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

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with God So that the Israelites are a perpetual instance to confirme this Doctrine that it is not so much to be regarded how holy and repenting we may appear sometimes but what we are constantly that is to be regarded To clear this take notice First That the Scripture speaketh of a two-fold conversation and the one directly contrary to the other whose ends also are contrary The first of these is A wicked carnal and natural one which all live in till God by his gracious power deliver us from it What is every mans conversation till grace change him but a continual road of evil actions he goeth from one sinne to another he is alwayes like himself as the worm is ever creeping upon the ground you never see it flying like a bird up to the clouds This is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our former conversation Ephes 4. 22. which is corrupt according the deceitfull lusts thereof The first conversation then of every one by nature is that of the old man original and actual sinnes conjoyned together into one body as it were so that he is a masse or lumpe of sinne This is daily corrupted by deceitfull lusts That as worms are continually eating into the Tree till they have destroyed it Thus are lusts constantly breeding in a man even till they have devoured him Now saith the Apostle This must be put off we must leave this former life and take up a new one Oh how few are there that can say They have put off their former conversation As they were prophane proud earthly so they are still They cannot say It was indeed their former drinking their former swearing but it is their present praying their present humiliation of themselves Their latter conversation differeth from the former as much as the day doth from the night that went before it This is also called a vain conversation received by tradition from our fathers 1 Pet. 1. 18. It is a vain one for all the life we live till regenerated is spent in vain we attain not to the true and proper end of living Thy eating thy drinking thy buying and selling is all in vain by none of these things wilt thou please God and so arrive at last at eternal glory Yea it were well if it were only vain missing its end but it 's meritorious of eternal flames in hell This conversation is said to be traditional by our fathers If the Apostle speak of Gentiles then it is true that children follow the evil and ungodly examples of their parents they will not seem to be better and wiser than they are if of the Jewes which is more probable then it relateth to those superstitious exercises of Religion which their fathers added to the command of God And although they rested and gloried in these as thereby highly honouring of God yet all was but a vain worship a vain Religion So then a mans evil conversation is not only to be extended to his vices and sinnes but also to his religious duties when either not instituted or if commanded yet not performed in that spiritual manner which the Law of God doth require So that a mans conversation in his praying in his coming to Church in his religious deportments must be altered as well as prophane wayes Thou must leave off thy former way of praying thy former way of hearing The second kind of conversation mentioned in the Scripture is A godly and an heavenly one So that although we live upon the earth yet our principles aims and ends carry us up to the enjoyment of God This is called a good conversation Jam. 3. 13. where all divine faith and spiritual wisdom is said to be demonstrated by a good conversation It is not Doctrine faith profession or gifts that men look at but the conversation that speaketh a Christian that speaketh a Minister more than ten thousand excellent discourses Plus oculis quam auribus creditur said Seneca So that a good conversation is more demonstrative of godlinesse then good gifts good parts a good faith Thy prayers are good thy conference and discourse is good Is thy conversation also Hence Paul exhorteth Timothy as a Minister to be a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An example 1 Tim. 4. 12. to believers in word in conversation In word that is in his Doctrine and preaching In conversation that is in the exercise of all holy duties So that you see a man is above all things to look to his convesation that it be good For as this is a special means to edifie and build up others so none can take comfort from the choisest abilities the most fervent duties the purest Church-wayes unlesse there be a good conversation to uphold him Hence you see Paul doth not runne to his Apostolical Office to his great miracles to the wonderfull revelations and gifts bestowed upon him but to his conversation in the world as if that were a greater conviction of all adversaries then the most glorious Church-prerogatives or priviledges that can be Hence a godly conversation is a special means to convert others The Apostle speaketh fully to this concerning godly women who have Heathen or wicked and ungodly husbands that they should look to their duty That they may without the Word be wone by the conversation of their wives while they behold your chaste conversation coupled with fear 1 Pet. 3. 1 2. he saith Without the Word not but that the Word is the onely ordinary means of conversion but because their conversation may be an occasion and introductory meanes to bring them to the Word As Austin said He should not have believed the Scriptures but for the Church because that was the introductory motive though the Scriptures themselves were the cause of his faith By this we see how much regard we are to have to our conversation for by it many may be converted or be subverted What a wofull thing will it be if thou by thy life hast given a just occasion to drive men off from godlinesse They were coming on but thy conversation drove them back It is true when wicked men doe wickedly from their owne corrupt hearts take an occasion to be offended at Gods wayes as some did when they heard Christ preach saying It was an hard saying who can bear it And from thence took an occasion never to follow Christ more John 6. 60. then the guilt of such men lieth at their owne doore They are offended where there is no just cause it 's Scandalum acceptum not datum But if thou doest by any sinfull and unwarrantable practises alienate men from Religion make them think the worse of godlinesse for thy doings then remember that dreadfull sentence of our Saviour Woe be to that man by whom offences come Matth. 18. 7. This is likewise called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Your good conversation in Christ A Scripture-conversation is a conversation in Christ that is partly by the rule and guidance of Christ We live not according
thousands abide under the power of Satan and sinne Therefore when Gods mercy is spoken of in pardoning of sinne it is perpetually in respect of us not of Christ Thus you see judging of Gods mercy without Scripture-light into how many Doctrinal errors it may plunge us 4. For want of Scripture-direction the Papist and Antinomian oppose the mercy of God but in extream contrary wayes Though God be mercifull yet he hath so ordained that none shall partake of his mercies in time but those who by his grace are inabled to believe and repent as the way to salvation Now the Papist injureth the mercy of God for he will have his Faith Repentance with other holy works the merit and cause of his salvation disdaining to have eternal life as meer alms from God But the Antinomian to avoid this Scilla falls into Charybdis he affirmeth a mercy and that of Justification even while we are sinners before we do either believe or repent But the Scripture-mercy lieth between both In the next place Let us consider What Practical Danger we are in by conceiving of God as a mercifull God without Scripture-information And First We are apt to flatter our selves with Gods mercy though we allow our selves in our sins and iniquities whereas the Scripture speaks not a drop of mercy to such Have you not many dreadfull examples of Gods anger and terrour as well as mercy What was the casting of all the Angels into eternal blackness for one sinfull thought and that the first which they were guilty of giving them no space to repent no day of grace affording no means for their recovery Is not this an instance of Gods severity But you will say This was to Angels he is more mercifull to man But consider that example of Gods Justice in drowning the whole world save eight persons Doth not that proclaim God is just and angry against sinne as well as mercifull not to spare the whole world because it had corrupted its wayes but to drown such an innumerable company of men women and children yea to destroy the whole earth as it were Oh who can stand before the anger of God! Have we not also a formidable demonstration of Gods anger against Sodome and Gomorrah when fire and brimstone was rained from Heaven to destroy those Cities and all that did belong to them What had the little children done They could not be guilty of those unclean vices but God cutteth off all Many other instances of Gods wrath we have in Scripture especially the day of Judgement will be a dreadfull manifestation of it to the wicked and therefore the Scripture will informe us in that as well as of Gods mercy A second Practical Errour I shall conclude with that necessarily accompanieth the thoughts of Gods mercy without Scripture-direction is to encourage a mans self in his sinnes because God is mercifull Every wicked person turneth this honey into gall Paul speaketh of some who made those wretched inferences Let us sinne that grace may abound Take heed then of having any such wicked thought arising in thy heart God is mercifull therefore I will go to my lusts again Oh no the Scripture represents Gods mercies for another end to repent and be converted from thy evil wayes Rom. 2 Knowest thou not the goodnesse of God would lead thee to repentance Oh then do not abuse the mercy of God! for there is a time coming when there will be no more mercy It 's called the day of wrath thou shalt meet with nothing but terrour Ezek. 8. 18. The Scripture speaks of vessels of mercy and vessels of wrath and there is no greater sign of a vessel of wrath one fitted and prepared for destruction then to grow wanton by the mercies of God to be evil because he is good so much mercy abused will one day be turned into so much vengeance SERM. XXXVI That God not only can but doth actually comfort his People and how he doth it 2 COR. 1. 4. Who comforteth us in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble by the comfort wherewith we our selves are comforted of God IN the former verse we had the Reasons of our blessing of God set down by the description of that glorious attribute of his The Father of mercies c. In this verse the Apostle doth further amplifie the cause of this duty of Thanksgiving viz. from the effect and fruit of this property of his He is not only a God of consolation habitually and potentially as it were He is not a fountain sealed up but this Sunne doth alwayes irradiate its beams As he is a God of consolation so he doth comfort So that in the words we have the Effect or Causality attributed to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who is comforting that doth never cease to do it that never withdraweth his consolations It 's his nature to be alwayes comforting As the Devil is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because he is alwayes tempting The word in humane Authors is used frequently of him who calleth another to him but in the New Testament either of him that intreateth and prayeth or of him that exhorteth or as in the Text of him that comforteth 2. The Subject of this consolation us That is either generally all believers or us Apostles and Officers in the Church For the Apostle might speak this to obviate that scandal which many were ready to take at the afflictions and persecutions of the Apostles as if they were hated of God and were nothing but impostors Therefore some part of this Chapter is a narrative of his pressures and apologetical in declaring the great goodness of God thereby to the Church 3. The particular wherein in tribulation Light can come into this dark dungeon 4. The Extent of this All our tribulation God can turn the hardest stones into bread All either of mind or body 5. The consequent Effect of this That we may be able to comfort them c. God many times doth in an exemplary manner exercise the Ministers of the Gospel that they may experimentally be able to instruct such who are tempted We begin with that efficiency given to God who comforteth is comforting and observe That as God is the God of all comfort so he doth actually put forth this comfort to those that are his Gods attributes may be truly affirmed of him though they never be put forth into act God would have been Omnipotent Mercifull Wise though he had not created the world only the creation of the world did demonstrate those Attributes Thus God may be called The God of comfort or a mercifull Father in respect of his Nature and Inclination though actually he doth not comfort any but God is a fountain communicating himself into streams of comfort he will make his people taste and feel what he is by Nature Now when it 's said That God comforteth you must understand this both in temporal and spiritual comforts
because none believe enough none love enough none are heavenly enough Several wayes the best Hearers may grow First In the amplitude of their knowledg They may know more things in Christianity than they did for seing we know but in part 1 Cor. 13. this light in our mind may still encrease more and more not indeed in more necessaries and Fundamentalls for then none could be saved because still ignorant of some Fundamental or other but in the Additionalls and Superstructures which have also a special use and efficacy to carry on the work of Salvation Even a Godly man may live in many Errors in many sinnes and not know them to be so as we see in many Ages when clearer light hath discovered that to be Superstition and a dishonour to God which was accounted once the great onour due unto him When God dispelled the Egyptian darkness of Popery from of the face of the face of the Church their Image-Worship their Indulgences their vowed Obedience and poverty which were admired as such eminent acts of Religion were manifested to be contemptible as having no foundation upon the Scripture and also very injurious to the Offices of Christ and in how many things do the best of men still continue ignorant and therefore with David though he had more understadding than his teachers are to pray that God would open their eyes that they might understand the wonderfull things of Gods law Psal 119. 18 Davids eyes were opened yet they must be opened more all the scales are not fallen from his eyes and therefore the Apostle prayeth for those Ephesians whose understandings were already enlightened Ephes 1. 17. that their eyes might yet be more opened and that God would give unto them the spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledg of him 2. By the Ministry they are to grow in the efficacy and experimental power of their knowledg For these two differ exceedingly men may grow much in speculative knowledg understand controversies in Divinity and dispute much about the Doctrines of the times that are agitated but unless a man grow in the savoury power of it he is but a tinkling cymbal if he do notgrow in the love of the truth if that knowledg doth not make him more pure more sanctified more reformed this will turn to his greater condemnation Therefore Tit. 1. 1. It s called the acknowledging of the truth which is after godliness Savanarola Hom. 3. p. 29. bringeth a distruction of Divinity out of Aquinas to this purpose a man may know a thing saith he either per modum studii or per modum inclinationis men may know many things by way of study in Divinity and yet not have the least knowledg of them by way of inclination to love and delight in them May not a man have obtained much discoursive knowledg about Christ in respect of his Person and Offices as to be able to confute Arrians and Socinians yet be far from that heavenly inclination which Paul found in himself to know nothing but Christ crucified and to judg all things dung and dross in comparison of this knowledg That knowledg then which doth bring a savoury tast and experimental inclination to the good things we know that is to be imbraced that we are to grow in more every day He that knoweth a Country or a City by a Map cannot be so affected as he that hath really seen it 3. We may by the Ministry have a continued benefit in respect of the firmness and strength of our faith It is noted sometimes of the Disciples that upon some miracle that was wrought by our Sauiour that then they believed Not but that they did so before onely their Faith was then more strengthened and confirmed and truly this firmness of Faith this steadfastness of it is a precious Antidote against all fickle and sceptical Opinions Men do not grow in Faith but fancy and that maketh inconstancy in Religion How can a man be a Martyr for Christs truth now can he lose all he hath rather than deny it unless he have this quieting and satisfying work of Faith upon the soul Hence Faith is called Heb. 11. 1. The substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Those two words substance and evidence do denote the great power that Faith ought to have upon the soul Again this firmness of Faith is not onely seen in dogmatical Assent but in in fiducial Application of the Promises to our selves in which sense it is said twice or thrice The just shall live by his faith Such are the weak actings of our Faith so strong are our temptations so supernatural and mysterious is this way of believing that all have cause to cry out with the Apostles Lord increase our faith Lastly The best hearers need the Ministry for increase in Godliness to grow in grace more Thus the Apostle writeing to those whom he supposeth as converted already yet exhorteth to put off the old man and put on the new To be renewed in the spirit of their minde Epes 4. 23. 24. And our Saviour prayeth for the Apostles even in that Prayer wherein he acknowledgeth that they had believed and received the word of God That they were not of the world John 17. 17 That God would sanctifie them by his word which is to be understood of the progress therein There is no Doctrine so practically opposite to the Scripture as that of Perfection for every where the Godly are commanded to grow to be mortifying the body of sin to be perfecting holiness which were ridiculous Exhortations if we had already attained Perfection Hence we are compared to those who run in a race and therefore till death do not come to our prize Thus where the Minister may have little to do in respect of Conversion it may have very much to do in respect of Edification And the Godly are to Examine whether every Sabbath day the Minister doth not come with a new benefit a new advantage to them look for a new grace and favour in every new Sermon And so we proceed to the Use which is of Instruction What all people should look at under the Ministry Spiritual advantages spiritual light spiritual heat spiritual quickenings As where Christ went up and down he healed their diseased people so where the word of God is preached it should heal soul-diseases Thou art not to have the Pride the passions the worldly cares as thou usest to have but oh how rare are such Hearers who aimeth at this who prayeth for this in every Sermon he heareth Oh fear least some spiritual judgment upon thee deprive thee of this benefit If an Israelite had looked upon the Brazen serpent and yet not be healed If a diseased person had stepped first in order into the Pool of Bethesda and yet not have been recovered they would have been greatly troubled to see their hopes frustrated No less ought it to make thee grieve and tremble
of God like Peters Angel doth break up all the strong bars of any prison we are in any difficulty we are afflicted with As Dalilah gathered Sampson loved her when he would manifest where his strength was so may we assure our selves of Gods love to us by revealing his promises oh if you bring the promises you binde the hands as it were of the Almighty he can do nothing against his promises when therefore any thoughts of Gods Majesty of Gods purity and holinesse may affright thee run to his promise and as the people of Israel when amazed under the terrible lightnings and thundrings at Gods presence in giving the Law cried out Let not God speak any more to us but Moses so do thou let not thy Majesty speak thy Justice speak thy Holinesse speak but thy Promise let that speak and we will hear Lastly The freenesse of Gods grace is made very glorious and resplendent in the promises of grace Free-grace is more than love or goodnesse and bounty for Adam while in the state of integrity had those but free-grace is only where a miserable and hopelesse sinner is Now to such an one belong only curses and threatnings when therefore in stead of a threatning like a roaring lion to devour thee thou meetest with a gracious promise to embrace thee this must needs rejoyce thy heart Go to the spring head of every promise and thou wilt finde it to be alone free-grace The Scripture useth these Arguments as equivalent to have a thing by grace to have it by a promise and to have it by faith for grace is the originall and fountain Promises are on Gods part the active and communicative means faith on our part is the receptive and applicative so that when we enjoy any mercy by Gods promise thereby is excluded all works and all boasting and thus God is altogether exalted and man debased Again if we come to the second particular there we shall see how that our Amen subscribed to the promises or our firm beleeving in them doth give glory to God and this is the more to be pressed because we are apt to have low thoughts of faith as we see in Popery where Charity is far preferred before it and withall to beleeve is accounted an easie thing Thus also the Papists charge us as if we made the way to heaven a broad way because we say they must beleeve that is the soul and life of all And further it is good to presse this because the people of God look upon faith as was hinted before only as their ease not as bringing any glory to God Hence though they never doubt whether they should repent of sinne or love God yet they do very much doubt about their duty of beleeving Now all this preposterousnesse ariseth from the want of consideration in this particular that Faith giveth glory to God as well as procureth mercies to our selves yea to beleeve in the promise is the great and signall eminent way of giving glory to God First because by beleeving in Gods promises we thereby proclaim our dependance upon him in all things that we live both spiritually and corporally upon him only so that faith in this consideration is the great duty of the first commandment That requireth us we should have no other Gods besides him Thus faith doth it taketh off from all supports of sence of second causes of all humane advancements and setleth us upon the promise of God alone Now must not this needs give glory to God when God alone is set up no creature no other help is looked upon This is that which maketh faith in the promises so difficult because it is so hard to be weaned from the breasts of the creature we know not how to swimme without these bladders Though we have ten thousand promises to support us yet one crosse providence doth more to unsettle us then all these promises to confirm and quiet us Some have observed that all the letters in the Name Jehovah are literae quiefcentes teaching us thereby to rest our souls alone upon him it may be that is too curious howsoever faith may be called the acquiescent or quietative grace therefore to beleeve in the promises is to give glory to God Secondly By beleeving in the promises we glorifie God because hereby we manifest him to be truth it self the supream and infallible truth Therefore the Scripture maketh the contrary to this a very hainous sinne highly dishonouring God as when it is said John 3. 33. He that receiveth the testimony of Christ which is by faith hath set to his seal that God is true Then on the contrary he that doth not receive it he setteth to his seal that God is a lyar Oh execrable blasphemy so much unbeleef is so much giving the lye to God and if this be so hainous a sinne then beleeving doth God as much honour And truly it must be unpardonable if we who do upon a mans promise rest our selves contented and never doubt of the performance especially when a just and honest man that we should not much rather rely upon God of whom the Scripture saith It is impossible he should lye Thirdly Herein doth beleeving in Gods promise so exceedingly glorifie God because it exalteth that Evangelicall way of our justification and salvation which God above all things purposed for his own glory The works of Creation are for the demonstration of Gods glory Whether we eat or drink we are to do all for the glory of God But the way of mans salvation is in a more signall and eminent manner ordered for Gods glory This is the mystery that hath astonished all the world This is that glorious truth which the Angels desire to search into more and more Now by faith this glory of God is published and acknowledged Take the despairing sinner look upon the damned in hell do they give God the glory of his grace and of his wisedom and mercy Do they with cordiall ravishments speak of the unsearchable riches of Gods grace in Christ No they cannot do it therefore the Beleever only is he who giveth God the glory due to him for all Gospel-wayes and all Evangelicall Priviledges Therefore hath God exalted Faith above all its fellow-graces because that above all graces doth give God the glory due to him Indeed in the state of Integrity their love of God had the preheminence as it shall also have in Heaven but in the state of grace there Faith hath the Excellency God hath taken off the royal Crown from that Vasthi and put it upon this Esther this despicable grace as it were and which hath no Pomp at all in it Only as it is said of Christ who being poor made many rich So this poor grace doth not onely enrich us but every way advanceth the Glory of God Insomuch that from the unbeleever God hath no more glory than if he had never sent his Sonne into the world No more
glory than if there were no promise no grace no mercy and pardon Let not then the People of God have low thoughts of Faith No thou dost more in beleeving and b●ingest more glory to God thereby than thou couldest do by all thy other obedience Shouldest thou mortifie sinne to thy desire Shouldest thou dye a Martyr for the Cause of God thou wouldest not so glorifie God as thou dost by beleeving I know this seemeth very Paradoxall to the humbled sinner I know he is difficultly perswaded that by trusting in God he doth thus glorifie God but if thou understandest the Scripture-way then thou wilt quickly see as to beleeve is the most difficult duty so it is the most consequentiall for Gods glory And indeed what have other Duties admirable in them that Faith it self in the Promise hath not in beleeving the understanding is mortified in beleeving the will is crucified in beleeving the Heart and Affections are martyred So that faith maketh a man to be offered up as an whole burnt-offering unto God Use of Instruction That the onely way to make a man live a joyfull life in himself and a glorifying life of God is by faith in the Promises This is that Faith by which a just man is said to live so that thy doubts thy fears thy unbeleeving thoughts these bring a dishonour to God these reproach the Gospel-way these obscure the honour of Christ Let then the godly soul take heed how it giveth way unto such temptations if your own consolation if the glory of God be dear unto you then bolt out unbeleef No wonder if the devil that is so great an enemy to the glory of God doth assault your souls most in this if he have broken down this part of the wall what legions of other sinnes may not he bring with them For this reason many Divines say Sola infidelit as damnat which is not to be understood as if other sinnes were not meritorious of damnation yea and did actually damn only that opposeth the Physician that would heal us that refuseth the atonement that is made for us Secondly As the Promises are thus to be improved for Gods glory by beleeving so also attend to another effect which the Scripture doth inferre from them and that is to cleanse our selves to be every day perfecting holinesse For so the Apostle notably exhorts us 2 Cor. 7. 1. Having these Promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit Promises are no waies incentives to sinne or encouragements to evil works No but a strong antidote against them Neither is faith in them a light superficiall assent swimming upon the heart as a fowl in the water said Luther but as water calefied doth no more manifest its own coldnesse but the heat of the water so doth faith fermentate and leaven the whole soul of a man that humane things do not so much appear as divine things in him As the Apostle expresseth the energy of it when he said I no longer live but Christ in me and that life is by faith in the Son of God Gal. 2. 20. Thou then that sayest all thy trust is in the Promises thou hopest in them for mercy and pardon Are they cleansing Promises purifying Promises Do they perfect holinesse every day in thee through the fear of God SERM. CXXIX Our Settlement and establishment in the faith of the Promises is the gracious work of God alone 2 COR. 1. 21. Now he which establisheth us with you in Christ and hath anointed us is God THe Apostle having formerly spoken of his constancy and unchangeableness in the preaching of the Gospel lest this should be attributed to his own power he informeth them who is the fountain of this strength even God himself For the Apostle doth upon all occasions delight to exalt grace having experimentally found the mighty work of it upon his own soul Or we may make the coherence this The Apostle in the verse preceding spake of the certainty of Gods Promises in themselves they were in themselves Yea and Amen which is called certitudo objecti though some learned men think that it is not a proper expression Now in this Verse he cometh to the certitudo subjecti or to show whence it is that the children of God have this assured perswasion in their own hearts that they are true and constant whence it is that we are able to give our Amen as a note of confirmation to them and therefore in the words we may take notice of The blessed and happy Effect it self and that is 1. Confirmation he which stablisheth 2. The Subject of this us with you 3. The Object in whom in Christ 4. The efficient Cause of this is God 5. The Illustration of this Establishment by a threefold Similitude of anointing sealing and giving the earnest 6. By whom God doth this and that is by his Spirit as it followeth in the next verse So that in these two Verses is the proper seat of that excellent and precious Doctrine Which is The assuring and sealing of the Spirit of God that is given unto Believers But I begin with the First It is God that establisheth us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though we render it now yet some make it causal for he that stablisheth us c. and that seemeth more probable The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Varinus maketh the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if the Adjective 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used by the Apostle 2 Pet. 1. 10. is made the same by Hesychius with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which cannot be shaken or altered this word is sometimes used of the Doctrine of Christ when that was confirmed and made sure by miracles or otherwise Mark 16. 20. Thus an oath is said to be the confirmation of the end of a strife Heb. 6. 16. or else of persons as here in the Text and Col. 2. 7. stablished in the Faith which being used passively denoteth that this strength and power we have cometh from God only That we of our selves are like reeds shaken with every winde It is the grace of God that maketh us pillars in his Church So that from the Text we may observe That our establishing and confirming in the faith of the promises is alone the gracious work of God Though the Promises be never so lovely and precious though never so profitable and necessary for us yet we are not able to rest our selves upon them but by the power of God strengthening us Our hearts do so quake and tremble with the consideration of our own sinnes and unworthiness that unless the Lord make it stedfast and immoveable we are tossed up and down like the leaves of a tree That it is God alone who doth thus preserve and confirm us is plain by that notable place 1 Pet. 5. 10. where the Apostle prayeth that God who had called them would make
the Rock followed the people of Israel in the wildernesse to refresh them this man may say verily God is here verily God is with me Lastly The Spirit of God doth give us Consolation by the antecedent workes of sanctification Rom. 8. 9. If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his But the godly they have received the Spirit of God And if the soul which is the spirit of a man manifest it self present in the body by its operations shall we not much rather thinke that the Spirit of Christ where it dwelleth in a man will make knowne it selfe Shall we have these coales of fire in our bosome and not perceive them Now there is an order in the works of Gods Spirit which we also must attend unto and not think to have one before the other The order is this the Spirit of God doth 1. Enlighten the minde 2. It doth sanctifie the will and affections 3. It doth witnesse and seale to us these blessed effects To looke therefore for consolation before sanctification is preposterous Oh how happy is it when the childe of God earnestly seeketh after all these effects upon his soule and that in the order God hath appointed These few qualifications may suffice by these and the like the Spirit of God doth confirme Onely you must know these doe but objectively offer themselves if the Spirit of God doth not rightly constitute our inward man and enable us all these blessed effects may be upon our soules and yet we be disconsolate as if we had them not Even as there may be pleasant flowers in a garden yet if we have not light we cannot see them So that the cause of assurance is more from the Spirit of God efficiently establishing the heart than from these qualifications which doe objectively onely declare themselves Even as in faith dogmatically assenting to divine truths the work of Gods Spirit is more upon the understanding giving firmnesse and stedfast adhesion than upon the motives of credibility in the truths themselves But what is necessary to a fuller clearing of this will upon another occasion be considered I proceed to the last thing in this Description and that is the final cause which is That under the sense of this we might live boldly c. I say under this sense For this sealing of Gods Spirit doth make such a divine impression upon the soule that we feele it and perceive it not indeed bodily as we doe the fire that burneth but rationally and spiritually in our inward man So that not onely grace is from Gods Spirit but the experimental feeling of it is likewise from the same Hence it is not to be called an humane but divine sense For a gracious constitution is required to feele what is grace and to discerne the effects thereof But I hasten This sense and apprehension of Gods sealing being thus experimentally in us we find a three-fold advantage thereby First We walke boldly confidently Insomuch that we can cry Father Ephes 3. 12. We have boldnesse and accesse with confidence There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are able to speake any thing in the presence of God whereas in fears and doubts our prayers are interrupted we question whether we may say this or that Secondly Hereby we walke comfortably Yea it is called Joy unspeakable 1 Pet. 1. 8. and Rom. 14. 17. Peace and joy in the Holy Ghost The Kingdome of God is there said to consist in this Alas how contrary doe the people of God walke to this Text for want of sealing as if godlinesse lay in doubts in fears and dejections of spirit Surely the people of God are to bewail their ignorance and low principles in these things Thou makest thy self to be like an heir under age as the Apostle alludeth Gal. 4. 1. and so not differing from a servant whereas the Gospel-light and Evangelical principles set home by the Spirit of adoption should fill thee with liberty and exceeding great joy Lastly Hereby we also live thankefully never satisfying our selves with admiring and commending the unspeakable and unsearchable riches of Gods grace Two great gulphs the Spirit of God hath delivered thee out of the sinfull lusts and corruptions thou didst once wallow in and the slavish sad tormenting feares thou wast once almost overwhelmed with Oh what cause is here of thankefullnesse How sorry art thou that thou art no more enlarged That thou hast but one heart and one tongue to be exercised in this matter And the aggravation of all this is that we may be thus bold joyfull and thankfull notwithstanding all discouragements to the contrary for they are many and dreadfull How many failings within How many temptations without What fiery darts from Satan And yet a sealed Christian is able to looke upon these with as much joy as the Israelites did upon the Aegyptian carcasses that lay dead upon the Sea-shore But if God should let open these flood-gates upon the most sanctified person he would be immediately swallowed up with them as Dathan and Abiram were suddenly in the earth And then Lastly You have the terme till which this sealing shall last and that is Till we are made happy compleatly in Heaven So Ephes 4. 30. We are sealed till the day of redemption This way of faith and assurance will then cease it will be turned into the immediate vision and fruition of God Then there will be no feares no doubts any more than lusts and corruptions How mercifull then is God that giveth us such manna in the wildernesse which will cease when we come into Canaan SERM. CXXXVII Whether all the People of God are his Sealed ones 2 COR. 1. 21. Who hath also sealed us THe nature of this sealing being largely described I shall conclude with an answer to that Question Whether all sanctified ones are Gods sealed ones for it might seem to be true of all seeing the Apostle speaketh universally in the person of beleevers who hath sealed us and Eph. 1. 13. those that beleeved were sealed there is no difference made neither are any exempted And not only by Scripture but by the testimony of many learned Protestants it should also seem so especially of such who defined faith to be an assurance for then if no assurance no faith To this purpose Calvin seemeth to speak on this very Text which Stapleten looketh upon as depraving the meaning of the Apostle Whosoever saith Calvin hath not the spirit of God a witnesse within him so that he can say Amen to God calling him to the certain hope of salvation he doth falso Christianum nomen obtendere pretend only to a Christian name not being so indeed To the same sense also in his Institutions lib. 3. cap. 2. par 16. Vere fidelis non est c. he is not truly a beleever who is not perswaded with a solid perswasion that God is a propitious and reconciled Father to him whereby he doth promise to
