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A69777 The intercourses of divine love betwixt Christ and his Church, or, The particular believing soul metaphorically expressed by Solomon in the first chapter of the Canticles, or song of songs : opened and applied in several sermons, upon that whole chapter : in which the excellencies of Christ, the yernings of his gospels towards believers, under various circumstances, the workings of their hearts towards, and in, communion with him, with many other gospel propositions of great import to souls, are handles / by John Collinges ... Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1683 (1683) Wing C5324; ESTC R16693 839,627 984

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and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 desideravit he hath desired Love is nothing else but a willing of good to the object beloved and desire is the eldest Daughter and first fruit of love For the particles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore they shew the cause of the believers loving of the Lord Jesus Christ because of the savour of his good Ointments The excellencies of grace which are in him of which it hath a spiritual sense This whole verse comprehends a second Argument by which the Spouse inforceth her first petition The first was drawn from that high esteem which her soul had of the love and grace of Christ 2. This is drawn from that particular affection which she had for him common to all spiritual Virgins which she shews was not brutish and irrational no it was because he was full of grace which was more precious than the most excellent Ointments and she had received the savour of this grace for his discovery of himself to the world as a Saviour and more specially to her soul as her Saviour was as an Ointment poured forth You may now take the substance of these two verses and so of the Spouses first and great petition thus Oh! That it might please my dearly beloved Saviour who is my Spiritual Bridegroom to shew me some token of special love and to multiply those tokens to me more specially in and by the words of his Mouth in Gospel Doctrines to speak unto my Soul which doth really prefer the tokens of his love and influences of his grace before the most choice of all creature comforts My beloved is full of grace and love which is sweet like good Ointment every discovery of himself is as sweet as Ointment poured forth therefore doth my Soul love him and not my Soul only but the Souls of all those who are not deflowered by the world and by lusts From the words thus opened several propositions of truth may be observed The mercies which the believing Soul thirsts after are spiritual distinguishing mercies The least of Christ a kiss is exceeding precious to a gracious Soul Though the least influences of grace be precious to believers yet they will not be satisfied without the fullest dispensations of grace and most frequent repetitions of it Believers have special thirstings after the Word of God The kisses of his Mouth The thirst of a true believer will not be satisfied without a Spiritual inward communion with Christ in his Ordinances The kisses of his Mouth A gracious Soul will be very bold and earnest with God for this spiritual communion with him The Lord Jesus Christ hath Loves A variety of Grace The Loves of Christ are better than Wine than all created comforts whatsoever The believing Souls knowledge of the Excellencies which are in Christ is the ground of its earnest desire of fellowship and communion with him It is an excellent Argument for a Soul to use with God for the obtaining of favours from him if it can truly say that it preferreth his favour before all created goods The Lord Jesus Christ hath good Ointments which cast a savour The name of Christ is as an Ointment poured forth Virgin Souls love the Lord Jesus Christ for those excelling graces which they discern in him Sermon II. Canticles 1. v. 1. 2 3. Let him kiss me with the kisses of his Mouth for his loves are better then Wine Because of the savour c. I Have in my former Exercises opened the Text and named those propositions of Doctrine which are couched in the words or rationally to be deduced from them I come now to the particular handling of them beginning with the first The thirst of a believing Soul is after Spiritual distinguishing mercies Nature teacheth every one to say who will shew us any good Good is a thing that all the creation is enamoured upon God is the fountain of all goodness Every good and perfect gift cometh from above from him who is the father of lights Who being not a debtor to the creature must needs dispense it out freely Hence that goodness of God which is his goodness of Beneficence not only dwelling in him as a piece of his divine perfection But flowing from him as a stream from the fountain of his liberality is properly called Mercy whether it be good to us in respect of its sutableness to our outward and bodily wants or to our more inward and Spiritual necessities Hence the Mercies and savours of God are either Bodily respecting out outward Man or Spiritual respecting our inward man The former such now as life health peace and prosperity riches c. are such as God gives to his Enemies as well as to his Friends he maketh his Sun to rise upon the evil and the good And sendeth rain on the just and unjust Math. 5. 45. Spiritual good things again are either Gifts of common or of Special Grace Gifts of common grace such as knowledge invention memory utterance c. These are indeed Spiritual gifts so called by the Apostle 1 Cor. 12. 1. ch 14. 1. because given out by the Spirit of God and tending to innoble the Spiritual part and they are also called the best gifts 1 Cor. 12. 31. They are so in their kind better than those which only concern the outward man but St. Paul himself mentioneth better than these in the very same Text I shew you a more excellent way Neither are these distinguishing favours but given in common to wicked as well as to good men But now there are Spiritual mercies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so called Not only because they come from the Spirit of Grace and innoble the Spiritual part of man but because they are suted to the greatest necessities of our inward man Such are the grace of Justification Union to and reconciliation with God pardon of Sin and the Senses of that pardon together with all the fruits of the Spirit of regeneration and Sanctification These are the distinguishing favours of God which difference the Child of God from him that is not Now I say these are those favours which the believing Soul thirsteth after and longeth for expressed here under the Metaphor of kisses And properly expressed under that notion Men and women use not to kiss such as they hate but such as they have an affection for It is a civil usage amongst us so to salute strangers indeed but frequency of kisses speaks a distinguishing love and some intimacy of Affection and are not ordinary unless amongst very intimate Friends such as is the Husband and Wife Brethren and Sisters c. But yet a little further When Isay the thirstings of gracious Souls are after such distinguishing tokens of divine love I understand it not Exclusively The Children of God are made up of flesh and blood as well as any others and subject to the same necessities and infirmities
and from formality 300. it is the Christians Ornament 725 726. Arguments to persuade it 726 727. Horses why believers are compared to them to a company of them in Pharaohs Charrets 701 702 703 704. I. JEsuits Notion of Grace 269 270. Influence of God upon our natural and upon our Spiritual acts how different 763 764 765. Joy the Nature of it 398 399. The special Nature of Spiritual Joy 399 400. Christ the peculiar object of the believers Joy 404 405 406. The reasonableness of rejoicing in Christ 407 408 409. K. KIsses various used as various Indications 41 42. Kisses of Christs mouth what 44. 45. Knowledge the various degrees of it 178 179. The Kings sitting at his Table what it signifieth 761 762. What we are to do that we may keep Christ sitting at his Table 772 773. L. LEast tokens of Christs distinguishing love what 67 68. desirable to believers and why 69 70 71. all persuaded to value them 75 76. Looking on the Spouses blackness how far our duty how our sin 524 525 526 527 528. Vnkind lookings upon the Spouse because she is black reproved 529 530. Love to Christ in what seen 443 444. by what it may be discovered 450 451 452 601 602 603. How far it may be in an unbeliever 813 814. Love to Christ persuaded from his love to us 157 158 159 160. Loves of Christ what 148 149. proved better then wine 162 163 164. Love of God to man whether more commended from the Doctrine of Common or special grace 282 283 284. M. MErcies of several sorts distinguishing mercies what 58 59. Ministers of the Gospel how necessary 662 663. Murmurings for God's inequal distributions of special grace unreasonable why 386 387 388 389. Myrrh the several acceptations of it 777 778. A bundle of Myrrh what 778 779. Why Christ is compared to it 781 782 783. N. NAme of Christ what 54 216 217 218. How sweet 212 213 214. Whence its sweetness is 219 220. Neck of the Spouse what it signifieth 719. O. OYL its sacred and civil use 51 52 53. the met aphorical sense of it 52 53. pouring forth what it imports 54. Ordinance of the ministry how necessary 662 663. Ordinances the Beams and Rafters of Christs house 890 891. how properly so called 892. Why compared to Beams of Cedar 903 904. their beauty power durableness 900. what to conclude from hence 905. Ornaments of believers what 726. Excess in other Ornaments dissuaded 727 728. P. PErfection of Christians threefold 481 482. Pleasant what it signifies 861. How Christ is not only fair but pleasant 861 862 863. What rendreth him so 865 866. Prayer rightly ordered what 146 147 148. it is a mean of our communion with God 140 141 142. Sometimes presently answered 345 346 347. What Prayers usually meet with such answers 348 349. Prayers of faith what 349 350 351. what to be done when we have not a present answer of our Prayers 368 369 370. Prayers heard a cause of joy and rejoycing in Christ 410 411. How to discern an answer of Prayer 420. 421 422. Special Presence of God what 375 376 377. Presumption no saith 296. R. REsisting divine grace how far there may be or not be 258 259 the great danger of such resistance 308 309 310. Rejoycing in Christ our duty how to be discerned 413 414. Persuaded by Arguments 416 417. Remembrance of Christ and his loves what it importeth 424 425 426 427. Why our duty 428. Who come short of it 429 430 431 432. The duty persuaded 433 434. Directed 435 436. Repetitions of Christs Love to Souls why used 823 824. Why not to all Souls alike 825 826. Returns of Prayer sometimes very quick 345 346. In what cases usually 348 349. Rows of Jewels and Chains about the Spouse what they signify 719 720. Running after Christ what it implies 242 243 244. 318 319 320. Many run not 327 328. S. SCripture rule compared with other rules 675 676. Scandal and sin the two great objects of believers fears 627 628. The Nature and difference of Scandals 628 629. why to be feared 630 631. Shepherds Tents what they signify 670 671. By what Shepherds Tents we are to feed our kids 673 674. How to know the true Shepherds Tents 680 681 682 683. Smell of grace what and whence 752 753. How to be promoved 759 760. Smells of wicked men what 754 755. Solomon what he was 18 19. whether he sinned in marrying Pharaohs Daughter 19 20. whether his Apostacy was total and final Opinions and Arguments on either side 21 22 23 24. That it was not total nor final proved 22 23 24. In what order he wrote his books 27. Song of Solomon of Divine Authority Objections answered 28 29 30. The Nature of the Song 32. Why called the Song of Songs Spirit how it teacheth and how by it we have communion with God 108 109 110 111. Special favours of God what 172 173. Sweetness of Christ to a Believer 785 786 787 788 789. T. TIme for mercy set how to know God's set time 353 354 355. V. VAriety of Divine Grace 81 82. Valuing of Christ's Loves an excellent Argument when it can be used in truth in our Applications to God 188 189. None but Believers can use it 193 194 195. Means to bring our Souls to a due value of Christ 196 197. Vineyard what the Church's Vineyard is 580 581. What the particular Christian's Vineyard is 578. How Both are to be kept 581. Not duly keeping our own Vineyards the cause of our blackness 585. Tht due keeping them pers●aded 587 588 589. Virgins who 55 223. Why Believers so called 223 224 225. Whence it is that they love Christ 445 446. Upright who 439 440 441. Those who are so love Christ they cannot but love him why 445 446. Unity persuaded 713 714. In what 895 896. Means to it 897 898. W. VVAnts of men what the principal 162 163 164. Willingness to a communion with God if true how to be judged 141 142. Arguments to persuade it 143 144. Wine in no notion to be compared with the Loves of Christ 165 166 167. How to know whether we do not prefer Wine to the Loves of Christ 170 171 172. Word of God its several parts 95. Communion with God in it three waies 94. Why desirable 97 98 99. Those who despise it reflected on 101 102 103. In what sense the Word of God is as the Beams and Rafters of the Church 893. The Beauty Power and Duration of the Word 904. Worldly Imployment a cause of the Spouses blackness why 571 572. Worship the Nature of it several Propositions about it 564 565. The sinfulness of corruptions in it 567 568 569. FINIS V. 2. Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth Of thy mouth Kisses pl. For thy loves are better then Wine V. 3. Because of the savour of thy good Ointments thy name is as an ointment poured forth Therefore do the Virgins love thee V.
