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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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of glory and rejoycing to us So likewise Gal. 6. 4. the Apostle pressing every man to try his own works to examine his intentions therein giveth this as the consequent fruit thereof That then he shall have rejoycing in himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a kind of glorying and boasting in himself To clear this truth let us first shew what is required to this glorying and then in what respects it is lawfull and allowed us And for the former First It is necessary to this rejoycing and glorying in the first place That we have an high esteem of the excellency and worth of that grace we discover to be in us If so be we are to rejoyce in these outward mercies which yet are only for the body what matter of joy should it be to find those spiritual workings of Gods Spirit in us which are of eternal concernment What Solomon saith concerning the esteem of wisdom which is indeed nothing but grace we should all make good Prov. 2. 4. If thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures That soul then which can rejoyce in the discovery of grace must esteem of it more than all the treasures of the world To say O Lord I had rather find my self sanctified I had rather see the powerfull workings of grace upon me then to be made the greatest or richest man in the world we have many exhortations to examine our selves and try our hearts to see if we can find this precious jewel in our souls Now none will be cordial to examine and search herein but those who look upon it as the greatest treasure Did the woman in the Gospel make such diligent search for a lost groat only and call her neighbours to rejoyce with her when she had found it How large and boundless then should our thoughts be about the excellency of grace And indeed to the godly soul this is the great question it labours to study and to resolve Whether it be in the state of grace or no knowing that this onely is the most blessed and happy estate in the world Secondly As we must highly esteem this work of grace so we must have a Certainty and perswasion that we have obtained it Had not Paul known that his heart had been sincere that he was not acted by carnal wisdome he could never have rejoyced For Philosophers make joy to be in that good thing we do possesse and also the knowledge thereof This Text then doth abundantly declare that the people of God may have a certain knowledge of the work of grace So that although the heart be indeed deceitfull and full of hypocrisie yet when sanctified it hath some measure of truth and sincerity in it and so far doth not deceive us He then that would rejoyce in the grace of God wrought in him must presse after assurance must endeavour after a certain perswasion of the truth of grace in him And although this perswasion be not justifying faith yea it is separable from it A man may be justified may be sanctified and not know it yet it is such a priviledge yea and duty also that we should diligently take heed of all those things that may weaken our assurance that may make us to doubt and question whether Jesus Christ be in us or no. Thirdly A sure perswasion of the goodnesse and integrity of our hearts is not enough but it must be upon right grounds and in a Scripture-demonstration For if it be a false perswasion it may produce indeed a rejoycing but a false rejoycing also It is more than probable that Paul while a persecutor being zealously affected to the tradition of his fathers and thinking himself bound as he professeth to do what he did against Christ and his members could then say His rejoycing was the testimony of his conscience being perswaded that in those wayes he glorified God And therefore some do extend that profession of his before the Council That he had lived in all good conscience before God untill that day And if this be so then we see plainly That every perswasion though never so confident is not enough to make us rejoyce but we must look to Scripture-grounds Doth not experience confirm this Take any heretical person any erroneous person though it be to the destruction of the very fundamentals of Religion yet he will proclaim a rejoycing in his heart from the good testimony of his conscience So that an erroneous conscience satisfied doth bring peace and rejoycing but it is an erroneous joy It is either from meer humane principles or from diabolical delusions But this will come in more properly when we come to the ground or reason it self of Paul's rejoycing Fourthly To this rejoycing there is required The Spirit of God enabling us thereunto So that the same spirit which doth seal to us the assurance of our estate doth also cause comfort in us The Spirit of God doth enlighten and sanctifie after this it doth seal and comfort And this latter work of Gods Spirit is necessary as well as the other For we see it lieth not in the power of Gods people to have comfort when they will Hence Gal. 5. Joy is the fruit of the Spirit and it 's called Joy in the holy Ghost not only objectively because it is a joy in spiritual objects but also efficiently because it is wrought by him Hence it is that the Spirit of God mouldeth the heart for comfort removeth fears and doubts restraineth and keepeth off Satan whereby no sinne no Devil is able to deject and cast down because God comforteth ●Thus you see what goeth to rejoycing in the graces of God and thereby an holy glorying in them Now let us see in what respect it is lawfull thus to rejoyce And First It is lawfull to rejoyce in them as they are the effects and fruits of Gods favour and love as they signifie the cause from whence they come Rahab could not but rejoyce to see the thread that was a signe of such a great mercy designed for her If then the godly man have that spiritual skill as to difference between trusting in his graces as any way causes of his salvation and thankfully receiving them assignes from which he may be perswaded of it then doth he hit the mark It is usually said from Luther That we are to take heed not onely of evil deeds but of good and holy works also because the heart is apt to be carried away with pride and self-confidence insensibly yet this much not so deterre the people of God that they may not take comfort from their graces For how can they see them and not rejoyce because they are the pledge of Gods favour it self and of an interest in Christ So that though their graces be weak and full of imperfections yet they manifest that to be ours which is fully perfect and hath no fault at all in it Imperfect graces do manifest Gods perfect grace to
spending all upon their pleasures they regard not their children but leave them in poverty and misery Now it's Gods gift to thee informing of thy parents heart to their duties concerning thee Thus if wives love husbands love children all this is Gods gift Gerson relates of his parents who desired to instruct him in this that he had all things from God as a gift that they made an Engine whereby descended from above whatsoever he desired or cried for as if it came from God immediately Fourthly Even those things that are brought about for us by the art and skill of others as well as their bounty we are to acknowledge God the giver of them Thus if Physicians by their art and skill have been a means to recover thee out of any disease thou art to confess it Gods gift It was Asa his great sinne That he relied on the Physician in his disease more than on God And men think themselves bound to reward the Physician to see he hath his fee but how little do they think to glorifie God and to give him the praises due to his name It is the midwives care and skill that brings the child into the world yet we have David taking notice of God as if he alone had done it Psal 22. 9. Thou art he that took me from my mothers womb Thou art my God from my mothers belly Oh how thankfully how humbly should we live did we consider how we are compassed about with Gods gifts Every thing we enjoy is the gift of God Lastly If all these things that yet seem to be the proper effects of second causes are yet the gifts of God Then how much more are all those enjoyments wherein mans wisdome and power cannot claim any worke at all Such are now all those favours of God in a temporal may that are cast upon us without any care or providence of ours That as God provided a wife for Adam while he was in a sleep Thus doth the Lord bring about many providences of love for his children that they never thought of that they could not in the least manner imagine To this head we may referre Paul's mercy in the Text. It might well be called a gift because he was pressed above strength and had no hope of life yet even then God did deliver him Such mercies also must needs be Gods gifts which are bestowed upon us while we are asleep while all the senses are locked up our preservation then from outward dangers yea and from many other wayes which might be our death or ruine when we have no use of reason to prevent them they must needs be Gods gift And lastly All the providences of God to us while little children having no wit or power to help our selves but exposed to danger every way all these were the gifts of God But who doth with thankfulnesse remember and meditate upon Gods mercies to him while a little child when he did eat and drink and play and thought of no God yet even then did God vouchsafe mercy to him David did acknowledge this Psal 22. 9. Thou didst make me hope when I was upon my mothers brests David was a sucking child then he could not put forth the actings of hope or any grace at that time but I meaneth God was he that did then support and preserve him though he did not know of it Thus you see that if you let your thoughts runne over all the good things you enjoy let them come in what channel they can yet they are all gifts from God So that we are to overlook all natural causes all means all men all our own wisdome and labour and take them from Gods hand alone That which David saith in reference to the creatures belongeth also to man Psal 104. 27. These all wait upon thee that thou mayest give them their meat in due season That thou givest them they gather thou openest thy hand and they are filled Now the grounds why they are Gods gifts are First Because there is no necessity upon God either natural or moral to vouchsafe them to thee He is not bound to give th●… life senses wealth there is no natural necessity for he made thee out of his meer good pleasure and he made thee a man whereas thou mightst have been a Toad or a Serpent Nor was there any moral necessity thou doest not deserve any thing at Gods hand thou doest not deserve a morset of bread nor a drop of water therefore all is the meer gift of God It is his free gift God doth it purely out of his love according to that saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Favours are to be free and naked not dissembled and counterfeited Thus God having nothing from thee to move him doth it from himself alone Secondly It 's Gods gift Because thy sins are such that he is provoked to blast all thy comforts to continue them no longer to thee As God threatens Hos 2. 8 9. I will take away my corn in the time thereof and my wine in the season thereof You see God calleth it his corn and his wine because he giveth it Thus all thy mercies are Gods gifts upon a two-fold account both because he gave them at first and also because he continneth them still unto thee notwithstanding thy unworthiness Thirdly They are Gods gifts Because we are commanded to pray unto him for them In that short summe of Petitions our Lord remembers this when he directs us To pray for our daily bread and this the rich man must do as well as the poor a Dives that hath his barns full as well as a Lazarns that wants crums If then we pray to God for it it is plain that it is his gift Use of Exhortation Are all the comforts we enjoy Gods gifts Then walk more thankfully Think of God more do not mind second causes and instruments so much David Psal 27. 10. saith David's parents did not forsake him but he compareth himself to a little Infant exposed as Moses was and God did take him up to provide for him Thus we are to regard God more than father or mother Labour to speak the language of Scripture more Say God hath given this God continueth this and be diligent to use these gifts to the honour and glory of the giver for that is the chief end why he giveth them Shall God give to thee and then wilt thou take off from his glory and honour Provoke not God to repent as it were that ever he did thus and thus to thee as he did about the making of man and preferring of Saul Those that said Their tongues were their own Psal 12. 4. were thereby encouraged to wickednesse whereas to consider thy wealth is not thy own thy health is not thy own thy eyes thy tongue thy body these are not thy own they are Gods gift How carefull wouldst thou be to improve them all for his glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let this
prepare themselves to be combustible matter in Hell Indeed a modest and humble enquiry into the Truths preached as the Bereans did about Pauls Preaching is allowed and commendable but a froward cavilling Disposition indisposeth to finde out the Truth and is like some fretting humour in the eye which hindreth the sight 2. We then do sinfully oppose the Ministry when we strive and contend with them because of their zealous and faithfull reproving and withstanding the course of sin Because a Minister would bring thee to the sight of thy sinnes to a deep and serious Humiliation because of them because he would recover thee out of those damnable wayes thou livest in Hence it is that thou cryest down the Ministry and their Labours This is the true ground of most mens calumny and malice because the word Preached is a convincing Word a reproveing Word a discovering Word of that evil and wrethchedness which is in thy heart Hence it is that thy soul cannot endure the messengers thereof This is not meerly to be wicked but Diabolicaly wicked And yet if many Despisers of the Ministry were asked What is it that moveth them to such despite against the Officers of Christ They would but for shame speak that which lieth in the bottome of their heart viz. That the Ministry discovereth unto them all the evil they have done That is speaketh onely evil and Damnation to them and therefore they cannot abide it but wo be to that man who striveth with a Minister doing his duty That because he telleth thee the truth he dealeth faithfully with thy soul therefore thou dost become an enemy to him Consider that place Hos 4. 4. Let no man reprove another for this people are as they that strive with the Priest The meaning is It is to no purpose to reprove the wicked men of Israel any more it is to no purpose to bring them balme or spiritual Medicines for they are an incurable people Why how doth this appear In that they strive with the Priest They will not et him do his duty If he reprove them for sin if he set against their iniquities they rise up as proudly against him as the Sodomites did against Lot their Preacher of righteousness By this you see it s a property of a desperate and incurable people when they strive with their Church-Officers in doing of their Duty Indeed if Ministers should pervert the Ordinances of God endeavour to bring in Heresies Supers●ition and Prophaneness to exalt the Kingdome of darkness then they are in all lawfull and wise wayes to strive with them even as Children may in some cases reprove their Parents who are desperately set to damn their soules provided they shew that Reverence and Humility that they ought to do This Text of the Prophet is made use of by the Papists who charge our Reformers that they did strive with the Pope and their Bishops refusing submission to them For their Canonists have a saying That if the Pope should draw thousands of soules to Hell none might say unto him why dost thou so But this place will not be a Sanctuary to them for if we take the ordinary exposition and common one which I have given there being another by-Learned man who maketh directly against them it speaketh of such a people who do sinfully strive with the Messengers of God because they reprove sin and zealously do their Duty This is the highest Degree of sinfull Opposition that can be no contesting with the Ministry is so heynous as when it cometh upon this account These are like frenetique men who fight with their Physician In other diseases commonly men send for physicians they desire their help but the mad man he will ne re send for any and if any be brought to him he rageth at them Thus doth such wicked men and so are like a ground Historians speak of that is dryer by the rain that falleth upon it and the more drought the more moysture 3. Then we sinfully reflect upon the Ministry when the vices of the persons we cast upon their office and Doctrine This was that which made Paul so di ligent and zealous in this Text had it been his own glory and name he would more patiently have born it But when they come hereby to disparage his Doctrines to call that in question then he could no longer bare it Take heed then of this disposition upon any evils or faillings in them presently to fall upon the Calling immediately to dislike the Doctrine they preach For though it ought not to be so yet we are naturally ready ex personis probare fidem not ex fide Personas We are ready to like and approve of Faith as we approve of mens persons and therefore if any failing or weakness be seen in them we presently charge their Doctrine with it What should a man have refused all that Peter said thinking it is no matter what he Preacheth because in his fear and temptation he denied Christ What shall a man exclaim at Paul and say we know not how to believe what he Preacheth For he was once as hot and zealous for the contrary way Oh take heed of such ungodly Judgment The Truth is Christs Truth the Gospel is the Gospel of God however men may fail 4. This is still the more abominable when men take false rumors and slanders up or go upon their own surmises and conjectures and thereby refuse the Ministry for this was Pauls case He had just grounds as is in time to be shewed why he did not come to them as he promised It was to spare them as he saith v. 23. So that if there were any fault they were the cause of it yet how readily do they make an occasion to bring Pauls Doctine out of credit and nothing is more ordinary than this for men to feign Reasons and pretend many absurd Arguments to vilifie the work of the Ministry which yet is appointed by God for the good of their souls If you ask What are the Reasons why men are so apt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon the Doctrine preached They are such as these First Wicked men being under the power of the Devil they are acted by him and his works they do Now his greatest work is to destroy that which if suffered would destroy him and his Kingdome The end of the Ministry we may read in Pauls Commission Act. 26. 18. which is To open mens eyes to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God It is no wonder if the Devil in all ages tempt men to this sin rather than others For hereby his Kingdome will be lift up so that as the Physicians were never quiet till they had deprived Sampson of that which was his strength so neither is the Devil and his Instruments ever at rest till they have removed that strength Christ hath appointed for the destroying of the works of the Devil 2. Men are carryed
if you ask Have all the sanctified persons of God this sealing Have none the sanctification of the Spirit but they must also have the witnessing of the Spirit I answer this Question because of great practical importance shall God assisting be handled by it self after the description hath been explained That which I shall here take notice of is That sanctification is necessarily presupposed to this sealing A great Prince will not set his seal to dung to make an impression there neither will God to an heart unsanctified For as in matter of Doctrine God will not vouchsafe miracles to confirm that which is a lie neither in practicals will the Spirit of God witnesse to that heart which is not made holy For indeed it should witnesse a lie in such a case informing such they are the sonnes of God when indeed they are the children of the Devil This order of Gods Spirits first sanctifying and then sealing is clear Ephes 1. 13. In whom after ye believed ye were sealed Those eminent Divines who defined faith to be assurance making it the same with the sealing of Gods spirit are gravelled at this Text and therefore make this Objection If faith be assurance be the sealing how doth the Text say After we believed we were sealed To this therefore Piscator answereth not yeelding that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be rendred Having beleeved as of a thing past but beleeving as in the present but there is too much forcing in this interpretation Others they consider of faith as it hath two parts Illumination of minde and fiducial assurance Now say they the Apostle meaneth by faith the former work of faith and so the meaning is After you were enlightned to know the truth you were confirmed and assured but that opinion making faith justifying to be an assurance that Christ is mine is justly refused It is plain then that when the Spirit of God hath in order of nature for in time they may be both together sanctified a man throughout whereby he is made a new creature then the Spirit of God maketh this glorious stamp upon him then he giveth him this seal as an honourable priviledge whereby he may know himself to be the Lords Even as in antiquity none might have seals but persons of honour and dignity So that the natural and unregenerate person is to stand aloof off thou hast nothing to do in this priviledge thou art not the man whom the great King of Heaven and earth doth purpose thus to honour We proceed in the Description and there we meet with the formal Nature of it wherein it doth essentially consist with the object thereof The Nature of it is In confirming and establishing the heart of a man For this is the chief and usual end of seals to ratifie a thing and to make it no longer uncertain and doubtfull And to this property doth the Scripture chiefly attend For whereas the soul though sanctified is apt to be in daily fears and doubts about Gods favour and grace towards it it fluctuateth up and down having no subsistency the Spirit of God cometh and consolidateth the soul inabling it to rest satisfied in this that God is his God that his sinnes are pardoned that he is become a reconciled Father in Christ And if you say Why do we not need the Spirit of God to do this Cannot we by our graces by our repentance and holy life sufficiently establish our own souls in peace No by no means we need the Spirit of God to comfort as you heard as well as to sanctifie and that for these Reasons First It is very hard for a man whose guilty conscience doth presse him and condemn him daily telling him that he hath deserved at Gods hands to be eternally tormented in hell not to thinke because God may doe thus that therefore he will do so In such terrours and affrights we look more to what we have deserved we look more to what God may do then what he will we are naturally suspicious and think the worst of God even as we doe to man If we have offended a man greatly and it lieth in his power to undo us we are never quiet we cannot but think when ever the opportunity is he will be avenged and therefore we dare not trust him Yea though we have given no just cause if others have taken up an unkind spirit towards us we expect nothing else from them but our ruine when it is in their power Therefore for all Saul's tears and good works to David yet he would never trust him Now although there be no cause for us to have such suspicious thoughts about God for he hath graciously promised that he will receive us insomuch as not to believe him herein is to give more credit to a man whose words many times satisfie us than to God who is truth it self yet the heart being guilty and full of fears doth work in this doubtfull manner about God How hard is it to bring the afflicted sinner to good perswasions about God and that though by promises and other wayes God hath so abundantly provided against such distrust Here then is the reason why we need the sealing of Gods Spirit we cannot perswade our selves but God will doe what he may do and what we have deserved And A second Reason followeth upon the former We can hardly be perswaded that the great and good things which we stand in need of God will ever bestow upon us who are so unworthy of them Can a beggars daughter be perswaded that a great King will marry her But here is a farre greater disproportion What will the great God of Heaven so holy so full of majesty look graciously upon me and not only forgive me my sinnes but advance me to eternal glory These things are very improbable Shall Joseph be freed not only from the prison but promoted to the greatest honour in the Land next to the King Who would have believed it And thus it is here the soul having low and humble thoughts of it self cannot be perswaded that the great God of Heaven will look upon such despicable wretches as they are 3. The way of evangelical confidence with the comfortable effects thereof are wholly supernatural And therefore no wonder if we need the Spirit of God to help us therein Not only holinesse and grace is supernatural but assurance and joy are likewise supernatural As we cannot pray without the Spirit helping our infirmities so neither are we able to call God Father If faith in Christ by which we are justified be supernatural then also is the comfort and peace flowing from the knowledge thereof As the Doctrine of the Gospel is by divine revelation flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto us that Christ is the Sonne of God so neither can flesh and blood enable us to the perswasion of this Mediator as loving me and giving himself for me Certainly if it be the gift of
