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

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not only came into our Natures but he must come into our Hearts This Union is common to all tho I confess it is only reckoned and imputed to the sanctified Heb. 2.11 For both he that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one for which cause he is not ashamed to call them Brethren And to the Children of God Heb. 2.14 Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of Flesh and Blood he also himself took part of the same 9. It is not a mixture as if Christ and we were confounded and mingled our Substances together That is a gross Thought and suiteth with the Carnal Fancies of a Corporal eating his Flesh and drinking his Blood We are not mixed his Substance with ours and ours with his he remaining still a distinct Person and we distinct Persons 10. It is not a Personal Union as of the two Natures in the Person of Christ. We are not united to Christ so as to make one Person but one Mystical Body 1 Cor. 12.12 For as the Body is one and hath many Members and all the Members of that one Body being many are one Body so also is Christ. The whole is Christ Mystical but every Believer is not Christ. Thus I have endeavoured to remove all gross and unworthy Thoughts But now Secondly Positively What it is I Answer We cannot fully tell till we come to Heaven then we shall have perfect knowledg of it then Christ is all in all John 14.20 At that day ye shall know that I am in the Father and you in me and I in you Then our Union is at the height But for the present we may call it an Union of Concretion and Coalition for we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 planted into him Rom. 6.5 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 joined to the Lord 1 Cor. 6.17 It is immediatly with Christ we are united to Father and Spirit but by Christ as the Foot is united to the Head but by the intervention of other Members So we are united to the Father and the Spirit but by Christ as an Arm or Foot of the Son belongeth to the Father but as the Son belongeth to the Father The Love of the Father is the Moving Cause of it the Spirit is the Efficient Cause of it but it is with Christ. And it is by way of Coalition as things are united So as they may grow and live in another as the Branches grow in the Vine and the Members being animated and quickned by the Soul grow in the Body so are we united with Christ as our Vital Principle that we may live and grow in him that we might live in him Gal. 2.20 I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and grow in him Ephes. 4.15 16. But speaking the Truth in Love may grow up into him in all things which is the Head even Christ. From whom the whole Body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every Joint supplieth according to the effectual working in the measure of every part maketh increase of the Body unto the edifying of it self in Love So that this is enough in general to call it an Union of Concretion and Coalition such an Union whereby Christ remaineth and liveth and dwelleth in us as a Vital Principle As the Soul is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Cause and Principle of Life to the Body so is Christ to us Before God breathed the Soul into Adam his Body tho otherwise organized and formed lay but as a dead Lump without Breath and Life but no sooner was the Soul put into him but he began to live So Christ being mystically united inableth us to live to act to grow and increase more and more More particularly to open it to you is hard because it is a great Mystery Life Natural is a Mystery not sufficiently explained much more Life Spiritual But now First I shall shew how it is wrought and brought about and in what Order For there is a difficulty there to be cleared For since Union is said to be by Faith Ephes. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your Hearts by Faith And Faith is an Act of Spiritual Life it seemeth there is Life before our Union with Christ So that this Union seemeth to be the Effect rather than the Cause of the Spiritual Life and some say it is the Effect of the Beginning and the Cause of the Continuance and Increase of it and conceive the Order thus That Christ is offered in the Gospel and by receiving Christ we come to be united to him and then to be possessed of his Righteousness and receive further influences of Grace and that the first beginning of Spiritual Life is not from Union but Regeneration by virtue of which Faith is given to us that we may be united to Christ. But I suppose this Method is not right Briefly then for the manner and order how it is wrought take it thus Union it is by the Spirit on Christ's part and Faith on ours he beginneth with us as the most worthy as having a quickning and life-making Power in himself 1 Cor. 15.45 The last Adam was made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quickning Spirit By the Spirit he infuseth Spiritual Life the first Act of which is Faith that is the first Grace that acteth upon Christ and maketh the Union reciprocal that so in him we may have Righteousness and Grace Phil. 3.9 And be found in him not having mine own Righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the Righteousness which is of God by Faith All Graces flow from Union with Christ so doth Faith Believing is an Act of the Spiritual Life but it is at the same instant of time and not before The first Band of Union is the Spirit for the Gift of the Spirit is the Cause of Faith and every Cause is before the Effect in Nature tho not in Time for Positâ causâ in actu ponitur effectus But the Spirit is not given us in the least moment of Time before the being of Faith for the Spirit being infused immediatly excites Faith to take hold of Christ. Secondly What is that Act of Faith by which we close with Christ I Answer The apprehending embracing taking hold of Christ To as many as received him c. John 1.12 trusting him with our Souls that is the Faith that gives us an Interest in Gospel-Privileges But what is this receiving Christ I Answer Receiving presupposeth Offering it is a Consent to what is offered an Accepting of what is given Receiving is a word used in Contracts and noteth the Consent of one Part to the Terms which the other offereth The Scripture chiefly delighteth in the Similitude of the Matrimonial Contract as a Woman accepteth a Man for her Husband so do we receive Christ. When a Man's Affections are set upon a Woman he sendeth Spokesmen to tell her of his Love and that he is ready to give her an Interest in himself
of the spirit An Assent with wonder and astonishment because so much wisdom love and grace was discovered in it Eph. 3.17 18 19. 2. Consent must be often renewed to that covenant by which the spirit is dispensed often enter into a resolution to take God for your God for your Soveraign Lord your Portion and Happiness and Christ for your Redeemer and Saviour and the Holy Ghost for your Guide Sanctifier and Comforter Every solemn consent renewed doth both confirm you in the benefit of the spirit and bind you and excite you to the duties required by God in all these relations Your constant work is to love and seek after God as your happiness and Jesus Christ as your Saviour and the Spirit for your Guide and Direction 3. Dependance upon the love of God and the merits of Christ and the power of the spirit that you may use Christs appointed means with the more confidence That soul that thus sets its self to believe findeth a wonderful encrease of the spirit in this renewed exercise of faith assenting consenting and depending Rom. 15.13 The God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing that you may abound in hope through the power of the Holy ghost 2. Your Repentance must be renewed by a hearty grief for sin and resolutions and endeavours against it The more sin is made odious the more the spirit hath obtained his effect in you and the more heartily you study to please God in the work of love and obedience the more you are acquainted with the spirit and his quicknings the spirit and his comforts Acts 9.31 They walked in the fear of the Lord and the comforts of the Holy ghost His business is to make you holy the more you obey his motions and follow his directions the more he delighteth to dwell in your hearts 2. VSE is self-reflection Let me put that Question to you Acts 19.3 Have ye received the Holy ghost since ye believed Is the first great change wrought Are you called from darkness to light From sin to holiness Turned from Satan to God Are you made partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 The change must be perfected more and more by the spirit 2 Cor. 3.18 Beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord we are changed into his image from glory to glory by the Spirit of the Lord. Do you obey his sanctifying motions Rom. 8.14 For as many as are led by the spirit of God are the Sons of God His motions all tend to quicken us to the heavenly life inclining our hearts to things above 2 Thes. 2.13 But we are bound to give thanks always to God for you brethren beloved of the Lord because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the spirit and belief of the truth SERMON XIII ROM VIII 10 And if Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin and the spirit is life because of righteousness THE Text is manifestly a Prolepsis or a Preoccupation of a secret Objection against our Redemption by Christ If believers die as well as others how are they freed from death questionless Christ was sent into the world to abolish the misery brought in by Adams sin now death was the primary punishment of sin Gen. 2.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die And this remaineth on believers The Apostle answereth in the words read 1. By supposition If Christ be in you That he might fix the priviledg on the Persons to whom it properly belongeth 2. By concession The body is dead because of sin 3. By correction And the spirit is life because of righteousness 1. The supposition sheweth that the comfort of the priviledg is drawn from the spiritual union which believers have with Christ if Christ be in you Secondly The concession granteth what must be granted that death befalleth believers their bodies return to the dust as others do But Thirdly the correction is that they are certain to live for ever with Christ both in body and soul and this upon a twofold ground first There is a life begun which shall not be quenched but perfected the spirit is life Secondly The ground and procuring cause is Christs righteousness Sin deprived them of the life of grace and forfeited the life of glory but here the righteousness of Christ hath purchased this life for us and the spirit applieth it to us Doct. That Christ in believers notwithstanding death is a sure pledg and earnest to them of eternal life both in body and soul. This Point will be best discussed with respect to the several clauses in the Text the supposition the concession the correction or contrary assertion 1. The supposition if Christ be in you Here I will prove to you that a true Christian is one that doth not only profess Christ but hath Christ in him 2 Cor. 13.5 Know ye not that Jesus Christ is in you except ye are reprobates that is senseless stupid wretches not accepted of God so Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of Glory Now Christ is in us two ways Objectively and Effectively Objectively as the object is in the faculty or the things we think of and love are in our hearts and minds so Christ is in us as he is apperehended and imbraced by faith and love so he is said Eph. 3.17 To dwell in our hearts by faith and again He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God and God in him 1 John 4.18 Which is not to be understood of the acts only but the habitual temper and dispositions of our souls for else by the ceasing of the acts the union at least on our hearts would be broken off Secondly Effectively so Christ is in us by his spirit and gracious influence Now the effects of his spirit are first life he is become the principle of a new life in us Gal. 2.20 Christ liveth in me and the life that I live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God Where he is he maketh us to live and we have another principle of our lives than our selves or our own natural or renewed spirit Secondly Likeness or renovation of our natures Gal. 4.19 Vntil Christ be formed in you The image of Christ is impressed on the soul 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new creature 'T is all to the same effect our being in Christ or Christs being in us for both imply Union and the effect of it a near conformity to Christ in holiness Thirdly Strength by the continued influence of his grace to overcome temptations 1 John 4.4 Ye are of God little children and have overcome them because greater is he that is in you than he that is in the world The spirit keepeth a foot Gods interest in the soul against all the assaults of the Devil so for the variety of conditions we pass thorough Phil. 4.12 I know both how to be abased and how to abound
we repent and believe in Christ. Page 218 224 Directions to those that are Reconciled Page 24 250 They that are Reconciled had need beg pardon of sin v. Pardon Page 225 Redeemer The necessity of a Redeemer Page 163 Religion must be our Business and Recreation Page 74 Renovation the Nature of it Page 207 The Object of it Page ib. That it is the work of God's Spirit Page ib. The Effects of it Page 208 Its Connexion with Reconciliation Page ib. v. New Creature Repentance what it includes Page 243 v. Faith and Repentance Respect to Christs Person in the days of his flesh was not all he looked for Page 196 Religiously to respect men for external carnal advantages condemned Page 194 Respect Civil due to carnal men Page ib. Respect of persons not with God Page 110 199 Resurrection of the Body Reasons of it Page 36 Resurrection of Christ the Example Pledge and Cause of the Spiritual Life Page 189 The likeness between Christ's rising from the dead and Christians rising from the death of Sin Page ib. Rewards Sinful respect to the Rewards of Religion how it bewrayeth it self Page 151 Right God hath a Right to us Page 186 Righteousness Why men are prone to establish a Righteousness of their own Page 257 Gospel-Righteousness what it is Page 72 Gospel-Righteousness a Garment to cover our nakedness Page 28 Righteousness as it respects the precept or the sanction of the Law opened Page 252 Why the Righteousness by which we are justified is called the Righteousness of God Page 253 What is that Righteousness by which we are justified Page 253 254 257 Christ is made sin for us and we are made the Righteousness of God in him Page 254 In what this exchange doth agree in what it differs Page ib. The Love of God herein Page 256 This Righteousness of Christ is made ours when we believe in him Page 254 The Priviledges depending on our being made the Righteousness of God in Christ. Page 257 S. SAcrifices were offered by Adam Page 28 Satisfaction of Christ the truth of it Page 170 The Sufficiency of it Page 171 Scope of a Christians Life Page 71 72 v. End Self-Love only cured by the Love of God Page 230 Sight what Sights we shall have in Heaven Page 60 In what manner shall we Behold Christ. Page ib. v. Faith and Sight Sin a wrong to God how to be understood Page 86 Sin and shame always go together Page 28 The greatness of the Burden of Sin Page 257 Why Sin is a Burden Page 33 In what manner Sin is to be checked Page 205 The aggravations of Secret Sins Page 95 Secret Sins to be avoided because of future Iudgment Page 95 In what sense Christ was said to be made Sin Page 252 Sin taken for a Sacrifice for sin and for Punishment of sin Page ib. Christ was made sin but not a Sinner Page ib. Christ was made sin for us and we the Righteousness of God in him Page 254 Christ being made Sin is the cause of our being made the Righteousness of God in him Page 255 Sincerity how evidenced Page 102 Paul's Testimony of his Sincerity Page 118 Soul that it is distinct from the Body proved Page 66 It can live apart from the Body Page 67 The Souls of the Saints at Death immediately go to God Page 67 Spirit How he dwells in us Page 42 Strangers how to carry our selves as Strangers in this World Page 52 Sufferings of Christ what they were Page 256 They show the heinousness of sin Page 174 How we are to be affected when we read the story of Christ's sufferings Page 198 Suitableness between Christ and Believers Page 190 Surety Christ the Surety of Believers Page 171 Christ dyed as a Surety Page 179 T. TAbernacle our frail Condition set forth by a Tent or Tabernacle Page 2 Terror of the Lord is ground of Fear Page 110 How it is so to the godly Page 113 The Terror of the Lord should have an influence on us while in the flesh Page 113 V. VEracity and Faithfulness of God manifested at the Day of Iudgment Page 98 Union to Christ Internal and External explained Page 203 How the New Nature flows from our Union with Christ. Page 203 W. WAlking by Faith those who have Faith must walk by it Page 61 Reasons of it Page ib. Will God will not do any man good against his will Page 235 Nor doth he force man's will but deal by Persuasion Page 236 Wisdom wherein Wisdom lyes Page 128 Wherein the Wisdom of a godly man appears Page 128 Evidences of Spiritual Wisdom Page 129 How Wisdom is to be justified by her Children Page 128 Wisdom of Christ. Page 83 Word of God is an Instrument fitted to gain the consent of man's will Page 236 Work the Work of a Christian. Page 72 74 Why Works are produced at the Day of Iudgment Page 97 What room and place Works have with respect to our final sentence and the Rewards and Punishments that follow it Page 100 101 Works good the Principle of them Page 101 Good Works cannot be performed by men in a state of Nature Page ib. The aim and scope of them Page ib. Good Works Imperfect Page 99 They merit nothing Page ib. What respect Good Works have to our future Reward Page 102 Worship External Pomp in the Worship of God is not that he looks after Page 198 A TABLE OF SCRIPTURES EXPLAINED In the SERMONS on 2 CORINTHIANS 5.   Chap. Verse Page GEnesis 1 31 216 3 11 28 4 7 252   13 252 Exodus 32 25 28 Deuteronomy 6 5 163 30 6 167 1 Kings 5 26 95 Psalms 1 5 92 27 4 64 31 1 233 33 15 93 51 4 92 115 1 133 130 3 92 Proverbs 16 14 112 29 27 246 Ecclesiastes 3 21 129 5 6 93 12 7 66 Canticles 8 6 146 Isaiah 56 4 76 65 17 200 66 22 200 Jeremiah 23 6 253 Hosea 2 3 28 4 8 252 6 7 96 10 1 183   11 152 Amos 6 3 112 Habakkuk 2 11 96 Malachy 2 15 168 Matthew 3 11 112 Matthew 11 19 128 20 23 40 22 37 163 250 24 12 160 25 31 78 Mark 6 11 94 9 44 105 Luke 2 40 191 10 27 250 12 20 4 16 9 68   22 68 20 37 38 68 23 43 67 John 2 24 25 84 5 45 93 7 ●4 63 14 2 4 15 2 203 20 27 197 Acts 16 14 175 20 21 224 Romans 5 14 171   25 223 6 3 4 5 180   6 177 179   13 180 6 19 131 8 2 164 9 3 141 11 36 134 14 7 8 183 15 3 187 1 Corinthians 3 8 40 1 Corinthians 4 4 5 82 11 22 195 15 21 179   45 179 16 32 169 2 Corinthians 1 12 117 4 7 238   16 60 5 21 171 6 11 12 13 145 Galatians 2 20 178 3 1 59   20 80 4 14 ●41 5 17 180 Ephesians 1 3 51 4 18 190 Philippians 1 23 67 2 13 209 Colossians 1 20 68   21 217 3 3 5 179 180 191 1 Thessalonians 1 10 112 1 Thessalonians 2 12 39   13 241 1 Timothy 6 12 19 6 2 Timothy 2 21 204 Hebrews 3 1 235 4 13 84 7 22 179 9 28 252 10 31 111 13 4 95 James 4 1 195 1 Peter 1 17 110 2 9 129 157 4 1 178 2 Peter 1 3 39 3 14 29 1 John 2 5 145 3 19 45 Revelations 2 5 162   3 4 38   5 9 76   12 12 93 FINIS Secondly Fourthly Thirdly Secondly Secondly ☞ That which follows being Printed Sermon XXX is the Conclusion of this 29 th Sermon
or other a spirit of bondage or a spirit of adoption now with what kind of spirit are we acted withall Gods children who are adopted into his family may have some degree of the spirit of bondage great mixtures of fears and discouragements for only perfect love casteth out fear 1 John 4.18 but these fears are over-ballanced by the spirit of adoption they have some filial boldness a better spirit than a slave do not wholly sin away the love of a father tho the delight and comfort be much obstructed 't was a sad word for a child of God to speak Psal. 77.3 I thought of God and I was troubled The remembrance of God may augment our grief when conscience representeth his abused favours as the cause of his present wrath and displeasure with us but this is not their constant temper but only in great dissertions for a constancy while sin remaineth somewhat of bondage remaineth but there is a partial predominant legality the partial may be found in the regenerate who do by degrees overcome the servile fear of condemnation and grow up more and more into a Gospel Spirit certainly where that prevaileth there will be liberty 2 Cor. 3.17 Tho for a while the heir differeth nothing or nothing to speak of from a servant yet in time he behaveth himself as a son and is treated as a son and they get more comfort and joy in the service of God but the predominant legality is in the carnal it may be known by the governing principle fear or love the inseparable companion of the spirit of bondage is fear and love and sonship or the spirit of Adoption go together and where slavish fear prevaileth and influenceth our Religion it may be known by these two things First By their unwillingness and reluctancy to what they do for God The good they do they would not and the evil they do not they would do that is they would fain live in a sinful life if they durst and be excused from religious duties except that little outward part which their custom and credit engages them to perform like Birds that in a sunshine day sing in the Cage tho they had rather be in the Woods They live not an holy life tho some of the duties which belong to it they observe out of a fear to be damned if they had their freest choice they had rather live in the love of the creature than in the love of God and the pleasures of the flesh than the heavenly life But now they that have the spirit of Adoption are inclined to the love of God and Holiness have hearts suited to their work Psal. 40.8 Thy law is in my heart and Heb. 8.10 I will put my laws into their minds and write them upon their hearts They obey not from the urgings of the law from without but from the poise and inclination of the new nature not barely as enjoined but as inclined They do not say O that this were no duty or this sinful course lawful but O how I love thy law Psal. 119.97 O that my ways were directed Psal. 119.5 They do not groan and complain of the strictness of the law but of the remainders of corruption Rom. 7.24 Not who will free me from the law but who will free me from this body of death Their will is to serve God more and better not to be excused from the duties of holiness or serving him at all 2. By the cause of their trouble about what they have done or left undone They are not troubled for the offence done to God but their own danger not for sin but merely the punishment as Esau sought the blessing with tears when he had lost it Heb. 12.17 He was troubled but why Non quia vendiderat sed quia perdiderat Not because he sold it which was his sin but lost the priviledges of the birthright which was his misery so many carnal men whose hearts are in a secret love and league with their lusts yet are troubled about their condition not because they are affraid to sin but affraid to be damned 't is not Gods displeasure they care for but their own safety the Young-man went away sad and grieved Mark 10.22 because he had great possessions because he could not reconcile his covetous mind with Christs counsel and direction Felix trembled being convinced of sins which he was loath to discontinue and break off slavish fear tho it doth not divorce the heart from its lusts yet it raiseth trouble about them 3. USE is to press you to get rid of this spirit of bondage and to prevail upon it more and more For Motives 1. 'T is dishonourable to God and supposeth strange prejudices and misrepresentations of God as if his government were a kind of Tyranny grievous and hurtful to man and we think him an hard Master whom it is impossible to please as the evil and sloathful servant Matt. 25.24 25. I knew that thou wert an hard man reaping where thou hast not sowed and gathered where thou hast not strawed and I was affraid and went and hid thy talent in the earth His fear was the cause of his negligence and unfaithfulness which fear is begotten in us by a false opinion of God which rendreth him dreadful rigorous and terrible to the Soul while we look upon God through the Glass of our guilty fears we draw a strange Picture of him in our minds as if he were a ridgid Lawgiver and a severe Avenger harsh and hard to be pleased and therefore unwilling to submit to him 2. 'T is prejudicial to us in many regards 1. It hindereth our free and delightful converse with God The legal spirit hath no boldness in his presence but is filled with tormenting fear and horror at the thoughts of him The Spirit of adoption giveth us confidence and boldness in prayer Heb. 4.16 and Eph. 3.12 but on the contrary the spirit of bondage maketh us hang off from God As Adam was affraid and run to the bushes Gen. 3.12 and David had a dark and uncomfortable spirit and grew shy of God after his sin Psal. 32.3 4. fain to issue forth an injuction or practical decree in the Soul to bring his backward heart into his presence v. 5. And Cain went out from the presence of the Lord of Hosts Gen. 4.16 as unable to abide there where the frequent Ordinances of God might put him in remembrance of him And Jam. 2.29 The Devils believe and tremble They abhor their own thoughts of God as reviving terror in them The Papists think it boldness to go to God without the mediation and intercession of the Saints The original of that practice was slavish fear when God had opened a door of access to himself 2. It breaketh our courage in owning the ways of God and truths of God The Apostle when he presseth Timothy not to be ashamed of the testimony of the Lord nor his servants and to be partakers of the afflictions
force of Nature or done beside the order of Second Causes We wonder when we read that Iron did swim as 2 King 6.6 Yet his hanging the world upon nothing is a greater miracle There is nothing but the fluid Air to support this vast body and consistence of Earth that we tread upon We wonder at the Curiosities of Art whereas the Lords Ordinary works look very Common-like in our Eyes as to go no farther The frame of our own Bodies is very Curious and exact So many Bones Arteries Veins and Sinews c. And all disposed in such a comely proportion Well then the Body in regard of the frame and structure of it is fitly called an House 2. With respect to an Inhabitant The Soul dwelleth in the Body as a man in an House It guideth and ordereth the Body as the Inhabitant ordereth the affairs of the House or as the Mariner and Pilot directs the motions of the Ship Not that the Soul is in the Body accidentally we must not strain it so far There is a formal union between the Soul and the Body But the Soul is the man that 's the Inhabitant God began man at his Body He first built the House and then put in the dweller He formed and organized the Body out of the dust of the Earth and then breathed into him the Breath of Life and so man became a living Soul Gen. 2.7 Well then the Immortal Soul is the man and that which should be chiefly regarded Most men are like those that take care to deck and adorn the House but never regard the Inhabitant all their care is for the Body whilst the poor neglected Soul hath cause to complain of hard usage This is as if a man should trim his House and starve himself In a Body over cared for there ever dwelleth a neglected Soul 2dly The Specification of this notion or what kind or sort of House it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our Earthly House of this Tabernacle A Tabernacle or Tent is a movable dwelling set up for present use such as hath a roof or covering but no Foundation Tectum habet Fundamentum non habet A poor sorry Habitation either left when the use ceaseth or taken down or suffered to fall a pieces of its own accord Paul himself was a Tent-maker and Spiritual men converse with corporal things Spiritually they are improving Common Occasions to an Holy use and therefore doth he so often consecrate this notion of a Tent to signifie our frail and flitting Condition here 1. A Tent or Tabernacle is easily raised up and as easily taken down So men are described Job 4.19 They dwell in Houses of Clay their Foundation is in the dust they are Crushed before the Moth a moth is but a handful of enlivened dust 2. A Tent is set up for a short time of use not for a fixed habitation As there are principles of Corruption in our Bodies so our use and end is but for a while when we have done our part and served our generation according to the will of God the Stage is shifted and the world furnished with a new Scene both of Acts and Actors 3dly A Tent is destroyed by taking the parts asunder Death is nothing but a dissolution of the parts whereof man is composed a taking asunder of the Soul from the Body Well then if the Body be but a Tabernacle alwaies decaying of its self though it should be preserved from external injuries and if its use be short and when that is over the Soul shall be plucked from the embraces of the Body let us do all the good that we can in this little time that we have to spend here 2 Pet. 1.13.14 I think it meet as long as I am in this Tabernacle to stir you up by putting you in remembrance knowing that I must shortly put off this Tabernacle even as our Lord Jesus hath shewed me This should make us bestir our selves while time and strength lasteth Yea the nearer our Journeys end we are the faster should we run Natural motion is in principio tardior when death is near the best will think the great part of their business undone while we are here we have a Cottage rather than a House a ruinous Cottage yea a Tent we spend all our time almost in repairing and keeping it up and supplying the necessities of the Body so it is an impediment to us from better things The Body hindreth the operations of the life of grace for the present and the manifestation of the life of glory It hindreth the life of grace The Body if it be sound and well it kicketh against the Spirit 1 Pet. 2.11 If ill it afflicts and discomposeth the Spirit And then the Life of Glory For till this shade be taken down that glorious House which we expect from above will never be raised up 3dly The Attribute or adjunct If this House of our Tabernacle ' T is ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an earthly Tabernacle-House and that in three regards In regard of its Composition Sustentation and Dissolution 1. In regard of its Original and Composition We were made out of the dust of the ground That curious frame that we see 't is but dust moulded up into a comely shape The matter out of which we were made was Earth all Elements meet in mixt Bodies yet in gross and heavy Bodies such as ours are Earth is predominant This speaketh the Wisdom and Power of God to make such a curious frame out of dust We read in the plagues of Aegypt the Magicians could not bring forth lice out of the dust of the ground Exod. 8.17 18 19. And yet God raised out of the dust of the ground such a noble Creature as man is And it serveth to humble us in the sense of our vileness who are but dust and ashes as to our original Gen. 18.27 Isa. 40.15 What should we Glory in The nobility of our birth We were made out of the dust of the ground as the worms are yea the worms are of the elder House for every creeping thing was made before man In our beauty or strength Prov. 31.30 Favour is deceitful and beauty is vain That part which we Glory in is but dust well coloured Or in Pomp of Living High and low shall lye down in the dust alike and the worms shall cover them Job 21.26 But chiefly it should remember us of our frailty 'T is on t Brass nor Iron or Stone or stiff Clay that we were made of but dust which hath no Coherence and Consistence but is easily dissipated and scattered with every puff of wind So is our dusty Tabernacle with every blast of God's displeasure 2dly In regard of Sustentation and support Psal. 104.14 He bringeth food for them out of the Earth Things bred there and nourished there feed us As the Body is framed out of the Earth so the means whereby it is supported is the Earth Meat and Drink and such like accommodations
and discomposed In this life the Saints are tossed up and down but there is a quiet resting place prepared for them where the Soul reposeth her self with all Spiritual delights after her labour and Travail Here is our Tent there our House our House is where our goods are In Heaven we enjoy the Treasures which were laid up there before Rev. 14.13 Luk. 12.33 A Treasure in the Heavens that fadeth not There is all our comfort 'T is a Capacious House Joh. 14.2 In my Fathers House are many Mansions that will hold all the Children of God who at last shall be gathered together There is abundance of Room in Heaven 'T is not carnally to be conceived as if Heaven were to be divided into so many cells But to note that many shall be admitted into that Blessed rest through the Love of God and the merits of Christ. Oh! Let us oftner think of this Blessed House Here we have but a Tent the Body is often afflicted And after that dissolved torn and taken down But then an House that we shall never change where we shall live sweetly and securely without trouble of enemies 2dly This House is described 1. By the efficient cause expressed negatively and positively 1. Negatively the false cause is removed an House not made with hands Not built by man of Terrestrial and Feculent Matter not contrived with mans art and care or skill things made by man are not comparable to things made by God For as the workman is so is the work Man being a finite Creature limited and confined his work cannot be absolute as God's is the Holy places made by Bezaleel and Aboliah had their Glory but they were nothing comparable to the Holy places not made with hands Heb. 9.24 Those were figures These are true Whatever God doth it is done in a more Glorious manner he discovereth his Magnificence in the work 2dly The true cause is assigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Building of God So 't is called Rom. 5.2 We rejoice in hope of the Glory of God God raised this House out of the greatest wisdom and highest love An House to shew the Riches and Glory and Honour of him that made it So where Heaven is compared to a City 't is said Heb. 11.10 He looked for a City which had Foundations whose builder and maker is God He is the Builder or Architect that doth frame and devise it according to model and he is the workman that did set it together man hath no hand in this at all God contrived it and prepared it 'T is so far above the Art and Power of man that only God could make it God is not only the principal but sole efficient of it 2dly By the adjunct 't is an eternal House All other Houses moulder to dust cernimus exemplis oppida posse mori all other buildings are infirm and moveable obnoxious to change decay and ruine experience doth sufficiently prove this by the ruine of so many Castles Palaces Cities and Kingdoms which have flourished in great Splendour Power and Strength yet now lye in the dust and do not appear But this City hath Foundations Heb. 11.10 Nothing can be firm that is not firmly fixed upon an unmoveable Ground But this hath Foundations the unchangeable Law of God and the everlasting merits of Christ. 3dly The place where 't is situated In the Heavens The place where God doth manifest himself in a more glorious manner than here upon earth which is a Common Inn for Sons and Bastards a Receptacle for Sinners and Saints yea for man and beast where God sheweth his bounty to all his Creatures A valley of tears where is the place of our Tryal and exercise But this is the place of our recompence there God will manifest himself in the greatest latitude that the Creature is capable of we shall have a place agreeable to our state and a state agreeable to the place The paviment is very Glorious The Starry Heaven we cannot look upon it without wonder and astonishment Adam's happiness was in an Earthly Paradise but ours is in Heaven Eph. 1.3 We have such a Glorious place and Glorious company That happy Region of the Blessed which is properly called the Heavenly Jerusalem doth as much excell all other Countries in height amplitude and beauty as the Inhabitants excel the Inhabitants of other Countries in wisdom nobleness and grace For sublimity The Stars seem to be like so many spangles for the distance 'T is above all Mountains Elements Sun Moon and Stars So far is it distant from the place of vicissitudes and changes And then for its Breadth as well as height some Stars have a body bigger than vast Countries yea than the whole Earth Then what is the capacity of Heaven it self For Beauty This world that is a stable for beasts the place of our exile the valley of tears hath a great deal of Beauty What hath God bestowed then upon Heaven Oh! When we shall meet with all the Holy ones of God then how shall we rejoice And the Innumerable Company of Angels that shall all join in Consort There is no pride or envy to divide us or make us Contemn one another but Love and Charity reigneth that the good of every one is the good of all and the good of all the good of every one There is one Body one Heart one Soul and one God that is all in all Whence is it that one Citizen loveth another rather than a stranger one Brother loveth another rather than another man that the head loveth the feet of his own Body rather than the Eyes of another Namely that Citizens dwell in one Common City or they are one Common House and are of the same stock members live by conjunction of the same life What conjunction then what love between the Blessed that have one God one Country one Palace one Life How sweet will this friendship be where there is no weakness to pervert or corrupt it After we have gotten through a short life here in the world this will be our portion Assoon as we do but step into this House we bid our everlasting farewel unto all sin and sorrow and step into it we do assoon as we dye in a moment in the twinckling of an Eye But above all what Joy is in the sight of God! 1 Joh. 3 2. We shall be like him for we shall see him as he is Oh then let us get a Title to it and be able with clearness to make out our qualification by two witnesses Conscience and the Spirit Rom. 8.16 the Spirit it self beareth witness with our Spirit that we are the Children of God As in the mouth of two witnesses every thing is established God never giveth Heaven but he giveth earnest 2 Cor. 1.22 Who hath also sealed us and given us the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts God never giveth Heaven to any but first he prepareth and fitteth them for it Col. 1.12 Giving thanks
