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A12478 An exposition of the Creed: or, An explanation of the articles of our Christian faith. Delivered in many afternoone sermons, by that reverend and worthy divine, Master Iohn Smith, late preacher of the Word at Clavering in Essex, and sometime fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Oxford. Now published for the benefit and behoofe of all good Christians, together with an exact table of all the chiefest doctrines and vses throughout the whole booke Smith, John, 1563-1616.; Palmer, Anthony, fl. 1632. 1632 (1632) STC 22801; ESTC S117414 837,448 694

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of this that this Iesus whom they have despised and condemned shall bee their Iudge at last Now I thought to have passed over the condemnation of Christ and to have spoken little of it but we must doe as the Goldsmith who will not lose the least fine of his gold but he will gather it up so we should not lose the least thing or circumstance touching Christ but should gather all up as in the Law wee read the Lord commanded that the ashes and cinders of the burnt offerings should be gathered up and laid in a cleane place in like manner wee should doe gather up the very ashes and cinders of the sufferings of Christ wherefore our hearts must bee the cleane place to lay them up in that so wee may thinke of the great love of Christ to us and be provoked to love him againe who hath loved us and washed away our sinnes Now Christ was condemned in two courts in the Ecclesiasticall before Annas and Caiphas and in the Temporall before Pilate the one whereof was a forerunner of the other and the reason is because the gouernment was not in the hands of the Iewes who could not put any to death but in the hands of the Romans under whom Pilate was the chiefe governour therefore wee will onely speake of the condemnation of Christ under Pilate where we will observe these foure things 1. How many times Pilate sought to deliver Christ. 2. What was the meanes he used 3. What made him stand so stiffe for Christ. 4. What drew him on to condemne Christ contrary to the light of his judgement First how many times Pilate laboured to cleere Christ before hee condemned him and that appeares to bee foure severall times first when they accused him saying they had found this man perverting the people and forbidding to pay tribute to Caesar saying that he is Christ our king Pilate asked him saying Art thou the king of the Iewes unto which he answered and said Thou saiest it then said Pilate to the high Priests and to the people I finde no fault in him indeed it is true that he is a king but his kingdome hee saith is not of this world therefore Caesar neede not to bee afraid of him I see no cause of death in him you say hee is a king what though it is of no worldly kingdome as Caesars is but it is a kingdome of another world therefore Pilate laboured to free Christ at this time Now in the answer of Christ to Pilate we observe two things First that hee doth professe hee is a king this is that same good confession Paul speaketh of 1 Tim. 6. 12. who under Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession therefore seeing Christ is a king wee must so accept of and receive him as to bee ordered by him in our life and conversation and governed by his Lawes because hee is the King of the Church and of all the world it is the sinne of the time that men can be contented to have Christ to bee their Saviour and redeemer to save them by his bloud but they cannot abide to have him to be their King as Luke 19. they say Wee will not have this man to rule over us so men now adayes can be contented to have Christ to teach and to preach to them but they cannot abide to have him to be their King to rule or raigne over them in their life and conversation but for this cause was he borne and for this cause did he die therefore if thou wilt ever raigne with him in the kingdome of glory thou must be ruled by him in the kingdome of Grace Secondly he saith his kingdome is not of this world it doth not consist in the pompe and glory of this world for Christs kingdome is of another world in heaven a kingdome above the clouds of glory and happinesse Which must teach us that seeing Christs kingdome is not of this world they that be subjects of Christ must not looke for especially worldly matters or preferments therefore in sicknesse paines troubles and afflictions we must say my kingdome is not of this world but above the clouds it is an heavenly kingdome a kingdome of glory and happinesse my comfort is laid up there when sicknesse and troubles are come upon a man hee must carry up his thoughts and say though I am sicke poore in distresse and disgrace yet it shall not alwayes be so with me for my kingdome is not of this world If the heire of a great King should be in a strange place and hardly used there he would gather up his thoughts and think with himselfe I am but a stranger here and therfore they use me hardly but when I come home againe into mine owne kingdome then it shall be otherwise with me so when wee bee hardly used here we must consider that wee are strangers and therefore they doe hardly use us but when we come at our Fathers house we shall have more comfort than this world can afford us Againe seeing our kingdome is not of this world but a heavenly kingdome the glory whereof farre exceeds all the transitory things of this life therefore wert thou a subject of the best kingdome of the world know it is nothing unlesse thou be a subject of Christs kingdome it is nothing to bee a citizen of the best citie in the world unlesse thou be a citizen of the kingdome of Christ Therefore labour to be a subject in the kingdome of grace to live by faith to be obedient to Gods Commandements to be patient in troubles and then thou shalt be a subject in the kingdome of glory The Queene of the South came from the uttermost parts of the earth to heare the wisdome of Salomon which when shee came and heard she thought it a great preferment to be one of his subjects saith shee Happie are thy men happie are these thy servants which stand continually before thee c. Now if it were a happie thing to be a subject in that kingdome much more is it a happie thing to be a subject in the kingdome of Christ therefore let us labour to bee subjects to Christ in the kingdome of grace that wee may be subjects in the kingdome of glroy The second time that Pilate laboured to free Christ and to set him at libertie was after he had sent him to Herod it is said That he called together the high Priests and the rulers of the people and said unto them yee have brought this man unto me as one that perverteth the people and behold I having examined him before you have found no fault in this man concerning those things whereof ye accuse him no nor yet Herod for I sent you to him and loe nothing worthy of death is done unto him This ye see is the second time that Pilate sought to deliver Christ Which may teach us to be constant in a good course although things doe not succeed
doves much more will he be angry with them that pollute his spirituall Temple with their sinnes and corruptions and vile lusts The second thing that we are to beleeve concerning God the holy Ghost is That he is person really subsisting and distinct from the Father and the Sonne And here we are to observe two things First That the holy Ghost is a Person or a reall subsistence and not a quality or motion in God as certaine heretikes hold but hee is a Person that hath reall subsistence by himselfe which we may see by divers acts that he doth as to send the Prophets and Apostles and give spirituall gifts and graces Esay 48. 16. it is said The Lord God and his Spirit hath sent me therefore because the holy Ghost is said to send he is not a quality or a motion but a person So also Acts 13. 2. The holy Ghost said Separate me Paul and Barnabas for the worke whereunto I have called them So then it is plaine by the Scripture that the holy Ghost is person and not a qualitie or a motion in God Now two wayes the holy Ghost is taken in the Scripture for the gifts and graces of the holy Ghost as Matth. 12. Christ shewes He that sinnes against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiven neither in this world not in the world to come A man may sinne against the Person of the holy Ghost and yet may be forgiven but the sinne that is here spoken of is the gifts and graces of the holy Ghost and in other places of the Scripture it is taken for the person of the holy Ghost Secondly the holy Ghost is a distinct Person from the Father and the Sonne Matth. 28. 19. Christ saith to his Disciples Goe teach all nations baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost and so also 1 Iohn 5. 7. he shewes there are three that beare record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one furthermore Matth. 3. when Christ was baptised there was the voice of the Father saying This is my welbeloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased and the holy Ghost descending on Christ in the likenesse of a Dove so it is plaine by the Scripture that the holy Ghost is a distinct person from the Father and the Sonne Now the use hereof is briefly that as we feele the power of God the Father in our creation and the mercy of the Sonne in our redemption so also we must labour to feele the worke of the holy Ghost in sanctifying of our hearts and quickning of us to all holy duties there were some as wee may reade of in the Acts that did not know there was a Holy Ghost but if we feele our hearts to be sanctified and the power of the holy Ghost to quicken us this is an argument to us against all heretikes to prove there is a holy Ghost The third point that we are to beleeve is that the holy Ghost is holy in himselfe and that he is the causer and effecter of holinesse in others So Saint Paul saith 1 Cor. 12. 3. No man can say that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost that is no man is able to doe any thing that is pleasing to God but by the holy Ghost and vers 11. saith he All these things worketh even the selfe-some Spirit distributing to every one severally as he will So the holy Ghost is not onely holy in himselfe but he is the cause of holinesse in all the people of God The uses are first seeing the holy Ghost makes men holy there is never a man that hath one deep or dram of holinesse in himselfe but the holy Ghost must worke it in him as Ezek. 37. we see the dead bones were scattered all the field over till the Spirit of God came into them then there was a noise a clattering and running together of the bones so we be scattered all the field over and lye like dead bones till the Spirit of God come into our heart then there is a noise and a clattering together of the bones then men begin to stirre in the life of holinesse therefore doth any man desire spirituall graces and is often in prayer doth any man find in himselfe holy motions to good let him comfort himselfe for such desires are of and by the Spirit of God it is the holy Ghost that workes them in him for no man hath a dram or a drop of holinesse in himselfe but it is the holy Ghost workes it in him Secondly seeing it is the holy Ghost that makes men holy as often as we feele any good motions or good desires we may know from whence they come that it is the holy Ghost which is the beginner and worker of them If a man lye in a trance and neither moves nor stirres if one layes his eare to the man and heares him breath he may say there is life in the man even so although a man be not able to stirre in the life of holinesse yet if he doe but breath that there be good thoughts and good motions and good desires this is a token that there is the life of grace in him and that the holy Ghost hath begun to worke in him there is the beginning of grace in him SERMON LIV. IOHN 14. 26. But the Comforter which is the Holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my name hee shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you FOure points yee heard wee are to beleeve concerning the holy Ghost first That the holy Ghost is God secondly That he is a person and not a motion or a qualitie in God but hath a reall subsistence and that hee is a distinct Person from the Father and the Sonne thirdly That he is not onely holy in himselfe but he is the Effecter and Causer of holinesse in others and that no man hath one dram or drop of holinesse in him but it is wrought by the holy Ghost The fourth point which we are at this present to handle is that He is not onely the causer of holinesse in others but I must beleeve that he will particularly make me holy and give me such a measure of sanctitie as shall be meet and fit for me This is properly the faith of a Christian which herein goeth beyond the faith of all others the devils doe beleeve that the holy Ghost is God and that hee is a Person that hath reall subsistence and that he is a distinct Person from the Father and the Sonne and they doe beleeve that the holy Ghost is the causer of holinesse in all the faithfull people of God but they doe not beleeve that he will worke holinesse in them But here is the faith of a Christian to appropriate the holy Ghost to himselfe so they have not faith onely
deceived of our faith and so deceived of heaven I will give you seven true notes and markes of faith whereby wee may discerne true faith from the faith of the world which are these that follow The first signe of true faith whereby wee may discerne it from the faith of the world is By the efficient cause which is preaching For thence it ariseth so it is preaching that workes faith in us so wee see in Rom. 10. Faith commeth by hearing the Word of God preached it doth not arise of nothing but comes of preaching therefore it is called Semen the seede of the Word that even as plants and herbs come of seedes so of the preaching of the Word comes faith but the faith of the world that doth not arise of the preaching of the Word but of the speech of people and by a report they have heard of ever since they can remember who never heard otherwise and therefore this is not the true faith Wherefore every one should looke how he comes by his faith and by what means if it comes not by preaching it cannot be true faith Now if preaching be the meanes to get true faith in us let us labour to have it because it is the meanes to worke true faith for how can wee have it if wee want the meanes if wee have not seede wee can have no corne and hee that stealeth away a handfull of our feede doth us more hurt than hee that stealeth much more out of our barne so if we have no preaching which is the meanes we can have no faith and he that takes away preaching doth us more hurt than to take any thing else from us The second signe or marke of true faith whereby wee may discerne it from the faith of the world is That it begins in weakenesse Even like a childe that is weake at the first and afterwards it groweth stronger and stronger through the nourishment it takes so our faith is weake at the first and by the use of good meanes it groweth stronger and stronger Iudges 6. we see how weake Gideons faith was at the first and so the disciples of Christ their faith was so weake at the first that Christ did reprove them for it Now the faith of the world that doth not begin in weakenesse but it is as strong the first day as it is many yeares after there is no doubting of Gods mercy they leape into the full assurance of faith at the first and therefore this cannot bee true faith for this beginnes in weakenesse and after by little and little it comes to the full assurance of faith Even as a man that climbes up to the top of a tree he catcheth hold first on the lower boughs and so by little and little he windes himselfe into the Tree till at last he comes at the top so wee come not to the full assurance of faith at first but wee must winde our selves into it by prayer meditation conference and such like duties till wee come unto the full assurance thereof It is the bold presumption of the world that they thinke they shall bee saved as soone as they looke into Religion when as it comes onely by the use of good meanes many a day together The third point wherby wee may discerne true faith from the faith of the world That it groweth although it begins in weakenesse yet it growes by the use of the good meanes that it was gotten by as by preaching of the Word prayer and such like good meanes as the Apostle shewes 1 Thes 2. 13. For this cause also thanke wee God without ceasing that when ye received the Word of God ye received it not as the word of man but as it is indeede the Word of God which worketh in you which beleeve The graces of God are compared to a little seede and not to a stone for that stands at a stay Now true faith groweth by the use of good meanes so we see 1 Pet. 2. 1. As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word that ye may grow thereby The faith of the world doth not grow but keepes at a stay and doth not increase by the preaching of Gods word and prayer and by the use of good meanes therefore it cannot be true faith if a man hath a little child and they feede it and give it meate and the child grows not therby but stands at a stay they may say it is a changeling but this is not alwayes true It is observed to bee a judgement of God to restraine the blessing of foode although it be not alwaies true in this yet it is true in our faith if it keepe at a stay and doe not grow when there is good meanes it is no true faith no better than a changeling The fourth point whereby wee may discerne of true faith from the faith of the world is By the qualities of the person in whom it is found for it is not found but in a heart bruised and broken with sinne as Acts 2. they were pricked in their hearts and in Acts 16. the Iayler there trembled so that true faith is alwayes in a heart broken and bruised for sinne Now in the faith of the world there is no compunction nor sorrow for sinne they never mourne nor grieve for it therefore because it is not found in a heart bruised and broken it cannot be true faith they bee as merry at the first as at the last day If a Physitian should tell us that such a herbe would helpe us against all Infections whatsoever but it alwayes growes in a watery place and hee should tell us that there is another herbe like that in colour stalke leafe smell and in blossome but it groweth on a rocke or on a stone wall if wee should finde such an herbe on a rocke or on a stone wall wee could not say it were that which would preserve us against the infection because it groweth not in a watery place even so the heavenly Physitian hath told us that true saving faith doth alwayes grow in a heart that is broken and bruised for sinne in a watery conscience and therefore if wee find one like it in in all things and find it on a rocke or on a stone wall if we find it in an impenitent and hard heart and a heart never touched for sinne this is not the true faith Wee read that Mary Magdalen brought a boxe of costly oyntment to Christ and broke her boxe and powred it our which Christ did accept of all other oyntments are best in a whole boxe but this oyntment of faith Christ doth not accept but in a broken boxe in a heart broken for sinne and because the world hath not their faith in a broken boxe in an heart broken for sinne therefore Christ doth not accept of it The fifth point whereby wee may discerne true faith from the faith of the world is by the opposition that is made against
thanke our selves and our sinnes for it thus much the very Heathen could tell Ionas that because there was a disorder in the creatures a great tempest causing the Sea to rage they thought there was somewhat amisse amongst them therefore they cast lots to see for whose cause it was And this shall bee the first use that seeing God made all good if there bee any defect in the creatures wee may thanke our selves and our sinnes Secondly Seeing God made all the creatures good wee must take heede wee doe not abuse and turne them to evill ends for God made apparell to cover our shame and to keepe us warme therefore wee must take heede we doe not use it to pride He made our meate to feede us and nourish us wee must take heede that wee abuse it not to gluttony and drunkennesse and so of the rest If a servant should be allowed a candle to doe his businesse by and should therewith goe and set the house on fire this were not the masters sinne but the servants hee shall answere for it for his master gave him a candle to doe his businesse by and not to set his house on fire so 〈◊〉 we abuse the creatures of God and turne them to wrong ends the fault is not in God that gave them but it is our fault and we shall answere for it Thirdly seeing God made all the world good wee should wish to reduce them to their former state which seeing wee cannot doe wee should labour to bring our selves to our former estate and goodnesse againe And should therefore apply our selves to the use of good meanes as preaching prayer reading of the word meditation the use of the Sacraments and the like If a man should make an Image or picture and it should bee defaced the eyes plucked out or the face deformed or wanting a hand or a part of it if the picture had life and reason whether would it goe to be renewed but to him that made it so seeing sinne hath defaced us whither should wee goe to be renewed but to him that made us As David makes his request Psal 119. 73. Thine hands have made me and fashioned me give me understanding that I may learne thy commandements even so should we if we feele any defects or wants in our selves goe to God and desire him to restore us againe so that although wee cannot reduce the creatures to their former estate yet we must labour to restore our selves againe Sixthly In what time the Lord made heaven and earth hee could have made it in a moment in sixe houres but hee was sixe dayes in making it Here wee may see the great power of God that he was able to doe that in sixe dayes that all the powers of heaven and earth are not able to doe in sixe thousand yeares nay not at all it is a long time since the world was made and yet all the creatures in the world could not make such an heaven and earth in all this time we can doe nothing without time although wee bee willing to doe for our friend yet we will say I pray you give mee time I must have time to doe it in Solomon was thirteene yeares in building the Temple and the Iewes were fortie yeares but God made the world in sixe daies Men must have time for all things so we see Moses was a long time in delivering the people out of Egypt and Ioshua was seven yeares in placing of them and Daniel must have time to interpret the dreame but Gods power is not tyed to any time hee is able at an instant to helpe us and therefore wee must take heed we doe not tye the power of God unto time Matth. 19. 20. The woman that had a bloody issue did but touch the hemme of Christs garment and was made whole and Luk. 5. 13. He did but touch the Leper and he was made clean and Mat. 8. when his Disciples were at the sea in great distresse when the winds blew and the ship was in danger of sinking and drowning Christ did but speake a word and there was a great calme such a change the Lord can make still that if there be any danger upon our persons or in our estates hee is able to remove it and to make a great calme in a moment therefore wee are not to tye Gods power to any time hee can doe great matters in a short time God made the world and all things in it in sixe dayes but hee was thirty three yeeres in redeeming of us therefore the worke of our redemption is a greater worke than the worke of our creation So S. Ambrose saith O Lord I am more beholding to thee for that thou hast redeemed me by thy blood of thy Sonne when I was lost by sinne than I am for that thou hast created mee by the hand of thy power Therefore it is a pittifull thing that neither the worke of our creation nor the worke of our redemption can moove us the Lord may say to us as hee did to the children of Israel in Esai 5. 4. What is it that I can doe more for my vineyard that I have not done so the Lord may say to us what could I have done more for you I have created you and made you reasonable creatures and when ye were lost by sinne I have redeemed you I was content to bee borne of a Virgin to bee laid in a manger to shead my blood and to dye for you what could I have done more for you Wee read Gen. 30. 16. Leah said unto Iacob Come in unto mee for I have bought thee and have paid for thee with my sonnes mandrakes such a claime and challenge the Lord may lay to us Come unto mee live and abide with me for I have bought you and paid for you I have not onely bought you with mandrakes but I have bought you with mine owne blood The Lord was but sixe dayes in making the world but he was thirty three years in redeeming of it hence this Question But why was the Lord sixe dayes in making of this world he could have made it in a moment in sixe houres I answer it was to determine the time of mans labor that seeing God did labour sixe daies together before hee rested and then rested the seventh day so wee should labour sixe dayes and rest the seventh day as Leviticus 23. 3. Sixe daies shall worke bee done but the seventh day is the sabbath of rest Againe hee was sixe dayes to shew the ordinary course of Gods labour that God brings not things together at once but by little and little even as a man when hee filleth a bottle or vessell first hee filleth it to the quarterne and then to the halfe and then unto the top so it is in the worke of grace it is not perfect at an instant but in time it shall bee perfect for as the Lord was sixe daies in
