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A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

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God hath in us God hath not only an interest in us but a dominion over us which an Inferiour cannot have over a Superiour so that we are Gods more fully than he can be ours Now a trust accepted and broken afterwards involveth us in the greater Crime I am Gods and will be Gods and would I could do more for his glory as a Christian in general as a Husband or Wife or Father or Child or Servant I will more honour God in my place 4. The Fruit Comfort and Excellency of the thing trusted is most seen in the use 'T is true of all sorts of Talents take the lowest outward subservient helps Wealth Power and Honour A man doth not see the comfort and use of Wealth so much in any thing as when he doth imploy it for God If he hoard it up he hath it only for shew if he layeth it out to cloath his back or to feed his belly he doth but make himself a more honourable sort of bruit Beast all the while he is sowing to the flesh or Sacrificing to his God the Belly or offering up a Meat-offering or a Drink-offering to Appetite But how sweet is it when we have opportunities of doing more for God! then he seeth the use of Wealth indeed it giveth him advantages of service and a more diffusive Charity Ordinances the worth of them is most known in the use and improvement not when we resort to them out of custom and fashions sake but use them as means to do our Souls good So for Gifts as Wells are the sweeter for draining so gifts are improved by using So Graces of the Spirit Gods most precious gifts should not lye idle 2 Cor. 6.1 We beseech you receive not the Grace of God in vain In short you do not taste the true sweetness of Wealth when gorgeously attired your Tables plentifully furnished and you glut your selves with all manner of fleshly delights but in feeding the hungry cloathing the naked that satisfieth the Mind and Conscience of them that do it as you do not reap the increase of Corn by scattering it in the Sand but casting it into a fruitful Soil VSE 1. To press us to this Negotiation For if these things be so we should all rouze up our selves and say What honour hath God by my Wealth my Parts my Honour and greatness my Place and Office what protection to his cause what Relief and Comfort to his People 1. Consider 'T is our business in the World Now every one should ask for what end he was born and continued in the World so long Our Lord Jesus Joh. 18.37 saith To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the World that I should bear witness unto the truth Every one is sent into the world for some end for surely God would not make a Creature in vain We did not come into the VVorld meerly to fill up the number of things as Stones and Rubbish nor to grow in bulk and stature as the Plants nor to enjoy pleasure without remorse as the Beasts God would never then have given us those higher faculties of Reason and Conscience For what end did I come into the VVorld but to glorifie God in my place to act that part in the VVorld which the great master of the Scenes appointed to me Why do I live here What have I done in pursuance of my great end Most men live as Beasts eat and drink and sleep and die and there 's an end of them they never asked in good earnest for what purpose they came hither 2. Every one is trading for some body the Devil or the Flesh regarding his Makers glory or his own Satisfaction There is no medium now which are you doing trading for Heaven or Hell 3. Consider how much you are intrusted with Look within you without you round about you and see how much you have to account for the faculties of the Mind the Members of the Body your Time Health Honour Estate lifted up to Heaven in Ordinances Mat. 11.23 Much given Mat. 12.48 and Neh. 1.11 Now improve all for God 4. Talents are encreased the more employed We double our gifts by the faithful use of them He that had five Talents gained other five and he that had two other two The more Grace here the more Glory hereafter If they be not employed they are lost How many poor blasted withered Christians may we find by slacking their Zeal and for want of diligent exercise But on the contrary as the Widows Oyl encreased in the spending and the Loaves multiplyed in the breaking in Christs Miracle and the right Arm is bigger and fuller of Spirits than the left So Grace that decayeth by difuse groweth by exercise The Corn sown bringeth in the increase 5. We must give an account at last to God Luk. 19.23 He will demand his own with usury VVhat honour hath God had by us as Ministers Magistrates Masters of Families Husbands and VVives Parents and Children Masters and Servants Beasts are not called to an account for they have no Reason and Conscience as Man hath VVhat will you say when God shall reckon with you what you have done with your Time Strength and Estates If an Ambassador that is sent abroad to serve his King and Countrey should return no other account of his negotiation than I was busie at Cards and Dice and could not mind the Imployment I was sent about or a Factour I spent roiotously that which I should have spent in the Mart or Fair will this pass for an excuse 6. VVhat a sad thing is it to have Gifts for this end to leave us without excuse as the Gentiles have the light of Nature Rom. 1.20 and Christians the light of the Gospel Joh. 15.22 If I had not come and spoken to them they had not had sin but now they have no cloak for their sin Others have the VVord preached to them Mat. 24.14 And the Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the World for a witness to all Nations compared with Mat. 13.9 know that a Prophet hath been among them have advantages and opportunities but no heart to use them only that God may be clear when he judgeth 7. VVe improve the Stock of Corruption left us by Adam why not the Gifts given us by Jesus Christ This fire needeth no blowing of it self it breaketh out into a flame and shall not we stir up our selves that we may be more useful In imploying our Gifts three things are necessary Prudence Fidelity and Industry 1. Prudence This is necessary for a Steward or Factour Luk. 12.42 Who then is a wise and faithful Steward whom the Lord shall make Steward over his houshold Now there is a twofold Wisdom a Wisdom that is not from above and a Wisdom that is from above Jam. 3.16 17. The first is earthly sensual devilish it either serveth for earthly profits or to give content to the flesh or to affect dominion and
of God to the World Thus the Creatures glorify God objectively there is somewhat of the Wisdom Goodness and Power of God stamped upon them somewhat of God to be seen in every thing which he hath made So Man much more There are Vestigia Dei the Footsteps of God in the Creatures but Similitudo Imago Dei the Likeness and Image of God in Man in his natural Excellencies much more in the New Creature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that we may be to his praise Ephes. 1.12 There is more of God engraven on us when a true Spirit of Wisdom Justice Holiness Truth Love prevaileth upon our Hearts and runneth through all our Operations When we live as such as converse with the great Fountain of Goodness and Holiness A Christian's Life is an Hymn to God his circumspect walking proclaimeth the Wisdom of God his awfulness and watchfulness against Sin proclaimeth the Majesty of God his chearful and ready obedience under the hardest Sufferings proclaimeth the Goodness of God his Purity and Strictness the Holiness of God the impression and Stamp of all the Letters of God's glorious Name is imprinted upon his Heart and Life A Carnal Christian polluteth his Honour and prophaneth his Name Ezek. 36.20 And when they entred unto the Heathen whither they went they prophaned my Holy Name when they said to them These are the People of the Lord and are gone forth out of his Land But how can God be polluted by us As a Man that lusteth after a Woman hath committed Adultery with her in his Heart while she is spotless and undefiled Mat. 5.28 Carnal Christians are a scandal to Religion they are called Christians in opprobrium Christi Men judg by what is visible and sensible and think of God by his Worshippers by those who profess themselves to be a People near and dear to him 4. By that which is an immediate consequence of the former by an exemplary Conversation when we do those things which tend to the Honour of God's Name and to bring him into request in the World 1 Pet. 2.12 Having your Conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as of evil doers they may by your good Works which they shall behold glorify God in the day of Visitation Mat. 5.16 Let your Light so shine before Men that they may see your good Works and glorify your Father which is in Heaven Our Holiness must be shewn forth for Edification not for Ostentation not for our Glory but the Glory of our Heavenly Father It is the fruitful Christian bringeth most honour to God John 15.8 Herein is my Father glorified that ye bear much Fruit. Glorifying God is not a few transient Thoughts of God and his Glory or a few cold Speeches of his Excellencies and Benefits this is not the great end for which we were made and new made but that we might be fruitful in all Holiness and shew forth those Impressions which God hath left upon us In the Impression we are Passive in shewing it forth Active 5. When we are active for his Interest in the World Our Lord took notice of it in his Disciples John 17.7 Now they have known that all things whatsoever thou hast given me are of thee If we are Agents for his Kingdom he will be our Advocate in Heaven This is the Method of the Lord's Prayer Hallowed be thy Name and then Thy Kingdom come This is the first Means of promoting the great End Jesus Christ himself telleth us this was the end of his coming into the World John 18.37 To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the World that I should bear witness unto the Truth It belonged to him in a more especial way as the great Prophet of the Church he came out of the Bosom of God to reveal the Secrets of God and for the same end we all came into the World Isa. 43.10 Ye are my witnesses saith the Lord and my Servant whom I have chosen that ye may know and believe me and understand that I am he They that felt the comfortable effects of his Promises and his Truth can best witness for him A Report of a Report is little valued we are all to witness to God by entertaining it in our Hearts and shewing forth the fruit of it in our Lives this is a witness to an unbelieving and careless World John 3.33 He that hath received his Testimony hath set to his seal that God is true Heb. 11.7 By Faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet moved with Fear prepared an Ark to the saving of his House by which he condemned the World Phil. 2.15 That ye may be blameless and harmless the Sons of God without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and perverse Nation among whom ye shine as Lights in the World When you are diligent in Holiness patient and joyful under the Cross full of hope and comfort in great Straits meek self-denying mortified you sanctify God in the Eyes of others You propagate the Faith by an open Profession Mat. 11. 19. Wisdom is justified of her Children When we suffer for it in times of great Danger and seal it with our Blood it is a great Glory to God John 21.19 This said he signifying by what Death he should glorify God It is an honour to God when in the midst of Temptations and Discouragements we are not ashamed of his ways 6. By doing that work which he hath given us to do But what is that work which he hath given us to do 1. The Duty of our Relations 2. The Duty of our Vocations and Callings 1. The Duty of our particular Relations They that are not good in their Relations are no where good This is a Rule that whatsoever we are we must be that to God An Heathen could say Si essem luscinia canerent ut luscinia c. If I were a Lark I would soar as a Lark if a Nightingale I would sing as a Nightingale As a Man I should praise God as such a Man in such a Relation still I should glorify God in the condition in which he hath set me If Poor I glorify God as a poor Man by my Diligence Patience Innocence Contentedness If Rich I glorify God by an humble Mind If Well I glorify God by my Health If Sick by meekness under his Hand If a Magistrate by my Zeal improving all advantages of Service Nehem. 1.11 If a Minister by my Watchfulness If a Tradesman by my Righteousness From the King to the Scullion all are to work for God every Man is sent into the World to act that part in the World which the great Master of the Scenes hath appointed to him Tit. 2. 10. That ye may adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things As to Husband and Wife Prov. 18.22 He that findeth a Wife findeth a good thing and obtaineth favour of the Lord. God expecteth that in the Catalogue
now 'T is a Blessed thing at the close of our pilgrimage that God will receive us into his Glory But while we continue in the Body The believing apprehensions of the favour of God are very comfortable before we come to injoy the fruits of it 1. How else can we long for the coming of Christ and expect his appearance if before we pass to our Judgment we know not whether we shall be accepted yea or no Now within time it concerneth us to know how we shall fare hereafter Man hath a curiosity to know his destiny as the King of Babylon stood at the beginning of the ways to make divination The good and the evil of the World is of such light concernment and of so short continuance and God is so good that we may trust him blindfold for Worldly things and 't is a wicked foolish and needless curiosity to be so desirous to know our fortune But it concerneth us much to know whether we shall be well or ill for ever how the case will be carryed in the last Judgment if it be evil that we may prevent it and correct our errour in Death we cannot err twice if good that we may know our portion and rejoice in it if it be our Happiness then it must needs be very desirable to know it aforehand In the next verse to the Text verse 10th he speaketh of our Judge our Happiness and final doom dependeth upon his being pleased with us if we apprehend him as an angry Judge or an adversary let us agree with him quickly by the way if he be a gracious Father let us have the solace and comfort of it during our pilgrimage while we so much need it 2. Else we cannot comfortably injoy Communion with God for the present How can we come before him if we know not whether he will accept an offering at our hands They who being in a state of Faith and Reconciliation make it their endeavour to please God have God ever with them John 8.24 He that sent me is with me The Father hath not left me alone for I do always the things that please him They that would have the comfort of Gods presence and company in all Conditions they ought to set themselves to please God and observe his will in all things and when we have any special business to do with God 1 John 3.22 And whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his Commandments and do those things that are pleasing in his sight So that while we are present we are accepted of him 3. We cannot have a cheerful fruition of the Creature and Worldly injoyments till God accepteth us Eccl. 9.7 Eat thy bread with joy and drink thy wine with a merry heart for God accepteth thy works Till we are in a reconciled estate accepted by God all our comforts are but as stolen waters and bread eaten in secret like Damocles his banquet while a sharp sword hung over his head by a slender thread But now when our persons and ways are pleasing unto God then all these comforts are sweet and satisfactory we tast Gods love in them and can use them as his Blessings with cheerfulness and thankfulness 4. That which maketh us more lively and active in our course of pleasing God is First The future Judgment And 2. The hope of our presence with him 1. The future Judgment That I gather from the 10 th verse for we must all appear before the Judgment seat of Christ. There will certainly come a day when every person that ever lived in this World shall be Judged by God and this day is sure and near In this life we are always expecting an end and carryed in a Boat that is swiftly wasting us towards Eternity Now whom should we please and with whom should we seek to be accepted A vain World or frail man or the God to whom we must strictly give an account Surely this universal impartial Judgment bindeth us to carry it so that we may be accepted with God 2. The hope of our presence with him and the beatifical vision and fruition of him for in the context he speaketh of presence and sight and then he saith wherefore we labour We are so sluggish and backward because we seldom think of the World to come earthly things are the great poise to an earthly mind but Heavenly things to an heart that is Spiritual that is their motive there are many such wherefores in the Scripture 1 Cor. 15.58 Wherefore my Beloved Brethren let us be stedfast and unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord. And Heb. 12.28 Wherefore we receiving a Kingdom which cannot be moved let us have grace whereby we may serve God accceptably with Reverence and Godly Fear There being such an eminent and excellent state of Glory and we being Candidates and Suitors for it how should it quicken us to use all diligence that we may be accepted of God and admitted into the fruition of it The Apostle telleth us Phil. 3.14 I press towards the Mark for the prize of the High calling of God in Christ Jesus Paul had his eye still upon the Mark that he might stear his whole course in order to it The thoughts of the prize and worth of the reward made him press forward through difficulties and discouragements the more we have this Glory in our thoughts the more shall we be heartned against faintings and failings which we shall ever and anon be tempted unto 2. Reasons 1. We were made and sent into the World for this end That by a constant course of obedience we might approve our selves to God and finally be accepted of with him and received into his Glory 'T is good to consider the end why we were born and sent into the World John 18.37 To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the World that I should bear witness unto the truth Surely man was made for some end for the wise God would make nothing in vain Now what is mans end Not to fill up the number of things as stones and not to wax bulky and increase in growth and stature as trees not to eat and drink and serve appetite as the beasts not for the earth the end is more noble than the means not dig for iron with mattocks of Gold The Earth was made for us to be our habitation for a while not we for it Surely God made all things for himself Prov. 16.4 And Rom. 11.36 For of him and through him and to him are all things So we especially who have the faculties of heart mind to know him love him and serve him injoy him for ever Now we seek after him our whole life is a coming to God we have not enough of God here to satisfy the Soul only enough to direct incline us to seek more and every one that seriously mindeth his end maketh it his trade and daily work John 6.38 I came from