the Image of him that created him The Child of God is transformed by the renewing of his mind Rom. 12. 2. Regenerated and born again Joh. 3. 3. Except a man be born again he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God born again of Water and of the Spirit as our Saviour expoundeth it v. 5. Now this change this renevation respecteth not the substantial power and faculties of the Soul The same powers and faculties the same understanding will and affections I mean the same powers which we call so remain but they are changed as to their quality and aspect unto Objects The same wheels of the Soul remain but they are set right and move more regularly towards what are indeed their true and proper Objects The natural man's understanding is blind and dark and weak and impotent he calleth good evil and evil good bitter things sweet and sweet things bitter his pallate is vitiated so as he neither doth nor can discern things truly and spiritually good Until his nature be cultivated by moral Discipline and some ingenious Education he is like the Beast that perisheth and judgeth of good and evil meerly by sense When it is cultivated he judgeth of it by reason and determines good and evil according to rational Principles and in that riseth no higher than to the perfection of an Heathen Philosopher who knew nothing of any such thing as Union and Communion with God and either believed nothing of the Immortality of the Soul and so took not himself concerned to care for that or at least had a faint belief and an imperfect notion of it But the renewed man hath his understanding opened to discern more excellent things He easily seeth That God is the chiefest Good and thence concludes as rationally that the happiness of man must needs consist in the enjoyment of God in Union and Communion with him as the Heathens determined that the happiness of a man must necessarily lye in the f●uition of and an union with the summum bonum the greatest good This being determined by the understanding by that new light and power of discerning given it by God The will of whose nature it is to follow the Dictates of the Understanding ordinarily chuseth and embraceth it by as natural and rational a working as that wretched Soul that knoweth no be tter things than good Meat and Drink and Cloaths and Estates chooseth them and embraceth them before other things Or the more cultivated Soul chooseth Learning and Knowledge and moral Habits Only in rega rd there is a particular Debauchery and Corruption of the Will of man there is a particular work of God upon the Will changing and altering that or else in Spiritual things it would not follow the Dictate of the Understanding and this may be seen in things benea th this Order We indeed usually say the Will is a blind faculty and follows the dictate of the Understanding but since the Fall man is so much mancipated and enslaved to his sensual Appetite that we see in daily experience it doth not The drunkard the unclean persons are daily proofs of it who know well enough that the prosecution of their Lusts in those things doth not only destroy their contrary moral Habits but ruine their Lives Health Reputation yet cannot forbear the pursuit of them But the Will being thus renewed to chuse the best spiritual good the affections move in a natural Order after it and the outward man is commanded to all actions pursuant to it So that I say this Renovation of the whole Man according to the Image of God is the true cause of the Souls willingness and earnest desire after these nearest degrees of Communion with God The understanding being thus fully enlightened to discern that God is the chiefest good and that mans greatest happiness must lie in an Union with him and enjoyment of him 2. To which I know nothing can be added but those measures of experience which every renewed Soul hath how good the Lord is The experience of any good adds much to our Souls value of it as it confirmeth to us our notion and apprehension of it Many things appear better to us in contemplation than in fruition But there can be nothing in nature conceived more effectual to inflame our affections after any Object than when besides the goodness our Understandings have discerned in it upon which our Wills have made their Election of it a superadded experience confirmeth our noton of the goodness of it There is no justified Soul but hath in some measure tasted how good the Lord is and how good a Fellowship and Communion with God is so as it doth but move rationally in willing and desiring the nearest and most intimate degrees of it I added further That this Soul as a mean to obtain it will use rightly ordered Prayer The Reason and ground of this evidently appears if we consider 1. That Prayer is the means to obtain it No man can be so much as presumed truly to will and to desire any thing which he useth no means to obtain or as to which he doth not use the proper means to obtain it if he knows it the good is here is not sensible or rational to be acquired by natural or moral means but is truly and highly spiritual the Communication of the Divine Influences to the Soul and most inward part of man the means must be somthing of Divine Institution somthing which God hath appointed as a mean in order to so great and blessed an end Prayer is one mean of this Nature He gives his holy Spirit to them that ask him saith our Saviour This is a Divine Means under a Divine Ordination and Institution with reference to such an end This the Believer knoweth and it is a means within his Power God hath sent forth the Spirit of Adoption into his Heart teaching him to cry Abba Father The Spirit helpeth his Infirmities with strong cries and groans which cannot be uttered 2. He also knoweth that it is not all Prayer will be effective of this but Prayer according to the Will of God effectual fervent Prayer A man may ask amiss and not receive Though therefore an Hypocrite that takes up with a form of Godliness and aims at no right end in his acts of Homage but drives a by Design for himself in all his duties and seeketh himself more than God may content himself with such performances as answer the low mark which he levells his Arrows at Yet the pious Soul that hath a true aim and design in his Actions must mind such a performance of them as shall bear a proportion to the true end he aimeth at but this is enough to have spoken for the Explication and Confirmation of this Proposition what this rightly ordered Prayer is God willing I shall further open to you in the Application of this Discourse From hence in the first place we may take some measures of our State with reference unto
again hath here made thee to differ No pious Soul that understands itself but will here cry out Grace Grace powerful distinguishing Grace So as this Doctrine is consonant to the experience and judgment of the best of men the other contrary to their experience and reason and therefore not like to prevail much in the world with any who either understand what grace and holiness is nor what the state of man is since the fall I could only wish that those who so glory in a power they have to come to Christ and to walk with him and run after him and to incounter and overcome the greatest Lions in the way would let us see it by their strict and close walking with God without putting such a sense upon the Commandments of God as the Pharisees did of old whom Christ confutes Mat. 5. according to which they may indeed be kept by vertue of that common Grace of God which he denieth to no man This is enough to have spoken Doctrinally upon this Subject Sermon XVIII Canticles 1. 4. Draw me and We will run after thee I Proceed to the Application of the Proposition which I largely opened and confirm'd in my last exercise viz. That no Soul cometh to or runneth after Christ till it be first drawn not only sweetly allured but powerfully by God inclined I come now to apply it This in the first place may inform you of the Vanity both of the Arminian and Popish Tenets as to this great point Arminians think it hard to be accounted Enemies to the Grace of God yea they will profess themselves to own special Grace but by the Grace of God they understand no more than exciting Grace the Grace of God in the Gospel which hath appeared to all men and by special Grace they only mean that further Grace which is given to them who have first made a good use of the power God hath created in their wills They say that wherever the Gospel is preached there goes alongwith it such a presence of the Spirit that if men will they may without any further influence of Divine Grace upon one more than another repent and believe c. That God when he calleth them by his Gospel giveth to sinners not only necessary but sufficient Grace for faith and obedience and seriously commandeth them to believe and obey under the promise of eternal life if they do these things and the contrary threatning of eternal death if they do not This calling they say is in Scripture called an Election unto Grace differing from that unto gloty and Eternal Salvation This calling is effected and perfected by the Preaching of the Gospel and the vertue of the Spirit conjoined with it and that with a gracious and serious intention on Gods part of working faith in all those who are so called whether they believe and be saved in the issue or pertinaciously refuse faith and eternal Salvation for they tell us there is an effectual calling so called rather from the event than from the intention of God properly so called which calling obtaineth its saving effect not from any precise intention of God to save men or because it is so made by the secret and singular wisdom of God that it effectually agreeth with the will of him that is called or because in and by it the will of him who is called is so determined to faith by an irresistible and an almighty power not less than that of Creation or raising the dead that it cannot but believe and obey but because man doth not put in a bar which he might do to the call of God nor resist Divine Grace They tell us there is another sufficient grace which is ineffectual which through a failure on mans part hath not a saving effect but is unfruitful and obtaineth not its due and desired effect only through mans voluntary and vincible fault Hence they will tell you that they attribute all to Grace they make that the beginning the reason of the progress and perfection of all good so that without preventing exciting following and co-operating grace the regenerate man himself can neither will nor do any good nor resist any temptation But they mean by Grace nothing but the means of grace and such an assistance of the holy Spirit as alwaies attends it and one as well as another hath that sits under the Gospel for that which we call special grace or distinguishing grace the drawing of the text by which God powerfully influenceth the Souls of some not of others and worketh faith and dispositions to new obedience in them they deny any such thing and so attribute to the will of man all the change of the heart which we call conversion or regeneration hence they will tell you that God never so worketh in any Soul but man may hinder and finally resist his operations This is their opinion which how contrary it is to truth and how absurd it is I have shewed you in my former discourse what Bradwardin saith of the Pelagians may be applied to these Teachers They make God pauperculum Mercatorem like a poor Pedlar that indeed carries about his Grace and persuades men to receive it But man is made the buyer Thus saith that grave Author God should rather gratiam suam commutare ac vendere quam dare commute and sell his grace rather than bestow and give it Doubtless the will of God is the efficient cause of every good thing that is done the first mover in every good motion the begetter and preserver of it Amantissima genitrix vivifica conservatrix as Bradwardin expresseth it l. 1. cap. 9. and maintaineth it from reason and the concessions even of Philosophers They will tell us they will grant this That God is the first cause and mover as to all good and that all this is of his grace but he moves us only by external calling and the common assistance of his Spirit They much delight in those terms aids and assistances of his Spirit by which they plainly grant the will of man the first cause and make the Spirit but an aiding assisting cause Again how is the conversion of a sinner from the Grace of God whose Grace it seems extends no further before conversion to the person to be converted than to the person that still continues in its hardness and inconverted state so as it is not the Grace of God that causeth the Soul to differ for as to that there is no difference the same administration of grace both to those whose hearts are changed and to those whose hearts are not changed They tell us grace and in the same degree of administration may be yea is resisted by many of those to whom it is administred This opinion must be faulty either 1. By maintaining that God doth not seriously and efficaciously will the salvation of any Soul the contrary to which in words they affirm and instead of it say he seriously willeth the salvation