Prophet of the Church and how he is the Priest hath beene shewed already it remaineth now to shew you how he is a King for it is nothing to admit him to bee the Prophet or to be our Priest unlesse we admit him to be our King Now that he is the King of the Church can no doubt for Psal 2. it is said I have set my King upon the holy hill of Sion and Zech. 9. he sayes O Daughter of Ierusalem behold thy King commeth unto thee c. And Luk. 1. 32. the Angell saith He shall be great and shall be called the sonne of the Sost High and the Lord shall give unto him the throne of his father David and hee shall raigne over the house of Iacob for ever and of his kingdome shall bee none end so we may see it is plaine that Christ was a King indeed Christ did refuse to bee a King Ioh. 6. 15. because they would have made him a temporall king there he departed into a Mountaine but when he was before Pilate Ioh. 18. 38● Pilate asked him if hee were a King Christ telleth him For this cause was I borne and for this cause came I into the World that I should beare witnesse to the truth Now there be foure Kingly duties that Christ doth exercise towards his Church First Hee doth gather and draw Subjects to himselfe by his Word and Spirit it is not with the Kingdome of Christ as with the kingdomes of the world for first they be constituted and gathered and then they have a king set over them as we see in David his kingdome was constituted before hee was king but Christ hath not a Subject in his Kingdome but he must draw him for ther is no man that is born a subject of his kingdome but he must draw him out of another kingdome out of the kingdome of the divell to make him a subject in his kingdome so we have it Who hath delivered us from the power of darkenesse and hath translated us into the Kingdome of his deare sonne we see that Christ must draw us out of another kingdome to make us subjects in his Kingdome Iob. 10. 16. Other sheep have I also which are not of this fold them also must I bring This is a peece of his Kingly care to draw aliens and strangers unto himselfe to make them subjects in his Kingdome we see in experience if a goodly Kingdome be set up and great priviledges belong unto it men wilseeke to be subjects of it and yet Christ hath set up a kingdome and there are few that seeke to bee subjects of it notwithstanding all the kingdomes in this world are not like to it in regard of the glory and excellency and of the goodly priviledges that doe belong to it yet what ado hath Christ to make men his subjects he is someitmes drawing of a man twenty or thirty yeares ere he can make him a subject of his Kingdome Here wee are to consider the infinite goodnesse of God to us that when we were under the kingdome of the divell at ods and war with him yea even when wee were at defiance with him then hee was not contented till he had drawne us home to himselfe to be made subjects in his Kingdome here wee may wonder and admire at his goodnesse that when men were at warre and at defiance with him hee laboreth then to draw them unto repentance as Ezek. 16. 6. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine owne bloud I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood Thou shalt live even when we be in our sins the Lord sheweth compassion unto us Act. 12. 7. When Peter was in prison and asleepe in his chaines the Angell of the Lord came and smote him on the side and bad him arise and the chaines fell off from his hands as the Angell brought him out of prison into the City and threw the Iron bolts from him so the Lord doth to us wee lie in our sinnes asleepe hee comes and strikes us in our consciences not on our sides brings us through the Iron gate places of danger and never rests till he have brought us into the Citty to make us subjects to his kingdome that were formerly ever subjects to the divels kingdome The second Kingly duty of Christ is That he governs his people by just and equall Lawes Psal 45. 6. he saith Thy throne O God is for ever and ever the Scepter of thy kingdome is a Scepter of righteousnesse Thou lovest righteousnesse and hatest wickednesse c. And Esai 7. The increase of his government and peace shall have no end he shall sit upon the throne of David and upon his Kingdome to order and to establish it with judgement and with justice from henceforth and for evermore so Christ is our King to governe us by just and equall Lawes this is the Kingly office of Christ therefore every one that will bee a subject to Christs Kingdome must be ruled and governed by his Lawes wee see men can be contented to be subjects to his Kingdome c. yet they will not be governed and guided by his Lawes for they will sweare though Christ saith Sweare not all he hath made a Law that we should not lye yet men will lye he commanded that men should not prophane the Sabbath and many will prophane it but every one that is a subject to Christs Kingdome must live by the Lawes of Christ it is a great fault that men professe themselves to bee Christians and yet will not bee ruled by his Lawes Ioh. 19. 7. The Iewes said they had a Law and by that Law Christ ought to dye Indeed it was a Law of their owne making for there is no Law of God to put an innocent and harmelesse man to death but it was a Law of their owne so wee make a Law to our selves that men may sweare or lye and whatsoever become of our neighbours looke to our selves but it is of our owne devising it is no Law of God the old Souldiers bowed the knee to Christ and yet they spit in his face they set a crowne of thornes on his head and put a reede into his hand so it is with the world still though they call him their father and king yet they will not bee ruled by him but even as it were spit in his face and set a crowne of thornes on his head this is that which the world cannot away with nor brooke that he should bee their king to governe and guide them they can be contented he should dye for them to save them but cannot indure that Christ should rule or raigne over them Luk. 19. assoone as Christ came amongst them they said Wee will not have this man to raigne over us so Psal 2. Let us breake their bonds and cast away their cords they cannot abide to bee tyed to Christ to bee tied to prayer and to holy duties this is such
3. Faith Adoration as Heb. 1. 6. When he brings his first begotten into the world he saith And let all the Angels worship him Invocation as by Stephen who called on God and said Lord Iesus receive my spirit so of Saul Act. 9. 14. it is said that hee bound all that called on the name of the Lord. Faith as Iohn 14. 1. Ye beleeve in God beleeve also in me to which purpose is that Act. 17. 3. Therefore wee may see by these arguments that Christ is God and to take heed of this brutish opinion of the Arrians Now what be the consequents of this that he was not a bare man but he was God also who did redeeme us There bee divers reasons why he onely should redeeme us First because he that did redeem us must beare the burthen of al the sins due to al men that hath beene and shall be now there was none that could doe this because the wrath of God was infinite save Christ Iesus for let the wrath of God come upon the Angels they are not able to beare nor stand under the burthen of it but it will presse downe and sinke them as low as Hell Secondly he that should redeeme us must pay a price Incomparable better and more worth than the bodies and soules of all men that ever were now there was none that could doe this but God and therefore he must bee God who redeemed us Thirdly he that should redeeme us must put on all our sinnes even all the sinnes that had been committed and shall be from the beginning of the world to the latter end and apparell himselfe with them but there is no man no Angell able to doe this and to stand before God unlesse there be infinite goodnesse in him to countervaile the justice of God therefore it must be God that must doe it The second branch is that we doe beleeve he is the onely Sonne of God not by creation as the Angels spoken of Iob 1. 6. nor by adoption and grace as men Ioh. 1. but by communicating his nature and essence to him Now this doth commend the goodnesse and mercy of God to us that when wee had sinned against him and had no way to redeeme our selves he having but one Sonne and his onely begotten Sonne yet gave him to dye for us so to redeeme us The uses are first seeing Christ is the only Son of God let us labour to become one with him and then we shall also be the sonnes of God as Ioh. 1. 12. But as many as received him to them he gave power to be the sonnes of God and Gal. 3. 26. For ye are all the sonnes of God by faith in Christ Iesus I know there is never a one here present but could be contented to be the sonne of God let us then labour to bee with Christ by faith and so we shall become the sonnes of God for hee draweth all his members into the same dignity with him David accounted it a great matter to be the sonne in law to a king so Moses to be a sonne to Pharaohs daughter howsoever he refused it afterward Now if it bee such a great matter to bee sonne in law to an earthly king much more is it to bee a sonne to God therefore what a comfort is this to such poore people that are one with Christ by faith howsoever they bee hated and despised at the hands of wicked men 1 Ioh. 3. 1. hee bringeth it in with an ecce Behold what love the Father hath shewed to us that we should be called the sonnes of God All the world doth not know what a great blessing it is to be the sonnes unto God wee see how great men will talke of their nobility and of their great descent but alas what is all this if we be not the sonnes of God therefore thinke this with thy selfe I am a great man in the world and come of a noble blood and a great descent but what is this unto me unlesse I bee the sonne of God And therefore let us labour to bee one with Christ and then as Christ was raised from the dead so he will raise us up together with him and wee shall be found the sonnes of God Secondly seeing Christ is the onely Sonne of God wee may see the horriblenesse of our sinnes and the greatnesse of them that when wee had sinned all the creatures in heaven and earth could not doe it but it must be the Sonne of God he must come downe take our nature upon him and dye for us Augustine saith O man by the great price that was paied for thee thou maiest consider the greatnesse of thy sinnes that they cost the bloud of Christ the Sonne of God If a man should commit an offence and all the nobles should kneele on their knees before the king for him and could not get release but that it must be the kings sonne onely that must doe it hee must shed his blood take the place of a malefactor be arraigned condemned and executed in his roome all men would conceive that this was a horrible fact that must be the cause of this this is our case when we had sinned all the heavenly powers could not bring us into favour againe but it must be the Sonne of God hee must take our roome and place bee arraigned condemned and executed for us therefore sinne is no small matter neither must wee esteeme of our sinnes slightly but consider with our selves that great are our sinnes that hath brought this on Christ Thirdly we should heare his voyce it is the charge the God giveth Matth. 3. 17. This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased heare him and therefore it is a great sinne to despise the voyce of Christ in the ministery of his Word Saint Paul sheweth what a great sinne it is saith he God spake by the Prophets at sundry times and in divers manners but now he hath spoken in these last times by his Sonne and therefore in the second Chapter he exhorteth us To take heede of it that wee doe not let it slip for if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast and every transgression and disobedience receiveth a just recompence of reward How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation Therefore seeing Christ is become a Prophet of the Church let us take heede we doe not despise his Word or voyce It was a holy thought in God when the Church of the Iewes had killed the Prophets beaten and despised them I will send my Sonne it may be they will reverence him it was a sweet thought in God to doe so And therefore let us take heed we doe not despise the voyce of Christ Ioh. 5. 28. it is said The dead shall heare the voyce of the Sonne of God even the dead cinders and ashes of men that have been rotting in the graves many thousand yeeres they shall startle and
c. Now penall infirmities and such as are voide of sinne hee tooke whereof there be two sorts First some that hee common to all the sonnes of Adam as to be hungry thirsty naked cold hot and such like secondly there be personall infirmities which arise upon particular causes as to have divers diseases now hee tooke not these infirmities upon him for hee tooke not any mans person upon him but the nature of man yea he tooke them that bee common to the whole nature of man And why did he take upon him these infirmities for three causes as the Schoolemen say First for satisfaction sake that he might satisfie for our sinnes for he that must satisfie for them must take the whole punishment for sinne therefore he tooke our infirmities upon him as we see in Matth. 8. 17. Hee tooke our infirmities upon him and bare our sicknesses Secondly to strengthen faith in the incarnation that wee might know hee was a perfect man because hee was subject to all our infirmities to eate sleepe bee weary and such like for if hee had not taken these infirmities was might have doubted whether he had beene man or no therefore he tooke our infirmities upon him that we might beleeve he was a man touching his Incarnation Thirdly for our example that as hee was subject to hunger thirst and nakednesse so we should be contented with it also for 1 Pet. 2. 21. it is written Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps c. Now besides these three reasons of the Schoolemen there is another reason Heb. 2. 17. why hee tooke our infirmities upon him there the Apostle saith Wherefore in all things it became him to bee made like unto his brethren that he might bee a mercifull and faithfull high Priest in things concerning God this was the reason why he tooke our infirmities upon him that he might be the more compassionate towards us Let a man come to one that is on his sick bed if he hath had the same disease he will be more compassionate and pitifull than twenty others so seeing Christ tooke our infirmities hee will have the more compassion towards us therefore as the Apostle saith Heb. 4. 14. Seeing then wee have not such an high priest which cannot bee touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sort yet without sinne let us therefore goe boldly to the throne of grace c. Now the next thing that was observed were the reasons why he was made man and that in three respects First for necessities sake for hee must have something to offer as the price of sinne so Heb. 8. 4. For hee were not a Priest if hee were on the earth seeing there are priests that according to the Law offer gifts therefore hee that doth redeeme us and bring us unto Gods favour must have something to offer to God as a price for sinne but the Godhead could not be offered for that cannot dye and therefore of necessity Hee must bee man Secondly in regard of the equity of it for the same nature that had offended must be punished because it could not stand with Iustice to punish sin in another nature which had not offended therefore of necessity he must bee man for the same nature that had sinned must be punished Thirdly in regard of the fitnesse for he that is the Mediator and doth reconcile God and man together must be God to deale with God and man to deale with man The Philosophers say that to bring two extremes together it must be done by middle things so Christ must be betweene both the must be God to deale with God and man to deale with man so that he must be man in regard of the fitnesse of it Hee must be God also a fit Vmpire to lay his hand upon both Thirdly the speciall ends why he must take mans nature upon him are five in number First to redeeme man for in the same nature the devill had destroyed man in the same nature must he destroy the worke of the devill so Heb. 2. 14. For asmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood hee also himselfe tooke part of the same that he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the devill and deliver them who for feare of death were all their life time subject to bondage It is a pretty saying of the councell of Ephesus even as a cunning workeman doth not only great matters in gold silver and precious stones but can also take a peece of clay and make such a peece of worke that may make the world to wonder at it so this cunning workeman Christ is not onely able to the doe great workes in gold and precious stones in his Godhead but even in a peece of clay with mans nature he can destroy the workes of the divell Secondly to restore the lost Image of God in man for Adam had lost it by his sinne and therefore he tooke mans nature to bring it to the former estate againe Saith Athanasius if a picture be defaced and hath lost its former beauty there is no way to restore it againe but to get the party that the picture was first drawne by to renew it so saith he when man had defaced the Image of God in him there was no way to have it restored againe but by bringing Christ into the world from whence this nature of man was drawne upon him Thirdly to advance mans nature which was so disgraced by sinne for mans nature was hatefull to God even as a toade is to us therefore seeing mans nature was in disgrace with God hee tooke our nature to advance it againe If a towne or a city be in disgrace with the king if he come againe into it abide and rest in it thereby it is advanced againe so when mans nature was in disgrace by the reason of sinne Christ came into mans nature and this did advance it againe Fourthly to make mans Nature dreadfull to the divell for Christ having overcome the devill in Mans nature this made his Nature terrible to him even as a fish when he is nibling at the baite and spieth the bare hooke is afraid to meddle with the baite after or as a man putting his hand into a hole if he pull out a toade will bee afraid to put his hand in againe so the devill having beene overcome by mans nature is afraid of it againe not because he thinkes hee shall meete with Christ for he knowes he is in heaven but because hee knowes hee shall meete or is afraid that hee shall meete with the power of Christ Fifthly that his incarnation might be as a glasse wherein we may see the infinite Goodnesse justice wisedome and power of God First wee may see the infinite goodnesse of God that when wee were lost by sinne
promises so it is said of Christ that he died in due time Rom. 5. 6. so the Angell sayes to Zachary Luk. 1. 20. Behold thou shalt be dumbe and not able to speake untill the day that these things shall be performed because thou beleevest not my words which shall be fulfilled in their season So that there is a time for the fulfilling of every promise of God Of which observe two Vses First for comfort that seeing there is a fulnesse of time for the accomplishment of all Gods promises though we have it not to day or to morrow this yeere or the next yet there is a fulnesse of time so David shewes Psal 102. 13. Thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion for the time to favour her yea the set time is come this is a stay and a comfort to a Christian that there is a fulnesse of time for the accomplishment of Gods promises Secondly that seeing there is a fulnesse of time for the accomplishment of Gods promises we should be contented to tarry that time bee it sooner or later so Habak 2. 3. The vision is yet for an appointed time but at the end it shall speake and not lye though it tarry waite for it because it shall surely come it will not tarry therefore seeing there is a fulnesse of time to come we must with patience bee contented to waite that time It is the madnesse of the world not to tarry the time that God hath set them but they must have it straight yea many a time Gods people be overtaken with it as good Moses Exod. 5. 23. For since I came to Pharaoh to speak in thy Name he hath vexed this people more and yet thou hast not delivered thy people at all hee thought much to tarry a little time But seeing there is a fulnesse of time every one should be contented to tarry till it come Ioh. 2. 4. saith Christ to Mary Woman my time is not yet come she had an houre and Christ had an houre her houre was assoone as there was want but Christs was when there was sensible feeling of the want Secondly this fulnesse of time is still comming so Paul saith here when the fulnesse of time was come it drawes neerer and neerer as a man that is a farre off every step hee takes he drawes neerer and neerer home so the●fulnesse of time is comming it stayes not in the day nor in the night but approcheth neerer and neerer as it is Dan. 7. 22. so Paul saith Heb. 10. 25. But let us exhort one another so much the more because yee see the day draweth neere This is a great comfort that the longer wee live here in this world the neerer we are to the accomplishment of Gods promises and as every day doth winde up the threed of this life so wee come so much neerer to our salvation and the comforts and blessings which hee hath prepared for us as Rom. 13. 11. the Apostle saith For now is our salvation neerer than when wee beleeved so in the Gospell it is said by our Saviour When you see these things lift up your heads for your redemption draweth neere and Psalm 37. 13. it is said the wicked man seeth his day comming towards him that is the day of judgement when hee shall bee called to an account for all his sinnes and be punished for them as this must needes be a terror to a wicked man to consider every day this day is comming towards him so also it cannot chuse but bee a great contentation and comfort to the godly to consider that the day of salvation is drawing neere to them the time when they shall bee put in possession of heaven and happinesse Thirdly When the fulnesse of time was come then God sent his Sonne made of a woman this must teach us that we should never looke for the accomplishment of Gods promises till the fulnesse of time There was great expectation and looking for Christ but he came not till the fulnesse of time so wee may expect and looke for comfort ease and for health but wee cannot have it till the fulnesse of time wee see Revel 6. 10 11. The soules of those that lye under the Altar crying Lord how long thou that art holy and just and true dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth And there was answere made them They must rest for a season till the fulnesse of time Exod. 12. 41. the people groaned a long time under their burthen and could not be delivered but when the fulnesse of time came then the very same day they were delivered in the foure hundred and thirty yeere the selfe same day so likewise Psal 105. 19. many meanes it may be was made for Iosephs deliverance yet it could not be untill the time that his word came and then it is said the king sent and loosed him so howsoever wee may seeke for comfort and ease desire health yet we shall not have it till the fulnesse of time come therefore as Iaakob said to Laban when his time was expired Give me my wife for I have served my time so a Christian may say unto God Give me that which thou hast promised me for the time is come Particularly the time is described two wayes 1. In the daies of Herod the king Matth. 2. 2. When Augustus caused all the world to be taxed Luk. 2. First Christ was borne when Herod was king why doth the Evangelist note this unto us first to shew that Christs kingdome is not of this world for Christ was borne when there was another king hee was borne a King for the Wisemen made inquiry Where He is that is borne King of the Iewes And in another place when he was before Pilate hee asked him Whether he were a king and he said for this cause was I borne and for this cause came I into the world c. But it was of another kingdome a spirituall kingdome not of a temporary And what may this teach us that we are not to looke for a worldly and a temporall kingdome but for a spirituall therefore when a Christian is under the crosse hee may say My kingdome is not of this world I looke not for a temporary kingdome but for a kingdome above the clouds a kingdome of glory and happinesse Secondly Christ was borne when the estate of the Iewes kingdome was at the lowest ebb for Iaakob prophesied Gen. 49. 10. That the Scepter should not depart from Iuda nor a Lawgiver from betweene his feete till Shil● came that is when a stranger was king when as the estate of the Iewes was at the worst This may teach us that the time when Christ comes in the presence of his power and goodnesse is when things bee at the worst so Ioh. 11. when did Christ come when Lazarus was dead foure daies and did stinke then He came so likewise when the Disciples were at sea
