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A92856 The parable of the prodigal. Containing, The riotous prodigal, or The sinners aversion from God. Returning prodigal, or The penitents conversion to God. Prodigals acceptation, or Favourable entertainment with God. Delivered in divers sermons on Luke 15. from vers. 11. to vers. 24. By that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ Obadiah Sedgwick, B.D. Perfected by himself, and perused by those whom he intrusted with the publishing of his works. Sedgwick, Obadiah, 1600?-1658. 1660 (1660) Wing S2378; Thomason E1011; ESTC R203523 357,415 377

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halting to our dying day either we want minds to good or wills or power not able of our selves to ha●ch one good thought and when the will is present yet we find not power to perform and though sometimes we do good yet evil is present with us like Beer which runs low with the liquor there runs out much muddy grounds or like Abrahams Sacrifice many Birds lighting on it or like Solomons Ointment in which is some dead Flie or like a Candle which burns with a Snuff or like the fire which ascends with much smoke Our actions are like the Arrows which are shot one is too far another is too short another is too wide not one of an hundred that hits the mark so is it with us many Duties and Services are performed by us but which amongst them all is performed with that reverence of Spirit faith on Christ integrity of Affection unitedness of Soul and sole fidelity of intention to Divine Glory Our excellencies are weak and the Lord be merciful unto us how often do we weaken them our work is but little that we do very little take aside the aversness the indispositions the formalities the coldness the distractions the unbelief the weariness the inconstancy the infinite infirmities which accompany them what poor things will they then appear may we not fall down and say having done our best We are but unprofitable servants Nay and that which being known may likewise abase us is this we may justly say of all our poor excellencies as the Widow of her Vessels They are but borrowed ware What have we which we have not received Every Gift and Grace which we have is but a Beam born of the Sun a drop coming from another Fountain then our Natures all our good is but free Gift take the borrowed feathers from the Crow it is then a most black creature alone So that consider our good aright either in the initial cause of it viz. Divine and free Grace or in the upholding cause of it Divine assistance or in the qualities of it how weak and imperfect or in the acts of it how rare and uneven all these are the springs as it were which feed humbleness of heart in the true Penitent Quest 2. Now I proceed to the next inquiry Why true Penitents Why true penitents are humble persons are such humble and lowly persons I am not worthy to be called thy Son Sol. The reasons are most of them insinuated already I will either express them again or add more to them thus then 1. Conversion necessarily infers an alteration in the whole man Though it doth not destroy Substances yet it changeth Qualities of unholy Conversion infers an Alteration in the whole man it makes us holy of ignorant knowing of filthy clean of obstinate flexible of unquiet meek of proud and lofty humble and lowly therefore penitent persons who are converted persons must needs be lowly ex natura rei this is forcible 2. They never did experimentally know themselves till they began to repent Sin was but a delight or a mock or a meer discourse They now experimentally know themselves unto them before the vileness of it the contagious pollution of it the stinging guilt of it the terrible effects of it both in respect of God and themselves they never savv it till novv they see that of sin vvhich they savv not before both for the filth and the guilt of it and they see it with other eyes then they savv it before no marvel then that they become low in their own eyes Should they not be very vile in their own eyes who perceive themselves guilty of that vvhich is most and only vile in Gods I have sinned what shall I say unto thee O thou preserver of men 3. They never saw till now how short they came in that good of duty Job 7. 20. which they owe to God and how unanswerable they are to the many bonds of obedience I have done nothing for They now see how short they come in duty God all my dayes nor to him in any Service and Honour They never knew till now how injurious they have been unto God to the kindness of his Love to the counsel of his Spirit And how injurious they have been to God to the righteousness of his Will how unworthily and stubbornly they have resisted despised him abused all his mercies Thus for the Explication of the point Now for the Application of it to our selves Doth true Repentance produce humble lowliness of Spirit then let us reflect on our own hearts and judge what solidity Vse Let us judge of our Repentance by our lowliness of Repentance is wrought in us by that lowliness and sense of unworthiness which is to be found in true penitents Consider Pride and loftiness and self-worthiness are very natural to us though we be born wholly naked not any external ornament is upon us no inward excellency yet our natures are puft with Pride and self-worthiness are very natural to us wind and a haughtiness and could we be rifled and stript of every sin we should find this of pride so opposite to lowliness most intimately cleaving to us Paradise was not free of it What do I speak of it nay Heaven it self was troubled with it the Divels who are cast into the lowest darkness fell thither by reason of their proud loftines● Look over all sorts of persons it 's a wonder almost to find one truly humble-hearted sinner If a man hath parts the Apostle tells us that knowledge puffeth up the the wind gets into the bladder as it was with Diotrephes c. Who is the Lord said Pharaoh if a man have dignities how rare is it to see greatness stooping and lowliness of heart with highness of honor If a man have riches he needs an Apostles charge Not to be high-minded If a man be poor he is like Diogenes trampling upon the Philosophers chair with greater pride Generally the scum is most light and vu●gar spirits most censorious and insolent If a man be ignorant yet Laodicea thinks her self rich and increased and to have need of nothing though indeed she be poor and blind and miserable and naked 2. If habitually and predominantly proud thou art as yet impenitent 't is true that Conversion doth not give an absolute cessation If Habitually Proud thou art impenitent to sin yet it do●h take off dominion and causeth diminution It cannot be that a man should have an heart rightly sensible of sin and set against it and yet be high in the opinion of his own excellencies and worth The mountains are cast down into a valley and the high imaginations brought into captivity the swellings of our corrupt spirits are in great measure abated and let out when once Grace enters our hearts and Repentance hath opened our eies Though you may be free from many other actual and gross exorbitancies if yet the spirit of pride
God hath rejected the Prayers of such who have r●sted on ●h●ir own wo●thiness their own worthiness The Pharisee was rejected upon this account Jam. 4. 6. God resisteth the proud .i. he regards them not he rewards them not the humble he doth but the proud he doth not He hath filled the hungry with good things and the rich he hath sent empty away so Mary Luk. 1. 53. A confidence of our Worthiness makes us uncapable therefore a sense of our Unworthiness makes us not uncapable An empty Stomack will receive but a full Vessel will admit of nothing you shall never find a rich God if you come to him with rich Spirits The Pharisee he goes up to pray and what doth he discover in his prayers I am not as other men I am no Extortioner I am no Adulterer I fast twice in the week He conceales his sins and displayes his perfections he stands upon his worthiness but he loseth his acceptance he justified himself but God did not justifie him accept him acquit him 5. None ever found more mercy then such who have come None have found more mercy then they who have been m●st sensible of unworthiness unto God in the sense of their own Vnworthiness I will give you some instances for this out of Scripture Matth. 8. The Centurion was so sensible of his unworthiness that he durst not himself presume to invite Christ to the help of his servant and when he had intreated him he did not think his house worthy of Christs presence I am not worthy that thou shouldst come under the roofe of mine house ver 8. yet he prayes Speak the word only and my servunt shall be healed and he speeds his Faith is applauded and his prayer fully granted ver 13. His servant was healed the same hour Mar. 5. 