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A96093 The beatitudes: or A discourse upon part of Christs famous Sermon on the Mount. Wherunto is added Christs various fulnesse. The preciousnesse of the soul. The souls malady and cure. The beauty of grace. The spiritual watch. The heavenly race. The sacred anchor. The trees of righteousnesse. The perfume of love. The good practitioner. By Thomas Watson, minister of the word at Stephens Walbrook in the city of London. Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1660 (1660) Wing W1107; Thomason E1031_1; ESTC R15025 429,795 677

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the children of God present Christ in the Arms of their Faith 2. The prayers of Gods children indited by the Spirit are ardent prayers Ye have received the Spirit whereby we cry Abba Father Rom. 8.15 Father that implies Faith we cry that implies fervency The incense was to be laid upon burning coals Lev. 16.12 The incense was a type of prayer the burning coals of ardency in prayer Elias prayed earnestly Jam. 5.17 In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verbis addita verbalia apud Hebraeus vehementiam significant Grot. IN PRAYING HE PRAYED that is he did it with vehemency † in prayer the heart must boyle over with heat of affection Prayer is compared to groans unutterable * Rom. 8.26 it alludes to a woman that is in pangs We should be in pangs when we are travelling for mercy such prayer commands God himself Isa 45.11 3. The prayers of Gods children are heart-cleansing prayers they purge out sin many pray against sin and sin against prayer Gods children do not only pray against sin but pray down sin 3. The Spirit of God hath a witnessing work in the heart Gods children have not only the influence of the Spirit but the witness Rom. 8.16 The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God There is a three-fold witness a child of God hath the witness of the Word the witness of Conscience the witness of the Spirit the Word makes the major Proposition He who is in such a manner qualified is a childe of God Conscience makes the minor but Thou art so divinely qualified the Spirit makes the conclusion therefore Thou art a child of God The Spirit joyns with the witness of Conscience Rom. 8.16 The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits The Spirit teacheth Conscience to search the Records of Scripture and finde its evidences for heaven it helps conscience to spell out its name in a promise it bears witness with our spirit Quest Quest But how shall I know the witness of the Spirit from a delusion Answ Answ The Spirit of God always witnesseth according to the Word as the Eccho answers the voyce Enthusiasts speak much of the Spirit but they leave the Word That inspiration which is either without the Word or against it is an imposture The Spirit of God did indite the Word 2 Pet. 1.21 Now if the Sp●rit should witness otherwise than according to the Word the Spirit should be divided against it self it should be a spirit of contradiction witnessing one thing for a truth in the Word and another thing different from it in a mans conscience 4. The fourth sign of Gods children is Zeal for God they are zealous for his Day his Truth his Glory they who are born of God are impatient of his dishonour Moses was cool in his own cause but hot in Gods when the people of Israel had wrought folly in the golden Calf he breaks the Tables When Saint Paul saw the people of Athens given to Idolatry his spirit was stirred in him Acts 17.16 In the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his spirit was imbittered or as the word may signifie he was in a Paroxysme or burning fit of zeal He could not contain but with this fire of zeal dischargeth against their sin As we shall answer for idle words so for sinful silence it is dangerous in this sense to be possessed with a dumb Divel David saith the zeal of Gods house had eaten him up Psal 69.9 Many Christians whose zeal once had almost eaten them up now they have eaten up their zeal they are grown tepid and neutral the breath of preferment blowing upon them hath cooled their heat I can never believe that he hath the heart of a childe in him that can be patient when Gods glory suffers Can an ingenuous childe endure to hear his father reproached though we should be silent under Gods displeasure yet not under his dishonour When there is an holy fire kindled in the heart it will break forth at the lips zeal tempered with holiness is the white and sanguine which gives the foul its best complexion Of all others let Ministers be impatient when Gods glory is impeached and eclipsed A Minister without zeal is like salt that hath lost its savour Zeal will make men take injuries done to God as done to themselves It is reported of Chrysostom that he reproved any sin against God as if he himself had received a personal wrong * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let not Ministers be either shaken with fear or seduced with flattery God never made Ministers to be as false glasses to make bad faces look fair for want of this fire of zeal they are in danger of another fire even the burning lake Rev. 21.8 into which the fearful shall be cast 5. Those who are Gods children and are born of God are of a more noble and celestial spirit than men of the world they minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things above * Col. 3.2 1 John 5.4 Whatsoever is born of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 overcometh the world The children of God live in an higher Region they are compared to Eagles Isa 40.31 in regard of their sublimeness and heavenly-mindedness their souls are fled aloft Christ is in their heart Col. 1.27 and the world is under their feet Rev. 12.1 Men of the world are ever tumbling in thick clay they are terrae filii not Eagles but Earth-worms the Saints are of another spirit they are born of God and walk with God as the childe walks with the father Noah walked with God Gen. 6.9 Gods children shew their high Pedigree in their heavenly Conversation Phil. 3.21 6. Another sign of Adoption is love to them that are children Gods children are knit together with the bond of love as all the members of the body are knit together by several nerves and ligaments If we are born of God then we love the brotherhood 1 Pet. 2.17 Idem est motus animae in imaginem rem he that loves the person loves the picture The children of God are his walking pictures and if we are of God we love those who have his Effigies and Pourtraiture drawn upon their souls If we are born of God we love the Saints notwithstanding their infirmities Children love one another though they have some imperfections of nature a squint-eye or a crooked back We love gold in the Oar though it have some drossiness in it the best Saints have their blemishes We read of the spot of Gods children Deutr. 32.5 A Saint in this life is like a fair face with a scar in it If we are born of God we love his children though they are poor we love to see the image and picture of our father though hung in never so poor a Frame we love to see a rich Christ in a poor man And if we are children of the Highest we shew our love to Gods children 1. By prizing their persons
And such is Christs blood it can never be emptied he that is poor in spirit hath recourse still to this fountain he sets an high value and appre●iation upon Christ he hides himself in Christs wounds * In vulacribus Christi dormio securus requiesco intrepidus Aug. he bathes himself in his blood he wraps himself in his Robe he sees a spiritual dearth and famine at home but he makes out to Christ Shew me the Lord saith he and it sufficeth 3. He that is poor in spirit is ever complaining of his spiritual estate that look as it is with a poor man he is ever telling you of his wants he hath nothing to help himself with he is ready to be starved so it is with him that is Poor in spirit he is ever complaining of his wants I want a broken heart a thankful heart he makes himself the most indigent creature though he dares not deny the work of grace which were a bearing false witness against the Spirit yet he mourns he hath no more grace This is the difference between an hypocrite and a child of God the hypocrite is ever telling what he hath a child of God complains of what he wants the one is glad he is so good the other grieves he is so bad the poor in spirit goes from Ordinance to Ordinance for a supply of his wants he would fain have his stock increased Try by this if you are poor in spirit while others complain they want children they want Estates do you complain you want Grace this is a good sign there is that maketh himself Poor yet hath great Riches Prov. 13.7 Some beggers have died rich the poor in spirit who have lain all their lives at the gate of mercy and have lived upon the Alms of free-grace have dyed rich in faith heirs to a Kingdom 4. He that is Poor in spirit is lowly in heart Rich men are commonly proud and scornful but the poor are submissive the poor in spirit rowle themselves in the dust in the sense of their unworthiness I abhor my self in dust Job 42.6 He who is poor in spirit looks at anothers excellencies and his own infirmities he denies not only his sins but his duties the more grace he hath the more humble he is because he now sees himself a greater debtor to God if he can do any duty he acknowledgeth it is Christs strength more than his own Phil. 4.13 as the Ship gets to the Haven more by the benefit of the wind than the sail So when a Christian makes any swift progress 't is more by the wind of Gods Spirit than the sail of his own indeavour the poor in spirit when he acts most like a Saint he confesseth himself the chief of sinners he blusheth more at the defect of his graces than others do at the excess of their sins he dares not say he hath prayed or wept he lives yet not he but Christ lives in him Gal. 2.20 He labours yet not he but the grace of God 1 Cor. 15.10 5. He who is poor in spirit is much in prayer he sees how short he is of the standard of holiness therefore begs for more grace Lord more faith more conformity to Christ A poor man is ever begging you may by this know one that is Poor in spirit he is ever begging for a spiritual Almes he knocks at heaven-gate he sends up sighs he poures out tears he will not away from the gate till he have his dole God loves a modest boldness in prayer such shall not be non-suited 6. The poor in spirit is content to take Christ upon his own terms the proud sinner will article and indent with Christ he will have Christ and his pleasure Christ and his covetousness but he that is poor in spirit sees himself lost without Christ and he is willing to have him upon his own terms a Prince as well as a Saviour Phil. 3.8 Jesus my Lord. A Castle that hath been long besieged and is ready to be taken will deliver up on any terms to save their lives he whose heart hath been a Garrison for the Divel and hath held out long in opposition against Christ when once God hath brought him to poverty of spirit and he sees himself damn'd without Christ let God propound what Articles he will he will readily subscribe to them Acts 9.6 Lord what wilt thou have me do He that is poor in spirit will do any thing that he may have Christ he will behead his beloved sin he will with Peter cast himself upon the water to come to Christ 7. He that is poor in spirit is an Exalter of free-grace none so magnifie mercy as the poor in spirit the poor are very thankful When Paul had tasted mercy how thankfully doth he adore free-grace 1 Tim. 1.14 The grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was super-exuberant he sets the crown of his salvation upon the head of free-grace as a man that is condemned and hath a pardon sent him how doth he proclaim the goodness and clemency of his Prince so Saint Paul displays free-grace in its orient colours he interlines all his Epistles with free-grace as a Vessel that hath been perfum'd makes the wine taste of it so Paul who was a Vessel perfum'd with mercy makes all his Epistles to taste of this perfume of free-grace they who are poor in spirit bless God for the least crumb that falls from the Table of free-grace SECT 4. Use 4 LAbour for poverty of spirit Christ begins with this Exhort and we must begin here if ever we be saved poverty of spirit is the foundation stone on which God layes the superstructure of glory There are four things may perswade Christians to be poor in spirit 1. This poverty is your riches you may have the worlds riches and yet be poor you cannot have this poverty but you must be rich poverty of spirit intitles you to all Christs riches 2. This poverty is your Nobility * Nobilis in●pia mentis humilitas Austin God looks upon you as persons of honour he that is vile in his own eyes is precious in Gods eyes * Tanto eris apud Deum reciosior qua●to fueris in oculis tuis despectior Isiod the way to rise is to fall God esteems the Valley highest 3. Poverty of spirit doth sweetly quiet the soul when a man is brought off himself to rest on Christ what a blessed calm is in the heart I am poor but my God shall supply all my need Phil. 4.19 I am unworthy but Christ is worthy I am indigent Christ is infinite Lead me to the Rock that is higher than I Psal 61.2 A man is safe upon a Rock when the soul goes out of it self and centers upon the Rock Christ now it is firmly setled upon its Basis this is the way to comfort thou wilt be wounded in spirit till thou comest to be poor in spirit 4. Poverty of
proud earthly malitious may say our father which art in hell 't is blasphemy to call God our Father and make the Divel our Pattern Gods children resemble him in meeknesse and holinesse they are his walking pictures As the Seale stamps its print and likenesse upon the Wax so doth God stamp the print and effigies of his own beauty upon his children 3. The third sign of Gods children is they have the Spirit of God 'T is called the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 ye have received the Spirit of adoption c. Quest How shall we know that we have received the Spirit of adoption and so are in the state of adoption Answ The Spirit of God hath a three-fold work in them who are made children 1. A Regenerating work 2. A Supplicating work 3. A Witnessing work 1. A Regenerating work whomsoever the Spirit adopts it regenerates Gods children are said to be born of the Spirit John 3.5 Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God we must first be born of the Spirit before we are baptized with this new name of sons and daughters we are not Gods children by creation but renovation not by our first birth but our new-birth This New-birth produced by the Word as the material cause * James 1.18 and by the Spirit as the efficient cause is nothing else but a change of nature Rom. 12.2 which though it be not a perfect change yet is a thorow change 1 Thes 5.23 This change of heart is as necessary * Generatus damnatus nisi regeneratus Austin as salvation Quest How shall we know that we have this regenerating work of the Spirit Answ Two wayes By the pangs By the products 1. By the pangs There are spiritual pangs before the new-birth some bruisings of soul some groanings and cryings out some struglings in the heart between flesh and spirit Acts 2.37 they were prick'd at their heart The child hath sharp throws before the birth so it is in the new-birth I grant the new-birth doth recipere magis minus all have not the same pangs of humiliation yet all have pangs all feel the hammer of the Law upon their heart though some are more bruised with this hammer than others Gods Spirit is a Spirit of bondage before it be a Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 What then shall we say to those who are as much to seek about the new-birth as Nicodemus John 3.4 How can a man be born when he is old c The new-birth is ludibrium impiis though it be grande mysterium piis some thank God they never had any trouble of spirit they were alwayes quiet These blesse God for the greatest curse it is a signe they are not Gods children the child of grace is alwayes born with pangs 2. The new-birth is known by the Products which are three 1. Sensibility The infant that is new-born is sensible of the least touch If the Spirit hath regenerated thee thou art sensible of the ebullitions and first risings of sin which before thou didst not perceive Paul cries out of the law in his members Rom. 7.23 The new-born Saint sees sin in the root 2. Circumspection He who is born of the Spirit is careful to preserve grace he plies the breast of Ordinances 1 Pet. 1.2 he is fearful of that which may endanger his spiritual life 1 John 5.18 he lives by faith yet passeth the time of his sojourning in fear 1 Pet. 1.17 This is the first work of the Spirit in them who are made children a regenerating work 3. The Spirit of God hath a supplicating work in the heart The spirit of adoption is a spirit of supplication Rom. 8.15 Ye have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father While the child is in the womb it cannot cry while men lie in the womb of their natural estate they cannot pray effectually but when they are born of the Spirit then they cry Abba Father Prayer is nothing else but the souls breathing it self into the bosome of its Father 'T is a sweet and familiar intercourse with God as soon us ever the Spirit of God comes into the heart it sets it a praying no sooner was Paul converted but the next word is behold he prayeth * Implet Spiritus Sanctus organum suum tanquam filia chordarum tangit digitus Dei corda Sanctorum Prosper in Epist Acts 9.11 It is reported in the life of Luther when he prayed it was with so much reverence as if he were praying to God and with so much boldnesse as if he had been speaking to his friend * Theodor. in vit Luth. p. 142. And Eusebius reports of Constantine the Emperour that everyday he used to shut up himself in some secret place in his Palace and there on bended knees did make his devour prayers and soliloquies to God Gods Spirit tunes the strings of the affections and then we make melody in prayer For any to say in derision you pray by the Spirit is a blasphemy against the Spirit it is a main work of the Spirit of God in the hearts of his children to help them to pray Gal. 4.6 Because you are sons God hath sent the spirit of his Son into your hearts Crying Abba Father Quest But many of the children of God have not such abilities to expresse themselves in prayer how then doth the Spirit help their infirmities Answ Though they have not alwayes the gifts of the Spirit in prayer yet they have the groans of the Spirit Rom. 8.26 Gifts are the Ornament of prayer but not the life of prayer A carcass may be hung with jewels Though the Spirit may deny fluency of speech yet it gives fervency of desire and such prayers are most prevalent The prayers which the Spirit indites in the hearts of Gods children have these three-fold qualifications 1. The prayers of Gods children are believing prayers Prayer is the key Faith is the hand that turns it Faith feathers the Arrow of prayer and makes it pierce the Throne of grace Matth. 21.22 Whatever you shall ask in prayer believing ye shall receive Whereupon saith Hierom * Non orarem nisi crederem I would not presume to pray unless I bring faith along with me to pray and not believe is as one saith a kind of jeer offered to God * Irrisio Dei est Pelican as if we thought either he did not hear or he would not grant That Faith may be animated in prayer we must bring Christ in our Arms when we appear before God 1 Sam. 7.9 And Samuel took a sucking Lamb and offered it for a burnt-offering and Samuel cryed unto the Lord for Israel and the Lord heard him this sucking Lamb typified Christ When we come to God in prayer we must bring the Lamb Christ along with us Themistocles carried the Kings son in his Arms and so pacified the King when he was angry * Thucyd.