God even the God of Israel only he desires that the Lord would be merciful to him as to his bowing down in the House of Rimmon They are neither uniform nor steady and constant in their service of God they seem to run in publick duties but follow them into their Families and Closets there they halt They appear like those that run in duties of more external communion with God but halt in duties of more secret heart communion with God Nor are they constant that of the Apostle to the Galatians is applicable to them Gal. 5. 7. You did run well who hindered you Heretofore one would have thought them in a great zeal for God but they are grown cold and remiss and are very careless of their conversations these never truly ran though they appeared to others to have ran at least they never ran so as to obtain It is said Isaiah 40. 12. That they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength they shall mount up with wings like the Eagle they shall run and not be weary walk and not faint 3. How many more are there that seem to stand at a stay We cannot say they halt that they are not uniform or not constant they are not to be accused of any notorious lapses or goings backward but alas they are come yet but to a little pitch in religion their knowledge of the things of God is but little that of the Apostle Heb. 5. 12. is applicable to them Whereas for the time they might have been teachers of others they had need be themselves taught the first principles of Religioṅ and must be spoken to as Babes in Christ such as had need of milk and not of strong meat and truly this is much the fault of good People they do not grow in the knowledge of Christ we see something of heat in them in whom we want a great deal of light Others seem to be increased in light but to be decayed in heat and warmth for God sure we are we see a great decay of religion amongst Christians or at least but a small improvement they have in profession seem'd to be such as have walk'd with God a long time we do not see them running yet It is true some plants grow downward in the root when they do not grow upward into the air so as their growth is not so sensible and difcernable So it is possible there may be some such Christians who though their proficiency may not so much appear in their outward performances which requires a growth in gifts and parts yet they may be grown more in faith and love and hatred of sin and resolution for God c. and this is a good running in Grace they grow best who grow in the root not those who improve most in leaves and more exterior branches of Christian profession 2. If Christians cannot satisfy themselves that they run in any sense it would be enquired from whence they are hindered whether from some cause from within or from without 1. A man may be hindered in his bodily running by some inward obstructions bodily decay or weakness this must be cured or purged out Christians ought to search whether they have no secret lust no love to the world no greedy desire to be rich nothing of sensuality which weakens their Souls and keeps them from this running after Christ 2. As a man may be kept from running from some external cause So may a Christian also be hindered in his spiritual race from some ill company with which he is linked from some impressions of his grand adversary the Devil From the withdrawings of Divine Grace those measures of it I mean which are necessary to a Christians running though not to the upholding of the spiritual life If a Christian be hindred from such ill company as he cannot avoid or from some temptations of Sathan or from such divine desertions he is the object of our pity but not to be hastily censured or condemned but in the mean time he ought to lie under convictions of his duty to run though it be his misery that at present he cannot run Secondly We may from hence learn one great reason Why many move not at all after Gȯd and also of that uneven pace which is discernable even in the best of God's People The greater part of the World moveth not after Christ at all One Man runs after his sensual satisfactions anoher after sensible enjȯyments making hast to be rich few after Christ● What is the reason The Scripture layeth the fault upon the immediate proximate cause that is Man 's perverse will he will not come to Christ that he might live but there is an higher cause for no more would any other Soul have done if the Lord had not drawn it and made it partaker of his powerful special Grace had it pleased the Lord to have done as much for those other Souls they would have come they would have run likewise But you will say then mens Damnation is from God and is not caused so much from their not running as from God's not drawing I have before spoken to this Objection but it comes again a cross me I will add but a word or two or rather repeat what I have already said in the case The Objection were indeed considerable if 1. God did not in some degree draw every Soul to whom the Gospel is preached 2. If the Sinner did to his utmost obey those drawings and God yet denied his further and more effectual Grace But as I have before shewed you there is no Soul that liveth under the preaching of the Gospel but is drawn drawn by Exhortations Arguments Promises of reward c. the proper Cords of a Man Nay there are none amongst the Heathens but are drawn by the Cords of common gracious Providence God saith the Apostle leaveth not them without witness Now though none of these Cords are sufficient to draw the Soul home to Christ yet they are sufficient with that power which is left in the will of Man to ingage him to many acts of Reformation and to the performance of many acts of moral discipline yea and of Religion too that part of it which lyeth in Bodily exercise if men will not do what they have a power to do how shall their destruction be from God for denying them his special grace Especially when we say That although the good use of common Grace meriteth nothing at the hand of God yet God doth never deny his special Grace but where common Grace is first wilfully abused and thus the destruction of Sinners lyeth at their own Doors not because that if they would they might repent believe and turn to God but because that if they would they might make such an use of the common Grace of God as in the use of it God would not be wanting to them in the giving them that further power to Spiritual acts which they have not of themselves But
more strict and close walking with God Let this ingage us to perfect holivess in the fear of the Lord. Study therefore the closest degrees of fellowship and communion with God the strictest course of an holy conversation There is a great deal of difference even in good mens communion with God some are more upon the mountwith God then others are more in holy meditation and contemplation more in secret duties more in prayer more in watchfulness more warm and zealous for God David had many worthies but he had a first three to which the others did not come up though they did worthily God hath many Souls that he loveth that are dear and precious in his Eyes but he hath also his first threes some that excel and out-run others these are they that have most of Gods Ear for tho the first grace be not given because men keep his Commandments yet further grace the manifestations and signal tokens of Divine love are given out according to the promise Jo. 14. 21. as men love and keep the Commandments of God you therefore that would excel in the favour of God that would have Gods ear fully and presently open to your supplications study to excel in holiness Doth a poor Courtier in the Courts of Earthly Princes bless himself in having the Ear of his Prince that if he hath a Petition to put up unto his Prince he can go immediately into his presence and have his Petition presently signed whereas the Petitions of others are rejected or at least deferred so as he is constrained to wait months or years And is this no priviledge no happiness at all that a poor Soul can immediately go unto the Lord of Heaven and Earth to him who is the Fountain of all grace and goodness and if he wants any thing freely present his Petition to him and have it signed presently not let the Lord go until he hath blessed him when as a wicked man tho he maketh many prayers yet is not heard yea those that may have some interest in God yet walking more loosely and more imperfectly may cry a long time and yet not be answered if we had nothing more then this to commend to us holiness in all manner of conversation and the strictest degrees of walking with God yet this certainly should be enough I shall add but one word more in application of this discourse I put into the Proposition the term sometimes God doth not alwaies but sometimes give in a quick answer to his peoples prayers Let not the people of God therefore think it strange if they have not presently an answer to their prayers God is not alwaies alike quick in his returns to the prayers of his people He always heareth them he will be certain to answer them but he is not alwaies equally quick in the answer of them This is many times the trouble of Souls that belong to God it was Davids trouble expressed Psal 22. 2 3. It was Asaphs trouble though God did at last hear him as you read v. 1. yet he had first spake as in v. 7. 8 9. Will the Lord cast off for ever and will he be favourable no more Is his mercy clean gone for ever Doth his promise fail for evermore Hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies yet because the not hearing of prayers is threatned as a judgment and punishment upon wicked men and mentioned in holy writ as the reward of mens regarding iniquity in their hearts This often causeth a great deal of trouble in the Spirits of Gods People Let me therefore shut up this discourse in advising alittle what that man or woman should do that lieth at least under some apprehensions that God doth not hear or hath not heard their prayers they cry in the day time and are not silent in the night season yet God heareth not 1. In the first place Let such a Christian examine whether it be not his own mistake Thou thinkest God hath not heard nor answered thy prayers art thou not in a mistake All answers of prayers are not discernable to our sense It may be God hath answered thee by denying thee the particular thing that thou askedst of him thus he answered Paul by denying him as to the thing he asked which was the taking the thorn out of his flesh He better knoweth what we have need of then we our selves know it the general desire of thy Soul was for some good thou didst therefore desire health riches c. because thou didst apprehend them suitable and convenient and so good for thee God who knoweth thy Soul the frame and temper of it he seeth that these things would be for thy hurt he therefore with-holdeth them and so in not answering answereth thee in not answering thy particular request he doth answer the general desire of thy Soul and only correcteth thy ignorance in thy request 2. You have heard that God sometimes answereth by giving though not the thing yet the value of the thing which thou askest i. e. that which is every way as sutable and convenient and as profitable for thee as that which thou didst desire Hath not God according to thy prayer removed thy affliction yet hath he supported thee under it hath he filled thee with inward consolations hath he told thee as he did Paul that his grace should be sufficient for thee Dost thou call this no answer God answers the prayer of that Soul to whom he giveth the full value of the thing it asketh though he doth not give the thing itself 2. If thou canst not find that God hath answered thee neither in kind nor in value Review thy prayer and see if thou canst not find some failure in that for which God with-holds his answer I suppose thee a person reconciled to God through the blood of Christ other Souls either pray not at all or if at all they make a meer formality of the duty and put up prayers as Children shoot arrows never regarding whither they flie or what becometh of them but even in a good mans prayer there may be such failures as may give God a just cause to with-hold an answer without any breach of Gods truth or faithfulness thou mayest not have prayed in faith but too much doubting thou mayest have prayed for something which thy wise Father saw was not good for thee or at least not good for thee under some present circumstances under which thou art if thou findest any thing of this nature thy work is to correct thy prayers if thou wouldst receive an answer 3. If thou dost not find this if thou canst not charge thy want of an answer upon some defect or failure in thy prayers nor yet find that God hath answered thee either giving thee the thing which thou didst ask of him or the value of it in a quiet and contented frame of Spirit in the want of it or in the supportations or consolations of
dependeth upon the will of God He sheweth mercy where he will shew mercy Thus God is said to be present where he sheweth mercy and kindness and to be absent where he with-holdeth his acts of kindness Thus the Saints in Heaven are said to be ever with the Lord in Heaven because they shall be ever under the fullest manifestations of his glory and goodness and the damned are said to depart from God because they are never like more to see him or feel him in any manifestations of his mercy and goodness the shewing of mercy and goodness is so natural to God so much his proper work and delight that he is said to be wholly absent from them to whom he will never more shew kindness and mercy So as to this life God is said to be present with a people when he sheweth them goodness and mercy to be departed and to be absent from them when he with-holdeth from them such dispensations as they have formerly enjoyed and are suited and proper to their wants or desires Now these mercies or good things being such as are suited to the necessities of our bodies here in this life or of our Souls the first of which we usually call the good things of common providence The latter the good things of special grace God is said to be present with or absent from his people with respect to the one or to the other with respect to the good things of common providence God is present with a people when he goeth forth with their Armies gives them peace and plenty success in business prosperity in their tradings and commerce and on the other side he is said to be absent from them and to be departed from them when he goeth not forth with their Armies but makes them to fall before their enemies when he sends amongst them famine and pestilence c. Thus as to particular persons as God is said to be present with persons when he upholdeth their Souls in life their bodies in health when he blesseth them in their businesses and relations and maketh the works of their hands to prosper so he is said to have forsaken them and to be departed from them when he leaves them to sicknesses blasts them in their Estates c. thus Gods presence and being with his people his absence forsaking of and departing from a people or person are often taken in holy writ Thus God may be present with the very worst of men thus he may be absent and depart from the very best of his people But then there is a presence of God with men and women with respect to the good things of special grace Now these things again are such as are either absolutely necessary to salvation Or 2. Such influences as though they be not absolutely necessary to the salvation of the Soul yet do highly accommodate the Soul in its way to Heaven Of the first sort are the graces of justification and of Regeneration Sanctification without these the Soul can never enter into the Kingdom as to these therefore God is always present with never absent from the Souls of any whom he hath chosen and called out of darkness into light in that sense the promise doth and ever shall hold true He will never leave his people nor forsakethem But now there are other influences of grace exceeding pleasant of high advantage accomodation to the Soul in its way to Heaven such are further degrees of strength and ability further freedom l●fe and activity and chearfulne●s in the service of God p●ace of conscience and joy in the Holy Ghost these are not absolutely necessary unto eternal life and salvation nor to the upholding of spiritual life in the Soul the want of them is only afflictive to the Soul and incumbers it in its spiritual life without a total destruction of it as to these God giveth more or less to the Souls of his people and to the same Souls more or less at one time then at another and so is said to be present or absent