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A29912 Twenty five sermons. The second volume by the Right Reverend Father in God, Ralph Brownrig, late Lord Bishop of Exeter ; published by William Martyn, M.A., sometimes preacher at the Rolls.; Sermons. Selections Brownrig, Ralph, 1592-1659.; Martyn, William.; Faithorne, William, 1616-1691. 1664 (1664) Wing B5212; ESTC R36389 357,894 454

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unseasonable Infirmities and to set it in just and due circumstances and then it is a speech of admirable Piety The words are a Suit and request made by the Prophet for his death and dissolution he made request for himself that he might dye In it observe two Particulars 1. The Suit it self O Lord take away my life 2. A double Meditation that works him to this desire and request for death 1. Is a full contentation and present satiety Satis est It is enough 2. Is an apprehension of his natural condition and frailty I am no better then my fathers First for his forwardness to dye and motion he makes for it Conceive it in three Particulars 1. Optat Here is an holy Wish 2. Orat That 's more he makes an holy Supplication 3. Resignat He yields himself up to God in an holy Resignation I. Optat He expresses his willingness he wishes to dye For fuller understanding of this willingness to dye let us consider 1. The Nature of it 2. The Grounds and Occasions of it 3. The Evidences and Strength and Power of it 1. The Nature of it To flesh and bloud it is a strange paradox that death should come within the compass of a Wish whereas Nature and Reason and Religion too all seem to lead us to the preservation and maintenance of our Life and Being 'T is true and yet Elias his case is here allowable and of ordinary use and practice too The Saints of God may and are willing to dye and wish for it but yet with these Caveats 1. Caveat In these wishes for Death they apprehend Death in a limited Consideration 1. In the apprehension of Nature as it is a state and condition of Separation and Destruction so we all shrink at it and flee from it 'T is that impression that God hath planted in us a care to preserve and maintain our Being Death thus apprehended makes David beg respit Psal. xxxix 13. O spare me that I may recover strength before I go hence and be no more Psal. vi 5. In death there is no remembrance of thee This makes S. Paul sigh and groan We would not be uncloath'd of this garment of our flesh but enter immediately into immortality Nay amongst others even this apprehension made Christ wish escapal and deliverance He fear'd and wish'd and begg'd escapal 2. In the apprehension of Religion as Death comes with a malediction that makes it dreadful Were Death onely a consequent of Nature or a contingency of Fortune or a contrivance of Man some more manly resolutions may willingly undergo it But as it is the stroke of Gods anger and indignation that heads the arrow and dart of Death and as it is attended with that train of evils and curses that follow Death that 's matter of horror To see Death on a pale Horse is dismal Rev. vi 8. but to see Hell following after him that 's dreadful To look into the Grave and see the Worm of Corruption 't is sad but to look lower and to see that never-dying Worm gnawing and consuming that 's unsufferable Thus it is not desirable But then 3. In the apprehension of Faith we find Death altered and changed nay sanctified and sweetned to us made useful and advantageous and so it is acceptable and desirable Death in its own nature is Gods Serjeant and Officer the appearance of such an one to a debtor or malefactor is fearful and they run from him but to a friend or acquaintance he is as a messenger of love and we willingly admit of him This Officer comes to a Christian not to arrest or attach him but lovingly to invite him 'T is made an in-lett into heaven a passage to eternity Oh When shall I come and appear before God! 2. Caveat The Saints desires of Death are alwayes conceiv'd with a limitation of submission to Gods will and appointment In this case S. Bernard gives us a good rule of conformity to Gods will and pleasure He makes a threefold subjection of these desires to God 1. Is Quod certum est Deum nolle execremur nos When Gods negative is clear and express he rejects our desires we must yield and give over As it was with Moses he begg'd often of God to go into Canaan at last God gives his peremptory denial Speak no more to me of this matter and Moses gave over 2. Is Quod certum est Deum velle velimus nos When Gods will is express and absolute then we must absolutely desire it When God did definitively appoint Moses to dye Go up to the Mount and dye Moses yields presently He dyed according to the word of the Lord Deut. xxxiv 5. 3. Is Quod incertum est utrum velit an nolit neque velimus ex toto nequc non velimus neutri parti nimis inhaereamus When his will for Life or Death is hidden and secret then we must bring down our desires from an absolute Petition to an humble and submissive Subordination Thus that good Bishop in S. Bernard tempers his desires and prayers for Death Domine si adhuc populo tuo sum necessarius non recuso laborem fiat voluntas tua desidero requiem non recuso laborem 3. Caveat The Saints desires of Death are limited and stinted with an holy moderation In this case what the School-men resolve of Christs desire of Life we may conclude of the Saints desire of Death it was an act of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was a moderate willingness not a resolute will As S. Paul expresses it 2 Cor. v. 8. a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they had rather Phil. i. 23. a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 't is better to dye These desires of Death are not so much an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what they purpose and fix upon as an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what is pleasing and acceptable As Gerson expresses it they have mortem in desiderio but yet they have vitam in pätientia they desire death but they will with patience endure life Ask Saint Paul what he wishes what is his choice and longing Oh! 't is to die it is his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ask him what he wills that 's to abide still as God sees cause You have seen the nature of Elias his willingness to die See now 2. What occasions this willingness in Elias to die Besides those main grounds that work the hearts of Gods children to desire death and to wish it with comfort as 1. That the power and sting of death is vanquish'd and swallowed up in victory 2. That Christ's death hath freed us from the fear of it 3. That death puts a blessed end to all sin and corruption 4. That it opens unto us a blessed entrance into glory Besides these the spirit of Elias is wrought to this willingness and desire of death upon these Occasions 1. Taedio afflictionum Elias his life was beset with many vexations and afflictions