37. saith David Marke the upright man and behold the just for the end of that man is peace In 1 Sam. 12. 3. when Samuel came to resigne his office he standeth out to cleare himselfe to the people and saith Whose Oxe have I taken or whose Asse have I taken or whom have I defranded whom have I oppressed or of whom have I received any bribe to blind mine eyes withall so when a man can stand out at the day of his death and cleere himselfe as Samuel did and say O Lord I thanke thee that I have not beene a deceiver or an unjust dealer in the world but I have dealt justly and uprightly this may be a comfort to him at the day of his death therefore it is a good thing to be a just dealer Secondly it is said he was a devout man as it is in the new Translation the Greeke word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a religious man such a one as feared God so we must put both these together he was a just man and a religious man for it is nothing to be religious unlesse one be just nor nothing to bee just unlesse one be religious therefore if thou bee religious labour to bee just also if thou bee a just man labour also to bee religious for a man must so looke to his duties to God as that hee doe not neglect his service to men and so looke to men as that he doe not neglect his duety to God It is a corruption in the world that if a man be a good and a just dealer in the world he cares not for religion if he be religious hee cares not for good dealing therefore art thou a just man make conscience of religious dueties for howsoever thou mai'st stand before man and bee in account with him yet thou shalt not bee able to stand before God and art thou a religious man labour thou also to bee a just man a good dealer lest this lye on thy conscience at the day of thy death for no unjust man shall inherite the kingdome of God Thirdly hee waited for the consolation of Israel which implyes two things first that hee had laid up all his hope joy comfort and consolation in Christ which must likewise teach us to lay up all our hope and comfort in Christ as Phil. 3. the Apostle saith Christ was to him both in life and in death advantage and our Saviour saith Ioh. 8. 56. Your father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad so also Iohn 20. the Disciples said to Thomas Wee have seene the Lord and Mary she had laid up all her joy and comfort in Christ Many now adayes lay up their comfort in their friends some in their goods and lands or in their money but a Christian must lay up all his joy and comfort in Christ and then one day hee shall be happy with him let a man lay up his comfort in any thing but in Christ howsoever it may stand by him in the time of peace yet it will faile him in the time of trouble howsoever it stand by him in life yet it will faile him in the time of death but if we can lay up our comfort joy and hope in Christ then Christ will looke upon us with a sweete and comfortable face at his comming Secondly hee looked every day for the time of Christs comming so should we doe but there is a difference hee looked for his first comming in the flesh wee must looke for his second comming Rom. 8. 22. it is said the whole creation groaneth waiting for the comming of Christ much more should wee because wee shall have especially the fruit and benefit by it Iudges 5. The mother of Sisera looked out of a window and cryed why is his chariot so long a comming why tarry the wheeles of his chariots So when wee looke out of our doores or windowes we should long for Christs comming and say when will hee come and when will hee appeare thus wee should waite for Christs comming The second point is The manner how this manifestation was by a vision or as the Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth by divine inspiration Christ was made manifest to the shepheards by an Angell to the Wisemen by a starre and to Simeon by a Vision Of which there are two parts First that he should not dye till he had seene Christ Hee was an old man and like to drop into his grave every day and yet he had a revelation given him that he should not dye till he had seene Christ so we should pray to God that we may have the same grace whether we bee young or old that we may not dye till we have seene Christ by the eyes of our faith for we have more cause to doe so than Simeon for if he had never seene Christ with the eyes of his body he might have beene blessed though he had wanted this comfort but if we doe not see him before we dye we are like to perish therefore we have much more cause to desire and pray God that we may see Christ before we dye before we bee downe in the dust and sleepe our long sleepe saith old Iaakob when his sonne Ioseph sent for him I will goe and see my Sonne Ioseph before I dye so a Christian should say I will goe and see Christ before I dye The second part of the vision was that he must goe into the Temple because Christ was to bee found there before Christ came there he was in the townes why did not Simeon goe out to meete him in the streets or why did not he goe to Bethlehem to see Christ as the shepheards did There be two reasons of it First that Christ might bee the more famously knowne secondly to teach us that if we will see Christ we must come into the Temple to the place of preaching and prayer for the Gospell as I have shewed you is a glasse wherein if we looke wee shall see Christ and all his graces even as Simeon did come by a motion of the Spirit so if wee would come to see Christ in the Temple we must come by a motion of the Spirit and of grace many come to the Temple but how come they by a motion of their friends or some other thing that mooveth them but let us come by a motion of the Spirit and then we shall see Christ to our comfort Thirdly the effects of the manifestation and they are threefold first as soone as he was come into the Temple he laid hold on Christ Simeon was an old man and had much adoe to scramble thither and yet hee was not contented to looke upon Christ and see him in the armes of Ioseph and in the lap of Mary but hee gets him into his owne armes embraces him and blesseth God that he lived to see these happy daies so must wee doe not content our selves to see Christ in
the armes of Ioseph in the lap of Mary in the armes of the Preachers or of other good Christians but wee must labour to have him in our owne armes the armes of our faith for though we may see Christ in the armes of our teachers yet for all this wee may perish and therefore so much the rather ought wee to receive and get him into our armes and apply him into our hearts because hee comes to present himselfe to thee and to me therefore if we doe not receive him wee shall be guilty of his blood If we should bee in a roome and a childe should cry to come unto us would wee neglect the childe would not we cast away that which wee had in our hands and take the childe into our owne armes I doe not say if it were the childe of a king we would doe so but if it were the childe of an honest poore man and therefore much more should we receive the Childe Christ beloved this Chide Christ doth in a sort cry to come unto us and saith as it were thus O good people receive me into your hearts receive me into your soules I doe not desire it for my owne sake but you shall be the better for it therefore O good people why doe ye not receive me if we doe not wee are like to perish and we shall be guilty of his blood and therefore this is our duty when Christ doth offer himselfe unto us we should bee ready to receive him so old Simeon did for it is nothing to see him unlesse wee get him in our armes by our faith and embrace him therefore why doe we not fling away all things that doe hinder us and receive him into our hearts and lay hold on him which is life and salvation offered to us The second was that when he had seene Christ he praiseth God for it that although he had seene a great deale of trouble and felt a great deale of sorrow yet that he lived to see those happy daies wherein he might see Christ so howsoever we have lived to see a great deale of trouble and sorrow yet wee should praise God that hee hath let us live to see Christ in the face of the Gospell therefore wee have great cause to praise God that hee hath let us live till this time to repent us of our sinnes to get faith in Christ howsoever we have had a great deale of sorrow and trouble in this world yet the comfort is that we have repented of our sinnes and lived to make heaven and happinesse sure unto us Matth. 13. 16. saith our Saviour But blessed be your eyes for they see and your eares for they heare as if he should say O blessed be God for this happy time wherein we live to see that wee see and to heare that which we heare so Iohn 20. when the Disciples had seene Christ they told Thomas of it They were glad that after a great deale of trouble they had seene Christ at last so it is said Act. 8. 39. the Eunuch went away rejoycing when Christ was made knowne to him therefore whatsoever wee have beene before yet if wee can repent of our sinnes get Christ into our hearts by faith wee have great cause to praise and to thanke God that wee have lived to see these daies hast thou beene a swearer or a drunkard or a bad liver and repented of thy sinnes lay hold on Christ thou hast great cause to praise God and to thanke him that he hath let thee live to see these happy daies The third effect was that he did utter these speeches Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace c. Now this saying of Simeon was the first song in the new Testament that was sung in the Temple wherein foure things may be observed 1. His willingnesse and profession to dye 2. What account he made of death 3. In what disposition he doth desire to dye 4. The Reason why he was willing to dye The first is a profession of his willingnesse to dye Now Lord I am willing to dye I am well contented to depart in peace for I have seene enough I have seene the Saviour and redeemer of the world I have embraced him in my armes and therefore I am willing to dye now So when we have seene Christ we should bee willing to dye for wee have seene enough for our salvation as long as God would have us live wee should be willing to live and when he would have us dye we should be willing to depart we see if a master send his servant to trade and traffique beyond sea so long as his master will have him to trade and traffique so long hee will trade but when his master will have him come home hee will packe up all and come away so as long as God will have us trade and traffique heere we should be content but when hee will have us packe up all and come home wee should be contented to doe so In the Gospell we finde that Christ fled from death and danger when God would have him fly but when the time of his death came he went out to meete it so likewise Moses hee could have beene contented to passe over Iordan but when God told him that he should not but he must goe and dye in the mount Nebo hee went as willingly up as any man goeth to a feast or banquet therefore it is a pitifull thing to see how men doe hang upon the world at that time when God would have them dye Secondly what account he made of death men make much adoe about it are afraid of it but Simeon accounteth it but a departing out of this one roome into another a departing from men to God from earth to heaven from mortality to immortality therefore wee may see what account wee should make of it The Philosophers say that death is the most terrible thing that may be because they thinke it is an utter destruction of nature but Simeon accounts of it as of a remooving or departure from one place to another therefore he is not afraid of it but embraceth it as a doore or gate to passe from earth to heaven from men to God from mortality to immortality and this is the account that all men should make of death Gen. 15. 15. saith the Lord to Abraham but thou shalt go to thy fathers in peace and shalt be buried in a good old age so that death is nothing but a going to the holy men those that have died in faith before and Christ accounts of it Ioh. 17. 13. but as a going to God to the blessed Angels and holy Spirits departed so also Paul in one of his epistles Neverthelesse wee are bold and love rather to remoove out of this body and to dwell with the Lord. Ahasuerus Hester 2. 13 14. had two houses for his women one was the house of sweete perfumes and odors that they might bee
their courses it will grieve Christ that ever he prayed in the mount sweat in the garden died on the crosse therefore seeing the end why Christ suffered is to bring us to God let us not disappoint him of it Thus much for the generall end Now the particular end is twofold 1. To reconcile unto God 2. To abolish sinne First to reconcile us to God and to make us at one with him so 1 Pet. 2. 24. Who his owne selfe bare our sinnes in his body on the tree that we being delivered from sinne should live in righteousnesse by whose stripes we are healed and Ioh. 1. 14. Behold the Lambe of God that takes away the sinnes of the world even as the Lambe in the Law tooke away sinne so doth Christ for in the Law when a lambe was to bee offered for the sinnes of the people they came and laid their hands upon the head thereof confessed their sinnes and so they were put upon the lambe which was killed and the man went free so Christ doth take away our sinnes which are laid upon him he is killed and we goe free therefore when the devill shall stand up at the day of judgement to accuse us and say we have sinned against God wee must not deny the matter for then we are cast and God may justly condemne us but wee must say it is true indeede Satan I have sinned against God I have done thus and thus against Him but I have had the Law for it I have answered it and although not in my selfe yet in Christ for he suffered and was killed for me and hath borne whatsoever God could require at my hands therefore seeing Christ hath satisfied thou canst not require any thing at my hands there is a rule in law that if a debt be paid they cannot require payment thereof againe therefore if we can prove payment of it by Christ it cannot be required of us againe Secondly Christ died to abolish Sinne for he did not onely die to reconcile us to God and beare that which wee should have borne but also to abolish and destroy Sinne therefore seeing Christ died to abolish it wee must take heed wee doe not strengthen sinne for if wee nourish it it will make all the death of Christ and his blood void to us when Ioshua destroyed Iericho Cursed saith he bee the man before the Lord that riseth up and buildeth this Citie c. Iosh 6. 26. So seeing Christ hath suffered to abolish sinne cursed shall that man or that woman bee that buildeth it up againe therefore wee have great cause to weaken sinne and to decline it seeing hee had not suffered any thing but for it As 1 Sam. 25. 21. when David sent to Nabal a messenger and hee returned a churlish answer againe saith David Surely in vaine have I kept all that this fellow hath in the wildernesse c. so may Christ say if we live still in our sinnes and strengthen them in vaine have I suffered for them in vaine have I prayed and died on the crosse and therefore if wee live in our sinnes we make his death of none effect unto us Againe seeing Christ died to abolish sinne we must make this the end of our sufferings for that which was Christs end must be the end of our sufferings therefore doest thou suffer sicknesse losse of thy goods or other afflictions Let this be the end of thy sufferings to abolish sinne Afflictions are called Crosses because as wee know that crosses are to crucifie and kill men so every affliction must be as a crosse to crucifie and to kill sinne our vile affections and the immoderate lusts of our flesh many a man is contented to suffer afflictions but to what end to abolish sinne as Christ did no but for some by-respect of his owne we may not doe so for if we would have comfort in our sufferings that which was Christs end in his must be ours also Fifthly Of whom he suffered of God and of man this is a lesson for our learning not onely to suffer at the hands of God but also at the hands of men because this is part of our conformitie with Christ Ordinarily the people of God when they doe suffer of God doe not suffer of men and when they suffer of men doe not suffer of God but if it fall out so that we doe suffer both at the hands of God and men we should be quiet and contented with the good will of God and say as Eli did It is the Lord let him doe as it pleaseth him It is the corruption of the world that they can be contented to suffer at the hands of God but they cannot abide to suffer of men they are impatient when it is so and what men must wee suffer of the unjust the wicked men many can be contented to suffer at the hands of good men as David saith Let the righteous smite me Lord but we must be contented to suffer of the unjust men for Christ did not onely suffer at the hands of God but also of wicked men Now the sixth thing is What he suffered and here we have a double suffering for he suffered things 1. From God 2. From Men. The things he suffered from God were two First the cup of Malediction or of Gods curse tempered by our sinnes of which he drunke in the Garden Secondly Desertions on the Crosse the hiding of Gods favourable countenance from him wherein observe 1. How it wrought three afflictions in him 2. His carriage in that estate 3. The effects of it Secondly what he suffered from men in which foure things 1. Apprehension 2. Arraignement 3. Condemnation 4. Execution The first thing is the cup of Malediction which our sinnes tempered for him now see we what this bitter cup of Gods wrath which Christ did drinke wrought in him and here wee may consider these three Afflictions First Feare it is said Hee began to be afraid which was no ordinary or common feare but a dreadfull horrible feare such a feare as Moses had for which it is said of him Act. 7. 32. That hee trembled and durst not behold And such as David had when he said Psal 119. 120. My flesh trembleth for feare of thee and I am afraid of thy judgements so it was not an ordinary feare but an horrible and a dreadfull feare At other times he was so full of holy courage and of an undaunted Spirit that his Disciples wondered at it for when they told him that the Iewes did lye in wait to destroy him he did not feare it yet now he was horribly afraid what was the reason of it There were two things that made Christ so to feare First because he was to stand before God in judgement clothed and apparelled with our sins If he might have stood before God in his owne righteousnesse then there had beene no cause of feare but because hee was to stand
before him clothed with our sinnes this made him afraid Secondly He was afraid of death which was neere at hand Now he was not afraid of death as it was a dissolution of nature a separation of the soule from the body but as it was joyned with the curse of God But let us consider these two causes of his feare a little better and we shall finde good matter of instruction in them First he was afraid to stand before God in judgement clothed and apparelled with our sinnes this was a strange thing that he which was the Sonne of God and the brightnesse of the glory of God should now be afraid to stand before God Now if he were afraid how much more may we be to stand before God in judgement to come before him in prayer to appeare in his holy presence If the Sonne of God was afraid then much more may we Indeed if we have repented for our sinnes carried them over unto Christ and doe beleeve in him then we may boldly stand before God in judgement and come before him in prayer and approch into his holy presence when we may say as David doth Psalm 26. Prove me O Lord and trie my wayes but if we have not repented of our sins nor carried them unto the shoulders of Christ if we doe not beleeve in him then we have just cause to be afraid Gen. 3. When Adam had committed but one sinne he was afraid to come before God in judgement and therefore hid himselfe If Adam was so afraid when he had committed but one sinne how much more should we be to come before him having committed many great and grievous sinnes therefore howsoever we may carry away the matter closely and be quiet in our consciences for a time yet if God should but bring his judgements upon us or death so that we come to appeare before God then we shall quake and tremble as Dan. 5. we see Belshazzar did who whilest he was making himselfe merry drinking and abusing the holy vessels of God and the hand-writing did but appeare on the wall quaked exceedingly so that his countenance was changed his thoughts troubled the joynts of his loynes were loosed his knees smote one against another Even so howsoever the wicked may be at peace and quiet a little while yet if God set up a throne of judgement then they will quake and be afraid to come before him In the Revelation we may see how the brave fellowes and gallant lads of this world and the great captaines howsoever they could carry away the matter and be at quiet for a little time when God sets up a tribunall seat to judge them they runne into caves and dens and desire the hils and mountaines to fall upon them to hide them from the presence of God So howsoever we may be at quiet for a time if we have not repented for our sinnes If God come to judge us we shall quake and tremble and desire the hils and mountaines to fall upon us and to hide us from the presence of God Secondly Christ was afraid of death which was neere at hand So Heb. 5. 7. Christ is said in the dayes of his flesh when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and teares unto him that was able to save him from death It appeares he was afraid of death in that he prayed against it I but was Christ afraid of death we see that in the Revelation many of the Saints of God loved not their lives but did willingly embrace death And Act. 20. the Apostle Paul was not onely readie to bee bound for the name of God but to die for it And therefore wee see many of the people of God were not afraid of death how then was Christ afraid of it I answer that death may be considered two ways 1. As it is a dissolution of nature and a separation of the soule from the bodie 2. As it is joyned with the curse and wrath of God Now Christ was not afraid of death as it was a separation of the soule from the bodie but as it was joyned with the wrath and curse of God thus as it is a curse every man hath cause to be afraid of it but if it be joyned with the favour and love of God then we have no cause of feare Iohn 8. Christs threatens the Iewes that they should die in their sins Oh it is a fearful thing when men die in their sinnes under the wrath and curse of God unrepentant for them There is a great cause why such should be afraid of death a number of people there be that are contented to die and yet they are covetous persons vile livers swearers and drunkards but I tell thee if thou hast not repented for thy sinnes hast not caried them unto Christ and applied his righteousnesse unto thee thou hast great cause to be afraid of death Pull the sting out of the serpent and thou mayst put him into thy bosome but if thou let his sting alone be will sting thee So death hath a sting as 1 Cor. 15. 55. which is sinne therefore let this sting be taken away and then we have no cause to be afraid of death But Revel 20. 14. Death is said to goe before and Hell to follow after so that Hell is the tayle of Death and therefore wee have good cause to bee afraid thereof Bernard saith If thou hast put away all shame which appertaineth to so noble a a creature as thou art if thou feele no sorrow as carnall men doe not yet cast not away feare which is found in every beast Wee offer to load an Asse yet hee cares not for it though wee weary him out because he is an Asse but if thou wouldst thrust him into the fire or into a ditch he would avoid it as much as hee could for that hee loveth life and feareth death feare thou then and be not more insensible than a beast feare death feare judgement feare hell The second Affliction that wrought in Christ was heavinesse and sorrow and this not a common or an ordinary but a dreadfull sorrow Now what was the cause that Christ was thus sorrowfull I answer there were three causes of it First because he saw the face of God discomfortably to looke upon him which was wont to shine upon him with an amiable and loving countenance he that was wont to looke so sweetly upon him now to see him as an angry Iudge and not as a loving Father This was it that made him sorrowfull and heavie The Scribes and Pharisees looked upon him angerly yet he was never moved at it but when hee seeth Gods angry countenance towards him this did more touch him than all the bodily paines that hee felt for hee never complained of the spickes and nailes that were thrust into his hands and feet nor of his whipping or buffetting but when he saw Gods angry