the Rock followed the people of Israel in the wildernesse to refresh them this man may say verily God is here verily God is with me Lastly The Spirit of God doth give us Consolation by the antecedent workes of sanctification Rom. 8. 9. If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his But the godly they have received the Spirit of God And if the soul which is the spirit of a man manifest it self present in the body by its operations shall we not much rather thinke that the Spirit of Christ where it dwelleth in a man will make knowne it selfe Shall we have these coales of fire in our bosome and not perceive them Now there is an order in the works of Gods Spirit which we also must attend unto and not think to have one before the other The order is this the Spirit of God doth 1. Enlighten the minde 2. It doth sanctifie the will and affections 3. It doth witnesse and seale to us these blessed effects To looke therefore for consolation before sanctification is preposterous Oh how happy is it when the childe of God earnestly seeketh after all these effects upon his soule and that in the order God hath appointed These few qualifications may suffice by these and the like the Spirit of God doth confirme Onely you must know these doe but objectively offer themselves if the Spirit of God doth not rightly constitute our inward man and enable us all these blessed effects may be upon our soules and yet we be disconsolate as if we had them not Even as there may be pleasant flowers in a garden yet if we have not light we cannot see them So that the cause of assurance is more from the Spirit of God efficiently establishing the heart than from these qualifications which doe objectively onely declare themselves Even as in faith dogmatically assenting to divine truths the work of Gods Spirit is more upon the understanding giving firmnesse and stedfast adhesion than upon the motives of credibility in the truths themselves But what is necessary to a fuller clearing of this will upon another occasion be considered I proceed to the last thing in this Description and that is the final cause which is That under the sense of this we might live boldly c. I say under this sense For this sealing of Gods Spirit doth make such a divine impression upon the soule that we feele it and perceive it not indeed bodily as we doe the fire that burneth but rationally and spiritually in our inward man So that not onely grace is from Gods Spirit but the experimental feeling of it is likewise from the same Hence it is not to be called an humane but divine sense For a gracious constitution is required to feele what is grace and to discerne the effects thereof But I hasten This sense and apprehension of Gods sealing being thus experimentally in us we find a three-fold advantage thereby First We walke boldly confidently Insomuch that we can cry Father Ephes 3. 12. We have boldnesse and accesse with confidence There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are able to speake any thing in the presence of God whereas in fears and doubts our prayers are interrupted we question whether we may say this or that Secondly Hereby we walke comfortably Yea it is called Joy unspeakable 1 Pet. 1. 8. and Rom. 14. 17. Peace and joy in the Holy Ghost The Kingdome of God is there said to consist in this Alas how contrary doe the people of God walke to this Text for want of sealing as if godlinesse lay in doubts in fears and dejections of spirit Surely the people of God are to bewail their ignorance and low principles in these things Thou makest thy self to be like an heir under age as the Apostle alludeth Gal. 4. 1. and so not differing from a servant whereas the Gospel-light and Evangelical principles set home by the Spirit of adoption should fill thee with liberty and exceeding great joy Lastly Hereby we also live thankefully never satisfying our selves with admiring and commending the unspeakable and unsearchable riches of Gods grace Two great gulphs the Spirit of God hath delivered thee out of the sinfull lusts and corruptions thou didst once wallow in and the slavish sad tormenting feares thou wast once almost overwhelmed with Oh what cause is here of thankefullnesse How sorry art thou that thou art no more enlarged That thou hast but one heart and one tongue to be exercised in this matter And the aggravation of all this is that we may be thus bold joyfull and thankfull notwithstanding all discouragements to the contrary for they are many and dreadfull How many failings within How many temptations without What fiery darts from Satan And yet a sealed Christian is able to looke upon these with as much joy as the Israelites did upon the Aegyptian carcasses that lay dead upon the Sea-shore But if God should let open these flood-gates upon the most sanctified person he would be immediately swallowed up with them as Dathan and Abiram were suddenly in the earth And then Lastly You have the terme till which this sealing shall last and that is Till we are made happy compleatly in Heaven So Ephes 4. 30. We are sealed till the day of redemption This way of faith and assurance will then cease it will be turned into the immediate vision and fruition of God Then there will be no feares no doubts any more than lusts and corruptions How mercifull then is God that giveth us such manna in the wildernesse which will cease when we come into Canaan SERM. CXXXVII Whether all the People of God are his Sealed ones 2 COR. 1. 21. Who hath also sealed us THe nature of this sealing being largely described I shall conclude with an answer to that Question Whether all sanctified ones are Gods sealed ones for it might seem to be true of all seeing the Apostle speaketh universally in the person of beleevers who hath sealed us and Eph. 1. 13. those that beleeved were sealed there is no difference made neither are any exempted And not only by Scripture but by the testimony of many learned Protestants it should also seem so especially of such who defined faith to be an assurance for then if no assurance no faith To this purpose Calvin seemeth to speak on this very Text which Stapleten looketh upon as depraving the meaning of the Apostle Whosoever saith Calvin hath not the spirit of God a witnesse within him so that he can say Amen to God calling him to the certain hope of salvation he doth falso Christianum nomen obtendere pretend only to a Christian name not being so indeed To the same sense also in his Institutions lib. 3. cap. 2. par 16. Vere fidelis non est c. he is not truly a beleever who is not perswaded with a solid perswasion that God is a propitious and reconciled Father to him whereby he doth promise to
merits and dispositions in Paul At this very time Paul might have had a thunderbolt from Heaven fallen upon him which might have shaken him into Hell And behold a gracious arm stretched out to save him from thence And for this cause it is that none like Paul doth so amplifie the grace of God and is so frequently naming of Jesus Christ and therefore it's Paul's whole design in his Epistles to take off all from works and any thing in our selves and to give all to the grace of God And thus Austin a second Paul in some respect he in his former times had been a great sinner involved in unclean lusts and a cursed Ma●…e but when converted what Ancient did so clearly fully and pregnantly maintain the true Doctrine of Grace as he did He had not only read Books but his own heart and experience to confirm this truth Therefore those opinions that Paul was predestinated because God fore-saw the good works he would do or that God by a Scientia media knew Paul would consent to Grace calling of him if put into such a condition and that thereupon God did ordain him to eternal happiness all these Doctrines and the like are meer Antipodes to Paul's discourse and expressions in his Epistles Thus you have the Reasons on Gods part now on mans part God may therefore take such rather than others Because hereby they may be alwayes kept humble in themselves Thus Paul findeth these old wounds now and then bleeding afresh he remembers what he hath been to his great sorrow and humiliation yea hereby a man is preserved from any dangerous fall afterward Peter and David after they had been converted unto God we read of their fals again breaking their bones and recovering with bitterness and much difficulty But concerning Paul after his conversion we never read of any scandal he fell into yea he saith He knew nothing by himself 1 Cor. 4. viz. in any gross miscarriage for the old bitterness would never out of his mind Lastly God may do this to provoke all Formalists and civil Justiciaries to an holy jealousie What shall such as lay wallowing in their mire that were like the impure Swine become Sheep to Christ shall get Crowns of Glory upon their heads and we who were never like any of such Publicans with our glistering goodness be thrown into hell SERM. II. Learning an excellent gift of God though through the corruption of man 't is often made an Engine to promote the Kingdome of the Devil yet by the Grace of God 't is very usefull in his Church 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle c. VVE have considered Paul as a great sinner yet made an Apostle of dung made a pearl Let us now take notice of him as a learned man and so made use of by God for the Ministry of the Gospel That Paul was endowed with much learning was so evident to Festus that he told him Much learning had made him mad And the Lycaonians called him Mercury Acts 14. He was for a while educated at Tarsus where he was born and it is recorded by Strabo as Lapide citeth him That the Tarsenses were so wholly given to literature that they did excell Athens and Alexandria And that he had perused humane Authors appeareth in that three times he alledgeth Greek Poets Now besides this he went also to Jerusalem and there was brought up at Gamaliel's feet an eminent Doctor amongst the Jews And if there were nothing else but his Epistles he wrote this would abundantly declare the rare and admirable wisdome he was endowed with Insomuch that Chrysostom 3. Hom. upon 1 Corinth speaks of a Dispute between a Christian and a Grecian Whether Paul was not to be preferred before Plato though Chrysostom condemneth the Christians argument as ridiculous and absurd Indeed the Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 11. 6. That though he was rude in speech yet not in knowledge Now it 's questioned by Interpreters In what sense Paul saith He was rude in speech Austin thought he said so only by concession and in the repute of the false Apostles who accounted him so But Chrysostom and others think Paul speaketh properly and that he was really so not but that he was full of learning only he did not use those affected wayes of humane eloquence as he speaks in another place He did not write as a Demosthenes whom Plato censured as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an hunter of words and a curious Artificer therein yet he hath masculine and strong eloquence such as becomes the divine and admirable matter he propounds And certainly to paint a Jewel would take off the proper lustre of it The more naked and plain divine truths appear the more lovely they are and do more immediately insinuate into the heart And if he said of Tully's eloquence because it 's not so affected and fancifull That he had made great progresse in Rhetorick who could delight in his Latine We may more truly say he hath attained to some good sufficiency in Christs school who seeth more excellency in Paul's Epistles than in all humane Writers Paul therefore had true and solid wisdome and was also indowed with acquired abilities in humane learning So that whereas Christ chose fishermen that were unlearned here we see him making use of one that was skilfull and learned So that God can make use of all and as Austin said Qui dedit Petrum piscatorem dedit Cyprianum Rhetorem So that we may observe When men of great learning and parts are chosen by God and sanctified they become eminently usefull in their place To amplifie this Doctrine consider That though Christ at first did choose Fishermen and other illiterate persons yet that makes nothing at all to that Anabaptistical position That men abiding in their Trades and destitute of learning may take upon them to be publick Preachers of the Gospel For that instance doth rather make wholly against them For First Though our Saviour called them while illiterate yet after their call he took them into his fellowship So that they were like a Colledge living together whereof Christ was the Head and Master and thus he trained them up with himself for two years before he sent them abroad to preach And Secondly When he enlarged their Commission before they did execute it they are commanded to stay at Jerusalem where they received the holy Ghost in a wonderfull manner and were inabled to speak in all strange tongues and were also inabled to work miracles for the confirmation of their Doctrine Now let the Adversaries demonstrate such an extraordinary effusion of Gods Spirit on them and we shall not envy if all the Lords people can so prophesie And Lastly As soon as they were called at the very first they left their trades they gave themselves to attend upon their work they had undertaken whereas these plead for the retaining of their Calling still private Christians
who from his victory over them was called Corinthiacus but Augustus taking delight in the place restored it and sent a Colony thither to inhabit it And it 's plain by Acts 18. that they were then under a Roman called Gallio their Proconsul It was the chief Town or Metropolis of Achaia and because of the two Havens there famous for Traffick and thereby abounding in all wealth and riches These things are observed in it 1. It was notable for learning and knowledge Periander one of the seven wise men is said to be of it and therefore Cicero calleth it Totius Graeciae lumen 2. It was famous for wealth and riches especially their Brass called Corinthiacum was esteemed better than gold or silver of which Josephus speaketh sometimes Augustus did so delight in dishes made of it that he was called Corinthiarius Their buildings also were very curious and glorious insomuch that Tirinus quoteth out of Vitruvius that it was an ambition to build houses formâ Corinthiacâ But Lastly That which is commonly the consequent of wealth and plenty they were infamous for uncleanness and wantonness For there was a Temple to Venus where were a thousand Maids besides others set apart to be prostituted which was accounted so glorious that thereby they could the better advance themselves in Marriage Here also they adored the Heathenish god of all uncleanness called Cothys Insomuch that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Suid●● is as much as to be wanton to be lascivious To corinthize was as much as much as to be unchast Here Demosthenes is said to refuse that whore which demanded so great a price for the carnal knowledge of her saying Tanti poenitentiam non einam and because their abominable uncleanness was at so dear a rate therefore say some came that Proverb Non cuivis datur adire Corinthum though Suidas and others understand it of the difficulty of reaching into the Haven and it should seem that after many were turned Christians yet they were very prone to this bodily filthiness and therefore in no Epistles doth the Apostle so industrlously set himself against fornication as in this and here was that abominable uncleanness committed even amongst them while a Church That was not so much as named amongst the Heathens Thus you see they were a proud rich high and lascivious peple and yet for all that Act. 18. Paul is commanded in a vision to stay there Because God had much people in that place And although he was so necessary to all other Churches yet he spent a year and an half in converting and confirming of people unto God From whence observe That even amongst the most prophane and unlikeliest people that are God may sometimes gather a Church to himself The Apostle having reckoned up 1 Cor. 6. 11. monsters of men rather than men whereof some are said to be effeminat● and abusers of themselves with mankind he addeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and these things as if they were peccata not peccatores were some of you but now ye are justified now ye are washed God then doth sometimes make Blackmoors to become white and though man cannot yet he sometimes doth make figs to grow of thorns and grapes of thistles I have spoken to this truth in Paul's case and therefore shall be brief Only the reason why God may build his house of such crooked timber and make his Temple of such rough stones may be to shew the freeness of his grace and the efficacy of it Both which are opposed by Arminians and Papists but gladly acknowledged by the godly man who hath had experience of it For the freenesse of Gods grace that is seen two wayes Absolutely and Comparatively Absolutely For when God shall call such to himself who are so utter unworthy that deserve all the vengeance and wrath God can inflict upon them this must discover grace to be exceeding free and gracious In stead therefore of the curses of the Law thou meetes● with the promises of the Gospel In stead of hell and damnation God vouchsafeth Heaven and salvation What can be freer then Gods love and his gift herein Thou art so farre from being in a state of congruity or fitness that thou art in direct opposition and contrariety Again The grace of God is manifested to be free comparatively For who can give a reason why God calleth these Corinthians and not Athenians Were the Corinthians the only deserving men in the world Yea there were more civil and moral people than they yet to these and not to many others is the grace of God communicated Is not that admirable which our Saviour speaks of Chorazin and Bethsaida That if such things had been done in Tyre and Zidon Mat. 11. 21. they would have repented long ago in sackeloth and ashes You see then that the grace of God is not so much as offered to some who yet externally at least would have demonstrated more humiliation and reformation when yet it is plentifully bestowed on those who are contemners and despisers of it The freeness then of Gods grace to some and not to others is admirable and sheweth that there is no such thing as Universal Grace Common Grace is no Grace as Austin said well neither is God an accepter of persons in this thing for that is committed only in things of justice but in matters of liberality there the free liberal man may give as he please to one and not to another In the next place This discovers the efficacy of Gods grace For must it not be the great power of God as shall convert such an obstinate and prophane people to himself Grace may be much acknowledged as Pelagians did especially Papists and Arminians but it is not gratia except it be gratuita omni modo Therefore except we hold that grace doth not only reveal the object or morally perswade the subject but invincibly and irresistently determine and incline the heart to apply it so that it cometh not from the good use of our Free-will but the discriminating power of grace which giveth both to will and to do we give not all no nor the chiefest to grace but make our will to be the more principal discriminating cause We are therefore to affirm That God converts both per modum sapientiae and potentiae that Gods work upon us is Ethico-physical in bringing of us home unto him It 's by way of moral arguments therefore we are not as stocks and stones yet by way of power and invincible efficacy therefore it is not we that make grace efficacious but grace makes our will And this truth is not so much proved by books and demonstrations of Authours as it is from experience When God taketh sometimes the worst of men and maketh them the best of Saints Is here any previous goodness Is here any probum ingenium or docilitas animi that the Remonstrants talk of so much No the Scripture speaks of every one in a state of enmity and rebellion