AN Expository COMMENT DOCTRINAL CONTROVERSAL AND PRACTICAL Upon the whole First CHAPTER OF THE Second EPISTLE of St Paul TO THE Corinthians By Anthony Burgesse Pastor of Sutton-Coldfield in Warwickshire LONDON Printed by A. M. for Abel Roper at the Signe of the Sunne in Fleetstreet near St Dunstans Church 1661. TO THE READER Reader AMongst the several reasons why there ought to be a special care and holy diligence in writing of Books these two are none of the least First A difficulty of having pure and right intentions therein even the Glory of God and the Edification of others For as in Preaching so in Printing Pride Vain-glory and Self-ends are apt to creep in whereby there is a temptation to accumulate those things which may be for ostentation more than utility And Euge Bernarde benè scribis may importunately presse it self into the heart as well as benèdicis Insomuch that we are to looke upon the time wherein we are preparing any thing for the publick view as the hour of temptation earnestly praying unto God for humility mortification and a publick frame of heart For as Gregory once said Tutius auditur veritas quam praedicatur The Auditor is in more safety while hearing than the Preacher while speaking because of the vain motions which are ready then to arise in the heart so is the Reader in lesse temptation than the Authour of the Book A second cause of such exact watchfulnesse is the difficulty of working those Truths in a savoury experimental power upon our own hearts which we communicate to others whereby we may fear least while we write for others we our selves be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unapproved Quid tibi proderit lingua aurea si cor ferreum VVhat will a Golden Tongue advantage if a man have a senslesse heart at that time This then is a cause of godly trembling Ne illae literae vicariae oris nostri in die judicii adversus nos proferantur as Tertullian said Least our writings witnesse against us as publishing those things the experimental power whereof we never felt upon our hearts Such considerations as these may be apt to deterre from writing For as for those ordinary and customary Apologies against the severe Momusses and sharp Aristarchusses of the world they are comparatively contemptible But yet though there be these Lyons in the way we are not through slothfulness to hide our talent in a napkin but where Opportunity offereth it selfe there to imbrace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the edification of others And I know no way so conducible to the spiritual advantage of others as the Interpretation and Explication of the holy Scriptures It s a pleasant and profitable work to be digging gold out of this mine to adorne the Temple of God to be cutting down timber out of this wood for Gods house to be plucking off the leaves and fruit of this tree of life which are both medicinal and alimental The Scripture is medicum myropolium an Apothecaries shop whereby all the spiritual diseases of the soul may be cured It 's Bellicum armamentarium a Magazine of warre by which all errours and here●ies are to be destroyed It is augustissimum sacrarium a●most august treasury of all spiritual good things How much better then is it to be gathering honey here than to sting in polemical Controversies To keep the sweetnesse and the fatnesse we may enjoy here than to be torne by these brambles Now among other parts of the Scripture I have taken the second Epistle of the Corinthians to comment upon and practically improve not onely because of the universal concernment of that excellent matter contained therein but also because there are few who have selected that Epistle on purpose to treat upon So that whereas there are many Books of the Scripture particularly expounded and illustrated by several learned Authours yet this hath been past by Yea when the former Epistle hath had its Commentators as Martyr Pareus Morton yet this hath been pretermitted As therefore God shall give life and opportunity I shall endeavour the true and sound Exposition of this Epistle especially so as to reduce all Doctrinals and controversals to practicals and experimentals which is the life and soul of all For to have Books only in our heads and not in our hearts doth bring as Solomon saith much wearinesse to the flesh yea sometimes much detriment as Gerson speaketh of a young man in his Tractate De simplificatione cordis who by an indiscreet laboriousnesse in reading Anselm's Meditations fell into such a bodily distemper that the very beholding of a Booke that was written would afterwards put him into an horrour and vertiginous giddinesse Thus worldly reading as I may so call it causeth death but spiritual and godly improving of the Books we peruse will be like oil to the wheels that the work of grace may succeed more prosperously I shall not trouble thee with an enumeration of what different and yet profitable matter is treated on in this first Chapter presented to thy view that is done to thee by another hand in the Table or Contents only my request is that the Errata which may some times be committed and the rather because of my distance from the Presse may not prejudice the Discourse And if in so long a Worke some things are spoken that required a more distinct Explication and further Illustration as haply upon a Review may appear cast this into the account of humane imbecillity For if even great Pillars of the Church have acknowledged that they did Scribendo proficere and Docere ut discant how much more ought Tantillitas nostra being conscious of my owne imbecillity It 's a true saying of Austins speaking of the imperfections of Readers and Writers in his Epistle to Euodius Epist 150. Laborant homines in discendo brevia non valent intelligere prolixa non amant legere laborant itidem in docendo qui pauca tardis multa pigris frustra ingerunt However let that which the Apostle saith to these Corinthians be also truly applicable to us That these things are not written with ink only but the Spirit of God not in Books only but in the flesbly tables of our heart So prayeth The affectionate well-wisher of thy Souls good Anthony Burgesse THE CONTENTS SERM. I. 2 Cor. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God and Timothy our brother unto the Church of God which is at Corinth with all the Saints which are in all Achaia WHy our Saviour is called Jesus Christ and Saul Paul who of a cruel Persecutor becomes a faithfull Preacher of the Gospel of Christ Why God of great sinners often maketh most eminent Saints SERM. II. Learning an excellent gift of God though through the corruption of man 't is often made an Engine to promote the Kingdom of the Devil yet by the grace of God 't is very usefull in his Church SERM. III. Paul's Name being prefixed to
God as the elder brother did the Prodigals conversion It is disputed by Casuists Whether a prophane ungodly Minister formerly though now truly converted is to be continued in his Ministry at least in that place where he hath lived so scandalously Some are rigid for the negative Yea the Novatians of old would not admit any Christian that had grossely sinned though repenting to Church-communion Others are more mollified and hold such Ministers truly manifesting their conversion and repentance ought to be received and that as Ministers again But the determination of this Case concerning a particular person would be difficult because circumstances may much alter the matter But in the general we see Christ appointing Peter to feed his sheep though he had apostatized in so dreadfull a manner Neither may we runne to that absurd and impious Position of some who said the Apostles delivered a more perfect way of Discipline than Christ did because say they Christ received Peter again and gave him Commission for his Apostleship through the whole world In the Old Testament David and Solomon are used as Pen-men of the holy Scripture though polluted once with sinne in a scandalous manner And here we see Paul though formerly a notorious sinner and adversary to the Gospel yet is appointed by God to be a chosen vessel to carry his name And certainly the receiving of such after their serious and publick satisfaction to the Church of God or to ministerial imploiment may be of great use For hereby he will be the more industrious and diligent to reduce other sinners especially such as he hath been an occasion to lead into sinne Thus David promiseth Psal 51. Then will I teach transgressors thy Law And Christ bids Peter When he is converted to confirm his Brethren Oh what zeal and holy revenge will seize upon such a mans heart to make all the world see that he would now set up the way of Christ as he did once the Devils way especially such as he hath been a means to seduce and harden in sin over those he will weep and mourn How greatly will this lie upon his heart such it may be will lie damned in Hell and I have been the cause of it It may be some are now in Hell cursing the day that ever I was a Minister or Pastor to them because I encouraged and made their hearts bold and glad in wickedness Oh then if such agonies and estuations be in their souls in what pain and travail will they be to snatch such out of the fire whom they have been a cause to thrust in Doth God sometimes call even great sinners and that to eminent honour in his Church Then here we see a notable encouragement even for the most prophane to hearken to these offers of grace Might not you justly have expected that God should have made your condition as hopeless as the Devil Though God would out of pity have converted some of mankind yet he might have barred out all such notorious and prophane sinners as thou art But oh the goodness of God that will not have thee to say My sins are greater than can be forgiven I am a viler person than grace ever can or will convert What May the Prodigal sonne not onely be received into favour but the Father will runne and meet him weep over him put honour upon him Why then doth not this kindle a fire in your bowels Why do you not cry even me even me Lord the chiefest sinner of many thousands do thou draw to thy own self From the second consideration of Paul be exhorted to pray to God that he would raise up many Pauls in his Church godly and learned Ministers that by godliness may subdue sinne and by learning may conquer heresies such as these are both burning and shining lights such as these are Stars indeed both for the light they give and the purity of their conversation Happy is the Church of God when such Stars shine in her If we have godly Ministers and not learned then the subtil Papist and Heretick will be ready to prevail If we have learned but not godly then all holy order will beneglected then prophaneness and impiety will lift up its head but both together make a blessed Church SERM. III. Paul's Name being prefixed to his Epistle shews it to be of Divine Authority though of it self not a sufficient Argument to prove it The Pen-men were only Instruments God the principal Author of the Scriptures and therefore we should rest satisfied with their style and method and not question their Authority How to arm our selves against the Devil and all Hereticks opposing the Divinity of the Scriptures 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. HItherto we have considered Paul under a two-sold respect there remaineth one more observable thing from the mentioning of himself which is not to be omitted For it may be demanded Why he prefixeth his name in this Preface And the Answer is That as he expresseth his calling of Apostleship to bring Authority to his person so he also mentioneth his name to obtain credit to what he doth write that they may be assured this is his Epistle and not sent to them by any other For if the Corinthians were ignorant of the Authour of it or that he was not one who was guided by the Holy Ghost they would not have much regarded it So that from hence observe Inasmuch that Paul ' s name is set to this Epistle it is thereby of Canonical and Divine Authority and so ought to be received with all faith and obedience Paul's Epistles were never doubted of except that to the Hebrews which is attributed to him as the Epistle of James the 2d of Peter the two last Epistles of John and the Revelation have been but were alwayes received into the Canon Indeed there were the Elioniti called so say some from the Hebrew word because they were poor and simple in understanding These with such succeeding them in many opinions did reject all Paul's Epistles not but that they thought they were made by him only they rejected his Doctrine because they thought he was an adversary to the Law and contrary to Moses This truth about the Canonical Authority of this Book and the rest in the Bible is of very great concernment not only because of the weighty controversies and disputes both of old and alate herein but also because of a practical consideration For though men do generally profess themselves to be Christians and say They acknowledge the holy Bible as of Divine Authority yet where is the man almost that liveth as if he did believe it to be a true Book For doth any wicked man that goeth on in his impenitent wayes believe the Word of God to be true that condemneth him that forbids and threatens his wayes that tels him assuredly that if it be true and the Word of God without reformation he will be as assuredly damned
this Salutation Some think because the work of the Ministry meets with much malice and froward opposition from wicked men which made Paul pray that God would deliver him from unreasonable absurd men who are led only by humours and passions not by Reason and Religion Therefore seeing those that do faithfully discharge their trust meet with little favour and love from men hence it is that he doth in a peculiar manner pray for mercy to them Others they think the word is inserted because of the great difficulty of the Ministry it being a burden too heavy even for Angels shoulders Insomuch that Chrysostome thought Few Church-officers could be saved Seeing then the work is so great so much grace is required to manage it and the best have failings therefore they need the mercy prayed for But this by the way Come we to the Text. In that we may consider the Matter prayed for And the Efficient Cause from whom it is to come The Matter and Benefit is set down in two words which though but two yet comprehend all that a godly heart can desire the first is Grace the second Peace In the original there is a defect and therefore most do supply it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as our Translators Grace be to you Though the Apostle Peter in the salutations of both his Epistles expresseth the word and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be multiplied and so Estius would supply it here but there is no inconvenience to keep to the former Interpretation 2. There is the Cause of this which is two-fold God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ All these parts shall be opened as we take them in order only let us first take notice of the Manner and End of this Salutation in the general That it is not for any earthly or worldly thing but what is spiritual The Grecians they used commonly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in their Salutations as the Latines Salve and are relating only to temporal welfare And indeed the Heathens knew no better but the Apostle would lift up our hearts to higher things The Apostle James Chap. 1. 1. writing to the dispersed Tribes useth the word only Greeting which made Cajetan among other reasons reject it as not Canonical as if such a Salutation savoured of an humane spirit But this is no Argument For the Apostles gathered together in a Councel at Jerusalem sending a Letter to the Churches abroad use no more Salutation than that only in that we are to comprehend whatsoever is more expresly in Pauls Salutation Seeing then it s only spiritual things which Paul here doth wish to them Observe That spiritual mercies and priviledges are to be desired above all earthly and worldly ones what soever The Grace of God and Gospel peace is infinitely to be preferred before any outward advantage Psal 4. 6 7. when David had represented the natural desire of every man unregenerated Who will shew us any good He presently demonstrates the clean contrary disposition of those that are godly and spiritual Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us and Thou hast put more gladness into my heart then they have had when their wine or oyl increaseth By David you may judge of all the faithfull they esteem more of the love of God and the sense or perswasion of this more than the whole world Let the prophane bruitish men of the world say as some did in Chrysostomes time whom he reproveth Give me that which is sweet although it choke me So let me have my pleasures my lusts though they damn me The godly on the other side if raised up to this heavenly transfiguration as it were to have the spirit of Adoption enabling them to call God Father and to walk under the light of his grace and favour they will say It is good to be here So that the desires and earnest longings of mens hearts do divide the world into two parts Some and they are only few who with David say As the Hart panteth after the water-brooks so do their souls after God Yea Their souls break for the longing they have to God at all times But then others they seek the things of this world in the first place Let them have their pleasures their wealth their honours then with the Reubenites they will sit down and go no further because they see the Land is a good and pleasant Land never desiring to go into Canaan To open this Doctrine consider First That all the while a man is meerly natural and dead in his sins he is not affected with nor can he desire any spiritual mercy Even as dead men are not affected with pleasant sights or melodious sounds No wonder then though we do out of the Gospel shew such all the glory of Heaven yet they will not fall down and worship Christ because they are no wayes sensible or apprehensive of a better good Can a Worm that crawleth upon the ground live the life of an Angel or a man Alas that knoweth nothing but to crawl on the ground and feed on the dust of the earth Thus it is with every carnal man speak to him of the savour of God of the light of his countenance he knoweth no more what you mean than the bruit beast doth what reason is Besides sinne hath so infected and polluted the heart and appetite of every natural man that he calleth good evil and evil good he takes sweet for bitter and bitter for sweet That as the Swine loveth to wallow in its mire and delighteth in that more than in the sweetest garden that is Or as they say of those blind Beetles that live in muck and dung but sweet things do presently kill them thus it is with every natural man he is not only not affected but he is contrarily disposed to heavenly things Rom. 8. The wisdome of the flesh is enmity against God The wisdome the best understanding parts and knowledge that he hath is as full of malice against holy things as a Toad of poison The Greek word doth not only signifie his intellectual but his practical wisdom and affection he doth not say He hath savoury knowledge of heavenly things Sapientia est sapida scientia And as Bernard Sapiens est cui res sapiunt prout sunt Heavenly things savour as heavenly earthly things as earthly But in every natural man his appetite and taste is wholly disordered he finds no excellency loveliness in heavenly things which yet to a gracious heart are matter of exceeding delight and ravishment Hence in the second place Till a man be regenerated till he be made a new creature and endowed with an heavenly heart he is no sutable subject for these heavenly things Every one then as he is affected and disposed so he judgeth if earthly then all his affections move that way if heavenly then they are turned the contrary way As you see in mixed and compounded bodies
what element doth most predominate accordingly is their motion either upward or downward now in this regenerate person his nature is now changed and he hath a spiritual resurrection that as the body when that shall rise will lose its gravity and burdensomness for we shall meet the Lord in the Air even with our bodies So the soul in this life made partaker of a spiritual resurrection hath cast off those burdens and clogs that did press it down to the creature and ascends up to communion with God and Christ And besides this general Cause there are some peculiar qualifications which provoke the godly man to esteem the Grace and Peace of God above all things As 1. The sense of the sting of sin and the bitter guilt thereof is that which makes a man go out of himself and all creatures to have some supply and comfort Alas the soul thus broken and contrite for sinne is like that diseased woman that had spent all she had upon Physicians and yet she was as bad as ever till Christ cured her So that the grace of God and Gospel peace is the only oil that can be poured into this wound Come to a David who complaineth God had hid his face yea his bones were broken and all his desirable things perish and tell him while thus affected That he had a glorious Kingdom many outward mercies and delights he might rejoyce in What good would this musick do to his sad heart Oh it 's something else that must cure him No creature no wealth can do it but peace from God and this made him while in those conflicts but getting some victory breathe out so affectionately Psal 32. 1. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no sinne not blessed is he who hath the good things and pleasures of the world who liveth at his hearts ease but whose sinne is pardoned Thus the guilt of sinne maketh him esteem Grace and Peace 2. Those spiritual desertions and temptations which sometimes the dearest of Gods children feel do make them esteem of the favour of God the possession of that more than any thing They sit as Rachel refusing to be comforted till they have obtained this How precious was the presence of Christ to the Church When she had lost him then she will hold him and not let him go as the night or the eclipse maketh the Sunne more precious Where there is nothing but sense of unworthiness what is more welcome than grace Where there is a desert of hell and damnation where the soul hath cause to expect nothing but the frowns and vengeance of God there to meet with grace and favour Oh how welcome is this Thus the heart which hath continual fears tumult and warre within it self to have peace and that with God such a peace as no outward misery can take away What unspeakable refreshments are these It is these dark and cloudy thoughts that make the least beams of Gods face shining upon them more than all the enjoyments of this world 3. The experimental taste and sweetness which they have of heavenly things maketh them undervalue all things else If the Prodigal after he had eaten of the satted Calf and been refreshed in his fathers house had returned again to his husks how unsufferable had it been This aggravated the Israelites ingratitude that after they had eaten Manna they should desire the garlick of Egypt The Apostle Peter 1 Pet. 2. 2 3. exhorting them to desire the sincere milk of the Word to be as much affected with it and delight in as children with their milk he addeth If so be ye have tasted how good God is implying that this tasting this experimental trial of the goodness and grace of God in Christ is that which will make them still long for more and more of God It 's no wonder that natural men are never affected with these Gospel-promises they never knew better they were never acquainted with better and therefore they cannot desire it but thou hast known how good God is thou hast had the first-fruits of Heaven and glory upon thy soul and therefore thou dost still importune for more and desire more of Gods presence never saying It is enough In the next place Let us consider the Reasons why the gracious heart doth thus desire heavenly things above all outward advantages whatsoever And First Because these spiritual objects have only universal sufficiency and fulness in them to satisfie and content the heart If God be reconciled if he be our God what then can be wanting to our happiness Thus David acknowledged when he said Whom have I in Heaven but thee and none in earth in comparison of thee And Psal ●3 how contented and happy is he in having God his God The creatures they are but as a drop they have only a limited goodness but God is the ocean there is nothing wanting Hence it is that because the glorified Saints have a beatifical vision of God therefore they cannot sin they cannot immoderately desire any thing else Secondly These spiritual mercies they are everlasting and eternal If the Apostle had wished honours wealth long life to them yet all these would have been but for a moment comparatively they could not have continued with them alwayes whereas the favour of God and the effects thereof they are to all eternity whom God taketh into his favour he never casteth out How many men have been in grace and favour with the Potentates of the world yet at last cast off and ended their dayes tragically Haman may be a constant instance of the inconstant grace and favour of men but whom God receiveth into this favour he will never abhorre again Such gifts as these are without repentence Oh then press hard for this use an holy violence for this This will never leave thee till it hath made thee eternally happy The Manna that was gathered for any day of the week would last but that night but that which was treasured up for the Sabbath-day would continue longer Thus the things laid up for this life they will quickly vanish but what is in reference to Heaven and our Sabbath or rest there that will continue alwayes Use of Instruction To teach us what we are most to desire for our selves or others What should Ministers most wish for the people even that they might have this grace this peace in the Text And you should above all things desire it for your selves Oh then take heed of such wayes such courses as drive away Gods grace and his peace What peace can there be as Jehu said as long as whoredoms were in the Land See that notable place Isa 57. 21. There is no peace saith my God to the wicked What canst thou expect Gods grace to pardon while thou hast no grace in thy own heart This also teacheth parents what they should in the first place pray for their children as also friends for their acquaintance even this grace of God How
shels in comparison of that Manna that spiritual favour I am made partaker of As therefore the spiritual man when in outward miseries and straights is not so much grieved under those outward calamities as because he hath sinned and God is offended So neither in outward mercies is the same gracious soul so much affected with the comforts it enjoyeth as that the light of Gods countenance doth shine upon him that he hath an evidence of propriety and interest in Christ this he would not lose for all the Kingdoms of the world Let us press this the more because even the most holy are apt to be affected more with sensible mercies than spiritual Nature teacheth them the one but Grace the other For as we are apt to desire temporal things above spiritual so also to be affected with and bless God for one more than another But take these few Motives to provoke thee to bless God for spiritual mercies which are of two sorts External as the means of grace and the Ordinances or Internal the inward sanctification and justification of our persons As 1. That if thou hadst more mercies than Solomon if thou hadst all thy soul can desire in these outward things yet if without spiritual mercies thou judgest thy condition is cursed and to be lamented Therefore Psal 4. when the natural persons of the world cried out Who will shew us any good David as knowing a better and more solid good prayeth God would lift up the light of his countenance upon him And therefore he that hath the least drop of grace is more bound to bless God then he that may have all the glory and plenty in the world Oh then why art thou not more sollicitous saying what is this wealth without Gods favor What is it to say this house is mine this estate is mine but am not able to say God is mine but if God doth evidence himself to thee then over-look all thy outward comforts put the Ecce the Selah upon what is spiritual This is like the Sunne which is farre above all the Starres It is this that makes all outward mercies mercies they are no wayes good to thee but snares and temptations to draw out thy sins So that thy condemnation in hell will be the hotter if thou doest not enjoy spiritual mercies with them 2. Be in the first place affected with spiritual mercies Because Christ shewed his love to thee most in these it was for these he died The Scripture doth exceedingly commend to us the love of Christ in his death Now what are the effects of Christs death Are they chiefly to make us rich great or honoured in this world No it is for remission of sinne it 's for holiness and power over the Devil Certainly if Christ died to purchase these for thee thou art very unthankfull if thy heart be not most inlarged to bless God for them 3. Spiritual mercies are the chiefest object of our praises Because these onely can truly satisfie the soul these only are a sound cause of rejoycing The heart of a man is never satisfied with temporal mercies but the more he drinketh of them the more thirsty still he is When Solomon hath made an experience of all his Motto is That they are vexation of spirit as well as vanity whereas the pardon of sinne and the Spirit of Christ working in us these afford uninterrupted causes of joy 4. The soul-mercies will abide for ever thou canst not lose thy title and interest in them but all these earthly comforts are as the flower which presently withereth thou hast them to day and they may be removed to morrow Be sure then that thy blessing of God keepeth that method which the nature of mercies doth require above all things Let thy soul melt with joy in blessing of God for what he hath done to thy soul Lastly Consideration remembring and fixed meditation upon the mercies of God is that which will greatly inflame the soul to give all glory and honour to him The heart is not easily and quickly put into a blessing frame there must be polishing and fashioning of it and there is no such way for this as true consideration When David calls upon himself so much to glorifie God this implieth that he found his soul dull heavy and unfit for that duty The heart will not boil over in meditation unless it be long upon this fire Psal 45. 1. David there calls his inditing the boyling or bubling of his heart we are apt to forget Gods mercies or when we do think of them they are but transistory and ambulatory It is Gods goodnesse or I bless God and there is all whereas when we bless God our souls should be raised up into divine inflammations we should be as Elijah who was carried up to Heaven in a Chariot of fire whereas the soul is at other times abridged or epitomized but in short characters in the praises of God it should be voluminous as you see David in Psalms 103 104 105 106 and 107. very large in the enumeration of all Gods benefits which intimateth That the soul ought to be extended in all its dimensions while it sets upon this work And certainly meditation is like the birds sitting on the egge not leaving it till it hath produced a live young one This will so often work upon the soul that at last there will be heavenly and supernatural life for several aggravations will the meditating heart find in every blessing it doth possess As 1. It will admire the power and strength of God in every mercy especially in soul-mercies That God should change such a stubborn heart as thine was That God should give thee eyes to see that hast been blind so long That God should give thee life who wast dead and putrifying in the grave of sinne This will make thee wonder at the glorious power of God Again The Wisdome of God if that be considered in every mercy this will also greatly inlarge to thankefulnesse Gods mercies are not only mercies in themselves but they come in such fit seasons they are at such times and opportunities that this maketh them double mercies and so some have observed this difference between blessing and praising of God Blessing of God is because of the goodnesse of the mercy Praising is for the wisdome and curious workmanship of God as it were in that mercy As if a friend who also was himself the maker of a curious Watch should bestow it upon you as a gift you would not only thank him for his love but praise his skill and art likewise Thus we are not only to consider the mercies God giveth us but the wisdome that God demonstrateth at that very time making every mercy to be with an aggravation Again Meditation will inflame by apprehending of Gods freenesse in every mercy and our unworthinesse We could do nothing that may provoke God especially this we are to aggravate in our spiritual mercies as Paul doth often excluding
our works and giving all to the grace of God who worketh according to his own purpose and will Oh what coals of fire will this be in thy bosome To think why doth God do this to me What moveth him Is God necessitated to it Can he not do otherwise Would he be unjust if he did it not And this further will be aggravated when we consider the mercy comparatively with others that want such if for spiritual mercies we compare them with the damned Angels that are utterly cut off from the least crum of any spiritual mercy though so noble and excellent creatures may not this astonish thee And if thou sayest These are not of the same nature with thee How many are there of the same flesh and bloud in the same vicinity where thou livest of the fame calling and profession yea of the same parentage and yet they are forsaken by God and left to their natural deserts whereas he hath pitched his favour upon thee to justifie sanctifie and at last to glorifie thee Certainly thou art a stock and a stone if such discriminating mercy as this doth not affectionately possess thee In the last place The universality of the mercies thou enjoyest will much heighten in the consideration of them All that thou seest thou hearest thou eatest thou feelest yea thou thinkest and apprehendest is a mercy There is nothing within thee without thee or about thee but it is a mercy To hear is a mercy to see is a mercy to think without madness and distraction is a mercy Every thing that is not hell is a mercy to thee All the creatures as Psal 8. the Sunne the Sturres the beasts of the field are wholly mercies if then a man set himself to meditation after this manner will he not find the goodness of God like Ezekiels waters To ascend higher and higher till they come over his head But to finish at last this Subject take notice of the encouragements to this duty of a thankful blessing and praising soul that so if thy heart at last be throughly raised up to this duty thou mayest praise God for this truth that provoketh thee to praise him And First The more thou blessest God the more wilt thou have cause to blesse him For to the thankfull heart God multiplieth his mercies as many times because thou doest not take notice of his goodness to thee or lookest upon his mercies as a debt to thee or thou takest the mercies God hath given thee and usest them as weapons against him therefore he taketh away thy mercies from thee to make thee prize them the more whereas to the soul that taketh every mercy as the hen every drop of water and immediately looks up to Heaven that will take up every fragment that nothing be lost As thou blessest God declaratively God will bless thee really Christ will bless thee as he did those few loaves by multiplying of them Secondly Consider this is all thou canst do to God for all his several mercies What doth God require of thee after all that he hath done for thy soul and body Is it any thing else but to magnifie his name to give him the glory of it And this doth not at all adde unto the greatness of God he is not made the more perfect and blessed in himself by all the glory thou givest to him So that indeed it is the greatest glory that thou art capable of that God will accept of blessing from thee that he will own praises out of thy mouth that he doth not rebuke thee as Christ did the Devils when they confessed He was the Son of the living God Thirdly This blessing and praising of God will keep thee in a joyfull active and fruitfull way Those that sing at their work dispatch it with greater facility And thus it is the soul filled with cordial thankfulness to God doth more for God then many others who are clogged with dejecting and discouraging thoughts See whether the cause of all thy heaviness yea the prevailing of lusts and passions upon thee be not want of chearfull blessing of God The joy of the Lord is our strength Lastly Consider the example of David how unwearied he is in this work never thinking that his soul doth enough herein and therefore because he cannot discharge this duty to his desire he calls upon all the creatures of the world almost to help him therein yea the very Ice and Snow and such inanimate creatures how much more Angels and men must joyn with him to praise God In Austin's time some were named Deo gratias certainly we should so abound in this duty that it may be truly said unto God as Psal 22. Thou inhabitest the praises of Israel SERM. XXXI How Christ is the Sonne of God And how the consideration thereof is the foundation of all a Christians comfort 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ THe Duty of Blessing with the Object of it being dispatched let us now come to that Amplification and Illustration which the Apostle ufeth in describing of it And The first is From a personal and relative respect The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Even the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That particle is by way of interpretation and explication What he meaneth by God viz. That he doth not take the word as it is often absolutely for the essence of the Divine Nature as common to the three Persons but relatively and in the distinct personality of the first Person and therefore said to be The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ For the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Stephanus observeth may be rendred by Et sed tunc etiam c. as the subject matter requireth The Apostle doth in other places delight to use this expression Rom. 15. 6. 2 Cor. 11. 31. Ephes 3. 14. In which places the Apostle seemeth with much affection and cordial enlargement to make mention of this relative Title in God the Father for this is the treasure of our comfort herein are all our mercies contained that we and Christ have the same Father he by Nature and we by Grace So that we are not to consider of Gods paternal relation to Christ as a speculative doctrinal truth but as practical and the ground of all consolation to us Hence John 20. 17. Christ by way of comfort tells them He ascends to his Father and their Father And indeed without Christ we cannot behold him as a Father but as a severe and dreadfull Judge Only when we say this Doctrine of the Fathers relation to Christ a Sonne is so full of comfort you must not understand it absolutely and nakedly as the second Person in the Trinity but as assuming the humane Nature into a Personal Subsistency Therefore he saith The Father of Jesus Christ which is the description of his Person in both his Natures So that we must not look upon the Sonne as the second Person alone in