countenance bent towards him this made him complaine on the Crosse My God why hast thou forsaken me Of which wee have two Vses First To prise the favour of God above all things and to joy in it howsoever men be displeased with us to make little account of our ease pleasure and profits but to prise the love of God above all things and to say with David Psalm 63. 3. Because thy loving kindnesse is better than life my lips shall praise thee And Psalm 4. 6. Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us Secondly To mourne for the losse of Gods favour more than for the losse of worldly friends or for the losse of worldly goods or jewels thus wee see Christ did he was sorrowfull to see the angry countenance of God towards him Exod. 33. 4. we see when the Lord had told the people that an Angel should conduct them but he would no more go before them because they were a stiffenecked people they were dejected and no man put on his best rayment then Moses said If thy presence goe not carry us not hence So a Christian man must say when he is going out of his doore Lord carry me not from this place unlesse thy holy presence goe with me for if God be not with us we have just cause to be sorrowfull and heavie it is a pitifull thing that men can weep and sorrow for the losse of a wife or a childe or of some worldly goods but cannot weep for the losse of Gods favour Iudg. 18. 24. we see how Michah did weepe for the losse of a false god when the souldiers had taken away his gods he runnes crying after them and when they asked him why he cried saith he Yee have taken away my gods and now what have I more If Michah thus wept for the losse of his false gods how much more should we weepe for the losse of the true God And therefore men have great cause to weepe when they have driven away God from them by their sinnes The second cause of Christs sorrow was To make expiation and satisfaction for our sinnes because all sinnes are done and committed with delight therefore there must be sorrow and heavinesse to make expiation and satisfaction for them for it is a ruled case That as we doe commit sinne with delight so there should be sorrow to make satisfaction for it therefore wee are called often to weep and to mourne for our sins the greatnesse whereof we may see by the greatnesse of the sorrow that was in Christ therefore we must grieve and sorrow for our sinnes proportionably as Christ hath grieved and sorrowed for us seeing whatsoever we should have suffered he suffered for us Thirdly His sorrow was to leave us him for an example that as he sorrowed for sinne so unlesse we repent wee shall sorrow and weepe too Christ sorrowed and wept for other mens sinnes then wee have cause to sorrow and weepe for our owne sinnes to grieve throughly for them as Hosea 9. 1. saith the Lord Rejoyce not O Israel for joy as other people for thou hast goe a whoring from thy God So if we have sinned against God there Is little cause why wee should rejoyce therefore what must wee doe we must goe into the Garden with Christ weepe along after him fall downe flat upon the ground before God and never bee at rest till wee have assurance to our soules that all our sinnes are pardoned for shall Christ sorrow for our sins and we never be moved We see 2 Sam. 11. when Vria came to David hee bids him goe downe to his house and wash his feet yet he would not but slept at the doore of the Kings Palace then it was told David who demanded of him why hee went not downe to his wife his answer was The Arke and Israel and Iuda abide in Tents and my Lord Ioab is in the field shall I then goe into my house to eat and drinke c. So we must say My Lord Iesus is in the Garden weeping sorrowing sweating bleeding and grovelling on the ground for my sinnes and shall I live then in delight Nay I will sorrow and weepe for them for sinne will cost sorrow either here or in hell therefore better it were to weepe for them here in earth when we may have comfort and hope than to weepe for them in hell where wee shall never have comfort for sinne is like to a legge that is out of joynt that cannot be set without great griefe and sorrow The third Affliction that which was wrought in Christ was astonishment or an amazednesse Matth. 26. 38. the Greeke word doth signifie that he was in a great perplexity that he knew not whither to goe nor what to say nor how to winde out himselfe such an astonishment there was and such amazednesse in the holy soule of Christ what was the reason of it because the curse of God was to come upon him for our sinnes Oh thinke of this this was that which did so amaze and perplex him therefore if he was thus troubled and perplexed to thinke of the curse of God which hee was to undergoe what shall become of us what perplexitie and amazement shall we be in when we shall stand before God we shall hardly know what to doe or where to winde or turne our selves but wee shall desire the hils and mountaines to fall upon us and to cover us from the presence of God and from his angrie countenance And therefore let every man be afraid to live in his sinnes without repentance and never let him looke for hope of ease unlesse he doe repent and turne to God here wee have twenty trickes to put off the Law and to shift that but when wee shall stand before God wee shall have no shifts to excuse the matter SERM. XIV MATTHEW 20. 17. And Jesus going up to Ierusalem tooke the twelve Disciples apart in the way and said unto them Behold wee goe up to Ierusalem and the Sonne of man shall be betrayed unto the chiefe Priests and unto the Scribes and they shall condemne him to death And shall deliver him unto the Gentiles to mocke and to scourge and to crucifie him and the third day he shall rise againe THe point now in hand is the Behaviour or Carriage of Chirst in his Afflictions set out two wayes 1. By his Prostration on the ground 2. By his Prayer First by his Prostration Luke saith hee kneeled downe but the other that he fell downe flat upon the ground on his face this is a strange thing that Christ fell downe on the ground not able to beare our sinnes whereas Hebr. 1. 1. Hee is able to beare up heaven and earth with his mighty Word And yet the heavie burthen of our sinnes pressed him downe to the ground Many a man makes a sleight matter of sinne but it is the heaviest burthen that may be for all other
cause of this darknesse but it was onely the hand of God that did restraine it even as he did restraine the heat of the fire when the three Children were cast into the firy furnace there was fire but God restrained the heat thereof that it could not burne so there was the Sunne at that time but God restrained the light of it three houres together Againe as the Philosophers say the second cause cannot work without the vertue of the first therefore if the first cease the second must needs cease as we see in a clocke if there be a stand in the great wheeles there must needs be a stay in the lesser because the great wheeles carry about the little ones so as I may say God is as the great wheele that carrieth about the creatures therefore when there is a stay or an cessation in God there must needs bee a stay and cessation in the creatures This therefore should make us afraid to sin against God and displease him because hee is able in a moment to destroy all the creatures or to restraine them therefore wee have cause to be afraid to offend or displease him we see how afraid men be to sinne against the King and offend him who yet can but kill the body but God is able to kill both foule and body and cast them into hell fire All the Kings are not able to restraine the influence of the heavenly bodies but God we see is able to doe it he can restraine as Iob saith the influence of the Pleiades and Orion And therefore how afraid should we be to snne against him Indeed so much the more because we have made a covenant with God of new obedience we see if a man have given one a peece of gold or silver upon a condition that if he doe such and such things hee shall double the gold if he be tempted he will say I dare not doe it because I am bound to the contrary so if we be inticed to any sinne we should say I dare not doe so because I am bound to the contrary if a man set a bowle well at the first it is like to runne well but if it be not set well it cannot possibly runne well so if we set our selves in a good course at the first it is like we shall continue well but if we doe not how is it possible we should come in a good course Thirdly The end of it Some say the Sunne was darkened because it was ashamed to behold the death of the Sonne of God and therefore was darkened even as Hagar would not see the death of her childe some say that the end was to deterre the Iewes from the death of Christ As a man when he would not have his servant to leave worke he will not put out the candle so say they it was to keepe the Iewes from so vile a thing as to kill the Sonne of God therefore the Sunne was darkned but in my minde there is another end howsoever these may bee probable and that is this that seeing Christ was to suffer for us and for our sins therefore God did darken the Sun upon him To teach us that we deserve not to have the light of the Sunne Moone or Stars to shine on us therefore when as we looke upon our gardens wives children lands or goods we must confesse and say O Lord we deserve that thou shouldest have wrapped up all in darknesse and that we should not have any light to have seene any thy blessings This should stirre us up to be thankfull to God for the light of the Sunne Moone and Starres yea for the light of a candle even for the least light we enjoy SERMON XV. MATTH 27. 46. And about the ninth houre Jesus cried with a loud voice saying Eli Eli lamesabachthani that is to say My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee IN the Gospell when our Saviour had fed five thousand people with five loaves and two fishes he bids them gather up the fragments that nothing be lost So we should doe in the sufferings of Christ gather them up so that nothing bee lost never a drop of bloud that hee shed in the Garden never a sigh or sobbe or word on the Crosse should fall to the ground this must bee our care as also that we get cleane hearts and soules to keepe all in That which Christ suffered at the hands of God was two-fold In the Garden and on the Crosse of which we have spoken The next thing we are to speake of is the bitter complaint of Christ on the crosse wherein two things are to be considered 1. The time when he complained 2. What hee complained of The time may be considered in three particulars First that he complained at the ninth houre of the day after the fearefull darkenesse there was none of the souldiers that complained nor any of the Iewes that were moved with it but we see Christ complaines when he saw how the wrath of God came against him for our sinnes Which must teach us that though the world be not moved nor touched with the present judgements that bee upon them yet wee should take them to heart and labour to make a good use of them the Prophet complaines of this Thou hast smitten them and they have not mourned c. And Ierem. 8. 6. I. harkened and heard that they spake not aright no man repented him of his wickednesse saying What have I done And Zeph. 3. 5. Every morning doth he bring his judgements to light he faileth not but the wicked will not learne to bee ashamed There is not one day that commeth over our heads but there is one judgment or other that befals our selves or others therefore howsoever others are not moved at it nor take it to heart yet wee should there be a number of strange judgements come upon us from time to time which though the wicked let slip and never regard yet the people of God must be wise to make a good use both of the judgements that come upon themselves and others if a man heare the kings writs bee out against him will he let the matter alone No but hee will make agreement or else hee knoweth it will come to a greater charge so the judgements of God are Gods writs as it were what shall we let them alone No but agree quickly lest it cost us a great deale of paines and labour afterwards But what was it that made Christ complaine It was in him the power of grace that brought it home to his heart in like manner if the power of grace be in our hearts it will teach us to make a good use of all the judgements of God Secondly hee complained on the crosse it was not in the garden for there was some distance of time betweene that which Christ suffered on the crosse and that in the garden so that hee did not
doe not see it Secondly though a Christian fall yet he fals not finally he shall not be forsaken for ever it is but for a little time as Esay 54. 7. For a small moment have I forsaken thee but with great compassion will I gather thee in a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a little season but with everlasting kindnesse have I had compassion on thee So in another place it is said Though heavinesse endures for a night yet joy commeth in the morning I have shewed you heretofore that it is with a Christian as with a man in a swound bring a man then to the fire rub and chafe him and put a little Aqua-vitae in his mouth if there be any life in him he will recover againe So it is with a Christian in his fals if he be brought to the meanes to the Word preached to prayer or to the use of the Sacraments if there be the life of grace in him he will recover againe so then God doth not forsake a Christian finally The Vses are First seeing God doth not forsake totally and finally wee may see what a comfortable estate it is to be a true Christian hee may have assurance that God will not forsake him for ever this is an excellent priviledge and prerogative that a Beleever hath his friends and kindred may forsake him but God will never therefore such a man may say by himselfe privately Lord I thanke thee although my friends and my kindred have forsaken mee yet thou hast not on thee I will rely and put my whole confidence in thee for thou hast promised that whilest I trust in thee thou never wilt forsake mee And this is a sweet comfort that a Christian may have a servant may be forsaken of his master as the Amalekite was 1 Sam. 30. 13. and a childe may be forsaken of his mother as Moses was Exod. 2. 3. a husband may forsake his wife one friend another but God will never forsake them that be his servants Secondly seeing God doth not forsake his finally nor totally let us labour to be one of his servants and then we have an evidence that God will not leave us not forsake us a father may forsake his childe a master his servant a land-lord may cast off his tenants but God will not forsake them that doe depend upon him if wee be his servants then wee have an evidence to shew whereby we may assure our selves when all else leave us yet God will not forsake us Thirdly seeing God will not forsake us finally and totally it is a shame for us to forsake him the childe hath greater cause not to forsake the mother than the mother hath to forsake the childe for the childe cannot live without the mother but it is like to starve and perish but the mother can live without the childe so we have greater cause not to forsake God than he hath to forsake us wee cannot live without him and he can be glorified though we were in hell Therefore seeing God hath not forsaken us it is a shame for us to forsake him The third thing is To know what the cause is that God forsakes his people To answer briefly It is for sinne Why is sinne such a great matter that it will make God forsake his creatures I answer it is sinne and nothing but sinne let a mans estate be what it will be never so rich or poore if hee doe not repent his sinnes but live in them and commit them from day to day it will cause God to forsake him therefore art thou poore or rich doe not sinne against God and live in it without repentance for it will make God to depart from thee For looke what was the cause that God did forsake his owne Sonne the same will make him forsake thee Now sin was the impelling cause that made God forsake his Son for when he found our sinne upon him by imputation he forsooke him awhile therefore consider with thy selfe if God would not spare sin but punish it upon his owne Sonne though it were but imputed to him then it is sure if he finde sinne upon thee he will forsake thee if thou repent not for it for if God spared not the Angels when they had sinned neither spared his owne Sonne when he found our sinnes imputed unto him surely he will not spare thee unlesse thou repent howsoever thou do not find it in time of health and peace yet when the day of death or the day of judgment commeth thou shalt see thy selfe forsaken of God O that the wicked would consider this that if they live in their sinnes and doe not repent God wil forsake them It was sinne that made God depart away from his Temple and from his own house as Ezek. 8. 6. saith God Sonne of man seest thou not what they doe even the great abominations that the house of Israel committeth here to cause me to depart from my Sanctuarie So we see that sinne made God to forsake his owne house and the place that he had appointed for his owne glory if wee provoke him by our sinnes he will depart from us unlesse we repent Fourthly How a Christian should cary himselfe when he finds himselfe to be forsaken of God This may we see in the famous and memorable example of Christ for looke how Christ carried himselfe when he was in shew forsaken of God so should we carry our selves when we likewise finde our selves forsaken of him Now Christ carried himselfe 1. Mournefully for he did in that bitternesse come to God 2. Patiently he did not murmure or grudge against God 3. Holily First he carrieth himselfe mournefully he did bitterly complaine to God when he saw himselfe to be forsaken Now as Christ carried himselfe mournefully when he saw himselfe to be forsaken of God so wee should mourne and bitterly complaine to ●od when we see our selves forsaken of him as 1 Sam. 7. 2. wee see the people of Israel lamented after the Arke twenty yeeres together all the while being without it so we should weepe and lament many daies together so long as we finde our selves forsaken of God Ioh. 20. when Mary had lost Christ shee seekes for him and standeth weeping by his Sepulcher saith Christ to her Woman why weepest thou to which she answered they have taken away my Lord and I know not where they have laid him I have good cause to weepe they have taken him away or I have lost him in whom I have laid up all my hope comfort and joy so a Christian man or woman may say when he findes himselfe forsaken of God I have good cause to weepe and mourne many a-day together for I have lost Christ hee is departed from me in whom all my joy and comfort was laid up Secondly Christ did carry himselfe patiently he did not murmure and grudge against God for as a learned man saith these
Then all the Churches shall know that I am he that searcheth the reines and hearts Thirdly he was apprehended to temporall paines but the wicked shall be taken to eternall torments as it is said Marke 9. the worme that never dieth there shall be no end of their torments And this shall be the fearfull apprehension of the wicked at the day of Iudgement wherefore as the Apostle Saint Paul 2 Cor. 5. 11. saith Knowing therefore the terrour of the Lord we perswade men c. So say I knowing of this fearefull apprehension of the wicked at the last day of Iudgement we perswade men to repent them of their sins and to please God that So they may avoid it If a man heare that the Kings Writ is comming out against him to arrest and carry him away to prison hee would surely make friends to stay the Processe and Writ so when we heare to know that there is a Writ against us from heaven to come upon us we must labour to stop it and send up our prayers to God to stay his judgements that so we be not farther vexed with them thus the taking of Christ should put us in minde of the fearefull taking of the wicked at the day of Iudgement The second was the binding of Christ one would not thinke that the Iewes would have bound him seeing he was so willing to be taken that he offered himselfe yet there be divers reasons thereof in regard of the Intention both of Man and of God and first in regard of the Intention of man I will give you these three reasons 1. For paine and punishment 2. For caution and securitie 3. To put the more shame and disgrace upon him First it was for Paine and punishment so Paul in his persecution bound them that called upon the Name of the Lord it was for punishment and for paine and so Christ was bound in regard of both Most thinke they can never be too harsh to Christ and to his members and never tender enough to themselves and to others but these shall bee put to all the paines So we see Psal 105. 18. it is said that Iosephs feet was in the stocks and the irons entered into his soule that is they entered into his live-flesh so Heb. 11. it is said of the faithfull that some of them were sawne in sunder some racked some were stoned and put to the greatest extremity that might bee Theeves and murtherers and vile persons can finde favour and mercy but Christ and his members can finde none at the hands of the world Secondly it was for caution sake and security because they would hinder him in his flight and so keepe him safe for this cause Peter Act. 12. had chaines laid upon him to abate his force that he should not hurt or resist them and so Sampson was bound now none of these reasons could move the Iewes to binde Christ for though he might have escaped yet he came and did offer himselfe and when they were downe on the ground Christ might have escaped and would not therefore there was no cause of feare but this is the property of a bad conscience to be afraid when there is no cause of feare especially of Christ and his servants Thirdly it was to put the greater disgrace and shame upon him therefore seeing Christ was content to have disgrace and shame put upon him for us we should be contented to suffer the like for him and for holy Religion now seeing Christ was contented to have disgrace and shame put upon him for us though he was God and wee men he the Creator and we the creatures hee our Lord and we his servants hee holy and we unholy therefore let us be contented to be ashamed and disgraced for him saith the Apostle Paul I am not ashamed of the Gospell of Christ c. So let every one of us say I am not ashamed of Christian and holy Religion And these be the Reasons why Christ was bound in regard of men Now as Christ was bound in regard of men so hee was bound in regard of Gods intention and that for three causes first To sanctifie the bounds of his servants that if any should suffer for his cause or for Religion his bands might bee sanctified to them if wee suffer with Christ then our sufferings become the sufferings of Christ he sitteth at one end of the ballance and we at the other Act. 26. saith the Apostle for the hopes sake of Israel I am bound with this chaine And Phil. 1. 13. So that my hands in Christ are manifest in all the palace and in all other places This may give comfort to man in bonds and in affliction that by the meanes of Christs bonds they are sanctified to him this is the first cause why Christ was bound in regard of Gods Intention Secondly To teach us the desert of our sinnes for as Christ was bound and fettered for us so wee deserved to bee bound with the chaines of eternall condemnation and to be led away that we should never see God Esai 53. 5. saith the Prophet The chastisements of our peace was upon him he stood in our roome and place and therefore looke how the Iewes tied and bound Christ so we deserve to be tyed and bound with the chaines of darknesse for ever wee see how many a man goes jesting up and downe and does not consider how Christ was bound and chained but know thou whosoever thou art this is thy desert for sinne if God should draw out the arme of his justice against thee and give thee thy due deserving punishment It is the speech of the holy man Ieremie It is the Lords mercy that we are not all consumed it is his mercy that we have a house to put our heads in a bed to lye in one bit of bread to eate Thirdly Christ was bound that wee might be loosed his binding is our loosing for he was in our roome and place now in that Christ hath suffered and was bound for us wee are freed the old debt cannot be required of us for as the Lawyers say if the debt bee paid of the surety in good dealing it cannot bee required againe Now there bee two kinds of chaines that Christ doth free us from 1. The Chaine of Condemnation 2. The Chaine of Corruption First the chaine of condemnation for as Divines say the guilt of sinne is the binding of a man to answer at Gods judgement barre for it and therfore every sin that a man committeth is a spirituall chaine to binde him to answer for it and as poore prisoners goe bound in fetters and chaines to answer at the sessions so a man goes bound in chaines by his sinnes to answer at Gods judgement seate Now by Christ wee are freed from these chaines so soone as wee are converted and lay hold on Christ as Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to those
