterity of Cain John 8.44 Now because a man kills his brother out of the seed of the Serpent a devillish and malignant spirit therefore he hath not eternal life abiding in him Vse 1 See the danger of such who in their drinkings quarrell even to murther Obj. If there be no possibility that a murtherer should be saved what say you to David and others in their carnall estate Answ David did indeed kill and God follows him with judgments and afflictions 2 Sam. 12.8 9 10. but yet upon repentance God forgave him his sin And as for such as have murthered in their carnal estate if God give them hearts to be humbled then the blood of Christ is of a lowder cry then the blood of Abel Heb. 12.24 Saint John speaks not of every murtherer for some doe it against their judgments and hearts but others if they repent not have not eternal life 1 Cor. 6.8 9. 2. To stir up every christian man that hath his hands in blood to have recourse to the blood of the covenant for the pardon of their sins and healing of them The sin on Levi held him longest under to bring him to repentance Gen. 49.7.28 Jacob blessed him in a curse God preserves us with curses that may put us in minde of our sins and makes us walk sensibly of them therefore renew we our mournings for our hatred 3 In respect of challenges let us take heed we take them not and that we stop them in the beginning It is not fit that fire should burn out of its place 4 Such as love their Brethren are not only not abiding in death but have everlasting life already abiding in them If you see any hatred spring in thee thou art taken with a dead Palsie You cannot bring out a good word or good countenance so much hatred so much death so much want of love so much want of life 1 JOHN 3.16 Hereby perceive we the Love of God because he laid down his life for us and we ought to lay down our lives for the Brethren THese words are part of the exhortation St. John useth to all christians to love one another He useth many arguments vers 14. He tells us It is a sign we are translated from death to life 2. From the danger of the hatred of our Brother 3 From the exemplary and strong love of Christ 4 From the emptinesse of such hearts of grace when there is no love of their Brethren These words are a notable motive to christians
perfect love to God and their brethren they may have boldnesse in the day of judgement This Paul confirms 2 Tim. 4 7 8. he is confident that God would give him a crown of righteousnesse who had fought the good fight of faith and had finished his course had abounded in love to God and man which is our righteousnesse to 〈◊〉 God and man his due and this crown of glory God will give not only to him but to all that love his appearing James 2.13 Mercy rejoyceth against judgement which is a fruit of love for mercy is nothing else but love compassionating our brothers distresse the judgement day is terrible to all bitter cruel and harsh spirits but mercy riseth against judgement Matth. 25.34 to 41. We see what encouragement he gives to his sheep on this ground because they shewed him kindnesse in being kind to his brethren Reas 1. From the esteem the Lord Jesus bears to such before whom they are to appear in judgement for such as love Christ and his members have found Christ dispensing himselfe to them not as a Judge but as a Saviour or else they could never have loved him nor others now they that are to meet with a Saviour have cause of boldnesse in that day or if he come as a Judge it 's but as a Judge to plead their cause and right their wrong and take vengeance on their enemies 2. A loving Christian hath a further ground of confidence in his heart that the day of Christs appearing shall be as the day of his marriage now a marriage day is a day of the gladnesse of the heart Cant. 3.10 Now they that love one another are espoused to Christ here by their effectuall vocation but the day of judgement is as the marriage day Christ here adorns and beautifies us that so at the last day we may be represented as fit Spouses for himselfe Such as are in marriage love how do they desire and long after the marriage day and so doe all true Christians that have kept their hearts chast to Christ how doe they pray for the hastening of that day Beloved be like a Dove or young Hart upon the Mountains of spices Cant. 8. ult This day is called the day of refreshing Acts 3.19 and it 's the work of the Ministers of the Gospel to drive a match between you and Christ that so at that day they may look them out and present them to Christ Loe here am I and the children that thou hast given me Isa 8.18 2 Cor. 11.1 2 3. It 's therefore the day of the comfort of Gods Ministers and all his servants therefore a day of boldnesse 3. It 's a day of much comfort and boldnesse because then they shall be freed from all discouragements from all persecutions and malignities from slanderous tongues and hard speeches from all fears and sorrows nay more from all temptations and corruptions this must needs give boldnesse to them it 's all the cause of boldnesse we have in this life because at that day all our sins