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A86269 Nine select sermons preached upon special occasions in the Parish Church of St. Gregories by St. Pauls. By the late reverend John Hewytt D.D. Together with his publick prayers before and after sermon. Hewit, John, 1614-1658. 1658 (1658) Wing H1634A; ESTC R230655 107,595 276

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Cherubims seated upon the Ark of Gods glory cast continually their unspotted eyes upon the rotten raggs of Humane frailty aiming still at mans felicity How else could dust and ashes expect continued life from such dry bones as was and is still the foundation of mans body for should Heavens propitious eye glance forth nothing but renewed smiles upon our actions and mercy alwayes sit hovering over our Tabernacles we should quickly ingulf our spirits in the bottome of miserable security or on the contrary should but the direful hand of Omnipotency it self draw forth his glittering sword against our weak resistance unto what a paralytick posture would such an appearance strike us as coming from him whose very breath can speak us into nothing Oh then with what bowed knees and humble hearts should every soul of us kiss the very remembrance of a Iesus coming not onely to save them that believe but to work a present reconcilememt betwixt the Justice and Mercy of God the Father that now the one as well as the other or rather with united consent both together may conspire and joyn issue in the great work of mans redemption for could your drowsie spirits but lend an ear to the pleasant dialogue that continually passes betwixt these glorious Attributes now you should hear Justice calls for the Sanctuaries ballance to weigh all the actions of the sons of men and with a Mene Mene Tekel c. finde such dusty performances of no validity in Heavens account and so poor we being in Adam wilfully lost are now necessarily fallen short of immortal bliss Thus is our sentence irrecoverable and no door of hope left for our escape till Mercy that eternal beam of love stand forth and present the all-sufficient merit of a dying Saviour as full satisfaction for the sins of the whole world pleading that faithful covenant made by Justice it self that whosoever believes shall not perish but have everlasting life Which faith is the golden pillar that bears up the stately structure of mans everlasting glory the only hand by which the promises of a better life are made ours the sure entail by which the inheritance purchased in common is become mine in particular it is the onely voice by which holy David could make an echo that would reach from the lowest deeps to the highest Heavens Out of the deeps have I called unto thee O Lord Lord hear my voice as you may see verse the first of this Psalme nay it is the very nerve and sinewe of all pious Devotion for if you peruse the whole Psalme you will find it is nothing else but a rehearsal of religious petitions and serious exhortations In his petitions you 'l find his soul big with holy affiance spiritual confidence grounded on Gods word promising and his own Experience tasting In his Exhortations like a faithful Physician he prescribes nothing but what is attested to with his own and others Probatum est making mercy both the beginning and the end the principal and the final cause of Happiness but in both he keeps the eye of humility placed upon the raggs of mans unworthiness as justly demeriting eternal wrath were God exact in remunerating our actions for so he closes up the summe of his requests in the words of my Text If thou Lord wilt be extreme to marke what is done amiss O Lord who may abide it In which words please to consider two general parts 1 An antecedent in these words If thou Lord be extreme to marke what is done amiss 2. A Consequent in the other words who can abide it Or if you will look on them 1 In the Thesis 2 In the Hypothesis 1 In the Thesis wherein you have Gods extremity in punishing 2 In the Hypothesis There you have mans misery in suffering And now my Text in its situation is not unlike a pleasant Grove presenting to your view variety of pleasant Trees each bough thereof being richly laden with delicious goodly fruit not onely delightful to the eye but beneficial to the Taste or if you will your Conceptions may behold most costly Arras enriched with the lively story of Gods bounty and mans felicity mutually interwoven in the same peece but if you list to change the scene and have the true parts more neerly acted you may gain a precious enterview of Gods omnipotency displayed in its several Dispensations and management of Humane affairs where Justice and Mercy the twins of royalty discovering on the one Hand Gods free benevolence in bestowing and mans utter unworthiness for so large a guerdon on the reverse parts your sight is presented with the Almighties just severity in punishing together with mans reaping misery the true fruit of his sin In fine that I may unbowel this sacred writ take the substance thereof distilled into these four observations 1 It s the Corruption of mans nature to do amiss 2 God is not alwaies extreme to marke and punish what 's done amiss 3 God can when he pleases be extreme in marking and punishing what is done amiss 4 If God be extreme in punishing man must needs be extreme in suffering These are the four streams that naturally run their division from this pleasant spring that voluntarily tenders its silver drops to refresh the heart of every pious Christian which makes me beg your patience and zealous attention whilst in order I make these glorious truths to pass before the spiritual eye of your intelligent souls And first of the First namely It s the corrupt nature of man to do amiss As its the nature of man to be doing so it s the corruption of that nature to be doing amiss and though God see and observe all the actions of discomposed and distempered man yet it s onely the obliquity of those actions his severity intends to reward with punishment for every action simply considered in it self is good and no way meriting unspeakable torment but every such action contracts eternal guilt as performed by and prersisted in of sinful man whose customary nature and naturall custome is to do evil for as things are in being so they are in operation Can a man gather grapes of thornes or figgs of thissles saith our Blessed Saviour Or can any man bring a clean thing out of an unclean was the question put by holy Iob. Ever since man eat the forbidden fruit man himself hath become a barren tree and cumbred the ground for ever since man voluntarily fell man hath been under a necessity of sin a necessity I say proceeding not from Gods peremptory decree but his feeble and corrupted will for its a voluntary necessity should I set open the door of this defiled cage and present to your view the misery lapsed mans unhappiness hath reduced him to or give you but a glimpse of those polluted birds whose habitation is in the house of every soul by nature or but read a Lecture of mans depraved condition I could do it in no other language then that of