from them according to the greater or lesser degrees of these influences which he vouchsafeth unto them and those Souls may be said to be brought into the Lords Chambers to whom he vouchsafeth greater degrees of these gracious influences and those Souls may be said to be under desertions forsaken of God to whom the Lord denieth such degrees of these influences as either themselves have before enjoyed or others do enjoy As to these God is very various in his dispensations they being such dispensations as God upon the covenant of grace is left at liberty to dispense out to the Souls of his people or to with-hold from them according to his own good pleasure and wisdom and which accordingly he doth dispense out in pursute of the design of his own glory and as according to his infinite knowledge and wisdom he seeth will be most for the good of his people when God dispenseth out more of these he is said to be more present with the Souls of his people when he more with-holdeth them he is said to be absent not that at any time he is wholly absent from the Souls of his people as to his gracious presence for without that they were able to do nothing the seed of God abiding in the Soul must be upheld in its life and cherished by the influence of the Sun of righteousness upon the Soul but as God though he be alwaies present in the world by his essential presence yet doth not alwaies shew forth his power in upholding and preserving this or that part of it no not the same parts of it which is the reason of that sickness and mortality with which some parts of it are affected more than others and the same parts of it are affected at some times more than others So as to spiritual influences though he alwaies vouchsafeth such a presence of his gracious influences as shall keep up spiritual life in the Soul yet for further gradual influences the want of which is yet consistent with spiritual life in the Soul the Lord granteth or with holdeth them according to his own will guided by his infinite wisdom with respect to the great ends of his own glory and his peoples good And the Lords withdrawings of this nature are the cause of all the Souls sickness and spiritual distempers upon this are the grievous complaints of the people of God of the strength of their corruptions the violence of temptations their deadness and inactivity to in the operations of the spiritual llfe their heaviness sadness and want of comfort When the Lord granteth out to any of the Souls of his people more of these influences then he may be said to bring them into his Chambers when they find more internal strength to the performance of their duties that their meditation of God is more sweet to them they can believe with less doubting pray with more faith more fervour less distraction
otherwise the object of their joy then as it was an evidence of Gods favour It is a great piece of the Spiritual mans art to rejoice in God while he rejoiceth in the creature to make Christ the gladness of his joy as the Psalmist expresseth it now this motion of a pious Soul will appear to be natural supposing him to be first enlightned to discern and to be fully persuaded that the love of Christ to the Soul is the greatest good the rational Soul is capable of this will appear to you if you will but consider these three or four things 1. That the presence and e●joyment of some good of which the Soul stands in need and in the pursuit of which it is is the true and natural cause of the motion of that affection which we call joy This is evident both to sense and reason we rejoice not in evil but in good not in an absent but in a present good in the sense and manifestation and apprehension of it 2. That the loves of God and Jesus Christ are the greatest goods in the world and therefore the presence and sensible manifestations of them are the enjoyments and manifestations of the supreme good The very light of nature shewed the Heathen that the happiness of man lay in his union with the greatest good thus far they were agreed by their common reason though they could not so well agree what that chief good was nothing hindred them from agreeing this truth but their want of true knowledge of God and Christ and of the possibility of a poor creatures having an union with him or any kind of enjoyment of him or understanding the need their Souls stood of the loves of Christ for agreeing that the happiness of man lay in an union with the supreme good they wanted but the revelation we have of mans wants and the possibility of this blessed union with and fruition of God but they must have agreed this truth 3. It is but natural to the Soul to rejoice more in the obtaining of a greater good then in the obtaining of what is lesser and to rejoice most in a good most comprehensive of other particular goods though it wanteth those particular good things Who is there who doth not naturally more rejoice in the getting of five hundred pounds than of five because the five hundred pound is a greater good then five who doth not more rejoice in a great stock of mony by him then in a great quantity of Bread or a great Wardrobe of Cloaths the reason is because Mony is comprehensive of these he that hath Mony can buy Bread and Cloths 4 Lastly It is but natural to us to rejoyce in nothing which we apprehend incompetent with that good wherein our chief happiness doth lie Nor in the having of any thing which we enjoy whiles we want that which we look at most of all Rachel was a good Woman Jacob was her Husband to whom she was exceeding dear he had a plentiful estate 't is hard to say what good she wanted save Children only that blessing her heart was upon Jacob was nothing his estate nothing to her she goes to her Husband and cries Give me Children or else I die Now admit a believing Soul to be firmly persuaded that it must live for ever either in eternal happiness or in eternal misery and again to be persuaded That it can never live in eternal happiness without an union with Christ without his love manifested to it in the pardon of its sins and the imputation of his righteousness admit the Soul to be fired in the pursuit of these things as its chief good how is it possible that it should rejoice in any thing incompetent with it or that it should rejoice in any thing with an equal joy as it rejoiceth in this Hence it followeth that Christ must be the singular object of the believing Souls joy 1. Because it is impossible the Soul should rejoice in what is incompetent with the sruition and enjoyment of what it rightly judgeth its chief good Such are all sensual prohibited satisfactions 2. Because it is impossible it should rejoice in what it judgeth a lesser good more then in what it judgeth a greater and transcendent to it 3. Because it knoweth Christ and his loves are comprehensive of all other good for if he hath given us Christ saith the Apostle shall he not also with him give us all things Thus I have opened and shewed you the reason of the Proposition why the Soul rejoyceth in Christ I added and in the manifestations of his love particularly in hearing and answering its prayers I shall give you some reasons of that and then apply the whole discourse But c. Sermon XXVIII Cant. 1. 4. We will be glad and rejoice in thee I Am yet handling the Proposition at first laid down I shewed you the last day how Christ is the singular object of the Spouses joy I added then and the manifestations of his love especially in hearing and answering our prayers Indeed Christ is no otherwise the object of our joy then in the manifestations of his love All joy requireth some sensible manifestation or experience The personal excellencies of Christ make him the object of our love whom saith the Apostle having not seen yet we love Love asks for nothing but amiableness in its object no more doth desire which is the first born of love but joy requires propriety and union Christ manifested to the Soul can alone be the object of joy but I added especially in hearing and answering Prayer that was the case here the Spouse had prayed draw me and we will run after thee she presently triumpheth in the hearing of her Prayers and then addeth we will be glad and rejoice in thee I might have also added prayers put up particularly for spiritual mercies We shall all along in Scripture find this made a great matter of joy in the hearts of Gods people take the instances of Hannah and David Hannah had been 1 Sam. 1. praying unto God for a Child the Lord answered see how she rejoiceth 1 Sam. 2. 1. Hannah prayed and said My heart rejoiceth in the Lord mine Horn is exalted in the Lord my mouth is inlarged over mine Enemies because I rejoice in thy salvation Concerning David we have many instances Psal 31. 21. Blessed be the Lord for he hath shewed me his marvellous kindness in a strong City v. 22. Thou heardst the voice of my supplication when I cried unto thee Psal 3. 4. I cried unto the Lord with my voice and he heard me from his holy place in this he rejoiceth and triumpheth v. 6 8. Psal 6. 8. The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping the Lord hath heard my supplication he will receive my prayer So again Psal 18. 6. again Psal 28. 6. Blessed be the Lord because he hath heard the voice of my supplications so Psal 116. 1. But there needeth no Scripture in the
Heresies So as we are not to wonder if the things that have been still are whiles the state of the Church is yet militant we are not indeed to cause them or be the Authors or Abettors of them but neither are we to be discouraged or condemn Churches for them who may be comely though they have something of this blackness thus caused I shall shut up this discourse with a few words of Exhortation 1. To all such as own themselves Christians and glory in the name of the Sons and Daughters of the Church That they would answer that name and relation and not be a cause of the Spouses blackness or appearing blackness There are two ways by which we may be so 1. By a loose and scandalous conversation 2. By being angry with our Brethren By the first we make the Spouse black By the second we cause her to be reproached and called and counted black 1. Take heed of a loose and scandalous conversation This makes you spots in the Assemblies of Christians and declares you to be but presumptive Members Can a man be a Member of Christ and a Member of a Harlot Christs Companion and a Pot companion A Disciple of Christ who hath commanded us not to swear falsly idly or prophanely and yet being a common Swearer and Curter and Blasphemer Only let your conversation saith the Apostle he as becometh the Gospel of Christ Loose livers are the blots of any Church the Church is a body of called ones now you are not called to uncleanness or profaneness but unto purity and holiness It is for your sake that the name of Christ and the body of Christ is evil spoken of Consider that though it be the way of God to denominate his Church a parte meliori from the better part of it and therefore he calls the Church those that are called and sanctified in Christ Jesus though they all be not so that are Members of the visible Church yet it is the way of the World out of their hatred both to Christ and all that have relation to him to denominate them a parte deteriori from the worser part and to call all Professors of Religion by the name that belongeth only to the worser part of them But this is not so proper an application of this Proposition which speaks of the anger of false Brethren as the cause of the Spouses blackness 2. Therefore let me speak to you whose corruptions will not allow you to be so strict in your walking with God as others are whether in matters of Worship or your more ordinary conversation yet not to be angry with those who desire to walk more closely with God then you think needful and in some things dare not give themselves that liberty which you dare allow your selves I will offer three things to your consideration which may help you to abate your wrath 1. Consider first How little reason there is for you to be offended You all profess to be going the same journey aiming at the same end you all profess to be going towards the new Hierusalem Your dispute is only about the nearest way you are satisfied that this way of worshipping God this course of Religion will bring you to your journies end others cannot be so satisfied but take a straiter way what reason is there here for thy wrath who thinkest a broader will bring thee as well to thy Journies end how doth his walking more strictly prejudice thee Thou thinkest thou doest enough in the Service of God another thinks he can never do too much never do enough and therefore he heareth more and readeth more and prayeth oftner wherein art thou hereby prejudiced Hast thou not rather cause to bless God for the good example of others and to examine thy own ways and why another should not take up with those measures in duty with which another cannot be satisfied Thou thinkest that in the Worship of God thou mayest be guided and limited by the precepts and practices and traditions of other men others considering that it is but reasonable Worship being an Homage which the Soul payeth to God that God should prescribe his own Homage and considering that God hath declared himself to be a jealous God and affixed the declaration of this his jealousy to the second Commandment which concerneth his external Worship and that in the whole course of Scripture the revelations of Gods wrath appear more against sins relating to the Worship of God then any other sins they dare not in the matters of Divine Worship deviate from the Divine Rule wherein art thou by this prejudiced What reason is there for thine anger Surely they walk most safely that finding the Holy Scriptures a perfect rule able to furnish a man to every good work keep close to that and dare not in practice admit any thing but what they find there commanded or practised Thou ownest the Holy Scriptures as thy rule Why art thou offended that another keepeth closer to it then thou dost 2. Consider you are a great cause of the Spouses appearing black She is reproached for the contentious divisions and Schisms that are in it who are the cause of them those that keep to the rule of Gods Word or those that depart from it Surely the whiteness and purity of any Church lieth in its adherence to the Divine Rule the more a particular Christian or any society of Christians keep close to the pattern which Christ and his Apostles have set them and to the rule which God hath given them the more pure the more white and comely they are Their deviation from it is their blackness so are those contentions and divisions which arise in the Church because of those deviations it is a dreadful text 1 Cor. 3. 17. If any man defile the Temple of God him shall God destroy The Apostle is there speaking with reference to the Bodies of Professors which he had called the Temple of God But it is as true concerning the Church of God that is the Temple of God this is destroyed or defiled for the word may be translated by either of these words God saith the Apostle will destroy him who are they that defile the Church and indeed destroy it but those that are the cause of scandals in it either of its being black or of its appearing black unto the World 3. Lastly Let the words of our Saviour sink into your hearts Mat. 18. 7 Woe unto the World because of offences for it must needs be that offences must come but woe to that man by whom the offence ●ometh Luke repeating that passage ch 17. v. 1. addeth v. 2. It were better for him that a milstone were hung about his neck and he cast into the Sea then that he should offend one of these little ones Whoso considereth the Church as the only body of People in the World by whom God is spontaneously glorified and how God hath expressed his favour and love to it must dread the laying