25. The poor woman who was so sensible of her unworthiness ver 33. she came fearing and trembling and fell down she durst not either immediately or mediately speak to Christ only her Faith spake at her fingers ends for she said If I may but touch his cloaths I shall be whole ver 28. How doth this speed ver 29. Straightway the fountain of her blood was dryed up What should I speak of the woman of Canaan who confessing her self to be as a Dog and thereupon craving for crumbs was presently fed and answered with a great mercy Or what should I speak of the Publican a penitent all in sighs all in tears altogether unworthy and he knew it and therefore Stands afar off dares not lift up his eyes to heaven sm●tes on his brest and cryes out Lord be merciful to me a sinner Here was a deep sense of Unworthiness here was nevertheless a fervent prayer and upon it a most gracious answer He went home justified 6. Lastly Sense of our unworthiness it is a strong principle Sense of unworthiness is a strong principle and furtherance of prayer and furtherance of prayer We are most barren and idle in prayer when we are least sensible of our sins and we are more diligent to prayer more spurred on and are more zealously fervent and importunate when we are most sensible of our own vileness and unworthiness For indeed the true sense of our unworthiness is a special part of our spiritual poverty and poverty of spirit breeds the strongest desires even hungring and thirsting after righteousness and both of them have promises of a most full and exceeding great reward as you may see in Mat. 5. 3 6. And thus briefly for the Explication and Comfirmation of the Doctrine Now I proceed to the useful Application of it The Uses which I will make of this point shall be 1. To try our selves whether we be sensible of our unworthiness in our Vse 1. Addresses unto God 2. Then to encourage our hearts notwithstanding our unworthiness to draw near to the Throne of Grace 1. For Examination Are we sensible of our unworthiness in our approaches unto God that we deserve nothing at For Examination all that we come not to buy but to beg not to deserve but to receive There be many reasons why I put you upon this Reasons of our Trial. search 1. Because many pervert this Doctrine of personal unworthiness they utterly mistake it they do profess that nothing Many pervert the Doctrine of personal unworthiness that is in them can deserve any thing with God and therefore trample upon all holiness of heart and godliness of life as if there were no use of Grace but to merit or Gold were of no use but in a Crown But these are a loathsome people who would link great mercies and a wicked life together To be sensible of our unworthiness is not to rest in an evil condition nor is it to run on in an evil conversation nor is it to slight holy duties for thy performances nor is it to disregard habitual or actual Grace this argues an unsensible and seared conscience But this it is to strive against sin to strive after all holiness to be careful and watchful to pious performances yet with all and after all to cast those Crowns to the ground not in their names but in the name of Christ and free mercy to expect answer and help Though imperfect holiness in the habits or acts cannot justifie men yet they may glorifie God and though they put not dignity into the hand yet they put a capacity into the hand a fitness to receive though not a worthiness to claim 2. Because many tender Christians are not yet rightly sensible of their unworthiness they are very apt to insist and adhear unto Many ●ender Christians are not yet rightly sensible of their unworthiness themselvs Two things do evidently shew that like Jacob's Sons who went down with money in their Sacks and would not go without Benjamin so these Christians would bring something to buy out their requests with God One is this that all the promises of free Grace and mercy do not satisfie them though God hath said he will love freely and pardon sin for his own sake yet they are not contented to accept to receive they are most hardly perswaded that the Sun will shine so freely that God will accept such a vile sinner upon such easie terms and without any more adoe pass by all transgressions Another is that they are frequent in digging after reasons and causes of good in themselves If they could bring Hearts more broken Graces more strong Affections more melting Conversations less tainted then they could be perswaded that God would hear and grant them the mercy or good which they do desire I confess that we must strive after perfection in all Grace enlarged desires an humble complaint a fervent endeavour in the use of all sacred means all of these are commendable practices yet herein we fail and exceedingly to if we pluck back the hand from receiving because we are not full that we will not suck the
a lost sinner p. 238. Why God doth thus find a lost sinner p. 241. Motives to a serious Trial whether our lost souls be found p. 242. An impenitent unconverted man is a dead man p. 254. Reasons of it p. 256. Trial whether we be spiritually dead p. 261. Every converted man is a living man p. 265. How this may be evidenced p. 268. Trial of our selves about our spiritual life p. 269. Objections answered p. 276. A very great and notorious sinner may be converted p. 279. Who may be called so p. 280. How it may appear great sinners may be converted p. 281. Directions to such converted sinners p. 288. Great afflictions are sometimes an occasion of great sinners conversion p. 289. How it may appear p. 290. There is an Almighty Ppower required to convert a sinner p. 294. proved 295. True Conversion is avery great inward and universal change p. 303. and demonstrated to p. 312. How may a man know that God hath indeed changed his heart p. 316. Comfort to those who are changed p. 323. How may we know this change is from converting Grace and not from the power of a troubling Conscinece p. 329. Conversion brings the soul into a very joyfull condition demonstrated p. 333. What kind of joy Conversion brings p. 336. Why Conversion makes the souls condition so joyfull p. 339. How can this condition be so joyfull that is so exposed to afflictions p. 344. and denies and abridges many delights p. 347. Trial whether converted or no p. 359. How converted persons should do to walk joyfully p. 363. The Parable of the PRODIGAL LUKE 15. 11 c. 11. A certain man had two Sons 12. And the younger of them said to his Father Father give me the portion of goods that falleth to me And he divided unto them his Living 13. And not many days after the younger Son gathered all together and took his journy into a far Country and there wasted his substance with riotous living 14. And when he had spent all there arose a mighty famine in that Land and he began to be in want 15. And he went and joined himself to a Citizen of that Countrey and he sent him into his fields to feed swine c. THis Chapter consists of three Parables all of them tending to one scope and issue though distinct in their special matter and object The first Parable is of a Sheep from vers 4. to vers 8. The second of a piece of Silver from vers 8. to vers 11. The third of a Child from vers 11. to the end All of these agree in two conditions One of Loss the Sheep was lost the Groat was lost and the Child was lost Secondly of Recovery the Sheep that wandred is brought home the Groat which was lost is found out and the Son who departed is returned and accepted There be who undertake the Cyril Reasons of these Parables or dark similitudes under which Christ doth couch some special Lesson as why man is compared to a Sheep viz. because of our Creation wherein God made us and not we our selves we are the sheep of his pasture Psal 100. And why man is then compared to a Groat because of that singular image of God which was stamped in man at his creation as the royal image of a King is stamped upon such a piece of Coin And then why man is compared to a Son because of that near relation which he had to God being once able to call him Father And then why in every one of these to a lost Sheep a lost Groat a lost Son because of his revolt and departure from God by sin Nay and if it were lawfull to put and use free conceits on Parables as I am sure some of the Ancients do as St. Austin Gregory c. what if in this threefold Parable you might espie a threefold cause of mans fall In the sheep wandring Satans suggestion In the Groat lost by the woman the womans yielding In the Sons departing Adams voluntary revolting and spending of his happy estate and condition But these and such like observations though to some they seem more acute and pleasant yet to me they are frothy and unprofitable Touching the Parable therefore concerning which I am to The Scope of the Parable with a division of the chief Heads thereof Who are meant by the two Sons treat there are several conjectures about the