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A33980 Thirteen sermons upon several useful subjects two of them being funeral dicourses, occasioned by the death of the Reverend Mr. Nathaniel Mitchel, Minister of the Gospel ... / by John Collinges ...; Sermons. Selections Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1684 (1684) Wing C5344; ESTC R16837 141,524 284

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a Child without a Parent alas that I cannot also say a particular flock without a Pastor but the whole flock of Christ I can say he hath left deprived of one labourer more and that in a time when the Harvest truly is great and the labourers too too few But it is no part of love for our own good to envy the more exceeding good happiness of our friends our sorrow for him as a publick loss is much alleviated by that useless condition as to publick service into which the wisdom of the Divine Providence had brought him for some years before it pleased God to take him to himself His conversation from his youth was better known to many of you then to my self he being born and bred up amongst you I shall limit my discourse concerning him by my Text having nothing in further design then to shew you that we who believe that there is a Crown of Righteousness laid up for some which the Righteous Judge will one day give out to all such as love his appearance have no reason for any dissatisfaction at this dispensation of Divine Providence because we have reason to hope that he was one of those who fought the good fight who finished his course who kept the faith who loved the appearance of our Lord Jesus 1. For fighting the good fight It respecteth the World the Flesh or the Devil as to the World there was none who knew him who can accuse him of any pursuit of it none who saw not his neglect of it he contented himself with a competency of it and could not be tempted to mend his commons in it by a compliance in any thing which he judged sinful he was no man of pleasure none of those who sought great things for himself He did not neglect the work of the Ministry while he had a liberty to exercise it and withal to exercise what he judged a good conscience but when he saw he could not do that the profits of such service was no temptation to him he rather chose to live upon the little God had given him and occasionally to preach the Gospel where he had an opportunity offered for near twenty years before God took him from us though indeed for 5 or 6 of those years he was not fit for any publick service of that nature The good fight with the flesh is a more secret combate of which we can make no judgment but from a mortified conversation to sensible satisfactions as to which I need say nothing to you you know how he walked in and out before you dying daily to the contentments of this life and bringing his body under and keeping it in subjection But it was his managery of this good fight with the Grand Adversary that was to us to me at least the most perspicuous and as to which I was the most competent witness in regard of my frequent converse with him It was in the year 1673. if I remember right when it pleased God to take from him his only Son a Child in which he much delighted and whose life probably by giving him some diversion kept him from those depths of Melancholy into which he soon after fell and c●ntinued to his dying day though under some different circumstances It were infinite to recount all his doubts and fears some respecting his Spiritual and Eternal State Some with reference to the Actions of his life so as there was not the most lawful action of his life which he was not at one time or other questioning the lawfulness of He had the assistance of Divines whose success with him was but what is usual in those cases they could easily silence him and answer the Objections he made against himself and give him a little relief at present but his troublesome thoughts would return again and renew upon him yet we observed God blessing our indeavours so far as to drive the Enemy from one Post to another But still there came on new supply from those Principalities with which he was ingaged and this continued so long that his life grew a burden to him and he seemed weary of it not desirous to live alwaies when in living he did not live His Adversary brought forth all those usual fiery Darts which he commonly throweth at persons under his circumstances Temptations to Blasphemous thoughts Despair Self-Murder as to the first and second it so far pleased God to bless our Brotherly assistances to him advantaged by his own knowledge of the things of God and acquaintance with the Covenant of Grace which he was observed almost always to make the subject of his Sermons in later years that he was not many months in those combates but under the latter he laboured some years indeed so long as in the whole course of my Ministry I never knew any who was infested with those Temptations but was overthrown by them if they continued in much shorter