the first link of the chaine in his hand hath the whole chaine The Saints have the Spirit of God in them 2 Tim. 1.14 The Holy Ghost which dwelleth in us How can the blessed Spirit be in a man and he not blessed a godly mans heart is a Paradise planted with the choicest fruit and God himself walks in the midst of this Paradise and must he not needs be blessed 2. The Saints are already blessed because their sins are not imputed to them Psal 32.2 Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity Gods not imputing iniquity signifies Gods making of sin not to be 't is as if the man had never sinned the debt-book is cancel'd in Christs blood and if the debtor owe never so much yet if the creditor cross the book it is as if he had never owed any thing Gods not imputing sin is that God will never call for the debt or if it should be called for it shall be hid out of sight Jer. 50.20 In those days the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for and there shall be none and the sins of Judah and they shall not be found Now such a man who hath not sin imputed to him is blessed and the reason is because if sin be not imputed to a man then the curse is taken away and if the curse be taken away then he must needs be blessed 3. The Saints are already blessed because they are in Covenant with God This is clear by comparing two Scriptures Jer. 31.33 I will be their God and Psal 144.15 Happy is that people whose God is the Lord This is the crowning blessing to have the Lord for our God impossible it is to imagine that God should be our God and we not blessed This sweet word I will be your God implies 1. Propriety that all that is in God shall be ours his love ours his Spirit ours his mercy ours 2. It implies all Relations 1. Of a Father 2 Cor. 6.18 I will be a Father unto you The sons of a Prince are happy how blessed are the Saints who are of the true blood Royal 2. It implies the relation of an Husband Isa 54.5 Thy Maker is thy husband The Spouse being contracted to her husband is happy by having an interest in all he hath The Saints being contracted by faith are blessed though the solemnity of the Marriage be kept for heaven 3. It implies terms of friendship They who are in Covenant with God are Favourites of heaven Abraham my friend Isa 41.8 'T is counted a Subjects happiness to be in favour with his Prince though he may live a while from Court how happy must he needs be who is Gods Favourite 4. The Saints are already blessed because they have a Reversion of heaven as on the contrary he who hath hell in Reversion is said to be already condemned John 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already He is as sure to be condemned as if he were condemned already So he who hath heaven in Reversion may be said to be already blessed a man that hath the Reversion of an house after a short Lease is run out he looks upon it as his already this house saith he is mine So a believer hath a Reversion of heaven after the Lease of life is run out and he can say at present Christ is mine and glory is mine he hath jus ad rem a title to heaven and he is a blessed man that hath a title to shew nay faith turns the Reversion into a Possession 5. The Saints are already blessed because they have Primitias the first fruits of blessedness here We read of the earnest of the Spirit and the seal 2 Cor. 1.22 and the first fruits Rom. 8.23 Heaven is already begun in a believer Rom. 14.17 The Kingdome of God is peace and joy in the Holy Ghost This Kingdome is in a believers heart Luk. 17.21 The people of God have a prelibation and taste of blessedness here As Israel tasted a bunch of grapes before they were actually possessed of Canaan So the children of God have those secret incomes of the Spirit those smiles of Christs face those kisses of his lips those love-tokens that are as bunches of grapes and they think themselves sometimes in heaven Paul was let down in a basket Acts 9.25 Oftentimes the Comforter is let down to the soul in an Ordinance and now the soul is in the Suburbs of Hierusalem above a Christian sees heaven by faith and tasts it by joy and what is this but blessedness 6. The Saints may be said in this life to be blessed because all things tend to make them blessed Rom. 8.28 All things work for good to them that love God We say to him that hath every thing falling out for the best You are an happy man the Saints are very happy for all things haue a tendency to their good prosperity doth them good adversity doth them good nay sin turns to their good every trip makes them more watchful their maladies are their medicines are not they happy persons that have every wind blowing them to the right Port 7. A Saint may be said to be blessed because part of him is already blessed he is blessed in his head Christ his head is in glory Christ and believers make one body mystical their head is gotten into heaven Use 1. Inform. Branch 1. See the difference between Use 1 a wicked man and a godly Inform. let a wicked man have never so many comforts still he is cursed let a godly man have Branch 1 never so many crosses still he is blessed let a wicked man have the candle of God shining on him Job 29.3 let his way be so smooth that he meets with no rubs let him have success yet still there is a curse entailed upon him you may read the sinners Inventory Deut. 28.16 17 18. He is not more full of sin than he is of a curse though perhaps he blesseth himself in his wickedness yet he is heir to Gods curse all the curses of the Bible are his portion and at the day of death this portion is sure to be paid but a godly man in the midst of all his miseries is blessed he may be under the cross but not under a curse Branch 2. It shews the priviledge of a believer he Branch 2 not only shall be blessed but he is blessed blessedness is begun in him Psal 115.15 You are blessed of the Lord Let the condition of the Righteous be never so sad yet it is blessed he is blessed in affliction Psal 94. Blessed is he whom thou chastenest Blessed in poverty James 2.5 Poor in the world rich in faith Blessed in disgrace 1 Pet. 4.14 The Spirit of God and of glory resteth upon you This may be a cordial to the fainting Christian he is blessed in life and death Satan cannot supplant him of the blessing Branch 3 Branch 3. How may this take away murmuring and melancholy from a child of
God Wilt thou repine and be sad when thou art blessed Esau wept because he wanted the blessing Gen. 27.38 Bless me even me also O my Father and Esau lift up his voice and wept But shall a child of God be immoderately cast down when he hath the blessing Adam sin'd in the midst of Paradise how evil is it to be blessed and yet murmure Branch 4 Branch 4. What an encouragement is this to godliness we are all ambitious of a blessing then let us espouse Religion Psal 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord. But you will say this way is everywhere spoken against 't is no matter seeing this is the way to get a blessing Suppose a Rich man should adopt another for his heir and others should reproach him he cares not as long as he is heir to the Estate So what though others may reproach thee for thy Religion as long as it entails a blessing upon thee the same day thou becomest godly thou becomest blessed CHAP. IV. MATTH 5. ● Blessed are the Poor in Spirit HAving spoken of the general notion of blessedness I come next to consider the Subjects of this blessedness and these our Saviour hath decyphered to be the Poor in Spirit the mourners c. But before I touch upon these I shall a little Preface or Paraphrase upon this Sermon of the Beatitudes 1. Observe the Divinity in this Sermon which goes beyond all Philosophy The Philosophers use to say contrarium contrarium expellit one contrary expels another but here one contrary begets another poverty useth to expel riches but here poverty begets riches for how rich are they that have a Kingdom mourning useth to expel joy but behold here mourning begets joy They shall be comforted Water useth to quench the flame but the water of tears kindles the flame of joy Persecution useth to expel happiness but here it makes happy Blessed are they that are persecuted These are the sacred Paradoxes in our Saviours Sermon * Evangelicam Philosophiam à Parado●is inchoavit Dominus ●nd Cl●● 2. Observe how Christs Doctrine and the opinion of carnal men differ They think beati divites blessed are the rich The world would count him blessed who could have Midas wish that all he touch'd might be turn'd into gold But Christ saith Beati pauperes blessed are the poor in spirit The world thinks Blessed are they on the Pinacle but Christ pronounceth them blessed who are in the Valley Christs reckonings and the worlds do not agree 3. Observe the nature of true Religion Poverty leads the Van and Persecution brings up the Reare Christianus quasi Crucianus Every true Saint saith Luther is heire to the Crosse Some there are who would be thought religious displaying Christs Colours by a glorious profession but to be poor in spirit and persecuted durus hic sermo they cannot take down this bitter pill they would weare Christs Jewels but wave his Crosse these are strangers to Religion 4. Observe the certain connexion between grace and its reward they who are poor in spirit shall have the kingdom of God They are as sure to go to heaven as if they were in heaven already Our Saviour would encourage men to Religion by sweetning Commands with Promises he ties duty and reward together As in the body the veines carry the blood and the arteries the spirits so one part of these Verses carries Duty and the other part carries reward As that Scholar of Apelles painted Helena richly drawn in costly and glorious apparel hung all over with orient pearl and precious stones So our Lord Christ having set down several qualifications of a Christian poor in spirit pure in heart c. draws these heavenly vertues in their fair colours of blessednesse and sets the magnificent crown of reward upon them that by this oriency he might the more set forth their unparallel'd beauty and entice holy love 5. Observe hence the concatenation of the graces poor in spirit meek merciful c. where there is one grace there is all As they say of the Cardinal vertues virtutes sunt inter se connexae the vertues are chained together so we may say of the graces of the Spirit they are link'd and chain'd together he that hath poverty of Spirit is a mourner he that is a mourner is meek he that is meek is merciful c. The Spirit of God plants in the heart an habit of all the graces the new creature hath all the parts and lineaments as in the body there is a composition of all the Elements and a mixture of all the humours The graces of the Spirit are like a Row of pearl which hang together upon the string of Religion and serve to adorn Christs Bride This I note to shew you a difference between an hypocrite and a true child of God The hypocrite flatters himself with a pretence of grace but in the mean time he hath not an habit of all the graces he hath not poverty of spirit nor purity of heart whereas a child of God hath all the graces in his heart at least radically though not gradually These things being premised I come in particular to those heavenly dispositions of soul to which Christ hath affixed blessedness And the first is POVERTY of SPIRIT Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Chrysostom and Theophylact are of opinion that this was the first Sermon that ever Christ made therefore it may challenge our best attention Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Our Lord Christ being to raise an high and stately Fabrick of blessedness lays the foundation of it low in poverty of Spirit but all poverty is not blessed * Non omnis paupertas beata B●ugensis I shall use a four-fold distinction 1. I distinguish between Poor in Estate and Poor in Spirit there are the Divels poor poor and wicked whose cloaths are not more torn than their conscience There are some whose poverty is their sin who through Improvidence or Excess have brought themselves to want these may be poor in Estate but not poor in Spirit 2. I distinguish between spiritually Poor and Poor in spirit he who is without grace is spiritually poor but he is not poor in Spirit he knows not his own beggery Rev. 3.17 Thou knowest not that thou art Poor He is in the worst sense poor who hath no sense of his poverty 3. I distinguish between Poor-spirited and Poor in spirit They are said to be poor-spirited who have mean base spirits who act below themselves 1. As they are men such are those Misers which having great Estates yet can hardly afford themselves bread who live sneakingly and are ready to wish their own throats cut because they are forced to spend something in satisfying Natures demands This Solomon calls an evil under the Sun Eccles 6.2 There is an evil which I have seen under the Sun a man to whom God hath given Riches so that he wants nothing for his soul of all that he desireth yet
of price is only precious to the poor in spirit he that wants bread and is ready to starve will have it whatever it cost he will lay his garment to pledge bread he must have or he is undone So to him that is Poor in spirit that sees his want of Christ how precious is a Saviour Christ is Christ and grace is grace to him he will do any thing for the bread of life therefore will God have the soul thus qualified to raise the price of his Market to inhance the value and estimate of the Lord Jesus Reason 3 3. Till we are Poor in spirit we cannot go to heaven Theirs is the Kingdom of heaven this doth tune and prepare us for heaven By nature a man is big with self-confidence and the gate of heaven is so strait that he cannot enter now poverty of spirit doth minorare animam it doth lessen the soul it pares off its superfluity and now he is fit to enter in at the strait gate The great Cable cannot go through the eye of the Needle but let it be untwisted and made into small threads and then it may Poverty of spirit untwists the great Cable it makes a man little in his own eyes and now an entrance shall be made unto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Richly into the Everlasting Kingdom 2 Pet. 1.11 Through this Temple of Poverty we must go into the Temple of Glory SECT 1. Use 1 Use 1 IT shews wherein a Christians riches do consist namely in poverty of spirit Some think if they can fill their bags with gold then they are rich but they who are poor in spirit are the rich men they are rich in poverty This poverty entitles them to a Kingdom How poor are they that think themselves rich how rich are they that see themselves poor I call it the Jewel of poverty There are some Paradoxes in Religion that the world cannot understand for a man to become a fool that he may be wise 1 Cor. 3.18 to save his life by losing it Matth. 16.25 and by being poor to be rich Reason laughs at it but blessed are the poor for theirs is the Kingdom Then this poverty is to be striven for more than all riches under these rags is hid cloth of gold out of this carcasse comes hony SECT 2. Use 2 IF blessed are the poor in spirit then by the rule of contraries Cursed are the proud in spirit Prov. 16.5 There is a generation of men who do commit idolatry with themselves no such idol as self They admire their own parts moralities self-righteousnesse and upon this stock graft the hope of their salvation There are many are too good to go to heaven they have commodities enough of their own growth and they scorne to live upon the borrow or be beholding to Christ These bladders the Divel hath blown up with pride and they are swell'd in their own conceit but it is like the swelling of a dropsie-man whose bignesse is his disease thus it was with that proud Justiciary Luke 18.11 The Pharisee stood and prayed God I thank thee that I am not as other men are extortioners unjust adulterers or even as this Publican I fast twice in the week I give tythes c. Here was a man setting up the top-sail of pride but the Publican who was poor in spirit he stood a far off and would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven but smot upon his brest saying God be merciful to me a sinner This man carried away the Garland I tell you saith Christ this man went down to his house justified rather than the other Saint Paul before his conversion thought himself in a very good condition Touching the Law blamelesse Phil. 3.6 He thought to have built a Tower of his own righteousnesse the top whereof should have reached to heaven but at last God shewed him there was a crack in the foundation and then he gets into the Rock of ages Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him There is not a more dangerous praecipice than self-righteousnesse this was Laodicea's temper Rev. 3.17 because thou sayest I am rich and have need of nothing and knowest not that thou art wretched and miserable c. She thought she wanted nothing when indeed she had nothing How many doth this damne we see some ships that have scaped the rocks yet are cast away upon the sands so some who have scaped the rocks of grosse sins yet are cast away upon the sands of self-righteousnesse and how hard is it to convince such men of their danger they will not believe but they may be help'd out of the Dungeon with these rotten rags they cannot be perswaded their case is so bad as others would make it Christ tells them they are blind but they are like Seneca's maid who was born blind but she would not beleeve it Ait domum esse coecam The house saith she is dark but I am not blind Christ tells them they are naked and offers his white robes to cover them but they are of a different perswasion and because they are blind they cannot see themselves naked how many have perished by being their own saviours O that this might drive the proud sinner out of himself a man never comes to himself till he comes out of himself and no man can come out till first Christ come in SECT 3. Use 3 IF poverty of spirit be so necessary Trial. How shall I Use 3 know that I am poor in spirit Answ By the blessed effects of this Poverty which are 1. He that is poor in spirit is weaned from himself Psalm 131.2 My soul is even as a weaned child 't is hard for a man to be weaned from himself The Vine catcheth hold of every thing that is near to stay it self upon There is some bough or other a man would be catching hold of to rest upon how hard is it to be brought quite off himself The poor in spirit are divorced from themselves they see they must to hell without Christ My soul is even as a weaned child 2. He that is poor in spirit is a Christ-admirer he hath high thoughts of Christ he sees himself naked and flies to Christ that in his garments he may obtaine the blessing He sees himself wounded and as the wounded Deere runs to the water so he thirsts for Christs blood the water of life Lord saith he give me Christ or I die conscience is turned into a fiery Serpent and hath stung him now all the world for a brazen serpent he sees himself in a state of death and how precious is one leaf of the tree of life which is both for food and medicine The poor in spirit sees all his riches lye in Christ wisdome righteousnesse sanctification c. In every exigence he flies to this magazine and store-house he adores the all-fulnesse in Christ They say of the oyle in Rhemes though they are continually almost spending it yet it never wasts