useth in his Church not in respect of the Lordship and Dominion it self Christ shall never cease to be the King and Lord of his people only that manner of Government which now Christ exerciseth shall cease all Ordinances and administrations the Ministry and Sacraments yea all Magistracy and Civil Power that God might be all in all fot then we shall not mediately by Christ approach unto God as we do here but immediately yet so as all glory and honour will redound to Christ Thirdly Christ was thus a Lord in the state of his humiliation even in his very Infancy as well as after his exaltation and resurrection And here again the Socinians blaspheme denying That Christ was thus a Lord till his resurrection But although indeed the Scripture doth often attribute this glory and great name to him after his sufferings and upon his resurrection yet that is not because he was not so before but partly because then there was a glorious manifestation of his Dominion The Sunne did not appear so admirable in his eclipse Christ in the state of his humiliation did not so fully and palpably discover this his greatness yet for all that he was endowed with it and Christ doth acknowledg himself to have a Kingdom to Pilate even before his sufferings Yea at his birth the Wisemen came to worship him as Lord and King and when he rode in triumph into Jerusalem that Prophecy was fulfilled Behold thy King cometh to thee And certainly if then he was a Saviour and the Messias he must needs be also Lord and King Yea in the greatest expressions of his humane weaknesses as in his birth and death there was also powerfull demonstrations of his Divine Majesty Neither is Vorstius his Objection of any value That because Christ in his Infancy had not that wisdom required to govern which afterwards he did grow up into therefore he could not be Lord For in Christ while an Infant were hidden the treasures of all wisdom though these were not actually to be put forth but when there was an occasion to do so There was no defect in Christ to be Head of his Church while a child because even then he could put forth whatsoever was required at that time to govern the Church with And indeed to argue that he was not Lordor King because he did not actually put forth himself in that way is absurd for kingly or lordly actions did not make him to be a King or Lord but because he was Lord and King therefore he did as he pleased put forth such actions Certainly the Apostle cals him the Lord of glory even while they crucified him 1 Cor. 2. 8. And the Socinians themselves acknowledge him upon his ascension to be Lord of glory when yet the greatest instance of his lordly power is still to be accomplished which is the judging of all mankind at that dreadfull Day of Judgment Christ then was always Lord both in his state of humiliation and also of his exaltation Fourthly This lordly power which Christ hath extends to all things in the world he is Lord over the whole world He is the universal Monarch for God hath given him all the kingdoms of the world Rev. 11. 15. The kingdoms of this world are there said to become the Lords and of his Christ Yea in some sense this great Dominion is given to every Saint Revel 2. 26. To have power over all Nations even as he hath received of the Father Hence it is said John 5. 22. That the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne not that the Father hath wholly abdicated himself from the government of the world as the Socinians say but because Christ as Mediator is subordinate unto him in this administration Christ therefore hath an universal power over the whole world And whereas learned men say One man cannot be universal Governour over the whole world much lesse over the Church because no man can have those qualifications fit for to discharge that Government yet in Christ this doth not hold because he is God as well as man but this Dominion of Christ in respect of his Church is of another nature than that of the world for he rules the world with a rod of iron breaking every thing to pieces that shall prejudice his Church So that this power over them is wholly coactive as they do not willingly own or submit to him as a Lord so he doth by his omnipotent power keep them under and makes them servants and vassals for his work and to bring about such glorious ends which they never intended or shall have any benefit by as those that built Noah's Ark were not preserved in it But to his Church there he holdeth out a Scepter of grace For as they do willingly own him as their King submitting to his order and laws so he taketh special care over them and they may more safely lay themselves down under his protection than under the greatest Potentate in the world More might be said Doctrinally about this Dominion of Christ but let us consider what comfortable and usefull improvement is to be made of it And 1. Is Christ thus a Lord and that above all Lords Then what ground is here for our faith under all discouragements and affections How little doest thou posfess thy heart with this Lord of glory Doest thou doubt about the pardon of sinne conquering of corruptions preservation under temptations Is not all this because thou doest not remember Christ is Lord of Lords Will not he bear thee up Doth he want either knowledge or power Especially this should encourage us in any work for him Thou fearest the frowns of man the oppositions of man thou doubtest thy cause will sink and is not all this because thou lookest upon earthly power as greater than Christs power Was ever any temporal lord able to do such things as the Lord Christ Never than saint or be discouraged under his work Use 2. If he be our Lord then here is ground for duty as well as for comfort Joh. 13. 13. Ye call me Master and Lord ye do well saith Christ but from that consideration he puts them upon duty And certainly i● Christ be our Lord where then is our honour our obedience to him May not he impose what duties injoyn the Church what Laws and order to walk by he pleaseth Shall we be our own lords Our tongues our hearts are not our own but our Lords Take heed of being in the number of those who shall deny the Lord that bought them 2 Pet. 2. 1. for such as do so bring upon themselves swift destruction if he be not thy Lord in grace and favour he will be thy Lord in wrath and in thy confusion They that said Psal 12. 4. Who is Lord over us found that God would be above them SERM. XXIX Of the Duty of Thankefulness Blessing and Praising God for all his Mercies 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the
our works and giving all to the grace of God who worketh according to his own purpose and will Oh what coals of fire will this be in thy bosome To think why doth God do this to me What moveth him Is God necessitated to it Can he not do otherwise Would he be unjust if he did it not And this further will be aggravated when we consider the mercy comparatively with others that want such if for spiritual mercies we compare them with the damned Angels that are utterly cut off from the least crum of any spiritual mercy though so noble and excellent creatures may not this astonish thee And if thou sayest These are not of the same nature with thee How many are there of the same flesh and bloud in the same vicinity where thou livest of the fame calling and profession yea of the same parentage and yet they are forsaken by God and left to their natural deserts whereas he hath pitched his favour upon thee to justifie sanctifie and at last to glorifie thee Certainly thou art a stock and a stone if such discriminating mercy as this doth not affectionately possess thee In the last place The universality of the mercies thou enjoyest will much heighten in the consideration of them All that thou seest thou hearest thou eatest thou feelest yea thou thinkest and apprehendest is a mercy There is nothing within thee without thee or about thee but it is a mercy To hear is a mercy to see is a mercy to think without madness and distraction is a mercy Every thing that is not hell is a mercy to thee All the creatures as Psal 8. the Sunne the Sturres the beasts of the field are wholly mercies if then a man set himself to meditation after this manner will he not find the goodness of God like Ezekiels waters To ascend higher and higher till they come over his head But to finish at last this Subject take notice of the encouragements to this duty of a thankful blessing and praising soul that so if thy heart at last be throughly raised up to this duty thou mayest praise God for this truth that provoketh thee to praise him And First The more thou blessest God the more wilt thou have cause to blesse him For to the thankfull heart God multiplieth his mercies as many times because thou doest not take notice of his goodness to thee or lookest upon his mercies as a debt to thee or thou takest the mercies God hath given thee and usest them as weapons against him therefore he taketh away thy mercies from thee to make thee prize them the more whereas to the soul that taketh every mercy as the hen every drop of water and immediately looks up to Heaven that will take up every fragment that nothing be lost As thou blessest God declaratively God will bless thee really Christ will bless thee as he did those few loaves by multiplying of them Secondly Consider this is all thou canst do to God for all his several mercies What doth God require of thee after all that he hath done for thy soul and body Is it any thing else but to magnifie his name to give him the glory of it And this doth not at all adde unto the greatness of God he is not made the more perfect and blessed in himself by all the glory thou givest to him So that indeed it is the greatest glory that thou art capable of that God will accept of blessing from thee that he will own praises out of thy mouth that he doth not rebuke thee as Christ did the Devils when they confessed He was the Son of the living God Thirdly This blessing and praising of God will keep thee in a joyfull active and fruitfull way Those that sing at their work dispatch it with greater facility And thus it is the soul filled with cordial thankfulness to God doth more for God then many others who are clogged with dejecting and discouraging thoughts See whether the cause of all thy heaviness yea the prevailing of lusts and passions upon thee be not want of chearfull blessing of God The joy of the Lord is our strength Lastly Consider the example of David how unwearied he is in this work never thinking that his soul doth enough herein and therefore because he cannot discharge this duty to his desire he calls upon all the creatures of the world almost to help him therein yea the very Ice and Snow and such inanimate creatures how much more Angels and men must joyn with him to praise God In Austin's time some were named Deo gratias certainly we should so abound in this duty that it may be truly said unto God as Psal 22. Thou inhabitest the praises of Israel SERM. XXXI How Christ is the Sonne of God And how the consideration thereof is the foundation of all a Christians comfort 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ THe Duty of Blessing with the Object of it being dispatched let us now come to that Amplification and Illustration which the Apostle ufeth in describing of it And The first is From a personal and relative respect The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Even the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That particle is by way of interpretation and explication What he meaneth by God viz. That he doth not take the word as it is often absolutely for the essence of the Divine Nature as common to the three Persons but relatively and in the distinct personality of the first Person and therefore said to be The Father of our Lord Jesus Christ For the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Stephanus observeth may be rendred by Et sed tunc etiam c. as the subject matter requireth The Apostle doth in other places delight to use this expression Rom. 15. 6. 2 Cor. 11. 31. Ephes 3. 14. In which places the Apostle seemeth with much affection and cordial enlargement to make mention of this relative Title in God the Father for this is the treasure of our comfort herein are all our mercies contained that we and Christ have the same Father he by Nature and we by Grace So that we are not to consider of Gods paternal relation to Christ as a speculative doctrinal truth but as practical and the ground of all consolation to us Hence John 20. 17. Christ by way of comfort tells them He ascends to his Father and their Father And indeed without Christ we cannot behold him as a Father but as a severe and dreadfull Judge Only when we say this Doctrine of the Fathers relation to Christ a Sonne is so full of comfort you must not understand it absolutely and nakedly as the second Person in the Trinity but as assuming the humane Nature into a Personal Subsistency Therefore he saith The Father of Jesus Christ which is the description of his Person in both his Natures So that we must not look upon the Sonne as the second Person alone in
That spiritual comfort comes alone from God is plain because the Spirit of God is called the Comforter We cannot have one drop of heavenly consolation till Gods Spirit infuse it into us If the children of God could have comfort when they will would they walk so disconsolately and cry out of their dark troubled souls as they do but then even earthly comfort to take delight in the lawfull contentments God doth allow us to take delight and joy in these corporal mercies this is also from God Eccles 2. 24 26. Eccles 3. 13. Eccles 5. 18. You see the Wiseman affirmeth it often That a man cannot take any joy or delight even in those lawfull things unless it be given him of God All comfort then of all sorts ariseth from him But let us consider the way or manner of Gods comforting For as it is a great and profitable Question to examine How God doth convert and sanctifie so also how he doth comfort And First You must lay this foundation That God doth comfort two wayes either immediately when he doth by himself work upon the soul Or mediately when he comforteth by such means as he hath appointed thereunto Let us then in the next place consider What are those immediate workings of God upon the soul whereby he maketh the heart joyfull For David Psal 4. saith God had put more joy into his heart then any man can have in the abundance of all temporal mercies And First Therefore God doth comfort by illuminating and opening the understanding and opening the understanding to know and see the grounds and reasons of comfort And certainly this is of great conducement to have the heart comforted when the understanding is rightly convinced of the grounds of comfort For as the dark night is apt to beget fears and terrours so darkness in the understanding is a great cause of all that terrour and disconsolateness which Gods own children may many times lie under So that as God in conversion and humiliation for sinne begins with conviction upon the heart so also in consolation and comfort The great impediment to a godly mans comfort is want of spiritual knowledge and conviction about the causes of comfort As it was with Hagar in the wilderness she sate weeping for her child and gave over all as desperate till God opened her eyes and made her see a fountain Thus the broken heart judgeth it self in a wilderness destitute of all comfort seeth nothing but matter of despair and damnation till God enlighten the understanding about comfortgrounds in the Gospel As for example when the Spirit of God enlightens us to receive comfort it giveth us the eye salve 1. To look upon Christ revealed in the Gospel as the full cause and ground of all our comfort as well as on sinne Generally the people of God in the first workings of the soul look upon nothing but their sins behold nothing but sinne but God will not let them alone in this agony he enlightens them further that they shall see Christ as well as sinne the Gospel as well as the Law he giveth them eyes to behold the brazen Serpent when stung Hence the Spirit of God John 16. 9 10. doth not only convince of sinne but of righteousness also The Devil he indeed moveth in those troubled waters of thy soul and would keep thee off from Christ as the Disciples did the blind man but the Spirit of God will not leave the soul in these wounds in these straits but doth carry him up from the mount of cursing to the mount of blessing And certainly the wise men could not more rejoyce to see the starre than the godly heart doth to behold Christ after the storms and tempests in his soul Hence the Apostle Gal. 1. calleth it The revealing of the Sonne in him This then we are inabled to do by God not only to know sinne in the terrour and sting of it but also Christ in his fulness and excellency How was Paul affected with this 2 Cor. 2. 1. I desire to know nothing but Christ crucified This therefore is a special work of God to make us look with both eyes to make thee see sinne as well as Christ and Christ as well as sin 2. As God doth convince the soul of Christ what a full and glorious Saviour he is so also in the second place Of our duty to receive him and to lay hold on him And this is a further step to comfort when God doth so farre open the eyes as to see not only a full and sufficient Christ but also that it 's a duty in particular to apply this Christ and to rest upon him for comfort and salvation This is a further discovery still Paul said Gal. 2. Who gave himself for me and loved me And Thomas said My God and my Lord. It is one of the blessed truths discovered in the Reformation out of Popery That it is not our duty to believe in the general onely that Christ is a Saviour but to rest on him also for the pardon of my sinnes That this is the Faith that justifieth That this is most acceptable and precious unto God That unbelief not only in the general but as it faileth in this particular in not applying in not appropriating Christ to the soul is that which will damn a man Oh then what blessed and comfortable light is that which God bringeth into the soul when he shall make thee see that though a sinner though burdened though unworthy yet it 's thy duty to go to Christ to be eased That he commands thee with that woman not only to touch the hem of his garments but to lay hold on Christ himself This particular faith is that which the soul is hardly convinced of Though others may draw nigh to Christ yet may I But he cometh at last to be perswaded of this truth 3. God comforts by enlightning the mind that a comfortable joyfull life arising from peace with God is a most acceptable thing to God that it brings honour and glory to God and that on the other side to walk heavily and in a dejected manner is to dishonour and reproach God That God doth not only look to our gracious walking but also to our comfortable walking and that we demonstrate the Kingdom of Heaven to be begun in us in joy as well as in mortification Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God is righteousnesse and joy in the holy Ghost You see Joy as well as Righteousnesse The children of God they are not quickly perswaded of this they think such as they are may not walk comfortably It 's not for them to rejoyce but at last they come to see that they were sinfully kept up by slavish fears and servile dejections that the Kingdome of God requireth Consolation as well as Sanctification Thus you see the first general way how God comforteth viz. by enlightning the mind Secondly and principally God comforteth By preparing and fashioning the heart by making it
dat quod not habet is the old Rule They have no skill or ability to comfort others who have not the experience and feeling of this upon their own souls It is not enough for the Ministers of the Gospel to have devoured many Books of learning to be able to decide Polemical questions in Divinity to convince gainsayers to be Doctors Angelical subtle or profound to be Mallei Hereticorum The hammers of Hereticks unlesse also they have the experimental works of Gods Spirit upon their own souls They are not able to apply themselves to the hearts of others Paul had not been able to comfort others if the Lord had not practically acquainted him with heavenly consolations 2. There is the Subject to whom or the Persons whose wounds Paul like a good Samaritan is desirous to pour oyl into and that is Them which are in any trouble 3. There is the manner how which is by that very comfort Paul himself found And Lastly There is the fontal and original Cause of this Whereby we our selves are comforted of God The final Cause will afford two Observations First That the heavenly and spiritual works which God vouchsafeth to his people are not for themselves only but for the advantage and edification of others Who would not think that the inward comforts and soul-consolations should not be wholly inclosed within our own breasts that these should not be communicated to others Who would not say of these as Solomon in another case Prov. 5. Let these fountains be only thine own and not strangers with thee Yet God giveth us these soul-comforts that we may be able to revive and comfort many sad troubled hearts which lie languishing for want of them The second Observation is That those have the greatest ability and fitnesse to help the souls of others who have had the experience and work of God upon their own souls First Let us consider the former Doctrine viz. That those great and spiriritual works which God vouchsafeth to his children are not for their own god only but for the good of others If he said in a political sense Nemo sibi vivit sed patriae it is much more true of a Christian Non sibi vivit sed Ecclesiae He liveth not to himself but to the Church of God Hence is that frequent comparison in the Scripture of the Church of God and a body together making all Christians so many several Members that if one rejoyce all must rejoyce with it To be throughly possessed of this truth we are first to know That there are two kinds of Gifts of Gods Spirit unto those of the Church The Ancient Schoolmen which distinction is still retained with the Papists is that there are Gratiae gratis datae Favours freely given which are bestowed not so much for the good of them that have them as of the good of others Such were those extraordinary gifts of Gods Spirit in the primitive times to work Miracles to speak with tongues c. And such are also those common gifts of Prayer and Preaching which many may have and yet they be never the more holy But as water-pots that conveighs water to the Garden making it fruitfull while it self beareth no flowers at all so are they And truly this is sadly to be considered by all the Ministers of the Gospel whether the gifts God giveth them be not for the good of others more then their own As the Nurses of young Princes live upon excellent food not for their own sake but to give more excellent nourishment to their young ones The other sort of gifts they call Gratiae gratum facientes such gifts as he that hath them must needs be accepted of with God And these they make faith and love with the like graces Now this distinction is absurd for the Members are confounded The graces making acceptable are graces freely given It is solely and wholly of the grace of God to make thee differ from others in the special work of sanctification as it was in the primitive times to make one who had miraculous gifts to differ from another And then it is false for no grace we have doth of it self make us gratos accepted of to God but it is in and through Christ that their imperfections are pardoned and so received Therefore our Divines do distinguish better That there are Dona Ministrantia and Dona sanctificantia Gifts of service and Gifts of sanctification Gifts of service are such which God giveth for the use of the Church Gifts sanctifying are such as are for the good of those that have them Now though this be true yet in the second place you must not limit this so straightly as that sanctifying gifts may not be serviceable gifts also For it 's plain that in all the people of God their very graces as well as their gifts are to be exercised for the good of others Thy repentance thy faith thy joy may be put forth to quicken and edifie others Therefore we say in the Doctrine All the spiritual works of God upon the souls of his people are not only for themselves but for others All not only gifts but graces Not only their parts and their duties but their holinesse also Hence Prov. 15. 4. an wholesome tongue which is the gift only that a godly man hath is said to be a tree of life because it doth so much spiritual good to others Think then that God hath not given thee grace and comfort for thy self only but for others who may stand in need of thee As it was with Christ the Head so it should be with his Members proportionably Isa 50. 4. To have the tongue of the learned given them from God to be able to speak a word in season to him that is weary As therefore God hath given thee fullnesse temporally to feed the hungry and to cloathe the naked when such due objects of charity are presented to thee Thus also God giveth thee faith to help him that complaineth he cannot believe He giveth thee comfort to succour those that can find no joy This is to be considered that thou beest not a fountain sealed up but opened whereat many may occasionally refresh themselves Thirdly The godly mans improving his gifts and graces doth not at all hinder and diminish his own but thereby increaseth and multiplyeth them It is like the widows giving of oyl to the Prophet which was so farre from impoverishing that it did enrich her We may not then refuse those who shall desire help for their souls as the wise Virgins did the foolish saying It might be there would not be enough for themselves No the more thou art willing to season others with thy own salt to quicken and comfort others by thy own quicknings and comforts herein thou wilt find thy self more edified and the good will rebound upon thy own self For these improvings of thy gifts and graces serviceably to others souls will multiply thy