God to be what he is we are but a kind of witnesses to Gods Glory But he is an efficient in our Glory He bestoweth upon us what was not before and the Glory he bestoweth upon us answereth the greatness of his being 2 Cor. 4.17 For our light afflictions which are but for a moment work for us a far more exceeding and Eternal weight of Glory He will at length act like himself as an Infinite and Eternal Power His gift shall answer his nature a far more exceeding and Eternal weight of Glory 6. Gratitude bindeth us continually to live unto God Every moment God is at work for us and therefore every moment we should be at work for God John 5.17 My Father worketh hitherto and I work In every thing we should be mindful of him you are upheld by him every moment and have life and breath and all things from him 7. Our great end must fix our minds which otherwise will be tossed up and down in several and various uncertainties and distracted by a multiplicity of ends and objects that it cannot continue in any composed and setled frame Psa. 86.11 Vnite my heart And Jam. 1.8 A double minded man is unstable in all his ways An uncertain mind breedeth an uncertain life not one part of our lives will agree with another because the whole is not firmly knit by the power of their last end running through them Most mens lives are but a meer lottery because they never minded in good earnest why they came into the World The fancies they are governed by are jumbled together by chance if right 't is but a good hit a casual thing They live at peradventure and then no wonder they walk at random Means 1. Rowse up thy self and consider often the end for which you were created and sent into the World Our Lord saith John 18.37 For this cause was I born and for this end sent into the World that I might bear witness to the truth So should every one consider for what errand God sent him into the World If these self-communings were more rife they would do us a great deal of good Why do I live here what have I done in pursuance of my great end Most men live as beasts eat and drink and trade and die and there is all that can be said of them little have they served God or done good in their Generation Certainly you were not made to serve your selves nor any other Creatures but that other Creatures might serve you and ye serve God Will ye once sit down in good earnest about this business and mind the work for which ye were born Many never asked yet in good earnest for what purpose they came into the World and then no wonder they wander and walk at random since they have not as yet proposed any certain scope and aim to themselves All that we have to know is what is our end and the right way to obtain it And all that we have to do is to seek the end by those means Now we should often consider whether we do so yea or no for comparing our ways with our rule is the way to awake and come to Wisdom Psa. 119.59 I thought on my ways and turned my feet unto thy Testimononies I labour I take pains I rise early I go to bed late but to what end is all this What is it that my Soul doth principally aim at in all these things Oh consider seriously and frequently for whom are you at work for whom are you speaking and spending your time For whom do you use your Bodies your Souls your time your estate your labours and cares Oh my Soul what is thy end in all these things 2. Remember thou art not thine own to dispose of The sense of Gods interest in us should be often renewed upon our hearts 1 Cor. 6.19 Ye are not your own therefore glorify God He hath a full right in all that we have and do Rom. 14.8 For whether we live we live unto the Lord Or whether we die we die unto the Lord Whether we live therefore or die we are the Lords he hath jus possidendi disponendi utendi a power to possess dispose and use the Creature at his own pleasure And if they alienate themselves from him or use themselves to any other purpose than for his Service and Glory they do as much as in them lyeth to disposess him of his right there is nothing doth so strongly bind us absolutely to resign our selves to the will use and service of our Creator as his right and interest in us 'T is meet that God should be served with his own Every man expecteth to receive the fruit of his vineyard the improvement of his own money and goods We think we speak reasonably when we say we demand but our own All the disorder of the Creature proceedeth from the denyal or forgetfulness of Gods Propriety in us Psa. 12.4 Our tongues are our own who is Lord over us Therefore if we would live unto God we must often think of it and revive it upon our Souls that we may not dispose of our selves or any thing that is ours but for the Glory of God and prefer his interest before our own 3. Consider how much we are bound in gratitude to devote our selves to Gods use and service for the great mercies of Creation Redemption and daily Providence Certainly if we have a due sense of the Lords goodness to us we will devote the whole man our whole time and strength to his service will and honour the glorifying of God is the fruit of love The context sheweth that Love is but the reflex of Gods Love or the beating back of his beam upon himself Because he hath loved us we love him and because we love him we live to him and seek his Glory and Honour 'T is gratitude keepeth this resolution afoot of being and doing all things for God he shewed love to us in Creation when we started out of nothing into the life and being of man But he shewed more love to us in Redemption when his own Son came to die for us And that 's the greater ingagement to bind us to live unto God And so 't is pressed every where in the Scripture But yet God reneweth his mercies to us every day that the variety and freshness of them producing new delight may revive the feelings of his love and goodness and excite us to renewed zeal for his Glory and delight in his service and to imploy our time and strength to his Glory with a thankful heart In short Creation bindeth us for to whom should we live but to him from whom and by whom we live Having all from God we should in gratitude bring back all to him Redemption bindeth us for we are purchased to God not to our selves And God carryed it on in such an astonishing way the more to oblige us that we might readily and freely yield up our selves
of it otherwise it would be a post-destination not a predestination effectual calling and justification and glory are effects of Gods eternal purpose and flow from it as streams out of a fountain and herein differeth the purpose of God to do good from the purpose of man Something is presented to us as good and convenient that moveth our will to purpose and chuse and inclineth us for its own goodness to seek after it and set about the means whereby we may obtain it but nothing in the creature can move God what is the effect of the decree cannot be the motive of it Indeed God willeth one thing in order to another as effectual calling in order to justification and both in order to glory but then these are co-ordinate causes his will and good pleasure is the original of this order and the free grace of God is the only supream and fountain-fountain-cause of our salvation 2 Thes. 2.13 14. Because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the spirit and belief of the truth whereunto he called you by our Gospel to the obtaining of the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ. The cause is our election the means of execution are the Sanctification of the Spirit and our belief of the truth the end is our eternal salvation or our obtaining the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ and mark he saith they were chosen from the beginning as elsewhere 't is said this grace was given us in Christ before the world was 2 Tim. 1.3 And he hath chosen us before the foundation of the world Eph. 1.4 So that from this preordination all cometh Well then God hath of his meer grace put his eternal purpose in that model and mold wherein we now find them he that is the efficient cause of all things is also the dirigent cause appointing in what order Grace and Mercy should be dispensed 5. This order of causes is so settled and joined together that none can separate them The chain is indissoluble and one link draweth on another none are glorified but those that are sanctified and justified and none are justified but those that are effectually caled and none are effectually called but those that are predestinated according to the purpose of his grace and on the other side whoever is effectually called justified and sanctified may be assured of his predestination to eternal life and his future glorification with God this connexion must not be cannot be disturbed which is to be noted because some upon the vain presumption of the infallibility of Gods purposes think it needless to be serious diligent and holy if I be elected I shall be saved no God hath linked means and ends together his decree establisheth the duties of the Gospel and checketh all thoughts of dispensation from them never think that this order shall be broken or disturbed for your sakes Drunkards and Gamesters may as well imagine that God will break the ordinance of day and night by turning day into night and night into day for their sakes as the unholy soul to think to be justified and glorified till they be effectually called and sanctified no you must be holy or conclude that you shall have no saving benefit by Chrst for they who are fore-ordained are a chosen generation a distinct society and community of men who are called out of darkness into his marvellous light to shew forth the vertues of God 1 Pet. 2.9 Made objects of his special grace and love that they may shew forth the distinction God hath made between them and others by the choiceness of their spirits and conversations their carriages must be suitable to their priviledges 6. The method is to be observed as well as the connection 1. The first effect of predestination is effectual calling Certainly all that are chosen before time are called in time Rom. 1.7 Beloved of God called to be Saints First beloved then called so 2 Pet. 1.10 Make your calling and election sure By making our calling sure we make our election sure for that is the first eruption of Gods eternal love you may know God hath distinguished you from others when you are recovered from the Devil the world and the flesh to God John 5.19 We know we are of God and the whole world lyeth in wickedness When there is a conspicuous difference between us and others we may trace the stream to the fountain and know God hath made a difference before the world began and distinguished you from them that perish once you were as vain sensual worldly-minded as others till God called you out of the lost world to be a peculiar people to himself but this act of grace cometh from on high vocation is the fruit of election the first grace found you in the polluted mass of mankind as having found you intangled in many foolish and hurtful lusts now this is a mighty engagement upon us If God hath made such a difference oh do not unmake it again and confound all again by walking after the course of this world for you do in effect set your selves to disannul his decree conformity to the world is a confusion of what God hath separated God made the difference when none was and by the power of his grace you must keep it up 2. The next step is whom he hath called them he hath justified Calling is chiefly by the Gospel and the next end of that is faith in Christ or conversion to God and certainly none are justified but those that are called and all that are called are justified Acts 26.18 To turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God When we are turned from Satan to God we receive the forgiveness of sins Mark 4.12 Lest at any time they should be converted and their sins should be forgiven them Where forgiveness of sins is mentioned as a consequent of their conversion and turning to the Lord so when we are brought into the Kingdom of Christ then we have Redemption by his Blood the Remission of sins Col. 1.13 14. Till we become Christs subjects we cannot have the priviledges of Christs Kingdom this is the order set down here of conveying to us the benefits of Christs death first called then justified they that are yet under the power of sin are under the guilt of it as in the fall there was sin before there was guilt so in our recovery there must be conversion before remission a new nature or life from Christ then a new relative estate when we are regenerated we are justified and adopted into Gods Family Heb. 8.10 11 12. For this ii the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days saith the Lord I will put my laws into their mind and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people and they shall not teach every man his neghbour and every man his brother saying know the
an Acqu●efcency in Gods Providence though our Talents be not so large 2. Let it quicken those that have received greater Gifts than others to do so much the more good with them you are more bound and that which God will accept from others he will not from you If you have many Ordinances and means of Improvement you should get the more Grace Heb. 6.6 7. and Mat. 11.22 23 24. You are deeper in the State of Condemnation if you do not bring forth Fruit proportionable to the means of Salvation if greater Abilities you must give God the more Glory if a greater Estate you must be richer in good Works 1 Tim. 6.7 8. For you to shut up your Bowels 1 John 3.17 How dwelleth the Love of God in you Potentes potenter cruciabuntur Mighty shall be the Destruction of the Mighty if we have greater Mercies there is greater Duties and greater Duties greater Sins and greater Sins greater Judgments Surely if men had any Sense of their Accounts those that have much to answer for would have more Trouble Doct. III. Among those that have received Talents all are not alike Fruitful I shall handle the Point with respect to the Context we have in hand 1. Though but one be mentioned yet the Number of Vnfaithful ones is very great In Parables the Scope must be regarded Now the general Scope is to shew that as the Virgins are not all admitted so all the Servants of the House not accepted in the Parable Indeed two of the Servants are Faithful one unfaithful We cannot conclude thence that the Number of those that used their Talents well should be greater than of those that hid them or neglected the Improvement of them as in the former Parable that the Number of the Foolish shall be just equal with the Number of the Wise or in the Parable of the Wedding Garment that but one shall come to the Gospel-feast unprepared No the Ornament of that Scheme and Figure which Christ would make use of to signify his mind required it should be so expressed For since our Lord to avoid Perplexity and Confusion would mention but three Servants 't was fit that one should be an instance of eminent Faithfulness and Service another of Service in a lower degree that the meanest may not be discouraged and the other should represent the unfruitful ones Now Experience sheweth they are more than one to two yea more than ten to one much the far greater Number Oh how few are there even of those that hold much from God that return him ought of Love and Service The Idle and Unprofitable ones are found every where in all Ranks and Conditions of men 2. Observe He that had but one Talent is represented as the Vnfaithful One and that with good Advice If the Example of Reprobation and Punishment had been put in the Servant that had five Talents or two Talents we might have thought that men of eminent Gifts Rank Quality and Employment in the Church shall be called to an Account and punished for their Neglect No but as our Lord hath laid it it reacheth his full Scope and Purpose For in the instance of the Servant that had but one Talent those that had five and two may easily know how much sorer Punishment shall light upon them if he that had least be called to such a strict Reckoning for his Non-improvement However this we may observe That he that had the least Gift was Unfaithful to be sure those that have most Spiritual gifts do usually improve them and the rest are left without Excuse 3. Observe His Crime is he went and digged in the Earth and hid his Lords Money Men dig in the Earth to find Metals and Talents not to hide them there Mark 't is not said he did imbezzle his Talent as many waste their Substance in riotous Living quench brave parts in excess sin away many precious Advantages of Ordinances and Education and powerful Convictions No he did not imbezzle his Talent but hid it Mark again he did not Misimploy his Talent as some do their Wealth others their Wit to scoff at Religion or to put a Varnish on the Devils Cause their Power to Oppress and crush the good The precious Gifts that many have are like a Sword in a mad-mans hand they use them to hurt and mischief No no such thing is charged upon this evil and naughty Servant 'T is Fault enough to hide our Talents though we do not abuse them That you may conceive of this I shall shew you 1. His Sin in hiding his Lords Money 2. What may be the Cause of it in those that imitate him First 'T was a Sin Partly because 't was against the command of his Master In Luke 19.13 He gave them a Charge Occupy till I come Partly because 't was against the end of the Distribution of the Talents to keep Money unprofitably by us is a loss 't was made for Commerce so were Gifts given us to profit withall scattered into several hands to bring in some encrease to the Lord and Owner Partly because 't was against the Example of his Fellow-Servants who were industrious and careful to comply with their Charge 2 Cor. 9.2 Your Zeal hath provoked very many And partly as his Obedience and Account would have been easier as 't is more easie to give an Account of a small Sum than a greater as there is less Trouble less Danger so his Refusal is less excusable And partly as 't was an Abuse of his Masters Patience 't was long e'er he called him to a Reckoning God will bear long with us in Infancy Childhood and Youth but he will not bear alwayes if we do not bethink our selves at last our Account is hastened and God will suffer idle Servants no longer to have an Opportunity of Promoting his Glory the good of others and their own Salvation Secondly What may be the Causes of such like Unfaithfulness Men are taken off from Improving their Talents First Sometimes by a sloathful Laziness and should that hinder us especially us that are Servants to God what man can endure an idle Servant though he should not whore and steal yet if he do not his work you put him away Every thing in the World costs Diligence and shall not we be diligent in our Masters Work How will men labour for a small Reward in the World and is not Heaven worth our most industrious Care shall not we be hard at work 1 Cor. 15.58 The Reward is still propounded to the diligent 1 Cor. 3.8 Every man shall receive his Reward according to his own Labour 2 Cor. 9.6 He that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly Idleness is its own Punishment An idle man is a Burden to himself like a man buryed alive When 't is Morning would God it were Evening He Contracts Distempers a Key seldom turned rusts in the Lock standing Pools are apt to putrify David when he was idle fell into those foul Faults An idle
man can think of nothing but the Delights of the Flesh and so becometh a ready Prey to Sathan Oh then shake off Laziness and the ease of the Flesh God is at work John 5.17 the Creatures are at work the Sun is alwayes going up and down Secondly Another Cause is a Foolish Modesty and Pusillanimity Oh this should not be We should not like Saul hide among the Stuff when God calleth us forth to some Employment for his Glory 1 Sam. 10.22 or with Moses draw back when Opportunity is offered us to be useful in our Generation Exod. 4.20 God can help the stammering Tongue and will bless mean Gifts when you sincerely obey his Call Thirdly Self-love Phil. 2.21 All men seek their own things not the things of Jesus Christ. Many care not how it goeth with Chrsts Matters if their particular go right they serve their own worldly Ease Profit Credit Pleasure Fourthly Distracting Businesses or love to the World this is digging in the Earth and hiding our Talent indeed 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me and embraced the present World Fifthly Fear of Danger if publickly Active for God some are so Cowardly that they are Brow-beaten with a frown cannot venture a lesser Interest cannot bear a Scoff or a disgraceful Word therefore sneak loath to own what they are or to do for Christ and his despised Cause this is not a Christian Frame Phil. 1.28 In nothing terrifyed by your Adversaries which to them is a Token of Perdition but to you of Salvation and that of God It looketh like Christs Business he speaketh of Endeavours to propagate the Faith of Christ and to gain men to embrace the Gospel VSE Let us see if we be found in the Number of the Faithful or Vnfaithful A negligent Ministry a Gallio a careless Magistrate an idle Master of a Family a sloathful Christian is like the Servant in the Text You have your use whether you be in a publick or private Station let us be faithful if but one Talent the smallest gifts must not lye idle but be seriously exercised for Gods glory if but one your Temptations are the less Private men are not exposed to such Dangers as publick Persons It will Aggravate your Negligence if when less is required you are found idle Oh therefore shake off the ease of the Flesh that loathness to be troubled with the faithful Discharge of your Duty SERMON XIII MATTH XXV v. 19 20 21 22 23. After a long time the Lord of those Servants cometh and reckoneth with them And so he that had received five Talents came and brought other five Talents saying Lord thou delivered'st me five Talents behold I have gained besides them five Talents more His Lord said unto him Well done thou good and faithful Servant thou hast been faithful over a few things I will make thee Ruler over many things Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. He also that had received two Talents came and said Lord thou delivered●st unto me two Talents behold I have gained other two besides them His Lord said unto them Well done thou good and faithful Servant thou hast been faithful over a few things I will make thee Ruler over many things Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. WE now come to the Third part of the Parable The 1. We called the Distribution 2. The Negotiation 3. The Account This Account is First Spoken in the General vers 19. Secondly More Particularly described and set forth There we shall take notice First Of the Reckoning with the good Servants Secondly With the bad one In the Passages that concern the good Servants you may take notice of the Servants Account and the Masters Approbation The account of the first Servant is in vers 20. of the second in vers 22. the Masters Approbation in vers 21 23. He entertaineth both the Servants with the same countenance and the same words 1. I begin with the general intimation of the Account ver 19. Where the Time 1. When he cometh After a long time 2. His Work what he will do when he cometh He reckoneth with his Servants First For the Time I. Doct. There is a good space of time between Christs Ascension and second coming Q. But why is this last reckoning so long delayed A. Not from any unreadiness in Christ he is ready to judge if we be ready to be judged 1 Pet. 4.5 But 1. There is a Reason on the part of the good and that is that the Number of the Elect may be gathered who live in several Ages and places and it requireth some time and pains to work upon each Soul of them for not one of those must perish 2 Pet. 3.9 And after they are converted there must be some time allowed to exercise their diligence They must have a day to work in John 9.4 and to try their Faith and Patience in Rev. 6.11 They should rest yet for a little season untill their fellow-servants and their Brethren that should be killed as they were should be fulfilled A certain number are enrolled for Sufferings as well as for Heaven many of which had not obtained their Crown as the High-priest tarryed within the Vail till his Ministration ended As long as there is need of Christs Intercession he deferrs his second coming 2. On the wickeds part 't is necessary they should have a time of Improvement that they may be left without excuse Rom. 9.22 What if God willing to shew his wrath and to make his power known endured with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction 'T is for the glory of God that he should take them when ripe Then the Angel thrusts in his sickle Rev. 14.15 Therefore they have longer time of prospering in their sinful wayes 1. Let us not make an ill use of this either to deny or doubt of his Coming as those 2 Pet. 3.3 or of slackening or putting off your Preparation as the naughty Servant Mat. 24.48 49. But let us wait with patience and hold out to the very last Saul held out till Samuel was even ready to come and so forced himself to offer Sacrifice whereby he lost his Kingdom 1 Sam. 13.8 9. If he had stayed a little longer Samuel had come So many grow weary of doing and suffering and miscarry in the very Haven We wait in ordinary things Jam. 5.7 8. Be patient therefore Brethren unto the coming of the Lord. Behold the Husband-man waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth and hath long patience for it until he receive the early and latter rain Be ye also patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh His hastiness cannot alter the seasons so we in improving our Interests and employing our Talents should not faint Gal. 6.4 And be not weary in well doing for in due season we shall reap if we faint not 2. Let us shame our selves that having so much time we have done so little work Our Master hath tarryed