have a command more then another in it to make our addresses to God nor any to which any promise is made nor concerning which it can be said God hath in it more Manifested himself to People seeking him yet there are two sort of places in which we have more advantage then in others for a communion with God 1. Places of Solitude 2. Places where 2 or 3 meet together or a greater number of Gods People so meet to pray or in any manner to Worship God 1. The first give us advantage by freeing us from the noises business and distractions of the World hence you read of Jsaac's going into the field for meditation and our Saviour's going so often up to a mountain for Prayer Mar. 6. 46. Matth. 14. 23. 2. The second gives us advantage as from the promise of God made to the assemblies of his People so from the influence that the Affections of pious Souls in holy duties have one upon another of which it is an hard thing to give an account but it is no more then I believe any good Christian will find upon his or her experience that their hearts are otherwise affected when they are in a society of serious Christians praying to God or performing any acts of Worship then when they are alone Hence it is that you find serious Christians so covetous of opportunities to withdraw into their closets or when they may join with other serious and consciencious Christians in more publick Worship If any shall for the further explication of this notion ask me from whence a more full free and uninterrupted communion with God is to be adjudged and determined I answer shortly I have before told you That all communion speaks a mutual or reciprocal communication of two or more each to other God communicateth himself to the Soul in his influences of grace the Soul communicateth it self to God in the actings and exercises of its gracious habits so as the fulness freedom and more near communion with God is to be judged from several things 1. First from the attention of the Souls thoughts in the duty A Soul hath more or less communion with God in a duty as his thoughts more or less deviate and wander from the thing he is about When there is a meer bodily service performed either by the lips or knee or Eye the duty is but a mere formality the Soul hath no communion with God in it in Praying the man doth not Pray nor in hearing hear nor in singing sing As to this the best of Gods People must cry God be merciful to us sinners so that the degree of perfection attainable in this life as to this thing is but comparative some may have more of this attention then others or more at one time then at another but none is perfect in this thing Only the pious Soul as in other things so in this thing is striving after perfection pressing forward towards the mark and daily humbling himself for his imperfection and flying to Christs intercession and advocation and exercising faith on his more perfect righteousness A second thing wherein a fuller communion with God on the Souls part lyeth is fervency of Spirit this chiefly respecteth the duties of Prayer and Praise The effectual Prayer must be servent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Prayer which setteth the whole Soul on work and while we sing we must make melody in our hearts to the Lord Eph. 5. 19. Prayer is oft times in Scripture expressed under the notion of crying wrestling with God pouring out of the heart before the Lord Psal 142. 2. Psal 62. 8. David calleth this a pressing hard after God Psal 63. 8. some think it is a metaphor from hounds pursuing their game in view 3. A third thing is a Freedom of Spirit This is as I take it that which David calls largeness of heart Psal 119. v 32. I will run the way of thy commandments when thou shalt enlarge my heart There is no good man but findeth his heart more free to duty and in duty at one time then at another there is a straitness of heart which at some times is the great grievance and incumbrance of pious Souls it is caused sometimes from immoderate sorrow sometimes from fear sometimes from one cause sometimes from another but what ever the cause be it certainly abates the Souls communion with God at least its communications of it self to God And by consequence a freedom of Spirit a readiness of heart to duty with a liberty not of tongue onely but of Spirit also for without the latter the former is but hypocrisy advantageth and promoveth the Souls communion with God 4. A fourth thing which maketh the Souls communion with God more full is An ability more strongly to exercise its saith upon God without doubting whether it be in a stronger adherence or more firm persuasion 5. On Gods part the Souls communion is more full when it receiveth from God more influences of grace testifying his acceptance of the Souls addresses unto him or filling it with the sensible manifestations of his love or inabling it more fully to communicate it self unto God that it can be more attent in its thoughts more fervent in Spirit more free to and in its performances or exercise its faith more powerfully and strongly This I conceive to be enough to have spoken in the explication of the Proposition hinting you both wherein this more full and free communion with God is discernable and also what those times or places are where and when it may most ordinarily and probably be obtained which I conceive is the thing which the Spouse in the text expresseth her desire towards and which she begs that her beloved would instruct her as to That this is the desire of every good Christian appeareth 1. From its deprecation of those things which would hinder it and avoiding them so far as it can Those things that hinder it are 1. Intestine lusts and motions to sin Vanity of thoughts c. 2. Diabolical Suggestions Now there are no two things which the pious Soul more deprecateth then these two Worldly distractions Observe David how he bewailed his dwelling in Meshek And having his habitation in the tents of Kedar and how bitterly in three several Psalms he bewails his being banished from Hierusalem Psalm 42. Psal 84. Psal 63. So Psal 120. v. 5. How sadly doth St. Paul bewail his body of death Rom. 7. 24. 2. From its thirstings after times and opportunities of communion with God of which also you have instances in all the Psalms before mentioned Psal 86. 11. He prays for an heart united to fear the Lords name Psal 86. 11. And rejoiceth in a fixed heart Psal 57. 7. Psal 208. v. 1. Nor indeed can it possibly be otherwise as will appear to any Soul that understandeth what communion with God is That which is the object of any rational Souls desire must come under the notion of good and
when the Soul that found in itself a strength before sufficient to grapple with its temptations and to perform the several duties and operations of a Spiritual life hath suffered itself to be overcome with motions and temptations to sin it finds itself weak falls before a temptation fails in its Spiritual duties it cannot believe hope meditate rejoice and delight in God c. Thus it was with Peter that had faith enough to walk upon the Sea at Christs command when he had sinned by too much confidence in himself he falls by the hand of a silly Damsel in the High Priests Hall hence it is oft-times that the liveliness and chearfulness of the Soul in its conversation also fails and it is at a loss where to find its beloved and how to enjoy its desired communion with him 2. Sometimes these dispensations are not so much founded in the Divine Justice and intended as the punishment of guilt in the Soul as in the Divine Wisdom designing to prove and to try his People and to make them to seek more after him Job was thus tried Though Job doubtless had guilt enough of sin to have justified God in such providences yet God himself saith of him Job 2. 3. That there was none like him in the Earth that he was a perfect and an upright man one that feared God and eschewed evil yet had he not been under some divine desertion and withdrawings of grace as well as more external Trials he had never fallen into those extravagant passions in which you find him ch 3 c. 3. On our part this loss and ignorance happeneth divers ways I shall instance in some more principal causes 1. The prevailing of sin and corruption in the Soul The guile of sin alwaies causeth weakness and blindness How weak is thine heart saith the Lord seeing thou dost all these things Zech. 16 30. Weakness is the cause of sin and it is the effe ct of sin it argueth weakness in a Soul to do those things which God hath forbidden and which will certainly end in the harm of the Soul It is a weak thing wilfully to sin against God and weakness is also the effect of sin this is caused from the sour reflections and reverberations of conscience when a man would medirate on God believe and hope joy rejoice and delight in God conscience throws his sin in his face and bringeth his iniquity to remembrance he remembreth God and is troubled he cannot tell how to believe how to hope how to joy and rejoice in God whom he now looketh upon as angry with him for the proof of this though I might fetch enough from Davids Poenitential Psalms yet I need no more then the experience of every good Christian who keepeth any watch upon his own heart and ways I appeal to any of your Souls when you are conscious of any wilful slips and failings in your life can you remember and think of God as at other times Can you believe and hope in his mercy Can you pray with that boldness and courage and confidence doth not shame cover your faces so as you know not how to look upward 2. Diabolical suggestions are another cause what strange and horrid impressions do the best of Gods people find some indeed of more strength and longer continuance then others but there is scarce any who doth not find them at some times and in some degree or other and although if they be mere impressions not consented to by the Soul but abhorred by it they are not the Souls guilt yet they must be the Souls disturbance so as under them the Soul will not know how to uphold and maintain a communion with God as at other times but its communion is broken and interrupted and imperfect though the Devil cannot stain the Soul without its own concurrence yet he can trouble the Soul if God permits him by his mere suggestions and impressions and therefore we had need pray every day Lead us not into temptation The Devil in this case can do as much to a Soul as a clamorous railing fellow can do to disturb our communion with our friends though we hearken not much to him and chide him away yet he can make a noise and disturb our communion 3. Severe outward afflictions may be a cause Though afflictions be not alwaies indications of Divine Wrath for the Apostle tells us that whom he loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every Child whom he receiveth yet oftentimes they are so and whether Gods end be to punish sin or no yet there is no Soul but is conscious of so much daily guilt as gives him cause to suspect they are the punishments of some guilt and I told you before how apprehensions of guilt very ordinarily make the Soul at a loss how to uphold and maintain its wonted communion with God Besides afflictions usually excite passions particularly those of fear and sorrow Both opposite to the exercises of faith and joy and delight in God both distracting the Soul in the sweet meditations of God To this may be added that the Soul in afflictions as it standeth in more need of the divine presence and influence so it is prone to expect more or to think it hath nothing Neither can the Soul under the roilings and prevailings of passion so well discern Christs communications of himself unto it and besides they hinder the Soul in its motions and communications of it self to Christ I am so troubled saith the Psalmist that I cannot Speak The Soul is so troubled that it cannot believe it cannot hope it cannot Pray c. 4. The last cause that I shall assign is distractions caused either from worldly cares and businesses or from some false guides A Soul overwhelmed with businesses and cares of the World will many times find it self at a loss how to maintain its communion with God there is such an opposition betwixt a communion with God and the World the first being wholly a Spiritual thing the other wholly of the Earth earthly that a man overwhelmed in the World will find the maintaining of this communion difficult and be more at a loss to it then another man more free from these incumbrances Besides in the World Christians are subject to distractions from false guides one saying loe Christ is here another saying loe he is there one telling us that the way to have communion with Christ is to cast off duties and ordinances another prescribing an attendance upon them as the onely means of such communion One telling them that there is no other communion with Christ then with Christ mystical having and keeping in the communion of his Church whereas many may do so if we mean the visible Church that have no communion with Christ at all Upon Christs floor there is Chaff as well as Wheat which when Christ cometh with his fan thoroughly to purge his floor shall be cast into unquenchable fire tares as well as wheat which must grow together untill