truth Introduction AN imprudent discourse attended with ambitious thoughts was the first occasion of Adams misery and the mercie of God in making the New Covenant is the principal cause of the Serpents ruine whose mischeivous head was early broke by the promised Seed the true Messiah whom the Patriarchs foresaw and the Prophets foretold The Patriarchs foresaw him Genesis 49.10 The Prophets foretold him under diverse representations Esay Esay 7.14 Jer. 23.5 Dan. 9.25 26. Zachary 6.12 Haggai 2.7 by the Emanuel Ieremy the Branch Daniel the Messiah Zachary By him that riseth on high Haggai The desire of all Nations That God should be Incarnate that sinners should be saved that a despicable man should save a World was thought so incredible that the Prophet Esay cryes out Who hath beleeved our report which was in time fulfilled But when the fulnesse of the time was come God sent forth his Son made of a woman c. Gal. 4.4 though the newes was true and proclaimed from Heaven by an Angel and that of great Joy for that on this day was born a Saviour Christ the Lord what was in the Prophets prophesied concerning his coming was by himself fulfilled in time what they pointed at he pointed out and by a Miracle shewed it to the Wise Men saying Where is he that is borne King of the Iewes for we have seen his Star in the East and we are come to worship him St. Matthew 2.2 Yet when he came to his own they received him not but rejected the counsels of God as they did that slew the Prophets who declared the coming of the just One for when he was come he was forced to be gone and flie for the safety of his life into a forraign Country to avoid the fury of that mighty Nimrod whose pretended worship was onely the dark vizour of an inhumane murder disguising his wicked purposes under the beautiful mask of a desired amity no wonder therefore that there are some amongst us that call themselves Christs when there are those that call themselves Christians that would and doe disown Christs Nativity and this old Simeon by inspiration calculated at his Nativity saying This child is set for a signe which shall be spoken against St. Luke 2.34 And wicked people make it good as if he had not been foretold by Prophets nor come into the world in the fulnesse of time at an appointed day and that for us men and for our Salvation Christ came down from Heaven and was incarnate in the womb of the blessed Virgin Mary it is a work that many would not believe saith God Hab. 1.5 which was fulfilled Acts 13.41 Behold ye despisers and wonder and perish for I work a work in your dayes a work which you shall not beleeve c. For so would they have hindred the Author and finisher of our Faith from working that which he had wrought and what God had set down should be done which w●… accordingly fulfilled that he should not be borne but to witnesse to the truth 〈◊〉 he himself saith so much of himself To this end was I borne and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnesse to the truth In which words you may remember I have formerly observed these three parts 1. An Action 1. The End 3. The Object 1. The Action Christs Incarnation He was borne he came into the world 2. The End and that pointed at and pointed out 1. Pointed at To this end and for this cause 2. Pointed out To bear witnesse 3. The Object was the truth To this end was I borne and for this cause came I into the world to bear witnesse to the truth And since the end is the first thing in the intention though last in execution I did begin with the end Pointed at and that was to this end and for this cause But I shall now proceed to the proper work of this day Christs Nativity I was born I came into the world and here at the first step of our discourse we are plunged into an unfathomed depth of mystery for this he that was here borne is the same he that calls himself I am that I am Exodus 3.14 That Socinian that saith he was not very God is a blasphemer I am that I am it is the Name of God whose Essence is from everlasting to everlasting and to be born notes his humanity and how this work was that he that is I am should be borne and close with the Deity tongue cannot expresse and heart cannot conceive we can conceive how nothing is but what is in and of our selves and not that neither but with much imperfection for the first of us that was so desirous of knowledge left us nothing but a penury of what we were and if we know not our selves we cannot possibly conceive how God was made man and at the same time remain incommunicable or how he being incommunicable did vouchsafe to partake of humane Nature yet thus was Christ both God and Man in the same person as man he had a mother that bare him and as God a Father that begat him but who can without admiration speak of such a Sonne or tell of such a generation that was like both yet like neither like neither for consider him as Man and so he hath no similitude of an ineffable Essence look upon him as God and so he bears no proportion with the Virgins Womb and yet like both as God like his Father as man like his mother God and yet the sonne of a woman Man and still the Image of his Father and that from Eternity being without beginning of dayes or end of time Gods Son and Motherlesse a Virgins Babe and Fatherlesse without a Father as borne of a Woman and without a Mother as begotten of God Thus was he God and motherlesse as begotten and not borne a man and Fatherlesse because borne and not begotten we must beleeve both beyond enquiry because more is possible with God then is conceiveable with man and divine Mysteries should perswade us to beleeve that they are undoubted truths though our reason cannot comprehend them for what we cannot understand by beleeving we must believe beyond understanding and of all the divine Mysteries this of our blessed Saviours Incarnation especially whose very mystery heightens Faith to no lesse then a Miracle and where a Miracle is wrought wonder must needs be created and both these two meet in this one act of Faith exercised about the hypostaticall union for beleeving we wonder and marvelling we beleeve and make our blessed Saviours Incarnation the object of both we beleeve what we marvell at and yet wonder at our Faith still doubling the Miracle by marvelling that we can at once both wonder and beleeve it is a wonder and yet this wonder is the object of our Faith for how can we doe lesse then marvell when we consider that on the Fathers side he should be God and no man