Lastly Here are Consolations And although these are of greater concernment in the particular to every Believer because the joy of the Lord is his strength hereby also he walketh thankfully and fruitfully yet let him take heed of being narrow and sparing in using them for others comforts For if thou art a Minister of the Gospel then thy work is not only to convert but to comfort not only to bring out of sinnes but out of fears and dejections Thus the Apostle at the last verse in this Chapter We are helpers of your joy Consider that not only what is acquired by study but what also is inspired by God into thy soul may be of admirable efficacy to others Though Christs Sermons and Parables were like a two-edged sword mightily dividing between true grace and hypocrisie yet Isa 50. 4. he expresseth his Ministry by this to speak a word in season to the weary and this he calleth the tongue of the learned We call it Learning to alledge the Ancients to be full of Greek and Hebrew to empty out the bowels of School-learning yea some are so simple as to account studied words and composed language rare Learning whereas speech is like the Arrow that is not commended for studs of gold or Jewels on it but if it hit the mark Thus that is Oratory which is most proper to effect the end of our speech To make the sinners weep the hard heart to tremble and the sad to be comforted You see it 's the tongue of the learned to do this Doth then God give thee comfort be not thou wanting then to support and comfort the feeble-minded It may be thou art a kind of a spiritual Dives full of consolations and thinkest thou hast store enough laid up for thee both to live and die with take heed lest some poor Lazarus would be glad of thy crums and thou dost not give to him SERM. XLII That those only can make fit applications of Spiritual things to others who have an Experimental knowledge of them in their own souls 2 COR. 1. 4. That we may be able to comfort those that are in any trouble THere remaineth a second Doctrine contained in the final cause why God comforts his people viz. That they may be able to comfort others From whence there is this Observation obvious That those only are able to make fit applications to the souls of others who have had the experimental working of Gods grace upon their own souls That we might be able implying otherwise there would not be that sufficiency and fitnesse in us which ought to be To discover this consider First That there is a two-fold knowledge of divine and spiritual things The one is speculative and meerly Theoretical when we know them yea and it may be give a sound and firm assent to them And such are all those learned men who are very Orthodox and wonderfully able to maintain the truths of Christ against all opposers whatsoever Such as these are God raiseth up many times as eminent Pillars in the Church But because this is not enough to salvavation therefore in the second place there is a saving affectionate practical and experimental knowing of truth whereby we do not only believe such things but by believing we do love and embrace the truths we know We do credendo amare we have a faith which worketh by love Now it must be confessed that the condition of those who are only Orthodox and no more is much to be pittied and lamented To write against Arminians and others about the work of Gods grace in Conversion and yet never experimentally to have this upon their own souls So to treat of Justification and Christ yet not at all to have the saving and sweet operations of these things upon their souls is greatly to be bewailed To be like the builders of Noah's Ark that proved a place of rest and refuge in the time of the deluge for others when they themselves had no advantage by it But it is no wonder that such excellent knowledge and of such admirable lovely use in the Church be not saving while it goeth no further because practice and doing is the end of all Theological knowledge If ye know these things happy are ye if ye do them Joh. 13. 17. So that this experimental and practical knowledge of divine things is that which compleateth the former To know Christ so as to have him to know regeneration so as to be born again this is the glory of all knowledge Hence is that Commandement 2 Cor. 13. 5. To examine our selves to try our selves whether we be in the faith and in Christ or no. The latter word signifieth to make an experience or an experimental tryal of grace in us So that if you had a man who could speak like an Oracle in all the points of Divinity who was a very Miracle in respect of learning yet he is but a tinckling cymbal and speaks in the matters of Religion like a Parrot not rightly or fully apprehending of them till he hath inwardly tasted of the sweetnesse of them Secondly This saving experimental knowledge doth differ in its whole kind and is of another nature in a moral consideration from a meer Orthodox or bare speculative knowledge I shall not enter into a large dispute concerning the difference between illumination in a temporary believer although now we are not so much speaking of the habitus fidei as Theologiae which may be in learned knowing men and that which is in a true convert We shall suppose it for a truth from Heb. 6. That those who were inlightned yea and had some experimental workings of which a non yet they had not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they had not the things that hold fast salvation and therefore the Apostle hoped for better things They therefore so differ that take a man who doth only know divine things by Books by Sermons by reading of Authours and was not at all acquainted wih the Spirits effectual teaching by the Word and let him at last come to have these things set home upon him by an effectual demonstration of Gods Spirit let him know these things as the truth is in Jesus which the Apostle mentioneth Eph. 4. and he will then cry out acknowledging that he never knew any thing till then That he was in the dark that he had but a learned kind of folly that he spoke of these things as men do of Countries which they see in Maps only by a general knowledge having never travelled to see the Countries themselves There is such a fuller power accompanying this practical knowledge that the former was but a shadow to this substance Observe many men Do they not read the Scripture Do not they go from Chapter to Chapter But till it be the ingrafted Word in them they have the images and pictures of things not the things themselves In the third place That is not to be called
man He suffered in his Name in all reproach and ignominy dying a most accursed death and shalt thou be so tender and delicate as not to indure the mocks and rages of men for him Shall Christ be in cruce and thou in luce Christ in convitiis and thou in conviviis Christ in patibulo and thou in Paradiso as Gerhard expresseth it Oh fear left this prove dreadfull at the latter end SERM. XLVII What Qualifications they must be endowed with who suffer in a right manner for Christ 2 COR. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ WHat it is to suffer for Christ ex parte objects in respect of the matter for which hath already been dispatched We now proceed to shew What is required ex parte subjecti What are the qualifications necessary in him who doth truly suffer for Christ When we read of so many glorious priviledges promised to such as are troubled for Christs sake you must know that their bare suffering no not for that which is righteous is enough to entitle them to this blessedness but there must be the Adverb as well as the Nown it must not only be pro bono but benè for that which is good but also in a good manner for suffering and martyrdome it self as all other duties is not integrated of all its causes as it is not enough to pray to hear though these for the matter be commanded but they must be done in an holy and spiritual manner Thus it is not enough to suffer or to be persecuted and that for Christs sake unlesse also we have that holy frame of heart in suffering which Gods word doth require Let us then examine this truth viz. What are the requisites to qualifie a true sufferer for Christ When his cause is good his heart his ends also must be good Therefore that ordinary saying Causa non poena facit Martyrem The cause not the punishment doth make a Martyr must be further limited for the cause doth not unlesse there be also those concomitant graces in the subject as well as there is truth in the object and we shall find this suffering temper to have as curious ingredients into it as there was into that precious ointment made for the high Priest alone and no wonder for it is the highest pitch of love we can arrive at to suffer for him and it is the most contrary to flesh and blood So that ●one can do this for Christ but such who are wonderfully enabled by him First Therefore in a sufferer for Christ there is required Faith in the eminent and powerfull actings thereof It is as impossible to suffer without faith as a bird to flie without wings It 's faith alone that can remove these mountains in the Sea Heb. 11. Those great exploits the Saints did yea and those wonderfull sufferings they underwent is attributed by the Apostle wholly to their faith Now this faith requisite to true suffering for Christ emptieth it self into two chanels there must be a Dogmatical Faith and a Fiducial Faith A Dogmatical Faith is that whereby a man is assured of the truths be suffereth for as divine and because of Divine Authority Faith must be as Heb. 11. 1. an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The substance and evidence of things For if a man have not this faith it 's obstinacy and pertinacy not faith that maketh him suffer as we see in Hereticks Hence also it is that a meer Opinionist or Sceptick in Religion will never suffer for Christ because he hath no faith but opinion in Religion So likewise those who are of a Religion meerly for humane Authority sake because of the custome and Laws where they live commanding such a Religion as those amongst the Graecians that were called Melchitae because they followed the Religion the King was of though indeed the Orthodox were so branded by the Heretical party Vide Hornbeck de Graecis These cannot suffer truly for Christ Indeed they may suffer for their Religion as it 's local and traditional to them as Turks and Jews do but yet this is not from faith which doth necessarily relate to divine testimony This then cuts off the glory which Hereticks and erroneous persons may boast of if they suffer truly they suffer with a true Faith if they have a true Faith that can be proved and demonstrated out of Gods Word And when we say a Dogmatical Faith that must be understood in respect of its compleatnesse and integrity as to Fundamentals No man can suffer truly for Christ that peremptorily denieth any I undamental if he hold the foundation though he build hay and stubble superstructive errours yet if he do not demolish any of the foundation stones he may be saved but so as by fire And truly is this charity be not allowed we shall scarce find any person or Church truly suffering for Christ For where hath there been such a sound faith in Fundamentals circa-fundamentals and praeter-fundamentals as that there hath not been any spot or wrinkle in the face of the Church This prerogative belongs to the Church in Heaven They therefore suffer for Christ who are persecuted for his truths though happily they erre in many things not necessary to salvation But if they deny any Fundamentals I do not say doubt and that for a season as the Apostles did about the nature of Christs Kingdome and his Resurrection and that with persevering obstinacy then though he suffer for one Fundamental yet because he denieth another he doth in effect destroy the whole building of Christ Thus when a Macedonian suffered for holding the Deity of Christ being put to death by an Arian the primitive Church never judged him a Martyr because he denied the Deity of the Holy Ghost There is therefore required a sound Dogmatical Faith for which cause some have doubted Whether the Church did well in making all those infants which were killed by Herod because of Christ in reckoning them among Martyrs For they did not know any thing of Christ neither it may be many of their parents had any true faith about him Certainly ly they cannot be called Martyrs or Sufferers for Christ in an active fense but passively only The second act of faith is a fiducial dependance on the promise of God and his Power which is able to raise up the heart above all fears and discouragements yea to represent prisons palaces and coals of fire beds of roses such a transubstantiating nature is faith of It was faith Heb. 11. which made Moses esteem the reproaches of Christ more than all the glory and honour which was in Pharaoh's court especially faith as it is the substance of things hoped for As it maketh Heaven and glory present so it 's admirably quickning and enlivening the heart of him that suffereth It is therefore called The shield of faith which above all or to all as some expound we
the Gospel is though to some a savour of life yet to others a savour of death Thus afflictions and troubles to some do discover their hypocrisie and guile as winnowing doth the cha●● but to others they are blessed either to conversion or to edification So that in all the sufferings of the Church we are by prayer to importune God that by these means greater glory may come to Christ and that these waters of persecution may be like those to the Ark which could not drown it but exalted it nearer to Heaven Hence Fourthly We may admire the wisdome power and goodnesse of God that wherein the enemies of Gods Church deal craftily and cruelly in that very thing he is above them working the contrary to that which they are intending For how many persecutors hath the Church had who like Haman resolved to root out the very name of Christianity and their persecutions have increased the number of Christians Thus it must needs be madness and torment to the Churches enemies to see that the wayes they take to demolish is indeed to build up the Church of God Even as it was with Pharaoh when he called a counsel to deal craftily with the Israelites to oppress and diminish them then they were the more multiplied Thus Act. 12. 24. when Herod set himself to kill the eminent servants of the Lord and thereby weaken the Church of God for when the shepherds were dissipated what would become of the flock it is said But the word of God grew and multiplied See how the contrary fell out to Herods design These things premised Let us consider What is the general good promoted by the Churches sufferings And 1. Hereby the glory of God and Christ is the more exalted amongst all that fear him For when the Churches of God shall see the wisdome and goodness of God thus to his people turning all the cruelty and craft of their adversaries to their own good that what they could never do their enemies do for them What glory and praise doth this cause in all Congregations How is the Church indeared hereby to God to trust in him to continue faithfull to him in all exercises God hath been good and will be good God hath turned the greatest evil of men to the greatest advantage and he will do it As Christs death is called a glorifying of him Thus also are the sufferings for Christ the believers glory and not only so but the glory of Christ also What saith Paul Phil. 1. 20. Christ shall be magnified in my body whether by life or death But 2. The great good overflowing to the Church by its sufferings are the propagation and enlargement of the Gospel thereby Phil. 1. 13. Paul there sheweth how his troubles fell out to the furtherance of the Gospel for his bonds were made manifest in Caesars palace and in all other places That of Tertullian is known The blood of Martyrs is the seed of the Church When men did behold their faith the r●patience their constancy and courage it made them enquire into the cause of their sufferings what it was that could make them so constantly endure all kind of torments Insomuch that this was in stead of the working of miracles to bring men to faith So that as the shaking of a ripe flower maketh many seeds fall to the ground and in stead of that one flower many come up in the room of it or as when the Vine hath its branches cut off there come farre more in stead thereof Thus it hath also been by all the troubles on the Church of God by afflictions and by patience under them How numerous did the Church of God grow even like the stars in Heaven Let the Use be To consider those examples of all such worthies who have suffered for Christ whether recorded in Scripture or in Ecclesiastical History read them for thy comfort and thy salvation The word of God and the lives of Martyrs bearing witness to it may much prevail over a stony heart It hath been a good blessing of God that the Names and Histories of most Martyrs have been preserved and recorded for the good of the Church of God to come The lives and sufferings of our Martyrs here in England what influence may they not make upon thee What patience what heavenly mindedness what courage should this put into thee As Abel though dead speaketh Thus do all the godly Martyrs the Bradfords the Ridleys the Latimers they all speak still and God suffereth such persecutions to be as perpetual Sermons to teach us SERM. LI. The Afflictions which others suffer for Christ make much for our Comfort and Salvation 2 COR. 1. 6. And whether we be afflicted it is for your consolation and salvation THe second particular in this Text as it stands divided is the Consequent or Effect of this tribulation which is set down in a particular and special manner above any other fruit of it and that is two-fold Consolation and Salvation Of the word Consolation enough hath already been said For the other viz. Salvation we shall remit it to the end of the verse where it is again specified So that our work is immediately to proceed to the Observation which is That sufferings for Christ should be so farre from disheartning and offending others that a true and right consideration of them may much provoke our comfort and salvation This truth is of great use For the afflictions accompanying the wayes of Christ have been an offence and a stumbling block to many Now when a curb shall be made a spur when an hinderance a furtherance and we shall be encouraged from those particulars which should drive back this consideration must be very profitable Before we come to amplifie in what manner in what respects persecutions are made thus serviceable to others Let us take notice First That the sufferings of others do work good only occasionally or by way of example We must not conceive any merit or causality as was declared before in Martyrs They are Examples not Mediators Their light did shine that we might thereby glorifie God So that we must take heed that the sufferings of the godly do not obscure the sufferings of Christ that they should not be accounted the only treasure of Christ But as Luther was afraid lest his books should take men off from meditating on the Bible Or as Paul was afraid men should judge of him as if he by his own power had done that miracle and therefore told them It was onely by the Name of Christ. So also it was with all the true Martyrs of Christ they were humble looking upon themselves as unworthy of the name of a Martyr neither would they have their blood derogate from the blood of Christ Hence Secondly We may greatly deplore and bewail the Apostasie of the Church concerning those that were Martyrs and sufferers for Christ in what superstition and sinfull devotion were they plunged in about