any mixture of Errors that have any considerable Influence upon the main of Religion Others are in that Communion in which those Doctrines are as yet taught that are indeed necessary to Salvation but many things are added which are indeed pernicious and dangerous in their own nature So that if a Man should possibly be saved in that Profession he is saved as by Fire 1 Cor. 3.13 And 't is a strange escape as if one had Poyson mingled among his Meat the goodness of his Digestion and strength of Nature might work it out but the Man runneth a great hazard As the Papists acknowledge Christ for the Redeemer and Mediatour between God and Men They own his two Natures and Satisfaction though they mingle Doctrines that strangely weaken these Foundations The Turks deny not Christ to be a great Prophet but they deny him to be the Son of God and the Saviour of the World and the Redeemer of Mankind and wickedly prefer their false Prophet before him The Jews confess there was a I●sus the Son of Mary that gave out himself in their Country of Judea to be the Messiah and gathered Disciples who from him are called Christians But they call him an Impostor question all the Miracles done by him as done by the Power of the Devil Now all these shall be judged by the Gospel which is so proudly and obstinately rejected by them The Spirit shall convince the World of Sin because they believe not in me Joh. 16.9 he hath so proved himself to be the Christ the Son of God the great Prophet and true Messiah that their rejecting and not believing in him and his Testimony will be found to be a great and damning Sin both in its self and as it bindeth their other Sins upon them however their Judgment shall be lighter or heavier according to the diversity of their Offence and the invincible Prejudices they lie under The Corrupters of the Christian Religion because they have perverted the Truth of the Gospel to serve their Interests Ambition Avarice or any Humane Passion their Doom will be exceeding great 2 Thess. 2.10 11 12. And with all Deceivableness of Vnrighteousness in them that perish because they received not the Love of the Truth that they might be saved And for this cause God shall send them strong Delusions that they should believe a Lie That thy all might be damned who believed not the Truth but had pleasure in Vnrighteousness To poyson Fountains was the highest way of Murther to royle the Waters of the Sanctuary to mangle Christ's Ordinances is a Crime of a high Nature The Jews that rejected Christ in so clear Light of Miracles Joh. 8.24 Christ saith If you believe not that I am he ye shall die in your Sins it maketh the Judgment the more heavy upon them Others to whom Christ is less perspicuously revealed shall have a more tolerable Judgment For the clearer the Revelation of the Truth is the more culpable is the Rejection or Contempt of it For there is no Man that heareth of Christ's Coming into the World suffering for Sinners and Rising again from the Dead and Ascending into Heaven but is bound more diligently to enquire into it and to receive and embrace this Truth Carnal Christians their Profession condemneth them They are inexcusable they deny in Works what in Word they seem to acknowledge 3. Some lived under the Legal Administration of the Covenant of Grace To whom two things are propounded 1. The Duty of the Law 2. Some Scriptures and obscure Beginnings of the Gospel They shall be judged according to that Administration they are under either for violating the Law or neglecting the Gospel or those first Dawnings of Grace which God offered to their View and Study Indeed the Law was more manifest but the Gospel was not so obscure but they might have understood it Therefore God will call them to an Account about keeping his Law by which who can be Justified Or whether by true Repentance they have fled to the Mercy of God which by divers wayes was then revealed to them and have owned the Messiah in his Types Psal. 145.2 Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant for in thy Sight shall no Man living be Justified Psal. 130.3 4. If thou shouldst mark Iniquities O Lord who shall stand But there is Forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared Which if not clear they shall be condemned not only for not keeping the Law but also for neglect of Grace Though their Unbelief and Impenitency be not so odious as theirs is that lived under a clearer Revelation yet a grievous Sin it was which will bring Judgment upon them 4. There are some that have no other Discovery of God but what they could make from the Courses of Nature and some Instincts of Conscience as meer Pagans The Apostle having told us of the Righteous Judgment of God Rom. 2.5 and how managed Vers. 6 7 8. and how aggravated the Jew first and then the Gentile he then concludeth Vers. 12. For as many as have sinned without the Law shall perish without the Law but as many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law That is the Jews as the other is to be understood of the Gentiles To whose notice no Fame of Christ or the Law of Moses could possibly come To perish without the Law is to be punished and Punishment followeth upon Condemnation and Condemnation is in this Judgment Therefore Pagans and Heathens that lived most remote from the Tydings of the Gospel and Divine Revelation must appear before Christ's Tribunal to be judged But by what Rule He telleth us Vers. 14 15. For wh●n the Gentiles which have not the Law do by Nature the things contained in the Law these having not a Law are a Law to themselves Which shew the Work of the Law written upon their Hearts their Conscience also bearing Witness and their Thoughts th●m an while accusing or excusing one another They knew themselves to have sinned by that Rule by the natural Knowledge of God and some sense of their Duty impressed upon their Hearts Nature it self told them what was well or ill done The Law of Nature taught them their Duty and had some Affinity with the Law of M●ses And the Course of God's Providence taught that God was placable which hath some Affinity with these Gospel Rudiments and first Strictures Therefore the Goodness and Long-suffering of God should lead them to Repentance Rom. 2.4 Surely then the Impenitency of the Jews will meet with an heavy Condemnation according to the Proportion of Clearness in their Revelation 5. Men of all Conditions high and low rich and poor mighty and powerful or weak and oppressed Kings Subjects Revel 20.12 I saw the Dead both small and great stand before God No Rank or Degree in the World can exempt us These Distinctions do not ou●-live Time they cease at the Graves Mouth there all stand upon the same Level and are
't is a more blessed thing to give than to receive It cometh nearest the Nature of God So Christ himself went about doing Good and healing all that were oppressed And by Helpfulness to others we do very much resemble Christ. I cannot exclude this since Mercy is mentioned only IV. A Fourth Doubt is this That all cannot express their Love and Self-denyal this way some are so very poor and miserable I Answer 1. All must have that Faith which will work by Love Gal. 5.6 For in Jesus Christ neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor Vncircumcision but Faith which worketh by Love And Self-denyal which some way or other must be expressed Matth. 16.24 Then said Jesus unto his Disciples If any Man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross and follow me By denying the Ease of the Flesh if not the Interests of it to be serviceable in their Place whatsoever it be 2. Though some be so needy themselves that they cannot cloath the Naked or feed the Hungry yet they may visit the Sick resort to such as are in Prison Every one in some kind or other may be the Object of his Neighbours Charity so may every one be either the Instrument or Agent in the doing of it The Rich may stand in need of the Help or Prayers of the Poor and the Poor of the Bounty of the Rich. If we have an Heart to part with all for Christ we have that Faith which will carry away the Price of Gospel-Priviledges All must have such a Value for Christ see such an Excellency in the World to come that they have an Heart and Disposition to part with all rather than quit the Profession of the Gospel or neglect the Duties thereof Matth. 13.44 45. These things premised I come now to observe these Points First That at the General Iudgment all Men shall receive their Doom or Iudgment shall be pronounced according to their Works For Christ produceth Works both in the Sentence of Absolution and Condemnation Secondly That Christ hath so ordered his Providence about his Members that some of them are exposed to Necessities and Wants others in a Capacity to relieve them Thirdly That Works of Charity done out of Faith and Love to Christ are of greater weight and consequence than the World usually taketh them to be Other Points may be raised but to these Three all the rest may be reduced 1. That at the general Iudgment all Men shall receive their Doom or Iudgment shall be pronounced according to their Works Of the Wicked there is no doubt but that they shall receive according to their Works they stand on their own Bottom their Works deserve Punishment their Doom and Sentence is justified by their Works But for the Godly 't is also true that Life Everlasting shall be awarded Secundum opera non propter Opera Not that this Kingdom is by Right due to us for our Works but the Righteousness of the Sentence is manifested by producing our Works This will appear if we consider 1. The Business Scope or End of the Day of Judgment 2. The Respect of Good Works and how far they are considered First The Business of that Day is not only to glorifie God's free Love and Mercy but also his Holiness rewarding Justice and Truth Then God will not only glorifie the Riches of his Glorious Grace in the Electing of his People out of his Love and Favour to them without any thing considered in them Come ye Blessed of my Father The first Cause of our Salvation is made the Blessing of the Father But also his Remunerating Justice Veracity or Truth This maketh for our purpose now 1. His Holiness The Holy God delighteth in Holiness He will now manifest it in the Sun the Estimation he hath of the Holiness of his People The Veil is taken away Now 't is made matter of Sense 'T is a Delight to him Christ mentions their Graces and Services as things which are pleasing and acceptable to him Psal. 5.4 Thou art not a God that hast pleasure in Wickedness But he hath pleasure in the Holiness of his People The Upright are his Delight and as such will he speak of them and commend them and represent them to the World 2. His Remunerating Justice The Justice of God requireth that there should be different Proceeding with them that differ among themselves that it should be well with them that do well and ill with them that do evil That every Man should reap according to what he hath sown whether he hath sown according to the Flesh or the Spirit and the Fruit of his Doings be given into his Bosom Therefore those whom Christ will receive into Everlasting Life must appear Faithful and Obedient For then Christ will Judge the World in Righteousness Act. 17.31 3. That he may shew his Veracity and Faithfulness The Faithful God will make good his Promises and reward all the Labours and Patience and Faithfulness of his Servants according to his Promises to them If his Promises take notice of Works his Justice will God is not unfaithful or unrighteous to forget your Work and Labour of Love which you have shewed to his Name Heb. 6.10 Secondly The respect of Good Works and how far they are considered 1. They are Perfectional Accomplishments Those that have done them are lovely Objects in his Sight as being conformed to his Nature and Pattern Can we imagine that God should bid the Saints love one another for their Holiness and count them the Excellent Ones of the Earth Psal. 16.3 how poor and despicable soever they be as to their outward Condition and that he himself should not love them the more We that have but a drop of the Divine Nature hate impure Sinners Lot's righteous Soul was vexed with the filthy Conversation of the Wicked 2 Pet. 2.8 And we find a Complacency and Delight in the Good And can we imagine without a manifest Reproach to him that God should be so indifferent to Good and Evil and that the Saints should not be more lovely in his Sight for their Holiness Therefore the more lovely the more endeared Objects to their Redeemer 2. They are Qualifications to make them capable of his Remunerating Justice There is in God a threefold Justice First His strict Justice Secondly His Justice of Bounty or free Benefic●nce and Thirdly As Judging according to his Gospel-Law of Promise 1. He may be said to be strictly Just when he rewardeth Man according to his perfect Obedience yet no Obedience though never so perfect can bind him to reward Man or Angel 2. He is Just by way of Bounty when he rewardeth a Man capable of Reward though not in respect of his perfect Righteousness in himself yet because he is some way righteous in respect of others that are unrighteous So 't is said 2 Thess. 1.6 7. 'T is a righteous thing with God to recompense Tribulation to them that trouble his Saints And to
not without Success and Fruit. This Phrase Kept thy Word is very significant it implieth not only outward Hearing but Knowledg Mat. 13.23 He that receiveth the Seed into good Ground is he that heareth the Word and understandeth it c. Nay not only Knowledg but Assent and Believing embracing the Promises of the Gospel Luke 8.15 Having heard the Word keep it and bring forth Fruit with Patience Not only Assent but the Fruits of Love and Obedience 1 John 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a Liar and the Truth is not in him Not only single Obedience but constant Profession and Perseverance Prov. 16.20 My Son keep thy Father's Commandments and forsake not the Law of thy Mother They have not failed as Judas Now there is a twofold keeping of the Word a Legal keeping and Evangelical The Legal keeping is absolute and perfect Obedience if there be but the least failing Moses accuseth and condemneth you The Evangelical keeping is filial and sincere Obedience Those Imperfections Christ pardoneth when he looketh back and seeth many Errors and Defects in Life as long as we bewail Sin seek Remission strive to attain Perfection All the Commandments are accounted kept when that which is not done is pardoned Thy Word He doth not say my Word but thine He elsewhere referreth his Doctrine to the Father John 7.16 My Doctrine is not mine but his that sent me So here he mentioneth the Divine Authority of his Doctrine 1. Observ. Christ speaketh good of his People to his Father Satan is an Accuser he loveth to speak ill of Believers but Christ telleth his Father how his Lambs thrive It is a grief to your Advocate when he cannot speak well of you in Heaven and say They have kept thy Word I am glorified in them How grievous is it when your very Advocate is forced to be an Accuser Isa. 49.4 I have laboured in vain and spent my Strength for nought I have sent my Gospel and it doth no good it is Christ's complaint against the Obstinacy of the Jews Again whom will you imitate Christ or Satan To slander and accuse is the Devil's Property we should be more tender in divulging the Infirmities of the Saints it is the Devil's work Christ when he prayeth for his Enemies he mollifieth their Crime and softneth it with a gentle Interpretation Luke 23.34 Father forgive them they know not what they do Christ excuseth Satan accuseth 2. Observ. Again They have kept thy Word Christ speaketh good of them tho they had many failings The Disciples often miscarried were of weak Faith passionate when when they met with Disrepect Luke 9.54 Lord wilt thou that we command Fire to come down from Heaven and consume them But Christ returneth this general Issue They have kept thy Word So James 5.11 Ye have heard of the Patience of Job Yea and of his Impatience too when he cursed the Day of his Birth but the Spirit of God putteth a Finger on the Scar. It is a ground of Hope notwithstanding many Weaknesses and Failings Christ loveth not to upbraid us with Infirmities We commend with Exceptions and when we seem to praise we come in with a But like a Stab under the fifth Rib Yea we blast much Good with a little Evil as Flies only go to a sore place 3. Observ. It is the Duty of God's People to keep his Word It is the greatest Commendation Christ could give his Disciples They have kept thy Word Mark Christians It is not your Duty to hear the Word only but to keep it not to know the Word only but to keep it Rickets cause great Heads and weak Feet We are not only to dispute of the Word and talk of it but to keep it We must neither be all Ear nor all Head nor all Tongue but the Feet must be exercised Now what is it to keep the Word We are said to keep it when we watch over it that it be not lost by our selves nor taken away by others It noteth three things that it must be impressed on our Hearts expressed in our Lives retained in our Conversations 1. To keep the Word is to feel the Force of it in our Hearts that our Hearts may be more bent and set towards God for else the Word is lost to our selves A Man may better his Knowledg by the Word but yet he doth not keep it nor feel the Virtue and Force of it The Brains may be warmed when the Heart is not and we may keep the Notion when the Motion is gone and lost Oh consider We know God as we love him we know him aright when we know him as we are known he knoweth us to love us to chuse us to gain us to himself and to Christ. So should we know him for our Portion to have no rest till we have an Interest in Christ. 2. It must be expressed in our Life Luke 11.28 Blessed are they that hear the Word of God and keep it To keep the Law is to live according to the Prescript of it 3. There must be a Perseverance to retain it in our Conversations Rev. 3.18 Thou hast kept my Word and hast not denied my Name Do we thus keep the Word all dependeth on it John 14.15 If ye love me keep my Commandments Christ conjureth us by all the Love we bear to him Vers. 23. If any Man love me he will keep my Words and my Father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him If there be any Faith in the Heart by which we esteem Christ we must not only keep it in Memory but keep it in Faith Do you honour him in your Lives Can we venture any thing to keep the Word when the World would take out Crown from us Vse We may know when Christ will speak good of us not when we hear and when we are taught but when we keep the Word yet this we must do understand and keep his Word not Customs not Traditions of Ancestors nor Fancies we must receive his Word as his Word 1 Thess. 2.13 For this cause thank we God without ceasing because when ye received the Word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the Word of Men but as it is in Truth the Word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe SERMON X. JOHN XVII 7 Now they have known that all things whatsoever thou hast given me are of thee IN this Verse there is another Argument why he should be heard for the Apostles which may be taken either from the Towardliness of the Disciples or the Fidelity of Christ The one is implied in the other the Towardliness of the Apostles in discerning the Divine Nature and Mission of Christ the Fidelity of Christ in referring all to his Father they know it and I have taught it them for he urgeth not only their Proficiency they have known but his own Faithfulness he had glorified his