and people Out of the bounds of the Church there is no redemption or salvation He who is out of this Ark perishes he who eats the Passeover out of this house is accursed he who lives out of this Hierusalem is an Heathen They erre who teach In any Religion there is possibility of salvation No Salvation is of the Iews sayd Christ so now Of the Christians Basan is an high Mountain but this is God's Mountain where it pleaseth him to dwell They erre too who teach that Christ's sufferings may profit even extra Ecclesiam and that there is a common grace beyond the pales of the Church No no sacrifice but in Hierusalem no grace but in the Church That is the place to which God hath respect There he hath commanded a blessing and life for evermore If Shimei peep in Hierusalem his lines pass but to Gath he dies for it Enough of the conference about Christ's decease Come we now to the Entertainment that the Apostles gave to this glorious Transfiguration v. 32. It represents the Apostles in three particularities 1. In a weakness and indisposition They were heavy with sleep 2. In a more attentive view and contemplation when they were awake They saw his glory and the two men that stood with him 3. In a sudden and passionate affection motion and petition v. 33. First here we see the Apostles in a great weakness and indisposition all fallen into a sleep That we may the better conceive the nature and original of this their condition at this time we may resolve it into these three considerable estimations of it 1. As a Natural infirmity 2. As a Carnal indisposition 3. As a Spiritual amazement and consternation I. Conceive it ut naturalis infirmitas as a natural Infirmity No doubt but they were bound to have attended with all vigilancy upon this manifestation of our Saviour exacting of them a stedfast watching and careful observation as Elijah to Elisha If thou seest me when I am taken from thee yet here these choyse Apostles are clogg'd with those humane imperfections and overtaken with sleep when they should have been awakned to most attention Nay the Evangelist singles out Peter as the chief Sleeper So in the Garden these when they should have assisted and refresh'd Christ in his Passion they were then fallen a sleep again And Christ singles out Peter Simon couldest thou not watch one hour It is true as Commentators conceive it was in the time of Sleep Peter and the rest were no Church-sleepers but being called to watch on Mount Tabor and Christ Praying all Night the weakness of Nature prevailed upon them This is the condition of the best Saints Corpus quod corrumpitur degravat animam We live here a life of necessities we should wish to have Evangelical bodies alwayes to attend his Glory and service But while we bear about us these clogs of corruption we are sunk downward even in our best performances This makes the Saints groan not only under sinful corruptions but natural necessities fain would they be freed from them that they might be alwayes exercised in heavenly performances A necessitatibus meis erue me Domine But are these three noted not without imputation that they are asleep although excuseable by those forenamed Circumstances it puts the occasion into my mouth to awaken our Church-sleepers and drousie Auditors A fault though pardonable if rarely and seldome and little done yet let us question their practice who like Solomon's sluggard Fold up themselves in sleep and like Esay's dogs Delight in sleeping 1. Whence may it arise 2. What may it procure 1. The evilness of the root 2. The bitterness of the fruit will condemn it as sinful 1. Quae radix What is the root whence it springs 1. Sometimes out of Infirmity and a child of God and one whose heart seeks the Lord may be overtaken That is my case saith every one it is mine Infirmity I wish it were otherwise But if it be an Infirmity we may know it by these signs 1. It will be counted an Infirmity if we grieve for it and be sorry and humbled and troubled at it Let the sin be never so small yet if thou continuest in it securely with delight or content if thy heart smite thee not for it thou art excluded from the plea of Infirmity 2. If it be to be accounted as a pardonable Infirmity then we will strive against it we shall find a contrary holy inclination a rousing us out of it Thus Christ excused his Apostles sleeping Matth. xxvi 41. The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak He saw their desires were good Didst thou ever labour against it pray against it make a Covenant with thine eyes as Iob speaks 3. If we daily get some strength and prevailing against it If we live and lye in our Infirmity and after warning never improve it it ceases to be accounted an Infirmity 't is to be reckon'd a voluntary sin 2. Sometimes it arises from our immoderate labours defrauding our selves of a due refreshing and so enforcing us to make bold with God's house and day to take up our rest This makes it more sinful God appointed a preparation to his Sabbath that body and soul may be better fitted and enabled Have you not houses to eat and to drink in saith S. Paul Hath not God given you the night for to sleep say I and your houses and beds to rest in but you must despise the Church of God 3. Sometimes ignorance and deadness of understanding is the cause of it When the spirit of a man is unacquainted with what he hears when they are things that his understanding skills not of naturally the soul sinks into heedlesness and drowsiness of spirit Didst thou know the gift of God Didst thou consider that the word that is spoken is Life and Power Wert thou acquainted with the mysterie of Godliness it could not but extort attention But when we sit as meer Gallio's regarding nothing no wonder though we sleep 4. Sometimes prophaneness and neglect and contempt of Gods Ordinances that is the original They account the Sabbath a lost day What will this Babler speak They who see no beauty in Gods Sanctuary that say We know what the Preacher can say such unclean dogs delight in sleeping Oh! David had such delight in Gods word and calling upon him that he awakened at midnight thy dull prophaness makes thee sleep at noon-day Indecens Christiano si radius Solis inveniat dormientem Aug. How much more unbecoming is it that the Sun of righteousness should take us napping Awake therefore thou Sleeper and call upon thy God 5. Sometimes Satan works it in men As he is a dumb spirit or a deaf spirit so sometimes he is a sleepy drowsie spirit He hates to see us spiritually exercised And if he cannot other wayes yet this way he can prevent the working of Gods word He can like Mercury lay souls asleep lest they should hear with