sinfull It is a fundamental qualification required in every Disciple of Christ he cannot be Christs unless he be above the love of all things Matth. 10. 37. He that loveth father or mother or life it self more than me cannot be my Disoiple Why then art thou so afraid to die Is it because thy heart is so dearly engaged in such relations to such creatures Be humbled for this and reform A second sinfull cause which floweth from the former is The want of love to God and to Christ Thy desire is not with Paul To be with Christ thou doest not judge this best of all Not to be willing to die upon this account must also be very sinfull Do we not pray for the Kingdome of God Are we not to look for and hasten the coming of Christ Are we not to be as pilgrims and strangers in this world Now if these things were real upon thee though thou couldst not avoid a natural fear yet thou wouldst greatly subdue a sinfull fear 3. There is a sinfull cause of the fear of death When we produce those actions and live such a life which will justly make death terrible Thou complainest I am afraid to die I dare not think of death and why Thou doest put stings into death thou increasest the guilt of thy conscienne by living without repentance and reformation and then it is no wonder if such a sinfull cause make a sinfull effect Sinne less keep thy conscience clear and then thou wilt fear death less The last sinfull cause of the sinfull fear of death is Want of faith in Christ and this even the godly are subject to though they live holily and unblameably though they have kept a good conscience towards God and men yet they have sometimes uncomfortable fears about death because they do not look upon Christ they consider not that Christ hath conquered death So that now every Christian may with Paul triumph Death is swallowed up in victory O death where is thy sting 1 Cor. 15. 54 55. but want of faith depriveth of this holy comfort and boldness See then if thy want of faith maketh thee fear death and consider that if so this is very injurious to Christ as if still death were not subdued as if death had conquered Christ and not Christ death Faith will make thee see a loveliness and another nature in death than what it had at first SERM. LXVI The truly godly may sometimes passe false sentences upon their own Persons and Actions and Gods dispensations towards them 2 COR. 1. 9. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead THe second Doctrine remaining from the clause of the former verse viz. That the children of God judge otherwise while they attend to second causes and humane helps then they do while they look to the power and promise of God will come in very seasonably as a branch of that general usefull matter which this Text will afford us Come we therefore to the consideration of it 1. It is a further amplification of this trouble which came upon him in Asia and that is the most extream and highest aggravation that yet hath been used which is expressed in the beginning We had the sentence of death in our selves 2. It is illustrated from the wholsom and saving end of this trouble laid on him It was not brought upon him by God for his destruction but his spiritual good His soul might have been in danger if his body had not been He might have perished spiritually if he had not been in danger of perishing temporally Now this blessed effect of his trouble is set down 1. Negatively That we might not trust in our selves 2. Positively But in God Described by a sutable property Who raiseth the dead Let us begin with the aggravation his trouble was so great That he had received the sentence of death in himself This is more than the clause in the precedent verse for there it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He was in such a doubt and perplexity about his life that he did not see any way to evade but here he is positive he comes now to make resolute conclusions He must die He had received the sentence of death The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used here in this place onely in the New Testament The Verb from whence it cometh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Budeus sheweth to have two more eminent significations the one is to separate and secerne one thing from another in which sense I do not observe it used in the New Testament It useth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that sense even as humane Authours also do most frequently 1 Cor. 1. 15. The spiritual man judgeth all things by searching and judging he cometh to discern the truth from errour The other signification is to answer in which sense it is alwayes used in the New Testament Favorinus in his Lexicon maketh this difference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The former is a bare simple Answer made to any Question the later is an Answer by way of defence against some accusation The proper word for an Answer is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Luke 2. 47. Luke 20. 26. Joh. 1. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is seldome used for an Answer yet Stephen sheweth out of Suidas an expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like that à secretis one whose office was to answer requests Hence some translate it answer as it is in the margin But the most genuine translation is sentence for so Hesychius expounds the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whom Favorinus followeth verbatim in this as in many other particulars It is true Heinsius on the place maketh the word in a contrary sense to signifie an answer or inspiration from God secretly assuring of him that he should not die like that Act. 24. 24. Fear not Paul such answers were by the Urim and Thummim So that in his sense it should imply Gods suretiship or undertaking for his preservation But the other is more generally received and the following words argue such a sense The word then doth signifie a sentence passing upon him That he must die This he had received but from whom Not from God for God delivered him nor from the Magistrate there was no such Decree that we read of against him Therfore it was onely from his own feares his own thoughts which maketh him say He had received it in himself You see then that Gods thoughts were others then Paul's Paul absolutely concluded he should die but God had purposed the contrary From whence observe That the godly themselves are sometimes greatly deceived about Gods administrations to them They are apt to erre in their judgements about Gods dispensation They gather such conclusions and make such inferences as are wholly opposite to Gods intentions Though it
we not to have done it 4. One chief motive which is to put us upon all holy obedience unto God is Thankfulness There are two great and principal parts of Divinity the one is De gratià Dei of the grace of God and the other De gratitudine hominis of mans thankfulnes There are indeed several reasons why we are commanded to abound in holy works but one of them is thereby to testifie our thankfulnes to God that though we cannot do anything to merit at his hands though Christ as Mediator hath purchased all spiritual priviledges so that we cannot do any holy duty as a cause to procure them yet to manifest our thankfulnes to God we are ready with delight to do his will 5. A thanksgiving heart is the most proper and sutable disposition to the Gospel dispensation wherein grace doth in so many wonderfull effects demonstrate it self Now praise doth properly answer to free grace and love Eph. 1. 16. Gods predestination and his adoption it is That we should be to the praise of the glory of his grace These new songs should alwayes be in our mouths And again v. 12. That we should be to the praise of his glory So that if you say Why did God predestinate thee It is to his praise Why doth he convert It is to his praise Thus he adopts he justifieth that we might be only to his praise Thus 1 Pet. 2. 9. we are a chosen generation a peculiar people that we should shew forth his praises The children then of free grace must be the children of praises and thanksgivings unto God Every power of the soul every part of the body should be a tongue as it were to glorifie God Were we more affected with the depth breadth and length of this grace of God we should be more abounding in this duty of blessing God David cals his tongue his glory though some apply it to the soul because of this work Lastly If we praise not God when mercies are obtained by prayer it discovereth a rotten and insincere heart It argued thou never didst pray for mercies upon right grounds to glorifie God to be thereby more instrumental in our service of him but only for our own ends and our own necessities For he that prayeth spiritually will praise God cheerfully he will more rejoyce in the favour of God because God heareth his prayers then the benefit obtained If then thou neglectest this duty of thanksgiving thou discoverest a prophane earthly heart that thou preferrest the mercy desired above the glory and honour of God and therefore it will be just with God never to hear thy prayers more For thankfulness is the only way to preserve mercies and to have more added SERM. LXXXII God is the fountain of all our Mercies they are his Gifts and why 2 COR. I. II. That for the gift bestowed upon us THe second part in order to be treated of is The Object matter for which or that for which Paul would have solemne thanksgiving after such solemn prayer The gift bestowed upon us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This temporal deliverance he calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it came from the favour of God not from any merits or deserts in Paul Some make a difference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was applied onely to the common gifts of Gods Spirit especially those which Divines call Dona ministrantia Gifts of service and the Schools Gratiae gratis datae and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the grace and favour of God in a special manner or to the effect thereof which is inherent grace in the soul These graces are called Dona sanctificantia Gifts that doe truely sanctifie those that have them The Schooles falsly call them Gratiae gratum facientes But though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be often applied to such common spirituall gifts as 1 Cor. 12. alibi Yet sometimes we must thereby understand sanctifying grace and justifying grace Rom. 5. 16. Rom. 11. 28. And indeed if we will make any difference it seemeth to be this rather that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the Effect and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Cause as Rom. 12. 6. Having gifts according to the grace that is given to us Hence it is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is generally translated gift in the New Testament So Favorinus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So that what the Scripture other where calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jac. 1. 17. Act. 8. 21. Psal 1. 17. it may be the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onely it doth properly signifie such a gift as maketh to the publick and spiritual advantage of the Church onely in this Text it may have the general signification and the special The general Paul's Deliverance was a temporal gift It was a mercy in these outward things a preservation from death either violent as the common exposition you heard is or from natural For Baldwin the Lutheran Expositor thinketh it may well enough be understood of some desperate sicknesse Paul was afflicted with Howsoever this outward mercy of preservation is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and it may have also the special signification of a Paul's life and preservation was a gift in this sense for hereby his ministerial labours might be more successefull But this latter consideration will come in in the close of this verse Let us take notice of the general one Paul's life and preservation it is a gift From whence observe That not onely spiritual mercies which are above natural causes but even our ordinary temporal enjoyments are the gift of God It 's not Gods gift onely to sanctifie us to justifie us but to give us our health our food our preservation so that we live wholly upon the meer bounty of God we are all so many Almes-men the world is an Almes-house Man doth not or cannot obtaine the least mercy with his owne wisdom and power without the blessing of God This is a necessary truth For we look more upon these ordinary mercies as the fruit of our own labour than as Gods meer free gift The Apostle Jam. 1. 17. saith Every good gift is from God Every gift whether natural or supernatural what have we that we have not received is true both in nature and grace For although in the sense that Pelagians did it was very erroneous to confound Creation and Nature with grace yet in this respect we may say That Creation and Preservation is of the grace and favour of God because he communicated of his goodnesse to the creature onely from his meer favour But to speake after the Scripture-language onely those spiritual favours and Church-priviledges which conduce to eternal blessednesse are called The grace of God So that health life and other mercies though they be The gifts of God yet are not called The grace of God However
they both agree in this our temporal mercies and spiritual mercies come from God the fountain of them though spiritual mercies have a more special and restrained consideration To affect us with humility and thankfulnesse in this point consider these particulars First That even those mercies which are the effects of natural causes yet they are the gift of God Should he withdraw his concourse no creature were able to performe its usefull operations The fire would not warme us our bread would not nourish us our raiment would not comfort us against the cold So that we are not only to bless God that we have such creatures as these are but that they are usefull We are not only to praise God that we have bread and raiment but that these things can do their office For in these there is a two-fold mercy 1. That God doth provide them for us 2. That when they are provided they put forth their usefulnesse Thus our Saviour alledgeth out of Deuteronomy Mat. 4. 4. Thou shalt not live by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of Gods mouth If God give not a word of blessing our bread cannot nourish us Hence we are also said In God to live and move and have our being Act. 17. 28. Although therefore there are natural causes and these do produce their effects from a natural necessity yet because they are second causes they do therefore depend upon God the chiefest and supream cause both in esse and operari in their being and operation Thus the fire would not burn if God should not give concourse thereunto as appeareth in the case of the three Worthies and the reason which is given by the Dominicans though the Jesuites do not well relish it is that every second cause though it be a natural agent and so determined to operation yet because it is in a potentiality to worke it hath a potentia a power this must be reduced to act by that which is the pure and chief act viz. God himself So that it is not enough for God to give a natural power to produce such an effect unlesse he also actuate that power and goe along with it This is a truth and when believed will draw off our eyes from the creature more so as to set them upon God and to acknowledge him more in all things This then thou art to know That even those natural comforts which flow from natural causes so that it would be a miracle if they should not produce them are yet from the goodnesse and bounty of God Now how often are we unthankfull for these mercies we doe not blesse God for the gift of seeing the gift of hearing the gift of walking Secondly Those comforts which flow from moral causes these also are to be attributed to the gift of God A man that is diligent in his place he may grow to be rich The strongest usually prevail in battel The swiftest they overcome in a race yet where these moral causes are the effect is Gods gift Therefore Solomon observeth that the clean contrary falleth out sometimes Eccles 9. 11. That the battel is not to the strong nor the race to the swift How many are diligent carefull and wise in their places and yet cannot obtain wealth in this world So that even those things which are brought about by the means that we use we must acknowledge they are Gods gift if his blessing be not upon the means they are frustrated Thus the Lord doth instruct Israel against any pride and confidence that might arise as if their power and strength did make them rich For it is the Lord saith he that giveth thee power to get wealth Deut. 8. 18. You see whatsoever wisdome diligence and good husbandry we use yet if any thing come thereby it is the gift of God You have a most significant place for this truth Hag. 1. 6. where the Prophet sheweth whatever we eat or drinke or take care and labour about the Lord can blast it and make it come to nothing Ye eat but have not enough ye cloathe you but there is none warme and he that earneth wages it is to put in a bag with holes Doth not this Text evidently proclaim that the labourer in his wages the tradesman in his buying and selling the husbandman in his plowing and sowing cannot adde one farthing to his efface unlesse the Lord blesse it Thirdly All those comforts we have and gifts either to relieve or refresh us that we have from others we are to account them Gods gifts rather than mens If any man help thee in thy necessities if any man preferre and honour thee thou art indeed to be thankfull unto men that are benefactors but more to God who inclined their hearts to thee Yet how little is this thought upon when we receive courtesies from men kindnesses from men we look upon these alone whereas if God did not move their hearts thou wouldst have found no relief from them It was thus with Joseph he was cast into prison upon the Kings displeasure in all outward appearance the Goaler would have used him with all cruelty yet saith the Text Genes 39. 21. God shewed mercy to Joseph and gave him favour in the sight of the keeper of the prison The Lord hath a command over mens hearts he maketh them mercifull and free to some and again he turneth the hearts of some men against others Now we poor creatures look only upon men as if they did all as if all were in their power But as God commanded Laban who was in a rage against Jacob not to speak an ill word against him So also doth the Lord daily he maketh men thy friends and he raiseth them up to be foes We have likewise a notable instance Exod. 12. 36. when the Israelites were upon their departure the Aegyptians though their cruel enemies who hated and oppressed them yet it 's said The Lord gave them favour in their eyes that they lent them even jewels of gold and silver On the contrary when God was provoked it is said Psalm 105. He turned their heart to his people As David then said when Shimei reviled him bitterly The Lord hath bid him So when thou receivest any favour any mercy from men look up higher than men The Lord hath bid him Mens gifts are much rather Gods gifts yea even what those do for us who are in the most indeared relations and so have principles of nature to instigate them to help thee yet thou art to look upon all their care and love as Gods gift to thee If thy parents have taken care of thee if they have provided for thee if they have looked to thee though it was their duty and they would have been unnatural if they had done otherwise yet do thou look upon it as Gods gift to thee How many parents are given up to unnatural affections How many love their lusts and their whores more than their children So that
the property of those who are godly to take nothing to themselves but to give all to the grace of God You see here though Paul was so eminent for godlinesse and so admirable for gifts yet he maketh the grace of God to be alone the sole Authour of all spiritual successe This subject the Apostle doth very willingly enlarge himself upon wheresoever he hath occasion Hence in the fore-mentioned place 1 Corinth 15. 10. he saith By the grace of God I am what I am The grace of God made him an holy man The grace of God made him an eminent Apostle he had nothing as a private Christian or as an Officer but by the grace of God and because many may have grace in a common way bestowed upon them that yet abuse it as Judas he addeth This grace was not in vain Yet lest it should be thought that it was his improvement of the grace bestowed that made it so effectual he presently correcteth his expression Yet not I but the grace of God which was with me As it is not the pen but the Writer that is a cause of fair Characters Let us discover this Doctrine And First We see the Apostle rejoycing in the sincerity of his heart and yet acknowledging all to the grace of God so that these two may well stand together to take comfort from our holinesse yet to put our trust in nothing but the grace of God It is true this is a very hard lesson to performe there is required much skill and prudence herein for we are apt to runne into extreames Either through unbelief and peevishnesse we nourish doubts and perplexing thoughts in our selves not taking notice of the grace of God in us Or else if we doe behold it and rejoyce in it we are presently in a secret manner lifted up and confident thereby But we see by the Apostles practice both are consistent together So that the people of God are diligently to labour after this heavenly frame of heart To be in doubts and fears about thy condition is to live in the jaws of hell and to be presuming or carnally confident of thy graces is the next door to a sad and miserable downfall Secondly It is not enough to acknowledge the grace of God in the general but so to set up grace as to give all to it The Apostle maketh an immediate opposition between grace and workes Rom. 11. 6. there cannot be a reconciling of grace and workes together This hath been often attempted but as unhappily as the building up the walls of Jericho again The Pelagian Arminian the Socinian and Papist all these doe acknowledge grace but when we come to the root of the matter it 's nothing at last but the free-will and workes of a man It is his good use of grace that doth determine and make all things effectual not grace it self And this is the rather to be noted because Stapleton would antidote against Calvin's poison as he speaketh from this Text. For whereas Calvin taking notice of the Apostles glorying in the testimony of his conscience concernin his sincerity doth shew that Paul hereby doth not oppose that command Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord because Paul giveth all to the grace of God and resteth alone upon that From this Stapleton would excuse the Papists also because they acknowledge all good workes to come from grace Their merits are founded onely upon Christs merits Even as it doth not derogate from the power of God that he useth second causes in natural things because they are subordinate to him both in their being and operation but it doth illustrate as his bounty so his power the more to make other things powerfull Thus saith he it is not injurious to the grace and merits of Christ if we attribute merit to our workes seeing this cometh onely from Christ but it argueth his fullnesse and rich grace the more that communicateth of it to us So that saith he to put trust in the workes of grace as the proxim and immediate cause but in the grace of God as the chiefe and universal cause is no derogation to the honour and glory of Christ But that of the Apostle must be alwayes remembred If of grace then not of workes otherwise grace is no more grace It is not grace unlesse it be grace every way And therefore to make our workes the second causes to trust in though it be not so high a wickednesse as to exclude Christ throughly yet it doth in part and therefore as in the matter of worship we admit of no primary and secondary worship no more than a primary and secondary God So it is in matter of trusting we must depend only upon Christ not but that holinesse and godly works are necessarily required but not as causes under any subtil distinctions whatsoever These two things premised let us now consider What is that grace which the Apostle doth here exalt against all fleshly wisdome And First As the ground-work of all there is to be understood That grace of God whereby he was called out of that pharisaical estate and condition of enmity against Christ to be a faithfull and ready servant to him This wonderfull grace of God to him doth often melt the heart of Paul he speaketh of it with aggravating particulars as much as may be Thus Galat. 1 15. When it pleased God who called me by his grace to reveale his Sonne in me c. And therefore 1 Tim. 1. 15 16. he acknowledged himself an instance Because the chiefest of sinners of the long-suffering of Christ In Paul's conversion there were no preparations no merits of congruity there was no docible and fitted dispositions Insomuch that the adversaries to Gods grace do acknowledge Paul's conversion to be an extraordinary thing In the midst of his persecuting sury when God might have struck him dead with thunder and lightnings from Heaven and so send him quick as it were to Hell God did visit him with his grace and give him another heart to his own amazement and of all those who heard of it So if you look upon Paul in a single capacity as a private person in the whole course of his life he giveth all to the grace of God Secondly The grace of God which Paul doth also greatly exalt is In the setting of him apart to be an Apostle and an eminent Officer in the Church of God This crooked and rough timber that was onely fit for the fire God doth not onely polish and smooth by grace but advanceth it to be an eminent part in the building notwithstanding all Paul's former unworthinesse God doth not onely by his grace call him but maketh him an honourable vessel in his house This our Apostle doth likewise with great enlargement in many places take great notice of See how emphatically is he affected with this grace of God towards him Ephesians 3. 7 8. Whereof I was made a Minister according to the gift of