Furnace because there was a Fourth there one that was as the Son of God If a Fiery Furnace be a comfortable place when Christ is there what will Heaven be when Christ and we shall be there to all Eternity Again this presence maketh way for enjoyment 'T is not a naked sight and speculation we are coheirs with Christ Rom. 8.17 We shall be like him live in the same state participate of the same glory Servants may stand in the presence of Princes but they do not make their followers their fellows and consorts with them in the same glory Solomon could only shew his glory to the Queen of Sheba but Christ giveth it us to be enjoyed Luke 22.30 Ye shall eat and drink at my Table in my Kingdom The greatest love that David could shew his Friends was to admit them to his Table 2 Sam. 9.8 Thou shalt eat Bread at my Table continually said he to Mephibosheth and so to Barzillai He put him upon his own Mule and caused him to sit upon his Throne 1 Kings 13.35 Thus Christ dealeth with us we sit upon his Throne we are feasted at his Table with unmixed delights In how much better Condition are we than Adam Adam was in Paradice we in Heaven Adam was there among the Beasts of the Earth we with God and his holy Angels Adam was thrown out of Paradice we never out of Heaven 'T is no matter if the World leave us not a Room to live in among them they cast us out many times but Christ will take us to himself Again if this presence of Christ be no small part of our Happiness let us more delight in it We injoy his presence in the Ordinances this is to begin Heaven upon Earth Therefore let us begin our familiarity here 2. Doct. That we are presently with the Lord as soon as the Soul flitteth out of the Body This is one of the plainest Texts to prove That separated Souls as soon as they are out of the Body do injoy Bliss and Glory There are a sort of men in the World who are so drowned in sense that they cannot believe things to come either questioning the Immortality of the Soul or else which is a step to it asserting the sleep of it And all because they so fancy it to be tyed to the Body as that it cannot exercise its functions and operations without it Those that deny the being of the Soul or the abiding of it after the Body is dissolved I shall not handle that now But to those that grant the abiding of the Soul but in a deep sleep without any sense and feeling of good or evil I must shew the falshood of this opinion or else all that I shall say will be to no purpose Therefore I shall handle these three things 1. That the Soul is distinct from the Body 2. That the Soul can live and exercise its operations apart from the Body 3. That the Souls of the Saints actually do so 1. That the Soul is distinct from the Body and is not meerly the vigour of the Blood appeareth by Scripture Reason and Experience In Scripture we read that when mans Body was organized and framed God breathed into him the Spirit of Life Gen. 2.7 The Life of man is a distinct thing from this mass of flesh that is proportioned into hands and feet head and belly arms and leggs bones and sinews And this life of man what ever it be 't is such a life as implieth Reason and a faculty of understanding and willing or opposing In him was life and that life was the light of men John 1.4 It doth not only enliven this flesh but discourse and choose things at its own pleasure A life that hath light in it 'T is distinct from the Body in its Nature being a Substance Immaterial and not capable of being divided into parts as the Body is for 't is a Spirit not created of matter as the Body was The Body was formed out of the dust of the ground and therefore it can be resolved into its original but the Spirit was Immediately Created by God out of nothing Therefore the Scripture saith Eccl. 12.7 Then shall the dust return to the Earth as it was and the Spirit shall return unto God who gave it Where the Body is dust in its Composition it shall be dust in its Dissolution There is described the first and last Condition of the Body in regard of its material cause and the Soul is described in the kind of its being 'T is a Spirit or an Immaterial substance its Author God gave it he framed the Body too but not so immediately in ordinary generation And our natural Fathers are distinguished from the Father of our Spirits Heb. 12.9 And by its disposal when the Body returneth to dust the Soul returneth to God that gave it When the material and passive part is separated from that inward and active principle of its motions the Scripture telleth you what becometh of the one and the other The material part is resolved to dust again but the Spirit returneth to God So the Saints resign it Acts 7.59 And they stoned Stephen calling upon God and saying Lord Jesus receive my Spirit 2. 'T is distinct in its supports The Body is supported by outward means and the help of the Creature but the Soul is supported without means by the Immediate Hand and Power of God himself The Body is patched up with daily supplies from without As it was made out of the Earth so is its food brought out of the Earth Psa. 104.14 And its clothing too but the Soul needeth not these things 3. 'T is distinct in its operations There are certain operations of the Soul wholly independant on the matter as understanding and willing for they agree to God and Angels who have no Bodies and there is no proper Instrument in the Body by which they should be exercised as sight by the Eye hearing by the Ear nay it understands not only corporeal things which are received by the ministry of the senses but Spiritual things as God and Angels who have no Bodies And it can reflect upon its self therefore it hath operations proper and peculiar to its self So that it doth not depend on the Body 4. 'T is distinct from the Body as to weakness and perfection as to pleasure and pain 1. As to weakness and perfection The Soul perisheth and decayeth not with the Body when the Body droopeth and languisheth the Soul is well and jocund yea better than it was before there are distinct periods of time beyond which 't is impossible to add a Cubit or hairs breadth to ones stature But the Soul is ever growing forward to its perfection And multitude of years though they bring on much weakness yet increase wisdom Job 32.7 Yea the Soul is strongest when weakest dying Christians have manifested the highest excellency under bodily infirmities and when least of the Life of Nature most Glorious expressions
of Grace Their choice of God for their portion remaineth unshaken They have chosen the better part adhere to it and have a general purpose to please God in all things 2. An universal slumber is not usually incident to the Saints 'T is not the sleep of the whole man as to all goodness 't is not in all parts of the soul. If there be a remiss will and dead affections yet not a sleepy Conscience something that taketh Gods part as appeareth because they are unsatisfied with this dull and drowsie estate 3. They are more easily alarmed and rouzed up out of it than others that sleep the sleep of death Their Faith and Love is soon awake again and easily set a work for God there is somewhat to work upon A true Christian riseth by unfeigned repentance when his Conscience hath but leizure and helps to deliberate and bethinks what he hath done and so much the better resolveth and bethinketh himself against his sin for the time to come 4. When they rise again and repent and do their first works they are more earnest and fervent than they were before As it were to make amends for their former languishing and to redeem the time they have lost they double their diligence Thirdly I come to the Reasons of this Sleepiness 1. There are two Principles in the Children of God the Flesh inclining to sleep and the Spirit to wake Mat. 26.41 The Spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak and therefore the degree of Grace which the best attain unto in this life is mixed with imperfection The guiding and commanding faculties do but imperfectly direct and the inferiour faculties imperfectly obey 'T is the Office of the Understanding and the Will to command of the inferiour faculties to obey There is weakness in all of them therefore 't is said Jam. 3.2 In many things we offend all The Understanding in many things is but a blind guide the Will is but in part rectified and so cannot exercise such a powerful command over our thoughts passions and senses 2. Variety of outward Occurrences working upon the diversity of Principles in us As sometimes we are in a prosperous estate sometimes in deep troubles both may cause this deadness and drowsiness in us Sometimes deep troubles make us weary of well-doing 2 Thes. 3.13 so Heb. 12.3 Consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners lest you be weary and faint in your minds Now as this weariness and heaviness causeth sleep in the body so it doth in the soul. We are tyred in Gods service and then our Wheels are clogged A man may be secure in trouble but usually he is so in time of peace Peace Wealth and Honour are often abused to spiritual drowsiness and secure neglect of God Ease slayeth the fool Prov. 1.32 We had need watch when Delilah spreads her lap for us and the Delights of the world open their bosom to us Surfeiting with the abundance of worrldly prosperity we neglect the Power of Religion and please our selves with the Form David enjoying peace and plenty slew Vriah his Friend who in his adversity spared Saul his Enemy yea his heart smote him but for the cutting off the Lap of his Garment In the abundance of outward comforts we sit loose from God therefore we have those cautions Deut. 8. from ver 7 to ver 14. 3. Conversing with Spiritual Sluggards that count it an high piece of wisdom not to be too forward Irreligious Company and Example is a great matter and hath a mighty force upon us And though it doth not begin sin in the Soul it doth increase it Isa. 6.6 Sin is by propagation not by Imitation but yet the contagion of Example is a great advantage to Corruption To be among warm heavenly mortifyed self-denying Christians is a great advantage in the spiritual life There is a notable provocation and excitement in their example Saul among the Prophets had his Raptures 1 Sam. 10.10 Heb. 10.24 Let us provoke one another to Love and good Works This begets a holy Emulation who shall excell but carnal Company is a deadning thing We are more susceptible of evil than good we catch a disease from one another but we do not get health one from another By touching the unclean they became unclean but he that was unclean was not purified by touching the clean The Conversations of the wicked have more power to corrupt than the good to provoke and excite to vertue A man that would keep himself awake unto God and mind the saving of his Soul must shake off evil Company Psal. 119.115 Depart from me ye evil doers for I will keep the Commandments of my God And by evil Company I mean not only the Prophane who bespeak their own hatred and detestation by their apparent odiousness but the loose and careless As we are to take heed that we be not allured to that which is evil so that we be not deadned to that which is good Neglect of God will keep us out of Heaven as well as Prophaneness We easily leven one another with deadness and formality frequent Society with dead hearted persons breedeth it such whose conference is empty and unsavoury and altogether of worldly things Certainly our dulness and backwardness is such that we need the most powerful helps 4. Another cause is a dead Worship Missa non Mordet Christ compareth spiritual Duties to new Wine Mat. 9. but the Pharisaical Feasts to Taplash or old unsavoury stuff that hath no Spirits Old Bottles will endure that well enough Nothing lulleth the Soul asleep so much as a perfunctory Worship or sleepy Devotions Christs Ordinances are simple but full of vertue his Institutions conscientiously observed will keep us awake Psal. 119.93 I will never forget thy Precepts for with them thou hast quickned me Use them much in Faith and Obedience and Graces will be preserved in us in a lively manner and constant exercise 1 Thes. 5.19 20. Quench not the Spirit Despise not Prophesying If you would not quench the Spirit you must not carelesly use the means of Grace The words of the wise are as Goads to prick us forward Eccl. 12.10 in Heavens way To stir us up to our Duty the Spirit of God sharpeneth and pointeth the Word that it may be as Goads in our sides When we are negligent here is quickning A dull Ministry as well as a dull Minister maketh us fall asleep 5. Slumber is the cause of Sleeping Mark the order in the Text They first slumbred and afterwards slept One degree of carelesness makes way for another and usually there is a lesser degree at first Take heed of the beginnings of declinations If we would avoid sleep we must avoid slumber No man becometh stark naught at the first step One careless Prayer maketh way for another Give way to it now and it will settle into an utter deadness at last Men fear not the danger of little sins and so are hardened under them
till they fall into greater Small sins harden as well as great sins 't is hard to say which more Indeed at first little sins seem to awaken Compunction The prick of a Pin maketh a man start but a heavy blow stunneth him David when he cut off the Lap of Sauls Garment his heart smote him but when he fell into Adultery and Blood he was like one in a swoon This is true but then on the other side great Sins are more apparent and liable to the notice of Conscience but we neglect small sins and so inveterate Custom groweth upon us and we are insensibly hardened by a carelesness and constant neglect of those kind of sins yea sometimes more than by gross falls A surfeit or violent distemper maketh us run to a Physitian but when a disease groweth upon us by degrees we have death in our bowels e're we know it We take care to mend a great breach but a leak unespyed drowneth the Ship We have need alwayes to stand upon our watch Many great mischiefs would not ensue if we took notice of the beginnings of those distempers which afterwards settle upon us 6. The Omission of holy Duties and the want of a constant serious Exercise induces a secure careless temper of Spirit Solomon telleth us Prov. 19.15 Sloathfulness casteth into a deep sleep and the idle Soul shall suffer hunger Labour dispelleth the vapours and scattereth them but sloath and idleness maketh way for sleep 'T is true in the Soul The renewed part hath need of a great deal of spiritual Exercise to keep it awake much Prayer much hearing much fasting The Apostle saith Rom. 12 11. Not sloathful in business fervent in spirit serving the Lord. The way to be fervent in Duties is to be frequent in them Be much in action and in the exercise of Grace that you may be kept fresh and lively Wells are the sweeter for draining so is the Soul the more fresh and ready for every good work In Gifts we see if they be not traded with they rust and decay and fail so in Graces to him that hath shall be given He that uses his gifts well shall find them encreased The right arm is bigger and stronger and fuller of spirits than the left because more in use 7. Grieving the Spirit causeth him to suspend his quickning influence and then the Soul is in a dead and drowsie estate Though the Children of God dare not quench the Spirit yet they may grieve the Spirit Eph. 4.30 The Conscience of a renewed man after 't is wounded by gross sins may be a dead and stupified Conscience for a long time Witness David and Jonah 8. Immoderate Liberty in worldly things as worldly cares and fleshly delights Sobriety is necessary or a sparing medling with those worldly Comforts that do mightily indispose us for the Christian Warfare 1 Pet. 2.7 Luk. 21.34 Take heed your hearts be not overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness Look as the multitude of gross vapours cast us into a sleep so do these delights and cares stupifie the Soul Psal. 119.37 Turn away mine eyes from beholding vanity and quicken thou me in thy way You will need quickning if you give way to vanity VSE Oh take heed of this Evil. Mark 13.26 Watch lest the Lord cometh suddenly and he finde you sleeping Would you have Christ come and find you in this case 1. Some are wholly in a state of spiritual Sleep To them the Lord speaketh Eph. 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light And of such the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 15.3 4. Awake to righteousness and sin not for some have not the knowledge of God I speak this to your shame 'T is all reason and more than time that you should thorowly rouze up your selves from the condition of sin wherein you have gone 'T is a shame such should be among Christians such as snort still upon the bed of Security when the light of the Gospel shineth round about them Oh! when God calleth Awake and rise from the dead if not God may punish you by your own sin One of his heaviest judgments is a Spirit of slumber and deep sleep Rom. 11.8 And then what will the end of it be you may sleep but your damnation sleepeth not 2 Pet. 2.3 Certainly we should commiserate the case of such especially if they be related to us and seek to awaken them from the sleep of sin that they may be brought home to Christ. Oh poor careless Creatures they fear not God nor think of his wrath nor make preparation to stand before the Son of Man at his Coming 2. There are others apt to slumber now and then though for the main they have chosen the better part To these the Apostle speaks 1 Thes. 5.6 There●ore let us not sleep as do others but let us watch and be sober There is great need Our Adversary watcheth The Devil is observing all our motions and Postures if we fall asleep we are exposed as a Prey to him There are many that mind our spiritual harm If we had no Enemy without there is Hostis domesticus a bosom Enemy and we are prone as others to be hardned through the deceitfulness of sin Therefore you may not sleep as do others You have another Spirit in you and if you are Gods Children you have other obligations Rom. 13.11 'T is high time to awake out of sleep for your Salvation is nearer than when you first believed When you first gave your names to Christ you thought no labour too much no pains too great How vigilant and diligent then and will you sleep now Your course beginneth to draw to an end and you are almost ready to set sail for the other World that you may meet with Christ. Oh! now you have shaken off the sleep of sin shake off the sleep of sloath too shall we be drowsie and cold at last 1. I shall give you the Signs of this Sin 2. Motives against it 3. Directions to avoid it First The Signs 1. Senslesness in not discerning and weighing the things that befall us good or evil An Instance of the one we have Hos. 7.8 For she did not know that I gave her corn and wine and oyl The Lord is very liberal to us yet little notice is taken of it An Instance of the other we have Isa. 42.25 Yet he laid it not to heart In Mercies we neither consider their Author nor their End nor their Cause Their Author we are like Swine that eat the Acorns but never look up to the Oak from whence they fall 'T is said of the Church she hath doves eyes they peck and look upward VVe should see God in every Mercy A drowsie unattentive Soul heedeth it not but is swallowed up in present delights and enjoyments and looketh no further 'T is our Priviledge above the Beasts to know the first Cause Other creatures live upon God but are not capable of knowing
God Idolatry and Prophaneness had never crept into the world if men had kept up the sense of Gods bounty Some never regard the End of Mercies which is to draw in our hearts to God therefore called the Cords of a man Hos. 6.4 being so many bonds and ties upon us What honour hath been done to God for this and that mercy I allude to that in Hest. 6.3 See how David reasoneth 2 Sam. 7.2 I dwell in an house of Cedar but the Ark of God within Curtains When the Heart is urging to Duty upon this score God hath been good to me given me food and rayment and plentiful provision for the comfort of this life what have I done for God Not only the Impenitent abuse mercy Rom. 2.4 but David lost his awe of God because he had not a thankful sense of the mercies of God 2 Sam. 12.7 8. So for corrective Providences The Body is a tender part with most men though they are sensible of the smart of the lash yet they do not consider the hand that striketh nor the deserving procuring Cause they do not look upward nor inward they do not see the hand of God in it Isa. 26.11 When his hand is lifted up they will not see look upon it as a chance 1 Sam. 6.4 Job had explicite thoughts of God Job 1.23 The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken Nor the Cause Lam. 3.39 Wherefore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his sins If Sickness cometh if a Relation be taken away if an Estate blasted a waking Conscience looketh to the Cause For this cause many are sick and many are fallen asleep 1 Cor. 11. We should see the mind of God in his Rod. When the Israelites fled before the men of Ai Joshua looketh out for the Troubler So the Children of God search for the sin that is the cause of their trouble 2. Stupid Dulness and cold Indifferency in heavenly things Their want of Zeal and chearfulness in holy Duties they go about them heavily Dull of hearing Mat. 13.5 Cold in Prayer when they should be fervent and effectual Jam. 5.6 In all things we shew forth an heartless formality Grace is asleep in the Soul and thence cometh a sleepy profession a sleepy hearing a sleepy praying a sleepy receiving The Word that was wont to be as burning Coals leaveth no Impression Luk. 24.32 Your whole Converse with the living God is cold and dead-hearted In such a condition a man heareth as if he heard not and prayeth as if he pray'd not receiveth as if he received not and mourns for sin as if he mourned not and rejoyceth in God as if he rejoyced not looks after Heaven and heavenly things as if he sought them not and so brings little honour to God and little profit and comfort to his own soul. 3. Tedious irksomeness in Gods service They grow weary of the wayes of God Mal. 1.13 Behold what a weariness is it Amos 8.5 When will the new Moons be over and the Sabbath past Shall God do so great things for us in Christ and shall any thing which God hath commanded be grievous to us How unkind is this neither have we an hard Master nor hath he enjoyned us tedious work but all our duties have a sweetness in them Micah 6.3 Do not my words do good You carry it so as if God did not deal well with his people or were not easie to be served His Commands are not grievous and his Yoke is easie Tryals sent by him not above measure his Corrections not above our deserving therefore why should we snuff at his service Weariness and repining at Gods service is an ill sign God loveth and requireth a willing people This weariness though it doth not make us wholly abandon Gods service yet it makes us slight it and mind it no more than how to get it over any way Oh take heed then of growing weary of Religion and attending on the duties thereof to look upon these as distractions or matters by the By or interruptions of the work we would be upon They are lead much by sense and carnality that esteem nothing but what yieldeth a pleasure to sense or gratifyeth the outward Man 4. Forgetfulness of Changes and vain dreams of worldly happiness When we have a carnal Pillow to rest upon we fall asleep Psal. 30.6 7. A Christian should sit loose from all earthly things There was Leven in the Thank-offering We should be contented to dwell in Booths as the Israelites Psal. 39.5 Surely every man in his best estate is vanity 5. Carnal Complacency The peace and pleasure which you live upon is fetched more from the world than from God and Heaven and you live in quietness of mind not so much from the belief of the love of God in Christ and the hope of Heaven as because you feel your selves well in your bodily estate and live at ease and in prosperity in the world and have something grateful to the flesh Luk. 12.19 20 21. Oh! that soul is in a dangerous condition when the World is so pleasing and lovely to it that it can take contentment and delight in it without God or apart from God To many worldly prosperity is so sweet that it can keep them quiet under the guilt of wilfull sins When you have your hearts desire for a while you can forget Eternity or bear those thoughts with security which otherwise would amaze your Souls Secondly Motives 1. Your Enemy watcheth The Devil is never asleep 1 Pet. 5.8 he observeth you in all postures and watcheth all possible advantages against the Children of God and will not you stand upon your Guard and look about you 2. If you sleep you hazard your selves to the Whip or Gods severe Correction Hos. 5.15 God findeth out many times a very smart Rod to whip lazy drowsie Saints to their duty He will not suffer Grace to rust in his Children Your awakening will be sad God sent a Tempest after Jonah Some sharp cross or other will fall upon us 3. The eyes of many are upon us and shall we be slumbring and sleeping 1 Cor. 4.9 W● are made a spectacle to the World Angels and Men. Miscarriages will tend to Gods dishonour 4. When Grace is asleep sin breaketh loose There is no sin but a man is exposed to in a secure Estate therefore the Devil laboureth as much as he can to cast us into this temper When David walked at ease on the top of his House little did he know the evil of his own Heart and the danger of the Temptation 5. Every lesser indisposition that hindreth any degree of Communion with God should be grievous to the Children of God If we do not take heed to the beginnings of sins further Mischief will ensue when Temptations are near importunate and constant Little sticks set green ones on fire when the thatch once taketh fire 't is hard to quench it therefore we should not rest in
be renounced or we are for ever miserable and why not now Sin will be as sweet hereafter as now it is and Salvation dispensed upon the same terms You cannot be saved hereafter with less adoe or bring down Christ or Heaven to a lower rate If this be a reason it will ever be as a reason against Christ and Religion because you are loath to part with this or that pleasing lust and so it will never be 3. The Suspicion that is upon a late Repentance 'T is seldome sound and therefore alwayes questionable That is no true Repentance which ariseth meerly from horrour and the sense of Hell This sensible work that men have upon them may be but the beginning of everlasting despair All men seek the Lord at length but the wise seek him in time This was the great difference between the wise and foolish Virgins one sought him in time the other out of time They would covet his favour at last Upon a Death-bed the most prophane would have God for their portion When they can sin no more and enjoy the World no longer then they cry and howl for mercy and comfort and a little well grounded hope of Heaven or eternal life But who can tell whether this sensible work that is upon them be not meerly an act of self-love and the fruit of those natural desires which all the Creatures have after their own happiness or a meer retreat others have when they can hold the World no longer We cannot say this Repentance is true nor affirm the contrary that 't is false but 't is doubtful There is but that one instance of the Thief on the Cross that truly repented when he came to die The Scriptures contain an History of four thousand years or thereabouts and yet all that while we have but this one instance of a true Repentance just at death and in that Instance there is an extraordinary Conjunction of Circumstances which cannot reasonably be expected again Christ was now at his right hand in the height of his love drawing sinners to God Never such a season as then and 't is more than probable he had never a call before then Well then let us put this necessary work of Preparation for God out of doubt betimes yea let the Children of God if they have not yet prevailed against such a Lust or lived in the neglect of such a Duty could not bring their hearts to it hitherto make speed left they be surprized and this defect in their preparation make their death uncomfortable A good Christian is alwayes converting yet not fully converted The first work is often gone over and he is still getting nearer to God by a more affectionate compliance with his whole will Doct. 2. That those that are finally refused by the Lord may yet have a desire of the Ioyes of Heaven 1. Consider them in this VVorld and in the VVorld to come These two respects are different For though Self-love be the common cause of their desiring Heaven both now and then yet there is a difference 'T is more commendable to desire it now than to desire it then though neither be an argument of any gracious Constitution of Soul 'T is more commendable to desire it now when 't is a matter of Faith to believe the World to come than when 't is a matter of Sense as when all Shadows are chased away then 't is no hard matter to convince men of things that lye within the Veil that is of the truth and worth of Heavenly things And yet if they should be convinced of this we cannot say they are gracious however they are better than meer Infidels for carnal men may desire a share in the state of the Blessed as Numb 23.10 Oh that I might die the death of the Righteous Balaam had his wishes And those that did not like Christs Doctrine but departed from him said Joh. 6.34 Lord evermore give us of this bread of life They would fain be happy When this happiness was represented unto them it may and doth stir up strange motions in the Hearts of those that are unrenewed and unchanged 2. There is a difference in the End and Vse of this desire of Happiness Now and then God leaveth these Velleities and Inclinations as a Stock upon which to graft Grace as a Spinster leaveth a lock of Wooll to fasten the next thread as Nebuchadnezzar's shape remained when he was turned a grazing among the Beasts and as Job's Messengers I alone am escaped to tell thee There are these Inclinations to happiness that are escaped out of the ruines of the Fall God by our self-love would draw us to love himself Man will not be dealt with else It leaveth men capable of Heaven the Doctrine of Life represented to them they are without excuse if they refuse it This is the use of it now but then when we are in termino it hath another use This love of their own happiness and desire to be saved serveth for this very use to make them sensible of their loss the grief of their Condemnation and lost estate is encreased thereby Now this is little thought of by carnal men because they have Oblectamenta sensus the entertainments of sense to divert their minds but when separate and set apart from all these then if they have no other punishment this is enough Surely their understanding remaineth having nothing to comfort them and allay the bitter sense of their loss But now let us see 1. How far carnal and unregenerate men desire Happiness 2. Why this is so little improved and they make so little use of it First How far a carnal and unregenerate man may desire Happiness 1. They may desire good confuse non indefinitè Happiness in the General but this desire cometh under no deliberation and choice The happiness that is offered by Christ or that Life and Immortality that he bringeth to light cometh under another consideration Good Good is the cry of the World Certainly no man would be miserable but all would be happy and live at ease Christians Pagans all good men bad men they that seldome agree in any thing do all agree in this they would have good To ask men whether they would be happy or no is to ask men whether they love themselves yea or no. 2. They would not only have good in the General but some eternal good And because this is not so evident by nature they grope and feel about for it Act. 17.26 There is an unsatisfiedness in present things and therefore they are scrambling and feeling about for some better thing As Solomon tryed all experiments so do men go about seeking for good Eccl. 7.29 Since we lost the streight line of Gods direction we seek it sometimes in one thing sometimes in another and Christ saith Mat. 13.45 46. That the Kingdom of Heaven is like unto a Merchant man seeking goodly pearls And when he had found one pearl of good price he went
Page 133 Hell a state of Torment as well as a state of Death Page 193 Hell a State of Torment and Place of Torment Page 193 The greatness of the Torments of the damned Page 207 Torments of the Body what they shall be Page 206 Torments of the damned why eternal Page 208 Eternity of Hell Torments consistent with Gods Iustice. Page 194 Few believe the Torments of Hell Page 195 Trimming of Lamps what it signifies in the Wise Virgins Page 40 What it signifies in the Foolish Virgins Page 40 Who do not trim their Lamps Page 41 Trade what it is to trade with our Talents Page 90 In trading for God our Returns must carry proportion to our Receipts Page 94 Reasons of it Page 95 Cautions in judging of our Returns in Trading Page 94 U. UNion of Believers with Christ represented by Marriage-Union Vid. Marriage Page 56 The Benefits of Union with Christ. Page 57 Virgins Visible Professors why so called Page 3 Virgins foolish why many have great confidence of their good Estate that shall be found foolish Virgins at last Page 45 Visible Church the State of it in this World Page 4 W. WAtching spiritual what it is Page 72 Watching as it respects our present state to avoid sin and do good considered Page 74 75 Reasons why we should watch to avoid sin Page 73 Watching unto Prayer in Prayer after Prayer what Page 75 Watching as it respects the future State opened Page 75 Who are to watch Page 78 Reasons why we should watch Page 77 The Causes of it Page 73 How long we are to watch Page 78 The Blessing promised to watching Page 78 The danger of not watching Page 78 Means to help to Watchfulness Page 79 Wisdom of Christ Divine and Humane explained Page 143 Wisdom Spiritual wherein it lyes Page 22 Wonder a great Wonder that any should reject the Christian Faith Page 136 214 And that any should embrace it and live sinfully Page 137 214 Three Causes of it Page 137 The Reward of the Righteous at the day of Iudgment shall be matter of wonder to them Page 183 The Reasons of this wonder Page 183 Work Christ appointed every man his work at his departure Page 84 How good Works must be performed Page 180 The Godly described by their fruitfulness in good Works Page 206 Comfort to sincere Christians from their good Works Page 180 The doing some good Works cannot excuse men for the omission of others Page 180 The respect of good Works to the future sentence Page 178 Works assigned as a Reason of the Sentence of Absolution at the last day Page 174 Works at the last day produced as an Evidence of Faith Page 175 Trusting in Works very natural but very dangerous Page 179 Works are not the moving Cause to incline God to give us Christ. Page 179 Nor the Instrument of applying the Merits of Christ. Page 180 Yet no man can maintain his Comfort without them Page 182 Worm that never dyes what it is Page 206 Wrath of God the greatness of it Page 207 Some Instances of it Page 208 FINIS A TABLE OF SCRIPTURES EXPLAINED In the SERMONS on the 25 th of MATTHEW   Chap. Vers. Pag. EXodus 34 5 6 7. 112 Job 11 20. 47 Psalm 32 31. 13 141 3. 79 Proverbs 3 16. 199 19 15. 28 26 9. 121 Ecclesiastes 10 2. 14 Isaiah 30 33. 192 Jeremiah 17 11. 207 Hosea 2 19 20. 59 Zechariah 11 17. 131 Matthew 6 3. 183 11 23. 130 26 45. 26 28 10. 187 188 Luke 13 7. 206 Acts 20 21. 14 24 10. 7 Romans 2 12. 159 9 11. 200   22. 199 1 Corinthians 3 8. 107 2 Corinth 11 2. 3 Ephesians 2 10. 14 4 18. 12 6 8. 107 Colossians 1 24. 36 2 Thessalon 1 9. 149 2 Timothy 2 12. 66 Titus 1 16. 14 2 12 13. 42 Hebrews 2 11. 187 6 12. 119 8 10. 13 10 22. 22 James 3 16 17. 93 1 Peter 1 3. 172   7. 104 2 Peter 1 4. 12   7. 186 3 11. 40   14. 42 1 John 2 16. 74 Revelations 20 12. 102 21 8. 209 ERRATA in the Sermons on the 25 th Chap. of St. Matthew The Reader is desired to Correct these following Errors with some others less material which have been occasioned by the faultiness and Imperfection of the transcribed Copy PAge a. line 51. for thus read as l. 52. for grew r. drew l. 53. r. so he was ib. for to r. from p. 4. l. 39. r. meant of p. 12. l. 51. dele of p. 18. l. 8. for never r. neither p. 21. l. 31. r. not to waste it l. 49. for Transfiguration r. Presignation p. 22. l. 43. for Wisdom is r. Rectum est p. 47. l. 56. r. hope of p. 48. l. 43. r. profession and l. 44. dele without that l. 45. dele should l. 46. r. Now these Temporaries p. 51. l. 19. for that we might r. but we must l. 36. r. in the names of their little ones avouch God to be their God p. 55. l. 48. dele 3. p. 57. l. 9. for name r. terms p. 59. l. 46. r. he comes p. 63. l. 56. r. would not now die p. 66. l. 13. r. if he were not heard and l. 61. for assigneth r. ascribeth p. 67. l. 25. for beareth r. leaveth l. 26. for thereto r. on them p. 69. l. 8. r. ever be l. 34 35. dele not fully p. 70. l. 16. for indefinitè r. distinctè p. 71. l. 3. for separate r. despise l. 5 6. for promote r. promise p. 76. l. 8. r. they both see things future and things future with clearness and certainty l. 11. r. the light of Faith l. 16. for design r. Decree ib. for they are r. that Decree is p. 79. l. 6. after Judge adde before they are ready to be judged p. 81. l. 50. for commutative r. cumulative p. 82. l. 47. for Duty r. Entity p. 84. l. 33. dele and undertakes p. 92. l. 9. for is r. as p. 94. l. 15. dele mans l. 38. after boldeth adde Crescentibus donis crescunt rationes donorum Gregory p. 97. l. 24. for Ministry r. Minister p. 104. l. 53. for Fruits r. Smells l. 53 54. for Pleasure consists r. And lastly p. 105. l. 17. r. delight to meet them l. 25. for This r. His p. 114. l. 47. dele by their failing p. 117. l. 48. dele no p. 121. l. 61. r. a sleight Eye p. 124. l. 27. for Many r. Man l. 41. dele First l. 42. dele Who p. 127. l. 4. dele or p. 141. l. 35. for of r. at ib. after coming dele l. 40 41. for Soul and Body r. humane Body p. 146. l. 18. for with r. without l. 39. r. bonum p. 155. l. 26. r. You have no cause l. 29. r. The wayes of God are condemned p. 163. l. 28. for lively r. live l. 44. for Comforts r. People p. 172. l. 47. r. of the Inheritance of the Saints p. 179. l. 20. for because r. besides p. 184.