sense and intention of it Concerning the Father of the two Sons they all agree but about the two Sons they differ Some by the two Sons understand Angels and Men The Angels they were the elder Son Man the younger being created after them The Angels abode at home with their Father Man had the stock put into his own hands and in a quick time lost himself and it This opinion you see hath some kind of Vicinity or correspondency sensus pius as Aquinas speaks of it but not proprius And there is one pregnant Reason against it in the Text for that the elder Son in this place is described to be grieved and sad at the acclamations and welcome testimonies of the younger Brothers return but the Angels rejoice and are glad at the conversion or return of a sinner 2. Others by the two Sons understand the Jews and the Gentiles the Jews were the elder the Gentiles the younger the Jews kept home as it were of all the Nations of the Earth they seemed to be the inclosure for God and his service and the Gentiles were as it were excluded rejected wandring sheep a lost people yet at length God through Christ looks after these lost sheep the other sheep of his fold as Christ speaks Joh. 19. and returns and accepts of the Gentiles which did much provoke the Jew as the elder Son was here provoked at the repentance and acceptance of the younger and kept out they were provoked to jealousie by those who once were not a people This interpretation pleaseth S. Austin and Cyril and some others and indeed it bears a fair congruity with the Parable in most respects 3. But the third and general opinion is that by the elder Son is meant the Scribes and Pharisees and under them any Justitiaries persons too conceited and confident of their own works service righteousness as this elder Son who had been as he said thus long in his Fathers house and never transgrassed any of his Commandments but served him carefully which indeed was the opinion of the Scribes and Pharisees who trusted to and boasted of their own righteousness And that by the younger Son is meant the Publicans and Sinners persons more notoriously riotous and infamous in sinning utterly forsaking of God as it were and living without him And the end of this Parable was to convince the proud and envious Scribes and Pharisees who in vers 1. and 2. of this Chapter murmured against Christ for receiving Publicans and Sinners Now Christ tells them that though these notorious sinners were despised by
are but stolen waters and at the best but for a season they will end bitterly and on the contrary That Repentance from sin makes way for the most precious fountains of the most living comforts that it enables a man for a nearer conjunction with the truest happiness and fulness of most infinite goodness and lets in to such pleasures and joyes which pass all understanding c. Now the soul is reduced to a right judgment and begins to contemn those false vain deluding temptations by sin and is carried off to another course or way which will afford the real solid superlative advantages in happiness and comfort c. 2. This Comparison will win our love and affection to a Converted and penitent condition It is true that as long as the heart loves This wins our love to a converted condition sin it will never leave it for love is an iron clasp a strengthning quality a strong and tenacious quality but if a mans love be changed then his sinfull wayes will quickly be changed for that way doth the heart and life go that love do●h go they are not out who say that Amor is Radix actionum as well as Passionum Now by a right comparison of estates there will appear in a converted and penitent condition the sole and sufficient causes of Love viz. Good and the best good and only good and most proper and sutable good all which is apt to draw love and consequently Repentance for as much as Conversion from sin begins in love to God 3. This comparing of estates in the wofulness of the one and This occasionally stirs up the beat to fly to God by Prayer and in the use of meanes in the happiness of the other that the one is death and the other is life as Moses propounds it to the Israelites occasionally stirs up the heart to fly unto God by prayer and in the use of other means for grace and ability to leave the paths of death and to walk in the wayes of life for naturally men do affect life and happiness and are afraid of death and misery The first Use which I would make of this shall be for Information Use For information Of the cause why many are yet in their sins You here see the Cause why many are yet in their sins that they repent not though we preach though God punisheth though man counsels Surely they never yet did search their hearts and wayes they never did consider of what they have done they are like the Laodiceans who thought themselves to be rich and increased and to stand in need of nothing but they never yet saw their blindness nakedness and extreme poverty and misery There are many duties unto which men will be perswaded as to hear the Word receive the Sacrament give some Almes say some Prayers and now and then to confer of some good but of all the duties which do so nearly concern them they are hardly perswaded to this viz. to consider of their sins 't is true they will confess That all men are sinners and themselves too but as some do with their debts they care not to see and view them so many with their spiritual estates they have no mind to search into them to look them over to meditate of the Vileness of them Consider these things 1. That this inconsideration leaves many a sin already committed upon a sad account God doth consider Considerations to such as doe not Consider their wayes them though we will not they are in his book and before his eye though we will not think and look on them 2. That it ripens sin exceedingly The heart which will not consider of past will break out into sin future it will be high in sinning if negligent in considering he will venture deeply who knows not the nature nor the merit of sinning 3. All the work of Repentance will lye flat and dead Why where can be that brokenness of heart that filial lamentation for sinning that remorse of spirit that indignation that detestation of it that resolution against it that watchfulness and fear until by a sound consideration we come to see the vileness and miserableness of sinning c. He who thinks his way right will not turn aside and that man who knows no better will never leave or change a bad course 4. You advantage Temptations exceedingly You are under the edge and power of them all for you see nothing to hinder you the motions to sin will pass without any contradiction for you know not the evil nor misery of being impenitent Great sins will seem but little little will seem none how easie is he to sin who considers not the great evil in sin 5. All the edge of the Ordinances is blunted and dulled by inconsideration they are but water on the Tiles which passe away For what are Threatnings against sin what operation have they on us to make us tremble and humble our hearts whiles we hear them as Pieces discharged at others not at our selves And so what force have the Precepts for new Obedience or the Promises for much mercy to the Penitent until we see that we are the men as Nathan said to David whom all this concerns 6. You will never prize Christ aright nor the love of God in giving of Christ nor will you ever seek him to purpose with hungrings and thirstings until you do seriously consider of your sinful estates A man if whole will not seek to the Physician and if he hath but a scratch will not send to the Chyrurgion No sense or slight sense of sin hath no influence on ou● affections but let a man sadly view and find out that he is bad indeed out with God ready for Hell must perish for sin this man will cry out Is there no Balm in Gilead is there no hope for us sinners He will enquire for a Saviour and when he knows him he will with tears beseech him O the hope of Israel and the Saviour thereof in the time of Trouble Master have mercy on me or else I perish if thou canst do any thing save me 7. You will never come to any true setledness nor grounded assurance of peace with God nor in your own Consciences until you do throughly consider of your sinful conditions and estates For how know you whether you be good or bad in Covenant or out of Covenant with God that he will save you or condemn you what shall become of you when you die Untill you by solid Consideration find out the vileness and miserableness of your sinful condition out of which you must indeed be translated if ever you would be saved or know assuredly that you shall be saved 8. You will not know how to make special requests unto God For you know not the nature nor danger of that pride of that hypocrisie of that uncleanness of that envy and malice c. which are in you When we do not know what our selves