at Peace with God All that can be said to relieve the Child of God under this complaint to ease him under this burden is this That this misery which befalleth him is but what is common to the very best of men it is a priviledge reserved for the Saints in glory to live in a not interrupted communion with God To be ever with the Lord beholding his face to live in the sense of such a constant communion with Christ as doth afford the Soul a perfect Satisfaction The sublunary Saint is often crying out Tell me O thou whom my Soul loveth where tho u feedest This dispensation indeed will speak thee sensibly miserable and sad but it will not speak thee to have no relation to Christ I shall shut up this discourse with a Word or two of exhortation Pleading with you to do what in you lies to avoid such a state and to keep your selves within the knowledg where Christ feedeth where he makes his flocks to rest at noon 1. Consider first That as the Spiritual life of any Soul lyes in its union and communion with Christ So the comfort of his life lyeth in his sense of this communion and knowledge how at all times and in all conditions to Support and to maintain it Our Saviour tells us that As the branch cannot bring forth fruit unless it abide in the Vine so neither can we except we abide in him John 15. 4. That Soul which hath no communion with Christ is as certainly dead as the body is that hath no communion with the head or the branch that hath no communion with the stock Now it is true Sense is not necessary to Spiritual life We live saith the Apostle by faith not by sight But the comfort of the Soul doth depend upon sense and knowledge it is true as to a Christians comfort not to live and not to know that we live are much the same thing as to its happiness it is not but I say as to his comfort it is What quiet can a Christian have in his breast what Peace in his conscience What joy in the Holy Ghost that feeleth no intercourses is sensible of no inward communion betwixt his Soul and Christ 2. Hence consider Secondly That to the waky Christian there is no greater misery upon the Earth then what ariseth from his apprehensions of his having no communion with Christ All the enjoyments of the World will be nothing of Satisfaction to such a Soul it is an evil Nullis medicabilis herbis I say with a waky soul it will be thus some Souls are in a profound sleep they never think of Eternity never consider their latter end they are ignorant and know not the relation that Christ hath to a State of Eternal happiness that as Eternal life is the gift of God so it is through Christ for that the Father hath given into his hands the Power of Eternal life and he giveth it to whomsoever he pleaseth Now these Souls though they have no fellowship no communion at all yet they have no misery no grief from it But I say to the Soul that is awake to consider the Grave the Eternity to which he is hastening 't is the greatest burden imaginable to lye under apprehensions that his fellowship is not with the Father and with the Son Jesus Christ 3. Thirdly consider that of all evils those lye heaviest and most sadly upon the Soul concerning which the man or woman is conscious that he himself hath been accessary to them and a cause of them Let a good Christian be at loss for his communion with God let the cause of it be what it will he is sad enough but if his heart smites him that he himself hath been the cause of it Oh! insupportable burden of that reflection he cannot bear the thoughts of his destroying his Soul by his own hands of this you may make an easy judgment by considering the frame of your Spirit under such accidents though of a much lighter nature it is sad enough for a man to lose his estate for a Mother to lose her Child but for the man to think that he lost his estate through his own supine negligence or for a Mother to think she hath been the death of her Child These are wounds healed usually with great difficulty So for a Soul to think it hath lost its communion with its dear Lord by its own supine negligence or any voluntary act of its own which it might have avoided This maketh a deep wound in the Soul But will some say what should what can we do to uphold our communion with Christ and to maintain a sense of it Let me here speak two words The first to such as have their beloved in view and do yet injoy desired communion with him 2. To such as have lost this view in order to their recovery of it To the first I say 1. Be much with him whom your Soul loveth What the Prophet said of Gods presence of Providence is as true concerning the presence of God in gracious influences 2. Chron. 15. 2. The Lord is with you while you are with him if you seek him he will be found of you Souls that are much with God seldom lose their sight of him ordinarily the Souls of men and women first withdraw the communications of themselves unto him through levity and wantonness then Christ withdraweth both in justice to punish in them that levity and in wisdom to make them to seek after him Hos 5. 15. I will go and return to my place until they acknowledge their offence and seek my face in their affliction they will seek me early That Soul is seldom or never at a loss to know where Christ feedeth his flocks that keepeth a constant correspondence with him Be much in Prayer especially secret Prayer much in Heavenly meditation and contemplation when the Spouse after her loss Cant. 3. 1 2 had found her beloved I held him saith she and would not let him go How doth the Soul hold Christ so as she will not let him go but by faith and constant and frequent acts of fellowship and communion with him 2. Secondly Take heed of grieving the holy Spirit It is the Apostles Counsel Eph. 4. 30. Grieve not the holy Spirit by which you are sealed to the day of Redemption We maintain our fellowship with Christ by the Spirit That takes of Christs and giveth to us and again it takes of ours and giveth to Christ by the Spirit we Pray by its assistance we exercise faith Love c. Christ by his Spirit communicateth himself to us and we by the Spirit do communicate our Souls to him Take heed therefore you grieve not this Spirit either by any presumptuous sinnings or by quenching its motions or resisting its operations Let every Knock every motion and impulse every impression of the holy Spirit be very valuable to and regardable in the Eyes of your Souls 3. Thirdly Maintain in
see your good works Shew me thy saith by thy works faith James Faith without works is dead It were endless to reckon up the several Texts of Scripture by which God hath directed the Government of our Tongues our Eyes our Ears our Hands our Feet In short the several Precepts for good works are all proofs of this 2. It must be so if we consider what influence the heart and will affections have upon our whole outward man commanding all the outward members out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh from the dictates of the heart the Eye looketh the hand moveth the mouth speaketh the Feet turn this or that way So that if the Tree be good the fruit must be good also the Fig-tree brings not forth thistles nor the Vine thorns A naughty tongue eye hand foot is a certain indication of a corrupt and naughty heart 3. The ●●liever is made conformable to Christ He went up and down doing good finishing the work which his Father had given him to do glorifying his Father on Earth doing his will manifesting his name no guile was found in his mouth no iniquity in his hand No iniquity towards God no unrighteousness towards men 4. See the Patterns of holy men upon Scriptural record Abraham and David all the holy Servants of God you will find their holiness did not lye only in the obedience of their heart but of their whole external converse a strict walking with God in obedience to his will 5. Observe the promises of God they are not onely made to Faith and Love and the more inward habits of the mind but to external acts such as Prayer hearing the Word Sanctification of the Sabbath shewing mercy to the poor doing justly walking righteously 6. The descriptions of holy men also make out this They are described to be men fearing God and eschewing evil walking in the Commandments of God Working righteousness all which expressions signify that a believer must not only be internally holy but externally so also Lastly the end which they serve shews also a necessity of it they are lights to inlighten the World and therefore they must not be hid under bushels They are Salt to season the World and therefore must be exposed to their use their end is to glorify God before men which cannot be without an external as well as an internal holiness thus the first thing appeareth I have passed over these things easy enough to have been extended into a much larger discourse Because it is a point so exceeding obvious and indeed agreed by all men The 2d thing is that holiness is a believers beauty it is so in the Eyes of Christ which is here spoken of Nor is this of any thing more difficult demonstration then the other What is that which we call beauty but an amiable external appearance of a Person arising from a Symmetry of parts a due mixture and Proportion of colours in conformity to some Original Pattern or Idea A Christians Original Pattern is God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ be you holy at your Heavenly Father is holy As I am holy saith the holy Writ What can be a Christians beauty but his conformity to God and that amiableness which ariseth from that All Spiritual beauty is to be measured from the symmetry of the Soul to the divine law That which makes the Soul amiable to God and to all those who are like God This is holiness But I shall sum up all in some few Words of application I shall first observe from hence two or three Corollaries for our instruction then close all with a few words of exhortation Observe then That it is not enough for one that owneth the name of a believer to glory in a good inside There goeth a good outside as well as a good inside to make up a good Christian There are 2 Sorts of hypocrites and I am at loss with my self to determine which is worst The first sort glory in appearance but not in reality The Pharisees were of this Sort they were painted Sepulchers they made clean the outside of the platter of this Sort are men that pretend much to acts of devotion praying fasting hearing and acts of righteousness toward men and perhaps charity but are without any true faith in God or love to God full of malice and envy and cruelty and covetousness these are Pharisaical Hypocrites The 2d are such as will pretend to a good inside but they have a bad outside These men bite and devour their brethren lye and cheat and defraud and oppress neglect duties of Religion c. And yet tell you they have a good heart they have faith in God Love to God c. Thou Hypocrite shew me thy faith by thy works thy pretended Love to God by thy keeping his commandments Truly of the two these are the worst they pretend to holiness but which way will you look for it What notion of holiness have these men taken up Will you look for it in their conscientious constant attendance upon duties of publick Worship there you see their places empty or if they be filled observe their behaviour they are prating or sleeping or sporting or with their Eyes compassing the whole congregation Will you look for it in their private families There it may be you may hear the voice of Cursing or Swearing or reviling but the voice of Praying of reading the Word of those that sing praise unto God is seldom or never heard in their Houses Will you look for their holiness in their behaviour toward men you shall there find neither Justice nor Charity cheating defrauding Oppression cruelty hard-hearted behaviour c. Yet they will tell you they have good hearts Either now these men have Souls not like other mens Souls that have no command of their tongues and hands c. Or else they speak falsely I say these are of all others the Vilest Hypoerites 1. Because they have nothing good the first mentioned do some good things materially good they read fast pray walk justly give alms But these wretches have nothing do nothing at all that is good There is nothing good in their lives and that assureth us there 's nothing good in their hearts 2. These men do much more hurt then others do these are they that cause the name of God to be Bla●●●emed and evil spoken of Brethren be not deceived they are fifty men that you can impose upon but you cannot impose upon that God who searcheth the heart tryeth the reins Let none be deceived by the pretences of these Hypocrites The Spouse of Christ hath beautifull Cheeks and a beautiful Neck as well as a beautiful inside her Cheeks are comely betwixt rows of Jewels She hath a Chain of gold upon her Neck The laws and instructions of her Heavenly Father are an Ornament to her head and a Chain upon her Neck She durst not before men dishonour God Let this be the first
Rom. 7. 4. In me saith God is thy fruit found hence a life of Holiness is called a walking in and after the Spirit Gal. 5. 25. Rom. 8. 1. I live saith the Apostle Galat. 2. 20. but yet not I but Christ liveth in me and again Phil. 4. v. 13. I can do all things through Christ that strengthneth me To every good act there is not required only a first exciting grace and a working grace quickening and determining the will unto the act But a further exciting assisting and cooperating grace Thus that ancient Councel Concil Araus Can. 9. determined As often as we do that which is good God worketh sn us and with us that we may work Hence the Apostle saith of himself 1 Cor. 15. 