are not but are the Synagogue of Satan Mr. Greenham tells of one who was executed at Norwich for an Atheist first he was a Papist then a Protestant then he fell off from all Religion and turned Atheist How can you believe it is true that there is God when this Truth hath so little power on the Heart 3. It presseth you to lay this Principle up with Care All Satan's malice is to bring you to a denial of this Supream Truth it is good to discern his Wiles There are special Seasons when you are most liable to Atheism When Providence is adverse Prayers are not heard and those that worship God are in the worst Case the Lord doth not come in when we would have him The Devil worketh upon our Stomach and Discontent and when we are vexed that we have not our Desires we complain as Israel Exod. 17.7 Is the Lord among us or no when they wanted Water But still our God is in the Heavens and doth whatsoever he pleaseth The Saints in their Expostulation still yield the Principle Psal. 73.1 Truly God is good to Israel however the state of things are yet he is resolved to hold to Principles So Jer. 12.1 he layeth it down as an undoubted Maxim Righteous art thou O God! God is God still So when we meet with Oppression Men pervert Judgment others forswear themselves our Innocency doth not prevail the Devil abuseth the rage of Passions in such a Case As Diagoras a noted Atheist among the Heathens became so upon this occasion he saw a Man deeply forswearing himself and yet was not striken with a Thunder-bolt Consider though this be a sure Temptation yet there is a God Eccles 3.16 17. I saw under the Sun the Place of Judgment that Wickedness was there and the Place of Righteousness that Iniquity was there What then I said in my Heart God shall judg the Righteous and the Wicked for there is a time for every Purpose and for every Work God will have a time to judg this Matter e're long still recover your supreme Principle out of the hands of the Temptation So in times of general Oppression when the innocent Party are left as a Prey to their Adversaries Eccles. 5.8 When thou seest the Violent perverting of Judgment and Justice in a Province marvel not at the Matter for he that is higher than the highest regardeth and there be higher than they We may lose all outward Supports but not our God Attamen vivit Christus regnat So when second Causes operate and accomplish their wonted Effects according to their fixed and stated Course all things continue as they were 2 Pet. 3.4 they think the World is governed by Chance or Nature so this proveth a Snare But you should see God at the other end of Causes he can change them as he pleaseth SERMON IV. JOHN XVII 3 And this is Life Eternal that they might know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent DOCT. II. THE next Proposition is That this God is but one Thee the only true God Deut. 6.4 Hear O Israel the Lord thy God is one Lord. The Heathens multiplied Gods according to their own Fancies They had Lords many and Gods many Austin in one of his Epistles speaketh of one Maximius a Heathen who excuseth the Polytheism of the Gentiles that they worshipped but one Supream Essence though under divers Names Ejus quasi quaedam membra variis supplicationibus prosequimur ut totum colere valeamus That they had several Deities that they might as by so many several Parcels adore the whole Divine Essence The Truth is Nature hath some sense of it for as it sheweth there is a God so it sheweth there is but one God Socrates was a Martyr to this Truth The Platonicks worshipped one Supream Essence whom they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Philosophers sometimes called God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Being sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that one thing Tertullian proveth that the Soul was naturaliter Christiana as he speaketh Oh testimonium Animae naturaliter Christianae which he proveth from the Forms of Speech then in use Deus videt c. What God shall award God seeth let God determine of me and for me And in Troubles they cryed out O God! and in Straits they did not look to the Capitol the imagined Seat of such Gods as the Romans worshipped but to Heaven the Seat of the Living God Thus it it is with the Soul saith he when recovered out of a Distemper The Truth is it was the dotage and darkness of their Spirits to acknowledg many Gods as Drunkards and Madmen usually see things double two Suns for one But besides the consent of Nations to give you Reasons There is a God and therefore but one God there can be but one first Cause and one Infinite one Best one most Perfect one Omnipotent If one can do all things what need more Gods If both be Omnipotent we must conceive them as agreeing or disagreeing if disagreeing all would be brought to nothing if agreeing one is superfluous God hath decided the Controversy Isa. 44.8 Is there a God besides me Yea there is no God I know not any As if he said If any have cause to know I have but I know none This Point is useful not only to exempt the Soul from the anxious fear of a false Deity and to confute the Manichees Marcion Cerdo and others that held two sorts of Gods and those that parted the Godhead into three Essences and the Pagan Fry But Practically 1. It checketh those that set up other Gods besides him in their Hearts If there be but one God why do we make more and give Divine Honour to Creatures A Worldling maketh his Mony his God and a Sensualist his Belly his God Covetousness is called Idolatry and Phil. 3.19 Whose God is their Belly How is Covetousness Idolatry and how can any make their Belly their God Who ever was seen praying to his Pence or worshipping his own Belly I answer Though it be not done corporally and grosly yet it is done spiritually That which ingrosseth our Love and Confidence and Care and Choice and Delight that is set up in the room and place of God and this is to give Divine Honour to a Creature Now this is in Worldlings and Sensualists For Confidence they trust in their Riches for a supply do not live on Providence 1 Tim. 6.17 Charge them that are rich in this World that they be not high-minded nor trust in uncertain Riches but in the Living God Prov. 10.15 A rich Man's Wealth is his strong City He is provided of a Defence against all the Chances and Stroaks of Providence So for Care a Man devoteth his Time to his God and the Sensualist sacrificeth his Estate his Health his Soul to his own Gullet many Sacrilegious Morsels to his own Throat every day he offereth a Drink-Offering and Meat-Offering to Appetite Oh
our Fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. 2. John v. 9. He that abideth in the Doctrine of Christ he hath both the Father and the Son God will make good his Gift and Christ his Trust. God bestowed us upon his Son to oblige Christ to the greater respect and Christ hath bought us of his Father that the Gift might be sure and certain The Son loveth us because the Father required it the Father loveth us because the Son merited it If Christ be faithful to his Father or the Father be loving and respectful to Christ we cannot miscarry We have an Interest in the Father who is the Fountain of Mercy in the Son who is the Golden Pipe and Conveyance God made the Elect to be Members of Christ's Body that he might redeem them and Christ made them Children of God's Family that he might love them and bless them Electing Love and Christ's Purchase are the two Fountains of Salvation God who is the supreme Judg offended Party first Cause and Fountain of Blessing he requireth the Son to die for us and Christ hath undertaken it and made good his Word 2. God hath put the Business of our Salvation into safe hands He would not be defeated of his Purpose therefore he hath given the Elect to Christ that they may be quickned by virtue of that Power and Life which was given to him He would deal with us upon sure Terms and therefore took Order sufficient to attain his End he would not trust us with any but his own Eternal Son There is a Charge laid on Christ who is a good Depository of such care and faithfulness that he will not neglect his Father's Pledg of such strength and ability that nothing can wrest us out of his hands for he that doth it had need of a stronger Arm than Christ's John 10.28 29. Of such Love that no Work can be more pleasing to him he loveth us far better than we do our selves or else he would never have come from Heaven for our sakes Of such Watchfulness and Care that his Eyes do always run to and fro throughout the Earth Providence is full of eyes as well as strong of hand As the High-Priest bore the Names of the Tribes upon his Breast and Shoulder so doth Christ the Memorial of every Saint he knoweth their Names and their Necessities tho many Thousands in the World yet every single Believer falleth under the care of Christ as if none besides him he knoweth them by Head and Poll their Wants Necessities They are written in the Lamb's Book of Life Rev. 13.8 Christ keeps a Register of them There is not only God's Book of Remembrance but the Lamb's Book of Life He knoweth every distinct Sheep by Name and constantly giveth an Account of them to God I am glorified in them It is grievous to our Advocate when he is forced to be an Accuser He taketh a distinct and explicite Notice of them Isa. 40.27 Why sayest thou O Jacob and speakest O Israel My Way is hid from the Lord and my Judgment is passed over from my God Psal. 34.6 This poor Man cried and the Lord heard him and delivered him out of all his Troubles If it were not for this our Keeper we should surely perish but Christ is our Keeper who is faithful loving able watchful Qui potest vult facit Christ's own Charge cannot miscarry If the Elect should not be saved Christ would neither do his Work nor receive his Wages Vse To press us to come under these sweet Hopes There is nothing wanting but the clearing up of our Interest that you may be of the number of those that are given to Christ. You will know it by God's Act towards you and by your Act towards God 1. By God's Act towards you If we be given to Christ Christ is given to us We are given to Christ before all time and in time Christ is given to us by converting Grace he and we are brought together God makes an Offer in the Gospel Are we willing to receive him for Lord and Saviour Then you put it out of question Are you moved by the Spirit to receive him upon God's Offer Conversion it is as it were an actual Election By original Election the Heirs of Salvation are distinguished from others in God's purpose so by Conversion or actual Election they are visibly distinguished What Excitements of Grace can you speak of that urge you to come to Christ All that are given to him come to him 2. By your Act towards Christ. All the Father's Acts are ratified in time by Believers He ordaineth we consent he chuseth Christ for Lord and King and they shall appoint themselves one Head So God's giving of Souls to Christ is ratified by the Believers Act. As there is a double giving on his part by way of Charge and by way of Reward so there is a double Act on our part committing and consecrating our selves to Christ. 1. Committing our selves to Christ. Can we wholly and absolutely resign up our Souls into his hands The Father is wiser than we he knew well enough what he did when he commended us to his Son Faith is often expressed by committing our selves to Christ it answereth the Trust the Father reposed in him 2 Tim. 1.12 I know whom I have believed and I am persuaded that he is able to keep 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which I have committed unto him against that day This is not an easy matter it argueth a sense of Danger a sollicitous Care about the Soul and an advised Confidence What care hast thou ever taken to lay thy Soul safe What confidence hast thou of Christ's Ability Didst thou think thou couldst be safe without him Thou wouldst be an unfaithful Guardian Knowingly canst thou venture Eternity on thy present State 2. Consecrating our selves to him Rom. 12.1 I beseech you by the Mercies of God that ye present your Bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable to God which is your reasonable Service Then walk as his it is dangerous to alienate Things once consecrated 1 Cor. 3.23 Ye are Christ's Whatever you have you must give up to him for his Glory You have nothing at your own dispose neither Tongue nor Heart nor Estate as long as a Man reserves to himself an Interest he will miscarry Nabal called what he had My Bread and my Water and my Flesh 1 Sam. 25.11 Did you ever make a serious Resignation of your selves to God Psal. 119.94 I am thine save me for I have sought they Precepts SERMON XIX JOHN XVII 11 And now I am no more in the World but these are in the World and I come to thee Holy Father keep through thine own Name those whom thou hast given me that they may be one as we are Fifthly THE Last Circumstance That they may be one as we are is the Aim of Christ's Request which is Unity and Consent among the Apostles It is illustrated by the
a Christian hath to rejoyce Secondly By what means he may get keep and maintain it First What Reasons a Christians hath to rejoice The Causes of Joy may be referred to his past Estate his present Interest his future Hopes 1. The Remembrance of his past Estate A Christian may stand wondring at the Change which God hath made in his Soul 1 Pet. 2.9 That ye should shew forth the Praises of him who hath called you out of Darkness into his marvellous Light The Light is the more marvellous because of the foregoing Darkness Past Miseries are sweet in the remembrance It will be a part of our happiness in Heaven to look back as Travellers in the Inn discourse of the dangers and dirtiness of the Way It is matter of renewed Joy to see how the Weeds of Sin are rooted out how the Buds of Grace begin to grow in the Garden of our Hearts No Man looketh on the Sea with more comfort than he that hath escaped the dangers of a Shipwrack as the Israelites when they saw the Egyptians dead on the shore sung a Song of Triumph so doth a Christian rejoice when he considereth his Change what he was what he is 2. His present Interest Sense and Feeling We have Mercies in Hand as well as Mercies in Hope something exhibited as well as promised God's Eternal Love with all the Blessings that issue thence of Justification Sanctification c. Paul triumphs in this Rom. 8.37 Nay in all these things we are more than Conquerors through him that loved us God hath adopted them to be Children Heirs of his Heavenly Kingdom if the World maketh War against them they have Peace with God they are in a reconciled Estate in frame of Heart they are regenerate they have the first Fruits of the Spirit sweet experience of Grace not only the Wine of Canaan but the Clusters of Canaan they have Communion with God tho banished from Men. It is the nature of the Mind to delight it self in the possession of any solid Good No Good can satisfy but the Supream this we are in part possessed of as soon as Grace is wrought in the Heart 3. His Future Hopes Heb. 3.6 If we hold fast the Confidence and the rejoicing of Hope firm unto the End We are Heirs apparent to the Crown of Heaven We may rejoice in what we possess we may Glory in what we hope for This ravisheth the Heart to think of it we shall have what infinite Mercy will bestow infinite Merit purchase and the ample Promises of the Reward hath revealed The Body of Sin will be destroyed and we shall be out of the reach of Temptations Secondly By what means it is maintained God hath appointed Graces and Ordinances for this End 1. Graces Faith Hope and Obedience 1. Faith it is a help to Joy it representeth the Excellency Truth and Reality of Spiritual Things That which we rejoice in must be good true present All Joy ariseth from the presence of some good either in actual Possession or firm Expectation Thus doth Faith Heb. 10.34 Knowing in your selves that in Heaven ye have a better and an induring Substance Faith is not an Opinion or wild Guess Heaven is a pleasing Fancy to a Carnal Man but it is a Reality a Substance an induring Substance to a Believer The World is a Fashion perishing moveable It is the nature of Faith to make Things absent present it giveth a Being to Hope it sets up a Stage in the Heart of a Believer where God is represented acting whatever he hath promised and this not by a naked Fiction or empty Speculation as a Man may frame Idea's of Things that never shall be as in the Dream and Dotage of a distempered Fancy they make a Soul as if seen with bodily Eyes Faith gives to its Object not only a naked Representation but an actual Presence 2. Hope This dependeth much on Faith it is an earnest elevation of the Mind to look for what Faith counteth real Now Hope ravisheth the Soul as if it had its Head above the Clouds Rejoicing in Hope Rom. 12.12 Joy is proper to Enjoyment but Hope serves instead of Enjoyment they feast and entertain their Souls with their glorious Hopes 3. Obedience Faith giveth the Title Hope the Sight Obedience the Evidence therefore it is necessary to the establishing of Joy Nay it hath an effective Influence it is God's Method first he poureth in the Oil of Grace before the Oil of Gladness Heb. 7.2 First being by Interpretation King of Righteousness and after that also King of Salem that is King of Peace Rom. 14.17 The Kingdom of God is not Meat and Drink but Righteousness and Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Sin taketh away Joy and Peace the whole strength of Men and Angels cannot make the Conscience of a Sinner to rejoice Yea the Children of God must take heed that they do not violate Peace of Conscience by allowing the least Sin You are to walk so that you may be in a condition capable of Joy none walk sweetly but they that walk strictly Acts 9.31 They walked in the Fear of the Lord and in the Comfort of the Holy Ghost that is a sweet Couple 2. Ordinances I shall name them 1. The Word The Joy that Hypocrites have is from the Word Heb. 6.5 They have tasted the good Word of God A Temporary Faith findeth Joy in the Word all the fault is it is but a taste some slight experience which they do not continue and maintain Here is represented Fuel for Faith and Hope God's infinite Mercy Christ's infinite Merits the Glory of the Next World Joy it is as it were the Blaze of the Soul Love keepeth the Fire burning but now if we would have it blaze and flame up we must come to the Word this is the Bellows When the Angel preached the Gospel he said Luke 2.10 Behold I bring you glad tidings of great joy which shall be to all People We come to hear good News from Heaven tho an Angel be not the Messenger yet the Message is the same God openeth his Heart to us 2. Prayer wherein we open our Hearts to God it hath a pacative Virtue Many Psalms begun with Anguish end with Triumph as if he had received good News that his Affairs were altered Hannah when she had prayed her Countenance was no more sad 1 Sam. 1.18 God is the Father of Mercies the God of Consolations 2 Cor. 1.4 The nearer to him the nearer to the Fountain of Joy there are Joys felt in Prayer by retiring into God's Presence Psal. 16.11 In thy Presence there is fulness of Joy at thy right Hand there are Pleasures for evermore Heaven is a Place of Joy because of the constant Communion we have with God there God doth not love to send us away sad 3. Sacraments because of sweeter Experiences Cant. 1.4 We will be glad and rejoice in thee we will remember thy Love more than Wine They are sealing
to our old sins again at least let them not have dominion over us Baptism is the Sacrament of our Regeneration and implanting into Christ and reception into Gods family and as we are born but once so we are but once new-born being once received into Gods Family we are never cast out thence being once adopted into the number of his Children we are never disinherited no the gifts and calling of God are with●●t repentance Rom. 11.29 Secondly As to the Perfection and Blessedness of it In that he liveth ●e liveth unto God This is 1. A Pattern and Copy of the spiritual Life here upon earth 2. A Pledge and Assurance of our glorious Life in Heaven The one is our Duty the other i● our Reward 1. The spiritual Life is a living to God as Christ liveth with God and to God As Mediator he liveth with God is sat down at his right hand so should we live in Communion with God be much and often in Company with him in our whole course we should always set him before us walking as in his eye and presence Psal. 16.8 I have set the Lord always before me It is his Law we live by in his Presence we stand his Work we do his Glory we seek for our great end is the pleasing and glorifying of God Gal. 2.19 For I through the Law am dead to the Law that I might live unto God Rom. 14.7 8. For none of us liveth to himself and no man dyeth to himself for whether we live we live unto the Lord and whether we dye we dye unto the Lord whether we live therefore or dye we are the Lords Christ gave us a Pattern of an holy obedient and heavenly Life in his conversation here on Earth and in Heaven we must still write after his Copy we must be Christs as Christ is Gods and then all things are ours 1 Cor. 3.23 All are yours for you are Christs and Christ is Gods Wholly devote your time and strength and service to him God must be your solace and your strength and your beginning end way and all When you awake you should be still with him Psal. 139.18 all the day long you should keep in his Eye Prov. 23.17 Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long In all your actions your intention must be to please and glorifie him 1 Cor. 10.31 Whether therefore ye eat or drink or whatsoever you do do all to the glory of God 2. Our glorious Life in Heaven that is a living unto God indeed for there we have nothing else to mind but God We are admitted before the Throne of his Glory to be with him for evermore Now if Christ be there we shall be there also for if we follow him we shall fare as he fared Job 12.26 Where I am there shall my servant be Joh. 17.24 Father I will that those also whom thou hast given me may be with me where I am So Joh. 14.3 If I go and prepare a place for you I will come again and receive you unto my self that where I am there ye may be also Our Saviour desireth to have the Faithful in Heaven with himself it is a thing which his heart is set upon and he presents the efficacy of his Merits and Obedience to this end and purpose that the great work of the Restitution of lost Man may obtain its end and effect and his mystical Body may be brought together to one place that they may ever land and praise and glorifie God Many in the World cannot endure the presence and company of the Saints Christ cannot be in Heaven without them now the spiritual Life issuing it self into the heavenly is a great encouragement to us to go on in our Duty and Obedience Vse Let us often and seriously think of him Who dyed for our offences and rose again for our justification Rom. 4.25 and improve it 1. For the destruction of sin Christ dyed that he might destroy sin and take away sin if he had not fully done his work he could not rise again or if risen he needed to return once more to dye but Christ dyeth no more death hath no more dominion over him By raising up Christ God sheweth that he received the death of his Son as a sufficient ransom for our sins and all that believe in him shall have the comfort of it If he had remained in death or were still obnoxious to it his Satisfaction should not have been perfect neither should he have been able to apply the virtue and comfort of it to us but now who shall condemn when God justifieth when Christ is dead yea rather risen from the dead c. Rom. 8.33 34. If Christ hath paid our debt and born our sorrows so far that no more is required of him surely God will never reverse that Pardon which was sealed with Christs Blood The Curse and Condemnation are terrible indeed but he hath taken them away and given us a free discharge 2. For the new Life Christ is both the Cause and the Pattern of it His Spirit is the Cause of it and his Life in Heaven is the Copy after which we must write 1. His Spirit is the Cause of it who quickeneth our dead Souls therefore if you be entred into Gods Peace have sued out your Atonement you may expect to be saved by his Life Rom. 5.10 If when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled shall we be saved by his life that is by him who now liveth and sitteth at the right hand of God and there intercedeth for grace necessary that we may live unto God he that intercedeth wanteth no will and he that saith that all things are put into his hands wanteth no power 2. Christ is the Pattern of this new Life which we are to live in the World Christ is the great Agent to promote Gods Kingdom and Glory but his Spirit ingage● us in the same design as long as we live we should live unto God we are raised 〈◊〉 from the grave of sin that we should be to the praise of his glorious Grace The C●●istians life is a life whereby we glorifie God see this life be begun in you and see it be perfected more and more Be Christs as Christ is Gods Heb. 7.25 He is able to save unto the uttermost all those ●ha● come unto God through him seeing he over liveth to make intercession for us Christ liveth we need not doubt of a supply He gives life as Creator to the smallest worms In him was life Joh. 1.4 he can quicke● or when dead and dull he came into the World for this purpose Joh. 10.10 I am come that they might have life and that they might have it more abundantly and he is gone out of the World to Heaven for this purpose Eph. 4.10 He ascended for above the heavens that he might fill all things he is filled with the Spirit to
at ●alseness of the heart and are bred in us by some corrupt affections such as Pride Vain-glory Self-seeking c. Gal. 2.18 Puffed up with his fleshly mind and for sins of Omission they arise in us from some inordinate sensual affection to the Creature which causeth us to omit our Duty to God But generally most sins are acted by the body Therefore as in Grace or in the Dedication of our selves to God the Soul is included when the Body only is mentioned Rom. 12.1 Present your body as a living sacrifice holy and acceptable to God which is your reasonable service all the service we perform to God is acted by the body so in the destruction of sin let it not reign in your body 3. Because the disorder of the sensual Appetite which inclineth us to the interests and conveniencies of the bodily life is the great cause of all sin and therefore man corrupted and fallen is represented as wholly governed by his sensual inclinations Gen. 6.3 For that man also is flesh and Joh. 3.6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh as if he had nothing in him but what is earthly and carnal Our Souls do so cleave to the earth and are addicted to the body that they have lost their primitive excellency our Understandings Will and Affections are distempered by our Senses and enslaved to serve the Flesh which is a matter well to be regarded that we may understand why the Scripture so often calleth sin by the name of Flesh and sometimes a Body or it is said to dwell in the body not as if the Understanding and Will were not corrupted and tainted but to shew how they are tainted and corrupted that this corruption which hath invaded humane Nature cometh chiefly though not only from the inordinacy of our sensual Appetite I will prove it by two Considerations First One is a Supposition Suppose that Original sin so far as it concerneth the Understanding and Will consisted in a bare privation of that rectitude that should be in these Faculties I do not say it is so but suppose it were so yet as long as our Senses and Appetites are disordered which wholly incline us to terrene and earthly things this were enough to cause us to sin as a Chariot must needs miscarry where the Driver is weak sleepy negligent and the Horses unruly and disorderly So here we have not so much light and love to higher things as will restrain the sensual Appetite the Understanding hath no light 2 Pet. 1.9 But he that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off Eph. 1.18 The eyes of your understandings being inlightned that ye may know what is the hope of his calling c. The Will hath no love 1 Cor. 2.14 The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned and therefore man that obeyeth his bodily lusts and desires must needs be corrupt and sinful Secondly The other is an Assertion that there are habitual positive inordinate inclinations to sensual things both in the Understanding and Will For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the carnal mind is enmity against God Rom. 8.7 The mind doth not only befriend the lusts of the flesh and seek to palliate and excuse them but opposeth whatever would reduce us from the love of them And the Will is biassed by such sensual inclinations 1 Tim. 6.10 For the love of money is the root of all evil Our Reason doth often contrive and approve sin and the Will embraceth it So that you see the reason why sin is said to reign in our bodies because of the strong inclination of our Souls to present things or things conducing to the contenting of the flesh or gratifying the bodily life Secondly Why doth the Apostle say In your mortal bodies I answer For sundry reasons 1. To put us in mind of the first rise of sin for sin brought in death Rom. 5.12 As by one man sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned And so while we live this mortal bodily life we are subject to these desires swarms of sinful motions and inclinations to evil remain within us we are prone to them and give way to them and are too slack in the resistance of them and through the ignorance and unattentiveness of our minds cannot discern or distinguish between what regular Nature desireth and Lust craveth There are lawful desires of the body and prohibited desires of the body through the crafty conveyance between the Understanding and the false Heart we easily give way to what is inordinate under the pretence of what is lawful and convenient and so insensibly slide into compliance with the plain prohibited desires of the body Lust is head-strong and the Empire and Government of the Will feeble and so we are led on to obey them that is we become servants and slaves to sin And though the Regenerate be delivered from the power of sin yet much of this corruption remaineth in them for their exercise and humiliation and if they be not watchful and obey not the motions of the Spirit it will soon recover its power and men will be brought into their old slavery and captivity Gal. 5.16 17. Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit lusteth against the flesh So that this mortal body giveth sin many advantages 2. This term mortal Body puts us in mind of its punishment it tendeth to death and destruction We considered it before as it pointed at the rise now at the fruit it self The Apostle telleth us Rom. 8.10 The body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is life because of righteousness He speaketh there of Believers or those who have the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them who being once sinners the punishment of sin death befalleth them and so their bodies must die and return to dust yet they shall live a happy and blessed Life both in Body and Soul If they labour to mortifie and suppress sin and return sincerely to newness of life though they are still mortal and subject to corporal death because of sin yet it shall not be eternal death The renewed Soul is a partaker of eternal Life and shall always live with God in Glory and though the body be put off for a time yet in time it shall be partaker of this life also 3. To shew us the transitoriness of these delights You gratifie a mortal body with the neglect of a precious and immortal Soul now the mortal body should not be pampered with so great a loss and inconvenience to our Souls All the good things which the flesh aimeth at they perish with the mortal body but the guilt and punishment of this disorderly life remaineth for ever All fleshly pleasure ceaseth at the
know and no sin but what you are truly desirous to get rid of so that the chiefest care of your hearts and endeavour of your lives be to serve and please God and it is your daily desire and endeavour to please God and master its rebellious opposition to the Spirit and you so far prevail that for your drift and course you are not led by the Flesh but the Spirit then you are sincere and upright with God otherwise you must not think every striving will excuse you if it be such a striving as may consist with the dominion and customary practice of sin There are few Wretches so bad but they may have some wishes that they could leave sin especially when they think of the inconveniences that attend it and Conscience may strive a little before they yield but they live in it still A Christian striveth but cannot be perfect there are infirmities but the convinced sinner striveth but cannot live holily there are iniquities This striving hindereth not the dominion of sin because he doth not conquer and master it so far but that it breaketh out in a gross manner his striving cometh not from the renovation of the Spirit but the conviction of his Conscience which is ever condemning his practices 2. Positively when we obey it and follow it and do that to which sin inticeth us For the end of sins Reign and Empire is our Obedience the commands and urgings of it are in vain if you obey them not but rather rebuke and suppress them Now we may obey bodily lusts two ways First By the inward consent of the mind for what sins you would do you have done in Gods account though the outward Act follow not Mat 5.28 He that looketh on a woman to lust after her hath already committed adultery with her in his heart though you be impeded and hindered in the Action The life and reign of sin is in the heart in the love of the heart though it may be it may not appear in outward deeds Restraint is not Sanctification Practices may be restrained by bye-ends but if you like the sin in your hearts you let it reign and do not oppose it by gracious motives Your hearts are false with God if his Empire be not set up there Therefore obey not the lusts of the body that is consent not to them if they arise and bubble up in your hearts let them be disowned and disliked We are to abstain from fleshly lusts 1 Pet. 2.11 before they break out into our conversation for the governing of the heart and the regulating of the life are two distinct acts of our obedience to God they are required indeed the one in order to the other but you must be careful of both Your love to God and his Law must be shewed by abominating the motions that would draw you to the contrary Psal. 119.113 I hate vain thoughts but thy Law do I love The first motions are sins for they proceed from corrupt Nature we had none such in Innocency and the consent is a farther sin because then you begin to give way to its reign The delightful stay of the mind sheweth our love to it these pauses of the mind come from sin are sin and tend to further sin Jam. 1.15 Then when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin and sin when it is finished bringeth forth death Secondly The Execution of these Motions by the Body when sin is brought to her consummate effect Micah 2.1 Wo to them that devise iniquity and work evil upon their beds when the morning is light they practise it because it is in the power of their hands This is a sign of the reign of sin too much room being given to sin in the heart that it obtains a mastery there it violently and effectually commands our practice which if it be a scandalous enormity it makes sin to reign for the present Lesser evils steal into the Throne by degrees and leaven us with a proud worldly or carnal frame of heart but gross sins invade the Throne in an instant at least for the present making fearful havock and waste of the Conscience and the repeated acts shew our state II. That Christians are strictly obliged to take heed that sin get not Dominion over them 1. By the Light of Nature which is in part sensible of this disorder which hath invaded all Mankind namely an inclination to seek the happiness and good of the Body above that of the Soul The very make and constitution of man sheweth his Duty man is composed of a Body and a Soul both which parts are to be regarded according to the dignity of each the Body was subordinated to the Soul and both Soul and Body unto God his Flesh was a servant unto his Spirit and both Flesh and Spirit unto the Lord but sin entring defaced the Beauty and disturbed the Harmony and Order of Gods Creation and Workmanship Man withdrew from subordination to God his Maker seeking his happiness without God and apart from him in earthly and worldly things and also the Body and Flesh is preferred before the Soul and Reason and Conscience enslaved to Sense and Appetite Understanding and Will are made bond-slaves to the lusts of the Flesh which govern and influence all his actions his Wisdom Mind and Spirit as it were sunk into the Flesh and transformed into a brutish Quality and Nature This many of the wiser Heathens saw and sought to rectifie Maximus Tyrius calls our Passions and Appetites 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the tumultuous Populacy or common People of the Soul which must not be left to their own boisterous violence but be kept under the Law and Empire of the Mind Philo the Jew calleth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Woman part in Man in opposition to Reason which he maketh to be the Masculine part Simplicius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Child in us which needeth more stayed heads to govern it And some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Foot part of the Soul as it is a monstrous disorder if the feet be there where the head should be so it is for us to serve divers lusts and pleasures when we should be governed by Reason The Stoicks generally 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the bestial part in us which they counted the Man as if the Beast should ride the Man as Socrates expresly calls Reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Rider or Chariot-driver as the Body and bodily Inclinations the Horses Now if the Light of Nature taugh the Heathens who knew little of the cause and malignity of this Vitiosity and Disorder to observe this and labour under it surely Christians are more strictly bound to curb the flesh and moderate the lusts and passions of it We know more clearly what an evil it is to love the Creature above God the Body more than the Soul the World above Heaven Riches Honours and Pleasures more than Grace and Holiness as the Light of Christianity befriendeth