change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body Phil. iii. 21. Neither Lazarus nor the rest in Scripture are exact patterns of our resurrection They rose to dye again they were rather bayl'd and repriev'd from the grave for a time not fully discharged Lazarus rose with his grave-cloaths on him still cloath'd with mortality Christ left the grave-cloaths behind him he is the example of our resurrection An example is not a casual resemblance but that which hath a similitude drawn from it by an intended imitation So onely Christs Resurrection is the example of ours Hence S. Paul saith We are planted into the similitude of his Resurrection Rom. vi Christs Resurrection hath an assimilative virtue draws our resurrection into the similitude of it self As the Prophet Elijah applyed every member of his living body to those of the dead child and so recovered him 'T is Exemplum Resurrectionis 3. Christs Resurrection 't is a good ground of ours 't is Principium effectivum nostrae Resurrectionis Vivo ego vos vivetis there is the derivation of our living again Iohn xiv 19. The Jews fondly say that there is something in Spina dorsi that doth not putrefie in our dead bodies and that is the cause of our resurrection No 't is not Robur dorsi but Virtus Capitis the influence of our Head Christ that shall convey life to us We are to look upon Christs resurrection as the fountain and original of ours He was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith S. Basil. Christ did not rise as a private person for himself but as a publick principle of all our resurrections Hence he calls himself The Resurrection and the Life S. Paul calls him Primitias dormientium The First-fruits dedicate the whole Crop so our resurrection 't is dedicated by Christ. Tertullian calls our resurrections Appendices resurrectionis Dominicae It was represented as on this day When he rose the graves of many Saints were open'd and they rose with him As at Kings Coronations when they receive the Crown they enlarge prisoners dispense honours advance their favourites Non tam Christusin carne nostra quâm caro nostra in Christo. As Ioseph's advancement was the advancement and safety of all the Hebrews and all the Jews were honour'd in the preferment of Hester so all the body of the Church was raised in Christ. Indeed he entred the grave as our Surety and lay under the arrest of death for our debt that being discharged he hath effected not so much his own as our enlargement That 's the second Fundatio Resurrectionis 3. Here in this Profession of Iob's is Realitas Resurrectionis his Faith believes and expects a true real substantial bodily resurrection Nay here is not onely a reality but an identity he shall have a body and the very same body 1. He expects a true real body Not as some Hereticks that turn'd this high mysterie into a moral Allegory Why the soul by sinning neither dyes nor sleeps but is immortal not capable of a resurrection Thy dead men shall live together with my dead body shall they rise saith the Prophet Esay Chap. xvi 19. 2. And as there is a reality so here is likewise a perfect identity we shall receive the same bodies not new bodies created for us In my flesh shall I see God these eyes shall behold him 1. Else it were not a resurrection Quod cecidit hoc resurgat quod mortuum est reviviscat saith the Father And 2. Justice and Equity would have it so The body is partaker in sin as well as the soul. Famula in culpa must be Socia in poena saith Salvian If the Master mourns the Servant that attends him follows him in black If the soul the principal in sin if that suffers the body that 's accessory must share in the punishment 3. The grand pattern and Example of our resurrection confirms it Christ rose not onely with a true body Feel me a spirit hath not flesh and bones but with the same body Cicatrices Corporis were Indices Resurrectionis 4. Mercy delights to have it so It will pour forth a redundant reward upon soul and body God will not forget the labour of love that the body hath undertaken That flesh which thou hast chastised and mortified those hands that have been lifted up in prayer reach'd out to the poor employed in good works those eyes that have shed tears of repentance He shall wipe tears from those eyes Utique iisdem oculis qui flebant quique adhuc flerent nisi indulgentia Divina siccaret Nay not an hair of our heads shall perish Si sic custodiuntur superflua tua in quanta securitate est Caro tua S. Augustine This flesh this body shall be raised and glorified We have seen the first thing observable the several Truths profess'd and acknowledged by Iob in this faith of the resurrection Now follows Secondly Pietas fidei the Motions and Evidences of Piety his faith expresses 1. Here is Fortitudo fidei here appears the great strength of his faith that foresees and forecasts all the future difficulties and hindrances of his expectation and overcomes them all and is resolute against them He considers death and the consequences of death rotttenness and corruption Can a body when it is wasted and consumed in the Grave ever rise again Yes yes saith Iob Nothing is impossible to an omnipotent God I know whom I have trusted and he is able to effect it A weak Faith is glad to look off from these difficulties and shrinks back at them As Martha considering Lazarus was four days dead and began to putrefie her faith began to fail her it was too late now to remove the Grave-stone But Faith in its strength considers all these urges these impossibilities 〈◊〉 and yet overcomes them As Elijah in his dispute with Baals Priests took all the disadvantages to himself Pour on water and again Pour on more water Faith shall fetch fire from Heaven to enflame the Sacrifice so saith Iob Let me die and not and putrefie in the Grave nay let the fire burn my body or the Sea swallow it or wilde Beasts devour it yet it shall be restored to me Death shall be praedae suae oustos like the Lion that kill'd the Prophet and then stood by his body and did not consume it Iob's faith laughs at impossibilities is asham'd to talk of difficulties with Abraham considers not his own dead body but believes above and against hope knew God would restore it 2. A second print of Piety is Alacritas fidei the great alacrity and cheerfulness of his faith against present discouragements See how cheerfully he views the horrid face of death now seizing upon him looks upon his ulcerous body the skin consumed and eaten with Worms Tertullian saith he play'd with the Worms he surveys all the ghastly appearances and approaches of death confidently comfortably through this faith of the Resurrection This blessed assurance
