Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n work_n world_n worship_v 36 3 8.1129 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

There are 31 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the animal life to the divine and spiritual 3. God will have the world seen in their proper colours the far greater part of the world do live and ungodly sensual life and they cannot endure those that would disgrace their delights by a contrary course John 15.19 The world loveth its own but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you 1 Pet. 4.4 They think it strange that you run not with them into the same excess of riot A contrary course produceth contrary affections and interests thence cometh their hatred and malignity against the Saints because they upbraid them with their sins The wicked and the righteous the spiritual and the carnal the sensual and the heavenly the formal and the serious can no more agree than the Wolf and the Lamb the Raven and the Dove 4. 'T is needful that our pride and carnal affections should be broken by the Cross 1 Pet. 1.6 Ye are in beaviness for a season if need be This smart discipline is needful to reclaim us from our wandrings to cut off the provis●on for the flesh which is an enemy to humble us for sin which is the greatest evil to wean us from the world to make us more mindful of heavenly things to make us thankful for our deliverance by Christ. How lazy and vain do the best grow when they live in Wealth Honour and Power Graces are eclipsed duties obstructed thoughts of Heaven few and cold We often fear the dejection of the godly we need more fear their Exaltation What lamentable work do they make in the world when they get uppermost so that we have more cause to thank Christ for our afflictions than our prosperity 1. VSE is Instruction That we have no reason to doubt of Gods Favour and Presence with us tho we be exercised with calamities and divers calamities ●ingle calamities are consistent enough with the love of God to his people God is a Father when he frowneth as well as when he smileth Christ was the Son of his love and yet a man of sorrows and so for Christians Rev. 3.19 As many as I love I rebuke and chasten God loveth those most whom he doth not leave to perish with the Godless and unbelieving world and divers calamities or variety of troubles tribulation distress persecution famine nakedness peril sword call it by what name you will 't is all incident to the Saints Some trials to ordinary sense seem to speak wrath utter wrath rather than love as when he seemeth to have broken off his ordinary course of kindness to his people and to cast them out of his protection leaving them in the hand and will of their enemies so that they are reproached troubled and reduced to great straits and necessities all this is necessary for till an utter exigence carnal supports are not spent and one trial by continance is blunted and loseth its edg till God send another therefore we need not one affliction only but divers but how many soever they be we have no reason to question the love of God Job 5.19.20 He shall deliver thee in six troubles yea in seven there shall no evil touch thee In famine he sha●l redeem thee from death and in war from the power of the sword In nakedness he will cloathe thee in persecution preserve thee in peril protect thee in distress comfort thee tho it cometh to the greatest trouble yet we have no cause to despond as if God had cast us off or withdrawn his love from us 2. That if we meet with many troubles this will be no excuse or plea to exempt us from our duty for as afflictions should not make us doubt of Gods love to us so they should not make us abate of our love to God Psal. 44.17 All this is come upon us yet we have not forgotten thee nor have we dealt falsly in thy covenant They had suffered hard things yet all this could not shake their constancy and resolution for God all our interests were given us that we might have something of value to esteem as nothing for Christ. 3. It sheweth us what a good allowance we should make Christ when we enter into Covenant with him and with what thoughts we should take up the stricter profession of Christianity Many think they may be good Christians yet their profession shall cost them nothing this is as if a man should enter himself a Soldier and never expect battel or a Mariner and promise himself nothing but calms and fair weather wi●hout waves and storms a life of ease is not to be expected by a Christian here upon ear●h if God will suffer us to go to Heaven at an easier rate yet a Christian cannot promise it to himself but must be a mortified and resolute man dead to the world and resolved to hold on his journey to the world to come whatever weather he meeteth with among other of the pieces of the spiritual armor the Apostle biddeth us Be sh●d with the armor of the gospel of peace Eph. 6.15 If a man be not thus shod he will soon founder in hard and rough ground But what is this preparation of the Gospel of Peace Peace noteth our reconciliation and peace with God and interest in his favour and love and peace arising from the Gospel the Law sheweth the breach the Gospel the way of reconciliation how it is made up for us but there is also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 preparation or readiness of mind the Apostle's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts. 21.13 I am ready not to be bound only but to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus And 1 Pet. 3.15 Be ye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ready to render a reason of the hope that is in you Meaning there not sufficiency of knowledge in the mind but strength of resolution and will so that this preparation is a resolution to go through thick and thin to follow Christ in all conditions Alas else when we have lanched out with Christ we shall be ready to run ashore again upon every storm Now that we may thus resolve Christ would have us sit down and count the charges for he would not surprize any We should be ready to suffer the sharpest afflictions though it may be the Lord doth not see fit to exercise us with them God never intended Isaac should be Sacrificed yet when he would try Abraham he must put the knife to his throat and make all things ready to offer him up 4. How thankful we should be if God call us not to severe tryals such as tribulation distress persecution famine nakedness peril or sword which the primitive Christians endured that were purer Christians than we are If he deal more gently with us what use shall we make of this indulgence Manifold 1 Partly to be more strict and holy for when we are not called to passive obedience and sufferings our active obedience should be the more cheerfully performed Acts 9.31 Then the
innocent contentedness and humble submission if Rich by liberality and publick usefulness when well I will glorify God by my health being hard at work for him when sick by meekness and patience if a a Magistrate by my zeal and activity if a Minister by diligence and faithfulness if a Tradesman by my righteous and conscionable dealing So that from Christ to the meanest Christian from the King to the meanest Skullion all should be at work for God for every man is sent into the world for some cause and born for some end or other to act that part upon the stage of the world which the great Master of the Scenes appointeth 4. All our sufficiencies gifts and abilities were given us for this end Every man hath some gift more or less as well as some relation as Matth. 25. Every man received his Talent and he that had but one Talent was to give an account of it Now all these must be improved for God As the Husbandman when he scattereth his Seed on the Earth looketh for a crop and increase So when God scattered his gifts 't was not to disposses himself but that they might be used for his glory Every gift and grace received is not barely donum a gift but Talentum a Talent We are Stewards and not owners not to act for our selves but to honour our Master Therefore what honour and glory hath God by our gifts and graces God hath dominium we have but dispensationem 'T is ours for use but not ours for injoyment as a Factor intrusted with his Masters goods at length it will be seen how we have improved them 5. The end much varieth the nature of the action It maketh an act to be of another kind an indifferent action by the end may become a duty a meal is an act of Worship Alms a Sacrifice Heb. 13.18 Trading for God an act of Religion as well as Prayer On the other side a duty by the end may become a sin as Prayer is howling Hos. 7.14 when it hath only a natural or a carnal end Fasting the bending of a Bulrush Isa. 58.5 Obedience Murther Hosea 1.4 Jehu did not the Lords work sincerely but for his own base ends and interests he was Anointed at Gods command to execute Judgment on Ahabs house 2 Kings 9.6 7. And was Temporally rewarded for it 2 Kings 10.30 his Children to the fourth Generation should sit on the Throne of Israel yet I will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon the house of Jehu Why Because he did it only to get a Kingdom to himself and though he executed Gods Quarrel on Ahab and his House yet he clave to the Idolatry of Jeroboam for securing his interest So Reformation may be a covetous design Non pietate everterunt idola sed avaritia Indeed an act for the matter ●inful is not altered by the end for I must not do evil that good may come thereof nor use the Devil to serve God But how vile is it then to make God serve with our Iniquities and use his Worship as a stale to our own ends SERMON XXII 2 Cor. 5.13 For whether we be besides our selves it is to God or whether we be sober it is for your cause USE is to press you to make this your great aim to Glorify God You must take care not only negatively that God be not dishonoured but positively that he be honoured and glorified by you and that in all states and Conditions and also in all businesses and imployments Some have wholly deviated from their great end and are not yet come to themselves and live unprofitably in the World and do nothing but Eat and Drink and Play and Sleep they live to themselves and to their own ease and carnal delights Alas what are these men good for To what end have they reason and Conscience Some things if they be not good for one thing yet are good for another But a man if he doth not know God and love God and delight in God and seek the Glory of God is like the wood of the Vine Ezek. 15.2 3 4. Good for nothing Not so much as to make a pin whereon to hang any thing Good for nothing but to be cast into the fire and to reflect upon the Glory of his justice to be fuel for the Lords indignation 2dly Another sort are those who are convinced they should live to God and do now and then look after him but are not so overcome by grace as that this should be the over-ruling principle in their hearts The last end is principium universalissimum it should have an universal influence upon us and be minded and regarded in all our desires purposes actions injoyments relations Gods Glory should be at the utmost end of every business nothing is good that is not directed to the last end 'T is done to the flesh and not to God 'T is impertinent to our great scope First in all our desires if we desire increase and estate 't is to honour God with it Jam. 4.3 Agur measureth every estate by ends of Religion Pro. 30.8 9. Nay Spiritual things must be desired in order to Gods Glory Eph. 1.6 We must not please our selves meerly in the Consideration of our own Happiness and personal benefit but as Gods Glory is promoted by it 2dly Our purposes dependance is the proper notion of a crea●ed being Man hath God for principium finem 'T is no more lawful for a man to abstain from respecting or seeking his end than it is possible not to depend on his principle The Creature is from another and for another Man is for Gods Glory and for no other end As he is from Gods Power and no other cause And therefore in whatever we deliberately purpose and resolve upon the Glory of God must have the casting voice 2 Cor. 1.17 The things that I purpose do I purpose according to the fl●sh That is am I swayed by carnal motives A Christian should not lightly and rashly resolve upon any course but consider how it may conduce to the Glory of God 3dly Our actions civil sacred all the pots in Jerusalem must have Gods impress Holiness to the Lord as well as the utensiles of the Temple Zach. 14.21 In a Kings House there are many officers but all to serve the King So in a Christians there are many duties of several kinds but all must have an aspect upon and a tendency to the Glory of God I must mind it in the closet mind it in the shop mind it in the family 4thly For injoyments I must value them more or less as they conduce to the Glory of God In every thing I must ask what doth it Eccl. 2.2 How doth it contribute to m● great end The delight in an estate is not in the possession but use for that hath a nearer connection with the Glory of God The delight in an ordinance as it giveth out more of God or inableth me more to honour him The delight
of or never did but we are all guilty 2. Partly that he would not prosecute his right against us as a revenging and just Judge calling us to a strict account and punishing us according to our demerits which would have been our utter undoing Psa. 130.3 If thou shouldest mark iniquity O Lord who could stand Psa. 143.2 Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant for in thy sight shall no flesh be justified There is not a man found which hath not faults and failings enough and if God should proceed with him in his just severity he would be utterly uncapable of any favour 3. Partly because he found out the way how to recompense the wrong done by sin unto his Majesty and sent his Son to make this recompense for us who was made sin for us that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him Our iniquities were laid on him Isa. 53.4 And his Righteousness imputed to us Rom. 4.11 4. And partly that he did this out of his meer Love which set a work all the causes which concurred in the business of our Redemption John 3.16 God so loved the World that he gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Everlasting Life The external moving cause was only our misery the internal moving cause was his own grace and mercy And this love was not excited by any love on our parts Rom. 3.24 Justified freely by his grace that is by his grace working of its own accord 5. And partly that this negative or non-imputation is heightned by the positive imputation There is a non-imputing of sin and an acceptance of us as righteous in Christ his merits are reckoned and adjudged to us that is we have the effect of his sufferings as if we had suffered in person Christ is become to us the end of the Law for Righteousness Rom. 10.4 2. 'T is matter of great priviledge and Blessedness to the Creature if so be the Lord will not impute our sins to us and account them to our score This will appear 1. If we consider the evil we are freed from guilt is an obligation to punishment and pardon is the dissolving and loosening this obligation Now the punishment of sin is exceeding great what maketh Hell and Damnation but Not-forgiveness Hell is not a meer Scar-crow nor Heaven a May-game 't is eternity maketh every thing truly great an everlasting exile and separation from the comfortable presence of the Lord which is the poena damni Matth. 25.41 Go ye cursed and Luke 13.27 Depart from me ye workers of iniquity They are shut out and thrust out from the presence of the Lord. When God turned Adam out of Paradise his case was very sad but nothing comparable to this God took care of him in his exile and made coats of skins for him God gave him a day of patience afterwards promised the seed of the woman intimated hopes of a better paradise But instead of all comforts how sad is it to be sent into an endless state of misery which is the poena sensus Mark 9 44. The worm that never dyeth and the fire that shall never be quenched The worm of Conscience when we think of our folly imprudence disobedience to God A man may run away from his Conscience now by sleeping running riding walking working drinking distract his mind by a clutter of business but then not a thought free the Soul will be always thinking of slighted means abused comforts wasted time and of the course wherein we have involved our selves then our repentance will be fruitless our sorrows now are curing then tormenting when under the Wrath of God You coldly now entertain the offer of a pardon then Oh for a little mitigation a drop to cool your tongue 2. Because of the good depending upon it in this life and the next First In this life Partly because we are not fitted to serve God till sin be pardoned Heb 9 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your Consciences from dead works to serve the living God God pardoneth that he may further sanctify us and fit us for his own use The end of forgiveness is that God may have his own again which was lost and we might be ingaged to love him and live to him Forgiveness tends to holiness as the means to the end and so there is way made for our thankfulness and love to our Redeemer which is the predominant ruling affection in the Kingdom of grace and the main motive of obedience Partly because we cannot please God till sin be pardoned for God will not accept our actual services till our guilt be removed till pardoning grace cover our defects Whence should we hope for acceptance From the worth of our persons That is none at all From the integrity of the work Alas after grace received we are maimed in our principles and operations much more before Heb. 11.6 Without faith no man can please God Rom. 8.8 They that are in the flesh cannot please God Till we are adopted reconciled absolved neither our persons nor our actions can find acceptance with him And partly because we have no found comfort and rejoycing in our selves till we obtain the pardon of our sins and be in such an estate that God will not impute our trespasses to us For while sin remaineth unpardoned and the sentence of the Law not reversed the Soul is still in doubt or fear if not it proceedeth from our security and forgetfulness which will do us no good for we do but put off the evil rather than put it away and deal as a Malefactor that keepeth himself drunk till he cometh to execution In Scripture a pardon is made the solid ground of comfort Isa. 4.1 2. Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith your God speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned When Gods Wrath is pacified and appeased then there is ground of comfort indeed when God for Christ's sake hath forgiven and forgotten all our transgressions and accepted a ransom for us So Matth. 9.2 Son be of good cheer thy sins be forgiven thee Ay then misery is stopped at the fountain head our great trouble is over but till then all our comforts are soured by our fears When the Sun by its bright beams appeareth it dispelleth mists and clouds 2. In the next life we are not capable of injoying God and being made happy for evermore in his love till we be in such an estate that God will not impute our trespasses to us For till we escape wrath we cannot injoy happiness nor till his anger be pacified can we have any interest in his love Rom. 5.18 The free gift came upon all men unto justification of life Now our right beginneth when sin is taken out of the way and hereafter our impunity in Heaven is a