and sorrows shall be put away it 's a day of universal freedome from all sin 1 John 3.2 we shall then be like him in grace and glory and freedom from all evils Vse 1. To reprove a grosse errour in Popery which is that no man can be certain of his salvation in the day of judgement but we see it 's no other doctrine but St. John here delivers is it not a word of boldnesse and confience that Paul hath 2 Tim. 4 7 8. I know from henceforth is laid up for me a crown of glory true say they Paul was an extraordinary Christian but he addes not for me only but for all them that love his appearing were not Christians confident against that day how is it that they so earnestly desire that day The Spirit and the Bride say Come and every one that is a thirst sayes Come Lord Jesus come quickly be like a young Roe which shews plainly they doe not look at it as a day of terrour but as a day of boldnesse and comfort Object Have not many of Gods servants been afraid of the face of death and troubled at it What was Hilarius his speech Egredere anima mea quid trepidas Egredere septuaginta annos Christum colui jam mortem times Answ The words of Hilarius shew that he checks this fear he thought he had no cause to be afraid therefore he bids his soul goe forth 2. I grant that a mans nature may shrink at death though he knowes that he hath been a faithfull servant and is not afraid of judgement for death is an enemy to nature though a friend to grace 2 Cor. 5.12 Paul himselfe desires to be cloathed with glory 〈…〉 unclothed of his body so Christ told Peter John 21.18 〈…〉 thee whither thou wouldst not he means to martyrdome implying if he could have shunned martyrdome with a good conscience he would have ●orded it because its an enemy to nature but yet this 〈…〉 ●●ture is after aggravated by tempt●● 〈…〉 so that as 〈…〉 so to 〈…〉 will 〈…〉 times taking away all matt●● 〈…〉 he w●● con●●●dent o● 〈…〉 all 〈◊〉 of com●●●● 〈…〉 him 〈◊〉 that day shall 〈…〉 examination and possese him 〈…〉 youth that his 〈…〉 Psal 30.7 〈…〉 his face 〈…〉 is the 〈…〉 and Joh● ●0 〈…〉 yet this 〈…〉 love may 〈…〉 in that day though 〈…〉 wh● 〈…〉 with temptati●● and 〈…〉 it may be 〈…〉 and so other Christians in his 〈…〉 ●emper 〈…〉 Christ 〈◊〉 to him Psal 3.6 I will not be af●●● 〈…〉 about 〈…〉 St. Ambrose I have not 〈…〉 am ashamed to 〈◊〉 any longer neither doth it irk me to die 〈…〉 a good Lo●● so Paul professeth Phil. 1.21 〈…〉 ●●●ved so Job 19. ●● 26. 〈…〉 but even of every one whose lo●● 〈…〉 that th●● 〈…〉 in that day Vse 2. Shews the dangerous estate of such whose love to Go● 〈…〉 brethren is not perfect for if they wh●●● love is perfect may have 〈…〉 then such as never sought 〈…〉 his favour never loved the ●ell 〈…〉 of his servants in tha● 〈◊〉 where 〈…〉 Obj. I have know●●● 〈…〉 ●●ve never troubled themselves with matters of Relig●●● 〈◊〉 yea scornfull 〈…〉 boysterous men yet as little afraid of death and hell 〈…〉 Isa 22. ●● Answ That which the Papists condemn as hereticall 〈…〉 God 's servants that may be called 〈◊〉 presumption in such men 〈…〉 who never shrink at death or judgement and indeed it proceeds from 〈◊〉 profound ignorance and deadnesse of their hearts who nenver 〈…〉 of God nor the terrours of hell D●●●e bellum in ex pertis but if one 〈…〉 ●ome to see that d●y then shall they call to the moutainns and hills to cove●●●●em from the wrath 〈◊〉 the Lamb. Vse 3. For those that would live comfortably and die peaceably take this ready way be perfect and sincere in your love to God and his Saints and that will breed 〈…〉 marvellous boldnesse against that day
fear in love then if there be no fear there is no fear of falling away Vse 2. Of direction to poor souls against those 〈…〉 and fears of their hearts if we would be quit● of all those cares and grie● 〈…〉 g●●p in love to God to your brethren for there is no fear in love 〈…〉 therefore from all hatred of God learn to take all Gods d●g● in good part as proceeding from his love to your souls Look at all th●se fears and anguishes he puts you to as wholsome for your spirits and the very apprehension of Gods love to you in these will quiet your consciences and scatter those fears Grow up likewise in love to your brethren lay aside all wrath and revenge be tender-hearted and merciful unto them and thus growing in love you shall grow in fearlesnesse Vse 3. Shews the fearful estate of a hateful heart as there is no fear in love so there is nothing but fear in hatred he that findes his heart estranged from God and 〈…〉 love to his brethren why when troubles comes fears increase What is 〈◊〉 reason natural men are so afraid of death and judgement Why because they have hateful spirits whereas a loving soule prays for the hastning of the day of judgement Come Lord Jesus come quickly But an hateful spirit knows the Lord Jesus comes to take vengeance on all his hateful carriages and hard speeches and therefore he trembles at judgement Yea this hatefull disposition is more dangerous to the soule then any sinne besides Let a godly man be defiled with many sins fall into divers weaknesses and frailties yet because he maintains a loving heart to God and