makes him look Death in the face undauntedly Alass we how doth any appearance of death affright us If we see but another man die the cold sweat and the pale face and the pangs of death upon him how doth it dismay us Iob finds all these in himself and speaks comfortably of them 'T is S. Augustin's pious counsel Si times mortem ama resurrectionem If thou beest afraid of death acquaint thy self with the hope of the resurrection If a man go to prison and be able to say I know I shall be bayled I have one who will quit my debt and enlarge me such an one fears not the Prison Let death arrest us Christ shall enlarge us We are prisoners of hope Zech. ix How cheerfully did Iacob take his journey when God spake to him Gen. xlvi Fear not to go down into Egypt I will go down with thee and I will surely bring thee up again This hope made Iob not onely not to fear death but even to desire it Chap. xiv Oh that thou wouldst hide me in the Grave then he asks this question If a man die shall he live again Yes saith he Thou shalt call and I will answer thee thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands That 's the second Alacritas fidei 3. There is yet another print of Piety Sancta expectatio Fidei What is the thing his Faith longs for at the resurrection It is the seeing of his Saviour the beholding of God the enjoying of his Redeemer In my flesh shall I see God and mine eyes shall behold him 'T is that that makes the resurrection comfortable not that we shall live ever but be ever with the Lord. It was small joy for Absalom to dwell at Ierusalem and not be admitted to see the Kings face 2 Sam. xiv Heaven is not Heaven but a place of confinement without this glorious and blessed Vision Though Moses and Elias vanish on Mount Tabor yet to see Christ in glory is abundant happiness Do occidere heliace the glory of the Sun swallows up the glory of the lesser Stars Whom have I in heaven but thee and whom do I desire in comparison of thee Psal. lxxiii The good women at the Sepulchre this Day saw a Vision of Angels but that contented them not till Christ himself appeared Iob knew he should enjoy the society of Saints and Angels sit down and feast it with Abraham and Isaac and Iacob in the Kingdom of Heaven but here is the height of his happiness I shall see my Saviour Heaven as it is Coenaculum sponsi the Guest-chamber for the supper of the Lamb 't is a place of comfort but as it is Thaelamus sponsi the Bride-chamber of the Lamb where the Spouse enjoys him whom her soul loves it is the place of blessedness Thirdly the last thing remains that 's Beneficium fidei the use and benefit Iob makes to himself of this Meditation And the benefit is threefold suitable and seasonable to a threefold condition in which Iob now was 1. Iob was overlaid and opprest with affliction Suitable to this condition this Meditation affords Vim sustentaetivam it supports his spirits amidst all his afflictions Here is the patience of the Saints mockings and scourgings and bonds and imprisonments they endured them all because they expected a better resurrection Heb. xi That blessed day will make amends for all It was this hope that sustained S. Paul kept him from fainting 2 Cor. iv Knowing that he which raised up the Lord Iesus shall raise us up also with Iesus and for this cause we faint not Thus also he comforts and cheers up other Christians If in this life onely we had hope in Christ we were of all men most miserable But there is a Resurrection after this life we have hope in Christ and therefore of all men most happy This assurance will stand by us when all things else fail It was Esau's confession Behold I am at the point to die and what profit shall this birth-right do to me But to be Filius resurrectionis that Birth-right will relieve us at our last agony and support us comfortably Iob felt the good of this Meditation and he insists upon it Here is Masticatio fidei he chews it in his mouth and sucks out the sweetness of it 2. You may see Iob in another condition transported with passion and suitable to that this Meditation it had Vim quietativam a great virtue he found in it to settle and compose him In the Verses going before his spirit is stirred within him he is full of complainings and murmurings and quarrellings with God and expostulations See how he rebukes and allays these storms and tempests with this Meditation O my soul keep silence unto God for of him comes my salvation Thus David stills discontents Why art thou so troubled O my soul Why art thou so disquieted within me I shall yet praise him The day shall come that I shall see his countenance and for ever enjoy him Mortale mori is one ground of settlement against these perplexities and Iob makes use of it Chap. xiv but Mortuum reviviscere is satisfaction with advantage that will calm and quiet all his complainings 3. Lastly behold Iob in another condition he is charged by his friends with the sin of hypocrisie and then this Meditation it hath Vim apologeticam 't is his defence and apologie against that accusation Against all their surmises and suspicions of his integrity this he opposes for his justification It is God that justifies me who are ye that condemn me 'T is Christ that is dead and now risen again he shall judge and acquit me O! hypocrisie shrinks at the thought of death trembles to hear of a resurrection These painted Sepulchres till then make a goodly shew they are the beautifullest parts that are in the Church but when the Vault shall be open'd and all secrets disclosed nothing will appear then but horrour and confusion rottenness and corruption But truth and integrity appeals unto that great Trial knows that the Name that 's written in Heaven shall one day be cleared from slanders on earth My witness is in Heaven and my record is on high That 's the great avowment of Iobs truth and integrity till then it matters not much what the world says of us Lingua Petiliani non est ventilabrum Christi there lies an appeal of all mens censures to that days trial before the great Tribunal A joyfull appearance before which He grant unto us who as this Day overcame death for us and opened unto us the Gate of eternal life even Jesus that hath delivered us from the wrath to come To whom with the Father c. ON EASTER-DAY The Second Sermon ROM viii 11. But 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 IN this Context and passage