causeth much joy in the heart God therefore is called the God of comfort in this respect that though for just and wise ends he will not deliver his people from sad exercises yet he will in those exercses give them such strong cordials and sweet revivings that they shall not only have patience to bear them but even joy in them So that in the words we may take notice of what he is said to be a God and then the Extent or Universality of it a God of comfort and a God of all comfort The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used sometimes for exhortation and sometimes for comfort for exhortation Act. 13. 15. Rom. 12. 8. and for comfort in many places In 1 Cor. 14. 3. there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exhortation and comfort put together Some say therefore is the same word put for exhortation and comfort because spiritual consolation is hardly received by the afflicted humbled sinner and therefore he must again and again be pressed and exhorted to entertain it for the Devil is the prince of darkness and father of terrors and fears and so immediately opposite to this glorious Attribute in God The God of all comfort The holy Ghost from this word is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Comforter So that although by way of oeconomy it is attributed to him in an appropriated manner yet that doth not exclude the Father For opera ad extra sunt indivisa but as was formerly said this fountain doth not need any stone to be removed from it and therefore we may immediately drink of it Observe That God is a God of all comfort to such as are his The Apostle is not content to call him only the Father of mercies but as a further aggravation of his goodness represents him to us as a God of all consolation For though he be a Father of mercies yet because a Father he doth chasten and correct us it is necessary therefore that under those corrections we should be supported by heavenly consolations from him Rom. 15. 5. Paul doth in that place also style him The God of patience and consolation the God that giveth us to be patient and lowly under his hand For who is not furious and fretting against God under chastisements if God give not a meek and patient spirit But that is not all he is also a God of consolation that is more than patience he giveth songs in the night he turneth our water into wine Though tears may be for a night yet joy cometh in the morning But let us consider how much is comprehended in this expression The God of all consolation wherein every word hath some emphasis As First In that he is said to be a God of comfort a God that intimateth these things to us 1. That he hath a supream power and independent Dominion and Sovereignty over us whereby he distributeth comfort when where and to whom he pleaseth For in being a God of it that supposeth all comfort is at his command he makes it go where he goeth and he taketh it away where he pleaseth Hence we read in Scripture a cup of consolation Jer. 16. 7. and a cup of salvation Psal 116. 3. and Psal 23. 5. David speaketh of his cup running over that is a cup of gladnes and joy Now why is it called a Cup Expositors say It 's an allusion to the master of a feast amongst the Jews whose custome was to assign the Cup of praise and thanks to those who were to drink of it In that then it is called the Cup of gladnesse that supposeth it to be a cup in Gods hand who is the chief governour of the world and that he giveth those to drink whom he approveth of Even as the Scripture speaks also of a Cup of astonishment a cup of anger and fury in his hand which he will make nations to drink off whether they will or no Jer. 25. 28. God then hath a cup of joy in his hand and he giveth his people to drink of it when he pleaseth we cannot have joy and comfort when we please The godly afflicted soul would give a world for comfort in his heart but he cannot procure a drop to his own soul by his own power 2. He is a God of consolation and that supposeth him to be alone the efficient cause of it That if we would have our sad and darkned hearts filled with joy it is God alone that can do it So that as he is called The God of all grace because there is no grace whether outward or inherent that we are made partakers of but it cometh alone and freely from God the fountain So is he also the God of all comfort because it 's he alone that worketh this comfort in us The least affliction the least sinne in its guilt would be enough to overwhelm us did not God come in with comfort David under the sense of Gods wrath for his sins and complaining of his broken bones Psal 51. doth earnestly pray to God To restore joy to him again Alas he was never able to bring joy more into his soul But as when the Sun is set all the men in the world cannot make it rise again it would be perpetual night if God did not make the Sunne to arise So the godly heart humbled for sinne would find continual blackness and horrour would be in a perpetual hell if God did not create light in that soul Hence Gal. 5. Joy is made the fruit of the Spirit because it 's the Spirit of God that can only comfort the heart truly Indeed there is much carnal and worldly joy that men may for a while sport themselves with but this is no true enduring comfort It is but a vapour a dream a blaze like the tickling upon a scratch that leaveth more smart afterwards He is therefore a God of consolation because God only can vouchsafe it 3. He is the God of comfort because whom he will comfort shall be comforted As he makes men drink the cup of his anger whether they will or no so even those humbled souls who with frowardness and unbelief set themselves against comfort they do with Rachel refuse all comfort yet God doth wonderfully bring comfort into their hearts How subtil and resolute are sometimes Gods own servants while in darkness to argue against and resuse the comfort that the Ministers of the Gospel bring to them They will not let the good Samaritans pour oyl into their wounds But when God cometh with comfort then these boisterous winds and waves will presently be silent Hence David Psal 4. acknowledgeth God had put more comfort in his heart then they had in the abundance of all earthly joy God did put it into his heart even with a kind of holy irresistibleness when he comforts neither sinne or the Law or the Devil can discomfort Insomuch that it 's great matter of praise to God when the
That spiritual comfort comes alone from God is plain because the Spirit of God is called the Comforter We cannot have one drop of heavenly consolation till Gods Spirit infuse it into us If the children of God could have comfort when they will would they walk so disconsolately and cry out of their dark troubled souls as they do but then even earthly comfort to take delight in the lawfull contentments God doth allow us to take delight and joy in these corporal mercies this is also from God Eccles 2. 24 26. Eccles 3. 13. Eccles 5. 18. You see the Wiseman affirmeth it often That a man cannot take any joy or delight even in those lawfull things unless it be given him of God All comfort then of all sorts ariseth from him But let us consider the way or manner of Gods comforting For as it is a great and profitable Question to examine How God doth convert and sanctifie so also how he doth comfort And First You must lay this foundation That God doth comfort two wayes either immediately when he doth by himself work upon the soul Or mediately when he comforteth by such means as he hath appointed thereunto Let us then in the next place consider What are those immediate workings of God upon the soul whereby he maketh the heart joyfull For David Psal 4. saith God had put more joy into his heart then any man can have in the abundance of all temporal mercies And First Therefore God doth comfort by illuminating and opening the understanding and opening the understanding to know and see the grounds and reasons of comfort And certainly this is of great conducement to have the heart comforted when the understanding is rightly convinced of the grounds of comfort For as the dark night is apt to beget fears and terrours so darkness in the understanding is a great cause of all that terrour and disconsolateness which Gods own children may many times lie under So that as God in conversion and humiliation for sinne begins with conviction upon the heart so also in consolation and comfort The great impediment to a godly mans comfort is want of spiritual knowledge and conviction about the causes of comfort As it was with Hagar in the wilderness she sate weeping for her child and gave over all as desperate till God opened her eyes and made her see a fountain Thus the broken heart judgeth it self in a wilderness destitute of all comfort seeth nothing but matter of despair and damnation till God enlighten the understanding about comfortgrounds in the Gospel As for example when the Spirit of God enlightens us to receive comfort it giveth us the eye salve 1. To look upon Christ revealed in the Gospel as the full cause and ground of all our comfort as well as on sinne Generally the people of God in the first workings of the soul look upon nothing but their sins behold nothing but sinne but God will not let them alone in this agony he enlightens them further that they shall see Christ as well as sinne the Gospel as well as the Law he giveth them eyes to behold the brazen Serpent when stung Hence the Spirit of God John 16. 9 10. doth not only convince of sinne but of righteousness also The Devil he indeed moveth in those troubled waters of thy soul and would keep thee off from Christ as the Disciples did the blind man but the Spirit of God will not leave the soul in these wounds in these straits but doth carry him up from the mount of cursing to the mount of blessing And certainly the wise men could not more rejoyce to see the starre than the godly heart doth to behold Christ after the storms and tempests in his soul Hence the Apostle Gal. 1. calleth it The revealing of the Sonne in him This then we are inabled to do by God not only to know sinne in the terrour and sting of it but also Christ in his fulness and excellency How was Paul affected with this 2 Cor. 2. 1. I desire to know nothing but Christ crucified This therefore is a special work of God to make us look with both eyes to make thee see sinne as well as Christ and Christ as well as sin 2. As God doth convince the soul of Christ what a full and glorious Saviour he is so also in the second place Of our duty to receive him and to lay hold on him And this is a further step to comfort when God doth so farre open the eyes as to see not only a full and sufficient Christ but also that it 's a duty in particular to apply this Christ and to rest upon him for comfort and salvation This is a further discovery still Paul said Gal. 2. Who gave himself for me and loved me And Thomas said My God and my Lord. It is one of the blessed truths discovered in the Reformation out of Popery That it is not our duty to believe in the general onely that Christ is a Saviour but to rest on him also for the pardon of my sinnes That this is the Faith that justifieth That this is most acceptable and precious unto God That unbelief not only in the general but as it faileth in this particular in not applying in not appropriating Christ to the soul is that which will damn a man Oh then what blessed and comfortable light is that which God bringeth into the soul when he shall make thee see that though a sinner though burdened though unworthy yet it 's thy duty to go to Christ to be eased That he commands thee with that woman not only to touch the hem of his garments but to lay hold on Christ himself This particular faith is that which the soul is hardly convinced of Though others may draw nigh to Christ yet may I But he cometh at last to be perswaded of this truth 3. God comforts by enlightning the mind that a comfortable joyfull life arising from peace with God is a most acceptable thing to God that it brings honour and glory to God and that on the other side to walk heavily and in a dejected manner is to dishonour and reproach God That God doth not only look to our gracious walking but also to our comfortable walking and that we demonstrate the Kingdom of Heaven to be begun in us in joy as well as in mortification Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God is righteousnesse and joy in the holy Ghost You see Joy as well as Righteousnesse The children of God they are not quickly perswaded of this they think such as they are may not walk comfortably It 's not for them to rejoyce but at last they come to see that they were sinfully kept up by slavish fears and servile dejections that the Kingdome of God requireth Consolation as well as Sanctification Thus you see the first general way how God comforteth viz. by enlightning the mind Secondly and principally God comforteth By preparing and fashioning the heart by making it
perswaded this as a special help to premeditate on evils before they came Others they refused this as making a man miserable before he was so Others supported themselves with the thoughts of necessity and that it could not be otherwise But of all these we may say as Job to his friends Ye are miserable comforters and are of no more advantage then the rending of garments or pulling off the hair in grief which Bion derided in one as if a bald head would take away grief We therefore conclude That no Philosophers had the true art or grounds of comfort and that 1. Because they were wholly ignorant of Jesus Christ in whom alone is all the cause of comfort Therefore he is called our Peace and he is said to be the Prince of peace Foelicissimum est cui non est opus foelicitate and such an one is the man in Christ for he will never thirst more than hath drunk of that fountain No sinne no guilt no curse can be removed but by the bloud of Christ Insomuch that all their Philosophical precepts about comfort were as the influence of the Moon which doth rather rotten than ripen in respect of the Sunnes influence 2. They were without the Spirit of Christ the efficient cause of comfort Christ is the subject matter in whom alone we can have comfort and the Spirit of God is the efficient cause that doth alone give a comfortable and glad heart 3. They were altogether unbelieving of a Resurrection to leternal glory which is an admirable ground of all true joy This the Apostle presseth against immoderate sorrow about those that are dead Not to grieve as those that are without hope Lastly They were wholly unacquainted with the life of faith that is only instrumental to receive joy Use of Exhortation in all thy tribulations to look up to God in Christ for comfort Thou runnest to this creature to comfort and thou thinkest this and that condition would comfort thee but how can the chanel have any thing in it if the fountain doth not give it Say not it 's thy affliction so greatly to be aggravated that makes thee disconsolate No it is for want of Gods presence in it SERM. XXXIX What are these Apples which Christ refresheth his Spouse with Or what are those Scripture-grounds of comfort which support the hearts of Gods children under all their afflictions 2 COR. 1. 4. Who comforteth us in all our tribulation THere is no tribulation either for the kind or degree of it but God can and doth comfort his people therein It is therefore requisite to know what are those cordial comforts what is that balm and oyl by which he healeth the wounds of his afflicted ones For seeing Gods comforts do farre exceed all Philosophical remedies as much as the Sunne doth a Gloworm And Paul's admirable temperament I know how to abound and how to want doth infinitely transcend that so much celebrated carriage of Socrates who was noted to be alwayes Eodem vultu let whatsoever befall him It is very usefull to know what are these Apples of comfort as the Church calleth for Cant. 2. 5. And the rather this is to be done because many of Gods children are deficient in a three-fold respect about Gods consolations For either 1. They are in a great manner ignorant of what foundations and sure grounds they have of comfort They do not know what fountains of living water they may abundantly bathe themselves in They are as Elisha's servant who though there was a great host of Angels to help him yet he did not see them So that the Spirit of God doth not only illuminate us in the matter of duty but also in matter of comfort hence he is called The Comforter Or 2. Though they know many arguments of comfort yet their memory faileth them that in the very hour of their temptations in the midst of their furious assaults they forget what comfortable supports they might make use of So that it is good to preach of these principles of consolation that thereby we may be remembrancers to you and put you in mind of that joy which in the midst of your afflictions your corruptions and the Devils temptations are so apt to strike out As the Disciples were sometimes blamed for their forgetfulness they did not remember the miracle of loaves Thus also the children of God may often rebuke themselves and with David say Why wast thou cast down O my soul And why wast thou so troubled within thee Hadst thou thought on such a promise such a place of Scripture Hadst thou remembred such a precious and sweet truth the temptation had not prevailed so much upon thee Come we then to lead you up into the Mount of transfiguration let us see even in this life as farre as our narrow hearts can comprehend What are the good things God hath prepared for those that love him And First Take this for a foundation That God comforts only through and by the Scriptures He must enter into this pool that will feel these consolations descending upon him he must buy this field of the Scriptures that will have this pearl hidden there The Spirit of God is that indeed which doth efficiently reach to the soul and make it to receive comfort but the means by which or the harp as it were whereby the evil spirit of sorrow and dejection is removed is by the word of God So that as the Spirit of God doth powerfully change and alter the heart yet the word is organically and instrumentally used for that end So though the Spirit of God be the Comforter yet it is through the Word Hence the Apostle Rom. 15. 4. That we through comfort of the Scriptures might have hope And David doth not only admire the word of God because it fore-warneth of sinne quickeneth up to duty but also because it was a reviving comforting Word whereby he was kept from fainting and being utterly overwhelmed in his troubles And this is the more to be considered by the godly that so they may not be deluded by false joyes When the Devil is said to transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. that is into light of comfort as well as of truth There are false joyes there are comforts from the Devil as well as doctrines of the Devil The Papist hath his comforts The Socinian the Antinomian all these have a spirit of delusion in their joyes as well as in their opinion The Spirit of God doth first lead into truth before it vouchsafeth comfort But we detain you too long The first ground therefore of Scripture that may be had out of the treasury thereof is this viz. That all the tribulations we fall into they are precisely determined by God as a Father out of much love both in regard of the beginning of them the degree of them as also the continuance of them And if this truth be well rumiated and digested here is
experimental knowledge which may be accompanied with some kind of sensible affections Mat. 13. the temporary believer received the word with joy You see then that some may have joy and that from the Word yet this not be the true saving knowledge or faith Heb. 6. some are there also said not only to be inlightened but to have tasted the good word of God Here you may observe that some may tast may have joy all which do inferre some affectionate inward experimental workings on the soul and yet not attain to have the true and honest heart And the reason is because these affectionate workings they are but transitory they quickly vanish away There is no setled constancy or permanency in them So that we are not to give credit to all the affections nor to all inlargements that we may find in our selves even about holy things but we are to be sure that there be deep rooting enough Hence Fourthly All experimental workings of the soul are to be judged and tryed by the Scripture Our hearts being full of guile and imposture the devil also transforming himself into an Angel of light hence it may come about that we may have the experience of much joy of many inlargements and yet all the while be in the devils waies Hence it is that all Sectaries almost will tell us of the great support and comfort they have had and that ever since they embraced those new waies yea some make themselves to be the only spiritual men that all other are in the flesh as Tertullian wrote a Book against the Orthodox stiling it Contra Psachicos as those that were meerly natural in the mean time he pretended to private revelations The experiences therefore which we find in our souls we must examine and try lest we make that to be of God which is indeed of the devil No doubt many deluded souls in dangerous and damnable waies comfort others of the same way with them by that comfort wherewith they are comforted not of God but of the devil Therefore let our experiences especially of comfort be judged by the Word in these Particulars First In the manner and way how thou comest by them Are they by the Scriptures truly understood I say truly understood For if thou abusest Scripture putting thy own sense upon it and thereby receiving comfort it is no longer then Verbum Dei but verbum tuum thou wrestest it and makest it thy own or the devils and not Gods If therefore thy experience of comfort be grounded on the Word if thy consolation flow from hence then this will abide That we through comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15. 4. The Spirit of God doth first lead into all truth and then into all comfort Secondly In the original and the efficient cause is it from God from the Spirit of God Or from the devil who may harden thy heart and make thee have such joy as mad men have not feeling their own misery The comfort and the joy that is truly so is still attributed to God and the Holy Ghost as the fountains thereof Thirdly Doth thy experience of Consolation make thee more humble and empty Doth it drive thee out of all thy vain carnal confidences This argueth it cometh from God if with the Centurian when Christ cometh to thy soul thou sayest Lord I am unworthy this joy this consolation should enter into me And therefore the more comfort the more lowly and debased in thy own eyes And never more then when the most joy This is a good experience of comfort as coming from God So also if this comfort be conducing to holinesse if by this thou art more quickned to mortifie sinne to subdue the corruptions that remain if this be like oyl to the wheeles thou art more fervent more zealous in all holy duties then make much of this comfort for it cometh from Heaven If then we have the experience of Gods working upon our souls both in the way of grace and the way of comfort then and never till then are we fitted to deal with the souls of others And there are these Reasons First None can wisely be a Physician to heal a disease in another unlesse he have skill and understanding in the nature of it and the fit remedy for it Now while a man hath no experimental knowledge of Gods workings upon his own soul he hath no skill no heavenly heart about the diseases in others souls Bring a poor wounded soul that is burdned with sinne that would be directed into Evangelical comforts to a Pharisaical self-righteous Doctor and alas he will as Ely thought the poor weeping woman bitter in soul and praying to God to be drunk so will these think such an one mad and foolish Hence you heard Christ would be tempted as we are that he might succour those that are tempted that he might have the tongue of the learned to speak to such who are weary Those that have not been thus humbled thus exercised thus comforted they are no waies able to be any helpfull comforters but like the Priest and the Levite will passe by those who are thus wounded Secondly As such can have no skill or understanding so they cannot have any sutablenesse of pity and compassion to those that are so afflicted in spirit and needed comfort She said Non ignara mali miseris c. The experience she had of miseries made her pity those that were in the like God would have the Jews be kind to strangers because they had once been strangers themselves Thou that hast been in the deep waters of Gods wrath thou that knowest how insupportable it is to feel the frowns and wrath of God for sin with what melting bowels with what pittifull affections wilt thou be like the good Samaritan Hence it is that as the Lord Christ himself did conflict with the wrath of God being in unspeakable agonies so also many of the choicest servants of God especially Ministers have been under the harrow and hammer of these desertions that they may be more polished for Gods building Luther doth manifest in several places what the great works of God were that he felt on himself so that though of a stout and undaunted spirit yet the anger of God did beat him to powder and finding no help for his afflicted soul in any Popish Principles no more then the Dove could place of abode while the waters did overflow at last when it pleased God to comfort him by Evangelical comforts through a right understanding of Christ and righteousnesse what a tree of life did his tongue become to others How many did he comfort by those comforts God had comforted him Calvin also it 's noted of him that he was a man of deep and retired thoughts within yet did retain them much in his own brest and no doubt by this he was the more prepared to be an excellent Instrument in the Church of God We see
then he only that hath the experimentals either of the bitternesse of sinne or the sweetnesse of the Gospel is only able with a tender heart and hand to cure a wounded soul And certainly if the Apostle make this an Argument Gal. 6. 1. to rejoynt as it were one that is overtaken in a fault because the most spiritual may be tempted how much rather when thou hast been tempted So that this experimental way in holy things worketh much commiseration and sympathizing with those who groan under the hand of God upon them When Judas was in that perplexed agony crying out I have sinned in betraying the innocent blood with what stony and seared hearts did the Pharisees reject him saying What is that to us look thou to that It 's a mercy for broken-hearted sinners to fall into the hands of a tender experienced Believer who hath felt what they feel and so is able to conceive of their sad estate And indeed even as for instruction of the ignorant there needeth much patience so there doth also pitty which will put thee upon unwearied diligence to comfort the dejected For it is not a work soon done they must bear with many infirmities they are full of subtile objections and when they are for a while comforted they loose all presently again insomuch that he must have tender bowels who is not wearied out with their weaknesses Thirdly Such experienced ones are only able to deal with tempted souls to instruct and comfort them because the afflicted find such only reall Such are in earnest He that hath experimentally felt the bitternesse of sinne maketh it manifest to others that it 's not meer Oratory or Eloquence that sets him against sinne but something within that he feeleth burning like fire within The very Heathen could say Si vis me flere dolendum est primo tibi A man that hath not inwardly felt the power of truth upon his heart he is so cold so formall so lazy that you cannot tell whether he believeth the things he preacheth to be true or no. And so also for comfort must it not much satisfie the dejected soul to meet with one under the same temptations under the same fears and yet now prayeth with joy heareth with joy Thou canst find all thy heart as it were in him and yet he is delivered he is comforted who thought it as impossible as I do Whereas if a man be a stranger to these workings of God the tempted soul flyeth off saying He knoweth not how to judge of these things I can give no credit to him Fourthly Such are only able because they alone are faithfull They dare not flatter them they dare not sooth them They will give them no comfort if there be no cause for it Now the truly broken soul loveth this faithfull dealing better then flattery There is a woe to those that made the heart of those merry whom God would have made sad And there are many in the ministerial Office that are unworthy and flattering in this case comforting every one that lyeth a dying though never so prophane Now he that is truly humbled careth not for such a mans comfort he knoweth he will not deal faithfully he will send me to hell with comfort And whereas it is one rule that experienced Divines give to tempted souls That under their fears and doubts they must believe the judgment of the Ministers of God about their condition rather then themselves this must be understood of sound faithfull and experienced Ministers otherwise it is a most dreadfull thing to fall into the hands of fawning flattering Ministers who will encourage them and send them to Heaven when they themselves know not either what true sorrow for sinne or true Evangelical comfort meaneth Use 1. Of Exhortation to the Ministers of Gods Word not to think learning study reading of Books enough to qualifie thee for a Ministerial employment but implore much the work of Gods Spirit herein A good heart a gracious heart will help as well as good Books Do not rest only upon studied and acquired gifts but pray also for infused and inspired Use 2. Of Instruction to the people of God How usefull it is to communicate their gracious experiences one to another much edification much consolation may come hereby Whose sadnesse hast thou comforted Whose deadnesse hast thou quickned It may be thou hast learned a precious receit how to cure such a sinne such a temptation and why doest thou not help others SERM. XLIII It is a special Duty incumbent upon every one both Minister and Christian to apply comforts to the Afflicted in a right manner 2 COR. 1. 4. That we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble IN this final cause we considered the Subject who are fit for this comfort and they are said to be such who are in any trouble Those that abound in mercies need no comfort we are not to give honey to such full stomacks But the troubled the afflicted these are they whose condition we are to commiserate From whence observe That it is a special duty in a right manner to comfort those that are in trouble We are not only to seek the conversion of such who go astray but also to regard the consolation of those that lack it Hence Lam. 1. the Church complaineth That she had none to comfort her The Apostle speaketh of this duty often 1 Thess 4. 18. Comfort one another with these things 1 Thess 5. 11 14. Comfort the feeble minded You see by this pressing this duty so often that we are seriously and diligently to practise it lest as God will judge for neglect of corporal alms to fit objects of charity so also he will call to account for the not dispencing of these spiritual alms Thou hast not visited those who were spiritually imprisoned by the guilt of their sins neither fed those with the bread from Heaven who were hungry Hence it is that the Apostle speaking concerning the incestuous person who was now deeply humbled for his sinne 2 Cor. 2. 7. exhorts them to comfort him lest he be swallowed up with too much sorrow We have a notable instance for this in Jobs friends Job 2. 11. who when they heard of all the evil that was come upon him they made an appointment together to come and mourn with him and to comfort him Thus you see that it is a special duty we are carefully to discharge to refresh the souls of others who are cast down That as the custom was among the Jews and Solomon he giveth a precept about it Prov. 31. 6 7. Give wine unto those that are of an heavy heart that he may drink and remember his misery no more So we are in a spiritual consideration to give the wine of the Gospel to such as mourn for their sins To discover this truth Consider First The troubled as you heard formerly are of two sorts Those who are afflicted in soul as the
one way or other Every Abel will have a Cain every Isaac an Ismael What though you do not suffer from the Pagans or heretiques without yet how greatly do ye suffer from the prophane and ungodly within Every prophane man though he shrowd himself under the name of Christ yet he is of an Antichristian spirit if not doctrinally yet practically and in deed Bernard speaking of the bitter times by Paganish persecution and then of more bitter by hereticall maketh the third and most bitter of all to be in the evil and ungodly manners of those who are within the Church Heu domine saith he qui sunt in Ecclesiâ primi sunt in persecutione primi There is then a suffering for Christ though not to blood and if every godly man do not thus suffer let him fear whether he be not a man pleaser whether he fear not man more then God whether therefore he be not applauded as a wise man as a moderate man because he is not indeed a zealous godly man against sinne in his place The very Heathen could say How is he a good man who is not trouble some to and hated by an evil man Therefore saith our Saviour Wo be to you when all men speak well of you Luk. 6. 26. Some observe the connexion the Apostle useth 1 Pet. 4. 11 12. for having in the 11 verse exhorted to a faithfull and diligent discharge of those Offices we are betrusted with presently exhorts to patience about afflictions because one will necessarily cause the other So Mat. 10. when Christ giveth his Apostles Commission to preach he doth withall admonish them of the hatred they shall meet with Light will be offensive to sore eyes and salt will make wounds to smart Thirdly To suffer for Christs sake is very tedious and grievous to flesh and blood It 's because of those reproaches and many times dangers which accompany the way of Christ that it is such a stumbling block to many They like the Crown of Glory well but they like not the Crown of Thornes If Christs way was a broad way they might have Christ and their honours Christ and their lusts Christ and their advantages then they would be as forward to runne out and meet Christ as they did from Jerusalem crying Hos●nna to him Therefore howsoever men have thousands of pretences to keep off from the way of godlinesse and the faithfull owning of Christ they have many wide gates of distinction to go out at when danger is at hand yet it is fear of suffering that keepeth most off their duty They like Christ well till it cometh to be said as she did to Moses Thou art a bloody husband to me So Christ will have thy good name thy estate thy life this makes thee prove an Apostate and turn hypocrite Oh the gulf of misery yea sometimes of despair that this fear of suffering hath put men upon Therefore afflictions for Christs sake are so often called temptations because they will discover whether a man be ●ound for God or not whether they love Christ more then the creatures Oh then pray to God that he leave thee not to this snare to be afraid to suffer for doing what is good This will prove bitter at the latter end Do you not see among Officers how fearfull to punish the drunkard the Sabbath-breaker they shall loose their good word they will do them despite and malice afterwards Art not thou all this while afraid to suffer for Christ He that suffers for doing that which is righteous for punishing offenders he suffers for Christ as is to be shewed Remember then it 's better suffering for Christ which is our Crown and Glory then suffering in Hell for ever because thou wouldst not do the will of God SERM. XLVI The same Doctrine prosecuted shewing the Object for which Christians are to suffer if they would suffer for Christ 2 COR. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us c. THe Doctrine that hath in part been treated on is That a true and faithfull owning of Christ is accompanied with sufferings and persecutions Some Particulars have been given in to clear this We proceed to adde more and the first in order shall be That although it is very difficult to flesh and blood to own Christ so farre as to suffer for him yet the Scripture represents it as a most blessed and glorious thing howsoever the world judge it reproachfull I shall not here enlarge my self about the encouragements to suffer when Christ calls for it it is enough at this time in the general to inform That God will not honour every one with persecutions for himself It is a great expression of his grace and favour Hence some Confessors have desired to be Martyrs but God by his providence preserved them they have been greatly humbled and dejected under this as if it were for some special sinne and unworthinesse in them that God would not in that manner dignify them These are not words and meer oratory the Scripture is clear in proclaiming this for a title of favour to be a sufferer for Christ Act. 5. 41. The Apostles rejoyced that they were accounted worthy to suffer shame for his Name That they might have shame and reproach for Christ this they rejoyced in as a great matter of honour Who were they that the Lord should so exhalt them So Phil. 1. 29. To you it 's given not only to believe but to suffer By this you see that every one to whom God doth give to believe he doth not also give to suffer for him It 's a gift then and where this is bestowed they ought to rejoyce and to be exceeding glad Yea 1 Pet. 3. 14. They are happy And 1 Pet. 4. 16. Thy are to goorifie God in that behalf If we could believe these Scripture truths so much sinfull fear and pusillanimity in the cause of Christ might not be charged upon us as too often it may be we would not run from a duty accompanied with sufferings as Moses did from the rod turned into a Serpent neither should we with Simon the Cyrenean be compelled to bear the crosse That is observeable 1 Pet. 2. 19. If a man suffer for conscience towards God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We translate it this is thankworthy But happily that is not so proper for if a man should suffer all the Martyrdomes that have been in his own body yet God is not to thank him he hath not suffered more then he ought to do Neither do I know that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used in such a sense Therefore it 's better translated This is a favour this is grace if God bring us to suffer for a good conscience towards him If then thou art to suffer either verbally by mocks and slanders or really by miseries and persecutions set the Crown of Glory to the Crown of Thornes set the honey to the gall set the honour with God to