in the time of Performance An Unworthy person may lawfully bee an earnest Suiter He Nor take off Confidence in the time of Performant● may put up requests and also believe that God will grant them See it in the Church Isa 64. 6. We are all as an unclean thing and all our righteousnesses as filthy rags c. Ver. 8. But now O Lord thou art our Father Ver. 9. Be not wrath very sore O Lord neither remember iniquity for ever behold see we beseech thee we are all thy people So Psal 25. 11. For thy Names sake O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great He was sensible of the greatness of his sin yet puts up a believing Petition for pardon 3. Nor yet take off our expectation of the success Nor take off our expectation of the Success and fruit of Prayer Though a man hath sown his seed with an hand perhaps foul or lame yet he expects an Harvest We may expect a most gracious and proper and seasonable answer to our ptayers though we be most unworthy of the mercy or blessing which we do desire Though we know nothing in our selves to commend us to God yea though we know enough in our selves to condemn us before God to non-suit all our prayers if the answers were to be given according to our deserts yet we may not only request the Lord but should by Faith rely on God yea and expect an answer what the Lord will answer us and when he will perform his promise to us 2. But you may demand Why should not the sense of our unworthiness prejudice our prayings Sol. I will give you divers Reasons for it Arguments to confirm it Though we cannot Sue in our own name yet we may in the Name of Christ 1. Because though we cannot Sue in our own name yet we may Sue in the Name of Christ There may be a worthiness For us though not In us In the Old Law it was a dangerous presumption for any man to offer a Sacrifice without a Priest Lev. 17. 3 4 5. such a person was to be cut off in like manner it is most dangerous for any man to offer up his prayers to God without Christ to come in his own name it is the way to cut off our prayers God will not take any petition from us unless it come out of the hands of our Master of requests .i. Christ Jesus And again in the Old Law if the Priest did offer up the Sacrifice though it were not a rich sacrifice of a Bullock or a Sheep if it were but a pair of Turtle Doves nay if it were but the tenth part of an Ephah of fine flour it was available for the person it was accepted Levit. 5. intim●ting unto us That it is not our own names not any excellencies in us which make way for the acceptance or the answer of our prayers they are accepted for his sake in whom our persons are accepted and therefore you read in Rev. 8. 3. of the Angel that stood at the Altar having a golden Censer who had much incense which he offered with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden Altar which was before the Throne The golden Altar and the golden Censer and much Incense make all accepted and ver 4. The smoke of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand It was the Angels Incense which made even the prayers of the Saints to ascend .i. the meritorious intercession of Christ which giveth acceptance and audience to our Petitions as he is a sufficient Redeemer so is he a sufficient Intercessour and therefore our own Unworthiness must not prejudice or discourage us for as much as the name of Jesus Christ is enough to implead God withall 2. Secondly When we come to God in Prayer we come to one who is of a most liberal and gracious Nature therefore our God is of a most liberal and G●acious nature unworthiness should not discourage our petitions That God is of a liberal Nature is unquestionable he is abundant in goodness and truth so Moses He will give grace and glory so David He giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not so Jam. 1. 5. Water comes not from the clouds as from a Pump a bountiful and noble Nature stands not on desert it finds principles enough within it self to shew kindness But which is yet more the Lord hath not only a nature full of goodness and most propense to give but also he hath a gracious Nature which dispenseth all good upon free terms not for our sake who receive but for his own sake only who gives As Gods liberality appears in giving many times before we ask and sometimes in giving more then we ask and sometimes in giving a better thing then we ask so his graciousness appears in not considering how worthy we are what Causes and Arguments we can bring but in a a free dispensation of his mercies to us without all desert or causality on our parts The whole cause of the mercy is only in mercy as in Deut. 9. 6. The Lord thy God doth not give thee this good land to possess it for thy righteousness for thou art a stiff-necked people The gift then was gracious no desert of it nay a desert of the contrary Come saith the Prophet ye that have no mony come ye buy and eat yea come buy wine and milk without mony and without price Isay 55. 1. If God doth not sell any of his mercies if he will take none of our coyn if he doth not stand upon a price but only upon the asking and on the acceptation of his gifts then our Unworthines doth not prejudice our prayers 3. We do not only advance the name of Christ and the name of divine Comming with the sence of unworthiness advanceth the name of Christ and is a necessary concomit● an ●ccept● Prayer Grace by comming with a sense of our Unworthiness but it is the necessary concomitant of acceptable prayer There are two singular Graces which must exercise themselves in prayer one is Faith by which we go in the name of another another is Humility by which we go out of our selves When Abraham prayes his form was humble I who am but dust and ashes When Jacob prayes his form was humble I who am not worthy of all the goodness and truth c. He hears the desire of the humble This poor man cried unto the Lord and he heard him When we pray to God we are said to fall down at his footstool not only our bodies but our souls also must fall down at his footstool And when do our soules fall down Then when they are fully affected with the sense of their own unworthiness If we would pray acceptably we must pray humbly If we would pray humbly we must be sensible of our own Unworthiness 4. God hath rejected the Prayer of such who have rested upon
a quickning and regenerating Word it carries Christ in it the Author of Life and the Apostle calls it the Ministration of Life And perhaps it hath been so to some poor man and woman and to some of thy children But O how long hast thou heard it how often hast thou come to this Bread of Life to these Waters of Life What! and yet dead in thy sins not yet quickned and made alive Why thou art a reproach to the Gospel and thy sins have not only given death to thy soul but death to the Gospel of Christ the Gospel is made by them a dead Letter it is not so in it self but thou hast made it so And how wilt thou answer God for killing thy soul and killing his Christ and killing his Gospel 2. Many have a name that they live but like the Angel of Many have a name to live and yet are dead the Church of Sardis they are dead Revel 3. 1. Oh Sirs Spiritual life the life of grace is a rare thing and a difficult thing Every man loves his life but few love this life No man hates his own life almost but most men hate this life of grace because it is destructive to this life of sin And many think they have it and others think so too and yet they have it not You know it is one thing to put Flowers upon a dead body and another thing to put life into a dead man It is one thing for the Sun to convey light another thing for the Sun to convey life I might shew you that m●n mistake spiritual life exceedingly Education in a person may lead him far and so may an enlightned and generous Conscience and so may restraining Grace and so may Art and so may the common gifts of the Spirit they may enable a man to strange conceptions and strange affections and strange actions and yet the man may be spiritually dead Not any of these flow from a gracious principle of spiritual life Why common Gifts may lead up the soul far and Education may lead to Duties much and Conscience may awe sin exceedingly and Art or Hypocrisie may counterfeit the very life of Grace as a Stage-player doth a King wonderfully O therefore look to it that you have more than a name of life that you live indeed 3. If you should deceive your selves and when you come to It would be very sad to be deceived in this die you find that you have been dead all your lives and never were spiritually made alive Oh! in what a condition will thy poor trembling soul be To die and see nothing but death I thought there was life in my heart and life in my strong faith and life in my troubles of spirit and life in my obedience but alas I never lived I never enjoyed Christ never enjoyed grace c. 4. If the Lord hath made thee alive from the dead I do not To be alive is cause of great joy know any man living on the earth that hath such cause of joy unspeakable and glorious I will mention but three particulars unto thee 1. Hereby thou mayest be assured of thy interest in the richest mercy and greatest love of God to thy poor soul Read but the Apostle in Ephes 2. 