Christians The Faith of the Patriarchs and Prophets was chiefly employed about Christs first Coming and Incarnation the Faith of Christians must now expect and wait for his second Coming in Glory to Judgment They listned to hear the first voyce gentle and meek as the voyce of a Lamb we must be attentive to hear his last voyce that is dreadful and terrible as the roaring of a Lion Answerable to these two Epoches and periods of the Churches Faith the Scripture tells us of two dayes of Christ. 1. The day of his Incarnation the Prophets and Patriarchs fixed most upon that Abraham rejoyced to see that day Iohn viii 56. Then 2. The Scripture tells us of a second day of Christ that is the day of his Coming to Judgment That is called The day of the Lord 2 Pet. iii. The day of Iesus Christ Phil. i. 6. It is called The dreadful day of the Lord Malach. iv 5. The great day of his wrath Revel vi 17. For this day must be the expectation and preparation of Christians S. Peter tells us 'T is our duty to look for and to hasten to the Coming of this day of God 2 Pet. iii. 12. That is the first thing I note here Christ forewarneth it Secondly He doth not onely forewarn it that one day sooner or later it will come upon us but he tells them of many signs and prognosticks of the approaching of it vers 25. there shall be signs of it and they certain and infallible and dreadful and dismal that will astonish the beholders Indeed the particular season and set time of it is reserved and concealed from us and that for great and good purpose but yet Christ hath furnished his Church with such signs and tokens of it in the fulfilling of which we may plainly conclude The day is drawing on and now approaching that we may resolve with S. Iohn 1 Ioh. ii 18. We know that it is the last time See saith S. Iames The Iudg standeth before the door Who knows how soon he will enter in upon us That 's the second he foretells the signs of it Thirdly He doth not onely forewarn it and foretel the signs of it but premonisheth and giveth a Caveat to us that we should carefully provide for it 1. Be the truth of his Coming never so certain 2. Be the signs and tokens of it never so manifest yet 3. If we look not well about us we may be surprised by it It may rush in upon us when we little think of it S. Paul tells us It shall come suddenly as the throes and travel of a woman with child 1 Thes. v. 3. Let a woman with child keep her reckoning never so carefully yet the just time and season of her travel she may not know she may be taken with those pangs when she little looks for them So then we have here a strict Caveat given us a warning-piece shot off to arouse and awaken us against the day of Judgment And it stands upon two Particulars 1. Here is a special Caution against a dangerous indisposition that will make us unfit for the entertainment of that day that is Gravedo cordis a spiritual surcharge and surfeit that our souls may fall into that will so clog and dull and oppress the heart that it can never heed nor expect or once think of the day of re●…koning that must come upon us That 's vers 34. 2. Here is a special direction to an holy preparation and ●…itting our selves against that day that is the duty of Vigilancy that we should keep Sentinel continually stand upon our Watch expect daily prepare hourly fit our selves carefully for the entertainment of that fatal day vers 36. The Text contains the first the ●…aution In it observe these particulars 1. The Caveat it self Take heed to your selves lest at any time 2. The distemper and indisposition to be avoided that is oppressing and overcharging our hearts 3. The Causes that will breed this surcharge of our hearts surfetting and drunkenness and cares of this life 4. The mischief that will follow if this Caveat be neglected That day may come upon us unawares and then wo be to us We come First to the Caveat In it three things 1. Is the duty of heedfulness and attention 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take heed 2. The persons concerning whom this Caveat is given Your selves 3. The greatness and measure and strictness of this heed in this vigilant and watchful word of circumspection 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lest at any time I. The first thing you must consider is the duty of heedfulness and attention Take heed saith Christ. 'T is the solemn watchword and warning of Scripture often urged and pressed upon us Take heed to thy self saith Moses that thine heart be not deceived Deut. xi Take good heed unto your selves Iosh. xxiii Take diligent heed Iosh. xxii Take heed and beware saith Christ Matth. xvi It is a warning always seasonable we all stand in need of it but especially in three Exigencies 1. If the duty we undertake the business about which we are employed be weighty and ponderous Matters of less moment and consequence may be slubbered and slighted but matters of importance require heed and attention Now matters of Religion that concern our spiritual state and condition the eternal welfare of our souls are of all others of highest consequence of greatest concernment O●… set your hearts unto it saith Moses for it is not a vain thing for you because it is your life Deut. xxxii 46. So again Deut. iv 9. Onely take heed to thy self and keep thy soul diligently And amongst all the duties of Religion the fitting of our souls for the day of Judgment the survey and examination of our consciences making 〈◊〉 our accounts against that day of reckoning it is a most weighty business That is the first enforcement of this duty of Heed the matter is exceeding serious 2 There is a second Exigent of this Care and Heed which makes this Caveat seasonable that is the approach of some great danger and miscarriage Safety may breed security but when we go upon hazards and dangers then we look about and arouze our selves to care and heedfulness Now there is no undertaking so beset with dangers as the duty of Religion and the managing of our spiritual condition The way of Piety is exceeding narrow and down-falls on both sides A Christian is Salutis funambulus The way to heaven it is no broad high way but a narrow path we may soon tread awry Especially the dangers of the last day the hazards that our souls must run at that great day of trial and account are most perilous 3. Above all this Caveat is most seasonable and necessary if the miscarriages we may fall into be irrecoverable and such as there is no getting out of them In those miscarriages that may be recovered and fetch'd about again there is some hope but if the danger we go upon be deadly and
