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A88417 England faithfully watcht with, in her wounds: or, Christ as a father sitting up with his children in their swooning state: which is the summe of severall lecvtures painfully preached upon Colossians 1. / By Nicho. Lockyer, M.A. Published according to order. Lockyer, Nicholas, 1611-1685. 1646 (1646) Wing L2794; Thomason E321_1; ESTC R200573 432,053 511

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your affections burn and your hearts beat to be redeemed That 's well then there is but one step more believe and you are redeemed out of bondage and this will be wrought it will spring and grow insensibly out of those pantings and breathings which are upon you I have seen the bondage of my people and I have heard their cry saith God When bondage makes crying out O what shall I do and who shall deliver me Enemies are got into a body and are deadly strong a body of death besets my soul and in the midst of this body shall not I loose my soul Now the sinner is turned from iniquity and now the redeemer comes to Sion Let the redeemed admire and adore the redeemer this one thing I will touch and give up the point and I am the rather induced unto it because 't is the use made in my text In whom we have redemption through his bloud Which words are spoken in way of admiration and thanksgiving and are but the continuation of that thanksgiving which is begun in the verse fore-going The redemption of the soul is precious silver would not reach it gold would not reach it onely the precious bloud of Christ would do it precious bloud must stirre and precious spirits leap from this consideration as high as heaven and spurtle up in Gods face Freedome binds man all must be sent to heaven that is saved from hell Let the redeemed say this and say that saith the Psalmist Redemption is obligation who ever hangs by his harp a redeemed person must not because he hath his advantage with him above all others his lesson set and laid before him yea his instrument tuned and put into his hand his lips are opened as the Psalmist speaks 't is but stirre thy tongue and matter cannot be wanting nor affections be able to lie still He that died for us must be perfumed and carried home honourably and buried in his own countrey as Jacob was he that died for you on earth must be perfumed by praises and carried to his own countrey and buried in heaven You must not bury Christ in his works but take him up out of his works and words and carry him to heaven and bury him there Nature abhorres burying things in their own bloud you must not bury Christ in his own bloud but take him up out of his bloud and bath him and perfume him and lay him to sleep in the arms of his father The redemption we speak of here and would have you thankfull for respects your souls and your bodies what mercy comes to either is a blessing from Christ as a Redeemer Not a deliverance in these bloudy times but from the bloud of Christ from that great redeemer that sits in heaven Bodily redemption is but the outside of soul-redemption I hope the blindest sight will be able to see the out-sides of mercy Blind wretches look upon temporall redemptions which now Christ makes and see if you can blesse him for these you had not had the lives of your bodies nor the livelihood of your estates at this houre had not your redeemer pleaded for you had not he pleaded for you w th his bloud you had been all ere this tumbling in your own bloud you had had your bloud trod under foot by those which have long trod under foot the bloud of Christ One redeemer works all redemptions for soul and body one redeemer pleads in soul-cases and in bodily cases See a full plain place Prov. 23.18 Enter not into the fields of the fatherlesse for their redeemer is mightie he shall plead their cause with thee It is but one redeemer that pleads for us in spirituall things and in corporall and therefore in all mercies both spirituall and corporall let Christ be honoured and praised Coloss 1.14 In whom we have redemption through his bloud THe way of grace is here considerable life comes through death God comes in Christ and Christ comes in bloud to save The choisest mercies come through the greatest miseries prime favours come swimming in bloud to us Through a red sea Israel came to Canaan Many a man lost his life and much bloud shed the very land flowing with milk and honey made to flow with bloud ere Israel could inherit the promise seven nations were destroyed ere the land of Canaan was divided to the Israelites Acts 13 19. Israel came to Canaan through bloud and kept in Canaan through bloud Samson was strangled in his own bloud like Christ to keep bloud and life in that blessed people The harlot had her life by a scarlet thread and so had the rest of her faith As the promised land so the promised crown came swimming to David in bloud how many men died and how near was David death many times ere that promise of his honour did live Josephs garment was dipt in bloud and he dead alive for so many years and this was the way to his greatnesse and to the saving of the life of all the holy seed Sinne makes mercie so deadly hard in bringing forth to cristen every precious child every Benjamin Benoni every sonne of Gods right hand a sonne of sorrow and death to her that brings him forth Adam's sweets had no bitter till he transgressed Gods will one mercie did not die to bring forth another till he died One creature was a felicitie for another and none a death to or for another mercy generated mercy and man fed upon the cream and top of all and yet the bottom as sweet as the top mans felicitie was no creatures misery