clothes so we rather than lose the peace of our conscience let all other things fall to the ground As a man in a shipwracke hee never thinkes of his losses but is well contented if hee can save his life hee is thankfull to God and rejoyceth that he himselfe hath escaped so when the time of trouble and persecution is let us not thinke of our losses if we can escape with the peace of our conscience let us bee thankfull to God it is the course of the world that if any strange disease fall upon their children or their cattell they say they are bewitched when as indeed it is their sinnes that doth bewitch them and what doe they then say they have been damnified by a bad witch therefore they must goe to a good witch to have helpe and sometimes they doe so losing thereby the peace of their consciences but rather than we should doe so let us lose children and cattell and all before we lose Gods favour and the peace of conscience Matth. 10. our Saviour saith to his Disciples Bee yee wise as Serpents Now this is the wisdome of the Serpent that he will take a wound any where rather than on his head because life lieth there so rather than we should lose Christ let us lose all because Christ is our life Thus this young man teacheth us wisdome who rather than hee would betray Christ lost his garments and ran away SERMON XVII MARKE 14. 55 56. And the Chiefe Priests and all the Councell sought for witnesse against Iesus to put him to death and found none For many bare false witnesse against him but their witnesse agreed not together THe Apprehension of Christ we spake of the last day Now wee are to speake of his Arraignement for though Christ might have beene killed in the tumult yet he was preserved In the Arraignment of Christ we observe three things 1. The persons before whom he was Arraigned 2. The causes for which he was Arraigned 3. The manner of his Arraignment First The persons before whom he was arraigned Annas and Caiphas the two high Priests it is worth our observation that these Priests were gathered together early in the morning for they could not be at rest till they had apprehended and condemned him no question there were a number of other Priests with them at the same time who would not in all probabilitie have beene hired for any money to come out of their warme beds to have done good but to condemne Christ they are up all night and that a cold night too so it is a corruption still that men cannot abide to sit up about any good duties of religion to repent of their sinnes to pray to God to speake of good things then they are asleepe straight but to sit up long at dice and cards and other pastimes this is their delight Luke 5. we see the Disciples when they were fishing they could hold out and not sleepe but when they came to pray with Christ in the Garden they were straight asleepe and there also Matth. 26. Iudas he slept not but was busie about his market with the Priests consulting to take him it is said of such Prov. 4. 16. That they cannot sleepe except they have done evill and their sleepe departeth except they cause some to fall Now this diligence in the Priests should teach us diligence in the performing of good duties for if they would spend whole nights to bring their wicked purposes to passe oh how diligent should we be to performe service to God Marke 1. 35. we see our Saviour arose early in the morning to pray and yet how slow are wee who cannot get up an houre after Sunne in the morning to performe good duties Secondly the causes why Christ was arraigned were three first that wee might not be arraigned and condemned as the day of judgement for he stood in our roome interposed himselfe for us and was contented to be taken of the Iewes to be led away arraigned and condemned and to dye for us therefore a Christian beleever may have comfort that seeing Christ was arraigned for him before men hee shall not be arraigned before God as Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus c. and againe in the same Chap. vers 35. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen It is God that justifieth who shall condemne so Ioh. 3. He that beleeveth in me shall not perish but shall have everlasting life therefore if we beleeve we have a certificate from God that wee shall not bee condemned when the devill is ready to accuse us and to say thou art a vile sinner and thou must come before God to bee arraigned and condemned for thy sinnes we must not deny the matter but say it is true Sathan I am a great and grievous sinner against God but Christ was arraigned and condemned for me and though I suffer not in my owne person yet Christ hath for me and therefore it shall not be required at my hands Secondly that he might have compassion and pitty on them that suffer and be arraigned for good causes as Heb. 4. 15. saith the Apostle For we have not an high Priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sort as we are yet without sinne therefore seeing Christ was arraigned doe not thou doubt but if thou bee arraigned for a good cause Christ will releeve thee and shew compassion on thee as Pauls experience was 2 Tim. 4. 17. And I was delivered out of the mouth of the Lion c. This hath made good men confident to hold out in trouble as Dan. 3. when the king would have had the three Children to have worshipped the image which hee had made say they we are not carefull to answer thee in this matter behold our God whom we serve is able to deliver us so Act. 4. when the Apostles were brought before the governors and forbidden to preach they said They could not but speake the things they had heard and seene therefore as Saint Cyprian saith a Christian may be killed but cannot be overcome because he that is in them is greater than he that is in the world Thirdly that we might set up a throne in our owne hearts and arraigne our selves of sinne for Christs arraignement must teach us to arraigne sinne as he was killed so we must kill sinne as Christ was buried so wee must bury sinne to which purpose it is said 1 Cor. 11. 31. If we would judge our selves we should not be judged of the Lord so our judgement is to prevent the judgement of the Lord. Thus many good men have in holy Scripture arraigned themselves as Iob If saith he I should justifie my selfe yee then would condemne me David 2 Sam. 24. 17. It is I that have sinned but these sheepe what have they done so the Church
well at first and have the successe we desire yet we must not give over but to it againe and againe It is the sinne of the world that if things doe not succeed well at the first they give over a good cause and are discouraged as Hag. 1. when the Iewes were hindered from building the Temple straight-way they left off so men be quickly discouraged in good courses but it must be the wisdome of a Christian though things doe not succeed presently yet to goe on againe and againe This was the wisdome of Pilate and must be our wisdome also as it is observed of the Spider that although she be hindered in her labour and one come with a broome and sweepe downe her web she will up againe the next day so this must be the wisdome of a Christian though he doe not succeed well in a good course and in his labours at first yet he must not give over but to it againe and againe as long as there is life in him The third time when he laboured to free Christ was when hee joyned Christ and Barabbas together thinking by this meanes they would have rather freed Christ than Barabbas neverthelesse when he saw this would not prevaile he asked But what evill hath he done I finde no fault in him it is against my conscience to put him to death therefore he takes water and washes his hands but yet he could not cleare himselfe from the bloud of Christ all the water in the sea was not able to wash him cleane Now there be some that have their hands as deepe as Pilate in the bloud of Christ I doe not say it of my selfe but the Apostle Paul tels us as much Hebr. 6. 5 6. That they which have tasted of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come If they fall away it is impossible that they should be renewed againe by repentance seeing they crucifie afrosh to themselves the Sonne of God and put him to an open shame And Hebr. 10. 26. If we sinne wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaines no more sacrifice for sinne c. Therefore if thou hast beene inlightned and hast tasted of the good Word of God and of the powers of the world to come take heed how thou commit sin wittingly and willingly against thy knowledge judgement against the light of Grace shining in thy heart and lye in it without repentance thou dost no better than crucifie the Sonne of God and so hast thy hands as deepe in the bloud of Christ as Pilate had so when thou livest in thy sins in the light of the Gospell art a drunkard a whoremaster a prophane person a bad liver take heed thou hast thy hands in the bloud of Christ The fourth time was when they cried Crucifie him crucifie him I but Pilate would not doe it and yet he was the Magistrate who had power in his hands to doe it which must teach us that although there bee a power in our hands to doe hurt unto our neighbours yet wee must not doe it as it is Proverb 3. Withhold not good from them to whom it is due when it is in the power of thine hand to doe it Although thou be mighty yet God is mightier than thou and thou canst not deliver thy selfe from him Now these foure times did Pilate labour to cleare Christ which shewes his innocencie that he died an innocent man and that not for himselfe but for us therefore never doubt but that he hath made expiation and satisfaction for thee by his death Now there were foure particular Meanes that Pilate used to deliver Christ but before we come to speake of them we will answer a doubt or two that may arise First Whether Pilate did well to seeke to deliver Christ seeing that Peter was reproved and reprehended for the same thing Secondly Whether Pilate did well to labour to free Christ seeing it did crosse the will of God for it was the will of God that he should die To the first I answer That Pilate did well to seeke to deliver Christ but Peter did not well because hee did not seeke to deliver Christ by good meanes and in due order but hee would have delivered him by resisting and fighting for him therefore it was a sinne to him but Pilate sought to deliver him by good meanes and in due order threfore it was no sinne in him Againe Peter he knew the mystery of mans redemption therefore it was a sinne in him but Pilate was ignorant of it who tooke him to be but an innocent man therefore Pilate did well do deliver Christ To the scond I answer the will of God is two-fold 1. The will of his Decree 2. The will of his Commandement The will of his Decree is the disposing of every particular man and of the whole world to his best pleasure and can by no meanes be resisted The will of his Commandement is what he would have us to doe Now it was the will of God indeed that Christ should die but it was the will of his Decree for the will of his Commandement was that when he brought Christ into the world all men should kisse him seeke to him for his favour and doe him all the honour that might bee therefore Pilate did well in endevouring to deliver Christ Now to draw this downe lower to our selves it may be it is the will of God we should be poore or that we should be rich therefore must we not be idle and doe nothing for this is the will of Gods Decree which is secret to himselfe but the revealed will of God the will of his Command is that every man should eat his bread in the sweat of his face and apply himselfe to the means notwithstanding that God hath appointed But to returne to the meanes that Pilate used for Christs deliverance The first meanes that Pilate used to deliver Christ was Loquendo by speaking for him And when did hee speake for him marry when all the world was silent which is a worthy example for us to follow to speake for Christ and in his cause for the Gospell though all the world should be silent or else Pilate shall rise up in the day of Iudgement and condemne us for if we be silent in the cause of Christ and holy religion before men he will also be silent at the day of Iudgement for us before his heavenly Father and if we speak in the cause of Christ before men and in the cause of religion he will also speake for us at the day of Iudgement before his heavenly Father Gen. 41. wee see that Pharaohs Butler did dreame a dreame which Ioseph did interpret for which all that Ioseph did request in recompence of him was that he would make mention of him to Pharaoh so our good Ioseph hath done much for us and shewed us great kindnesse for
which this is all that hee desires at our hands to make mention of his Name to the world that wee should speake in his cause and for religion this we see the Apostles did Act. 4. when they were rated and rebuked for speaking in the Name of Christ they made answer That they could not but speake of the things that they had both seene and heard so Hester 4. when the Iewes were in distresse saith Hester If I perish I perish as if shee should say Should I forsake the cause no whatsoever befall me I will venture my selfe if I perish I perish to this purpose Exod. 4. saith the Lord to Moses Goe thy way I will be with thy month from which words Augustine collects That if a man speake for the Gospell and in a cause of justice then God opens his mouth but if a man open his mouth to sweare lye deceive slander his neighbour or open his mouth against the Gospell then it is the Devill that doth open his mouth therefore it is a pitifull thing that Christ Religion and the Gospell is condemned and yet men will bee silent at it but doe not thou wonder in this case if Christ bee silent for thee at the day of Iudgement The second meanes that Pilate used was Mittendo by sending Christ to Herod for he hoped that the Iewes would not have followed him at all to accuse him or if they did hee should have found some favour and friendship from Herod seeing he was desirous of a long time to see him not out of any love to Christ to be saved by him draw any grace from him or take good by his presence but out of an humour and conceit he had touching him having heard of the strangenesse of his miracles that hee did that hee was a Iugler o● some cunning man that would have done seats this it was that made him desirous to see Christ So there be a number of men desirous to see Christ but they have divers ends some because they would be fed some because of his miracles some to get credit and favour amongst men to bee well accounted of but few seeke him to a right end to get grace and strength against sinne to bee quickened up in their affections as Iohn 1. 38. Iesus turned about when hee saw them that did follow him and said unto them What seeke yee So the Spirit of Christ askes us when wee come to the ministery of his Word what seeke yee if ye seeke for worldly ease preferment or credit amongst men then ye come to a wrong end but if ye seeke to Christ to have your graces encreased and to be strengthened against sinne then yee shall be blessed in your comming therefore when we come to the Word we must see that we come to a right end Now when Herod had not that that he looked for that Christ did not follow his humour hee fals a mocking of him puts on a white garment on him in derision and so sends him away this is a strange thing that Herod had a desire a long time to see Christ and now when he seeth him hee makes a mock of him and puts a white garment upon him though hee had done so much at Iohns preaching that he did many things wel heard Iohn gladly yet now he makes a mock of Christ here we may see what a dangerous thing it is to nourish sinne for if a man harbor some secret sinne though hee hath good affections and good graces it will eate out the heart of them so Herod harbord one sinne the taking his brother Philips wife and the nourishing of this one eate out the heart of all his good affections This was the case of Herod and is the case of thousands in the world though they be hearers of the Word and have reformed many a thing yet because they nourish some secret sinne they fall to bee mockers of Religion which eats out the heart of all their graces and of good affections as Matth. 3. our Saviour shewes that some seede fell in stony ground and sprang up and when the Sunne arose it parched withered and came to nothing because there were stones in the bottome so if a man have good affections if hee nourish one secret sinne all will come to nothing it will eate out all the heart of his graces The third meanes hee used to deliver Christ was jungendo by joyning Christ and Barabbas together for it was a custome at their feasts to let loose a prisoner now Christ was matched with a notable theefe that was in the prison one that was a traytor and a murtherer therefore Pilate thought they would not have chosen him that was so vile but would rather have chosen Christ but the Priests through envie stirred up the people who did chuse Barabbas and refused Christ this was a notable policie in Pilate and must teach them that have fine wits and politike pates to use them for Christ and not against him as Levit. 2. The Lord commands that they should offer fine flowre so if men have fine wits and fine policies God must have a handfull of them Psalm 22. David desires to be kept from the horne of the Vnicornes why was this though is were a good and sufficient horne yet it was a naughty head that did beare it so learning wit and policie is a good thing when it is in a good heart but if it be in a bad heart then we had need to pray to God as David did to keepe us from the horne of the Vnicorne keepe me from his policie his wit and learning a man that hath a good wit must use it for Christ and not against Him for if he doe God will destroy his wit and him In all the histories of the Heathen wee finde not the like example to that in the Bible of Achitophel whose counsell was as the Oracle of God and yet because he used policie and wit against God and not for God it was overthrowne by a plaine man so the Papists and Iesuits beyond sea are great Polititians have fine wits and goe far beyond us in their policies yet they have been often overthrowne in their deepe fetches and subtile plots and it hath pleased God to blesse us in our simplicity and weakenesse the reason whereof is because their policie is against Christ and the Gospell and ours is for it Thus much for Pilate Now for the people we see that they preferred Barabbas before Christ who was a traytor and a murtherer Christ being an innocent man and yet by the instigation of the Priests they chose Barabbas and refused Christ Now I dare say there is not any here but will be ready to condemne the Iewes that they preferred Barabbas before Christ but what doe we not as ill who preferre our vile lusts and sinnes before Christ For as Divines say in every choise and election there is a practicall discourse in the cour● of a
therefore Christ did first appeare to her I will shew you six particulars wherein Mary did shew her love to Christ First that she continued seeking when others Peter and Iohn gave over Secondly in that she wept and mourned for the losse of Christ when others went away without mourning and weeping We see in nature if one comes to a birds-nest and take away her young ones the bird will flie about the nest take on and in some sort bewaile the losse of her young but the Devill may come and catch away the graces of Christ repentance faith patience the comfortable feeling of Gods favour with the hope of heaven and yet thou never weepest for the losse of these therefore it is a good thing when a man hath lost these graces if he can bewaile them It is said of Ioseph and Mary when they had lost Christ they sought him with heavie hearts even so when a man hath lost the comfortable feeling of Gods favour and the graces of Christ he seekes for them and doth weepe in regard of the losse of them this is a true note of true love to Christ Thirdly in that shee bowed downe into the Sepulchre and looked here and there if by any meanes shee could finde Christ Of these wee have spoken alreadie now to proceed Fourthly Her true love to Christ is seene by the continuance of her complaint For notwithstanding she had seene the comfortable sight of Angels the one sitting at the head the other at the feet of the Sepulchre shewing that they were not onely ready to attend the head but also to minister to the meanest of the members of Christ who gave her comfortable speeches asking why shee wept as if they should say to her Indeed if Christ should lye still trampled and trodden under-foot of death if thy sinnes were yet upon him and held him under there might be cause for it but Christ hath risen from the dead and hath vanquished and overcome Death Hell and the Devill and therefore thou hast no cause to weepe yet for all this sight she had seene and for all those good speeches the Angels could not give her comfort till she had the thing shee sought for So if a man have true love to Christ it is not all the Angels can give him comfort till he finde Christ and feele the comfortable assurance of the pardon of his sins and the hope of Gods favour nothing will make him glad till then as Mary complaines to the Angels and sayes They have taken away my Lord and I know not where they have laid him in whom I have laid up all my joy and comfort all my hope and all my delight so a Christian may complaine and say My sinnes have taken away Christ from me they have taken away the comfortable feeling of Gods favour the hope of heaven We marvell that the good speeches that Preachers and good Christians give to a man in distresse doe not comfort him but it is no marvell for the Angels cannot doe it till a man be possessed with Christ therefore no marvell that good Preachers and good Christians cannot give them comfort it is a pitifull thing that a number when they have lost Christ every little matter will comfort them they need not have Angels sent from heaven for a few angels of gold will doe it Fifthly The divulgation of her complaint shee complaines to the Angels and she complaines to Christ thinking he had beene the Gardener she was not ashamed that hee should know that the cause of her heavinesse sorrow and weeping was for Christ this is a certaine note of true love to Christ when we are not ashamed to let the world know or see that the cause of our sorrow and heavinesse is because wee have lost Christ by our sins and the comfortable feeling of Gods favor So in the Canticles when the Church had lost Christ she runs thorow the streets and lanes to see whether she could finde him she was not ashamed to let the world know that the matter of her griefe and sorrow was because she had lost Christ so afterwards she layes out for Christ If yee meet my love tell him that I am sicke of love shee was not ashamed to let the world know that she was sicke of love so when it is thus with a man that hee is not ashamed to let the world know and see that the matter of his sorrow and griege is because he hath lost the comfortable feeling of the pardon of his sins and of Gods favour this is a note of true love to Christ Hebr. 2. 11. it is said that he was not ashamed to call them brethren therefore if he be not ashamed of us let us never be ashamed of him Indeed there is good cause why he should bee ashamed of us there is such a deale of corruption and sin in us therefore he might be ashamed of us especially when hee shall stand before God in judgement Now if Christ bee not ashamed of us let us never be ashamed of him for if we be ashamed of him before men he will be ashamed of us before God and all the holy Angels The sixth note of true love which she bare to Christ was the strange proffer she made to Christ Tell mee saith she where thou hast laid him and I will take him away if he be never so deepe if it be never so far I am contented to take any paines to have him this is a strange proffer which she makes beyond her power and abilitie her weake armes were not able to carry Christ but herein she shewes her true love to him so when a man is contented to take any paines or labour to goe thorow it be it never so farre if he can finde Christ is contented this is a note of true love to Christ for Luke 7. 37. our Saviour saith that where the dead bodies be thither the Eagles will resort As the Eagles when they sent a dead body they will flie many a mile to it so we should like the Eagles get a sent of the dead body of Christ and be contented to goe many miles take any paines and labour that we might have Christ Ioh. 21. when the Disciples were a fishing Christ came and appeared to them upon which discovery Peter launches into the water the ship could not hold him but he leapes into the sea to come to Christ so when we know that Christ is to be found in the use of good meanes in the preaching of the Word nothing should keepe us from thence Mary was content beyond her strength and ability to seeke Christ so we should shew our love to him above our strength and abilitie as 2 Cor. 8. it is said of the Macedonians that to their power and beyond their power they were willing And as he sayes Psa 119. Thou hast commanded me to keep thy Precepts diligently O that my heart were
