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A47643 A practical commentary upon the first epistle general of St. Peter. Vol. II containing the third, fourth and fifth chapters / by the most Reverend Robert Leighton ... ; published after his death at the request of his friends. Leighton, Robert, 1611-1684.; Fall, James, 1646 or 7-1711. 1694 (1694) Wing L1029; ESTC R36245 321,962 503

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sealed it that then the Grave had indeed shut her mouth upon him it appeared a done business to them and lookt very compleat-like in his Enemies eyes and very desperate like to his Friends his poor Disciples and Followers were they not near the point of giving over when they said This is the third day c. And we thought this had been he that should have delivered Israel And yet he was then with them who was indeed the Deliverer and Salvation of Israel that rolling of the Stone to the Grave was as if they had rolled it towards the East in the night to stop the rising of the Sun the next Morning much further above all their Watches and power was this Sun of Righteousness in his rising again That body that was en●omb'd was united to the Spring of Life the Divine Spirit of the Godhead that quickened it Obs. 1. Thus the Church which is likewise his Body when it seems undone is brought to the lowest Posture yet by vertue of that mystical Union with Jesus Christ as his Natural Body by personal Union with his Deity shall be preserved from destruction and shall be delivered and raised in due time Yet as he was nearest his exaltation in the lowest step of his Humiliation so is it with his Church when things are brought to the most hopeless appearance then shall light arise out of darkness Cum duplicantur lateres venit Moses Therefore as we ought to seek more humble Sense of Sions distress so withal not to let go this hope that her mighty Lord will in the end be glorious in her deliverance and all her sufferings and low estate shall be as a dark Soil to set off the lusture of her restorement when the Lord shall visit her with Salvation As in the rising of Jesus Christ his Almighty Power and Deity was more manifested than if he had not died and therefore we may say confidently with the Psalmist to his Lord Psal. 71. Thou which hast shewed me gre●t and sore troubles shall quicken me again and shall bring 〈◊〉 up from the depths of the Earth thou shalt increase my greatness and comfort me on every side Yea the Church comes more beautiful out of the deepest distress let it be o●erwhelmed with waves yet it sinks not but rises up as only washt And in this confidence we ought to rejoyce even in the midst of our sorrows and though we live not to see them yet even in beholding afar off to be gladed with the great things the Lord will do for his Church in these later times he will certainly make bare his holy Arm in the Eyes of the Nations and all the ends of the Earth shall see the Salvation of our God His King that he hath set on his holy Hill shall grow in his Conquests and Glory and all that rise against him shall he break with a Rod of Iron He was humbled once but his glory shall be for ever as many were astonished at him his Visage being mar'd more than any Man they shall be as much astonished at his Beauty and Glory so shall he sprinkle many Nations and Kings shall shut their mouths at him According as here we find that remarkable evidence of his Divine Power in rising from the dead put to death in the Flesh but quickened by the Spirit 2. Thus a believing Soul at the lowest when to its own sense it is given over unto death and swallowed up of it as it were in the Belly of Hell yet look up to this Divine Power him whose Soul was not left there will not leave thine there Yea when thou art most sunk in thy sad apprehensions and far off to thy thinking then is he nearest to raise and comfort thee as sometimes it grows darkest immediately before day Rest on his power and goodness which never failed any that did so It is he as David says that lifts up the Soul from the Gates of Death 3. Would any of you be cured of that common Disease the fear of Death look this way and you shall find more than you seek you shall be taught not only not to fear but to love it Consider 1. His Death He died by that thou that receivest him as thy life maist be sure of this that thou art by that his death freed from the second death and that 's the great Point let that have the name which was given to the other the most terrible of all terrible things and as the second death is removed this death that thou art to pass through is I may say beautified and sweetned the ugly Visage of it becomes amiable when ye look on 't in Christ and in his death that puts such a pleasing comeliness upon it that whereas others fly from it with affrightment the Believer cannot chuse but embrace it longs to lie down in that Bed of Rest since his Lord lay in it and hath warmed that cold Bed and purified it with his fragrant Body 2. But especially looking forward to his return thence quickened by the Spirit this being to those that are in him the certain pledge yea the effectual Cause of that blessed Re●urrection that is in their hopes there is that Union betwixt them that they shall rise by the communication and vertue of his rising not simply by his Power so the wicked to their grief shall be raised but they by his life as theirs Therefore is it so often re-iterated Io. 6. where he speaks of himself as living and Life-giving Bread to Belivers adds I will raise them up at the last day This comfort we have even for the house of Clay we lay down and for our more considerable part our immortal Souls this his death and rising hath provided for them at their dislodging entring into that Glory where he is Now if these things were lively apprehended and laid hold on Christ made ours and the first Resurrection manifest in us quickened by his spirit to newness of life certainly there would not be a more wellcome and refreshing thought nor a sweeter discourse to us than that of death and no matter for the kind of it were it a violent death so was his Were it that we account most judgement like amongst diseases the plague was not his death very painful and was it not an accursed death and by that curse endured by him in his is not the Curse taken away to the Believer Oh! how wellcome shall that day be that day of Deliverance to be out of this wo●ful Prison I regard not at what Door I go out at being at once freed from so many deaths and set in to enjoy him who is my life Verses 19 20 21. 