his people they do not eclipse his boldnesse David confesseth That the iniquities of his heels compassed him about yet because he kept his heart sincere and upright to God he dares be confident wherefore should I be afraid whereas on the contrary let a man walk never so justly and honestly and do many good things yet if the heart be estranged from God have no fellowship with him nor his Saints let death and judgement come because his heart is not possest of Gods love therefore he is opprest with many fears and anguishes Vse 4. Of consolation to every loving heart if thou findest thy heart possest with love to God and his Saints that there is none in heaven or earth that thou desirest in comparison of him and for the Saints they are the ●ly men of thy delight if thou beest afraid thou art much too blame If thou discernest ●ods love in thy heart bid farewel to groundlesse fears Object But will a loving heart say Have not I just cause to fear do you not see how loosely I walke how often I trip and fall in my Christian course Answ There is no causes of fear Wherefore should I feare in the day of evill when the iniquities of my heels compasse me about These are causes to make me love love God the more that pardons these fallings and to hate sin the more but they ought to weaken thy confidence for there is no fear in love 1 JOHN 4.19 We love him because he first loved us THese words depend on the former words vers 17. he delivered this truth that those that are sound-hearted in love may have boldnesse against the day of judgement this he proves from the resemblance that is between God and a loving heart 2 from the contrariety betwixt fear and love there is no fear in love which he proves 1 From the eff●●● of love perfect love casts out fear 2 From the ●nct of fear Fear hath torment therefore love that is a quiet peaceable gr● cannot stand with it 3 From the ●oundnesse of fear he that fears is not perfect in love The fourth argument is taken from the cause of love which is Gods love to us if we love God because God loved us first then perfect love casts out fear but we do so Ergo. For this is the nature of love it makes us look at God as good and merciful to us and therefore love casts out all fear of evil from the hand of God In this 19 verse observe two parts 1 The freedom of Gods love to us he loved us not because we loved him but he first loved us 2 The root and spring of our love to God is Gods love first to us preventing us For the first part observe Doct. 1. The love of God to us is altogether free un-prevented and un-deserved on our part If the question be why God loved us it was not because we had done him any service of love but he loved us before we loved him 2 Tim. 1.9 He called us not according to our works but according to his free purpose and grace Deut. 7.7 8. The Lord did not set his love upon you because you were more in number then any people for ye were the fewest of all people but because the Lord loved you So Deut. 9.4 5. he loved them because he loved them and therefore surely without prevention or desert on our parts Reas 1. From the removal of such causes of love as might prevent God on our parts if there be any cause on our parts he loved us either out of foreseen faith or good works but from neither of these not from foreseen faith for it 's the love of God to us that produceth faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed so that our faith springeth from Gods love choosing us to life nor for our good works for we are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works so that good works did not cause Gods ordaining us to life but Gods ordaining us to life causeth good works so that faith and good works are not causes but fruits of Gods love to us Reas 2. From the eternity of Gods love to us Je. 31.3 I have loved you with an everlasting love Now if Gods love be eternal before the world was then it was not for our sakes who were made after Ephes 4.5 Nothing temporal can be the cause of that which is eternal our love and faith began in time his love was eternal Obj. Though our love and faith began but now yet he fore-saw it from eternity and therefore it might move him to set his love on us Answ It 's all one with God whether you have respect to that which is now or what he knows will be hereafter so a wise man serves a Prince not out of meer affection to the Prince but because he loved himselfe first for he fore-saw if he served him carefully he should have abundant recompence Now to the wise man it 's all one whether he have respect to the future foreseen recompence or to the present and therefore still his service is mercenary therefore when God loved us it was not for any thing we did or was foreseen to be done by us for then we had not loved him because he first loved us but he