there is hope Repentance unravels sin and makes sin not to be but hardness of heart binds guilt fast upon the soul it seals a man under wrath it is not the hainousness of sin but hardness of heart that damns this makes the sin against the Holy Ghost uncapable of mercy because the sinner that hath committed it is uncapable of Repentance CHAP. VII Containing a sharp Reprehension Use 1 Use 1 THIS Doctrine draws up a Charge against several sorts Reproof Branch 1 1. Those that think themselves good Christians yet have not learned this Art of holy Mourning Luther calls Mourning Bara herba a rare herb Men have tears to shed for other things but have none to spare for their sins there are many Murmurers but few Mourners most are like the stony ground which wanted moisture Matth. 13. We have many cry out of hard times but are not sensible of hard hearts hot and dry is the worst temper of the body sure I am to be hot in sin and to be so dry as to have no tears is the worst temper of the soul How many are like Gideons dry Fleece and like the Mountains of Gilboa there is no dew upon them Did Christ bleed for sin and canst not thou weep if Gods bottle be not filled with tears his Vial will be filled with wrath We have many sinners in Sion but few mourners in Sion It is with most people as with a man on the top of a Mast the Winds blow and the Waves beat and the ship is in danger of shipwrack and he is fast asleep so when the Waves of sin have even covered men and the stormy wind of Gods Wrath blows and is ready to blow them into hell yet they are asleep in security 2. It reproves them who instead of weeping for sin Branch 2 spend their dayes in mirth and jollity instead of Mourners we have Ranters they take the Timbrel and Harp they spend their dayes in wealth Job 21.13 Vitam agunt Sybariticam * Luther they do not lugere animo but indulgere genio they live Epicures and dye Atheists St. James bids us turn our laughter to Mourning Jam. 4.9 But they turn their Mourning to laughter Sampson was brought forth to make the Philistines sport Judg. 16.26 The jovial sinner doth make the Divel sport it is a saying of Theophylact It is one of the worst sights to see a sinner go laughing to hell How unseasonable is it to take the Harp and Viol when God is taking the Sword Ezek. 21.9 10. A sword a sword is sharpned and also furbished should we then make mirth this is a sin that enrageth God Isa 22.12 13. In that day did the Lord of Hosts call to weeping and to mourning and behold joy and gladness slaying Oxen and killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine and it was revealed in mine ears by the Lord of Hosts Surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till you dye saith the Lord God of Hosts That is this your sin shall not be done away by any expiatory sacrifice but vengeance shall pursue you for ever 3. It reproves those who instead of mourning for sin Branch 3 rejoyce in sin Prov. 2.14 2 Thess 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who take pleasure in iniquity Wicked men are worse in this sense than the damned in hell for I dare say they take little pleasure in their sins there are some so impudently profane that they will make themselves and others merry with their sins sin is a soul-sickness Luke 5.31 Will a man make merry with his disease ah wretch did Christ bleed for sin and dost thou laugh at sin is that thy mirthwhich grieves the Spirit * Tantis in malis laetari diesque jocis choreis consumere nonne est eos imitari qui phrenesi laborant qui dum carnes proprias laccrant ridem Isid Clar. is it a time for a man to break jests when he is upon the Scaffold and his head is to be stricken off thou that laughest at sin now the time is coming when God will laugh at thy calamity Prov. 1.26 Branch 4 4. It reproves those that cry down mourning for sin they are like the Philistines who stopped the Wells Gen. 26.15 These would stop the Wells of godly sorrow Antimonians say this is a legal Doctrine but Christ here preacheth it Blessed are they that mourn and the Apostles preached it Mark 6.11 And they went out and preached that men should repent Holy ingenuity will put us upon mourning for sin he that hath the heart of a child cannot but weep for his unkindness against God Mourning for sin is the very fruit and product of the Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 Such as cry down Repentance cry down the Spirit of grace mourning for sin is the only way to keep off wrath from us such as with Sampson would break this Pillar go about to pull down the vengeance of God upon the Land To all such I say as Peter to Simon Magus Acts 8.22 Repent therefore of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee O sinner Repent that thou hast cryed down Repentance CHAP. VIII Motives to holy mourning 2. LET me exhort Christians to holy Mourning Use 2 Exhort I now perswade such a Mourning as will prepare the soul for blessedness Oh that our hearts were spiritual limbicks distilling the water of holy tears Christs Doves weep Ezek. 7.16 They that escape shall be like Doves of the Vallies all of them mourning every one for his iniquity There are several Divine Motives to holy Mourning 1. Tears cannot be put to a better use if you weep Motive 1 for outward losses you lose your tears 't is like a showre upon a Rock which doth no good but tears for sin are blessed tears Blessed are they that mourn These poyson our corruptions salt-water kills the worms the brinish water of repenting tears will help to kill that worm of sin which would gnaw the conscience 2. Gospel-Mourning is an evidence of grace Zach. Motive 2 12.10 I will poure upon the house of David and the Inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and they shall mourn c. The Holy Ghost descended on Christ like a Dove Matth. 3. The Dove is a weeping creature where there is a Dove-like weeping it is a good sign the Spirit of God hath descended there weeping for sin is a sign of the new birth assoon as the child is born it weeps Exod. 2.3 And behold the babe wept To weep kindly for sin is a good sign we are born of God Mourning shews an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 A stone will not melt when the heart is in a melting frame it is a sign the heart of stone is taken away Motive 3 3. The preciousness of tears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tears dropping from a mournful penitent eye are like the water dropping from the Roses very sweet and precious to God
joy God poures the golden oyle of comfort into broken Vessels the Mourners heart is emptied of pride and God fills the empty with his blessing the Mourners tears have helped to purge out corruption and after purging physick God gives a Julip The Mourner is ready to faint away under the burden of sin and then the bottle of strong water comes seasonably The Lord would have the incestuous person upon his deep humiliation to be comforted lest he should be swallowed up with over much sorrow 2 Cor. 2.7 This is the Mourners priviledge he shall be comforted the Valley of tears brings the soul into a Paradise of joy a sinners joy brings forth sorrow the mourners sorrow brings forth joy John 16.22 Your sorrow shall be turned into joy The Saints have a wet seed-time but a joyful Harvest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They shall be comforted SECT I. Showing the mourners comforts here NOw to illustrate this I shall show you what the comforts are the mourners shall have These comforts are of a divine infusion and they are two-fold either Here or Hereafter * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 1. Comforts here 1. COMFORTS HERE They are called the consolations of God Job 15.11 That is Great comforts such as none but God can Give they exceed all other comforts as far as heaven doth earth The root on which these comforts grow is The blessed Spirit he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Comforter John 14.26 and comfort is said to be a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Christ did purchase peace the Spirit speaks peace Quest How doth the Spirit comfort Answ Either Mediately or Immediately 1. Mediately By helping us to apply the Promises to ourselves and draw water out of those Wells of salvation we lie as dead children at the breast till the Spirit helps us to suck the breast of a Promise and when the Spirit hath taught Faith this Art now comfort flows in O how sweet is the breast-milk of a Promise 2. The Spirit comforts immediatly The Spirit by a more direct act presents God to the soul as reconciled it sheds his love abroad in the heart from whence flows infinite joy Rom. 5.5 The Spirit secretly whispers Pardon for sin and the sight of a Pardon dilates the heart with joy Matth. 9.2 Be of good chear thy sinnes are forgiven thee That I may speak more fully to this point I shall show you the qualifications and excellencies of these comforts which God gives his mourners 1. These comforts are real comforts the Spirit of God cannot witness to that which is untrue There are many in this age do pretend to comfort but their comforts are meere impostures the body may as well swell with wind as with flesh a man may as well be swelled with false as true comforts * Distinguendum est inter Gaudia Veritatis Vanitatis Aug. The comforts of the Saints are certain they have the seal of the Spirit set to them Ephes 1.13 2 Cor. 1.22 A seal is for confirmation when a Deed is sealed it is firme and unquestionable When a Christian hath the seal of the Spirit stamped upon his heart now he is confirmed in the love of God Quest Wherein do these comforts of the Spirit which are unquestionably sure differ from those which are false and pretended Answ Three ways 1. The comforts of Gods Spirit are laid in deep conviction John 16.7 8 and when he that is the Comforter verse 7. is come he shall reprove or as the Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall convince the world of sinne Quest Why doth conviction go before consolation Answ Conviction fits for comfort by conviction the Spirit doth sweetly dispose the heart to these two things 1. To seek after Christ When once the soul is convinced of sin and the hell that follows it now a Saviour is precious When the Spirit hath shot in the arrow of conviction now saith a poor soul where may I meet with Christ In what Ordinance may I come to enjoy Christ saw ye him whom my soul loves All the world for one glimpse of my Saviour 2. The Spirit by conviction makes the heart willing to receive Christ upon his own termes man by nature would article and indent with Christ he would take half Christ he would take him for a Saviour not a Prince he would accept of Christ as he hath an head of gold Cant. 5.11 but not as he hath the government upon his shoulders Isa 9.6 But when God le ts loose the spirit of bondage and convinceth a sinner of his lost undone condition now he is content to have Christ upon any termes When Paul was struck down to the ground by a spirit of conviction he cries out Lord what wilt thou have me to do Acts 9.6 Let God propound what Articles he will the soul will subscribe to them Now when a man is brought to Christs termes to beleeve and obey then he is fit for mercy when the Spirit of God hath been a Spirit of conviction then it becomes a spirit of consolation when the plough of the Law hath gone upon the heart and broken up the fallow ground now God sows the seed of comfort Those who brag of comfort but were never yet convinced nor broken for sin have cause to suspect their comfort to be a delusion of Satan It is like a mad mans joy who fancies himself to be King but it may be said of his laughter it is mad Eccles 2.2 The seed which wanted depth of earth withered Matth. 13. that comfort which wants depth of earth deep humiliation and conviction will soone wither and come to nothing 2. The Spirit of God is a sanctifying before a comforting Spirit as Gods Spirit is called the Comforter so he is called a spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 Grace is the work of the Spirit Comfort is the seal of the Spirit the work of the Spirit goes before the seal the graces of the spirit are compared to water Isa 44.3 and the comforts of the spirit are compared to oyle Isa 61.1 First God pours in the water of the spirit and then comes the oyle of gladnesse The oyle in this sence runs above the water Hereby we shall know whether our comforts are true and genuine Some talk of the comforting spirit who never had the sanctifying Spirit they boast of assurance but never had grace these are spurious joyes these comforts will leave men at death they will end in horror and despair Gods Spirit will never set seal to a Blank First the heart must be an Epistle written with the finger of the Holy Ghost and then it is sealed with the Spirit of Promise 3. The comforts of the Spirit are humbling Lord saith the soul What am I that I should have a smile from heaven and that thou shouldest give me a privy seal of thy love The more water is poured into a Bucket the lower it descends the fuller the ship is laden