19. By which also he went and preached unto the spirits in prison 20. Which sometime were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God waited in the days of Noah while the Ark was a preparing wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water 21. The like figure
that there is a 〈◊〉 need of this honouring that consists in not d●spi●●g and in covering of ●railties as is even imply'd in this that the Woman is not called simply weak but the weaker and the Husband that is generally by Natures advantage or should be the stronger yet is weak too for both are Vessels of Earth and therefore frail both polluted with sin and therefore subject to a multitude of sinful sollies and frailties but as that particular frailty of nature pleads for Women that honour so the other reason added is not from particular disadvantage but from their common priviledge and advantage of grace as Christian that the Christian Husband and Wife are equally Co-heirs of the same grace of life As being Heirs together of the grace of life This is that which most strongly binds on all these duties on the hearts of Husbands and Wives And most strongly indeed binds their hearts together and makes them one 〈◊〉 each be reconciled unto God in Christ and so heirs of life and one with God then are they truly one in God each with other and that 's the surest and sweetest union that can be Natural love hath risen very high in some Husbands and Wives but the highest of it fall● far very short of that which holds in God hearts concentring in him are most and excellently one that love which is cemented by youth and beauty when these moulder and decay as soon they do it ●ades too that is somewhat purer and so more lasting 〈◊〉 holds in a natural or moral harmony of Minds yet these likewise may alter and change by some great accident but the most refin'd and spiritual and most ●●dis●oluble● is that which is knit with the highest and 〈◊〉 Spirit And the ignorance or disregard of this 〈◊〉 great cause of so much bitterness or so little true 〈◊〉 in the life of most married Persons because 〈…〉 meet not as one in him Heirs together Loath will they be to despise one another that are both bought with the precious blood of one Redeemer and loath to grieve one another being in him brought into peace with God they will entertain true peace betwixt themselves and not suffer any thing to disturb it They have hopes to meet one day where is nothing but perfect Concord and Peace they will live as heirs of that life here and make their present estate as like to Heaven as they can and so a pledge and evidence of their title to that Inheritance of peace that is there laid up for them and they will not fail to put one another often in Mind of th●se hopes and that Inheritance and to advance and further both each other towards it where this is not 't is to little purpose to speak of other rules where neither party aspires to this hei●ship live otherways as they will there is one common Inheritance abiding them one Inheritance of everlasting flames and as they do increase the sin and guiltiness of one another by their irrelig●ous Conversation so that which some of them do wickedly here upon no great cause they shall have full cause there to curse the time of their coming together and that shall be a peice of their exercise for ever but happy those persons in any Society of Marriage or Friendship that converse so together as those that shall live eternally together in glory This indeed is the Sum of all duties Life A sweet word but sweetest of all in this sense that Life above indeed only worthy the name and this we have here in comparison let it not be called life but continual dying an incessant journey towards the Grave if you reckon years but a short moment to him that attains the fullest old age but reckon miserie● and sorrows 't is long to him that dyes young Oh! that that only blessed li●e were more known and then it would be more desir'd Grace This the tenor of this Heirship Free Grace this Life a free Gift Rom. 6. ult No life so spotless either in marriage or virginity as to lay claim to this life upon other terms if we consider but a little what it is and what we are this will be quickly out of question with us and we will be most gladly content to hold it thus by deed or gift and admire and extol that Grace that bestows it That your Prayers be not hindred He supposes in Christians the necessary and frequent use of this takes it for granted that the Heir of Life cannot live without prayer this is the proper breathing and language of these Heirs none of them dumb they can all speak these Heirs if they be alone they pray alone if Heirs together and living together they pray together Can the Husband and Wife have that love and wisdom and meekness that may make their life happy and that blessing that may make their Affairs successful while they neglect God the only