times He hath often affrighted his nearest Relation and my self with telling us He must put an end to his days he was not able to bear the impetus of the Temptation Both my self and others would speak what we judged proper in the cause and for a time were successful to divert him but the Tempter came on again and that with that violence as I scarce ever knew I learned in my daily converse with this good man the great advantage which true faith in any gives a Minister of the Gospel in such an hour of temptation over what he hath towards one who hath no such root of Grace In my discourses with him I used a much different method from what others would have thought proper in the case and in the midst of these Paroxysms commonly made the eternal misery of damned Souls and the desperate state of persons dying in the commission of known sins the subjects of my discourse Knowing that if God would bless my discourses to revive his faith in such Revelations of Holy Writ I should countermine his adversary whose design was to blow up his Soul by the hopes of a freedom from a temporary affliction and misery In the mean time many prayers were put up to God for him many were made to God with him and himself if out of his bed was almost always alone upon his knees such was his condition that his friends durst not have trusted him the twentieth part of that time alone but they knew he was not alone while he was with God and they found that he was safe because in his company After the spending of some years in this degree of deep affliction it pleased God in a great degree to rebuke the Tempter that although his bodily distemper yet continued and by this time it had bred more yet his mind was much more free from these desperate Temptations and impetuous assaults that if at all any thing of them returned at any time yet they were not a continual dropping upon his Soul thus he fought the good
due respect to those to whom he giveth his Testimony and who agreeth and doth not contradict himself and yet is bold and couragious speaking with freedom hence you shall find that word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is often used about the testimony that the Apostles did bear to the truth a free bold testimony in any cause doth it great service while the stammering lisping Witness that useth no freedom in his Speech rather hurteth a cause than doth it good the Scripture speaketh much of and commendeth a Christians boldness a boldness in Faith and Prayer and a boldness in a bearing testimony to our Lord when we are not afraid of the Faces of men that would outface the truths of God a Christian should be bold in the Faith bold in Prayer and bold in his Confession 7. Let your Testimony be a hearty testimony a free ready chearful testimony God loveth a chearful giver saith the Apostle indeed in all our Gifts unto God it is so God loveth a freedom and chearfulness of Spirit we should not be subpoena'd into a Testimony to our Lord Jesus Christ indeed we are subpoena'd by that dreadful Text Matth. 9. A Christian should give a Testimony freely not to provoke and challenge danger and dare a Trial but when he seeth suffering at hand so that God calleth him to give a testimony to him and to the truths of the Gospel then chearfulness becometh a Christian chearfulness as it is opposed to grudging 8. I will add but one thing more it should be a patient Testimony Rev. 19 St. John giveth this Character of himself I John who also am your Brother and Companion in tribulation and in the Kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ Patience under evils is what is often called for in Scripture and pressed upon the Servants of God with a great variety of Arguments by a patient Testimony I understand three things 1. A patient continuance in the Testimony of Christ a flitting and incertain Christian in the truths of God who is of one mind to day and another mind to morrow is no good Witness in the cause of Christ semper idem is the true Motto of every Christian of every such Witness he that is one day of one mind another day of another like a Wave of the Sea tossed about may possibly get to Heaven at last as through fire but he is no good Witness for Christ you know amongst men a good Witness must abide by his testimony if he varieth his testimony is weakned Therefore Christians are highly concerned to examine Propositions well before they profess them and when they profess them to think well with themselves before they part with them a man never is a good witness for the Lord in that point wherein he hath been incertain himself 2. It must be a patient testimony with respect unto those affronts which he may suffer from men while he is giving his Testimony a good and steady Witness in your Courts is not moved by the affronts of any Lawyer that setteth himself to baffle him out of his Testimony he that is a good Witness in the cause of Christ must not be affected at the affronts of Men that would baffle him out of his Testimony he must be patient both as to the