your own and when any interest of your own riseth up against the interest of God you will set light by it as if it were nothing worth and then no self-respects will tempt you to disobey God though never so powerful no hire draw you to the smallest sin nor danger fright you from your Duty Dan. 3.17 18. Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace and he will deliver us out of thine hand O King But if not be it known unto thee O King that we will not serve thy gods nor worship thy golden image that thou hast set up Acts 20.24 But none of these things move me neither count I my life dear unto my self so that I might finish my course with joy If we can but forget our selves and remember God he will remember us better than if we had remembred our selves We secure whatever we put into Gods hands and venture in his service 2. You will make Conscience how you spend your time and strength God keepeth account Luke 19.23 Wherefore gavest not thou my money into the bank that at my coming I might have required mine own with usury So you will keep a faithful reckoning how you lay out your selves for God that share he hath in all things we have and do God observeth so must we whether God have his own and we do not defraud him whose work are you a doing 3. You will have a liberal heart you will think no service too much or loss too great for God Phil. 1.21 For me to live is Christ all other things come from God Certainly you must not put him off with what the flesh will spare SERMON XII ROM VI. 14 For sin shall not have dominion over you for ye are not under the Law but under Grace THE Apostle had exhorted them to Mortification vers 12. to Vivification vers 13. in both to Caution that sin may not usurp the power and place of God who alone should command and govern both our Souls and Bodies To fight for sin is to fight against God which should be an horrid thing to Christians who should imploy all their powers and faculties to keep up Gods interest in their Souls by maintaining that new Life that is given them by God If we have any Weapons or Instruments they should be imployed for God and not for sin because sin was not their Lord now as heretofore it neither had nor shall have dominion over you If a man should speak to any City suppose in Hungary or other Frontier of Christendom newly freed from Turkish slavery Care not for the commands and threatnings of the Turks any more they do not Lord it over you as they were wont to do the very same is the Argument of the Apostle Sin hath not the same strength against you which before it had now you are regenerate and alive from the dead Nay he speaketh with more advantage of expression than any can in an outward case sin hath not sin shall not have dominion c. if you keep striving and fighting against it this Tyrant shall not recover the Kingdom in you which he hath lost but you shall become victorious by Christ. There are two things which incourage us to fight 1. the goodness of the Cause 2. the assurance and hope of Victory The Cause is good for the business in debate is to whom we should yield up our selves to sin or to God or in whose Warfare we shall imploy the faculties and powers of Body and Soul If we take to Gods side the Victory is clear that Grace which hath freed us from the Tyranny of sin is able to free us still that we shall no more come under that bondage Strive we must for unless we fight and make good our resignation sin will reign but let not the sense of our weakness discourage us in our endeavours against sin though there be some relicts of the flesh yet the Sanctification of the Spirit shall prevail and therefore it is laziness and cowardize if we do not strive duly against sin For sin shall not have dominion over you for ye are not under the Law but under Grace In the words observe 1. The Priviledge of the renewed and striving Christian Sin shall not have dominion over you 2. The Reason of the Certainty of it For ye are not under the Law but under Grace This Reason is both Negatively and Affirmatively expressed 1. Negatively For ye are not under the Law 2. Positively But under Grace Both Expressions have their proper Emphasis as you will see by and by 1. The Priviledge of the renewed and striving Christian. 1. That the renewed Christian is here considered is plain from all the foregoing Context he speaketh of those that were dead unto sin ver 2. not only in Profession and Baptismal Vow but really by virtue of their Union to Christ ver 5. But how is a Christian dead unto sin not so as that it should be wholly extinguished in us but so as that it is a dying and the Victory is sure to those that strive against it Again he speaketh of those that are alive from the dead v. 13. had a new Life begun in them and have renounced sin and effectually presented and resigned up themselves to Gods use and service 2. That the renewed Christian is here considered as striving because they are the same Persons who were exhorted ver 12. not to let sin reign what is here a Promise is there an Exhortation Again they were such as had presented their Members and Faculties to the Lord as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 weapons or instruments of righteousness now what are weapons but for Warfare they had undertaken in their Covenant-resignation not only to work but fight for God Rom. 13.12 the Graces of the Spirit are called Armour of Light Christ doth array us non ad pompam sed ad pugnam not for shew but use A Christian can do no good but he must fight first Again carnal inferences are rejected with indignation ver 15. What then shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace God forbid and therefore the Christian here is not considered as loose and lazy but as warring and fighting against sin Once more the Argument here implieth it ye are under Grace which impelleth and urgeth us to resist sin and the lusts thereof God giveth power to overcome it So then the Apostles purpose is to exhort the renewed Christian strongly to resist sin because through Grace he is sure to carry away the Victory whilst we work and concur with our wills and endeavours God worketh in us both to will and to do Phil. 2.12 2. The Reason of it 1. Negatively expressed Ye are not under the Law By the Law is meant the Covenant of Works which requireth exact obedience but giveth no strength to obey the Law requireth what we must do but giveth no power to do what it commandeth it forbiddeth sin and
the new Nature to hate sin as to love God Psal. 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate evil there is an irreconcileable hatred and enmity against sin There is a twofold hatred odium abominationis odium inimicitiae The hatred of abomination or offence is a turning away of the Soul from what is apprehended as repugnant and prejudical to us so to sin is repugnant and contrary to the renewed Will it is agreeable and suitable to the unregenerate as Draff to the appetite of a Swine or Grass and Hay to a Bullock or Horse Now there being in all those that are born of God this kind of hatred it must needs weaken sin for the mortification of sin standeth principally in the hatred of it sin dyeth when it dyeth in the affections when it is an offence to us and we have an Antipathy against it as some Creatures have one against another the new Nature is a Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 in some measure it hath the same aversations and affections which God hath we hate what he hateth love what he loveth Prov. 8.13 The fear of the Lord is to hate evil pride and arrogancy and the evil way and the froward mouth do I hate There is another kind of hatred odium inimicitiae now this hatred is nothing else but a willing evil or mischief to the thing or person hated out of that dislike offence and distaste we take against them Psal. 18.37 I have pursued mine enemies and overtaken them neither did I turn again till they were consumed This is different from the former for there may be an aversation or an offence from some things which yet I do not maligne or pursue to the death But by this hatred also do the Regenerate hate their sins they hate sin so as to mortifie and subdue it and get it destroyed in themselves Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof Grace within will not let a man alone in his sins but rouseth up the Soul against it non cessat in laes●one peccati sed exterminio it is still taking away somewhat from sin its damning power its reigning power its being Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death They would be free from all sin groan under the relicts of it as a ●ore burden therefore certainly the new Nature which hath such a lively hatred against sin must needs give us a great advantage against it I would not flatter you with the shew of an Argument nor put you off with an half Truth therefore I must needs tell you That though the former things alledged be true yet 1. You must not forget the back-biass of Corruption and the Flesh which still remaineth with us and is importunate to be pleased and though it be not superiour in the Soul yet it hath a great deal of strength that still we need even to the very last to keep watching and striving the best of Gods Children must resolve to be deaf to its intreaties and solicitations and not accommodate themselves to please the flesh Not fashioning your selves according to the former lusts in your ignorance 1 Pet. 1.14 that is they must take heed they do not cast their conversations into a carnal mould and suffer their choices and actions to be directed and governed by their Lusts. In your ignorance when you knew not the terrour of the Lord nor sweetness of the Lord you could not be deterred from delighting in this slavery your lusts influenced all your actions and you wholly gave your selves to the satisfaction of your sinful desires shaping and moulding all your actions and undertakings by this scope and aim The Apostles word is very emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though now you have more knowledge more grace to incline your hearts to God and so by consequence against sin yet former lusts are but in part subdued and therefore our old love to them is soon kindled and the gates of the senses are always open to let in such objects as take part with the flesh and there is an hazard in the best of complying with the sinful motions of corrupt Nature and therefore you must not so take it as if there were no need of diligence and watching and striving and constant progress in Mortification even holy Paul mortified Paul saw a continual need of beating down the body lest after he had preached to others he himself should be a cast-away 1 Cor. 9.27 This great Champion after so many years service in the Cause of Christ was not secure of the Adversary which he carried about with him And therefore though we speak of the advantage of the new Nature it is only for our incouragement in the Conflict there is still need of caution that we do not revert into our old slavery And though it be troublesom to resist the pleasing motions of the Flesh yet there is great hopes of success we do not fight as those that are uncertain the Grace given us is a fixed rooted Principle and the Lusts we contend with are but the relicts of an Enemy routed and foiled though not utterly and totally subdued Though there be a contrary Principle in us that retaineth some life and vigour yet surely in the Regenerate it is much abated there is not such a connaturality and agreement between the heart and sin as there was before Grace is a real active working thing and where the new Nature doth prevail certainly old things are passed away 2 Cor. 5.17 Every Creature acteth according to its kind the Lamb according to the nature of a Lamb and a Toad according to the nature of a Toad as a Thorn cannot send forth Grapes nor a Thistle produce Figs so on the contrary Vines do not yield Haws nor the Fig-tree Thistles Men now they have renewed Principles cannot be at the power of Satan nor at the command of every Lust as they were before How are all things become new how are old things passed away if it should be so if they had the old thoughts and disigns still the old affections still the old passions they used to have the old discourses the old coversation Surely Grace will not let a man alone nor give him any rest and quiet if he should act and walk according to the old tenour and manner certainly the Grace given serveth for some use and giveth some strength 2. I must interpose one Consideration more for the full understanding of this Truth That Grace is operative indeed a real active working thing but yet it doth not work necessarily as fire burneth or light bodies move upward but voluntarily therefore it must be excited and stirred up both by the Spirit of God who worketh in us both to will and to do Phil. 2.13 and by
any man among you seem to be wise in this world let him become a fool that he may be wise he cometh to himself again and when sensible of his filthiness and loathsomness it is a sign he hath some love and liking to the pure and holy ways of God as there is more light and love infused into the heart so do men more loath themselves for their filthiness Ezek. 36.31 Then shall ye remember your own evil ways and doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and abominations To be truly and really ashamed of sin is the effect of saving Grace Ezra 9.6 I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God There are two sorts of Shame the shame of a guilty stormy Conscience and the shame of a tender Conscience there is a confounding shame and a penitential shame the one breedeth trouble of Spirit and is the fruit of Sin the other an holy Self-loathing and is the fruit of Grace the first may be in carnal men the other is only in Gods Children The differences between these two sorts of shame may be these 1. The Penitential Shame continueth and increaseth under the greatest assurance of Forgiveness and dieth not when we think we are out of danger the other is presently after the commission of sin and while the guilt remaineth As David grew shy of God Psal. 32. after he got his discharge and his sins were pardoned Ezek. 16.63 That thou mayest remember and be confounded and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified towards thee for all that thou h●st done saith the Lord God There is a dislike of sin when they are upon the surest Terms with God 2. The first sort of Shame considereth Sin as it damneth or destroyeth not as it defileth but the second as it is an act of Filthiness and Folly of Folly as David Psal. 73.22 So foolish was I and ignorant I was as a beast before thee of Filthiness Ezra 9.6 O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God for our iniquities have increased over our head and our trespass is grown up unto the heavens They loath sin as sin because they love Holiness as Holiness Psal. 119.140 Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it Conscience keepeth its own Court medleth not but for moral evils is ashamed not of calamities and infelicities but crimes or sins which are hateful to God and therefore to the new Creature for it hateth and loveth on Gods grounds and reasons 3. The first sort of Shame is accompanied with slavish fear shunneth the presence of God as Adam did Gen. 3.10 I heard thy voice in the garden and I was afraid because I was naked and I hid my self or David Psal. 32.3 4. When I kept silence my bones waxed old c. The other is accompanied with Love and causeth the Godly to come into Gods presence but with self-loathing and reverence Prov. 30.2 Surely I am more brutish than any man and have not the understanding of a man Luke 18.13 The Publican standing afar off would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven but smote on his breast saying God be merciful to me a sinner The one causeth us to hate God the other to loath our selves for our unkindness to him and unworthy dealing with him The one is our torment the other our cure 4. The trouble and shame of Hypocrites is because of the World the shame of the Godly is because of God Saul was not ashamed of his sin but ashamed that Samuel should reprove him before the people 1 Sam. 15.30 So the thief is ashamed when he is found Jer. 2.26 But a Child of God is ashamed before God and of sins which the world cannot see Psal. 69.5 6. O God thou knowest my foolishness and my sins are not hid from thee Let not them that wait on thee O Lord God of hosts be ashamed for my sake let not those that seek thee be confounded for my sake O God of Israel As if he had said Sure I have just cause to be ashamed c. 5. The effect sheweth a difference the true shame quickeneth the Soul to more resolution vigilance earnest striving against sin so that our Life Trade and principal Business in the World is to avoid it Psal. 119.6 Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy commandments But in the other it prevaileth no further than that they may avoid the present trouble and get a little ease The Reasons and Causes of this Shame 1. A new and heavenly Light to see those things which others see not and which themselves saw not before Jer. 31.19 Surely after that I was turned I repented and after I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth Rom. 7.9 I was alive without the commandment once but when the commandment came sin revived and I died They see more of sin and more evil in sin than ever they saw before as light discovers what lay hid before in the dark 2. A lively sense and taste of Gods Mercy and Goodness of his forbearing Mercy that he did not strike assoon as the offence was committed Rom. 2.4 The goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance Redeeming Mercy by Christ 1 Joh. 3.5 Ye know that he was manifested to take away our sins Covenanting Mercy or the offers of Pardon and Life in the new Covenant Acts 17.30 The time of this ignorance God winked at but now he commandeth all men every where to repent His healing Mercy Tit. 3.5 According to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost To offend so good a God or sin against the Lord of Love and Mercy is a great crime 3. The new Nature which is contrary to Sin Psal. 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate evil there is Odium offensionis odium inimicitiae a hatred of offence and a hatred of enmity 4. Their seriousness before the deluded Soul is so taken up with fleshly Pleasures and deluding Objects that they had no time nor room to consider of their ways what with business and sensual delights and the crowd of worldly cares and the noise of foolish sports and sensual passions their hearts were diverted from observing things of the greatest and everlasting consequence they did in effect forget they had Souls to save or lose or a God to serve or a Glory to look after but now they remember and loath themselves Vse 1. To shew how much they differ from the People of God that wallow in all manner of filthiness and know no shame Impudency is a great note of Obstinacy and Impenitency Zeph. 3.5 The unjust knoweth no shame By long custom in sinning they lose the sense of the filthiness and odiousness of it and
have as the constitution is so is the Gust and Tast Tell a carnal Person of the joys of the Life to come the comforts of the Spirit the Peace of a good Conscienee the sweetness that is in the Word and Ordinances they find no more savour in these things than in the white of an egg or a dry chip but Banquets merry meetings and idle sports they have a complacency for these things and soon find a delight free and stirring at the mention of them their hearts are in the house of mirth Eccles. 7.4 To be well clad and well fed maintained in Pomp and State these are the Things which are most sweet and pleasing to them and which they most desire and seek after for they mind these things and so bestow their care and delight upon them and can spend Days and Hours without weariness in them carnal men relish no sweetness in Religion 1 Cor. 2.14 But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned As they do not perceive them so not receive them these are not the Things which are likely to make an Impression upon their souls But on the contrary the spiritual minding is discovered by this because 't is best pleased with spiritual things spiritual minds find a marvellous sweetness and comfort in the Word of God and the means of Grace and Salvation Psal. 119.103 How sweet are thy words to my tast yea sweeter than honey to my mouth and Psal. 63.5 My soul shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness and Job 23.12 I have esteemed the words of his mouth more than my necessary food What gladness doth Communion with God put into their hearts One day with him is better than all those flesh-pleasing Vanities wherewith others are deluded and inticed from God 3. It reacheth also to practise and implieth earnest prosecution and so to be carnally minded is to make the things of the flesh our work and scope to be spiritually minded is to make that our work and trade to seek after the things of the spirit therefore the course of mens actions and the trade of their lives is to be considered Our business sheweth our bent and what we constantly frequently and easily practice discovereth the over-ruling principle Wicked men have their good moods and godly men have their carnal fits the constant practice sheweth the prevailing inclination to mind the things of the flesh or spirit is to seek after them in the first place when men are seriously constantly readily willingly carried to those things which please the flesh without any respect to God and eternal life Effects shew their causes if the drift and bent of our lives be not for God and salvation and our great business in the world be not the pleasing of God and the saving of our own souls and this be not chiefly minded and attended more than all the pleasures honours and profits of the World God hath not the precedency but the flesh Walking after the flesh or the spirit is the great discriminating note in this place propounded ver 1. amplified afterwards by minding the things of the flesh and then living after the flesh ver 13. so Gal. 6.8 He that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption but he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reap life everlasting We must see whether our lives be a sowing to the flesh or the spirit The mind leaveth a stamp upon the actions as a godly man sheweth spirit in all things so a carnal man sheweth flesh in all things Zach. 14.21 On every pot in Jerusalem and in Judah shall be holiness to the Lord of hosts As God sheweth his Divine power in every creature in a Gnat or Pile of grass as well as the Sun so a Christian sheweth grace in all things on the contrary carnal men shew their mind in all things not only in eating and drinking and trading but in preaching praying and co●f●rence about holy things The one goeth about his worldly business with an heavenly mind casts all into the mould of Religion the other goeth about his heavenly business with a carnal and worldly mind the flesh doth not only influence his common actions but his duties either to feed or hide a lust to serve his Worldly mind and vain glory or else that he may more plausibly carry it on without blame before men or check of conscience and so maketh one duty excuse another 'T is the flesh maketh him pray preach confer about holy things give alms and seemingly forgive enemies or do that which is outwardly and materially just Thus you see what is the carnal minding only I must tell you that because the Apostle saith it is death or the high way to everlasting destruction we must more acurately state the matter 1. The minding of the flesh must be interpreted not barely of the acts but the state Who is there among Gods children that doth not mind the flesh and too much indulge the flesh but yet he doth not make it his business to please the flesh but rather mortifieth and subdueth it Gal. 5.24 and they that are Christs have crucified the flesh and they are still labouring that they may subdue it more and more 1 Cor. 9.27 but I keep under my body and bring it into subjection 2. This minding of the flesh or spirit must be understood as to the prevalency of each principle that is to say when we mind the flesh so as to exclude the minding of the spirit and the things that belong to the spirit 1 Joh. 2.15 If any man love the world and the things of the world the love of the Father is not in him And so on the other side when we so mind the spirit as that it deadneth our affections to the world and baits of the flesh Gal. 6.14 the conversation in heaven is that which is opposite to minding earthly things Phil. 3.19 20. Therefore if the flesh can do more constantly and ordinarily to draw us to sin than the spirit to keep us from it we are under the power of the fleshly mind 3. This minding of the flesh must be interpreted with respect to continuance not with respect to our former state For alas all of us in time past pleased the flesh and walked according to the course of this World in the lusts of the flesh Tit. 3.3 We were sometimes foolish and disobedient serving divers lusts and pleasures and if we yet please the fl●sh we are not the servants of Christ. But if we break off this servitude and do at length become servants of righteousness God will not judg us according to what we have been but what we are therefore it is our duty to consider what principle liveth in us and groweth and encreaseth whether the interest of the flesh decreaseth or the interest of the spirit if we grow more brutish
but be raised up from the grave and their vile bodies be changed like unto the Glorious Body of their Redeemer SERMON XIV ROM VIII 11 If the Spirit of him that raised up Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you THE Apostle is answering a doubt How there is no Condemnation to them that are in Christ since death which is the fruit of sin yet remaineth on the Godly Answer 1. By concession that sin is indeed the seed and original of mortality the body is dead because of sin Not only the carnal undergo it but the justified tho the guilt of sin be taken away by a pardon and the dominion and power of it be broken by the Spirit of Christ yet the being of it is not quite abolished and as long as sin remaineth in us in the least degree it maketh us subject to the power of death 2. By way of correction He opposeth a double comfort against it Destruction by sin is neither total nor final First Not total 't is but an half death v. 10. The spirit is life because of righteousness Secondly Nor final it hath a limit of time set which when it is expired the body shall have an happy Resurrection and that by vertue of the same spirit by which the soul is now quickned so that mark both parts receive their happiness by the spirit the soul and the body the soul tho it be immortal in its self yet the blessed immortality it hath from the spirit the spirit is life because of righteousness and the dead body shall not finally perish but be sure to be raised again by the same spirit If the spirit of him c. In the Words we have 1. The condition upon which the Resurrection is promised if the Spirit 2. The certainty of performance set forth 1. By the Author or efficient cause he that raised up Jesus from the dead 2. By his spirit that dwelleth in you the way and manner of working 1. The condition A Resurrection is necessary but an happy Resurrection is limited by a condition Phil. 3.11 If by any means 2. The certainty of performance 1. From the Author of God described by his eminent and powerful work he that raised up Jesus from the dead This is mentioned partly as an instance of his power and partly as an assurance of his will first an instance of his power Eph. 1.18 19. According to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead Our Resurrection is a work of the same Omnipotency with that which he first evidenced in raising Christ from the dead the same power is still imployed to bring us to a glorious Eternity Secondly 'T is an assurance of his will for Christs Resurrection is a pattern of ours 1 Cor. 6.14 God hath both raised the Lord and will also raise up us by his own power 2 Cor. 4.14 Knowing that he that raised up Jesus shall also raise us up by Jesus 2. For the way and manner of bringing it about by his spirit that dwelleth in us Where take notice 1. Of the Relation of the Holy Spirit to God Secondly His interest in and nearness to us 1. His relation to God He is called his Spirit and the Spirit of him that raised Jesus from the dead That is of God the Father The Holy Spirit is sometimes called the Fathers Spirit and sometimes Christs Spirit because he proceedeth both from the Father and the Son the Fathers Spirit John 15.26 When the Comforter is come whom I will send to you from the Father even the spirit of truth he is also called Acts 11.4 The promise of the Father and Christs Spirit Rom. 8.9 If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his and Gal. 4.6 God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into our hearts Now the Spirit being one in essence and undivided in Will and Essence with the Father and the Son surely the Father will by or because of the Spirit dwelling in us raise us again for Father Son and Holy Spirit are one and the same God 2. His interest in and nearness to us he dwelleth in us All dependeth upon that mark he doth not say he worketh in us per modum actionis transeuntis so he worketh in those that resist his work and shall perish for ever but per modum habitus permanentis as we are regenerated and sanctified and the effects of his powerful Resurrection remain in those habits which constitute the new nature so the Spirit is said to dwell in us and in the former verse Christ to be in us if Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin verse 10. Doct. That the bodies of Believers shall be raised at the last day by the spirit of holiness which now dwelleth in them 1. I shall a little open this inhabitation of the spirit 2. Shew you why 't is the ground and cause of our happy Resurrection 1. For the first the inhabitation of the Spirit Dwelling may relate to a double Metaphor either to the dwelling of a man in his house or of God in his Temple of a man in his house 1 John 3.24 And he that keepeth his commandments dwelleth in him and be in him so it noteth his constant familiar presence or of God in his Temple 1 Cor. 6.16 Know ye not that you are the Temple of God and the spirit of God dwelleth in you Which noteth a sacred presence that presence as a God to bless and sanctifie the spirit buildeth us up for so holy an use and then dwelleth in us as our Sanctifier Guide and Comforter the one maketh way for the other first a Sanctifier and then a guide as a ship is first well-rigg'd and then a Pilot and by both he comforts us he hath regenerated and guided us in the way of holiness first he sanctifieth and reneweth us Tit. 3.5 But according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and the renewing of the Holy ghost and John 3.6 That which is born of spirit is spirit First he buildeth his House or Temple and then cometh and dwelleth in it Secondly He guideth and leadeth us in the ways of holiness Rom. 15.14 And my self also am perswaded of you my brethren that you also are full of godliness filled with all knowledg If we live in the spirit let us also walk in the spirit Gal. 5.25 Before we were influenced by Satan Eph. 2.2 Wherein in times past ye walked according to the course of this world according to the prince of the power of the air that now worketh in the children of disobedience He put us upon anger malice envy unclean lusts and noisome and filthy ways and we readily obeyed 2 Tim. 2.28 And that they may recover themselves out of the snares of the devil who are taken captive
dust keepeth their bones Well then if the spirit of Christ hath freed them from the snares of sin he hath freed you also from the bands of death or as 't is said in the Revelations if you have part in the first resurection the second death hath no power over you Rev. 10.6 That is you shall not be cast into the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone The good spirit hath prevailed over the evil spirit and therefore your resurrection will be joyful VSE Let us give up our selves to the Holy Spirit as our sanctifyer set open your hearts that he may come into them as his habitation do not receive him guestwise in a pang or for a turn or in some solemn duty but see that he dwelleth in you as an inhabitant in his house A man is not said to dwell in an Inn where as a stranger or wayfaring man he goeth aside to tarry for a night or in the house of a friend where he resorteth no use all Christs Holy means that he may fix his abode in your hearts that he may dwell there as at home in his own house that he may be reverenced there as a God in his Temple Motives 1. He richly requiteth us he keepeth up the house and temple where he dwelleth The spirit is our seal and earnest The spirit of God and of glory resteth upon you 1 Pet. 4.14 2. The heart of man is not a waste you will have a worse guest there if not the Holy Spirit Satan dwelleth and worketh in the Children of disobedience 1 Sam. 16. ● But the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul and an evil spirit from the Lord troubled him and Eph. 2.2 The spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience and Eph. 4.27 Neither give place to the Devil That cursed inmate will enter if we give place to him and hearken to his motions So that then he will make the body a sink of sin and a dunghil of corruption tempts you to scandalous sins which do not only waste the body for the present but is a pledg of eternal damnation 3 Consider how many deceive themselves with the hopes of a Glorious Resurrection Alas they are strangers to the Spirit it may be not to his transcient motions they resist the Holy Ghost which will be their greater condemnation but to his constant residence for where he dwelleth he maketh them more Heavenly acquainting them with God Col. 1.6 more Holy that is his office to sanctifie 1 Pet. 1.22 To love God more for he is the operative love of God Rom. 5.5 1 John 4.15 To hate sin more that bringeth death and his business is to come as a pledg of life Alas in most the spirit that dwelleth in them lusteth to envy are ruled by an unclean spirit by the spirit of the world 1 Cor. 2.12 have no love to God no real hatred of sin 2. VSE Live in obedience to his sanctifying motions Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the spirit are the sons of God The spirit of God by which you are guided and led is that divine and potent spirit that raised up Christs dead body out of the grave and if you be led and governed by him you shall be raised by the power of the same spirit that raised Christs Body his power is the cause but your right is by his sanctification 3. VSE Vse your bodies well possess your vessel in sanctification and honour 1 Thes. 4.4 1. Offer up your selves to God For every Temple must be dedicated Rom. 12.1 I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a liveing sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service Rom. 6.13 Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin but yeild your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead 2. When devoted to God take heed you do not use them to sensuality and filthiness which wrong the body both here and hereafter the pleasures of the body cannot recompence the pains of your surfeit or intemperance much less eternal torments for what will be the issue if you live after the flesh Rom. 8.13 you must die therefore you should daily keep the flesh in a subordination to the spirit 1 Pet. 2.11 I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims that ye abstain from fleshly lusts To please and gratifie the flesh is to wrong the Soul 3. We should deny our selves even lawful pleasures when they begin to exercise a dominion over us 1 Cor. 6.12 All things are lawful for me but I will not be brought under the power of any 'T is a miserable servitude to be brought under the power of any pleasure either in meat drink or recreations inchanted with the witchery of gaming tho it grieve the spirit wrong the soul defraud God of his time rob the poor of what should feed charity yet they are inslaved SERMON XV. ROM VIII 12 Therefore brethren we are debtors not to the flesh to live after the flesh IN the Words we have 1. A note of Inference 2. The truth inferred In this latter we find 1. A Compellation Brethren 2. An Assertion That we ars debtors 3. An instance or exemplification to whom we are debtors The negative is expressed not to the flesh to live after the flesh and the affirmative is implied and must be supplied out of the Context To the spirit to live in obedience to the holy spirit 1. The Inference therefore he reasoneth from their priviledges the priviledg is asserted v. 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit 'T is applied to the Christian Romans v. 9. But ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit These reasonings are pertinent and insinuative from the priviledg asserted Exhortation must follow Doctrine for then it pierceth deeper and sticketh longer On the other side Doctrine becometh more lively when there is an edg set upon it by Exhortation from the priviledg implied certainly priviledges infer duty and therefore having comforted them with the remembrance of their condition he doth also mind them of their obligation Ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit therefore we are are not debtors to the flesh to walk after the flesh but to walk after the spirit 2. The truth inferred Where first observe the compellation Brethren a word of love and equality of love to sweeten the exhortation for men are unwilling to displease the flesh of equality for he taketh the same obligation upon himself this debt bindeth all high and low learned or unlearned ministers or people greatness doth not exempt from this bond nor meanness exclude it 2. The assertion that we are debtors Man would fain be sui juris at his own dispose affecteth a supremacy and dominion over his own actions Psal. 12.4 Our tongues are our own who is Lord over us But this can never be we were made by
this actual joy for 't is possible a man may be perswaded of his sincerity or have no doubting of it and have too much deadness and dulness of soul not so comforted Well then 't is not an Oracle as to Christ Matth. 3 17 Nor an internal suggestion thou art a child of God we have no warrant for that from Scripture 't is not only to but with conscience Now conscience goeth upon rational evidence and we reason and argue from what we feel or find in our selves and 't is ascending to the covenant where Priviledges are assigned to the believer 1 John 1.2 To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the sons of God to the penitent Acts 2 38 Repent and you shall receive the Holy ghost To the obedient He is become the author of salvation to all that obey him 2. The one superaddeth to the other Not the priviledg without the qualification that is sufficiently done by the word not the conscience by discourse and the spirit immediately no they concur to produce the same conclusion the spirits testimony superaddeth certainty authority and overpowering light 1 Cor. 4.4 For I know nothing by my self yet am I not hereby justified but he that sudgeth me is the Lord and Rom. 9.1 I say the truth in Christ I lye not my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy ghost As the influences of the Heavens work strongly but imperceptibly while they mingle themselves with the motions of the creatures so doth the spirit with our spirit it fortifieth and strengthneth the testimony of a mans own heart and so doth with more authority and power perswade us that we are the children of God 3. The necessiry of this to our full comfort 1. We cannot pray without it For the Text is brought to prove that they have a spirit within them which inclineth them to cry Abha Father surely 't is a great advantage in prayer to be able to say Psal. 63.26 Doubtless thou art our father and again Isa. 64.8 But now Lord thou art our father But how will you do unless you be Gods children and how will you know you be Gods children but by the spirit bearing witness to and with your spirits I know all Gods children have not the comfort of the spirit but they have the spirit of comfort and in some measure can come to God as a Father 2. We cannot apply the promises without it For the promises are childrens bread unless we be the children of God what comfort can we take in the promises unless we have an interest in them priviledges have their conditions annexed the right is suspended till the condition be performed that is till we know our selves to be true believers the promises are in vain and of no effect if to all you deceive the most for tho some are of Gods Family the whole world lieth in wickendness the most are the children of the Devil If to some they have their characters which occasioneth the restraint and you are told here this is known by the spirits bearing witness to our spirits But what shall poor creatures do that have not yet this clear testimony 1. Disclaim all other confidence When you cannot apply Hos. 14.3 Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon horses neither will we say any more to the works of our hands Ye are our gods for in thee the fatherless findeth mercy 2. Own God in the humbling way Creep in at the back door of the promise 1 Tim. 1.15 Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners If Christ came to save sinners I am sinner enough for Christ to save Luke 15.18 19. I will arise and go to my father and will say unto him Father I have sinned against heaven and before thee and am no more worthy to be called thy son make me as one of thy hired servants 3. Come to him as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Eph. 3.14 For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Certainly God will love and accept all those that come to him by Christ. 4. There is a child-like inclination when there is not a childlike familiarity and boldness The soul cannot keep away from God and that is an implicite owning of him as a Father Jer. 3.19 Thou shalt call me father ond shalt not turn away from me We call him Father optando si non affirmando unspeakable groans discover the spirit of adoption as well as unutterable joys we own him by way of option and choice tho not by actual assurance of our special relation to him and interest in his fatherly love there may be a child like love to God when we have no assurance of his paternal love to us 5. There is a childlike reverence and awe when not a childlike confidence Their heart standeth in awe of as the Rechabites their fathers command dare not displease him for all the world these in time will overcome in short God hath a title to our dearest love when we cannot make out a title to the highest benefit SERMON XXV ROM VIII 17 If children then heirs heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified together THE Apostle had shewed v. 13. That if we through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body we shall live He proveth it by this medium and argument That as many as obey the sanctifying motious of the spirit are children of God and children may look for a childs portion He proveth they are children because the spirit accompanieth the dispensation of the New Covenant whereby we are adopted into Gods family and this spirit acts suitably as is evident by his impression v. 15. By his Testimony and Witness v. 16. Now he goeth on further and proveth That if we be children we are heirs and that we shall live if we mortifie the deeds of the body is more abundantly proved for our inheritan●e is eternal life and glory And if children then heirs c. In the Words observe 1. A Dignity inferred from our Adoption 2. The Amplification of it from the excellent nature of this inheritance Heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ. 3. 'T is applied as a comfort against adversities If so be that we suffer with him that we may also be glorified together 1. The Dignity inferred is that we are Heirs The Inheritance belonging to Children jure nascendi all Children are not necessarily heirs but only males and among them the first born but jure Adoptionis they that are Adopted are adopted to some Inheritance so here if Children then heirs be they Sons or Daughters begotten to God sooner or later Male are Female are all one in Christ Gal. 3.18 they are not debarred from the Inheritacce 2. The amplification of it Or the greatness and excellency of this Inheritance in two expressions Heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ.