man He suffered in his Name in all reproach and ignominy dying a most accursed death and shalt thou be so tender and delicate as not to indure the mocks and rages of men for him Shall Christ be in cruce and thou in luce Christ in convitiis and thou in conviviis Christ in patibulo and thou in Paradiso as Gerhard expresseth it Oh fear left this prove dreadfull at the latter end SERM. XLVII What Qualifications they must be endowed with who suffer in a right manner for Christ 2 COR. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ WHat it is to suffer for Christ ex parte objects in respect of the matter for which hath already been dispatched We now proceed to shew What is required ex parte subjecti What are the qualifications necessary in him who doth truly suffer for Christ When we read of so many glorious priviledges promised to such as are troubled for Christs sake you must know that their bare suffering no not for that which is righteous is enough to entitle them to this blessedness but there must be the Adverb as well as the Nown it must not only be pro bono but benè for that which is good but also in a good manner for suffering and martyrdome it self as all other duties is not integrated of all its causes as it is not enough to pray to hear though these for the matter be commanded but they must be done in an holy and spiritual manner Thus it is not enough to suffer or to be persecuted and that for Christs sake unlesse also we have that holy frame of heart in suffering which Gods word doth require Let us then examine this truth viz. What are the requisites to qualifie a true sufferer for Christ When his cause is good his heart his ends also must be good Therefore that ordinary saying Causa non poena facit Martyrem The cause not the punishment doth make a Martyr must be further limited for the cause doth not unlesse there be also those concomitant graces in the subject as well as there is truth in the object and we shall find this suffering temper to have as curious ingredients into it as there was into that precious ointment made for the high Priest alone and no wonder for it is the highest pitch of love we can arrive at to suffer for him and it is the most contrary to flesh and blood So that ●one can do this for Christ but such who are wonderfully enabled by him First Therefore in a sufferer for Christ there is required Faith in the eminent and powerfull actings thereof It is as impossible to suffer without faith as a bird to flie without wings It 's faith alone that can remove these mountains in the Sea Heb. 11. Those great exploits the Saints did yea and those wonderfull sufferings they underwent is attributed by the Apostle wholly to their faith Now this faith requisite to true suffering for Christ emptieth it self into two chanels there must be a Dogmatical Faith and a Fiducial Faith A Dogmatical Faith is that whereby a man is assured of the truths be suffereth for as divine and because of Divine Authority Faith must be as Heb. 11. 1. an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The substance and evidence of things For if a man have not this faith it 's obstinacy and pertinacy not faith that maketh him suffer as we see in Hereticks Hence also it is that a meer Opinionist or Sceptick in Religion will never suffer for Christ because he hath no faith but opinion in Religion So likewise those who are of a Religion meerly for humane Authority sake because of the custome and Laws where they live commanding such a Religion as those amongst the Graecians that were called Melchitae because they followed the Religion the King was of though indeed the Orthodox were so branded by the Heretical party Vide Hornbeck de Graecis These cannot suffer truly for Christ Indeed they may suffer for their Religion as it 's local and traditional to them as Turks and Jews do but yet this is not from faith which doth necessarily relate to divine testimony This then cuts off the glory which Hereticks and erroneous persons may boast of if they suffer truly they suffer with a true Faith if they have a true Faith that can be proved and demonstrated out of Gods Word And when we say a Dogmatical Faith that must be understood in respect of its compleatnesse and integrity as to Fundamentals No man can suffer truly for Christ that peremptorily denieth any I undamental if he hold the foundation though he build hay and stubble superstructive errours yet if he do not demolish any of the foundation stones he may be saved but so as by fire And truly is this charity be not allowed we shall scarce find any person or Church truly suffering for Christ For where hath there been such a sound faith in Fundamentals circa-fundamentals and praeter-fundamentals as that there hath not been any spot or wrinkle in the face of the Church This prerogative belongs to the Church in Heaven They therefore suffer for Christ who are persecuted for his truths though happily they erre in many things not necessary to salvation But if they deny any Fundamentals I do not say doubt and that for a season as the Apostles did about the nature of Christs Kingdome and his Resurrection and that with persevering obstinacy then though he suffer for one Fundamental yet because he denieth another he doth in effect destroy the whole building of Christ Thus when a Macedonian suffered for holding the Deity of Christ being put to death by an Arian the primitive Church never judged him a Martyr because he denied the Deity of the Holy Ghost There is therefore required a sound Dogmatical Faith for which cause some have doubted Whether the Church did well in making all those infants which were killed by Herod because of Christ in reckoning them among Martyrs For they did not know any thing of Christ neither it may be many of their parents had any true faith about him Certainly ly they cannot be called Martyrs or Sufferers for Christ in an active fense but passively only The second act of faith is a fiducial dependance on the promise of God and his Power which is able to raise up the heart above all fears and discouragements yea to represent prisons palaces and coals of fire beds of roses such a transubstantiating nature is faith of It was faith Heb. 11. which made Moses esteem the reproaches of Christ more than all the glory and honour which was in Pharaoh's court especially faith as it is the substance of things hoped for As it maketh Heaven and glory present so it 's admirably quickning and enlivening the heart of him that suffereth It is therefore called The shield of faith which above all or to all as some expound we
comparatively to the cause and glory of Christ And this makes it so difficult to suffer This hath made the Apostates that have many times been in the Church This hath filled the hearts of many with woe and wounds implacably For their childrens sake for their lives sake they deny Christ and a good conscience and how can it be otherwise while Earth is dearer than Heaven when we esteem the favour of men more than the favour of God This hath proved bitter wormwood to many at last Lastly To suffer for Christ there is required pure and holy motives To lose all for Christs sake out of meer conscience that this is the only cause why we are in any trouble We may read both in sacred and prophane Histories how men have suffered even death it self only for vain-glory All Aristotles vertuous men they were ambitious and vain-glorious men The very Heathen could make it Laudum immensa cupido as well as Amorpatriae We would think it a madnesse to lose comforts and life for an airy bubble of windy glory yet many have been thus transported not only Philosophus but Haereticus est animal gloriae vanissimum If then it 's not Scripture-grounds but ambitious vain-glorious principles that make thee to suffer Christ doth not will not provide sugar for thy bitter pils Thus have we seen what is required to suffer for Christ Oh the difficulty of this duty No wonder so much seed hath withered away when the scorching Sunne of persecution did arise No wonder Christ hath many Swallow-friends that endure with him the Summer time onely No wonder few are lovers of Christ for Christs sake As Alexander had more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These are the Bees that follow for the honey-pot only Now to all these we must adde this Caution A Christian that suffereth for Christ though he have not those qualifications in a perfect degree but find corruption opposing every one of them He must not therefore cast away his confidence for we can no more suffer perfectly for Christ then do perfectly for him and if our gracious works cannot justifie us no more can our gracious sufferings Martyrdom is not meritorious Though we shed our bloud for Christ yet the blood of Christ must cleanse that duty also The Martyrs died only in resting upon Christ for salvation and no wonder the godly heart finds more imperfections in his sufferings more carnal fear and impatience then in other duties because this is the hardest service Christ doth ever put his upon What else is to be said in this point will come in in the next particulars SERM. XLVIII How many wayes and by what means Christ comforteth those who suffer for him 2 COR. 1. 5. So our consolation aboundeth by Christ THe second absolute Proposition in the Text is That our comfort aboundeth by Christ. The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rendred by some Exhortation but more generally and fitly Consolation Though this be spoken in the singular number and afflictions in the plural yet this is to be understood collectively as a treasure that hath all kind of comforts in it not one or two but all Therefore the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here repeated again aboundeth which is to be understood partly repletively it filleth the hearts of those that do suffer for Christ and partly diffusively it extends also to the comfort of others And then you have the cause of all this By Christ Christ who is the cause of their sufferings is also the cause of their comfort As from the same root proceedeth both the Rose and its pricks Thus from Christ the same Fountain cometh both bitter and sweet Were not this added who would suffer for Christ who would lose all for him but Christ hath so ordained it that these sufferings are advantagious to us and though we lose in the retail yet we gain in the bulk and whole Observe That as our sufferings are for Christ so by the same Christ are our comforts Though he strike with one hand yet he supporteth with the other If David said to the Priest who fled to him many of them being slain at No● by the bloudy cruelty of Saul Stay with me I am the occasion of your deaths thou shalt fare as I fare How much more will Christ own such who suffer for him saying Depend upon me for I am the cause of all the reproaches and cruel usages you meet with in the world But to explain this Let us consider In what respects comforts may be said to abound by Christ And First Efficiently He being the same with God is therefore a God of all consolation Yea Christ as a Mediator he is sensible of our temptations knoweth our need and wants and therefore the more ready to comfort Christ that wanted comfort himself and therefore had an Angel sent to comfort him is thereby the more compassionate and willing to comfort us Thus you may read Christ and God put together in this very act 2 Thess 2. 16 17. Our Lord Jesus Christ himself and God even our Father who hath given us everlasting consolation comfort your hearts Paul here prayeth that both Jesus Christ and God the Father would comfort them Christ therefore not only absolutely as God but relatively as Mediator is qualified with all fitnesse and fulnesse to communicate consolation he is the fountain and head as of grace so of comfort Secondly We are comforted by Christ Meritoriously he hath merited at the hands of God our comfort for without Christs death and atonement we were no more subjects prepared for comfort then the damned Angels Had all mankind with Dives begged but for a drop of comfort such was the gulph between God and us that it could not be obtained So that by Christ a way is made for our consolation Christ did not only obtain the communication of the holy Ghost in the gifts and graces thereof So that as by Christ the Spirit of God is given to the Church as a guide to teach and lead into all truth as the sanctifying Spirit and use of all holinesse So he is also as the Comforter who giveth every drop of consolation that any believer doth enjoy Though therefore joy and comfort be in Scripture attributed to the holy Ghost as the appropriated and applying cause thereof yet this is wholly because of the merits of Christ And therefore we may pray for comfort upon the same grounds as we doe for holinesse They are both the fruits of Christs death Lastly We are comforted by Christ Objectively that is in him and from him we take our comfort As Christ is called Our righteousnesse because in and through his righteousnesse we are accepted of in him we are compleat So Christ is our comfort because in him we find matter of all joy though there be troubles and vexations from the creatures though the Sunne and Moon be turned into bloud all powers
Moral Patience Natural Patience I call that which cometh much from the constitution and complexion of their bodies they are more mild quiet and enduring of grief than others Moral patience I call that when men by wisdom and reading of moral precepts can harden themselves heroically to bear the tribulations up on them but Christian patience is that which comes from a regenerated and sanctified nature eying Gods glory his will and command only not regarding other sinister respects So that a Natural Patience a Moral Patience under thy sufferings will not advance thy salvation but that which is Christian You have a notable place for this 2 Pet. 1. 6. To patience godlinesse The Apostle doth there exhort to have the chain of graces linked together not to think it enough to have one grace unless he have all And therefore patience must be added to temperance for that requireth the denial of our pleasures the crucifying of our delights which cannot be without patience but then to this patience we must adde godlinesse implying that though we be never so meek so still so Lamb-like under our troubles yet if godliness be not added to this patient deportment if it be not from divine principles and to divine ends then our patience is greatly defective Look we therefore that when we quietly and patiently suffer it came from the grace of patience not from a counterfeit patience for this is not true gold and so will not enrich us This distinction being premised whereby a Christian may be inabled to know when it is Nature and when it is Grace that doth bear when flesh and blood doth suffer and when a divine Nature within him In the next place let us consider What goeth to the producing of this grace of patience for we cannot of our selves perform this duty of patience no more than a wildernesse can bringforth roses Therefore First The efficient cause of patience is God only The heart of man under any afflictions is like a wild bull in a net there is nothing but raging and repining under every exercise till God give a patient spirit Hence Rom. 15. 5. he is called The God of patience For what a wild unruly bedlam is an unsanctified man under any pressure upon him Like Cain he crieth out It is greater than he can bear Like Jobs wife he is tempted to curse God and so die Doest thou therefore under thy trials want patience Doth it grieve and sadly afflict thee to see thy self so passionate so impassionate Then let this make thee to run to the throne of grace improve this title God is the God of patience Say Oh God it is but speaking the word it is but saying Let there be patience and there will be patience How often have I resolved for patience How often prayed for patience and yet Lord my heart is tormented and tossed up and down like that Lunatick which could not be bound by any chains Not only my tongue but my heart are worse than unruly and savage beasts they may be tamed but this no man only God can tame it It 's God only therefore that maketh in us patience The grace of patience is farre above our power Tertullian wrote a Book of Patience but in the very beginning he apologizeth for himself why he should write of that subject which he had so little experimentally and practically attained unto and he excuseth it thus That he doth as those who are sick they delight to be talking and praising of health So I saith he who am Aeger caloribus impatientiae sick with feavorish impatient heats do delight to write of patience Thus do thou seeing it is more then of thy self thou art able to do The least tryal the least affliction is ready to heat thee with impatience pray to God importunately let him not alone till he blesse thee with this composed patient spirit Say with the same Tertullian Pereat seculum dummodo patientiam lucrifaciam Let the whole world perish so that God will give me patience Secondly As God is the efficient cause so the word of God that is instrumental The Word is like Davids harp to drive out this evil spirit So the Apostle Rom. 15. 14. That we through patience of the Scriptures might have hope When thy impatient flesh doth suggest this and that argument to discontent and repining Oh remember what the word of God saith It is for want of Scripture-consideration of Scripture-arguments that thy heart is so clamorous and unruly such a command such a promise would presently have made all calm and quiet The Heathen adviseth an angry furious man to look in the glasse while he is in those passionate fits that he may see how deformed he is made thereby but how much rather when thy heart hath boiled over with impatient repining thoughts art thou to recover thy self immediately and to look into the Word See what that faith what that requireth and then thou wilt be ashamed and abhorring thy self as a very beast Thirdly Afflictions themselves according to Scripture-expression they work patience also Thus Rom. 5. 3. Tribulation worketh patience Jam. 1. 3. The trying of your faith worketh patience Here you see afflictions are said to work patience but not of themselves it 's the power of God in and through them only as the beast accustomed to the yoke is more tame than at first so when we are constantly exercised with afflictions that they seem to be no new thing then through Gods grace we come to be more ready and willing in a patient enduring of them It is said of Christ himself He learned obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5. 8. not that he could grow properly in grace or be more obedient than he had been formerly but it is spoken in regard of experimental obedience he had the sense and feeling of it more than before but the adopted sons of God they do increase in obedience and patience by the things that they suffer Therefore thou who hast more afflictions than others it is a reproach to thee if they have not taught thee more patience and meeknesse than others Fourthly The exemplary or ideal cause of patience is God and Christ From them we have a most exact and compleat rule of patience Mat. 5. 48. Be ye therefore perfect as your heavenly Father is To be perfect is there to be patient for he had before instanced in the patience of God that even to the unjust he causeth the Sunne to arise and from this inferreth Be ye therefore perfect To be patient and that to enemies may be called perfection because this alone is taught in Christianity To love our friends is acknowledged a duty by all Nations but to love enemies is only professed by Christians Well then may we be patient under all the persecutions reproaches and vexations the enemies of God bring upon us For is not God patient towards them and yet they are more his enemies then
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for it is constructed with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but it is usual with the Apostle to transgresse such rules of Grammar This Samson is not tied in such cords The vehement and affectionate zeal of Paul in his expressions cannot be so manacled Thus the word is used abruptly Rom. 13. 11. In the second place we have the object of this his knowledge concerning the Corinthians and that is that they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Partakers of or in communion with him in his afflictions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is more humble and lowly than Paul in this expression saith Chrysostome they who had not in the least measure shared with him in sufferings yet he maketh them copartners with him They are as Salmeron expresseth it Copartners in the gain and in the losse with Paul They venture as it were in the Ship together The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which cometh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text is taken sometimes actively not for communion so much as commuuication Therefore it is called distribution 2 Cor. 9. 13. Thus 1 Cor. 13. 13. The communion of the Spirit that is The communication of the Spirit And so 1 Cor. 10. 16. The bread and wine Is it not the communion The sense may be The communication of his body and his blood but very often it is used intransitively as it were and signifieth Fellowship Society and Communion The Object of which spiritual communion is fully set down 1 John 1. 3. Ye have fellowship with us and truely our fellowship is with the Father and with the Sonne As for the Adjective which is the word in the Text we have it used in that which is Evil and in that which is Good In that which is sinfull 2 Cor. 10. 10. I would not have you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 partakers of the table of Devils Thus also the Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used 1 Tim. 5. 22. Partake not of other mens sinnes And 2 John 12. He that biddeth him God speed is partaker of his evil deeds We are not only to keep our selves from acting of sinne but look we do not partake with other in their impieties and that is done many wayes most have cause to pray with that good man Lord forgive me my other mens sinnes If thou doest communicate with such then the Text will on the contrary be verified upon thee as thou doest partake with them in their sins so thou shalt in their terrour and damnation But 2. There is a good participation or copartnership of which the Text here speaketh Though Paul was persecuted and suffered much for the preaching of the Gospel yet this did not deterre the Corinthians or make them to be scandalized at Christ and so to fall off from him but they looked upon Pauls sufferings as their own and so are affected with his persecutions as if they themselves were persecuted This was it which made Paul have such a stedfast hope of their sincerity for if their foundation had been sandy such tempestuous winds would have overthrown all Observe That a partaking of and communion with those who suffer for Christ is a sure way to interest in all that joy and glory which such sufferers shall at last receive from God The Corinthians shall partake with Paul in joy and glory because they are willing to partake with him in afflictions and persecutions The joy that is spoken of in the Text is a distinct thing from glory and eternal happinesse for that is not till the Resurrection but Consolation is for the present while we are here in the valley of tears And indeed if we take consolation for the relieving and reviving of the heart under miseries so it cannot be in Heaven but in this world only To discover this truth consider First That there may be a two-fold participation of or fellowship with others that are in afflictions 1. When though we our selves are freed and delivered from all troubles enjoying all outward peace and quietnesse yet we are compassionately affected with the condition of all those members of Christ upon the earth who may be in an afflicted and troubled estate For seeing all the people of God make up one body if any part thereof suffer the other parts condole and suffer with it Insomuch that it is plain thou art a dead part in the body destitute of all spiritual life if thou canst see the Church of God or any part thereof lie wounded like the man of Jericho and thou like the Priest and the Levite passe by not laying it to heart This fellowship in suffering is part of the Apostles meaning which he attributeth to the Corinthians and is indeed a good and sure hope of grace in whomsoever we find it Heb. 13. 3. The Apostle there exhorts to remember such as are in bonds but how Not in a superficial carelesse manner but as cordially and affectionately as if we were bound with them Now consider that if thou wert impoverished if thou wert banished if thou wert imprisoned how much would it possesse thy heart all the day long No lesse is to be done for others whom God thus exercises The Scripture doth much delight in the comparison of the Church with the natural body and that because of the intimate conjunction and sympathy which is between the members if one be honoured all rejoyce if one be pained all grieve The Prophet complaineth Amos 6. 6. of those who enjoyed their pleasures and made themselves merry but did not remember the afflictions of Joseph Know then that it is a special touchstone of thy grace when with Nehemiah thou hast all things that can be desired for thy private content yet doest mourn and pray because of the desolations of Jerusalem and this may be one answer to that Question Why should you speak so much of afflictions and troubles to those who have none at all For let that be granted yet are all the Churches of God in quietnesse and freedom Look abroad and see how it fareth with many that call on the Name of Christ and thou wilt have cause to see that though thou art not afflicted outwardly yet in thy heart and soul thou art to be afflicted in all the afflictions of others Why doest thou live as if thou wert not of the body Be of a more publick spirit let the Churches gain or losses be as thine own 2. There is a fellowship with the afflictions of others not onely spiritual but real when we are cast into the same outward condition as others are And this also may be part of the meaning in the Text. They were not onely Spectators of Pauls troubles but they themselves had part of this burden upon their own shoulders That cup of tribulation was given them to drink as well as others For although persecutions do sometimes fall onely upon the Pastors and Officers in the Church yet for the most part it is
universal and pursueth all that call on Christ That as with Christ there is no bond or free no Jew or Gentile all are one so it is also with the enemies of Gods Church in their persecutions all are one to them Look not then for an Ark when all the people of God shall be in the waters Though an Obadiah may live quietly in Ahabs Court when the Elijahs are sought for to be put to death yet this is not alwayes so and that man who will own Christ upon no other condition but that he may not suffer for him or be persecuted for him that man is unsound and rotten at the very heart Secondly Consider that it is no lesse glorious before men and acceptable unto God to be a companion and an associate with those who do suffer then if we did suffer our selves in our own person This hath been alwayes a very hard task for flesh and blood to own the godly while they are in a suffering condition The Disciples themselves proved cowards and unfaithfull in this temptation for when the Shepherd was smitten all the sheep were scattered When Christ was to be crucified all his Apostles fled from him they dared not own him and when Peter was charged to be one of Christs company He curseth and sweareth he did not know the man he was afraid to own so much as the very knowledge of Christ Indeed the godly women Mary the mother of Christ and others they shewed more grace and courage than the very Apostles that all honour and glory may be given to God alone but as for his Disciples they hid themselves and were afraid to be companions with him Hence the Apostle Heb. 10. 33. exhorting believers To call to mind their enduring of a great fight of afflictions he instanceth wherein partly Whilest ye were made a gazing stock both by reproaches and afflictions and partly whilest ye became companions of them that were so used Here you see to become a companion to those that suffer not to flie from them or forsake them is made a great expression of their love to God Paul also 2 Tim. 1. 16. remembers what Onesiphorus did to him while in bonds he mentioneth it as if he would never have it forgotten any more than that womans box of ointment poured on Christ The Lord give mercy to the house of Onesiphorus Why Because he answered his name indeed He oft refreshed me he sought me out very diligently and was not ashamed of my chain What a glorious character is here given to Onesiphorus He was not persecuted himself but he made himself a companion with those that were Paul complaineth of Demas 2 Tim. 4. 10. That he had forsaken him for he was now in hands and to answer before Nero who was known to be nothing but clay and blood mingled together whose cruelty would extend to all abettors and well-wishers If any did but sigh in his time it was a capital crime This fear made Demas as it did all his other friends vers 16. forsake Paul they had not faith and courage enough to venture for him and therefore it 's said He did love the present world he loved his life and liberty too much though some think this was but a temptation in Demas and that he did return to Paul again By this we see how hard a thing it is to own those that are godly in their extremities John 19. 38 39. It is noted both of Joseph of Arimathea and of Nicodemus both Disciples of Christ but secretly for fear of the Jewes yet when Christ was crucified they shewed their boldnesse and courage about Christs body when he was dead And Matth 25. at that terrible day of Judgement judicial processe against sinnes of omission will be for neglect in this I was in prison and ye visited me not When Christ and his cause are discountenanced in the world then unlesse a man have a sincere and upright heart he will curse with Peter and swear That he knoweth not the men These things laid as a foundation let us consider why such sympathizing with and partaking of others afflictions doth interest in eternal glory And First This Reason is evident Because hereby we plainly demonstrate that our Faith in Christ and acknowledging of him is upon divine and spiritual grounds that we do not know Christ and the Christian faith after the flesh Matth. 13. This discovered the thorny ground not to be true and right soil because in time of temptation when the scorching Sun did arise then all the hopefull fruit began to wither This apostatizing from Christ in time of such temptations is so great a matter that we are constantly to pray for the grace and assistance of God therein that we be not left to our selves For Peter being forsaken in some measure only how dreadfull was his fall And for this end it is that God suffereth persecutions and troubles to accompany the profession of his truth that so it may be known who are sound and who hypocrites If thou art but chaff this winnowing will drive thee away They are but a very few that acknowledge Christ upon spiritual and enduring grounds So that though the world rage though enemies be furious and bloudy yet they stand like Mount Sion that cannot be moved Many become Christians as some did Jewes in Mardochees time for fear and because the State favoured the Jewes Outward restraint maketh many take the title of Christians but they live the life of Heathens because the pleasures of sinne are present and affect the sense Orant quia timent peccant quia volunt They pray and performe outward religious duties because they are afraid but they sinne because their will and pleasure inclineth thereunto Now these drossie Christians when they are brought to the fire they presently melt away It cannot be denied but that men may suffer much for a while at least and yet at last deny Christ as we have sad instances in Ecclesiastical History but many times such with that famous Cranmer did prove the more couragious and took an holy revenge upon themselves This accompanying Christ in his dangers hath a notable promise Luke 22. 28. Ye are they which have continued with me in my temptations therefore I appoint unto you a Kingdome that ye may eat and drinke with me and sit on thrones judging Israel Even as Christ manifested his pure love to us that in the midst of all the agonies and miseries he grapled with from God and men yet he did not give over our cause but compleated our redemption for us If so be Solomon did so much favour Abiathar though he deserved death that he told him he would not put him to death though guilty because he had been afflicted in all wherein his father was afflicted 1 Kin. 2. 26. How much more will Christ say thus to such who have not been driven from him by great afflictions Secondly Such communion in afflictions must needs interest in