4. But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us v. 5. even when we were dead in sins hath quickned us 2. Thou mayest palpably discover the tokens and vertues of Jesus Christ upon thy soul the very Effigies of the saving works of Christ that which Paul so longed to know even the power of the death and of the resurrection of Christ Philip. 3. 10. In thy death to Sin and in thy life of Grace doth the power of Christs death and of Christs resurrection appear 3. Thou mayest certainly know that Heaven shall be the place of thy rest hereafter Spiritual life comes from Heaven and bends to Heaven and shall bring to Heaven It prepares for Heaven and it is a part of Heaven and it shall be perfected and filled up in Heaven O what things are these who would miss of these For Christs sake search throughly whether you be made alive Now me thinks I hear some soul secretly longing to know how it may be cleared un●o it That God hath quickned it from the Signs of spiritual life dead That as it was once dead yet it is now alive Sol. There are many things which may clearly declare it for indeed life is such an active thing especially spiritual life that it may easily appear sometimes or other to him who hath it 1. If sin be alive then thou art still dead and if sin be dead thou art certainly alive I will open both these par●s 1. If sin be alive then the man is dead for it is impossible that the If sin be alive the man is dead same man should be alive and dead under the same consideration Spiritual Life and spiritual Death are incompatible at the same time in the same subject And therefore if sin be alive questionless you are spiritually dead Now there are four things which manifest sin to be alive in any mans soul 1. The flaming bents and in●atiable desires of the heart after things forbidden in the Word Ephes 4. 19. we read of sin with greediness 2. The universal and easie authority law or command that it hath over the soul and body that it can use them in the service of lusts when and as it pleaseth Ephes 2. 2 3. 3. The joyfull contentation and satisfaction which the heart takes in evil things as we do in meat and drink 4. The customary trade and course of our life in sinfull ways a walking in them a living in them O if these be yet found in thee sin is alive still and thou art dead still 2. But if sin be dead thou art certainly alive If sin be dead thou art alive I confess sin may be restrained and a man not alive and sin may be troublesome in some respects and a man not yet alive But if it be dead the man is spiritually alive for sin in thee can never come to be dead but by spiritual life Now sin is dead in thee if thou canst find two things 1. If it hath lost thy affections If love to sin be gone and hatred of sin be come if delight in sin be quenched and sorrow for sin be implanted Oh Sirs the love of sin is the life of sin and if the hatred of sin doth live then the love of sin is dead 2. If it hath lost its Authority its free and uncontrolled power although it molests still and tempts still yet it rules not thou art not a slave to it and subject to it thou wilt not serve it obey it any longer If thou hast Christ for thy Lord the Law of Christ for thy Rule and Sin for thy Enemy thou art alive 2. A second sign of spiritual life is a spiritual sense
any one of them it is a sign that thou livest if the child doth not go yet if it sucks this shews life if it doth not speak yet if it cry it is alive if it doth not cry yet if it breath it is a sign of life If there be groanings under the burden of sin and ●ighings for help for grace for Christ c. they are a sign of life O Christian the spiritual life is sometimes more open and full and lively and quick in actions and sometimes it is reduced to desires to a will to a complaint to a tear to a sigh to a groan O that I could pray O that I could believe 2. Dictinctly to the particular Cases Obj. 1. Thou fearest that thou art not alive because much Distinctly to the particular cases I am not alive because much sin is living in me Answered sin is yet living in thee To which I answer 1. It is with the Christian made alive by Grace as it was with Lazarus made alive by Christ who had for a while his grave cloathes on him and he was bound hand and foot and yet he was made alive so there may be many sinful corruptions yet cleaving to that soul which is indeed quickned with spiritual life Nay if thou didst feel no sinful corruptions I should question whether yet thou wer● made alive for spiritual life or grace doth give unto the soul 1. The clearest sense of sin 2. And the greatest grief for sin 3. And the strongest combate and conflict with sin 2. There is a difference twixt a feeling of sin still stirring in us and of the life of sin still ruling in us Thou feelest sin living in temptation but dost thou feel sin living in thy affection Thou feelest sin molesting of thee as a Tyrant but dost thou acknowledg sin ruling over thee as a King 3. And what doest thou when thou findest sin thus working Dost thou dye daily If thou feelest sin as if it were alive doth not this humble thee and doth not this hasten thee by Faith unto Christ for more crucifying virtue Obj. 2. Thou fearest that yet thou art not alive because thou There is much du●ness and deadness in my affections and operations Answe●ed discernest m●ch spiritual dulness and deadness in thy affections and operations Sol. I answer 1. Even the living have so●nd too much spiritual deadness in their hearts Davids soul was heavy and cast down and indisposed and a deadness possessed him and he prayes of en● O Lord quicken me 2. But is there not a difference twixt deadness and death death is the total privation of life where there is spiritual death there is not so much as the habit of grace but deadness is some diminution or some damp upon the habit of grace that it steps not out to its acts with that liberty and that alacrity as it was wont and such a deadness may be in a living soul And thirdly Thou feelest this deadness and thou dislikest it and thou bewailest it and thou prayest how often how earnestly Lord quicken this dead heart of mine Is it thus where death prevails do dead men do thus 4. The actions of life are various Let the action for the quantity be what it will greater or lesser quick or dull free or checked and interrupted yet if what thou dost be done in the strength of Christ if it be wrought with an humble and an upright heart assuredly thou art not a dead sinner but a living though perhaps troubled Christian Obj. 3. But I have no power to do any good I cannot believe I cannot pray I cannot mourn Sol. 1. What no Power at all I have no power to do any good Answered never any power no power from thy self nor any power from Christ no power perhaps to this work but what no power to any spiritual work no power perhaps at this time to an eminent act but then is there not a power to pray for power Though power appears not in the work doth not power yet appear in the will and desire Rom. 7. 18. I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing For to will is present with me but to perform that which is good I find not I cannot do it but I would do it 2. If there be a power living in the will it is the best sign of life A wicked man doth often the good which his will is against and the good man often doth not the good cannot do the good which his will is yet for Now God looks upon the will more then upon the work If gracious acts be couchant in the will life is in thee 3. However although thou hast not power sometimes let down for spiritual work yet thou hast so much power still remaining as to lif● up weak hands for more power Though thou canst not believe nor repent nor mourn as thou thinkest yet there is an heart to seek unto God in Christ for this power to believe c. Obj. 4. But my old lively affections are gone my old estimations My old lively ●ff●ctions are gone Answered my old hungrings and thirstings my old delightful communion with God in prayer and in his ordinances Sol. To this I would only say thus much 1. There is a difference twixt the intensive swiftness or flash of affections and the intensive strength and weight of the affections A young Christian is most in the former an old Christian who acts more upon Judgment and Faith is most in the latter 2. The case seems rather to be of a living man like to dye then dead Of a man decaying in Grace rather then totally deprived of grace of a sick Christian rather then of a dead Christian 3. And therefore seriously search the causes of the remission of thy first love of thy ancient favour in holy communion O look whether a dead flye be not fallen into the ointment whether some insnaring lust fleshly or worldly hath not robbed thee of thy strength 4. If so Be humbled greatly and repent and do thy first work Obj. 5. But where there is life there is growth but I find it not I finde no growth Answered Sol. A word to this The denial of growth may be either 1. Negative Never any at all this is impossible if life be wrought 2. Comparative Not so much as another not so much as I have found under such or such means not so much as I desire and this may be where there is life I have finished two Proposition from this Text One respecting the death and the other respecting the life of a sinner I now proceed to a third which is That a very great and notorious Doct. 3. A very great sinner may be converted sinner may be at length converted and changed This my Son was dead and is alive again This Son and who was he or what was he in the precedent Verses you may see his picture you may read
