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A57982 The tryal & triumph of faith: or, An exposition of the history of Christs dispossessing of the daughter of the woman of Canaan Delivered in sermons; in which are opened, the victory of faith; the condition of those that are tempted; the excellency of Jesus Christ and free-grace; and some speciall grounds and principles of libertinisme and antinomian errors, discovered by Samuel Rutherfurd, professor of divinity in the University of St. Andrews. Published by authority. Rutherford, Samuel, 1600?-1661. 1652 (1652) Wing R2397A; ESTC R203460 278,378 498

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It beleeveth Heaven and worketh Heaven 2. We often go on imagining that we are in a way of back-sliding deserted souls not conscious of the reflect acts of beleeving and longing for Christ think themselves Apostates when they are advancing in their way In great water-works where there be a great multitude of wheels the standing of some five or six is the advancing of the work in other twenty or forty wheels In desertion some wheels are at a stand and move not as often acts of feeling joy self-delight in the actuall beholding of Christ are at a stand and then it s thus I said I am cast out of his sight yet other wheels are moving as 1. Humble and base thoughts of himself 2. Broad and large thoughts of Christ and his grace 3. Hunger and longing for Christ. 4. Self diffidence is much 5. Care and love-sicknesse Saw you him whom my soul loveth is vehement 6. Sense of sin and of wants and spirituall poverty increaseth now 7. Sense of the misery of the combate is much more then before O miserable man that I am c. 8. Believing under hope and against hope is strongest now 9. There 's more tendernesse and humble fear now then before 10. A stronger resolution to entertain Christ more kindly when he shal return again in his fulnesse of presence 11. Sorrow that remembring he said My head is full of dew and my locks with the drops of the night Cant. 5.6 Yet the sleeping soul kept him at the door We are to adore that Dispensation who will have us not stepping one foot to Heaven but upon Grace and upon Graces charges he could make Saints to be sinlesse Angels But what haste We should then not yet being habituated with glory nor confirmed in Heaven think little of Christ. If we be so dependent on Christ we have not ended with all Law directions the Law standeth us yet in good use I mean when Christ hath made us and the Law friends and hath removed the curse and made the Beleever say O how love I thy Law Obj. Can you saith M. Toun separate the directing or commanding power of the Law from the condemning power of the Law can the Law speak to any but to those who are under the Law Is it Law at all if it condemn not Ans. Actuall condemnation may well be separated from the Law as a Lyon is a Lyon and yet being chained cannot actually devour To condemn may well be removed from the Law it could not condemn Adam before sin entred in the world it cannot condemne the Holy Elect and sinlesse Angels yet it had and hath a commanding and obliging power to command and direct both to condemn is accidentall to the Law as the state of sin is accidentall to man 2. The Law may speak by way of direction to Believers but cannot speak to them by way of actuall condemnation because Christ hath removed the curse Obj. 2. Holinesse and walking in the way of holinesse contributeth not one jot to Salvation as causes or as the way thereto Christ hath done that perfectly Ans. I pray you consider three things here 1. The Will of Gad to save yea and to justifie the ungodly 2. Ius the Law right to righteousnesse and salvation 3. Actuall salvation Christs merits are neither cause nor motive nor condition moving God to will to choose or ordain persons for glory this is an act of eternall election to glory which is not from Christs merits nor doth any externall work or condition either good or evill in Iacob or Esau or in the surety Christ move God to such an act of free libertie Libertines are ignorant in so speaking yea faith is no condition cause or motive of such a will 2. Christs merits not faith not holinesse in us must be the cause of our Law-right to righteousnesse and glory Christ his alone gave the price of Redemption for us no Garments were rolled in blood for a patent and right to Heaven but his only his alone trode the Wine-presse of Gods Wrath in those two notions works of holinesse have no footing in the work But 3. as touching actuall salvation the way to it is holinesse without which none can see God It s expresly commanded Be ye holy as I am holy 1 Pet. 1.19 20. and Rom. 6.21 But being now made free from sin and become servants to God ye have your fruit into holinesse and the end life everlasting 2 Pet. 1.10 If ye doe these things ye shall never fall for so an entrance shal be ministred unto you abundantly unto the everlasting Kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Rev. 2.7 To him that overcometh I will give to eat of the Tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradice of God Rev. 3.21 To him that overcometh wil I grant to sit with me in my Throne even as I also overcame and am set downe with my father on his Throne They answer overcoming is by faith But I reply Faith to Libertines is but a believing that Christ hath overcome in their person and place for faith is no more to them a condition or way to salvation then good works for Faith say they is not Christ Christ only is the way to Heaven but this were a vain promise if overcoming were not 1. A duty required of us in time upon the performance whereof we have an entrance made to life eternall 2. If overcoming be but only believing and so an act of the soul only those to whom the promise is made are to do no more but believe Christ hath overcome the persecuting world for them and yield and in profession deny the Faith and accept of conditions of life and so be foyled and yet claim right to the promise contrary to the intent of Christ Rev. 2.13 who commendeth Pergamus for not denying the Faith Now in all this as the walking in the way to a fair Palace to dwell in it in honour and happinesse cannot be the price the ransome the sum given to buy right to that place and to the honour and happinesse thereof so neither can our walking in the way to glory bee the price of glory Obj. 3. But we are saved by Christs merits before we can do any good works then good works cometh not to perfect and make up salvation Ans. So are we in regard of right of purchase saved before we beleeve yet that hindereth not but faith is a way to salvation 2. This concludeth that good works are no cause or way or meane of obtaining the right jus of purchase to Redemption which we yeeld but not that we are actually saved without walking in the way called the way of holines which the uncleane shall not passe over Esa. 35.8 Obj. 4. We are to do good works from the principle of the love of Christ constraining us not from the Law commanding or directing us Ans. 1. These are no way contrary the
do act in Faith a float especially because a strong faith is a great vessel and therefore more of Christs tide is required for weighing Anchor and lancing forth The wings of a Sparrow should not raise an Eagle off the earth the limbs of a Pismire could not suit with a Horse or an Eliphant there is need of a strong winged soul to believe especially against hope 4. To believe Christ when midnight speaketh blacknesse of wrath requireth eyes and light of miracles yea it s a greater work then the very miracles of Christ Iohn 14.12 But especially when Christ is absent it s with the soul as with a clock in which the wheels are broken the passes or weights are fallen down Obj. 1. But I aim and endeavour to believe but can do nothing and without his grace my violence to heaven is without fruit Ans. 1. It s true the Semipelagians halfing of the work of believing and the glory of it between co operating grace and will as if nature could divide the spoil with the grace of Christ is damnable pride but its Gods way to half the work between Christ within in regard of the habit of grace and Christ without in regard of the assisting grace of God Luke 15.20 While he was yet a great way off his father saw him and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him Christ rewardeth not natures aims with grace nor doth he make gifts the work and grace the hire or natures labour the race and grace the Garland but he rewardeth grace with grace and that of meer grace Joh. 15.3 He hath in his Decree and Promise marshalled such and such acts of grace to stand beside others and that by Covenant and therefore believe that you may believe pray that you may pray Obj. 2. But who can act saving grace without the blowing of saving grace I can no more do it then I can command the West wind to blow when I list Ans. I grant all nor do I speak this to insinuate that Free-will sitteth at the helm or that Grace sleepeth and Will waketh the contrary is an evident truth yet give me leave to say there 's ods between blowing of the winde and making ready the sails Though Sea-men cannot make wind nor is it their fault to want wind yet can they prepare the Sailes and hoise them up to welcome the wind we cannot create the breathings of the spirit yet are we to misse these breathings and this is a fitting of the Sails and we are to join with the spirits breathings Christ bindeth up the winds in his garment so as if one look of faith or halfe a spirituall groane should ransom me from hell I have it not in stock therefore hath God ordered such a dispensation that in all stirrings of grace the first spring Principium motus the fountain-rise of calling Jesus Lord shall be up in Heaven at the right hand of the Father and the farre end of any gracious thought is as far above me as