now to proceede to the uses but before wee come to them give mee leave to shew you two reasons why we are so slow to beleeve the Scriptures 1. Nobilitas Objecti The noblenesse of the Object 2. Debilitas Subjecti The weakenesse of the Subject The first is Nobilitas Objecti the noblenesse of the Object for the Scriptures are the wisedome of God which wisedome goeth infinitely beyond our reach being of such infinite excellencie that we cannot attaine the height of them for as the Philosophers say that a thing exceeding sensible doth destroy the senses as too much light doth destroy the sight too much cold doth benumme the senses too much heate doth consume us too much noyse doth make one deafe so the wisdome of God being of so great excellency above us that it transcends the capacitie of our understandings cannot be apprehended by us and therefore we are slow to beleeve the Scriptures Secondly Debilitas subjecti The weakenesse of the subject the Scriptures excellency and the dulnesse of our apprehension makes us slow to beleeve for nature cannot worke above her power but the wisedome of God is above the power of nature for as the Apostle saith The naturall man perceiveth not the things that be of God because there must be a power above nature to make us to understand and beleeve them therefore as the woman of Samaria saith Iohn 4. The Well is deepe and I have nothing to draw with so we may say The Scriptures are deepe and we have not any thing to found them with therefore wee are slow to beleeve them Now the uses to be made of this first point are First seeing wee are so slow to beleeve the Scriptures no man neede to marvell though wee see so few converted or so few beleeve for every man hath a let in his owne nature therefore no marvell though so few beleeve Let a man fling a narrow-mouth bottle into the sea and if the mouth bee downeward it will receive no water so wee are like narrow-mouthed bottles for although we bee in an Ocean sea of good meanes yet we cannot receive it we have a let at home in our selves Secondly seeing wee are slow to beleeve the scriptures seeing wee have such a let in our selves at home therefore it must bee our care to take the more paines and to labour with our hearts that so we may beleeve the Scriptures If a man have nothing but greene wood hee must take the more paines to blow it and to lay it together that so it may burne so seeing our hearts are like unto greene wood wee must take the more paines with them to make them beleeve the Scriptures Secondly by informing of them and two things hee doth informe them of 1. Of the Necessitie of his suffering 2. The good Vse and utilitie of the same First that it is needfull that Christ should suffer and secondly that by suffering hee must enter into his glorie and thereby seeing this was the way for Christ to enter into his glory he takes away the scandall of the Crosse First It was of necessitie that Christ must suffer now the necessity was not in himselfe for he might have gone to glory the same houre he came into the World because it was hereditary to him but in regard of us for it was the good of us that made a necessitie and put this upon him Therefore Paul saith Ephes 5. 2. He gave himselfe for us and Heb. 2. Hee tasted of death for all men therefore he suffered not for himselfe but it was for us One askes the question What is the reason that Christ cals it his glory and answers he cals it so in regard of us for he could have gone some other way but we should have beene left heere therefore it was needfull in regard of us and that by reason of a double necessitie 1. The Necessitie of paying the price of Mans Redemption 2. The Necessitie of good Example The first was The Necessitie of paying the price of Mans Redemption because when we have sinned such is the Iustice of God that either we must suffer in our own persons or we must suffer in the person of Christ either Christ must suffer or wee therefore when the wrath of God was ready to seaze upon us it pleased Christ to suffer for us and to satisfie the Iustice of God We may remember by this occasion that which I have shewed heretofore that O●esimus after he ran away from his master Paul converts and sends him home againe to his Master with a letter in his hand to this effect Receive him againe if hee have done thee any wrong set it on my score I will answere it so wee are run away from God and Christ hath sent us backe againe with a letter as it were in our hands to this effect Father admit them and receive them into thy favour make them partakers of thy glorie If they have done thee any wrong or ought thee any thing set it on my score I will answere it I Iesus have written it not with penne and Inke but with mine owne blood and therefore we see it was needfull that Christ should suffer to pay the price of mans Redemption Secondly it was needfull that Christ should suffer in regard of good ex●●ple for no man would goe to Heaven through so many troubles unlesse Christ had gone before them Saint Peter saith Christ hath suffered leaving us an example therefore did hee goe through all these troubles and shames that we might be contented to follow him If a Man goe through bushes briers rugged waies through dens and caves and rockes if hee finde the footesteps of his loving friend this giveth him comfort so seeing we finde the footesteps of Christ in these afflictions we may bee bold to goe on that way and therefore it was of necessitie that Christ must suffer as well in regard of good example as to pay the price of mans redemption what man then hath cause to be offended at the scandall of the crosse seeing it was so needfull that Christ should suffer these things I but some Man may say Was it of necessitie that Christ should suffer so many things that his head should be crowned with thornes that his backe should be whipped his face buffeted his sides pierced and hee himselfe at last to die such a shamefull death as on the crosse I answer it was needfull that Christ should suffer all these things which we have spoken of for if hee had suffered lesse then it would have done us no good Mans sinnes were so hatefull in the eyes of God that hee must suffer all these things howsoever the Friers say that one drop of the blood of Christ was enough to redeeme us yea all Men yet it cost Christ all his bloud to redeeme Man for when Man had sinned all the Angels or Archangels in Heaven
him the reasons because he would their faith should be grounded on the Scriptures which must teach us that wee must ground our faith onely on the Word of God therefore Christ saith Search the Scriptures for in them yee thinke to have eternall life so it is not true faith till it bee founded on the Scriptures it may be a counterfeit or it may be an opinion or it may be a perswasion but it cannot be true faith till it hath his ground there so saith Paul Rom. 10. Faith commeth by hearing of the word preached as also the Schoolmen say the best resolution of faith is of God that they doe beleeve because God saith so here we are to take notice of an errour in the world that many say they have faith and yet have no ground for it but they will tell you such a Preacher said so or such a good man or wee heard it a great while agoe but it is not true faith till they can say that God spake it well he may have a perswasion or an opinion or a conceit but it cannot be true faith till it be founded on the word of God Thus we heard in the former verses how Christ did found the faith of the Disciples on the Scriptures he might have discovered himselfe at the first and have given them a sensible knowledge of him as hee did after in this chap. but Hee drew them on by little and little and did lead them through the Scriptures the booke of God that so he might open unto them all that was spoken of him In the next place we come to the discovery of him where wee may see that when they drew neere unto the towne they went to Christ makes a proffer to be gone as though he would have left them after he had begun the worke of grace in them and had kindled some sparkes in them in like manner through the wise dispensation of God hee doth still hee beginnes the worke of grace and kindles some sparkes of faith in us and then he will proffer to bee gone if we be not wise to lay hold on him and retaine him therefore Moses makes his prayer Numb 10. 36. every time the Arke removed Returne O Lord to the many thousands of Israel he knew that the people had given God just cause to be gone from them therefore he makes his prayer that God would yet returne againe to them In like maner David Psal 44. 9. makes his complaint But now thou art farre off and puttest us to confusion and goest not forth with our armies here David seeth the Lord to shrinke from him making a proffer to be gone therefore complaines he thus so we shall find that the Lord doth shrink from us and makes a profer to be gone and to take away the Gospell and our comfort if wee bee not wise to lay hold on him and stay him Now there bee three things by the which a man may know when Christs makes a proffer to be gone First When men grow idle and cold in the use of good meanes in prayer hearing the word reading and meditating thereon they doe not apply themselves to it as they have done but they attend about the world this makes Christ proffer to be gone Luk. 2. 47. Ioseph and Mary never lost Christ all the while they were in Aegypt they kept him when they were under the crosse and in affliction but when they were in peace and at Ierusalem then they lost him and the reason was because they attended their friends kinsfolkes and the rest of the company but did not attend Christ never looked after him therefore hee was presently lost even so most men as long as they be under the crosse keepe Christ but when they bee in peace then they lose him and the comfortable feeling of faith they attend to the world to their profits and pleasures and grow loose in the use of good meanes forgetting to nourish the good things and holy feelings of Gods favour in themselves to this effect Psal 51. 11. David prayes unto God That he would not take away his spirit from him he felt the Lord to shrinke from him and make a proffer to be gone and therefore he sayes Lord take not thine holy spirit from me whatsoever thou take away from mee though it bee my crowne and kingdome yet take not thy spirit from me As we see if a man hath fish in his pond as long as the water tarries so long the fish will remaine but if the water bee drawne out then the fish will follow the water even so as long as wee use good meanes so long Christ will tarry with us but if once we grow loose then Christ will follow the meanes And this is the first thing whereby we may know whether Christ makes a proffer to be gone Secondly wee may know whether Christ makes a proffer to bee gone When wee live in knowne sinnes against our judgement and conscience giving way to our flesh and following bad examples then we may justly feare hee will be gone or make a proffer to be gone For as Ezek. 8. 6. the Lord saith Son of Man seest thou not what they doe Even the great abominations that the house of Israel committeth here that I should goe farre off from my Sanctuarie So if we commit sins against God it will cause his Spirit to depart from us as also Exodus 33. 7. When the people of Israel had committed a great sinne against God in worshipping the Calfe Moses tooke the Tabernacle and did pitch it without the Host to shew unto the people that God was departing from them because of their sinnes if they were not wise to stay him by repentance and turning to him by Prayer Another example hereof we have Iudges 16. 20. Sampson who was a good man and yet because hee loved a harlot and sinned against God The Spirit of the Lord departed from him for when she said the Philistians bee upon thee Sampson hee awo●ke out of his sleepe and said I will goe out as at other times before and shake my selfe And hee wist not that the Lord was departed from him Even so if good Men sinne against God it will cause the Spirit of Christ to depart from them for when they have committed great sinnes against God though they shake themselves and thinke to doe as they have done before to pray and performe such like duties yet for their life they cannot because the Spirit of God is departed from them hence we may learne that though a man be a good man yet if he sinne against God God may give him over and he may lose the Spirit of grace and the comfortable feeling of it for a time therefore every man must take heed how hee give way to the flesh to commit sinnes against God and as Iacobs sonnes said to the Sichemites If yee will be circumcised then will we give our daughters to you and take your daughters
power of Christ and had tasted of his sweet graces and of the excellencie that was in him so if men had tasted of the sweete things that are in Christ they would long after him therefore Christ sayes to the woman of Samaria Iohn 4. If thou knewest the gift of God and who it is that saith unto thee Give me drinke thou wouldest have asked of him and hee would have given thee living water This was the reason why the two Disciples constrained Christ to tarrie with them because they had felt of the goodnesse and of the excellency that was in him Secondly it is said the doors were shut for feare of the Iewes this is a strange thing that they shut the Doore for feare of the Iewes they were bold to confesse the name of of Christ before all men and now they are afraid of the Iewes and no marvell for they had killed and crucified him and therefore they would make no scruple to kill them which may teach us two things First that we should bee carefull to avoid all needlesse dangers as Matth. 16. Our Saviour saith If any man will follow mee let him deny himselfe take up his crosse and follow mee If it bee a crosse that God layes upon us we must take it up with both hands but wee must take heed of making crosses to our selves We read Luke 22. That Christ prayes that this cup might passe away so we must pray that this trouble and affliction may passe away but if it be the will of God that it shall abide with us then we must willingly yeeld to it Indeede the crosse is needfull when God layes it upon us but we must take heed how we bring needlesse crosses upon our selves If a Physitian should give us ranke poyson hee would so temper and qualifie it as that it should doe us good but if wee take it our selves it may poyson us So God this same skilfull Physitian if he lay the crosse and trouble upon us it will turne to our good but if we take it our selves it may trouble and hurt us therefore it is good to avoyde all needlesse dangers or crosses The second thing that it doth teach us is that Every man must measure his owne actions by his strength the more strength a man hath the more courage and the lesse strength the lesse courage so it was with the Disciples the more strength the more courage they had in the cause of Christ and the lesse strength the lesse courage here is the question answered by that which hath beene spoken of before whether it be lawfull to flie in the time of persecution If one hath strength and courage to stand then hee were best to abide it but if he have not strength then he were better to fly as Marke 15. There was a yong man that did follow Christ in a linnen garment whom they caught hold on and hee left the linnen cloth and fled from them naked But did he well to flie from Christ I answere he did well to flie for he had not strength to resist nor meanes to prevaile The second thing is The manner how hee did appeare and that was when the Doores were shut Hence wee learne no Doores can keepe out Christ when Paul was in prison and the Doores shut he came to Paul so that all the Doores could not keepe out Christ There bee diverse opinions how this could be some be of the minde that the Doores gave way to Christ and did open as the iron gates opend when the Angell did fetch Peter out of prison as S. Ierome saith that the Creature gave place to the Creator A schooleman saith that the Doore did open so softly and shut again as that they did not perceive it others think that he did so attenuate his body and make it so subtile as that it could passe through the Doore or any little chinke or Crevise as the Sun passeth through the glasse window Others againe thinke there is such power in a glorified body as that it is able to passe through any solid body as a man may passe through water or the Aire Therefore Christs body rising a glorified body was able to passe through the Doore so our bodies glorified if they were in an Iron or Steele Chest in a Marble stone or Tombe it could not hold them a glorified body is able to passe through them Hence the Papists would prove their transubstantiation that seeing he could make his body passe through the Doore he could make it passe into the bread and wine To this I answer there is great difference between them for although he passed through the Door yet he was in the same proportion figure dimension that he had before but in the Sacrament there are not the same proportions nor the same figures nor the same dimension so there is a great difference between them Thirdly the Effect of this appearing when Christ came amongst them hee said Peace bee unto you this is a strange speech of Christ to say to them peace bee unto you seeing some of them had betrayed him some denied him and all had fled away from him yet hee sayes Peace be unto you as if they had not offended him the cause was they had repented of their sinnes condemned and judged themselves therefore Christ brings peace unto them So though we sinne against God and offend him yet if wee weepe for our sinnes repent of them and condemne and judge our selves hee will bring peace unto us Here wee may see what Christ brought out of the grave with him to his Disciples even as when a father is absent from his childe hee comes home comfortably so Christ being absent from his Disciples brings out of the dens of death and out of the Grave peace with God with the holy Angels with all the Creatures and peace of their owne conscience with him Therefore if any man shall demand and say Christ indeede was crucified and he died and was laid into the Grave but what good have wee by these things To this I answere that he hath brought the greatest good with him that may be for he hath brought peace with God with the holy Angels with all the Creatures and peace with our Consciences this is a great comfort to a Christian for though hee bee not a great man in the world nor one of the brave gallants yet he is a happy man because Christ hath brought a peace with him unto him Further this may teach us where we are to seeke our peace no where but in the death of Christ therefore if thou wouldest have peace with God and in thy owne conscience seeke it in the death of Christ there thou mayest have it if thou hast peace which doth not arise from hence it cannot bee true peace nor the peace of conscience till thou canst see by the eye of faith Christ dying upon the crosse bleeding in the Garden
function this same binding and loosing is a Metaphor or borrowed speech taken from a man that is fast bound in fetters and chaines so as he is not able to stirre till he bee unloosed so every man by nature is bound in fetters and chaines with his sins and cannot be loosed till God sends true Preachers to loose them as we may see when Lazarus was in the Grave though hee had life in him yet he was not able to come forth being bound with his Napkins and cloths till hee was unbound so when the Philistines had taken Sampson they bound him and laid fetters and chaines upon him In like manner the Divell doth lay spirituall fetters and chaines upon us so as we are not able to stir in the life of holinesse till the Lord send Preachers to us to unloose us Therefore as a man that is in fetters and chains when the Iaylor comes to knocke off his chaines and fetters though he be never so much pinched and pained yet he will hold still and take it in good part because he shall bee freed and set at liberty so when the Preachers come to breake off our gives and chaines though it bee more painefull than before yet we must take it in good part because we shall be set at liberty by it Now two waies a Minister may forgive sinnes First By pronouncing forgivenesse of sinnes to such as doe repent and beleeve as the Priests in the old Law did pronounce those that were made cleane to bee cleane so a Minister when hee sees a man throughly washed and purified by the teares of true repentance may without feare absolve that man from all his sinnes and iniquities But how can this be may some man say seeing it is God onely that doth forgive sinne I answer There bee two Courts there is the Court of Heaven and there is the Court of this World In the Court of Heaven none but God can forgive but in the Court of this World a Minister may forgive upon the true confession that a man may make and the hearty repentance he may see in him he neede not feare to pronounce unto him the forgivenesse of his sinnes Secondly By way of authoritie not as the Papists do but when in distres of conscience hee sees cause to charge the party to beleeve the remission of sinnes as having just title to Heaven manifested in his good life and holy conversation amongst men though at that time God suffer him for triall to want the sense and feeling of his faith in Iesus Christ SERMON XXXVI IOHN 20. 24 25. But Thomas one of the twelve called Didymus was not with them when Jesus came The other Disciples therefore said unto him Wee have seene the Lord. But hee said unto them Except I shall see in his hands the print of the nailes and put my finger into the print of the nailes and thrust my hand into his side I will not beleeve FIve severall times Christ did appeare the same day that hee did rise from the Dead and this is the sixth time of his appearing and it was eight dayes after when Thomas was present for when Christ did appeare to his Disciples Thomas was away therefore when the Disciples saw Thomas they told him They had seene the Lord Thomas answers them Except I see in his hands the print of the nailes and put my hands into his side I will not beleeve Therefore Christ in compassion comes eight daies after and suffers him to put his hands into his side and bade him that he should not be faithlesse but faithfull Now in this appearance there bee foure things to bee considered 1. The Occasion of Christs appearing 2. The Time of it 3. The Manner of it 4. The Effects and fruits of it The Occasion was To heale the infidelitie of all his Disciples for hee had now but one that did remaine in infidelitie therefore hee comes to cure that one Here we see the tender care of Christ that having but one Disciple that did remaine in unbeleefe yet could not be at rest till hee had cured that one so we see the care of Christ doth not onely extend in generall to al his Disciples but also in particular to everie one which is a sweete comfort to a Christian that the care of Christ is not onely in generall for the good of the Church but in particular for every one so that if there bee but one weake and fraile member Christ hath a care of that one It is said Iohn 10. 3. that The good shepheard calleth his owne sheepe by name Hee doth not onely know the grosse summe and keepe the whole tale of them but he knowes every particular one If there be but one man or woman that doth belong to him Christ hath a care of him as wee see in that parable Luke 15. Of a man that had an hundred sheepe whereof when one of them goes astray hee leaves the ninetie and nine and goes and seekes for that one sheepe If there bee but one weake and fraile member Christ will have a care of that one for he himselfe saith Iohn 9. 18. Of them that thou hast given me I have not lost one so that if wee can once bring our selves to be members of Christ he will regard and have a care of us This is an excellent comfort to Gods people for as Numb 12. 15. When Miriam was shut out of the Host for her sinne the Lord would not let the Arke remove till she was recovered and brought in againe so if there be but one gone astray God will never rest till he have it home againe Therefore as Saint Paul saith boldly where hee doth apply Christ unto himselfe particularly Galath 2. 20. Neverthelesse I live yet not I but Christ liveth in mee and the life I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Sonne of God who hath loved me and given himselfe for me for when Christ was on the crosse he did not onely eye the generall good of the Church but in particular England Essex Clavering and so of every particular man and woman which may comfort us howsoever wee may erre and goe astray yet if wee belong to Christ there will bee a time when Christ will have a care of us and bring us backe againe to God for there was but one Disciple that did remaine in infidelitie and Christ had a care of that But let us enquire what were the causes that Thomas remained in unbeleefe there be two causes expressed in the Text. First Because hee was away when Christ came hee remaines in his unbeleefe here wee see what a losse it is to bee absent from holy meetings for thoughg it be but once for Thomas was but once away yet he lost the sight of Christ if he had beene present with the rest of the Disciples then it is like as they did beleeve hee would have beleeved for they were