the meaning thereof yet now that he is sure it is the thing it self the mistaking or leaving out but of one circumstance may make the whole action sinful there being no excuse to be drawn for the same either from the goodness of his person now or the holiness of his former life that can make good or fill up what was wanting and defective in his actions Nor is David excusable in feigning himself mad before the people 1 Sam. 21.13 though he was a man after Gods own heart No much more is commendable the saying of old Eleazar when at the command of Antiochus all were to die that would not eat swines flesh and when he had eaten it or at least seemed to eat it for he spit it out again and repenting came of his own accord to the torment choosing to die gloriously rather than live stained with such an abomination therefore saith he excellently when perswaded by friends to bring flesh of his own and make as if he obeyed the King in eating the flesh taken from the Sacrifice It becomes not one of my years to dissemble for then any young person may think that I being fourscore years old and ten were now gone to a strange Religion and so they through my hypocrisie and desire to live a little time and a moment longer should be deceived by me and so I get a stain and make my old age abominable and though I should at present be delivered from men yet should I not escape the hand of the Almighty neither alive nor dead 2 Maccab. 6.19 20 21. When it once comes to this strait that we must either deny the truth or fall under the sword of persecution we are rather to die in or for the Faith then forsake it and as we may not for the saving of our lives doe that which is unlawfull much lesse must we free our goods from danger by similation or making a lie we must not similate good into evil nor truth into falshood by wicked words or works nor seeme to doe good when we intend nothing lesse because of the lye which will lie upon us and we shall be guilty of for so doing and withall because there is a lye in deed as well as in saying and neither is allowable in any man under what pretence soever though the doing thereof were to save his life For we must not doe evil that good may come thereof Rom. 3.8 4. Deniall of the truth and that either by subscribing against it or by doing that in our lives and actions which is directly opposite unto it for there is a double denial of truth 1. In Faith 2. In practice 1. In Faith for the love of pleasures 2. In Practice for fear of pain 1. In Faith Some have made shipwrack of faith and a good conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 and the reason is given in 2 Tim. 3.4 why they so did it was because they were lovers of pleasures more then lovers of God And as they for love of worldly pleasure cast away truth of Faith So 2. Others for fear of pain have done it in fact having a forme of godliness but denying the power thereof c. 2 Tim. 3.5 And in words profess that they know God but in workes they deny him Titus 1.16 being reprobate to every good work c. But besides this denying of truth in faith and practice there is also a deniall of the truth in judgement and this admits of divers degrees 1. Apostasie when men fall from truth into sinfull errours 2 When they revile the truth by evil speeches Thus wicked men detect themselves to be enemies to that truth which with their tongues and hands they violently oppose 3. The sin also against the holy Ghost comes in under the notion of a sinfull Apostate and reviling judgement and that appears 1. In matter of Faith 2. In matter of Fact 1. In matter of Faith when men fall off from the truth of Faith first forsaking of it then denying and at last blaspheming the truths of God and continuing in that blasphemy this is to sinne against the holy Ghost in matter of Faith 2. In matter of Fact and that is when men doe those things which are utterly contrary to the revealed will of Almighty God and obstinately persist in the same this is to sinne in matter of Fact against the holy Ghost for every action that dishonours God and heartens others to doe the like is to deny the truths of God therefore it concernes every man to look to himself and make a curious examination by what hath been said in reference to his words and works that so he may not be found guilty of those errours and crimes which the workes and words of our Saviour eminently convince of for we are obliged though with the losse of our lives to bear witness to the truth for to this end were we born regenerate made Christians came into the world the Christian Chruch that we both in our words in our workes in our lives by our deaths if called thereunto should bear witness to the truth And so I have done with the act Bear witness To this end was I borne and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witness to the truth Testis fidelis OR The faithful Witness SERMON VIII St. IOHN 18.37 To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnesse unto the truth THe lives of most men are mispent it being onely they who have a certain end of their actions that shall attain to the right end for which those actions are designed namely the glory of God and their own salvation some there are that shoot at they know not what mark they direct themselves to an universal scope not minding or regarding the particular tendency of their doings hence it is that they arise not to perfection they continue in that evil which ends in discomfort some level at the right end but level amiss wanting prudence and discretion rightly to manage their actions so as may best direct to the true end of their creation It is only true Christian wisdome that shewes the right end and certainly finds out the way thereunto and a wise Christian amidst the many changes of this life continually presses to one end with reverence and respect still setting his resolution in all his wayes if possible to get near to the great centre who when he was summoned unto death and betrayed thereunto by his seeming friend yet stedfastly asserted the end of his life saying To this end was I borne and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witness to the truth In which words I have already observed these particulars 1. An Action 2. An End 3. The Object 1. The Action he was born he came into the world 2. The End and that Pointed at Pointed out 1. Pointed at to this end and for this cause 2. Pointed out to