the heart of Christ who is in the Heaven of Heavens is above the earth though ye think nothing of it and better Christ be my Steward and that the Gospel be at the end of all acts of grace as that Christ be Free wills debtor More reason Christ be Creditor then debtor to his Redeemed ones 2. I know the childe of God may be so far forth lazie as that its his fault that the winde bloweth not if we speak of a morall cause 3. It s his part to joyne with the working of assisting grace Col. 1.29 Whereunto I also labour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 striving according to his working which worketh in me mightily The Lord hath by free promise laid holy bands on himself to give predeterminating grace to his own children to persevere to the end and to prevent Apostacy and hainous sins inconsistent with saving faith 1 Cor. 1.8 Jude v. 24. Ier. 32.39 40 41. Isa. 54.10 Isa. 59.21.22 Luk. 2● 32 1 Ioh. 2.1.2 Yet so as he hath reserved a liberty to himself to co-operate with them in particular acts as it shall be their sin not his withdrawing of Grace that maketh them guilty to the end we may know we are in Graces debt in all good and supernaturall Acts so 2 Chron. 32.31 Ezechiah was tried of God in the businesse of the King of Babylons Ambassadors that the King might see that he could not walk to heaven on clay legs or by his own strength and the reason is clear God cannot make a Promise of contributing this bowing and predeterminating Grace but in a way suitable to Free-grace For God cannot change Grace unto naturall debt it remaining grace for so it should be Grace no Grace which is a contradiction 2. The Lord hath reserved liberty to himself in this promise that in this or this particular Act the omission whereof may consist with perseverance in Grace he may contribute his influence of Grace or not contribute it so David hath not actuall Grace at his will and nod to eschew adultery and murther as he pleaseth nor Peter to decline an evill hour when he shall be tempted to forswear his Saviour Christ nor hath Heman in his hand Psal. 88. nor the deserted Church power Psal. 77. to pray and believe and rejoice in the salvation of God at the disposition of Free-will But the key is up in the hands of the Kingly Intercessor At the right hand of the Father that must open the heart it s far to fetch as far as the Heaven of heavens to make winde and sailing to Christ-ward therefore 3. Seasons of Acts of Grace to believe to walk in any warmnesse of love to Christ and his members are fruits of Royall Liberty and Free-Grace who hath the key of the house of wine to stay the soul with the Flaggons and Apples of love Certainly it is the King himself that taketh the Spouse into His banqueting House Cant 2.4 And yet so as the omission of all supernaturall duties yea our lazinesse in the manner of doing our failings and sins are imputed to our selves and not to the not blowing of the wind of the holy spirit nor to the want of the efficacious motion of the spirit as Libertines teach with Arminians For we so sin through the want of the motions of efficacious Grace as through the want of a Physicall not of a morall cause and so as we are most willing to want that influence and so are guilty before the Lord God hath reasons strong and convincing why he worketh thus 1. It setteth not Grace to work by ingagement the spirit of the living creatures is within every wheel of Christ that it must move from an inward principle the motion of saving Grace is Christs heart wheeled about by it self and by no forraigne cause without it self Love worketh as Love without bud or bribe from Men or Angels Grace is both wages and work the race and the gold to it self 2.
for Zach. 4.6 Not by might nor by power but by my Spirit saith the Lord When Babylon is to be destroyed as the work is even now on the wheels in Britain Rev. 18.21 A mighty Angel took up the great milstone and threw it in the sea though it be a Vision by comparison yet it holdeth forth an immediate work of God in the ruine of Babylon and Angels powre their vials on the Sea on the Sun on the River Euphrates to make for the destruction of Babylon and in delivering of Lot Angels did work God himself spake to Noah for making an Ark although Angels be creatures yet the Lords action by them is more immediate then when he worketh by naturall causes when the Judges scourge and imprison the Apostles no man will speak for them the immediate power of God doth it the chains fall off legs and armes immediate providence is a key also to open the prison doors and they are saved There is a bloody war at the taking of the Ark and thirty thousand footmen of Israel killed 1 Sam. 4.10 11. But there is not a sword drawen when it s rescued The Ark cometh home its alone Gods immediate providence driveth and acteth upon two milk kine to bring it home again 1 Sam. 6.12 13 14. Who knoweth but when our strength of two Kingdoms hath failed us