immediately go before and ordinarily usher in Conversion so it is sad and bitter and sharp for there the law imprints a sense of sin and of wrath and a spirit of bondage to fear the Needle pricks and the Sword cuts and wounds and the Hammer bruiseth and the Plough rents and tears 2. Formaliter as it is a perfective change and alteration even from hell to heaven from basest lusts to sweetest holiness and thus it is at the least a fundamental radical and virtual joy 3. Consequenter For the Crop and present harvest which results out of Conversion thus it is the Musick after the tuning of the strings the fruit of righteousness is peace so the fruit of conversion is joy and delight There are three things unto which I desire to speak about this point 1. That upon Conversion the condition becomes very joyful and pleasant quod sit 2. What kind of joy and pleasure Conversion doth bring quale sit 3. Reasons why so cur sit and then the useful Application Quest 1. For the first of these that Conversion doth bring the soul into a very joyful condition Sol. There are four things which demonstrate the quod sit of The quod sit demonstrated this 1. Many pregnant places of Scripture Psal 52. 11. Shout for joy all ye that ar● upright in heart Psal 132. 9. By Scripture Let thy Saints shout for joy Isai 35. 10. The ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads they shall obtain joy and gladness and sorrow and sighing shall flee away Isai 65. 13. Behold my servants shall rejoyce but ye shall be ashamed v. 14. Behold my servants shall sing for joy of heart but ye shall cry for sorrow of heart Isai 61. 10. I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord my soul shall be joyful in my God Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdome of God consists in righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Prov. 3. 17. Her wayes are wayes of pleasantness and all her paths are peace 2. Many pregnant testimonies and instances By Instances When Zacheus was converted he came down joyfully and received Christ Luke 19. 6 9. When the three thousand were converted there ensued singular gladness and joy Acts 2. 41. When the Eunuch was converted he went home rejoycing Act. 8. 39. When those in Samaria were converted the Text saith There was great joy in that City Acts 8. 5 6. When the Jailor was converted He rejoyced believing in God with all his house Acts 16. 34. When they to whom Peter wrote were converted they did rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of Glory 1 Pet. 1. 8. 3. The many Comparisons by which converting grace is expressed By Comparisons doth confirm it that it makes the souls condition very joyful and delightful The estate of grace is set forth by all the things which are esteemed pleasant and delightful and joyful Men take Delight and Joy in Honour Beauty Strength Youth Riches Pearls and Jewels in Birth in Wisdome and Knowledg in Springs Orchards Spices Perfumes Buildings Victories Life Duration Friends Why when converting grace is conveyed into the heart the man now is honourable and of high dignity now the beauties of Christ are on his soul all his graces are more precious then Pearls and Gold and Silver he is rich in spiritual treasures he is one born of the Spirit of God never truly knowing and wise till now c. Nay grace is phrased by such things which yield a general and universal contentment and delight to the whole man It is sometimes called Light which is pleasant to the eye Oyntment which is pleasant to the smell Wine which is pleasant to the tast Musick or the joyful sound which is pleasant to the ear Nay yet again it is sometimes called Truth and that is pleasant to the understanding Goodness and that is pleasant to the will a Kingdome and that is pleasant to desire an Inheritance and that is pleasant to hope Communion and that is pleasant to love a Possession and and that is pleasant to joy a Victory and that is pleasant to hatred a Security and that is pleasant to fear Heaven the Kingdome of Heaven and that is pleasantness itself and all this even under fears and combates when at the first and weakest and lowest Nay yet once more it is set out by all the occasions and by all the times of joy to the birth of a man-child for joy that a man-child is born said Christ A converted man is a new-born To the day of Marriage which some call the only day of joy a converted man is marryed to Christ To a Feast Isai 25. 6. Every dish is filled with mercy To a Coronation day which was a day of gladness of heart to Solomon Cant. 3. 11. There is a crown of life for every converted soul To the time of Harvest when the Husbandman reaps with joy Isai 9. 3. To the returns of Merchants upon the increase of Wine and Oyle Psal 4. To a ransome and release from bondage and captivity a converted man is set at liberty he is a freeman in Christ 4. Consider Conversion in the Causes of it or in the very By the Causes of it Nature of it or in the Acts flowing from it certainly by all of them you may be induced to believe that it makes the Condition joyful and pleasant 1. The Causes of it which are four 1. The Radical cause Why Conversion drops out of the Eternal Love of God to a mans soul Behold what manner of Love 1 Jo. 3. 1. as many as were ordained to eternal life believed Acts. 13. 2. The Meritorious cause Who loved us and gave himself for us Gal. 2. It is one part of Christs purchase he merited Grace and Glory for his 3. The Efficient cause immediately efficient it is the first breath of Gods sanctifying Spirit the Spirit of true Comfort and Joy 4. The Instrumental cause the word which is called sweet and sweeter then the Hony and the breasts of Consolation is the instrument of Conversion Jam. 1. 2. It s owne Nature Converting Grace hath three things intrinsecal unto it 1. Goodness it is By the Nature of it good and it only makes us good Now Goodness is the foundation of Delight Nothing is truly pleasant but what is truly good 2. Suteableness There is nothing so suteable either to the nature of the soul or end of the soul as true Grace 3. Perfection it is the Glory of the Soul 3. The acts flowing from it If the acts flowing from Conversion be such as God himself takes delight in He takes delight By the acts flow●ng from it in the prayer of his servants in the broken hearts of his servants in the Faith and in the Fear and in the Hope of his servants all their services are a sweet savour unto him as Noahs sacrifice was Surely then Conversion is able to make the converted