of a promise which is fed by a promise Many times a word of grace and wise admonition sinks so deep into the heart as that it makes many a one amend his wicked wayes and take better courses and reform his life but this is no evident signe of spirituall life So an hypocrite may be so far convinced as to turn the stream of his life and yet without all power of godlinesse and the ground is we cannot receive life from the words or works of the Law it 's altogether impossible Gal. 3.21 All true spirituall life is from some word of promise that hath been dispen●ed to us in the Word The word of the Law may reclaim us from giving outward offence but yet without all respect or obedience to God But when we are quickened by a word of promise then the love of God constraineth us Obj. Is it not ordinary for the word of the Law to cast down and humble us before we can lay hold on a promise Answ True Yet this is not that which makes a man a new man this may reach to the reformation of many outward sins but yet it gives not spirituall life till we begin to think of and long after Christ and meditate and talk of him till at length the sight of Christ doth so work on us that we do not only long after him but we so receive him and imbrace him that we are inlightned by him A third cause of life is the Spirit of God John 3.6 There is a shedding abroad of the Spirit into the heart of every regenerate man that he hath not the same spirit he had before Now a mans spirit is the bent and inclination of the soul Eph. 4.23 Be ye renewed in the spirits of your minds The soul and the body is the same But there is another spirit they see other things they never saw before judge otherwise then they did before now they have new thoughts and judgements and affections so that their heart is far off from earthly things and let on spirituall things All things are become new A new heart new conference new imployment new company the whole man hath another frame of spirit in him He that finds it thus hath life For application Consider therefore how you finde your hearts speaking concerning your estates Do you finde indeed that sometimes you have had good motions cast in but before God was pleased to call you to his grace nothing did you good Doe you finde your life wrought by a spirit of promise Do you finde that you are renewed to a new inclination and frame of spirit then you have life Your life springs from true causes if not you have not life A second sort of signes of life is from the effects of spirituall life And 1 Justification or pardon of sins is a principall part of our spirituall life Psal 32.2 3. And this is called justification to life Rom. 5.18 Even as a condemned mans pardon is the life of the man so is the pardon of our sins the life of our souls Now the first effect flowing from the pardon of our sin is 1 Some inward peace of conscience some inward satisfaction that he never found before My sin is not pardoned at least not manifested so to be till I finde some measure of inward peace Rom. 5.1 What was it that burthened thy conscience but guilt of sin If therefore God say to my soul Son thy sins be forgiven thee upon this follows the tranquility of the mind and sometimes in that unspeakable manner that passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 Though this be not so ordinary yet they alwayes finde a secret peace and ease as if you had cast off milstones from the heart Isa 32.17 The effect of righteousnesse is quietnesse and assurance for ever if sin be pardoned peace and everlasting assurance follows A 2. effect of this life of Justification is that look as you see in a morall life no man hath received life but he strives to maintain it so that all that he hath will he give for his life So if thou hast received the life of the pardon of thy sins thou shalt finde a serious and constant care of preserving that life and peace so that you will let all go rather then the peace of your conscience Thy loving kindnesse is better then life Psal 63.4 And therefore if I finde a tender care in me to maintain my peace it 's a signe I have received life seeing I am so carefull to maintain it A man that hath been in a great debt and lately paid it he is carefull to run on the score no more so when God hath blotted out the score of our sins a Christian is very sollioitous to sin no more but that he may live an holy and spotlesse life all his dayes Notable is the example of Joseph Gen. 39. How shall I commit this great wickednesse and sin against God How shall I break my peace of conscience and run on a new score Sometimes indeed Gods children have received pardon of sins and yet afterwards turned Gods grace into wantonnesse but withall observe if they have been overtaken with some grievous lusts the losse of their peace and favour of God hath been more bitter to them then death it self and if the Lord give us hearts follicitous to maintain our peace it is a sign that he hath given us peace those sins are pardoned which we abhor it 's the nature of life to preserve it self and to expell what may be an enemy to life And this is a signe our peace is not counterfeit but sound if we be carefull to preserve it A 3. effect of our life of Justification is that which our Saviour gives Luke 7.47 Her sins which are many are forgiven her because she loves much He that loves much hath much forgiven him The love of