so infinitely transcending all earthly comeforts and therefore such who find no matter of rejoycing herein it is because they are carnal sensual they abide under the Dominion of their lusts they never found the Ministry spiritual and powerfull to them They never had the experience of the blessed effects thereof upon their hearts and then How can they rejoyce in i● 3. Seing that this mutual assistance is appointed by God as a special means to destroy the Kingdome of Satan Hence it is that he doth most assault this indeavouring to make discords and differences between Minister and people That so both the benefit and comefort of such unity might be frustrated It is true the Devil delights to sow his Tares in every field therefore in civil estates in domestical relations he throweth his Firebrands and loveth to see all in Passions and discontents but especially his design is against those spiritual relations because the well mannaging of them doth more immediately oppose his throne of darkness For this end he stirred up so many fals Prophets and Teachers whose works was to divide between the people and their faithfull guides And can we think the Apostles would have written so Apologetically in many places condescended so much in the wayes of Humility and diligence to win their affections but that he knew by such Dissentions the Devil would inlarge his Dominions Hence it is that Calvin upon that place of 2 Cor. 2. 11. Lest satan should get an advantage of us though he take notice of their exposition who refer it to the Incestuous person as if Satans designe was upon that occasion to have him swallowed up with excessive sorrow yet he doth in a great part relate it to the Dissention that the Devil endeavoured to make between them and Paul for if Paul was for the confirming of their love to that person now repenting but the Corinthians under a pretence of zeal against sin should be against him This would have caused sad Divisions and so thereby Satan would have prevailed It is observed as one of Julians devilish designes against Christianity to make a difference between the Christians and their godly Pastors and therefore he did craftily and secretly pour all the oyl he could into such flames to make them greater and truly the Instances of such differences even in the Reformed Churches do give too full a testimony of the Devils labour herein Should we speak of the Churches troubles at Franckford though exiled and under Persecution The sharpest whereof was between the Flock and their Shepherd yea of the hot contention between Geneva and Calvin and in many other Churches we may easily be perswaded that there is scarce any one thing wherein the Devil goeth more about as a roaring Lyon to deceive them than to break the slaves of beauty and bands between Shepherd and Sheep which should make both Minister and people the more watchfull and diligent and also much in Prayer that God would disapoint all such purposes of Satan and his Instruments This may suffice in the General Let us now proceed to the respective particulars and first In what sence and how a people may rejoyce in their faithfull Guides And first They are to rejoye in them as those instruments which God hath used to bring spiritual light unto their minde and heavenly heat into their heart For this it is the Apostle doth so much insist upon to convince the Corinthians That if ever they did believe if ever they felt any thing of the saving efficacy of Gods spirit upon their hearts it was by his Ministry and therefore they would be unthankfull to God if they did not take notice of Gods special blessing to them by his means It is true 1 Cor. 3. we see there the Apostle zealously beating down their factions and Contentions which they raised by setting up one Officer and Teacher to the despising of another and thereupon exalteth Christ onely But yet though Christ be the principal only and he alone giveth the encrease yet he granteth the Necessity of the Ministry withall Paul must Plant Apollo must water and these are Ministers by whom they believed Ver. 5. Although then it be our duty to lift up our hearts to God alone as he in whom and by whom all spiritual success doth arise to us yet we are to rejoyce in such instruments as God useth For if we may be glad of such Instruments that cause our temporall comforts and supports If the Childe may rejoyce in the father if an indigent man in him who is potent and bountifull no wonder then if we do cry out How welcome are the feet of those who bring glad tydings of peace Rom. 10. 15. How beautiful are the very feet of such So that it plainly demonstrateth all such to be delivered up to the spirit of slumber and prophaneness or of Error and Heresie who do not find this cause to rejoyce in them as Gods Instruments to their Soules 2. We are to rejoyce in them because of their works sake and the Faithfull discharge of their duties And the more powerfull they are herein the greater ought our joy to be Thus the Apostle 1 Cor. 4. 1. Let a man account of us as the Embassadours of God and Stewards of Christ Thus the Apostle also commandeth 1 Thessal 11. 13. To esteem very highly of those who are over them and admonish them and that for their works sake Though they do admonish and reprove you which is as unpleasing to a sin as salt to a sore yet you are to esteem highly of them This requireth not onely external respect but cordial and Internal and this must be for their works sake Many times a people may glory in the Abilities in the Learning and admirable gifts of their Teachers thinking that thereby they surpass other Congregations This is a vain-glorious thing too often seen in great Cities but the Apostle saith it must be for their works sake because they do faithfully and powerfully lead you into the paths of Eternal Life Thus as David esteemed the word of God above gold and silver because thereby he was forewarned from sin The spiritual and holy commands of God not induring any sin made him thus in love with it So it should also be with our people they should delight and rejoyce in the Ministry because it is efficacious against sin because it enlighteneth it converteth it destroyeth the works of the Devil so that this particular discovers the Prophanenesse and impiety of such men who rejoyce most in such Ministers as are either lazy and negligent or that are dissolute and carnally humouring men in their evil wayes These they boast in and rejoyce in they account none like them Thus God of old complained of the people of Israel that they loved such who did sow pillowes under their armes and encouraged the hearts of those that were wicked but made those sad whom the Lord would not have made sad Ezek. 13. 10
immediately make them take up such Resolutions they must shew much Constancy and self-denial using all means to recover them For seeing it is God that giveth the encrease though we plant and water and his time is unknown to us it may fall out that a people who give no hope for the present may afterwards appear more curable and the seed that is now sown thou for the present it may seem buried yet afterwards it may grow up Therefore we are to imitate God himself who useth much Patience and Forbearance even to the vilest men thereby to allure them to Repentance This counsel also Pasl giveth Timothy as a Minister of the Gospel 2 Tim. 2. 25. In meekness instructing those that oppose if peradventure God will give them Repentance to the acknowledging of the truth Though then hopes of doing good to a people is a great Encouragement to co continue with them yet a people that appear incurable for the present are not to be immediately abandoned because the times of success are in Gods hand and sometimes Persecutors are at last made Lovers and imbracers of the truth Besides we see the Prophet quieting his heart with this though he had no success in his Ministry that he had his reward with God Isay 49. 5. Though Israel be not gathered yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of God Such as are despised and contemned in the eyes of men shall be glorious in the eyes of God 4. This confidence and hope of doing good must not depend upon a mans own apprehensions but must be guided by the word of God So deceitfull and corrupt is the heart of a man that many times it flattereth it self and when a man seeketh his own advantage yet he may perswade himself that it is confidence and hope of doing good Therefore to know when their is more hope of doing good in one place than in another must not be decided by selfish and private desires but by general Rules fetched out of Gods Word and indeed because all success of Ministerial Labours lyeth wholly upon the good Grace of God and the Word is blessed sometimes to one people not so likely and at another time not to a people more likely Therefore the will of God is very difficultly discovered in such cases which sheweth with how much sincerity and fervency God is to be sought unto at such times Now the Reasons are palpable Why Confidence in a Minister to do good to a people should be a matter not onely of continuance but of studying and diligent improving all his Ministerial Labours with the greater joy First Because the End of his Ministry is hereby accomplished When the Disciples had fished all the day and caught nothing they were disheartened but when Christ bid them throw the net in again and they brought up a multitude this made them rejoyce even to amazement If the Husbandman is at much cost and pains about his ground and that bring forth nothing but bryars and thornes Is not that a disheartening If a Physician see that no Potions no Medicines he giveth ever do any good will not that make him weary of his imployment How much more if a Minister labour in vain Preach in vain Admonish in vain and still people grow more ohdurate in their sinnes Doth not this teach them with Jonah even to run from their work Secondly There is great matter of rejoycing where this hope is because Success in the Ministry is above all Successes Herein the Souls of men are concerned In this is contained our everlasting Happiness Oh that men should be no more sollicitous in this than they are How few do examine what fruit the Word preached hath upon them whether it be a sustaining Word or an hardening Whether it be the savour of life or the savour of death That Ark which brought so much blessing to Obedmelech and his Family to the Philistines was cause of grievous Plagues And thus the same Sermons that are life to one may be darkness to others that are light to one may be darkness to another If then the Minister shall see his work like to prosper in the end it is sent for here is greater cause to rejoyce then in any outward blessing whatsoever for this is of everlasting consequence Let the Use be of Exhortation to you to be a people of good Confidence that our Ministeriall Labours shall not be in vain That we do not in vain preach to you or pray for you Can there be a greater grief to the Minister yea and provocation of God than to be like that ground the Scripture speaketh of Heb. 6. 8 Which drinking in rain often yet bringing forth nothing but bryars and thornes is rejected and whose end is to be burned And is not this the sad case of most of those trees that stand in the Lords Garden Do not many grow more ignorant more prophane more hardened Oh what hope can a Minister have about such a man May we not see sad symptomes of Gods wrath upon your soules many such desperate Patients have the spiritual Physicians of mens soules to deal with But take heed of shewing thy self an hopeless man to a faithfull Minister one to whom no admonition no reproof will ever do good For First Those sighs and troubles that thou put test such spiritual Guides unto are in a speciall manner taken notice of by God It is true we see Jeremiah so grieved and offended sometimes at the wicked carriage of the people he prophesied unto that he prayeth against his persecutors yea God commanded him saying Pray not for this people for their good Jerem. 14. 11. But we have not an extraordinary Spirit neither dare we pray against any hopeless people yet remember all their ●ighs all their grief will one day witness against thee Certainly if the ears of God be open to the Curses of an hired Man whose wages are kept from him how much more will God hear the sad complaints of those Ministers who are faithfull poured out because of a peoples rebellion and incurableness 2. Consider this That your discouraging them by your evil wayes maketh them the more unfit and heartless in their studies and Labours Why doth rain fall on the rock say they Why do we wash blackamoors and so some expound that place Heb. 13. 17. That they may give their account with joy and not with grief for that is unprofitable for you in this sense by grieving and disheartening of them they cannot be so active in their Ministry they will grow more heartless therein and that will be your damage Oh it s a terrible thing when this heaviness and dulness of a Minister ariseth from the discouragements he hath from the wicked lives of a people and therefore Calvin upon that place speaketh excellently That people should take notice of God punishing them for their ingratitude When their Ministers abate in zealous and lively watching over their soules we are apt many times to
complain of such a dull and liveless Ministry yet how little do people think that many times they give the cause so that its Gods punishment upon them in that very thing yea though Ministers be never so faithfull and godly yet as Calvin observeth they cannot go on in their Ministerial work with that vigor and alacrity they ought to do when their hearts are bound up with sorrow and discouragements about their people All cannot attain to Pauls excellency who could have enlarged bowells to that people who had streightened ones towards him SERM. CVII Of the Necessity of a constant Ministry not only for the constituting but to an establishing the Church 2 COR. 1. 15. That you might have a second benefit IN these words we have the End of Pauls purpose to come to them It was wholly spiritual It was not for any advantage any earthly respects but but wholly for their good to encrease and confirm their graces The End is expressed in these words That ye might have a second benefit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some as Chrysostome interpret for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea their are some who would have that to be the word in the Original It is no doubt but that much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or joy did follow upon this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All spiritual effects and heavenly exercises are apt to breed much joy Hence none have true joy but those that are godly and so by consequence none are blessed but they for Joy is a great ingredient to Happiness Hence Aristotle maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceedingly to rejoyce yet is more consonant to other places of Scripture to read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thus Rom. 1. 11. He desired to see them that he might impart to them some spiritual benefit The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is chiefly used in the New Testament for the free grace of God towards us in reference to our Eternal Happiness so that the very name ought to be sweet and precious to such who labour under the sense of their unworthiness and see no power or works of their own any wayes able to save them It is of grace therefore that doth not onely exclude merit but supposeth thee unworthy for such mercies of thy own self It is sometimes in Scripture applyed to such Almes as were freely given for the use of distressed Churches 2 Cor. 8. which is therefore called Grace partly because it is of Gods special goodness to give us such a free and liberal Disposition as the first Verse in that Chapter implyeth I do you to wit saith Paul of the grace of God bestowed on the Churches of Macedonia and that was to be liberal to the other afflicted Saints and partly because it cometh from the bountifull disposition of a man to such as are in want In this Text it is to be applyed to spiritual bounty that is to be willing and ready in all serviceableness to promote the spirituall good of others for there are spiritual almes as well as temporal which lieth in reproof in Admonition and frequent Exhortation to what is good Now this Grace or Benefit is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some translate iterated and repeated though it be more than the Second or third time Chrysostome referreth it to his Epistles and his presence for by both these he communicated spiritual benefit unto them But it is most probably and generally referred to his first and second coming whether Paul did come a third time to those Corinthians is disputed by Commentators because of some passages in the 12 and 13 Chapters of this Epistle of which in its time It is enough that by the first grace or benefit we mean the first work upon them by Pauls Ministry when they were converted from their Paganism and planted a Church of Christ And the second benefit was to confirm them in the same Faith and also to quicken them up unto further degrees of Holiness and this was the second Benefit Paul desired to impart unto them For it appeareth that though this Church of Corinth was a garden planted by Paul yet many weeds and some poysonous ones began to grow up amongst them There were both in Doctrine and Manners many things amiss which needed Pauls presence to reforme Observe That it is not enough to be a Church planted and gathered from out of the world at first but there needeth a constant and dayly Ministry to be tilling and dressing of it That Garden which God planted and put Adam into yet was to be dayly dressed and so it is still with the best Churches even those that are of the Apostolical Plantation yet needed the Apostles care and diligent visitations which was one main cause of writing those several Epistles to several Churches They were not written to convert them or make them Churches but to admonish instruct or confirm and comfort as occasion did require and upon this ground it is that though the office of Apostles and Prophets as also the gift of miracles are now ceased because the Church is now planted yet the office of Pastors and the Ordinances Christ hath instituted are perpetual and must be continued to the end of the world So that the opinion of the Socininians about the Ministry as it were only a thing of order and not of Divine Institution is grosly repugnant to Gods Word as also their Doctrine about Baptism That it was but a temporary Ceremony instituted for the beginning of the Church is full of falshood Churches though constituted yet must be dayly watered neither is it enough for a people once to be brought home to the Faith but they need a second and a third yea a continual benefit For though the Apostle haply did come but the second time to these Corinthians yet he appointed Officers in an ordinary residence amongst them as wel as in other Churches which were continually to watch over them The particulars wherein the Ministry is necessary for perfecting work as well as foundation work for progress as well as ingress for consummation as well as imitation are these First To inform against those Errors which false Teachers do easily insinuate into the hearts of people No sooner hath God sowed his field with precious wheat but the envious one commeth and soweth his tares As the April showers that make grass and flowers to come cause also weeds to grow Thus at the same time God is building the Church the Devil and his instruments are raising their Babel No sooner have the Ministers of God with Isaac digged up Wells but the Philistines have been ready to throw their earth and mud therein If then Errors and damnable Heresies may so quickly infect a Church formerly pure no wonder if there be such necessity of Pastors and Guides who are to lead the people into all truth by their Ministry as the spirit of