the Lord shall make Kine to bring home his Kingdom and Reformation to our doors were it possible that creatures could work salvation for us and freedome from the sword and sure peace in Scotland England and Ireland without God or any subordination to him let it be a deliverance from the creature only it should be no deliverance but a curse that which maketh salvation to be salvation is that God hath a finger of power and an influence of Free-grace in it O but this putteth the lustre sweetnesse and smell of Heaven on it that it is the salvation of the Lord Ex. 14.13 In regard of irresistable efficacy and successe under causes though chained to the influence of God are but idoll-Idoll-causes they lie as Cyphers and do nothing no more then a lame arm can master a sword The Lord worketh all our works for us and he is daily marring and shal further mar our Armies Parliaments Counsels undertakings to the end that more of Christ may appear in these wars then in other wars some immediate power must close and crown this glorious work in Britain God must be his alone and appear his alone and only Jehovah must be visible in the Mount to the end that bleeding England long afflicted Scotland and wasted Ireland may with one shout cry Not unto us O Lord Not unto us but unto thy name be the glory This discovereth the deceit of our confidence for when the Lord and the creature worketh together for our good Asa though his heart was perfect possibly seeth not whether he trust on the Lord or on the Physitian and yet the Scripture saith When he was diseased in his feet there was a worse disease about his heart for because he sought to the physitians he is blamed yet to seek to Physitians is lawfull but the spirit of God blameth his seeking to the Physitians and saith 2 Chron. 16.12 He sought not the Lord in his sicknesse and the reason is given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Because he was in the Physitians So the Hebrew readeth it he is said not to seek the Lord not because he sought to the Physitians for that had not been a sin but because he was wholly the whole man soul and all in or on the Physitians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his care paines and heart was all on the Physitians so also the Greek expresse great care and diligence by the like Phrase 1 Tim. 4.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Give thy self to these things Seldome do we seek to God and trust in him when God and the creature are yoked together in a work that we are much bent upon as in Wars in a Reformation yea in a journey that the spirit is intent upon but in trusting on God we interpose a folding and a ply of the creature between our soul confidence and the Lord just as a pillow is put between the mans shoulder a pressing burden for fear the burden crush a bone we are afraid we give God too much to do or more then he is able to bear When we sail we seem to betrust our selves to the Lord and the Sea but the truth is often we trust more to the strong Ship then to the Sea or the Lord. Our confidence shifteth it self from under the Lord on upon the creature and the Arm of flesh so we walk often in the strength of the Lord as some walk upon Ice they walk softly and timorously upon it fearing it should break under them they put no faith upon cracking and weak Ice we are not daring and venturous in casting our selves and our burdens on the Lord. So in judgements Davids choice fell upon the Pestilence rather then the Sword Why Gods hand is sweeter and softer then the devils then the Malignants hard hand Samuel is one of the best children because he is given of God and is a child of many prayers Isaac the joyfull childe Why No thanks to nature or to Sarahs dead womb for him he is the son of an immediate promise Free-grace is rather Isaacs Father and Mother then Abraham and Sarah in ordinances a man speaketh but if Christ himself would speak O his Spikenard O his own Perfume O his own lips drop honey O his own Lebanon-like countenance Alas we think Christ is not Christ except the King help him Religion is not Religion except worldly throns bear it up the Gospel is a very immediate thing the Lilly amongst the thorns is Christs Lilly the Church stands more immediatly by Christ then any worldly thing doth God maketh the earth to bud and bring forth her fruits but the Son the soil the season of the year and nature are his under-servants God watereth the earth but by clouds Kings are indigent and very mediat and dependent creatures they need Armies Multitudes Navies Prelats Babylon Ireland France Spain Denmark Holland Moneys Friends Parliaments But Grace and the Gospel are more immediate and lesse needy The Gospel can live without all these SERMON XXVI BE it unto thee as thou wilt We see what power Christ hath over the devils Christ sent him invisible summons Let Satan be gone and he must be gone It is a proper work of Christ to oppose Satan Heb. 2.14 He took part of flesh and blood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he might make Satan unprofitable and idle and fruitless as the word is used Luke 13.7 Why doth this fruitlesse tree keep the ground saplesse and barren So is the word taken to make a thing of no effect Romanes 3.3 Things that make sport to children as nuts feathers toyes are called things of infants to be