God in some measure proportionable to the sin pardoned is a good evidence of the pardon of our sins Gods pardons are lively pardons they leave not a man as he was but whom he pardons them he heals This woman was a notorious Harlot her loving much shewed that her many sins were forgiven her according to the multitude and measure of sins pardoned such is the measure of our love to God and his Saints And indeed there is none hath so little forgiven him but he thinks it a great deal as indeed well he may and thinks himselfe bound to love God abundantly For application Consider therefore what peace thou hast Perhaps thou wilt say I have had peace all my life long but such peace is ill rooted it springs not from a word of God And 2 It 's fruitlesse Thou sayst thou hast peace but what care hast thou to maintain it and to expell thy sins which hinder thy peace And again if thou hast such peace where is thy love If that be wanting pardon of sin is wanting If thou wouldst have good ground of the pardon of thy sins try thy self
a dead heartednesse to the world For a man to rise early and sit up late follow his work hard take much pains is not a thing to be discommended Prov. 10.14 Prov. 31.27 It 's commended in the good Housewife even the greatest Princesse may not eat the bread of idlenesse then we see diligence in worldly businesse may well stand with grace but yet the same person must be dead to the world his heart must be set on things above these are not his life that is laid up in Christ Col. 3.1 2 3. His heart is crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 Though his employment be in the world yet his conversation is in heaven Phil. 1.20 Prov. 6.5 6. It 's made a part of wisdome to be as busie Ants gathering and laying up but all the while his hands are there his heart is in heaven he doth things in obedience to God by the rule of his Word and for his freedome in Gods service another may do the same work with the same care and successe and yet the heart far unlike 3 The love of our enemies is a particular virtue of Gods Saints Matth. 5.45 to 47. Now this very grace hath in it contrary works in our heart it 's like fire and water both naturally our hearts are very cold and hard and frozen like ice towards our enemies but Christ comes and thawes these frostlings and warms us with compassion towards them that his heart oftentimes mourns for them to see them take such unjust courses against them who have not wronged them and on the other side whereas a naturall man if he see his enemy he boyls in wrath and passion against him love comes like a cool water and cools the heat of passion in our heart For application Wouldst thou know whether thou hast life or no Why hast thou found thy heart affected with joy for Gods goodnesse to thee and yet withall grieved and sorrowfull for thy unkinde dealing with him These are certain evidences of the life of grace in thee You may find many affected and comforted with the Word as Herod was but if this joy were of God it would not vanish away like smoak but would administer so much the more sorrow and mourning for sin though a Christians joy may suddenly vanish yet it alwayes leaves behinde an inward grieving for sin to keep possession for it 2 How do you finde your hearts affected to Gods worship Do you finde your hearts generally unwilling to pray or hear This is an ill signe But if you finde your hearts willing and the more willing the more carefull withall In this case there is life But if a man have fear without joy or joy without fear the heart is not in a good temper 3. How dost thou finde thy heart in tribulation Dost thou finde no consolation supporting thee This is an ill signe But if thou findest with David in the multitude of thy troubled thoughts Gods comforts sustain thy soul Psal 94.18 in this case thou hast life 4. Observe your carriages Doe you bear patiently with bad men and yet not so patiently as to bear with evill Patience and zeal must goe together 5. Are you of a meek gentle and flexible temper It s well But how are you in Gods cause Are you there inflexible and immovable so that you will not abate an hoose in Gods cause Why both these are a life of grace 6. Thou sayst thou art modest and thinkest meanly of thy selfe I but how is this grace coupled for God sends them two and two together as he did his Disciples to ballance one another Hast thou withall a lofty spirit in the wayes of God an heart lift up to heavenly things Why such a spirit hath life The most modest should be most magnanimous 7. Look at worldly businesse Canst thou be diligent in thy calling Why this God requires But how stands thy heart Art thou busie in the world and yet thy heart dead to the world This is a signe of true spirituall life 8. If we finde our hearts so abounding in love that like fire it thawes our cold frozen affections and again like water can cool our hot passionate spirits why this love is a fruit of faith and a signe of life it s a signe our sins are forgiven us if we have hearts forgiving others Now we come to the effects of Sanctification as they