under him they were happy in him and he in them and all in the presence of God to each I will rain bread from heaven saith God to Moses and this was an extraordinary thing then and yet ordinary to Adam before his fall spiritually understood he had all his provision without cost or toil his felicity descended from heaven upon him as dew heaven and earth opened and not any ones sides or veins and so mercy streamed upon him he had his felicity with no more hardship then Angels Man would have his pleasure and God would have his too divine pleasure hath turned the course of love The sea hath runne so many thousand years in such a channell yet God can when he will turn it into another though so broad and big an element The sea is bottomlesse but not boundlesse 't is ordered by the pleasure of God and so is mercy the will of God bounds it orders it keeps it in and lets it forth through what channells it will life through death heaven through hell The first covenant was sealed with life the tree of life was the seal of Adams first grace and favour the second covenant is ratified with death the tree of life must die or else none could live by eating of it 't is not life out of life now as out of the first covenant but life out of death and this necessarily because
the bloud of his Crosse Hanging was used under the old Covenant onel● for some notorious crimes as blasphemie sacrificing to Devils c. and was used as a second death first life was taken away by some other punishment as stoning or the like and then the body hanged up to render the person as well as the fact abominable to all to God and man which is the meaning of that expression He that is hanged is accursed of God Deut. 21.23 his person as well as his fact is execrable greatly abhorred Thus David commanded Rechab and Barzillah to be punished with a double death for that foule fact of murthering Ishbosheth he slew them and then he hanged them up 2 Sam. 4.12 Such a one was Christ judged to be a notorious malefactor a blasphemer one that had a devill c. and therefore hanged on a tree not slaine first but tortured to death upon the Crosse which was a Romish variation from the rule as in matter so in forme and served in this case onely to vend the height of malice against innocency making not two deaths but a thousand deaths in one The bloud of the crosse speakes three things Divine wrath fully suffered Infinite Justice was offended answerable displeasure brake forth a sea of wrath in the world and Christ in the bottome of it alive and all the waves passing over him I went downe to the bottome of the mountaines saith Jonah All the waves passed over me yet hast thou brought my life the pit These expressions speake Christ he lay under mountaines seas of displeasure he bore the full weight of divine wrath he paid the utmost farthing God is not extreame to marke what 's done amisse in reference to us but he was so in reference to Christ not a sin not a circumstance of sin overlooked of all those millions of sinners and sins undertaken for but wrath weigh'd out exact in proportion to all and laid on Christ and he bore all He bore the iniquitie of us all Justice mingles her selfe with mercy when shee breakes forth upon us in the middest of Justice God remembers mercie but it did not so in reference to Christ Justice went forth in its full strength against him without a dram of mercy mixed with it He was made a curse for us Which words speake no mercy The strength of sin is the Law and the strength of the Law is the curse all the curses written in Gods book without any mercy mixed and all this did Christ beare upon the crosse The crosse was a grand curse a superlative punishment which wrapt up all the misery in it that ever justice made or any creature felt Christs cup had mixture in it but not one sweet ingredient all corroding and speaking full and pure wrath gall and vineger was given him in the pangs of death The bloud of the crosse speakes justice fully satisfied 't is called for this cause a Lutron a ransome Wee were sold under sin and the bloud of the crosse bought us paid the full demands of that power under which we were The Son of man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and give his life a ransome for many The bloud of the crosse is a ransome that which gives full satisfaction to an offended God under whose wrath wee lay Wee are bought with a price this price is not gold nor silver but the precious bloud of Christ The bloud of Christ is bloud of price that this is shed is as much as if the bloud of all the creatures in the world had been shed yea more life is our choicest jewel yet all creatures lives put together and put into one bundle of life and presented to God he would not have taken it to ransome one soule no he would not have taken it as satisfactory for one sin Justice offended is infinite the price given for satisfaction must be proportionable or else no satisfaction the bloud of all the world is finite and not proportionable to infinite and therefore God shed his bloud the bloud of the crosse is the bloud of him that was God-man this made the bloud of the humane nature precious bloud as Peter speakes that is infinitely precious of worth to satisfie for all the sins that are or shall be committed in the world because all will rise but to a finite bulke let it swell as big as 't will 't is of price to satisfie for all the sinnes in the world and if there were so many more then there are therefore is that expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much more repeated twice in the fifth of the Romans Not as the offence so is the free gift the price is another gets thing