Amen Even so Come Lord Iesus It shall not be well while the Father and Christ the prime Heire and all the weeping children be under one roofe in the Palace-Royall it is a sort of mysticall lameness and that the head wanteth an Arme or a finger and it is a violent and forced conditon for Arme and finger to be separated from the head The Saints are little pieces of mysticall Christ sick of love for union the wife of youth that wants her husband some years and expects he shall return to her from over-sea lands is often on the shoare every ship coming near shoar is her new joy her heart loves the wind that shall bring him home she askes at every passenger news O saw you my husband what is he doing when shall he come Is he shipped for a return Every Ship that carrieth not her husband is the breaking of her heart What desires hath the Spirit and Bride to hear when the Husband Christ shal say to the mighty Angels Make you ready for the journey let us go down and divide the skies and bow the heaven I 'le gather my prisoners of hope into me I can want my Rachael and her weeping children no longer Behold I come quickly to judge the Nations The Bride the Lambs wife blesseth the feet of the Messengers that preacheth such tiding Rejoice O Zion put on thy beautifull garments thy King is coming yea she loveth that quarter of the Skie that being rent asunder and cloven shall yield to her husband when he shall put through his glorious hand and shall come riding on the Raine bow and clouds to receive her to himself The condition of the people of God in the three Kingdoms calleth for this that we now wisely consider what the Lord is doing there is a Language of the Lords fire in Zion and His furnace in Jerusalem If we could understand the voice of the crying Rod The Arrowes of God flee beyond us and beside us but wee see little of God in them We Saile but we see not shoar we fight but we have no Victory the efficacy of second causes is the whole burden of the businesse and this burden we lay upon creatures and it s more then they can bear and not upon the Lord God is crying lamenesse on creatures and multitude that his eminency of working may be more seen 2. Many are friends to the successe of Reformation not to Reformation Mens Faith go along with the promises untill Providence seem to them to belie the promise through light at a key-hole many see God in these confusions in the three Kingdoms but they fall away because their joyning with the Cause was violent kindenesse to Christ it is not a friends visite to be driven to a friends house to be dry in a showre and then occasionally to visite wife and children Christ hath too many occasionall friends but the ground of all is this I love Jesus Christ but I have not the gift of burning-quick for Christ O how securely should Faith land us out of the Gun-shot of the prevailing power of a black hour of darknesse Faith can make us able to be willing for Christ to go thorow a quarter of Hells pain Lord give us not leave to be mad with worldly wisedome 3. When the Temptation sleepeth the mad man is wise the harlot is Chaste But when the vessell is peirced out cometh that which is within either Wine or Water Yet if we should attentively lay our ears to hypocrites wee should hear that their Lute-strings do miserably jar for Hycrisie is intelligible and may bee found out Would Parliaments begin at Christ we should not fear that which certainly we have cause to fear One wo is past and another wo cometh The Prophets in the three Kingdoms have not repented of the Superstition will-worship Idolatry Persecution Prophanity Formality which made them vile before the people and the Judges and Princes who turned judgement into gall and wormwood are not humbled because they were a snare on Mizpah and a net spread upon Tabor No man repenteth and turneth from his evil way no man smitteth on his thigh saying what have I done It s but black Popery the name being changed not the thing to think the by-past sins of the Land are by-past and a sort of Reformation for time to come is satisfactory to GOD Ex opere operato By the deed done Yea the divisions in the Church are a heavier plague then the raging sword These same sins against the first and second Table the reconciling of us and Babylon Pride Bribing Extortion Filthiness and intemperance unpunished blood touching blood and not revenged vanity of apparell the professed way of salvation by all kinde of Religions whatsoever are now acted in another stage by other persons but they are these same sins if