yet thou mayst have a proneness and inclination to them The seeds of those evils are in our nature Inbred Concupisence is as the materia prima to all sorts of sins susceptive of any unlawful Impression The Spirit that is in thee may be willing but the flesh is weak nay willful too 2. It must make us watch over Satans temptations Take heed of them Art thou not given to these sins of Voluptuousness and Covetousness yet if thou look not to thy self Satan may surprise thee by some temptation Consider thy self saith St. Paul lest thou be tempted Let our hearts seem never so empty of these sins Satan can fill our hearts with these lusts as he did to Ananias and Sapphira Why hath Satan filled your hearts with covetousness Acts v. 3. Though thy heart be not habitaculum for Satans temptations yet it may prove hospitium 3. We must watch over all occasions Take heed of them shun not onely these sins but the occasions that may bring thee unto them As Solomon speaks of unlawful haunts Avoid it pass not by it turn from it come not near it He that fears a distemper will forbear all meats that may dispose him to it A wise man will not onely shun poyson but all unwholsome meats Even lawful liberty lawful company lawful employments must be warily used So much of the Caveat Come we Secondly to the Distemper to be avoided And in it 1. The Causes that breed it And then 2. The Disease it self Gravedo cordis The Causes that breed this surcharge are three 1. Surfetting 2. Drunkenness 3. The Cares of this life And then the Enquiry must be 1. Why doth Christ so forewarn them against these sins 2. Why especially with reference to the day of Judgment The Scripture tells us there are other great sins that will raign and prevail in the world about that time Infidelity which is Atheism against the Gospel that will then prevail When the Son of Man comes shall he find Faith on the earth Luke xviii 9. Want of Charity that will then abound in the world The Charity of many shall then wax cold Matth. xxiv Apostasie giving over Religion Antichristianism and Idolatry and corruption in Religion that shall prevail in the world at Christs coming 2 Thes. ii 'T is true these and many outragious sins shall prevail then Iniquity shall then abound Matth. xxiv but yet we see Christ forewarns them especially of these evils in the Text. I. Why so 1. These sins of Voluptuousness and Worldly-mindedness they are more natural to us Heresie and Idolatry and Bloud and Oppression men are not so prone to these but to be overtaken with excess in pleasures and profits our nature is exceeding subject to these evils 2. As they are more natural so these sins are most general and universal Outragious villanies many will abstain from them but all the world almost is taken either with Voluptuousness or Covetousness He is counted a strange Monster among men that is not addicted and given to pleasures 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith S. Peter 1 Pet. iv 4. They think it strange a man runs not with them into excess and riot Iohn came neither eating nor drinking and they counted him a devil Otherwise he would have done as other men did and plaid the good-fellow Survey the whole world and all almost are taken with one of these two Young men they are for Pleasures old men they are for Profits They will haunt the same man in a succession as when a Quartane leaves him he falls into a Dropsie Hydropi●…am habent conscientiam so when Pleasure forsakes him Covetousness layes hold upon him 3. These are such sins as Professors of Religion will venture upon They will be no Hereticks no Idolaters nor yet unnatural monsters but security and tasting too much of pleasures and profits men that would be counted for good Christians will be overtaken with them Thus in the old world the Sons of God the true Worshippers fell by Voluptuousness S. Paul tells us of loose-living Christians Whose God is their belly and that mind earthly things 4. These sins Christ forewarns them of as being unworthy and unsutable with the Faith and Hope and Religion of Christians The prevailing of these sins wrung tears from S. Paul I tell you weeping they are enemies to the Cross of Christ. Enemies to his Cross. Christ's Religion it is a Religion of Sobriety and Moderation When the world offers us these delights and profits we should answer as Christ did when they offerd him meat I have other meat which you know not of So should a Christian say We have other pleasures and treasures which the world knows not of which our Religion affords us Ey but Christs Cross that 's of the greatest force to mortifie these sins Christians profess they serve a crucified God Sub spinato capite membra delicata That Cross should crucifie us to the world Gal. vi and make us dye to it Lovers of pleasures more then lovers of God What a great indignity is that to our Religion And for worldly-mindedness our Saviour tells us plainly 't is inconsistent with piety Matth. vi 24. Ye cannot serve God and Mammon O yes We can mind the world and Gods service too Such quick and large-parted men there are that can deal in divers businesses Well Christ tells us We cannot serve two Masters 1. It will breed a distraction God requires this service of thee the world will forbid it God saith Relieve the poor No Spare thy purse saith the world God saith Set daily some time apart to pray to thy God and to mind thy soul No the world saith Thou canst not spare so much time thou hast other business It will breed distraction 2. Christ adds Thou must love the one and hate the other that is more then a distraction it implyes a contrariety We cannot serve two at all much less two that are in contrariety and enmity So is God and the world The love of the world is enmity to God Iam. iv 4. Denias hath forsaken me and loved this present world 2 Tim. iv If you love the world you must hate God Will a man abide such a servant that shall live in his house and yet hold a close correspondency with his utter enemy mind his affairs and leave his Master 's undone O but we may bear good-will to both No therefore saith Christ 3. You must cleave to the one and despise the other If you serve the world you must cleave to it addict your selves wholly to it neglect despise God Serving loving cleaving to the world all these will not suffer us to apply our selves to God and the world too II. Christ principally forewarns them of these sins with a special reference and eye to the day of Judgment and that for three causes 1. These sins of voluptuousness and worldliness they are Peccata praecurrentia The prevailing of these sins are a certain prognostick of that day these sins