it is that in Heaven when our understandings shall be fully perfected then we shall not grow in knowledge we shall not imbrace errours and upon further illumination leave them So that whensoever God shall make such a change upon us that we are not to believe as we have done worship as we have done lived as we have done As we are to be thankfull unto God so we are to be humble in our selves because that ever any darknesse did take hold of us The Thomists among the Schoolmen give this for a reason why the good Angels proved constantly good and the evil Angels unchangeably evil Because say they Such is the perfection of the Angelical Nature that what it willeth it willeth immoveably it cannot alter again and therefore an evil Angel cannot repent I shall not justifie this reason but certainly we see it a glorious perfection in God that his understanding is infinite his will immutable so that he cannot know any new thing or will any new thing which he did not from eternity Yea the estate of the glorified Saints in Heaven is admirable in this particular that they are so confirmed by grace they are so perfectly enlightned and sanctified that they receive all truth at first and can never come to know more or better then they did at first admission into that glorious place Fourthly There is no man living though never so learned and so knowing but may still understand more In him there may be there will be Yeas and Nayes He will have cause to confesse he was in this errour once he misunderstood such and such Texts of Scripture formerly Doth not experience confirm this Hence are their retractations their recognitions and reviews of their works which they have put out with much judgement and deliberation So that we are not to wonder if the most excellent and learned men do sometimes say This I thought once and this was my judgement once but now I am better informed It is true the case of the Apostles and such as were divinely inspired of old is different from the most eminent holy and learned men that are in the Church for though after their first call by Christ they did retain some ignorance upon them yea did erre in some doctrinal points of great consequence yet after they received the holy Ghost in a full confirmation of them in their Office then they were made infallible so that in their preaching and writing they could not erre And therefore if there had been any Yea and Nay any contrariety in their Doctrine If any of them should have said Thus I thought once but it was my errour I am now of another mind this would have made us questioned their immediate call from God but all Pastors and Teachers that are to guide the Church they are not to expect such infallibility neither should people look for such assistance upon us but we are limitted to the Scripture as the Rule by which all spirits are to be tried If therefore any eminent Officer of the Church do build hay and stubble upon the foundation of precious stone and pearle wonder not at it Or if you see such afterwards more enlightned and to bewaile the hay and stubble they have built Let not this make you stagger so as to think with your selves what can we believe For they may erre in one thing as well as another and as they confesse they have taught false in one particular so it may be in all the rest and therefore we are not bound to believe them at all For In the fifth place You must distinguish between that which is fundamental in a word and that which is circa or supra fundamental The word of God containeth in it all things that are necessary to salvation but withall it hath many excellent conclusions that are deduceable from them It hath not onely the foundation stones but an excellent and glorious superstructure It hath not onely milk for the babe but strong meat for the adult person And although there be no truth revealed in the Scripture which when sufficiently proposed to us we ought to despise it being the truth of the holy Ghost and wilfully to oppose any known truth of Gods word though it be farre from the fundamentals is a very damnable sinne and rebellion against the Spirit of God yet for all that we must alwayes distinguish between the fundamentals and principles of Religion such as are named Heb. 6. and the conclusions by many mediums deduced from them between the seed and the crop between the essentials and the accessories For there is no godly man much lesse no godly Officer that is so farre left by God as to erre in fundamentals of salvation at least perpetually and therefore they have no Yea and Nay in them For they have the promise of God which is That the Spirit shall lead them into all truth John 16. 13. And they have also the anointing which will teach them all things 1 John 2. 27. where by all things is not meant Omne scibile Every thing that may be known for then they should know all the arts and all the tongues every one would be wiser than Solomon No nor all things in Religion not all things in faith and manners for that would contradict other places which say We know but in part 1 Cor. 3. and also That we are to grow in knowledge 2 Pet. 3. 18. but all things necessary to salvation They shall not want the knowledge of that thing the absence whereof will damn them It may be for a season they may be involved in some fundamental errour even as they may in regard of their lives fall into some grossimpieties that do for the present take away the present claim that they have to the Kingdom of Heaven but at last they shall be delivered because it 's not possible the elect should be deceived viz. totally and finally by the most deceiveable wayes of falshood that are Matth. 24. 24. Now the knowledge of this is necessary to obviate that Objection which you heard mentioned If the Ministers of the Gospel may be Yea and Nay in some things why not in all things If they erre in one thing why not in every thing This is not to be yeelded unto For they cannot erre in necessaries though they may in accessories They cannot lay any other foundation than what is laid yet they may build hay and stubble Therefore it 's sensless and irrational to argue from any errour or mistake the Ministers may have in some points of Religion that are problematical to those that are essential For in these later we are sure we are never deceived we may with Paul confidently say If an Angel from Heaven preach contrary to that Doctrine let him be accursed SERM. CXVIII A further Discovery of the sinfulnesse and reproach of Inconstancy especially in a Minister 2 COR. 1. 18. Our word toward you was not yea and nay WE are pursuing
to charge it upon all other Ministers as if they were all alike It was for this that Paul doth not only apologize for himself but his Associates also But how unreasonable is this grant that some were truly blame-worthy must all be so If in the Old Testament there were many false prophets that daubed with untempered mortar that cried peace peace to sinners when destruction was at hand shall we therefore condemn the good Prophets who reproved even the greatest and most mighty for their sins Because Judas was a thief and for filthy lucre sake betrayed Christ shall we condemn all the Apostles making them to be no better Must Sylvanus and Timotheus be accused Because they thought Paul was inconstant and light yet thus it falleth out continually and that from these Grounds First The policy and enmity of false teachers who like Haman think it a small matter to destroy one Mordecai unlesse they root out the whole race of the Jews Thus the false Apostles concluded Though Paul was disgraced and vilified yet if Sylvanus and Timotheus be in esteem and authority our Kingdom will fall to the ground It is therefore the adversaries design to cast dung in the faces of all the faithfull Ministers of Christ that so there might not one be left that should be usefull in their place A second Ground is From the injudiciousnesse and indiscretion of people who are credulous and apt to believe all rumours and reports How could it be that the Pharisees by their calumniating Christ as an Impostor and a Blasphemer should prevail with the greater part of the people to be on their side because they were blinde and led by the blinde they would not make use of their own judgement they would not examine and try whether things were so or no. And then the third Ground is From the natural enmity that is in all wicked men to the Office of the Ministry when faithfully discharged That is a burden to them they must needs say with Ahab to such faithfull Michaiahs We hate him because he alwayes prophesieth evil Alas godly Ministers cannot give any comfort cannot promise peace to such ungodly persons therefore they have hatred against them and are glad to receive any false report concerning them Ministers are compared to Light and to salt now the Light must needs be offensive to distempered eyes and Salt to soars Thus if the Ministery be powerfull to enlighten to convince to reprove no ungodly man can endure this Therefore it is that the office of the Ministery when faithfully managed is so great a trouble to wicked men They are thievs therefore cannot endure this light they cry out with Ahab hast thou found mee O my enemy Every Sermon that is powerfull is as bitter as gall and wormwood to them and therefore there being such an enmity and ill-will against them it is no wonder if they be quickly prejudiced and will not believe there is a godly or faithfull Minister in the whole Church of God But I hasten to the Last Observation and that is It is a most blessed and happy thing when all the Ministers of God agree with one consent to advance Christ As Luke calleth it chap. 1. The mouth of all the holy Prophets which have been since the beginning of the world It was but one mouth as it were They all agreed in the same Doctrine Paul and Sylvanus and Timotheus they all preach the same Christ they were not yea or nay This accord and agreement among the Ministers of the Gospel is of so great concernment that our Saviour in his valedictory prayer doth with much efficacy and vigor press this Petition That his Disciples may be one and one in the most near manner imaginable even as the father and son are one I shall not enlarge on this because heretofore much spoken off only I shall instance in some usefull Effects and consequences of this happy Agreement Only before I do that we have cause to take notice of the goodness of God and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 manifold wisdome of God whereby he hath provided many Offices many Officers for his Church and those variously gifted and all for the spiritual benefit of our soules some are Barnabasses some are Boanergeses Thus as the Kings Daughter is said to be cloathed with needle work of divers colours so hath God richly adorned his Church with variety of abilities that if men be not converted the greater will be their condemnation For whereas Auditors are of divers appetites some are for doctrinal Preaching some for affectionate some are for legal terrible Sermons others for sweet Evangelical discourses if Christ send Embassadours thus qualified every way what can they look for who are not by these several baits allured and taken For this cause we have Christ himself upbraiding the Jews that no kinde of heavenly way would please no kinde of dressing the Word of life was acceptable to their palates Matth. 11. 18. John came neither eating nor drinking and they say he hath a devil The son of man came eating and drinking and they say Behold a friend of publicans and sinners Hereupon he compareth them to children playing in the markets saying we have piped to you and ye have not danced we have mourned unto you and ye have not lamented Thus nothing would do any good to them Admire then Gods goodness that hath thus abundantly provided for thee Do not simply and enviously compare one Ministers gifts above another but adore the mercy of God that useth all the different abilities of men for the Churches good This premised we may from the harmony and Agreement of Ministers in advancing Christs Kingdom see First The greater Confirmation of the truth If out of the mouth of two or three witnesses then how much more out of the mouth of many thousand witnesses is every truth abundantly confirmed How canst thou give way to any atheistical thoughts whether there be a God or a day of Judgment or an heaven or an hell when thou shalt hear so many thousands of Gods servants in all ages witness to this thing All the Prophets and Apostles men renouned for holiness for miracles they all preached the same Doctrines that we do to you And therefore consider with thy self what a cloud of witnesses thou gainsayest by thy unbelief 2. The greater consent and harmony the greater defence there is for the truth The old rule is vis unita fortior Our Saviour confirmeth it when he saith A Kingdome divided against it self cannot stand What advantages do the enemies of Gods Church make by the Divisions and different Judgments of men in the Reformed Church The Papist doth confidently conclude that all will turn to them at last for say they you have so many Sects amongst you and one saith he hath the spirit of God and another he hath but all contrary to one another Now although it were easie to recriminate yet this difference
speak to this sealing of Gods Spirit upon the hearts of beleevers though in other terms This I have mentioned is pregnant for having said that he who keepeth Gods Commandements dwelleth in him and he in him Whereas it might be said how shall we know that he dwelleth in us May we not be deluded and deceived No saith he hereby we know that he abideth in us by the spirit which he hath given us and lest any man though living loosely and carnally should pretend to this spirit he saith They that have it keep his Commandements Thus doubtings and sinnefull diffidence is excluded on one hand and all carnal presumption on the other hand The last Text to bring in assistance to this truth shall be 1 John 5. 8 9 10. where the Apostle speaketh of three Witnesses on earth as he had before in heaven viz. water and the bloud and the spirit Now although there be many perplexed controversies about this passage yet I shall pitch upon that which is most probable without further disquieting of you It seemeth to be without doubt that the Apostle alludeth to the legall administrations wherein there was bloud for expiation and water for cleansing by which is represented justification and sanctification and these being wrought in us do evidently witnesse that Jesus is the Christ and Sonne of God We finding these glorious effects upon our souls cannot but acknowledge that Doctrine but because these are not enough of themselves seeing that sanctified and justified persons may be under great discouragements therefore he addeth the Spirit also It is true the same spirit is said to be a witnesse in heaven but that was because of the extraordinary and visible Testimony that it gave to Christ but here it speaketh of the witnesse it giveth on earth and that must be the sealing spoken off in other places for he saith verse 6. It is the spirit that beareth witnesse because the spirit is truth having there also mentioned water and bloud Verse 10. he seith He that beleeveth on the Sonne of God hath the witnesse in himself Thus you see that as God hath abundantly provided for the holinesse of his people by his spirit to quicken them up therein so also for the assurance and consolation of his children to establish them therein Oh how greatly are we indebted unto the Lord Jesus Christ who giveth us his Spirit not only to leade us into the truth and mortifie the deeds of the flesh but also to fill us with comfort and to assure us that we are the children of God So that it is the duty of the Ministers of the Gospel not only to improve the former truth but this also and to presse you upon the sealing work of Gods Spirit as well as the sanctifying Hath not the Spirit of God this Name given it to be called the Comforter John 14. and shall we divide the operations of Gods Spirit minding him as he is an holy spirit but not a comforting Spirit Having thus informed you what the Scripture declareth in this matter I shall give you a large and popular description of the nature of this sealing and the opening of the several parts touched therein will much conduce to the knowledge thereof The sealing of Gods Spirit may be described after this manner It is a supernaturall and gracious work of Gods Spirit upon the hearts of sanctified persons in a secret and unspeakable manner whereby they are confirmed and established in the Covenant of grace as belonging to them in particular by such means which God hath appointed thereunto that through the sence thereof they may daily walk more and more boldly joyfully and thankefully notwithstanding all discouragements to the contrary till they be made compleatly happy in heaven I have made this description the larger because I would take in every particular considerable about it as much as may be And First I give two Qualifications or Adjuncts to this work of Gods Spirit It is supernatural and gracious Supernatural and that if we respect either rectified nature or corrupted nature Rectified nature for Adam in the state of integrity though he was made perfectly holy yet he had not this Gospel-sealing no more then he was in Christ as a Mediatour for had he been thus sealed he would certainly have persevered and although Adam was partaker of the holy Ghost yet it was as he is the third person not as the spirit of Christ viz. purchased by his death for those that are his so that in this respect we may say this sealing is a priviledge above the nature of Adam while considered before his apostacy but then I call it supernaturall chiefly in respect of corrupted nature for as man naturally of himself hath no power to that which is gracious so neither to that which is comfortable and joyfull All the world all Ministers and Angels cannot powr one drop of this assurance and joy into thy soul unlesse the Spirit of God inable thee thereunto As it is supernaturall so it is gracious for this floweth from the former There is nothing in thee to deserve this establishing as Gods grace sanctifying found thee dead in thy sinnes so his sealing and comforting findeth thee in a guilty despairing way and therefore as God might leave every prophane man to wallow in his lusts and so let him perish thus also might he forsake every guilty conscience under the burthen of thy sinnes and suffer thee to be a Cain to be a Judas even to fall from an hell here into an hell hereafter So that not only by grace we are sanctified but by grace we are healed Blesse God for any establishment of soul against fears and doubts as well as for victory against any lusts It is meerly of Free-grace that we are thus sealed In the next place Secondly we have the generall nature of it with the efficient cause The work of Gods Spirit It is true in the Text it is said That God doth seal us and so whatsoever works there are ad extra from God to the creature they are all common to the three Persons yet there is a peculiar order and appropriation which the Scripture taketh notice of So that it is made the work of the Father to send his Sonne into the world It is made the work of the Sonne to offer up himself a Sacrifice for our sinnes And it is made the proper work of Gods Spirit to apply the benefits of Christs death to our souls therefore sanctification is attributed to the Spirit so also consolation and sealing thereunto Thus the Texts we mentioned formerly give all this work to the Spirit of God as in an appropriated manner doing this for us It is not then of our selves or of our own power that we can obtain this priviledge but it is wrought alone by Gods Spirit As we have no free-will to the grace of God so neither to the comforts God as he is called a God of all