giver of these and all good things You think these needless motives but you cannot think how it would sweeten your Converse if it were used 'T is prayer that sanctifies and seasons and blesses all and not enough that they pray when with the Family but even Husband and Wife together by themselves and with their Children that they especially the Mother as being most with them in their Child-hood when they begin to be capable may draw them apart and offer them to God often praying with them and instructing them in their youth for they are pliable while young as glass when hot but after sooner break than bend But above all Prayer is necessary as they are Heirs of Heaven often sending up their desires thither You that are not much in prayer look as if you look'd for no more than what you have here if you had an Inheritance and Treasure above would not your heart delight to be there Thus the Heart of a Christian is in the constant frame of it but after a special manner Prayer raises the Soul above the World and sets it in Heaven 't is its near access unto God and dealing with him especially about those Affairs that concern that Inheritance Now in this lies a great part of the comfort a Christian can have here and the Apostle knew this that he would gain any thing at their hands that he press'd by this Argument that otherwise they would be hinder'd in their prayers He knew that they who are acquainted with prayer find such unspeakable sweetness in it that they will rather do any thing than be prejudic'd in that Now the breach of conjugal Love the jarrs and contentions of Husband and Wife do out of doubt so leaven and imbitter their Spirits that they are exceeding unfit for Prayer which is the sweet Harmony of the Soul in God's ears and when the Soul is so far out of tune as those distempers make it he cannot but perceive it whose ear is the most exact of all for he made and tun'd the Ear and is the
death and resurrection study them set thine eye upon them till thy Heart take in the Impression of them by much Spiritual and affectionate looking on them beholding the Glory of thy Lord Christ then be transformed unto it 2 Cor. 3. It is not only a moral Patern or Copy but an effectual Cause of thy sanctification having real influence into thy Soul dead with him and again alive with him Oh Happiness and Dignity unspeakable to have this Life known and cleared to your Souls If it were how would it make you live above the World and all the vain hopes and fears of this wretched Life and the fears of Death it self yea it would make it most lovely to them that is the most affrightful Visage to the World It is the Apostles Maxime that the carnal mind is enmity against God as it is universally true of every carnal mind so of all the motions and thoughts of it even where it seems to agree with God yet it s still contrary if it acknowledge and conform to his Ordinances yet even in so doing it s in direct opposite terms to him particularly in this that which he esteems most in them the carnal mind makes least account of He chiefly eyes and values the inside the Natural Man dwells and rests in the shell and superfice of them God according to his Spiritual Nature looks most on the more Spiritual part of his worship and Worshippers The carnal mind 's in this just like it selfe altogether for the sensible external part and cannot look beyond it Therefore the Apostle here having taken occasion to speak of Baptism by terms of Paralel and resemblance with the Flood is express in correcting this mistake It is not says he in putting away the filth of the flesh but the answer of a good conscience Were it possible to perswade you I would recommend one thing to you learn to look on the Ordinances of God suitably to their Natures spiritually and enquire after the spiritual effect and working of them upon your Consciences We would willingly have all Religion reduced to outwards this is ou● natural choice and would pay all in this coyn as cheaper and easier by far and would compound for the Spiritual part rather to add and give more external per●ormance and ceremony Hence the natural complacency of Popery which is all for this service of the flesh and body-services and to those prescribed of God all deal so liberally with him in that kind as to add more and frame new Devices and Rites what you will in this kind Sprinklings and Washing● and Anointings and Incense but whither all this is it not a gross mistake of God to think him thus pleased or is it not a direct afront knowing that he is not pleased with these but desires another thing to thrust that upon him that he cares not for and refuse him what he calls for that single humble heart worship and walking with him that purity of Spirit and Conscience that he only prizes and no outward-service but for these as they tend to this end and do attain it Give me says he nothing if you give not this Oh! saith the carnal Mind any thing but this thou shalt have as many washings and offerings as thou wilt thousands of Rams and ten thousand Rivers of Oyl yea rather then fail let the Fruit of my Body go for the Sin of my Soul Thus we will the outward use of Word and Sacraments do it then all shall be well baptised we are and shall I hear much and communicate of●en if I can reach it shall I ●e exact in po●nt of Family Worship shall I pray in secret all this I do or at least I now promise Ay but when all that is done there is yet one thing may be wanting and if it be so all that amounts to nothing is thy Conscience purged and made good by all these or art thou s●●king and aiming at this by the use of all means then certainly thou shalt ●ind life in them But does thy heart still remain uncleansed from the old ways not purified from the