me So this is the Reason of the Assignement The Popish Church lay hold on these words and would prove thereby that their workes merit at the hands of God because Christ gives heaven to those that doe good to his servants and because they shall be judged by their workes To which I answer although this be the reason why the Lord assignes heaven to them that they did workes of mercy and although we shall be judged by our workes yet workes are not the meritorious cause of it why he gives us heaven but the signes and tokens who be the persons so qualified that shall have heaven such as love Christ and shew mercy to his needy members and doe good to them I will cleere it you by an example The King of England makes a promise to bestow on his subjects a great reward out of his bountie and there came before him his subjects and his enemies and he saith to his subjects I will bestow this gift on you for when I was in France ye did attend on me and shewed your love to mee ●ow this gift shewes who be the subjects of the King and who be the enemies So at the last day when the good and bad shall be before Christ and Christ shall tell them this is the reason why I bestow heaven on you because I was hungry and yee gave mee meat this is not the cause of it but it shewes onely who be the persons that God hath assigned heaven to to those that love him and regard him in his members therefore one sayes well Christ shewes not for what he bestowes heaven in this place but on what kinde of persons he will bestow it And Chrysostome saith though the Saints doe a thousand such things as these yet they deserve nothing at the hands of God it is his bountie to bestow heaven on them for so small and meane things as these So then we see workes are not the cause why Christ assignes heaven to us And there be foure grounds for it The first ground● is from the estate and condition we be in all are servants Therefore whatsoever we doe is but our dutie and if it be our duty we cannot merit any thing at the hand of God So saith Christ Luke 17. 10. When yee have done all these things which are commanded you say We are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our dutie to doe Therefore the very estate and condition that wee are in doth sh●w that wee cannot merit any thing at the hands of God And Chrysostome saith No man is able to shew such an holy conversation of life to deserve any thing at the hands of God but when he hath done all he is but an unprofitable servant The Papists reply against this and say That although a man cannot merit any thing being in the estate of a servant yet if of a servant hee become a friend hee may merit Now that hee may bee a friend it is plaine by the words of Christ Iohn 15. 15. Hence call I you no servants for the servant knoweth not what his master doth but I have called you friends and in the verse before Yee are my friends To this I answer we are servants still though it please God to accept of us as his friends we are only made friends by acceptance in the merit of Iesus Christ which alters not the former condition of duty and service as may be proved by these places Rom. 6. 18. Being then made free from sinne yee are made the servants of righteousnesse and in the 1 Pet. 2. 16. he exhorteth them As free and not using the libertie for a cloake of maliciousnesse but as the servants of God And Christ saith Ioh. 15. 19. Yee are my friends if yee doe whatsoever I command you therefore because we be servants still and remaine in the same estate and condition wee cannot merit any thing but when wee have done all wee doe but our dutie The second ground is our owne impotencie that we are not able to doe any good thing of our selves much lesse can wee merit anything Now that we can doe no good thing it is plaine by the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15. 10. By the grace of God I am that I am And 2 Cor. 3. 5. saith he Not that we are sufficient of our selves to thinke any thing as of our selves but our sufficiencie is of God So Phil. 2. 13. For it is God that worketh in you both the will and the dead even of his good pleasure Now then if all we doe is by the power of grace and if it is God onely which worketh both the will and the deed then we are beholding to God for it and God is not beholding to us Origen saith well No workes of man can deserve any thing at Gods hand because they cannot thinke any good or doe any good but it must be from God The Papists reply and say that God may give a man grace which he may so husband as that hee may deserve any thing at Gods hand and they make it plaine by this similitude A father gives a farme to his son and gives him a stocke now the sonne may so raise the stocke and play the good husband as he may purchase any thing that the father hath in like manner say they God may give a man grace and hee may so husband it as he may purchase any thing at Gods hand To this I answer If a father should give his sonne a farme and a stock to use and when he had done so his childe could not earne a penny but it must be the father and the son could not stirre a foot or a hand without the father then the father is not beholding to the sonne but the son to the father This is the case betweene God and us for when he gives us any grace he must give us a second grace to use and to imploy it wel and therefore it is manifest we cannot merit any thing at Gods hands it is the doctrine of the Schoole-men and Aquinas makes it plaine hee puts the question and resolves it saith he A man may receive a benefit from another and may deserve it at his hands as a man may give one an house which he may deserve but if a man when he hath given another an house must give him also power to use the house and wisdome to governe the same that man cannot be beholding to him that receives but the receiver must needs be beholding to him that gave it so although God give a man grace which he cannot use well unlesse he also give him power to use it Therefore God is not beholding to us for any thing but we are to God and therefore we cannot merit any thing at Gods hands The third ground is our imperfection that in every thing we doe we sinne against God and if we sinne against him then we cannot merit any
heart of a sinner to thinke that the paines of hell are everlasting for when they have lien a thousand yeares it shall be as if it were the first day they came thither wee see if a man bee on the racke or hang by the hand or foote or put his hand into fire hee would not long indure it for the gaining of a world much more to lye in torment for ever and ever againe if a man lye on a soft bed and have his friends to attend him when hee is sicke yet hee turnes himselfe tosses and tels the hours of the night and wishes that it were day and if hee could be rid of that paine hee would part from any thing then consider what a paine and torment it is to lye in hell where one shall not have a soft bed to lye on nor friends to attend one but shall have the Divels to torment one and shall have no allaiment of paines but bee tormented for ever and ever But seeing sinne is temporary how doth it stand with the Iustice of God to punish sinne eternally I answer two wayes First every sinne is eternall according to the intention of the doer for if wicked men should live eternally they would grieve God eternally and to this purpose Gregorie sayes well wicked men would live ever to weary and to grieve God with their sinnes therefore it is justice in God that seeing a sinner sinnes eternally in his own intenlion to punish it eternal●y The second answer is because we sinne against an infinite thing and therefore it must have infinite punishment Now because it cannot bee infinite in regard of the degree seeing men bee but finite and are not capable of infinite torments at one time Therefore it is infinite in the continuance of it The uses are First seeing hell fire is the portion of sinners therefore as a man will take heed of fire and water and be afraid to goe into it how much more should wee bee afraid to meddle with sinne seeing it is the cause of it If a man goe to hire a porter to carry a burthen the porter will first peise it and f●ele the weight of it which if hee sees hee cannot beare it shall not come on his backe for any mony so before we meddle with sinne we must peyse it and consider the waight and burthen of it whether we bee able to live in everlasting fire and if wee feele wee cannot then let us not have to doe with sinne in any case If there should bee a law made that for every lye w●e told or oath wee did sweare and for every one wee did deceive or slaunder wee should hold one of our hands in scalding leade or in flaming fire but halfe an hower how afraid would men bee to breake the Kings law Now the truth is that every sinne we commit against God if we doe not repent of it carry it up into the crosse of Christ and seeke reconciliation in his blood we shall not have our hand or foote to bee in fire halfe an hower but every part of us for ever and ever shall bee tormented in hell fire Secondly seeing hell fire is the punishment of sinne and the estate that every wicked man must passe into therefore wee may see the madnesse of men to bee carried away with the pleasures and delights of sinne as with a streame which bee but for a season and to lye in hell for ever and ever for it One sayes well that a sinner is like to Pharoahs d●eame which was interpreted by Ioseph the 7 fat kine were 7 yeares of plenty the 7 ilfavored were 7 yeares of famine the leane and ilfavored kine did eat up the sat that is the 7 yeares of want did devoure all that they had gathered together in the 7 yeares of plenty so this is the estate of a sinner all the time that a sinner liveth here is the 7 yeares of plenty and when hee goes out of this world then commeth the 7 yeares of famine O if it were but so all were well but it shall bee 7 hundred thousand yeares nay it shall bee for ever and ever in hell fire One compares the pleasures of sinnes to the Streames of Iordan that the fishes are delighted with play and skip in but at last are carried away not into the dead Sea so many are delighted with the pleasures of sinne and take their solace in it but at last are carried away into the dead Sea but into the Ocean of Gods wrath into the lake of fire and brimstone The fourth punishment or paine of the wicked is their association with the devill and his angels one would have thought there had beene punishment enough of the other O but they shall not onely goe to hell but they shall dwell with these hellish fiends the devill and the damned this is all the company that they shall enjoy doth it much aggravate their punishment Augustine saith if thou art not afraid of the place that thou shalt goe to consider the fearefull and dreadfull company that thou shalt dwell with as Dan. 4. Nabuchad●ezzar was driven from his palace to eate grasse and to live among the beasts what a fearefull judgement was this to live with Oxen but what is it in comparison with the other to be cast out of the presence of Christ and to dwell among the devils and damned It was the custome of a certaine country if one had murthered a man he was taken and tyed to the dead man his hands were tyed to the dead mans hands and his feet to the dead mans feet and there he lay bound till hee was poisoned with the stinke of the dead man but alas this is nothing to that which the wicked shall undergoe for if they doe not repent and turne to God while they live here they shall be bound and tyed to the devils to lye in paines and torments for ever what heart would not bleed to consider this O that wee had grace to thinke of it and care to avoide it Wee see Matth. 15. that there was a woman came to Christ and said unto him Have mercy upon me O Sonne of David for my daughter is miserably vexed with a devill now if shee were vexed thus with one devill here on earth what will it be when a man shall be tormented with all the devils in hell fire wee see what it is for a man to have his deare friend or his childe possessed with a devill though it bee but for a time what a grievous terrour then will it bee to bee tormented with the devils for ever and ever So also if a house bee haunted with devils one would not dwell in it for any thing nay not lye in the house a night O but what a torment will it be to be tormented in hell to dwell with all the devils and hellish fiends for
of our sinnes to get faith in Christ to walke before God in newnesse and holinesse of life and then after this life we shall live in all blessednesse in the kingdome of Heaven for ever SERMON LXXI LVKE 1. 77. To give knowledge of salvation unto his People by the remission of their sinnes AT length wee are come to the second maine blessing and benefit that God giveth unto us in this life the forgivenesse of sinnes wherein two things are to be considered First That the forgivenesse of sinnes is one of the greatest blessings that God giveth to his People here in this World Secondly That this blessing appertaineth to this life onely if we have it not here let us not looke for it in the life to come For the first That the forgivenesse of sinnes is one of the greatest blessing that God giveth to his People in this world We see Esay 33. 24. it is said The People that dwell therein shall have their iniquitie pardoned So Esay 40. 1. Comfort ye comfort ye my People saith God speake yee comfort unto Ierusalem and crie unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquitie is pardoned for she hath received of the Lords hand double for all her sinnes and Psal 32. David pronounceth the man blessed that hath his sinnes pardoned therefore Matth. 1. the Angell said to Mary and thou shalt call his Name Iesus for he shall save his People from their sinnes so then it is cleare by the Scripture that the pardon of sinnes is one of the greatest blessings that God giveth in this life It is a great blessing indeed to have food and rayment with things fit and needfull for this life but the pardon of our sinnes is a greater blessing than that for take any man abounding in all these things riches goods honours and credit yet if he want the pardon of his sinnes he is a miserable man and stands in a wofull condition for he stands not on cleare grounds The prisoners in the Tower are in a worse estate and condition than the poorest waterbearer is for though he have all good diet attendance fine roomes and a soft bed to lie on yet in his owne sense he is miserable because he lookes every day for his arraignment when sentence shall be given against him so if a man flow in all the wealth and deliciousnesse the world can afford and yet be unreconciled to God and hath not repented his sinnes he is in a worse condition and estate than the poorest of Gods Saints though they have but bread and water because that every day hee may looke when hee shall have the finall sentence pronounced against him to the wofull confusion of him for evermore When every thing goes well with us it is an hard matter for us to see the pardon of our sinnes to bee one of the greatest blessings but if the Lord should open our eyes to see our sinnes and to feele the burthen of them a little being touched in conscience for them then if the world were set on the one hand and the pardon of our sinnes on the other we would choose the pardon of our sinnes before all this world The use hereof shall be seeing the pardon of sinnes is one of the greatest blessings that God giveth in this world therfore though God give us food and raiment things needfull and necessarie for this life yet we should not be at rest till we finde the pardon and forgivenesse of our sinnes most men now a-dayes labour for these outward things never seeke for the pardon of sinnes but every one should checke himselfe and say I have laboured a long time for these outward things for a little bread and cloath yet the time is to come that ever I sought for the pardon of my sinnes the greatest blessing of all Exod. 8. 8. wee read how Pharoah came to Moses and Aaron saying Pray yee unto the Lord that hee may take away the frogges from mee Hee desired not him to pray to take away his sinnes which was the cause of them Iust the same is the case of the men of this world they cry out take away this judgement this sicknesse this lamenesse take away this povertie but never pray to God to take away their sinnes which are the cause thereof Gen. 15. God made to Abraham great and large promises who replies to God Lord what is all this seeing I goe childlesse so when God hath given a man Riches and goods and what the heart of a man can wish for yet he should say unto God Lord what is all this seeing I want the pardon of my sinnes therefore above all things Lord forgive mee my sinnes and pardon them The second thing is that pardon of sinnes appertaineth to this life onely for there are two sorts of blessings some that appertaine to this life some to the world to come those that appertaine to this life are First The Communion of Saints Secondly The forgivenesse of sinnes Here a man must seek it for so Christ shewes Matth. 5. agree with thine adversarie whilest thou art in the way Now Augustine saith that the time of life is the way to the judgement barre and therefore while wee are in the way wee must labour to seeke peace with God and the pardon of our sinnes lest our adversarie accuse us to the Iudge and the Iudge deliver us to the jaylour and the jaylour cast us into prison whence wee shall not come out untill wee have payed the uttermost farthing And Salomon saith Eccl. 9. 10. All that thy hand findeth to doe doe it with all thy power for there is neither worke invention nor knowledge in the grave whither thou goest So S. Cyprian saith when a man is once out of this world all opportunitie of doing good is gone So Chrysostome here in this world one must finde the pardon of his sinnes in the world to come it will bee too late to finde it And so Augustine there is a twofold Repentance a fruitfull Repentance which is in this life and penall or unfruitfull Repentance in the life to come so the wicked in Hell may repent them of their sinnes the whoremonger of his whroedome swearers of their swearing and the drunkard of his drunkennesse but this kind of Repentance is unfruitfull because they have no good by it but it serveth to increase their further torment But the fruitfull Repentance is in this life onely therefore we are taught hereby to make it our wisedome to lay hold on the good time that God giveth us to repent us of our si●nes to bee reconciled unto him and seeke favour at his hands for if we bee once dead and layd in the grave all opportimitie of doing good is taken away If a man sends his servant to the market to buy such things as they stand in need of when the market bell rings hee must apply himselfe to buy the things that
therefore let every man so attend to the things of this life as that he may labor for everlasting life which is the blessing of all blessings I but is everlasting life so great a blessing seeing the wicked shall bee raised to everlasting life I answer that the wicked shall bee raised up to everlasting life which life shall bee a continuall death to them for looke in what extremitie any man is in when hee is a dying grieving and groaning as though his Spirit were departing in the like extremitie shall all the wicked bee in dying and never dye breathing out their last breath and yet never breathing it out If a man for an offence should be adjudged to lye in such a hot furnace as was prepared for the three Children by Nebuchadnezzar but two yeeres hee would thinke he were better die a thousand deaths than to lye in such extremitie But what is temporarie fire to Hell fire It is nothing comparable to it what is the wrath of man to the wrath of God nothing there is no death to the death of the wicked and no torment like the torment of Hell for their death is continuall If a man were put to his choyce no doubt hee would die a thousand deaths temporary before hee would dye that death For though the deaths of mens devising bee terrible yet they are nothing compared to the death and punishments that God can devise for the wicked And yet wee see how men labor to avoid to flie temporarie death they will runne ride take physicke endure any paines to shunne it which is but a flea biting as it were if compared which eternall death and never feare never labor to shun this latter which is the most wofull of all other We see how afraid men bee of the plague so as they will labour by all meanes to avoide it which yet brings but temporarie death how much more afraid should wee bee of sinne because that is the cause of eternall death Here wee see the madnesse of the world which labours to avoid temporarie death and yet will not strive to avoid sinne which brings eternall But let us pray to God to avoid sinne that so wee may avoid eternall death for the wicked shall rise no to live eternally but to dye eternally nay their life shall bee worse than death if any thing can be worse but it is otherwise with the people of God they shall rise to everlasting life for hee bestowes that of none but his people and Church Now here wee are to consider two things 1. What it is that God doth promise 2. The Continuance of it First hee promiseth to his People Life now Life is two-fold 1. Naturall 2. Spirituall First the Naturall life is upheld by the use of meate drinke and physicke wherein both the good and bad have their part for this is proper to both but that is not the life that our christian faith here speakes of For to speake exactly it is but the way to life whereof Christ speakes Matth. 5. 25. Agree with thy adversarie quickly whilest thou art in the way with him c. where Christ shewes that this life is but the way to everlasting life Therefore it must bee every mans wisedome to passe this life so here as that hee may make it the way to everlasting life Now our spirituall life is upheld by having Communion with God for as the soule is the life of the body so God is the life of the soule because as the body cannot have life but by Communion with the soule so the soule cannot live unlesse it have Communion with God Which life is spoken of Psal 16. 11. Thou wilt shew mee the path of life in thy presence is the fulnesse of joy at thy right hand are pleasures for evermore And Iohn 5. 40. Christ sayes But yee will not come unto mee that ye may have life And this is the life which Christ promiseth here for it is nothing to live the life of nature to eate drinke and sleepe which doth but nourish the body and never looke to the life of grace but the speciall care of a Christian must bee for that a number of men thinke if they can live the life of nature they care not for living the spirituall life for faith or repentance or to live holily here the speciall thing I say which we should looke to is to live hereafter We finde Gen. 17. 18. Abraham saith unto God Oh that Ismael might live in thy sight so this should bee the request wee should make to God Oh that I may live the life of the Spirit indeed I live a naturall life but I desire to live the life of grace so David Psal 119. 175. saith Let my soule live and it shall praise thee my body liveth and I goe up and down with it but let my soule live and then I shall praise thee which is the blessing of all blessings to have Communion with God to draw neere to him and bee acquainted with him by prayer repentance and amendment of life Now there are two degrees of spirituall life 1. The Life of Grace 2. The Life of Glorie First in that the soule hath Communion with God by faith which Communion is many times darkened and eclipsed by sinne when yet in the interim it hath many a glimpse of it as the Sunne being under a cloude is kept from our sight that we cannot see it untill it breakes out so it is our sinnes which hinders this sweet Communion that is betweene God and the soule As it is with the light and the eye as long as the eye is well it dare boldly looke on the light but if it catch a blow or an hurt it must have somewhat to hang before it because the light offends it So it is between God and the soule as long as it stands in good termes with God so long it dare with boldnesse come unto God but if once it catch a blow have a hurt and a wound it is afraid to come before God This is the life of Grace Now the Life of Glorie is to live in the blessed presence of God in the Kingdome of Heaven where the sweet face of God shall shine on us and where wee shall have the Company of the Angells and Holy Spirits But this is the order First wee must live the life of grace and then the life of Glorie and therefore every man must acquaint himselfe with God by Prayer and in repenting for his sinnes that so we may looke to have Communion with him in the life to come but if we doe not acquaint our selves to prayer and in the use of holy meanes then we are as strangers to him and must not looke to have Communion with him in the life of Glorie But to inlarge my selfe further in the point of Eternall Life let us consider of it a little more