then that in proportion to which it is given for if through the offence of one many be dead much more the grace of God and the gift by grace which is by one man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many The bloud of the crosse speakes guilt fully expiated actually in reference to Christ as an undertaker and so also in reference to us who are actually in him by faith He bore our sinnes in his bodie upon the crosse saith the Apostle Peter The Leviticall bloud was purging it purified the flesh as the Scripture speakes and pointed at Christs bloud which purifies flesh and spirit i takes away the wrath of God liable to both Without bloud there is no remission but with bloud there is remission full remission the bloud of the crosse takes out all spots The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 There is not a spot in Christ consider him as our undertaker as married to our nature he is all faire Thou art all faire my love c. Joshua had filthy garments but he hath washed them white in his owne bloud so have they which are in him by faith their garments are white with the bloud of the Lambe by garments is not meant the outside onely but outside and inside the whole person They that are washed are cleane every whit Christ speakes of the Spouse as the Spouse speakes of him Thou art all faire c. Vse Sinners doe you consider how usefull Christ is and make use of him The chastisement of our peace is upon him that which belongs to any mans eternall welfare is contrived upon the crosse by Christ he hath bought all into his hand with his bloud which tends to any ones good he has the eare of God the hand of God the heart of God he has Earth Heaven he hath eternall life and can give it to whom he will he hath the keyes of David the keyes of those everlasting dores he is the dore to the bosome of the Father he hath by his bloud entered within the vaile bought all under his custodie Christ is furnished to doe us good and we make no use of him Sinners tumble in their sinnes and fall asleepe and wrath cuts them off ere they dreame of a Saviour There is a
and the fruits of it Redemption notes satisfaction power holding and loosing it self as having found a ransome Redemption is no free thing simply though so in order to us what is free to us is not to Christ satisfaction is made to justice and so the prisoner set free We are bought with a prise Power commanding proposeth its will will proposeth its justice justice proposeth its violation to the delinquent and demands it recompence according to this violation of truth of the least truth is the death of Gods will and so the death of himself the death of one thing in justice calls for the death of another and without delay will have it In the day thou eatest thou shalt die The death of God is more then the death of all the men in the world and therefore justice demands more for satisfaction then mere man-dying for if man-dying would make God satisfaction then when all men are dead justice would be satisfied and so the drowning of the whole world would have been its ransome and the burning of this world its redemption whereas it is but the breaking forth of justice unsatisfied and laying up the debters which are many in a sure prison the death of God is unvaluable with us and calls in justice for more then the death of mere man and therefore God-man dies to redeem And for this cause he is the mediatour of the new testament that by means of death for the redemptions of the transgressions that were under the first testament c. Hebr. 6.15 Legall redemptions had this law to propose worth to worth and so to make satisfaction as exact as might be E. G. an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth and bloud for bloud and the most precious bloud for the most precious bloud the bloud of a man for the bloud of a man and without bloud yea without sanguine tali such bloud their was no redemption no redemption in a humane sence because no satisfaction and that pointed to this in my text which is exactly noted redemption through his bloud Redemption notes discharge actuall and full discharge Death paid bonds are cancelled nothing in will and if their were yet nothing in power to prosecute further justice satisfied nothing is charged nothing in the will nor power of any no not in the will nor power of God to charge man Who shall lay any thing to their charge If ye say God he justifies because satisfied and can do no otherwise 't is the Apostles strength of reasoning Redemption takes off obligation to justice though not obligation to mercy We are not under the law but under grace The law can charge no guilt upon a believer because grace hath satisfied the law can charge no guilt but grace can charge duty that is what soever the royall law and what soever the whole will of God requires that grace which hath died obliges to We are under grace that is under all the commands of it to fulfill all that righteousnesse as farre forth as we can which grace hath fulfilled exactly we are under grace immediately and under the law mediately as love to Christ sets the soul to the fulfilling of the whole will of God quantum in se est Redemption notes release from guilt and from rigour sinne doth not dame nor duty doth not discourage precepts bind graciously to the utmost of what imperfect man is able and not to the utmost of what a perfect rule may require Redemption is from a yoke of bondage and not from all yokes from a yoke of bondage to an easie yoke and a light burthen from legall bondage to Gospel bondage which is perfect libertie which is a law as James calls it but yet a perfect law of liberty Redemption is from all