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bound in the Spirit carried by a strong guidance of the Holy-Ghost in all his conversation Hath he vouchsafed to dwell in thee Yield up thy self to his command and authority 4. Dwelling implies Care and Protection and Provision All that are within the Verge are under Protection The Master of the house is to see to all and to provide for them The good man of the house wakes soonest and watches longest Aristotle gives this rule in his Oeconomicks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The care of his house belongs to him Nor is this Spirit of Christ wanting in this property A Christian possess'd by God hath a Patent of Protection a full supply of all comfortable provision He will safe-guard his house and protect it he withstands all assaults made upon it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he resists the assaults that Satan makes upon it He that destroyes the Temple of God him shall God destroy See the Patent of Provision that God grants to his houshold My servants shall eat but ye shall be hungry my servants shall drink but ye shall be thirsty my servants shall rejoyce but ye shall be ashamed Isai. lxv 13. For use 1. It should teach us gladly to yield up our selves as Mansions for him to dwell and abide in us not onely to receive him guest-wise or at some good time onely as at a Communion but resign up all to him give him the keys let no room be shut up against him Invite him to come in unto us to own and possess us Turn in my Lord turn in to me 2. When he hath taken up his dwelling offend him not by any thing that may make him mislike much less give over and forsake his dwelling Res delicata est Spiritus Dei Tertul. 'T is not every rude and homely entertainment that will content him Nobilem hospitem habes O anima O man thou lodgest a glorious Inhabitant study to please him We must not grieve him Ephes. iv 30. much less resist him Act●… vii least of all despise him Heb. x. 29. He will abide no longer than where he is observed As the spirit of man stayes no longer in the body then it is pliant to him hinder it from working and it forsakes us presently 3. This Inhabitation of the Spirit in us challenges a reverence of the souls and bodies of Gods Saints as of the Mansion-place where God himself abides Violence to a Temple 't is counted Sacriledge such a Prophanation is no less then an Abomination to God Neither scorn nor cruelty nor any unworthy usage to these Temples of the living God but strikes at the face of God himself Do you despise the house of God saith S. Paul As Christ saith He that swears by the Temple swears by it and him that dwells in it so he that violates the body of a Saint offers indignity to that God that dwells in it Take heed of profaning your selves being dedicated and devoted to the Holy Ghost Thus S. Paul dehorts them from uncleanness The body is not for fornication but for the Lord and the Lord for the body Portastis Dominum in corpore vestro as the old Translation hath it Possess them in Holinesse and Honour We have seen the particulars Now II. Briefly take notice of the summary intent and purpose of this Clause If the Spirit of him that raised Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised Iesus from the dead shall quicken your mortal bodies The Exigence and Illation from this Conditional is thus much That Sanctification is a necessary Requisite to a glorious Resurrection The expectation of future Glory it must be founded upon present Grace Thou will not give thine holy One to see corruption saith David Psal. xvi Solum Sanctum non videbit corruptionem saith S. Bern. 'T is holiness that embalmes our dead bodies and will keep them from corruption The many habitudes and references that Holiness hath to Happiness Grace to Glory will confirm this truth 1. Grace in reference to Glory it hath Rationem seminis Everlasting life it is called the fruit of holiness Rom. vi 22. and Galat. vi 8. He that sowes to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting Sementis hodie ●…ras messis saith S. Chrysostom This life is the Seed-time the next life is the Harvest If there be no Seed-time of Grace never expect any Harvest of Glory 2. Grace unto Glory hath the respect of a First-fruits to the whole Crop Rom. viii 23. We that have the first-fruits of the Spirit wait for the redemption of our bodies The First-fruits dedicated the whole Harvest These ripe Ears of Grace are a blessed assurance of the full Sheaves of Glory to be reaped hereafter 3. Grace unto Glory hath the respect of a Fountain to a Stream or River Ioh. iv 14. The water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up to everlasting life And what that Well of water is he tells us chap. vii 39. This spake he of the Spirit which they that believe on him should receive Damm or dry up the Spring-head and the Streams flow not we must begin at the Fountain of Grace if ever we mean to attain to the Ocean of Glory 4. Grace unto Glory hath the respect of a pledge or earnest or seal unto a full actual Possession 2 Cor. i. 2. Who hath sealed us and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts And again Eph. i. 13. Ye are sealed with that holy Spirit of Promise which is the earnest of our inheritance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. saith S. Chrysost. It seals up all and is in stead of all Theodosius made it a Law That they who received not the Pledge of Matrimony should lose their Dowry Without this earnest of Grace we cannot expect the fruition of Glory 'T is like the red thread on Rahab's house if we part with that token we cannot escape 5. Indeed there is so near a Conjunction twixt Grace and Glory that the Scripture makes them both the same thing Saint Peter calls Grace The Spirit of Glory The Spirit of God and of Glory rests on you 1 Pet. iv 14. They differ but in degrees as the Morning-light doth to the light of the perfect-Day Prov. iv 18. Grace 't is the beginning and day-break and dawning of Glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as there is some light before the Sun rises Glory 't is nothing but gratia consummata and the blessedness of Heaven 't is gloriosa sanctitas holiness in the brightest hue shining in its full lustre This makes the Scripture urge and enforce the necessity of Holiness Follow holiness without which none shall see the Lord Heb. xii 14. c. We have done with the first Particular The Condition upon which our Resurrection is promised If the Spirit of him that raised up Iesus from the dead dwell in you Now follows Secondly The efficient cause