of death is thus sinfull when it putteth thee upon sinne so when it maketh thee omit any duty that God requireth thou darest not confess God and his truth in the midst of a perverse generation thou darest not be valiant for the truth nor plead for righteousness this fear is excessive Love to God love to his glory should cast out the fear of death Observe then thy self in dangers or temptations how thou findest thy fear to put thee upon sinfull compliances or omissions and presently as Jehoshaphat in the midst of a battel being in great danger cried out unto God for help so do thou to be delivered from this sinfull fear that is a deadly enemy encompassing thee about Secondly Thy fear about death is sinfull when it is immoderate and disquieting of thee so that thou doest not walk with a cheerfull quiet and calm spirit So that although it may not put thee upon any sinfull or unlawfull enterprize yet if it fill thee with anxieties with trepidations so that it depriveth thee of that Evangelical joy and peace in this excess it is a sinne All that are truly godly Being justified by faith they are to have peace in their hearts yea they are to rejoyce alwayes in the Lord but the inordinate fear of death causeth this Sunne to be in an eclipse and as men subject to swooning fits or convulsions cannot go with that courage and confidence up and down as those who are freed from such distempers Thus also the slavish and immoderate fear of death putteth millstones about our neck is a continual Ephialtes upon the soul filleth the spirit with heaviness whereby that Evangelical life and Gospel-conversation that we are called unto is seldome or never exercised Observe then thy self doth such fears of death make thy soul full of tumults and distractions Doth it oppose any Evangelical grace or retard the Spirit of Adoption upon thy soul Then humble thy self know thou sinnest against God and pray for the mortification of it and this thou art to do though it doth not make thee put out thy hand to any evil way though it doth not make thee omit any known duty For as worldly and distrustfull cares though lodging only in the heart are greatly displeasing to God though we do not thereby fall into covetous and unjust wayes yet the very cares and distractions of the heart are forbidden as appeareth by that reproof given to Martha by our Saviour himself Luke 10. 41. Martha Martha thou art troubled about many things but one thing is needfull Thus it is also in fears though thou art not instigated thereby to unlawfull wayes to preserve thy self yet the distractions and divisions of thy heart are offensive to God Therefore as the Apostle saith Phil. 4. 6. Be carefull in nothing but let your requests be made known to God Let prayer rebuke all storms and tempests of sinfull cares so in nothing be fearfull no not about death it self but commit thy self by prayer to God to whom the issues of life and death do belong Thirdly This fear of death is sinfull when it excludeth better and more profitable and seasonable fear The Scripture doth frequently command a fear of God and the serving of him with godly trembling Psal 2. 11. Yea the whole work of grace is expressed in this That God will put his fear in our hearts Jer. 32. 40. If then this fear of God did more prevail and rule in our hearts we should not fear diseases and death so much as we do The fear of God would put a due moderation upon all the powers of the soul This would regulate the fear of all other things so that we dare not fear otherwayes than God hath commanded then this natural fear is compatible with gracious fear For as our love to the creatures must be animated and regulated by our love to God so that we are never to love any thing that thereby our love to God may be abated or diminished Thus it must be in fear we are never to dread any thing further than it is consistent with the fear of God therefore it may fall out sometimes that the fear of God may justly put us upon the fear of death as when we walk negligently coldly and formally when we do not make up our daily accounts with God when we do not make our daily peace with God with renewed repentance and faith If we live in this manner then we have good cause to fear death because we are unprovided for it it seizeth on us before we are prepared and the fear of God may justly put us into this fear of death For we know how great holy and just God is how dreadfull his appearance will be at the day of judgement and all that we can do it must be done before death then the night is come and none can work To repent to bewail our unprofitableness our neglect of the seasons of grace in hell will then be as unprofitable as Esau's teares when he had lost his birth-right There is therefore a just and holy fear about death lest it should take us not doing the work of God lest it should come so unexpectedly that we be forced to cry out with him Inducias usque ad mane O spare me till to morrow Let one live another day to make peace with God and the fear of God will put us upon this fear as the Apostle said 2 Cor. 5. 11. Knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men Thus it is here Knowing the terrour of the Lord that he is greater than our hearts that if they condemn us then God will much more This will put a fear of death upon us because that is nothing but the presenting of our souls in his presence We read Judg. 6. 23. and in many other places when God made any glorious apparition the persons who beheld it were so amazed and stricken with the sense of their imbecillty that they thought they should die presently and shall not the thoughts about death that it 's the dislodging of the soul and bringing it immediately before God strike much terrour into us This holy and reverential fear about death is laudable and is the fruit of the fear of God but when this fear of death maketh thee fear God the less or hindereth thee in the service of him then cast this Hagar out of doors Fourthly The fear of death is sinfull when it doth proceed from a sinfull cause If the fountain be bitter then the stream is bitter Now there are these sinfull causes of the fear of death 1. When it proceedeth from an inordinate love of life An excessive love of life doth alwayes beget an immoderate fear of death So that we may judge of the sinfulness of fear by the sinfulness of love If thy heart be not mortified and crucified to the world if thy heart be not loosned and weaned from earthly comforts and this maketh thee afraid to die this is
Wilderness They grant he provided water for them even out of the Rock the streames overflowed But can he give bread can he give flesh also Oh blind and foolish unbelief Is it not as easie for God to provide bread as water in a dry Wilderness but they limited God to their own thoughts and wayes Now this sinne of limiting God to such humane helps and wayes as we propound to our selves doth insinuate very much into the hearts of those those that are godly What was that expression of David I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul but bitter fruite from that bitter root Oh how often do the people of God in their extremities say Can God furnish a Table in the Wilderness Those millions of thoughts which eat thee up in a dividing distrusting way how shall this difficulty be overcome how shall that want be supplyed what if God suffer such a thing to be then where am I Is not all this to say Cen God prepare bread in the Wilderness And this way Paul's desponding thought in this trouble The extremity is great death is at hand there is no way to escape it but that which deceiveth him is because he looketh only to sensible helps he considers the instruments not the hand in which they are This is a very secret insinuating sinne and therefore the godly are more diligently to watch and pray against it that it do not at any time overcome them Take heed of living by sense The Apostle disclaimeth such a life in the behalf of the godly 2 Cor. 5. 7. We walk by faith and not by sense Did faith make us overlooke instruments second causes and all Creatures how certain and constant would the hopes of the godly man be The Sun would alwayes go down upon a peaceable fixed serene frame of heat but when faith prevaileth and for that composeth the soul and maketh it like the Rock which though one wave after another fiercely assault yet that abideth in the same place still so though conditions alter though unheard causes and helps be mutable yet because God is the same and the promise is the same he therefore continueth the same Let then the Children of God examine and search their hearts more in this particular see if the cause of all thy disquietness of all thy troubles and feares do not arise from this that thou art deceived that thou passest false judgement upon thy self certainly the Devill is enemy enough to thy comfort he indeavours to seduce thee and deceive thee Do not thou joyn with him against thy own true and solid comfort But let us proceed to examine the grounds of this truth And The first is Because the godly are apt to be hasty and too quick in judgeing these things They do not consider and well weigh all things together They do not compare Gods promises and his providences together They do not set Gods word and his workes together Insipientis est aspicere ad pauca they cast their eyes only upon that which is discouraging They look upon the dead wombe and not on the power of God and this inconsiderateness makes them pass false judgement Psal 31. 22. I said in my haste I am cut off from before thy eyes and again Psal 116. 11. I said in my haste all men are liars You see what hasty and sudden thoughts and words may come from those that feare God Oh do not judge in thy rashness do not conclude this or that in thy haste but consider debate and compare all things together Moses though so meek a man and the faithfull Servant of God yet in a suddain haste spake unadvisedly with his lips Examine then whether most of those thoughts whereby thou hast wronged God and wronged thy self have not risen from unadvised hastiness Thou saist in thy haste God forsaketh thee thou saist in thy haste thou shalt be undone 2. Another reason why the godly are so apt to be deceived in Gods administrations is because they are apt to be passionately transported with anger and feare and these are like a misty foggy vapour to the Sun that doth obnubilate it and obscure the light When David doth conclude he is cast off and cut off he doth not only this in his haste but in his passions also It is anger maketh him say so it is grief maketh him say so his spirit is often troubled leavened and overwhelmed within so that as when the water is bemuddied we are not able to see those little stones in the bottome which when clear we might do Thus it is here when the heart is moved with fear and grief when it is in sad commotions then it is no wonder if it judge erroneously anima sedendo quiescendo sit sapiens Let reason and wisdome or faith rather meet thy passionate heart as Abigal did David and this may prevent many sad things which prove a trouble to thee afterwards let it therefore be thy wisdome when thou art ready to give this censure and pass that sentence about thy affaires or Gods dealings with thee to stay till the heat and commotions of thy soul be over fear and anger and grief these are ill counsellours erect such a Tribunall in thy self as they say that of the Areopagite was no man was to move the affections by any Rhetoricall indeavours least thereby the judgement might be perverted 3. Therefore the godly may misjudge and conclude contrary to what God intendeth because of the want of that spirituall skill and wisdome which is requisite when we are to inquire or determine about Gods proceedings Clouds and darkness saith the Psalmist Psal 29. 7. are round about his pavilion and as his essence is a light that none can draw nigh unto so also his administrations do far exceed our naturall capacity and therefore we are not able to comprehend his counsell and wayes Now although this be so yet as the Scripture is a Directory to us how we are to conceive of his nature so it doth also teach us how we are to understand his actions The Scripture is a Key that doth in some particulars even open the deep things of God and as Sampson out of love did disclose to Dalilah such secret things that none else did or could know so setting aside many imperfections in the comparison doth God out of his love to his Church reveale to them wherein his strength lyeth how she may prevaile with him which way if she take she is sure to have good acceptance with him but to receive this there is a Heavenly wisdome and skill required When the Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 14 15 16. made a distinction between a naturall man and a spirituall as to their judgement and discerning for by the naturall man cannot be meant a weake Christian as a late Writer would have it which is the greater wonder because those of his way I mean the Arminians think they strongly conclude Paul doth not speak Rom. 7. in
it had beene better if Gods help had come sooner if he had not deferred so long but this is as if the patient should take upon him to direct the Physician when is the fittest time for the administration of his medicinal helpe Fourthly The people of God aggravate their mercies By comparing them with others miseries I have health how many are in paines and exquisite torments I have sufficiency and fullnesse how many Lazar's are there that would be glad of the crummes that fall from my Table As those Lepers that were ready to be famished but unexpectedly met with full provision in the Syrian's Camps said We doe not well 2 King 7. 9. let us informe the Kings houshold For alas they were ready to eat their own children through the famine while these had all plenty In the same manner mayest thou reflect with thy self How many are there even of the deare servants of God that are naked hungry persecuted and destitute of all hope There is scarce any so afflicted or in a low condition but he may look upon others who are more miserable than he This therefore will greatly sharpen thy affections to blesse God When thou shalt compare thy mercies with others miseries especially if you doe consider it in spirituals How many thousands sit in Paganisme and know nothing of Christ How many lye roaring in hell for the same sinnes or lesse sinnes it may be that thou hast committed Thus if thou set thy self to aggravate the mercy of God from every consideration thou wilt finde the circumstances will increase upon thee as the widows oyl did and thou wilt see thou hast more cause to blesse Ood then ever thou didst apprehend at first If I say thou didst this thou wouldst no more complaine of the coldnesse and chilnesse that is upon thy heart Nothing doth so much dull the heart as resting in generals blessing God in generals Take every mercy as thou wouldst some Watch or curious worke of Art and view every piece every part or as those that hehold some admirable Image they are intentive to every part thereof to observe the beauty life and proportion thereof Oh it is this and this onely will draw out thy soul and make thee have rivers of water flowing from thee It is this that will make thee say with Elihu Job 32. 18. I am full of matter the Spirit within me constraineth me my belly is as wine which hath no vent it is ready to burst like new bottles Thus five words of praise coming from an heart aggravating Gods mercy are more effectual then five hundred in a formal general way SERM. LXXV Privative and preventing Mercies are to be accounted of as Positive 2 COR. 1. 10. Who delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver IN this Text we have Paul celebrating the goodness of God to him in that extream trouble mentioned before wherein was observed First The holy thankefull temper of Paul studying to aggravate the mercy of God He leaveth out nothing unexpressed which may not make for the great exaltation of Gods goodness towards him There remaineth a second Doctrine which is That the children of God are to account of the privative and preventing mercies as much as positive Paul cals this deliverance a deliverance from such a death so great a death yet he was not actually killed he was onely in danger of it but because had not the mercy of God prevented death had surely seised on him Therefore this mercy of preventing death he doth judge to be as it were a positive deliverance from it That as we see God doth deal with his people He accepteth of a willing mind for the deed And Heb. 11. 17. Abraham is said to offer up his onely begotten sonne because it was in the immediate disposition and preparation of his heart he had done it had not God prevented it So it is here with the people of God Those mercies which keep off the dangers that are immediately issuing out upon us they take as if the mercy was it self positively done to them Divines have a saying Plures sunt gratiae privativae quàm positivae There are more privative favours of God than positive and this they apply to spiritual things And indeed if we consider how many sins God may keep thee from which others fall into how many temptations God doth preserve thee in which swallow up others we must needs acknowledge that we are no more able to reckon up these preventing mercies of God than we can count the stars or reckon up the sand upon the sea-shore That this truth may affect us and cause us more to imploy our thoughts in a thankfull way towards God concerning all that evil which might come upon us if God did not interpose Let us take notice of these particulars First That there are some mercies God doth vouchsafe to his people which do suppose evil to be actually come upon them As when Joseph was delivered out of prison Jonah out of the whales belly the Lord did not prevent which he could have done if he had pleased but suffered them to overtake those children of his Yea all the troubles which do befall the godly he could have prevented them if he had pleased He that can deliver out of them can also stop them from coming but God out of wise ends both relating to his own glory and the good of his people doth bring these exercises upon them Then on the other side There are mercies which do not suppose evil actually to come upon us but ready and prepared to fall on us if the Lord did not forbid That as we see it was with the Angel when he had his drawn sword and was ready to strike Jerusalem with the plague as well as other places the Lord did mercifully command the Angel to put up his sword Now no doubt but David did account this preventing mercy this stopping of the plague to be as great as if they had been delivered in the midst of it For in regard of the preparation to this judgement they were but as so many dead corpses So that the people of God are of too narrow and streightned a spirit when they look onely to what troubles they have been in and God hath delivered them Oh consider further how many might have fallen upon thee yea would certainly have bruised thee had not the Lord kept them off Secondly These preventing mercies do empty themselves in a two-fold chanel For they are either Temporal evils or Spiritual evils that these mercies do relate unto and thus preventing mercies do compasse us about all the day long what evil might not have fallen upon thee every moment This disease that casualty such a sudden and unexpected calamity Insomuch that thou canst not hear of any misery fallen upon any living but it also might have come upon thee Doth any sit mourning and wringing their hands crying out O ye that passe by see if
the discriminating mercy of God he killeth and maketh alive he maketh poor and maketh rich So that all these things are distributed according to the wisdome and pleasure of God If so how then cometh it about that thou escapest such a misery and another doth not Afflictions rise not out of the dust neither doth preferment and honour God then giveth a cup of gladness and joy or a cup of gall and wormwood to drink off Now then look about thee and behold how many sit in darkness and have no light how many are bereaved of senses of their understandings and of all comforts even brought to be like Dives in hell asking for a drop of water and cannot obtain it but it is light in thy Goshen while darknesse with others Doth not this preventing mercy melt thy soul Art thou not made of brasse and iron if thy preservation from the miseries of others especially the damnable and sinfull wayes do not exceedingly move thee How canst thou carry such live coales in thy bosome as these thoughts are and not be wholly inflamed with them 3. Acknowledge this likewise That whatsoever God in justice might inflict upon thee and yet doth not therein is also preventing mercy It may amaze us to consider what objects of wrath and examples of Gods vengeance there have been in the world Cain was in the beginning of the world God made him like an Anatomy-lecture for all succeeding evil men to beware of his impieties Pharaoh also God saith of him For this cause have I raised thee up or as some contend I have kept thee alive in the midst of those many judgements that destroyed round about him Rom. 9. 17. Exod. 9. 16. Now let any thankfull godly heart meditate on these Histories Consider these examples Why wast not thou a Cain thou a Pharaoh Why should not God make thee an example of his wrath to be a pillar of salt to season others as well as others are to thee Oh the depths of this preventing mercy how incomprehensible and unsearchable are they Must not this astonish thee to think that whatsoever God in the way of wrath hath done to any man in the world the same God might have done to thee and no more have wronged thee than he did them Account this therefore upon the riches of his mercy that these things have not come upon thee Look upon all such mercies as priviledges and exemptions God doth otherwise with thee than many others he punisheth their sins he animadverteth their iniquities they are howling under his anger and thou art preserved It is true God is no accepter of persons and therefore Cain cannot expostulate with God why he did not make him Abel nor can Pharaoh complain of God because he was not David nor yet can Judas find fault with the Lord because he was not Peter because as Aquinas observeth well in things of meer bounty and liberality there cannot be any accepting of persons seeing that if no munificence to any at all were extended there was no cause of grievance And thus it is wholly with God he is no debtor nor obliged in any way of justice to man and therefore if he do what he pleaseth with his own Shall thy eye be evil because he is good So that God must needs be justified by these different dispensations onely thou whom the Lord doth thus spare and exempt from his way of wrath look upon it as so much mercy as if God had said to the damned in hell as he did to Lazarus in the grave Come forth 4. Not onely whatsoever God doth in a way of justice but also in a providential way which we call chance bring upon others and not upon thee this also is a preventing mercy We reade that if a man were cutting a tree and the Axes head fall off and kill another it is said The Lord delivered that man into his hand Exod. 21. 13. compared with Deut. 13. 19. Although to man there be such a thing as contingency and casualty such sad things fall out many times that no wisdom of man could fore-see yet in respect both of Gods knowledge and providence no thing is uncertain to God and therefore those casual things are as much under Gods providence as necessary things What can be more inconsiderable than an hair Yet not one of these fals from the head without Gods will This being so let a godly man but think with himself How many casual murders how many sudden and unexpected deaths have many met withall in the world What sad changes have been made in families in relations by some accidents that were never thought of yea it may be the like never fall out again Now then cast up thy accounts ô child of God see how much is owing to God in this very particular Count every such preventing mercy as much as a positive one 5. Whatsoever the frailty imbecillity and weaknesse of man would cast him into yet God keepeth thee from know this is a preventing mercy Man is such a poor infirm creature so many things are requisite to keep up life that we may wonder every man who goeth from home alive is not brought home dead at night How is it that this candle under so many puffs of wind is not extinguished How cometh this spark of fire to be kept in a sea of water So that thou mayest justly account every dayes life a resurrection from the dead Had man no other keeper or preserver than himself both in temporals and spirituals every moment he would die both in soul and body Say then O Lord my heart is affected my soul suffers violence within me If I had the tongue of men and Angels I could not exalt thy mercy according to the nature of it I look upon my self as brought out of the grave yea brought out of hell many times a day The Papists have an opinion about the Virgin Mary That she was borne in no original sinne nor ever committed any actual sinne and therefore say they when she called Christ her Redeemer that is by way of preservation not that she was actually redeemed from sinne but would necessarily have been if Christ had not preserved her This is an absurd and a foolish opinion Onely in the general we may say That Christ as he is a Redeemer to his people by actual deliverance so also by preservation Christ is a Saviour in that he preserveth thee from the sinnes thou wouldest have committed as well as those thou hast committed Yea all those iniquities thy heart thy temptations would have carried thee unto if God had not prevented thou art to blesse God for as well as the pardon of those sinnes actually committed by thee Fill thy soul therefore with the meditation of these things Say Lord what I am is a mercy what I am not is a mercy The removing of evil is a mercy the keeping of it off is likewise a mercy SERM. LXXVI Of the Necessity of Gods
we not to have done it 4. One chief motive which is to put us upon all holy obedience unto God is Thankfulness There are two great and principal parts of Divinity the one is De gratià Dei of the grace of God and the other De gratitudine hominis of mans thankfulnes There are indeed several reasons why we are commanded to abound in holy works but one of them is thereby to testifie our thankfulnes to God that though we cannot do anything to merit at his hands though Christ as Mediator hath purchased all spiritual priviledges so that we cannot do any holy duty as a cause to procure them yet to manifest our thankfulnes to God we are ready with delight to do his will 5. A thanksgiving heart is the most proper and sutable disposition to the Gospel dispensation wherein grace doth in so many wonderfull effects demonstrate it self Now praise doth properly answer to free grace and love Eph. 1. 16. Gods predestination and his adoption it is That we should be to the praise of the glory of his grace These new songs should alwayes be in our mouths And again v. 12. That we should be to the praise of his glory So that if you say Why did God predestinate thee It is to his praise Why doth he convert It is to his praise Thus he adopts he justifieth that we might be only to his praise Thus 1 Pet. 2. 9. we are a chosen generation a peculiar people that we should shew forth his praises The children then of free grace must be the children of praises and thanksgivings unto God Every power of the soul every part of the body should be a tongue as it were to glorifie God Were we more affected with the depth breadth and length of this grace of God we should be more abounding in this duty of blessing God David cals his tongue his glory though some apply it to the soul because of this work Lastly If we praise not God when mercies are obtained by prayer it discovereth a rotten and insincere heart It argued thou never didst pray for mercies upon right grounds to glorifie God to be thereby more instrumental in our service of him but only for our own ends and our own necessities For he that prayeth spiritually will praise God cheerfully he will more rejoyce in the favour of God because God heareth his prayers then the benefit obtained If then thou neglectest this duty of thanksgiving thou discoverest a prophane earthly heart that thou preferrest the mercy desired above the glory and honour of God and therefore it will be just with God never to hear thy prayers more For thankfulness is the only way to preserve mercies and to have more added SERM. LXXXII God is the fountain of all our Mercies they are his Gifts and why 2 COR. I. II. That for the gift bestowed upon us THe second part in order to be treated of is The Object matter for which or that for which Paul would have solemne thanksgiving after such solemn prayer The gift bestowed upon us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This temporal deliverance he calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it came from the favour of God not from any merits or deserts in Paul Some make a difference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was applied onely to the common gifts of Gods Spirit especially those which Divines call Dona ministrantia Gifts of service and the Schools Gratiae gratis datae and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the grace and favour of God in a special manner or to the effect thereof which is inherent grace in the soul These graces are called Dona sanctificantia Gifts that doe truely sanctifie those that have them The Schooles falsly call them Gratiae gratum facientes But though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be often applied to such common spirituall gifts as 1 Cor. 12. alibi Yet sometimes we must thereby understand sanctifying grace and justifying grace Rom. 5. 16. Rom. 11. 28. And indeed if we will make any difference it seemeth to be this rather that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the Effect and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Cause as Rom. 12. 6. Having gifts according to the grace that is given to us Hence it is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is generally translated gift in the New Testament So Favorinus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So that what the Scripture other where calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jac. 1. 17. Act. 8. 21. Psal 1. 17. it may be the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onely it doth properly signifie such a gift as maketh to the publick and spiritual advantage of the Church onely in this Text it may have the general signification and the special The general Paul's Deliverance was a temporal gift It was a mercy in these outward things a preservation from death either violent as the common exposition you heard is or from natural For Baldwin the Lutheran Expositor thinketh it may well enough be understood of some desperate sicknesse Paul was afflicted with Howsoever this outward mercy of preservation is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and it may have also the special signification of a Paul's life and preservation was a gift in this sense for hereby his ministerial labours might be more successefull But this latter consideration will come in in the close of this verse Let us take notice of the general one Paul's life and preservation it is a gift From whence observe That not onely spiritual mercies which are above natural causes but even our ordinary temporal enjoyments are the gift of God It 's not Gods gift onely to sanctifie us to justifie us but to give us our health our food our preservation so that we live wholly upon the meer bounty of God we are all so many Almes-men the world is an Almes-house Man doth not or cannot obtaine the least mercy with his owne wisdom and power without the blessing of God This is a necessary truth For we look more upon these ordinary mercies as the fruit of our own labour than as Gods meer free gift The Apostle Jam. 1. 17. saith Every good gift is from God Every gift whether natural or supernatural what have we that we have not received is true both in nature and grace For although in the sense that Pelagians did it was very erroneous to confound Creation and Nature with grace yet in this respect we may say That Creation and Preservation is of the grace and favour of God because he communicated of his goodnesse to the creature onely from his meer favour But to speake after the Scripture-language onely those spiritual favours and Church-priviledges which conduce to eternal blessednesse are called The grace of God So that health life and other mercies though they be The gifts of God yet are not called The grace of God However
they both agree in this our temporal mercies and spiritual mercies come from God the fountain of them though spiritual mercies have a more special and restrained consideration To affect us with humility and thankfulnesse in this point consider these particulars First That even those mercies which are the effects of natural causes yet they are the gift of God Should he withdraw his concourse no creature were able to performe its usefull operations The fire would not warme us our bread would not nourish us our raiment would not comfort us against the cold So that we are not only to bless God that we have such creatures as these are but that they are usefull We are not only to praise God that we have bread and raiment but that these things can do their office For in these there is a two-fold mercy 1. That God doth provide them for us 2. That when they are provided they put forth their usefulnesse Thus our Saviour alledgeth out of Deuteronomy Mat. 4. 4. Thou shalt not live by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of Gods mouth If God give not a word of blessing our bread cannot nourish us Hence we are also said In God to live and move and have our being Act. 17. 28. Although therefore there are natural causes and these do produce their effects from a natural necessity yet because they are second causes they do therefore depend upon God the chiefest and supream cause both in esse and operari in their being and operation Thus the fire would not burn if God should not give concourse thereunto as appeareth in the case of the three Worthies and the reason which is given by the Dominicans though the Jesuites do not well relish it is that every second cause though it be a natural agent and so determined to operation yet because it is in a potentiality to worke it hath a potentia a power this must be reduced to act by that which is the pure and chief act viz. God himself So that it is not enough for God to give a natural power to produce such an effect unlesse he also actuate that power and goe along with it This is a truth and when believed will draw off our eyes from the creature more so as to set them upon God and to acknowledge him more in all things This then thou art to know That even those natural comforts which flow from natural causes so that it would be a miracle if they should not produce them are yet from the goodnesse and bounty of God Now how often are we unthankfull for these mercies we doe not blesse God for the gift of seeing the gift of hearing the gift of walking Secondly Those comforts which flow from moral causes these also are to be attributed to the gift of God A man that is diligent in his place he may grow to be rich The strongest usually prevail in battel The swiftest they overcome in a race yet where these moral causes are the effect is Gods gift Therefore Solomon observeth that the clean contrary falleth out sometimes Eccles 9. 11. That the battel is not to the strong nor the race to the swift How many are diligent carefull and wise in their places and yet cannot obtain wealth in this world So that even those things which are brought about by the means that we use we must acknowledge they are Gods gift if his blessing be not upon the means they are frustrated Thus the Lord doth instruct Israel against any pride and confidence that might arise as if their power and strength did make them rich For it is the Lord saith he that giveth thee power to get wealth Deut. 8. 18. You see whatsoever wisdome diligence and good husbandry we use yet if any thing come thereby it is the gift of God You have a most significant place for this truth Hag. 1. 6. where the Prophet sheweth whatever we eat or drinke or take care and labour about the Lord can blast it and make it come to nothing Ye eat but have not enough ye cloathe you but there is none warme and he that earneth wages it is to put in a bag with holes Doth not this Text evidently proclaim that the labourer in his wages the tradesman in his buying and selling the husbandman in his plowing and sowing cannot adde one farthing to his efface unlesse the Lord blesse it Thirdly All those comforts we have and gifts either to relieve or refresh us that we have from others we are to account them Gods gifts rather than mens If any man help thee in thy necessities if any man preferre and honour thee thou art indeed to be thankfull unto men that are benefactors but more to God who inclined their hearts to thee Yet how little is this thought upon when we receive courtesies from men kindnesses from men we look upon these alone whereas if God did not move their hearts thou wouldst have found no relief from them It was thus with Joseph he was cast into prison upon the Kings displeasure in all outward appearance the Goaler would have used him with all cruelty yet saith the Text Genes 39. 21. God shewed mercy to Joseph and gave him favour in the sight of the keeper of the prison The Lord hath a command over mens hearts he maketh them mercifull and free to some and again he turneth the hearts of some men against others Now we poor creatures look only upon men as if they did all as if all were in their power But as God commanded Laban who was in a rage against Jacob not to speak an ill word against him So also doth the Lord daily he maketh men thy friends and he raiseth them up to be foes We have likewise a notable instance Exod. 12. 36. when the Israelites were upon their departure the Aegyptians though their cruel enemies who hated and oppressed them yet it 's said The Lord gave them favour in their eyes that they lent them even jewels of gold and silver On the contrary when God was provoked it is said Psalm 105. He turned their heart to his people As David then said when Shimei reviled him bitterly The Lord hath bid him So when thou receivest any favour any mercy from men look up higher than men The Lord hath bid him Mens gifts are much rather Gods gifts yea even what those do for us who are in the most indeared relations and so have principles of nature to instigate them to help thee yet thou art to look upon all their care and love as Gods gift to thee If thy parents have taken care of thee if they have provided for thee if they have looked to thee though it was their duty and they would have been unnatural if they had done otherwise yet do thou look upon it as Gods gift to thee How many parents are given up to unnatural affections How many love their lusts and their whores more than their children So that