sinne but from no service which the Gospel calls for Gospel release is likewise double in heaven or in earth their is a loosing in heaven and a loosing in earth a discharge in the person of Christ and a discharge in our own person a generall discharge in a generall person and a particular discharge made out by that generall person to every particular There is peace in Jesus Christ and preaching of peace by Jesus Christ deliverance made for captives and deliverance preached to captives a ministeriall discharge Divine discharge hath a double administration one above and another below heaven is made to speak and explain her self out of earth and to tell to whom it belongs and then the redeemed can say that his redeemer lives and this is Gods bearing record in earth Much love breaking forth in earthen ordinances and running out of earthen vessells to the sensible apprehension of the beloved a voice from heaven in earth in a frail corrupt state a distinct artificiall voice Thou art all fair and yet understood by none but the party to whom 't is spoken a white stone with a name fairly ingraven in it and yet none can see it or reade it but he that receives it Our discharge in heaven in what state and glory 't is is peculiar to those agents 'tween whom things first passe and without hint I think to us here Our discharge here in what state and glory 't is carried within in the soul ask not me but ask your own souls for 't is honour peculiar and private to every redeemed soul and carried with more state or lesse according to the pleasure of God The summe of all is this Redemption is a sinner discharged by the death of Christ from the power of sinne and wrath Use Is this condition yours My question is generall are you bond or free Bodily bondage is very discernable but soul-bondage is very indiscernable We are Abrahams children and never were in bondage to any said the Jews and yet were never out of bondage to the devil Senses pleased conscience asleep the man blesses himself in his condition as the freest man in the world he hath what he will he can do what he will and none within cry out of him he can eat what he will and drink what he will and nothing tumbles nor wambles in his stomach in the afternoon troubled with no bitter regurgitations from conscience and what freer condition then this in supposition and yet what condition more desperate slavery then this If these men be free they are free among the dead and therefore if you have any life look about you Soul-powers are dead and therefore is the soul so free to do what it lists without controll Loose souls you are no free-men but dead men and all friends are dead that should look to you understanding is dead affection dead conscience dead and therefore are you so lively in sinne so free to do what you list The soul dead in sinne wrath tolls and rings out but the dead heare nothing The dead are buried out of Gods sight ere they are aware hell is the grave of a dead soul which is farthest out of Gods sight of any
children cry friends frowne lively-hood did I say nay Life it selfe because of all these is almost gone t is as much as my heart-strings will hold I sigh so oft and so deep and can the heart of God be towards me can all be for me and all against me The Heart of God how it inclines cannot be gathered from the hand no not from the Tongue of God When a man would make demonstration of his state by the hand of God towards him hee had neede weigh things well the wheeles that go over have so many eyes and looke so many wayes one shall be deceived also God can speake against a man and do against him as you call against and yet all that while yearne in heart over him and working about great things for him he can speake against Ephraim a deare child and yet at the same time remember him yea remember him earnestly Since I spake against him I remember him still Affection is subordinate to fancy memory and more noble powers persons and things kept in memory and fancy these powers will work and keepe bowels beating still but when persons and things are throwne out here out of the memory of God then a mans condition is forlorne indeed and never till then thus Saints are never Christ speaking of sharpe troubles killing and bloudy trials saith Feare not him that can kill the body and then comes on thus to shew the tender providence and bowels still work in such times when we thinke not Are not five Sparrowes sould for two farthings and yet not one of them is forgotten before God but even the haires of your head are all numbred feare not therefore you are of more value c. Pretious persons sometimes according to externall condition are of no worth spoild bought sold for naught five of them for two farthings and yet not these not one person no not one haire of these persons forgotten i not without the compasse of tender bowells their haires numbered when upon their head and when they fall off their head T is not safe to calculate kindnesse by the meere motion of outward things or of ones own heart Straites and trialls put weake creatures to it Christ is not extreme to observe in this case Divine compassion dies not so soone as we thinke t is an everlasting thing t is a child of mercy which indures for ever God in all cases of transgression lookes upon Christ strictly then his fury is ceased this ceased whatsoever God does is consistent with bowels tender bowels The bitterest things that befall us should be so construed by looking still to Christ as God doth The Lord speakes of the piercing Serpent and Leviathan the crooked Serpent and the Sea Dragon Esaia 27.1 2 3. and all these in his Vineyard and suffered them all to make terrible worke and yet when hee comes to redresse this saith that fury was not in him all this while they did quite mistake him that did judge these sad afflictions the fruites of a heart turned against them Make use of these things to keepe your hearts setled in the truth of this point that the heart of God specially bends toward you and then milke out the sweet of it to all occasions so all conditions will bee sweete to you death it selfe Life COLOS. 