are exprest in the life of a Christian and they are answerable to the effects of naturall life The effects of naturall life are principally five 1. Motion When a creature is able to move it selfe in its place to those duties of this or that life it s said to live If a thing move not but by others it s not alive or if it move out of its place it s not alive as a stone thrown up moves downward and fire moves upward but this is not properly life but rather a desire of rest and for things that move they move according to the life they have as a tree a vegetative life a beast a sensitive life a man a rationall life but if a man have a spirituall motion in his proper place it s a signe of spirituall life sometimes a man reacheth out of his place reaching to higher matters and more ambitious thoughts then his calling leads to those move not from an inward principle of grace but from levity of heart so the Pharisees they moved to holy duties but it was for credit others for profit for loaves John 6.26 It s one thing to move to spirituall duties out of an inward inclination and affection to them another thing to move out of levity or desire of eminency it is one thing to move to them out of love another thing to move to them out of respect or credit or profit Why this is but as the moving of a stone out of its naturall gravity Absolom had a marvellous affection to reign and oh that he were King every one should have justice 2 Sam. 15.13 But he was now out of his place and therefore the thing he did was but to attempt the cutting off his Fathers life but that is life properly that moves in its place Again a man may move in his place and yet by an outward principle as a clock moves by the weight that hangs on it so a man may move to some duties of Religion by the weight of the Law or authority hanging on him Again Jehu may move in his calling very busily and yet have no spirituall life so it must be inquired whether the duty a man doth be spirituall or no. And a duty is spirituall 1. When we are sensible of our insufficiency and therefore depend upon Christ that thorough him we may doe all things 2. When we have respect to the Word of God as our rule 3. When we doe all for the glory of God Gal. 2.20 The life I now live I live by faith in the Son of God So far a man lives as he denies
is that place Dan. 9.23 ch 10.12 At the beginning of his supplication the commandement came forth only God was bringing it about in the Court of Persia The King oft-times grants a petition the first day it is put up but it must passe many hands before it come to the subject so the very first day we put up a lawfull prayer God grants it there be many means to bring it about which we must waite for Doct. Such as do believe on the name of Christ for salvation may come to have confidence and knowledge of the hearing and having all their petitions For explication How do these two great benefits confidence and knowledge of granting our prayers spring from what St. John hath written in this Epistle Answ Five things concur to this confidence and all of them insisted upon by St. John in this Epistle 1. Our adoption exprest by St. John ch 3.1 He wonders at the admirable love of God not only indebasing of himselfe to behold things here below as David did Psal 113.4 to 8. but in looking on us poor earth-wormes and raising us up to be Sons and daughters to God So that this is the first ground of our confidence in prayer viz. our adoption that we are Sons of God Gal. 4.5 6. Rom. 8.15 To whom may a Son come more boldly then to his Father And what assures him more of the grant of his petitions then that he is his Son 2. Christs advocation breeds confidence in us 1 Joh. 2.1 2● Christ pleads with his Father on our behalfe for the hearing our petitions and for the granting of what we want An Advocate puts the petition that it may be was rudely drawn by a man into a form of Law and so it holds currant in Law so doth Christ with our prayers he puts them into a right form and so pleads for us 2. The atonement or propitiation of Christ is another cause of confidence 1 Joh. 2.2 So that whereas many a Christian may be afraid that his prayers shall never be heard he is so sinfull and unclean Why saith St. John If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father and he is the propitiation for our sins He is not onely an Advocate but a propitiation to make atonement for our sins that they shall not hinder our acceptance 4. The anoyntment of the Spirit whereby we know all things 1 Joh. 3.20 is a ground of much confidence that though we be blind and dull and know not what God doth for us in our prayers or how they speed in heaven why Christ like an Advocate sends down his Spirit and lets us know how all things speed This unction teacheth us all things 1 Cor. 2.12 Q. How doth the Spirit certifie us of the hearing of our petitions 1. By helping us to pray for we know our own hearts are dead and straight not able to put up any good prayer if therefore the Spirit come like oyl and make us pray affectionately and sensibly we know a prayer well made cannot speed ill a prayer made by Gods Spirit cannot but be heard for God knows the meaning of his Spirit Rom. 8.26 2. This Spirit puts in us a perswasion of faith that what we pray for God will answer Matth. 