Grace and Authority Mat. 7.29 The People were astonished at his Doctrine for he taught them as one having Authority and not as the Scribes All he did was with Heavenly Majesty and Authority a Soveraign Majesty was to be seen in Christ's teaching proper to himself Besides his Faithfulness as a Minister with such Clearness Evidence and Demonstration there was sufficient Declaration to the World at his Baptism Mat. 3.17 Lo a Voice from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased agreeing with the Prophecy of him Isa. 42.1 Behold my Servant whom I uphold my Elect in whom my Soul delighteth At his Transfiguration before three Persons that for the Holiness of their Lives were of great Credit Mat. 17.5 Before all his Disciples John 12.28 Father glorify thy Name Then came there a Voice from Heaven saying I have both glorified it and will glorify it again To the World at his Resurrection Acts 17 31. Whereof he hath given assurance unto all Men in that he hath raised him from the dead To which Resurrection the Jews were conscious Those that reported it wrought Miracles these Men sought not themselves had no Advantage but visible Hazards their Witness was agreeable to the Writings of the Prophets the Doctrine built on it very satisfactory there is in it what every Religion pretendeth to tho in a higher way tho Miracles are now ceased yet it is confirmed by the Truth of the Word God continually confirmeth it by the Seal of the Spirit and there is an inward Certioration whereby Believers are satisfied John 18.37 For this cause came I into the World that I should bear witness unto the Truth Every one that is of the Truth heareth my Voice that is enlightned by the Holy-Ghost receiveth and believeth it but those that have a mind to wrangle God will not satisfy And then for his Miracles they were not Miracles of Pomp and Ostentation not destructive Miracles but Actions of Relief When the Pharisees said He casteth out Devils by Beelzebub the Prince of Devils Mat. 12.24 He proveth that his main aim was to cast out Satan ver 26. If Satan cast out Satan he is divided against himself Would Satan consent that his Kingdom should fall He would not go to dispossess himself All his aim was to promote Holiness and the Kingdom of God I note this 1. That you may know that the Apostles had sufficient Means to convince the World of the certainty of the Christian Doctrine The inward Testimony of the Spirit the Apostles would not alledg it by Miracles and rational Probabilities they were fitted to deal with the World and to appear as Witnesses for him when they were to give an Account Acts 5.32 And we are Witnesses of these things and so is the Holy-Ghost whom God hath given to them that obey him This inward Witness is proper to Believers the other may be alledged to Infidels By the Spirit is meant there a Power to work Miracles 2. That you may know the way of God's working with Men Usually all these three concur to the working of Faith there is the Light of the Spirit external Confirmation and the use of fit Instruments 1. The Light of the Spirit without which there can be no Grace nor Faith 1 John 5.6 It is the Spirit that beareth Witness because the Spirit is true That is That Word which the Spirit himself hath revealed is Truth for he is not only the Author and Inditer of the Word but the Witness he worketh in the Hearts of the Faithful so that he persuadeth them of the Truth of the Word 2. There is external Confirmation Tho Miracles cease yet we have the Testimony and Consent of the Church who by undoubted and authentick Rolls hath communicated her Experience to us which is visibly confirmed by the Providence of God not suffering the Truth to be oppressed 3. There is the use of fit Instruments specially gifted for this Purpose Tho the Effect of the Word doth mainly depend on the Spirit yet there is a Ministerial Efficacy in the Messengers Acts 14.1 They so spake that a multitude both of the Jews and also of the Greeks believed Not that the Faith of the Hearers doth meerly depend upon the excellency of the Preacher Yet certain it is that one way of preaching may be more fit to convert than another both in regard of Matter and Form Pure Doctrine for the Matter is more apt to convert than that which is mixed with Falshood as pure Water cleanseth better than foul and good Food nourisheth better than that which is in part tainted He that can divide the Word aright and prudently apply it is more powerful to work than he that seeth by an half Light or presseth Truth loosly and not with Judgment and Solidity Not as if they could infallibly convert but they are more likely they do not carry the Grace of Conversion in their Mouths Then for the Form with more plainness clearness strength of Argument God hath given to some Gifts above others not to bind himself to them but in the way of Instruments they are more powerful tho the weakest Gifts are not to be despised And in the quality of the Persons Holy Persons are more polished Shafts in God's Quiver 3. I observe it to press you to regard all these things 1. The Power of the Spirit if you would profit in Christ's School The watering-Pot will do nothing without the Sun nor the Word without his Testimony 1 Cor. 3.7 So then neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that giveth the Increase The Spirit is to confirm Truth to you by way of Witness and Argument By way of Witness 1 John 5.7 For there are three that bear record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy-Ghost There is a secret Persuasion especially when you are reading and hearing that insinuateth it self with your Thoughts doubtless this is the Word of God Acts 16.14 Whose Heart the Lord opened that she attended to those things that were spoken by Paul By way of Argument working such things from whence you may conclude it is God's Word John 8.32 Ye shall know the Truth and the Truth shall make ye free When ye are freed from the bondage of Sin then ye are enlightned to see the Truth of the Gospel by experience ye shall know the Truth 2. Take in the advantage of external Confirmation By Miracles Christ's Testimony was made valuable to the Apostles You have not only authentick Records wherein these Miracles are recorded which as an History may be believed but the Testimony of the Church which hath experience of the Truth and Power of the Gospel for many Ages The Lives of the Godly who are called God's Witnesses 1 Cor. 14.26 The Providences of God in delivering his Church in their miraculous Preservations Psal. 58.11 Verily there is a God that judgeth in the Earth Answers of Prayers grounded on the Word Upon all these
most when we are like him Heb. 12.14 Follow Peace with all Men and Holiness without which no Man can see God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Masculine Article referreth to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tho they have not Peace with Men whatever Entertainment they meet with in the World they are sure to have the Favour of God Peace with God That seeing God referreth to the Enjoyments of the other World the degrees of Vision are according to the degrees of Sanctification 1 John 3.2 We shall be like him for we shall see him as as he is but it holdeth good also in the present World A dusky Glass cannot represent the Image so distinctly we cannot have such a sight of God we cannot expect any Communion and Intimacy with him till we be holy It is said Psalm 5.4 Thou art not a God that hast pleasure in Wickedness neither shall Evil dwell with thee The Idols of the Heathen are stained with filthy Practices God is not such an one Likeness is the ground of Delight God loveth himself for his own Holiness and they are best loved and liked that are most holy for others God professeth he will have no Intimacy with them he will have nothing to do with Sinners nor be of their Fellowship and Communion and they shall have nothing to do with him Psalm 50.16 What hast thou to do to declare my Statutes or that thou shouldst take my Covenant in thy Mouth Nay God will not afford Sinners one good Look Habbak 1.13 Thou art of purer Eyes than to behold Iniquity and canst not look upon Evil. As the Prophet to profess his Detestation of that prophane Prince said 2 Kings 3.14 Were it not that I regard the Presence of Jehosaphat the King of Judah I would not look towards thee nor see thee God would not look towards a Congregation were it not for his People in it But what shall we do and who can say My Heart is clean and who is able to stand before this holy God I answer God hath provided a Remedy in the Gospel in the Gospel-sence he only is pure who is purged and washed from the Guilt of his Sins in the Blood of Christ. In a Child of God there are many Failings but God in Christ giveth him an Acquittance But this is not all there must be an habitual Disposition of Purity and a Man must enter into a true course of Sanctification if he would be accepted in God's Eyes 1 Cor. 6.11 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are justified but ye are sanctified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God The Work of the Spirit and the Merit of Christ are inseparable There is a relative and a real Change not only a judicial Abolition of Sin but a real If you would come to God as your holy One you must be his holy Ones as David was called God's holy One Psal. 16.10 Somewhat answerable there must be to God's Nature before he can take pleasure in you You will find it 1. By an hatred of Sin Where God doth change a Soul he breedeth a Disposition in it in some sort like himself Those Sympathies and Antipathies that God hath the Soul hath Now God is an Holy God he cannot endure Sin so it is with an holy Heart What have I to do with Sinners saith God and what have I to do with Sin saith the Soul the displacency is keen and strong they have a Nature put into them like God's and therefore hate what he hateth It is said Psal. 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate Evil In what measure we love God we hate what is contrary to God In Grace there is a Love to the chiefest Good and an Hatred of the chiefest Evil the one as well as the other is natural to the Saints Let us never talk of Love to God except there be a Zeal to reform what he hateth It 〈◊〉 true we have a mixed Nature there is the Divine Nature and the Carnal Nature a Believer is partaker of both Flesh and Spirit there will be Slips and Failings but the prevailing part of the Soul abhorreth Sin It is the Evil which we hate and tho a Child of God falleth into Sin yet he cannot rest in it A Fountain may be troubled but it will work it self clean again The Needle in the Compass may be joggled but it rests not till it turns to the Pole A neat Man may be dirtied but he cannot endure any Filthiness should lie on his Cloaths impure Men are in their own Element if they abstain from Sin their unholy Nature likes it they forbear it but do not abhor it as Phaltiel forsook Michal only for fear of David's Displeasure Sinful Affections continue in their full Force and Strength when the Act is suspended 2. By an Act of Duty and Conformity to God's Will and Nature Ephes. 4.24 That ye put on the New Man which is after God created in Righteousness and true Holiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is a counterfeit Holiness and true Holiness the true Holiness is such a Holiness as God's is answerable in Quality tho not in Equality Now what is God's Holiness such an Attribute by which he loveth himself above all things and all other things as they do more or less partake of his Nature So when we are holy in Truth we love God out of a Principle of the new Nature God is lovely not only for his Benefits but for his Essence as he is deligibilis naturâ it is eminently in him what is in us in a weaker degree So there will be a Delight in the Saints because of the Resemblance they bear to God Psal. 16.3 To the Saints that are in the Earth and to the Excellent in whom is all my Delight Certainly they have cause to question their Holiness to whom good Company is a Prison and a Burden they have not such Dispositions as God hath So they delight in Duties as they exhibit much of God And they delight in the Practice and growth of Holiness as it maketh them more like God Thus Christians should you strive to come up to the Divine Patern more and more You will think a Child uncapable of Learning when the longer he hath been at the Writing-School the more he swerveth from the Copy and certainly that Holiness that doth not grow up into a greater Likeness and Resemblance of God is to be suspected Thus must you look to come in an holy State 2. With holy and prepared Affections You should remember you have to do with the holy God Josh. 24.19 Ye cannot serve the Lord for he is an holy God Do you know what it is to worship him Rash entring upon the Worship of God is not without Sin and to come reaking from your Sins into God's Presence it is but as Cains's approach from Blood to Sacrifice Before Worship there must be a special purging When Joseph came before Pharaoh he
would venture upon that probability Now here is not only a possibility of gaining but you are threatned with horrible Torments everlasting Death and Horror more than is propounded in any Religion Do not think this is a foolish Credulity the Simple believeth every Word there is none more foolishly credulous than the Atheist and the Antiscripturist who withhold their Assent from the Word of God upon very slight Reasons and venture their Salvation upon them 2. Do not in such a Matter rest upon the Credit of any Man but seek to have a firm Ground in your Consciences an inward Certioration from the Spirit of God Phil. 1.9 This I pray that your Love may abound yet more and more in Knowledg and in Judgment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all sence Wait till you have an inward feeling He that is led by a Man into the acknowledgment of the Truth will be led off again by Men. There will be no stability till you have an inward Assurance 2 Pet. 3.16 Beware lest ye also being led away with the Error of the Wicked fall from your own stedfastness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Every Child of God should have some Ballast in his own Spirit some Ground and Experience upon which he durst venture his Soul Labour for this proper Ballast and Stedfastness of your own And for your Comfort let me tell you if you with a humble and pious Mind wait upon God you will not want it long He that with a sincere mind and studiousness of his own Salvation desires to find out the Truth of the Scriptures certainly God will settle him Vse 2. Here is Advice to the People of God 1. Prize this way of Dispensation bless God for it that the Rule of Faith is put into a setled Course the greatest Gift next the Lord Jesus Christ that the World ever had The Scriptures are God's Charter given to Man the Evidence of his Happiness by which he holds Heaven and Grace and all his Privileges in Christ. Tho the Bible alone were extant in the World here were sufficient Direction a Doctrine full enough to guide us to Happiness and tho all the World were full of Books if the Bible only were wanting you would have no sure Doctrine Some Books are of Satan's inditing they that are full of Filthiness and Folly Other Books smell of Men there is not any other Book in the World but hath something of Man in it and a humane Spirit But this is all of God this is the Truth the Touchstone of Words and Deeds Other Writings speak Man's Heart but this speaks to Man's Heart with a Divine Power this is the Book that is the best discovery of God's Heart to us and our own to our selves it is the Touchstone not only to try Doctrines but to try all Mens Dispositions how we stand affected to him 2. Rest in the certainty of this Doctrine We are foolish Creatures and would give Laws to Heaven and indent with God to believe upon our own Terms Look as the Devil would indent with Christ Mat. 4.3 If thou be the Son of God command that these Stones be made Bread So we indent with God If it be his Word let God testify it by some Oracle or some visible Dispensation We think it were better and that the World had more Assurance when God spake in divers manners than when the Canon and Rule of Faith is closed up and he speaks by Writing only and not by Voice No God's Terms are surer than if a Man should come from Hell and speak to them We are apt to think if a Messenger should come up in Garments of flaming Fire and preach of the Horrors of the World to come then there would be no Atheists but there is a far greater certainty in such a Dispensation as we are now under Luke 16. 30 31. If one went unto them from the Dead they will repent And he said If they hear not Moses and the Prophets neither will they be perswaded tho one arose from the Dead Satan still appears to the blind World in horrible shapes to terrify them so would we look upon this as an horrible shape as the malice and cunning of the Devil Nay it is surer than if an Angel should come from Heaven to preach the Gospel to us for that would not be such an absolute Assurance Gal. 1.8 For tho we or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you let him be accursed Nay it is more sure than an Oracle from God tho that is as sure in it self because it is from the true God yet it is not so sure to us 2 Pet. 1.19 We have a more sure Word of Prophecy More sure than what Than Visions and the Voice from the excellent Glory He alludes to that Voice which came from Heaven Mat. 3.17 This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Ay but saith he We have a more sure Word of Prophecy Therefore rest in this way of Dispensation do not blame God as if he had ill provided for the Comfort and Safety of the Church 3. Improve it to a solid Hope and Comfort it is the Word of God and venture upon it If you be deceived God hath deceived you as the Prophet saith Jer. 4.10 Venture upon the Promises of God entertain the Precepts of it as if God himself had spoken them 1 Thess. 2.13 For this cause also thank we God without ceasing because when ye received the Word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the Word of Men but as it is in Truth the Word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe When you hear any particular thing prest out of the Word entertain it as if God spake from Heaven What will you venture upon God's Word in a way of Suffering And what Lust will you thwart and crucify that God by his Word commands SERMON XXVIII JOHN XVII 17 Sanctify them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth NOW I proceed to the Arguments that prove the Scriptures to be the Word of God First Some are Extrinsical and do lie without the Scriptures Secondly Some are Intrinsical and lie within the Scriptures themselves as being taken from the Matter and Form of them First Extrinsical Arguments There I shall shew you I. That God hath owned the Scriptures for his Word II. The Church hath owned them as God's Word III. The Malignant World in their way hath owned them that is upon that respect they have opposed them I. God hath owned them several ways By the wonderful Success of that Religion which the Scriptures establish Preservation Miracles Accomplishment of Prophecies Promises and Threatnings by Concomitancy of Grace Testimony of the Spirit by particular Judgments and Punishments of those which have abused the Scriptures First By the wonderful Success of that Doctrine and Religion which the Scriptures do establish Certainly if we think that