with sweet spices the lower it sails the more a Christian is filled with the sweet comforts of the Spirit the lower he fails in humility the fuller a Tree is of fruit the lower the bough hangs the more full we are of the fruits of the Spirit joy and peace Gal. 5.22 the more we bend down in humility St. Paul a chosen Vessel * Acts 9.15 fill'd with the wine of the Spirit * 2 Cor. 5.1 did not more abound in joy than in lowliness of mind Eph. 3.8 Unto me who am less than the least of all Saints is this grace given c. He who was the chief of the Apostles calls himself the least of Saints Those who say they have comfort but are proud they have learned to despise others and are climb'd above Ordinances their comforts are delusions the Divel is able not only to transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11.4 but he can transform himself into the Comforter 'T is easie to counterfeit money to silver over brass and put the Kings image upon it the Divel can silver over false comforts and make them look as if they had the stamp of the King of heaven upon them the comforts of God are humbling though they lift the heart up in thankfulness yet they do not puff it up in pride 2. The comforts God gives his Mourners are unmixed they are not tempered with any bitter ingredients worldly comforts are like wine that runs dregs there is that guilt within checks and corrodes in midst of laughter the heart is sad Prov 14.13 Queen Mary once said if she were opened they would find Callis lying at her heart if the breast of a sinner were anatomized and opened you would find a worm gnawing at his heart guilt is a Wolf which feeds in the breast of his comfort a sinner may have a smiling countenance but a chiding conscience his mirth is like the mirth of a man in debt who is every houre in fear of arresting the comforts of wicked men are spiced with bitterness they are worm-wood wine Hi sunt qui trepidant ad omnia fulgura pallent Hor. Cum tonat exanimes primo quoque murmure coelum But spiritual comforts are pure they are not muddied with guilt nor mixed with fear they are the pure wine of the Spirit what the Mourner feels is joy and nothing but joy 3. These comforts God gives his Mourners are sweet Eccles 12.7 Truly the light is sweet so is the light of Gods countenance How sweet are those comforts which bring the Comforter along with them John 14.16 Therefore the love of God shed into the heart is said to be better than wine Cant. 1.2 Wine pleaseth the palate but the love of God chears the conscience the lips of Christ drop sweet smelling myrrhe Cant. 5.13 The comforts God gives are a Christians Musick they are the golden Pot and the Manna the Nectar and Ambrosia of a Christian they are the Saints Festival their banquetting stuffe so sweet are these Divine comforts that the Church had her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fainting fits for want of them Cant. 2.5 stay me with flagons Metonymia Subjecti pro adjuncto the flagons are put for the wine by these flagons are meant the comforts of the Spirit the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies all variety of delights to show the abundance of delectability and sweetnesse in these comforts of the Spirit Comfort me with Apples Apples are sweet in taste fragrant in smell so sweet and delicious are those Apples which grow upon the tree in Paradise These comforts from above are so sweet that they make all other comforts sweet health estate relations they are like sawce which makes all our earthly possessions and enjoyments come off with a better relish So sweet are these comforts of the Spirit that they do much abate and moderate our joy in worldly things he who hath been drinking spirits of wine or Alkermes will not much thirst after water and that man who hath once tasted how sweet the Lord is Psal 34.8 and hath drunk the cordials of the Spirit will not thirst immoderately after secular delights Those who play with dogs and birds it is a signe they have no children such as are inordinate in their desire and love of the creature declare plainly that they never had better comforts 4. These comforts which God gives his mourners are holy comforts they are call'd the comforts of the holy Ghost Acts 9.31 Every thing propagates in its own kind * Omne agens operatur secundum naturam agens the holy Ghost can no more produce impure joys in the soul than the Sun can prduce darknesse he who hath the comforts of the Spirit looks upon himself as a person engaged to do God more service Hath the Lord looked upon me with a smiling face I can never pray enough I can never love God enough The comforts of the Spirit raise in the heart an holy antipathy against sin the Dove hates every feather that hath grown upon the Hawke so there is an hatred of every motion and temptation to evil he who hath a principle of life in him opposeth every thing that would destroy life he hates poison so he that hath the comforts of the Spirit living in him sets himself against those sins which would murder his comforts divine comforts give the soul more acquaintance with God 1 John 1.4 Our fellowship is with the Father and his Sonne Jesus 5. The comforts reserv'd for the mourners are filling comforts Rom. 15.13 The God of hope fill you with joy John 16.24 Ask that your joy may be full When God pours in the joyes of heaven they fill the heart and make it run over 2 Cor. 7.4 I am exceeding joyful the Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I overflow with joy as a Cup that is filled with wine till it runs over Outward comforts can no more fill the heart than a Triangle can fill a Circle Spiritual joyes are satisfying Psal 63.5 My heart shall be satisfied as with marrow and I will praise thee with ioyful lips Davids heart was full and the joy did break out at his lips Psal 4.7 Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart worldly joyes do put gladnesse into the face 2 Cor. 5.12 they rejoyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the face but the Spirit of God puts gladnesse into the heart divine joyes are heart-joyes Zach. 10.7 John 16.22 Your heart shall rejoyce a believer doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 1.47 My spirit rejoyceth in God And to show how filling these comforts are which are of an heavenly extraction the Psalmist saith they create greater joy than when wine and cyle encrease Psal 4. Wine and Oyle may delight but not satisfie they have their vacuity and indigence we may say as Zach. 10.2 they comfort in vaine outward comforts do sooner cloy than chear and sooner weary than fill Xerxes offered great rewards to him
time of drought so neither is any man to dispute or quarrel with God when he stops the sweet influence of comfort but ought rather to acquiesce in his sacred will But though the Lord might by vertue of his Soveraignty with-hold comfort from the Mourner yet there may be many pregnant causes assigned why Mourners want comfort 1. In regard of God 2. In regard of themselves 1. In regard of God He sees it fit to with-hold comfort 1. That he may raise the value of grace We are apt to esteem comfort above grace therefore God locks up our comforts for a time that he may inhance the price of grace when farthings go better than gold the King will call in farthings that the price of gold may be the more raised 2. God would have his people learn to serve him for himself and not for comfort only it is amor Meretricius an Harlot love to love the husbands money and tokens more than his person such as serve God only for comfort do not so much serve God as serve themselves of him 2. That Gods Mourners want comfort it is most frequently in regard of themselves 1. Through mistake which is two-fold 1. They go not to the right spring for comfort they go to their tears when they should go to Christs blood it is a kind of Idolatry to make our tears the ground of comfort Mourning is not meritorious it is the way to joy not the cause Jacob got the blessing in the garments of his elder brother true comfort flows out of Christs sides our tears are stained till they are washed in the blood of Christ John 16. ult In me peace 2. Mistake is that Mourners are priviledged persons and may take more liberty they may slacken the strings of duty and let loose the reins to sin Christ hath indeed purchased a liberty for his people but an holy liberty not a liberty for sin but from sin 1 Pet. 2.16 Ye are a Royal Priesthood a peculiar people ye are not in a state of slavery but Royalty What follows do not make Christian liberty a cloak for sin Ver. 16. As free and not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciousness If we quench the sanctifying Spirit God will quench the comforting Spirit sin is compared to a cloud Isa 44.22 This cloud intercepts the light of Gods countenance 2. Gods Mourners sometimes want comfort through discontent and peevishness David makes his disquiet the cause of his sadness Psal 43.5 Why art thou cast down O my soul why art thou disquieted within me A disquieted heart like a rough Sea is not easily calmed 't is hard to make a troubled spirit receive comfort this disquiet ariseth from various causes sometimes from outward sorrow and melancholy sometimes from a kind of envy Gods people are troubled to see others have comfort and they want it and now in a pet they refuse comfort and like a froward child put away the breast Psal 77.2 My soul refused to be comforted Indeed a disquieted spirit is no more fit for comfort than a distracted man is fit for counsel and whence is the Mourners discontent but pride as if God had not dealt well with him in stopping the influences of comfort O Christian thy spirit must be more humbled and broken before God empty out his golden oyle of joy 3. The Mourner is without comfort for want of applying the promises he looks at that sin which may humble him but not at that Word which may comfort him The Mourners eyes are so full of tears that he cannot see the promise the vertue and comfort of a medicine is in the applying when the promises are applied by faith they bring comfort Hosea 2.19 Isa 49.15 16. Faith milks the breast of a promise That Satan may hinder us of comfort it is his policy either to keep the promise from us that we may not know it or to keep us from the promise that we may not apply it Never a promise in the Bible but belongs to the Mourner had he but the skill and dexterity of faith to lay hold on it 4. The Mourner may want comfort through too much earthly-mindedness by feeding immoderately on earthly comforts we miss of heavenly comforts Isa 57.17 For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth and I hid me The earth puts out the fire earthliness extinguisheth the flame of divine joy in the soul an Eclipse is per interpositionem corporis Lunaris when the Moon which is a dense body comes between the Moon is an Emblem of the world Rev. 12.1 when this comes between then there is an Eclipse in the light of Gods face Such as dig in Mines say there is such a damp comes from the earth as puts out the light of a candle earthly comforts send forth such a damp as puts out the light of spiritual joy 5. Perhaps the Mourner hath had comfort and lost it Adams Rib was taken from him when he was asleep Gen. 2.21 Our comforts are taken away when we fall asleep in security the Spouse lost her beloved when she lay upon the bed of sloath Cant. 5.2 6. For these Reasons Gods Mourners may want comfort but that the spiritual Mourner may not be too much dejected I shall reach forth the cup of consolation Jer. 16.7 and speak a few words that may comfort the Mourner in the want of comfort 1. Jesus Christ was without comfort therefore no wonder if we are our comforts are not better than his he who was the Son of Gods love was without the sense of Gods love 2. The Mourner hath a seed of comfort 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 97.11 Light is sown for the righteous Light is a Metaphor put for comfort and it is sown Though a child of God hath not comfort alwayes in the flowre yet he hath in the seed though he doth not feel comfort from God yet he takes comfort in God 3. A Christian may be high in grace and low in comfort the high Mountains are without flowres the Mines of gold have little or no corn growing on them a Christians heart may be a rich Mine of grace though it be barren of comfort 4. The Mourner is heir to comfort and though for a small moment God may forsake his people Isa 54.7 yet there is a time shortly coming when the Mourner shall have all tears wiped away and shall be brim-full of comfort this joy is reserved for heaven and this brings me to the second particular SECT 2. Showing the mourners comforts hereafter 2. COMFORTS HEREAFTER 2. Comforts hereafter They shall be comforted Though in this life some interviews and love-tokens passe between God and the mourner yet the great comforts are kept in reversion in Gods presence is fulnes of joy There is a time coming the day-star is ready to appear when the Saints shall bathe themselves in the river of life when they shall never see a wrinkle on Gods brow more but his face shall shine his
Thy sin thy neighbour is not so bad in offending thee as thou art in not forgiving him thy neighbour in offending thee doth but trespasse against a man but thou refusing to forgive him dost trespasse against God 2. Thy danger thou who art implacable and though thou may'st smother the fire of thy rage yet wilt not extinguish it know that if thou dyest this night thou dyest in an unpardoned condition if you will not believe me believe Christ Mark 11.26 If you do not forgive neither will your Father which is in heaven forgive your trespasses He who lives without meeknesse dies without mercy 3. Branch of meeknesse is in recompencing good for evil this is an higher degree than the other Matth. 5.44 Love your enemies do good to them that hate you pray for them which despightfully use you Rom. 12.20 If thine enemy hunger feed him 1 Pet. 3.9 not rendring evil for evil but contrarywise blessing This three-fold cord of Scripture should not easily be broken To render evil for evil is bruitish to render evil for good is divellish to render good for evil is Christian The Heathens had this maxime Nemini laedere nisi lacessitus injuriâ they thought it lawful to wrong none unlesse first provoked with an injury but the Sun-light of Scripture shines brighter than the lamp of reason Love your enemies when grace comes into the heart it works a strange alteration when a sciens is ingrafted into the stock it partakes of the nature and sap of the Tree and brings forth the same fruit take a crab ingraft it into a Pepyn it brings forth the same fruit as the Pepyn so he who was once of a sowre crabby disposition given to revenge when he once partakes of the sap of the heavenly olive he bears generous fruit he is full of love to his enemies Grace allays the passion and melts the heart into compassion as the Sun draws up many thick noxious vapours from the Earth and Sea and returns them in sweet showres so a gracious heart returns all the unkindnesses and discurtesies of his enemies with the sweet influences and distillations of love thus David Psal 35.13 They rewarded me evil for good but as for me when they were sick my cloathing was sackcloth I humbled my soul with fasting c. Some would have rejoyced he wept some would have put on scarlet David put on sackcloth this is the rarity or rather miracle of meekness it retorts good for evil thus we have seen the nature of meekness SECT 1. Shewing the Character of a true Saint IT shews us the badge of a true Saint he is of a meek Use 1 candid spirit he is not easily provoked he takes every thing in the best sense and conquers malice with mildness I would to God all who profess themselves Saints were bespangled with this grace We are known to belong to Christ when we wear his Livery he is a Saint whose spirit is so meekned that he can smother prejudices and bury unkindnesses a passion of tears doth better become a Christian than a passion of anger every Saint is Christs Spouse Cant. 4.8 It becomes Christs Spouse to be meek if any injury be offered to the Spouse she leaves it to her husband to revenge 't is unseemly for Christs Spouse to strike SECT 2. Containing a Swasive to meekness Use 2 LET me beseech all Christians to labour to be eminent in this superlative grace of meekness Exhort Zeph. 2.3 Seek meekness Seeking implies we have lost it therefore we must make an hue and cry after it to find it Col. 3.12 Put on therefore as the Elect of God meekness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Put it on as a garment never to be left off Meekness is a necessary ingredient into every thing 1. It is necessary in instruction 2 Tim. 2.25 In meekness instructing c. Meekness conquers the opposers of truth meekness melts the heart soft words are softning 2. Meekness is necessary in hearing the Word Jam. 1.21 Receive with meekness the ingrafted Word he who comes to the Word either with passion or prejudice gets no good but hurt he turns wine into poyson and stabs himself with the sword of the Spirit 3. Meekness is needful in reproofs Gal. 6.1 If a man be overtaken with a fault restore such an one with the spirit of meekness The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put him in joynt again if a bone be out of joynt the Chyrurgion must not use a rough hand that may chance break another bone but he must come gently to work and afterwards bind it up softly so if a brother be through inanimadvertency overtaken we must not come to him in a fury of passion but with a spirit of meekness labour to restore him I shall lay down several Motives or Arguments to meeken the spirits of men 1. Let me propound examples of meekness Motive 1 1. The example of Jesus Christ Matth. 21.5 Thy King cometh unto thee meek Christ was the samplar and pattern of meekness 1 Pet. 2.23 When he was reviled he reviled not again His enemies words were more bitter than the gall they gave him but Christs words were smoother than oyle he prayed and wept for his enemies he calls to us to learn of him Matth. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek Christ doth not bid us saith Austin learn of him to work miracles to open the eyes of the blind to raise the dead but he would have us learn of him to be meek if we do not imitate his life we cannot be saved by his death 2. Let us set before our eyes the examples of some of the Saints who have shined in this grace Moses was a man of unparallel'd meekness Numb 12.3 Now the man Moses was very meek above all the men which were upon the face of the earth How many injuries did he put up when the people of Israel murmured against him instead of falling into a rage he falls to prayer for them Exod. 15.24 25. The Text saith they murmured at the waters of Marah sure the waters were not so bitter as the spirits of the people but they could not provoke him to passion but petition Another time when they wanted water they fell a chiding with Moses Exod. 17.3 Wherefore is this that thou hast brought us up out of Egypt to kill us and our children with thirst As if they had said if we dye we will lay our death to thy charge Would not this exasperate sure it would have required the meekness of an Angel to bear this but behold Moses his meekness he did not give them an unbecoming word though they were in a storm he was in a calm they chide but he prayes Oh that as the spirit of Elijah did rest upon Elisha so that some of the spirit of Moses this meek man or rather earthly Angel may rest upon us Another eminent pattern of meekness was David when Shimei cursed David and Abishai one