or the blood of Christ shed for our sins then he obtained eternal redemption for us Heb. 9.12 not for the soul only but for the body also as appeareth 1 Cor. 6.20 For ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are Gods Secondly The application is our actual deliverance and freedom by virtue of that price which is either begun or perfected Begun when our bonds are in part loosed Eph. 1.7 In whom we have redemption through his blood the forgiveness of sins And perfected in the other world therefore the day of Judgment is called the day of our Redemption Eph. 4.30 when the last enemy is destroyed namely Death and our bodies are raised up in glory then we are actually free from all evil and because this is done by virtue of that price and ransome which Christ paid for us 't is called Redemption and the redemption of our bodies because the body which was sown in corruption is raised in incorruption and that which was sown in dishonour is raised in glory and that which was sown in weakness is raised in power 1 Cor. 15.42 43. tho the price was paid long ago the full fruit is not enjoyed till then for then we have our final and compleat deliverance from all sin and misery vanity and corruption in this life we are not free from those things which lead to corruption that is from sin misery and afflictions at death the soul is made perfect but the body is in the power of the grave but then the body enjoyeth a glorious resurrection 2. By way of Confirmaeion Why we should groan and long for this estate The Reasons concern either this life or the next 1. For this life I shall prove that there is cause or matter for groaning and desiring a better estate 2. That those that have the first fruits of the spirit are more apprehensive of this misery than others are or can be 1. The pressures aad miseries of this life call for this groaning being burdened saith the Apostle we groan We have an heavy burden upon us both of sin and misery 1. Of sin To a gracious heart and waking conscience 't is one of the heaviest burdens that can be felt Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of death Paul was whipped imprisoned stoned in perils by Land and Sea persecuted by enemies undermined by false brethren but afflictions did not sit so close to him as sins the body of death was his sorest burden therefore did he long for deliverance a beast will leave the place where he findeth neither food nor rest 't is not the troubles of the world only which set the Saints a groaning but indwelling corruption this grieveth them that they are not yet rid of sin that they serve God with such apparent weakness and manifold defects that they are so often distracted and oppressed with sensual and worldly affections they cannot get rid of this cursed inmate and therefore desire a change of states by the Grace of God they have got rid of the guilt of sin and reigning power of sin but the being of it is a trouble to them which will still remain till this Tabernacle be dissolved then sin shall gasp its last and the Saints are groaning and longing for the parting day when by putting off flesh they shall put off sin and come and dwell with God 2. Of misery This burden is a partial cause of the Saints groaning for they have not divested themselves of the feelings of nature nor grown sensless as stocks and stones they are of like passions with others and love their natural comforts as others do humane nature is the same thing in all that are made of flesh and blood Job 6.12 Is my strength the strength of stones or is my flesh of brass They feel pain as every one doth which will extort complaints from them Now a Christians misery may be reckoned from Three Things 1. Temptations from Satan 2. Grievous Persecutions from the World 3. Sharp afflictions from God himself All these concur to wean a Christian from the World 1. Temptations from Satan Who seeketh all advantages either to withdraw us from God or to distract us in his service and make it tedious and wearisome to us 1 Pet. 5.8 9. Your adversary the devil goeth about seeking whom he may devour All these things 〈◊〉 accomplished in your brethren in the flesh they are all haunted with a busie Tempter who is restless in his endeavours to ensnare their souls this world is Satans walk the Devils Circuit who goeth up and down to destroy unwearyed creatures and therefore his assiduons temptations are one of the Christians burdens 2. Bitter and grievous persecutions Which sometimes make them weary of their lives that they may be freed from their hard Taskmasters as Elijah was weary of the trouble he had by Jezabels pursuits that he durst not trust himself in the land of Israel and Judea but goeth a days Journey into the Wilderness and sate down under a Juniper Tree and requested for himself that he might die for saith he I am not better than my Fathers House 1 Kings 19.4 5. Surely the troubled will long for rest 3. Sharp afflictions from God himself who is jealous of our hearts because we are not watchful over them we are too apt to take up with a worldly happiness and to root here looking no further whilst we have all our comforts about us our hearts saying 'T is best to be here till God by his smart rod awaken us out of our drousie fits we are so pleased with our entertainment by the way that we forget home therefore the Lord is fain to imbitter our worldly Portion that we may think of a remove to some better place and state where all tears shall be wiped from our eyes We would sleep and rest here if we did not sometimes meet with thorns in our bed All the days of my pilgrimage saith holy Jacob Gen. 47.7 are few and evil Our days are evil and 't is well they are but few that in this shipwrack of mans felicity we can see banks and shores and a landing place where we may be safe at length Here most of our days are Sorrow Grief and Travel but there is our repose our heart would fail were there not some hopes mingled with our tears Secondly That those who have the first fruits of the spirit are more apprehensive of this misery than others are or can be 1. Of Misery and Afflictions Partly because Grace intendreth the heart they look upon afflictions with another eye than the stupid world doth they look upon them as coming from God and as the fruit of sin and they dare not slight any of Gods corrective dispensations there are two extreams slighthing and fainting Heb. 12.5 Affliction cannot be improved if we have not a sense of it We owe so much reverence to God as to
and unseen But other qualifications are necessary beyond these already mentioned 1. It must be something promised by God 2. Believed by us before we can hope for it 1. Such future things as God hath promised to bestow upon us These are the matter and object of our faith and hope the promise giveth us notice and the promise giveth us assurance First Notice We can have no other certain knowledg of their futurity but by Gods promise the light of nature or reason giveth a shrewd guess at a future estate but the certain knowledg we have by Gods Word there life and immortality is brought to light 2 Tim. 1.10 He brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel There we have the clear prospect of it the Heathen had nothing but the light of nature to guide them spake doubtfully of a future estate like men travelling on the hills and see the spire of a steeple at a distance sometimes they have a sight of it and presently they lose it and so cannot certainly tell whether they saw it yea or no but all is clear full and open in Gods promise 2. Certainty and assurance for it conveyeth a right to us upon certain terms for he that believeth on the Son of God hath everlasting life John 3.36 Hath it in the offer and promise of God if he will fulfil the condition required not only shall have it at the close of their days but they have the grant already and therefore wait for 〈◊〉 ●●uition as we are fulfilling the conditions we gain more security and confidence that we shall have it 1 Tim. 6.12 Fight the good fight of faith lay hold on eternal life V. 19. Laying up in store for themselves a good foundation that they may lay hold on eternal life The meaning is challenge it for theirs In short our expectation must be grounded on some promise or else 't is but a fancy and presumption 2. The thing hoped for must be believed by us For there can be no expectation of things not seen till there be faith which is the evidence of things not seen Heb. 11.1 First There is a firm assent by faith we are as confident in some measure of those things as if we saw them with our eyes or as we are of those things which we daylie see then after this assent there followeth earnest expectation For hope maketh the assent practical Though God promise never so much yet if we believe him not we expect nothing therefore faith is necessary look as to bodily sight there needeth an object to be seen and an eye by which we see so in spiritual sight the promise sets the object before us Heb. 12.2 Looking unto Jesus and Heb. 6.18 lay held of the hope set before us But the eye is faith which though it cannot give us sight it giveth us foresight we have heard of it though yet we have not seen it and see it by the eyes of the mind as it is contained in the promise of the everlasting God though we do not and cannot see it with the eyes of the body Compare it with reason By reason we apprehend more than we see for we see effects in their causes but that is but probable foresight for many things intervene between the cause and the effect by faith we foresee the blessing in the promise by reason we see things beyond sense so far as natural probabilities will carry us by faith we see things beyond reason so far as the promises of good invite us to a better hope But how can we surely hope for that we see not which neither sense nor reason can inform us of Answer 1. This glory is not a fancy 't is seen by many in our nature that now possess it and by the word of God you are invited to follow them in the same course of holiness and godliness that you may in time see it also Heb. 6.12 be ye followers of them who through faith and patience have inherited the promises propound the same noble end and the same holy course and matters of faith will in time become matters of sense Now though the end be unknown the way is so good and holy and justifiable by reason that we should venture the imitation of them not their holiness only but their faith Heb. 11.13 they lived and dyed in this faith their life was holy and their death was happy that are gone into the other world But you will say If we could talk with any of these that are gone into the other world Luke 16.30 31. And he said Nay father Abraham but if one went unto them from the dead they would repent and he said unto him They have Moses and the Prophets and if they will not hear them neither will they be perswaded if one should come from the dead They are out of the sphere of our commerce their testimony is not convenient for the government of God who will not govern the world by sense but by faith and besides you have better hopes Moses and the Prophets there is more reason to perswade a man the Scriptures are true than to believe a message brought him from one among the dead 2. One that hath seen and is an infallible witness hath testified to us of the truth of these things we hope for John 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten son which is in the bosome of the father he hath declared him Christ perfectly saw and knew all that he hath told us of ●od and the world to come John 3.11 Verily verily I say unto thee We speak that which we know and testify that we have seen and ye receive not our witness so that our faith and hope goeth on sure grounds so verse 32. What he hath seen and heard he testifieth and no man receiveth his testimony A good man whose testimony is valuable that hath been in a strange country and testifieth what he hath seen there of it would not we believe him Christ that came from the other world and told us of the blessedness of it deserveth the credit of a good man he used a faithful plainness John 14.2 if it were not so I would have told you But more of a Teacher sent from God who confirmed his message by miracles and laid down a Doctrine holy and good and shall not we receive his testimony concerning these things he had perfect knowledge of assured us of the truth of them shall we not receive his testimony 3. Those that saw him and conversed with him were not only authorized by him to shew us the way to Eternal life but saw so much of it themselves as the mortal state is capable of yet enough to prove the reality of the thing 1 John 1.1 2 3. That which was from the beginning which we have heard which we have seen with our eyes which we have looked upon and our hands have handled of the word of life for the life was
the Holy Ghost himself is the principal cause of all who doth create this faith love and hope and still preserve it and order and actuate it The Soul worketh powerfully and sweetly by an earnest motion and inclination towards God SERMON XXXV ROM VIII 26 Likewise the spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered WE now come more distinctly to shew what the Holy Ghost doth in Prayer 1. He directeth and ordereth our requests so as they may suit with our great end which is the injoyment of God For of our selves we should Pray only after a natural and humane affection which sets up its self instead of God and self considered as a Body rather than a Soul and so asketh Bodily things rather than Spiritual and the conveniencies of the Natural Life rather than the injoyment of the world to come Let a man alone and he will sooner ask baits and snares and temptations than graces and helps A Scorpion instead of Fish and a Stone rather than Bread we take counsel of our lusts and interests when we are left to our own private spirit and so would make God to serve with our sins and imploy him as a Minister of our carnal desires as 't is said of them in the Wilderness Psal. 78.18 They tempted God in their hearts by asking meat for their lusts Our natural will and carnal affections will make us Pray our selves into a snare In the Text 't is said We know not what to pray for as we ought And in the 27. v. He maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to God not only with respect to his will but his Glory and our eternal good so that human and earnal affection shall neither prescribe the matter nor fix the end To Pray in an Holy manner is the product of the Spirit and the fruit of his operation in us Faith and Love and Hope are more at work in a serious Prayer than human and carnal affection which referreth all its desires and inclinations to the Bodily Life 2. He quickneth and enliveneth our desires in prayer There is an holy vehemency and fervour required in Prayer opposite to that careless formality and deadness which otherwise is found in us These are the groanings which cannot be uttered spoken of in the Text. Groaning noteth the strength and ardency of desire when there is a warmth and a life and a vigour in Prayer Oh how flat and dead are our hearts oftentimes when we want these quickening motions A flow of words may come from our natural temper but these lively motions and strong desires from the Spirit of God T is notable that the Prayer which is produced in us by the spirit is represented by the notion of a cry twice 't is said teaching us to cry Abba Father not with respect to the loudness of the voice but the earnestness of affection Crying for help is the most vehement way of asking used only by persons in great necessity and danger a prayer without life is as incense without fire which sendeth forth no perfume or sweet savour The firing of the Sacrifices was a token of Gods acceptance so when warmth of heart cometh from Heaven God testi●ieth of his gifts 3. He incourageth and emboldneth us to come to God as a Father This is one main thing twice mentioned in Scripture Rom. 8.15 We have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father and Gal. 4.6 Because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into our hearts crying Abba Father A great part of the life and comfort of Prayer consisteth in coming to God as a reconciled Father Now this is seen in two things 1. Child-like confidence 2. Child-like reverence 1. Child-like confidence or a familiar owning of God in Prayer when we come to him as little Children to their Father for help in their dangers and necessities Christ hath taught us to say our Father and in every Prayer we must be able to say so in one fashion or an other not with our lips but with our hearts by option and choice if not by direct affirmation Luke 11.13 If ye then being evil know how to give good gifts to your children how much more shall your heavenly father give the holy spirit to them that ask it We forget the duty of Children but God doth not forget the mercies of a Father Let it be the voice of our trust and hope rather than of our lips 2. With child-like reverence in an humble and awful way God that hath the title of a Father will have the honour and respect of a Father Matt. 1.6 If this should breed lear and reverence in us at other times it should much more when we immediately converse with him 1 Pet. 1.17 If ye call on the father who without respect of persons judgeth every man God will be sanctified in all that draw nigh unto him Heb. 10. so Phil. 3.11 Serve the Lord with fear and rejoyce with tr●ubling Our familiarity with God must not mar our reverence nor confidence and delight in him our humility and serious dealing with God in Prayer is wrought in us by the spirit in whose light we see both God and our selves his Majesty and our vileness his purity and our sinfulness his greatness and our nothingness 2 The necessity of this help and assistance 1. The order and oeconomy of the divine persons sheweth it In the mystery of redemption God is represented as our reconciled God and Father to whom we come Christ as the Mediator through whom we have liberty and access to God as our own God And the Spirit as our guide Sanctifier and Comforter by whom we come to him God is represented as the great Prince and Universal King into whose presence-chamber poor petitioners are admitted Christ openeth the door by the merit of his Sacrifice and keepeth it open by his constant intercession that wrath may be no hindrance on Gods part nor guilt on ours for otherwise God is a consuming fire Heb. 12.29 and sin divides and separates between God and us Isa. 59.2 Then the spirit doth create preserve and quicken and actuate these graces in the exercise of which this access is managed and carryed on Otherwise such is our impotency and aversness that we should not make use of this offered benefit Eph. 2.18 For through him we both have an access by one spirit unto the father The injoyment of the Fatherly love of God is the highest happiness in which the Soul doth rest content Christ is the way by which we come to the Father and the Spirit our guide which causeth us to enter in this way and goeth along with us in it We cannot look right to the blessed Father but we must look to him through the Blessed Son and we cannot look
not so wholsom on the other side medicinal Potions are bitter but they tend to health Therefore tho the afflictions continue God may hear our prayers for we find this best for us in the issue And we know c. In the Words 1. A priviledg 2. The persons qualified In the priviledg observe 1. The certainty of it And we know 2. The nature of it And there 1. The extent of it All things prosperity adversity all the varieties of conditions we pass thorough 2. The manner of working work together with the spirit say some cooperanter non per se operantur This is a truth but not of this place the poysonous ingredients which are used in a medicine do good not of themselves but as ordered and tempered by the skill of the Physitian rather work together omnia simel adjumenta sunt as Beza paraphrastically rendreth it ●ingly they are against us if we look upon Providences by pieces as there is no beauty in the scattered pieces that are framed for a building till they are all set togethe● so men look upon Gods work by halves 3. The end and issue for go●d Sometimes for good temporal for our greater preservation but rather for good spiritual the increase of grace chiefly for eternal good to fit us and prepare us for the blessedness of the everlasting estate this is the priviledg 2. A description of the persons who enjoy it 1. By their act tow●rds God To them that love God believing his Mercy and Goodness in Christ they love him above all things and are willing to hazzard and venture all things for him 2. Gods act or work upon them They are effectually called to them who are the called according to purpos● There is a distinctive term by which Gods purpose is intended they are called no● obiter by the by as they live within the hearing and sound of the Gospel but according to Gods eternal purpose and the good pleasure of his grace I begin with the Priviledg Doct. That all things that befall Gods children in this life are directed by his Providence to their eternal happiness 1. I shall explain this point with respect to the circumstances of the Text. 2. Give a more general state of the case The first will be done 1. By opening the nature of the priviledg 2. The certainty of it 1. The nature of it and there we begin with the extent all things it m●st be limited by the Context which speaketh of the afflictions of the Saints 1. All manner of sufferings and tryals for righteousness sake Such as Reproaches Stripes spoiling of Goods Imprisonment Banishment Death all such kind of things Reproaches are as dung cast upon the grass which seemeth to stain it for a while but afterwards it springeth up with a fresher verdure Stripes are painful to the flesh but occasion greater joy to the soul as Paul and Silas after they were scourged sung at midnight in the stocks Acts 16. Spoiling of goods stirreth up serious reflections on a more enduring substance the hopes whereof we have in our selves Heb. 10.34 Imprisonment doth but shut us up from ●emptations that we may be at liber●y for a more free converse with God as Tertullian telleth his Martyrs You went out of Prison when you went into Prison and were but sequestred from the world for more intimacy with the Holy Ghost So banishment every place is a like near to Heaven and the whole earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof they know no banishment that know no home here in the world but because we have an affection to our natural comforts especially to the place of our service God is wont to recompence his exiles with an increase of spiritual blessings as John had his Revelations when banished to Patmos Rev. 1.9 Death doth but hasten our glory if the guest be turned out of the old house you have a building of God eternal in the heavens 2 Cor 5.1 And so do but leave a shed to live in a Palace tho yo●r life be forced out by the violence of men the sword is but the key to open Heaven doors for you and you are freed from hard task-masters to go home to your gracious Lord. 2. Ordinary afflictions incident to men Are you pained with sickness and role to and fro on your bed like a door on the hinges through the restless weariness of the flesh Many times we are best when we are weakest and the pains of the body help to the invigorating and renewing the inward man 2 Cor. 4.16 In Heaven you shall have everlasting ease for that is a state of rest Have you lost children if God give you a better name than sons and daughters you have no cause to complain Isa. 56.5 'T is honour enough to you that you are children of God if poor and destitute yet if rich in the gifts and graces of the spirit 't is made up to you Rev. 2.9 I know thy poverty but thou art rich But 't is not expedient to name all cases whatever the calamity and affliction be God knoweth how to turn it to good so that tho we restrain all things to the Context it is large enough for our consolation But is there not more in it For men are always given to over-gospelling and inlarging their priviledges doth it not comprehend sin Ans. No not in the in●ention of the Apostle God hath not made a promise that all the sins of Believers shall work for their good 'T is true God made advantage of the sins of the world for the honouring of the Grace in Christ Rom. 5.16 17. It should be our care that Satan may be a loser and Christ have more honour by every sin we commit True repentance can draw good out of sin its self to be a means of our hatred and mortification of it So love and gratitude to our Redeemer Luke 7.47 Her sins which are many are forgiven for she loved much but to whom little is forgiven the same loveth little Sin doth not do good as sin but as repented of 't is not the sin but the repentance But for the proof of this 1. Then it would destroy the qualification mentioned in the text Those that love God Our love is a love of duty none love God but those that obey him and keep his commandments 2. To assure us aforehand that our sins would turn to our good would open a gap to looseness and is contrary to the usual methods of God in his word who commands obedience with a promise of increase of grace and threatneth disobedience and punishe●h it also by hardness of heart and a tradition or giving us up to vile affections Now there would be no reconciling these passages if God assured us by promise that our sins should turn to good and yet sins be punished with blindness of mind and hardness of heart 3. If any should object they mean infirmities not grievous and hainous sins yet even then they see a reason
more in the Scriptures than others do the secure and fortunate read them as they do Ovids verses Certainly when the soul is humble and we are refined and purified from the dregs of sense we are more tractable and teachable our understandings are clearer and our affections more melting Now spiritual learning is a blessing that cannot be valued enough if God write his Law on our hearts by his stripes on our backs we have no reason to complain 4 'T is a repenting-time to stir up the hatred of sin by the bitter effects of it Jer. 2.19 Now know what an evil and bitter thing it is that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my fear is not in thee Weigh with thy self what hath brought all these evils upon thee experience teacheth fools So Lam. 3.39 Wherefore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his sin He hath no reason to murmur against God when he considereth his own deserts and that he suffereth nothing but what he hath produced to himself by his sins And therefore we ought to have deep shame and sorrow for our former miscarriages it conduceth to breed true remorse to consider our folly and the misery brought upon us thereby Jer. 31.18 Surely I have heard Ephraim bemoaning himself thus Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised as a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke turn thou me and I shall be turned thou art the Lord my God Surely after that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed ●ea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth 5. 'T is a weaning time from the pleasures and conveniencies of the present world First the pleasures of the world pleasure is the great Sorceress that hath inchanted all mankind they all court pleasure though in different shapes 'T is deeply ingrained in our nature and the cause of our many miscarriages Tit. 3.3 Serving divers lusts and pleasures and because we have divers pleasures God sendeth divers afflictions The soul is almost so sunk in flesh that it ceaseth to be spirit John 3.6 Pleasure is that which draweth us off from God and ingageth us in the Creature Jam. 1.14 But every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and inticed Now among the divers afflictions diseases are natural penances which God hath put upon us to reclaim us from vain pleasures The gust of the flesh would be too strong if God did not check it by imbittering our portion in the world Secondly The conveniencies of the present life riches honours friendships afflictions are sent to cure our carnal complacency and increase the heavenly mind Riches Heb. 10.34 And took joyfully the spoiling of your goods knowing in your selves that ye have in heaven a better and an enduring substance Relations p●ssessions 1 Cor. 7.29 30 31. The time is short it remaineth that both they that have wives be as though they had none And they that weep as though they wept not And they that rejoice as though they rejoiced not And they that buy as though they possessed not And they that use this world as not abusing it for the fashion of this world passeth away Friendship John 16 32. Doating on the Creature is spiritual adultery James 4.4 Ye adulterers and adulteresses know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God who ever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God If an image of jealousie be set up God will blast it he turneth the world loose upon us so that friends prove as broken reeds 'T is easie for God to prosper his people in the world and suit all things to their own desires but he knoweth our proneness to carnal love and how easily our heart is inticed from himself Our temptations would be too strong if the world did appear in an over-amiable tempting dress therefore he doth exercise us sometimes with the malicous envious world sometimes with the cares griefs pains disappointments which are incident to the present life and will shew us what a restless empty world we have here that we may the more earnestly look after those peaceful Regions which are above 6. 'T is a time of increasing our love to God upon a twofold account 1. Affliction sheweth us that nothing is worthy of our love but God whatsoever robbeth God of it soon proveth matter of trouble and distress to us our hearts are the more averse from God because they are inclined to the Creature Jer. 2.13 For my people have committed two evils they have forsaken me the fountain of living water and hewed them out cisterns broken cisterns that will hold no water Men b●stow their hearts on something beneath the chief good which becometh an idol and false god to them and which they respect and love more than God now the love of God cannot reign in that soul where the love of the world and fleshly lusts reigneth 1 John 2.15 If any man loveth the world how dwelleth the love of the Father in him 'T is not in him Now the great work of grace is to cast out the usurper and to give God the possession of what is his own and therefore the heart must be circumcised before it be true to God Deut. 30.6 The Lord thy God will circumcise thy heart and the heart of thy seed to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul that thou mayest live First the foreskin and fleshliness that sticketh so close to us must be taken off before we can adhere to God as our proper and chief happiness Now this is Gods own work by his internal grace but yet he useth external means and amongst the rest sharp afflictions to wean us from the Creature and to shew us that we do but court our own trouble and infelicity when we bestow our affections elsewhere for hereby God plainly demonstrateth that he is our All-sufficient and Indeficient God All sufficient as answering all our necessities and desires Indeficien● our never failing good when all things fail about us Habbak 3.18 Yet I will rejoice in the Lord and joy in the God of my salvation And thus by desolating the Creature doth he drive our foolish hearts to himself that we may have the solid delights of his love 2. This love of God is the comfort by which we are supported in all our distresses The servants of God have never so much of the joy in the Holy Ghost as in their great sufferings their delight in God is then purest and unmixed God comforteth them when they have nothing else to take comfort in Job 16.20 My friends scorn me but mine eye poureth out tears to God When all friends forsake us but one that one is sweeter to us than ever Humble moans to God giveth us ease and comfort notwithstanding the neglect and contempt of man and when the world undervalueth 't is enough
Corinth God doth not say because there are much people though it is good casting out the net where there is store of fish but I have much people he understandeth not the Corinthians which were converted already so there were few or none at that time in Corinth but to be converted they were Gods people elected and redeemed by him though as yet wallowing in their sins Therefore the first moving-cause of all this business was the election of God or his purpose to call them the persons never thought of seeking means for themselves and have not an heart to entertain them for a long time but God is at work for their good when they intended no good to themselves We read of saints in Nero's houshold Phil. 4.22 Who would look for saints in the family of so bloody a persecutor yet the Gospel could find its way thither and seize on some of his menial servants for God had strange ways and methods to convert those that belong to his grace I cannot say to them but to some others Christ was made known to them by Pauls defence 2 Tim. 4.17 Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me and strengthened me that by me the preaching might be fully known and that all the Gentiles might hear 4. In blessing the means quite besides the purpose and intention of the parties that receive benefit by them as appeareth by the circumstances of their conversion and first acceptance of Christ many times they come where they may hear of God and Christ with careless and flight spirits or drop in by chance as Pauls Infidel 1 Cor. 15.24 25. There cometh in one that believeth not How many do thus stumble upon grace unawares to themselves not minding or desiring any such matter but God directeth a serious word that pierceth into their very hearts sometimes God calleth them when opposing and persecuting as Paul Acts 9. Vergerius Many when they came to scoff have felt the mighty power and Majesty of God in his ordinances and what begun with scoffing ended in a more serious work Isa. 57.18 He went on frowardly in the way of his own heart I have seen his ways and I will heal him The officers that came to attack Christ John 7.46 said Never man spake like this man Sometimes men have been loath to come drawn with much importunity against their inclination and prejudices John 1.46 Can any good come out of Nazareth saith Nathaniel to Philip come and see and there he met with Christ. The Galileans were a ruder part of the Jews a gross and blockish sort of people it was generally conceived no Prophet was of that Country where Jonah was thus Nathaniel held off out of a prejudicate opinion Many of these things which come as it were by chance to us and without our foresight are well foreseen and wisely ordered by God As Augustine was carried besides his purpose that Gods purpose might come to pass in the conversion of Firnias a Manichee 5. In suiting all his dealings with them so after conversion that they may be kept blameless to his heavenly Kingdom John 10.3 Christ calleth his sheep by name knoweth all his flock particularly taketh notice of all their persons and conditions hath a special affection to them and care of them so Psal. 1.6 The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous knoweth their necessities straits hopes burdens and temptations His business in Heaven is to order his providence for their good 2 Chron. 16.9 sometimes giveth seasonable correction Psal. 119.75 I know O Lord that thy judgments are right and that thou in faithfulness hast afflicted me 1 Pet. 1.6 Now for a season if need be ye are in heaviness sometimes to lessen the affliction or remove it Psal. 125.3 For the rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the lot of the righteous lest the righteous put forth their hands to iniquity And 1 Cor. 10.13 But God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able but will also with the temptation make a way to escape that ye may be able to bear it God considereth who needeth chastning and who needeth protection and deliverance Thus I have stated it 2. I shall give you an argument or two to confirm it 1. That there is a difference between man and man is plain and obvious to sense some are good and holy others are naught and wicked some understand the Gospel others are ignorant of it some scoff others believe some have a dead faith others a lively and deep sense of the world to come and make preparation accordingly ask the reason of this difference whence is it you will say their choice and inclination some chuse the better part others abandon themselves to their Iusts and bruitish satisfactions true But whence cometh this different choice and inclination Experience sheweth us that man from his infancy and childhood is very corrupt and more inclinable to evil than to good to things earthly than Heavenly carnal than spiritual and you may as well expect to gather grapes from thorns and figs from thistles as that man of his own accord should become good and holy and that we should be able to bring our own hearts to love God and delight in God Job 14.4 Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean not one Well then since all are not good but some are whence cometh the difference Is it from a better temper and constitution of body That is a benefit and gift of God but this is not the whole cause many besot brave wits and spoil an excellent temper and constitution of body by their intemperance and incontinency and on the other side many of crabbed and depraved tempers master their natural inclination by grace and God doth often chuse beams and rafters for the Sanctuary of the most crooked timber Is it education and setting their inclinations right from their infancy 'T is I confess a great advantage to be brought up in the nurture and information of the Lord in a course of vertue and religion Prov. 22.6 Train up a child in the way that he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it The first infusions stick by us and conduce if not to conversion yet to conviction but many wrest themselves out of the arms of the best education and turn the back upon all those godly counsels and instructions which are instilled into them Is it the ordinances and means of grace these certainly have great force and efficacy this way God knoweth what keys will fit the wards of the lock if any thing the Doctrine of the Gospel will do it But they have not all believed Rom. 10.16 For Isaiah saith Who hath believed our report We see the same seed that thriveth in the good and honest heart is lost in high-way stony thorny ground the difference is not in seed but soil whatever means and helps you can imagine all is nothing till God puts a new heart into