11.23 24. And so God gives us an Amen in our hearts Psal 6.8 David was in a sore tryall and affliction he prayes to God then Vers 8. Away from me all ye workers of iniquity for the Lord hath heard the voyce of my weeping In the midst of his mourning this unction fills him with a perswasion of the granting of his prayers and so God often times satisfies the heart of a Christian with this perswasion Hannah when she had poured out her spirit before God and Eli had said to her The Lord grant thy petition thou askest of him Why she took this as a voyce from heaven and so she went away comfortably and she feared that petition no more 1 Sam. 1.16 17. 2. There is another act of faith besides perswasion and that is a constant wrestling against all discouragements which come betwixt us and our prayers famous is that example of the woman of Syrophaenicia Matth. 15 26 27 28. If the holy Ghost doth but give us so much resolution as not to be overwearyed with d fficulties then Be it unto thee thou wilt 3. This Spirit works as a Spirit of hope and this stirs us up to wait patiently on God till he answer our carnall spirits would be ready to say Wherefore should I wait on the Lord any longer as that wicked King did but now a spirit of hope waits on God till God shall give an answer of peace Psal 85.8 Psal 130. 2 last vers When God gives us spirits to wait on him he seals up unto us the grant of our petitions A wise Prince if a petition be put up that is lawfull and he bid me wait for it I count it granted so if I put up a prayer and God give me an heart to wait for it I make account he will grant it 4. This Spirit is a Spirit of fear Psal 145.9 Dost thou walk in thy Christian course depending upon Christ reverencing his name and Ordinances Why God will fulfill the desires of them that fear him Jer. 32.40 And so he keeps covenant with us If God give us an awefull reverent heart that keeps us from departing from God and God from departing from us then the Lord will be neer when we call upon him and this is from the unction of the Spirit which make us profit in all our wayes Isa 11.2 3. 5. This is a Spirit of obedience and that gives us good assurance of the hearing of our petitions 1 Joh. 3.21 For as we hearken to God so God hearkens to us Prov. 28.9 He that turneth away his ear from hearing the Law his prayer shall be abominable But if you hearken to God God will hearken to you Judg. 9.7 If we say Speake Lord for thy servant heareth 1 Sam. 3.5 then what we speake God will hear An obedient Christian is a powerfull petitioner mighty in prayer 6. From the root of confidence which springs partly from Gods nature partly from faith in Christ partly from the unction of the Spirit now for those things we see many promises belong to us our adoption assures us of Gods Nature that he is a mercifull Father our Father assures us that Christ is our Advocate the unction of the Spirit breeds in us experience that we have the Son that we are Sons it assures us of our election vocation and salvation and if it assure us of greater matters then much more of the grant of our prayers Rom. 8.32 But now knowledge is a further work knowledge springs either from sense or experience Now then this unction of the Spirit which gives us experience not only gives us confidence but knowledge that our prayers are heard Eph. 3.19 This Spirit of God in our hearts gives us
formerly been a professor of the truth who afterward made shipwrack of faith and a good conscience and withstood Paul and therefore Paul prays against him Some think he did it as discerning by extraordinary revelation that he was in a state of reprobation but that is not likely he leaving his prayer as exemplary to all after comers Gal. 5.12 I would that even those were cut off that trouble you that subvert or unddermine you those he wisht they were utterly cut off from Church and Common-wealth Those false Apostles they would have overthrown the Gospel of Christ and brought in another Gospel and because those false Apostles were all alike the Apostle discerned them to be in a state of damnation as being enemies to the Crosse of Christ Phil. 3.18 19. At the first they preached the Gospel but afterwards turning aside to earthly things they began to magnifie themselves and vilifie the Apostles and so hindered the preaching of the Gospel and therefore he looks at them as deserving to be cut off he looks at them as dogs Phil. 3.2 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be anathema maranatha that is the greatest curse that can befall a man There was a threefold Excommunication in the primitive Church 1 A mere restraint from the Sacrament of the Lords Supper of such as were ignorant till they were better instructed 2 There was Excommunicatio major when they cut them off from all fellowship with the Church from the Word and Sacraments and Christian communion and from eating with