of Davids life-guard would have beheaded Shimei No saith King David Let him alone and let him curse 2 Sam. 16.11 And when Saul had wronged and abused David and it was in his power to have taken Saul napping and have killed him 1 Sam. 26.7 12. yet he would not touch Saul but called God to be Umpire Ver. 23. Here was a mirror of meekness 3. The examples of Heathens though their meekness could not properly be called grace because it grew not upon the right stock of faith yet it was beautiful in its kind Pericles when one did revile him and followed him home to his gate at night rayling upon him he answered not a word but commanded one of his servants to light a Torch and bring the Raylor home to his own house Frederick Duke of Saxony when he was angry would shut up himself in his Closet and let none come near him till he had mastered his passion Plutarch reports of the Pythagoreans if they had chanced to fall out in the day they would embrace and be friends ere Sun-set Cicero in one of his Orations reports of Pompey the great he was a man of a meek disposition he admitted all to come to him so freely and heard the complaints of them that were wronged so mildly that he excelled all the Princes before him he was of that sweet temper that it was hard to say whether his enemies did more fear his valour or his subjects love his meekness Julius Caesar not only forgave Brutus and Cassius his enemies but advanced them he thought himself most honoured by acts of clemency and meekness Did the spring-head of nature rise so high and shall not grace rise higher shall we debase faith below reason let us write after these fair Copies 2. Meekness is a great Ornament to a Christian 1 Pet. Motive 2 3.4 The ornament of a meek spirit How amiable is a Saint in Gods eye when adorned with this jewel what the Psalmist saith of praise * Psal 33.1 the same may I say of meekness it is comely for the righteous no garment more becoming a Christian than meekness therefore we are bid to put on this garment Col. 3.12 Put on therefore as the Elect of God meekness A meek spirit credits Religion silenceth malice it is the varnish that puts a lustre upon holiness and sets off the Gospel with a better gloss 3. This is the way to be like God God is meek towards Motive 3 them that provoke him * Cum crebris exacerbatur offensis iram suam temperat Cypr. how many black mouths are opened daily against the Majesty of heaven how do men tear his Name vex his Spirit crucifie his Son afresh they walk up and down the earth as so many Divels covered with flesh yet the Lord is meek not willing that any should perish 2 Pet. 3. How easily could God crush sinners and kick them into hell but he moderates his anger though he be full of Majesty yet full of meekness in him is mixed Princely greatness and Fatherly mildness as he hath his Scepter of Royalty so his Throne of grace Oh how should this make us fall in love with meekness hereby we bear a kind of likeness to God it is not profession makes us like God but imitation where meekness is wanting we are not like men where it is we are like God 4. Meekness argues a noble and excellent spirit a Motive 4 meek man is a valorous man he gets a victory over himself * Immensae virtutis est non sentire te esse percussum Passion ariseth from imbecillity and weakness therefore we may observe old men and children are more cholerick than others strength of passion argues weakness of judgement but the meek man who is able to conquer his fury is the most puissant and victorious Prov. 16.32 He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty and he that ruleth his spirit then he that taketh a City To yield to ones passion is easie 't is swimming along with the Tyde of corrupt nature but to turn head against nature to resist passion to overcome evil with good this is like a Christian this is that spiritual Chivalry and Fortitude of mind as deserves the Trophies of victory and the garland of praise Motive 5 5. Meekness is the best way to conquer and melt the heart of an enemy When Saul lay at Davids mercy and he only cut off the skirt of his Robe how was Sauls heart affected with Davids meekness 1 Sam. 24.16 17. Is this thy voyce my son David and Saul lift up his voice and wept and he said to David Thou art more righteous than I for thou hast rewarded me good forasmuch as when the Lord had delivered me into thy hand thou killedst me not wherefore the Lord reward thee good c. This heaping of coals melts and thaws the heart of others it is the greatest victory to overcome an enemy without striking a blow the fire will go where the wedge cannot mildness prevails more than fierceness passion makes an enemy of a friend meekness makes a friend of an enemy the meek Christian shall have letters testimonial even from his Adversary It is reported of Philip King of Macedon that when it was told him Nicanor did openly rail against his Majesty the King instead of putting him to death as his Council advised sent Nicanor a rich Present which did so overcome the mans heart that he went up and down to recant what he had said against the King and did highly extoll the Kings clemency Roughness hardens mens hearts meekness causeth them to relent 2 Kings 6.22 When the King of Israel feasted the Captives he had taken in War they were more conquered by his meekness than by his sword 2 Kings 6.23 The bands of Syria came no more into the Land of Israel 6. Consider the great promise in the Text The meek Motive 6 shall inherit the Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this Argument perhaps will prevail with those who desire to have earthly possessions * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Some may object If I forbear and forgive I shall lose my right at last and be turned out of all No God hath here entred into Bond the meek shall inherit the Earth The unmeek man is in a sad condition there is no place remains for him but hell for he hath no promise made to him either of Earth or Heaven 't is the meek shall inherit the earth Object How do the meek inherit the Earth when they are strangers in the earth Hebr. 11.37 Answ The meek are said to inherit the Earth not that the Earth is their chief inheritance or that they have always the greatest share here but 1. They are the inheriters of the Earth because though they have not always the greatest part of the Earth yet they have the best right to it The word inherit saith Ambrose notes the Saints title to the Earth * Fruuntur
Divel let me tell you God hath charg'd every man not to meddle or have any league of friendship with you Prov. 22.24 Make no friendship with an angry man and with a furious man thou shalt not go What a monster is he among men that every one is warned to beware of and not come near as one who is unfit for humane society make no league saith God with THAT MAN if thou takest him into thy society thou takest a Snake into thy bosome with a furious man thou shalt not go Wilt thou walk with the Divel the furious man is possessed with a wrathful Divel Oh that all this might help to meeken and sweeten Christians spirits Object But it is my nature to be passionate Answ 1. This is sinful arguing it is secretly to lay our sin upon God we learned this from Adam Gen. 3.12 The woman whom thou gavest to be with me she gave me of the tree and I did eate rather than Adam would confesse his sin he would father it upon God the woman thou gavest me as if he had said it thou hadst not given this woman to me I had not eat So saith one it is my nature this is the froward peevish nature God hath given me oh no thou chargest God falsly God gave thee no such nature he made man upright Eccles 7.25 God made thee straight thou madest thy self crooked all thy affections at first thy joy love anger were set in order as the Stars in their right orb but thou didst misplace them and make them move Excentrick at first the affections like several Musick-instruments well-tuned did make a sweet consort but sin was the jarring string that brought all out of tune vain man plead not 't is thy nature to be angry thank thy self for it natures spring was pure till sin poysoned the spring Answ 2. Is it thy nature to be fierce and angry this is so far from being an excuse that it makes it so much the worse it is the nature of a Toad to poyson that makes it the more hateful if a man were indited for stealing and he should say to the Judge Spare me it is my nature to steal were this any excuse the Judge would say Thou deservest the rather to dye Sinner get a new nature flesh and blood cannot enter into the Kingdom of God SECT 3. How to attain this grace of meekness Quest HOW shall I do to be possessed of this excellent grace of meekness Answ 1. Often look upon the meekness of Christ the Scholar that would write well hath his eye often upon the Copy 2. Pray earnestly that God will meeken thy spirit God is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the God of all grace 1 Pet. 5.10 He hath all the graces in his gift Sue to him for this grace of meekness if one were Patron of all the Livings in the Land men would sue to him for a Living God is Patron of all the graces let us sue to him mercy comes in at the door of prayer Ezek. 36.26 37. I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them Meekness is the commodity we want let us send prayer as our Factor over to heaven to procure it for us and pray in faith when faith sets prayer on work prayer sets God on work all divine blessings come streaming to us through this golden channel of prayer MATTH 5.6 Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after Righteousness CHAP. XIII Describing the Nature of spiritual hunger WE are now come to the fourth step of blessedness Blessed are they that hunger The words fall into two parts 1. A Duty implied 2. A Promise annexed 1. A Duty implied Blessed are they that hunger 1. The Duty implied Spiritual hunger is a blessed hunger Doctr. Quest 1. What is meant by hunger Answ Hunger is put for desire Isa 26.9 Spiritual hunger is the rational appetite whereby the soul pants after that which it apprehends most sutable and proportionable to it self Quest 2. Whence is this hunger Answ Hunger is from a sense of want he who spiritually hungers hath a real sense of his own indigence he wants righteousness Quest 3. What is meant by righteousness Answ There is a two-fold righteousness 1. Of Imputation 2. Of Implantation 1. Justitia imputativa 1. A righteousness of Imputation viz. Christs righteousness Jer. 23.6 He shall be called the Lord our righteousness This is as truly ours to justifie as it is Christs to bestow by vertue of this righteousness God looks upon us as if we had never sinned Num. 23.21 this is a perfect righteousness Col. 2.10 Ye are compleat in him this doth not only cover but adorn he who hath this righteousness is equal to the most illustrious Saints the weakest believer is justified as much as the strongest this is a Christians triumph when he is defiled in himself he is undefiled in his head in this blessed righteousness we shine brighter than the Angels this righteousness is worth hungring after 2 Justitia implantativa 2. A righteousness of Implantation that is inherent righteousness viz. the graces of the Spirit holiness of heart and life which Cajetan calls universal righteousness this a pious soul hungers after This is a blessed hunger bodily hunger cannot make a man so miserable as spiritual hunger makes him blessed this evidenceth life a dead man cannot hunger hunger proceeds from life the first thing the child doth when it is born is to hunger after the breast spiritual hunger follows upon the new birth 1 Pet. 2.2 Saint Bernard in one of his Soliloquies comforts himself with this that sure he had the truth of grace in him because he had in his heart a strong desire after God * Certus sum per gratiam defiderium ●ui habere me in toto corde Bern. Solil 't is happy when though we have not what we should we desire what we have not the appetite is as well from God as the food SECT I. The Inferences drawn from the Proposition 1. SEE here at what a low price God sets heavenly Use 1 things it is but hungring and thirsting Inform. Isa 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters buy Branch 1 without money We are not bid to bring any merits as the Papists would do nor to bring a sum of money to purchase righteousness Rich men would be loth to do that all that is required is to bring an appetite Christ hath fulfilled all righteousness we are only to hunger and thirst after righteousness this is equal and reasonable God requires not Rivers of oyle but sighs and tears the invitation of the Gospel is free if a friend invite Ghuests to his Table he doth not expect they should bring money to pay for their Dinner only come with an appetite so saith God T is not pennance pilgrimage self-righteousness I require only bring a stomack hunger and thirst after righteousness God
inheritance The making one an heir implies a relation to an inheritance A man doth not adopt another to a title but an Estate so God in adopting us for his children gives us a glorious inheritance Col. 1.12 The inheritance of the Saints in light 1. 'T is pleasant 't is an inheritance in light 2. 'T is safe God keeps the inheritance for his children 1 Pet. 1.4 and keeps them for the inheritance 1 Pet. 1.5 so that they cannot be hindered from taking possession 3. There is no disinheriting for the Saints are Coheirs with Christ Rom. 8.15 Nay they are members of Christ Col. 1.18 The members cannot be disinherited but the head must 4. The heirs never dye eternity is a jewel of their Crown Revel 22.5 They shall reign for ever and ever Before I pass to the next here a question may arise How Gods Adopting and mans Adopting differ 1. Man adopts to supply a defect because he hath no children of his own but God doth not adopt upon this account he had a Son of his own the Lord Jesus he was his natural Son and the Son of his love testified by a voyce from heaven Matth. 3. ult This is my beloved Son Never was there any Son so like the Father he was his exact Effigies Hebr. 1.3 The express image of his person he was such a Son as was more worth than all the Angels in heaven Hebr. 1.4 Being made so much better than the Angels so that God adopts not out of necessity but pity 2. When a man adopts he adopts but one heir but God adopts many Hebr. 2.10 In bringing many sons to glory Oh may a poor trembling Christian say Why should I ever look for this priviledge to be a childe of God! 't is true if God did do as a man if he did only adopt one son then thou mightest despair but he adopts millions he brings many sons to glory indeed this may be the reason why a man adopts but one because he hath not Estate enough for more if he should adopt many his Land would not hold out but God hath Land enough to give to all his children John 14.2 In my Fathers house are many Mansions 3. Man when he adopts doth it with ease 't is but sealing a Deed and the thing is done but when God adopts it puts him to a far greater expence it sets his wisdom on work to find out a way to adopt us it was no easie thing to reconcile hell and heaven to make the children of wrath the children of the promise and when God in his infinite wisdom had found out a way it was no easie way it cost God the death of his natural Son to make us his adopted sons When God was about to constitute us sons and heirs he could not seal the Deed but by the blood of his own Son it did not cost God so much to make us creatures as to make us sons To make us creatures cost but the speaking of a word to make us sons cost the effusion of blood 4. Man when he adopts doth but settle earthly priviledges upon his heir but God settles heavenly priviledges Justification Glorification Men do but entail their Land upon the persons they adopt God doth more he not only entails his Land upon his children but he entails Himself upon them Hebr. 8.10 I will be their God not only heaven is their portion but God is their portion 2. Gods filiating or making of children is by the infusion of grace When God makes any his children he stamps his Image upon them this is more than any man living can do he may adopt another but he cannot alter his disposition if he be of a morose rugged nature he cannot alter it but God in making of children doth disponere ad filiationem he doth prepare and sanctifie them for this priviledge he changeth their disposition he files off the ruggedness of their nature he makes them not only sons but Saints they are of another spirit Numb 14.24 They become meek and humble they are partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 SECT 3. Shewing how we come to be Gods children 3. THE third thing is How we come to be the children of God Answ There is a double cause of our filiation or childship 1. The Causa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or impulsive cause is Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his free-grace We were Rebels and Traytors and what could move God to make sinners sons but free-grace Ephes 1.5 Having predestinated us unto the Adoption of children according to the good pleasure of his will Free-grace gave the casting voyce Adoption is a mercy spun out of the bowels of free-grace it were much for God to take a clod of earth and make it a Star but it is more for God to take a piece of clay and sin and instate it into the glorious priviledge of son-ship How will the Saints read over the Lectures of free-grace in heaven 2. The Organical or Instrumental cause of our son-ship is faith Baptism doth not make us children that is indeed a badge and livery and gives us right to many external priviledges but the thing which makes God take cognizance of us for children is faith Gal. 3.26 Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus Before faith be wrought we have nothing to do with God we are as the Apostle speaks in another sense bastards and not sons Hebr. 12.7 An unbeliever may call God his Judge but not his Father Wicked men may draw near to God in Ordinances and hope that God will be their Father but while they are unbelievers they are bastards and God will not Father them but will lay them at the Divels door Ye are the children of God by faith faith doth legitimate us it confers upon us the title of son-ship and gives us right to inherit How then should we labour for faith without faith we are creatures not children without faith we are spiritually illegitimate this word illegitimate is 1. A term of infamy such as are illegitimate are looked upon with disgrace we call them base-born Thou who dost ruffle it in thy silks and velvets but art in the state of nature thou art illegitimate God looks upon thee with an eye of scorn and contempt thou art a vile person a son of the earth of the seed of the serpent the Divel can shew as good a Coat of Armes as thou 2. This word illegitimate imports infelicity and misery Persons illegitimate cannot inherit legally the Land goes only to such as are lawful heirs till we are the children of God we have no right to heaven and there is no way to be children but by faith Ye are the children of God by faith Here two things are to be discussed 1. What faith is 2. Why faith makes us children 1. What faith is If faith doth instate us into son-ship it concerns us to know what faith is There is a two-fold faith 1. A more