Pollutions of the World do thy beloved sins still lodge with thee and keep possession of thy heart then art thou still a stranger to Christ and an enemy to God the word and seals of Life are dead to thee and thou still dead in the use of them all Know you not that many have made shipwrack upon the very rock of Salvation that many which were baptised as well as you and as constant attendants on all the Worship and Ordinances of God as you yet remained without Christ and died in their sins and are now past recovery Oh! that you would be warned there are still multitudes running headlong that same course tending to destruction through the midst of all the means of Salvation the saddest way of all to it through Word and Sacraments and all heavenly Ordinances to be walking hellwards Christians and yet no Christians baptised and yet unbaptised as the Prophet takes in the prophane multitude of God's own People with the Nations Jer. 9. 26. Egypt and Iudah and Edom all these Nations are uncircumcised and the worst came last and all the House of Israel are uncircumcised in the Heart Thus thus the most of us unbaptised in the heart and as this is the way of personal destruction so it is that as the Prophet there declares that brings upon the Church so many publick Judgments and as the Apostle tells that for the abuse of the Lord's Table many were sick and many slept Certainly our abuse of the holy things of God and want of their proper Spiritual Fruits are amongst the prime sins of this Land 〈◊〉 which so many 〈◊〉 have fallen in the Fields by the Sword and in the Streets by Pestilence and more likely yet to fall if we thus continue to provoke the Lord to his Face for it is the most avowed direct affront to prophane his holy things and thus we do while we answer not their proper end and are not inwardly sanctify'd by them we have no other Word nor other Sacraments to recommend to you than these that you have used so long to no purpose only we would call you from the dead forms to seek the living power of them that you perish not You think the renouncing of Baptism a horrible Word and that we would speak only so of witches yet it is a common guiltiness that cleaves to all who renounce not the filthy lusts and the self will of their own hearts for Baptism carries in it a renouncing of these and so the cleaving unto these is a renou●cing of it Oh! we all were sealed for God in Baptism who lives so few that have the Impression of it on the Conscience and the expression of it in the walk and fruit of their life We do not as clean washed persons abhor and fly all pollutions all fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness We have been a
Fountain of Harmony it cuts the sinews and strength of Prayer makes breaches and gaps as wounds at which the spirits fly out as the cutting of a vein by which as they speak it bleeds to death When the Soul is calm and compos'd it may behold the Face of God shining on it and they that pray together should not only have hearts in tune within themselves in their own frame but tun'd together especially Husband and Wife that are one they should have hearts consorted and sweetly tun'd to each other for prayer So the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matt. 18. 19. And 't is generally true that all unwary walking in a Christian wrongs their communion with Heaven and casts a damp upon their Prayers clogs the Wings of it these two mutually help one another Prayer and holy Conversation the more exactly we walk the more fit for prayer and the more we pray the more enabled to walk exactly and 't is a happy l●●e to find the correspondence of these two calling on the Lord and departing from iniquity Therefore that you may pray much live holily and that you may live holily be much in prayer surely such are the heirs of Glory and this is their way to it Verse 8. Finally be ye all of one mind having compassion one of another love as brethren be pitiful be courteous HEre the particular Rules the Apostle gives to several Relations fall in again to the main current of his general Exhortation that concerns all us Christians The return of his discourse to this universality is express'd in that finally and the universality of these duties all 'T is neither possible nor convenient to descend to every particular but there is suppos'd in a Christian an ingenuous and prudent spirit to adapt those general Rules to their particular Actions and Conversation squaring by them before hand and examining by them after and yet herein the most fail hear these as general discourses and let them pass so apply them not or if they do 't is readily to some other but they are address'd to all that each one may regulate himself by them and so these Divine Truths as a well drawn Picture looks particularly upon every one amongst the great Multitude that look upon it And this one Verse hath a cluster of five Christian Graces or Vertues That which is in the middle as the stalk or root of the rest Love and the other growing out of it two on each side Vnanimity and Sympathy● on the one and Pity and Courtesie on the other but we shall take them as they lie Of one mind This doth not only mean Union in Judgment but it extends likewise to Affection and Action especially in so far as they relate to and depend upon the other And so I conceive it comprehends in its full latitude an harmony and agreement of minds and affections and carriage in Christians as making up one body and a serious study of preserving and increasing that agreement in all things but especially in spiritual things in which their Communion doth primely consist And because in this the consent of their Judgments in matters of Religion is a prime point therefore we will consider that a little more particularly And First What it is not 1. 