1.25 To fulfill the Word of God THe finall cause of Divine distribution is here doubly set down substantially and circumstantially What is given is to be imparted to whom To Saints to you how much is to be given to them All that is given unto us this last circumstance is prest in this last clause as the other is in the former we must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fulfill the Word of God i preach fully the word of God The same word is used Romans 15.19 and so translated From Ierusalem round about to Illyricum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have fully preached the Gospell of Christ The matter and the manner of divine ministration fall both here under consideration Sacred constitutions are not stuffed with hay straw stubble things that hold forth onely to sense some humane fading thing they are all of supreame authority and hold forth something of God and nothing else some pure beame of the Sun shines in every sacred Ordinance There were many sorts of instruments about the Tabernacle and yet not a pin but pointed at some great thing some pointed at the wisdome of Christ some at the power some at the mercy of Christ some noted the back-parts some the face some the body some the bloud some the Life some the death some the dying-breath of Christ to wit the word Know the nature and the authority of this Ordinance now managed we breath the dying breath of Christ to fulfill the Word of God 1 Cor. 23.27 i to accomplish his mind who thus made his will By the last words of David were the Levites appointed at such certaine yeares to their worke so by the last words of Christ was this worke put upon our shoulders Whereof J am made a Minister to fulfill the word of God i his last word of institution The dying breath of Section Christ we breath in your faces the nature of this I will open to you what it is naturally what accidentally Naturally t is pure perfectly pure There are three regions of Aire and although one purer then another yet none perfectly pure 'T is a division that pleaseth Schollers Pure but the substance is one So we may distinguish in this matter in hand There be three Regions in that Aire that blowes and breathes upon our soules the brest of the Father the brest of the Sun the brest of the holy Ghost all pure perfectly pure these are personally distinguished but one in essence As things are so they breath Lungs and inwards rotten and breath is answerably corrupt cleane things come not out of the mouth of uncleane wickednesse proceeds out of the mouth of the wicked persons when they are dying their breath is most of all impure all parts within are so over-run and ruined with filth Christ was dying all that time hee lived among us and yet sound in all parts holy and so breathed to the last he gave up his last breath in Hell and yet holy and heavenly and therefore very apt and punctuall is that expression of Solomon Every word of God is pure Prov. 30.5 Christ never had any filth in his mouth the fountaine that gave spring to that out-let was so pure hee never spake a sinfull word if every word of Christ was pure then his dying words were pure his words in Hell Eloi Eloi c. And yet this is not all the emphasis of that Text every word of God is Tserupha purgatus purified Surmo purgatus 'T was a Hell that Christ did speake in all his time here below if this Hell did do any thing it did purge and not pollute his words hee learn'd obedience not disobedience by all he
die under our hands all the solemnitis belonging to our company are for the most part Funerall solemnities going to the Grave with the dead in trespasses and sinnes our invitations are Sir mourne with me I beseech you for such a one that lies upon his eternall Death-bed that hath Plague-spots in his breast that lies raving blaspheming and much a doe to keepe him in his Bed to keepe him from leaping into a worse if worse may be from leaping desperatly into Hell When our Ministrey petrefies turnes hearts into stones and these taken up and throwne at us this kills us the recoiling of our paines kills us when our peace returnes to us as Christ speakes J have laboured in vaine spent my strength for naught saith the Prophet When we spend our strength to make men more naught then they were this wounds our heart which should be considered of sinners to kill ones selfe and ones Minister too which would save him what a bloudy condition is this the bloud of a Minister upon a mans soule is more then the blood of many men stubborne soules lay this to heart When the Poet would cure drunkennesse in the Heathen Emperour he said remember thou drinkest the Blood and the Life of the earth meaning the juyce of the Grape So I say to you stubborne sinners remember when you breake the heart of your Ministers by your stubbornnesse you destroy the Blood and Life of the World I would I could say any thing to breake the Iron sinnew that is in the neck of some sins and sinners Be a friend to us in our worke and be a friend to your selves come off readily and speedily to Christ our work will be easy and your condition safe hold us fight long and I know who will fall at last with a witnesse The warre betweene the house of David and Saul was