could not be supposed to feign Now he appealeth to their Experience You know in all your Hearts c. So Solomon speaks 1 Kings 8.56 Blessed be the Lord that hath given rest unto his People Israel according to all that he promised there hath not failed one word of all his good Promise which he promised by the Hand of Moses his Servant So if a Man would but observe the Course of Providence after a little Faith and Patience which is required of all that would inherit the Promises God never failed but made good his Word to a Tittle Object Many Temporal Mercies are Promises which Promises are not accomplished Answ. They are promised still with exception of the Cross. God is tied no further than the Covenant tieth him Psal. 89.31 32 33. If they break my Statutes and keep not my Commandments Then will I visit their Transgression with a Rod and their Iniquity with Stripes Nevertheless my loving-kindness will I not utterly take from him nor suffer my faithfulness to fail My Covenant will I not break nor alter the thing that is gone out of my Lips Object But the Scriptures do absolutely press and inculcate these Hopes of temporal Mercies Answ. No only they are mentioned in the Promise partly to encourage our Hearts to pray we should not else ask them 2 Chron. 20.9 If when Evil cometh upon us as the Sword Judgment or Pestilence or Famine we stand before this House and in thy Presence and cry unto thee in our Affliction then thou wilt hear and help Psal. 119.49 Remember thy Word unto thy Servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope Partly to shew that God is able to keep them from such distress and if it be good for them will keep them Dan. 3.17 Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery Furnace and he will deliver us out of thine Hand O King Partly to shew that if we have such Mercies we have them by virtue of a Promise Psal. 128.5 The Lord shall bless thee out of Sion To see a Mercy come out of the Womb of a Promise is very sweet and comfortable Partly to comfort them if they have them not they shall have the spiritual Part nothing shall light on them as a Curse We must go into the Sanctuary to know the meaning of such Promises God will deliver either from the Lion or from every Evil Work 2 Tim. 4.17 18. I was delivered out of the Mouth of the Lion And the Lord shall deliver me from every evil Work If there be any Temporal Promise you may expect the Mercy in kind or as good There is not a waste word in the Promise God will give them satisfaction The People of God never complain when their Thoughts are regular Partly because God seldom faileth a trusting Soul few Experiences can be given to the contrary Psal. 91.2 3. I will say of the Lord He is my Refuge and my Fortress my God in him will I trust Surely he shall deliver me from the Snare of the Fowler and from the noisom Pestilence Thereby there is another Engagement on God Isa. 26.3 Thou wilt keep him in perfect Peace whose mind is stayed on thee because he trusted in thee Psal. 9.10 And they that know thy Name will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seek thee Vse Learn to regard the Promises and Threatnings of the Word with more Reverence as if God in Person had delivered them to you 1 Thess. 2.13 For this cause also thank we God without ceasing because when ye received the Word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the Word of Men but as it is in Truth the Word of God Look to the Threatnings God hath left room for his Mercy and that must be sought in God's way or else we have no Security and Peace Look to the Promises 1. Seek after them more and mind them more Sure your Neglect saith you do not count them true 1 John 5.10 He that believeth on the Son of God hath the Witness in himself he that believeth not God hath made him a Liar because he believeth not the Record that God gave of his Son If one should proffer you an hundred Pounds and you should go away and never heed it it is a sign you do not believe him 2. Venture more on the Promises they are God's Bills of Exchange whereby you have Treasures in Heaven Deny Interests God will make it up 3. Rejoice in them more You have Blessings by the Root Heb. 11.13 These all died in Faith not having received the Promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and embraced them they hugged the Promises Do you ever refresh your selves with the remembrance of them Do you ever bless God for your Hopes and say I will rejoice in God because of his Word 4. Wait for the accomplishment of them The Word of the Lord is a tried Word The Saints are tried and the Word is tried Psal. 12.6 The Words of the Lord are pure Words as Silver tried in a Furnace of Earth purified seven times It is enough for Faith that we have the Promise Fourthly God hath owned the Word by associating the Operation of his Grace and powerful Spirit with it and with no other Doctrine Things of a powerful Operation do evidence themselves as Fire by Heat the Wind by its Noise and Strength Salt by its Savour the Sun by Light and Heat and the like Moral Principles that are effectually operative manifest themselves also Let us see how the Case standeth with the Scripture It is called Rom. 1.16 The Power of God unto Salvation and the preaching of the Cross is to them which are saved the Power of God 1 Cor. 1.18 And 1 Cor. 2.4 My Speech and my Preaching was not with enticing words of Man's Wisdom but in demonstration of the Spirit and of Power And 1 Thess. 1.5 Our Gospel came not unto you in Word only but in Power and in the Holy Ghost and in much Assurance It giveth a perswasion of it self by its being the Power of God and the Rod of his Strength Psal. 110.2 The Lord shall send the Rod of his Strength out of Sion When the Egyptians saw the Miracles that Moses wrought they confessed the Power of God that God was with him Exod. 8.19 Then the Magicians said to Pharaoh This is the Finger of God And when the Scripture evidenceth so great a Power it shews it self to be of God as in judging the Hearts of Men. Heb. 4.12 The Word of God is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged Sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of Soul and Spirit and of the Joints and Marrow and is a Discerner of the Thoughts and Intents of the Heart In convincing them of their evil Estate 1 Cor. 14.25 And thus are the Secrets of the Heart made manifest and so falling down on his Face
he will worship God and report that God is in you of a Truth In converting Sinners to God James 1.18 Of his own Will begat he us with the Word of Truth In building up them that are sanctified Acts 20.32 And now Brethren I commend you to God and to the Word of his Grace which is able to build you up and to give you an Inheritance among them that are sanctified This is no sluggish idle Power that may be hid and obscured but manifests it self by sensible Effects it is lively and operative not only to change Men's Lives but Hearts Psal. 19.7 8. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the Soul the Testimony of the Lord is sure making wise the Simple The Statutes of the Lord are right rejoicing the Heart the Commandment of the Lord is pure enlightning the Eyes This the Apostle makes to be a sensible proof of Christ speaking in him 2 Cor. 13.3 Since ye seek a proof of Christ speaking in me which to you-ward is not weak but is mighty in you Object But this is an Argument to those that have felt it How will it perswade others Answ. 1. It is an Argument to others also for this mighty Operation is sensible to others they may see the change wrought in them and wonder at it 1 Pet. 4.4 Wherein they think it strange that you run not with them to all excess of Riot 2. There are publick Effects of the Power of the Word besides private Instances Wherever the Word hath been Satan vanished where formerly he tyrannized and his Deceits are of no more force Oracles ceased at Delphos the Devils howled Where the Gospel is preached there are less Witchcrafts and Diabolical Delusions they are not so frequent where the Gospel has had a free passage 3. Those that have felt no experience of this Power have a secret fear of it John 3.20 Every one that doth Evil hateth the Light neither cometh to the Light left his Deeds should be reproved Conscience is afraid of the Majesty of God shining forth in the Scriptures Men dare not pause upon and consider the Doctrine therein contained Atheism lieth in the Heart the Seat of Desire Psal. 14.1 The Fool hath said in his Heart There is no God Men question the Word because they would not have it true When Men give leave to Lusts they are afraid the Word should prove true and therefore would rather accuse the Word of Falsity than their own Hearts as Ahab was loth to hear Micaiah because he prophesied Evil. Strong Lusts make the Soul incredulous they fear the Scriptures and then question them They know there is Power in them to astonish them and therefore as Malefactors desire to destroy the Records and Evidences that are against them so do wicked Men they are Antiscripturists in Affection rather than Opinion Fifthly By the Spirit 's Testimony That it is so is clear 1 John 5.6 It is the Spirit that beareth witness because the Spirit is Truth The Doctrine of the Gospel is there called Spirit because he is the Author of it 2 Pet. 1.21 For the Prophecy came not in old Time by the Will of Men but Holy Men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost Or because the Spirit is Truth therefore he is the Supreme Witness He is of God's Privy Council 1 Cor. 2.11 For what Man knoweth the Things of a Man save the Spirit of Man that is in him Even so the Things of God knoweth no Man but the Spirit of God Now the Spirit witnesseth from Heaven or on Earth 1 John 5.7 8. For there are three that bear record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are One. And there are three that bear witness in Earth the Spirit and the Water and Blood and these three agree in One. From Heaven in Miracles and so Christ as God might be a Witness in his own Cause On Earth so in an Association and Conjunction with Water and Blood when we feel the Effects of it in ease of Conscience or Sanctification of Heart And over and above the Spirit 's Testimony there is an inward Testimony 1 John 5.10 He that believeth in the Son of God hath the Testimony in himself But what is this inward Testimony a Witness to the Truth of Scripture by the certainty of our own Thoughts it is not that which every one's Mind and Fancy suggests to him but the Light of the Holy Ghost leading us into the acknowledgment of the Truth the same Holy Ghost which inspired the Penmen of the Scriptures inclines our Hearts to believe them 1 John 2.27 But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any Man teach you but as the same Anointing teacheth you all things and is Truth and is no lie and even as it hath taught you ye shall abide in him Faith cannot be wrought by Humane Authority or more rational Inducements it is the Work of the Spirit We may plead and urge but the Heart closeth not with what is represented till the Spirit worketh Isa. 53.1 Who hath believed our Report and to whom is the Arm of the Lord revealed There is an outward Report and an inward Revelation This Testimony of the Spirit may be thus discerned 1. It is affective Truth represented in the Light of Reason leaveth a weak Impression but Truth represented in the Evidence and Demonstration of the Spirit 2. Cor. 2.4 worketh after another manner sees another manner of excellency and beauty in Christ another manner of vanity in the Creatures 2. It draweth to Admiration Psal. 119.18 Open thou mine Eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law A Man never wondreth so at the dreadfulness of God's Wrath at the sweetness of God's Mercy in Christ at the Evil of Sin the strictness of Duty till the Spirit opens his Eyes Acts 13.12 Then the Deputy when he saw what was done believed being astonished at the Doctrine of the Lord. 3. It begets more certainty Till we have the Spirit 's Light we have but a trembling wavering Opinion but then we have that which the Apostle calleth The Fulness of the Assurance of Vnderstanding Col. 2.2 Tho we have no other Arguments yet we see by another Light As Gerson reporteth of a devout Man that doubted of an Article of Faith and came to be setled not by any new Demonstration but by the humiliation and captivation of the Understanding to see more by former Arguments As Hagar's Eyes were opened to see the Fountain by her Gen. 21.19 The Spirit taketh away the Vail of Ignorance the Pride of Reason and by an over-powering Force maketh the Soul stoop to the simplicity of the Gospel 4. It is a transforming Light 2 Cor. 3.18 We all with open Face beholding as in a Glass the Glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of our God A Man
And is this the manner of Men O Lord God Was it ever heard that he that is offended should be so sollicitous and careful to send about Agreement and Reconciliation But this God doth not out of any need that he hath of our Friendship as Men sometimes in Policy seek to those who have injured them for God is stronger than we but out of pure Love The first Ambassador God sent was his own Son 1 John 4.10 Herein is Love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the Propitiation for our Sins And Vers. 19. We love him because he first loved us Christ cometh out from the Bosom of God The Law was delivered by an Angel but the Gospel by Christ himself And then God sendeth Apostles with extraordinary Gifts and Power of working Miracles to lay a Foundation 1 Cor. 3.10 According to the Grace that is given unto me as a wise Master-builder I have laid the Foundation And then Pastors and Teachers Men of like Passions with our selves weak Men but furnished with Gifts proper to their Calling There is a Mercy in this Institution We cannot endure God's Presence Deut. 5.25 If we hear the Voice of the Lord our God any more then we shall die Moses trembled and quaked when a Voice was heard out of the Clouds and Darkness Therefore God sends Men of like Infirmities with our selves that our Defects might be born with patience because they have experience of the hardness and obstinacy of their own Hearts and that our Ignorance might be familiarly instructed and Knowledg dropped in by degrees we are to learn by little and little here a Line and there a Line God in condescention to our weakness hath appointed this help 4. It informeth us of the Madness of the World that use Christ's Ambassadors ill when they come about such a Message It is against Jus Gentium the Law of Nations to offer violence to Ambassadors let their Message be never so displeasing their Persons are secured by the Civility of all Nations Yet Christ's Ambassadors are often ill intreated Matth. 23.37 O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them that are sent unto thee It is England's Sin to malign and hate God's Messengers tho they come with Terms of Peace Never was the Ministry more Evangelical yet never more hated than now What should be the Reason of this Madness No Calling is more profitable to Humane Society to civilize a People to take them off from their brutishness and fierceness and yet none more opposed Partly out of a Gadarene Temper they grow weary of Christ's Ministers but chiefly out of a natural Enmity against them Since the Fall Man is an Enemy to his own Happiness In bodily Miseries it is otherwise a blind Man loves his Guide and as Elymas when stricken blind they seek about for some to lead them a sick Man loveth his Physician but Spiritual Blindness and Sickness is of another Nature Men hate those that offer to lead them and cure them The guilty World would fain take a Nap and rest and because God's Messengers will not let them alone therefore they hate them Errors and Lusts are touchy Mundus senescens patitur phantasias The World as it grows old is given to Dreams and Dotage and is loth to be disturbed A Thief would have the Candle put out that discovereth him Christ's Messengers tho Instruments of common Good yet often meet with publick Hatred Ephes. 6.20 For whom I am an Ambassador in Bonds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Chains A Man would think he meant Golden Chains because he speaks of his Ambassadorship no he means hard Iron Chains which he suffered for Christ's sake and usually this is the Lot of Christ's Ambassadors Vse 2. Advice both to People and Ministers First To People If Ministers be sent by Christ then it adviseth you to respect their Message their Calling their Persons 1. Accept their Message When we speak for the Honour and Dignity of the Ministry we plead for a Spiritual Respect to them not for a Temporal Domination and Precedency in all Meetings and Companies Our King whom we serve is a Spiritual King his Kingdom is not of this World he came not with external Pomp and Splendor therefore these are not things we should look after Tho some respect is due to their Persons yet chiefly we plead for a respect to their Doctrine Do not despise the Message which they bring tho their Persons be obscure and despicable Doctrines delivered from the Scripture have a Divine Authority it is God's Message as if it had been spoken from Heaven And therefore if we must speak at the Oracles of God you must hear it as God's Word 1 Thess. 2.13 For this cause also thank we God without ceasing because when ye received the Word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the Word of Men but as it is in Truth the Word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe Never can you expect the Word should work with you till you have this respect and reverence for it But you will say Is all Gospel that is delivered by one in Office I Answer No but you must humbly consider what is brought to you in Christ's Name When Ehud said to Eglon Judges 3.20 I have a Message from God unto thee he arose out of his Seat See what it is and let it move you more to look to your ways 2. Respect the Calling more Many seek to undermine it as if it were grown the Burden of the Christian World others think disgracefully and meanly of it as if it were below their Parts or Rank and Place Let me tell you it is the highest Honour that can be put upon a Creature to be Christ's Messenger No Nobility of Birth Antiquity of House Plenty of Estate is to be compared with it all worldly Honours and Titles are beneath it and so shall we judg when once we come to see a Prophet's Reward Do not think scornfully of the Calling It is a great Mercy if God should chuse any of thine to this Work the best and chiefest of thy Family The First-born were separated to God before the Priesthood was setled upon the Tribe of Levi. Usually Men consecrate the worst to God if any be lame blind unfit for Work like the Deceiver Mal. 1.14 Which hath a Male in his Flock and ●oweth and sacrificeth to the Lord a corrupt thing I speak the more in this Matter because if God suffer the Wickedness of the Age to go on if Maintenance go away Nobles must put their Necks to the Yoke to serve Christ in this Employment as some have done in other Churches 3. Respect their Persons Something is due to them for the Work 's sake 1 Thess. 5.12 13. And we beseech you Brethren to know them which labour among you and are over you in the Lord and admonish you and to esteem them
before Hill or Mountain were brought forth Prov. 8.30 31. Then was I with him as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight rejoicing alway before him Rejoicing in the habitable part of his Earth c. As two that are br●d up together take delight in one another 2. As Mediator he loveth the Humane Nature of Christ freely the first Object of Election was the Flesh of Christ assumed into the Divine Person Col. 1.19 I pleased the Father that in him should all Fulness dwell it deserved not to be united to the Divine Person When it was united the Dignity and Holiness of his Person deserved Love There was the Fulness of the Godhead in him bodily the Spirit without measure all that is lovely And then besides the Excellency of his Person there was the Merit of his Obedience he deserved to be loved by the Father for doing his Work John 10.17 Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my Life that I might take it again that was a new ground of Love Christ's Love to us was a f●rther cause of God's Love to him Thus you see how God loveth Christ. Vse 1. It giveth us confidence in both Parts of Christ's Priestly Office his Oblation and Intercession His Oblation Mat. 3.17 This is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased God hath proclaimed it from Heaven that he is well-pleased with Christ's standing in our room tho so highly offended with us and with him for our sake Eph. 1.6 To the praise of the Glory of his Grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the Beloved All that come under his Shadow will be accepted with God He is beloved and will be accepted in all that he doth his being beloved answereth our being unworthy of Love surely he will love us for his sake who hath purchased Love for us His Intercession if the Father loveth Christ we may be confident of those Petitions we put up in his Name John 16.23 Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my Name he will give it you Our Advocate is beloved of God When we pray in the Name of Christ according to the Will of God our Prayer is in effect Christ's Prayer If you send a Child or a Servant to a Friend for any Thing in your Name the Request is yours and he that denieth the Child or Servant denieth you When we come in a sense of our own Unworthiness on the score and account of being Christ's Disciples and with an high estimation of Christ's Worth and Credit with the Father and that he will own us that Prayer will get a good Answer Vse 2. It is a Pledg of the Father's Love to us and if God gave Christ that was so dear to him what can he with-hold Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son but gave him up to the Death for us all how will he not with him also freely give us all things He spared him not the Son of his Love was forsaken and under Wrath and will he then stick at any thing God's Love is like himself infinite it is not to be measured by the affection of a Carnal Parent Yet he gave up Christ Love goeth to the utmost had he a greater Gift he would have given it How could he shew us Love more than in giving such a Gift as Christ John 16.22 The Father himself loveth you because ye have loved me and have believed that I came forth from God God hath a respect for those that believe in Christ and receive him as the Son of God Vse 3. It is an Engagement to us to love the Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 16.22 If any Man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha Shall we undervalue Christ who is so dear and precious with God Let us love him as God loved him 1. God loved him so as to put all Things into his Hands John 3.35 The Father loveth the Son and hath put all things into his Hand Let us own him in his Person and Office and trust him with our Souls He is intrusted with a Charge concerning the Elect in whose Hands are your Souls 2 Tim. 1.12 I know whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed to him against that day 2. God hath loved him so as to make him the great Mediator to end all Differences between God and Man God hath owned him from Heaven Mat. 3.17 This is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased Do you love him so as to make use of him in your Communion with God Heb. 7.25 Wherefore he is able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God through him seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for us That is the sum of all Religion 3. God loveth him so as to glorify him in the Eyes of the World John 5.22 23. The Father judgeth no Man but hath committed all Judgment to the Son that all Men should honour the Son even as they honour the Father He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father that hath sent him Do you honour him Phil. 1.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To me to live is Christ should be every Christian's Motto This is Love and not an empty Profession Christ will take notice of it and report it in Heaven it is an endearing Argument when the Father's Ends are complied with John 17.10 And all thine are mine and mine are thine and I am glorified in them SERMON XL. JOHN XVII 23 I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the World may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me I Come now to the Second Observation That God loveth the Saints as he loved Christ. The Expression is stupendous therefore divers Interpreters have sought to mitigate it and to bring it down to a commodous Interpretation First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As is a Note of Causality as well as Similitude He loveth us because he loved Christ. Therefore it is said Ephes. 1.6 He hath made us accepted in the Beloved The Elect are made lovely and fit to be accepted by God only by Jesus Christ accepted both in our State and Actions as we are reconciled to him and all that we do is taken in good part for Christ's sake who was sent and intrusted by the Father to procure this favour for us and did all which was necessary to obtain in The Ground of all that Love God beareth to us is for Christ's sake There is indeed an Antecedent Love shewed in giving us to Christ and Christ to us John 3.16 For God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting Life The first Cause of Christ's Love to us was Obedience to the Father the Son loved us because the Father required it Tho afterwards God loved us because Christ merited it