us Is it a good temper and disposition of mind so that grace is represented to us congruously so that it findeth us fitly prepared Certainly seasons should not be over-slipped but yet this is not the adequate cause of conversion that some believe others not because we are so happy to find them in a disposition of mind to obey the word we see that many that come with an ill disposition and temper of soul to hear the word of God yet God taketh them by the heart people should bring a prepared mind free from distractions and prejudices but that is not all that is necessary we are to use the means but the success is from God who will take his own time Christians when they think themselves best prepared find not that efficacy in the word they could desire 2. All good is of God 1 Cor. 4.7 Who maketh thee to differ And what hast thou that thou hast not received And Jer. 24.7 I will give them a heart to know me 'T is his grace maketh the difference Matth. 13.11 'T is given you to know the mystery of the kingdom of Heaven but to them it is not given The cause of putting a difference between the one and the other is in the will of God the giver The advantages in the means of better temper better ministry somewhat there is in that Acts 14.1 They so spake that a great multitude of Jews and Greeks believed all this is to be imputed to Gods external providence one way of preaching may be more apt to convert souls than another a dart headed and feathered and sent out of a strong bow will pierce deeper than falling of its own weight pure solid Doctrine rationally enforced is more likely to do the deed But yet the thorough cause of the difference is internal grace changing the heart and powerfully inclining it to God Acts 11.21 The hand of the Lord was with them and a great number believed and turned to the Lord. 'T is Gods mighty power maketh the difference 3. Whatever God doth in time he purposed to do before all time for God doth nothing rashly and by chance but all by counsel and predestination 't is according to his purpose especially in mans salvation nothing is done but what he decreed to be done even the least circumstance time means and occasion 't is all according to purpose not of yesterday but from all eternity Acts 9.11 Gods sending Ananias to Paul and was not that foreknown and determined VSE Is to press us to admire grace Nothing moved God to let out his love upon us but his free eternal distinguishing love nothing keepeth the heart so right with God as a due sense of his free grace and love for the glory of his grace was the great thing God aimed at in all his dealings with us Eph. 1.6 12. To the praise of the glory of his grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved That we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. Rom. 9.23 And that he might make known the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy which he had afore prepared unto glory This is the study of the saints Eph. 3.18 19. May be able with all saints to comprehend what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge 'T is the great excitement to duty 2 Cor. 5.14 The love of Christ constraineth us Rom. 12.1 I beseech you by the mercies of God 1 John 4.19 Titus 2.11 12. It breedeth a good spirit if love is at the bottom of all our duties 2. We have the truest view of our obligations to God in his elective love aulcius est ipso fonte Nothing will so much excite our love and gratitude as to consider 1. That God All sufficient who needeth nothing should chuse us He might have possessed himself if he had never created any thing without himself if you remove all Creatures from him you detract nothing from God if you add all to him you increase nothing in God 'T is the Creatures indigent condition that maketh him go without his own compass for the happiness of his being man cannot be happy in loving himself nor be satisfied in his own intrinsick perfections therefore seeketh supplies from abroad but Gods happiness is to love himself and delight in himself 2. That when God would look abroad among the Creatures he would chuse us whom he found in the polluted mass of mankind and make us objects of his grace and when he came to call us found us intangled in other sins as Abraham the father of the faithful an Idolater Joshua 24.2 every one that looketh into himself will find they were in temper to chuse any thing rather than Christ unless the Lord had prevented us by his goodness and turned our crooked wills and if we consider why we taken and others left Jer. 3.14 I will take you one of a city and two of a family And lastly if we consider this powerful prosecution of his eternal purpose This certainly will excite our love and gratitude SERMON XXXIX ROM VIII 29 For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son that he might be the first born among many brethren HEre is a reason why all afflictions work together for good to the called according to purpose because they were predestinated to be like Christ in all manner of likeness in sufferings holiness felicity In sufferings they must be afflicted as Christ was he had his share and they have their share Col. 1.24 I rejoice in my sufferings that I may fill up what is behind of the sufferings of Christ in my flesh Christ mystical is to suffer so much he was appointed and they are appointed 1 Thes. 3.3 That no man should be moved by these afflictions for your selves know that we are appointed thereunto Holiness we are to be holy as he is holy as well as afflicted as he was afflicted 1 Pet. 1.15 and again for felicity his sufferings had a good end so shall ours he bore afflictions and passed through them to eternal glory The captain of our salvation was made perfect by sufferings Heb. 2.20 So in us the cross maketh way to the Crown we can go no other way to Heaven than Christ did Therefore the conclusion out of all is That afflictions work for good they do not infringe our holiness but promote it rather if we be humble meek and patient as Christ was they do not infringe our happiness for still it fareth with us as it did with Christ as he was a pattern in bearing afflictions holily and couragiously so in the Crown of glory to be obtained after the victory He was the leader of a patient and obedient people to everlasting happiness so that here is a double argument Why all afflictions must turn to good because our afflictions fall not out besides the purpose
'T is the property of love to long to be with Christ which is better for us Phil. 1.23 therefore we should be content to have the prison-door opened that those who have desired and longed to be with Christ may be admitted into his immediate presence and let out into liberty and joy 3. Hope We expect within a little while to have our desires accomplished Jude 21. Looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life Will a soul that is at Heaven gate lose all that he hath waited for because the entrance is troublesome As those that are going to a Mask or Show when they come where it is exhibited must croud and will venture hard for what they hope to see now God will have graces tryed with difficulties the Crown of Victorry is not set on our heads if we fight not 4. Reason 'T is necessary to have this preparation of heart that we may the better deny other things Life is that which maketh us capable of all the contentments of the flesh and pleasures of the world and maketh them valuable to us now this is a blow at the root we are prepared for mortification when we can deny life its self we can deny all the appendages of life Therefore so much of Christianity being exercised in self-denial our Lord would have us once for all bring our selves to the highest point that we may do other things the more easily The Apostle's bonds and afflictions did not move him because he did not count his life dear to him Acts 20.24 And certainly a man is never dead to the world and the interests of the Animal life till he be dead to life its self and is willing to part with it when God pleaseth 5. This life must be quitted now God will have it quitted in obedience for things of meer necessity have no moral worth in them Now 't is a mighty help to die willingly and comfortably when we can once lay life at Christs feet USE To inform us 1. That Christianity wholly draweth us to another world for life its self is one of the interests that must be hazarded for Christs sake 1 Cor. 15.19 If in this life only we had hope we were of all men most miserable Christ would never profelite us to a Religion that should make us miserable now it would do so if only our happiness were in this life for it requireth us not only to deny the conveniences of life but life its self 2. Those that take Gods Word for the other world must expect to have the strength of their faith and love tryed all along this hath been Gods way God would not confirm Adam in innocency before he had let loose a tryal upon him wherein he failing brought misery upon himself and his posterity after the breach the Father of the faithful is tryed Gen. 22.1 with Heb. 11.17 By faith Abraham wh●n he was tryed And still God continueth the same course to all believers Jam. 1.12 Blessed is he that endureth temptations for when he is tryed he shall re●eive a crown of life In the primitive times their Baptism was a presage of their slaughter 3. Those that expect to be tryed had need to be well prepared by a due knowledg of the cause and foresight of and resolution against all known dangers 1. By a due knowledg of their cause that it may be sure it can be said for Gods sake The cause is sometimes more clear and unquestionable as when it is for a great essential point and there our courage should be more clear for then there can be no doubt in the mind whether the cause be good or not and then all the comforts of Christianity do fall upon the soul directly and with great power and efficacy or else more dark when 't is for a particular truth or duty First it may be for the profession of a particular truth which we are to own in its season for we must be established in the present truth 2 Pet. 1.12 What is the present truth the Godly-wise will soon discern Whoever compiled the Creed yet the observation is in a great measure good that the controversies that have hapned in the Church have succeeded according to the method and order of the Articles therein contained The controversie with the Heathen was about the one only and true God with the Jews and afterwards with the Pseudo Christians about Christ his Person Natures Offices States then about the Holy Ghost his Personality and Operations in converting the elect Then about the Church Now in all such controverted truth● we must shew the same zeal the faithful did in former ages But to return tho it be out for a particular truth yet we must shew our fidelity to Christ For t●●n we have an occasion to shew that our hearts be true to God and very sincere w●●n we are willing to suffer any thing from man rather than renounce the smallest truths o● Go● for tho the matters for which we suffer be not great yet sinceri●y is a great point and tho profession thus be sorborn and of exceeding great moment to our peace in some points yet we can do nothing against the truth 2 Cor. 13.8 I am not boun● always to profess in lesser things yet if they will bind me against it I am to endure all manner of displeasures rather than yeild to the lusts and wills of men Eating of swines fl●sh was no great matter but when they would compel them to it in affront to Gods institution Contempt of God is a great matter Heb. 11.25 36 37. I say the more of this because men are apt to translate the scene of their duty to former times or forreign pl●ces if to turn Infidels and Turks as the Jews if they had lived in the Prophe●s days Matth. 23.30 If we had been in our fathers days we would not have been partakers with them in the blood of the prophets How doth God try thee in thine own Age Secondly for particular duties as well as particular truths In the general there is less controversie about the Commandments than about the Creed the Agenda of Christianity are more evident by the light of Nature than the Credenda Yet because the Commandments are general and humane light is imperfect about the application as the Heathens were right in generals but became vain Rom. 1.20 21. Yet in particular duties we must not be wanting for that is a sincere heart that will run the greatest hazzards rather than commit the smallest sin or omit the smallest duty when it is a duty and I am called to perform it in omission there is a greater latitude than in commission for affirmativa non ligant ad semper In the general he that suffereth for a Commandment is as acceptable with God as he that suffereth for an Article of Faith tho the cause for which we suffer be civil yet obedience to God is concerned in it as if a man suffer
is increased Certainly 't is above their trouble 2 Cor. 4.17 For our light afflictions which are but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory 'T is likely they have more Mark 10.29 30. In the day of judgment more honour and praise 1 Pet. 4.6 7. That the tryal of your faith being much more precious than of gold that perisheth though it be tryed with fire may be found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Christ Jesus 3. The Author or Cause of the Victory or the power by which they conquer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through him that loved us Here observe 1. That Christ is not estranged from his people by their afflictions but rather is more tender of them the more they are wronged by others 2. That loving them he doth over-rule these things and cause them to become a means to do them good 3. He doth not only over-rule these occurrences of providence but doth give them the Spirit of Grace 4. That giving them the Spirit of Grace they overcome in his strength not their own 5. That Christs love is more powerful to save us than the world's hatred to destroy us 2. Branch That a true believer doth not miscarry under his troubles but overcome them yea more than overcome them Here I shall show 1 The nature of the Victory 2 How more than Conquerors 3 Who is this true believer that will be more than a Conqueror 4 Reasons why more than Conquerors 5 Application 1. To explain the nature of this Victory it doth not consist in an exemption from troubles or suffering Temporal loss by them or utter perishing as to this world but keeping that which we contend and fight for We do not vanquish our enemy so as to cause all opposition to cease yea or that we shall not Temporally perish under it no the world needeth not suspect this holy Victory of the Saints 't is not conquering Kingdoms and becoming masters of other mens possessions nor seeing our desire upon our enemies I prove it 1. From Christs purchase Gal. 1.4 Who dyed that he might deliver us from the present evil world How so That we should live exempt from all troubles That the world should never trouble us no but that the world should not ensnare and pervert us his work was to save us from our sins Matth. 1.21 To deliver us from wrath to come 2 Thes. 1.10 and to justifie and sanctifie and glorifie us We have the Victory that he hath purchased for us if the Devil and the world do not hinder our fruition and possession of eternal glory 2. I prove it partly from the way of dispensation of it that is intimated in the first promise of the Messiah Gen. 3.15 I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel Misery being brought into the world by sin God ordereth it so that some Temporal calamities shall remain on those that are recovered by Grace indeed 't is our Redeemers work so to moderate these sufferings that our heel may be only bruised but our head safe 3. I prove it from the way of our conflict and combate and conquest 't is not by worldly Greatness visible prosperity or the strength of outward Dominion but by patience and contentedness in suffering even to the very death Those that are as sheep appointed to the slaughter and killed all the day long are more than conquerors This is a riddle to carnal sense we do not call them conquerors in the world who are killed oppressed kept under but yet these are killed all the day long and yet are more than conquerors Scias hominem Christo dicatum saith Jerome Mori posse vinci non posse A Christian may be slain yet more than a conqueror The way to conquer here is to be trodden down and ruined 2 Cor. 4.8 9. We are troubled on every side yet not distressed we are perplexed yet not in despair persecuted but not forsaken cast down but not destroyed 4. Our main party and enemy is Satan You have not only to do with men who strike at your worldly interests but with Satan who hath a spight at your souls Eph. 6.12 For we wrestle not against flesh and blood but against Principalities against Powers against the rulers of the darkness of this world against Spiritual wickedness in high places God may give men a power over your bodily lives and all the interests thereof but he doth not give the Devil a power over the graces of the Saints to separate them from Gods love The Devil aimeth at the destruction of souls he can let you enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season that he may deprive you of your delight in God and Celestial pleasures He can be content you shall have dignities and honours if they prove a snare to you The Devil seeketh to bring you to troubles and poverty and nakedness to draw you from God 1 Pet. 5.8 9. Be sober be vigilant because your adversary the Devil as a roaring Lyon walketh about seeking whom he may devour whom resist stedfast in the faith knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world Satans temptations are conveyed to the Godly by afflictions by which he seeketh to make them quit the truth or their duty or to quit their confidence in God otherwise he would let such have all the glory in the world if it were in his power so you would but hearken to his lure as he offered it to Christ Matth 4.9 And saith unto him all these things will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and 〈…〉 Therefore our Victory is not to be measured by our prosperity and adversity but faithful adherence to God if he get his will over our bodies if he get not his will over our souls you conquer and not Satan 5. The ends or things we contend for The Victory must be stated by that for we overcome if we keep what we fight for now our conflict is for the glory of God the advancement of the kingdom of Christ our own salvation and to maintain and keep alive present grace 1. The glory of God God must be honoured by his people in adversity 2. Thes. 1.11 12. Wherefore we pray always for you that God would count you worthy of this calling and fulfil all the good pleasure of his goodness and the work of faith with pow●r that the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you John 21.19 This he said signifying by what death he should glorifie God Phil. 1.20 Christ shall be magnified in my body whether it be by life or by death When we suffer for his cause our very sufferings are conquering 1 Pet. 4.14 On your part he is glorified When they are reviled reproached persecuted God can bring more honour to himself by the constancy of his people
deep experience of his grace in Christ that have not taken up some light thoughts about it but are deeply overcome and possessed with a sense of his love whose heart and soul is towards God and his wondeful love in Christ is the root and foundation of all their Religion now these thorough-Christians who are rooted and grounded in faith and love they are not so much believers in conflict as believers in triumph and whereas others make an hard shift to get to Heaven with much labour both of flesh and Spirit and many doubts and fears they keep up a continual rejoycing in God and find little or no trouble or disturbance in the Spiritual life Lusts are more mortified and Satan is discouraged and they are assisted with a larger experience of grace than others receive 1. USE Is information 1. To shew what cause they have to be ashamed that are discouraged by smaller temptations that cannot run with the foot-men Jer. 12.5 The smallest things separate them from the love of God in Christ or darken the comfort of it in their souls 2. The great priviledges of a Christian. Turn him to what condition you will raise him or cast him down kill him or spare his life you cannot harm him inrich him or beggar him his happiness is not at your command he is not at the disposal of any creature in the world Devils or Men crosses and contrary winds blow him to Heaven Cant. 4.16 and here death life heigth depth if God hath good to do by his life he will preserve him if his work is ended he will take him away by death All doth better his heart or hasten his glory 3. What an advantage those Christians have above others that make it their business to love God and count it their happiness to be beloved by him Take either first that make it their business to love God Love God once and all that he doth will be acceptable to you and all that you do will be acceptable to him for if we love him nothing will be grievous not commands grievous nor tryals grievous 1 John 5.3 Heb. 12.6 Whom the Lord loveth he chastneth 'T is from a father and all that you do is acceptable to God The lovers mite is better taken than the vast treasures of enforced service If you love him you may be sure he loveth you John 14.21 Secondly They count it their happiness to be beloved by him and then under the sorest temptations 't is enough that God loveth them if he will not take away his loving-kindness from them 't is enough though he visit them with scourges Other things will not satisfie them without this but this satisfieth them in the want of all other things Psal. 106.7 2. USE Is to exhort us to several duties 1. To the great duties of Christianity which give us an interest in this unchangeable love I shall instance in faith and love First by faith to put our souls in Christs hands for there alone we are safe against temptations 2 Tim. 1.12 For I know whom I have believed and am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And 1 Pet. 4.19 Commit the keeping of your souls to him So Psal. 37.3 4. Trust in the Lord and do good so shalt thou dwell in the land verily thou shalt be fed Delight thy self in the Lord and he shall give thee thy hearts desire 'T is not a devout sloath or careless negligence but a resolution to take his way and adhere to it trusting him with all events We may do it upon the confidence of his willingness fidelity and sufficiency His Office sheweth his willingness 't is his office to save souls which he cannot possibly neglect Luke 19.10 The son of man came to seek and save that which was lost His Covenant sheweth his fidelity 1 Cor. 10.13 But God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able His nature or his Divine Power sheweth his sufficiency He is God Phil. 3.21 and he is with God Heb. 7.25 2. The next great duty is love for love is the mutual bond between us and Christ as Christ is the bond of union between God and us We must not intermit our own love the love of God keepeth us and we are bidden to keep our selves in the love of God Jude 21. John 2.27 28. Ye shall abide in him and then presently abide in him And John 15.5 Abide in me and I in you The greatest danger of breaking is on our part there is no fear on Christs part Now we must use the means possess the heart with the love of God in Christ. We must believe the love of God think of it often not by light thoughts but let it be radicated in our hearts and let us rouse up our selves to love God again who hath shewed so much love to us 2. Let us forecast all visible dangers and not fix too peremptorily on temporal happiness There are a world of vicissitudes in our pilgrimage but all are ordered for good to a Christian. Let us not too peremptorily fix on life or death heighth or depth but beg of God to sanctifie every condition Phil. 4.12 I know how to be abased and how to abound to be full and to be hungry to abound and to suffer need We are subject to changes sometimes in credit and sometimes in disgrace sometimes in sickness and sometimes in health sometimes rich and sometimes poor there needeth wisdom to carry our selves in prosperity as well as adversity 3. Let us get our hearts confirmed against these temptations that may assault our confidence Life death if God prolong life there is occasion for service if death cometh that is our comfort Rev. 14.8 Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord. Phil. 1.20 I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is much better Death is a passage to glory it shall not separate us from Christ but joyn us to him Phil. 1.23 Lay up this comfort against the hour of death 'T is a separation that causeth a nearer conjunction Then Angels the evil Angels are under Christ Col. 1.16 You are never in Satans hand but Satan is in Gods hands Then for Principalities and Powers no Potentates have any power but what is given them from above John 19.11 Thou couldest have no power at all against me were it not given thee from above And Christ promiseth Matth 16.18 Vpon this rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it Things present and things to come Whatsoever is present is either good or evil the good things are for our comfort in our pilgrimage the evil fit us for an happier estate but we have no assurance of things to come Matth. 6.34 Sufficient to the day is the evil thereof And then heighth depth We are acquainted with the heighth and depth of the love of God we know
respect from men If we shall Everlastingly injoy the Love of God nothing should trouble us Rom. 8.37 38. Nay at length we shall meet all the Holy ones of God Heb. 11.13 and shall all join in comfort there There is no pride or envy to divide us or to make us contemn one another but Love and Charity reigneth so that the good of every one is the good of all and the good of all the good of every one They all make up one Body and have one heart and one Soul and one God who is all in all 6thly Against Persecution Matth. 5.11 12. Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and shall say all manner of evil against you ●●lsely for my sake Rejoice and be exceeding Glad for great is your reward in Heaven For so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you And 1 Thes. 1.6.7 Having received the word in much affliction with joy of the Holy-Ghost 7thly Against exile When cast out of Cities Towns driven from House and home consider we shall abide with Christ for ever 8thly Against Death of friends 1. Thes. 4.14 to the 18. He concludeth Wherefore comfort one another with these words They are not genuine comforts of Christianity which are not fetched from the world to come 9thly Against sin 'T is our trouble here it must be mortified There it will be nullified Our Inheritance is incorruptible and undefiled and fadeth not away 1 Pet. 1.4 Our carnality will be for ever gone our Temptations will be over There is no Serpent in the upper Paradice 10thly Against spiritual wants There all desires will be accomplished our expectations fully satisfied and the Soul filled up with all the fulness of God And Lastly Against Death which is the last enemy This Christ hath conquered and will conquer for you 1 Cor. 15.56 57. The sting of Death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law But thanks be to God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Death is yours 1 Cor. 3.22 All things are yours whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the World or Life or Death or things present or things to come all are yours And ye are Christs and Christ is Gods SERMON IV. 2 Cor. 5.2 For in this we groan earnestly desiring to be Clothed upon with our House which is from Heaven IN the former verse the Apostle had asserted his confidence of a Blessed Estate both in his own name and the name of other Believers Now he speaketh of his readiness to enter into it or his desire of getting out of this Life that he might enjoy this Immortality and Blessedness For in this we groan In this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or in the mean time In the words observe 1. The greatness of the affection here mentioned Expressed by the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we groan by which he meaneth not the groans which come from sorrow but from desire and hope 2dly The other word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not desiring only but earnestly desiring 2dly The object or thing affected To be cloathed upon with our House which is from Heaven Where our Glory and Blessedness is set forth by a double Metaphore an House and a Garment Men do not clothe themselves with Houses but this is such an House as is so fitted for us and we for it as apparel is for the Body Well then the state of Glory is called an House with respect to the deliverance which we have from the pressures which the bodily Life is subject unto As in an House we are sheltered and defended from the injuries of wind and weather And then 't is compared to an upper garment to hide our blemishes and imperfections Because the Apostle useth the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some have thought the Apostles meaning to be That he would have that Life clothed upon this Life as the Tunick upon the Vest That he would not put off the Body or die at all but go to Heaven by that sudden change spoken of 1 Cor. 15.51 52. 1 Thes. 4.17 Indeed many of the expressions of the Context seem to look that way But I shall adjourn the debate till I come to open the Third and Fourth verses Doct. Those that sincerely believe and wait for a Blessed Immortality do also groan for it and earnestly desire it The reasons of this groaning are 1. Because of the pressures and miseries of the present Life Being burthened we groan verse 4 We are pressed under an heavy weight burthen'd both with sin and misery and both set us a groaning very sorely 1. With sin To a waking Conscience and a gracious Heart this is one of the greatest burthens that can be felt see that Rom. 7.24 Oh vvretched man that I am vvho shall deliver me from the body of this Death If any had cause to complain of his afflictions Paul much more He was Whipped Imprisoned Stoned in Perils by Land and by Sea but afflictions did not sit so close to him as sins The body of death was his greatest burthen and therefore did he long for deliverance A Beast will leave the place where he findeth neither food nor rest 'T is not the bare trouble of the world which sets the Saints a groaning but indwelling corruption which may be cast down but is not cast out This grieveth them they are sinning whil'st others are pleasing God serving him with weakness and manifold defects whil'st others are serving him without spot and blemish They see clearly what we see darkly and as in a glass and adhere to God perfectly whil'st we are distracted with sensual and worldly affections and many incident fears and cares They are enjoying and praising God while we are mourning under sin and such an heap of remaining infirmities Surely 't is weariness of sinning which maketh the Saints groan As light and love increaseth sin groweth a greater burthen to us they cannot get rid of this cursed Inmate and therefore are longing for a change A gracious heart seeth this is the greatest evil and therefore would fain get rid of it not only of the guilt and power but of the very being of it which will never be till this Tabernacle be dissolved Then sin shall gasp its last because death removeth from us this sinful flesh and admits into the sight of God And therefore the Saints are groaning and longing for the parting day when by putting off flesh they shall put off sin and come and dwell with God 2. They are also burthened with miseries and these are not the only causes yet they are a cause of the Saints groaning For they have not devested themselves of the feelings of nature nor grown senseless as Stocks and Stones The Apostle telleth us Rom. 8.20 21. That the whole Creation groaneth because 't is put under misery and vanity 'T is a groaning world and Gods Children bear a part in the Consort because they live here in a valley of