or not doing what he commands for as he did endure the contradiction of sinners in witnessing to the Truth so should Christians and though they meet with unreasonable dealings from men yet they should undergo all with patience for since Christ was a pattern of goodness we must so look to Iesus in our lives that we should bear witness to the Truth for to this end were we as well as he born and for this cause came we into the world c. In which words I have already observed these three things 1. An Action 2. An End 3. An Object 1. The Action He was born he came into the world 2. The End Pointed at and Pointed out Pointed at for this cause and to this end Pointed out to bear witness 3. The Object The Truth I have discoursed over all the parts of the Text as they concerned our Saviour and came to the two last parts as they generally concern us and dispatcht the act the end of Christs coming into the world shal now go on with the last part of the Text The object the truth And shall shew 1. What it is so as that it is distinguished into past present and future truth is as the sun which hath an intrinsecal light in it self and as in the sun so there is an essence of light in the understanding and this is as the light of the sun uncommunicated But 2. There is an extrinsecal light communicated to other things which in their beings are no other then uncreated truths of things and these are divided from the created truths of God and are as the light of the sun to the moon and stars and then there is a proposition following the thing exprest which is no other in being but the thing it self and is demonstrated in the truth by a double application to the thing exprest and which is conceived in the mind by word and in the understanding by knowledge and this is as the light of the sun communicating it self to this region of the lower aire and this hath multiplicity of acts derived from the matter conceived and accordingly we must distinguish truth into these four parts there is a divine historical moral and civil truth though especially the divine truth is that which is to be witnessed unto though the other in a subordinate manner are to have their attestation also yet divine truths most of all whether we consider them as Principal or Less principal 1. Principal and they are the Scriptures of truth the law of truth and the word of truth 2. The less principal are the necessary conclusions which upon inferences are deduced from those grounds therefore every parcel of truth whether it be Scripture or deduced from Scripture is to be the sub●ect matter of a Christians testimony and these are they which we are to witness unto and comprehend the truth of faith and manners which is to be witnessed unto both in words and works I have spoken of the doctrine of faith formerly and shewed that we are to witness to it by doing and suffering and if God call us thereunto by dying also I shall now come to the Second branch which contains these divine moral truths that are for the regulation of our lives laid down in the Scriptures of the old and new Testament there Gods law is the truth and the truth of the Gospel is that law whose precepts and promises we are to imitate It was a custome among the heathens to derive their lawes from their Gods giving them names accordingly but we that are Christians have our law from the true God who is the author of truth The law was given by Moses but Grace and truth came by Iesus Christ Saint Iohn 1.17 where you see the truth of salvation is ascribed to the Gospel and that which we are to consider the end of Christs coming into the world for is that it was not to give new lawes but to fulfil the old law for we find not the forme of the new Testament to carry in it the authority of a law but onely the precepts thereof to be brought in occasionally by our Saviour in a way of interpretation exhortation and also by application but not in a way of constitution therefore saith our Saviour think not that I came to destroy the law and the Prophets c. Saint Matt. 5.17.18 It is not that I come to take away the law and the Prophets but rather to fulfil them this is that law which is the rule of mens actions written First by Moses and Then by the Prophets It is to be understood of all the law as it was given unto the Jews and others whether they were men just or unjust but especially unto the Jewes in a more ample translation then to other people the law of works it is true was abolished by our Saviours comming but the law of doctrines and rules of holy living given by Almighty God in the Mount though these were in some sense perfected by bringing in the substance for the shadowes flie away when the substance appears yet I say this law is not disanulled but perfected in such a manner that it is now become the perfect rule of Christian piety whatever the Antinomians say in opposition thereunto as that it was nayled to the Cross of Christ and so abolished by his death but it is evident to the contrary that still the whole commanding power remains because the whole world shall be judged by the law and word of truth for every man shall be judged according to his works Rev. 2.23 and we are to bear witness to this truth by the testimony of our hands and tongues our words and works of our tongues and that two wayes Both by speaking the truth to the religious and also by defending of it against the erroneous 1. By speaking of the truth to the religious though they know it already yet that they may be established in the truth and therefore holy David makes it his prayer to get direction from God how to be enabled to walk in the truth of God under divers denominations Psalm 119. sometimes he prayes to be directed in the law of God verse 18. sometimes in the statues of God ver 26. sometimes in the Iudgements of God v. 7. sometimes in the truth of God ver 43 sometimes in the word of God ver 17. and sometimes in the Ordinances of God v. 91. thereby giving us to understand that in the most confirmed Saints there is still so much of corruption that if left to themselves they will be in danger of relapsing and therefore saith St. Paul to his Ephesians who were great Christians Let no man deceive you with vain words c. Ephes 5.6 intimating that there was a possibility for them to be led away with the error of the wicked for what Saint Peter long since foretold is in our dayes found too true as there were false teachers among them so there should be amongst us