flatteries and enticements of enemies and also as to their frowns and menaces 3. A patient Testimony must be a Testimony attended with that patience which they had need of who may suffer for giving their Testimony for though no Man ought to suffer for bearing Witness to the truth yet there is nothing more ordinary then for men and women to suffer for giving a Testimony unto truth and thus now I have shewed you what kind of Testimony it is that every good Christian is bound to give unto the Lord. I have but two things more to do first to encourage you to it by some Arguments then to direct you in the fulfilling of it now for Arguments to perswade you not to be ashamed of the Testimony of Christ you have heard enough already I have shewed you a Ten-fold Obligation lying upon you 1. It is the Will of God 2. Remember Christ is your Lord 3. You cannot otherwise shew your gratitude to him for that Testimony which he gave for you 4. Thus you shall be conformable unto Christ and what is behind of the suffering of Christ shall be filled up in you 5. Remember the nature of the Gospel and of the truths of it 6. Consider the Station which you take up in the World of a Witness a Souldier a Child to our Heavenly Father a Servant to a Heavenly Master 7. Remember the private Law that you have laid upon your selves 8. Remember the duty which lieth upon you to be conformable to your fellow members 9. Remember the danger of forbearing and the reward of your giving this Testimony 10. Consider your oneness with the Members of Christ after all these what need any further Arguments yet because we are of our selves not forward unto this our Hearts are awk and backward to the partaking of the affliction of the Gospel and averse to the giving of this Testimony let me by way of a further Argument in this cause name to you and press upon you the Arguments which the Apostle useth in this place and by which he himself presseth this Exhortation 1. The first lieth in those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the power of God One great discouragement that is upon our Spirits to keep us in a day of Testimony that we should not testify is the fear we should never be able to speak and to give our Testimony To give a Testimony for our Lord is a noble thing to receive a Crown the Crown of Martyrdom is a great dignity But when the Lord by his providence seeketh out for us to set this Crown upon our Heads we too frequently hide our selves and the reason is we distrust our selves but Christian fear not we shall have the power of God it is a wonderful thing to observe that the power of God hath been so seen in no other thing as in this you read of a Testimony that Stephen gave to the Gospel First a vocal then a real Testimony Acts 6.9 10. And they were not able to resist the Wisdom and the spirit by which he spake Stephen had then a dispute with the Libertines The power and presence of God from the beginning of the Gospel hath been seen in nothing more than in Gods assistance of his Witnesses you have a promise Luke 12.12 For the Holy Ghost shall teach you in the same hour what you ought to say Matth. 10.19 20. But when they deliver you up take no thought how or what you shall speak for it shall be given you in that same hour what you shall speak For it is not you that speak but the spirit of your heavenly Father which speaketh in you Luke saith When they bring you unto the Synagogues and unto
fight and indeed in this piece of it was more a Conquerour then I ever knew any who was so long ingaged in it and at last died the ordinary death of men quietly in his Bed surrendring his Soul into the hands of him that gave it 2 For the finishing of his course how he walked in and out before you I need not tell you you knew the man and observed his conversation For the duties of his Relation as a Minister while he had a publick liberty he was no indiligent Preacher when he was restrained as to that you were also some witnesses of his readiness to that work For his Domestick Relations let his Widow rise up and call him blessed let his Daughter praise him He spent no small proportion of time in opening Scripture and praying with his Family and other exercises of Religion proper to a Family He rather erred by excess then by a defect in those exercises 3. As to his keeping the faith As he was known to all that conversed with him to be sound in the Doctrine of faith So two things spake the exercise of the habit of that Grace in him 1. He was much in prayer It was almost his whole work for some years before he died he did little else but read and pray When he could no longer Pray himself he would continually be solliciting others to the performance of it and when he hardly regarded either Wife or Child coming to him yet he was so regardful of this that he missed Prayer if at any time any of us had come to him and gone away having not prayed with him 2. Much holiness speaketh faith His scrupulosity in his actions lest he should by any of them sin against God was such as indeed was