comes out of the hand of love and kindness O Sirs even the ordinary mercies to a converted man have a sweet distinction in them they are so perfumed they are so distilled they are so carved they are all of them the kisses of a father the gifts of a gracious God Every bit of Bread thou eatest and every draught of Beer thou drinkest and every piece of Cloath thou wearest it is the special provision of thy most gracious God and thy loving Father If some one royal mercy in the Covenant be able sometimes to sweeten an Ocean to turn hell into heaven to wipe off all tears and put the soul almost into an extasie of joy what rivers of joy then can the whole Covenant afford If the lifting up of the light of Gods countenance upon the soul which is but one beam of the Covenant if his saving to a man Soul I am thy Salvation if one word Son be of good cheer thy sins are forgiven thee imprints a superlative comfort a joy unspeakable and full of glory if one drop be so sweet how sweet is the Fountain if one Grape what is the cluster of Grapes Now not only this or that mercy in the Covenant belongs to a converted man but every mercy the God of all mercies and all the mercies of God the God of all comforts and all the comforts of God 5. True Conversion It is the infallible fore-runner the It is the infallible forerunner of glory earnest the pawn of Glory the pledg which God leaves in hand the first fruits of thy eternal Glory in the highest heavens and is not this a cause of great joy if I look back and see a love from all eternity if forward and see a glory to all eternity Truly if I should never taste Honey on earth if all the Wells of a present comfort were stopped up if my Father should never smile on me in the way if all my Life were a sayling on brinish tears and my Ship were still to be tossed with troublesome waves yet if I were sure at length to put in at this Port to come safe to Heaven at length to appear before the God of Gods at the last to see him in Glory and enjoy his face and the pleasures at his right hand for evermore even this confidence and assurance were enough to make me to rejoyce in the hope of the Glory of God Oh Christian besides all that joy which ariseth from converting grace which is it self a sweet Rose and besides all those Honey dewes which fall upon the soul in the exercise of grace in the way to Heaven Thou meetest him that rejoyceth and worketh righteousness those that remember thee in thy wayes Isai 64. 5. There is also reserved in the highest heavens that most perfect happiness that most perfect tranquillity that most perfect joy Oh I cannot express it I cannot comprehend it 1 Pet. 1. 3. He hath begotten us again unto a lively hope v. 4. To an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you Ponder the words an inheritance the best of possessions incorruptible the best of inheritances undefiled the best of incorruptibles unfading the best of undefileds and reserved in heaven the best of unfadings Nothing is so surely kept as that which is kept in heaven for us and born unto all this and a lively hope of all this Oh what comfort Oh what joy comes out of all this If I had all the world and lookt up towards heaven but my heart should tell me that goodly Canaan will never fall to thy portion it would be now with me as once with Ahab who though he enjoyed a Kingdome yet was very sad because the heavens were as Brass to him But in the midst of all distresses to look up to Heaven to think of God and the future Beatifical Vision and upon infallible grounds to say that God is my Father that Heaven is my inheritance that place of Glory is my home there shall I be shortly there shall I be to eternity I have the earnest of it the pawn of it in my heart the first fruits c. 2. Secondly As to Christ The converted condition cannot As to Christ but be joyful because the converted person hath 1. A neer relation to Christ Bone of his Bone 2. A singular propriety in Christ my beloved is mine c. 3. An admirable revenue by Christ wonderful riches of and by Christ all are yours for ye are Christs 4. He is bought by Christ and reconciled by Christ and loved by Christ and discharged by Christ and owned by Christ and defended by Christ and kept by Christ and shall one day be saved by Christ 3. As to Conscience As a mans conscience is so is his comfort As to Conscience or discomfort so is his joy or sorrow One drop of an evil conscience saith Luther doth imbitter the whole Sea of worldly joy an evil conscience is an hell in the brest and in hell said Latimer there is no mirth and on the contrary a good conscience it is a kind of heaven one good word from it will sweeten all our miseries and cause us to rejoyce under all sorrows Solomon saith it is a continual feast it is the year of Jubilee conscience speaks the truest joy and the strongest joy and the highest joy and no man hath a good conscience but a good man Conscience cannot speak peace till a man be converted and when he is converted conscience hath then a commission and authority to look on the man and speak to the man as God doth When thou hearest of pardon of sins Oh saith conscience hearken and be of good cheer that 's thy portion when thou hearest of Jesus Christ and of his sufferings and of his satisfactions and merits hearken saith conscience and take hold for all this also is thy portion when thou hearest the Covenant of Grace graciously explained and all the glories in heaven Oh saith conscience all this also is thy portion when thou art about to pray and fears are intruding themselves do not fear ●aith conscience thou art speaking to thy Father when thou art about to dye and tremblings are upon thee do not doubt or tremble saith conscience thou art going to thy God when Satan suggests thou hast nothing to do with the mercy-seat what such a sinner thou hast saith conscience when unbelief suggests Christ will have nothing to do with thee he will saith conscience Now against all that hath been said it is objected That the assertion of joy for a converted person cannot be true Because 1. No persons are so exposed to afflictions and persecutions and infamies as converted persons They are appointed to them 1 Thes 3. And they that will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecutions how can that condition be so very joyful which may and oftentimes doth deprive a man of all his comforts 2. Conversion brings the person into
tempore It is not every apprehension nor every transcient approbation but the Will must come to an obligation binding it self in a perpetual Covenant to Christ alone 4. An Union or Conjunction A Mutual Conjunction with Christ Before Marriage the persons were distinct and had no other relation but what was common to Nature but upon Marriage two are made one flesh 1 Cor. 6. 16. This is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh said Adam of his Wife Gen. 2. So when the soul is married unto Christ not only in respect of affection for love unites but likewise in respect of nature he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 6. 17. That Nature which is in Christ it is participated of by him that is married unto Christ so that there doth arise upon this marriage the nearest and dearest relation of union that is in all the world 5. A faculty of right or interest Indeed Christs faculty over us is facultas Dominii facultas Influ●ntiae A mutual Right a faculty of Dominion he hath a right to rule and guide us and a faculty of Influence he hath a right to teach and heal us Such a faculty of Soveraignty we have not over Christ yet we have ●acultatem Juris a faculty of Right or Interest which they call Jus in re or as others a faculty of propriety Though the Wife hath not a power of authority over her Husband yet she hath a power of propriety in her Husband that as he can say This is my Wife so she can say This is my Husband In like manner whosoever is marryed unto Christ he hath an interest in the person in the condition of Christ there hath passed such an intire and proper and peculiar and mutual resignation that he may say as the Church in the Canticles My Beloved is mine and I am his The married unto Christ gives up the right of his soul and body unto Christ O Lord Jesus all that I am all that I have all that I can do is thine and for thee 6. Lastly A mutual Society There is Society and ●se As marriage infers with it Co-habitation and Co-interest they dwell together and make use of either both persons and estates Thus is it when any person is married unto Christ there is a holy society and fellowship of him with Christ Christ dwels in him and he dwels in Christ Christ delights in him and he delights in Christ Christ makes use of him and he makes use of Christ If he wants grace or mercy or strength or peace or comfort why saith Christ I am thine I have them for thee make use of me And if Christ would use him in any service Lord saith the soul that is married to Christ If thou wilt have me to speak for thee I will speak for thee If thou wilt have me to do for thee I will do for thee if thou wilt have me to suffer for thee I will suffer for thee if thou wilt have me to dye for thee I will dye for the Name of Christ said Paul So that you see what the Ring in the Text may import namely the marriage of the soul unto Christ and what that is Quest 2. The next thing to be discussed is What that is What it is which marrieth us unto Christ viz. Faith which marryeth us unto Christ and that I told you was Faith The principal cause of this match is the Spirit of Jesus Christ but the internally instrumental cause is Faith I know you know the several acceptations of the word Faith I take it in the Habitual sense not in the Doctrinal and there too in the choice and eminent part I mean as restrained to Justifying and Saving of all other Graces in man this is it which makes How Faith doth it the match and draws up the marriage twixt the Soul and Christ And the manner how it doth effect it I conceive may be thus 1. By discovering the preheminent excellencies of Christ For By Discovering the excellencies of Christ till the soul can discern a better excellency in Christ then in any other thing it will never yield to match it self unto him Now Faith hath two