assemble themselves together You see even in the Apostles dayes the Devil tempted some in this kind yet they are reproved though private Christians in those dayes had greater gifts and abilities then now ordinarily men have yea they are reproved though some think the cause was not voluntary but that it was fear of danger and persecution It was criminal to meet together and therefore fear of death and other miseries might make some forbear to assemble themselves yet for all this they are censured by the Apostle Let this then be laid to heart by thee look that no reason keep thee from this publick worship of God but what God himself will allow of For in some cases God hath condescended that his own worship shall rather be omitted then mens necessities not supplied Secondly As God is more honoured so hereby The love and charity of the people of God is greatly quickened to one another This publick and holy meeting together is a special means to enflame the affections of one believer to another Hence you have it so often noted That the Disciples met together with one accord and they had one heart And therefore diversities of opinions and alienation of affections do cause commonly a publick rent and division in Church-societies David doth with affection expresse the advantage of the publick Ordinances We went to the house of the Lord and we took sweet counsel together Psal 55. 14. This is the visible communion of the Saints wherein as members of the same body they are so firmly and nearly compacted together There is nothing that the Devil doth so much design as rents schismes and differences in the Church of God knowing that these if not healed will certainly destroy all at last Now a right and orderly meeting in these publick Assemblies are a special means to preserve love How shall those mouths speak against one another that joyned together to pray to God and to praise God You that called upon one Father as Brethren How shall ye disagree as if one had not the same God and the same Father with another Therefore our Saviour directs to say Our Father not my Father hereby commanding our publick meetings together and also our union and brotherly love Thirdly Therefore are these publick duties to be the more prized Because of Gods special presence and power there Mat. 18. You have a peculiar promise for two or three meeting together in Christs name even as by way of type God had promised his peculiar presence in the Temple And for this reason you have David with such ardent and passionate affections expressing his esteem of the Ordinances of God Psal 63. 1 2. My soul thirsteth and my flesh longeth as in a dry land where no water is to see thy power And at another time How amiable are thy tabernacles O Lord of hosts And As the Hart panteth after the brooks so doth his soul after God in the Ordinances Though David when he was banished and by force could not come to the publick Congregation no doubt did enjoy God in a most comfortable and full manner yet still he is not satisfied but breaths for his presence in those Ordinances And therefore for thee to think that thou mayest meet God as well at home is as if a cripple should have looked to be healed by going into some other water then that of the pool of Bethesda Lastly These publick Ordinances are therefore to be highly esteemed Because those who are quickened and enlivened may prevail for those who are indisposed and unfit for prayer So that the coldnesse and dulnesse of one man may be supplied by the zeal and fervency of another Insomuch that happily the prayer which if performed by thy own self would not be successefull being now joyned with others doth obtain its desired effect yea it may be in that publick service when thou through temptations canst or darest not pray for thy self others accompanying of thee do put up thy own thoughts and speak the desires of thy own heart So that thou art even astonished to see how God ordereth the gracious gifts of others to be helpfull unto thee As it was with Job his whole body though full of ulcers and pains yet because his mouth was free that could plead with God in behalf of the whole body Thus it may be when many are gathered together that Christian who could not speak for it self which could not pray for it self findeth the hearts and mouths of others opened in his behalf So that as when many coals are laid together some live ones may revive those that are ready to decay Thus the zeale of others may helpe thy coldnesse The life of others may quicken thee up against deadnesse and thou find that spiritual heat come upon thee from others which thou wouldst not have had alone Use of Exhortation To prize these publick Assemblies more than thou hast done Pray for such strong and earnest affections as thou findest David manifesting after them Oh let these publick meetings raise up thy heart as if thou were in Heaven The beholding of the faces of the affections and of the graces of others let it assimilate thee also into them As when Saul came among the Prophets the spirit of prophecy fell upon him likewise Oh let the Congregation of those who feare God worke upon thee also Be in these Assemblies as Peter on the Mount of transfiguration saying in an holy excesse of spirit It is good to be here What high expressions are those of David in reference to the solemne Ordinances Psal 65. 4. Blessed is the man thou choosest and causest to approach unto thee that he may dwell in thy Courts we shall be satisfied with the goodnesse of thy house even of thy holy Temple Here is sweetnesse and fullnesse that the people of God find in these publick approaches All the merry meetings all the fairs and markets are nothing to this spiritual society And Psalm 84. 10. A day in thy Courts is better than a thousand otherwhere Hence he had rather be a door-keeper in the house of God then dwell in the tents of wickednesse Oh heavenly and gracious frame A Sabbath day is better than all the dayes of the week he hath more rejoycing there then a thousand dayes can afford that are spent in worldly affaires But when these publick duties are thus advanced as you hear you must alwayes look that they be done holily spiritually fervently that they be not turned into a meer custome and external fashion as it too often falleth out in Church-assemblies their bodies are present but their souls are absent and therefore they have no more than the carkasse and out-side Such prayers and praises God will not accept The third and last particular is to be spoken to in a word and that is In whose behalf these publick prayers and praises are and that is said In our behalfe Some Copies have read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but
of glory and rejoycing to us So likewise Gal. 6. 4. the Apostle pressing every man to try his own works to examine his intentions therein giveth this as the consequent fruit thereof That then he shall have rejoycing in himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a kind of glorying and boasting in himself To clear this truth let us first shew what is required to this glorying and then in what respects it is lawfull and allowed us And for the former First It is necessary to this rejoycing and glorying in the first place That we have an high esteem of the excellency and worth of that grace we discover to be in us If so be we are to rejoyce in these outward mercies which yet are only for the body what matter of joy should it be to find those spiritual workings of Gods Spirit in us which are of eternal concernment What Solomon saith concerning the esteem of wisdom which is indeed nothing but grace we should all make good Prov. 2. 4. If thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures That soul then which can rejoyce in the discovery of grace must esteem of it more than all the treasures of the world To say O Lord I had rather find my self sanctified I had rather see the powerfull workings of grace upon me then to be made the greatest or richest man in the world we have many exhortations to examine our selves and try our hearts to see if we can find this precious jewel in our souls Now none will be cordial to examine and search herein but those who look upon it as the greatest treasure Did the woman in the Gospel make such diligent search for a lost groat only and call her neighbours to rejoyce with her when she had found it How large and boundless then should our thoughts be about the excellency of grace And indeed to the godly soul this is the great question it labours to study and to resolve Whether it be in the state of grace or no knowing that this onely is the most blessed and happy estate in the world Secondly As we must highly esteem this work of grace so we must have a Certainty and perswasion that we have obtained it Had not Paul known that his heart had been sincere that he was not acted by carnal wisdome he could never have rejoyced For Philosophers make joy to be in that good thing we do possesse and also the knowledge thereof This Text then doth abundantly declare that the people of God may have a certain knowledge of the work of grace So that although the heart be indeed deceitfull and full of hypocrisie yet when sanctified it hath some measure of truth and sincerity in it and so far doth not deceive us He then that would rejoyce in the grace of God wrought in him must presse after assurance must endeavour after a certain perswasion of the truth of grace in him And although this perswasion be not justifying faith yea it is separable from it A man may be justified may be sanctified and not know it yet it is such a priviledge yea and duty also that we should diligently take heed of all those things that may weaken our assurance that may make us to doubt and question whether Jesus Christ be in us or no. Thirdly A sure perswasion of the goodnesse and integrity of our hearts is not enough but it must be upon right grounds and in a Scripture-demonstration For if it be a false perswasion it may produce indeed a rejoycing but a false rejoycing also It is more than probable that Paul while a persecutor being zealously affected to the tradition of his fathers and thinking himself bound as he professeth to do what he did against Christ and his members could then say His rejoycing was the testimony of his conscience being perswaded that in those wayes he glorified God And therefore some do extend that profession of his before the Council That he had lived in all good conscience before God untill that day And if this be so then we see plainly That every perswasion though never so confident is not enough to make us rejoyce but we must look to Scripture-grounds Doth not experience confirm this Take any heretical person any erroneous person though it be to the destruction of the very fundamentals of Religion yet he will proclaim a rejoycing in his heart from the good testimony of his conscience So that an erroneous conscience satisfied doth bring peace and rejoycing but it is an erroneous joy It is either from meer humane principles or from diabolical delusions But this will come in more properly when we come to the ground or reason it self of Paul's rejoycing Fourthly To this rejoycing there is required The Spirit of God enabling us thereunto So that the same spirit which doth seal to us the assurance of our estate doth also cause comfort in us The Spirit of God doth enlighten and sanctifie after this it doth seal and comfort And this latter work of Gods Spirit is necessary as well as the other For we see it lieth not in the power of Gods people to have comfort when they will Hence Gal. 5. Joy is the fruit of the Spirit and it 's called Joy in the holy Ghost not only objectively because it is a joy in spiritual objects but also efficiently because it is wrought by him Hence it is that the Spirit of God mouldeth the heart for comfort removeth fears and doubts restraineth and keepeth off Satan whereby no sinne no Devil is able to deject and cast down because God comforteth ●Thus you see what goeth to rejoycing in the graces of God and thereby an holy glorying in them Now let us see in what respect it is lawfull thus to rejoyce And First It is lawfull to rejoyce in them as they are the effects and fruits of Gods favour and love as they signifie the cause from whence they come Rahab could not but rejoyce to see the thread that was a signe of such a great mercy designed for her If then the godly man have that spiritual skill as to difference between trusting in his graces as any way causes of his salvation and thankfully receiving them assignes from which he may be perswaded of it then doth he hit the mark It is usually said from Luther That we are to take heed not onely of evil deeds but of good and holy works also because the heart is apt to be carried away with pride and self-confidence insensibly yet this much not so deterre the people of God that they may not take comfort from their graces For how can they see them and not rejoyce because they are the pledge of Gods favour it self and of an interest in Christ So that though their graces be weak and full of imperfections yet they manifest that to be ours which is fully perfect and hath no fault at all in it Imperfect graces do manifest Gods perfect grace to
is it How slavish and unbelieving Hence is it that the people of God need so many instructions and informations Hence is it that they are often in prayers and groans unutterable ere they can truly and cordially call God Father They fear him as a Judge and flie from him rather as an enemy Even as if there be never such glorious and delightfull objects to refresh the eyes with yet if a man be in the dark he cannot take any pleasure therein Thus many of Gods dear children who walk with a tender conscience who are diligent in all the wayes of holiness yet have not this testimony of conscience to comfort them it is hid from their eyes only because the Spirit of God doth not enable them thereunto Now the Apostle telleth us 1 Cor. 2. 17. It is the Spirit of God whereby we know the things that we have freely received of God 2. The Spirit of God doth witness unto us Objectively as I may so call it and that is by some effects and fruits of his grace upon our hearts by which we gather as by so many sure signes that we are in the state of grace and not hypocrites But because this will come in more fully in the ensuing particulars I shall only touch upon those effects by which the testimony of our conscience is rightly guided in witnessing to us And First By having a full and serious purpose to avoid all sinne as it shall become manifested to us As David professed That he did hate every evil way Psal 119. 104. He that doth allow and indulge himself in any known sinne cannot have the testimony of this good conscience It is true as is to be shewed there is no man living though never so holy but his conscience convinceth him of much sinne and many infirmities and this maketh him so highly esteem Christ and a Gospel-righteousness but yet it doth not witness to him that he liveth in the customary acting of grosse sinnes if it doth the Spirit of God never witnesseth with such a mans conscience that he is the child of God No if thou livest quietly without the smitings and condemnations of conscience it is because it is stupid and the Devil hath deluded and hardened thee for Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience and by this effect that we have a tender respect to avoid all known sinne Secondly Another effect is A zeal for the glory of God to honour him to magnifie Christ and to set up his Kingdome as much as we are able The more zeal and fervency men have had for Gods honour the more powerfull testimony of a good conscience they alwayes enjoyed As we see in this Paul in his whole ministerial course with what burning zeal did he flame forth continually and on the contrary so much remisness so much negligence and lukewarmness so much is the abating of consciences testimony Thirdly An holy confidence and boldnesse in our approachings to God And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. The Spirit of Adoption removing our fears our unbelief and dejection raising us up also with an holy confidence and humble boldness doth hereby testifie with our consciences that we are the children of God Hence the more distrustfull fears the more tormenting doubts that we groan under the weaker and more feeble is the witness of our conscience yea if those prevail and are predominant then our conscience is set against us and witnesseth against us and then the child of God is in sad desertions when his heart witnesseth against him that he is an hypocrite that he did serve the Lord without integrity For though this be false yet till Gods Spirit remove this darknesse and fill thee with an Evangelical confidence thou art not able to hold up thy head Fourthly Another effect by which Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience is An unfeigned love to the brethren a delight in all those that love God Where this is that thou lovest godly men for their godliness sake this demonstrateth thou art born of God and hast the same Image in thee as they have And if thy love also extend to thy enemies if thou findest that thou canst pray for them that curse thee do good to them that revile especially thou pitiest their souls and wouldst be helpfull to them in the way to Heaven though they are enraged adversaries to thee and that without cause By this frame of heart the conscience doth give a full and precious evidence Fifthly In daily and faithfull exercises of self-denial in the wayes of God doth the Spirit of God greatly assure the conscience In sufferings for Christ in enduring the losse of name liberty and li●e it self for Gods cause is the clearest testimony of our conscience Hence the Martyrs had so much serenity of spirit such unspeakable consolations because they found they loved Christ better than all things As they gave a testimony to the word of God called therefore Martyrs so God also gave them a testimony within whereby they did glory in tribulations and triumph over all aduersaries We see that if men suffer in false wayes if they be Martyrs for the Devil if they die for that which is highly offending God they many times glory in the comfort they have from the testimony of their conscience Now if a deluded conscience if deluded joyes can do so much what shall not the Spirit of God do sealing and confirming his love to us by our patient sufferings for him Thus when happily the world doth witness against thee wicked men they condemn thee and lay many heavy accusations against thee as the false Apostles did here concerning Paul yet this testimony with in will answer all and God doth come in with fuller evidences of his love in such passages of self denial Lastly The Spirit of God doth witness to our spirit in this blessed effect viz. When we do with delight and joy meditate think and speak about heavenly things when the Ordinances of God are matter of pleasure to us David doth often pro●efs what delight he had in the Ordinances of God how the word of God was more precious than gold more sweet than the honey-comb Now when the heart is thus affected to holy things that they find more joy as David professeth Psal 4. in the things of God then worldly men do in their corn and wine when these increase By this excellent heavenly temper the Spirit of God witnesseth with our conscience that we are the children of God But I shall enlarge no more on this because the Doctrine of Assurance will follow upon the next words We shall now lay down some distinctions to clear this truth to you because it is plain That many times the people of God being cast down with black thoughts that cannot say with Paul The testimony of our conscience is our rejoycing And on the other side many heretical pharisaical and self-deluded persons will at least outwardly boast
of this Therefore First We may take notice That there is a two-fold testimony of our conscience which doth afford matter of rejoycing either particular as to some matter of fact or one particular business especially when calummated by adversaries Or secondly General which is to the whole frame of our heart and our whole conversation These two are greatly to be distinguished For we see David in many places praying to God That he would reward him according to his innocency and deal with him according to the righteousnesse of his hands and he doth many times appeal to God concerning his integrity Now this was from a testimony of his conscience to a particular fact Saul and others did maliciously accuse him laying to his charge things that he never did Of this Paul speaketh also 1 Cor. 4. 2. I know nothing by my self He did not matter those crimes that the false Apostles burdened him with because his conscience did clear him as to any grosse neglect in his ministerial course Now you must know that many a natural or moral man may have in some cases this particular testimony of his conscience and receive comfort from it and yet be farre enough from the state of grace How many persons in the world are slandered by some malicious adversaries as guilty of such crimes which are altogether false Now happily thou art pure and free from them thy conscience justifieth thee and thou hast comfort from this but this is not all which God requireth Therefore there is a second testimony of the conscience which is General and that speaketh to the whole man witnessing that thy whole conversation is unblameable and that thy heart in the universal inclination thereof is wholly for God and against sinne It is this general testimony that is the foundation of true comfort A man may be free and innocent as to some particular sinnes and yet the state of his soule be in gall and bitternesse Secondly This testimony of the conscience even in general witnessing unto thee thy state of grace may be considered two wayes For either it may be supposed or expected that it should testifie unto thee an heart and life free from all sinne failing in nothing at all Or else To witnesse sincerity and uprightnesse for the main though failing in many things If then a Christian should resolve to take no joy unlesse his conscience can witness perfection and an immunity from any failings such an one must resolve to have no comfort all his life time but if it witness the main bent and frame of thy heart to be for God though carried aside often through the violence and deceitfulnesse of temptations from this thou mayest rejoyce This is much to be observed for why are the discouragements and disconsolateness of Gods own children so great but because their conscience telleth them of several failings and they desire some testimony of a perfection Satisfie your selves therefore and regulate your thoughts in this particular And thus we must expound that place 1 John 3. 20 21. which at first appearance seemeth to speak very terribly If our hearts condemn us God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things This Text if not rightly understood is enough like Belshazzars writing in the wall to strike us with trembling For is there any man living whose heart doth not condemn him for sinne Doth not this very Apostle say 1 John 1. 8. If we say we have no sinne we deceive our selves and no truth is in us If then we have sinne how can our hearts but condemn us And then God knowing our hearts and seeing more evil and errour in us then we can understand must condemn us much more What is this then but to fill every godly man with despair But that the Apostle himself may not speak a contradiction we must have recourse to the mentioned distinction viz. That our hearts condemn us justly for the main that our foundation is rotten that we love sinne more than God then we have cause to be wholly cast down but if our hearts do not condemn us for the main only for those imperfections and frailties which we cannot perfectly be purged from in this life then we may have confidence towards God Thirdly Our conscience may be considered as Habitually able to testifie or as Actually and immediately prepared This is necessary to be observed For every regenerate man having his conscience sanctified is thereby habitually able to give a good testimony but many things may intervene that hinder it in its actings Even as the Sunne is able to give a clear light to the whole world but clouds and mists may hinder the actual communication of it And thus it is often with the children of God their conscience is sanctified but many doubts arise many scruples and fears do interpose so that they have not that actual witness in their conscience which they might have So that as in sanctification there are the principles of grace though the exercise of them may be stopt So it is in matter of consolation there is the foundation and fountain of it though the stream may be troubled And this should make us wary so to walk as not to put stops and checks in the way of conscience especially to labour for a sound judgement and a full perswasion in things to be done For the more doubtfull and scrupulous we are the less firm and clear is the testimony of our conscience as appeareth Rom. 14. 22 23. Fourthly We are to distinguish of the testimony of conscience as alone and separate or relating wholly to the blood of Christ in whom alone all our acceptance and cause of comfort is contained Whereas if a man should attend to the testimony of conscience alone though to his best actions he would have more cause to fear and tremble from that then rejoyce Therefore the Scripture attributeth the purging of our conscience to the blood of Christ there is no mans conscience can be good and truly peaceable that doth not look to Christ that saith not with John Behold the lamb of God that taketh away thy sinne as well as behold the holy duties thou hast lived in Heb. 9. 14. How much rather shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from dead workes Let conscience then alwayes eye Christ look to him as well as to our graces For the goodness of an evangelical conscience lieth not in this to testifie thou hast not been such a sinner or thou hast not such failings but though thou hast been such yet repenting and believing through the blood of Christ thy conscience is not to condemn thee for them because pardoned Now the conscience of a civil and pharisaical man which comforts from works done doth not at all relate to Christ and by this thou mayest find the deceitfulness of it seeing that by Christs blood alone it cometh to be truly purified Use 1. Of Instruction How few they are that have this
you had what gifts and enlargements you had what not what remarkable external duties you have done for God but with what sincerity and singlenesse of heart all this hath been performed Therefore meditate on this lesson as it were every day be studying of it to know all the practical mysteries about it And as the Husbandman before he can sow his ground with corn must cut up the roots and bushes which are in the way so do thou That thou mayest the better set thy self upon this duty of pressing after sure knowledge in this great matter remove first All those impediments and hinderances that keep thee from exercising thy self therein and they are these First A self-fulnesse and presumptuous security that thou art already in a good estate This is the condemnation and eternal ruine of many a mans soul he will not so much as put it to the Question Whether he be in a state of grace and salvation or no he will not so much as entertain one doubt about it No this is the way to bring him in despair by this means he may have trouble and disquietness of conscience he cannot live so jollily and securely as he doth Therefore whatsoever Gods word or the Ministry speaketh though never so terribly about the deceitfulness of mans heart that we delude our selves taking that which is like grace for true grace they matter it not they will perswade themselves that their souls are in a good estate and none in the world shall make them question it Of all the men in the world such secure confident spirits have the most cause to doubt and fear Never to doubt or search into thy heart and to compare thy self with the Rule is a very ill signe To take all for granted thus concerning thy soul and never to commune with thy own heart is a great argument that thou art rotten in the foundation Doth not the Wiseman observe it as a general Rule Prov. 16. 2. The wayes of a man are clean in his own eyes but the Lord pondereth the heart Though thou sayest with the Church of Laodicea Thou art rich cloathed and wantest nothing yet God knoweth thou art poor cursed and miserable God knoweth otherwise by thee then thou doest We charge it upon the Church of Rome that she is incurable because of this principle she holdeth That she cannot erre For if she would yeeld that if she would grant happily for so many years they have been grosly deceived then there would be some principles to proceed upon to reform them So it is if we meet with a man that confesseth his heart is deceitfull his condition may be very miserable though he hath applauded himself thus many years if I may be found out not to have laid a good foundation about the work of grace I would gladly be convinced of it It is the great desire of my soul not to be deceived about the nature of grace in me There are fearfull and sad instances of hypocrites and temporary believers therefore I would gladly be informed Whether I came not too short as yet Whether there be not a more excellent way then I have attained unto This man is not farre from the Kingdom of Heaven this man is in a way to be secured But the self-righteous man that supposeth himself good it is the first principle with him that he will never suffer to be questioned this man is remediless as to humane appearance Such a presumptuous man in practicals is like an Heretick in doctrinals and so after the first and second admonition we may even reject knowing that he doth willingly damne himselfe Be sure then to take heed of this rock at which so many have split themselves A second cause that must be removed is A prophane carelesse spirit whereby men do not at all matter their souls nor in what relation they do stand in towards God If their bodies be well if their worldly affairs prosper then they say Soul take thy ease But as for their spiritual condition whether God be reconciled or an enemy whether yet they have been ever taken off that natural and cursed estate they were born in they never look after it Oh foolish and brutish man If the Spirit of God shall once convince thee of thy sinfull and dangerous estate of the curses of the Law which may fall upon thee every moment then thou maist have no rest day or night till thou obtainest some assurance herein The third cause is The over-greedinesse and importunate minding of our earthly businesses We rise with the world in our heart and go to bed with it in our heart so that we never set time apart seriously to think how it is with us Hence come those constant delayes and procrastinations promising our selves we will after such and such businesses are over set our selves to the examination of our wayes but still the work is not done our dayes passe away our hearts grow more hardned and indisposed every day till at last death unexpectedly seizeth upon us and then we would gladly have oil when it is too late then with Esai we cry out for a blessing with tears and bitterness but we come too late How comfortable on the other side is it for a godly man dying to say his soul hath been set in order long before he hath not his evidences now to seeke The knowing of his heart hath beene all his study in his life time Satan can object no new thing which he hath not already thought upon Lastly There is another cause in the other extream which is to be removed if we would arrive to this certainty and that is To shake off all despairing and discouraging thoughts as so many vipers fastened upon thee This valley must be exalted as well as the other mountains levelled Paper too much wetted as well as foul receiveth no characters So the heart sinfully dejected and disquieted is indisposed for assurance as well as the presumptuous one For this reason we need the Spirit of God to seal us and to confirm us yea we need Gods Spirit more in this work of confirmation then of illumination Darkness and ignorance is sooner removed out of the mind than unbelief and diffidence out of the heart Do ye not see it thus often with the children of God who are very tender in respect of illumination are very quick and Eagle-eyed in respect of conviction are wonderfully ingenuous to find out all the secret pollution and guile of their souls But then for assurance and confirmation in the grace and favour of God towards them they are exceedingly fearfull and very weak Therefore the believer must look upon slavish and disquieting fears as adversaries to his peace as well as presumptuous and secure thoughts These impediments being thus rolled out of the way the next thing he hath to do is to awe his foul with those Commands of God that require us to get a certain knowledge of
the property of those who are godly to take nothing to themselves but to give all to the grace of God You see here though Paul was so eminent for godlinesse and so admirable for gifts yet he maketh the grace of God to be alone the sole Authour of all spiritual successe This subject the Apostle doth very willingly enlarge himself upon wheresoever he hath occasion Hence in the fore-mentioned place 1 Corinth 15. 10. he saith By the grace of God I am what I am The grace of God made him an holy man The grace of God made him an eminent Apostle he had nothing as a private Christian or as an Officer but by the grace of God and because many may have grace in a common way bestowed upon them that yet abuse it as Judas he addeth This grace was not in vain Yet lest it should be thought that it was his improvement of the grace bestowed that made it so effectual he presently correcteth his expression Yet not I but the grace of God which was with me As it is not the pen but the Writer that is a cause of fair Characters Let us discover this Doctrine And First We see the Apostle rejoycing in the sincerity of his heart and yet acknowledging all to the grace of God so that these two may well stand together to take comfort from our holinesse yet to put our trust in nothing but the grace of God It is true this is a very hard lesson to performe there is required much skill and prudence herein for we are apt to runne into extreames Either through unbelief and peevishnesse we nourish doubts and perplexing thoughts in our selves not taking notice of the grace of God in us Or else if we doe behold it and rejoyce in it we are presently in a secret manner lifted up and confident thereby But we see by the Apostles practice both are consistent together So that the people of God are diligently to labour after this heavenly frame of heart To be in doubts and fears about thy condition is to live in the jaws of hell and to be presuming or carnally confident of thy graces is the next door to a sad and miserable downfall Secondly It is not enough to acknowledge the grace of God in the general but so to set up grace as to give all to it The Apostle maketh an immediate opposition between grace and workes Rom. 11. 6. there cannot be a reconciling of grace and workes together This hath been often attempted but as unhappily as the building up the walls of Jericho again The Pelagian Arminian the Socinian and Papist all these doe acknowledge grace but when we come to the root of the matter it 's nothing at last but the free-will and workes of a man It is his good use of grace that doth determine and make all things effectual not grace it self And this is the rather to be noted because Stapleton would antidote against Calvin's poison as he speaketh from this Text. For whereas Calvin taking notice of the Apostles glorying in the testimony of his conscience concernin his sincerity doth shew that Paul hereby doth not oppose that command Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord because Paul giveth all to the grace of God and resteth alone upon that From this Stapleton would excuse the Papists also because they acknowledge all good workes to come from grace Their merits are founded onely upon Christs merits Even as it doth not derogate from the power of God that he useth second causes in natural things because they are subordinate to him both in their being and operation but it doth illustrate as his bounty so his power the more to make other things powerfull Thus saith he it is not injurious to the grace and merits of Christ if we attribute merit to our workes seeing this cometh onely from Christ but it argueth his fullnesse and rich grace the more that communicateth of it to us So that saith he to put trust in the workes of grace as the proxim and immediate cause but in the grace of God as the chiefe and universal cause is no derogation to the honour and glory of Christ But that of the Apostle must be alwayes remembred If of grace then not of workes otherwise grace is no more grace It is not grace unlesse it be grace every way And therefore to make our workes the second causes to trust in though it be not so high a wickednesse as to exclude Christ throughly yet it doth in part and therefore as in the matter of worship we admit of no primary and secondary worship no more than a primary and secondary God So it is in matter of trusting we must depend only upon Christ not but that holinesse and godly works are necessarily required but not as causes under any subtil distinctions whatsoever These two things premised let us now consider What is that grace which the Apostle doth here exalt against all fleshly wisdome And First As the ground-work of all there is to be understood That grace of God whereby he was called out of that pharisaical estate and condition of enmity against Christ to be a faithfull and ready servant to him This wonderfull grace of God to him doth often melt the heart of Paul he speaketh of it with aggravating particulars as much as may be Thus Galat. 1 15. When it pleased God who called me by his grace to reveale his Sonne in me c. And therefore 1 Tim. 1. 15 16. he acknowledged himself an instance Because the chiefest of sinners of the long-suffering of Christ In Paul's conversion there were no preparations no merits of congruity there was no docible and fitted dispositions Insomuch that the adversaries to Gods grace do acknowledge Paul's conversion to be an extraordinary thing In the midst of his persecuting sury when God might have struck him dead with thunder and lightnings from Heaven and so send him quick as it were to Hell God did visit him with his grace and give him another heart to his own amazement and of all those who heard of it So if you look upon Paul in a single capacity as a private person in the whole course of his life he giveth all to the grace of God Secondly The grace of God which Paul doth also greatly exalt is In the setting of him apart to be an Apostle and an eminent Officer in the Church of God This crooked and rough timber that was onely fit for the fire God doth not onely polish and smooth by grace but advanceth it to be an eminent part in the building notwithstanding all Paul's former unworthinesse God doth not onely by his grace call him but maketh him an honourable vessel in his house This our Apostle doth likewise with great enlargement in many places take great notice of See how emphatically is he affected with this grace of God towards him Ephesians 3. 7 8. Whereof I was made a Minister according to the gift of