is but a lame consent yeilded by constraint for he that by a Tyrant is compelled with force of punishment to deny the Truth doth in a sort deny and not deny he denies it outwardly with his lips but his heart greives inwardly for the same because his conscience bears witness to the Truth but he that with a wicked life is given wholly to sin that he hath all his delights in it that man hath made himself perfect in evil 4. From the more full signification we do signifie more of wickedness to be in us by our works than by our words he sits at a farre greater denial of truth that denies it by a wicked life than he that denies it onely with his lips for fear of death though both these are great aggravations since in our lives words and works we are to bear witness to the Truth for to this end were we born and for this cause came we into the world c. Application Our Saviour bids Let your light so shine before men c. Saint Matthew 5.6 then we may hence learn that those that should light others to Heaven by their Doctrine must not darken their way by the evil example of an unholy life and not only must Ministers but people also let the light of holiness appear visible in their lives When God places a man a private Christian in the lower Orbe he puts him there to shine like a starre bright and clear in his own sphere Christians should shine and bear witness in their lives and be cautious how they walk because every sin puts a dimness upon the soul and darkness internal can expect no other but to go to darkness eternal and therefore St. Peter saith that our good works should make those that look on us as evil doers glorifie God in the day of visitation 1 Saint Peter 2.12 There be some that must believe in Christ throughout the world and witness his Truth to unbelievers by a holy life and why may it not belong to us but if on the contrary we be found to live as they live how shall they be brought to believe as we believe It was the saying of a Heathen If I did see the Christians lives better I should think their faith better than mine Religion and the Doctrines of Faith are often disgrac'd by wicked Professors 1 Tim. 1.6 7. the rebellion of a Christian that is a Servant though to an Heathen Master brings a scandal both upon God and on holy Religion Sure I am God and Religion is very much disgrac'd and the Gospel dishonoured and the Church of Christ abused by the wicked lives of those that are called the Sons of the Church Oh therefore that by holy lives judicious reading faithful hearing and constant studying and meditating in the wayes of God and the Truths of God we would make our selves able and ready to give an account of the hope that is in us that so both in our knowledge and practice we bearing witness to the Truth here on earth we may have the truth in our consciences to bear witness to our selves that we are the Sons of God that so he that ascended into Heaven to take possession of his own Glory may in time bring us thither who himself affirmed and after whose example we should walk that as he was born and came into the world to bear witness to the truth so we should also account of our selves that we were born and that we came into the world that we might bear witness to the truth that we came into the world this Christian world to witness to the truth as common Christians that we came into the world the Church of God as members thereof to justifie that faith by a holy life unto which our parents had baptized us still indeavouring to carry the same mind in us that was in Christ Jesus that as he did so we came into the world to bear witness to the truth for he justified himself before the judgement-seat of Pilate saying in the words of my Text To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witness to the truth The end of the Sermons Dr. Hewit's publique Prayer after Sermon O HOLY HOLY HOLY Lord God of heaven and earth heaven and earth are full of the majesty of thy glory Glory be to thee O Lord glory be to thee glory be to thee glory be to thee for all those infinite favours which thou of thine infinite goodnesse hast voucsafed to us who are lesse then the least of all thy mercies for the fountain of all mercies Jesus Christ in whom thou hast loved us with an everlasting love before ever we or the world were made that thou hast created us after thine own Image and redeemed us by the bloud of Jesus Christ when we were utterly lost that thou hast called us with an holy calling and in some measure sanctified us by the graces of thy holy Spirit that thou hast spared us thus long and given us so long and so large a time of repentance when as thou mightest have cut us off in the midst of our transgressions whilst we were rebelling against thee Blessed be thy name O Lord for all thy mercies vouchsafed unto us thy mercies to allure us thy promises to wooe us thy patience and long-suffering towards us to lead us to repentance thy corrections to reclaime us thy judgements to affright and better us blessed by thy name for all opportunities of wel-doing for all hinderances of evill-doing for all the good purposes and resolutions thou hast put into our hands to draw our souls from the dregs of sin and ignorance into the glory of thy Saints for any assistance that thou hast given to any of us in any holy performance for the Communion of thy Saints the aide of their counsels the benefit of their Prayers the comfort of their conversations the protection of thy Holy Angels for all corporall spirituall temporall and eternall mercies mercies concerning this life and mercies concerning the life to come Blessed be thy name for thy mercies to us all the dayes of our lives thy mercies unto us this present day for the light thereof the greater light the light of thy truth to shine into our soules to guide our feet into the way of all truth For that portion of Scripture wherein thou hast been pleased to reveal thy self unto us at this time Lord though it be sowne in much weaknesse do thou raise it up in great power let it not be as water spilt upon the ground but let it be as seed sown in good ground that it may take deep root downward in our hearts by faith and bring forth much fruit upwards in our lives and conversations to the glory of thy holy name to the edification of thy Church and people and to the salvation of our souls in the day of Jesus Christ to whom with thy self and holy Spirit we desire to