man can think of nothing but the Delights of the Flesh and so becometh a ready Prey to Sathan Oh then shake off Laziness and the ease of the Flesh God is at work John 5.17 the Creatures are at work the Sun is alwayes going up and down Secondly Another Cause is a Foolish Modesty and Pusillanimity Oh this should not be We should not like Saul hide among the Stuff when God calleth us forth to some Employment for his Glory 1 Sam. 10.22 or with Moses draw back when Opportunity is offered us to be useful in our Generation Exod. 4.20 God can help the stammering Tongue and will bless mean Gifts when you sincerely obey his Call Thirdly Self-love Phil. 2.21 All men seek their own things not the things of Jesus Christ. Many care not how it goeth with Chrsts Matters if their particular go right they serve their own worldly Ease Profit Credit Pleasure Fourthly Distracting Businesses or love to the World this is digging in the Earth and hiding our Talent indeed 2 Tim. 4.10 Demas hath forsaken me and embraced the present World Fifthly Fear of Danger if publickly Active for God some are so Cowardly that they are Brow-beaten with a frown cannot venture a lesser Interest cannot bear a Scoff or a disgraceful Word therefore sneak loath to own what they are or to do for Christ and his despised Cause this is not a Christian Frame Phil. 1.28 In nothing terrifyed by your Adversaries which to them is a Token of Perdition but to you of Salvation and that of God It looketh like Christs Business he speaketh of Endeavours to propagate the Faith of Christ and to gain men to embrace the Gospel VSE Let us see if we be found in the Number of the Faithful or Vnfaithful A negligent Ministry a Gallio a careless Magistrate an idle Master of a Family a sloathful Christian is like the Servant in the Text You have your use whether you be in a publick or private Station let us be faithful if but one Talent the smallest gifts must not lye idle but be seriously exercised for Gods glory if but one your Temptations are the less Private men are not exposed to such Dangers as publick Persons It will Aggravate your Negligence if when less is required you are found idle Oh therefore shake off the ease of the Flesh that loathness to be troubled with the faithful Discharge of your Duty SERMON XIII MATTH XXV v. 19 20 21 22 23. After a long time the Lord of those Servants cometh and reckoneth with them And so he that had received five Talents came and brought other five Talents saying Lord thou delivered'st me five Talents behold I have gained besides them five Talents more His Lord said unto him Well done thou good and faithful Servant thou hast been faithful over a few things I will make thee Ruler over many things Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. He also that had received two Talents came and said Lord thou delivered●st unto me two Talents behold I have gained other two besides them His Lord said unto them Well done thou good and faithful Servant thou hast been faithful over a few things I will make thee Ruler over many things Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. WE now come to the Third part of the Parable The 1. We called the Distribution 2. The Negotiation 3. The Account This Account is First Spoken in the General vers 19. Secondly More Particularly described and set forth There we shall take notice First Of the Reckoning with the good Servants Secondly With the bad one In the Passages that concern the good Servants you may take notice of the Servants Account and the Masters Approbation The account of the first Servant is in vers 20. of the second in vers 22. the Masters Approbation in vers 21 23. He entertaineth both the Servants with the same countenance and the same words 1. I begin with the general intimation of the Account ver 19. Where the Time 1. When he cometh After a long time 2. His Work what he will do when he cometh He reckoneth with his Servants First For the Time I. Doct. There is a good space of time between Christs Ascension and second coming Q. But why is this last reckoning so long delayed A. Not from any unreadiness in Christ he is ready to judge if we be ready to be judged 1 Pet. 4.5 But 1. There is a Reason on the part of the good and that is that the Number of the Elect may be gathered who live in several Ages and places and it requireth some time and pains to work upon each Soul of them for not one of those must perish 2 Pet. 3.9 And after they are converted there must be some time allowed to exercise their diligence They must have a day to work in John 9.4 and to try their Faith and Patience in Rev. 6.11 They should rest yet for a little season untill their fellow-servants and their Brethren that should be killed as they were should be fulfilled A certain number are enrolled for Sufferings as well as for Heaven many of which had not obtained their Crown as the High-priest tarryed within the Vail till his Ministration ended As long as there is need of Christs Intercession he deferrs his second coming 2. On the wickeds part 't is necessary they should have a time of Improvement that they may be left without excuse Rom. 9.22 What if God willing to shew his wrath and to make his power known endured with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction 'T is for the glory of God that he should take them when ripe Then the Angel thrusts in his sickle Rev. 14.15 Therefore they have longer time of prospering in their sinful wayes 1. Let us not make an ill use of this either to deny or doubt of his Coming as those 2 Pet. 3.3 or of slackening or putting off your Preparation as the naughty Servant Mat. 24.48 49. But let us wait with patience and hold out to the very last Saul held out till Samuel was even ready to come and so forced himself to offer Sacrifice whereby he lost his Kingdom 1 Sam. 13.8 9. If he had stayed a little longer Samuel had come So many grow weary of doing and suffering and miscarry in the very Haven We wait in ordinary things Jam. 5.7 8. Be patient therefore Brethren unto the coming of the Lord. Behold the Husband-man waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth and hath long patience for it until he receive the early and latter rain Be ye also patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh His hastiness cannot alter the seasons so we in improving our Interests and employing our Talents should not faint Gal. 6.4 And be not weary in well doing for in due season we shall reap if we faint not 2. Let us shame our selves that having so much time we have done so little work Our Master hath tarryed
yet Gods merciful Justice respecteth the degree of our Service Heb. 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your work of Faith and labour of Love 'T is an act of remunerative Justice according to the New-Covenant The higher Service hath an ordinability to the greatest Reward 4. God doth in this world give the greatest Blessings to those that do most eminently glorifie him therefore signal Faithfulness is eminently rewarded in the World to come as God promiseth to make a Covenant with Phineas because he was zealous for God to make an atonement for the People Numb 25.13 This the rather holdeth good because the Rewards of the Old Testament were a kind of Figure of Eternity 5. In the Punishment the●e are degrees therefore in the Reward God will punish men differently more or less according to the rate of their sins we read of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more tolerable So he will reward men more or less according to the different degrees of their faithfulness So Mat. 11.21 22. It shall be more tolerable for Tire and Sidon in the day of Judgment than for you So Luk. 12.47 48. we read of many Stripes and few Stripes 'T is true the Reward is not of debt yet there is an Equity observed in his Bounty 6. The Glorified State of the Saints in all probability suiteth with all the rest of the Creation There is a difference and disparity in every thing else Among men in the World in Wisdom and Rank and Quality and Riches In the Church some have meaner some larger Gifts There are degrees among the Devils we read of Beelzebub the Prince of the Devils Among Angels there are Arch-Angels Principalities Powers Thrones Dominions So 't is likely among the Saints 7. The Profit It encourageth to Godliness This inequality of Rewards giving greater things to those that do more and be more faithful than to imagine that they who sow more sparingly shall reap as plentifully as those that sow liberally It is a great damp to all worthy dealing and signal excellency that all shall fare alike but it quickneth us to our utmost activity to remember that as our work is our Reward will be VSE Is to quicken us to be more faithful to God for these Considerations 1. Heaven being the perfection of Holiness if you do not desire more degrees of Holiness you do not desire Heaven it self 1 Joh. 3.2 3. Behold now ye are the sons of God and it doth not appear what we shall be But we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself as he is pure 2. 'T is gross Self-love to go as near the brink of Hell and Destruction without falling into it and to beat down the price of Salvation as low as we can and he that will do nothing more than what is simply necessary to Salvation will never be faithful with God To save the stake of their Souls they will serve God as little as they can SERMON XIV MATTH XXV v. 24 25. Then he which had received the one Talent came and said Lord I knew thee that thou art an hard man reaping where thou hast not sowed and gathering where thou hast not strawed And I was afraid and went and hid thy Talent in the Earth Lo there thou hast that is thine WE have seen the Account and reception of the faithful Servants We now come to the Masters Reckoning with the unfaithful one The Order is observable First He rewardeth the faithful Servants and then punisheth the careless and negligent His own Nature inclines him to Reward he doth good and sheweth Mercy out of his own Self-inclination but our Sins force him to punish And mark he that had received one Talent is called to an account as well he that had received more That no man may think to be excused for the meanness of his Gifts and place 'T is true he giveth an account for no more than he hath but for so much as he hath he must give Account Christians that have five or two Talents must give an Account for five or two But Heathens that have but one Talent the light of Nature give an account for one The Apostle telleth us That as many as have sinned without the Law shall perish without the Law but as many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law Rom. 2.12 Every one according to the Dispensation they have lived under The Apostle intimateth a distinction of two sorts that are to be judged 2 Thes. 1.8 In flaming fire taking Vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. Those that have great parts and great opportunities will not be accepted with the same Improvement that others are that have fewer neither from the same person will God accept a like Service when sick as when well but according to their abilities and opportunities he doth expect Well but let us see what Account he bringeth that had but one Talent The Parable offereth First The Servants Allegation or Excuse Secondly The Masters Answer or Reply We are now upon the former and there 1. The remote Cause of his neglect his prejudice against his Master Lord I knew thou art an hard man reaping where thou hast not sowed and gathering where thou hast not strawed 2. The Effect of this Prejudice and so the next and immediate cause of this neglect I was afraid 3. His Negligence and unfaithfulness it self in bringing his Talent without Improvement I went and hid thy Talent in the Earth and lo there thou hast what is thine 1. In the Prejudice Christ impersonateth our natural thoughts and the secret workings of our minds we dare not say so but many think so as if God were an hard and morose Master whom 't is impossible to please The Servant in the Parable had as little cause for his pretence as we have for our hard thoughts of God He knew the contrary if he would consult his own experience he might have found his Master to be good and kind who had taken him into his Family intrusted him with a Talent waited long for his Improvement But this is the nature of man Self-love will rather blame God than acknowledge our own Fault and Sin tax his Severity than confess its own Negligence 2. In the Servants being afraid Christ would teach us that ill Opinions of God beget Pusillanimity and slavish fear And Lastly In his Non-improvement but rendring the Talent as he received it That Pusillanimity or slavish fear and sloath go together or those that are afraid of God will never do him Hearty service I cannot handle all the Points that will arise from this Paragraph yet I shall discuss one that will take in the Substance and Effect of all And that is Doct. That slavish Fear is a great hinderance to the faithful discharge of our Duty to God
Net or Toyl that roar and foam They will curse God that created and sentenced them to this Death his Power by which they are continually tormented his Wisdom by which he governeth the World his Goodness that to them is turned into Fury his Sons Death and Blood which hath profited so many and they have no Benefit by it Secondly Against the Saints They hated them and have an Envy at all the Felicity that betideth them in this World Psal. 37.12 The Wicked plotteth against the Just and gnasheth at him with his Teeth So Psal. 112.10 The Horn of the Righteous shall be exalted with Honour The Wicked shall see it and be grieved he shall gnash with his Teeth and melt away The Godly are their opposite Party then their Blessedness shall be so great that they shall envy their Happiness when they see the Godly in good Case and themselves miserable At the great Day the Wicked shall see the Believers Joy to the Increase of their own Sorrow Thirdly Against Themselves Their own Hearts shall reproach them Hos. 13.9 Thou hast destroyed thy self They shall rave and vex at their own past Folly past Neglects and past abuse of Grace and past refusal of that Happiness which others enjoy when they find their own Delights salted with the present Curse Little Comfort and Satisfaction shall they have when they remember they came thither to avoid the Tediousness of a few blessed Duties VSE Is to shame us that we make no more Preparation to escape this dreadful Estate or in the Language of the Holy Ghost that we do not Flee from Wrath to come No Motion can be earnest and speedy enough There are two things that are very great Wonders 1. That any Man should reject the Christian Faith so clearly promised in the Predictions of the Prophets before it was revealed and confirm'd with such a number of Miracles when it was first set a foot received among the Nations by so universal a Consent in the learned Part of the World notwithstanding the Meanness of the Instruments imployed in it and perpetuated to us throughout so many Successions of Ages who have had experience of the Truth of it And yet still we have cause to complain Isa. 53.1 Lord who hath believed our Report Some cannot out-see Time and look beyond the Grave 1 Pet. 1.9 He that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see afar off And 2 Pet. 3.3 There shall come in the latter times Scoffers and Mockers walking after their own Lusts Many dare not question the Precepts of Christianity because of their usefulness to humane Society and reasonable Nature they doubt of the Recompences and yet have a secret fear of them and seek to smother it by their Incredulity and unbelief But alas 't will not do They scoff at others as simple and credulous none so credulous as the Atheist there is a thousand to one against him At least if it prove true in what a case are they 'T will do them no hurt to venture upon probabilities 'till further assurance What assurance would you have Luk. 16.30 31. You have Moses and the Prophets if you believe not them neither will you be perswaded if one came from the dead Will you give Laws to Heaven God is not bound to make a Sun for them to see that wilfully shut their eyes Yet that way what assurance would you have to prove this is no Phantasm Doth God need a Lye to perswade you to your Duty But 2. The greater Miracle is that any should embrace the Christian Faith and yet live sinfully and carelesly that they should believe as Christians and yet live as Atheists You cannot drive a dull Ass into the fire that is kindled before him Prov. 1.17 Surely in vain is the net spread in the sight of any Bird How can men believe eternal Torments and yet with so much boldness and easiness run into the sins that do deserve them Many times not compelled by any terrour nor asked or invited by any Temptation but of their own accord tempt themselves and seek out occasions of sinning On the other side can a man believe Heaven and do nothing for it if we know that it will not be lost labour there is all the reason we should not grudge at it 1 Cor. 15.58 Be stedfast and unmoveable alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord for asmuch as ye know that your labour shall not be in vain in the Lord Now there are three Causes of this 1. Vnbelief 2. Inconsideration 3. Want of close Application 1. Want of a sound Belief Most mens Faith is but pretended as appeareth by the Effects 1. By our proneness to Sin If God did govern the world by Sense and not by Faith we should be other manner of persons than we are in all Holiness and Godliness of Conversation If we were sure and certain that for every Law we break or for every one whom we deceive and slander we should hold our hands in scalding Lead for half an hour how afraid would men be to commit any Offence Who would tast meat if he knew there were present Death in it yea that it would cost him bitter gripes and torments How cautious are men of their Diet that are prone to the Stone or Gout or Chollick where 't is but probable the things we take will do us any hurt We know certainly that The wages of sin is Death yet how little are we concerned at sin 2. By our backwardness to good Works Sins of Omission will damn as well as sins of Commission small as well as great It is not said Ye have robbed but Ye have not fed Ye have not cloathed not Ye have Blasphemed but Ye have not invoked the Name of God not done hurt but done no good And cast the unprofitable Servant c. 3. By our weakness in Temptations and Conflicts We cannot deny a carnal Pleasure yet we are told Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall die Nor withstand a carnal Fear yet we are told Matth. 10.28 Fear not him that can kill the Body but fear him that can cast both Body and Soul into Hell But shrink at the least pains of Duty when we are told on the one hand 1 Cor. 15.58 That our labour shall not be in vain in the Lord On the other side Rev. 21.8 That the fearful and unbelieving shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with Fire and Brimstone which is the second death On the other side that 't is the most irrational thing to go to Hell to save our selves the labour of Obedience The whole world promised for a reward cannot induce us to enter into a fiery Furnace for half an hour If one much desiring sleep which is Chrysostome's supposition should be told that if he once nodded he should endure ten years torment would he venture 4. By our carelesness in the matters of our Peace If we were in danger of Death every moment we
of the same Mould To bridle the Excesses of Power the Scripture often telleth us of the Day of Judgment how the great Men of the Earth shall tremble and the Hearts of the Powerful then be appalled Revel 6.15 16 17. They shall then understand the distance between God and the Creature when his Wrath and Terrour is in its Perfection Who can stand when he is angry Psal. 76.7 'T is a wonder Men will live in a way Controversie with him and are so little moved at it No Wrath so considerable as the Wrath of the Lamb When their Mediator is their Enemy none in Heaven or Earth can befriend them Those that in the Thoughts of Men are most secure Ring-leaders to others in Sin that swear and swagger and bear down all before them and persist in their Opposition to Christ with the greatest Confidence will be found the greatest and most desperate Cowards then Now these Gallants ruffle it as if they would bid defiance to Christ and his Wayes Oh! how pusillanimous and fearful then Appear they must though they cannot abide it What Torture do they endure between these two The necessity of Appearing and The impossibility of Enduring Oh! the Great Ones then would gladly change Power with the meanest Saint Then they know what an excellent thing it is to have the Favour of God and of what worth and value Godliness is and how much a good Conscience exceedeth all the Glory of the World and what an Advantage it is to have Peace made with God 6. Not only some of all sorts or of all Nations but every individual Person In one Place the Apostle saith All of us collectivè 2 Cor. 5.10 in another Place distributivè Every one of us Rom. 14.12 Not only all but every one Not all shuffled together in gross but every one severally and apart is to give an Account of his Wayes and Actions to God VSE If these things be so That all Places shall give up their Dead and all those Nations that differ so much one from another in Tongues Rights and Customs of Living and distance of Habitation shall be gathered together into one Place and not left scattered up and down the World there are many wayes to shift Mens Courts and Tribunals they may fly the Country or bribe the Judge but there is no shunning the Bar of Christ Oh then let the Thought of this make us more watchful and serious 1. In this Judgment there is no Exemption For all summoned small and great and whether they will or no they shall be gathered together The Faithful shall willingly come as to Absolution the Wicked shall be violently halled as to Condemnation 2. There is no Appearing by a Proctor or Attorney but every one in his own Person must give an account of himself to God 3. No Denying For the Books shall be opened Revel 20.12 4. No excusing or extenuating For Christ will judge the World in Righteousness Act. 17.31 according to terms of strict Justice 5. No Appealing For this is the last Judgment No suing out of Pardon or no Time of shewing Favour For this is too late the Day of Grace is past Sinners are in termino Their Work is over and now come to receive their Wages Oh then Now let us take care that this day may be comfortable to us God's Children have more cause to look and long for it than to dread it Secondly We now come to the Segregation and there First As to Company He shall separate them one from another as the Shepherd divideth between the Sheep and the Goats In these Words there is 1. A Point intimated and implyed That Christ is represented as a Shepherd and the Godly as Sheep but the Wicked as Goats 2. There is a second Point expressed That though there be a Confusion of the Godly and Wicked now yet at the Day of Judgment there will be a perfect Separation For the First of these That Christ is represented to us under the Notion of a Shepherd So he is called Zech. 13.7 Awake O Sword against my Shepherd I will smite the Shepherd and the Sheep shall be scattered And 1 Pet. 2.25 But are now returned to the Shepherd and Bishop of your Souls First A Shepherd among Men is one that is not Lord of the Flock but a Servant to take care of them and charge of them This holdeth good of Christ as Mediator for he is God's Elect Servant the Servant of his Decrees The Flock are his not in point of Dominion Right and original Interest but in point of Trust and Charge So Christ is Lord of the Faithful as God but as Mediator he hath an Office and Service about them and is to give an Account of them to God when he bringeth them home and leadeth them into their Everlasting Fold Joh. 6.37 to 40. with 1 Cor. 15.24 25. Heb. 2.13 Behold I and the Children which God hath given me Jude 24. Now unto him that is able to keep you from falling and to present you faultless before the Presence of his Glory And Col. 1.22 To present you holy and unblameable and unreproveable in his sight Secondly The Work of the Shepherd is to keep the Flock from straying to choose fit Pasture and good Laire for them yea not only to fodder the Sheep but to drive away the Wolf To defend the Flock is a part of his Office as David fought with the Lyon and the Bear and slew them for the Flock's sake All these concur in Christ as you may see Psal. 23.1 2 3 4. The Lord is my Shepherd I shall not want He maketh me to lie down in green Pastures He leadeth me besides the still Waters Thy Rod and thy Staff they comfort me There is guarding and feeding and defending So Joh. 10. there is Leading Vers. 3 4. then there is Feeding them Vers. 9. and Defending them Vers. 12 27 28 29. Thirdly Christ is not an ordinary Shepherd He is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The good Shepherd Joh. 10.11 And Heb. 13.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The great Shepherd of the Sheep And 1 Pet. 5.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The chief Shepherd When the chief Shepherd shall appear c. 1. He is the good Shepherd Other Shepherds are said to be good when they perform their Office well or quit themselves faithfully in the discharge of their Trust. But besides the resemblance in these Qualities there are certain Singularities in Christ's Office that denominate him the good Shepherd 1. A good Shepherd is known by his Care and Vigilancy If he know the State of his Flock Prov. 27.23 This Resemblance holdeth good in Christ He hath a particular Care and Inspection of every Soul that belongeth to his Flock Calleth his Sheep by Name Joh. 10.3 He hath a particular exact Knowledge of every one of them their Persons their State their Condition their Place their Countrey their Conflicts Temptations and Diseases 2 Tim. 2.19 The Lord knoweth who are his Joh.