that head-ship that flattering Prelates took from Jesus Christ and gave to the King be yet taken from Christ and given to men if Christs Crown be pulled off his head no matter whose head it warme it s taken from Christ both wayes I shall pray that the fatnesse of the flesh of Jacob for this do not wax leane and that the warefare of Britaine be accomplished But if the faithfull watchmen know what hour of the night it is now there be but small appearance that it is near to the dawning of Britains deliverance or that our sky shall clear in hast would God the yeare 1645. were with childe to bring forth the salvation of Britain It was once as incredible that the enemy should have entred within the gates of Jerusalem as it is now that they can enter within the Ports of London Edinburgh Dublin I speak not this to incourage Cavaliers for certainly God watcheth over them for vengeance but that we go not on farther to break with Christ the weaknesse of new heads devising new Religions and multiplying Gods for two sundry and contrary Religions argue interpretatively two sundry Gods According to the number of our Cities must come from rottennesse of our hearts O if we could be instructed before the decree that is with childe of Plagues to the sinners in Zion bring forth a man childe and before the long shadows of the evening be stretched out on us But of this Theame no more Grace is the Proposition of this following Treatise when either Grace is turned into painted but rotten nature as Arminians do or into wantonnesse as others do The error to me is of a far other and higher elevation then opinions touching Church-Government Tenacious adhering to Antinomian errors with an obstinate and finall persistance in them both as touching Faith to and suitable practise of them I shall think cannot be fathered upon any of the regenerated For it is an opinion not in the Margin and borders but in the page and body and too near the Center and vitall parts of the Gospel if any offend that I desire to anger them with good-will to
chase few men to Christ three grounds thereof p. 44 How men naturally love the Devil p. 45. Satan how an unclean spirit p. 46 It s true wisedome to know God savingly p. 47. What hearing bringeth souls to Christ p. 49. Four defects in hearing p. 50. Hell coming to our senses in this life should not cause us believe without effectuall Grace p. 51. It s good to border near to Christ p. 52. SERM. VI. Crying in prayer necessary p. 53. Five grounds thereof p. 54. Prayer sometimes wanteth words so as groaning goeth for Prayer p. 55. How many other expressions beside vocall praying go under the liew of praying in Gods accompt ibid. 8. Objections removed p 55.56.57.58 59 60. Some affections greater then tears p. 56. Looking up to heaven praying ibid. Breathing praying p. 57. That wher●in the least of prayer the Minimum quod sic consisteth ibid. Broken Prayers are Prayers p. 58. The Lord knoweth non-sense in a broken spirit to be good sense p. 59. SER. VII Why Christ is called frequently the Son of David not so the Son of Adam of Abraham p. 62. Christ a King by Covenant p. 63 What things be in the Covenant of Grace ibid. The parties of the Covenant p. 64 Christ hath a sevenfold relation to the Covenant 1. He is the Covenant it self 2. The Messenger 3. The Witnesse 4. The Surety 5. The Mediator 6. The T●stator 7. The principall party contracter p. 64 65. Christ the Covenant it self ibid. Christ a Messenger of the Covenant in 4. particulars ibid. A Witnesse in four things p. 66. A Surety in three p. 67 68. A Mediator in three things 1. A Friend 2. A Reconciler 3. A Servant p. 69. Christ a servant of God and our servant ibid. Christ confirmed and sealed the Testament p. 70 Christ the principall consederate party ibid. The Covenant made with Christ personally not mystically proved from Gal. 3.16 The contrary Reasons answered p. 71. A Covenant between the Father the Son proved ibid. Of the Promises of the Covenant p. 73. Two sorts of Promises p. 74. Christ took a new Covenant right to God p. 75. Five sorts of promises made to Christ and by proportion to us ibid. SERM. VIII The condition of the Covenant p 77. Libertines deny all conditions of the Covenant p. 78. The new Covenant hath conditions to be performed by us ibid. Six Objections removed p. 77 78 79 80 81. A twofold dominion of gracious and supernaturall acts p. 79. We are not justified before we beleeve proved by six Arguments p. 81. A condition taken in a threefold Notion p. 83. It s not a proper condition by way of strict wage and work when we are said to be justified and saved upon condition of faith p. 85. The Freedom 2. Eternity 3. Well-ordering of the Covenant the three properties thereof p. 87 88. The freedom of the Covenant is seen in regard 1. of Persons 2. of Causes 3. of Time 4. of manner of dispensation p. 86 87. Uses of the Doctrine of the Covenant p. 88 89 90. SERM. IX Christ God and man and our comfort therein p. 91. Christ immediate in the Act of Redeeming us and so sweeter ibid. Christ incomparable p. 92. Four other necessary uses p. 91 92 93 94 95. To believers all temporall favours are spiritualized and watered with mercy four grounds thereof p. 96. By what reason our Father as a Father giveth us spiritual things by that same he giveth us all things p. 98. Mercy originally in Christ and how p. 99. SERM. X. Parents affection their spirituall duty to children p. 102. Thirteen Practicall Rules in observing passages of Divine providence p. 103 104 105 106 107 108. 