the wicked are of no account with God they are vile persons Nahum 1.14 I will make thy grave for thou art vile therefore the wicked are compared to chaffe Psal 1.4 to dross Psal 119.119 There is little use of a wicked man while he lives and no loss of him when he dies there is only a little chaffe blown away which may well be spared But Gods children are precious in his sight they are his jewels Mal. 3.17 The wicked are but lumber which serves only to cumber the ground but Gods children are his jewels locked up in the Cabinet of his Decree from all eternity Gods children are the apple of his eye Zach. 2.8 very dear and tender to him and the eye-lid of his special Providence doth cover them the Lord accounts every thing of his children precious 1. Their name is precious the wicked do leave their name for a curse Isa 65.15 The names of Gods children are embalmed Isa 60.15 So precious are their names that God enters them down in the book of life and Christ carries them on his breast How precious must their name needs be who have Gods own Name written upon them Rev. 3.12 Him that overcometh I will write upon him the Name of my God 2. Their prayers are precious Cant. 2.14 O my Dove in the clifts of the Rock let me hear thy voyce for sweet is thy voyce Every childe of God is this Dove prayer is the voyce of the Dove and sweet is this voyce The prayer of Gods children is as sweet to him as Musick a wicked mans prayer is as the howling of a Dog Hosea 7.14 The prayer of the Saints is as the singing of the Bird the finger of Gods Spirit touching the Lute-strings of their hearts they make melody to the Lord. Isa 56.7 Their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine Altar 3. Their tears are precious they drop as pearls from their eyes I have seen thy tears Isa 38.5 The tears of Gods children drop as precious wine into Gods bottle Psal 56.8 Put thou my tears into thy bottle A tear from a broken heart is a Present for the King of heaven 4. Their BLOOD is precious Psal 116.15 Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints This is the blood God will chiefly make inquisition for Athaliah shed the blood of the Kings children 2 Kings 11.1 The Saints are the children of the most High and such as shed their blood shall pay dear for it Rev. 16.6 Thou hast given them blood to drink for they are worthy 2. God looks upon his children as persons of honour Isa 43.4 Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast been honourable c. 1. God esteems them honourable he calls them a Crown and a Royal Diadem Isa 62.3 He calls them his glory Isa 46.13 Israel my glory 2. God makes them honourable as a King creates Dukes Marquesses Earles Barons c. so God installs his children into honour he creates them noble persons persons of Renown David thought it no small honour to be the Kings son-in-law 1 Sam. 18.18 Who am I that I should be son-in-law to the King What an infinite honour is it to be the children of the High God to be of the blood-royal of heaven The Saints are of an Ancient Family they are sprung from the Ancient of dayes Dan. 7.9 That is the best Pedigree which is fetched from heaven here the youngest childe is an heir a co-heir with Christ who is heir of all Hebr. 1.2 Rom. 8.17 Consider the honour of Gods children 1. Positively 2. Comparatively 1. Positively 1. They have the titles of honour they are called Kings Rev. 1.6 The excellent of the Earth Psal 16.2 Vessels of honour 2 Tim. 2.21 2. They have their Scutchion you may see the Saints Scutchion or Coat-Armour the Scripture hath set forth their Heraldry sometimes they give the Lyon in regard of their courage Prov. 1.28 Sometimes they give the Eagle in regard of their sublimeness they are ever flying up to heaven upon the two wings of faith and love Isa 40.31 They shall mount up with wings as Eagles sometimes they give the Dove in regard of their meekness and innocency Cant. 2.14 This shews the children of God to be persons of Renown 2. Consider the honour of Gods children comparatively and this comparison is double Compare the chidren of God 1. With Adam 2. With the Angels 1. Compare the children of God with Adam in a state of innocency Adam was a person of honour he was the sole Monarch of the World all the creatures did vail to him as their Soveraign he was placed in the garden of Eden which was a Paradise of pleasure he was crowned with all the contentments of the Earth nay more Adam was Gods lively picture he was made in the likeness of God himself yet the state of the meanest of Gods children by Adoption is far more excellent and honourable than the state of Adam was when he wore the Robe of innocency for Adams condition though it was glorious yet mutable and was soon lost Adam was a bright star yet a falling star but Gods children by Adoption are in a state unalterable Adam had a posse non peccare a possibility of standing but believers have a non posse peccare an impossibility of falling once adopted and ever adopted as Isaac said when he had given the blessing to Jacob I have blessed him and he shall be blessed Gen 27.33 So may we say of all Gods children they are adopted and they shall be adopted so that Gods children are in a better and more glorious condition now than Adam was in all his Regal Honour and Majesty 2. Let us ascend as high as heaven and compare Gods children with the glorious and blessed Angels Gods children are equal to the Angels in some sense above them and then sure they must needs be persons of honour 1. Gods children are equal to the Angels this is acknowledged by some of the Angels themselves Rev. 19.10 I am thy fellow-servant here is a Parallel made between John the Divine and the Angel the Angel saith to John 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am thy fellow-servant 2. The children of God by Adoption are in some sense above the Angels and that two wayes 1. The Angels are servants to Gods children Hebr. 1.14 Though they are glorious spirits yet ministring spirits The Angels are the Saints servitors we have examples in Scripture of Angels attending the persons of Gods children we read of Angels waiting upon Abraham Moses Daniel the Virgin Mary c. Nor do the Angels only service to Gods children while they live but at their death too Lazarus had a Convoy of Angels to carry him into the Paradise of God thus we see the children of God have a preheminence and dignity above the Angels the Angels are their servants both living and dying and this is the more to be observed because it is never said in Scripture that the
he will with me let him take the rod or the staffe 't is all one he loves me 2. The second adoptional priviledge is this if we are Privi ∣ ledge 2 children then God will bear with many infirmities A father bears much with a child he loves Mal. 3.17 I will spare them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him We oft grieve the Spirit abuse kindnesse God will passe by much in his children Numb 23.21 he hath not seene iniquity in Jacob his love doth not make him blind he sees sin in his people but not with an eye of revenge but pity He sees sin in his children as a Physitian doth a disease in his Patient He hath not seene iniquity in Jacob so as to destroy him God may use the rod 2 Sam. 7.14 not the Scorpion O how much is God willing to passe by in his children because they are children God takes notice of the good that is in his children and passeth by the infirmity God doth quite contrary to us we oft take notice of the evil that is in others and over-look the good Our eye is upon the flaw in the Diamond but we observe not its sparkling But God takes notice of the good that is in his children God sees their faith and winks at their failings 1 Pet. 3.6 Even as Sarah obeyed Abraham calling him Lord the holy Ghost mentions not her unbelief and laughing at the promise but takes notice of the good in her viz. her obedience to her husband she obeyed Abraham calling him Lord. God puts his finger upon the fears and infirmities of his children how much did God wink at in Israel his first-born Israel oft provok'd him with their murmurings Deut. 1.27 but God answered their murmurings with mercies he spared them as a father spares his son 3. The third priviledge is this If we are children Privi ∣ ledge 3 then God will accept of our imperfect services A Parent takes any thing in good part from his child God accepts of the will for the deed 2 Cor. 8.12 oftentimes we come with broken prayers but if we are children God spels out our meaning and will take our prayers as a grateful present a father loves to hear his child speak though he doth but lisp and stammar Isa 38.14 Like a Crane so did I chatter Good Hezekiah looked upon his praying as chattering yet that prayer was heard ver 5. a Sigh and groan from an humble heart goes up as the smoak of incense Psal 38.9 My groaning is not hid from thee When all the glistering shews of Hypocrites evaporate and come to nothing a little that a child of God doth in sincerity is crowned with acceptance a father is glad of a letter from his son though there are blots in the letter though there are false spellings and broken English O what blottings are there in our holy things what broken English sometimes yet coming from broken hearts it is accepted though there be weaknesse in duty yet if there be willingnesse the Lord is much taken with it Saith God it is my child and he would do better Ephes 1.6 He hath accepted us in the beloved Privi ∣ ledge 4 4. If we are children then God will provide for us a father will take care for his children he gives them allowance and layes up a portion 2 Cor. 12.14 so doth our heavenly Father 1. He gives us our allowance Gen. 48.15 The God which fed me all my life long unto this day Whence is our dayly bread but from his dayly care God will not let his children starve though our unbelief is ready sometimes to question his goodnesse and say Can God prepare a Table See what arguments Christ brings to prove Gods paternal care for his children Matth. 6.26 Behold the fowles of the aire they sow not neither do they reap yet your heavenly Father feedeth them Doth a man feed his bird and will he not feed his child Luke 12.27 Consider the Lilies how they grow they toyl not they spin not if then God so cloath the grasse c Doth God cloath the Lilies and will he not cloath his Lambs 1 Pet. 5.7 the Lord careth for us As long as his heart is full of love so long his head will be full of care This should be as physick to kill the worm of unbelief 2. As God gives his children a viaticum or bait by the way so he laies up a portion for them Luke 12.32 It is your Fathers good pleasure to give you a kingdom our Father keeps the purse and will give us enough to bear our charges here and when at death we take shipping and shall be set upon the shore of eternity then will our heavenly Father bestow upon us a Kingdom immutable and immarcessible lo here a portion which can never be summed up 5. If we are children then God will sheild off dangers Privi ∣ ledge 5 from us a father will protect his child from injuries God ever lies Sentinel to keep off evill from his children 1. Temporal evil 2. Spiritual evil 1. God screens off temporal evil There are many casualties and contingencies which are incident to life God mercifully prevents them he keeps watch and ward for his children Psal 7.10 my defence is of God Psal 121.4 he that keeps Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep The eye of Providence is ever awake God gives his Angels charge over his children Psal 91.11 a believer hath a guard of Angels for his life-guard we read of the wings of God in Scripture as the breast of his mercy feeds his children so the wings of his power cover them how miraculously did God preserve Israel his first-born he did with his wings sometimes cover sometimes carry them Exod. 19.4 He bare you as upon Eagles wings an emblem of Gods providential care the Eagle fears no Bird from above to hurt her young only the Arrow from beneath therefore she carries them upon her wings that the Arrow must first hit her before it can come at her young ones Thus God carries his children upon the wings of Providence and they are such that there is no clipping these wings nor can any Arrow hurt them 2. God shields off spiritual evils from his children Psal 91.10 There shall no evil befall thee God doth not say no afflictions shall befall us but no evil Quest Quest But sometimes evil in this sense befalls the godly they spot themselves with sin Answ Answ But that evil shall not be mortal as quick-silver is in it self dangerous but by oyntments it is so tempered that it is killed so sin is in it self deadly but being tempered with Repentance and mixed with the sacred oyntment of Christs blood the venemous damning nature of it is taken away Privi ∣ ledge 6 6. If we are children then God will reveal to us the great and wonderful things of his Law Matth. 11.25 I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these