a Kingdom that cannot be shaken of which none can dispossess us our Sufferings may be many long and grievous but then all will be at an end when Christ shall place us at his right hand Heb. 6.19 Which Hope have we as an Anchor of the Soul both sure and steadfast and which entereth into that within the veil We have a sure Anchor in the stormy gusts of Temptations 1 Thes. 5.8 Let us put on the Breast-plate of Faith and Love and for an Helmet the hope of Salvation and Eph. 6.17 And take the Helmet of Salvation Hope is our Helmet in the dreadful day of Battel As long as we can lift up our heads and look to Heaven we should patiently bear all Calamities We shall at last hear this Blessed Voice Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the Foundation of the World SERMON XXII MATTH XXV v. 35 36. For I was an Hungred and ye gave me Meat I was Thirsty and ye gave me Drink I was a Stranger and ye took me in Naked and ye Cloathed me I was Sick and ye visited me I was in Prison and ye came unto me WE have seen the Sentence now the Reason of the Sentence For The Illative Particle sheweth that many like the Sentence would be glad to be entertained with a Come ye blessed of my Father But turn back upon the Reason to Visit Feed and Cloath they have no mind or to any other serious Duties and Acts of Faith and Self-denyal but we must regard both and I hope in a business of such moment you will not be skittish and impatient of the word of Exhortation I shall first Vindicate the words and then give you some Observations from them First Vindicate them and assert their proper sense and intendment for upon the Reading four Doubts may arise in your minds 1. That good Works are the reason of this Sentence 2. That the good Works of the Faithful are only mentioned and not the evil they have committed 3. That only works of Mercy or the fruits of Love are specified 4. All cannot express their Love and Self-denyal this way Let me clear these things and our way will be the more easie and smooth afterward I. For the first Doubt That works are assigned as the reason of the Sentence of Absolution For the Papists thence inferr their Merit and causal influence upon Eternal Life I Answer 1. 'T is one thing to give a Reason of the Sentence another to express the Cause of the Benefit received and adjudged to us by that Sentence A Charter may be given to a sort of People out of meer grace and Priviledges promised to all such as are under such a qualification though that qualification no way m●riteth those Priviledges and that Grace promised As if a King should offer Pardon and Preferment to Rebels that lay down their Arms and return to their Duty and Allegiance and live in such bounds their returning to their Duty doth not merit this Pardon for it was a meer act of Grace in the Prince much less doth their return to their Duty and living peaceably within their ancient bounds merit the Honours and Advancement promised yet this is pleadable in Court and the Judge that taketh knowledge of the Cause taketh the Reason of his Sentence from their peaceable Living within their bounds whereby he Judgeth them capable of the Honours promised and expected So here God of his meer Grace promiseth the Pardon of our Sins and to bestow upon us Eternal life if we Believe and Repent and return to the Duty we owed him by our Creation Our Obedience is not the Cause of our Pardon or of our right to Glory but his free Promise but yet this qualification must be taken notice of by our Judge in the great day as the Reason of his Sentence The sprinkling of the Door-posts with Blood was not a proper cause to move the destroying Angel to pass over but according to that Rule he must proceed the admitting all that have a Ticket to any Solemnity is not the Cause why they are worthy to be received This is clear that a Person is justified in some other way than a Sentence is justified These works are produced to justifie the Righteousness of his Sentence before the whole World A Sinner is justified by Faith Christ's Sentence by the Believers Obedience 2. That Works merit not the Blessings promised and adjudged to us is evident For they are due Luke 17.10 So likewise ye when ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you say We are unprofitable Servants ne have done that which was our Duty to doe And they are imperfect Phil. 3.12 Not as though I had already attained or were already perfect And they are Gifts of God for which we ought to give him thanks 2 Cor. 8.1 A Grace of God bestowed on us and Gifts have no Equality with the Reward Rom. 8.18 And they are done by Servants redeemed by an Infinite Price 1 Pet. 1.19 With the Precious Blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot being already appointed Heirs of Eternal Life Rom. 8.17 Deserving eternal Death Rom. 6.17 and that need continually implore the Mercy of God for the Pardon of Sin So much as you ascribe to mans Merit so much you detract from the Grace of God And the more sin is acknowledged the more Illustrious is Grace Rom. 5.20 Where sin abounded Grace did much more abound You cross the Counsel of God all glorying in himself 1 Cor. 1.29 That no flesh should glory in his presence And Deut. 9.4 5 6. Speak not thou in thy Heart after that the Lord thy God hath cast them out from before thee saying For my Righteousness the Lord hath brought me in to possess this Land but for the wickedness of these Nations the Lord doth drive them out from before thee Not for thy Righteousness or for the uprightness of thine heart dost thou go to possess their Land But for the wickedness of these Nations the Lord thy God doth drive them out from before thee and that he may perform the word which the Lord sware unto thy Fathers Abraham Isaac and Jacob. Vnderstand therefore that the Lord thy God giveth thee not this good land to possess it for thy Righteousness for thou art a stiff-necked People 3. That Works are produced as the undoubted Evidences and Fruits of a true and sound Faith Justification is opposed to Accusation before Gods Tribunal A double Accusation may be brought against us That we are Sinners or guilty of the breach of the first Covenant And that we are no sound Believers having not fulfilled the Conditions of the Second From the first Accusation we are justified by Faith From the latter we are justified by Works and that not only in this World but in the day of Judgment Christs Commission and Charge is to give Eternal Life to true Believers and the Mark of true
them that are troubled rest c. This with respect to Christ's Merit and the Qualification of the Parties 3. The Third Righteousness is in Performance of his Promises For though his Promise be free yet if it be once made Justice doth require it and God is not free but bound to perform it Now in these two latter Respects are they capable 3. They are Signs and Tokens of their being approved and accepted with God according to the Gospel-Covenant Christ as God's Steward cometh to distribute the appointed Reward to the Heirs of Glory This is the Evidence he is to proceed by When the destroying Angel was sent to destroy the First-born of the Aegyptians he was to take notice of the Sign of Sprinkling of Blood on the Door-Posts Exod. 12. Not that that Blood deserved but it signified that there dwelt Israelites 4. They are Measures according to the Degrees of Grace and our abounding in the Work of the Lord 2 Cor. 9.6 He that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly and he that soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully The Reward is more full or sparing according to what we have done or suffered for God VSE To set us right in the Doctrine of Grace and Works we have to do with three Parties 1. The Pharisaical Legalist 2. The Carnal-Gospeller and 3. The Broken-hearted and serious Christian. 1. The Legalist that trusts in himself that he is Righteous and hopeth to be accepted with God for his Works sake Trusting in Works is very natural and very dangerous 'T is very Natural because of the Law written upon our Hearts We all come into the World with a sense of a Duty-Covenant and because every one would be sufficient to his own Happiness an unhumbled Soul is apt to give more to Duty and Personal Righteousness than to Christ Rom. 10.3 For they being ignorant of God's Righteousness and going about to establish their own Righteousness have not submitted themselves unto the Righteousness of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A russet ragged Coat of his own pleaseth a Proud Man better than a silken Coat that is borrowed 'T is dangerous for 't is contrary to all the Declarations of God Eph. 2.9 By Grace ye are saved not of Works lest any man should boast The whole Progress of Salvation from its first Step in Regeneration till its final and last Period in Glorification doth intirely flow from God's Grace and not from our Works The securing the Interest of free Grace in our Salvation is a thing the Spirit of God is very careful of in the Scriptures the Glory of Grace being that which God mainly aimeth at Eph. 1.6 and a thing which we do naturally incline to intrench upon and to rob him of in whole or in part It crosseth the great End which God aimed at in contriving of Man's Salvation which was that all ground of glorying should be taken away from Man as being in the meanest or least respect a Saviour to himself and that all the Glory might be ascribed compleatly to God in Christ 1 Cor. 1.29 30 31. Christ spake a Parable against those that trusted in themselves that they were righteous Luk. 18.9 Two men went up into the Temple to pray the one a Pharisee the other a Publican The one cometh Appealing to Justice The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself God I thank thee that I am not as other men are Extortioners Vnjust c. I fast twice in the Week I give Tythes of all that I possess The other cometh crying out Grace The Publican standing a far off ●ould not lift up so much as his eyes unto Heaven but smote upon his Breast saying God be merciful to me a Sinner The Sinner is justified not the Worker In short to prevent all Mistakes First Our Works whatever they are either Works of Love to God or Man and the good use of External Means or Common Grace are not the moving Cause or Inducement to incline God to give us Christ or the Grace of Faith or Work of Conversion before others but this is the meer work of Grace or the Mercy and good Pleasure of God Tit. 3.5 6. Not by works of Righteousness which we have done but according to his Mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost Which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour Secondly Works both before and after Conversion are not that Righteousness nor any part of that Righteousness by which Sin is expiated or the Wrath of God appeased or whereby we are reconciled to God and do originally obtain a Right to Eternal Life This is only ascribed to the Merit of Christ Rom. 3.24 25. Being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through faith in his Blood to declare his Righteousness for the Remission of Sins that are past through the forbearance of God The Merit is in Christ's Blood Christ's Obedience his Ransom and meritorious Price 3. Our Works or what we do to fulfill the Law of God are not that Instrument by vertue of which we apply the Merits of Christ to our selves or receive that Righteousness by vertue of which we are reconciled to God Our Interest in the Merits of Christ our Right to Pardon of Sin and Grace doth not arise from Works but meerly Faith Rom. 3.22 So that in the Plea of Justification or our Suit for the Pardon of Sin we must renounce all our good Works and wholly rely on the Merits of Christ giving up our selves to do the Will of God ' Bate this and then Works indeed come in as the fruits of Faith as Evidences of Eternal Life and the way to Glory 2. The Carnal-Gospeller is the other person we have to do with And to him we say 1. That no man can maintain his Comfort and faithfully relye upon Christs Merits but he that is faithful in doing his Fathers will No other Faith is allowed by the Scriptures for sound in the Judgment of our Consciences but such a Faith Gal. 5.6 For in Christ Jesus neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor Vncircumcision but Faith which worketh by love No other Faith will be approved by Christ for sound at the last day Mat. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in Heaven 2. That the doing of some good Works cannot excuse men for the Omission of others which be as necessary we must not do one act of Charity only but all Many acts are reckoned up of one kind to imply all the rest not only fed but cloathed not only cloathed but visited Therefore besides the goodness of the work which we are bound to do there must be an Uniformity in them There are good Works of divers kinds many Works of the same kind To Prophesie in Christ's Name is a good
on his head nor the Entertainments made him when he lived upon earth but the feeding and cloathing of his hungry and naked Servants The greatest part of Christians never saw Christ in the Flesh But the Poor they have alwayes with them Kindness to these is Kindness to him Again Among these he doth not mention the most Eminent the Prophets and Apostles or the great Instruments of his Glory in the World but the least of his Brethren even those that are not only little and despicable in the esteem of the World but those that are little and despicable in the Church in respect of others that are of more eminent Use and Service Again The least Kindness shewn unto them Mat. 10.42 Whosoever shall give to drink to one of these little ones a Cup of cold water in the name of a Disciple verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his reward He had spoken before of kindness to Prophets and righteous Men Men of Eminent Gifts and Graces then ordinary Disciples among these the least and most contemptible either as to outward Condition or State of Life or to Use and Service and it may be inward Grace Now all this sheweth what value Christ sets upon the meanest Christians and the smallest and meanest Respect that is shewed them The smallness and meanness of the Benefit shall not diminish his Esteem of your Affection any thing done to his People as his People will be owned and noted When the Saints that newly came from the Neglects and Scorns of an unbelieving World shall see and hear all this what cause will they have to wonder and say Lord who hath owned thee in these Alas in the World all is quite contrary Let a Man profess Christ and resemble Christ in a lively manner and own Christ thoroughly presently he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 set up for a Sign of Contradiction and that not only among Pagans but Professing Christians yea by those that would seem to be of great note in the Church as the Corner-stone was refused by the Builders 1 Pet. 2.7 And therefore when Christ taketh himself to be so concerned in their Benefits and Injuries they have cause to wonder Christ was in these and the World knew it not 3. At the Greatness of the Reward That he should not only take notice of these Acts of Kindness but so amply remunerate them In the Rewards of Grace God worketh beyond humane Imagination and Apprehension 1 Cor. 2.9 Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard neither have entred into the Heart of Man the things God hath prepared for them that love him We cannot by all that we see and hear in this World which are the Senses of Learning form a Conception large enough for the Blessedness of this Estate Enjoyers and Beholders will wonder at the Grace and Bounty and power of their Redeemer 'T is transcendent hyperbolical weight of Glory 2 Cor. 4.17 Where is any thing that they can do or suffer that is worthy to be mentioned or compared with so great a Recompence When these Bodies of Earth and Bodies of Dust shall shine like the Stars in Brightness these sublime Souls of ours see God face to face these wavering and inconstant Hearts of ours shall be immutably and indeclinably fastned to love him and serve him and praise him as without Defection so without Intermission and Interruption and our Ignominy turned into Honour and our Misery into everlasting Happiness Lord what Work of ours can be produced as to be rewarded with so great a Blessedness VSE That which we learn from this Question of theirs supposed to be conceived upon these Grounds is 1. An humble Sense of all that we do for God The Righteous remember not any thing that they did worthy of Christ's Notice and we should be like-minded Nehem. 13.22 Remember me O my God concerning this also and spare me according to the Greatness of thy Mercy When we have done our best we had need to be spared and forgiven rather than rewarded On the contrary Luk. 18.11 The Pharisee stood and prayed thus to himself God I thank thee that I am not as other Men are Extorioners Vnjust Adulterers or even as this Publican And those Isa. 58.3 Wherefore have we fasted say they and thou seest not wherefore have have afflicted our Souls and thou takest no Knowledge They challenge God for their Work None more apt to rest in their own Righteousness than they that have the least Cause Formal Duties do not discover Weakness and so Men are apt to be puffed up they search little and so rest in some outward things 'T is no great Charge to maintain painted Fire The Substantial Duties of Christianity such as Faith and Repentance imply Self-humbling but external things produce Self-exalting They put the Soul to no stress Loaden Boughs hang the Head most so are holy Christians most humble None labour so much as they do in working out their Salvation and none so sensible of their Weaknesses and Imperfections Old Wine puts the Bottles in no danger there is no Strength and Spirits left in it So do formal Duties little put the Soul to it On the other side they are conscious to so many Weaknesses as serious Duties will bring into the View of Conscience and have a deep Sense of their Obligations to the Love and Goodness of God and a strong Perswasion of the Blessed Reward None are so humble as they They see so much Infirmity for the present so much Obligation from what is past and such sure Hope of what is to come that they can scarce own a Duty as a Duty None do Duties with more Care and none are less mindful of what they have done They discern little else in it that they contribute any thing to a good Action but the Sin of it This is to do God's Work with an Evangelical Spirit doing our utmost and still ascribing all to our Mediator and blessed Redeemer 2. What Value and Esteem we should have for Christ's Servants and Faithful Worshippers Christ treateth his Mystical Body with greater Indulgence Love and Respect than he did his Natural Body for he doth not dispense his Judgment with respect to that but these He would not have us know him after the Flesh 2 Cor. 5.16 Please our selves with the Conceit of what we would do to him if he were alive and here upon Earth but he will judge us according to the Respect or Disrespect we shew to his Members even to the meanest among them To wrong them is to wrong Christ Zech. 2.8 He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of his Eye The Churches Trouble goes near his Heart which in due time will be manifested upon the Instruments thereof To sleight them is to sleight Christ He that despiseth you despiseth me To grieve and offend them is to grieve and offend Christ. Matth. 18.10 Take heed that ye despise not one of these little Ones for I say unto you That in
Page 133 Hell a state of Torment as well as a state of Death Page 193 Hell a State of Torment and Place of Torment Page 193 The greatness of the Torments of the damned Page 207 Torments of the Body what they shall be Page 206 Torments of the damned why eternal Page 208 Eternity of Hell Torments consistent with Gods Iustice. Page 194 Few believe the Torments of Hell Page 195 Trimming of Lamps what it signifies in the Wise Virgins Page 40 What it signifies in the Foolish Virgins Page 40 Who do not trim their Lamps Page 41 Trade what it is to trade with our Talents Page 90 In trading for God our Returns must carry proportion to our Receipts Page 94 Reasons of it Page 95 Cautions in judging of our Returns in Trading Page 94 U. UNion of Believers with Christ represented by Marriage-Union Vid. Marriage Page 56 The Benefits of Union with Christ. Page 57 Virgins Visible Professors why so called Page 3 Virgins foolish why many have great confidence of their good Estate that shall be found foolish Virgins at last Page 45 Visible Church the State of it in this World Page 4 W. WAtching spiritual what it is Page 72 Watching as it respects our present state to avoid sin and do good considered Page 74 75 Reasons why we should watch to avoid sin Page 73 Watching unto Prayer in Prayer after Prayer what Page 75 Watching as it respects the future State opened Page 75 Who are to watch Page 78 Reasons why we should watch Page 77 The Causes of it Page 73 How long we are to watch Page 78 The Blessing promised to watching Page 78 The danger of not watching Page 78 Means to help to Watchfulness Page 79 Wisdom of Christ Divine and Humane explained Page 143 Wisdom Spiritual wherein it lyes Page 22 Wonder a great Wonder that any should reject the Christian Faith Page 136 214 And that any should embrace it and live sinfully Page 137 214 Three Causes of it Page 137 The Reward of the Righteous at the day of Iudgment shall be matter of wonder to them Page 183 The Reasons of this wonder Page 183 Work Christ appointed every man his work at his departure Page 84 How good Works must be performed Page 180 The Godly described by their fruitfulness in good Works Page 206 Comfort to sincere Christians from their good Works Page 180 The doing some good Works cannot excuse men for the omission of others Page 180 The respect of good Works to the future sentence Page 178 Works assigned as a Reason of the Sentence of Absolution at the last day Page 174 Works at the last day produced as an Evidence of Faith Page 175 Trusting in Works very natural but very dangerous Page 179 Works are not the moving Cause to incline God to give us Christ. Page 179 Nor the Instrument of applying the Merits of Christ. Page 180 Yet no man can maintain his Comfort without them Page 182 Worm that never dyes what it is Page 206 Wrath of God the greatness of it Page 207 Some Instances of it Page 208 FINIS A TABLE OF SCRIPTURES EXPLAINED In the SERMONS on the 25 th of MATTHEW   Chap. Vers. Pag. EXodus 34 5 6 7. 112 Job 11 20. 47 Psalm 32 31. 13 141 3. 79 Proverbs 3 16. 199 19 15. 28 26 9. 121 Ecclesiastes 10 2. 14 Isaiah 30 33. 192 Jeremiah 17 11. 207 Hosea 2 19 20. 59 Zechariah 11 17. 131 Matthew 6 3. 183 11 23. 130 26 45. 26 28 10. 187 188 Luke 13 7. 206 Acts 20 21. 14 24 10. 7 Romans 2 12. 159 9 11. 200   22. 199 1 Corinthians 3 8. 107 2 Corinth 11 2. 3 Ephesians 2 10. 14 4 18. 12 6 8. 107 Colossians 1 24. 36 2 Thessalon 1 9. 149 2 Timothy 2 12. 66 Titus 1 16. 14 2 12 13. 42 Hebrews 2 11. 187 6 12. 119 8 10. 13 10 22. 22 James 3 16 17. 93 1 Peter 1 3. 172   7. 104 2 Peter 1 4. 12   7. 186 3 11. 40   14. 42 1 John 2 16. 74 Revelations 20 12. 102 21 8. 209 ERRATA in the Sermons on the 25 th Chap. of St. Matthew The Reader is desired to Correct these following Errors with some others less material which have been occasioned by the faultiness and Imperfection of the transcribed Copy PAge a. line 51. for thus read as l. 52. for grew r. drew l. 53. r. so he was ib. for to r. from p. 4. l. 39. r. meant of p. 12. l. 51. dele of p. 18. l. 8. for never r. neither p. 21. l. 31. r. not to waste it l. 49. for Transfiguration r. Presignation p. 22. l. 43. for Wisdom is r. Rectum est p. 47. l. 56. r. hope of p. 48. l. 43. r. profession and l. 44. dele without that l. 45. dele should l. 46. r. Now these Temporaries p. 51. l. 19. for that we might r. but we must l. 36. r. in the names of their little ones avouch God to be their God p. 55. l. 48. dele 3. p. 57. l. 9. for name r. terms p. 59. l. 46. r. he comes p. 63. l. 56. r. would not now die p. 66. l. 13. r. if he were not heard and l. 61. for assigneth r. ascribeth p. 67. l. 25. for beareth r. leaveth l. 26. for thereto r. on them p. 69. l. 8. r. ever be l. 34 35. dele not fully p. 70. l. 16. for indefinitè r. distinctè p. 71. l. 3. for separate r. despise l. 5 6. for promote r. promise p. 76. l. 8. r. they both see things future and things future with clearness and certainty l. 11. r. the light of Faith l. 16. for design r. Decree ib. for they are r. that Decree is p. 79. l. 6. after Judge adde before they are ready to be judged p. 81. l. 50. for commutative r. cumulative p. 82. l. 47. for Duty r. Entity p. 84. l. 33. dele and undertakes p. 92. l. 9. for is r. as p. 94. l. 15. dele mans l. 38. after boldeth adde Crescentibus donis crescunt rationes donorum Gregory p. 97. l. 24. for Ministry r. Minister p. 104. l. 53. for Fruits r. Smells l. 53 54. for Pleasure consists r. And lastly p. 105. l. 17. r. delight to meet them l. 25. for This r. His p. 114. l. 47. dele by their failing p. 117. l. 48. dele no p. 121. l. 61. r. a sleight Eye p. 124. l. 27. for Many r. Man l. 41. dele First l. 42. dele Who p. 127. l. 4. dele or p. 141. l. 35. for of r. at ib. after coming dele l. 40 41. for Soul and Body r. humane Body p. 146. l. 18. for with r. without l. 39. r. bonum p. 155. l. 26. r. You have no cause l. 29. r. The wayes of God are condemned p. 163. l. 28. for lively r. live l. 44. for Comforts r. People p. 172. l. 47. r. of the Inheritance of the Saints p. 179. l. 20. for because r. besides p. 184.