1. We are neither to lead nor to stint Providence p. 103 2. But to observe God in his wayes and not to look to by-ways of providence ibid. 3. Omnipotency not laid down in pawne in any means p. 104. 4. God walketh not in the way that we imagine ibid. 5. Providence in its concatenation of Decrees actions events is one continued contexture going along from Creation to the day of Christs second coming without one broken threed p. 105. 6. The spirit is to be in an indifferency in all casts of Providence p. 106. 7. Low desires best p. 107. 8. We are to lie under providence submissively in all ibid. 9. Providence is a mistery ibid. 10. Walketh in uncertainties toward us ibid. 11. Silence is better then disputing p. 108. 12. It s good to consider both what is inflicted who ibid. 13. God alway ascendeth even when second causes descendeth ibid. SERM. XI Every temptation hath its taking power from the seeming goodnesse in it p. 109. Reasons why this was a temptation to the woman p. 110. The scope of the Temptation to make the tempted believe there is none like him p. 111. The non-answering of Christ is an answering ibid. 5. Reasons of the Lords not hearing of Prayer p. 113. Seven wayes prayers are answered ibid. Praying in Faith alwayes heard even when the particular which we suit in Prayer is denied p. 114. Faith in one and the same Prayer seeketh and knocketh and answereth and openeth to it self p. 115. The light of saving Faith and the Propheticall light of the Pen man of the word of God differ not in ●p●ce and nature ibid. The dearest not admitted into God at the first knock p 116. SERM. XII Naturall men and even the renewed in spirit in so far as there remaineth some flesh in them are ignorant of the mystery of an afflicted spirit p 117. Peace of conscience is a work of Creation p. 118. A reason why it s so hard to convince the deserted p. 119. Christ sweeter to the deserted then all the world ibid. Difference between Gods trying and the creatures temp●ing in three Positions p. 121. A Creature cannot put a fellow creature to act sin upon an intention of trying him ibid. In the actions of creatures we must know Quis 2. Quid 3 Quare Who ●ommandeth 2. What 3. And for what end In Gods actions It is enough to know Quis Who that is Jehovah p. 122. Four doubts of the tempted p. 124 125. In the sending of Christ to the lost sheep of the house of Israel there be three things considerable 1. His designation 2. Qualification 3. Commission p. 126. The Son most fit to be Mediator ibid. How Christ is qualified p. 127 His Commission ibid. It is not properly grace that we are born its grace that Christ is born p. 128. Gods hidden decree and his revealed will opened p. 129 A twofold intention in the promises ibid. How and who are to believe the Decree of Reprobation concerning themselves p. 130 SERM. XIII It s a priviledge of mercy that Christ is sent to the Jews first p. 131 Nine priviledges of the Jews p. 132. The honour and priviledges of Britain p. 133. The Redeemed called sheep upon four grounds p. 134. How passive the Redeemed are in the way to
gave thee for a Covenant of the people for a light of the Gentiles Isa. 49.8 I will preserve thee and give thee for a Covenant of the people Christ God and man is all the Covenant 1. Because he is given to fulfill the Covenant on both sides 2. He is the Covenant In abstracto he is very Peace and Reconciliation it self Mic. 5. 5. And this man shall be the peace when the Assyrian shall come unto our Land As fire is hot for it self and all things hot for it and by participation so thou art in so far in Covenant with Christ as thou hast any thing of Christ want Christ and want Peace and the Covenant 2. Mal. 3.1 The Lord whom ye seek shall suddenly come to his Temple even the Messenger or Angel of the Covenant whom ye delight in Christ travelleth with tidings between the parties 1. He reporteth of God to us that its his fathers will that we be saved Joh. 6.39 2. Christ reporteth of himself for it setteth Christ to be a Broker for Christ and wisdom to cry in the streets who will have me Prov 1.21 22. Prov. 9.1 2 3 4 5. It became the Lord Jesus to praise himself Joh. 6.48 Joh. 8.12 I am that bread of life I am the light of the world Joh. 10.9 I am the door v. 11. I am the good Shepherd 3. He praiseth his Father Joh. 15. My Father is the good Husband-man 