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A95857 A charge against the Jews, and the Christian world, for not coming to Christ, who would have freely given them eternall life. Delivered in a sermon, before the Right Honorable the House of Peers, in the Abbey Church at Westminster, on May 26. 1647. being the day of their publick fast. / By Thomas Valentine, one of the Assembly of Divines, and Minister of Chalfont in the County of Bucks. Valentine, Thomas, 1585 or 6-1665? 1647 (1647) Wing V24; Thomason E389_6; ESTC R201520 27,808 35

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word signifies heat and we would have our friends hot in our cause we would not have a Counsellor that should plead coldly or indifferently and shall we be indifferent in the service of God far be it from us Breathing is a signe of life it befals many that are in swoonings and dangerous fits that it is heard to tell whether they be yet if they breath in wholsome aire and pant after God and the Scriptures and after good advice to be set and kept in the way of Religion it is an argument they live I might follow the similie of breathing in and out but I surcease Those that are alive to choose would converse with the living and not with the dead I would not have any one to think that I would insinuate any such matter or suggest any such thoughts into the heads of any that should go about to tell who are dead and who are alive but we must not deny that which Scriptures plainly affirm to choose a man that is not dead in sins would not familiarly converse with any but such as he hopes in the judgement of charity to be alive and it stands thus between the living and the dead no fellowship no commerce if you speak to a dead man you are not answered if you take him by the hand and otherwayes expresse your self yet no correspondence no sutablenesse your love is not answered again and therefore there can be no joy in such conversing Speak to a worldly man he can say little unles it be in worldly things he is out of his element And surely such as rejoyce in good things must needs cheerfully delight in the society of such as minde the like And for further enlarging of this point think what a miserie it would be for a man to marry a dead woman to have her layed in his bed carried to his board to be with her continually it would be irksome and unpleasing You see Abraham would fain bury his wife Sarah out of his fight for the face of death is irksome and uncomfortable And is it not the case of many a man that lives with a dead wife and the wife with a dead husband if it be no sorrow to you it is so much the worse with you for then you your selves are dead A woman goes with grief and is daily in sorrow if she think her child is dead in her wombe she hath no joy to think of the time of her deliverance O what is it to carry about with you a dead heart a dead soul And it is so if you be not moved in pitie to such as converse with you of whose life in Religion you have no warrantable nor well grounded hope But all you that by these or the like signes can suppose and conclude to your selves that you are now alive I dare be bold to assure you that you shall still live and live eternally in heaven many things may in this world trouble you molest the comfort of your lives but nothing shall cut it off therefore with patience wait untill you injoy a better life then you now have beare with patience sicklinesse of body troubles of minde the reproaches and crosses of this life in hope of eternall life And the consideration hereof should make us willing to undergo any difficulties because we hope to live happily and that happinesse to remain eternally And surely there is great reason why the servants of God should wait patiently and cheerfully expect the accomplishment of their hope for of all men in the world they are in the way to the greatest preferment and by faith they see already the bounty of God which shal hereafter be manifested towards them It may be of reproofe justly to tax and challenge the most part of Christians Vse 2. for not longing more after life eternall what should moove us to be in love with the world Ah do we so much esteem life that is temporall it is a wonder to see so great matters mentioned in the Scriptures and our hearts so little affected with them and it may be a matter of wonderment why our hearts make no more after things that be so pretious I take it these causes may be rendered but all of them intimate matter of reproofe First men that are not assured of a better estate are loath to leave that which they have in possession a poore man tha●●ives in a cold house and hath never a good roome yet if he knowes not whither to go he will not wil●lingly go out though it be never so cold so is it with many men that are miserable and poor they have no assurance of a better estate and therefore they are loath to leave this It may be they have some hopes and cares and that honest and religious as in David he had a promise of the Kingdom and his heart was set on the service he meant to do when he came to the Kingdome this may be in the mind and hinder the more earnest desires of heaven The maine cause is life eternall and the joyes of heaven are so high above our spirit that till the soul be fitted by an extraordinarie measure of grace and raised above an ordinarie pitch it is not made sutable to them Paul that had visions and revelations was elevated higher than ordinary he was full of heavenly desires FINIS Die Jovis 27 May. 1647. ORdered by the Lords in Parliament assembled That Mr. Valentine one of the Assembly of Divines is hereby thanked for his great pains taken in his Sermon Preached yesterday before their Lordships in the Abbey Church Westminster And he is hereby desired to cause the same to be Printed and published Which is to be done onely by Authority under his own Hand Jo Browne Cler Parl ' I Appoint Joh Rothwell to Print my Sermon Tho Valentime