things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes A father will teach his children the childe goes to his father Father Teach me my Lesson so David goes to God Psal 143.10 Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God The Lord glories in this title Isa 48.17 I am the Lord thy God which teacheth thee to profit Gods children have that anointing which teacheth them all things necessary to salvation they see those mysteries which are vail'd over to carnal eyes as Elisha saw those Horses and Chariots of fire which his servant did not see 2 Kings 6.17 The adopted see their own sins Satans snares Christs beauty which they whom the god of the world had blinded cannot discern whence was it that David understood more than the Ancients Psal 119.100 He had a Father to teach him God was his Instructer Psal 71.17 O God thou hast taught me from my youth Many a childe of God complains of ignorance and dulness remember this thy Father will be thy Tutor he hath promised to give his spirit to lead thee into all truth John 16.13 And God doth not only inform the understanding but incline the will he doth not only teach us what we should do but enable us to do it Ezek. 36.27 I will cause you to walk in my statutes What a glorious priviledge is this to have the star of the world pointing us to Christ and the load-stone of the Spirit drawing 7. If we are children this gives boldness in prayer Privi ∣ ledge 7 the childe goes with confidence to his father and he cannot finde in his heart to deny him Luke 11.13 How much more shall your heavenly Father give his holy Spirit to them that ask him All the father hath is for his childe if he comes for money who is it for but his childe If thou comest to God for pardon for brokenness of heart God cannot deny his childe Who doth he keep his mercies in store for but his children And that which may give Gods children holy boldness in prayer is this When they consider God not only in the relation of a Father but as having the disposition of a Father Some parents are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a morose rugged nature but God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Father of mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 He begets all the bowels in the world in prayer we should look upon God under this notion a Father of mercy sitting upon a Throne of grace we should run to this heavenly Father in all conditions 1. In our sins as that sick childe 2 Kings 4.19 He said unto his father my head my head assoon as he found himself not well he ran to his father to succour him So in case of sin Run to God My heart my heart O this dead heart Father quicken it this hard heart Father soften it Father my heart my heart 2. In our tentations A childe when another strikes him runs to his Father and complains so when the Devil strikes us by his temptations let us run to our Father Father Satan assaults and hurles in his fiery darts he would not only wound my peace but thy glory Father take off the Tempter 't is thy childe that is worried by this red Dragon Father wilt not thou bruise Satan under my feet What a sweet priviledge is this when any burden lies upon our spirits we may go to our Father and unload all our cares and griefs into his bosome Privi ∣ ledge 8 8. If we are children then we are in a state of freedom Claudius Lysias valued his freedom of Rome at an high rate a state of son-ship is a state of freedom this is not to be understood in an Antinomian sense that the children of God are freed from therule of the Moral Law this is such a freedom as Rebels take Was it ever heard that a childe should be freed from duty to his parents But the freedom which Gods children have is an holy freedom they are freed ab imperio carnis from the Law of sin Rom. 8.2 This is the sad misery of an unregenerate person he is in a state of Vassaladge he is under the tyranny of sin * Quamobrem dignitatem tuam abjicis teque servum peccati constituis Bern. Justin Martyr used to say It is the greatest slavery in the world for a man to be subject to his own passions A wicked man is as very a slave as he that works in the Gally look into his heart and there are Legions of lusts ruling him he must do what sin will have him a slave is at the service of an usurping Tyrant if he bid him dig in the Mine hew in the Quarries tug at the Oar he must do it Thus every wicked man must do what corrupt nature inspired by the Divel bids him if sin bids him be drunk be unchaste he is at the command of sin as the Ass is at the command of the Driver sin first enslaves and then damns But the children of God though they are not freed from the in-being of sin yet they are freed from the Law of sin all sins commands are like Laws repeal'd which are not in force though sin live in a childe of God yet it doth not reign Rom 6.14 Sin shall not have dominion over you Sin hath not a coercive power over a childe of God there is a principle of grace in his heart which gives check to corruption This is a believers comfort though sin be not removed yet it is subdued and though he cannot keep sin out yet he keeps sin under the Saints of God are said to crucifie the flesh Gal. 5.24 Crucifying was a lingring death first one member dyed then another every childe of God crucifies sin some limb of the old man is ever and anon dropping off though sin doth not dye perfectly it dyes daily this is the blessed freedom of Gods children they are freed from the Law of sin they are led by the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 This Spirit makes them free and chearful in obedience 2 Cor. 3.17 Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 9. If we are children then we are heirs apparent to Privi ∣ ledge 9 all the promises the promises are called precious 2 Pet. 2.4 The promises are a Cabinet of jewels they are breasts full of the milk of the Gospel the promises are enriched with variety and are suited to a Christians present condition Doth he want pardoning grace there is a promise carries forgiveness in it Jer. 31.34 Doth he want sanctifying grace there is a promise of healing Hos 14.4 Doth he want corroborating grace there is a promise of strength Isa 41.10 And these promises are the childrens bread the Saints are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heirs of the promise Hebr. 6.17 There is Christ and heaven in a promise and there is never a promise in the Bible but an adopted person may lay a Legal claim to it and say This
is mine The natural man who remains still in the old Family hath nothing to do with these promises he may read over the promises as one may read over another mans Will or Inventory but hath no right to them the promises are like a Garden of flowers paled in and enclosed which no stranger may gather only the children of the Family Ishmael was the son of the bond-woman he had no right to the Family Cast out the bond-woman and her son as Sarah once said to Abraham Gen. 21.10 So the unbeliever is not adopted he is none of the houshold and God will say at the day of judgement Cast out this son of the bond-woman into utter darkness where is weeping and gnashing of teeth Privi ∣ ledge 10 10. If we are children then we shall have our Fathers blessing Isa 61.9 They are the seed which the Lord hath blessed We read that Isaac blessed his son Jacob Gen. 27.28 God give thee of the dew of heaven which was not only a prayer for Jacob but a Prophesie of that happiness and blessing which should come upon him and his posterity * Luther Thus every adopted child hath his heavenly Fathers benediction there is a special blessing distill'd into all that he possesseth Exod. 23.25 Psal 29.11 The Lord will bless his people with peace He will not only give them peace but they shall have it with a blessing the wicked have the things they enjoy with Gods leave but the adopted have them with Gods love the wicked have them by Providence the Saints by Promise Isaac had but one blessing to bestow Gen. 27.38 Hast thou but one blessing my father But God hath more blessings than one for his children he blesseth them in their souls bodies names estate posterity he blesseth them with the upper-springs and the nether-springs he multiplies to bless them and his blessing cannot be reversed as Isaac said concerning Jacob I have blessed him yea and he shall be blessed Gen. 27.33 so God blesseth his children and they shall be blessed 11. If we are children then all things that Privi ∣ ledge 11 fall out shall turn to our good Rom. 8.28 All things work together for good to them that love God 1. Good things 2. Evil things 1. Good things work for good to Gods children 1. Mercies shall do them good 1. The mercies of God shall soften them Davids heart was overcome with Gods mercy 2 Sam. 7.18 Who am I and what is my house c I who was of a mean Family I who held the Shepherds staffe that now I should hold the Royal Scepter Nay Thou hast spoken of thy servants house for a great while to come Thou hast made a promise that my children shall sit upon the Throne yea that the blessed Messiah shall come of my Line and Race and is this the manner of man O Lord God! as if he had said Do men shew such kindness undeserved See how this good mans heart was dissolved and softned by mercy the flint is soonest broken upon a soft pillow 2. Mercies make the children of God more fruitful the ground beats the better crop for the cost that is laid upon it God gives his children health and they spend and are spent for Christ he gives them Estates and they honour the Lord with their substance the backs and bellies of the poor are the Field where they sowe the precious seeds of their charity a childe of God makes his Estate a golden Clasp to binde his heart faster to God a foot-stool to raise him up higher towards heaven 2. Ordinances shall work for good to Gods children 1. The Word preached shall do them good 't is a savour of life 't is a Lamp to their feet and a Lavor to their hearts the Word preached is Vehiculum salutis a Chariot of salvation 't is an ingrafting and a transforming word it is verbum cum unctione it not only brings a light with it but eye-salve anointing their eyes to see that light the preaching of the Word is the Lattice where Christ looks forth and shews himself to his Saints this golden pipe of the Sanctuary conveys the water of life To the wicked the Word preached works for evil even the Word of life becomes a savour of death the same cause may have divers nay contrary effects * Eadem causa varios habet effectus the Sun dissolves the yce but hardens the clay To the unregenerate and profane the Word is not humbling but hardning Jesus Christ the best of Preachers was to some a Rock of offence the Jewes sucked death from his sweet lips 't is sad that the breast should kill any the wicked suck poyson from that breast of Ordinances where the children of God suck milk and are nourished unto salvation 2. The Sacrament works for good to the children of God in the Word preached the Saints hear Christs voyce in the Sacrament they have his kiss The Lords Supper is to the Saints a Feast of fat things it is an healing and a sealing Ordinance in this Charger or rather Chalice a bleeding Saviour is brought in to revive drooping spirits The Sacrament hath glorious effects in the hearts of Gods children it quickens their affections strengthens their faith mortifies their sin revives their hopes encreaseth their joy it gives a prelibation and fore-taste of heaven 2. Evil things work for good to Gods children Psal 112.4 Unto the upright ariseth light in darkness 1. Poverty works for good to Gods children it starves their lusts it enricheth their graces James 2.5 Poor in the world rich in faith Poverty sends to prayer when God hath clipped his childrens wings by poverty they flie swiftest to the Throne of Grace 2. Sickness works for their good it shall bring the body of death into a consumption 2 Cor. 4.16 Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day like those two Laurels at Rome when the one did wither the other did flourish when the body withers the soul of a Christian doth flourish How oft have we seen a lively faith in a languishing body Hezekiah was better on his sick bed than upon his Throne when he was upon his sick bed he humbles himself and weeps when he was on his Throne he grew proud Isa 39.2 Gods children recover by sickness in this sense out of weakness they are made strong Heb. 11.34 3. Reproach works for good to Gods children it encreaseth their grace and their glory 1. Disgrace encreaseth their grace the Husbandman by dunging his ground makes the soile more rich and fertil God lets the wicked dung his people with reproaches and calumnies that their hearts may be a richer soile for grace to grow in 2. Reproach encreaseth their glory he that unjustly takes from a Saints credit shall adde to his Crown the Sun shines brighter after an Eclipse the more a childe of God is eclipsed by reproaches the brighter he shall shine in the Kingdom of
like an untamed Heifer which will not endure the yoke but kicks and flings or like a wilde Bull in a net Isa 51.20 Thus to a person in the state of nature Christs commands are grievous Nay to a childe of God so far as corruption prevails for he is but in part regenerate Christs Laws seem irksome the flesh cries out it cannot pray or suffer the Law in the members rebels against Christs Law only the spiritual part prevails and makes the flesh stoop to Christs injunctions A regenerate person so far as he is regenerate doth not count Gods Commandments grievous they are not a burden but a delight Divine commands are not grievous if we consider them first positively in these eight particulars 1. Positively 1. A Christian consents to Gods commands therefore they are not grievous Rom. 7.16 I● consent to the Law that it is good What is done with consent is easie if the Virgin give her consent the Match goes on chearfully A godly man in his judgement approves of Christs Laws * Rom. 7.12 and in his will consents to them therefore they are not grievous a wicked man is under a force terror of conscience hales him to duty he is like a slave that is chained to the Gally he must work whether he will or no he is forced to pull the Rope tug at the Oare but a godly man is like a free subject that consents to his Princes Laws and obeyes out of choice as seeing the equity and rationality of them Thus a gracious heart sees that beauty and equity in the commands of heaven as draws forth consent and this consent makes them that they are not grievous 2. They are Christs comands therefore not grievous Take my yoak Matth. 11.29 Gospel commands are not the Laws of a Tyrant but a Saviour The husbands commands are not grievous to the wife it is her ambition to obey this is enough to animate and excite obedience Christ commands As Peter said in another sence Matth. 14.28 Lord if it be thou bid me come unto thee upon the water So saith a gracious soul Lord if it be thou that wouldest have me mourn for sin and breath after heart-purity if it be thou dear Saviour that biddest me do these things I will chearfully obey Thy commandments are not grievous A souldier at the word of his General makes a brave onset 3. Christians obey out of a principle of love and then Gods commandments are not grievous Therefore in Scripture serving and loving of God are put together Isa 56.6 The sons of the strangers that joyne themselves to the Lord to serve him and to love the Name of the Lord c. Nothing is grievous to him that loves love lightens a burden it adds wings to obedience an heart that loves God counts nothing tedious but it s own dulnesse and slownesse of motion love makes sin heavie and Christs burden light 4. A Christian is carried on auxilio Spiritus by the help of the Spirit and the Spirit makes every duty easie Rom. 8.26 The Spirit helpeth our infirmities The Spirit works in us the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both to will and to do Phil. 2. When God enables to do what he commands then his commandments are not grievous if two carry a burden it is easie the Spirit of God helps us to do duties to bear burdens it draws as it were in the yoke with us If the Scrivener guides the childs hand and helps it to frame its letters now it is not hard for the childe to write If the Loadstone draw the iron it is not hard for the iron to move if the Spirit of God as a Divine Loadstone draw and move the heart now it is not hard to obey When the birds hath wings given it it can flie Though the soul of it self be unable to do that which is good yet having two wings given it like that woman in the Revelation * Rev. 12 24. the wing of faith and the wing of the Spirit now it flyes swiftly in obedience Ezek 11.1 the Spirit did lift me up The heart is heavenly in prayer when the Spirit lifts it up The sails of a Mill cannot move of themselves but when the wind blows then they turn round when a gale of the Spirit blows upon the soul Now the sails of the affections move swiftly in duty 5. All Christs commands are beneficial therefore not grievous Deut. 10.12 13. And now O Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to feare the Lord thy God to love him to keep his Statutes which I command thee this day for thy good Christs commands carries meat in the mouth of them and then surely they are not grievous salvation runs along in every precept To obey Christs Laws is not so much of duty as our privilege all Christs commands centre in blessednesse Physick is in it self very unpleasant yet because it tends to health no man refuseth it Divine Precepts are to the fleshy part irksome yet having such excellent operation as to make us both holy and happy they are not to be accounted grievous the apprentise is content to go through hard service because it makes way for his freedome The Scholar willingly wrastles with the knotty difficulties of Arts and Sciences because they serve both to enoble and advance him How chearfully doth a believer obey those Laws which reveal Christs love That suffering is not grievous which leads to a Crown This made Saint Paul say I take pleasure in infirmities in persecutions 2. Cor. 12.10 6. 'T is honourable to be under Christs commands therefore they are not grievous The precepts of Christ do not burden us but adorn us * Omnia quae praestari jubet Christus non onerant nos sed ornant Salv. 'T is an honour to be employed in Christs service How chearfully did the rowers row the Barge that carried Caesar the honour makes the precept easie a Crown of gold is in it self heavy but the honour of the Crown makes it light and easie to be worn I may say of every command of Christ as Solomon speaks of wisdom Prov. 4.9 She shall give to thine head an ornament of grace a Crown of glory shall she deliver to thee 'T is honourable working at Court The honour of Christs yoake makes it easie and eligible 7. Christs commands are sweetned with joy and then they are not grievous Cicero questions whether that can properly be called a burden which is carried with joy and pleasure * Utrum onus appellandum quod laetitiá fertur Cicero When the wheeles of a Chariot are oyled they run swiftly when God poures in the oyle of gladnesse how fast doth the soul run in the wayes of his commandments Joy strengthens for duty Nehem. 8.10 The joy of the Lord is your strength and the more strength the lesse wearinesse God sometimes drops down comfort and then a Christian can run in the