one may receive the things done in his Body according to that he hath done whether good or bad PAuls Motives to Faithfulness in his Ministry were three Hope Fear and Love Hope of a Blessed Immortality Fear or an holy reverence wrought in him by the Consideration of the last Judgement Love to Christ verse 14. We just now come to the Second Consideration it fitly falleth in with the close of the former branch as a reason why it must be our chiefest care to approve heart and life to God Not only the hope of the Resurrection breedeth this care to please God but also the Consideration of the general Judgment We are so cold careless and backward because we seldom think of these things but if we did oftner think of them it would make us more aweful and serious we would soon see that though we can approve ourselves to the World yet it will not profit us unless we approve our selves to God for all dependeth upon his doom and sentence For we must all appear c. In the words observe a description of the day of Judgment Wherein 1. The necessity of this Judgment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must Judged we must be willing or unwilling 2. The Vniversality of this Judgment Who must be Judged in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All. 3. The person by whom we shall be judged The text speaketh of the Judgment seat of Christ. He is our Rightful Lord to whom this Judgment belongeth And he hath his Judgment seat and Throne of Glory as 't is called Mat. 25.31 Then shall he sit upon the Throne of his Glory What that is because it is wholly to come and not elsewhere explained in Scripture we know not we must rest in the general expression The Cloud in which he cometh shall possibly be his throne or if you will have it farther Explained you may take that description of the Prophet Daniel Chap. 7.9 10. Of This see more in Sermon on Matth. 25. verse 31. 4thly The manner we must appear before the Judgment seat of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word signifieth two things 1. To stand forth and make our appearance Rom. 14.10 There 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we shall all stand before the Judgment seat of Christ. Or else 2dly To be made manifest And so rendred verse the 11th But we are made manifest before God and I trust are made manifest in your Consciences So here our hearts and ways shall be laid open as well as we Every action of our lives shall be taken into consideration Well then we must appear so as to be made manifest in our thoughts words and deeds we must not only appear in Person but be laid open have our whole life rip'd up and have all our thoughts words and works disclosed before Men and Angels 5. The matter about which we shall be Judged the things done in the Body That is during the bodily life The Body is the Shop of action wherein or whereby every thing is done Mechedius telleth us 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Yoakfellow or Colleague of the Soul Now whatever is done by it good or evil is the cause to be tryed 6. The end That every man may be punished or rewarded according to his deserts the end is that there may be sentence given and after sentence execution both as to reward and punishment 1. Mark the emphasis of the Phrase the things done in the Body we are said to receive them when we receive the fruits of them So Eph. 6.8 Whatsoever good thing a man doth the same shall he receive whether bond or free So here things done in the Body is the just reward of those things 2. Observe the several kinds of retribution Good or bad both the godly and the wicked receive a full recompense at that time 3. The proportion According to their several ways only the reward of good is of grace of evil of desert Rom. 6.23 The Wages of sin is death Doct. There will certainly come a day when every person that ever lived shall be judged by Christ according to his works I shall examine this point by the circumstances of the Text. 1. The necessity he might have said we shall appear No but he saith we must appear God hath so appointed Here I shall speak 1. Of the certainty of the thing There must be a Judgment 2. The infallible certainty of the event There shall be a Judgment 1. It must be so For God hath decreed it and Reason enforceth it But why is it necessary I answer not to discover any thing to God 1. But Partly That grace may be glorifyed in and by the righteous 1 Epistle of Pet. Chap. 1. v. 13. Hope unto the end for the grace which is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ. Then is the largest and fullest manifestation of Gods love to his people We see his grace now in the pardon of sins and that measure of Sanctification which now we attain unto that he is pleased to pass by our offences and take us into his family and give us a tast of his love and a right to his Heavenly kingdom and imploy us in his Service but then it will be another manner of grace and favour indeed when pardon and approbation shall be pronounced and ratifyed by the Judges own mouth Acts 3.19 When he shall not only take us into his family but into his Immediate presence and Palace John 12.26 Where I am there shall my servant be When he giveth us not only right but the possession Matth. 25.34 Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you When we shall not only have some remote Service and ministration but be everlastingly imployed in loving delighting in and praising of God with all those Heavenly creatures who are our eternal companions in the work The grace of God or his favour to his people is never seen in all its glorious graciousness till we be glorifyed 2. That the wicked may be convinced of their sin and defect they come upon a tryal and the fault of all their miscarriage is charged on themselves 'T is hard to determine which is the greater torment to them the righteousness or terribleness of the sentence God leaveth them without excuse Rom. 1.20 Psa. 50.21 I will set all thy sins in order before thee Sins forgotten lost in the crowd by a secure sinner in the day of Gods reckoning shall be brought to remembrance with time place and other circumstances and so presented to conscience as if newly done 3. That Gods Justice may be cleared Psa. 51.4 That thou mayest be clear when thou Judgest When he giveth to men according to their choice and according to the merit of their own works there lyeth no just exception against Gods proceeding The justice of God requireth that there should be differing proceeding with them that differ among themselves that it should be well with
called life and well deserveth it This life is but a continued death it runneth from us as fast as it floweth to us and 't is burdened with a thousand miseries but that life which is the portion of the faithful 't is a good and happy life and 't is endless it hath a beginning but it hath no end One moment of Immortality is worth a full age of all the health and happiness that can be had upon Earth what will you call life The vegetative life or the life of a plant Alas if that may be called life 't is not an happy life for the plants have no sense of that kind of life they have The sensitive life or the life of the Beasts will you call that life They are indeed capable of pain and pleasure but this is beneath the dignity of man and those that affect this kind of happiness to injoy sensual pleasure without remorse degrade themselves from that dignity of nature wherein God hath placed them and make themselves but a wiser sort of beasts as they are able only to purvey for the flesh more than the bruits can Wherein then will you place Life Surely in reason mans Life is a kind of light given us John 1.4 In him was Life and the Life was the light of men Reason and understanding was mans perfection Well then this is the Life which we must enquire after Now when is this Life of light in its full perfection While the Soul dwelleth in flesh and looketh out by the senses to things near at hand the proper contentments of the body are the poor paltry vanities of this deceitful World Now this is not the life which we were made for but when it seeth God and injoyeth God in the highest manner that we are capable of our true life lyeth in the vision of God 1 Cor. 13.12 And Matth. 5.8 For he is only that universal and infinite object which can satiate the heart of man and our proper and peculiar Blessedness Whom have I in Heaven but thee Psa. 73.25 This is our full and continued Happiness Alas the present life hath more gall than honey its injoyments are low and base and short and fading and its troubles and miseries are many Gen. 49.9 Few and evil are the days and years of my pilgrimage But in the other World there is nothing but Glory and Blessedness A glorified Soul in a glorified Body doth for ever behold God and delight its self in God 2. The other notion is punishment the Word signifieth not only punishment but torment So we render it 1 John 4.18 Because fear hath torment Annihilation were a favour to the wicked they have a being but 't is a being under punishment and torment Divines usually distinguish of poena damni and poena sensus the loss and the pain both are included Matth. 25.41 in Christs sentence Depart and go into everlasting fire God doth not take away the being of a sinner but he taketh away the comfort of his being he is banished out of his sight for evermore and deprived of his favour and all the joys and blessedness which are bestowed on the Godly and that is enough to make him miserable 'T is true a wicked man now careth not for the light of Gods countenance because looking to visible things he hath no sound Faith of those things which are invisible but now he cometh to understand the reality of what he hath lost and besides hath no natural comforts to divert his mind no Plays or Balls or Pleasures or Meat and Drink and company which now do draw off his heart from better things and solace him in the want of them Secondly the pain of sense that 's double the worm that never dyes and the fire that shall never be quenched Mark 9.44 The worm is the worm of Conscience reflecting upon his evil choice and past folly which hath brought him to this sad and doleful estate When he considereth for what base things he sold his birth-right Heb. 12.15 He parted with felicity and the Life to come this will be a continual torment and vexation to them And being under despair of ever coming out of this Condition his torment is the more increased If there were no more than this Conscience reflecting upon the sense of his loss with the cause and consequents of it surely this will fill him with anguish and the Body united to such a miserable self vexing and self-tormenting Soul can have no rest Secondly besides this there is the fire that shall never be quenched which is the wrath which bringeth on unspeakable torments on the Body For Wo Wrath Tribulation and Anguish is the Portion of every Soul that doth evil Rom. 2.9 10. What kind of punishments they are we know not but such as are grievous and come not only from the reflection of their own Consciences but the Power of God Rom. 9.22 God will shew his Wrath and make his Power known 4. Eternity is affixed to both Everlasting Punishment and Eternal Life 1. The joys of the Blessed are Everlasting There shall never be change of and intermission in their Happiness but after Millions and Millions of Imaginary years they are to continue in this Life as if it were the first moment Paul telleth you 1 Thes. 4.17 That we shall for ever be with the Lord. And what can we desire more in this Life if we had the confluence of all manner of comforts yet the fear of losing them is some infringement of our Happiness But there whatever Glory we partake of we shall never lose it it will be thy Crown for ever thy Kingdom for ever thy Glory for ever thy God and thy Christ for ever Oh why do we no more think of this This Life that scarce deserveth the name of a Life yet we would fain continue it though in pain and misery Skin for skin all that a man hath would he give for his Life Oh then how welcome should Eternal Life be which compared with this Life is like the Ocean to a drop When we lay both of these lives together this fading moment and that enduring Eternity how much more valuable doth the one appear than the other Our sorrows will soon end but these joys when they once begin will never end 2 Cor. 4.17 This light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and Eternal weight of Glory Cannot we suffer with him for one hour deny our selves a little contentment in the World Shall we begrudge the labours of a few duties when assoon as the vail and curtain of the flesh is drawn we shall enter into Eternal Life and Joy 2. The Punishment is Everlasting The wicked are everlastingly deprived of the favour of God and of the light of his Countenance When Absolom could not see his Fathers Face kill me saith he rather than let it be always thus 2 Sam. 4 32. The wicked are never more to be admitted into
to presume upon the indulgence of that day are such who make a fair profession injoy many outward priviledges As suppose the Jew above the Gentile the Christian above the Jew the Officer or one Imployed in the Church above the common Christian. The priviledge of the Jew was his circumcision the knowledge of the Law and outward obedience thereunto or submission to the rituals of Moses because they were exact in these things they hoped to be accepted with God and to be more favourably dealt with than others The priviledge of the Christian is baptism the knowledge of Christ being of his party and visibly owning his interest in the World they have eaten and drunk in his presence he hath taught in their streets and they have frequented the assembly where he is ordinarily present and more powerfully present Luke 13.26 'T is possible they have put themselves in a stricter garb of religion forborn disgraceful sins been much in external ways of duty given God all the cheap and plausible obedience which the flesh can spare But if all this be without solid godliness or that sound constitution of heart or course of life which the principles of our profession would breed and call for these priviledges will be no advantage to him Well then let the Officer come the Apostle Prophet Pastour or Teacher by what names or titles soever they be distinguished who have born rule in the Church been much in exercising their gifts for his glory have taught others the way of salvation this is their priviledge Mat. 7.22 Lord have we not prophesyed in thy name and in thy name cast out Devils and in thy name done many wondrous works Then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye workers of iniquity Well now if no mans person shall be accepted if not for his profession if not for his Office if not for his external ministrations surely we ought to be strict and diligent and seriously godly as well as others And if we shall all appear before this Holy Just and Impartial Judge we should all pass the time of our sojourning here in fear 2. T is a strict and a just Judgment Acts. 17.30 31. He commandeth now all men every where to repent Because he hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the world in righteousness Now God winketh at every mans faults and doth not take vengeance on them judgeth the World in patience but then all men must give an account those who have refused the remedy offered to lapsed mankind shall have Judgment without mercy And how terrible will that Judgment be when the least sin rendreth us obnoxious to the severity of his revenging justice But those who have heard the Gospel and accepted the redeemers mercy shall also be judged according to their works in the manner formerly explained there is a remunerative Justice observed to them we must give an account of all our actions thoughts speeches affections and intentions that it may be seen whether they will amount to sincerity or a sound belief of the truths of the Gospel and therefore we should be the more careful to walk uprightly before him Matth. 12.36 37. But I say unto you that for every idle word that men shall speak they shall give an account thereof in the Judgment for by thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words shalt thou be condemned Words must be accounted for especially false blasphemous words and such as flow out of the evil treasure of the heart and sadly accounted for For in conferring rewards and punishments God taketh notice of words as well as actions they make up a part of the evidence certainly in this just judgment we shall find that 't is a serious business to be a Christian. But those who have owned the redeemer must esteem him in their hearts above all wordly things and value his grace above the allurements of sense and count all things but dung and dross for the excellency of the knowledge of their Lord Phil. 3.7 8 9. And glorify him in their lives 1 Thes. 1.11 12. And pass through the Pikes To him that overcometh Rev. 2.26 And resist the Devil and subdue the flesh and vanquish the World There must be doing and there must be suffering there must be giving and forgiving giving out of our estates and forgiving wrongs and injuries visiting the sick and clothing the naked feeding the hungry there must be believing loving mortifying sin perfecting holiness And this is the tryal of those who come under the Gospel covenant which might be easily proved if the thing were not evident of its self Now judge you whether all this should not beget the fear of reverence or caution at least which fear of God should always reign in the hearts of the faithful 3. Gods final sentence is to be passed upon us upon which our eternal estate dependeth Therefore the great weight and consequence of that day maketh it matter of terrour to us We are to be happy for ever or undone for ever our estate will be then irrevocable Where a man cannot err twice there he cannot use too much solicitude According to our last account so shall the condition of every man be for ever What is a matter of greater moment than to be Judged to everlasting joy or everlasting torment Matters of profit or disprofit credit or discredit temporal life and death are nothing to it If a man lose in one bargain he may recover himself in another credit may bewounded by one action and healed in another though the scar remain the wound may be cured If a man die there is hope of life in another World but if sentenced to eternal death there is no reversing of it Therefore now we knowing the terrour of the Lord sue out our own pardon and perswade others to sue out their pardon in the name of Christ to make all sure for the present 4. The execution in case of failing in our duty is terrible beyond expression Because this is the main circumstance and is at the bottom of all I shall a little dilate upon it not to affright you with needless perplexities but in compassion to your souls God knoweth I shall take the rise thus The object of all fear is some evil approaching now the greater the evil is the nearer it approacheth the more certain and inevitable it is and the more it concerneth our selves the more cause of fear there is all these concur in the business in hand 1. The execution bringeth on the greatest evil The Evil of punishment and the greatest punishment the wrath of God the wrath of the eternal Judge who can and will cast body Soul into eternal fire This was due to all by the first covenant will be the portion of Impenitentsinners by the second Heb. 10.31 It s a fearful thing to f●ll into the hands of the living God Mark first obstinate and impenitent-sinners do Immediately fall
is Gods glory 't is not strength for our lusts strength for our worldly ends but for the Lords honour we must please Appetite no farther than the pleasing of it fits us for the service of God In many cases nextly we may aim at some other thing beneath God but ultimately and terminatively all must be directed to God as the Apostle here considered them their Spiritual profit as his next aim but lastly and finally the glory of God 2. The Reasons of the general point 1. The Interest God hath in us obligeth us to live to his glory Rom. 14.8 For whether we live we live unto the Lord or whether we die we die unto the Lord for whether we live or die we are the Lords The Apostles reasoning is built upon this supposition that those who are the Lords should live as for the Lord but the case is so with us we are his and therefore must live to him How are we the Lords 1. By Creation Prov. 16.4 God made all things for himself In the Creation of the World God could have no higher end than himself than his own glory for the end is more noble than the means Therefore when he made the World made Beasts made Man made Angels he did all for himself God is Independant and self sufficient of himself and for himself Self-seeking in the Creature is absurd and unbeseeming because we depend upon another for life and breath and all things Therefore to seek our own glory contentment and satisfaction apart from God 't is to arrogate a self-being to our selves apart from him we were made by God and were not made for our selves 2. By Preservation Rom. 11.36 For of him and through him and to him are all things As our being is from him so our moving and doing is through him through his providential influence and supportation therefore all must be for him and to him The motion of all Creatures is circular they end where they began as the Rivers return to the place from whence they came All that issueth from God in a way of Creation and is sustained and preserved by God in a way of Providence must be to him in the tendency and final end of their motions As we must deduce all things from God as their first cause and continual conserving cause so we must reduce all things to God as their last end 3. By Redemption That is pleaded 1 Cor. 6.19 20. Ye are not your own ye are bought with a Price Therefore glorify God with your Bodies and your Souls which are Gods You are twice bound as Creatures and as redeemed and a double obligation will infer a double Condemnation if we answer it not The bought belonged to the Buyer so we to Christ. 4. By Dedication We are dedicated and set apart for the Lords use Rom. 6.13 Yield your selves to God as those that are alive from the dead and your Members as instruments of Righteousness unto God So Rom. 12.1 I beseech you therefore Brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your Bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable to God which is your reasonable service Now to live to our selves and speak for our selves is practically to retract our own vows and the dedication which we have made of our selves to his use and service 2. We are above all Creatures fitted for his glory As Men and as new Creatures 1. As Men Man above all other Creatures should glorify God Partly because by the design of his Creation he is placed nearer God as the end than other Creatures are Man is both proximè ultimè nextly and lastly for God and so return immediately to the Fountain of our Being There is nothing intervening between God and us towards which our use and service should be directed Other Creatures though they were made ultimately and terminatively for God yet immediately for Man lastly for God nextly for us So that man standeth in the middle between God and all other Creatures to receive the benefit of them that God may have the glory Oh then how much is man as man obliged to glorify God for whom this inferiour world was made All things are subjected to our Dominion or created for our use not only Fowls and Fishes and Beasts of the field to be injoyed by him but Sun Moon Stars Rain Weather and all the Seasons of the Year Psal. 8.3 4 5 6. When I consider thy Heavens the work of thy Fingers the Moon and Stars which thou hast ordained What is man that thou art mindful of him and the Son of man that thou visitest him Thou hast made him little lower than the Angels thou crownest him with glory and honour thou hast made him to have dominion over the work of thine hands thou hast put all things under his feet When we look up and behold those glorious Creatures the out-work and visible parts of Heaven which display their radiant Beauties to our wonder and astonishment and withal consider how much they serve for our comfort and use and with them the soveraign power wherewith thou didst invest man over all sublunary and inferiour Creatures Beasts Fowls Fishes Plants we cannot sufficiently admire that this vile clod of Earth Man should be so much in the eye of God to take care of him above the whole Creation The Sun doth not shine nor winds blow nor rain fall at our pleasure but 't is for our use Heaven is for us the airy Heaven to give us breath and motion the starry Heaven to give us heat light and influence The third Heaven or the Heaven of Heavens to be our dwelling place So that man is strangely stupid and oblivious if he should forget the God by whose bounty he injoys all these things And partly because man is more fitted as being furnished with higher capacities he teacheth us more than the Beasts of the Field We have faculties suited to this purpose we have an understanding that we may know him Surely such an understanding nature such an immortal Soul was never made for corruptible things God was pleased to stamp man with the Character of his own Image he beareth his superscription Now give unto Caesar the things that are Caesars and unto God the things that are Gods We may find out his tract and foot-print in the Creatures but man had his Image Other Creatures glorify God necessarily we voluntarily and by choice they know not the first cause but are over-ruled by the Government of Providence but we have or should have an understanding to know him and an heart to love him Therefore the duty properly belongeth to us Other creatures glorify God passively we actively they are the Harp man makes the Musick Psal. 145 18. All thy works praise thee thy Saints bless thee Man is the mouth of the Creatures the Creatures by us glorify God 2. As new Creatures The people of God are most bound of all men to seek the glory of God you are created again in
to give thee heat and influence and cherishing 'T is out of his store-house that provisions are sent to thy Table He furnisheth thy dishes with meat and filleth thy cup for thee He did not only clothe man at first Gen. 3.21 Vnto Adam and his Wife did the Lord God make coats of skins and clothed them When he turned unthankful man out of paradise he would not send them away without a Garment As he performed that office then so still he causeth the silk-worm to spin for thee and the sheep to send thee their fleeces only there is a wretched disposition in man we do not take notice of that invisible hand which reacheth out our comforts to us Acts of kindness in our fellow Creatures affect us more than all those benefits we receive from God What should be the reason Water is not sweeter in the dish than in the fountain man needeth himself never giveth so freely and purely as God doth but out of some self respect No kindness deserveth to be noted but the Lords who is so high and Glorious so much above us that he should take notice of us nothing but our unthankfulness is the cause of this disrespect and forgetting the goodness of his daily providence and our looking to the next hand and to the Ministry of the Creature and not to the supream cause 3. Case of Conscience about love is about the intenseness and degree of it The Soul will say God is to be loved above all things and to have the preferment in our affections choice and endeavours For he is to be loved with all the Heart and all the Soul Deut. 6.5 And earthly things are to be loved as if we loved them not Now to find my heart to be more stirred towards the Creatures than to God and seem to grieve more for a worldly loss then for an offence done to God by sin To be carryed out with greater violence and sensible commotion of Spirit to carnal objects than to Jesus Christ I cannot find these vigorous motions or this constraining efficacy of love over-ruling my heart Answer 1. Comparison is the best way to discover love comparing affection with affection our affections to Christ with our affections to other matters for we cannot Judge of any affection aright by its single exercise what it doth alone as to one object but by observing the difference and disproportion of our respects to several objects The Scripture doth often put us upon this kind of tryal 2 Tim. 3.4 Lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God Singly and apart a man cannot be so well tryed either by his love to God or his love to pleasure there being in all some kind of love to God and a lawful allowance of Creature delights provided they do not most take us But when the strength of a mans Spirit is carryed out to present delights and God is neglected or little thought of the case is clear that the interest of the flesh prevaileth in his heart above the interests of God So Luke 12.21 So is he that layeth up treasure for himself and is not rich towards God Mindeth the one and neglecteth the other namely to inrich his Soul with Spiritual and Heavenly treasure That followeth after Spiritual things in a formal and careless manner earthly things with the greatest earnestness The objection proceedeth then upon a right supposition that a respect to the World accompanyed with a neglect of Christ sheweth that the love of Christ is not in us or doth not bear rule in us 2. That God in Christ Jesus is to have the highest measure of our affections and such a transcendent superlative degree as is not given to other things Luke 14.26 If any man come to me and hate not his Father and Mother and Wife and Children and Brethren and Sisters and his own life also he cannot be my disciple He that loveth any contentment above Christ or equal with him will soon hate Christ. So Matth. 10.37 He that loveth Father or Mother Son or Daughter more than me is not worthy of me And the sincere are described Phil. 3.7 8 9 10 The nearest and dearest relations and choicest contentments all trampled upon all is dung and dross in comparison of the excellency of the knowledge of our Lord. 3. Love is not to be measured so much by the lively act or the sensitive stirring of the affection as the solid esteem and the setled Constitution A thing may be loved intensively as to the sensitive discovery of the affection or appretiated by our deliberate choice and constant care to please God Partly because the vigorous motion is hasty and indeliberate is the fruit of fancy rather than faith Some by constitution have a more moveable temper and are like the Sea easily stirred the reading the story of Christs passions will draw tears from us though we regard not Gods design in it nor how far our sins were accessory to these passions and sufferings This qualm is stirred in us by fancy rather than faith the story of Joseph in the Pit will work the like effect as of Jesus on the cross yea the fable of Dido and Aeneas In all passions the setled constitution of the heart sheweth the man more than the sudden stirrings of any of them Men laugh most when they are not always best pleased We laugh at a toy but we joy in some solid benefit True joy is a secure thing and is seen in the judgment and estimation choice and complacency rather than in the lively act So love is not to be measured by these earnest motions but by the deliberate purpose of the heart to please God And partly because the act may be more lively where the affection is less firm and rooted in the heart The passions of suitors are greater than the love of husbands yet not so deeply rooted and do not so intimately affect the heart Straw is soon enkindled but fire is furnished with fit materials and burneth better and with an even and more constant heat These raptures and transports of Soul fanatical men fell them oftner than serious Christians who yet for all the World would not offend God And partly because sensible things do more affect us and urge us in the present state while we carry a mass of flesh about with us our affections will be more sensibly stirred by things which agree with our fleshly nature our senses which transmit all knowledge to us will be affected with sensible things rather than Spiritual I confess 't is Good to keep up a tenderness and we should be affected with Gods dishonour more than if we had suffered loss Psa. 119.136 Rivers of tears run down mine eyes because men keep not thy Law But in some tempers grief cannot always keep the rode and vent it self by the eye Certainly the constant disposition of the Soul is a surer note to Judge by sensible stirrings of affection are more liable to suspicion and not so certain
signs of grace as the acts of the understanding and will there is a possibility of a greater decay in them you cannot weep for sin but you would give all that you have to be rid of sin A man may groan more sorely under the pains of the tooth-ach which is not mortal than under the languishings of a Consumption 4. The effects of solid esteem are these 1. When Christ is counted more precious than all the World no affections to the Creature can draw us to offend him 1 Pet. 2.7 But all our love to them is still in subordination to an higher love Love was principally made for God and 't is many ways due to him Those excesses and heights which are in the affections will become no other object The Genius or Nature of it sheweth for whom 't was made However as God hath placed some love and holiness in the Creature so some allowance of affection there is to them Worldly comforts are valuable as they come from God and lead to him as effects of his bounty and instruments of his Glory and service All the value we put upon them should be this that we have something of value to esteem as nothing for Christ And when God tryeth us when Christ and Worldly matters come in competition then to be found faithful and despise the riches pleasures and honours of the World This is a sensible occasion to shew the sincerity of our love which do you choose the favour of God or earthly friends The light of his countenance or the prosperity of the World 2. When you can for Gods sake incur the frowns and displeasure of the Creature Luke 14.26 If any man come to me and hate not his Father and Mother and Wife and Children and Brethren and Sisters yea and his own Life also he cannot be my disciple 3. When a man maketh it his main care rather to please God than to gratifie the flesh and promote his carnal interests Your great business is to walk worthy of God to all pleasing Col. 1.10 You labour to get Christ above all and to live in his love All cares and businesses give way to this and are guided and directed by this His favour is the life of thy love and his love is thy greatest happiness And thou darest not put it to hazard nor obscure the sense of it by any indulgence to carnal satisfactions And thy greatest misery is his displeasure and thereupon sin which is the cause of it is most hateful to thee This is our constant tryal and certainly sheweth how the pulse of the Soul beateth SERMON XXV 2 Cor. 5.14 For the Love of Christ constraineth us because we thus Iudge that if one dyed for all then were all dead THe fourth case of Conscience is about the decay of love The heart is not so deeply affected as it was wont to be with the love of God in Christ nor is there such a strong bent of heart towards him nor delight in him and we grow more remiss in our work feeble in the resistance of sin some that thus decay in love are not sensible of it others from the decay infer a nullity of love Therefore because this is a disease incident to the new Creature something must be said to this case both to warn men and to direct them in the judging of it In answering this doubt take these Propositions 1. Leaving our first love is a disease not only incident to Hypocrites but Gods own Children To Hypocrites Matth. 24.12 The love of many shall wax cold To Gods own Children Revel 2.4 Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee because thou hast left thy first love They were commended for their labour in the Lords work zeal against Hypocrites patience in adversity yet I have some what against thee what 's that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only here is this difference though the disease be common to both yet with some difference as to the event and issue Hypocrites may make a total defection and there may be in them an utter extinction of love In others there is not a total failing but only some degrees of their love abated The love of Hypocrites may utterly miscarry and vanish many seem to be carryed on with great fervour and affection in the ways of God for a while yet afterwards fall quite away Partly because it was a love built upon forreign motives as the favour of the times the air of education the advantage of good company Christ might be the object but the World the ground and reason of all this love Jesus is not loved for Jesus sake He must be both object and reason otherwise when the reasons of our love alter the object will not hold us When times grow bad we grow bad with them 't is no wonder to see hirelings prove changelings and many that loved a Christ triumphing to forsake and hate a Christ crucified When the grounds alter their affections are removed Their affections to Christs Cause and Servants will cease also As Artificial motions cease when the poise is down by which they are moved flying Meteors when the matter that feedeth them is spent will vanish and disappear or fall from Heaven like lightning when the Stars those constant fires of Heaven shine forth with a durable light and brightness What is in one Evangelist take from him that which he hath is take from him that which he se●meth to have in another Luke 8.18 Partly because if Jesus were loved for Jesus sake yet not with such a prevalent radicated love as could subdue contrary affections There is a love of God and a delight in his ways which is cherished in us upon right motives and reasons Such as the offer of pardon and Eternal Life by Christ but this did but lightly affect the heart not change it A tast of the good word Heb. 6 4 5 6. At first men find a marvellous sweetness in the way of godliness hugely pleased with the possibility of pardon and Happiness But these sentiments of Religion are afterwards choaked by the cares of this World and voluptuous living and all that delight and savour which they had is lost and comes to nothing when Temptations rise up in any considerable strength Therefore we are warned to keep up the confidence and rejoycing of hope Heb. 3.6 14. That well-pleasedness of mind that liking that comfortable savour which we had in the serious attending upon the business of Religion 2. Gods own Children may find their love cold and languishing and that they go backward some degrees and suffer loss in the heat and vigour of grace but though grace do decay 't is not utterly abolished The Church of Ephesus left her first love but not utterly lost it The seed of God remaineth in them 1 John 3.9 There is some vital grace communicated in regeneration which cannot be lost This is more radicated than the former 't is a deeper sense of Gods love and doth more affect the