Dangers they may pluck Joint from Joint but they cannot pluck the Soul from Christ that is once really implanted into him 2. Observe That Eternal Life is Christ's Gift It is not the Merit of our Works but the Fruit of his Grace Rom. 6.23 The Wages of Sin is Death but the Gift of God is Eternal Life through Jesus Christ our Lord. It is good to observe how the expression is diversified Sin and Death are suited like Work and Wages but Eternal Life is a mere Donative not from the Merit of the Receiver but the Bounty of the Giver Works that need Pardon can never deserve Glory Grace in us runneth as Water in a muddy Channel the Child hath more of the Mother It is true there is a concurrence of Works but not by way of Causality but Order God will first justify then sanctify then glorify Justification is the Cause and Foundation of Eternal Life and Sanctification the Beginning and Introduction of it and we have both by Christ. The first is obtained by Christ's Blood the second wrought by his Spirit See Ephes. 2.8 9. By Grace ye are saved through Faith and that not of your selves it is the Gift of God Not of Works left any Man should boast The Instrument of Salvation is Faith which requireth a renouncing of Works and Faith also is of Grace The Papists to excuse the gross Conceit of Merit say our Works do not merit but as they come from the Grace of God and are washed with the Blood of Christ. But neither Salve will serve for this Sore 1. It is not enough to ascribe Grace to God all Justitiaries will do so the Pharisee said God I thank thee I am so and so You confound the Covenants when you think we may merit of God by his own Grace God maketh us Righteous by Grace and if by the exercise of it we deserve Life Adam under the Covenant of Works must then have been said to be saved by Grace because he could not persevere in the use of his Free Will unless he had received it from God 2. Nor as dyed in the Blood of Christ because Faith disclaimeth all Works as to the Act of Justification and there is no Merit if it be of Grace Learn then to admire Grace with Comfort and Hope Merit-Mongers are left to be confuted by Experience Surely Men that cry up Works seldom look into their own Consciences Let them use the same Plea in their Prayers they do in their Disputes Give me not Eternal Life till I deserve it Lord let me have no Mercy till I deserve it Or let them dispute thus when they come to dispute with their own Consciences in the Agonies of Death then Optimum est inniti Meritis Christi 3. Observe The Gifts that God is wont to give are not earthly Riches worldly Power transitory Honours but Eternal Life This was the great End for which he was ordained by the Father Many come to Christ as that Man Luke 12.13 Master speak to my Brother to divide the Inheritance with me He looked upon him as aliquem magnum one furnished with great Power fit to serve his Carnal Ends such fleshly Requests are not acceptable to our Mediator The Lord loveth to give Blessings suitable to his own Being He liveth for ever and he giveth Eternal Life to the Elect. Learn then how to frame your Requests Say I will not be satisfied with these things Remember me with the favour of thy People O visit me with thy Salvation that I may see the good of thy Chosen that I may rejoice in the gladness of thy Nation that I may glory with thine Inheritance Psal. 106.4 5. 4. Observe From the Expression Eternal Life Our Estate in Heaven is expressed by Life and Eternal Life This is a term frequently used to signify the glorified Estate Now it doth imply not only our bare subsistence for ever but also the Tranquillity and Happiness of that state 1. It is Life Heirs together of the Grace of Life 1 Pet. 3.7 Life is the most precious Possession and Heritage of the Creature there can be no Happiness without it All our Comforts begin and end with Life Life is better than Food Mat. 6.25 Is not the Life more than Meat and the Body than Raiment Poisons and Cordials are all one to a dead Man Creatures base if they have Life are better than those which are most excellent A living Dog is better than a dead Lion All Creatures desire to preserve Life All the Travail of Men under the Sun is for Life to prop up a Tabernacle that is always falling Job 2.7 Skin for Skin and all that a Man hath will he give for his Life All our labour and care is for it and when we have made provision for it it is taken from us It is called the Life of our Hands Isa. 57.10 We make hard shift to maintain it This Life is a poor thing it is no great matter to be Heir to it James 4.14 What is your Life it is even a Vapor that appeareth for a little time and then vanisheth away 2. It is Life Eternal not like the Earthly Life which is but as a Vapor a little warm Breath or warm Smoak tunn'd in and out by the Nostrils Our present Life is a Lamp that may be soon quenched it is in the Power of every Ru●●ian and Assassinate But this is Life Eternal In Heaven there is a fair Estate the Tenure is for Life but we need not take thought for Heirs We and our Happiness shall always live together The Blossoms of Paradise are for ever fresh and green therefore if we love Life why should we not love Heaven This is a Life that is never spent and we are never weary of living This Life is short yet we soon grow weary of it The shortest Life is long enough to be encumbred with a thousand Miseries If you live till old Age Age is a burden to it self The Days shall come in which they shall say we have no pleasure Eccles. 12.1 Life it self may become a burden but you will never wish for an end of Eternal Life that is a long date of days without misery and without weariness Eternity is every day more lovely Well might David say The loving Kindness of God is better than Life Men have cursed the Day of their Birth but never the Day of their New Birth Those that have once tasted the sweet and benefit of God's Life never grow weary of it 3. This Life is begun and carried on by degrees 1. The Foundation of it is laid in Regeneration Then do we begin to live when Christ beginneth to live in us and we may reckon from that day when in the Power of his Life we began to advance towards Heaven for then there was a Seed laid of a Life which cannot be destroyed The Life of Nature may be extinguished but not of Grace Rom. 8.11 If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus
corrupt according to the deceitful Lusts And that ye put on the New Man which after God is created in Righteousness and true Holiness It is indeed a Question Where the Trial of a Christian lieth ●ost sensibly in Mortification or Vivification in an hatred of Sin or in the practice of Duty It may be alledged that our Nature doth more easily close with Precepts than Prohibitions We are many times content to do much if the Law require this or that we yield and consent to it but to be limited and debarred of our Delights this is most distasteful Men that love Sin cannot endure Restraints O that there were no Bonds And therefore to meet with Man's Corruption the Decalogue consists more of Prohibitions than Precepts the fourth and fifth Commandment are only positive But then on the other side it may be alledged that many that live a civil Life and do no Man wrong have no care of Communion with God and that Sins trouble the Conscience more than Want of Grace Natural Conscience doth not use to smite for spiritual Defects Sins work an actual Distemper and Disturbance to Reason It is the new Nature that maketh Conscience of Duties and of obeying God's Precepts therefore the New Nature is here most tried but yet both must be regarded 2. Both are alike disserviceable to the Work of Grace It is another Question Whether we are more hardened by Sins of Omission or by Sins of Commission For Sins of Commission it may be alledged that they stun the Conscience like a great Blow on the Head and cast Grace into a Swoon David's Adultery put all out of order 2 Sam. 12.14 Howbeit because by this deed thou hast given great occasion to the Enemies of the Lord to blaspheme the Child which is born of thee shall surely die He lay in a spiritual Swoon till the Child was born But then on the other side Neglect of Duty depriveth us of the Influences of Grace and hardens us insensibly An Instrument tho never so well in Tune yet if you let it alone it will be soon be out of order worse than if a String were broken After some great and sudden Fall into Sin the●● may be a Recovery as in David's Case but it is hard to recover out of long Neglects Therefore Sins of Omission are more dangerous than Sins of Commission And if your Communion with God be not constant the Heart contracts Rust. A Key that is seldom turned is rusted in the Lock by neglect and omission of God and Duties the Heart is wonderfully hardened and estranged from God Gifts and Graces languish and perish in Idleness 2 John v. ● Look to your selves that we lose not those things which we have wrought Standing Pools are apt to putrify and Sins increase as well as Unfitness for Duties the Motions of the Spirit are quenched 3. Both are odious to God It is a Question Whether God hateth most the careless sluggish Person or the outwardly vicious A barren Tree cumbreth the Ground and is rooted out as well as the Bramble It is not enough that a Servant do his Master no hurt but he must do his Work An Husbandman is not contented that his Land does not bear him Briars and Thorns but it must yield him good Grain It is not enough to say I am no Swearer no Drunkard What Communion have you with God What motions and feelings of the Power of Holiness Want of Grace depriveth a Man of Happiness As you would not be damned in Hell so you should get Evidences for Heaven Negative Righteousness in abstinence from Sin the Brutes and inanimate Creatures have it is improper and lame Omission of good Duties is a more general Means of Destruction than Commission of Evil But then Commission of Evil is ever accompanied with Omission of Good but Omission of Good is not always accompanied with Commission of Evil. He that doth Evil dishonoureth God more but he that omitteth Good disadvantageth himself more Sin is more odious than Want of Grace in it self yet Want of Grace considering our Advantages may provoke God as much as Commission of Sin II. To whom he prays Holy Father sanctify them Observe It is God must sanctify us We cannot ou● selves and Means will not without God 1. We cannot our selves We could defile our selves but we cannot cleanse our selves as little Children defile themselves but the Nurse must make them clean A Sheep can wander of it self but it is brought home upon the Shepherd's Shoulders Domine errare per me potui redire non potui God that gave us his Image at first must again stamp it on the Soul Who can repair Nature depraved but the Author of Nature When a Watch is out of order we send it to the Workman Eph. 2.10 We are his Workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good Works that we might walk therein Levit. 21.8 I the Lord that sanctify thee am holy It is God's Prerogative 2. The Means cannot without God It is by the Truth but God is the principal Cause Sanctification is ascribed to many Causes To God the Father as he decreeth it Jude 1. To them that are sanctified by God the Father To the Son as he merited it Eph. 5.25 26. He gave himself for the Church that he might sanctify and cleanse it To the Holy-Ghost as he effects it 2 Thess. 2.13 God hath from the beginning chosen you to Salvation through Sanctification of the Spirit To Faith as it receiveth the Grace of God Acts 15.9 Purifying their Hearts by Faith To the Word as the Instrument of begetting it John 15.3 Now ye are clean through the Word which I have spoken unto you It is the external Means But all Efficacy is of God and Grace is his Creature else what should be the reason why the same Word preached by the same Minister worketh on some and hardneth others at least it amendeth them not Lydia alone is converted because the Lord opened her Heart Acts 16.14 Man's Will doth not put the difference but God's Grace Vse It presseth us 1. To wait and look for it from God A Plant thriveth better by the Dew of Heaven than when watered by the Hand We may say as Peter Acts 3.12 Why look ye so earnestly on us as tho by our own Power and Holiness we had made this Man to walk Am I in the place of God saith Jacob to Rachel Gen. 30.2 When you look only to the Teacher's Gifts you lose the Divine Operation it may fill your Heads with Fancies and Notions but not your Hearts with Grace 2. To praise the Lord when it is accomplished 1. Cor. 3.5 What is Paul Or what is Apollo but Ministers by whom ye have believed As if Children should thank the Servants for what they have Grace maketh us more in debt you have received it from him not from your selves Not I but the Grace of God in me Thy Pound hath gained ten Pounds If you have any Holiness any
and He communicates in the same Nature the Fulness of the Godhead dwelt in him bodily Col. 2.9 Now there is something which answereth to this in the Mystical Union there is a communion of Spirit between us and Christ tho not the same Nature The same Spirit dwelleth in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily that is essentially in us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spiritually we partake of the Divine Nature in some Gifts and Qualities 2. By constant Influence God is in Christ by a communication of Life Vertue and Operation 1. The Father is the perpetual Beginning Foundation and Root of Life to Christ as Mediator John 6.57 As the living Father hath sent me and I live by the Father so he that eateth me even he shall live by me So is Christ to us Gal. 2.20 Nevertheless I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the Life that I live in the Flesh I live by the Faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me 2. The Divine Essence sustained the Person of Christ as Mediator The Humanity could not subsist of it self but by constant influence from the Godhead Isa. 42.1 Behold my Servant whom I uphold Christ had constant sustentation from the Father he upheld him and carried him through the Work So are we preserved in Jesus Christ Jude 1. We have not only the Beginning and Principle of Life from Christ but constant support We can no more keep our selves than make our selves all things depend upon their first Cause 3. The Father concurreth to all the Operations and Actions of Christ and so the Father is in Christ as he worketh in him John 14.10 Believest thou not that I am in the Father and the Father in me the words that I speak unto you I speak not of my self but the Father that dwelleth in me he doth the Works The Divine Power was interested in Christ's Works as Mediator especially in the Miracles that he wrought to confirm the Truth of his Person So is Christ in Believers as he worketh in them all their Works for them John 15.5 I am the Vine ye are the Branches He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much Fruit for without me ye can do nothing he doth not say nihil magnum no great thing but nihil nothing at all Thinking is the most suddain and transient Act sure the new Nature there may get the start of Corruption But 2 Cor. 3.5 Not that we are sufficient of our selves to think any thing as of our selves but our sufficiency is of God Actions are more deliberate there is more scope for the interposition of corrupt Nature but of our selves we cannot think a good thought What Use shall we make of this Vse 1. If Christ be in us as God was in Christ let us manifest it as Christ did Christ manifested the Father to be in him by his Works John 10.37 38. If I do not the Works of my Father believe me not But if I do tho ye believe not me believe the Works that ye may know and believe that the Father is in me and I in him Works and Miracles exceeding the Power and Force of Nature shewed that Christ was a Divine Person sure the Father is in him or else he could not do these Works So St. James puts Hypocrites upon the Trial Shew me thy Faith by thy Works James 2.18 Do we do any Works exceeding the Power of corrupt Nature that would be a proof of Christ's working in you When Jacob counterfeited Esau Isaac felt his Hands So what are your Works If you walk as Men do no more than an ordinary Man that hath not the Spirit of God where is the proof of Christ's working in you Many boast of Christ in them if Christ were in them he would be there as the Father was in Christ they would bewray it by their Operations You may know what is within by what cometh out if Christ be within thee there will come out Prayer Sighs and Groans for Heaven fruitful Discourses heavenly Walking a mortified Conversation all this cometh out because Christ is within But now when ye belch out filthy Discourses rotten Communication there is nothing cometh out but Vanity and Sin how dwelleth Christ in you are these the Fruits of his Presence Vse 2. Learn Dependance upon Christ. All the Power we have to work is from Christ. Whence hath the Body the Vigor it hath to work and to move from Place to Place but from the Soul And whence hath a Christian his Power but from Christ We derive all our Strength from Christ. We are as Glasses without a Bottom they cannot stand of themselves but they are broken in pieces Christ can do all things without us but we can do nothing without him As the Soul can subsist apart from the Body Christ hath no need of us but we cannot live and act without him Sine te nihil in te totum possumus Phil. 4.13 I can do all things through Christ which strengthneth me The Apostle doth not speak it to boast of his Power but to profess his Dependance It was never seen that a Father would cast away the Child that hangeth on him III. I shall now speak of Christ's being in Believers apart that I may a little enforce this Argument How is Christ in Believers We must not go too high nor too low It is not to be understood essentially so he is every where and cannot be more peculiarly in one than in another Whither shall I go from thy Spirit or whither shall I flee from thy Presence Psal. 139.7 He is here and there and every-where in Heaven in Earth in Hell Personally he is not in us that cannot be without a Personal Union if the Spirit were personally in us that would make us to become one Person with the Holy Ghost as the Divine and Humane Nature make but one Person But Mystically with respect to some peculiar Operations which he worketh in us and not in others Christ is in us as the Head is in the Members by influence of Life and Motion not such Influence as tendeth to Life Natural so natural Men live in him move in him and have their being in him There is an Union of Dependance between God and all his Creatures but Influence with respect to Life Spiritual In short Christ is not only in us as in a Temple or House that is one way of his being in us therefore he is said to dwell in our hearts by Faith Eph. 3.17 But he is in us as the Head in the Members and as the Vine in the Branches Joh. 15.1 where there is not only a Presence but an Influence Once more he is not only in us in a moral Way in Affections his Heart is with us and our Heart is with him and his Love and his Joy is in and towards us Prov. 8.31 Rejoicing always in the habitable parts of the Earth and my Delights
before Hill or Mountain were brought forth Prov. 8.30 31. Then was I with him as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight rejoicing alway before him Rejoicing in the habitable part of his Earth c. As two that are br●d up together take delight in one another 2. As Mediator he loveth the Humane Nature of Christ freely the first Object of Election was the Flesh of Christ assumed into the Divine Person Col. 1.19 I pleased the Father that in him should all Fulness dwell it deserved not to be united to the Divine Person When it was united the Dignity and Holiness of his Person deserved Love There was the Fulness of the Godhead in him bodily the Spirit without measure all that is lovely And then besides the Excellency of his Person there was the Merit of his Obedience he deserved to be loved by the Father for doing his Work John 10.17 Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my Life that I might take it again that was a new ground of Love Christ's Love to us was a f●rther cause of God's Love to him Thus you see how God loveth Christ. Vse 1. It giveth us confidence in both Parts of Christ's Priestly Office his Oblation and Intercession His Oblation Mat. 3.17 This is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased God hath proclaimed it from Heaven that he is well-pleased with Christ's standing in our room tho so highly offended with us and with him for our sake Eph. 1.6 To the praise of the Glory of his Grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the Beloved All that come under his Shadow will be accepted with God He is beloved and will be accepted in all that he doth his being beloved answereth our being unworthy of Love surely he will love us for his sake who hath purchased Love for us His Intercession if the Father loveth Christ we may be confident of those Petitions we put up in his Name John 16.23 Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my Name he will give it you Our Advocate is beloved of God When we pray in the Name of Christ according to the Will of God our Prayer is in effect Christ's Prayer If you send a Child or a Servant to a Friend for any Thing in your Name the Request is yours and he that denieth the Child or Servant denieth you When we come in a sense of our own Unworthiness on the score and account of being Christ's Disciples and with an high estimation of Christ's Worth and Credit with the Father and that he will own us that Prayer will get a good Answer Vse 2. It is a Pledg of the Father's Love to us and if God gave Christ that was so dear to him what can he with-hold Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son but gave him up to the Death for us all how will he not with him also freely give us all things He spared him not the Son of his Love was forsaken and under Wrath and will he then stick at any thing God's Love is like himself infinite it is not to be measured by the affection of a Carnal Parent Yet he gave up Christ Love goeth to the utmost had he a greater Gift he would have given it How could he shew us Love more than in giving such a Gift as Christ John 16.22 The Father himself loveth you because ye have loved me and have believed that I came forth from God God hath a respect for those that believe in Christ and receive him as the Son of God Vse 3. It is an Engagement to us to love the Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 16.22 If any Man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha Shall we undervalue Christ who is so dear and precious with God Let us love him as God loved him 1. God loved him so as to put all Things into his Hands John 3.35 The Father loveth the Son and hath put all things into his Hand Let us own him in his Person and Office and trust him with our Souls He is intrusted with a Charge concerning the Elect in whose Hands are your Souls 2 Tim. 1.12 I know whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed to him against that day 2. God hath loved him so as to make him the great Mediator to end all Differences between God and Man God hath owned him from Heaven Mat. 3.17 This is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased Do you love him so as to make use of him in your Communion with God Heb. 7.25 Wherefore he is able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God through him seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for us That is the sum of all Religion 3. God loveth him so as to glorify him in the Eyes of the World John 5.22 23. The Father judgeth no Man but hath committed all Judgment to the Son that all Men should honour the Son even as they honour the Father He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father that hath sent him Do you honour him Phil. 1.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To me to live is Christ should be every Christian's Motto This is Love and not an empty Profession Christ will take notice of it and report it in Heaven it is an endearing Argument when the Father's Ends are complied with John 17.10 And all thine are mine and mine are thine and I am glorified in them SERMON XL. JOHN XVII 23 I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the World may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me I Come now to the Second Observation That God loveth the Saints as he loved Christ. The Expression is stupendous therefore divers Interpreters have sought to mitigate it and to bring it down to a commodous Interpretation First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As is a Note of Causality as well as Similitude He loveth us because he loved Christ. Therefore it is said Ephes. 1.6 He hath made us accepted in the Beloved The Elect are made lovely and fit to be accepted by God only by Jesus Christ accepted both in our State and Actions as we are reconciled to him and all that we do is taken in good part for Christ's sake who was sent and intrusted by the Father to procure this favour for us and did all which was necessary to obtain in The Ground of all that Love God beareth to us is for Christ's sake There is indeed an Antecedent Love shewed in giving us to Christ and Christ to us John 3.16 For God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting Life The first Cause of Christ's Love to us was Obedience to the Father the Son loved us because the Father required it Tho afterwards God loved us because Christ merited it