with Christ. What that is we have explained already all that I shall now add is That in Scripture it implieth two things First Conformity with Christ in his Sufferings so we have a Saying like that in the Text 2 Tim. 2.11 It is a faithful saying for if we be dead with him we shall also live with him which presently is explained vers 12. If we suffer we shall also reign with him Secondly It implieth mortification of sin so it is understood here if we have communion and fellowship with his Death for the mortification of sin 2. The Term of Proposal conditionally If we The Particle if hath sometimes the notion of a Caution see that ye be dead with Christ sometimes it is a note of Relation when one priviledge is deduced from another as here if we partake of the effect and likeness of his Death in dying to sin we shall partake of the effect and likeness of his Resurrection in being quickened to live in Holiness and Righteousness all our days Dying to sin and newness of life are inseparable if we have the first we shall have the other also they are branches of the same work of Regeneration and both proceed from the same Cause Union with Christ. 2. The Truth hence inferred We shall also live with him This is meant both of the Life of Grace and of the Life of Glory Regeneration and Resurrection the one is to newness of Life the other is to everlasting Bless and Happiness Regeneration is the Spirits begetting us to the Image and Nature of God our heavenly Father and Resurrection is for the perfecting of that Likeness which is 't is true perfect in part here in the Soul 2 Cor. 3.18 We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. Hereafter both in Body and Soul Phil. 3.21 Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his own glorious body according to the wonderful working whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself As to degrees 1 Joh. 3.2 When he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is As to kinds both in Holiness and Happiness 1 Cor. 15.49 As we have born the image of the earthy we shall also bear the image of the heavenly Now we are conformed to his Image in afflictions Rom. 8.29 He hath predestinated us to be conformed to the image of his Son we look like him in the form of a Servant then we shall be like him as the Lord from Heaven heavenly Therefore the life of Glory in Heaven must not be excluded 3. The Certainty of the Inference 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not a matter of Opinion and Conjecture but of Faith we are certainly perswaded of the truth of it We must distinguish of this Truth for it may be considered two ways First As a general Maxim or Proposition so it is absolutely true Those that are dead with Christ shall live with him This is an Article of Faith to be believed fide divinâ Secondly As it is applied to us or as it is a ground of our particular Confidence so it is true Hypothetically or upon Supposition and our Confidence can be no greater than the evidence of our Qualification If we be indeed dead with Christ we in particular shall also live with him It is but a rational Conclusion from two Premisses one of which is of Divine Revelation the other of inward Experience namely that I am dead with Christ therefore I believe that I shall live with him It is an act both of Faith and Reason an act of Faith by participation as it buildeth on a Principle of Faith Doctrine Those that are dead with Christ have no reason to doubt but that they shall also live with him I. I shall speak of the Condition If we be dead with Christ. II. Of the Benefit They shall live spiritually and everlastingly III. Of our certain Apprehension We believe I. Of the presupposed Condition If we be dead with Christ. 1. Who are dead with Christ. 2. How necessary this Order is The one will shew us that it is not an over-strict but a comfortable Condition the other that it is a Condition absolutely necessary to subsequent Grace 1. Who are dead with Christ. 1. Such as owne the Obligation which their Baptism and Profession puts upon them That reckon themselves dead indeed unto sin Rom. 6.11 that make account they are under a Vow and Bond wherewith they have bound their Souls The careless mind it not but the sincere Christians acknowledge that the debt lyeth upon them they being solemnly ingaged to Christ to do it The Apostle saith Rom. 8.12 We are debtors not to the flesh to live after the flesh as the Jew by Circumcision is bound to observe all the Rituals of Moses Gal. 6.3 so Christians by Baptism are bound to crucifie the flesh and obey the Spirit What say you Are you at liberty to do what you lift or under a strict Bond and Obligation to dye unto sin Let your lives answer for you 2. They make Conscience of it and seriously address themselves to perform it Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts they have begun to do it and still go on to do it more and more for this is a continued action not the work of a day but of our whole lives They have not only retrenched the desires of the flesh but seek to mortifie and subdue them and perform their Promise so solemnly made to God 3. They obtain the effect in such a degree that the reign of sin is broken though sin it self be not utterly extinct us They do no longer live in their old slavery and bondage as those do who obey every foolish and hurtful lust that bubleth up in their hearts A mans condition is determined by what is in the Throne habitually and governeth our lives and actions There are two warring Principles in us full of enmity and repugnancy to each other the Flesh and the Spirit but one reigneth which constituteth the difference between the carnal and the renewed in the carnal Flesh reigneth but in the regenerate the Spirit hath the mastery and is superiour and most powerful so that a Christian sheweth himself to be Spirit rather than Flesh otherwise it could not be said That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit Joh. 3.6 The acts of sin are disowned acts and he may say with Paul It is not I but sin that dwelleth in me Sin is against the bent and habit of our wills 4. They substract the fuel of their lusts as they wean themselves from earthly things and shew such contempt of the World that the good things which they enjoy by Gods allowance are not a snare to them For the Apostle saith of those that set their affections
defence of it Sixthly An immunity from such temporal judgments as might hinder our salvation and the service of God 1 Cor. 10.13 There hath no temptation taken hold of you but such as is common to man But God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that ye may be able to bear it and Rom. 8.28 All things shall work together for good to them that love God No absolute immunity from troubles God hath reserved a liberty to his wisdom and justice to afflict us as he shall see cause Psal. 89.32 Then will I visit their transgressions with the Rod and their iniquity with stripes But will preserve us to his Heavenly Kingdom 2 Tim. 4.17 18. 1. Their rights and prerogatives First They have a right to serve God with a ready and free will and on comfortable terms Luke 1.74 75. That being delivered out of the hands of our enemies we might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our lives Psal. 51.12 Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me by thy free spirit And Rom. 8.15 For we have not received the spirit of Bondage again to fear but we have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father 2. A liberty of access to God a large door is opened to us for communion with him Eph. 3.12 To whom we have boldness and access with confidence Heb. 4.16 Let us come with boldness to the throne of grace that we may have grace and find mercy in a time of need and Heb. 10.19 Having therefore brethren boldness to enter into the holyest by the blood of Jesus 1 John 3.21 Beloved if our hearts condemn us not then have we boldness toward God 3. A free use of all the creatures which fall to our share and allowance by Gods fatherly providence 1 Tim. 4.3 4. Forbidding to marry and commanding to abstain from meat which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them that believe and obey the truth For every creature of God is good and nothing to be refused if it be received with thanksgiving 1 Cor. 3.22 23. Whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or things present or things to come all are yours and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods With good conscience we may use the creatures and get them Sanctified to us by the word and prayer 4. A right to eternal life Tit. 3.7 That being justified by his grace we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life Rom. 8.17 If children then heirs heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ If so be we suffer with him that we may be also glorified together Tho we have not the possession yet a Title sure and indefecible so that you see and yet I have told you little of it it is valuable but 't is a glorious liberty we are to speak of 2. Our glorious liberty in the world to come That is a liberty which implyeth the removal of all evil and the affluence of all good and may be considered either as to the Soul or to the Body 1. As to the Soul We are admitted into the blessed sight of God and the perfect fruition and pleasing of him in perfect love joy and praise to all eternity 1 Cor. 13.12 For now we see through a glass darkly but then face to face now I know it partly but then shall I know even also as I am known 1 John 3.2 But we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is Psal. 16.11 Thou wilt shew me the path of life for in thy presence is fulness of joy and at thy right hand pleasures for evermore Psal. 17.15 As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness 2. As to the Body it is in a state of immortality and incorruption wholly freed from death and all the frailties introduced by sin and because the body remaineth behind when the Soul is in Glory our Deliverance and Redemption is sa●d to be yet behind Eph. 1.14 Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession Eph. 4.30 And grieve not the holy spirit whereby ye are sealed to the day of redemption And that in respect of the body Rom. 8.23 Waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body In short This glorious liberty may be somewhat understood by the liberty which we have now 1. Our liberty now is imperfect and incompleat but then 't is full and perfect 'T is but begun now and our bonds loosed in part but our compleat deliverance is to come from sin at death from all misery when our bodies are raised up in glory sin dwelleth in the Saints now but in death it will be utterly abolished therefore groan and long for it Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of death Yet with hope v. 25. I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord so then with the mind I my self serve the law of God but with the flesh the law of sin Our bodies now are subject to corruption and diseases as others are but Phil. 3.21 God will then perfectly glorifie his children in body and soul. 2. Spiritual liberty is consistent enough with corporal bondage Paul was in Prison when Nero was Emperor of the world many that are taken into the liberty of Gods children are not freed from outward servitude 1 Cor. 7.21 22. Art thou called being a servant care not for it but if thou canst be made free use it rather The condition of a slave is not incompetent with Christianity Joseph was a slave in Egypt but his Mistress was the Captive as she was overcome by her own lusts servants may be the Lords Freemen and Freemen may be Satans slaves 3. All the parts of liberty are quite other than now First as to duty we are not so free from the power of sin as to be able to govern our own actions in order to eternal happiness Rom. 7.25 With my mind I serve the law of God with my flesh the law of sin There is law against law mutual conflicts and mutual opposition tho grace gets the mastery not absolute freedom Our present estate is but a convalescency a recovery out of sickness by degrees 2. As to felicity First Immunity from the curse of the law and the wrath of God We have a right but the solemn and actual judgment is not past nor the case adjudged but at the last day when the condemning sentence is past upon the wicked our sins shall be blotted out Acts 3.19 Secondly Death remaineth on the body but then the last enemy shall be quite destroyed 1 Cor. 15.26 Thirdly Satan doth still trouble us and vex us winnow us as
Acts 24.15 16. I have hope towards God that there shall be a resurrection of the just and unjust 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And herein or thereupon or in the mean time do I exercise my self to keep a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men 2. To vanquish temptations Which are either on the right hand or on the left but both are defeated by hope on the right hand when some present delight is ready to invite us to sin on the left hand when some present bitterness is likely to draw us from the ways of God in both cases the hopes of future joys outweigheth that pleasure and allay that bitterness If the temptation be the comforts of the world or the delights of sin he that sincerely hopeth for Heaven dareth not think so slightly of it as to lose it or put it to hazzard for a little carnal satisfaction 't is noted high prophaneness in Esau to sell the birth-right for a morsel of meat Heb. 12.16 Sin cannot offer him things so good but he must forego better and so the heart riseth in indignation against the temptation Shall I leave my fatness my sweetness to rule over the Trees If the temptation be some grievous inconvenience or affliction Rom. 8.18 For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us and 2 Cor. 4.17 For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory This is the language of one that hopes for salvation all is but a flea-biting to him that hath his heart in Heaven 3. To comfort us in all our tribulations There are many difficulties that intervene and fall out between hope and having between our first right to eternal life and our full possession of it in our journey to Heaven we meet with tryals and sufferings by the way now 't is hope carryeth us through and therefore 't is compared to an Anchor Heb. 6.19 To an Helmet 1 Thes. 4.8 As we would not go to Sea without an Anchor nor to War without an Helmet so neither must we think of carrying on the spiritual life without hope nothing else will compose the mind or keep it stable in the floods of temptation therefore 't is an Anchor nothing else will cause us to hold up head in our daily conflicts and encounters with afflictions but this Helmet without this Anchor we are in danger of spiritual shipwrack without this Helmet our Heads are exposed to deadly blows from sin Satan and worldly discouragements 4. That we may dye peaceably and with comfort We need hope while we live but we most need it when we come to die and shoot the gulph of death They that are destitute of the hope of salvation are then in a dangerous woful and most lamentable case Job 27.8 What is the hope of the hypocrite if he hath gained when God taketh away his soul They may be full of presumption and blind confidence while they live but what hope have they when they come to dye All their worldly advantages will then yield them no solid comfort We live in a presumptuous dream that all shall be well but then they dye stupid and sensless or else despairing and their hopes fail when they have most need of them but then a lively hope of eternal life sustaineth the hearts of the faithful they are going to possess what they expected and when they resign their souls to Christ they can commit their bodies to the grave in hope Psal. 16.9 10. My flesh shall rest in hope for thou wilt not leave my soul in hell nor suffer thine holy one to see corruption God will not utterly forsake that dust that is in covenant with him nor suffer his servants totally to be extinguished or finally to perish 1. VSE is Information 1. That the great reward of a Christian lyeth not in things seen but unseen Not in the good of this world but of another because hope is one of the graces requisite to his constitution and hope is about future things Much to blame then are they who place all their happiness in present things which are so transitory God hath reserved us to a future estate because he bestoweth graces that suit with it and nothing so opposite to it as the spirit of the world 1 Cor. 2.12 For we have not received the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God 2. The Cognation and kin that is between faith and hope The one is the evidence of things not seen Heb. 11.1 The other is the earnest desire and expectation of things not seen The one is an Assent the other an Appetition Faith differeth from hope 1. In the order of nature Faith goeth before as the cause is before the effect First There is a firm perswasion of good things to come and then a certain expectation of them in the way which God hath appointed Faith assents to the truth of the promise and hope looketh for the accomplishment of it 2. In the object there is some difference First in the latitude of the object The object of faith is larger Faith is of things past present and to come as by faith we believe the Creation of the world Heb. 11.4 The present existence of God Heb. 11.6 And the truth of heavenly joys Heb. 11.1 Hope is only of things to come So again we believe some things that we hope not for as the Torments of the damned For hope is an expectation of good to come and the pains of hell are matter of fear not of hope Secondly In the formal consideration of the object Faith looketh to the word promising verbum rei hope to the thing promised rem verbi Faith considereth the veracity or truth of God in making the promise hope the benignity and goodness of God in making so great a promise as eternal life and salvation by Christ Faith respects the person giving his fidelity hope the persons receiving their benefit Faith perswadeth us there is salvation hope that we shall or at least may obtain it 3. There is a difference in the subject Faith as 't is an assent is in the mind hope is in the affections as reflecting upon the goodness of the thing promised so that tho there be some difference between faith and hope yet they are much of a like nature 3. It informeth us of the excellency of hope faith saveth Eph. 2.8 and hope saveth as in the text which is to be regarded because our thoughts run so much upon faith that we overlook hope and we do so altogether regard our present reconciliation with God through the merits of Christ that we forget our Eternal fruition of him in glory and what is necessary thereunto as if the whole drift of the new covenant were only to comfort us against the guilt of sin Now a Christian should mind both not only his