4. He suiteth us in marriage and commendeth his Father and our father in law You marry me dear souls O but my Father is a great person Joh. 14.2 In my Fathers house are many dwelling places 2. He commendeth us to the Father a Messenger making peace will do all this Joh. 17.8 They have received thy words and have known surely that I came out from thee and they have beleeved that thou didst send me 25. O Righteous Father the world have not known thee but I have known thee and these have known that thou hast sent me Ministers cannot speak of Christ and his father as he can do himself O come hear Christ speak of Christ and of his Father and of heaven for for he saw all O sweet beleever Christ giveth thee a good report in heaven the Father and the Son are speaking of thee behinde-backs A good report in Heaven is of much esteem Christ spake more good of thee then thou art all worth He telleth over again Ephraims prayers behinde his back Jer. 30.18 O woe to thee Christ is telling black tidings of thee in Heaven Such a man will not beleeve in me he hateth me and my cause and my people Christ cannot lye of any man 3. Christ is an Eye-witnesse of the Covenant and heard and saw all the whole Covenant was a bloudy act acted upon his person Isa. 55.4 Behold I have given him for a witnesse to the people Rev. 1. 5. The faithfull witnesse Rev. 3.14 The Amen the faithfull and true witnesse The Covenant saith 1. The Son of man came to seek and to save the lost Luke 19.10 Amen saith Christ I can witnesse that to be true 2. Christ dyed and rose again for sinners Amen saith the witnesse Joh. 1.18 I was dead and behold I live for evermore Amen Christ putteth his Seal to that This is a true and faithfull saying That Christ Jesus came into the world to die for sinners I can swear that is true saith Christ. 3. The world shall have an end saith the Covenant and time shal be no more By him that liveth for ever and ever who created heaven and earth saith this Angel-witnesse Rev. 10.6 that is most true Time shall be no more It s a controversie to the world if Eternity be comming Christ endeth the controversie with an oath 4. Christ shall judge the world and all shall bow to me This Amen of God saith that's true Rom. 14.11 For as it is written as I live saith the Lord every knee shall bow to me The Covenant of Works had a promise but because it was 1. Conditionall 2. To be broken and done away it had no oath of God as this hath O doubting soul thou sayest that thy salvation is not sure Why And it s a sworn Article of the Covenant thou hast Christs great Oath on it Alas God loveth not me hast thou the Son thou hast a true Testimony it s not so and Pro. 14.5 A faithfull Witnesse will not lie Christ has cause to remember that thou art saved he beareth the marks of it in his body Athiest thou sayest who knoweth there 's a heaven and hell Why the Witnesse of the Covenant saith I was in both and saw both 4. Heb. 7.22 Christ is the surety of the better Covenant And in this the Father is surety for Christ if he undertake for David and Hezekiah Psal. 119.122 Isa. 38.14 Far more for his own Son God hath given his word for Christ he shall do the work Isa. 52.13 Behold my righteous servant shall deal prudently Isa. 50.9 Behold the Lord God will help me and again the Son is Surety to the Father And the great undertaker that God shall fulfill his part of the Covenant that the Father shall give a Kingdom to his flock Luke 12.32 Joh. 6.37 38 39. 1. Christ as a Surety for us hath payed a ransome for us 2. Giveth a new heart to his fellow-confederats 3. And is ingaged to lose none of them Ioh. 17.12 But raise them up at the last day Joh. 6.39 If we could surrender ou● selves to Christs undertaking and get once ● word that he is become good to the Father for us all were well woe to him who is that loose man as he has not Christ under an Act and band of Surety that he shall keep him to the day of God we make loose bargains in the behalf of our souls 5. As Christ standeth between the two Parties he is the great Lord Mediator of the new Covenant Heb. 12.24 1. Substantially our Text calleth him Lord the Son of David by condition of nature he hath something of God as being true God and something of man as sharing with us hence is he Mediator by Office and layeth his hands on both parties As a days man doth Job 9.33 In which he hath a threefold relation 1. Of a friend to both he hath Gods heart for man to be gracious and satisfie mercy and a mans heart for God to satisfie justice 2. Of a reconciler to make two one to bring down God to a Treaty of Peace to take him off Law and high demands of Law which sought personall satisfaction of us and in his body to bring us up to God by a ransome payed and by giving us faith to draw near to his Father so he may say Sister and Spouse come up now to my Father and your Father to my God and your God and Father come down to my Brethren my kindred and flesh 3. He is a