career of Sin 1 Cor. 11.32 For when we are judged we are chastned of the Lord that we may not be condemned with the World How many Disappointments did we meet with in a carnal Course As David said to Abigail 1 Sam. 25.32 33. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel which se●● thee this day to meet me And blessed be thy Advice and blessed be thou which hast kept ●● this day from coming to shed Blood and from avenging my self with mine own Hand O how sweet is it to see Eternal Love in all that befalleth us It will be our speculation in Heaven we shall know as we are known and be able to interpret all the Windings and Circuits of Providence Vse 3. It shameth us that we adjourn and put off our Love to God till old Age when we have spent our strength in the World and wasted our selves in Satan's Work we dream of a devout Retirement O consider God's Love to us is as ancient as his Being and are not we ashamed that we should put off God till the latter and none decrepid part of our Lives It is a commendation to be an old Disciple and God loveth an early Love Jer. 2.2 Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the Kindness of thy Youth the Love of thine Espousals before our Affections are prostituted to other Objects Under the Law the first-Fruits were the Lord's he should have the First God's Children are wont to return Love for Love and like Love therefore let it be as Ancient as you can Do not say Art thou come no torment me before my time and dream of a more convenient Season Vse 4. It teacheth us to disclaim Merit 1. God's Love was before our Being and Acting Paul out of a less Circumstance concludeth Election not to be of Works Rom. 9.11 For the Children being yet ●●-born neither having done Good or Evil that the Purpose of God according to Election might stand not of Works but of him that calleth it was said The Elder shall serve the Younger God's Election is before all Acts of ours therefore we deserve nothing but all is from God It is not a thing of Yesterday our Love is not the cause of God's neither is it a fit Reward and Satisfaction Object But doth not God foresee our good Works or at least Faith and final Perseverance He knew who would believe the Gospel who would live Holy and who would remain in their Sins I Answer If this were true there were not such a gracious Freedom in Grace It is true God foreseeth all things that shall be but first he fore-ordaineth them Prescience includeth and supposeth Preordination things are not because they are foreseen but they are foreseen because they shall be From Predestination issueth Faith Sanctification Perseverance So that we are not chosen because we are Holy but to be Holy Ephes. 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the Foundation of the World that we should be holy and without blame before him in Love And to be rich in death James 2.5 Hearken my beloved Brethren Hath not God chosen the Poor of this World Rich in Faith and Heirs of the Kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him As Paul saith of himself 1 Cor. 7.25 I give my Judgment as one that hath obtained Mercy of the Lord to be faithful not that God foresaw that he was so Our Ordination to Life is the Cause of Faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to Eternal Life believed 2. When we were we were not lovely there was nothing to excite God to shew us Mercy Our natural Condition is described Titus 3.3 For we our selves also were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers Lusts and Pleasures living in 〈◊〉 and Envy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hateful and hating one another All are abominable and worthy of hatred yet one hateth another as if he were lovely and the other only abominable There are two Causes of Self-conceit we have not a Spiritual Discerning and are partial in our our own Cause and guilty of Self-love 1. We have not a Spiritual Discerning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are filthy deformed hateful in the Eyes of God stink in the Nostrils of God If we see a deformed Creature overgrown with Scurf and Sores or a stinking Carkass we turn away the Head in great abomination and cry O filthy yet we are all so before God A Toad a stinking Carkass cannot be so loathsome to us as a Sinner is to God If a Man had but a Glass to see his own natural Face he would wonder that God should love him Indeed we have a Glass but we have not Eyes What could God see in us to excite him to shew Mercy God is not blinded with the vehemence of any Passion yea the Object is uncomely uncomely to a Spiritual Eye much more to the Father of Spirits 2. Self-love blindeth us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If Men would hold together and like one another all would be well but now we cannot love one another and live with one another in safety we seem such odd Creatures Fratrum concordia rara est We are hateful Creatures to God to Angels to Devils to our Selves Object But some are more civil and refined Answ. It is true Natural Corruption doth not break out in all with a like Violence but a benummed Snake is a Snake a Sow washed is not changed As when the Liver groweth other parts languish one great Lust intercepteth the nourishment of other Corruptions Object But do not some use Free-Will better than others Sure God loveth them more Answ. No not according to the Works which we have done but according to his Mercy he saved us Tit. 3.5 God's Original Motives to do good are from himself Vse 5. We are not to measure God's Love by Temporal Accidents that which cometh from Eternity and tendeth to Eternity that is an evidence of his special Love Eccles. 9.1 No Man knoweth either Love or Hatred by all that is before him The Pleasures of Sin are for a Season Heb. 11.25 and Afflictions are for a season but Spiritual Blessings in Heavenly Places which come from Heaven and tend to Heaven which have no dependance upon this World whether it stand or no these evidence the best Love God's special Mercy Why they were devised before ever the Foundations of the World were laid and it is most of all shewed when the World is at an end Therefore moderate your desires of Earthly Things which the Apostle calls this World's Goods 1 John 3.17 they are of no use in Eternity And bear Afflictions with more Patience you do but lose a little for the present that you may be safe for ever Hic ure hic seca ut in aeternum parcas Vse 6. It presseth us to get an Interest in this Eternal Love How shall we discern it 1. By the Scope and Aim of your Lives and Actions Do you labour for another World 2 Cor. 4.18
Teaching of Christ. Providence doth not hinder Prayer Page 1● Providence of God in guarding Man is observable Page 172 R. REading the Scriptures the advantage of it Page 27 Scriptures to be read with Prayer Page 28 Receiving Christ what it is Page 389 What it is to receive Christ with all the Heart Page 94 Receiving the Word what it is Page 92 What it is to receive the Word with all the Heart Page 93 Reconciliation the Mercy of God in seeking Reconciliation with us Page 28● Redemption In the work of Redemption the Father the supream Author supream Cause supream Iudg. Page 86 87 Vniversal Redemption disproved Page 105 Covenant of Redemption vid. Covenant Reformation after Trials and Reformations come Trials and Probations Page 194 God oftentimes promotes Reformation by Troubles Page 194 What Call the first Reformers had Page 277 Rejoycing what reason a Christian hath to rejoyce Page 189 Religion no Religion but the Christian Religion the way to Salvation Page 32 Repentance the Ingredients of it Page 179 Repetition of the same Truths grievous to Nature and why Page 220 But profitable to Grace and why Page 220 Not to be grievous to us Page 221 Directions to Ministers in repeating the same Truths Page 222 Resemblance between us and Christ as the Son of God and as Mediator vid. Likeness Page 323 Respect of the World to be suspected Page 201 Restraint wicked Men restrained from Persecution by the Conviction of Sin on their Hearts Page 316 Resurrection how Christ was raised by the Father and how by himself Page 266 Revelation of God's Will to Adam to the World to the Church Page 240 241 Various manners of Revelation of God's Will 1. By Word without writing 2. By Word and writing 3. By writing alone vid. Scriptures Page 241 242 Reverence to be used in Prayer Page 3 138 Right God hath a Right to all we have Page 55 Righteousness of God how God is said to be righteous Page 367 Rule God's Act his Rule Page 238 There must be some Rule from God to guide the Creatures Page 261 Light of Nature not a sufficient Rule to fallen Man Page 239 S. SAcraments promote our Ioy. Page 190 Sacrament of the Lord's Supper the end of it Page 293 Sacrifice how Christ was both Priest and Sacrifice Page 288 Christ offered himself a Sacrifice Page 288 This Sacrifice Christ offered not for himself Page 288 But for all the Elect. Page 289 Sadness of Spirit the causes of it Page 188 In some it deserves Pity in others Rebuke Page 187 In Christians disproved Page 187 It brings a Scandal on Christ's Spiritual Kingdom and on the Ways of God Page 188 A Christian hath cause of Ioy when he hath Sorrow and Sadness of Spirit Page 188 Salvation next to God's Glory Christ's Aim was our Salvation Page 13 The business of our Salvation put into safe Hands Page 158 No Salvation out of the true Religion Page 236 Sanctification the various senses of the Word Page 226 287 293 It is actual Election Page 227 The difference between Civility and Sanctification Page 237 The efficient cause of it God Page 229 We cannot sanctify our selves Page 229 Means cannot do it without God Page 229 The Instrument of it the Word of God Page 231 233 Chiefly the Gospel Page 233 The Gospel worketh not without the Spirit Page 233 This must be received and applied by Faith Page 233 How Faith sanctifies Page 234 How we are sanctified by the Word Page 291 Why God sanctifieth by his Word Page 234 The Word of God is morally accommodated to this Page 235 The Excellency of Sanctification Page 227 Why we should pray for it Page 227 It is God's aim in all his Dispensations Page 227 The end of Christ's Death Page 290 Those that are sanctified need to be sanctified more and more Page 230 Sanctify what it is to sanctify God Page 243 What Christ's sanctifying himself signifies Page 290 Why Christ sanctified himself Page 290 Satisfaction of Christ the value of it Page 102 Saviour how Christ saves us Page 42 Scholars Believers Scholars of Christ's School Page 74 157 Scriptures the necessity of the Scriptures or written Word Page 241 The advantage we have by the Scriptures above what the Iews and Gentiles had Page 68 We are to bless God for the Scriptures Page 245 The Scriptures not corrupted Page 254 The aim of the Scriptures Page 261 To be the Iudg of Controversies Page 262 To be the constant Rule of Faith and Manners Page 262 Reading the Scriptures vid. Reading Divine Authority of Scriptures why we should inquire into it Page 242 Sufficiently assured to us Page 245 More Reason to believe than doubt it Page 261 How to settle the Conscience concerning it Page 261 What they shall do that stagger about it Page 244 Whether wicked Men can have any absolute assurance of the truth of it Page 243 Arguments to prove it Page 246 External 1. How God hath owned them Page 246 2. How the Church hath owned them by Tradition by Martyrdom Page 255 256 The Churches duty to the Scriptures Page 255 What respect we ought to bear to the Churches Testimony Page 255 3. How the malignant World hath owned them Page 256 Internal Arguments Page 257 1. The manner and form of them Page 257 The Majesty and yet the Simplicity of the Stile of Scriptures Page 257 The Harmony of the Scriptures Page 258 The Impartiality of them vid. Penmen of Scriptures Page 259 2. The matter of Scriptures vid. Precepts Promises Doctrines Histories Prophecies Self-Concei● the causes of it Page 365 Self-Murder the sinfulness of it Page 212 Sending of Ministers vid. Mission of Ministers Sent Christ was sent by the Father Page 263 What it implys Page 25 40 264 The ends of it Page 267 Christ's Condescension in submitting to be sent Page 269 Sending of Christ and sending the Apostles compared Page 270 271 Separation a great Crime Page 165 What grounds of Separation warrantable Page 165 Shame the way to Glory Page 10 Sight of Christ the greatness of the Priviledg Page 360 vid. Vision Sin committed against God chiefly as the wronged Party and highest Iudg. Page 86 263 Makes God stand at a distance from us Page 335 Sin prevails by degrees Page 176 Wilful Sins the danger of them Page 174 Sitting of Christ at God's Right-hand what it implys Page 62 Snares the World full of Snares Page 214 Sorrow the Nature of Man more acquainted with Sorrow than Pleasures Page 186 vid. Sadness of Spirit Spirit how it confirms the Word Page 27 85 Given to promote Vnity Page 164 Testimony of the Spirit how discerned Page 253 How we should know whether we have the Spirit of Christ. Page 306 386 Spirit of the World to be avoided Page 207 How it maybe discerned Page 207 Success to be desired by Ministers Page 277 Of the Doctrine the Scripture teacheth Page 246 Sufferings of Christ the greatness of them Page 287 He willingly underwent them
with Christ. What that is we have explained already all that I shall now add is That in Scripture it implieth two things First Conformity with Christ in his Sufferings so we have a Saying like that in the Text 2 Tim. 2.11 It is a faithful saying for if we be dead with him we shall also live with him which presently is explained vers 12. If we suffer we shall also reign with him Secondly It implieth mortification of sin so it is understood here if we have communion and fellowship with his Death for the mortification of sin 2. The Term of Proposal conditionally If we The Particle if hath sometimes the notion of a Caution see that ye be dead with Christ sometimes it is a note of Relation when one priviledge is deduced from another as here if we partake of the effect and likeness of his Death in dying to sin we shall partake of the effect and likeness of his Resurrection in being quickened to live in Holiness and Righteousness all our days Dying to sin and newness of life are inseparable if we have the first we shall have the other also they are branches of the same work of Regeneration and both proceed from the same Cause Union with Christ. 2. The Truth hence inferred We shall also live with him This is meant both of the Life of Grace and of the Life of Glory Regeneration and Resurrection the one is to newness of Life the other is to everlasting Bless and Happiness Regeneration is the Spirits begetting us to the Image and Nature of God our heavenly Father and Resurrection is for the perfecting of that Likeness which is 't is true perfect in part here in the Soul 2 Cor. 3.18 We all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. Hereafter both in Body and Soul Phil. 3.21 Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his own glorious body according to the wonderful working whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself As to degrees 1 Joh. 3.2 When he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is As to kinds both in Holiness and Happiness 1 Cor. 15.49 As we have born the image of the earthy we shall also bear the image of the heavenly Now we are conformed to his Image in afflictions Rom. 8.29 He hath predestinated us to be conformed to the image of his Son we look like him in the form of a Servant then we shall be like him as the Lord from Heaven heavenly Therefore the life of Glory in Heaven must not be excluded 3. The Certainty of the Inference 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not a matter of Opinion and Conjecture but of Faith we are certainly perswaded of the truth of it We must distinguish of this Truth for it may be considered two ways First As a general Maxim or Proposition so it is absolutely true Those that are dead with Christ shall live with him This is an Article of Faith to be believed fide divinâ Secondly As it is applied to us or as it is a ground of our particular Confidence so it is true Hypothetically or upon Supposition and our Confidence can be no greater than the evidence of our Qualification If we be indeed dead with Christ we in particular shall also live with him It is but a rational Conclusion from two Premisses one of which is of Divine Revelation the other of inward Experience namely that I am dead with Christ therefore I believe that I shall live with him It is an act both of Faith and Reason an act of Faith by participation as it buildeth on a Principle of Faith Doctrine Those that are dead with Christ have no reason to doubt but that they shall also live with him I. I shall speak of the Condition If we be dead with Christ. II. Of the Benefit They shall live spiritually and everlastingly III. Of our certain Apprehension We believe I. Of the presupposed Condition If we be dead with Christ. 1. Who are dead with Christ. 2. How necessary this Order is The one will shew us that it is not an over-strict but a comfortable Condition the other that it is a Condition absolutely necessary to subsequent Grace 1. Who are dead with Christ. 1. Such as owne the Obligation which their Baptism and Profession puts upon them That reckon themselves dead indeed unto sin Rom. 6.11 that make account they are under a Vow and Bond wherewith they have bound their Souls The careless mind it not but the sincere Christians acknowledge that the debt lyeth upon them they being solemnly ingaged to Christ to do it The Apostle saith Rom. 8.12 We are debtors not to the flesh to live after the flesh as the Jew by Circumcision is bound to observe all the Rituals of Moses Gal. 6.3 so Christians by Baptism are bound to crucifie the flesh and obey the Spirit What say you Are you at liberty to do what you lift or under a strict Bond and Obligation to dye unto sin Let your lives answer for you 2. They make Conscience of it and seriously address themselves to perform it Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts they have begun to do it and still go on to do it more and more for this is a continued action not the work of a day but of our whole lives They have not only retrenched the desires of the flesh but seek to mortifie and subdue them and perform their Promise so solemnly made to God 3. They obtain the effect in such a degree that the reign of sin is broken though sin it self be not utterly extinct us They do no longer live in their old slavery and bondage as those do who obey every foolish and hurtful lust that bubleth up in their hearts A mans condition is determined by what is in the Throne habitually and governeth our lives and actions There are two warring Principles in us full of enmity and repugnancy to each other the Flesh and the Spirit but one reigneth which constituteth the difference between the carnal and the renewed in the carnal Flesh reigneth but in the regenerate the Spirit hath the mastery and is superiour and most powerful so that a Christian sheweth himself to be Spirit rather than Flesh otherwise it could not be said That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit Joh. 3.6 The acts of sin are disowned acts and he may say with Paul It is not I but sin that dwelleth in me Sin is against the bent and habit of our wills 4. They substract the fuel of their lusts as they wean themselves from earthly things and shew such contempt of the World that the good things which they enjoy by Gods allowance are not a snare to them For the Apostle saith of those that set their affections
to the law partly through the law requiring a righteousness so exact and full in order to life as the corrupt estate of man cannot afford partly by the body of Christ introducing a better hope that is his crucified body which is the foundation of the new Covenant besides Paul argueth this that the law doth only discover sin but cannot abolish it but doth increase it rather it bindeth over to death and therefore cannot free from death and so to fallen man 't is a law of sin and death and then answereth the Objections that might be brought against this Is therefore the law sin God forbid Rom. 7.7 and verse 10. The commandment which was ordained to life I found to be unto death and so was a law of death and working wrath and all not because of any defect in Gods institution but the weakness of our flesh that is the corruption of our nature nature being depraved cannot fulfil it or yield perfect obedience to it Once more 't is said Acts 10.39 By him all that believe are justified by the law of Moses The Law of Moses was either the ceremonial law All the oblations and Sacrifices the washings and the offerings then required could not take away sin for they were but shadows and figures of what was to come Heb. 9.9 They were figures which could not make him that did the service perfect as appertaining to the conscience and again Heb. 10.1 4. They were shadows of good things to come and it was not possible that the blood of bulls and goats should take away sins They might obtain some temporal blessings or remove some temporal judgments as they obeyed God in them but did little as to the ease of the soul as it was conscious of sin or under fears of the eternal punishment they that looked beyond them to the Messiah to come with an humble and penitent heart might have their consciences cleansed from dead works Every effect must have a cause sufficient to produce it The blood of bulls and goats was no such cause had no such vertue the effect was far above it there was a more precious blood signified and shadowed out thereby that could do it indeed Or secondly the moral law given by Moses partly because we cannot keep it of our selves and the best works that the regenerate perform are so imperfect and mixed with so many infirmities and defects that they stand in need of pardon Jam. 3.2 In many things we offend all of us Our righteousnesses are as filthy rags Isa. 64.6 and partly because they cannot fatisfie for the least sin whereby the Infinite Majesty of God is provoked This is only spoken to shew why the Scriptures do so often speak of the weakness of the Law and how impossible it is the Law should give us life that we may wholly be driven to Christ. 4. The utter impotency of the Law to produce this effect may be known by these two Things which are necessary to salvation Justification and Sanctification The Law can give neither of these 1. It cannot give us Justification unto life the Law promiseth no good to sinners but only to those that keep and observe it he that doth them shall live in them Do and live sin and die this is the voice of the law that was a way whereby an innocent person might be saved but not how a sinner might be saved The Law considered us as innocent and required us to continue so Cursed is every one that continueth not in all the words of the law to do them Gal. 3.20 But alas all we have broken with God Rom. 3.23 We have all sinned and are come short of the glory of God The Gospel considereth us in this sinful estate and therefore it promiseth remission and requireth repentance both the priviledg and the duty concern our recovery to God Secondly If the law could be fulfilled for the future past sins would take away all hope of reward by the law for the paying of new debts would not quit old scores what satisfaction shall be given for those Transgressions let me express it thus the paying of what we owe will not make amends for what we have stolen we have robbed God of his Glory and Honour tho for the future we should be obedient to him yet who shall restore that we have taken away Or satisfie for the wrong done to Gods Justice Thirdly The law had no power of taking away of sin but only of punishing of sin as it threatned death to the sinner but how we should escape this death it told us not being all shut up under sin we are shut up under wrath and there is no escape but by Jesus Christ. 2. It cannot give us sanctification It calleth for duty and puts in mind of it but giveth no strength to perform it for being corrupted within we are little wrought upon by a law without to which our hearts stand in such enmity and contrariety but let me prove it by two Arguments 1. They that did not keep themselves in innocency cannot recover their integrity now 't is lost 'T is easier to preserve life than to restore it when once dead any fool may open the Flood gates but when once the waters are broken in who can recall them Job 14.4 Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean not one that is who can purifie his heart when 't is once defiled with sin This is an evil not to be remedied by instruction but inclination 2. Suppose they could recover themselves they would soon lose it again As Adam gave out at the first assault so we would be every moment breaking with God the sure estate and the everlasting Covenant is provided for us by Christ and our condition by Grace is more stable God by Christ hath ingaged his faithfulness to give us necessary and effectual grace to preserve the new life 1 Cor. 1.9 God is faithful by whom ye were called Austin compareth the state of Job and Adam Job was more happy in his misery than Adam in innocency he was victorious on the Dunghil when the other was defeated on the Throne he received no evil counsel from his wife when the first Woman seduced Adam he by grace despised the assaults of Satan when the other suffered himself to be worsted at the first temptation he preserved his righteousness in the midst of his sorrows when the other lost his innocency in paradise So much better is it to stand by the Grace of Christ than our own free will the broken vessel being cemented again is strongest in the crack Well then you see that our misery is such that God only can help us by some new treaty of relief and therefore let us see what God hath done for us Secondly The means of our deliverance they are tvvo his Incarnation and Passion 1. His Incarnation He sent his Son in the likeness of sinful flesh let me first open the words Secondly shew what benefit we have