long saith the Text 2 Sam. 3.1 the issue was answerable had that malitious stubborne man layd downe his Armes and readily yeilded to the Will of God to Christ that came against him in David hee might have found mercy but he would stand it out to the last and weary God and David his servant till at last there was no remedy and then all Davids Teares Prayers and brave services that he had done tooke place and effect with a witnesse Make our life dolefull and Christ will make your death dolefull be as great as you will stay long in the birth and kill Midwife and you will be delivered in hell ease us and ease Christ for Christ striveth in us we strive but according as be striveth in us as saith the following clause in my Text striving according to his working and therefore is Noahs suffering so long in his paynes for that people called the long suffering of God 1 Pet. 3.2 London England the blood of many Prophets is upon thee is this nothing the blood of God is upon thee and God layes this to heart now now he makes inquisition for blood hee makes blood to touch blood your blood to touch the blood of them whom you have kil'd in their labour by your frowardnesse and wickednesse to Christ and them COLOS. 1.29 Striving according to his working c. STriving This word seconds the explanation given of the former that the labour of the Ministery is very painfull t is a putting off all powers externall and internall to it to the utmost t is a strife contention running for a victory a fight so the word is in severall places translated Fight the good fight of faith I have fought a good fight in both places is the same word that here is translated strive fighting running for victory they are acts wherein the whole man intends it selfe as in matters of life and death The worke of our calling is in the former word generally and summarily exprest in this word t is particularly specified as it beares upon its particular and proper cause When we say such a one labours this satisfies not what is his labour this question is answered by this following word in order to our calling Our labour is in some sence the worst the sowrest t is contention spirituall contention i. a contention which hath its rise not from our owne spirit but from the spirit of God and its termination in the spirit of man We strive not according to our own will but according to his Word and Spirit that striveth and worketh in us Contention hath a bad and a good acceptation the spirit lights on fire of Hell sometimes and flames out of the mouth and burnes all that stand neere in name in whatsoever is deare this is bad contention Folly lurkes long in an unmortified soule at last gets a head and then words without wisdome or conscience toumble out one upon anothers backe as if they should toumble downe all that is before them but they throw downe him onely from whom they come A fooles lips enter into contention and his mouth calleth for strokes and in the next verse a fooles mouth is his destruction and his lips are the snare of his soule Prov. 18.6 7. If standers by can keepe off the flame this fire burnes no more houses then into which it comes The flame that comes out of one mans mouth if it be not suckt in by another onely one tenement is consumed folly is full of humour humour disguiseth every person and action and apprehends all for enemies and so fights against yea slayes with the tongue deare friends for deadly foes that is as much as in him lies Folly generates humour humour is a bastard pride now none so beautifull in any proceedings as the man himselfe other folkes children are all untimely births and mishapen brats and deserve all to be murthered with the mouth and bit to death Butchery is some persons trade neighbours children kild quartered and hung out to sale every day for all that come by and will buy pride hardens the heare hardned the man will runne against any one with his tongue till he can get other weapons and spot himselfe all over with the blood of the best mans repute in the world before his face Contention is a murthering of a mans off-spring before his face and throwing the blood of them in his face thou didst say this and thou didst doe that Pride hardens 'tas this property in every soule many hearts quard and become sulpherous stones the divell takes them up and strikes fire with them to burne all Bad contention hath alwaies a diabolicall concurrence more or lesse many things may charge and load the Gun but the Divell gives fire still and makes it off and helpes to fetch out all that is within the man Contention hath a good acceptation good contention is an expliced zeale against sinne Sinnes are of severall sorts some have their tongues cut out of their mouthes by conscience and can nor dare say nothing of their course others have their tongue in their head and can and will say