of the sufferings His Blood was the Blood of God Acts 20.28 3. Another circumstance accompanying the pains of the Second Death and unavoidably attending it in reprobates is desperation and a fearful looking for of the fiery indignation of God Heb. 10.7 But this is accidental to the punishment its self and only occasioned by the sinners view of their woful and irremediless Condition but this neither did nor could possibly befall the Lord Jesus for he was able by his Divine Power both to suffer and satisfie to undergo and overcome this dreadful brunt of the Wrath of God and therefore expected a good issue in his conflict Psa. 16.9 10. My flesh shall rest in hope for thou wilt not leave my Soul in Hell nor suffer thy holy one to see corruption 'T is applyed to Christ Acts 2. A shallow stream may easily drown a Child whereas a grown man may hope to escape out of a far deeper place yea a skillful swimmer out of the ocean Christ passed through that Sea of Wrath which would have drowned all the World yea came safe to shoar Well then it sheweth the reality and truth of his Satisfaction 2. It sheweth the fulness and sufficiency of his Satisfaction And that Christ undertook no more than he was able to perform For though but one yet he is accepted for all As one Sacrifice offered by the high Priest was enough for all the congregation The burnt offering for private men and for the whole congregation was the same a young bullock without blemish All had but one Sacrifice only for private men the Burnt-offering was offered by common Priests and for the congregation by the high Priest Or as the same sun serveth for every one and also for all the World So the same Christ the Sun of Righteousness serveth for all Or as one Adam was enough to ruine all So one Christ was enough to save all Yea much more as in Christ the Divine Power is more effectual The Scripture often insisteth upon the oneness of the Person and the oneness of the Sacrifice as in that oracle which drop't from the mouth of Caiphas it is expedient for one to dye for all the people John 11.51 52. Which is interpreted of the Redemption of the Elect He prophesyed that Jesus should die for that Nation and not for that Nation only but that he should gather together in one the Children of God which were scattered abroad This one Christ is accepted for all For 't is more than if all the World had dyed God was more pleased with this Sacrifice than he was displeased with Adams sin or the sins of all the World 1 Tim. 2.6 There is one Mediator between God and man the man Christ Jesus As one Mediator so one sacrifice Heb 10.10 We are sanctifyed through the offering of the Body of Jesus Christ once for all And verse 14. For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified And Heb. 9.26 He once in the end of the World appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself And 28 verse So Christ was once offered to 〈◊〉 the sins of many The Scripture doth so emphatically insist upon this circumstance to shew that there needeth no more to be done to satisfy Gods Justice That is sufficiently done already which is a great comfort to us For you are not left under the care of making Satisfaction for your own sins But only of accepting the Redeemer who hath satisfied and if you perish it will be for want of Faith in you not for want of Satisfaction in Christ The business is even brought to your doors and left upon your hands whether you will accept of the grace offered 2. How the great Love of God appeareth in this 1. In that he would not prosecute his right against us who were faln in Law and unable to recover our selves Noxa sequitur caput The Soul that sinneth shall die Exod. 32.33 He might have refused any Mediation and all our necks might have gone for it 'T was great love that God would think of a Surety he might have exacted the whole debt of us thou hast sinned and thou shalt pay 'T is some relaxing of the rigour of the Law that he would take person for person Moses was rejected when he interposed as a Mediator but so was not Christ. 2. That he would take one for all Justice would not let go the sinner without a ransom but 't is the wonderful grace of God that he would take Satisfaction from one man in the name of all those for whom he offered to satisfy That God would accept of Christ Heb. 2.9 'T is said that by the grace of God he should tast death for every one That which moved God to transfer the punishment of our sins upon Christ was his meer grace and the special favour of God 3. This one so dear to him his own Son the Son of his love his only begotten Son he is the person that must be our surety John 3.16 God so loved the World that he sent his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Everlasting Life And Rom. 8.32 He spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all Oh the unspeakable love of God! We are fond Eli would not let fall one rough word to his Children God had but one Son and he was made a Sacrifice for sin 4. This one so worthy in himself Person for person is the hardest bargain In some Wars Captives are redeemed with money But we are not redeemed with Silver and Gold but with the precious blood of the Son of God 1 Pet. 1.18 19. If there be man for man proportion is observed and men of like quality are exchanged You never heard of such a demand that a king should be given to ransom a Servant We were slaves and Christ was the Heir of all things The prince was given for Slaves The just for the unjust The Lord God Almighty who filleth Heaven and Earth with his Glory was given for poor worms The King of all the Earth came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his Life a ransom for many Matth. 20.28 5. And he given unto death One dyed for all if Christ had come on earth to take a view of our misery it had been another matter Captive Princes have kingly entertainment but he came to be fold for the price of a slave thirty pieces Exod. 21.31 The ransomer is not bound to suffer and be ruined if the Party be so But our redeemer must dye 1 Pet. 3.18 But Christ hath suffered for sin the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God Till death there was no full Satisfaction if ever any had cause to love his life Christ had his Soul dwelt with God in a Personal Union 'T is no great matter to quench and put out such glimering Candles as we are We are often a burden to our
sin was God reconciling In themselves Gods Elect differ nothing from the rest of the World till grace prevent them they were as bad as any in the World of the same race of cursed mankind not only living in the World but after the fashions of the World dead in trespasses and sins and obnoxious to the curse and Wrath of God Fourthly To shew the Amplitude of Gods Grace the greater and worser part of the World the Gentiles as well as the Jews Rom. 11.15 If the casting away of them be the reconciling the World So 1 John 2.2 And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole World Fifthly To awaken all that are concerned to look after this priviledge which is common to all nations the offer is made indifferently to all sorts of persons where the Gospel cometh and this grace is effectually applyed to all the Elect of all Nations and all sorts and conditions and ranks of persons in the World if thou art a member of the World thou shouldest not receive this grace in vain 2. The other party concerned is the Great God to himself To be reconciled to one another when we have smarted sufficiently under the fruits of our differences will be found an especial blessing much more to be reconciled to God this is the comfort here propounded To himself of whom we stand so much in dread 1 Sam. 2.15 If one man sin against another the Judge shall judge him but if a man sin against God who shall plead for him A fit Umpire and Mediator may be found out in matters of difference and plea between man and man but who shall arbitrate and take up the difference between us and God Here first the greatness of the priviledge That God will reconcile us to himself Doct. There is a reconciliation made in and by Iesus Christ between God and man First I shall premise three things in general 1. That to reconcile is to bring into favour and friendship after some breach made and offence taken as Luke 23.12 The same day Herod and Pilate were made friends for before they were at enmity between themselves So Joseph and his Brethren were made friends and the woman faulty is said to be reconciled to her husband 1 Cor. 7.11 So Matth. 5.23 24. If thou bringest thy gift to the Altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee go thy may and be reconciled to thy Brother All which places prove the natural notion of the word and so 't is fitly used for our recovery and returning into grace and favour with God after a breach 2. That the reconciliation is mutual God is reconciled to us and we to God Many will not hear that God is reconciled to us but only that we are reconciled to God But certainly there must be both God was angry with us and we hated God the Alienation was mutual and therefore the reconciliation must be so the Scripture speaketh not only of an enmity and hatred on mans part Rom. 5.10 For when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son but also of wrath on Gods part not only against sin but the sinner Eph. 2.3 Being Children of wrath by nature Certainly God doth not only hate sin but is angry with the wicked because of it Psal. 7.11 God is angry with the wicked every day And we must distinguish between the work of Christ in order to God and the work of the Minister and Christ by the ministry in order to men The work of Christ in order to God which is to appease the Wrath of God Therefore 't is said Heb. 2.17 That he is a merciful and faithful High-priest to make reconciliation for the sins of the people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Surely there Gods being reconciled to us is intended by Christs Sacrifice and Intercession For Christ as an High-priest hath to deal with us as Gods Apostle with men Heb. 3.1 We in Christs stead pray you to be reconciled verse 20th Besides our reconciliation is made the fruit of Christs death in contradistinction to his life Rom. 5.10 The death of Christ mainly respected the appeasing of the Wrath of God whereas if it only implyed the changing of our natures it might as well be ascribed to his life in Heaven as his death upon earth Again the Scripture maketh this reconciliation to be a great instance of Gods love to us Now if it did only consist in laying aside our enmity to God it would rather be an instance of our love to God than his love to us Once more the Text is plain that Gods reconciling the World to himself did consist in not imputing our trespasses to us his laying aside his suit and just plea he had against us so that it relateth to him Therefore upon the whole we may pronounce that God is reconciled to us as well as we to God Indeed the Scriptures do more generally insist upon our being reconciled to God than Gods being reconciled to us for two reasons 1. Because we are in a fault 'T is the usual way of speaking amongst men He that offendeth is said to be reconciled because he was the cause of the breach and he needeth to reconcile himself and to appease him whom he hath offended which the innocent party needeth not he needeth only to forgive and to lay aside his just anger We offended God not he us therefore the Scripture usually saith we are reconciled to God 2dly We have the benefit 't is no profit to God that the Creature enters into his peace He is happy within himself without our love or service only we are undone if we are not upon good terms with him If any believe not the Wrath of God abideth upon him John 3.36 And that is enough to make us eternally miserable 3. That reconciliation in Scripture is sometimes ascribed to God the Father sometimes to Christ as Mediator sometimes to Believers themselves 1. To God the Father as in the Text God was in Christ reconciling the World to himself and in the verse before the Text who hath reconciled us to himself And Col. 1.20 Having made peace by the Blood of his Cross by him to reconcile all things to himself To God the Father as the primary cause of our reconciliation he found out and appointed the means as he decreed from everlasting to restore the Elect faln into sin unto grace and favour and prepared whatever was necessary to compose and take up the difference between him and sinners 2. Christ is said to reconcile Eph. 2.16 That he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the Cross. And Col. 1.21 Yet now hath he reconciled Not as the primary but meritorious cause of reconciliation which respects both God and us chiefly God as he was appeased by the merit of his Sacrifice as he procured the Spirit that same Spirit whereby our enmity might be overcome and
Wo unto us if now after God hath been at such a great deal of cost we should slight the motion Angels wonder at what you slight 1 Pet. 1.12 Shall the Blood of Christ run a wasting Mind the business I pray you God hath laid out all his wisdom upon it and will not you take it into your thoughts Gods Heart was much set upon it or else he would never have given his Son to bring it about 'T is the folly of man to part with things of worth for trifles As Esau sold his Birth-Right for a mess of Pottage Lysimachus his Kingdom for a Draught of Water Surely we cannot imagine this of the wise God when he hath been at such expense 't is not for a matter of nothing Therefore we should the more regard it 3dly In that he hath appointed a Ministry of Reconciliation and authorized some as solemn Messengers to tender this grace to us in his name Therefore we as Embassadors for Christ we pray you in Christ's stead be ye reconciled to God God might have contented himself with putting his thoughts into Scripture and given us the word and doctrine of Reconciliation only and truly that 's a great mercy Heathens are left to the puzzle and distraction of their own thoughts and know not how God shall be appeased But because that Blessed Book may possibly lye by as a neglected thing he will have some that shall put us in mind daily of his design of saving the World by Christ. If he would send Messengers he might have sent Heraulds to proclaim War but he hath sent Embassadors of peace Surely upon this account we should be welcome to you Isa. 52.7 How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings that publisheth peace that bringeth good tidings of good that publisheth Salvation that saith unto Zion Thy God Reigneth How dirty soever their feet be with the Journey Our Message is not to require satisfaction for the wrongs done to the Crown of Heaven or to denounce War but a matter of peace Not only to beg a correspondency of Traffick but a treaty about Marriage and so to enter into the strictest-amity with God Even that you may be married unto Christ to bring forth fruit unto God Rom. 7.4 Yet farther 4thly These messengers are under a charge to manage Gods message with all wisdom and faithfulness and diligence Mark 16.15 16. To preach the Gospel to every creature to Rich and Poor Learned and Unlearned And woe be to them if they be not diligent warning every Man and teaching every Man that they may present every Man perfect in Christ Jesus Col. 1.28 Christ hath conjured them by all their love to his person to do it Joh. 21.15 16 Feed my sheep Feed my Lambs If we have any respect to our Lord we must be diligent in offering peace to all that are willing to repent and believe This work is seriously commended to us yet profess to be my Servants and therefore by all the love you have to me I conjure you I shall not take it that you love me if you have not a care of my sheep and my Lambs You know the temptations prejudices and hatred of those you have to do with Therefore pray them to be reconciled And 5thly Consider the terms which God requireth Which are only that we should render our selves capable of his favour by entring into covenant with him On Gods part all things are ready Now we pray you to be reconciled That is do you enter into covenant with him God in the covenant is our Friend Abraham is called the Friend of God James 2.23 2. Chro 20.7 Thou gavest it to the seed of Abraham thy Friend for ever Isa. 41.8 The seed of Abraham my Friend Abraham was Gods Confederate and they loved intirely as one Friend doth another In the covenant you take God for your God and God taketh you for his people you enter into a League Offensive and Defensive to hate what God hateth and to love what God loveth God promiseth and ingageth to bless and you to obey 3dly The value of this priviledge 't is worth the having What do we plead with you about but the favour of God and reconciliation with him by Christ God found out the way Christ purchased it The Angels first published it Luk. 2.14 I here are many priviledges depend upon it As 1. Sanctifying Grace God being propitiated in Christ giveth us the first grace and causeth us to repent and believe in Christ. For on the behalf of Christ 't is given us to believe Phil. 1.29 And the regenerating Spirit is Shed upon us by Christ. Now when we repent and believe we are made capable of more of the sanctifying Spirit Acts. 2.38 The holy Ghost is given to them that obey Acts 3.32 And we are witnesses of these things and so is also the Holy-Ghost whom God hath given to them that obey him And a farther measure of grace upon our actual reconciliation Gal. 4.6 And because ye are Sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father 2dly The pardon of sins When we are Regenerated our sins are actually pardoned Acts 26.18 To open their eyes and to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God that they may receive forgiveness of sins and Inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in me Heb. 8.10 11 12. We are released from the eternal punishment and God quits his controversy against us 3dly Communion with God Favour Image and Fellowship go still together They were lost together Before we could not look God in the face or lift up the Head to him or think of him without Trembling There is a God but he is my enemy Every Prayer revived our guilt But now we have access with boldness and confidence of welcom and audience when ever we have occasion to make use of God Heb. 4.16 When David heard that Saul was pacified towards him he was in his presence as in times past 1 Sam. 19.7 The flaming Sword which kept the way to the Tree of life is removed In our falls in our distresses in our dangers in our wants in death its self we have a God to go to to move for relief to whom to commit our Souls 4thly We have solid Consolation Rest and Peace in our selves For the chief cause of our fear and sorrow is done away Our sin is pardoned and subdued and the eternal punishment released 'Till this be you can never have any rest for your Souls 'till you are at peace with God and submit to the course prescribed by him for your reconciliation Matth. 11.28 29. One great fault of man is that he doth not take a right course to quiet his Soul God complaineth of his people by the Prophet That they had forgotten their resting place Jer. 50.6 That is they had forgotten God their only trust Men seek peace
against it Methinks it looks like going to the Day of Judgment Here we receive the Pledges of our Salvation or Damnation 3. We should come with Oyl in our Vessels as well as in our Lamps 1. Our Lamps should be kept burning bright If you are sluggish now 't is a sign you are slight in the whole Surely now the King sitteth at his Table Cant. 1.2 our Spicknard should send forth the smell thereof a lively exercise of Grace Now we come for meat which perisheth not now is our familiar converse with Christ and near Communion with him now we come to our Legal Investiture Christ and all his benefits are delivered by these signs which he hath instituted As if a man should say Here is my House when a Deed is delivered and you give up the Key or give possession of Land by a Turf This is our solemn taking possession of him and all his benefits We receive Christ in the Promises of the Covenant but here is a particular close Application In the Word Christ is offered and exposed to all as the Brazen Serpent that whoever looked upon him might be healed But this Supper is like the Blood sprinkled upon the Door-posts In the Word Christ and Immortality are brought to light now Christ is slain before our eyes The Bread is put into our hands and mouths 2. We should come with Oyl in our Vessels Would we have the Spirit blow upon a dead Cole He findeth nothing in us to work upon We are bidden to examine and what must we examine 1 Cor. 11.28 The Apostle will tell you Whether you be in the faith or no 2 Cor. 13.5 But to speak to this case I confess that in Foro Ecclesiae in the Court of the Church all are Virgins that take their Lamps that do profess to believe all these must be admitted But in Foro Coeli in the Court of Heaven none but Converted ones are admitted But in Foro Conscientiae in the Court of Conscience I dare not discourage those that have the grace of the second or third ground 'T is a means to strengthen them in Faith Hope and Love and make them more firm in the Covenant of God And the difference is too nice between temporary Grace and saving Grace for any to exclude themselves I am bound to come with Grace but I am not bound to come with Assurance Besides in the Kingdom of Grace Christ will not shut them out They that have good affections should come but with this caution I would press them to mind the renouncing and engaging part of the Covenant and earnestly to break the League between themselves and their own wayes and engage themselves more firmly to God for time to come that you may not think as you have done or speak as you have done nor behave your selves in your Relations as you have done but throw sin out of doors I would press you in the Apostles words Heb. 10 22. Let us draw near with a true heart having our Hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience and our Bodies washed with clean water The one relateth to the Duty-part Let us draw nigh with a true heart the other relateth to the Promissory part Though your Grace be common Grace 't is this way moulded into special 2 Doct. That this will be found to be true Wisdom and the other Folly For Wisdom to begin with that Wisdom is Index sui obliqui Wisdom lyeth 1. In proposing a right End 2. In the Choice of fit Means And 3. In an earnest Prosecution of the End by these Means This is the property of Wisdom in the General and it holdeth true in Godly Wisdom The wise Virgins did so Their End was right to be admitted in to the Nuptial Feast or everlasting enjoyment of God And then they use right Means such as will bring them to the end We do not use to draw Ships in the Sea with Horses nor draw Wagons with the Wind. We must not use contrary means nor insufficient means We cannot go to to the bottom of a Well that is thirty foot deep with a line that is but ten foot We must use such as will certainly do The Wisdom of God hath fixed Means for us and we are doubly Fools if we will not use them opportunely carefully and constantly Else 't is a Prize put into a fools hand Prov. 16.17 The Wise Virgins did all this sought Oyl in time both for their Lamps and Vessels Luk. 13.24 On the contrary he that contents himself with a profession of Christ without a work of Grace upon his Heart is a Fool he is not a Profane Fool that doth the contrary but a Professing Fool that sort of Profession is better than Prophaneness so far 't is a degree of Wisdom but rested in 't is Folly it faileth in all the points of Wisdom in the end they do not esteem the Lord as the chief good for they think a little ease of the Flesh or a little sensual Liberty or a satisfaction of a Lust to be better or Honour or Pleasure or Gain this quiets them in the neglect or want of God they see some good in Christ offer fair for him but take him not as the chiefest good they are willing to part with something but not with all for his sake SERMON IV. MATTH XXV v. 5. While the Bridegroom tarryed they all Slumbred and Slept WE have seen wherein they differed now we shall see again wherein they agree In the words observe 1. What happened to the Virgins They all slumbred and slept 2. The Occasion of it I do not say the Cause While the Bridegroom tarryed The Cause of sleeping was Infirmitas humana the Occasion of it Mora Sponsi In the first of these 1. Who They all 2. What slumbred and slept First Who They all 'T is no wonder to hear it of the foolish Virgins but that the wise should do it there is the difficulty Therefore some of the Ancients understand it of Death which is called sleep in Scripture but that is improbable and suiteth not with the frame and drift of this Parable Some would understand it distributively not conjunctively that the wise slumbred and the foolish slept but 't is not said slumbred or slept but slumbred and slept The meaning is all of them were not so diligent in their Duty as they should have been even the good are in part negligent as well as the foolish though they alwayes keep a good Conscience and an heart in some measure alwayes prepared to meet Christ. Secondly What Slumbred and slept Wherein the degree of their security is set forth they did not only slumber which is a less failing but Slept Thirdly The Order First slumbred and then slept Doctrine That the Foolish and Wise both Slumber and Sleep I shall First enquire What this Slumbering and sleeping is Secondly How far it may befall the Children of God or the Wise Virgins Thirdly The Causes and Reasons of it First What
this Slumbring and Sleeping is 'T is twofold that of the Body and that of the Mind That of the Body when the Senses cease for a time to do their Office That of the Mind is a secure State of Soul and that is twofold Moral and Spiritual 1. Moral When Reason and natural Knowledge is as it were asleep and useless to us a man doth not act as a reasonable Creature Psal. 94.8 Oh ye bruitish among the People when will ye be wise and Psa. 22.27 All the ends of the Earth shall remember and turn to the Lord Psa. 119.59 I thought on my wayes and turned my feet unto thy Testimonies If men did improve common principles shew themselves men they could not continue in that course of Life wherein they allow themselves In part this Sleep of Reason may befall the Children of God they do not consider nor turn their minds to their Affairs nor act as men whose Eyes are open 2. Spiritual Sleeping Here I shall shew the Nature and Effects of it First The Nature of it when Graces are not lively and kept in exercise I shall instance in those three Theological Graces Faith Hope and Love a weak dead Faith a feeble Sleepy Love a cold and careless Hope 1. A weak and dead Faith that consists more in a Form of Knowledge than a lively assent to the Truths of Godliness A dead oppinionative belief may stand with a carnal Life Jam. 2.20 Faith without works is dead The Word of God is come to them in Word only not in power it puts no Life into what we do believe 1 Thes. 2.13 Doth not work effectually This will fit the slumbring and Sleeping of the foolish Virgins but alas the Wise have their drowsie fits the Truths of the Word concerning God Christ Heaven and Hell have not such a lively influence upon them by the blandishments of worldly Prosperity Faith is fallen asleep ready to give place to the Flesh and they are governed more by Fancy and Appetite than by the Heavenly mind there is no consideration of the Vanity of earthly things the Heart is kept strange to God and Heaven and the Soul is taken up with carnal projects more than it should be 2. A feeble sleepy Love which doth not level and direct our actions to the great end of them which is the pleasing and glorifying of God so that they live too much to themselves Love in vigour doth over-rule us to live unto God 2 Cor. 5.14 15. For the Love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one dyed for all then were all dead and that he dyed for all that they should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him who dyed for them and rose again And this keepeth us more sincere and uniform in our course alwayes tending to the great end 3. A cold and careless Hope When there is not that earnest and desirous expectation of Blessedness to come which doth fortifie us against the allurements of sense Math. 6.19 20 21. Lay not up for your selves Treasure upon Earth where moth and rust doth corrupt and where Thieves break thorough and steal but lay up for your selves Treasure in Heaven where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt and where Thieves do not break thorough and steal for where your Treasure is there will your Hearts be also They do not mind their true Treasure Secondly The Effects of this Sleepiness are seen in these things 1. In some Intermission of their care and caution Watching is a diligent taking heed to our selves and wayes so as we keep our selves from sin We are in constant danger of sins that come on us by insensible Degrees Psa. 39.1 I said I would take heed to my wayes that I sin not with my tongue The best are surprized and Corruption often breaketh out we may say of them as Christ of the Damsel they are not dead but sleep The Children of God are sometimes overtaken by their inadvertency Gal. 6.1 or overborn by the violence of Temptations Jam. 1.14 Inconsiderately and suddenly surprized with some sin So subtle and assiduous is Sathan in Tempting and so ready is Corruption to close with the Temptation as soon as it is represented that if a Child of God doth but abate any thing of his Circumspection and diligence he will be surprized by some one sin or other and thereby be brought to dishonour God and to lay a stumbling block before others Besides those sins of daily incursion and suddain surreption Sathan lieth in wait to draw us to greater Offences that may dishonour God and wound our Peace and scandalize the World against our Profession 2. Some abatement of our Zeal and fervency We are not alwayes fervent in Spirit and do not keep up our Life and Seriousness in the Duties of Holiness our Graces are not actuated and kept in exercise but suffer some decay though they be not quite dead Faith is weak Love is cold Math. 24.12 There is not that lively Hope 1 Pet. 1.3 Christians should not only be living but lively 1 Pet. 2.5 Ye as living Stones Nay There may be so great a damp and quenching upon us that there is no outward visible difference between a dead man and a dying Christian All things in us may be ready to dye Revel 3.2 Be watchful and strengthen the things that remain that are ready to dye Life is even quite gone in some cases when sin hath made fearful havock in the Conscience 3. In Forgetfulness of non-attendency to the Lords coming When we live merrily quietly in a careless and unprepared Estate this is necessarily to be taken in as the cause of the two former In the slumbring and sleeping of the foolish Virgins the Case is clear Christ's absence or tarrying long is the occasion the World takes to grow secure and wicked the Scoffers walked after their own Lusts because they said Where is the Promise of his coming 2 Pet. 3.3 4. And in the degenerate Church the reason why they were given to Sensuality carnal Pomp and Persecution is set down Math. 24.48 49. My Lord delayeth his coming Therefore the Officers of the Church smite their fellow Servants and eat and drink with the Drunken encourage the wicked and smite the Godly with Censures As it was with the Israelites there was no speech of making a Calf when Moses first went up to the Mount but when he tarryed long Exod. 32. And as for this Moses we wot not what is become of him then nothing would content them but making a Calf The Ordinances and Institutions of Christ had never been so perverted in the Christian World but that they forgat Christs coming to see how they have been observed 1 Tim. 6.14 That thou keep this Commandment without spot unrebukeable until the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ. But now for the wise Virgins alas there is not such a constant waiting for the coming of the Lord for if we did not leave off to think of
175 5 5 239   8 343   13 50   13 15   19 20 127   24 129 132 137 Ephesians 1 3 89 4 5 150   11 306   13 14 83 99   22 23 17 2 2 3 113   4 5 330 3 17 18 19 4 24 25 16   27 98   30 150 5 9 16 6 15 134 Philip. 1 19 17   23 74 2 6 324 3 19 107 112   20 108   21 90 Colossians 3 3 189   5 127 132 1 Thes. 2 12 292 2 Tim. 1 7 15   7 8 159   10 143 363 2 5 175 319   19 301 Titus 2 11 125 3 3 20   11 50 Hebrews 2 5 202   14 97   18 356 3 6 14 230 ERRATA PAge 5. line 7. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 12. l 16. for liberum read liberam p. 12. I. 18. for seritatis read servitutis p. 16. l. last for Honour read tribute to p. 21. l. 14. for vendati r. venditi p. 26. l. 16. for sinint he read sin in the. p. 27. l. 25. f. 10. r. 13. p. 27. add from all things from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses p. 30. l. penult for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 36. l. 53. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 51. l. 5. for dundum read dandum p. 52. l. 46. for addando read addendo p. 52. l. 47. for hauriebar read hauriebat p. 54. l. 25. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 56. l. 31. for valla read Valla p. 56. l. 31. for sentiaut read sentiunt p. 69. l. 26. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 90. l. 12. for assertoin read assertion p. 96. l. 31. for acquitted read acquired p. 102. l. 39. for justici read justitiae p. 133. l. 27. for spirie read spirit p. 134. l. 59. for satiat read sanat p. 142. l. 10. for for our read from p. 147. l. 47. for inabled read unable p. 155. l. 35. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 158. l. 3. for after read all and a. p. 164. l. 40. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 169. l. 18. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 200. l. 51. for casually read causally p. 258. l. 3. for two read no. p. 267. l. 23. for simel read simul p. 328. l. 53. for offerte read offert p. 368. l. 14. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 376. l. 1. for gratia read gratiae p. 376. l. 2. for positiva read positivae p. 378. l. 6. between need and fear add not SERMON I. The Second Epistle to the CORINTHIANS CHAPTER V. Verse 1. For we know that if our earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an House not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens HAving shewed you how much of the true Spirit of Christianity lyeth in looking to things unseen Because the Apostle goeth on with that Argument I shall pursue it in the following verses of this Chapter Paul here rendreth a reason why he could so over-look things seen whether Crosses or Comforts And so resolutely venture upon the hope of things unseen For we know c. In which words there is not only a reason rendred of his Courage and self denying pursuit of unseen glory But also an Anticipation or secret Prevention of an Objection Some might say to to him There may be a blessed State to come But dost thou certainly know that thou shalt be a partaker of that glory Yea saith he We know c. The words branch themselves into three parts 1. A supposal of the worst that could befal him in the world If our Earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved 2dly A proposal of a glorious estate to be enjoyed after death We have a building of God an House not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens 3dly An Assertion of his own right or the application to himself or an assured expectation of this Blessed and Glorious Estate We know that we have 'T is not a bare Conjecture but a certain knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We know And what is there known Not the general Truth only That there is a building of God an House not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens But that we have a particular confidence of our own Blessed Immortality The Point is This That the difficulties pressures and dangers of the present life even though they should end in death its self are a matter of no great Terrour to those who have a sure confidence of their own Blessed Immortality I shall explain this Point by these Considerations 1. That the present life is frail miserable and transitory and within a little while will surely come to an end 2dly That there is a much happier Condition than this world is capable of Even an abiding Estate of Blessedness which God hath provided for his people For the Apostle speaking of the present life he calleth it a Tent but the other is an House that 's an earthly House this Eternal in Heaven out of the reach of all sublunary dangers That 's an House in which man is Instrumental in raising it up or sometimes pulling it down This is builded without hands by God himself and continued to us for ever by his gracious Grant 3dly That a sure confidence of this Happy and Blessed Condition may be had For there is a sure right We have a certain confidence We know 'T is not we think we hope well But we know 'T is propounded as a Common priviledge you and I and all the suffering servants We know 4thly That this sure confidence of our own right in it and future possession of it doth support and fortifie the Soul against all the dangers and pressures of the present life yea against death it self I. That the bodily life is Frail and Transitory and within a little while will surely come to an end The Circumstances of the Text explained will represent it to you 1. The Body of man is called an House 1. For the beauty and comely proportion that is between the parts as set up by line or rule There is an admirable piece of Architecture in building and raising up the body of man Story after Story and Room after Room Contrivance after Contrivance so compact and set together that the most Curious piles in the world are but rude heaps Compared to it Psal. 130.15 16. I am fearfully and wonderfully made c. The serious contemplation of Gods Workmanship in our very Bodies will force us to acknowledge his unspeakable wisdom all things are so well disposed and ordered for profit and use The greatest miracles are to be seen in Gods Common works We wonder when we hear of any work exceeding the