is usually the Note of an Instrument yet the Spirit is not our Instrument but we are his he first worketh by us as Objects then by us as Instruments and therefore tho the duty falleth upon us and we are said to do it by the Spirit yet it must be thus understood W are the principal parties as to Obligation of duty but as to Operation and Influence of Grace the Spirit is the principal 2. In the duty there is the Act mortifie the Object the deeds of the body 1. The act mortifie I shall open it more fully by and by only note for the present First Sin is alive in some degree in the justified Otherwise what need it to be mortified The Exhortation were superfluous if sin were wholly dead 2. It noteth a continued Act We must not rest in a Mortification already wrought in us He saith not If ye have mortified but if ye do mortifie this must be our daily practice not done now and then or by fits if we always sincerely labour to mortifie the deeds of the body we are in the way of life 3. It sheweth that this work must not be attended slightly or by the by but carried on to such a degree as corruption may be weakned or lye a dying or be upon the declining hand the success and event is considerable as well as the endeavour where the event dependeth upon outward and forreign causes a man hath comfort in doing his duty whatever the success be but here where the event falleth within the compass of our duty its self there it must be regarded we must so oppose sin that in some sort we may kill it or extinguish it not only scratch the face of it but seek to root it out at least that must be our aim 4. Mortifying noteth some pain or trouble For nothing that hath life will be put to death without some strugling and the flesh cannot be subdued without some trouble to our selves or violence offered to our carnal Affections only let me tell you if it be painful to mortifie sin you make it more painful by dealing negligently in the business and drawing out your vexation to a greater lenght the longer you suffer this Canaanite to live with you the more will it prove as a Thorn or Goad in your sides here if ever it is true our affection procureth our affliction sin dyeth when our love to it dyeth your trouble endeth your delight in it ceaseth as you can bring your souls to a resolution to quit these things Quam suave mihi subito factum est carere suavitatibus iniquorum No delight so sincere as the contempt of vain delights 3. The Object the deeds of the body that is our sins so called 1. Because sin is compared to a body Rom. 7.24 Who shall deliver me from this body of death and Col. 2. 11. In putting off the body of the sins of the flesh There is besides the natural body a body of corruption which doth wholly compass about the soul there is the head of wicked desires the hands and feet of wicked executions the eye of sinful lusts the tongue of vain and evil words therefore 't is said Col. 3.5 Mortifie your members which are upon earth Not of the natural body but of the mass of corruption particular sinful lusts are as members of this body 2. Sins are called the deeds of the body because they are executed by the body Rom. 6.22 Let not sin reign in your mortal bodies that ye should fulfil the lusts thereof and Rom. 6.19 As ye have yielded up your members servants uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity All the members of the body are employed as instruments to serve our sin now affections are manifested in actions therefore by the deeds of the body he meaneth not outward acts only but lusts also Well then fight we must but not with our own shadows sin is gotten within us by the soul it hath taken possession of the body The gates of the senses are always open to let in such Objects and Temptations as take part with the flesh and the flesh is ready to accomplish whatever the corrupt heart doth suggest and require 4. The life that is promised to them that mortifie sin ye shall live a spiritual life of Grace here and an eternal life of Glory hereafter Heaven is worth the having and therefore the reward should sweeten the duty From this Clause the Points are Three 1. That justified Persons are bound to mortifie sin 2. That in the mortifying of sin we and the spirit concur The Spirit will not without us and we cannot without the spirit 3. That eternal life is promised to them who seriously improve the assistance of the Holy Ghost for the mortifying of sin 1. Doct. That justified Persons should mortifie sin 'T is their Duty so to do 1. What is mortification that lieth upon us 1. Negatively What it is not we must distinguish between the mock mortification and the counterfeit resemblances of this duty and the duty its self 1. There is a Pagan Mortification I call it so because such a thing was among the Heathens which is nothing else but a suppressing such sins as nature discovereth upon such reasons and arguments as nature suggesteth Rom. 2.14 The Gentiles do by nature the things contained in the law Namely as they abstained from gross sins and performed outward acts of duty this was a kind of resemblance of mortification and but a resemblance we read of this in story Socrates his Answer to the Physiognomist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when his Scholars enraged at his Character 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So of Palaemon coming in a drunken fit to scoff at Xenocrates his Lecture with his head crowned with a Garland of Rosebuds was by his grave and moral discourse reduced from his riot and licentiousness which was a kind of moral conversion but this we fault because 't is but an half turn from sins of the Second Table or lower Hemisphere of Duty and because these sins were rather suppressed and hidden rather than mortified and subdued Sapientia eorum abscondit vitia non abscindit Lact. As Haman refrained himself when his heart boiled with rankor and malice Esther 5.10 Their Wisdom tended to hide sin rather than to mortifie it and besides this kind of conversion was not a recovery of the soul from the flesh and the world to God but only an acquiring a fitness to live more plausibly and with less scandal among men 2. There is a popish and superstitious mortification which standeth in a meer neglect of the body and some outward abstinences and austerities and such observances as are prescribed by men without any warrant from God as in abstaining from marriage and some sort of meats or apparel as unlawful yea from the necessary functions of humane life the Apostle telleth us that these things have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Col. 23. A shew of wisdom have a specious shew and
men Man hath brought a burden on the Creation and the encrease of wicked men sheweth the ruine of any people or countrey Prov. 11.10 11. When it goeth well with the righteous the city rejoiceth and when the wicked perish there is shouting By the blessing of the upright the city is exalted but it is overthrown by the mouth of the wicked The meaning of these two Proverbs is That the godly bring on a blessing on the Land where they live and the wicked a curse The godly bring on a blessing by their prayers and holy example Gods Providence and respect thereunto but the wicked a curse by their abuse of the creatures The corrupt world think otherwise That all their dishonour their judgments come from suffering the godly to live amongst them 'T is not for the Kings profit to suffer them to live Hest. 3.8 3. That we must not ascribe the alterations and changes of the creature to chance or fortune but to Gods Providence punishing mans sin Some do not see the hand of God as ignorant stupid and careless persons Psal. 28.5 They regard not the work of the Lord nor the operation of his hands And some care not to see Isa. 26.11 When thy hand is lifted up they will not see They put all Judgments upon the ordinary course of second causes either a chance 1 Sam. 16 9. or attribute it to some natural thing Joh. 12.29 They said it thundred when God spake from Heaven to own Christ. Some see but are in part blinded with malice and prejudice which is to be seen by their making perverse interpretations of Providence 2 Sam. 16.8 Toe Lord hath returned upon thee all the blood of the house of Saul 4. You see a reason why a righteous man should be merciful to his beast Prov. 12.10 A righteous man regardeth the life of his beast but the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel There is burden enough already upon the creature under which he groaneth he would bring on no more than needeth he will not use them unmercifully nor wear them out with too great and continual labours but giveth them that food rest and refection which is necessary In the destruction of Niniveh God had respect to the beasts Jonah 4.11 There was much cattel in that city 5. The wonderful dulness and dead-heartedness of man in case of sin and misery so that the creatures are fain to supply our room few are sensible of this burden we should all groan but do not Surely we ought to be excited to groan for sin and misery and long for the happiness of the Saints so v. 23. And not only they but we our selves also which are the first fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our bodies 6. The great need there is to draw off our hearts from the inordinate love of the creature and to lay up treasure in Heaven What can we expect from a groaning creature which will soon come to an end but that only we wholly trust sense and judg according to present appearance Otherwise we would say with the Apostle We know and look further than the compass of this world to that place where all is firm and stable but we seldom improve these thoughts 7. How unsuitable sensual rejoycing is unto the state which we are now in 't is a groaning world and here we seek all our pleasures and contentments 't is a charge against Sensualists Jam. 5.5 Ye have lived in pleasure upon earth The place of our exile the place defiled with mans sin the place subjected to a curse for mans sake Moderate contentment is allowed us during our pilgrimage as appears both by the dispensation of Gods Providence and Covenant but our full joy is reserved for hereaf●er his Providence alloweth many natural comforts and his Covenant many perpetual blessings SERMON XXX ROM VIII 23 And not only they but our selves also who have the first fruits of the spirit groan even we ourselves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption the redemption of our bodies IN these Words the Apostle pursueth his main scope which is to direct believers patiently to wait for their final happiness He doth it by comparing the disposition of the children of God with the inclination of the creatures spoken of in the former verses and not only they c. There is a Comparison 1. Between Persons and Persons 2. Between Actions and Actions 1. Between Persons and Persons The whole creation and those that have the first fruits of the spirit The one is a feigned the other a real Person Therefore this groaning and expectation is attributed to the children of God with greater propriety of speech The creatures are said to groan and wait upon supposition if they had sense and reason they would groan and wait we by certain knowledg and true desire the creatures groan as they are assisted and directed by God to a better state we by voluntary inclination the creatures groan by others as they excite our thoughts to consider their vanity and vicissitudes the Saints by themselves and in themselves others cannot perform it for them they expect by Gods direction and groan by our meditation but we properly and without a figure 2. Actions and Actions There are two ascribed to the creature waiting v. 19 groaning v. 22. They groan and we groan they wait and we wait the groaning is amplified by the mannner and the waiting by the Object 1. The groaning is amplified by the manner It may be rendred among our selves the whole Church of God groaneth as well as the whole Creation or rather in our selves ex imo corde these groans came from the bottom of the heart 2. The waiting is amplified by the object or matter which they wait for For the adoption the redemption of our bodies The last expression explaineth the former our full Adoption and Redemption which shall be accomplished at the general Resurrection Doct. That those that have received the first fruits of the spirit do groan and wait for a better estate than they now enjoy I shall speak of this Point 1. By way of Explication 2. By way of Confirmation For Explication 1. The description of the Persons We that have the first fruits of the spirit The expression alludeth to the customs of the law where the offering of the first fruits sanctified the whole heap Rom. 11.16 For if the first fruits be holy the lump also is holy Thence 't is applied to any such beginnings as are a pledg of more to ensue as here the first fruits of the spirit are the pledges and beginnings of eternal life What are they The graces and comforts of the spirit First the graces salvation is begun in our new birth Titus 3.5 But according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost And sanctifying grace is called an immortal and incorruptible seed 1 Pet.
his internal or external government and giveth us many blessings as the pledge of his love and above all the gift of the Holy Spirit whereby he sanctifieth us more thoroughly and worketh in us that which is pleasing in his sight This he giveth as the God of peace as reconciled to us in Christ Heb. 13.20 21. Now the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus that great shepherd of the sheep through the blood of the everlasting Covenant make you perfect in every good work to do his will working in you that which is pleasing in his sight through Jesus Christ. 1 Thes. 5.23 And the very God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ faithful is he that calleth you who will do it but more fully at the last day when we enter into everlasting glory and the wicked are turned into hell with the Devil and his Angels Matth. 25.46 And these shall go into everlasting punishment but the righteous into life eternal then is the full and final execution a perfect freedom from all misery and a possession of all happiness 3. How it can stand with the wisdom justice and holiness of God to justifie a sinner 'T is a great crime to take the unrighteous to be righteous and to pronounce the wicked justified seemeth to be against the word of God Prov. 24.24 He that saith unto the wicked Thou art righteous him shall the people curse Nations shall abhor him Prov. 17.15 He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are an abomination unto the Lord now what is an abomination unto the Lord is surely contrary to his nature Exod. 34.7 He will by no means clear the guilty Answer There is no abating the force of these objections if there were not good ground for Gods absolution or sentence of justification I shall mention three Christs ransom the Covenant of grace and our faith or conversion to God First Christs ransom maketh it reconcilable with Gods justice and the honour of his law and government Job 33.24 Then he is gracious unto him and saith deliver him from going down into the pit I have found a ransom Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins There is full satisfaction given to Gods wronged justice 2. His Covenant reconcileth it with his wisdom God is not mistaken in judging us righteous when we are not for we are constituted righteous and then deemed and pronounced so made righteous as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5.19 Our right is founded in Christs obedience but resulteth from the promise The constitution is by Covenant God doth first put us into a state of favour and reconciliation and then treateth and dealeth with us as such constituteth us righteous by his Covenant and then in his judgment accepteth us as righteous he will not acquit them in judgment whom his Covenant doth not first pardon 3. Effectual calling or the conversion of man reconcileth it with his holiness for a sinner as a sinner is not justified but a penitent believer 't is true 't is said God justifieth the ungodly Rom. 4.5 those that were once so but not those that continue so certainly he sanctifieth before he justifieth Acts 26.18 To open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God that they may receive forgiveness of sins and inheritance among them that are sanctified by faith that is in me And in many other places No man is freed from the guilt of sin which rendreth us obnoxious to Gods wrath who is not freed from the filth of sin which tainteth our faculties for Christ is made to us both righteousness and sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 By losing Gods image we lost his favour and in the order wherein we lost it we recover it God regenerateth that he may pardon and justifie and restoreth first our holiness and then our happiness 't is not consistent with Gods holiness to give us pardon and let us alone in our sins A man would not put a Toad in his bosome But more fully to give you a prospect into this matter let us take notice of the several things which are mentioned in Scripture as belonging to our justification as for instance sometimes we are said to be justified by grace as Rom. 3.24 Being justified freely by his grace sometimes by the blood of Christ as Rom. 5.9 Being justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him sometimes by faith as Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ sometimes by works James 2.24 Ye see then how that by works a man is justified and not by faith only All these things concur to our justification and do not contradict but imply one another The first moving cause of all is grace the meritorious cause is Christs blood the means of applying or the condition on our part upon which we are capable at first of receiving so great a priviledge is faith and the means of continuing in our justified estate is by good works or new obedience I say our first actual pardon justification and right to life is given upon condition of our first faith and repentance but this estate is continued to us both by faith Rom. 1.17 and new obedience these fairly accord The grace of God will do nothing without the intervention of Christs merits and Christs merits doth not profit us 'till it be applyed by faith and sound believers will live in a course of new obedience Let us consider them severally 1. The first moving cause that inclined God to shew us mercy in our undone and lost estate was meerly his grace God might have left us obnoxious to the curse without any offer of peace as he did the fallen Angels but such was his grace that he thought of the way of our recovery how we might be redeemed renewed and justified surely all this is of grace Titus 3.5 6 7. Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour that being justified by his grace we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life The rise of all is the love and good will of God 2. We are justified by the blood of Christ. Blood is not exclusive of the other parts of his obedience but doth imply them rather as the consummate act thereof Phil. 2.7 He became obedient unto death even the death of the cross 'T is by the merit of his sacrifice and obedience God took this course to exalt the glory of his justice as well as his grace and in the mystery of
and discomposed In this life the Saints are tossed up and down but there is a quiet resting place prepared for them where the Soul reposeth her self with all Spiritual delights after her labour and Travail Here is our Tent there our House our House is where our goods are In Heaven we enjoy the Treasures which were laid up there before Rev. 14.13 Luk. 12.33 A Treasure in the Heavens that fadeth not There is all our comfort 'T is a Capacious House Joh. 14.2 In my Fathers House are many Mansions that will hold all the Children of God who at last shall be gathered together There is abundance of Room in Heaven 'T is not carnally to be conceived as if Heaven were to be divided into so many cells But to note that many shall be admitted into that Blessed rest through the Love of God and the merits of Christ. Oh! Let us oftner think of this Blessed House Here we have but a Tent the Body is often afflicted And after that dissolved torn and taken down But then an House that we shall never change where we shall live sweetly and securely without trouble of enemies 2dly This House is described 1. By the efficient cause expressed negatively and positively 1. Negatively the false cause is removed an House not made with hands Not built by man of Terrestrial and Feculent Matter not contrived with mans art and care or skill things made by man are not comparable to things made by God For as the workman is so is the work Man being a finite Creature limited and confined his work cannot be absolute as God's is the Holy places made by Bezaleel and Aboliah had their Glory but they were nothing comparable to the Holy places not made with hands Heb. 9.24 Those were figures These are true Whatever God doth it is done in a more Glorious manner he discovereth his Magnificence in the work 2dly The true cause is assigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Building of God So 't is called Rom. 5.2 We rejoice in hope of the Glory of God God raised this House out of the greatest wisdom and highest love An House to shew the Riches and Glory and Honour of him that made it So where Heaven is compared to a City 't is said Heb. 11.10 He looked for a City which had Foundations whose builder and maker is God He is the Builder or Architect that doth frame and devise it according to model and he is the workman that did set it together man hath no hand in this at all God contrived it and prepared it 'T is so far above the Art and Power of man that only God could make it God is not only the principal but sole efficient of it 2dly By the adjunct 't is an eternal House All other Houses moulder to dust cernimus exemplis oppida posse mori all other buildings are infirm and moveable obnoxious to change decay and ruine experience doth sufficiently prove this by the ruine of so many Castles Palaces Cities and Kingdoms which have flourished in great Splendour Power and Strength yet now lye in the dust and do not appear But this City hath Foundations Heb. 11.10 Nothing can be firm that is not firmly fixed upon an unmoveable Ground But this hath Foundations the unchangeable Law of God and the everlasting merits of Christ. 3dly The place where 't is situated In the Heavens The place where God doth manifest himself in a more glorious manner than here upon earth which is a Common Inn for Sons and Bastards a Receptacle for Sinners and Saints yea for man and beast where God sheweth his bounty to all his Creatures A valley of tears where is the place of our Tryal and exercise But this is the place of our recompence there God will manifest himself in the greatest latitude that the Creature is capable of we shall have a place agreeable to our state and a state agreeable to the place The paviment is very Glorious The Starry Heaven we cannot look upon it without wonder and astonishment Adam's happiness was in an Earthly Paradise but ours is in Heaven Eph. 1.3 We have such a Glorious place and Glorious company That happy Region of the Blessed which is properly called the Heavenly Jerusalem doth as much excell all other Countries in height amplitude and beauty as the Inhabitants excel the Inhabitants of other Countries in wisdom nobleness and grace For sublimity The Stars seem to be like so many spangles for the distance 'T is above all Mountains Elements Sun Moon and Stars So far is it distant from the place of vicissitudes and changes And then for its Breadth as well as height some Stars have a body bigger than vast Countries yea than the whole Earth Then what is the capacity of Heaven it self For Beauty This world that is a stable for beasts the place of our exile the valley of tears hath a great deal of Beauty What hath God bestowed then upon Heaven Oh! When we shall meet with all the Holy ones of God then how shall we rejoice And the Innumerable Company of Angels that shall all join in Consort There is no pride or envy to divide us or make us Contemn one another but Love and Charity reigneth that the good of every one is the good of all and the good of all the good of every one There is one Body one Heart one Soul and one God that is all in all Whence is it that one Citizen loveth another rather than a stranger one Brother loveth another rather than another man that the head loveth the feet of his own Body rather than the Eyes of another Namely that Citizens dwell in one Common City or they are one Common House and are of the same stock members live by conjunction of the same life What conjunction then what love between the Blessed that have one God one Country one Palace one Life How sweet will this friendship be where there is no weakness to pervert or corrupt it After we have gotten through a short life here in the world this will be our portion Assoon as we do but step into this House we bid our everlasting farewel unto all sin and sorrow and step into it we do assoon as we dye in a moment in the twinckling of an Eye But above all what Joy is in the sight of God! 1 Joh. 3 2. We shall be like him for we shall see him as he is Oh then let us get a Title to it and be able with clearness to make out our qualification by two witnesses Conscience and the Spirit Rom. 8.16 the Spirit it self beareth witness with our Spirit that we are the Children of God As in the mouth of two witnesses every thing is established God never giveth Heaven but he giveth earnest 2 Cor. 1.22 Who hath also sealed us and given us the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts God never giveth Heaven to any but first he prepareth and fitteth them for it Col. 1.12 Giving thanks