curse of the law and absolve us from the guilt and eternal punishment of all our sins and moderate the temporal punishment of them surely the cross may be the better born and then a life begun which shall not be quenched Blessed is that soul who hath these priviledges 6. See the way how we get assurance of Gods love and our own salvation We know the purposes of Gods grace by the effects by which he witnesseth his love to his elect ones by vocation our predestination is manifested by justification we feel the comfort of it so climb up to glory by degrees Those whom God hath predestinated from all eternity and will glorifie in the world to come he doth powerfully call The Scripture promiseth Salvation not to the named but described persons here then is your way of procedure Would you know your election of God Are you called sanctified brought home to God Begin to live in the spirit 2. USE Do not know these things in vain nor reflect upon them meerly to satisfie curiosity or to keep up a barren speculative dispute but to cherish the love of God Holiness Patience and become more serious in the work of salvation What effects have you of this Predestination 1. Love to God From everlasting to everlasting he is God Psal. 90.2 Psal. 103.17 And from everlasting to everlasting his mercy is to them that fear him We see his love in his purposes and performances the one before the world began the other when the world shall have an end and so two eternities meet together eternal glory arising from purposes of eternal Grace so that whether we look backward or forward you see the everlasting love of God Oh then Let God be yours first and last let the everlasting purposes of his Grace be your constant admiration and the everlasting fruition of God in glory be your fixed end which is always in your eye and let the sense of the one and the hope of the other quicken all your duties Gods mercy you see from all eternity it began and to eternity it continueth we adjourn and put off God as if we had not sinned enough and dishonoured his name enough hereafter will be time enough to return to our duty If we begin never so soon God hath been aforehand with us some make early work of Religion as Josiah Samuel Timothy some are called sooner some later but tho all are not called so soon as others they are loved as soon as others for these benefits were designed to us from all eternity 2. Holiness That we might hate sin more and prize holiness more holiness is inferred out of election as a special fruit of this predestination Eph. 1.4 He hath chosen us to be holy 'T is inferred out of calling for he hath called us with an holy calling 2 Tim. 1.9 The calling is from misery to happiness from sin to holiness 't is inferred out of Justification Sanctification is the inseparable companion of it God freeth us a malo morali that freeth us a malo naturali impunity followeth uprightness our recovery were not else intire our case is like that of a condemned Malefactor sick of a deadly disease who needs not only the skill of the Physitian to heal him but the pardon of the Judg. And 't is inferred out of glorified none shall enjoy everlasting glory after this life but such as are holy here and if they be not sanctified and renewed by the spirit they shall never enter into the Kingdom of God for we cannot have one part of the covenant while we neglect another 't is not only the way but part of glory 3. Patience under afflictions The same notions are used of afflictions which are used of your priviledges by Christ 1 Thes. 3.3 Ye are appointed thereunto You should look to that in all that befalleth you he that appointed you to the Crown appointed you to the Cross also Called 1 Pet. 2.21 For even hereunto were ye called We are called to the fellowship of the Cross we consented to these terms Matth. 10.38 He that taketh not up his cross and followoth after me is not worthy of me Justified the comforts of it are most felt then Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God Glorified take it for degrees of holiness holiness is promoted by affliction Heb. 12.10 We are chastned that we might be partakers of his holiness Final blessedness 1 Pet. 4.13 Rejoice inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christs sufferings that when his glory shall be revealed ye may be glad with exceeding joy Christs last day is a glad day to you 4. More seriousness in the work of salvation 2 Pet. 1.10 Give all diligence to make your calling and election sure 2 Pet. 3.14 Wherefore beloved seeing that ye look for such things be diligent that you may be found of him in peace without spot and blameless SERMON XLI ROM VIII 31 What shall we then say to these things if God be for us who can be against us WE are now come to the Application of these blessed truths and the triumph of Believers over sin and the Cross yea over all the enemies of our Salvation 't is begun in the Text What shall we then say The Words contain two Questions 1. One by way of preface and excitation 2. The other by way of explication setting forth the ground of our confidence So that here is a question answered by another question 1. Let us begin with the exciting question What shall we then say to these things Doct. When we hear divine truths 't is good to put questions to our own hearts about things There are three ways by which a truth is received and improved By sound belief serious consideration and close application sound belief 1 Thes. 2.13 For this cause also we thank God without ceasing because when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe Serious consideration Deut. 32.46 Set your hearts unto all the words I testifie among you this day Luke 9.44 Let these sayings sink down into your ears Close application Job 5.27 Lo this it is we have searched it out know thou it for thy good Now these three acts of the soul have each of them a distinct and proper ground sound belief worketh upon the clearness and certainty of the things asserted serious consideration on the greatness and importance of them close application on their pertinency and suitableness to us see all in one place 1 Tim. 1.15 This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners of whom I am chief These are all necessary to make any truth operative we are not affected with what we believe not therefore to awaken diligence the truth of things is pleaded 2 Pet. 1.5 10 16. And besides this
'T is the property of love to long to be with Christ which is better for us Phil. 1.23 therefore we should be content to have the prison-door opened that those who have desired and longed to be with Christ may be admitted into his immediate presence and let out into liberty and joy 3. Hope We expect within a little while to have our desires accomplished Jude 21. Looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life Will a soul that is at Heaven gate lose all that he hath waited for because the entrance is troublesome As those that are going to a Mask or Show when they come where it is exhibited must croud and will venture hard for what they hope to see now God will have graces tryed with difficulties the Crown of Victorry is not set on our heads if we fight not 4. Reason 'T is necessary to have this preparation of heart that we may the better deny other things Life is that which maketh us capable of all the contentments of the flesh and pleasures of the world and maketh them valuable to us now this is a blow at the root we are prepared for mortification when we can deny life its self we can deny all the appendages of life Therefore so much of Christianity being exercised in self-denial our Lord would have us once for all bring our selves to the highest point that we may do other things the more easily The Apostle's bonds and afflictions did not move him because he did not count his life dear to him Acts 20.24 And certainly a man is never dead to the world and the interests of the Animal life till he be dead to life its self and is willing to part with it when God pleaseth 5. This life must be quitted now God will have it quitted in obedience for things of meer necessity have no moral worth in them Now 't is a mighty help to die willingly and comfortably when we can once lay life at Christs feet USE To inform us 1. That Christianity wholly draweth us to another world for life its self is one of the interests that must be hazarded for Christs sake 1 Cor. 15.19 If in this life only we had hope we were of all men most miserable Christ would never profelite us to a Religion that should make us miserable now it would do so if only our happiness were in this life for it requireth us not only to deny the conveniences of life but life its self 2. Those that take Gods Word for the other world must expect to have the strength of their faith and love tryed all along this hath been Gods way God would not confirm Adam in innocency before he had let loose a tryal upon him wherein he failing brought misery upon himself and his posterity after the breach the Father of the faithful is tryed Gen. 22.1 with Heb. 11.17 By faith Abraham wh●n he was tryed And still God continueth the same course to all believers Jam. 1.12 Blessed is he that endureth temptations for when he is tryed he shall re●eive a crown of life In the primitive times their Baptism was a presage of their slaughter 3. Those that expect to be tryed had need to be well prepared by a due knowledg of the cause and foresight of and resolution against all known dangers 1. By a due knowledg of their cause that it may be sure it can be said for Gods sake The cause is sometimes more clear and unquestionable as when it is for a great essential point and there our courage should be more clear for then there can be no doubt in the mind whether the cause be good or not and then all the comforts of Christianity do fall upon the soul directly and with great power and efficacy or else more dark when 't is for a particular truth or duty First it may be for the profession of a particular truth which we are to own in its season for we must be established in the present truth 2 Pet. 1.12 What is the present truth the Godly-wise will soon discern Whoever compiled the Creed yet the observation is in a great measure good that the controversies that have hapned in the Church have succeeded according to the method and order of the Articles therein contained The controversie with the Heathen was about the one only and true God with the Jews and afterwards with the Pseudo Christians about Christ his Person Natures Offices States then about the Holy Ghost his Personality and Operations in converting the elect Then about the Church Now in all such controverted truth● we must shew the same zeal the faithful did in former ages But to return tho it be out for a particular truth yet we must shew our fidelity to Christ For t●●n we have an occasion to shew that our hearts be true to God and very sincere w●●n we are willing to suffer any thing from man rather than renounce the smallest truths o● Go● for tho the matters for which we suffer be not great yet sinceri●y is a great point and tho profession thus be sorborn and of exceeding great moment to our peace in some points yet we can do nothing against the truth 2 Cor. 13.8 I am not boun● always to profess in lesser things yet if they will bind me against it I am to endure all manner of displeasures rather than yeild to the lusts and wills of men Eating of swines fl●sh was no great matter but when they would compel them to it in affront to Gods institution Contempt of God is a great matter Heb. 11.25 36 37. I say the more of this because men are apt to translate the scene of their duty to former times or forreign pl●ces if to turn Infidels and Turks as the Jews if they had lived in the Prophe●s days Matth. 23.30 If we had been in our fathers days we would not have been partakers with them in the blood of the prophets How doth God try thee in thine own Age Secondly for particular duties as well as particular truths In the general there is less controversie about the Commandments than about the Creed the Agenda of Christianity are more evident by the light of Nature than the Credenda Yet because the Commandments are general and humane light is imperfect about the application as the Heathens were right in generals but became vain Rom. 1.20 21. Yet in particular duties we must not be wanting for that is a sincere heart that will run the greatest hazzards rather than commit the smallest sin or omit the smallest duty when it is a duty and I am called to perform it in omission there is a greater latitude than in commission for affirmativa non ligant ad semper In the general he that suffereth for a Commandment is as acceptable with God as he that suffereth for an Article of Faith tho the cause for which we suffer be civil yet obedience to God is concerned in it as if a man suffer
afflictions of the Gospel 2 Cor. 5.8 9. Death its self may then be born for 't is but the Key to open the prison-door and let out that soul that hath long desired to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 Gratias agimus vobis quod a molestis Dominis liberamur You do them a favour to send them home to their dear Lord. 2. 'T is accompanied with hope they expect within a little while to have their desires accomplished and will a soul that is at Heavens Gates lose all that he hath waited for because the entrance is troublesome When men have crouded to any Mask or Show and have waited long they will not lose their waiting tho they venture many a knock or broken pate to get in so when salvation is very near will a Christian give over his waiting seeking and striving for it Matth. 11.12 Even from the days of John the Baptist the kingdom of heaven suffered violence and the violent take it by f●rce 3. Delight We have gotten in part a tast and earnest of our fruition and enjoyment of God and Christ hereafter and it is very pleasing to the soul so that the tempter must needs have a hard task to draw off the soul from him in whom he delighteth Worldly men will not let go their vanities nor sinful wretches their foulest sins because they delight in them Many who never knew what it is to love Christ and delight in his salvation do no● so earnestly long for and fixedly hope for the promised blessedness Now these may be easily taken off but the other will venture upon the greatest difficulties Oh. But may not a sound believer be foiled as to his inward man by these afflictive temptations Ans. Yes The experience of the Saints sheweth it too often But 1. 'T is not totally and finally their heel is bruised not only as the outward man is mol●sted by afflictions but as they may be drawn to some sinful slips and temptations the h●el is the lowest and basest part of the body far enough from any vital part the wounds whereof endanger not the life at all the devil may draw them into some sins which may cause much unquietness and affliction of spirit but these wounds are not deadly and do not quench the life of grace in them these wounds may be painful but not mortal They shall not be hurt of the second death Rev. 2.11 2 Upon recovery by repentance The Lord sanctifieth these falls to them to make them the more cautious and watchful so they grow wiser and better and more resolute as being warned before by their own bitter cost as a ball with the more force it is beaten down it rebounds the higher or as a child that hath gotten a knock or been bitten by a s●appish Cur groweth the more wary Josh. 22.17 Is the iniquity of Peor too little f●r us They were not yet whole of the iniquity of Peor and therefore should be careful not to wound themselves again 3. All ends in final conquest over Satan Rom. 16.20 And the God of peace shall bruise Satan under our feet shortly We are now in our combat 't is some conquering to keep up our resistance but our full triumph is hereafter 2. Ob. But will it not hurt to press believers to this confidence Will not this weaken their care and diligence No. 1. This is pleasing and acceptable to God to believe that he will perfect and maintain his beg●n work Phil. 1.6 Being confident of this that he that hath begun a good work in you will p●rfect it to the day of Christ. 2. 'T is honourable unto God and doth excite us to praise and thanksgiving when we can trust our interests in his hands with a quiet and well composed mind 2 Tim. 1.12 And I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him A Christian in all respects of time can bless God for what he hath done called us when strangers and enemies 1 Pet. 2.9 What he doth do keepeth the feet of his Saints 1 Sam. 2.9 For what he will do 2 Tim. 4.17 18. Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me and strengthned me And the Lord shall deliver me from every evil work and preserve me to his heavenly kingdom To be satisfied in Gods conduct is certainly very honourable to him 3. 'T is very profitable to the Children of God 1. To keep us from falling God promiseth to keep us but in his own way and that engageth us to an intire dependance upon him in the use of means John 15.4 Abide in me and I in you So 1 John 2.16 17. Ye shall abide in him And then he presently addeth Little children abide in him First a promise and then an exhortation and then we use the means with the more diligence and encouragement as Paul had a promise that not one should perish Acts 27.23 But yet they must all abide in the ship v. 31. 2. To encourage us to return when fallen we have some holdfast on God when we seek to recover our selves by repentance Psal. 119.170 Let my supplication come before thee deliver me accord●ng to thy word And Jer. 3 4. Wilt thou not from this time cry unto me My father the guide of my youth 4. 'T is very comfortable and breede 〈◊〉 everlasting joy that should be in Gods redeemed ones Isa. 35.10 And the ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads N●y it begets an hero●cal spirit when we can bear up on the love of God in the sorest tryals As here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 VSE It cautioneth us not to be dismayed when the people of God seem to be run down by oppositions and reproaches and the cause of Religion to suffer loss and visibly to go to ruin No Christ hath promised that the gates of hel● shall not prevail against the Church Matth. 16.18 All the Powers which the devil can muster up cannot destroy Christs interest in the world his Kingdom is like a Rock in the midst of the Sea which being beaten on every side with waves standeth unmove●ble his people many times may be scattered oppressed their profession discountenanced and opposed every where seemingly beaten out of the world but then the Church groweth inwardly the graces of his people are streng●hned and increased and their hearts bettered their glory hastned their profession more honoured and r●verenced in the consciences of men Some converted others confirmed When the Christians were butchered and went to wrack every where Oftentimmes it falleth out so when God breaketh that temporal interest to which we lean he provideth for his own Glory and the advancement of the Gospel by other and better means and Religion gaineth when it seemeth to lose as in the primitive times when the slaughters were frequent they sought to drive Christians to deny Christ but they confess him the more they fumed and chafed because they could not get their will and
is Gods glory 't is not strength for our lusts strength for our worldly ends but for the Lords honour we must please Appetite no farther than the pleasing of it fits us for the service of God In many cases nextly we may aim at some other thing beneath God but ultimately and terminatively all must be directed to God as the Apostle here considered them their Spiritual profit as his next aim but lastly and finally the glory of God 2. The Reasons of the general point 1. The Interest God hath in us obligeth us to live to his glory Rom. 14.8 For whether we live we live unto the Lord or whether we die we die unto the Lord for whether we live or die we are the Lords The Apostles reasoning is built upon this supposition that those who are the Lords should live as for the Lord but the case is so with us we are his and therefore must live to him How are we the Lords 1. By Creation Prov. 16.4 God made all things for himself In the Creation of the World God could have no higher end than himself than his own glory for the end is more noble than the means Therefore when he made the World made Beasts made Man made Angels he did all for himself God is Independant and self sufficient of himself and for himself Self-seeking in the Creature is absurd and unbeseeming because we depend upon another for life and breath and all things Therefore to seek our own glory contentment and satisfaction apart from God 't is to arrogate a self-being to our selves apart from him we were made by God and were not made for our selves 2. By Preservation Rom. 11.36 For of him and through him and to him are all things As our being is from him so our moving and doing is through him through his providential influence and supportation therefore all must be for him and to him The motion of all Creatures is circular they end where they began as the Rivers return to the place from whence they came All that issueth from God in a way of Creation and is sustained and preserved by God in a way of Providence must be to him in the tendency and final end of their motions As we must deduce all things from God as their first cause and continual conserving cause so we must reduce all things to God as their last end 3. By Redemption That is pleaded 1 Cor. 6.19 20. Ye are not your own ye are bought with a Price Therefore glorify God with your Bodies and your Souls which are Gods You are twice bound as Creatures and as redeemed and a double obligation will infer a double Condemnation if we answer it not The bought belonged to the Buyer so we to Christ. 4. By Dedication We are dedicated and set apart for the Lords use Rom. 6.13 Yield your selves to God as those that are alive from the dead and your Members as instruments of Righteousness unto God So Rom. 12.1 I beseech you therefore Brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your Bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable to God which is your reasonable service Now to live to our selves and speak for our selves is practically to retract our own vows and the dedication which we have made of our selves to his use and service 2. We are above all Creatures fitted for his glory As Men and as new Creatures 1. As Men Man above all other Creatures should glorify God Partly because by the design of his Creation he is placed nearer God as the end than other Creatures are Man is both proximè ultimè nextly and lastly for God and so return immediately to the Fountain of our Being There is nothing intervening between God and us towards which our use and service should be directed Other Creatures though they were made ultimately and terminatively for God yet immediately for Man lastly for God nextly for us So that man standeth in the middle between God and all other Creatures to receive the benefit of them that God may have the glory Oh then how much is man as man obliged to glorify God for whom this inferiour world was made All things are subjected to our Dominion or created for our use not only Fowls and Fishes and Beasts of the field to be injoyed by him but Sun Moon Stars Rain Weather and all the Seasons of the Year Psal. 8.3 4 5 6. When I consider thy Heavens the work of thy Fingers the Moon and Stars which thou hast ordained What is man that thou art mindful of him and the Son of man that thou visitest him Thou hast made him little lower than the Angels thou crownest him with glory and honour thou hast made him to have dominion over the work of thine hands thou hast put all things under his feet When we look up and behold those glorious Creatures the out-work and visible parts of Heaven which display their radiant Beauties to our wonder and astonishment and withal consider how much they serve for our comfort and use and with them the soveraign power wherewith thou didst invest man over all sublunary and inferiour Creatures Beasts Fowls Fishes Plants we cannot sufficiently admire that this vile clod of Earth Man should be so much in the eye of God to take care of him above the whole Creation The Sun doth not shine nor winds blow nor rain fall at our pleasure but 't is for our use Heaven is for us the airy Heaven to give us breath and motion the starry Heaven to give us heat light and influence The third Heaven or the Heaven of Heavens to be our dwelling place So that man is strangely stupid and oblivious if he should forget the God by whose bounty he injoys all these things And partly because man is more fitted as being furnished with higher capacities he teacheth us more than the Beasts of the Field We have faculties suited to this purpose we have an understanding that we may know him Surely such an understanding nature such an immortal Soul was never made for corruptible things God was pleased to stamp man with the Character of his own Image he beareth his superscription Now give unto Caesar the things that are Caesars and unto God the things that are Gods We may find out his tract and foot-print in the Creatures but man had his Image Other Creatures glorify God necessarily we voluntarily and by choice they know not the first cause but are over-ruled by the Government of Providence but we have or should have an understanding to know him and an heart to love him Therefore the duty properly belongeth to us Other creatures glorify God passively we actively they are the Harp man makes the Musick Psal. 145 18. All thy works praise thee thy Saints bless thee Man is the mouth of the Creatures the Creatures by us glorify God 2. As new Creatures The people of God are most bound of all men to seek the glory of God you are created again in