'T is not a careless indifferency concerning those things not to be troubled about them at all nor to make any judgment concerning them this is not a loving agreement arising from oneness of spirit but a dead stupidity arguing a total spiritlessness as the agreement of a number of dead bodies together which indeed do not strive and con●●st that is they move not at all and that is they live not So that concor'd in things of Religion that i● a not considering them nor acting of the mind about them is either the fruit and sign of gross ignorance or irreligion they that are wholly ignorant of spiritual things are content you determine and impose upon them what you will as in the dark there is no difference nor choice of colours they are all one But 2. which is worse in some this peaceableness about Religion is from an universal unbelief and inaffection and that sometimes comes of the m●ch search and knowledge of debat●s and controversies in Religion men having so many disputes about Religion in their Heads and no Life of Religion in their Hearts fall into a conceit that all is but juggling and the easiest is to believe nothing and these agree with any or rather with none sometimes 't is from a prophane supercilious disdain of all these things and many therebe of these of Gallio's temper that care for none of these things and that account all Questions in Religion as he did but matter of Words and Names And by this all R●ligions may agree together but it were not a natural Union by the active heat of the Spirit but a confusion rather by the want of it not a knitting together but a freezing together as cold congregates all how heterogeneous soever Sticks and Stones and Water but heat makes first a separation of different things and then unites those that are of the same Nature And to one of these two is reducible much of the common quietness of Peoples Minds about Religion all that implicite Romish agreement that they boast of what is it but a brutish ignorance of spiritual things authoriz'd and recommended for that very purpose and amongst the learned of them as many idle differences and disputes as among any 'T is an easie way indeed to agree if all will put out their eyes and follow the blind guiding of their Judge of controversies this is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their great device for Peace to let the Pope determine all I● all will resolve to be cozen'd by him he will agree them all as if the Consciences of Men should only find Peace by being led by the nose at one man's pleasure a way the Apostle ●aul clearly renounces 2 Cor. 1. 24. Not for that we have Dominion over your Faith but are helpers of your joy for by Faith ye stand And though we have escaped this yet much of our common union of minds I fear is from no other than the aforementioned causes want of knowledge and want of affection to Religion You that boast you live conformably to the Appointments of the Church and none hears of your noise we may thank the ignorance of your minds for that kind of quietness but this requir'd unanimity is another thing and before I unfold it I shall premise this That although it be very difficult and it may be impossible to determine what things are alone ●undamental in Religion under the notion of difference intended by that word yet it is undoubted that there be some Truths more absolutely necessary and therefore accordingly more clearly revealed than some others there are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 great things of the Law and so of the Gospel And though no part of Divine
Ierusalems Wall● than for the binding up and healing of it self and in that Psal. that seem's to be the expression of his joy being exalted to the Throne and sitting peaceably on it yet he still thus prays for the peace of Ierusalem And the Penman of that 137. Psalm makes it an execrable oversight to forget Ierusalem ver 5. or to remember it coldly or secundarily no less will serve him than to prefer it to his chief joy Whatsoever else is top or head of his joy as the word is Ierusalems wellfare shall be its Crown shall be set above it And the Prophet whoever it was that wrote that poured out that Prayer from an afflicted Soul comforts himself in this that Zion shall be favoured my bones are consum'd c. But it matters not what becomes of me let me languish and wither away provided Sion flourish tho' I feel nothing but pains and troubles yet thou wilt arise and shew mercy to Sion I am content that satisfies me But where is now this Spirit of high sympathy with the Church sure if there were of it in us 't is now a fit time to act it If we be not altogether dead sure we will be stirr'd with the voice of those late stroaks of Gods hand and be driven to more humble and earnest prayer by it Men will change their poor base grumblings about their privacy Oh! what shall I do c. into strong cries for the Church of God and the publick deliverance of all these Kingdomes from the raging Sword but vile selfishness undoes us the most looking no further if themselves and theirs might be secur'd would regard little what became of the rest as one said when I am dead let the World be fir'd but the Christian mind is of a larger Sphere looks not only upon more than it self in present but even to after Times and Ages and can rejoyce in the good to come when it self shall not be here to partake of it is more dilated and liker unto God and to our head Iesus Christ. The Lord says the Prophet Esay in all his peoples affliction was afflicted himself and Jesus Christ accounts the sufferings of his Body the Church his own Saul Saul why persecutest thou me the heel was trod upon on earth and the head cryeth from Heaven as sensible of it and this in all our evils especially our spiritual Griefs is a high point of comfort to us that our Lord Jesus is not insensible of them This emboldens us to complain our selves and to put in our petitions for help to the Throne of Grace through his hand knowing that when he presents he will speak his own sense of our condition and move for us as it were for himself as we have it sweetly express'd Heb. 4. 