removing of the Objection But the question is whether Adam had power to beleeve in Christ crucified He did beleeve in God and his faith was joyned with his obedience for he obeying the voice of God was to beleeve that God would make good his promise to him but his power was to the things of the Law written in his heart it was within that compasse and latitude but not in the way of the Gospel which supposeth man to be fallen and quite over-turned and how faith in Christ which is the condition of the Covenant of grace should be commanded in the Law given to Adam in his innocencie I do not understand And though he did beleeve in God yet he might not have power to beleeve in Christ dying for sinners But suppose God had revealed to Adam while he stood the event of things and imagine he had said to him Adam I have made thee wise and righteous I have enstamped mine Image upon thee I have given thee a just Law and power to keep it and for thy reward I will give thee life I have put thee into a pleasant Paradise where thou hast all things for necessity and delight but thou wilt disobey my voice and loose thy self and forfeit all that I have given thee yet neither thou nor all thy posterity shall perish I will send my Son into the world to take mans nature and dye for sin and life and happinesse shall come by faith in him The question is whether Adam could have beleeved upon such a Revelation I answer That he could and would have credited God and beleeved the truth of this relation made unto him by his Creator but to beleeve in Christ and cast himself upon a Saviour must presuppose him to be cast away and lost But could not Adam have promised to beleeve in Christ upon the former Revelation I answer If he had it had not been available for it is all one as if a rich man worth many thousand pounds should promise and give his Bond to pay me an 100 li. when he is broken and not worth a groat But it is very true that men have more power then they put out for faith and obedience and it is as true that infidelity is in their power and they willingly remain in unbelief The Answer that men return to the invitations of Christ are the same which the Jews made unto him How often would I have gathered thee together as the hen her chickens Matth. 23. and ye would not 1. Further to clear the point in hand we may safely affirm that all men in Adam stand guiltie of disobedience and God may justly punish them for that sin I●h 3 36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Non dicit ira Dei veniet super eum sed ira Dei manet super cum quamvis naturaliter damnati jam sint reprobi sua tamen infidelitate novam sibi mortem accersunt 2. That Christ being offered to them to deliver them from curse and condemnation and they wilfully rejecting him they aggravate their sins and bring upon them the condemnation of the Gospel so that the Law and the Gospel both condemne them the wrath of God that formerly was upon them by the sentence of the Law abides upon them and new wrath is kindled against them because they beleeve not in Christ the Son of God and so comes the great condemnation oft mentioned Joh. 3.19 And to set out the cause of mans miserie take it in this comparison A man lyes sick of a feaver he is told by the Physitian unlesse he bleed or purge and take other Physick he will dye he is distempered and will not be ruled he dyes The question is what this man dyed of I answer He dyed of a Feaver that was originally the cause of his death And then in the second place he dyed of wilfulnesse because he would not follow advice In the great day of judgement men shall be condemned for their disobedience and next which is the great aggravation of their sin for infidelity because they beleeved not in Christ Vse Before we come to the next point let us make a breefe application of this and it shall be an Item to take heed of infidelity especially of willfull infidelity say not that ye will not come to Christ neglect it not for he will take it ill and that because Foure aggravations of the sin of infidelity 1. The last best words that ever God spake were by Jesus Christ and to contemne them were a greater sin he that despiseth Moses Law did sin in a high degree but what will betide him that despiseth the glorious truthes of the Gospel uttered by Christ to honour him and the truthes he revealed the sweetest expressions were made that ever we heard of Luk. 2.14 Glory to be to God on high Peace on earth and good will towards men the Jewes could not be ignorant of those glorious manifestations and might have bin convinced by them we all do beleive the doctrin of the Gospel and we receive them and are readie to come unto him in the use of his Ordinances But with our faith we must joyne all other graces and the practise of al duties we must do every thing answerable to the profession of the Faith or else we are in some measure guilty of the sin of the Jewes 2. There is no such impediments to hinder us as was to the Jewes they might have said the Priests lips must preserve knowledge and the people must seeke the Law at their mouthes and they say that Christ is a deceiver a Samaritan and hath a Devill these might stumble the Jewes and keepe them from comming to Christ but there is no such let to us the Gospel is countenanced Christ is received In the Primitive times they were faine to sell all in Q●een Maries daies they went through the flames or else they could not have Christ these were great tryalls they fall not upon us and therefore our sin is the greater if we do not imbrace him 3. We must give a reason why we did not come to Christ why we did not beleive in him why we did not accept of him when he was offered unto us with all his Excellencies he came to us and brought with him righteousnesse life pardon heaven and the glorie of it and would have freely given us them if we would willingly and freely have accepted him for our Saviour but those that have rejected him shall see with sorrow the fruites of their infidelity and cry out against themselves for loosing so great joyes and pulling so great torments upon themselves and as Malefactors in the day of their execution lament their folly and obstinacie in that they would not be ruled and that brought them to their miserable end so the unbeleever in the day of judgment shall have it charged upon him and he shall repeat these words in the dolour of his trembling heart I dye and am