promises for the difference lies in these respects following 1. That above it differs from that below in degrees of Excellency that here below is grounded on Faith which beholds the promises of God darkly but that above is grounded on a clear sight and a perfect vision 2. That hope below is attended with sighs and sadnesses that above without sorrow all sighing and sorrow being removed from their hearts whose tears are wiped away with the light of Gods Countenance 3. This below hath weaknesses and imperfections but that above is a confirmed hope thus our hope even to the day of Judgement shall not be abolished in Heaven in regard of Essence it remains but in regard of weaknesses it ceases For till Gods promises be accomplished there is yet hope in exercising that act that may bring us to the enjoyment of the highest manifestation of Divine Love 2. The more principall objects not in this life onely that is not onely for the things of this life but the things of a better life for though hope looking to God it refers to the things of this life for subsistance yet it chiefly respects the things of the other life the resurrection of the flesh c. other hopes may promise eternall but will but serve as figge leaves other hopes may bring to the fruition of what we hope for but cannot give satisfaction but such is the excellency of this hope as it will supply so much as faith can beleeve or hope desire so that as it would be desperateness to cast away this anchor so again madness to cast it off as needless the Saints which should be climbing Heaven it would be folly for them to ply this hope about this life when we may have it about a better to hope in this life onely is unchristian and lesse then Christianity will not give us the hope of an eternal life to follow Christ onely to get possession of outward comforts is but to starve our souls while we feed our bodies with the loaves of pretended Sanctity for he that will be Heir to Christs Kingdome must expect to be crown'd with thornes temporal felicity having no entailment upon his discipleship persecution being their portion and their sufferings part of their triumph So that each true Beleever must joyn in the Chorus with the song of Saint Paul pathetically exprest in the words of my Text If in this life onely we have hope in Christ we are of all men most miserable FINIS A SERMON ON St. THOMAS Day SERMON V. St. IOHN 18.37 To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witnesse unto the truth c. Introduction ENvie and Malice the inseparable companions of a vicious heart are alwayes in unwearied motion untill they have found out some convenient means whereby to bring about their abominable ends and rather then be disappointed of unhallowed thoughts or wicked words they will not cease to speak evil of the way of truth yea by them those are accounted enemies that speak the truth thus wicked Ahab salutes the Prophet Elijah Have I found thee O my enemy 1 Kings 21.20 So that it seemes he accounted that holy person no lesse then his souls adversary for telling the truth so persecuted they the Prophets of old and the malice of men and devils have been so persecuting in all ages that the Church hath not found where to rest for the Saints wandred up and down afflicted and tormented yea they wandred about saith the Apostle in sheeps-skins and goats-skins c. of whom the world was not worthy Heb. 11.38 And in this the Disciple was not before or above his Lord for no better entertainment had Christ himself and he is pleased to say To this was I born for this cause came I into the world c. Which words have a double aspect and Ianus-like appear with a double face the one looking upon Christ the other upon Christians the one concerns our Saviour the other respects our selves For 1. If you respect the day so they look at Christ not onely as this is the Lords Day but as it is the Advent-Sunday instituted for the Advent or coming of Christ in the Flesh 2. It looks upon Christ as coming in his Ordinances and administrations to his people 3. It looks upon his coming in gracious visitations as on this day by his power coming to deliver the Church Militant from sinne and misery to be a Church triumphant in glory and thus my Text hath reference to the several comings of Christ But that 's not all the words not onely concern Christ but they have reference unto Christians also and that in a threefold respect for they eye all the errours and mislookings of the times 1. They look upon the grosse opinions of those that say the Scepter of Christ and the power of earthly Kings stand in opposition one to another and thereupon cry down all rule and all authority saying like the heathen Let us break their bands in sunder c. Psal 2.3 It is true Christ had the Title of a King yet neither that nor himself made any impeachment of Caesars Lawes and though he denied not himself to be a King yet he refused to dethrone Caesar for he saith expresly my Kingdome is not of this world So then you see he is not in opposition to the Kings of the earth he came not to take away earthly Kingdomes but to give an Heavenly Kingdome and therefore he saith Give to Caesar the things that are Caesars c. We must obey the temporal Lord for his sake who is the Heavenly Lord for they who yeild not obedience to temporal Kings for Christs sake who hath commanded it have as yet made no glorious entrance into the Kingdome of Heaven for love to Christ and submission to Caesar may and do dwell together in the same heart 2. The words look upon mens works as they are Christians who in defence of lawful Superiours with their swords in their hands had rather die fighting then betray their liberty by a cowardly resignation of their lives and fortunes and also as Christians they have learnt of Christ their Head to pay Tribute where lawfully it is demanded for if any might have rebelled and refused the same none more lawful and able then our Saviour who could at his pleasure command more then twelve legions of Angels to assist him and could command all the treasures of the earth as King and Lord thereof yet refused the glory of the one to pay lawful tribute and the innumerable force of the other that with silence he might answer Caesars Deputy for he came to bear witness of the truth and he will rather lose his life then his obedience 3. That none that would be thought a Christian might think himself unconcerned the words look upon all men but especially upon those that in pretended religious yet persecuting times are ready to betray the truth rather