a great part of his Affliction Indeed the latter part of his life being very Melancholick and that disposing him to too many fears and God having for some weeks before he died allowed him but a very incertain use of his reason and much deprived him also of a liberty of speech we had not that lightsome evidence of his desire to be dissolved which we might have expected from such a conversation But his quiet bearing Gods severe hand upon him his free submission to his will without any murmuring or repining added to the former spending of his life in a constant preparation for death may satisfy us that he was one who loved the appearance of our Lord Jesus Now I say if we have a sufficient evidence to hope that he was indeed one who fought the good fight who had finished his course who kept the faith and who loved the appearance of our Lord Jesus what reason have we to mourn Nay if we consider what a man of griefs and sorrows he was in his latter time what an ill habit of body he had contracted what a variety of diseases he was incumbred with and how improbable it was that by the use of any art his body should be recovered to a state of comfort to himself or usefulness to others We have great cause to rejoice in hope That he is crowned with that Crown of Righteousness which the Righteous God hath prepared laid up and will give out to those who love his appearance In ordinary cases where there is no cause of sorrow from a reflection upon the eternal state of the deceased yet there may be some cause of sorrow upon the account of the Churches loss and never was there a greater cause of mourning for Godly Ministers then at this day We have cause upon all such losses to cry out as Psal 12.1 Help Lord for the Godly man ceaseth and the faithful fail from the children of men But in the present case we have not that cause God by his Providence had made him dead to us before he died and except in a miraculous way we could not reasonably have expected a Resurrection a recovery I mean to any degree of usefulness So then if there remaineth no cause of mourning either from the consideration of our friends eternal state or our own loss What remains but that we should lay our hands upon our mouths or if we will open them bless God who hath granted us to see him after so long a scuffle with the great Enemy of Mankind depart in peace that he might see the Lords Salvation and be ever with the Lord as the Apostle expresseth the state of those that sleep in Jesus in another life I shall conclude as the Apostle doth that Chapter wherefore comfort yourselves with these words SERMON III. Deuteronomy 8.18 For it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth THis fifth Book of Moses is called Deuteronomy qu. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a second law because it for the most part containeth a repetition of the law of God formerly given unto this people by Moses Moses having in the former Chapter given them an account of some precepts that God formerly delivered to them he here presseth them to obedience and to make reflections upon what God had done for them he declareth a great tenderness for this people who had been brought up by him and lived upon his hand and an exceeding jealousy lest when they came into the land of Canaan they should forget the great God who had done so much for them and lest they should say in their hearts my power and the might of my hand hath gotten me this wealth but saith he in the words I have read unto you Thou shalt remember the Lord thy God for it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth The Doctrines of the Text are two Doct. 1. That it is the Lord who giveth unto people a power to get wealth Doct. 2. That the consideration of this should oblige men when they have gotten estates not to forget but to remember the Lord their God Prop. That it is the Lord who giveth unto a people a power to get wealth There is nothing in the Doctrine that needeth any explication we all know what is meant by wealth my whole business will lie upon the demonstration of this truth that it is the Lord that giveth men power to get wealth and to shew what influence God hath upon men as to their gaining of outward estates 1 Sam. 2.7 The Lord maketh poor and maketh rich Eccl. 6.2 A man to whom God hath given riches wealth and honour chap. 9.11 the race is not to the swift nor the battel to the strong 2. By way of Application to shew what influence this meditation should have upon us I shall spend all my time in answering these two Questions Qu. 1. What influence hath God upon men as to their gaining or keeping their outward estate All wealth and outward estate cometh to a man by inheritance or marriage or by gift or by labour let me shew you a little the influence God hath upon all these I will joyn the two first together 1. It is the Lord that maketh Heirs and