clearing up our Title to it The same things serve to enter into Heaven that serve to assure us of our interest in it Fulfil Gods conditions which he hath annexed to the new Covenant and you may be sure and the same is necessary to have as well as to be sure all the difference is some make a hard shift to go to Heaven others enter abundantly 2 Pet. 1.11 They that make it their business to know they have Eternal life have this above others that they go more seriously to work and do more attend upon it Secondly The force and virtue of this sure confidence 1. 'T is of great force to support us under the difficulties of Obedience In the context Paul is discoursing of what supported him and kept him from fainting under the labours of his Apostolate 'T was a toilsome life to go up and down venturing upon all hazards and uncertainties and to travel far and near and all to draw Souls to Christ. A Blessed work in it self But toilsome to the flesh But we know c. The same holdeth in all other duties of our general and particular Calling Nothing puts us upon such a willing Industry and ready constant Watchfulness as this confidence that after we have gone through a short life here in this world this everlasting Blessedness will be our Portion 1 Cor. 9.26 I run not as one that is uncertain An assurance of the end sweetneth the Race and allayeth all the difficulties of the way A poor Beast will go home chearfully How pleasant is it to know that we shall be with God for ever When we are assured that every step sets us nearer Heavenward it will make us mend our pace Doubtfulness is a Torment to an understanding creature and blind guesses and dark Hopes cannot animate us so much as a chearful and confident expectation The more assured our hope our endeavours the greater 1 Cor. 15.58 Be ye stedfast unmovable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord for as much as ye know your labour is not in vain in the Lord. 2dly 'T is of great force to quiet our minds in the midst of all the cares sorrows and Crosses of the present world The Soul that hath this Anchor needeth not to be tossed with all those Tempests and anxieties of mind which worldly men are subject unto for whatever uncertainty there may be in their outward Condition there is a sure estate laid up for them in Heaven Col. 1.5 1 Pet. 1.4 reserved for us in Heaven There we shall fully enjoy our God and all things in him We know it and are sure of it A certain durable treasure which is above the reach of danger and beyond all possibility of loss 3dly 'T is of greatforce to enable us to bear the greatest sufferings not only with a quiet but with a joyful mind A duty often pressed upon us in Scripture and a Christian height which we should all aspire unto and we can hardly attain to it till we have a confidence of our own Blessedness in another world for it is this maketh light the greatest sufferings Rom. 8.18 2 Cor. 4.17 Heb. 10.34 One that hath the promise of Eternal Life in the hand of his Faith this Glory and Blessedness in the Eye of his hope can look through all Tribulations see sunshine at the back of the storm That the Tribulation is working out means to help on and hasten this Glory He knoweth in himself hath assured grounds of confidence in his own Soul that he shall have better things from God than he can lose in the world That to be persecuted for Righteousness sake is the nearest way to Heaven He hath the promises to shew for the certainty of the thing and evidences in his heart of his own right and Title 4thly 'T is of great force to support us against Death it self which is the King of Terrours Certainly a Christian should get above the fears of death and be willing to be dissolved and to be with Christ. Now we shall be so far from desiring to dye that we can hardly venture to dye without assurance of a better estate Alas how bitter is the thought of death to that Soul that must be turned out of doors shiftless and harbourless and is not provided of an Everlasting Habitation or a better place to go to But now get this once certain and then death will not be so terrible whether it come in a natural or violent way Natural When sickness is ready to fret Life asunder then you are at the Gates of Heaven waiting every moment when you shall be called in When death shall draw aside the vail and shew you the Blessed Face of God you are just ready to Step into Immortal pleasures you do but change Houses when you dye and it is not an exchange for the worse but for the better A Cottage for a Pallace Do but step into this House and you bid an Everlasting Farewel to all sin and sorrow in a moment in the twinkling of an Eye Violent Rom. 8.35.36 The Sword is but the Key to open the Prison Doors to let out that Soul which hath long desired to be with Christ. Heb. 11.35 Were tortured not accepting deliverance that they might obtain a better resurrection contented to dye by the hands of the Tormentour because they would have Gods deliverance not his SERMON III. 2 Cor. 5.1 For we know that if our earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an House not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens Vse 1. Is an Exhortation to press you to several Duties As 1. TO Believe the promised Glory Here I shall First shew the necessity of this Secondly How Faith worketh as to the other World Thirdly How we shall rouze up our Faith to a more firm belief of the promised Glory First The necessity We had need press this much 1st Because eternal life is one of the principal objects of Faith and the first motive to invite us to hearken after the things of God The Apostle telleth us Heb. 11.6 That without Faith it is impossible to please God for he that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him He that would have any thing to do with God must be persuaded of his Being and Bounty In the choosing of a Religion we first look after a right object whom to Worship and a fit reward what we may expect from him For that is the great inducement to make up the match between our hearts and that object Now God that knoweth the heart of Man and what wards will fit the lock doth accordingly deal with us He propoundeth himself as the first cause and highest Being to be reverenced worshipped and obeyed by us so also as the chiefest good to be enjoyed by us in an everlasting state of Blessedness All the Doctrines of the Christian Faith tend to establish this
short He is Clothed also with the graces of the Spirit which are both ornamentum and munimentum Our Ornament and Armour of defence 'T is our Ornament as leaves are a beautiful vesture to the Apples as Cloaths are to the Body Col. 3.12 Put on therefore as the Elect of God Holy and Beloved bowels of mercies kindness humbleness of mind meekness long-suffering c. Munimentum Armour Rom. 13.12 The night is far spent the day is at hand let us therefore cast of the works of darkness and let us put on the Armour of light Christ doth aray us non ad pompam sed ad pugnam not to set us off with a vain shew but to furnish and secure us for the Spiritual warfare Well then the words agree There are some peculiar difficulties in the 4th verse But we shall handle them in their own place Doct. That none can groan and long for Heaven but those who are not found naked but Clothed with a Gospel Righteousness The Apostle limiteth it to them In this point I shall handle three things 1. What is a Gospel Righteousness 2. That this carryeth the notion of a Garment to cover our nakedness and shame 3. Why none but they can groan and earnestly desire to be Clothed upon with the House which is from Heaven 1. What is a Gospel Righteousness 'T is Christs reconciling and renewing grace with new obedience resulting from both Or Justification Sanctification and New Obedience 1. Justification is requisite to Eternal Life Therefore called Justification unto Life Rom. 5.18 Tit. 3.7 Being Justifyed by his grace we are made Heirs according to the hope of Eternal Life and this is also represented by Cloathing The taking away of sin is the taking away our filthy Garments or the covering of our nakedness And the applying the Righteousness of Christ 't is as the investing of us with change of Raiment Zech. 3.4 Take away the filthy Garments from him and unto him he said I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee and I will clothe thee with change of Raiment Christ taketh away our sin by pardon and withal adorneth the sinner with his Righteousness and with holiness in the sight of God There is no getting the Blessing but in the Garment of our Elder Brother 2dly Sanctification is requisite in order to Glory For without holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 And this is the Ornament wherein the inward man of the Heart is decked and adorned that it may be comely in the sight of God 1 Pet. 3.4 As we cover the nakedness of our Bodies from the sight of men so we must cover the nakedness of our Souls in the sight of God Now thought it be hidden from man yet it is not hidden from the Lord We must see that he find us not in our nakedness neither destitute of grace nor of the Righteousness of Christ. Well then it is not enough to look after the Righteousness of Justification but of Sanctification The one is founded on the Blood of Christ the other is wrought in us by the Spirit of Christ 1 Cor. 6.11 And the application of Christs Blood and the gift of the Spirit are inseparably conjoined both in the dispensation of God and the desire of a poor anxious Soul 1 Joh. 1.9 The one doth away the guilt of sin as it rendreth us obnoxious to Gods just wrath and the other the filthiness and power of sin as it tainteth our faculties and actions and rendreth us unacceptable and unserviceable to God Christ came to restore us to the favour of God and to restore his Image in our Hearts that the plaister might be as broad as the sore If Christ should free us only from the guilt of Sin he would perform but half our cares he would provide for our impunity but not for our holiness and serviceableness to God Our misery lay in our sinfulnes as well as our liableness to wrath Therefore Christ came to change our natures as well as to reconcile our persons to God 3dly New Obedience or Sanctification acted as well as infused is a part of those Garments of Salvation wherewith we are Clothed For the Gospel saith 1 Joh. 3.7 He that doth Righteousness is Righteous That is declareth that he is Righteous in Christs Righteousness and Sanctified by his Spirit And that this Godly and Righteous Life is necessary to the expectation of Glory and Blessedness appeareth by that 2 Pet. 3.11 What manner of persons ought we to be in all Holy conversation and Godliness Let Conscience speak when it reflecteth upon this how meet it is that we should Glorifie God in the duties of holiness if we would be glorified with him and that we should Glorifie him in all the points of obedience and not in one only For he saith in all Holy Conversation and Godliness in the outward carriage and secret practice in Common affairs and duties of immediate worship in Adversity Prosperity grace exercised and discovered in the lives of Gods people is a part of these Garments wherewith our nakedness is covered Psal. 132.9 Let thy Priests be Clothed with Righteousness 2dly This carryeth the notion of a Garment to cover our nakedness and shame 1. Sin and shame came in together and there is no man born Clothed but stark-naked and hath nothing wherewith to cover his shame before God Adams nakedness was an Emblem of it Gen. 3.11 I was afraid because I was naked and I bid my self We must not only look to the outward nakedness but the inward Adam was naked before and knew that he was so But till they had sinned they were not ashamed Gen. 2.25 our Bodies were Gods own handy work and Apparel in Innocency was but as a Cloud to the Sun Therefore while our first parents were apparelled with the Robe of Innocency they felt no shame all things were honest and comely and Glorious enough without a covering both in the sight of God and themselves no cause of shame either before God or betwixt themselves But when divested and stripped of this Spiritual apparel then Adam was ashamed hid himself from God and till they be Cloathed neither he nor his Posterity can come into his presence with any comfort Another Emblem of this we have in Aaron's stripping the Israelites of their Jewels and Ornaments Exod. 32.25 When Moses saw that the peole were naked for Aaron had made them naked to their shame among their enemies It is not meant barely of Aarons stripping them of their Jewels and Ornaments that was but a type of their nakedness and deformity which was uncovered before God what should Moses kill the Israelites because Aaron had taken away their Jewels And what great matter of disgrace was it among the enemies That the Sons and Daughters of Israel should want ear-rings But the meaning is Aaron had cast them out of Gods protection who was offended and provoked by their sin Another suitable expression is Hosea 2 3. I will set
avoid everlasting misery 'T is no 〈◊〉 what we suffer in time and endure in time USE 3. Improve it first to seek a reconciliation with God in the way of Faith and Repentance A man that is under the sentence of death and in danger to be executed every moment would not be quiet till he get a pardon All men by nature are Children of wrath as a Son of death as one condemned to die so 't is an Hebraism Now run for refuge to take hold of the hope that is set before you Heb. 6.18 make peace upon earth Luke 2.14 Agree with thine Adversary quickly while he is in the way Luke 12.58 59. Now God calleth to repentance Act. 17.30 31. Oh Labour to be found of him in peace 2 Pet. 3.14 How can a man be at rest till his great work be over 2. Improve it to holiness and watchfulness and to bridle licentiousness and boldness in sinning Eccl. 11.9 Rejoyce O young man in thy youth and let thine heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth walk in the ways of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes but know thou for all these things God will bring thee to judgment As cold Water cast into a boiling pot stops its fury 1 Pet. 1.17 And if ye call on the Father who without respect of persons Judgeth every man according to every mans work pass the time of your sojourning here in fear Say as the Town Clark of Ephesus Acts 9.40 We are in danger to be called in Question for this days uproar I must give an account for idle words careless praying and unprofitable mispending of time 3. Improve it to patience under ignominy and reproaches Thy innocency will appear on thy tryal if in an abject Condition the upright shall have dominion in the morning afflictions and persecutions will then end and thou shalt have thy reward 1 Thes. 1.6 7. And ye became followers of us and of the Lord having received the word in much affliction with joy in the Holy Ghost so that ye were ensamples of all that believe in Macedonia and Achaia And 1 Cor. 15.58 Wherefore my beloved be stedfast and unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord for as much as ye know your labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. SERMON XVIII 2 Cor. 5.11 Knowing therefore the terrour of the Lord we perswade men but we are made manifest unto God and I trust also are made manifest in your Consciences THe Apostle is giving an account of his sincerity zeal and faithfulness in his Ministry Three things moved him to it hope fear and love Here he asserteth the influence of the second principle In the words take notice of two things 1. The motive and reason of his fidelity in his Ministry knowing therefore the terrour of the Lord we perswade men 2. The witnesses to whom he appealeth For the proof of his fidelity and diligence 1. God the searcher of hearts 2. the consciences of his Auditours who had felt the benefit and force of the Word 1. To God as the supream Witness Approver and Judge but we are made manifest unto God he seeth our principles and aims and with what hearts we go about our work 2. To the Corinthians as secondary witnesses and I trust also are made manifest in your consciences He was confident that he had a witness of his sincerity and uprightness in their consciences The greatest approbation that we can have from men is to have an approbation in their consciences Mark the order our first desire should be to approve our selves to God who is our Judge and then to men And in doing that to approve our selves to their consciences which is the faculty which is most apt to take Gods part rather than to their humours that we may gain their respect and applause next to God the testimony of conscience next to our own conscience the consciences of others 1. I begin with the motive and reason of his fidelity knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the vulgar Timorem Domini knowing the fear of the Lord. Erasmus Beza and our translation terrorem domini Grotius according to the former reading knowing the fear of the Lord i. e. The true way of religion we perswade men to Imbrace it Rather the Apostle understandeth the terrour of this Judgment being certain that these things are so and that such a terrible Judgment of Christ will come we perswade men to become Christians or to live as such as shall speed well then when others shall be destroyed he saith plurally 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we perswade as comprizing his Colleagues suppose Timotheus and Sylvanus he and they perswaded men to Imbrace the Faith and to live as those who are to be judged For 't is to be looked upon 1. As an Argument and Motive to perswade himself and his Colleagues to sincerity in their Ministry who were to give an account of their dispensation 2. As an Argument and Motive to the People for their obedience to the Faith Doct. That the certain knowledge of the terrible Iudgment of God should move us to perswade and you that hear to be perswaded to a careful and serious preparation for it In managing which Point 1. I shall consider the object Here is terrour or matter of fear offered in the Judgment mentioned 2. The subject or persons fearing Paul and his Colleagues together with all the parties who are to be judged 3. The means How this fear cometh to be raised in us or to work on us Knowing 4. The effect here is perswasion grounded thereon knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men 1. That there is terrour and matter of fear offered in the day of judgment upon several accounts 1. As it is an Impartial Judgment that shall pass upon all heathens Christians Apostles Ministers private Persons This ground is urged 1 Pet. 1.17 If ye call on the Father who without respect of Persons judgeth according to every mans work pass the time of your sojourning here in fear Those who take the Lord to be their Father and themselves for his Children must consider him also as an Exact and an Impartial Judge of all their actions And therefore with the more care and sollicitude carry on the work of holiness What is respecting or accepting persons in the Judgment 'T is to esteem one person rather than another for outward advantages not regarding the merits of the cause which cometh to discussion and tryal As in mans courts when men are spared for their greatness dignity or worldly preheminence But what person may God be supposed to respect or accept in Judgment Surely none can be so irrational as to think the great or rich can have any pretention to his favour or merciful dealing rather then others no Noble or Ignoble Poor or Rich Prince or begger they all stand upon the same level before God Well then the persons who may be supposed
and being spoken to by him out of Heaven Therefore he saith 1 Cor. 9.1 Am not I an Apostle Have not I seen Jesus Christ the Lord But Paul did not seek his esteem meerly for his vision of Christ and that extasy which befell him at his first conversion but for his faithful discharge of his work on the grounds formentioned for he would not Glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as others did but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mortified Christians that have given up themselves to the Lords use should more mind that and esteem themselves and others for true and real worth more than the advantage of external priviledges I am confirmed in this exposition by what is said verse 6 th wherefore henceforth know we no man after the Flesh yea though we have known Christ after the flesh yet henceforth know we him no more That is we should not esteem and judge of persons by their conversing with him in the flesh but by their Loyalty and Obedience to him If they be zealous for his Kingdom and can upon the hopes which he hath offered run all hazards and encounters of Temptations and upon the confidence of his coming to Judgment be faithful to him and out of Love to his person and gratitude for the work of Redemption deny themselves and live to his Glory they have cause to Glory in heart whereas others who boast only of personal acquaintance with him but are not found in Doctrine and the practice of Religion do only Glory in a meer appearance or outward shew before men but can have no true solid confidence in their hearts Well then here lay the case between Paul and his opposites They gloryed in some external thing which could give no solid peace to the Conscience But Paul could Glory in his perseverance diligence patience and self-denyal for the Gospel The sense of which made his heart rejoice and by the way the same glorying may be taken up by all the faithful painful Preachers of the Gospel against their opposites who are the Popish Clergy who Glory in their pomp and their great revenues and that they are the Successours of the Apostles and can pretend an external title to this inheritance and sit in their Chair as Pope Alexander the 6th Haec est bona persuasio quia per hanc nos regnamus Now you are to Judge who are they that Glory in Heart or in Appearance They that Glory in their riches or outward possession or they that Glory in their labours sufferings and converting of Souls to God Doct. That then a man hath the full comfort of his sincerity when he hath the approbation of God and of his own Conscience and hath also a Testimony in the Consciences of others All these had Paul 1. The approbation of God For he saith We are made manifest unto God God knew both his actions and his aims for the Lord considereth both Prov. 16.2 Now the Lord knew his labour his patience his travelling up and down to promote the kingdom of his Son as also that he did this out of hope fear and love Pauls main care was to approve himself to God and to be accepted with God 2. He had the Testimony of a good conscience He telleth them so now and told them so before 2 Cor. 1.12 This is Our rejoycing the Testimony of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not in fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we had our conversation in the world but more abundantly to you ward Not by violent or fraudulent means did he seek to promote the Gospel not his self opinions not self ends they had more experience than others for whereas he was maintained by the poorer towns yet with them he laboured with his hands and still preached the Gospel As usually it falleth out often that handy-craft people are more liberal for the support of the Ministry than the Gentry or Nobles upon the account of the Gospel nay though he could speak of seeing Christ by extraordinary dispensation yet he would glory rather in the real and general evidences of grace than in any external priviledge and advantage whatsoever if Paul had never seen Christ yet he had wherein to glory 3. And he had a testimony in their consciences as well as his own I trust also we are made manifest in your consciences He was confident that he had a witness in their Bosoms of his sincere and upright dealing the greatest approbation that we can have from men is to have an approbation in their consciences for conscience is the faculty which is most apt to take Gods part We may easily gain their respect and applause by complying with their humours but that is not lasting that will not do Gods work and the Gospels Our greatest advantage if we be Faithful servants to God will be to have a witness in their consciences Thus did Paul he wanted not opposers at Corinth some questioned his Apostleship some slighted his abilities some saw no such evidence and excellency in his Doctrine what should the poor man do He courted not their affections by arts of insinuation but approved himself to their consciences But how did Paul commend himself to the Corinthians By three means 1. By the evidence of his Doctrine which he managed with such power and Authority that it was manifestly seen by all who had not a mind to lose their Souls and were not prejudiced by their worldly interest that it was not calculated for the Lusts and Interests of men but their Salvation 1 Cor. 4.2 By the manifestation of the truth commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God Paul preached such necessary Truths as if men were not strangely perverted they might see he aimed at their spiritual and eternal benefit 2. By the success of his Doctrine 2 Cor. 3.1 2 3. Do we begin again to commend our selves or need we as some others Epistles of commendation to you or letters of commendation from you Ye are our Epistle written in our hearts known and read of all men for as much as ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle of Christ ministred by us written not with Ink but with the Spirit of the Living God Not in tables of stone but in the fleshly Tables of the heart The conversions which he had wrought among them gave a sufficient Testimony to their consciences that he was not a vagrant self-seeker he had been the Instrument of transcribing the Doctrine of Christ upon their hearts Paul prevailed with many at Corinth and had converted many God himself assured him of this success Acts 18.9 10. Then spake the Lord to Paul in the night by a vision Be not afraid but speak and hold not thy peace For I have much much people in this city 'T was an opulent but a wanton Town but God would be with him and had much People therefore Paul ventured and prevailed 3. By the purity holiness and self-denial which was seen