15. 16. Now as it is our comfort so it is our pattern Love as Brethren Hence springs this feeling we speak o● Love is the cause of union and union the cause of sympathy and of that unanimity before they that have the same spirit uniting and animating them cannot but have the same Mind and the same feelings And this Spirit is derived from that head Christ in whom Christians live and move and have their being their new and excellent being and so in living in him they love him and are one in him they are Brethren as here the word is their fraternity holds in him he is head of it the first born among many Brethren Men are Brethren in two natural respects their Bodies of the same earth and their Souls breathed from the same God but this third fraternity that is founded in Christ is far more excellent and more firm than the other two for being one in him they have there taken in the other two for that in him is our whole Nature he is the Man Christ Iesus but to the advantage and 't is an infinite one being one in him we are united by the Divine Nature in him who is God blessed for ever and this is the highest certainly and the strongest union that can be imagin'd Now this is a great Mystery indeed as the Apostle says speaking of this same point the union of Christ and his Church whence their union and Communion one with another that make up that Body the Church is deriv'd In Christ every believer is born of God is his Son and so they are not only Brethren one with another that are so born but Christ himself own 's them as his Brethren both he which sanctifies and they who are sanctifi●d are all of one for which cause he is not asham'd to call them Brethren Sin broke all to pieces Man from God and one from another Christ's work in the World was Vnion to make up these breaches he came down and begun the union which was his work in the wonderful union made in his Person that was to work it made God and Man one and as the Nature of Man was reconciled so by what he performed the Persons of Men are united to God Faith makes them one with him and he makes them one with the Father and from these results this oneness amongst themselves concentring and meeting in Jesus Christ and in the Father through him they are made one together And that this was his great work we may read in his Prayer where it is the burden and main strain the great request he so iterates that they may be one as we are one ver 11. a high comparison such as Man durst not name but after him that so warrants us and again ver 21. that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us and so on So that certainly where this is it is the ground work of another kind of Friendship and love than the World is acquainted with or is able to judge of and hath more worth in one drachme of it than all the quintessence of civil or natural assection can amount to The friendship of the World the best of them are but tyed with chains of glass but this fraternal love of Christians is a Golden chain both more precious and more strong and lasting the other are worthless and brittle The Christian ows and pays a General Charity and good will to all but peculiar and intimate friendship he cannot have but with such as come within the compass of this fraternal love Which after a special manner flows from God and returns to him and abides in him and shall remain unto eternity Where this love is and abounds it will banish far away all those dissentions and bitternesses and those ●rivolous mistakings that are so frequent amongst the most it will teach wisely and gently to admonish one another where it is needful but further than that it will pass by many offences and failings and cover a multitude of sins and will very much sweeten Society and make it truly profitable therefore the Psalmist calls it both
poor vanity or other instead of him Surely the Godly Man when he thinks on this is exceedingly ashamed of himself cannot tell what to think of it God his exceeding joy whom in his right thoughts he esteem's so much above the World and all things in it yet to use him thus when he is speaking to him to break off from that and hold discourse or change a word with some base thought that steps in and whispers to him or at the best not to be stedfastly minding the Lord to whom he speaks and possess'd with the regard of his presence and of his business and errand with him This is no small piece of our misery here these wandrings are evidence to us that we are not at home but yet for this tho we should be humbled and still labouring against it yet not so discourag'd as to be driven from the work Satan would desire no better than that it were to help him to his wish and sometimes a Christian may be driven to think what shall I do still thus abusing my Lords name and the priviledge he hath given me I had better leave off no not so by any means strive against the miserable evil in thee but cast not away thy happiness be doing still 'T is a froward childish humour when any thing agrees not to our mind to throw all away thou mayest come off with halting from thy wrestlings and yet obtain the Blessing for which thou wrestled 4. Those Graces which are the due qualities of the heart disposing it for prayer in the exercise of it should be excited and acted as Holiness the