all to fate but Christ came to maintain a Trinity of persons and that in a divine Essence and that he takes care of the whole world and doth not necessitate any mans actions by a fatal destiny And not onely were there errors in mens judgements but 2. In their manners and waies how great the errors of the Philosophers were is well known to those that are and have been conversant in their writings and not onely they but the Rabbins of old under the law taught against literal hypocrisie that no obedience is profitable if it be not in observation of the whole Law and that not then neither but when onely in the letter and to mans appearance but Christ when he came he required truth in the inward parts and what they stood for in the letter he required in the spirit expounding their doctrine more strictly saying It hath been said of old Thou shalt not kill and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgement but I say unto you whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgement as is set down the 5 6 7. chap. of Saint Matthew Christ came to witness to the truth and did witness to it in his Sermons Judgements and Censures Answers and Reproofes 1. In his Sermons that his adversaries could not but passe this censure of them Master we know that thou art true and teachest the way of God in truth St. Matthew 22.16 2. In his judgements and censures for how did he use in reading pleading and deciding to demonstrate his faithfulness you have the full story of the first of these in Saint Luke 7.4 and so on concerning his willingness to forgive the greatest debt an example of the second is pregnant to this purpose when he defended the pious woman against his Disciples for anointing his Head with preous ointment Saint Matthew 26.10 11 12 13. You have his faithfulness in the third when against the Scribes and Pharisees he became an advocate for himself to defend that true power which the Father had committed to him Saint Iohn 8.12 and so on 3. In his Answers and Reproofes in his answers though they were many times in silence yet he convinced them by saying nothing and in his reproofes how true for when he spake they were such as never man uttered for faithfull seasonable and meek never expressing any seeming passion but once in purging the Temple of those buyers and sellers who had made his Fathers house a place of Merchandise and instead of the house of Prayer had turned it into a Den of Theeves indeed he spared neither friend nor foe for when he reproved his Disciples Saint Luke 9.46 upon their contention for greatness he did it in meekness by the innocent similitude of a Child ver 48. When to the Pharisees he said Woe unto you Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites for ye are like unto whited sepulchers which indeed appear beautifull outwardly but are within full of dead mens bones he did it in faithfulness St. Matthew 23.27 And even of Herod he said no lesse nor shewed he any fear of his power for he said Goe ye and tell that Fox behold I cast out Devils and I doe cures to day and to morrow and the third day I shall be perfected Saint Luke 13.32 whereby you see he alwayes bare witness to the truth and wherein else should we follow his example for every one is obliged in word and work in life and in death to bear witness to the truth every man in his place and calling Indeed there is a speciall duty lies upon Magistrates and all publick Officers that they in their severall spheres move exemplarily towards the mark of truth but most of all upon the Ministers of the blessed Word and Sacraments for that which is laid upon on them by way of obligation is double because they come into the world the Church as members thereof and Officers therein and that extraordinarily as called thereunto inwardly by the Spirit of God and outwardly sent by those that have power in the Church lawfully to commission them thereunto and then they are obliged also to bear witness to the truth as common Christians in their degree that they may bear witness to the truth in excellency of goodness following the excellency of all good that good man God and man the man Christ Jesus who left us his example as a pattern to imitate who was full of Humility strong in beloeving wonderfull in patience rich in love and in all a patterne of Holiness and it is the highest reason imaginable that we should imitate him whom we pretend to worship being carefull that we bring no dishonour to his name by doing what he did not or in refusing to doe what he did and commanded but rather looking upon him as the author and finisher of our Faith we may be ingaged to run as he did with patience the race that is set before us taking all manner of encouragement from him that so if we are unable or unwilling to follow Christ in his Word commanding yet we may doe it by his Word directing And what though Christians meet with unreasonable dealings from men yet they must not turn away their ears from hearing nor their tongues from speaking nor their lives from suffering for the truth if called thereunto for since they were borne for this end to follow the great examplary who died for witnessing to the truth they must not basely decline it for he himself saith To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the world c. And so I have done with the words in their primary intention as they concerned our Saviour and come now 2. To the extension of them as they concerne us for since Christ in the whole course of his life is presented as a pattern of Holiness we that profess our selves to be Christians our eyes must so look to Jesus the author and finisher of our Faith that we should follow his steps and as he did so we should bear witness to the truth and to this end were we borne and for this cause came we into the world that we should bear witness to the truth And so I begin again with The act to bear witness For though all the Sacred Word be called a testimony because sufficient to bear witness to it self yet God will have every truth of his established by the mouths and lives of Christians also and for this cause besides others came Christ into the world yea Christ who is the Word and Truth it self took the witness of others to himself and joyned himself to their witness for the whole sacred Trinity bears record of his truth 1. The Father and that to the Saints of old he did then bear witness of him the substance whereof was audibly delivered in that voice This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased hear ye him St. Matthew 17.5 2. The Word he did