that he sends not all afflictions at once 169. † The three afflictions that Christ suffered 153. The behaviour of Christ in his afflictions 158. The effects of Christs afflictions 160. Christ was affraid To stand be fore God in Iudgemens clothed in our sinnes of death Not as a dissolution of Nature But as Gods curse 155. Christs agonie the cause of his sweat 161. All things made for mans benefit 71. How Christ shall bee All in all at the day of Iudgement 477. Almighty see God The amazement of Christ on the Crosse proceeded from Gods curse 157. Angels Ministers unto Christians 297. ¶ The Angels service to Of Christs anointing 78. Men. 430. Christ 122. ¶ What meant by anointing in the Law 16. Christ by being anointed was designed enabled made acceptable for the worke of redemption 78. With what By whom the end why Christ was anointed c. 81. The benefit of Christs anointing participation of His Graces the dignitie of his Person 89. We must anoint Christs Head Body and Feete with the Oyle of Devotion Compassion and Contrition 82. ¶ In the Law were anointed Prophets Priests Kings 83. No injurie must bee done to the Lords anointed 82. † Apocrypha see Scripture Of Christs appearing 305. Application of Christ to the heart better than Simeons holding him in his armes 141. † The wicked can doe no more than God hath appointed 213. ¶ 268. † Whatsoever betides a man is by Gods appointment 214. The Place Time Manner and Preparation of Christs apprehension 177. c. That apprehension of impenitent sinners worse than that of Christs in the Garden 186. * Comfortable words like Aqua-vitae 589. Christs armes his messengers 342. Christs arraignement frees us from arraignment and condemnation 194. * Of Christs ascension 353. The Necessity Time Place from whence Manner Fruits and benefits of Christs asscension from 353. to 365. Christ ascended to Prepare a place for us Send down the holy ghost Lead captivity captive Give gifts to his Church Make intercession for us 354 Difference betwixt Christs ascension and others 363. Christs ascension a pawne of ours 315. † Trials to know whether wee have ascended from sinne or no. 365. Of the great assembly to Iudgement 428. Gods assistance in troubles makes men confident 194. † B CHristians ought to beare with one another in Hiding the infirmities Excusing them Loving the partie 595. Christians ought to begin all their workes with prayer and thankesgiving 645. † Not to resist beginnings in sinne dangerous 181. ¶ Why the Shepheards went to Bethlehem 126. * By Christs binding we are loosed from the chaine of condemnation and corruption 188. Christs birth the greatest Ioy of the world 125. ¶ The Place 116. Time 113. Manner 117. of Christs birth The manifestation of Christs birth 120. Foure reasons of Christs meane birth 118. God bestowes on his Children blessing of this life and the life to come 581. The wise order God takes in giving us blessings 622. The communion of Saints an earthly blessings 581. In the blood of Christ that issued out of his side is something naturall and miraculous 268. Christs blood purifies us from the guilt and filth of sinne 269. The blood of Martyrs and Christ cry unto God for revenge and mercy 85. † Body see Resurrection As a Goldsmith melts gold to make a cup for the king so God melts our bodies to make vessels of honour for himselfe 637. ¶ The perfection of our bodies compared to a Shipmans needle touched with a Loadstone 641. * Our bodies spirituall because Vpheld by Subject to the spirit 642. Chris rose with the same body hee was crucified with 340. ¶ The power of a glorified body 643. What use of stomacke teeth c. in a glorified body 628. ¶ Christ saves not our soules onely but our bodies also 230. ¶ Two Bookes opened at the day of Iudgement 439. Christ borne when Herod was king Augustus taxed the world why 115 Christ borne in a base place to shew 10. the guilt of sinne 2. to procure us a better place 3. to make us content with any estate 116. ¶ Christ borne after the common and poorest manner 117 118. Christ was bonnd in regard of God To sanctifie the bonds of his servants To teach us the desert of sinne That we might bee loosed 187. Men for Paine and punishment Caution and securitie Shame and disgrace 186. Against the Papists giving the bread onely 334. * What meant by Christs breaking of bread with the Disciples that went to Emmaus 334. Christs breathing on the Disciples was a signe of giving the Holy Ghost 345. † Christ was buried To give us assurance of his death that hee might conquer death in his strongest hold to sanctifie and sweeten the grave for us that wee might have strength to bury him 273. Of the burning of the world 410. ¶ A Story of two Protestants in king Edward the sixths dayes touching burning for religion 277. † The burthen of sinne 158. * Every sinne addes to the burthen of Christ 159. * The benefit of Christs buriall 281. Foure waies to bury sinne to kill it hate the loathsome face of it remove it out of our sight and to rake moulds on it 282. C CHrist comes when a man is at his calling 122. † Calvins speech Dominus cum venit inveniet me laborantem 122. ¶ Moderation in worldly cares seeing God is our Father 55. What the word Catholike meanes 574. ¶ The Church said to be Catholike in respect of Place Persons and Time 575. c. The Papists beleeving in the Catholike Church absurd in religion and reason 578. * Reasons proving the Papists no true Catholikes 578. A twofold chaine on every naturall man of corruption sinne of condemnation and guilt of sinne 188. The wicked compared to chaffe 434. A great change and alteration after conversion 499. We must commit the seede of our charity into the bosome of the poore and hands of God 594. ¶ All chastisements came from God our loving Father and shall turne to our good 56 57. Gods Children why withheld from worldly blessings 580. Gods Children never totally finally forsaken of him proued by foure grounds 172. What Christ shall doe after the last Iudgement 475. see Iudgement The word Christ what it signifies 77. see Anointed Christ and Messiah all one 77. ¶ Christ the Sonne of God 90. Christ proved to be God from the Names Attributes Workes and Worship of God ascribed to him 91. Why Christ must bee both God and Mun. 92. ¶ Christ borne when Augustus Caesar taxed the world to fulfill a Prophesie to be under the taxe of Gods wrath for our sakes 116. * Christ the Head of the Church three proofes 542. The love and willingnesse of Christ to die for us 208. † Every little meanes is to bee laid hold of to bring us to Christ 131. ¶ Three things required in him that would be found in Christ 693. The infinite comfort after finding Christ 312. No condition can
hinder a man from Christ 121. * How a strong Christian weakned by sinne may know whether the holy Ghost bee in him or no. 505. Christians of all men most happy because Christ is their Lord. 99. ¶ Good is to be done to Christians as they are Christians 461. † What the Church of God is 525. The Church Triumphant Militant 520. 530. No member of the Triumphant that is not of the Militant Church 530. The great blessing it is to be a member of the Church 566. ¶ Wee must beleeve a not in the Church 523. ¶ The Church a mixed company of good and bad 537. How the Church is one 534. The diverse estates of the Church here in this world 534. The Church sometimes hidden 535. ¶ The Church power at one time than another 537. Of cleaving to the Church 537. ¶ The blessings that proceed from the peace of the Church 536. ¶ The dignities of the Church 539. The Church as the Citie of God excels all other cities in foure respects 539. The Church the Body of Christ 542. * Christ Loveth Indoweth Adorneth Acquitteth Bringeth home Glorifieth the Church his Spouse 544. Vniversality a property of the Church 574. The Church the pillar and ground of truth 549. The Church preserves the Letters Canon Authority of the Scripture 550. Holinesse a property of the Church 569. Iudgement of the world mixture of good and bad remainder of sinne seeme to take away the holinesse of the Church 569. The Church said to bee Holy by 1. Faith and good conversation 2. Imp●tation of Christs righteousnesse 3. Inherent holinesse in the true members 4. Having the means of holinesse 570. Reasons why there is no salvation without the Church 565. ¶ The Church Bet●lehem thither we must goe to finde Christ 126. * All things tend to the good of the Church as crosse wheeles in a clocke 88. ¶ The come unto me in glory depends on the come unto me in grace 446. ¶ Christ comes to a man when things bee at the worst 115. ¶ The comfort of the Holy Ghost excels all other comforts 511. To appropriate Christs merit a great comfort 124. † Two times to commend our soules to God In danger every day 258. 3. grounds of cōmending our selves to God because hee is the Father of Spirits our Father in Christ hath afforded us former favours 258. Why Christ gives signes of his comming 402. God communicates his wisdome c. to us we our griefes to him 583. Christ communicates to us Himselfe right of his death merit Power of Spirituall life Dignity of his owne estate 584 We communicate to Christ our Nature Sinnes Troubles and dangers 383. Christ communicates his graces to his Church 341. Of the communion of the Saints 579. By the communion of Saints a Christian hath a thousand helps 597. ¶ The communion of Saints consists in communion with God with Christ one with another 582 Foure lets of the communion of saints 605. The communion one with another consists in the commmuion of the 1. Living with the living 587 c. 2. Living and the Dead in wishing well to conversing with one another 598 3. Dead with the dead in 1. Lying together in the Grave 2. Being members of Christ 3. Being gathered to the Saints departed 599. The communion of the living with the living stands in community of Affection 587. Graces 588. Spirituall sacrifices ibid. Temporall blessings 590. Bearing one with another 594. The communitie of goods is limited in the Excesse Defect 592. Communions of the wicked 579. Christs company a great comfort 243. † Christs complaint on the crosse 168. Christ conceived of the flesh of the Virgin 105. † by the power of the holy Ghost how 106. Christ conceived by the Holy Ghost that he might be pure and without sin 107. † The stirre that was at Christs conception 108. * Of the condemnation of Christ 197. Conscience compared to a Booke wherein all things are written 207. ¶ To sin against conscience a fearefull thing 205. † 207. † The property of a good conscience to be moved at Gods judgements 206. ¶ Bad consciences troubled at Christs comming 132. ¶ Wicked mens consciences may be sealed for a time but one day they shall be opened 184. ¶ No flying from an evill conscience 205. ¶ An evill conscience the worst accuser 207. ¶ A Christian though contemn'd in his life is honoured in his grave 278. ¶ Constancie in a good course requisite thogh without successe 199. * Of the conviction at the last day 437. Conversion makes men labour to draw others to the same estate 238. * Confession of sinne Cleering the Iustice of God Zeale for the honour of God a signe of conversion 238. No man knowes the instant of his conversion 305. No cost to be spared for Christ 280. ¶ Covetousnesse moved Iudas to betray Christ 181. † The workes of the Creation not to be lookt on but with due consideration 65. ¶ The Author Substance Manner Subject Estate Time Order End of the Creation c. 64. The motion multitude of the Creatures prove a Deitie 43. ¶ The Creature not God cause of sinne and defect 67. † We ought not to abuse the Creatures seeing God made them 65. Wee ought to pray for restauration to the creatures 68. * Christ died the death of the Crosse because it was most Accursed Shamefull Painefull Apparent 211. Christs behaviour on the Crosse 224. The seven last words of Christ on the Crosse 224. c. The scandall of the Crosse weakens faith 321. Christs Disciples must bee carriers of the Crosse 214. ¶ No man must make a Crosse to himselfe but bee contented if God lay it on him 214. ¶ All Crosses must be borne ibid. The place where Christ was crucified 215. Why Christ was crucified aloft 213. * How Christ was led to be crucified 213. What torments are expressed in the word crucified 219. ¶ Vses from Christs crucifying 220. c. Five falsehoods in Popish crucifixes 223. Christs Cup what it is 160. * Sinne brings Gods curse upon 〈◊〉 467. * D ALL needlesse dangers are carefully to be shunned 338. † Whether the darkenesse of the Sunne at Christs passion was all the world over 165. † The horrid darknesse of wicked men at the last day 165. ¶ The holy Ghost illuminates as a window in a darke house 509. Dead bodies members of Christ having communion with him 600. Incertainty of death should stirre us up to conscionable walking 237. † At the day of death most care is to bee had of our soules 238. ¶ 257. ¶ 258. * Death but a departing 143. * The good change a Christian makes by death 242. ¶ The greatest extremitie befals Christians at the time of their deaths 169. ¶ We ought to prepare for death 179. † Christs Death 261. Voluntarie 265. The manifestation thereof 266. The Power thereof 269. ¶ The fruits of Christs Death are to us freedome from the Eternall Death Seing of Death Curse of Death Power of
shall know one another at the resurrection 630. VVhy the resurrection is delayed 631. The dead bodies of the Saints pledges of our resurrection 632. Our resurrection shall bee onely by the power of Christ 635. Our bodies at the resurrection shall bee as glorious as Adams in innocencie 639. † There must bee no returne to sinne 137. ¶ The hope of reward must carry us through afflictions 451. Rich men have as much neede of God as poore 128. ¶ In what estate our bodies shall rise 637. As Christ is risen so wee must rise to newnesse of life 302. Wee shall all rise with the same bodies 627. Objections against it answered 628. In what estate the wicked shall rise 644. The difference of the rising of the godly and the wicked 300. VVhether monsters shall rise monsters 645. In what sexe all shall rise 646. Whether children and old men shall rise so or not 646 647. Christ rose the third day First no sooner 1. To evidence the truth of his death to the Iewes 2. To evidence the power of his death to the Disciples 3. To teach Christians patience 294. Secondly no later 1. Lest the Iewes should not thinke him Christ 2. Lest the Disciples faith should stagger 3. To apply his resurrection 4. Because God had so appointed 295. Christ rose in power 296. † VVhen Christ rose hee left the grave-clothes behinde him why 298. Multitudes of rose with Christ to Shew the benefit of his resurrection appertaines to many not a few Be witnesses thereof 301. What was done by VVhat became of th●se that rose with Christ 303. Roome for swaggerers c. in the Iune but none for Christ 119. ¶ Christ the roote of David how 543. * S CHrist instituted the Christian Sabbath 305. † Spirituall Sacrifices due to the Saints on Earth are Exhortation Admonition Consolation Mutuall praier 588 c. A Kingdome assigned to the Saints 447. The Saints are now in glory 529. † No salvation without the Church 565. All men naturally out of the estate of salvation 73. † But one meanes of salvation 47. ¶ Christ a Saviour 72. No Saviour but he 75. Differences betweene Christ and other Saviours 76. * Noah left all to save his Soule 38. Christ saves His owne people only By suffering From sinnes 73. Nobilitas objecti Debilitas subjecti The reasons why wee beleeve not the Scriptures 325. ¶ The Scripture the jewell and treasure of the Church 550. Reasons proving the puritie and perservation of the letter of the Scripture 551. Of the true translation of the Scripture 553. How to reconcile the different translations in the Scripture 553. ¶ Canonicall Scripture what it is 555. Reasons why the Apocrypha was not received for canonicall Scripture 557. The Scripture is a rule left us to walke and examine all things by 559. † The Church gives no authority to the Scripture seeing GOD is the Author of it 560. ¶ All that Christ did was to fulfill the Scripture 247. * In the Scripture the Puritie Majestie Predictions Power Sinceritie Consent of writers and Naturall reason prove them to have God their Author 561. c. Consent of writer in the Matter Manner if the Scriptures 663 The Scripture is to be Relied on Iudge in questions Not all neglected Directer of ●ur lives because the Word of God 564. The unsearchable goodnesse of the Holy Ghost expressed by the similitude of a mans looking on 〈◊〉 Sea 507. ¶ Ill successe Bad example T●o discouragements in the wisemens search for Christ 134. To see Christ in the Gospell a blessing worthy to provoke u●to praise GOD for 142. The Word of God ●e seed breeds Christ in our hearts 106. * Strangers seeke●hrist ●hrist sooner than the children 130. ¶ We must seeke C●●ist because Hee ●keth us His g●aces are precious He g●eth salvation 131. It is in vaine to se●ke Christ in this world or worldly thing 360. ¶ We sell our soules t●the Divell for pleasures and profits 183. * Of Christs sendin his Disciples 342. Diverse opinions by the sentence at the day of judgeme●● is pronounced first to the godly then the wicked 444. Of the dreadfull seene of the last judgement 445. † The wofull separa●on of dearest friends at the day of judge●ent 431 432. Separation from ●he Church Vnlawfu●● Lawfull 537. Gods Service ough● be preferr'd before all things 249. God had rather a●e of his Service than Man lose his comfort 459. A twofold Service to Christ Voluntary of the godly Vnwilling of the wicked 69 * Our friendship by reconciliation in Christ alters not the condition of Servants 454. ¶ Distinction of sheckles 183. The properties of sheepe 435. Christs manifestation of the sheepheards 120. Vnder shewes of law and justice the innocent destroyed 195. * Signes of the last judgement See judgement Of the signe of the Sonne of Man 417. What it is 419. The Crosse no signe of the Sonne of Man 418. The strange silence of Christ 208. Silence in Christs cause will make him silent in ours 201. * The manifestation of Christ to Simeon 138. Simeon A just man A devout religious man One that waited for the cōsolation of Israel 138 c. Our case worse than Simeons because if wee see not Christ by faith wee perish 140. ¶ Sinnes of omission will condemne a man as well as sinnes of commission 473. Small sins will condemne as well as great 474. Small sinnes great in Gods account 474. How it stands with Gods justice to punish sinne eternally 470. ¶ The brightest sinnes have a darke shadow 422. The private acting of sinne compared to writing with the juice of a Lemman 438. In sinne Guilt Power 75. The sinnes of the Godly shall not be remembred at the day of judgement 468. ¶ The burthen of sinne pressed Christ downe downe to the ground 158. † Christ the sinne-offering of the Church 215. † How to deale with sinne 5. The horriblenesse of sinne that could not be done away otherwise than by the blood of Christ 76. † 93. ¶ Why the weight of sinne is no more felt 442. Sinne seemes light to wicked men because It is in its proper place Of the insensibility of their consciences They look on the face not the tail therof 159. Great sinnes if fals of weakenesse and repented of Christ will pardon 315. By sinne wee become strangers to God 150. ¶ Sinne make GOD forsake his Servants 174. Our sinnes merit deprivement of all Gods blessings 222. * No release from sinne but by forgivenesse 611. Man unable to satisfie for sinne ibid. Continuance in sinne makes Christ lose his labour 151. ¶ Hee that gives place to small sinnes will afterward make no conscience of greater 181. ¶ The harboring of a secret sinne eats out of the heart all good affections 202. * Seasonable stopping of sinne 206. † Of Christs sitting at the right hand of God 370. Men in their naturals no better than slaves in the sight of God 184. * Christ sold for wealth
from the hand of a loving Father 5 We should part with any thing to give unto Christ Iudg. 14. Vse 2. Comfort First our dignity to be the Sons of God Secondly That God will be a Father to us Thirdly that God will give us a heavenly inheritance Fourthly All Gods chastisements shall turne to the best Simile Simile Mercie in the ●iddest of wrath Simile 5 Why God is said to bee Almighty Quest Ans. Simile Simile God is said to be Almighty foure waies First because he is able to doe whatsoever hee will Secondly because hee is able to doe whatsoever in Nature is possible Thirdly because the whole fulnesse of Power is in God Fourthly because all the power of the creatures is in God Simile Simile None can hurt us but by power from God given Simile Object Ans What thing God cannot doe because they imply weaknesse in one SER. VI. Secondly God cannot make the Creature God Simile Thirdly God cannot doe any thing which i plyeth Contradiction Vse 1. Men must stoop and bow before him Secondly to labour to make him our friend and bee in his favour Thirdly above all things sinne not against him Iob 31. 23. Fourthly in all extremities trust in him Rom. 8. 38. Vse 2. First that our salvation is in his hand Secondly wee shall bee safe under his protection Thirdly that all his promises shall bee fulfilled in due time Fourthly that he is powerfull to destroy our adversaries The more power there is in God the more should be our comfort Simile First God made heaven and earth Vse 1. Since God made the world hee is to be praised for the comforts in the same Simile Vse 2. Not to displease him who made all since hee is able to destroy all Simile Vse 3. Since God did make all he is able to dispose all at his owne pleasure The second point God made heaven and earth Vse 1. Since God made all not to wrong God with them Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Simile The third point how God made all The third point how God made all Vse 1. Vse 2. The fourth point what he made all of Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Simile Vse 4. Fiftly in what estate God made the world Simile Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Simile Sixthly in what time God made all Dan. 2. 16. Quest Sol. 1 2 Simile Simile Seventhly in what order all things were made Quest. sol Reason 1. Simile Reason 2. Reason 3. SER. VII Eighthly all was made for mans benefit Simile ARTIC II. First Hee is Iesus Simile Simile Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Vse 3. Simile First whom he shall save Secondly bo● Christ saves his people Simile Christs letter to the Father Guilt of Sinne what Triall Simile Secondly that there is no Iesus but our Iesus 1 2 3 4 5 Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile 3 Thirdly that hee will be our Iesus Iob 19. Simile Quest. Sol. The second Branch is that Jesus i● that Christ Act. 2. 36. First what is meant by Anointing First Assignation to the worke of Redemption Act. 2. 36. Vse 1. Simile Vse 2. Act. 2. 37. The second worke of Anointing was to shew sufficiencie for the worke Iudg. 16. 3. The third use of Anointing was acceptation of all he dealt with Secondly with what he was anointed The Graces of the Spirit comparted to Oyle First Oyle softens 1 Sam. 19. 23. Secondly Oyle makes cheerefull Act. 16. 25. Thirdly with what he was Anointed Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. 1 3 Fourthly to what end Christ was anointed First Christ is a Prophet Iohn 4. Simile Vse Christ teacheth by the Word and Sacraments Cantic 5. 2. Secondly Christ was a Priest Simile Simile The foure Kingly Duties of Christ 1 Col. 1. 13. Simile The second Kingly Duty Matth. 27. 26. The third Kingly Duty Simile SER. VIII The fourth Kingly Duty Vse 1. Vse 2. The fruit and benefit of Christs Anointing Simile Quest Sol. The third title is that Jesus is the Sonne of God Simile Ioh. 149. Simile Foure Arguments that Christ is God 1 Arg. 2. Arg. 3. Arg. 4. Act. 7. 59. Why Christ onely must Redeeme us 1 2 3 Secondly Christ is the Onely Sonne of God Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile Vse 3. Heb. 1. 1. Vse 4. Vse 5. Simile Simile First Lord of all the world First having all Power under Him Secondly having all things serving Him Simile Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Vse 4. Secondly that He is our Lord. Foure wayes Christ is Lord of the Church First by Creation Secondly by Redemption Thirdly by free gift Fourthly by voluntary service Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile Simile Vse 3. Simile Vse 4. Vse 5. Simile Simile Vse 6. Simile Vse 7. Simile The first Degree of Christs Humiliation Simile SER. IX Simile Vse 1. Vse 2. Simile First How farre Christ tooke mans nature The first conclusion The second conclusion Simile Quest. sol 1 2 3 4 Secondly why Christ was made man 1 2 3 Thirdly the ends why Christ tooke mans nature 1 Simile 2 Simile 3 Simile 4 Simile 5 Fourthly the manner how hee tooke flesh First of what he was Conceived Simile Simile 2 Secondly by what power He was conceived Quest Sol. 1 How Christ was conceived by the holy Ghost Simile 2 3 Simile Object Sol. Simile First of whom Christ is borne Three reasons why Christ was borne of a Virgin Reason 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Vse 1. Vse 2. First what stocke the Virgin Mary came of Secondly her estate Foure reasons why Christ was borne of such meane Parentage The first Reason of Christs low birth Reason 2. Reason 3. Reason 4. Reason 4. SERM. X. First there is a fulnesse of time to fulfill Gods promises Vse 1. Vse 2. Secondly the fulnesse of time is comming Simile Thirdly God sent his Sonne in the fulnesse of time The first perticular time when Herod was king Christ was borne at the lowest ebb of the Jewish estate The second particular time The first cause The second cause Simile Thirdly the place of Christs birth Quest Sol. Reason 1. Simile Reason 2. Reason 3. Fourthly the manner of Christs birth Object Ans Vse 1. Vse 2. Secondly hee was borne meanely Foure Reasons of Christs meane Birth 1 2 Simile 3 4 Simile First unto whom Christ was manifested Three Reasons why Christ was first knowne to the meaner sort 2 Simile 3 Simile Object Sol. Simile Secondly in what disposition the shepheards were found Iudg. 6. 11. Calvin Dominus cum venit inveniet melbar antem Thirdly by whom Christs Birth was manifested Fourthly the time of the manifestation SER. XI The first effect Simile Simile Reason 1. Reason 2. The second effect made hast Simile The third effect they published all Simile The fourth effect they returned to their callings Two Reasons of Christs manifestation Reason 1. Simile Reason 2. Secondly the place whence they came Two reasons why the wisemen came so farre to Christ 1 2 Luk. 11. 31. Simile Object sol Simile Thirdly the place whither they went Simile