desire of more than we have it is something strange but an old observation that the most of men the more they have the more greedy they are to have more the Apostle telleth us the love of mony is the root of all evil none are under greater temptations to love it then those that have the most considerable portions of it there is a kind of bewitching quality in the good things of this life and our heart naturally cleaveth to them and in regard that when we have a competent portion we have the better foundation and are at better advantages to get more commonly as our estates encrease so our love to things of this life doth more increase and covetousness is so great an evil that the Apostle calleth it Idolatry 4. Beware of Luxury Luxury is an excess in meat drink or apparel buildings houshold-stuff or any thing of that nature an affectation of an undue use of them the poor man hath no temptation to it being exercised sufficiently in getting his dayly bread they are only men of estates that are exposed to and ordinarily brought under the power of this temptation this is that which the Apostle often cautioneth us against that we should beware of Chambering and Wantonness that we should not mind high things c. Our Saviour pressing Christians duty to watch and pray expoundeth it by a taking heed we be not overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness 5 Beware of Cowardliness in the cause of God it is an usual Observation that Cities though never so populous yet if full of riches seldom make any good defence against an enemy their love of riches prevailing against the love of their liberties and they are very rarely men of great estates that will venture themselves in the cause of God though this be to prefer the love of riches before the love of Christ which whoso doth our Saviour saith is not worthy of him these are those ordinary temptations to sin to which men of great estates are exposed and by which many often fall I shall only say unto you let him that standeth take heed lest he fall 2. If you look upon your selves as Stewards of these good things and make use of them to the end for which God hath given them to you God hath betrusted him that is rich with many talents not to be hid up in a Napkin but to be laid out 1 Tim. 6.17 18. Charge them that are rich in this world that they be not high-minded nor trust in incertain riches but in the living God who giveth us richly all things to enjoy That they do good that they be rich in good works ready to distribute willing to communicate This is the best acknowledgment that we can make unto God that by his power we have gotten our wealth when we are willing to lay it out at his command when we are ready to do good and distribute for with such sacrifice the Lord is well pleased and certainly if the Heathen who knew nothing of the mind and will of God yet thought themselves concerned to look upon their estates as given them for other uses then meerly their own Christians that have so many directions from God in the case should know much more SERMON IV. Luke 12.15 For a mans life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth THE words are the words of our Saviour brought by him as an argument against Covetousness you have the exhortation take heed and beware of Covetousness these words are the reason For a mans life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth The whole discourse as you may see cometh in upon occasion of one that came to our Saviour desiring him to divide his inheritance as v. 13. Or to speak to his Brother to divide his inheritance with him which our Saviour refused v. 14. As having no call from God to be a Civil Magistrate a Ruler or a Judge from whence we may learn two things 1. That the business of meum and tuum of dividing and setling inheritances is the work of Rulers not of the Ministers of Christ they may have commission from men for such employments but they have no commission from God it is a work that belongeth unto the Ruler 2. That the Disciples of Christ should be afraid of medling with things out of their callings it hath pleased the Lord to establish an order in the world as an order in Creatures that they do not enter into one anothers station and works so an order amongst men appointing unto every man what his work is and he ought to keep to that and not to turn aside from it but this impertinent solliciting of our Saviour to this eccentrick work giveth him a fair opportunity to press a spiritual exhortation upon them and that is to beware of covetousness the reason is in the Text for a mans life lieth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth I shall need no other Doctrine then the words of the Text. Doct. A mans life doth not lie in the abundance of what he possesseth This Doctrine will need 1. Explication 2. Confirmation I will open it in two things 1. The continuance and preservation of a mans life doth not lie in the abundance of what he possesseth In this sense life is taken Gen. 45.5 For God did send me before you to preserve life Gen. 42.2 and buy for us from thence that we may live and not die And so often in Scripture life signifieth the preservation and continuance