to live to him daily mercies bind us to sweeten our service God being so good a Master 4. The new nature is requisite that we may in all things mind Gods Glory 'T is more easie to convince us of our obligations to live unto God than to get an heart and a disposition to live to God The new creature which is created after God ever bendeth and tendeth towards him As the flower of the Sun doth follow the Sun and openeth and shutteth according to the absence of the Sun so doth the heart of a Christian move after God We say aqua in tantum ascendit c. Nature riseth no higher than its spring head and center self is our principle and end Hosea 10.1 Israel is an empty vine He bringeth forth fruit to himself We live to our selves and seek after our own interests till God give us another heart when the heart is changed a mans felicity and last end is changed And therein the new nature doth most bewray its self 5. The more our lusts are mortified the more sincerely shall we aim at the Glory of God That which is lame is easily turned out of the way And if we have not a Command over our affections they will be interposing and perverting all our actions and when God should be at the end of all our actions the idol that our lust hath set up will be at the end of them We will subordinate them to our pleasure honour and profit any lust is a great ingrosser The belly will be God and honour command us as a God and Mammon will be God our hearts are corrupted and some created thing is set up in stead of God Therefore mortification is the guard of sincerity Otherwise we shall love the Creature for its self alone or for our selves alone and so be turned from God whom alone we should honour please and obey USE 2. Is this the temper and disposition of our Souls Do we make the glory of God our great end and scope If it be so then 1. We will prefer Gods honour above our own Interests though never so dear to us A notable Instance we have in our Lord Jesus Christ who came as Gods Servant in the work of Redemption and we read of him in the general Rom 51.3 That he pleased not himself That is he did not gratify his own natural and humane will More particularly Phil. 2.6 7 8. That he emptied himself and made himself of no reputation and humbled himself to the death of the Cross. To promote his Fathers glory he willingly submitted to all manner of indignities for this end purpose more expressly we have the workings of his heart set forth John 12.27 28. Father save me from this hour but for this cause came I to this hour Father glorify thy name and there came a voice from Heaven saying I have glorified it and will glorify it again His desires of his own safety were moderated and submitted to the conscience of his duty and he preferreth the honour of God and seeks to advance it above his own ease for Christ endeth all debates with this Father glorify thy name Now certainly all that have the Spirit of Christ will be tender of Gods glory and account that dearer to them than any thing else and submit to the bitter cup so God may have honour thereby You will think Christs example too high who submitted the sensible consolations of the Godhead to the respects of Gods glory and this is not possibly practicable by any creature 'T is true every ordinary Christian doth not come to this height but the thing is imitable witness Paul who valued the glory of God above that personal contentment and happiness that should come to him by his own Salvation Rom. 9.3 For I could wish that my self were accursed from Christ for my Brethren and kinsmen according to the flesh 'T is not an hasty speech he calleth God to witness that this was the real disposition of his heart he speaketh advisedly and with good deliberation But how then can it be made good There is an holy part and an happy part in religion he did not wish less love to Christ nor to be less beloved of him But you will say a regular love beginneth at home true but 't is not his Salvation and their Salvation that cometh in competition but his Salvation and the glory of God and he was much more affected with Gods glory then his own good This should shame us that stand upon our petty Interests We are not called to such self-denyal Surely we should be contented to do any thing and be any thing so God may be glorified poor or rich so God may be glorified by our poverty or riches As travellers take the way as they find it so it will lead to their journeys end Decline no service nor suffering for Gods sake when he calleth us to it Phil. 1.20 So also now Christ shall be magnified in my Body Whether it be by life or by death So Christ be glorified in his Body That is a lower and more moderate Interest the suspension and delay of Salvation laying it at Gods feet the glorifying of God in his calling was more welcome than his present entrance into glory So Acts 20.24 I count not my life dear to me so I may finish my course with joy When they told him of dangers he went bound in the Spirit to Jerusalem Well then an heart that is truely affected with Gods glory standeth upon no temporal Interests and concernments and preferreth Gods honour before its own ease honour pleasure esteem yea life its self 2. If tender of receiving honour from men to Gods wrong The Apostles did not set up a trade for themselves Acts 14.15 They rent their Clothes and said what do ye do we are but men of like passions So Acts 3.12 Why gaze ye upon us as if by our power and holiness we had made this man to walk Herod received Applauses and was therefore blasted Act. 12. The concealer is as bad as the stealer to affect or admit Divine honour or too much attributing to our selves any good effected by us as Instruments as we must not assume so we must not re●eive honour when 't is ascribed to us by others The Apostles would not suffer the admiration and praise in the people to rest upon themselves Thy pound hath gained ten pounds Matth. 25. And 1 Cor. 15.10 Not I but the grace of God that was with me And I live but not I Gal. 2.20 3. If affected deeply with Gods dishonour though done by others Psa. 69.9 The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up and the reproaches of them that have reproached thee have faln upon me Vehement passions waste the Body affected more with Gods dishonour than our own personal injuries On the other side when we rejoyce in his glory though we our selves be lessened Phil. 1.18 Whether in pretence or in truth Christ is preached and I therein
rest Evil is best stop'd in the beginning If when first we begun to grow careless we had taken heed it would never have come to that sad issue it doth afterwards an heavy body running downwards gathers strength by running and still moveth faster Look then to your first breaking off from God and remitting your watch and Spiritual fervour 'T is easier to crush the the egg than kill the serpent He that keepeth a house in constant repair prevents the fall and ruin of it When first the evil heart beginneth to draw us off from God and to be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin then we must Heb. 3.12 13. humble our Souls betime that we may stick close to Christ. 2. By way of recovery where there hath been a decay Take the advice of the Holy-Ghost Rev. 2.5 Remember from whence thou art faln and repent and do thy first works 1. A serious consideration of our condition in those words remember from whence thou art faln Recollect and sadly consider what a difference there is between thee and thy self thy self living and acting in the sense and power of the love of God and thy self now under the power of some worldly and fleshly lust Consider what an advantage thou hadst against Temptations of the Devil the World and the Flesh when love was in strengh and how much the case is altered with thee now how feeble and impotant in the resistance of any sin Say as Job Job 29.2 3. Oh that it were as in the months past In the day when God preserved me when his candle shined upon my head Or as the Church Hosea 2.7 It was better with me then than now In our returning we should have such thoughts as these I was wont to spend some time every day with God 't was a delight to me to think of him or speak of him or to him now I have no heart to pray or meditate 'T was the joy of my Soul to wait upon his Ordinances the returns of the Sabbath were well-come unto me But now what a weariness is it Time was when my heart did rise up in arms against sin when a vain thought was a grief to my Soul why is it thus with me now Is sin grown less odious or God less lovely 2. The next advice is repent That is humble your selves before God for your defection 'T is not enough to feel your selves faln many are convinced of their faln and lapsed estate but do not humble and judge themselves for it in Gods presence bewailing their case smiting on the thigh praying for pardon 'T is a great sin to grow weary of God Isa. 43.22 Thou hast not called upon me O Jacob Thou hast been weary of me Oh Israel And Mich. 6.3 Oh my people what have I done unto thee And wherein have I wearied thee Testify against me His honour is concerned in it therefore you must the more feelingly bewail it 3. Do thy first works We must not spend the time in idle complaints Many are sensible that do not repent Many repent i. e. seem to bewail their case but languish in idle complaints for want of love but do not recover this loss by serious endeavours You must not rest till you recover your former seriousness and mindfulness of God 'T is one of the deceits of our hearts to complain of negligence and not redress it The Nazarite who had broken his vow he was to begin all again Numbers 6.12 So you that have broken with God you must do what you did at first conversion let your work be sin-abhorring every day and ingaging your heart anew to God And make no reservation but so give up your selves to the Lord that his interests may prevail in your hearts again above all sinful and vile inclinations or whatever hath been the cause of the withdrawing your hearts from God and the decay of your love to him SERMON XXVI 2 Cor. 5.14 For the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus Iudge that if one dyed for all then were all dead WE come now to the fifth case of Conscience about loving God with all the heart a thing often required in Scripture the original place is Deut. 6.5 And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy Soul and all thy might 'T is repeated by our Lord Matth. 22.37 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy Soul and all thy mind But in Mark 10.30 And Luke 10.27 With all thy heart and all thy Soul and all thy mind and all thy strength This sentence was famous 't was one of the four Paragraphs which the Jews were wont to write upon their Phylacteries and fastened to their door posts and read in their houses twice a day Mark here is variety of words sometimes three words are used and sometimes four some go about accurately to distinguish them by the heart interpreting the will by the Soul the appetite and affections by the mind the understanding and by might bodily strength All put together with that intensive particle all imply great love to God Now a doubt ariseth hereupon how this is reconcilable with the defects of Gods Children and the weaknesses of the present state Yea it seemeth to confine our affections that there will be love left for no other things For if God have all the heart and all the Soul and all the mind and all the strength what is there left for Husband Wife Children Christian Friends and other Relations Without which respect humane society cannot be upheld and preserved The doubt may be referred to two heads 1. The irreconcilableness of the rule with present defects 2. The confinement intimated is destructive of our respect to our natural comforts and relations 1. Concerning the first how it is reconcileable with those many partibilities and defects of Gods Children I answer First By distinguishing this sentence may be considered as an exaction of the Law Or as a rule of the Gospel 1. As an exaction of the Law And so it serveth to shew us what duty the perfect Law of God requireth compleat love without the least defect All the heart all the Soul and all the might a grain wanting maketh the whole unacceptable As one condition not observed forfeiteth the whole lease though all the rest be kept That this reference is not to be altogether slighted appeareth by the occasion A Lawyer asked him a Question tempting him saying Master which is the great Commandment of the Law Matth. 22.35 Now Christs aim was to beat down his confidence by proposing the rigour of the Law Luke 10.28 This do and thou shalt live The best course to convince self-justiciaries such as this Lawyer was thereby to rebate their confidence and to shew the necessity of a better righteousness And so 't is of use this way for a double end First To convince us of the necessity of looking after the grace of the Redeemer Secondly To
175 5 5 239   8 343   13 50   13 15   19 20 127   24 129 132 137 Ephesians 1 3 89 4 5 150   11 306   13 14 83 99   22 23 17 2 2 3 113   4 5 330 3 17 18 19 4 24 25 16   27 98   30 150 5 9 16 6 15 134 Philip. 1 19 17   23 74 2 6 324 3 19 107 112   20 108   21 90 Colossians 3 3 189   5 127 132 1 Thes. 2 12 292 2 Tim. 1 7 15   7 8 159   10 143 363 2 5 175 319   19 301 Titus 2 11 125 3 3 20   11 50 Hebrews 2 5 202   14 97   18 356 3 6 14 230 ERRATA PAge 5. line 7. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 12. l 16. for liberum read liberam p. 12. I. 18. for seritatis read servitutis p. 16. l. last for Honour read tribute to p. 21. l. 14. for vendati r. venditi p. 26. l. 16. for sinint he read sin in the. p. 27. l. 25. f. 10. r. 13. p. 27. add from all things from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses p. 30. l. penult for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 36. l. 53. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 51. l. 5. for dundum read dandum p. 52. l. 46. for addando read addendo p. 52. l. 47. for hauriebar read hauriebat p. 54. l. 25. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 56. l. 31. for valla read Valla p. 56. l. 31. for sentiaut read sentiunt p. 69. l. 26. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 90. l. 12. for assertoin read assertion p. 96. l. 31. for acquitted read acquired p. 102. l. 39. for justici read justitiae p. 133. l. 27. for spirie read spirit p. 134. l. 59. for satiat read sanat p. 142. l. 10. for for our read from p. 147. l. 47. for inabled read unable p. 155. l. 35. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 158. l. 3. for after read all and a. p. 164. l. 40. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 169. l. 18. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 200. l. 51. for casually read causally p. 258. l. 3. for two read no. p. 267. l. 23. for simel read simul p. 328. l. 53. for offerte read offert p. 368. l. 14. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 376. l. 1. for gratia read gratiae p. 376. l. 2. for positiva read positivae p. 378. l. 6. between need and fear add not SERMON I. The Second Epistle to the CORINTHIANS CHAPTER V. Verse 1. For we know that if our earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an House not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens HAving shewed you how much of the true Spirit of Christianity lyeth in looking to things unseen Because the Apostle goeth on with that Argument I shall pursue it in the following verses of this Chapter Paul here rendreth a reason why he could so over-look things seen whether Crosses or Comforts And so resolutely venture upon the hope of things unseen For we know c. In which words there is not only a reason rendred of his Courage and self denying pursuit of unseen glory But also an Anticipation or secret Prevention of an Objection Some might say to to him There may be a blessed State to come But dost thou certainly know that thou shalt be a partaker of that glory Yea saith he We know c. The words branch themselves into three parts 1. A supposal of the worst that could befal him in the world If our Earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved 2dly A proposal of a glorious estate to be enjoyed after death We have a building of God an House not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens 3dly An Assertion of his own right or the application to himself or an assured expectation of this Blessed and Glorious Estate We know that we have 'T is not a bare Conjecture but a certain knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We know And what is there known Not the general Truth only That there is a building of God an House not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens But that we have a particular confidence of our own Blessed Immortality The Point is This That the difficulties pressures and dangers of the present life even though they should end in death its self are a matter of no great Terrour to those who have a sure confidence of their own Blessed Immortality I shall explain this Point by these Considerations 1. That the present life is frail miserable and transitory and within a little while will surely come to an end 2dly That there is a much happier Condition than this world is capable of Even an abiding Estate of Blessedness which God hath provided for his people For the Apostle speaking of the present life he calleth it a Tent but the other is an House that 's an earthly House this Eternal in Heaven out of the reach of all sublunary dangers That 's an House in which man is Instrumental in raising it up or sometimes pulling it down This is builded without hands by God himself and continued to us for ever by his gracious Grant 3dly That a sure confidence of this Happy and Blessed Condition may be had For there is a sure right We have a certain confidence We know 'T is not we think we hope well But we know 'T is propounded as a Common priviledge you and I and all the suffering servants We know 4thly That this sure confidence of our own right in it and future possession of it doth support and fortifie the Soul against all the dangers and pressures of the present life yea against death it self I. That the bodily life is Frail and Transitory and within a little while will surely come to an end The Circumstances of the Text explained will represent it to you 1. The Body of man is called an House 1. For the beauty and comely proportion that is between the parts as set up by line or rule There is an admirable piece of Architecture in building and raising up the body of man Story after Story and Room after Room Contrivance after Contrivance so compact and set together that the most Curious piles in the world are but rude heaps Compared to it Psal. 130.15 16. I am fearfully and wonderfully made c. The serious contemplation of Gods Workmanship in our very Bodies will force us to acknowledge his unspeakable wisdom all things are so well disposed and ordered for profit and use The greatest miracles are to be seen in Gods Common works We wonder when we hear of any work exceeding the
force of Nature or done beside the order of Second Causes We wonder when we read that Iron did swim as 2 King 6.6 Yet his hanging the world upon nothing is a greater miracle There is nothing but the fluid Air to support this vast body and consistence of Earth that we tread upon We wonder at the Curiosities of Art whereas the Lords Ordinary works look very Common-like in our Eyes as to go no farther The frame of our own Bodies is very Curious and exact So many Bones Arteries Veins and Sinews c. And all disposed in such a comely proportion Well then the Body in regard of the frame and structure of it is fitly called an House 2. With respect to an Inhabitant The Soul dwelleth in the Body as a man in an House It guideth and ordereth the Body as the Inhabitant ordereth the affairs of the House or as the Mariner and Pilot directs the motions of the Ship Not that the Soul is in the Body accidentally we must not strain it so far There is a formal union between the Soul and the Body But the Soul is the man that 's the Inhabitant God began man at his Body He first built the House and then put in the dweller He formed and organized the Body out of the dust of the Earth and then breathed into him the Breath of Life and so man became a living Soul Gen. 2.7 Well then the Immortal Soul is the man and that which should be chiefly regarded Most men are like those that take care to deck and adorn the House but never regard the Inhabitant all their care is for the Body whilst the poor neglected Soul hath cause to complain of hard usage This is as if a man should trim his House and starve himself In a Body over cared for there ever dwelleth a neglected Soul 2dly The Specification of this notion or what kind or sort of House it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our Earthly House of this Tabernacle A Tabernacle or Tent is a movable dwelling set up for present use such as hath a roof or covering but no Foundation Tectum habet Fundamentum non habet A poor sorry Habitation either left when the use ceaseth or taken down or suffered to fall a pieces of its own accord Paul himself was a Tent-maker and Spiritual men converse with corporal things Spiritually they are improving Common Occasions to an Holy use and therefore doth he so often consecrate this notion of a Tent to signifie our frail and flitting Condition here 1. A Tent or Tabernacle is easily raised up and as easily taken down So men are described Job 4.19 They dwell in Houses of Clay their Foundation is in the dust they are Crushed before the Moth a moth is but a handful of enlivened dust 2. A Tent is set up for a short time of use not for a fixed habitation As there are principles of Corruption in our Bodies so our use and end is but for a while when we have done our part and served our generation according to the will of God the Stage is shifted and the world furnished with a new Scene both of Acts and Actors 3dly A Tent is destroyed by taking the parts asunder Death is nothing but a dissolution of the parts whereof man is composed a taking asunder of the Soul from the Body Well then if the Body be but a Tabernacle alwaies decaying of its self though it should be preserved from external injuries and if its use be short and when that is over the Soul shall be plucked from the embraces of the Body let us do all the good that we can in this little time that we have to spend here 2 Pet. 1.13.14 I think it meet as long as I am in this Tabernacle to stir you up by putting you in remembrance knowing that I must shortly put off this Tabernacle even as our Lord Jesus hath shewed me This should make us bestir our selves while time and strength lasteth Yea the nearer our Journeys end we are the faster should we run Natural motion is in principio tardior when death is near the best will think the great part of their business undone while we are here we have a Cottage rather than a House a ruinous Cottage yea a Tent we spend all our time almost in repairing and keeping it up and supplying the necessities of the Body so it is an impediment to us from better things The Body hindreth the operations of the life of grace for the present and the manifestation of the life of glory It hindreth the life of grace The Body if it be sound and well it kicketh against the Spirit 1 Pet. 2.11 If ill it afflicts and discomposeth the Spirit And then the Life of Glory For till this shade be taken down that glorious House which we expect from above will never be raised up 3dly The Attribute or adjunct If this House of our Tabernacle ' T is ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an earthly Tabernacle-House and that in three regards In regard of its Composition Sustentation and Dissolution 1. In regard of its Original and Composition We were made out of the dust of the ground That curious frame that we see 't is but dust moulded up into a comely shape The matter out of which we were made was Earth all Elements meet in mixt Bodies yet in gross and heavy Bodies such as ours are Earth is predominant This speaketh the Wisdom and Power of God to make such a curious frame out of dust We read in the plagues of Aegypt the Magicians could not bring forth lice out of the dust of the ground Exod. 8.17 18 19. And yet God raised out of the dust of the ground such a noble Creature as man is And it serveth to humble us in the sense of our vileness who are but dust and ashes as to our original Gen. 18.27 Isa. 40.15 What should we Glory in The nobility of our birth We were made out of the dust of the ground as the worms are yea the worms are of the elder House for every creeping thing was made before man In our beauty or strength Prov. 31.30 Favour is deceitful and beauty is vain That part which we Glory in is but dust well coloured Or in Pomp of Living High and low shall lye down in the dust alike and the worms shall cover them Job 21.26 But chiefly it should remember us of our frailty 'T is on t Brass nor Iron or Stone or stiff Clay that we were made of but dust which hath no Coherence and Consistence but is easily dissipated and scattered with every puff of wind So is our dusty Tabernacle with every blast of God's displeasure 2dly In regard of Sustentation and support Psal. 104.14 He bringeth food for them out of the Earth Things bred there and nourished there feed us As the Body is framed out of the Earth so the means whereby it is supported is the Earth Meat and Drink and such like accommodations