is some Faith in that in taking Christ at his word The defect of this love is that you mind your own personal benefit and safety rather than the pleasing obeying and glorifying of God so far there is weakness in this act but this is the only way to bring in the creature as when a Prince offereth pardon to his Rebels with a promise that he will restore them to their forfeited priviledges in case they will lay down their arms and submit to his mercy Self-Interest moveth them at first but after love and duty to their Prince holdeth them within the bounds of their Duty and Allegiance I will ease you saith Christ you shall find rest to your Souls I will be a rewarder to you and give you eternal life As lost creatures we take him at his word and afterwards love him and serve him upon purer motives Or take the similitude thus In a treaty of marriage the first proposals are grounded upon estate suitableness of age and parentage and neighbourhood and other conveniences of life conjugal affection to the person groweth by society and long converse Fire at first kindling casts forth much smoke but afterwards it is blown up into a purer flame 2. Some love him for the good which they have received from him Not so much that he may be God but because he hath been good and indeed the love of gratitude is a true Christian and Gospel love and hath a greater degree of excellency than the former because thankfulness is the great respect of the creature to the Creator and because so few return to give God the glory of what they have received but one of the healed lepers returned back and glorified God Luke 17.15 18. And because gratitude hath in its nature something that is more noble than self-seeking and bare expectation for common reason tells us that 't is better to give than to receive and in this returning love we seek to bestow somthing upon God in that way we are capable of of doing such a thing or God of receiving it This returning love is often spoken of in Scripture as a praise worthy thing Psa. 116.1 I will love the Lord because he hath heard the voice of my supplications And Rom. 12.1 I beseech you ●herefore Brethren by the mercies of God that you present you● bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service God hath the honour of a precedency but we of a return 1 John 4.16 Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us There 's the true Spirit of the Gospel in such a love for Gospel obedience and Service is a life of love and praise and thankfulness 3. Some love God because he is good in himself Not only that he may be good to us or because he hath been good to us but because he is good in himself Gods essential goodness which is the perfection of his Nature his infinite and eternal Being and his Moral Goodness which is the perfection of his will or his holiness and purity is the object of love as well as his beneficial goodness or that goodness of his which promoteth our Interest I prove it Partly because God is the object of love though we receive no good by it Love and goodness are as the Iron and the load-stone nature hath made them so Now God considered in his infinite perfection is good as distinguished from his doing good Psa. 119 68. And Partly Because God loveth himself first and the creature for himself Pro. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himself The first object of the Divine complacency is his own being and the last end of all things is his own glory and pleasure Rev. 4.11 For thy pleasure they are and were created Now this is a reason to us because the perfection of holiness standeth in an exact conformity to God and by grace we are made partakers of a Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Which mainly discovereth its self in loving as God loveth and hating as God hateth And therefore we must love him in and for himself and our selves for him And Partly Because if God were only to be beloved for the effects of his benignity and beneficial goodness this great absurdity would follow that God is for the creature and not the creature for God for the supream act of our love would terminate in our happiness as the highest end and God would be only regarded in order thereunto Now to make God a means is to degrade him from the dignity and preheminence of God Partly Because we are bound to love the creatures as good in themselves though not beneficial to us Therefore much more God as good in himself if we are to love the Saints as Saints not because kind and helpful to us but because of the Image of God in them though they never did us any good turn Psa. 16.3 But to the Saints that are in the Earth and to the Excellent in whom is all my delight If we are to love the Law of God as 't is pure then we are to love God because of the Moral goodness of his nature Psa. 119.140 These things are out of Question clear and beyond all controversy why not God then in whom is more purity and holiness If indeed we are perswaded of the real●●y and excellency of his being Now in this last rank there are degrees also 1. Some love Christ above his benefits They do not love Pardon and salvation so much as they love Christ 1 Pet. 2.7 To them that believe Christ is precious To love the gifts more than the person the Jointure more than the Husband in a Temporal cause would not be counted a sincere love The truth is at first the benefits do first lead us to seek after God Man usually beginneth at the lowest and loveth God for his love to us but he riseth higher upon aquaintance First he loveth God for that tast of his goodness which we have in the Creatures then for that goodness God exhibiteth in the Ordinances for that help he offereth us there for our greatest necessities then as in graces Justification and Sanctification then as in Christ as the fountain of all then God above Christ as Mediatour as the ultimate object of love 2. Possibly some may come to such a degree as to love Christ without his benefits The height of Moses and Paul is admirable who loved Gods glory above their own Salvation Exod. 32.32 Blot me out of thy Book And Rom. 8.3 I could even wish my self accursed from Christ for my Brethren and kinsfolk in the flesh Lay all his personal Benefit or the happy part of his Portion at Gods feet in Christ for a greater end to promote his glory but this extraordinary zeal is very rare if attained by any other in this life 3. Some love the benefits for his sake Heaven the better because Christ is there pardon the better because God is so much
upon whom we do depend And every motion and inclination of ours is under a rule If we could any moment be exempt from the influence of his providence we might be supposed to be exempted in that moment from his Jurisdiction and government But man wholly depending upon God for being and preservation cannot lay claim or title to himself or any thing that is his no not for a moment They were rebels against Gods government who said Psa. 12.4 our tongues are our own who is Lord over us By what right can we call our tongue our own We neither made it nor can keep it longer than God will He is the maker of all things and therefore should be the governour and end of all things 'T is a robbery and usurpation of Gods right when you divert your respects from him and set up self in his place 2. By Redemption That right is pleaded 1 Cor. 6.20 Ye are bought with a price therefore glorify God with your Bodies and Souls which are Gods By Creation we owe our selves to God but by redemption we owe our selves to him by a double and a more comfortable right and title A man bought with anothers money if he dyed by his stripes if he continued a day or two his friends had no plea against his Master the Law giveth this reason for he is his money Exod. 21.21 That is his own purchase by money but God hath bought us at a higher rate with the Blood of his Son 1 Pet. 1.18 The precious Blood of Christ. Therefore the redeemed are bound to serve him that ransomed them if a man had bought another out of Captivity or he had sold himself all his strength and time and service belonged to the buyer Christ hath bought us from the worst slavery and with the greatest price No thraldom so bad as the bondage of sin and Satan no prison so black as Hell and no ransom so precious as the Blood of the Son of God And he bought us to this end that we might live to God not to our selves And therefore unless we mean to defraud Christ of his purchase we should mind this more than we do 3. By regeneration Whereby we are brought actually into Christs actually into Christs possession and fitted for his use taken into his possession for there is a Spiritual union and conjunction between us and Christ. See 1 Cor. 6.15 16 17. Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ Shall I take the members of Christ make them the members of an harlot God forbid know ye not that he that is joined to an harlot is one Body For two saith he shall be one flesh What But he that is joined to the Lord is one Spirit Mark there the grounds of the Apostles reasoning He that is joyned to an harlot is one flesh and he that is joined to the Lord is one Spirit What shall we conclude thence That all that is ours is Christs verse 15 th Shall I take the members of Christ and make them the members of an harlot God forbid Christ hath a right in all and every thing that is a Christians Members belong more to their head than slaves to their Master because of their near conjunction and from thence they receive life strength and motion Being ingrafted into Christ we must submit to be guided and quickened by his Spirit As fitted for his use the new Creature is fitted for the operations which belong to it the withered branch is again quickened that it may bring forth fruit unto God Gods best gifts would lie idle if this were not Rom. chap. 7. verse 4. Married to Christ that we may bring forth fruit unto God 4. By voluntary contract and resignation When we first enter into covenant with God God giveth Christ and all things with him and we give up our selves and every interest of ours unto God Cant. 2 16. I am my beloveds and he is mine So that to alienate our selves and use our selves for our selves 't is not only robbery but treachery and breach of covenant because by our own solemn consent we owned and acknowledged Gods right in us and yeilded up our selves to the Lord to be imployed ordered and disposed by him at his own will and pleasure Rom. 6.13 But yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead 2. Reas. The danger which will come by it if we should live to our selves and not to God 1. The creature doth not only withdraw its self from God but sets up another God And so the Crown is taken from Gods head and set upon the object of our own lust The World is God Matth. 6.24 Or the Belly is God Phil. 3.19 We leave the true God but a name and set up our selves as our own end and the pleasing of our selves as our chief good and use all creatures to this end and love the present life and prosperity more than God and set up our own will in contradiction to Gods all our labour and travail is to please our selves and satisfy our selves and to break the bonds and cast off the yoke and would be Lords of our selves and our own actions and injoy honours and riches and pleasures to our selves 2 There cannot a worse mischief befal● us than to be given over to our ownselves Or this is the sorest plague Psa. 81.12 So I gave them over to their hearts lusts and they walked in their own counsels There is nothing maketh us more miserable than to be given over to our own choices And he said well that made this prayer to God libera me á malo homine á me ipso For pride sensuality and worldliness will necessarily bear rule where a man is given over to himself we have not a worse enemy than our selves 'T is self that depriveth us of Heaven that maketh us neglect and slight the grace of our Redeemer Man 's own will is the cause of his own misery and thou offendest thy self more than all the World can do besides Therefore a man hath more cause to hate himself than other things VSE of all is to press us to this weighty duty of living to God and not to our selves Not to our own will and interest and according to the will and for the glory of God Motives 1. Christs self-denial who came from Heaven not only to expiate our offences but to give us an example And wherein was the example He telleth us he came not to do his own will but the will of him that sent him John 6.38 And to promote his Fathers Glory John 8.50 I seek not my own Glory He was still guided by his Fathers will and had his orders from Heaven for all that he did Now how did he do the will of God and seek the glory of God He did it with delight John 4.34 'T was meat and drink to him to do his Fathers will A will wedded to its self and his own honour and ease and credit
is satisfied with Christs Obedience as a perfect Ransom for us and is well pleased with those who make use of it and apply it in the appointed way by the subordinate New Testament Righteousness Now as it is the Righteousness of God 't is a great comfort for the Righteousness of God is better than the Righteousness of a meer creature With the Righteousness of God we may appear before God with all confidence and look for all manner of Blessings from him The Law which condemneth us is the Law of God The wrath and punnishment which we fear is the wrath of God The Glory which we expect is the Glory of God The Presence into which we come is the Presence of God And to suit with it the Righteousness upon which we stand is the Righteousness of God which is a great support to us 4. Mark again How the business is carried on by way of exchange Christ made Sin and we Righteousness Christ is dealt with as the sinner in Law and we are pronounced as Righteousness before God our Surety is to bear our punishment and we to be accepted as pleasing and acceptable to God Thus by a wonderful exchange he taketh our evil things upon himself that he might bestow his good things upon us He took from us misery that he might convey to us mercy He was made a curse for us that the Blessing of Abraham might come upon us by Faith Gal. 3.13 14. He suffered death that he might convey life took our sin upon himself that he might impart to us his Righteousness This exchange agreeth in this that on both sides something not merited by the person himself is transferred upon them What more averse from the Holy Nature of Christ than sin He knew no sin and yet is made sin What more alien and strange on our part than Righteousness who are so many ways culpable Yet we are made the Righteousness of God in him This is by no errour of judgment but the wise contrivance ordination and appointment of God that by something done by another it should be imputed and esteemed to that other as if done in his own person So for our sin was Death imposed upon Christ as if he had been the sinner And for Christs Righteousness Life and the Heavenly Inheritance is bestowed upon us as if we had fulfilled the Law and satisfied it in our own person But here is the difference our sins are imputed to Christ out of Gods Justice he being our Surety His Righteousness is imputed to us out of Gods Mercy Our sin was transferred upon him that he might abolish it or take it away for he came to take away sin 1 Joh. 3.5 His Righteousness was imputed to us that it might continue as an everlasting ground of our acceptance with God therefore he is said to finish transgression and to make an end of sin and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in an everlasting Righteousness The vertue of his Righteousness is never spent it abideth for ever He was made a curse for us that this curse might be dissolved and swallowed up but his Blessing is derived to us that it may abide and continue with us to all eternity He took our filthy rags that he might throw them into the depth of the sea but we have the garment of our Elder Brother that we might put it on and Minister in it before the Lord and find grace in his sight Hence is it that though we may be said truly to be Righteous and the Children of God yet Christ cannot be said to be a sinner or the Child of wrath because he had no sin of his own and the wrath of God did not remain on him but only pass over him 2dly There is but one thing remaining in the Text In him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And that noteth the time when and the manner how we are actually interested in this benefit When we are in him We are by faith grafted into Christ before this Righteousness is made ours upon this union This Righteousness is adjudged to us 1 Cor. 1.30 But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made to us Wisdom Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption First in him by a lively Faith then 't is imputed to us And as we abide in his love by a constant obedience so 't is continued to us This Righteousness is revealed from Faith to Faith Rom. 1.17 And 't is by Faith unto all and upon all that believe Rom. 3.22 So that we must look to this also how we come to be possessed of it as well as how it is brought about on Christs part As sin or sins could not be imputed to Christ but by the common bond of the same nature and unless he had been united to us by his voluntary Suretyship and undertaking so neither could the Righteousness of Christ have been imputed to us unless we had become one with him in the same Mystical Body so that we believing in Christ and abiding in him are made partakers of his Righteousness and so are pleasing and acceptable to God The Price was paid when Christ died our actual possession and admission into the priviledge is when we are planted into Christ by a lively Faith Doct. That Christ being made sin for us is the meritorious cause and way of our being the Righteousness of God in him Isa. 53.11 By his Knowledge shall my Righteous Servant justify many for he shall bear their iniquities So that his bearing of our iniquities is the cause of our being accepted as Righteous through Faith in him So Rom. 5.18 19. Therefore as by the offence of one Judgment came upon all men to condemnation Even so by the Righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made Righteous On this foundation hath the Lord established for the Saints an unchangeable rule of Justification I shall give you the Sum of this point in these Propositions 1. The First covenant requireth of us perfect obedience upon pain of eternal death if we perform it not for the tenor of it is do and live sin and dye The least sin according to that covenant merits eternal Death Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them 2dly All mankind have sinned and so are liable to that Death Rom. 3.23 For all have sinned and come short of the Glory of God And Rom. 5.12 Wherefore as by one man sin entred into the World and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned 3dly Christ became the Mediatour and stepped between us and the full execution of it and took the penalties upon himself and became a Sacrifice to offended Justice and a ransom for the sinners So that his sufferings were