is in its scope as others to obtaine i. the glory of God and salvation of the soule our fight of this kind is not onely to kill but to make alive to make an eternall death and an eternall life to make an eternall death to sin and an eternall life to Christ Vse Strife is common now all the world is on fire but t is so voyd of divine property that I know not what will become of us all t is hell fire that burnes onely to torment persons and augment sinnes such is our lung and tongue contests at this day as for other fights the Lord be gracious to us they are very bloody but what their nature is otherwise I am unskild to speake heart fight makes hand fight love was slaine before our wars began or we had never gone together by the eares with any weapon neither with tongue nor hand Justice hath found us out and turnd our inside outwards what will be in the end God knowes if the Spirit of Christ be wanting in contention t is the saddest worke in the world and of the most desperate issue and yet nothing puts upon greater temptation this way When a house is a fire a little winde will make the blaze very big big enough to consume all when David had his Sword by his side how quickly was he over-heated by a foole t is so in spirituall contests when friends meet to argue they are as souldiers with their weapons by their sides one foole now in the company a little folly throwne out over-heats and fires all of a sudden and sets all together by the eares if Christ be not very gracious Selfe must be first slaine in me before I goe to destroy any part of selfe in another otherwise I shall wound mine owne soule when I goe to cure anothers vain-glory is conceited such a man is a reformer of all but one this exactnesse because it cannot accomplish it selfe turnes into frowardnesse and now he that cannot mend all will marre all the froward soule sowes strife saith Solomon Prov. 16.28 These are the most dangerous persons of all there is a strife of words and a strife of matter reason not passion must onely fight against folly this makes conquest and honour strength and vigour of matter not violence and virulency of words and lust in this latter strife wee can doe nothing that is honourable to our selves or benificiall to others and therefore it s a strife utterly forbidden by the Apostle Phil. 2.3 Let nothing be done through strife or vain-glory but i● lownesse of mind let each esteeme other better then themselves Yet let not what is honourable be condemnd with that which is dishonourable I am to strive with any to plucke a brand out of the fire men come not out of the armes of a harlot with ease t is not divine strife but diabolicall that is our plague at this day and this in no mans heart more then in theirs that cry-out most of the divisions of the Land sects schismes and factions I have not a word to say for any one that walkes besides rule That strife in sacred things which strikes at mens honours liberties and the like is fire not from above but from below and will keepe persons and Kingdoms low the sword will never be turnd into a plowsheare nor want worke in the world while this spirit lives Our weapons in divine things are spirituall if we make them carnall we shall abuse institution and attempt to kill the King of the Jewes in the Cradle to keepe our selves King truth shall no sooner bud but have its braines knockt out with a club which hath been the effectuall argument of Antichrist these many hundred yeeres and the argument of Episcopacy now on foot in the field which hath cost a great deale of blood to answer and yet we are necessitated to answer as we are opposed which should make us and posterity for ever after us to abhor such kind of strivings to advance the things that we thinke Christs COLOS. 1.29 According to his working DIvine action according to its first cause is here mentioned First Christ workes and then a Christian Christ is the Prince of life ye have denied the holy one and killed the Prince of life Acts 3.15 That is the prime and first maker and breather of life as Christ is the Prince of life so he is the Prince of all the acts of life that is the preparations of the heart in man as well as the answer of the tongue are from the Lord. Ere divine actions are attempted there are great thoughts of heart in a good man How shall I move in this action congruous to the will of Christ a Christian travels still to bring forth now these travellings of the soule as well as the birth it self are all from Christ the training and exercizing of armes as well as the fight and conquest He workes the will and the deed of his good pleasure There is a first mover in order to the whole and a first mover in order to the parts the will is the first mover in order to the parts not an organ or faculty stirres not a thought workes or sits up a moment with any content about any thing till first the will will it this first mover is not independent not the originall of its owne influence upon other faculties the first mover in order to the whole moves the will which is Christ he gives the very desires and inclinations of the heart to things that are heavenly according to his working wee stir and work the expression meanes this that what we are as Christians intentionally or actually in thought word or deed we are wholly of Christ Three words will comprise all that belongs to a Christian though three thousand words will not expresse it efficiency sufficiency al-sufficiency and all these are of Christ The first term comprises the very being of a Christian esse Christianum A Christian precisely so considered that is as divine life and soule is together as one would say and he is as Melchisedeske without father and mother without any propagator in all the world but Christ there is much variety of things in the world and yet all of very knowne and very low birth some are borne of bloud that is of very corruption of very filth and excrement which we call a praeternaturall Generation others are borne of the will of the flesh that is of a naturall Generation others of the will of man that is an artificiall Generation as all your structures of art and ingenuity which are the birth of mens braines but a Christian is none of these births he came none of these wayes into this World hee is of God which were borne not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God 1 John which is explained in the verses foregoing and applied to God-man to wit Christ to as many as received him meaning believers to