People 1 COR. 1. 14. That we are your rejoycing as ye also are ours THis is the Second particular in the Text and doth contain the Specification wherein this acknowledgment of the Corinthians did consist viz. That he was their Rejoycing However some false teachers had endeavoured to take off their affections from him yet they had acknowledged him to be their Father and Master by whom they were faithfully instructed in the wayes of Godliness and for this they did blesse God and rejoyce that they had such a Teacher which was so great a mercy that few did enjoy the like Now the Apostle addeth That this rejoycing was mutual he did as well rejoyce in such apt and obedient Schollars Chrysostome observeth this Addition to be a great Expression of Pauls Modesty and Humility for that the Corinthians should glory and rejoyce in such an eminent Teacher as Paul was It is no wonder but that he should rejoyce in them who were so inconstant and so uncertain in their affections to him yea who were to be blamed so much in Doctrinalls and practicalls This may make us admire But sayes Chrysostome This Paul doth for humility sake that he might not procure envy us if he thought two arrogantly of himself therefore he assumeth them into a co-partnership with his glory and rejoycing The Original word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lieth already bear opened There is nothing difficult in the words onely when Paul and the Corinthians are thus said to be one anothers rejoycing we are to understand that the Act is here put for the Object of it as often in the Scripture Thus rejoycing is put for the Object Matter and Cause of our rejoycing and if you say We are to rejoyce in God onely in the Lord not in men that is true We are to rejoyce in God onely as the Author of all our good yet we may in men as they are instruments used by God to communicate his benefits to us Thus a people may rejoyce in a faithfull Minister not principally and originally but secondarily as the Instrument which God hath made very successfull to their souls The Observation then is That it is a most happy and blessed thing when Minister and people can upon just and holy grounds rejoyce mutually in each other When the people can bless God for the Ministerial gifts and graces bestowed upon their Pastor and he again can praise God that he hath a willing teachable and obedient people ready to receive the Ordinances of Christ in the power and purity of them This is a rare priviledg Oh there are but few Churches of which the Ministers may say as Paul to the Colossians Chap. 2. That he doth rejoyce in beholding their order and faith in Christ To meet with a people that are neither ignorant heretical nor prophane but willing to walk according to Christs rule and his order this is to see heaven upon earth The Apostle findeth such matter of joy not onely in those Corinthians but in many other Churches For as he had more Labours more Oppositions more Persecutions than others so also God gave him more joy and comefort in beholding the spiritual successe of his Labours for this was the onely comefort of his spiritual heart to see men imbrace Christ and to live worthy of the Gospel it was not his own Glory Honor and greatness that he aymed at which is an excellent example to us Ministers of the Gospel that our Matter of joy should not be any earthly riches or wealth any great fame or worldly esteem but that we are to win people to Christ alone not our selves Thus the Apostle calleth the Philipians his joy and crown Phil. 4. 1. and 1 Thes 2. 19 20. speaking of his ardent affections to see their face by way of interrogation the more emphatically to express himself he saith What is our hope or joy or crown of rejoycing Are not even ye And then addeth positively the same thing for or rather surely certainly ye are our rejoycing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not a note of reasoning for then the Apostle would prove Idem for Idem as they say but of Affirmation and asseveration Ye are our crown of rejoycing Grotius saith It is an allusion to Kings who on their solemn festival dayes have not an ordinary but extraordinary Crown to wear for the greater pomp and glory Such extraordinary honor would the Thessalonians be to Christ at the great day But let us consider this in the general and then amplifie it respectively to Minister and people And First The Relation of Pastor and people is by divine Institution Christ himself hath appointed the Office it self and the application of it to this or that man through the desire of the Church so that as Churches are of Gods gathering They are his creature in a more special manner than the world is so likewise are the Officers and spiritual Guides to teach them 1 Cor. 12. 28. God hath set in his Church Apostles and Teachers Thus Act 20. 28. The Holy Ghost is said to set them Overseers over their flock ●eeing therefore that this relation is built on a Divine Foundation no wonder if managed according to Divine Rules that it is the cause of exceeding great joy These Relations are respectively for supernatural and spiritual ends and effects The Minister is for illumination Conversion Edification for the destroying of the power and Kingdome of Satan as also the establishing and promoting the Kingdome of grace in the hearts of the people The people also they are to be matter of encouragement to him they are to be helpfull and assistant in their way that Godliness may flourish that the ends of the Ministry may not be frustrated The Apostle sometimes taketh notice of the great usefulness and serviceableness even of some women in that kinde For though Ministers be compared to Light to the Sun and Starrs yet in this there is a difference The Starrs give Light and Influence into these sublunary things but receive no benefit at all from them again but the Ministers of the Church even though as eminent as Paul yet they acknowledg the manifold benefits and that in a spiritual way which they may receive from their people again now then how happy is it when there is a reciprocal and circular helping of each other when spiritual guides do convert edifie and quicken up their people and again the people do assist help and quicken up their Officers certainly as spiritual delights are greater than any bodily ones because the objects are more excellent and usefull so should this mutual rejoycing in our spiritual joy surpass all the delight that we take in our natural and civil relation neither the delight of a Wife in her Husband or of a Childe in his Father should be equal to the joy of a people in Faithfull Officers And so è contra the Reason is evident because the effects of this Relation are spiritual heavenly and
when thou shalt see what that Heaven what that glory and happiness is which at that day godliness will give thee full possession of how quickly will thy thoughts alter Then thou wilt cry out Oh it is a mans riches to be godly it is a mans wisdome to be godly a mans profit to be godly though he did there by lose all this present world Again We are prejudiced against Godlinesse because it is not in honour and repute None of the great men of the wise men do much regard it Men of great estates and birth think godliness below their greatness that it is a dishonour a stain to their reputation to walk precisely and singularly to the wicked course of the world But in this also that day will make a mighty change when you shall see that then godliness is only enquired after Then the Question will be How hast thou lived How hast thou kept thy self unspotted from sinne Then thou wouldst give thousands of worlds for godlinesse That holiness and purity thou now laughest at it will at that day be only in request At that day there is no difference between Kings and peasants between the noble and base between the rich and poor but either wicked or godly sheep or goats that maketh all the distinction If Alexander plead he conquered the world If Craesui plead the multitude of riches If one saith he is an Emperour another he is a Nobleman a Gentleman these are absurd pleas at that day Art thou a godly an holy man This only will carry it Oh then remember you will have other thoughts of godlinesse than now you have It will be more in request and honourable esteem than now it is Whosoever he be that doth evil though the great Potentates of the world the Judge will then say Depart I know you not Lastly We are prejudiced against Godlinesse because we think it is too strict it requireth too much of us It will not allow us those pleasures and delights we might have Oh but at that day such a thought will presently vanish all the labour of my life thou wilt say is not worthy to one minute of this glory could I have been a Martyr every day it would not have been equivalent to this present happiness SERM CV A further Discovery of the great Changes that will be wrought at the Day of Christ's second coming 2 COR. 1. 14. In the day of the Lord Jesus AT this great day you heard there would be a wonderfull change upon the thoughts and perswasions of men to what they are now It is not so much what thy affections and apprehensions are for the present but what they be at that day Especially in three things this Change will be seen 1. About Godlinesse which hath been dispatched 2. About Good men 3. About Christ We come therefore to the second and that is the wonderfull change that wicked men shall then have in reference to those who live godly and dare not conforme themselves to the course of this world As First Such who separate themselves from the evil wayes of the world They are matter of reproach and scorne They are judged the fooles and the simple ones by all that live near them But at that day you will have other thoughts you will then admire their happinesse call your selves the fools and deluded ones wishing that it might fare so with you as it doth with them It is said of those noble Worthies Heb. 11. 38. That they had tryal of cruel mockings Yea David though a King Psal 69. 12. complaineth He was the song of the drunkards Thus you see what thoughts men of the world have of such who fear God as Michal did David They despise them in their heart But oh the wonderfull alteration that day will cause when thou shalt see those who were despised by thee honoured by God Those whom thou didst reproach to be blessed by God What a confusion will this be to thee Then you will cry out We fools and mad men judged their wayes folly and matter of scorn but with what unspeakable glory doth God honour them Secondly Another false perswasion they have about godly men is That they are Hypocrites that all they do is not out of love to God but for ostentation sake That it is not the glory of God but their own glory and advantage that they seek after Paul was so often charged with corrupt ends in his Ministry that he is compelled to make his Apologetical Defence to clear himself Yea Christ himself was judged by the Pharisees to be an Impostor and that he came of himself doing his own will and seeking his own glory which made him so earnestly deny it Iohn 6. 38. Iohn 8. 50. This is a sore evil upon the sonnes of men that because they have an enmity and hatred against the godly yet they cannot put this forth upon godlinesse as godlinesse therefore they represent the godly in such colours and lay such things to their charge that they may seeme to have just cause to vent their malice against them But at that day their sincerity and integrity will appear then all the world shall see that their hearts were upright their aimes and intentions sincere that what reproofe what holy endeavours they used for the recovering of men out from their sinnes was not out of hatred or any other ill principle as wicked men are now apt to judge but out of pure love and desire for their soules good Let not then evil and ungodly men take upon them to judge the hearts of others that is the prerogative of God alone neither doe thou judge before the great day of judgement Take heed of calling such Hypocrites and dissemblers of calling such Pharisaical and conceited whom it may be God will own at that day for his jewels for his faithfull ones If there be any Judas who followeth Christ because of the Bagge If there be any who believe in Christ yet love the glory of men more than of God they shall beare their burden The portion of Hypocrites in Hell is a double portion But let not all the Apostles be censured for a Judas Let not all be judged Hypocrites because he was so Remember that this day is a revelation of all things all the hidden purposes and counsels of mens hearts shall then be made manifest The Apostle giveth this exhortation to such as judged him 1 Corinth 4. 5. he sheweth them how little he regarded mans judgement for it is the Lord that judgeth Therefore they are not to judge any thing before the time untill the Lord come who will bring to light the hidden things of darknesse and will make manifest the counsels of mens hearts and then shall every man have praise of God Is not this a full place to make thee afraid of all censures and hard speeches against such who professe godlinesse Let them alone to the Lord there is a day when all the thoughts
complain of such a dull and liveless Ministry yet how little do people think that many times they give the cause so that its Gods punishment upon them in that very thing yea though Ministers be never so faithfull and godly yet as Calvin observeth they cannot go on in their Ministerial work with that vigor and alacrity they ought to do when their hearts are bound up with sorrow and discouragements about their people All cannot attain to Pauls excellency who could have enlarged bowells to that people who had streightened ones towards him SERM. CVII Of the Necessity of a constant Ministry not only for the constituting but to an establishing the Church 2 COR. 1. 15. That you might have a second benefit IN these words we have the End of Pauls purpose to come to them It was wholly spiritual It was not for any advantage any earthly respects but but wholly for their good to encrease and confirm their graces The End is expressed in these words That ye might have a second benefit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some as Chrysostome interpret for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea their are some who would have that to be the word in the Original It is no doubt but that much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or joy did follow upon this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All spiritual effects and heavenly exercises are apt to breed much joy Hence none have true joy but those that are godly and so by consequence none are blessed but they for Joy is a great ingredient to Happiness Hence Aristotle maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceedingly to rejoyce yet is more consonant to other places of Scripture to read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thus Rom. 1. 11. He desired to see them that he might impart to them some spiritual benefit The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is chiefly used in the New Testament for the free grace of God towards us in reference to our Eternal Happiness so that the very name ought to be sweet and precious to such who labour under the sense of their unworthiness and see no power or works of their own any wayes able to save them It is of grace therefore that doth not onely exclude merit but supposeth thee unworthy for such mercies of thy own self It is sometimes in Scripture applyed to such Almes as were freely given for the use of distressed Churches 2 Cor. 8. which is therefore called Grace partly because it is of Gods special goodness to give us such a free and liberal Disposition as the first Verse in that Chapter implyeth I do you to wit saith Paul of the grace of God bestowed on the Churches of Macedonia and that was to be liberal to the other afflicted Saints and partly because it cometh from the bountifull disposition of a man to such as are in want In this Text it is to be applyed to spiritual bounty that is to be willing and ready in all serviceableness to promote the spirituall good of others for there are spiritual almes as well as temporal which lieth in reproof in Admonition and frequent Exhortation to what is good Now this Grace or Benefit is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some translate iterated and repeated though it be more than the Second or third time Chrysostome referreth it to his Epistles and his presence for by both these he communicated spiritual benefit unto them But it is most probably and generally referred to his first and second coming whether Paul did come a third time to those Corinthians is disputed by Commentators because of some passages in the 12 and 13 Chapters of this Epistle of which in its time It is enough that by the first grace or benefit we mean the first work upon them by Pauls Ministry when they were converted from their Paganism and planted a Church of Christ And the second benefit was to confirm them in the same Faith and also to quicken them up unto further degrees of Holiness and this was the second Benefit Paul desired to impart unto them For it appeareth that though this Church of Corinth was a garden planted by Paul yet many weeds and some poysonous ones began to grow up amongst them There were both in Doctrine and Manners many things amiss which needed Pauls presence to reforme Observe That it is not enough to be a Church planted and gathered from out of the world at first but there needeth a constant and dayly Ministry to be tilling and dressing of it That Garden which God planted and put Adam into yet was to be dayly dressed and so it is still with the best Churches even those that are of the Apostolical Plantation yet needed the Apostles care and diligent visitations which was one main cause of writing those several Epistles to several Churches They were not written to convert them or make them Churches but to admonish instruct or confirm and comfort as occasion did require and upon this ground it is that though the office of Apostles and Prophets as also the gift of miracles are now ceased because the Church is now planted yet the office of Pastors and the Ordinances Christ hath instituted are perpetual and must be continued to the end of the world So that the opinion of the Socininians about the Ministry as it were only a thing of order and not of Divine Institution is grosly repugnant to Gods Word as also their Doctrine about Baptism That it was but a temporary Ceremony instituted for the beginning of the Church is full of falshood Churches though constituted yet must be dayly watered neither is it enough for a people once to be brought home to the Faith but they need a second and a third yea a continual benefit For though the Apostle haply did come but the second time to these Corinthians yet he appointed Officers in an ordinary residence amongst them as wel as in other Churches which were continually to watch over them The particulars wherein the Ministry is necessary for perfecting work as well as foundation work for progress as well as ingress for consummation as well as imitation are these First To inform against those Errors which false Teachers do easily insinuate into the hearts of people No sooner hath God sowed his field with precious wheat but the envious one commeth and soweth his tares As the April showers that make grass and flowers to come cause also weeds to grow Thus at the same time God is building the Church the Devil and his instruments are raising their Babel No sooner have the Ministers of God with Isaac digged up Wells but the Philistines have been ready to throw their earth and mud therein If then Errors and damnable Heresies may so quickly infect a Church formerly pure no wonder if there be such necessity of Pastors and Guides who are to lead the people into all truth by their Ministry as the spirit of
temporal life and loose a spiritual life Fourthly Whereas sinnes according to Divines are distributed into sinnes of the heart of the tongue and of the hand Cordis oris operis Lying is a sinne of the tongue So that as by the tongue we come to know the disease sometimes of the body that is within so by the tongue we may discerne a sinfull wicked heart A lying tongue doth argue a deceitfull heart So that as the pureness and foulness in the fountain doth quickly empty it self into the streams Thus as the heart is either holily or sinfully affected so it emptieth it self into the tongue and hands Hence in the fifth place All those who would abstaine from the way of lying must study the spiritual government of the tongue Nature indeed hath inclosed it with lips and teeth but Grace must have a more powerfull and predominant curb over it The Apostle James doth notably speak of the sinfulnesse of the tongue James 3. 6. calling the tongue though a little member yet a world of iniquity an unruly evil full of deadly poison Certainly the Apostles zeal discovered in that Chapter against a sinfull tongue should make us with much diligence watch against it especially in that it is so unru y that no man can tame it Now among many sinfull evils of the tongue this of lying and falshood is not the least So that he who hath an holy meek just and faithfull tongue is called by the Apostle a perfect man vers 2. not but that he hath still much imperfection in him onely we are so apt to sinne by that to offend by that What is in the heart is so quickly in that that the Christian hath arrived at a great proficiency in godlinesse who hath this power over his tongue Hence David as sensible of this work above his own strength maketh his earnest addresse in prayer unto God Psal 141. 3. Set a watch O Lord before my mouth and keep the door of my lips Grace must be the spiritual porter to watch the mouth else such sins will come out thereat that will both greatly offend God and man Hence in the sixth place That this government of the tongue against lying or any other sin may be attained unto it is necessary 1. To cleanse the heart that is the original and source of all evil and therefore it is in vain to heal the outwards unlesse the inwards also be first purged Therefore David in the fore-mentioned prayer addeth another Petition to the former Psal 141. 4. Incline not my heart to any evil thing Therefore when Solomon had first given that counsel Chap. 4. 23. To keep the heart with all diligence then he speaketh of the duties about the eyes hands and feet No man can in an holy manner keep his tongue from lying cursing and swearing with other sinnes thereof unlesse he first endeavour that the inward frame of the heart be made pure and holy The old man must be put off and the new man put on as the Apostle speaketh and then we lay aside the way of lying In the next place Let us consider what are the causes of lying of yea and nay I doe not mean the general ones for the Text nameth them to be inconstancy and a corrupt heart but the particular ones And 1. Some have a strong inclination and peculiar propensity to it they love and delight in telling of lies Yea this lying disposition is noted to be the property of some Countreys as the Poet said of the Cretians They were alwayes liars Titus 1. 12. which witnesse the Apostle saith is true And no wonder at this for the same Apostle maketh it the quality of every man by nature and that wherein he doth oppose God whose Attribute is truth God is true and every man a lyar Rom. 3. 4. Seeing then the nature of man is thus prone to it and some have a more peculiar inclination to it no wonder if lyes as well as oaths do make a Land mourn Do we not see it in children how they are more forward to lie than to speak They come both together only lying seemeth more natural A second cause of lying is want of dependance upon God as if he would not fulfill his promises without our lies and unlawfull means that we use In this Rebecca failed Genes 27. 6 7. though she knew of Gods promise to Jacob yet because Isaac's affections were set upon Esau the elder brother she saw no visible way how the promise should be accomplished therefore she used lying and dissimulation but though she got the blessing for her sonne yet many sad afflictions did befall both her and Jacob thereby 3. Another cause is The captivity and bondage that we are in by nature to Satan for he being 〈◊〉 lyar from the beginning we imitate him and follow our father in this particular This our Saviour telleth the Jewes John 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Devil when he speaketh a lie he speaketh of his own for he is a lyar and the father of it Mark that the father of it implying that by the Devil we are sollicited and tempted to lies and if there were no other consideration but this it were enough to make us with David Psal 119. 163. To abhorre the way of lying because it cometh from the Devil we thereby demonstrate the Devil to be working in us to move our tongues And truly the name of a lie is a very reproachfull thing How hardly can men endure the name of it who yet are constant in the practice of it So that the reproach especially the cause from whence it cometh may perswade us to leave it off which is hell it self we shall then quickly hear every man speaking truth with his neighbour 4. An inordinate desire of profit and gain doth many times put men upon lying They wil● commend and praise that which in their conscience they know to be bad and all to get a little profit Thus Ananias and Saphira they lied to Paul and all to reserve a little profit to themselves Lastly A sinfull and immoderate fear that many times provoketh to lying It was thus with Abraham and Isaac about their wives they lied to save themselves out of dangers And although David did abhorre the way of lying yet we see him in several exigencies degenerate from his principles It is true in case of a mans life to choose rather to die than to tell a lie must needs be an argument of heroical grace in a man but we see in Peter how difficult it is to abstain from lies when thereby we can preserve our selves out of danger So that if at any time we find the godly overtaken with this sinne we must not from thence conclude the lawfulnesse of it but rather bewail our pronenesse thereunto For if those that are godly in an eminent manner are thus apt to fall what shall the little Trees do
but predictions yet the very tenour of them doth evidence it Now these do not suppose but work all conditions and qualifications in us for other mercies for it would be absurd to say God promiseth to give us faith if we do beleeve or to renew and change our wils if we will These absolute promises then are the executions of his decrees of grace and salvation upon the Elect. But then there are conditional promises and such are the promises of pardon to the beleever of eternal glory to him that is godly only you must know that they are conditions only in a large sence they are more properly called qualifications and determinations of those who are thus to be justified and saved faith indeed in our justification hath a peculiar notion of being an instrument or supernaturall means to lay hold on Christ and is not to be called a condition when we speak exactly You see then that there is no ground for licentiousnesse and dissolutenesse to venture all upon the gracious promises of God for they are determined and specified by such qualifications who shall have either pardon here or salvation hereafter Only you must know that when we call them conditionall promises the meaning is not as if we had power of our own to fullfill these conditions and so the promises remain suspense till we perform them no these conditions we are enabled to accomplish by the grace of God they are his gifts as well as our duties so that there are no conditions required of us which also we are not enabled unto by the grace of God that all may glory in Gods grace and not in themselves and therefore God hath appointed an order between his gracious gifts this god●nesse is for happinesse holinesse is for glory faith is for justification and if we speak exactly we cannot so well say Gods promises are conditionall as the things promised may be conditions to one another by Gods appointment Lastly There may be good reasons assigned why God is pleased thus to promise he might have given and never have made any promise at all but before he is pleased to bestow the actuall benefits he is pleased to give us many sure and gracious promises that he will do such things for us in time The reasons may be First Because hereby God would exercise our faith and teach us to live upon him only for when we cannot see any possibility in second causes when they with Sarah have a dead womb yet because of Gods promise we shall keep up our hearts as Abraham did Why is it then that the promises of God are in no more esteem and request with us were it not for them how many times might thy heart break Yea to put our faith to greater experiment hence it is that though he hath promised such things yet his providences seem to crosse all and after Gods promise as it was in the Israelites deliverance all things seem to be more unlikely than before A second Reason for I shall instance in no more may be to teach us humility and thankefulnesse acknowledging Gods promise alone to be the fountain of all the good we enjoy by the promise we are regenerated by the promise we are justified by the promise we are glorified we are what we are only by the promise hence all the godly are said with Isaac to be the children of the promise Gal. 4. 28. by the promise we had our spirituall being and by the promise we are Preserved in it but this deserveth more improvement SERM. CXXV A further Discovery of the Nature and Sorts of Gods Promises 2 COR. 1. 20. For all the promises of God are in Christ Yea and Amen c. OUr work is to enlarge more upon this usefull and necessary subject viz. The promises of God And In the first place we may give in divisions of the Promises or the distribution of them as there are Legal Promises and Evangelical Promises the ignorant confusion whereof hath caused much mischief in the Church of God The Legal Promise is nothing but the Covenant of works contained in that expression Do this and live For as they are cursed who continue not in all things that the Law requireth So again they are blessed and eternal life is promised to all such who perfectly obey the Law of God By this promise God dealt with Adam And although God never transacted with man when fallen by this way of promise yet he was pleased to have the Doctrine of the Law in its full perfection manifested to the people of Israel but in an Evangelical intention that so the Israelites being humbled under their utter impotency and inability ever to performe it might make their earnest applications unto Christ for help and succour For what was impossible by the Law through our weaknesse Christ made possible through his obedience Now this Legal Promise the Jewes generally attended unto neglecting the Evangelical consideration of promises in Christ The promises to works made unto Adam are not intended in this Text they were not Yea and Amen seeing there was no need of a Mediator if Adam had not fallen onely now all the promises of grace become firme and sure in him But naturally we regard the Legal promise more than Evangelical What labour did the Apostle shew to bring the Jewes off from the Covenant of works And whence is that Pharisaical and Popish principle of self-righteousnesse but because we trust in our works and not in the promise So that it is an excellent proficiency in Christianity when persons are taken off from being Legal to be Evangelical when they doe not slavishly relie upon their works done but filially depend upon the promise The Apostle doth excellently and at large declare the difference between these two Galat. 3. and 4. Chapters It is strange that any should desire to be under the Law rather than the promise yet all Pharisaical Justiciaries are propense that way What is this but to desire to be under a curse and perpetual malediction Whereas the Evangelical promise is like the City of refuge to the pursued malefactour It is better than Jonah's gourd against the scorching heat of Gods wrath because of sinne for no worme can arise and consume this So that the Evangelical promise being wholly of free-grace God thereby pardoning us freely sanctifying us freely justifying us freely is like the Land of promise flowing with milk and honey It 's to 〈◊〉 is promise that every humbled sinner must look as the Israelites stung did upon the brazen srepent Let therefore the people of God look more to the promise without them They poreupon their own hearts they perplex themselves with many doubts and feares but if thou didst consider what an Evangelical Promise meaneth this would be like oyle poured into thy wounds when temptations aggravated by Satan have left thee not so much halfe dead as halfe damned In the next place Promises are divided in respect of their
applied to them yet they were not the seed of the promise in the sense the Apostle intendeth as Isaac was that is so as to have the true and real benefits of the promise and in this respect we say no ungodly man hath any promise of any priviledge made to him abiding in that condition No promise of pardon no promise of Gods favour no promise of any earthly comfort not a morsel of bread or droppe of drinke he cannot plead any promise in his prayers And therefore when we may enjoy many outward mercies these come not by vertue of a promise to him but onely through the providence of God God out of a general love doth bestow such comforts upon him it is not from any promise made to him And indeed seeing the Text saith The promises of God are confirmed in Christ unlesse a man be in Christ there is no promise can be effectual to him Oh the sad condition of all ungodly men For if thou hast no promise what hope canst thou have Are not the Devils therefore eternally wretched because they have no promise Hope in this is compared to an Anchor Heb. 6. 19. Now what shipwrack must that ship needs endure which under waves and tempests hath no Anchor for a defence Fourthly Gods promise for the accomplishing of it doth suppose faith on our part for the promise on Gods part and faith on our part are correlates We cannot put forth faith for any mercy where we have not Gods promise neither is Gods promise accomplished to any but the believer Thus the Apostle Rom. 4. 16. saith The promise is of faith that it might be not only by grace but also made sure to such who do believe So that it is with a godly man according to his faith Christ saith to thee Be thou justified according to thy faith receive pardon and comfort according to thy faith If thou complainest God hath made great and precious promises but I cannot taste of this honey I perish notwithstanding this fullnesse Then remember it is not because there is not enough in the promise but thy faith is weak thy vessel is narrow to receive As if the woman should have refused to borrow vessels when the Prophet multiplied her oyle For the oyl did not cease till her vessels ceased So neither will Gods promise cease working till thy faith cease to operate Indeed in Gods comminations and threatnings they are fulfilled whether man will or no Let him believe or not believe God will throw the ungodly into Hell but in the promises it is otherwise then they do good to us when by faith we imbrace them So that by this we see how dangerous and noxious it is not to put forth faith it both dishonours God and depriveth us of all good it dishonours God as if he were not true as if it were not impossible for him to lie as if he were no more than a man Therefore Abraham is said To give glory unto God by believing Rom. 4. 20. because he did not regard the dead womb or the improbability in second causes but rested upon the promise alone If it be so hainous a matter to accuse man of a lie who yet is by nature a lyar as the Scripture pronounceth of him how unsufferable is it to attribute it unto God And then it is a very destructive sinne for it evacuateth all promises as to us it maketh thy condition as hopelesse as if never any promises had been made This is to cut the Conduit-pipes of all comfort and consolation This is with the Philistims as it were to throw earth into all the Wells of water Therefore above all things look to thy faith for it maketh God no God Christ no Christ promises no promises as to thee Fifthly That our faith may be the more confirmed he is not onely pleased to make promises to his people but also to give signes for the confirmation thereof Therefore Sacraments are confirming signes of Gods promise they are visible promises so that our unbelief will still be the greater sinne if neither the promises nor the seales visibly annexed thereunto shall not establish us against all doubting and uncertainty It is true the Sacraments cannot make Gods word surer in it self but they do in respect of us God graciously condescending to our humane weaknesse By which mercifull provision of God that his people might live a life of faith in his promise ' we may gather as the necessity of faith so also the great pronenesse that is in us to unbeliefe that we rather live by sense than by saith Hence it is that when we have outward supports and comforts our hearts are kept up but when all these leave us are taken away then like Peter upon the water we are afraid and should even sinke did not the Lord support us Sixthly It is therefore a very great skill to make use of the promises of God by faith It is the Gospel-wisdome a mystery it is that even the Disciples of Christ are a long while ere they can learne it For though God doth promise to doe such and such wonderfull things yet he suffereth so many crosse providences to fall out that we would think God had wholly forgot his promise Hence the Church complaineth Doth his promises fail for ever Yea the Apostle Peter doth speak of some prophane scoffers that asked Where was the promise of his coming 2 Pet. 3. 4. because they saw all things continue as they did therefore they thought Gods promise was in vain It behoveth the people of God therefore to acquaint themselves with Gods Riddles to plough with the Scriptures Heifer for their unskilfullnesse herein is that which maketh them so full of dejections which doth so often perplex them not knowing what to think or say yea they are apt to question the truth and righteousnesse of God but take heed of this it is a very great sinne when God giveth thee a sufficient testimony of his grace and favour to thee by his promises and seals thereof still to question and doubt whether God will doe it or no. This is grievously to tempt God as the people of Israel did Exod. 17. 7. who though they had so many miraculous discoveries of Gods presence with them yet still they ask Is the Lord amongst us or not Oh take heed of saying Is the Lord mine Will he do good to me When he hath given proof enough both by his promises and seals of his favour Oh satisfie thy soul with this Lord I have thy promise before thou promisedst thou wast free whether thou wouldst do it or no but since thy mouth hath promised it how can thy hand but fulfill it Let thy temptations thy straits be never so great yet know the promise of God cannot be straitned Though thy friends die though thy goods are lost yet Gods promise cannot die neither can that perish And if thou sayest Oh but I am unworthy I am a poor wretch What