of life the continuance of the life of man doth not lie in the abundance of what he possesseth abundance is not necessary to preserve life the greatest abundance that we have will not lengthen out our lives beyond the bounds God hath set Natura paucis contenta we see the lives of those preserved to whom God hath not given such an abundance in this life and preserved to as great an advantage as they who have the most Daniel fareth as well with pulse as those that did eat of the Kings meat 2. Oftentimes we see it that those who have the greatest abundance of the things of this life do not only die as it is appointed for all men but also they die sooner and preserve their lives but a little while the continuance of this life doth not lie in the abundance of that which a man possesseth 2. Life sometimes signifieth happiness because the most of men count their great happiness to lie in this life therefore you shall find frequently in Scripture life is taken for a state of felicity Prov. 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of life Prov. 6.23 Reproofs and instruction are the way of life Prov. 16.15 In the light of the Kings countenance is life that Text is to be understood of happiness for to understand it strictly of life it is not true Prov. 18.21 Death and life are in the power of
you 3. It is one thing for a Christian to rejoyce in persecution as it is a token of God's anger and displeasure another thing for to rejoyce in it as a means by which it pleaseth God to make the Soul of his Saints perfect unto glory The Apostle tells us that no affliction is joyous at present but grievous 3 Obj. The last Question which remains is What ground of solid joy and rejoycing hath a Christian under persecution I shall open this to you in several particulars I begin with those of the Text. 1. Because the Lord hath blessed them This is matter of joy Is it not matter of joy to a Christian that he is in such a condition as he is under a blessing yea not under a single blessing but under a treble blessing Is it nothing to you Sirs to be blessed of God to have him who knoweth the state of every Soul in whose hand are all blessings and cursings and whom he blesseth they shall be blessed and whom he curseth they shall be cursed Is it nothing for you to be in such a state that you are sure you are under the blessing of God that you are some of those he hath pronounced blessed thrice over blessed though you be here some of them who are hated reviled and persecuted and spoken evil of falsly for the Lords Name sake 2. Yours is the Kingdom of Heaven You have a phrase very like this which will come into consideration Great is your reward in Heaven I shall not at present consider it in that sense Our Saviour saith elsewhere The Kingdom of Heaven is within you The Kingdom of Heaven within us is the Throne of Christ set up in our hearts 1 Pet. 4.14 The Spirit of Glory and of God resteth upon you So this shall be an evidence unto you that the Kingdom of God is set up in your hearts Thus the words of our Saviour are made good It shall be unto you for a testimony The Kingdom of Christ is then set up in any Soul when Christ ruleth and other things truckle under him and his Law when a Christian overcometh in a good fight when he is too hard for the World that they cannot flatter him into a disobedience to Christ nor frown him into a disobedience of Christ it is a sign that Christ sitteth as Lord and as King in that Soul and the Kingdom of Heaven is within that man it is a testimony of grace and that the Spirit of God resteth upon that man and the Spirit of Glory resteth on that man On your part saith the Apostle he is glorified 3. Great is your reward in Heaven The Papists make a great stir about the term of a reward as if it must needs be a correlative to a work but as there is a reward of debt as you reward a man that hath laboured for you and done you some valuable service so there is also a reward of grace The Father saith to the Child if you will do such a thing I will give you a new Coat here is a reward given upon the Child's obedience but yet the Child's obedience doth not earn it There is a reward of grace as well as a reward of debt there is a reward of a work which is not always a just reward for a work life everlasting is promised as the reward of them that suffer persecution But our afflictions are saith the Apostle but light and momentany afflictions though they work for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory James 1.12 Is not this matter of rejoycing that the reward of a man is great in Heaven 2 Thes 1.7 It is a token to you of rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed 4. They persecuted the Prophets that were before you There is a great cause of rejoycing in this 1. It is no new thing to you it is but what hath been the Lot of the people of God formerly 2. As it is no new thing to men so particularly not to the most eminent Servants of God Such were the Prophets nay the more eminent they were in their Generation