bear witnesse 3. The Object the truth To this end was I borne and for this cause came I into the world c. I have traversed over all the parts of my Text in the primary intention thereof as it concerned our Saviour and have entred upon the two last parts as they concern us in the extension thereof and have insisted upon the former of the latter parts namely To bear witness I shall now come to the third and last thing The Object The truth To this end was I borne and for this cause came I into the world that I should bear witness to the truth Truth is the first thing in intention though last in enjoyment as being the end of all and he that would be happy in the end must lay hold of truth in the beginning it was a question too good for a Pilate to ask What is truth St. John 18.38 because his jesting speech shewed he never intended a sober inquiry after it and besides the Schooles have wearied themselves in their Questions raised about the power and Infiniteness of God as distinguished into parts how all could be in one and yet that one in all so as that it is distinguished into past present and future and so he hath a time of giving and receiving Thus the body of the Sunne containes all light essentially in it self and when communicated to the Moon and Stars it is still the same though multiplyed So is truth according to the divers acceptations of it for as it is considered in it self so it is one intire being but as embraced by severall apprehensions it is divided though in it self still the same and this truth is that light which is really one in all yet so as this one light gives information to severall capacities For 1. There is essentially a cause of light in the understanding and this the Schooles call the first light and this you may understand to be as the light in the Sunne when intire in it self and uncommunicated to the lesser and inferiour Globes 2. There is a formal light and that consists in the exercising the dictates and right informations of the understanding and therefore Saint Austin rightly defines truth when exercised to be the creature of an enlightned understanding and this created truth is called a life exemplary from the increated truths of God and this is as the light of the sunne-beames to the moon and stars c. or the diffusions of truth from the understanding received into all the parts and faculties of the Soul together with the affections which are as the lesser stars but besides this there is also a secondary light conformable to the thing exprest and this whether it be in the minde or in words conceived or uttered it must first suppose a forme of knowledge received by the apprehension of a man according to the will of God and these two do but differ as the understanding to the thing conceived which in it self is so necessary that without it no Salvation can be received But then this truth as it may diversly be distinguished is not to be the object of our Faith so as that without the knowledge thereof we cannot be happy for there are truths naturall and truths theologicall but those truths which we are called out principally to witness unto in speaking and doing by words and workes are theologicall and that is those truths that are declared in the principles of divine Scriptures and they are the Scriptures of truth the law of truth the word of truth that necessarily call for our testimony together with all those doctrines of Faith and manners therein exprest as they are reduced from errors for every divine truth laid down in Scripture or drawn from Scripture is that the subject we are to bear witnesse unto and this is the truth that containes in it the doctrine of Faith and manners the one in words the other in workes so as that we in testimony of words and workes should bear witnesse to the truth 1. We must bear witnesse to the doctrines of Faith by the testimony of our words as with the heart man beleeves to righteousnesse so with the tongue confession is made unto Salvation Rom. 10.10 What we beleeve in our hearts we must confesse with our lips and in Saint Iohn 1.20 St. Iohn Baptist confessing himself not to be Christ it is clear he denyed not the truth but onely that he was not the Christ but he that confesses not the truth openly denies Christ in that place where God hath set him whether he be considered as a private man or a Minister as a Minister he denies Christ in words who is guilty of abusing the Scriptures by false glosses for the countenancing of rebellion or error either against God or man He denies Christ as a private man that omits to do what God wills as well as by doing of that which he nills you finde this in the song of Deborah though they denyed not to go out to battail yet because they stood still and appeared not for Israel it is said by the Angel of the Lord Curse ye Meroz curse them bitterly because they came not to the help of the Lord to the help of the Lord against the mighty Jud. 5.23 and wherever there is truth of faith in the heart there wil be confession of God in the mouth for confession is an act of faith I believed therefore have I spoken c. he forsakes the truth that doth not profess it in words and works therefore let not any man think that onely silence where the truths of God are to be manifested will argue his consent for they that will bear witness must confess the truth indeed there is a confession which is onely by constraint even the Hereticks and hypocrites do so they will confess truth but they do it with equivocation for if it be from their minds it is extorted or if otherwaies they do it it is from conviction of conscience so we find the Egyptian sorcerers confessed it was the finger of God when they saw no likelyhood of longer deceiving the people for we find by experience that those that will not voluntarily and freely shall be driven by constraint to confess the truth thus Balaam shall bless those people for nothing he was formerly hired to curse But though some speake well of goodness against their wills and by constraint yet a voluntary acknowledging of the truth best becomes a Christian therefore saith Saint Peter sanctifie the Lord in your hearts and be ready alwayes to give an answer to any man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear 1 Saint Peter 3.15 But further it is not enough to witness a good confession though before a Pilate when brought thereunto as a Malefactor but also as a free Christian thou art bound to profess the truth openly not onely against persecutors and Schismaticks but also against Hereticks and all others whatever