them This ought to be inflicted upon notorious scandalous sinners 3 Let him be Anathema Maranatha was a greater curse then any of those for in the former Excommunication though they excluded them from their fellowship yet they ought not to count them as enemies but might admonish them and bring them on to repentance that they might recover themselves 2 Thess 3.14 15. There was hope of such for they did therefore excommunicate them that they might be saved 1 Cor. 5.5 And when it was rightly dispensed it was a notable means to humble them when they considered that if the Church saw cause to banish them from their society God might see much more cause to banish them from heaven But yet there was a greater Excommunication Let him be Anathema Maranatha that is let him be accursed untill the coming of the Lord surely then their sin is a sin against the holy Ghost Obj. Some will say Paul loved not Christ at first Answ True He speaks not of men without the Church but within the Church Obj. Why are there not many carnall men in the Church that love not Christ that desire him not that never look towards him Answ I take it to be a kind of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this slender expression he intends much more then he expresseth If any man love not that is if any man hate the Lord Jesus Christ if he have partaken in the gifts and graces of Christ if he have received nor onely Baptisme but tasted of the sweetnesse and goodnesse of his grace if after he come to oppose and maligne Christ and his wayes Let such a man be Anathema Maranatha Reas 1. From the despight such persons doe to the chiefe means and help of prayer one is the Spirit of grace for the Spirit of grace is the Spirit of supplication Zech. 12.10 Now they that despight the Spirit of grace the Spirit is so grieved that it will not assist us in any prayer we make for such Heb. 10.29 Reas 2. From the like despight they offer to the other principall help of prayer that is asking in the name of Christ upon those two wings our prayers fly up to heaven viz. upon the mediation of Christ and the Spirit of grace with these two they prevail now these men that sin against the holy Ghost they make a scorn of Christ Heb. 10.29 They trample under foot his blood and put him to open shame Heb. 6.6 that is they put him to open and exemplary punishment as the most notorious malefactor Now if a man shall know Christ and afterwards hate him what doth he but shew that Christ was a notorious malefactor and suffered not for other mens sins but his own Therefore there is no hope Christ should lend his Name to be a Mediator Reas 3. Where Christ is not a sacrifice of propitiation for sins there be cannot be expected to be an intercessor for such Now there remains no more sacrifice for such Heb. 10.27 If the sacrifice of Christ reach not to such then he will never make intercession for them 4. From the incouragement God is wont to give his servants in their prayers He will fulfill the desires of them that fear him Psal 145.19 And this is their confidence that whatsoever they ask in the Name of Christ they shall receive and therefore God will not so much dishonor his promise nor discourage us as to give us hearts not to pray when we shal be answered we may pray for wicked men whom we know not in what condition they are but then our prayers shall return into our own bosomes Psal 35.13 But if men be profest enemies to Christ then we doe not shew our selves to be Gods friends if we shew friendship to them or pray for them and therefore our prayers will doe them no good and our selves harm Vse 1. To teach us that sin unto death may be discerned even of common Christians for else why doth he write to common Christians to all believers in generall Verse 13. That if his Brother sin a sin unto death then he should not pray for him Vse 2. It may therefore teach Gods people to learn the nature of this sin left they pray unawares for such whom their prayers shall doe no good If therefore you see professors that have tasted of the grace of God if afterward they maligne and oppose those wayes and the servants of God in this case save your labour in praying for them your prayers will doe no good but harm But how shall we discern when they are inlightned and convinced We may indeed discern their malignity and opposition but it may be they doe it of ignorance In this case our Saviour and Stephen prayed for their adversaries because they knew not what they did therefore three thousand after they were convinced that it was the Christ whom they had persecuted they were pricked in their hearts and brought on to repentance Therefore if you discern they doe this out of ignorance pray heartily for them But how may we discerne they commit this against the light and knowledge of the truth Answ If they doe expresse in their speech and conversation that they are affected with Christ and the wayes of his grace and convinced that those are the right wayes and yet afterwards they maliciously oppose those wayes then pray not for them Mat. 21.28 The Pharisees knew Christ to be the heir