therefore should a Christian doubting whether the promises do belong to him do in that darknesse and perplexity which is upon him And first we grant That a Christian so exercised is not to ascend up to those high points of predestination or the universal redemption by Christs death We do not require of thee to ascend up into heaven as it were to search into the Book of life whether thy Name be written there and then to say the promise belongs to thee This absurd and preposterous course some would fasten upon those who hold the doctrine of Gods absolute election as if from that it did necessarily follow that no Christian humbled for sin might apply the promises till they first know whether they be elected or no. And again those that pleade for Universall redemption by Christ they think that unlesse that be received we cannot rationally perswade any humbled sinner to apply a particular promise to himself that Christ loved him and gave himself for him but no afflicted sinner is to run to any of these doctrines but is out of the sence of his unworthinesse to go as boldly to Christ in the promise as if none of those doctrines had ever been disputed by learned men For in the second place We are to make Gods commands and invitations the ground of our drawing nigh to the promise If then the Scripture be full of such gracious invitations to all that are hungry and thirsty to all that are humbled and debased under their unworthinesse to come and finde rest for their souls yea if the Scripture commands such as are poor in spirit with all holy boldnesse to draw nigh to the throne of grace then here is their warrant from this they are to encourage themselves so that the truly humbled sinner is only to hearken what the word of God commands Art thou one who findest thy self undone Dost thou f●el thy self to be a lost man then know it is Gods will and command to come unto him for pardon Thou art bound in conscience if thou wilt not dishonour God nor damn thy own soul to eat of this tree of life Never then perplex thy self about these thoughts whether the promises of God belong to thee or no for it 's plain They belong to such who are sick under the sence of sinne who are burthened under the weight of it and if the promises belong not to such as thou art they belong to none in the world and withall set this home upon thy soul that the longer thou keepest off from the promise the worse it is with thee the work of faith will be the more difficult the longer thou sufferest this wound to fester the more difficultly will it be cured The longer thou wandrest in this wildernesse the more hard it will be at last to enter into Canaan the longer the water is muddied the harder will it be to see the face For when all is done and thou hast disputed thy self out of breath thou must come to this at last even to lay hold upon the promise by particular application Shall Esther resolve to go into the Kings presence though no Scepter of Invitation were held out saying If I perish I perish how inexcusable then wilt thou be if thou drawest back when the Scepter is held out No wonder if Adam did run from God endeavouring to hide himself from his presence upon his transgression for as yet he had received no promise from God But how wilt thou pleade for thy self when the promise is indefinitely propounded to every one that findeth the need thereof This is certain it is inevitable ruine to run from the promise where wilt thou help thy self if thou flyest from it There is no other way but this Ark to escape drowning Therefore remember it is not disputing but resting of thy soul on Christ that will at last quiet thy spirit In the next place in that all the promises of God are thus Amen in Christ it followeth That they will never be altered and changed that they are more immovable than the Laws of Medes and Persians so that although David and others of Gods Children have sometimes sadly complained Hath the Lord forgot for ever yet this was from their imbecillity attending more to the dead womb of second causes than to Gods truth For God can no more break his promise than he can ceafe to be God and truly herein the heart of a godly man should greatly rejoyce The promises depend not upon thy strength upon thy perseverance upon thy good use of the opportunities enjoyed by thee but upon Christ alone How often hast thou as much as lieth in thee made the promises of none effect to thee but the promises keep thee and not thou the promises God cannot break his promise Oh pray to God for an heart that is yea and Amen as well as the promises say O Lord I would gladly have faith as firm as the promises I desire my soul may be Yea and Amen as well as they are Oh how full is the Scripture of sweet and comfortable promises But we are dejected and desolate not at all attending to them so that it is with us as Pythagoras fancied about the heavens viz. that they made most admirable musick in their motion but our ears through continuall use are stupified and hear them not To be sure the Scripture vouchsafeth excellent musick and ravishing joy to a gracious heart but that many times attendeth not to it But you may say If this be so that God breaketh not his promise how shall we understand that place Num. 14. 34 where God threatning the people of Israel for their murmuring against them and that their carcases should fall in the wildernesse then saith God ye shall know my breach of promise or as in the margin my altering of my purpose Here it should seem God may break his promise to this it may be answered if we follow this Translation that God speaketh of that particular promise about their entring into the land of Canaan which was conditionall if they did not rebell against him and so they not fullfilling the condition God is there said to break his promise But others render the Hebrew word otherwise as some translate it ultionem meam my revenge The Hebrew word Tenuathi cometh of Noah to break and as it is applyed to words and promises so also to other things and therefore the most genuine translation is abruptionem meam you shall know my breaking that is as some that disobedience whereby you have broken your selves from me or else which is most probable that breaking which I have made upon you because of your sins you shall know I have divided my self from you for your iniquites and this I conceive most genuine The Use is of Instruction would we ever have the promises of God fullfilled to us then the way is to get an interest in Christ the promises are fullfilled in him and therefore without Christ
without the promises He is the heir and therefore contrary to those in the Parable Let us not kill him but obey him and receive him for our Lord and then the inheritance will be ours Canst thou upon good grounds say Christ is mine then thou maist also say all the promises are mine but know Christ cannot be thine upon any other terms than by forsaking all thy sins though never so pleasant and profitable Christ cannot be thine unlesse you leave every thing else for him This is the pearl that we must sell all to make ours and truly no tongue is able to expresse or heart to conceive the desperate condition of those to whom no promise of grace doth belong they are herein like the damned in hell It is true in your extremities in your terrours you will call for mercy cry out for pardon but where is the Christ in whose name this is to be obtained Certainly if Christ be yours the spirit of Christ also subduing your lusts and sins for you SERM. CXXVIII The Promises give glory to God both as they are made by him and beleeved by us 2 COR. 1. 20. And in him amen unto the glory of God by us WE are now arrived at the finall cause or end of Gods promises and their confirmation in Christ which is said to be Gods glory and that by us The Ministers of the Gospel are the instruments who do offer these promises and so God is glorified by their ministerial labours Some copies indeed reade our glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expounding it in this sence that it is the glory of the Ministers of the Gospel to proclaim the year of Jubilee the acceptable time of Gods promises but that is not so probable Some also as we have formerly hinted reade it thus and therefore in him is Amen to the glory of God Thus the Vulgar Latine and one Manuscript Greek copy which Calvin doth commend calling that connexion we have frigida a frigid and cold one whereas this doth notably discover the duty of all beleevers that they are to set to their Amen as a Seal to Gods Promises and certainly it is a blessed thing for the people of God to be nourished up in the Evangelicall Amen We do with more ease use the word Amen optatively Let it be so then confirmatively So it is For if we did give our Amen in this latter sence to the promises our hearts would have full quietnesse and serenity after our prayers when we had cast our burthen upon the Lord then we should no more disquiet our selves with doubting thoughts whether the Lord will fullfill his promises or no. So that this Amen would exclude all ergo's all arguings and doubtful disputations we are apt to molest our selves with Now although we shall not follow those copies that reade it so yet that sence must necessarily be included for then are promises to Gods glory when they are beleeved and received by us Let us then seriously consider the end of Gods promises why hath he taken such a full and sure way for beleevers The Text telleth us it is for the glory of God we would think the promises had this rather for their end to bring salvation to us and so indeed that is a subordinate end but the Apostle he instanceth in the principall and chiefest end of all which is Gods glory And therefore Chrysostome doth well observe upon this Text that this is a sure argument to prevail with God in our Petitions for the accomplishment of Gods promises for though he might neglect our salvation yet he will not his own glory saith he though thy happinesse be no argument yet his own honour will be a motive to prevail so that the words then afford this Observation That the promises of God are made on his part and are to be beleeved on our part to the glory of God When we beleeve Promises we do not only advantage our selves but we also glorifie God This is not sufficiently thought of for we are apt to look upon faith in a Promise as that which is for our comfort our profit only and do not attend that hereby also we do exceedingly glorifie God Hence Abraham is said Rom. 4. 20. to be strong in faith giving glory unto God That the usefulnesse of this doctrine may appear we will consider the Promises first on Gods part who promiseth them and shew how this maketh to the great glory of God and then on the beleevers part while he giveth his Amen to them And for the first Gods glory is exceedingly manifested in promises by these particularly First Hereby his bounty and goodnesse is made known The Lord as you heard formerly was infinitely sufficient in his own self Nothing can adde to the blessednesse of God no more than a feather can to the weight of a mountain Had God created no world or creatures therein he had been altogether happy in himself when he made the creatures It was not for that end that Eve was to Adam to be a meet help to him No it was his plentifull goodness for bonum quo melius eo magis diffusivum God is said indeed to make all things for himself he is the end of all but as Lessius the Jesuite expresseth it he is not finis indigentiae but assimilationis not an end of indigency as if he wanted any thing by us but an end of assimilation and perfection whereby he would reduce the rationall creatures to his own likenesse we may then with enlarged hearts admire the goodnesse of God in all his promises Hath the Lord promised to be gracious to pardon sin to sanctifie and subdue corruptions give glory to God in all these things Be like a David a sweet singer of the praises of God thou maist reade in every promise the glorious attribute of Gods goodnesse and bounty Secondly As we may see the glory of his goodnesse in promises so also the glory of his love We may there reade how great his affections are to us he layeth aside as it were his absolute Majesty his terrible greatnesse and condescendeth to deal with us in a way of promise he giveth us leave by this to have confident and familiar converse with him so that as it was the unspeakable love of God to become man for our sakes thus also it is to become in promise to us so that whereas the Majesty of God might affright us his commands and threatnings might amaze us Now his promises they give us encouragement and we are with Moses admitted as it were to speak to God face to face as one familiar friend to another he giveth us the key when he maketh a promise to come into his chamber of presence when we will or to go in his wine-cellar for all spirituall refreshments when you come with a promise you have a mandamus as it were for every door to open to you and to receive you in These promises
if you ask Have all the sanctified persons of God this sealing Have none the sanctification of the Spirit but they must also have the witnessing of the Spirit I answer this Question because of great practical importance shall God assisting be handled by it self after the description hath been explained That which I shall here take notice of is That sanctification is necessarily presupposed to this sealing A great Prince will not set his seal to dung to make an impression there neither will God to an heart unsanctified For as in matter of Doctrine God will not vouchsafe miracles to confirm that which is a lie neither in practicals will the Spirit of God witnesse to that heart which is not made holy For indeed it should witnesse a lie in such a case informing such they are the sonnes of God when indeed they are the children of the Devil This order of Gods Spirits first sanctifying and then sealing is clear Ephes 1. 13. In whom after ye believed ye were sealed Those eminent Divines who defined faith to be assurance making it the same with the sealing of Gods spirit are gravelled at this Text and therefore make this Objection If faith be assurance be the sealing how doth the Text say After we believed we were sealed To this therefore Piscator answereth not yeelding that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be rendred Having beleeved as of a thing past but beleeving as in the present but there is too much forcing in this interpretation Others they consider of faith as it hath two parts Illumination of minde and fiducial assurance Now say they the Apostle meaneth by faith the former work of faith and so the meaning is After you were enlightned to know the truth you were confirmed and assured but that opinion making faith justifying to be an assurance that Christ is mine is justly refused It is plain then that when the Spirit of God hath in order of nature for in time they may be both together sanctified a man throughout whereby he is made a new creature then the Spirit of God maketh this glorious stamp upon him then he giveth him this seal as an honourable priviledge whereby he may know himself to be the Lords Even as in antiquity none might have seals but persons of honour and dignity So that the natural and unregenerate person is to stand aloof off thou hast nothing to do in this priviledge thou art not the man whom the great King of Heaven and earth doth purpose thus to honour We proceed in the Description and there we meet with the formal Nature of it wherein it doth essentially consist with the object thereof The Nature of it is In confirming and establishing the heart of a man For this is the chief and usual end of seals to ratifie a thing and to make it no longer uncertain and doubtfull And to this property doth the Scripture chiefly attend For whereas the soul though sanctified is apt to be in daily fears and doubts about Gods favour and grace towards it it fluctuateth up and down having no subsistency the Spirit of God cometh and consolidateth the soul inabling it to rest satisfied in this that God is his God that his sinnes are pardoned that he is become a reconciled Father in Christ And if you say Why do we not need the Spirit of God to do this Cannot we by our graces by our repentance and holy life sufficiently establish our own souls in peace No by no means we need the Spirit of God to comfort as you heard as well as to sanctifie and that for these Reasons First It is very hard for a man whose guilty conscience doth presse him and condemn him daily telling him that he hath deserved at Gods hands to be eternally tormented in hell not to thinke because God may doe thus that therefore he will do so In such terrours and affrights we look more to what we have deserved we look more to what God may do then what he will we are naturally suspicious and think the worst of God even as we doe to man If we have offended a man greatly and it lieth in his power to undo us we are never quiet we cannot but think when ever the opportunity is he will be avenged and therefore we dare not trust him Yea though we have given no just cause if others have taken up an unkind spirit towards us we expect nothing else from them but our ruine when it is in their power Therefore for all Saul's tears and good works to David yet he would never trust him Now although there be no cause for us to have such suspicious thoughts about God for he hath graciously promised that he will receive us insomuch as not to believe him herein is to give more credit to a man whose words many times satisfie us than to God who is truth it self yet the heart being guilty and full of fears doth work in this doubtfull manner about God How hard is it to bring the afflicted sinner to good perswasions about God and that though by promises and other wayes God hath so abundantly provided against such distrust Here then is the reason why we need the sealing of Gods Spirit we cannot perswade our selves but God will doe what he may do and what we have deserved And A second Reason followeth upon the former We can hardly be perswaded that the great and good things which we stand in need of God will ever bestow upon us who are so unworthy of them Can a beggars daughter be perswaded that a great King will marry her But here is a farre greater disproportion What will the great God of Heaven so holy so full of majesty look graciously upon me and not only forgive me my sinnes but advance me to eternal glory These things are very improbable Shall Joseph be freed not only from the prison but promoted to the greatest honour in the Land next to the King Who would have believed it And thus it is here the soul having low and humble thoughts of it self cannot be perswaded that the great God of Heaven will look upon such despicable wretches as they are 3. The way of evangelical confidence with the comfortable effects thereof are wholly supernatural And therefore no wonder if we need the Spirit of God to help us therein Not only holinesse and grace is supernatural but assurance and joy are likewise supernatural As we cannot pray without the Spirit helping our infirmities so neither are we able to call God Father If faith in Christ by which we are justified be supernatural then also is the comfort and peace flowing from the knowledge thereof As the Doctrine of the Gospel is by divine revelation flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto us that Christ is the Sonne of God so neither can flesh and blood enable us to the perswasion of this Mediator as loving me and giving himself for me Certainly if it be the gift of
in his heart in somuch that an Angel was sent to comfort him This might make us wonder that God should not spare his own Sonne but it was necessary for our redemption for as he could not have wrought our reconciliation for us unlesse he had a passible body that could suffer death so neither unlesse he had a suffering soul by fears and grief though all without sinne It was Jobs case likewise to be without sealing for he could have no comfort in his heart while he complained the Arrows of the Almighty did stick fast in him while he was terrified with dreams and visions in the night Thus the Lord still doth exercise his soveraignty therein he withdraweth the light of his favour from many choice sanctified ones They wander in a wildernesse their lives are a burthen to them they cannot meet God in any ordinance as if they were become like so many rejected Sauls when yet the favour of the Lord is exceeding great to them only they perceive it not But then secondly On our part many times yea too often when the cause is that we have not this sealing We may thank our selves for bloaching the Paper so that no comfortable thing can be written upon it I shall instance in one or two waies how we come to keep off this sealing And the first is by falling into some grievous and grosse sinnes if such do drive away the naturall peace of a meer natural conscience as is plain in heathens how much more the supernaturall peace of a tender enlightned conscience Davids penitentiall Psalm 51. doth fully speak to this he there complaineth of his broken bones he prayeth to have joy restored to him all which argueth that by sinne he had lost all comfortable enjoyment of God That he was in a chaos and dark confusion and truly if there were no hell no damnation to threaten the people of God with to keep them from grosse sinnes This of Gods iron turnace to be cast into is enough to make our hearts tremble Oh the wofull condition that godly manis in who in stead of the spirit of Adoption he once enjoyed is now delivered up to Satan to be under his fears his black temptations No outward comfort in the world can then give him a drop of case Oh then come not near any grosse sinnes fly from the appearance of it for this sealing cannot consist with that Secondly Any carelesse and remisse walking though we do not fall into grosse sins is enough to put this Sunne into an Eclipse Any angry and bitter words to another will do it Any loose and wanton discourse may bring thee into this deep dungeon For so you may see Eph. 4. 30. Grieve not the spirit by which yeare sealed But how is that done for so you may see the verse before by corrupt communications by unsavoury gracelesse words and then see the subsequent Verse Let all bitternesse all wrath and anger be put away Dost thou then complain thou hast not this sealing how can it be otherwise How many frothy foolish speeches hast thou How many angry bitter words come from thee If you hereby grieve Gods spirit no wonder that he leave thee to thy grief Thirdly By any inward security and secret self-confidence we may deprive our selves of this sealing For seeing this is a Gospel-privi edge a ray from the Sunne of righteousnesse it is only conveighed in an Evangelicall method Now all Gospel-dispensations are to the broken in heart to the poor in spirit to the humbled sinner renouncing all righteousnesse and worth of our own so that as it is in the work of sanctification no sooner hath a man any secret confidence in his own power but sanctifying grace in some measure leaveth him As we see in Peter when he said Though all men should for sake Christ yet he would not Thus it is also in the way of consolation no sooner doth a man begin to be lifted up within because he hath these comfortable refreshments but presently they are substrated from us Thus David did but say his mountain was established that he should not be moved and immediately God hid his face and he was troubled Psa 30. 6 7. Therefore that man who would enjoy this desirable priviledge must walk with a tender humble and yet an Evangelicall fiducial frame of heart Fourthly When we speak of Gods sealing you must rightly understand the meaning of it It is not as if thereby such a certainty were wrought in the soul that it doth exclude all fears and doubts No that is a proper priviledge to heaven as the flesh lusteth against the spirit in matter of sanctification so it doth also in consolation As therefore when the spirit of God sanctifieth on the spirits part grace is pure and perfect but on the subjects part which doth receive it so it hath much drosse and imperfection cleaving to it Thus it is also in this sealing though the testimony and witnesse on the spirits part be infaliible and undoubted yet as we receive it so there is much unbeleef and doubting adhering to us This sealing therefore and many fears and doubts may consist together because it is not absolutely predominant and prevalent only here is a conflict we are to strive against these doubts we are to pray against these fears till the Lord cause light to arise out of this darkness Therefore the godly may have this sealing and yet not attend to it nor perceive it because the corruptions of our heart are most perceived by us and we are so exercised by them that we do not consider what the spirit of God doth witnesse at that time This then maketh the godly think they have not this sealing at all because they have it not with that dominion as they desire to exclude all conflicts and troubles within and so as in respect of sanctification there is some grace under much corruption so there is also this certainty under many fears And if you say that it is a contradiction that a man should be assured and doubt also I answer No no more than that a man should be sanctified and yet have some corruption in him for they do not respect the same thing Certainty ariseth from the Promises of God set home by his spirit upon us ahd fears arise from the sence and feeling of our own weaknesses So that what the holy Apostle speaketh concerning the work of grace in him with the oppositian thereunto the good he would do he doth not and he findes evil present with him Thus it is here the sealing the assurance the comfort he would have he cannot obtain but the doubts and slavish fears which he hateth they carry him away captive Lastly Suppose a godly man hath not this sealing yet let him not limit God to the times and seasons he would but leave all to the merciful dispensation of a wise and righteous God Thou hast not assurance yet no more thou hast
behalf It is good to consider how earnestly Paul though so eminent and choice a man in holinesse doth desire the prayers of others and therefore when he had spoken of that confidence he had in God who as he had so also would for the future deliver him he addeth vers 11. You also helping together by prayer for us as if none of those great mercies Paul looked for could be brought forth but by the help of their prayers This then is that which maketh the godly desirous that others who fear God may know how it is with them what temptations they lie under what afflictions they grapple with that so they may have the effectual fervent prayers of a righteous man which availeth much Though the prophane deride and scoffe yet the prayer of any true godly man is greatly to be valued and much to be desired Secondly As such are thereby provoked to pray to God for them so when God shall mercifully deliver them and turn their afflictions for good then they will also be encouraged to blesse and praise God also in their behalf and thus more glory redoundeth still to God Thus also the Apostle vers 11. declareth That by the meanes of many persons thankes may be given to God on our behalf Thus you see no Christian is to live to himself but it is his duty to be praying to God for others and praising God in the behalf of others but how little are the people of God exercised in these communion duties How little zealous in prayer for others but farre more negligent in the praises of God for others When doest thou blesse God for the mercies deliverance vouchsafed to the afflicted Saints of God as if they were thy own This publick affection is greatly wanting in believers who do not consider they are of the body Thirdly By knowing the afflictions of others and their holy deportment under them thou mayest thereby learne patience zeal heavenly mindednesse and many other graces Afflictions are Gods schools and that whether on thy self or on others How much patience may we learn by the afflictions upon Job Thus James 5. 10 11. The Prophets who spake in the name of the Lord must be taken as an example of suffering affliction and of patience and ye have heard of the patience of Job How greatly did the waves of God passe over his head No Martyr as Chrysostome amplifieth it came near Job in all their sufferings and therefore the holy Ghost thought fit to have the History of Job recorded that all might know and learn by it Be not then a stranger to the sufferings of Gods people but inform thy self about them to imitate their graces to be encouraged to do the like when God shall call thee to fight his battels But you may say What use can be made from the preaching about such afflictions which Paul and the other primitive Christians suffered from Paganish and Heathenish enemies We have no Neroes or Diocletians neither are we called to prisons and Martyrdome To what purpose is it to preach of sufferings to those who live in all quietnesse and freedom What use or good improvement can we make of it Therefore it is necessary to answer this Objection And First By the same reason you may say To what purpose did the Spirit of God cause this Chapter to be written with many other passages of the like nature which treat of afflictions and that from Pagans Certainly though we be not for the present exercised as they are yet the record of this the Doctrine about this is of very great concernment Therefore Secondly Though thou art not called to be a Martyr or to suffer from such enemies yet there is none that will live godly but they shall meet with afflictions one way or other We read of no child of God without his tribulations None can come into Canaan but they must first go thorow a wildernesse They must first with Christ suffer and so enter into glory We told you that there are afflictions of divers sorts There are real and there are verbal afflictions Though thou doest not suffer in thy life and in thy liberty yet thou mayest in thy name and in thy outward comforts There is no man which liveth in a zealous lively manner for God and endeavouring to pull down the kingdom of Satan but the Devil and his instruments will raise opposition enough against him and therefore it is good to hear Sermons about sufferings for Christ For though thy troubles be not such great and bloody ones as the Martyrs have been yet thou art to drink part of this bitter cup The Lord he hath given thee a portion in these tribulations and truly there is not the least affliction befals us in the way of God but if God did not preserve us and keep us by his grace we should sinke under it The frowhe of a man the fear of a mock is enough to discourage us from our duty if God doth not corroborate us If therefore the world doth not hate us if that be not a professed enemy to us we may justly doubt whether we be the Womans seed or not rather the Serpents seed Seeing therefore thou hast thy tribulations more or lesse and that for righteousnesse thou mayest improve this truth for thy edification Secondly What though the Church of God meeteth not with persecutions and troubles from Pagans and Heathens yet those it suffereth from such who pretend to Christ and judge it special service of God so to afflict them have a sharper sting in them What miseries and bloudy cruelties have not many godly Protestants suffered from Papists who yet glory that they only are zealous for Christ that others are blasphemers and enemies to Christ and therefore ought to be punished with such severe censures Now may not such Martyrs and sufferers receive as much comfort as if they had been persecuted from Heathens Yea doubtless for in some respects their suffering is the greater and their constancy the more admirable When the holy Prophets were stoned to death by the people of the Jews that yet thought themselves to be the onely people of God this did not diminish but aggravate their glory The patience of Abel was more admirable in being slain by his brother Cain then if it had been by a stranger If therefore thy sufferings arise from such who highly pretend to the glory and truth of Christ Be not despondent for thy crown of glory will herein be greater than if it had been from open adversaries Hence it is observable how remarkably the Scripture speaketh of those who suffered by Antichrist Rev. 13. 10. Here is the patience and the faith of the Saints which is again mentioned Rev. 14. 12. A true Christian suffering from false Christians hath not the promises of God obscured or diminished hereby to him but rather enlarged for God considereth both from whom it is thou art troubled and the cause why and the
manner how thou bearest it Thirdly These truths about suffering for Christ are usefull even to such who enjoy all freedom and abundance because there is a two-fold Martyrdom Martyrium cordis and Martyrium corporis a Martyrdome of the heart and a Martyrdom of the body If therefore thou art not called to suffer bodily it is certain thou must suffer spiritually Habes quod in te occidas if others do not martyr thee thou art to martyr thy self Hence is that duty Of offering up our selves as a Sacrifice to God Hence it is we are commanded To deny our selves to take up our crosse to pull out the right eye to cut off the right hand and the constant practice of Christianity is To mortifie the flesh to crucifie the flesh Insomuch that the ancient Writers do frequently compare this soul-mortification to the bodily Martyrdom He that doth abstain from the seeming pleasures and profies of slane this man is a spiritual Martyr He that doth crucifie his will that doth subdue and conquer his corruptions it is as much from the grace of God as he that is enabled to lay down his life for Christs sake all these come from the same principle There is required an insuperable divine and efficacious power of grace to bring the heart to any holy duty to avoid any sinne from pure and holy motives It is therefore of consequence to hear of the consolations which God giveth in sufferings for if thou hast not corporal sufferings thou hast spiritual ones and therefore God he will proportion thy comforts to thy exercises Fourthly It is good to understand and possesse our souls with the afflictions of others that hereby we may acknowledge the mercy of God to us if he give us Sun-shine dayes when others have lived in trouble some times Say not then What are these Sermons of suffering to us who are not exercised for they greatly concern thee seeing that hereby thy heart is to be raised up to more thankfulness to more joy in blessing and praising of God Is it not a mercy that thou didst not live in Queen Maries dayes That thou art not one of those mentioned by the Apostle Who wandered in sheepskins and goatskins who had no setled aboad or quietnesse in any place They did eat their bread with trembling and drink with fear and astonishment flying from one place to another parents bereaved of children husbands of wives Now when thou shalt consider what sad times many of the people of God have lived in and thou hast daies of peace and abundance Is not this like fire in thy bosome to inflame thee with the love of God and constantly to blesse him Fifthly It is good to know the sufferings of others though thou art freed because none knoweth when the time of thy trial may come The times of the Churches peace and of her troubles are in Gods hands and these times are only known to himself Thou knowest not what heavy sufferings thou mayest be put upon ere thou diest and therefore it is good to be providing the whole armour of Christ before the day of fighting doth approach The Mariner hath not his instruments to provide in the midst of the storm but he doth prepare for it so neither is the souldier then to furnish himself with weapons when the enemy is approaching to him Do thou therefore hear much know much and be instructed much about the patience and sufferings of the Saints that when God shall call thee to it it may not seem a strange and a new thing to thee Use of Instruction not to be afraid to hear of and know all the difficulties and calamities which will accompany the powerfull way of owning Christ How carnal and self-seeking are our hearts with the Disciples to flee from Christ when he is carried to the Crosse We would receive good from Christ but not evil whereas if thou doest consider it thou shalt find the earthly and the worldly man is more afflicted and troubled in getting the things of the world then thou in obtaining of Heaven and what a shame is it that they shall be more patient and enduring for these worldly goods then thou art for heavenly Doth not the earthly man say to his gold what shall separate us from the love of it Doth he not say for the love of thee I am killed all the day long This is the golden Image that every one fals down and worships Oh then shame thy self saying How much can these suffer How much can these bear and for that which will damn them at last But my carnal fearfull heart is afraid to suffer for Christ who will give me eternal glory Shall the Devil have his martyrs the world its sufferers and shall not Christ have such as will leave all to have all by him again SERM. LIX The Ministers of the Gospel find much opposition from the carnal and worldly Professors Who are these carnal and worldly Professors 2 COR. 1. 8. Of our trouble which came to us in Asia THe next thing considerable in the Text is the description of that tribulation which did fall upon the Apostle which was so necessary and usefull to be known In which we have 1. The Nature of this exercise expressed in the name it hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. There is the place where in Afia 3. There is the aggravation of it Of which in its time The exercise it self is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beza in Annotat. in Cor. cap. 13. saith this word is properly rendred affliction not tribulation for that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rather than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hence he sheweth out of Tully that Affligo is properly to throw a thing to the ground so as to presse it down and therfore is the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word then signifieth not an ordinary trouble but such as doth most strictly constringe and bind pressing a man to the ground and this he saith did come upon him in Asia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not that it came by chance or fortune or by the meer malice and power of men no it came by the special appointment of God in much wisdome and mercy thereby propagating the Gospel For afflictions are so many arrows delivered out of Gods quiver which are sure to hit the mark they are destined unto Here is no more difficulty in the words only Expositors question What this trouble was he met with in Asia Where may we find any thing about the particulars of it Cajetan on the place acknowledgeth That concerning this trouble in Asia he could read nothing in any Book that was authentick yet it seemeth not to referre generally to all the troubles he met with in publishing of the Gospel but to some eminent singular one and therefore he saith the trouble not troubles in the plural number Some learned men therefore referre this to those passages mentioned in the former Epistle to the Corinthians 1 Cor.