10. By the grace of God I am that I am and his grace which was bestowed on me was not in vain but I laboured more abundantly then they all yet not I but the grace of God which was with me In every good action of a regenerate Soul The renewed Soul acts and God acts Thus I remember August asserted of Old Some saith he may say Then holy men are acted and do not act Respondeo saith he Immo agis ageris ●unc bene agis si ab eo agaris that is I answer yes thou both actest and also art acted and then thou actest well if thou beest acted by him For the Spirit of God which acteth thee helpeth thee in acting he hath stiled himself thy helper because thou thy self dost something only here is to be observed a double difference 1. The first is the difference between Gods influence upon our natural powers to their natural acts and our Spiritual habits powers as to their Spiritual acts God influenceth our bodily members as to their natural acts Without his influence we could not move nor speak nor do any natural act but how doth he influence us as to them By upholding our natural powers And by keeping off those things which would hinder their natural exercises God hath given unto man a Soul indued with the powers both of the Vegetative Soul in plants and of the Sensitive Soul in brute creatures besides some more noble powers which are proper to the reasonable Soul Now these Souls act from this natural power in them which being upheld in them not hindred by any forraign or intrinsick cause produce the acts that are proper to them This is but an influence of common providence and is common to all men But the influence I am speaking of is an influence of Special grace Not an influence common to men but peculiar to the People of God who have experienced this grace 2. The Second difference I desire you to observe is The difference betwixt Divine influences as to the first and this further grace No man cometh unto the Son unless the Father draweth him In the first grace the Soul is meerly passive that change is wrought by working grace this by cooperative and assisting grace the renewed Soul moves and acts from it self It is only quickened and assisted by Divine influences To speak therefore clearly and distinctly we say God hath a double influence upon our wills as to any good actions done by us 1. He influenceth our wills as the cause Exciting our wills to the Acts. Our wills are the cause of all good actions done by us the proximate cause we first will the thing which we do sed ille facit ut velimus it is he who influenceth our wills and makes us willing and then excites our wills 2. God together with our wills as the proximate cause hath an influence upon the effect It is universally granted by sober men That there is a concurse of Divine providence to the production of every effect nor doth this concurse of the first cause hinder the liberty of the Second Cause No Natural agent produceth any effect without a concurse of the Divine power and a simultaneous motion of the Divine power Some will have this influence of God upon us as to Spiritual acts to be no more then an ordinary concurrence of Providence But I think the contrary will appear to every one who shall diligently consider two things 1. The imperfect state of the will of man even after regeneration Before Regeneration man hath servum arbitriun A meer servile will Augustine tells us that in the state of Innocency mans happiness lay in a posse non peccare a power which he had in that state if he would not to sin against God The happiness of the state of the Souls in glory will lie in a non posse peccare in this that they shall have no power more to sin They shall be like the Angels in Heaven confirmed in a state of purity and holiness The state of a Man or Woman not regenerated is that he cannot but sin Now though the Regeneratedman be by regeneration freed from the servitude of the last mentioned state yet it is much short either of the more perfect state of the will of the glorified Saints or of the state of Adam in innocency we cannot say that their will is so stated through Grace that they have a power not to sin Even the best of men sinneth 7 times a day and who can tell how oft he offendeth We know but in part and so may sin through ignorance and oft times do so We are men full of passions and live in a World that is full of temptations and are often over-born Our will is indeed manumised and to will is present with us but our freedom is imperfect 2. Yea I cannot understand but that we should have need of a Divine influence exciting and assisting us to our Spiritual acts supposing that upon our regeneration we had been perfectly restored unto that indifferency in which Adam was created For admit the will of man indifferently free to move to good or evil what but the Influence of Divine Grace should incline and determine it rather to that which is good than to that which is evil But that which makes it much stronger is the consideration that we are not restored to such a perfect liberty or indifferency but there is remaining even in the best the body of death passions impetuous passions which strongly Incline us to that which is evil and often prevail against us David complaineth That iniquities prevailed against him Paul complained That he was sometimes brought into captivity to the Law of his Members Besides if we could imagine that the will of man though renewed could be the first Principle of any spiritual action it must be a First Cause and man would be a God to himself But it may be some will say though it be true that the will of man cannot move it self to a Spiritual Act but it must have a first mover yet God's Influence upon it may be no more than the ordinary concurse of his Providence such as he allows to all his creatures upholding their Beings
under further Metaphors expressing her sense of her Saviours company And she doth it in the Text 1. By an elegant Metaphor comparing her beloved to a bundle of Myrrh 2. By an affectionatt resolution to give up her self to him for an intertaintment He shall stay or he shall lodge all night betwixt my breasts I find Interpreters exceedingly well agreed in the rendring of the Heb. words according to their several Languages Only Montanus Pagnine and some others translate the verb He shall stay not he shall lodge all night as we do the word will bear both Let me therefore shortly run over the words My beloved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Septuagint and Arabick my Nephew the difference is slighty for it was usual in those Countries for Lovers to call each other by names of relation as it is not wholly out of use with us So in this Song chap. 8. 1 ch 4 9. The Heb. word in Scripture signifies 3 things 1. In the first and proper signification it signifies a friend a beloved an Vncle or Aunt Lev. 10. 4. the Vncle of Aaron Esth 2. 5. The Vncle of Mordecai and elsewhere it is used to express a friend or beloved not less then 30 times in this Song so also Isa 5. 1. and often to fignify Love it self as in the 2d v. Of this Chap and elsewhere it doth also in Scripture signify a Caldron and a Mandrake But those significations cannot be proper here Whether therefore we translate it My Beloved or My Friend or my Nephew or Kinsman the sense is still the same For My Beloved is that which is understood Is a bundle of Myrrh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Upon a survey of the several Texts of Scripture which make mention of Myrrh and the use of it and a consideration of what learned men say of it I do not think it easy to determine what it was If I mistake not the Scripture makes mention of Myrrh under a threefold Notion 1. Vnder the Notion of a Plant. So in the fourth chap. of this Song v. 14. Thy plants are Myrrh and Aloes and Pliny tells us of such a Plant that groweth in Arabia both wild and in Orchards about five Cubits high and reckons divers kinds of it 2. Under the notion of a Spice or dry perfume Prov. 7. 17. I have perfumed my bed with Myrrh It is reckoned amongst the principal Spices for the holy anointing Oil Exod. 30. 23. Thy garments smell of Myrrh Psal 45. So also Gen. 37. 25. Gen. 43. 11. Though indeed the word there used be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. Under the Notion of an Oil or Gum or wet Perfume Cant. 5. 5. My hands dropped with Myrrh v. 13. His lips like Lillies dropping sweet smelling Myrrh Esth 2. 12. It was one of the Oils with which the Virgins were perfumed There are two other Texts in the Old Testament where there is mention of Myrrh Which may indifferently be understood of it as a Plant or Spice or Gum or Oil Cant. 4. 6. You read of the mountain of Myrrh And Cant. 3. 6. Who is this cometh up perfumed with Myrrh In the New Testament you find it mentioned in three Texts Mat. 2. 11. Where the three wise men offered to Christ Gold Frankincense and Myrrh So Mar. 15. 23. Joh. 19. 39. Where you read of Myrrh used in the burial of our Saviour I am not hard to believe that Myrrh is nothing else then a Plant which might bear the Spice as a fruit And whose Gum was that Oil of Myrrh or liquid Myrrh which we read of to which purpose Pliny tells us that they were wont to slit the rind of it at certain times of the year and from those slits dropped that which the Greks called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doubtless both the plant and fruit and Gum were all exceedingly sweet upon which account the Spouse here compareth Christ to Myrrh Grotius says the plant was good for little but for the smell and only grew in Arabia but Pliny reckons many other Physical qualities it had Nierembergius observes that it grows no where but in very Southern Countries It is granted on all hands that it was a great Enemy to putrefaction which was the cause that the Jews who some think learned it from the Egyptians used it to embalm their dead bodies Certain it is it was an exceeding precious commodity for Jacob calls it one of the best things of the land And it was one of the 3 Choice things which the wisemen coming from the East brought with them for a present to him whom they looked upon as the King of the Jews Those four things we have learned by this discourse of Myrrh 1. That it was exceeding sweet 2. That it was a great preservative against putresaction 3. That it was very medicinal 4. That it was exceeding pretious But the Spouse compares her beloved here not to Myrrh only but to a bundle of Myrrh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some question whether it were not properly translated a box of Myrrh supposing the Myrrh a Gum or a bag of Myrrh Supposing it a spice Others think a bundle or posy is well enough understanding it of the herb The truth is any of them all is well enough The word comes from the Heb. verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to bind and it properly signifies any heap or quantity of things that are or may be bound up It is translated a bag Hag. 1. 6. Job 13. 17. a bundle you read of the bundle of lives 1 Sam. 25. 29. A bundle of money Gen. 42. 35. Gen. 40. 35. Once in Scripture it is translated a stone 2 Sam 17. 35. But it is to be meant of an heap of stones and once Corn Amos 9. 9. But meant of an heap of Corn. Christ is compared to a bundle of Myrrh 1. A bundle of Myrrh is more sweet then a single drop or grain Christ is an heap of sweets 2. Men tye up things in bundles or boxes for their better preservation Christ saith the Spouse is a bundle of Myrrh intimating that she would be very careful to preserve the sweet influences of grace But of this more anon It follows 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To me I do not think this particle is redundant but exclusive Others have no value for my Beloved they have no sense of his sweetness But to me Christ is infinitely sweet a bundle of sweets 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall lie all night or he he shall stay The word in the Heb. signifies two things 1. Either to stay and lodge and spend nights in a place Or 2. To murmur and clamour and make a noise so 't is used Exod. 15. 25. The former must be the sense here and it is not material whether we translate it as in our Translation he shall lodge all night as it is often used in Scripture Gen. 19. 2
it hath any sense of the fire I conclude then that as Christs Ointments are the graces with which he is filled So the savour of these Ointments is nothing else than the souls perception and sense of that Christ by the mediation of the holy Spirit of God breathing his grace and love upon the Souls of his People And this is sufficient to have spoken for the explication of this first phrase It follows 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thy name is as an Ointment poured forth Job speaking of God saith what is his name and what is his Sons name Let us enquire a little concerning the name of Christ in this Text. A name is an appellation given to some person or thing either to express the nature and being of it or to distinguish it from another thing God cannot properly be said to have a name because no term can fully explicate to us his divine essence But yet God is pleased in some little measure to make himself known to us Now whatsoever God thus makes himself known unto us by that is his name More particularly The second Person in the holy Trinity considered as our Mediator and in reference to the great work of mans redemption had several names One expressing the two natures which were united in that Divine Person that was his name Emanuel which signifieth God with us Another expressing the great work which he had to do viz. To save his People from their sins therefore his name was called Jesus A third expressing his designation consecration to his Office thus he was called Messiah and Christ both signifying the same thing Anointed Gregory understands it of the name Christ and the name Messiah so doth Lud. de Ponte Genebrard Lyra and others of the name Jesus But I know no reason why we should dispute so nicely for the particular name when as Christ had several names either expressive of his Divine or Human nature or of his personal capacity as both Natures were united in him or else expressing the vertues and graces of his Person or else relating to one or another or all his sacred Offices and indeed what is said in the Text is true concerning every name of Christ as well as another Each of his names is As an Ointment poured forth And besides I see a more comprehensive interpretation of the term equally true with this Thy name Whatsoever thou art made known by unto us thy word ordinances grace gospel it is all like Oil poured forth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word translated poured forth cometh from the Hebrew Radix 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath emptied or exhausted Christs name is compared to Oil to Oil emptied poured out Oyl in the Box is sweet very sweet it maketh the Box sweet but it casts not forth its smell abroad nor is the sweetness of it so exceeding great and overcoming as when it is poured forth It is said of the Ointment with which Mary anointed our Lord that when she brake the Box the savour of it filled the room Nor is it said thy name is as an Ointment dropped out but as an Ointment poured forth as Ointment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 emptied or exhausted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Septuagint version Take the Lord Jesus Christ as he is one with the Father God over all blessed for ever so he is the Fountain and Original of Grace full of good Ointments But now look upon him as our Mediator in which notion the names of Jesus Christ Messias Emanuel c. belong unto him so he is as Oil poured forth The grace of the hypostatical union is poured out upon him he is God with us The fulness of the God-Head dwelleth in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily The Revelation of Christ to the world as the Saviour of the Sons of Men is as an Ointment poured forth which smells sweet in the Nostrils of all the world and filleth the whole Creation with a sweet savour The more special revelation of the Lord Jesus Christ unto the particular souls of the Saints is as an Ointment poured forth Christ apprehended and applyed by faith unto the soul is exceeding sweet to it To you that believe saith the Apostle he is precious It followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Therefore do the Virgins love thee Amongst men the term Virgin signifies one who hath not lain with Man neither as a Wife nor as a Strumpet By a metaphor the Servants of God in Scripture are called Virgins because it is their duty and will be their care to keep themselves unspotted from the world from all filthiness both of Flesh and Spirit as the Apostle speaketh the 144000 glorified Saints mentioned Rev. 14. 4. are called Virgins The professors of the Gospel at large are so called in the parable Mat. 25. of which though as to the matter of their own salvation some were wise some soolish yet all kept themselves from the Paganish Spiritual Adultery with Devils Stocks and Stones Gods People of Israel anciently was called a Virgin Jer. 31. 4. 13. And Saint Paul professeth it his desire to present the Saints at Corinth as a chast Virgin unto Christ to which purpose he was jealous over them with a godly jealousy 2 Cor. 11. 2. The word here translated virgins cometh from the Heb. root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to be hid and covered either Because the gravity of former times caused Parents to keep their Virgins as it were hidden in their Houses until Marriage Or else because the modesty of those more innocent times allowed not Virgins to go without their Vails as it were hidden from vulgar sight Rebeccah when she came near unto Isaac took a Vail and covered herself which usage continued a long time after especially in publick Assemblies Tertullian hath a peculiar Book de velandis Virginibus concerning the vailing of Virgins where he bitterly inveigheth against those who had broken those bars of modesty and calleth them capita nundinatitia pudorem ostentatitiae Virginitatis what would he have said to the bare Necks and open Breasts of this Age But I told you by Virgins here are meant the true Children of God who are called hidden ones Psal 83. 3. such who being cleansed have neither spot nor wrinkle but are holy and without blemish thus of old Origen and Gregor magnus and more lately Beda with the generality of modern Expositors interpret it Mercer by Virgins seems to understand the Gentiles who had not heard of Christ yet should be also induced to love him upon the report of his Excellencies revealed to them in the preaching of the Gospel but the other Interpretation is proper enough and more generally received to which I shall adhere These Virgins love Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word translated love is ordinarily used and so interpreted it hath a great cognation with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 voluit he hath willed