Virtues One is to make the mind rightly to judge all sinful and worldly things as base and vile dr●ss and dung Phil. 3. in comparison of Christ Another is to represent unto the soul the real and surpassing excellencies of Christ It is the Jacobs Staff which makes us to take the heigth and depth and breadth of the excellency of Christ that there is no Beloved like Christ he is the Choicest of ten thousand such a one in whom the God-Head dwels bodily full of Grace the holy One of God the brightness of the Fathers Image the Lord of Life the Prince of Glory the most excellent in himself and most complete and absolute for the Redemption and Salvation of a sinner 2. By subjecting the Judgment to the assent and approbation of By subjecting the Judgment to the Approbation of his excellency this excellent truth That none is like Christ for a sinner That he is the only Saviour and Redeemer and that such an offer of Jesus Christ unto a sinner is worthy of all acceptation the sinner is made for ever if he can get Christ and he perishes for ever if he enjoyes him not As a woman in a disposition to Marriage she considers of the person and his qualities and condition and thinks often This man hath choice parts in him a good estate I cannot better my self if I refuse him I see I may do very well if I match unto him Answerable effects doth Faith work in the soul it doth make the minde of a man to see the superlative excellency of Jesus Christ and to fall in liking of him and them Come I need a Saviour Christ is he and none else he is the Prince of my peace the Lord of my life his Nature is excellent Redemption sufficient and proper Laws righteous and good it is my wisdome it is my safety it is my salvation to accept of him and to bestow my soul on him 3. By inclining the will to consent and embrace the Lord Jesus For true Faith is not a meer notion but an operating grace it By inclining the will to embrace him is as light in the mind and as heat in the will there it is a singular representation and here it is an effectual inclination It is granted that to embrace or to be willing or to consent are the acts of the will but to embrace Christ with a conjugal consent to be willing to bestow our selves on him this comes from faith enabling the Will so to will Not by way of coaction for the Will cannot be compelled nor doth Faith work in a violent way though it works in an effectual way enabling the Will to a free election of Christ before all others i. predominant
causes in Christ to accept of him and to resign up to him rather than to sin or world or any thing else and when the Will is wrought upon so as to accept of Christ in his Person and Offices and Estates the soul is now matched or married to Christ by Faith It bestows it self and gives Christ all the right and cleaves unto him in an indissoluble bond of affection and service Quest 3. The third resolveable is concerning the Subject of this The subject of this faith faith who hath it The Text resolves that by telling us that the Ring was put on the returning Prodigals finger so that the penitent person is he who wears the Ring i. who is an espoused The penitent person is onely married unto Christ or married person by Faith unto Christ You may be married to your Lusts and to the World though you be impenitent yet none but Penitents are married unto Christ by Faith Not that Repentance goes before Faith in Christ for no Grace habitually considered is in time before another though in operation it be Nor that Repentance is the cause of Faith for it is a most improper Assertion to make one Grace to be the cause of another Grace when as every Grace doth come onely from the Spirit of Reasons Christ as the cause But because 1. The penitent person is only the The penitent person onely hath faith subject of Faith which doth marry us to Christ no person is a believer who is not a penitent person The Prodigal while onely a Prodigal he hath neither Garment nor Ring but when he is a returning Prodigal then he hath both and not till then 2. Onely penitent persons can evidence their faith and espousal unto Onely penitent persons can evidence their faith Christ Another who is impenitent can no more evidence his interest or title to Christ then an Alien that never heard of this Land can evidence or conclude his title and right to any Goods or Chattels of yours The title to Christ is proper onely to the Penitent for them he lived and for them onely he died Now if any should yet further demand Why the Lord should Why will the Lord give this to penitent persons To convince the world there is no lo●s in leaving sin To support the soul of the heavy laden give unto penitent persons a precious faith to espouse them to Christ I conjecture briefly that these may be the Grounds or Reasons 1. To convince all the world that there is no loss in leaving of sin Abjice tectum tolle coelum said one The repentant person forsakes his sins but presently finds a Saviour he is divorced from that which would damn him and by faith is espoused unto one that will save him 2. To support the soul of the penitent which of all other is most sick and heavy laden It is most sensible of sin and guilt and Gods displeasure on all which it cannot long look alone If the penitent person had not faith to see a Mediatour he would not long have an eye to look upon his transgressions It is a truth that Repentance could never act it self unless the penitent person had faith to act it self too The sorrow in Repentance would infinitely sink into despair and the forsaking of sin would turn into a forsaking of God if Faith saw not a Mediatour for Transgressions and a mercifull God through him 3. Lastly The Lord intends singular mercy to the penitent God intends singular mercies to the Penitent persons to perform many precious promises of pardon and grace and comfort unto them and therefore gives them Faith unto which all the Promises are made The promises may be considered two ways either in respect 1. of Intention so they look unto the Penitent of Application so onely Faith is the Hand in the Penitent which actively applies the Promises Again you know that the Promises of God are Yea and Amen in Christ i. they are all sealed by him and made good unto us by him so that first we must have Christ before the Promises made good unto us by Christ And therefore God gives unto the penitent person the Grace of Faith to espouse him unto Christ that so he may settle upon him all the Dowry upon the Marriage of the rich mercy and good in his precious Promises The main Use which I will make of this assertion is To try our selves whether we have this precious Ring of Faith a Ring Vse Try our selves whether we have this precious faith A necessary trial if we consider The paucity of true believers more precious than that of Gold put on our fingers yea or no. It is as necessary a demur as ever you were put unto all your dayes whether you consider 1. The paucity of true believers All men have not faith saith the Apostle All men nay very few Who hath believed our report said the Prophet We preach we offer Christ unto you we beseech you to accept of the Lord of Life to give up your hearts and lives unto him but who believes our report We tell you that Christ is better than all the world his bloud is better than sin it 's better to love and serve him than world or sin but who believes our report Men care not to know the excellencies of Christ they prize him not they care not to hear him speak in his Ordinances they will in no wise consent and yield to his terms and conditions 2. The Vtility The utility of it of it To the Sacrament of the Lords Supper if we come without our Wedding-Ring it will be as sad a day to us as to him who came without his Wedding Garment We do not onely receive no good at the Sacrament for we have neither hand nor mouth to take and eat if we have not Faith not title at all to the intrinsecal benefits by Christ if we have not faith in him Nay we occasion much evil and Judgment upon our selves we adventure to eat and drink our own damnation not discerning the 1 Cor. 11. Lords body And righteously may the Lord judge us for coming to his Sacrament without Faith for as much as in so doing we do not onely presume against an express prohibition that we should hold off but also we do at the least interpretatively assay to make God a Liar and a favourer of all villany as if he would put his Seal of Pardon and mercy and for all the good of his Covenant in Christ to a wicked impenitent and unbelieving sinner 3. The Hypocrisie of our hearts so apt to deceive themselves with shadows in stead of substances not The hypocrifie of our hearts considering that Satan can delude a man with the shew of any grace Every Ring is not a Ring of Gold nor is every Faith a precious and unfeigned Faith There is a thing called Presumption which is bold enough but it is not Faith and there