of it He that raised up Christ from the dead shall quicken your mortal bodies That is God the Father he will be the Author of our Resurrection Divers Reasons and Congruities there are for this truth 1. The first Founder of life must be the Repairer and Restorer of it to us As he first breathed life into us so he will send forth his Spirit and renew us and recall us back again The interest he hath in us by our Creation gives him the right to atcheive our Resurrection Iob observed that chap. xiv 14 15. If a man die shall he live again Yes yes Thou shalt call and I will answer thee thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands That hand which created us shall again raise and restore us Mine own I will bring back again Psal. lxviii 22. 2. The soul in death returns to him that gave it It is in his hand and power and custody and so none but he can return it into the body and re-unite it Dives in Hell confessed this truth Father Abraham send Lazarus to my brethren He hath the keys of hell and of death and of all the Chambers of the grave Rev. i. 18. 3. He is the Restorer of life in the Resurrection as being the supreme Disposer of all Rewards and Honours and Retributions As the King is the Fountain of all civil Dignity and Honour and he must dispense it so all the Dispensations of Glory are at his disposal The Preferments in Heaven are given to them for whom they are prepared by the Father Matth. xx 23. Now this Author of our Resurrection is specified not barely by the mention of his name or person but represented under an expression of much hope and assurance He that raised Christ from the dead that gives footing and fastning to our faith that he will raise us also That great work makes our Resurrection possible and hopeful and certain too There are many Praeludia Resurrectionis many miraculous works in Scripture that did sweetly prefigure our Resurrection but none like this of raising Christ. 1. Enoch's Translation that he saw not death Gen. v. 24. God delivered him from the power and possession of death That which was to him Gratia praeveniens shall be to us Gratia subvenieus He who exempted him from death can rescue us 2. Elijah's Rapture and Assumption in a fiery Chariot he likewise was exempted from the necessity of death his exaltation was a type of our resurrection 3. Aaron's Rod a dry dead piece of wood made to bud and flourish and bring forth ripe fruit that argues a possibility that we shall revive and renew our strength again 4. The Garments of the Israelites for forty years though used and worn yet decayed not He who can preserve our Garments from wearing out sure he can preserve our Bodies from perishing 5. The three Children cast into a fiery Furnace yet preserved no smell of fire was upon them that 's a great assurance that the Furnace of the Grave shall restore us to Incorruption 6. Ionas cast up again when the Whale had swallowed him the Prophet slain by the Lion but yet not devoured by him both Praedae suae custodes and hopeful and comfortable Assurances of our Resurrection All these are sweet Resemblances and Arguments of our rising again but none like this He that raised Christ from the dead shall Christ's Resurrection 1. Argues ours possible S. Paul argues strongly from it If Christ be risen again how say some that there is no Resurrection 2. It makes ours probable and easie Death is now vanquish'd by Christs Resurrection When the Prison door is set open it is easie to escape 3. It makes ours necessary If the Head be risen the Members must follow after Christus non potest habere membra damnata The living Head must not be united to dead Members We have seen the Author Thirdly What is the Action He shall quicken our mortal bodies Mortal bodies Why not Our dead bodies That seems to be more Mortuum sounds more then mortale No purposely the Apostle uses this expression in this point of the Resurrection Mortale is a great deal more then ●…ortuum To be raised à Mortalitate is a great deal more then to be raised à Morte It expresses three Excellencies of our Christian Resurrection 1. It frees us à possibilitate mortis it takes away the necessity nay more then so the possibility of death Death shall have no more dominion over us Not onely death shall be swallow'd up in victory 1 Cor. xv but mortality shall be swallow'd up of life 2 Cor. v. 4. Our Resurrection shall be according to the power of an endless life as the Apostle speaks This Resurrection far exceeds the Resurrection of Lazarus and those others in Scripture They were rais'd à morte but not à mortalitate The fit was rather removed then the disease cured 'T is a rule they have Qui comitialem morbum habent nè quidem diebus quibus morbo vacant sani dicuntur They who are troubled with the falling-sickness upon their good dayes are not counted whole Now Mortalitas it is Morbus caducus our Resurrection cures us of that the core of death is consumed the root and fibrae of death all stub'd up Nay our Resurrection sets us in an Immortality beyond that of Adam He was endued with an Immortality but not like this of ours As was his liberty from sin so was his immortality and freedom from death Prima libertas fuit non peccare and so Prima immortalitas was posse non mori He might not have sinned that was his Liberty he might not have died that was his Immortality But the liberty from sin in heaven is Non posse peccare there they cannot sin so is our immortality Non posse mori that we cannot die it takes away possibilitat●…m mortis 2. This Expression of quickning our mortal bodies it brings with it a second excellency a freedom from infirmities diseases and weaknesses they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sprowts that grow from this root of death It will free us from all the sad sequels of mortality No infirmity or deformity or indecency no pains or diseases Lame Mephibosheth shall leap blind Isa●…c shall see clearly and ulcerous Lazarus shall be whole and sound 3. It brings a third Excellency it will free us à miseria Miseries and afflictions and vexations they are the concomitants of our mortality this resurrection shall exempt us from them too Saint Iohn assures us of it Rev. xxi 4. God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes and there shall be no more death neither sorrow nor crying nor any more pain all these are passed by I come Fourthly To the last thing that is the ground and reason of all Because his Spirit dwells in you The inhabitation of God's Spirit that 's the ground of our Resurrection And the force and evidence of this reason may be deduced into these