of all Souls to whom the Gospel is Preached which is very strange for which of us seriously willeth any effect and want no power to effect it and the thing is not effected that an Almighty God should seriously will what he from all eternity knew should never be effected and will that which he hath a power to effect yet never is never shall be effected is a strange piece of Divinity or sense Or else it is faulty 2. By maintaining a greater power in the will of man in its laps●d state than in the will of God which is against all reason and can be owned by none but such as deny God to be omnipotent I have in opening and proving the Doctrine said enough to shew you the vanity of this dream I shall only add a word or two 1. That this pretended willing of God which they affirm to be real and serious and yet inefficacious not producing the effect is incomp●tent with that infinite wisdom and knowledge which must be in him who is the fountain of all knowledge and wisdom Indeed man who hath no knowledge of future contingencies may s●riously will that such a person should be moved exhorted and call'd upon to do such or such a thing upon the doing of which he should have an estate and yet he may be left at perfect liberty whether he will do it or no and so the reward may not be certain but contingent to him But that God who from all Eternity had a certain perfect knowledge who would and who would not believe and could not know it but because he had willed it for the will of God only from Eternity could make that certain which it itself was but cont●ngent I say that this God should seriously will the salvation of all those to whom the Gospel should be Preached and their faith and holiness as a means in order unto it when he from all eternity knew that only some of those to whom the Gospel should be Preached would believe and obey and therefore knew it because he had eternally willed their faith and holiness and salvation I say this is a strange mystery which it will be hard for any thinking men of any degrees of sense or reason to understand 2. Indeed if this Doctrine were true no Soul could be saved at least it were possible that no Soul should be saved Our Lord tells us Joh 6. 44. That no man cometh unto him but he whom the Father draweth and every one as he is learned and taught of the Father cometh unto him So then it is not of him that willeth no● of him that runneth but of the Lord who sheweth mercy and man that is born again is not born again of the will of the Flesh nor of the will of Man of God And it must be said of God He hath begotten us not only he hath treated and intreated us and proposed salvation to us but he hath begotten us influencing renewing changing the heart of the Creature by his power not leaving us to the power of our wills upon his word being p●eached unto us and the arguments of the Gospel used to us I appeal to any whose heart God hath changed whether they think their hearts had ever been turned to God if this had been all God had done for them that is given them his Gospel and by that invited them to turn unto him nor can it be supposed that when an all-knowing all wise God from all Eternity had a certain infallible knowledge who should be eternally saved and of the powers and inclinations of all mens hearts that he should leave the means in order to this salvation so imperfectly willed that it was left possible that by those means none should ever be saved and obtain what he certainly fore knew and therefore fore-know because he had willed it But I have already abundantly shewed you the opposition of these notions to the plain revelations and reason of Scripture It is said that God opened the heart of Lydia Acts 16. 14. And certainly if man had such a power being unregenerate to repent and believe upon the proposal of the Gospel and pressing the arguments of it supposing the common work of the Spirit always attending the Gospel he would much more have a power being converted to walk with God to run after him for the Soul not changed is not only impotent but unwilling and stubborn when converted it is willing though ●e●k yet not so weak as before conversion and according to all reason the Soul which is both stubborn and wholly weak hath more need of a power foreign to its own power which can be no other than the power of God then that Soul which is now made willing and only weak and not so weak as the inconverted Soul is but this is enough to shew you the vanity of these principles which yet obtain so much in the world 2. The Papists say the same thing that the others speak they will grant That man hath no power to spiritual things without the assistance of Divine Grace he cannot believe say they the mysteries of Divine Salvation this Bellarmine proves from Joh. 6. 4. where he desires his Reader to observe that it is not no man doth but no man can come to the Son except the Father draweth him Nay he tells us that without the special grace of God to help him man cannot love God nor prepare himself for Grace nor will any thing which tends to Salvation o● Godliness But then they tell us 1. That this Grace of God is not the sole agent That the Soul of man as to the first grace is no meerly p●ssive but also active God indeed calleth and by special grace excites and his grace aideth the will of man in believing He falls heavily upon Luther Calvin and Chemnitius for saying that the Soul in the reception of the first grace is meerly passive Pelagians and Arminians ascribe to the will of Man the whole power of closing with the promise by faith being once offered in the preaching of the Gospel Papists seem to divide Gods glory betwixt him and the will of man God say they must send his Grace but his Grace is not that alone which produceth the effect for the power of mans will though infeebled by the Fall is yet alive and God accommodating the Soul with the aid and assistance of his Grace the Soul joins with it and this they assign for the reason why one heart is changed and not another for God proposeth his special grace to all where by the way you may take notice that they call special Grace what we call common because administred to all because free will works better in him that is converted than in the other thus still Arminians and they are agreed that the fountain of all Spiritual and Eternal good is in mans self that man makes himself to differ and so hath wherein to glory and that man is the first
cause of any true Spiritual saving motion and so inequal vertues are as I said before ascribed to Souls of the same kind under the same circumstances and endowed with the same rational faculties Secondly They also agree That the operations of Divine Grace are no other than what may by the power of mans will be not only opposed but finally resisted so as they shall produce no effect and that drawing grace is no more then an intreating and moral suasion no such act of power as we would have it to be man comes to Christ alone he is not drawn Therein they agree with the other 3. Finally they say the converted Soul can of itself do acts of righteousness obey the Commandments of God and ordinarily needs no quickning only assisting Grace This is not to be allowed in the Latitude though there be something of truth in it there is certainly a greater power and ability to spiritual good in the converted then in the unregenerate and unconverted Soul we dare not say the Soul converted moves not acts not but as acted and is also in that state meerly passive God hath now infused a principle of life into it his Spirit dwelleth in it But we say that even the justified Soul still stands in need of a constant divine influx and that in a powerful degree and Bellarmine himself grants that as the Soul hath at all times need of Gods assisting exciting and protecting grace for Christ saith without me you can do nothing so in some hard cases and in the performance of some hard difficult duties he hath need of powerful influences of Grace So as the Jesuite himselfdurst not ascribe so much to the power of mans will though altered by grace as those bold men amongst our selves who will have man have a power not only in ordinary cases but to resist the strongest temptations It is a sign they neither ever knew what a strong temptation meant Nor what it is to resist and evercome them But this is enough to shew you the vanity of these Doctrines Secondly My discourse on this proposition will let all of us see the exceeding solly of resisting and vexing or grieving or quenching the holy Spirit of God at any time in its operations or motions you meet in Scripture with all these terms expressing the opposition which vain man maketh to the holy Spirit of God two of them resisting and vexing are applied to men wicked and unregenerate Acts 7. 51. You do always resist the Holy Ghost and thus you read of vexing the Spirit The Apostle writes to the Thessalonians not to quench the Spirit 1 Thes 5. 19. and to the Ephesians Eph. 4. 30. not to grieve it As the man that is unregenerate may resist and vex so those that are renewed may quench and grieve the Holy Spirit The Proposition which I have opened to you shewing you the necessity of our being drawn by this Holy Spirit if we ever come to Christ or being come if we hold on in our way and run after him and walk with him justifies those reproofs and exhortations of the Apostles evincing it to be the greatest folly imaginable voluntarily to do any such acts by which this blessed Spirit should be resisted vexed quenched or grieved 1. This may be done by persons whose hearts are not yet changed they sit under the ministration of the Gospel which is the ministration of the Spirit and a glorious ministration and besides the suasion of the potent arguments contained in it set on by all the art of the Ministers of Christ gifted by God for this end and authorized by God to this work there is hardly any of them but find some inward impressions of the Holy Spirit shewing them a necessity of believing and obeying the Gospel if they would ever obtain Eternal life this they cannot deny but cannot through the prevalency of their passions above their reason obtain of themselves to hearken to these admonitions and yield obedience to these impressions but after the prickings of their lusts they must go they cannot deny themselves in their pleasures or profits be they never such forbidden fruit yet on the other side possibly their consciences bear so hard upon them that they cannot quiet them without promising that they will amend their ways they will turn to God they only beg a little time and cry out with the Sluggard yet a little sleep yet a little slnmber a little folding of the hands to sleep like Trades-men that know they must not spend all their time in their Beds if they do their Families must starve yet their Eyes are heavy and they cry to those that call them It is not time to rise yet an hour or two hence is time enough So these men sitting under the sound of the Gospel will grant you that if they live and die in such courses as at present they walk in their Souls must perish to all Eternity But this they intend not only it is not time yet to awake ou● of sle p a year or two hence is time enough let them have some l●t●s●●ction in the pleasures of youth they will repeat and believe before they die and upon this presumption they at present 〈◊〉 the holv Spirit of God from time to time and v●x i● no● only appearing in the Ministration of the Gospel but in its more common motions and impressions This is what I would shortly shew you the vanity of from the asserted truth of this proposition Two things I would say to these Souls That whatsoever humane action is to be done naturally requireth time and place and that the Earth is the place and this life is the time for such actions for saith Solomon E●●l 9. 10. There is no work no device nor knowledge nor wisdom in the Grave whither thou go●st upon which he exhorts us Whatsoever thy hand f●●d●●h to do do it with all thy might It is only while we are upon the Earth that we are in the way with God whom we have made our adversary and whom we are concerned quickly to agree with when we die we are delivered to the Judge the Spirit returneth to God that gave it When our Dust returns to its Dust Our comp s●um is then dissolved and no action can be the action of the whole man When our bodies come to be covered with Earth our bodies move and act no more In the Grave none repents believeth prayeth or praiseth or any way remembreth God Thou sayest to morrow or within a few years I will amend I will repent how knowest thou in what capacity thou shalt then be what a day or a month or a year will as to thee bring forth The present time alone is thine and but a little of that neither that which as Gerard speaks dicendo praeterit currendo praeterlabitur is gone while thou speakest of it slipt away while thou thinkest of it What talkest thou of to morrow of the next week month year who