Love of it the Desire of increase and growth of it so the humbling and melting of the heart and chiefly Faith which is mainly set on work in prayer draw forth the sweetnesses and vertues of the Promises to desire earnestly their performance to the Soul and to believe that they shall be performed to have before our eyes his Goodness and Faithfulness who hath promised and to rest upon that and for success in Prayer exercising Faith in it it is altogether necessary to interpose the Mediator and look through him and to speak and petition by him who warns us of this that there is no other way to speed no man cometh to the Father but by me As the Jews when they prayed look'd toward the Temple were was the Mercy-Seat and the peculiar presence of God thus ought we in all our praying to look on Christ who is our Propitiatory and in whom the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily The forgetting of this may be the cause of our many disappointments 5. Fervency not to seek coldly that presages refusal fire in the Sacrifice otherwise it ascends not no sacrifice without incense and no incense without fire Our remiss dead hearts are not likely to do much for the Church of God nor for our selves where are those strong cries that should pierce the Heavens his ear is open to their cry He hears the faintest coldest Prayer but not with that delight and propenseness to grant it his Ear is not on 't as the word here is he takes no pleasure in hearing on 't but cries heart-cries Oh! those take his Ear and move his Bowels for these are the voice the cries of his own Children A strange word of encouragement to importunity give him no rest Is. 62. 7. Suffer him not to be in quiet till he make Jerusalem a praise in the Earth A few such Suiters in these times were worth thousands such as we are our prayers stick in our Breast scarce come forth much less go up and ascend with that piercing force that would open up the way for deliverances to come down But in this must be some difference of temporal and spiritual things the Prayer in the right strain cannot be too fervent in any thing but the desire of the thing in temporals may be too earnest a feverish distemper'd heat which diseases the Soul therefore in these things a holy indifferency concerning the particular may and should be joyn'd with the fervency of Prayer but in spiritual things there is no danger in vehemency of desire covet these hunger and thirst be uncessantly ardent in the suit yet even in those in some particulars as for the degree and measure of Grace and some peculiar furtherances they should be presented so with earnestness as that withal it be with a reference and resignation of it to the Wisdom and Love of our Father For the other point the answer of our Prayers which is in this openness of the ear it is a thing very needful to be considered and attended to if we think that Prayer is indeed a thing that God takes notice of and hath regard to in his dealing with his Children 't is certainly a point of Duty and Wisdom in them to observe how he takes notice of it and bends his ear to it and puts to his hand to help and so answers it this both furnishes matter of praise and stirs up the heart to render it therefore in the Psalms so often the hearing of prayer observed and recorded and made a part of the Song of Praise and withal it endears both God and Prayer unto the Soul as we have both together Psal. 116. 1. I love the Lord because he hath heard my voice and my supplications the transposition in the Original pathetical I love because the Lord hath heard my voice I am in love and particularly this causes it I have sound so much kindness in the Lord I cannot but love he hath heard my voice And then it wins his esteem and affection to Prayer seeing I find this vertue in it we shall never part again I will call upon him as long as I live seeing Prayer draweth help and favours from Heaven I shall not be to seek for a way in any want or strait that can befall me In this there is need of direction but too many Rules may as much confuse a matter as too few and do many times perplex the mind and multiply doubts as many Laws do multiply pleading Briefly then 1. Slothful minds do often neglect the answers of God even when they are most legible in the very thing it self granted that was desired It may be through a total inadvertence in this kind never thinking on things as answers of our requests or possibly a continual eager pursuit of more turns away the mind from considering what it hath upon request obtain'd still so bent upon what further we would have that we never think what is already done for us one of the ordinary Causes of ingratitude 2. But tho' it be not in the same thing that we desire yet when the Lord changes our petitions in his answers 't is always for the better regards according to that known word of St. Augustine our well more than our will We beg deliverance we are not unanswered if he give patience and support be it under
Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt And besides many other things to animate this that is here exprest Oh! how full is it They shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead And this in readiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath the day set and it shall surely come though you think it far off Though the wicked themselves forget them and the Christian slight them and let them pass they pass not so they are all registred and the great Court-day shall call them to account for all these riots and excesses and withal for all their reproaches of the godly that would not run with them in these ways Tremble then you despisers and mockers of Holiness though you come not near it What will you do when these you reviled shall appear glorious in your sight and their King the King of Saints here much more glorious and his glory their joy and all terror to you Oh! then all faces that could look out disdainfully upon Religion and the Professors of it shall gather blackness and be bathed with shame and the more the despised Saints of God shall shout for joy You that would rejoyce then in the appearing of that holy Lord and Judge of the World let your way be now in holiness avoid and hate the common ways of the wicked World they live in their foolish opinion and that shall quickly end But the Sentence of that day shall stand for ever Verse 6. 6. For for this cause was the Gospel preached also to them that are dead that they might be judged according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the Spirit IT is a thing of prime concernment for a Christian to be rightly inform'd and frequently remembred what is the true estate and nature of a Christian for this the Multitude of those that bear that name either knows not or commonly forgets and so is carried away with the vain fancies and mistakes of the World The Apostle hath charactered Christianity very clearly to us in this place by that which is the very nature of it conformity with Christ and that which is necessarily consequent upon that disconformity with the World And as the nature and natural properties of things hold universally thus it is in those that in all ages are effectually called by the Gospel are moulded and framed thus by it thus it was says the Apostle with your Brethren that are now at rest as many as received the Gospel and for this end was it preacht to them that they might be judg'd according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the Spirit We have first here the preaching of the Gospel or suitable means to a certain end 2. The express Nature of that end 1. For this Cause There is a particular end and that very important which the preaching of the Gospel is aimed at this end many consider not hearing it as if it were to no end not propounding a fixed determined end in our hearing This therefore is to be considered by those that preach this Gospel that they aim right in it at this end and no other no self end The legal Priests not to be squint eyed nor evangelical Ministers thus squinting to base gain vain applause and also that they make it their study to find in themselves this work this living to God otherwise they cannot skillfully nor faithfully apply their gifts to this effect on their hearers and therefore acquaintance with God most necessary How sounds it to many of us at the least but as a well couched story whose use is to amuse us and possibly delight us a little and there is an end and indeed no end and turns the most serious and most glorious of all Messages unto an empty sound and if we awake and give it hearing it is much but for any thing further how few deeply before hand consider I have a dead heart therefore will I go unto the word of Life that it may be quickened it is frozen I will go and lay it before the warm Beams of that Sun that shines in the Gospel my corruptions mighty and strong and grace if any exceeding weak there is in the Gospel a power to weaken and to kill sin and to strengthen grace and this being the intent of my wise God in appointing it it shall be my desire and purpose in resorting to it to find it to me according to his gracious intendment to have faith in my Christ the Fountain of my Life more enabled and more active in drawing from him to have my heart more refined and spiritualized and to have the Sluse of Repentance opened and my Affections to Divine things enlarged more hatred of sin and more love of God and communion with him Ask your selves concerning former times and to take your selves even now enquire within why came I hither this day what had I in mine eye and desires this morning ere I came forth and in my way as I was coming did I seriously propound an end or no and what was my end Nor doth the meer custome of mentioning this in prayer satisfie the question for this as other such things usually do in our hand may turn to a lifeless form and have no heat of spiritual affection none of David's panting and breathing after God in his ordinances such desires as will not be still'd without a measure of attainment as the Childs desire of the breast as our Apostle resembles it chap. 2. And then again being returned home reflect on your hearts much hath been heard but is there any thing done by it have I gained my point it was not to pass a little time simply that I went or to pass it with delight in hearing rejoycing in that light as they did in S. Iohn Baptists for a season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as long as the hour lasts it was not to have my earpleased but my heart changed not to learn some new notions and carry them cold in my head but to be quickened and purified and renewed in the Spirit of my mind is this done think I now more esteemingly of Christ and the life of faith and the happiness of a Christian and are such thoughts solid and abiding with me what sin have I left behind what Grace of the Spirit have I brought home or what new degree or at least new desire of it a living desire that will follow its point Oh! this were good repetition A strange folly of multitudes of us to set our selves no mark to propound no end in the hearing of the Gospel The Merchant sails not only that he may sail but for traffick and trafficks that he may be rich The Husband Man plows not only to keep himself busie with no further end but plows that he may sow and sows that he may reap with advantage and shall we do the most excellent and fruitful work fruitlesly hear only to hear and look no