the more they have been brought under this Rod. 3. This administreth further comfort to Christians in suffering that those who have professed to the same Religion yet have persecuted those born after the Spirit The Jews owned the same God and the same Religion that the Prophets did yet they persecuted the Prophets Lastly 4. It speaketh you the true Members of the Church You partake of the common afflictions of the Members of it that our Lord might let them know that it was no new thing he saith They persecuted the Prophets which were before you that our Lord might let them know they were not too good for persecution he says So persecuted they the Prophets who yet were the best of the Servants of God lest it should be a trouble to them that persons owning the same Religion were their Enemies he saith So persecuted they the Prophets that he might shew them with whom they had communion in their sufferings namely with the Antient Church of God he saith For so persecuted they the Prophets 5. I must yet rise one note higher you are partakers of the afflictions of Jesus Christ this is a ground of rejoycing Rejoyce saith the Apostle 1 Pet. 4.13 in as much as you are partakers of Christs sufferings that when his glory shall be revealed you may be glad also with exceeding joy Phil. 1.20 Christ shall be magnified in my body Col. 1.24 Who now rejoyce in my sufferings for you and fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh St. Paul Phil. 3.10 desired to know him and the power of his Resurrection and the fellowship of his Sufferings being made conformable to his Death If saith the Apostle we suffer with him that we may be also glorified together Rom. 8.17 18. For I reckon that the sufferings of this life are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us Thus far I have discoursed the duty of God s people relating to an hour of persecution whether imminent or already come upon them but in all persecution there must be an Agent as well as a Patient Last Vse Must this be the Lot of the Servants of God of all those that will live godly in Christ Jesus to suffer persecution take heed your hand be not upon them Offences must come saith our Saviour Luke 17.1 2. but woe unto him through whom they come It were better for him that a Milstone were hanged about his neck and he were cast into the Sea The will of God concerning an event will not justifie the proximate cause or agent in an action undoubtedly of all sins there is no sin that is greater in its kind than this 1. Consider with your selves by way of comparison if it be a great sin for a man to do hurt to those that are innocent how
me at Hierusalem so must thou also bear witness at Rome Be of good cheer one would have thought it should have quite deadned Paul and put him out of all good cheer God did not so judge he would not have said so to his Servant if he had not judged that it had been a proper argument of comfort and for the filling of his Soul with chearfulness Let not therefore your hearts fail indeed this ought to be no argument to a Christian to pull troubles of this nature upon himself he ought to maintain both the wisdom of a serpent and the innocency of a dove and to look that he cometh by his sufferings honestly But to suffer as a Christian is not a matter of trouble or shame but a good cause to glorify God 1 Pet. 4.16 What would not any considerate christian give to have a testimony that he is one whom God delighteth to honour one whom the Lord hath influenced with great degrees of grace and intendeth yet further to influence one whom God designeth a great reward for either in this life or that which is to come to have a Testimony that he is a Disciple of Christ and that not in name but in deed a true believer one that loveth God and that not in word and in tongue only but in deed and in truth I have read of one who in a great agony of Spirit had this expression I could be content to lye in Hell a thousand years were I sure then but to have one good look from God What saith the Apostle If we suffer with him we shall also reign with him If you suffer as Christians you may speak to your adversaries in the language of that ancient Martyr Sententiis vestris gratias agimus quum à vobis damnamur à Christo absolvimur We thank you for your sentences when you do condemn us Christ absolveth us In our Book of Martyrs we read of the condemnation of three famous Martyrs all Bishops Cranmer Ridley and Latimer The first replieth to his Judges I appeal from this your sentence to the Judgment seat of God The second told them Although I be not of your company yet I doubt not but my name is written in a better place whither your sentence will send me sooner The third saith I thank God most heartily that he hath prolonged my life to this time Mark how all these good men counted it all joy when they fell into these terrible temptations a good Christian ought not indeed to desire suffering for Christs sake the Apostle speaking of suffering saith 1 Pet. 3.17 It is better if the will of