for hereby this gracious worke of God is differenced from all Enthusiastical delusions or from those prophetical extasies which the Prophets of God sometimes did partake off from that rapture Paul was in when he said Whether he was in the body or out of the body he did not know No we are not to expect such immediate operations of the Spirit upon us where the Spirit shall be both the efficient cause and the object also Neither may we hearken after some voice of Gods Spirit or immediate testimony within saying to us as sometimes a voice spake to Christ This is my beloved Sonne We may not expect that Christ should say to thee after some visible manner as he did to Mary Magdalen Be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiven thee We are not to hearken to such Doctrines that may presse for such a witnessing but we must give care to what the Spirit of God speaketh in the Scripture and so expect to have this confirmation and sealing by those meanes which he hath appointed Even as it is in the Doctrine of the Scripture it is the Spirit of God that doth fully assure the hearts of believers that it is Gods word But how doth it thus perswade the soul Not by any immediate testimony but by these implanted arguments therein as the holinesse of the matter the majesty of the style c. by which this undoubted perswasion is wrought in us Thus it is in this worke of sealing the Spirit of God though it be the efficient cause of it yet it is in such an order and way as he hath appointed For we must not thinke that it is suitable to the workings of Gods Spirit that we should have a blinde perswasion in us whereby we are assured onely we know not why and we are not able to give any reason that we are assured but because we are assured The Spirit of God attemperateth its operations to our rational nature But what are those meanes and wayes whereby the holy Spirit doth thus assure us They are either External or Internal External are two-fold First By the Sacraments in the right use of them the Spirit of God doth assure us Hence you heard the Sacraments are called seales neither may we thinke that Christ hath appointed these Ordinances in a barren formal and empty manner No God will accompany his owne Ordinance to the right receiver and therefore as truly as he received the bread and wine so truly is he also made partaker of Christs body and blood Whereas then the promises are indefinitely propounded the Sacraments they are particular applied and by these the Spirit of God doth assure us of our interest in the promises Secondly Another External way is By those notes and markes which are given of such to whom the promises doe belong The Scripture doth not onely declare the promises but characterizeth the persons to whom they doe infallibly belong Insomuch that he who findeth he doth truely beleeve and repent He that findeth he is made a new creature such an one may as undoubtedly conclude being enabled thereunto by the Spirit of God that the promises doe in particular belong to him as if he were named as if it were said Thou Thomas and Thou John thou art received into the favour of God So that this particular doth evacuate all those boasts and confidences which many may have of Gods love towards them seeing the marks and signs are not applicable unto them which the promises do require But these I call External There are Internal Qualifications by which the Spirit of God doth thus perswade and assure us not that they are a cause or that we are to put confidence in them but by them as signes and effects of Gods gracious love we come to be assured of the love it selfe As by the Rain-bow we come to be assured that God will not drowne the world again I shall not enlarge upon these having had opportunity from some passages in this Chapter to speak thereunto The first particular signe or marke by which the Spirit of God doth interest or seale unto that I shall instance in is The sanctified and savoury improvement of afflictions Such as are chastened from the Lord and taught by him these may unquestionably conclude Gods special love towards them Hebr. 12. Revel 3. The Scripture doth in those places abundantly evidence that whosoever is a sonne of God is afflicted by him Insomuch that he who hath no chastisements is to thinke that he is a bastard and not a sonne Now this is not to be understood of afflictions themselves meerly as so but as sanctified as working to our spirituall good And when they have this blessed fruit it is as comfortable an argument to be assured of Gods grace towards us as any may be thought on The Apostle maketh this a sure effect of Predestination Romans 8. 26. He did also predestinate us to be conformed to the image of his Sonne which is partly in suffering as he did that so we might be glorified as he was Look then with a more comfortable face upon afflictions than thou hast done Doe not flie from them with fear as Moses from his Rod when turned into a Serpent For when these doe worke to thy spiritual good when they are like fire to make the gold lesse drossie when they are like winnowing to purge the wheat from its chaffe then know this is an assured testimony of Gods favour Thou needest not say Who will goe up into Heaven What messenger will come immediately from God to perswade my soule of Gods favour towards me For the testimony is on earth it is neare thee doe not cast thy eyes from it Secondly A second signe or meanes by which we come to this sealing is The observation and experience of Gods gracious presence in us and with us whereby we are preserved from some and kept either from or in such temptations that might have undone us When we finde that grace accompanying of us which David prayed for Psalm 19. to keep us back from sinning As the childe of God hath the Angels of Heaven to take care of him they have it in charge to hold him as it were in their armes as a Nurse doth her little childe so is he also inwardly fortified by inherent grace to keepe him in his wayes to Heaven he hath habitual grace and actual grace and he hath preventing grace and co-operating he hath exciting and persevering grace Now that man who observeth how richly and mercifully the grace of God putteth it selfe forth in these several effects how often when he is ready to goe astray the grace of God seeketh him out how often grace prevented and excited him else he had beene swallowed up in such deepe gulphs of sinne he I say that findeth such prevenitng concomitant and subsequent grace of God he that findeth this Rock Christ to follow him with gracious effects as some say the waters out of
true but because it is the spirit that doth apply the promises to the soul and make us assured of them as he is called the holy spirit because he is the authour of holinesse But then Eph. 4. 30. there we are said to be sealed by the spirit denoting the spirit of God to be the efficient cause of it So that it is a blasphemous wresting of the Scripture by a Socinian when by the holy Ghost thus sealing unto us is saith he Smal. disp de promisso spiritus sancti meant no more than a sure hope of eternal life He denieth the holy Ghost to be God and a Person it is only saith he a sure hope within us but this is to confound this effect with the cause faith and love and hope are the effects of Gods Spirit they are not the spirit it self So that from hence viz. because the spirit of God doth seal us we may gather a sure argument that he is truly God for the spirit is said to confirm us and God is said to confirm us whereby it is implyed that to confirm our hearts is a divine operation as well as to sanctifie it It is true how the spirit of God is God and how it proceedeth from the Father and Sonne cannot be comprehended by reason It is enough that by faith we are to beleeve so for no wonder the doctrine of the Trinity is inexplicable seeing the nature of God is ineffable To this purpose Austin having discoursed about the Trinity concludeth that he perceived only he had spoken something of God Si autem dixi non est hoc quod dicere volui hoc unde scio nisi quia Deus ineffabilis est Quod autem a me dictum est si ineffabile esset non esset dictum ac per hoc ne ineffabilis quidem dicendus est Deus quia hoc cum dicitur aliquid dicitur fit nescio quae pugna verborum quoniam si illud est ineffabile quod dici non potest non est ineffabile quod velut ineffabile dici potest De Doctrinâ Christianâ lib. 1. But that by the way Lastly Here is the subject wherein and that is said to be in our hearts So that as God doth write his Law in our hearts Thus he doth also infuse his comfort and assurance which doth demonstrate the soveraign power of God over our hearts he can make them holy when he pleaseth he can comfort them when he pleaseth No Potentate in the world can do thus That heart of thine which is not in thy own power which no man can tame the grace of God can tame it that heart which thou desirest may be filled with holinesse and consolation God alone can do it The Observation is That grace wrought in the heart is a sure earnest of glory hereafter He that is holy here must needs be happy hereafter If thou canst finde grace in thy soul thou hast found the Pearl thou maist rejoyce not doubting but heaven will be thine hereafter The people of God are not only to look upon grace as grace but as it is an earnest of a greater happinesse yet how often do the children of God consider it without thiis respect what courage joy and holy boldnesse would it work in thee to think thou hast within thee that which assureth of eternal glory as if thou wert already in heaven This is a reviving truth that grace is an earnest of glory thou mindest grace as it subdueth thy corruptions as it maketh thy heart to be carried out more holily and delightsomely to God but then thou dost not attend to it as an earnest There is a great deal of difference between a shilling as a single peece of money and as an earnest it may be of twenty pound more to come Thus it is very much rejoycing to finde grace at all in thy soul as it is grace but it doth much more rejoyce as it is an earnest of more fulnesse Adam had grace the angels had grace but grace was not given them as part of an inheritance for they fell from it Let us consider two Texts of Scriptures where we have this earnest spoken of The first is by our Apostle in this Epistle cap. 5. 5. Now he that hath wrought us for the self same thing is God who also hath given unto us the earnest of his spirit What is that self same thing he speaketh of it is a groaning and an earnest desire after immortality we would gladly be out of this burden here and in heaven yea as we groan and desire so we are assured and know that when we shall dye we shall go to heaven But now because these are things far above the power of nature we naturally are afraid of death we are unwilling to be taken from our relations we have not such assurance of heaven Therefore saith the Apostle He that doth work us frame and polish us for this great thing it is God We could never do it without his supernatural assistance But then how doth God work this admirable frame of heart it is by the earnest of his spirit we have the beginnings of heaven already So that as the Israelites by the bunches of raisons had some foretast of Canaan so have beleevers some taste of heaven by what they feel already and as Moses from Mount Pisgah could behold Canaan though he did not enter into it thus thou hast a sight of heaven and an entrance into it by the grace begun in thee The other Text is Eph. 1. 14. where the Apostle having said That we were sealed by the spirit of promise he addeth which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession We are not yet brought into heaven into Canaan We are yet in the wildernesse we meet with many dangers and temptations threatning us that we shall never come there but only this earnest doth assure us and satisfie us So that as among the Israelites an inheritance was not to be alienated from the Tribe in the year of Jubilee it would return again to the true owner Thus this inheritance of heaven will never be taken from thee Thou maist be in some dangers and fears of losing of it by thy unwise carriage but shalt not be deprived of it Before we enlarge on this subject it is good to take notice of the dissimilitude as well as the similitude for though grace wrought in us be compared to an earnest in this respect as it doth assure us of future glory yet in other respects it greatly differeth from earnest among men As in the first place An earnest in bargains is to assure the buyer that giveth it as well as the seller they mutually hereby are confirmed so that the buyer cannot honestly fly off any more than the seller But now when the spirit of God worketh this earnest in us it is only for our good it is that we may be assured and
for the future Considerations clearing the truth 1. Though we have oft had experience of Gods goodness yet every new trouble is ready to startle us 2. Though the promises be sufficient grounds for our trust yet experiences do much promote faith 3. 'T is a good way to keep the heart calme even to exercise trust in God for the future 4. The future good things that we are to trust in the Lord for are both spirituall and temporall Object Answer 1. There are motives to trust in God from both the personal and general priviledges of believers 2. What are the opposites to trusting in God 1. Presumption Signs of presumption 1. When we walk not by Scripture-light 2. When we are confident without a promise 3. When we separate the means from the end 4. When we use false means 5. When we think by our own strength to obtain grace and glory 2. Despair Whence despair arises 1. From low thoughts of God As 1. The power of God 2. The goodness of God 3. Of the merits of Christ 2. From wrong apprehensions about our sins 3. This grace of trusting in God cannot be expected to be perfect here 'T is our duty not to separate Gods power and goodnesse from the means required How God and the creature work together 1. All Gods spiritual mercies have many things concurrent before they be accomplished 2. The opposing of these requisites one against another hath bred much confusion and errour How we should relie wholly upon Christ and yet make use of the means and how we may know whether we do or no. 1. When we acknowledge whatsoever we have to come from Christ 2. When we attribute no merit or causality to the means 3. When we rest upon Christ onely for our justification 4. When we put no trust or confidence in the means 5. We dishonour God in the use of the means when we think we profit him thereby The most eminent in gifts and graces need the prayers of their inferiours Reasons 1. Because there is a more peculiar promise made to the prayers of many then one 2. Because the Church in Scripture is called a body whose parts stand in need one of another Use People ought to pray for their spirituall guides Considerations explaining the truth 1. 'T is an errour of the Socinians to say God commands prayer only in the New Testament 2. No merit or confidence to be put in our prayers 3. Ministers are to pray for their people and people for their Ministers 4. This supposeth the people to be both gifted and gracious 5. Many things there are which people are to desire of God for their Ministor 1. That they may be preserved 2. That their word may be suceesfull 3. That their gifts and graces may be quickned 4. That they may be saved Whensoever we have received mercies from God we are by praise and thankfullness to acknowledge then to him What is required to the praising of God 1. An acknowledgement that God alone is the Authour of all our mercies 2. Both the generall and particular acts of faith 3. Love to God 4. Heavenly mindedness 5. Chearfulnes Motives to praise God 1. 'T is an excellent duty in that we are so backward to it 2. It is called a Sacrifice 3. 'T is a debt due to God 4. The chief motive is thankfulnesse 5. A thankfull heart is the most proper disposition to Gospel dispensations 6. The neglect of this duty is an argument of a rotten heart Our ordinary temporal enjoyments are the gifts of God 1. The effects of natural causes are still the gift of God 2. The comforts that flow from moral causes are still the gifts of God 3. What we receive from men 't is still the gift of God 4. Whatsoever we have by the art and skill of others 5. Such things as come upon us without our care Reasons Why these are all Gods gifts 1. God is not necessitated to give them 2. We have oft forseited them by our sins 3. We are to pray to him for them Not only personal but publick prayers and praises are acceptable to God Reasons 1. Hereby the honour of God is more promoted 2. Hereby our love to one another is much quickened 3. God in a more especial manner present there 4. Herein the lively may prevail for the dull and indisposed Mercies vouch safed to the Ministers are to be accounted as Church mercies An holy rejoycing and glorying in the graces of God is lawfull What is required to our glorying in the gifts and graces we have received from God 1. An high esteem of our graces 2. A certain perswasion that we have them 3. Good grounds and Scripture-demonstrations thereof 4. The Spirit of God In what respect 't is lawfull thus to rejoyce and glory 1. As they are the fruits of Gods favour 2. As they bear up our hearts against all accusations either external or internal Wherein this rejoycing is unlawfull 1. When we rejoyce in our graces as if they were perfect 2. When we so rejoyce in them as so rest upon them 3. When we rejoyce in them as coming from our selves not God The witnesse of a good conscience is great ground of comfort What is required to a good conscience 1. That it witness according to the word of God 2. The help of the Spirit to instruct us in the true meaning of the Word 3. Pure aims and intentions 4. Inward sanctification What else is requisite to a well-regulated conscience 1. The witnessing and sealing power of the Spirit with our consciences How the Spirit of God doth not witness with our consciences How it doth 1. Effectively 2. Objectively What are the effects of the Spirit by which our consciences are rightly guided in witnessing to us 1. A purpose to leave all known sin 2. A zeal for the glory of God 3. An holy confidence in our approachings unto God 4. Love to the Brethren 5. Self-denial 6. Delight in heavenly things Distinctions concerning the testimony of our conscience 1. 'T is either particular or general 2. It witnesseth either perfection or sincerity 3. Conscience is either habitually enabled or actually prepared to testifie 4. The testimony of conscience is either alone or relating to Christ A believer may be assured he performeth duties with an upright heart What is required to a certain knowledg of our being in a state of grace 1. A firm assent to the truth of Gods promises and Word 2. A particular application of the promises to themselves What is required to an experimental discerning of our graces 1. An humble heart 2. A regular disposition in the soul 3. An holy fear 4. The help of Gods Spirit What are the hinderances which keep men from looking after an assurance of their sincerity 1. Self-fulness and presumptuous security 2. A prophane careless spirit 3. Carking carefulness 4. Despairing and discouraging thoughts Of Gods commands to get assurance The effects of our souls 1. A quiet heart 2. Spiritual
joy and comfort 3. Thankfulnes Caut. 1. Caut. 2. Godly simplicity and singleness of heart affords much comfort Of the uature of godly simplicity 1. It flows from a sanctified heart 2. It looks upon Gods will as the only motive to obedience 3. It is fixed upon God only 4. It is not compounded 5. 'T is uniform in its obedience 6. It s outwards and inwards are all the same 7. It doth not cover any sin 8. It makes a man free in the service of God More propositions of the nature of simplicity 1. It humbly submits to the truths of God 2. It submits to the commandments of God 3. It boldly reproveth sin Of simplicity towards men 1. It makes a man blameless as to others 2. It is accompanied with ingenuity and truth Use 1. Use 2. Godly sincerity carrieth a man above all other things to God himself What it is in God that a sincere heart looks upon 1. His Omniscience 2. His being the first cause and the last end 3. His sovereignty and dominion 4. The wisdom of God What are those inferiour ends which interpose betwixt God our souls which we are apt to look upon 1. Vain-glory. 2. Honour and riches Propositions concerning godly sincerity 1. 'T is universal 2. Sincerity goeth to the bottom of sin 3. Hence it is that it is so hard to be a Christian 4. Sincerity is the proper difference betwixt a temporary professour and a true believer 5. Sincerity carries us through duties with delight 6. Sincerity makes a man find grace to be a reall thing Why carnal wisdom called fleshly Ministers ought not to use fleshly wisdom Why this truth is to be treated of 1. Because professors are charged with it 2. Because all professours would be thought clear from it 3. To take off prejudices from true believers Principles of fleshly wisdom 1. To defend errours from Scripture wrested 2. To hide our errours or else secretly to infect others with them More principles of fleshly wisdom in propagating Religion 1. To advance those of their own way and disgrace others 2. To maintain false doctrines that overthrow humane society 3. To indulge men in sin and to increase Disciples 4. To propound fleshly ends The godly ascribe all to the grace of God 1. A man may take comfort in his own holinesse and yet trust only in Gods grace 2. All is to be given unto grace What is that grace the Apostle exalteth against fleshly wisdom 1. That grace whereby he was converted 2. That grace whereby he was made an Apostle 3. That grace whereby he was enabled and prospered in his Ministry As 1. It was the grace of God that made Paul sincere What were those graces which the Apostle acknowledged in his Ministry 1. Faithfulness 2. Humility 3. Guidance and direction in his preaching and meditations 4 His patience self-denial zeal and courage 5. His heavenly wisdome 6. His successe in his Ministry It is universal holinesse which is the ground of comfort There is a two-fold conversation the one natural The other is an heavenly and godly conversation What is required to a good conversation 1. Principles of grace 2. A predominancy in the heart to Christ 3. Actual Improvements of grace 4. Pure and heavenly motives Whose conversation is not holy notwithstanding some good things in it The more evidently Gods presence hath been with the Ministry the more inexcusable is the unprofitableness of the people under it 1. The longer time a people have enjoyed the means of grace they 'll be more inexcusable if they answer not Gods expectations 2. The more faithfull the Minister is the more in excusable will the people be 3. Where the Ministry is more succesfull the impenitent are more inexcusable Wherein the success of a faithfull Ministry is seen A godly convincing life is of great advantage specially in a Minister 1. Godlinesse hath a convincing and converting effect with it 2. The efficacy of the Ministry depends not upon the piety of the Minister 3. Yet such Ministers as are not godly cannot expect comfort from God nor acceptance with him 4. A godly life is convincing either potentially or actually What are the causes that make godly lives oft not convincing 1. Prejudice 2. Corrupt affections 3. Mistake about the way and nature of godliness An hopefull beginning in holiness is not enough without perseverance 1. A man that would set upon an holy life must first look to his foundation 2. Sincere beginnings are the cause of perseverance 3. Therefore the grace of God is not only necessary to begin but also to continue holiness in us 4. Perseverance promised doth not exclude but include fear watchfulnesse and diligence The best Churches are full of changes in their affections to their spiritual guides though never so faithfull 1. It is an imbred corruption for all inferiours to be mutable to their inferiours 2. This inclination to this changeablenes hath more temptations in great than small places What are the causes of this changeablenes 1. Inconstancy and fickleness 2. An overhasty receiving of the Ministers 3. Curiosity 4. Mistakes about the Doctrine delivered 5. A faithfull discharge of the Ministers office 6. The importunity of deceivers It is a happy thing when Minister and people can rejoyce in one another 1. The relation betwixt Pastor and people is by divine Institution 2. Therefore doth the Devil endeavour to make differences betwixt Minister and beople How and why may a people rejoyce in their Pastor 1. As the instruments whereby God hath instructed and converted them 2. For their works sake 3. In the spiritual success of the Minister Wherein a faithfull Pastor hath cause to rejoyce over his people 1. When they are tractable and teachable Motives to knowledg in spiritual things 1. Consider the Necessity of it 2. The usefulness of it 2. When people believe and receive the Word as Gods Word 3. When they are converted by the Word 4. When they are ready to all duties 5. When they are ready to submit to the whole order of Christ Christ hath a solemn day wherein great changes will be made 1. There will be a great change as to the comforts of a godly Minister and people 2. A great change in the prophane sinners 3. A great change to the godly 4. A great change in mens judgements and apprehensions of sinne and holiness There will be a great change in wicked mens thoughts 2. Of good men as 1. That they are fools 2. Hypocrites 3. In respect to their outward estate 3. Their thoughts will be changed as to Christ 1. They will then behold him the chiefest good 2. As a Judge as well as a Saviour There will be at the great day a great change as to Gods providence Lastly There will be a special change made upon some sinners as the jolly secret and self-righteous Where a Faithfull Minister hath hopes of doing good he hath good encouragement to remain 1. All people naturally have a door bolted