God be so that ye suffer for well doing then for evil doing Sufferings are things ingrateful to the flesh and upon that score evils as they are temptations Our flesh always is crying to us Master spare thy self They are not therefore to be desired No man knoweth what his heart will prove in an hour of trial but if it be the will of God you suffer saith the Apostle It is never the will of God that we should suffer in that sense wherein the Apostle there mentioneth the will of God but when we suffer for doing the will of God if this be our lot that a shower overtaketh us walking not in any crooked paths of our own but in the way of Gods commandments let us rejoice Christ is magnified in our body as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 1.20 And as Christ is magnified in you so you are magnified by Christ The spirit of glory and of God resting upon you 1 Pet. 4.15 Wherefore as the same Apostle saith Let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their Souls to him in well doing as unto a faithful creator v. 19. I need not much enlarge in this branch of application What it is to suffer for Christs name sake I have in my former discourse shewed you There are as I have shewed you arguments enough in these few words It shall turn unto you for a Testimony VSE III. Let us therefore in the last place labour for this degree of grace That we may be ready to suffer for the name of Jesus Christ It is every man● wisdom though he be at present in health to prepare for sickness because sickness is but a common accident to mortality none can promise himself that he shall always enjoy his health I call this Grace for the Apostle lets us know it must be given unto us to suffer Phil. 1.29 There are but two things that I know of necessary to us for suffering 1. The one is a mortified heart to the World both in the sensual satisfactions and in the sensible enjoyments of it We may do a great deal toward this by considering the vanity and incertainty of these things the inconsiderableness of them weighed and compared with the enjoyments of God By difusing our selves to them c. The second is courage now this is partly natural and morally partly infused There is a natural and moral courage which many have shewed in their personal dangers and in the more publick dangers of their country we find a great deal of this amongst Pagans this will not do in this case The courage here necessary must be given from above and the product of Faith in things that are invisible It is a courage by which Christians are as the Apostle saith out of weakness made strong by which Women have received their dead raised to life again Heb. 10.34 35. For this we had need be much in Prayer Our Saviour commandeth us that we should Pray that we enter not into Temptation And Luke 21.36 with which I shall conclude Watch ye therefore saith our Saviour and Pray always that you may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass and to ●●and before the Son of man We ought to pray that we enter not into Temptation as Temptation signifies no more then trials but more especially in a second sense as Temptation signifieth a motion to sin which is the Temptation of the former temptations But if that it be not the will of God that we should escape temptations in the former sense yet we may escape them in the latter sense and may be able to stand before the Son of man That sufferings may not be Testimonies against us which they will be if we be ashamed of the Lord Jesus or of his truths or ways but that they may as is here promised turn unto us for a testimony for us FINIS A Catalogue of Books Printed for and are to be sold by Edward Giles Bookseller in Norwich near the Market-place SEveral Discourses concerning Actual Providence A word in Season Defensive Armour against four of Satans most fiery Darts Sermons upon the whole first and second Chapters of the Canticles All published by John Collings D. D. The way of the Spirit in bringing Souls to Christ The Glory of Christ set forth with the necessity of Faith in several Sermons Both by Mr. Thomas Allen late Pastor of a Church at Norwich Enoch's walk with God and Christ A Christians gain By Mr. Timothy Armitage late Minister in the City of Norwich Precious Promises the Portion of Overcomers By Mr. John Lougher Minister in Norfolk The Saints Eben-ezer By Mr. Francis English late Minister in Norwich Directions to spell English right The History of the Protestant Reformation as it was begun by Luther The Dead Saints speaking being a Sermon Preached upon the death of Mr. Newcomb The English Presbyterian The orderly matter of Prayer drawn into Question and Answer Two Treatises the first Of Rejoycing in the Lord Jesus in all Cases and Conditions The second is Of a Christians Hope in Heaven and freedom from Condemnation by Christ Both by Mr. Robert Asty late Minister of Jesus Christ in Norwich Obedience to Magistrates Recommended By Mr. John Clapham Rector of Wramplingham in Norfolk A Present for Youth and Example for the Aged FINIS