to Christs blood he can cure the greatest sin as well as the least * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Hast thou a bloody issue of sinne running the issue of blood in Christs sides can heal thine 5. Objection But mine is an old inveterate disease Object 5 and I fear it is incurable Answ Though thy disease be chronical Answ Christ can heal it Christ doth not say if this disease had been taken in time it might have been cured he is good at old sores The Thief on the Cross had an old festring disease but Christ cured it it was well for him his Physitian was so near Zacheus an old sinner a Custome-house man he had wronged many a one in his time but Christ cured him Christ sometimes grafts his grace upon an old Stock we read Christ cured at Sun-setting Luke 4.40 He heals some sinners at the Sun-setting of their lives 6. Objection But after I have been healed my disease Object 6 hath broken forth again I have relapsed into the same sin therefore I fear there 's no healing for me Answ It is rare that the Lord leaves his children to these relapses though through the suspension of grace Answ and the prevalency of tentation it is possible they may fall back into sin these sins of relapse are sad It was an aggravation of Solomons offence that he sinn'd after the Lord had appeared to him twice 1 Kings 11.9 These sins after healing open the mouth of conscience to accuse and stop the mouth of Gods Spirit which should speak peace These sins exclude from the comfort of the promise it is as it were sequestred but if the soul be deeply humbled if the relapsing sinner be a relenting sinner let him not cast away the anchor of hope but have recourse to his soul-physitian Jesus Christ can cure a relapse he healed Davids and Cranmers relapse 1 John 2.1 If any man sinne we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ Christ appears in the Court as the Advocate for the Client As he poured out his blood upon the brazen Altar of the Crosse so he poures out his prayers at the golden Altar in heaven Heb. 7.25 He ever liveth to make intercession for us Christ in the work of intercession presents the merit of his blood to his Father and so obtains our pardon and applies the vertue of his blood to us and so works our cure therefore be not discouraged from going to thy Physitian though thy disease hath broken out again yet Christ hath fresh sprinklings of his blood for thee he can cure a relapse Object 7 7. Objection But there is no healing for me I fear I have sinned the sin against the holy Ghost Answ 1 Answ 1. The fear of sinning it is a signe thou hast not sinned it Answ 2 2. Let me ask Why dost thou think thou hast sinned the sin against the holy Ghost I have grieved the Spirit of God Answ Answ Every grieving the Spirit of God is not that fatal sin We grieve the Spirit when we sin against the illumination of it the Spirit being grieved may depart for a time and carry away all its honey out of the Hive leaving the soul in darkness Isa 50.10 But every grieving the Spirit is not the sin against the Holy Ghost A childe of God when he hath sinned his heart smites him and he whose heart smites him for sin hath not commited the unpardonable sin A childe of God having grieved the Spirit doth as Noah when the Dove did flie out of the Ark he opened the windows of the Ark to let it in again A godly man doth not shut his heart against the Spirit as a wicked man doth Acts 7.51 The Spirit of God would come in he keeps him out but a gracious soul opens his heart to let in the Spirit as Noah opened the door of the Ark to let in the Dove * Intra sancte Spiritus ut habeam te velut signaculum super cor meum Austin Christian is it not so with thee then be of good comfort thou hast not sinned the sin against the Holy Ghost that sin is a malicious despighting the Spirit * Hebr. 10.29 which thou tremblest to think of Therefore laying aside these Argumentations and Disputes whatever the diseases of thy soul are come to Christ for a cure believe in his blood and thou mayst be saved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 You see what a skilful and able Physitian Christ is what Soveraign oyles and balsomes he hath how willing he is to cure sick souls oh then what remains but that you cast your selves upon his merits to heal and save you of all sins unbelief is the worst because it casts disparagement on Christ as if he were not able to work a cure Oh Christian believe in thy Physitian John 3.15 that whosoever believeth in him should not perish Say as Queen Esther Esther 4.16 I will go in unto the King which is not according to the Law and if I perish I perish So say the Lord Jesus is a Physitian to heal me I will adventure on his blood if I perish I perish Queen Esther ventur'd against Law she had no promise that the King would hold out the golden Scepter but I have a promise which invites me to come to Christ He that comes unto me I will in no wise cast him out John 6.37 Faith is an healing grace We read when the Israelites were burying a man for fear of the Souldiers of the Moabites they cast him for haste into the grave of Elisha now the man as soon he was down and had touched the dead body of the Prophet revived and stood upon his feet 2 King 13.21 so if a man be dead in sin yet let him be but cast into Christs grave and by faith touch Christ who was dead and buried he will revive and his soul will be healed Remember there 's no way for a cure but by believing without faith Christ himself will not avail us Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood Faith is the applying of Christs merit A playster though it be never so rare and excellent yet if it be not applyed to the wound will do no good though the playster be made of Christs own blood yet it will not heal unless applyed by faith The Brazen Serpent was a Soveraign remedy for the cure of those that were stung but if they had not looked upon it they received no benefit So though there bean healing vertue in Christ yet unless we look upon him by the eye of faith we cannot be cured * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Above all things labour for faith this is the all-healing grace this hand touching Christ fetcheth vertue from him Not that faith hath more worthiness than other graces but only it is influential as it makes us one with Christ If a man had a stone in a Ring that could heal many diseases we
continual wrestling as Jacob wrestled with the Angel so we must wrestle with our corruptions we must not lay our sins in our bosome but set our feet upon their necks if we foyle our sins and get them down 't is not baseness or cowardise to strike them when they are down and we must wrestle with Satan wrestlers get one within another Satan labours to get within us and give us a fall as he did our first Parents What the Divel would have done to Christ thrown him from the pinacle of the Temple Mat. 4. that he did to our first parents he threw them down from the Pinacle of happiness therefore we must wrestle with him resist the Divel and he will flie from you Jam. 4.7 3. Sometimes the life of a Christian is compared to fighting 1 Tim. 6.12 Fight the g●od fight of faith Christ is the Captain of the Saints Forces he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Captain of their salvation Hebr. 2.10 We must all be Military persons faith is our shield hope is our helmet the Word of God our sword we come into the world as into a field-battel lusts war against us 1 Pet. 2.11 Good reason therefore that we should war against them 't is a day of battel and it is dangerous going abroad without our Armour 4. Sometimes a Christians work for heaven is compared to the running of a race so in the Text Know ye not that they which run in a race run all but one receiveth the prize So run that ye may obtain In which words the Apostle seems to allude as learned Writers observe either to the Olympian games which were kept every fifth year in honour of Jupiter or to the Isthmian games celebrated near Corinth in the honour of Neptune in which games they did put forth all their strength to win the prize So saith the Apostle Run the race of Christianity which is set before you with a winged swiftness that ye may obtain the prize of salvation The words fall into two general parts 1. The race to be run 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so run 2. The end of running 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that ye may obtain The Observations out of the Text are these two 1. That Christianity is a race 2. That wise Christians should labour so to run as to win the prize 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so run that ye may obtain Doctr. The first Doctrine is That Christianity is a race or the life of a Christian is a race Hebr. 12.1 Let us run with patience the race that is set before us We must be Viatores before we are Comprehensores heaven is a place of rest Hebr. 4.9 There remains a rest for the people of God No more wrestling there for then we have overcome the enemy the Saints in glory are set forth with Palms in their hands Rev. 7.9 in token of victory No more running there for the prize being obtain'd the Saints have Thrones to sit and rest themselves upon Revel 3.21 But this life is a race and it must be run and so run For the illustration of the Doctrine there are three things to be opened 1. Wherein a Christians life is compared to a race 2. Wherein the Christian race differs from other races 3. Why this race must be run 1. Wherein a Christians life is compared to a race that appears in four particulars 1. In a race there is the way or path to run in * Stadium locut erat in quo cursu c●rtabatur pedibus aut equis Estius so in Christianity there is the path-way in which we must run Psal 119.32 I will run the way of thy Commandments this is a good old way Jer. 6.16 'T is as good as it is old The way of sanctification and obedience is the way the Saints have gone in and the way which God hath been found in this way we are to run in is 1. A pleasant way 't is sweetned with comfort Prov. 3.17 All her wayes are pleasantness Rom. 15.13 Joy in believing The way of Religion is strowed with Roses oh the bunches of grapes that God cuts down the flagons of wine that he gives to those that turn their feet into this way 2. The way of Gods Commandments is a clean way 't is a way paved with holiness Isa 35.6 Christians may run in this way and never wet the sole of their feet the way of sin is defiling such as use themselves to this way the filth of hell sticks upon them in the wayes of sin there are such deep sloughs that men sink into perdition but the way of the Christian race is clean such as run this race cleanse themselves from all pollution of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness 2 Cor. 7.1 2. A race is laborious the running of a race is a violent exercise men do vires exerere put forth all the strength of their bodies in running Thus Christianity is a race for labour we must put forth all our strength in this race My soul followeth hard after God Psal 63.8 I reach forward Phil. 2.13 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifies I stretch my neck forward and saith the Apostle I press 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 toward the mark as runners in a race gather up their feet with all swiftness and stretch themselves forward to lay hold on the prize 't is not an idle wish a dead prayer will win the garland but a Christian must put forward with all speed and vigour of affection that he may obtain what he runs for 3. A race is short breve curriculum as Horace calls it the Greek word for a race 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a short stage of ground the Olympian race contained six hundred feet 't was one hundred twenty paces long as Authors report A race is but a short space of ground it is soon run Thus our time being short our race cannot be long and this may encourage us in the race of Religion and keep us from being out of breath remember it is but a short race 1 Pet. 5.10 After ye have suffered awhile So I may say after ye have run awhile you will be at the end of the stage it is but awhile Christians and you shall have done wrestling weeping praying and you shall reap the fruit of all your prayers it is but awhile and you shall have done suffering and be among the spirits of just men made perfect it is but awhile and you shall be at the end of your race 1 Pet. 1.9 Receiving the end of your faith c. How should a childe of God rejoyce to think he hath got over a good part of his race and is almost at the end as Doctor Taylor Martyr once said I have but two stiles to go over and then I shall be at my Fathers house You that have set out betimes for heaven now are in your old age comfort your selves with this you have but a few steps more to take
Bernard saith Fragrare unguentis optimis Christ will give them a new name he will call them his friends his Spouse the apple of his eye their names shall flourish with honour and give forth their perfume as the wine of Lebanon 3. Christ as a Judge will appear to crown his people when body and soul shall be reunited and perfected in glory Christ will take his people into his sweet and everlasting embraces he will lay them in his bosome he will set them upon his Throne he will fill them with the Inebriating wine of his love to all eternity And thus you see what is the Saints hope namely the glorious appearing of Christ when he shall appear as a Judge to acquit vindicate crown them Use 1 1. See here the misery of a wicked man who hath all his hope in this life Informat he makes the wedge of gold his hope he casts his Anchor downwards he can have no hope of Christs appearing he fears Christs appearing he doth not hope for it he is like a Prisoner that fears the Judges coming to the Bench. Christs appearing will be a dismal appearing to him when Christ shall appear where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear 1 Pet. 4.18 a wicked man is like a Mariner at Sea that hath no Anchor like a man in a storm that hath no shelter where is his hope when he shall come to die It is with a sinner as it was with the old world when the flood came the waters did arise higher and higher by degrees First the waters came to the Valleys but they encouraged themseves in the Hills then the waters came to the Mountains I but there might be some Trees upon the Hills and they would climb up to them then the waters prevailed and rose to the top of the Trees now they had nothing to trust to all hopes of being saved were gone So it is with a sinner if one comfort be taken away he hath another left if a Relation be gone he hath an estate left if one Crutch be broken yet he hath another to lean upon I but sickness comes and he sees he must die and appear before his Judge now he hath no hope he dies despairing he must lie for ever in the boyling furnace of Gods wrath * In inferno nulla est redemptio qui illic damnatuus demersus fuerit ulterius non exibit Aug. in Serm. ad Erem In cava Lethaeas dolia portat aquas 2. Put your selves upon the tryal Have you this blessed hope of Christs appearing and of your appearing with him in glory come almost to any man and you Use 2 shall hear him say he hopes to be saved well then Trial. let every soul put it self upon the tryal I shall show you four differences between a sound Hope and a sandy Hope 1. True hope is quickning it sets a man a working for heaven * Addit conatum quendam elevationem animi Aquinas it is called a lively hope 1 Pet. 1.3 it puts life into a man hope is a Spur to duty a Whetstone to industry Hope of victory makes the Souldier fight hope of gain makes the Merchant runthrough the several Zones Divine hope is as Wind to the Sails as Wheeles to the Chariot it makes a Christian active in Religion he runs the wayes of Gods Commandements * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Macar Hope is circa arduum it cuts away through the Rock it wrastles with difficulties it despiseth dangers it marcheth in the face of death True hope never gives over till it hath the thing hoped for He who hath Divine hope will have Christ though it be in a Furnance he will profess the truth though the next word Christiani ad Leones The Romans as Tertullian observes would endure all kind of hardship they would fight with cold and hunger and run any hazard for hope at last to be Consul which was saith Tertullian unius anni gaudium volaticum honour but for a year Oh then what pains will he take who hath hopes of heaven where he shall be Crowned with a Garland of glory for ever doth that man say his hope is in God who stands all the day idle Prov. 19.24 there is a faint velleity in Hypocrites they would be saved but sit still and do nothing their hope is not a a lively hope but a dead hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 True hope is in the soul like fire which is an active Element it is ever sparkling or flaming 2. True hope is purifying 1 Joh. 3.3 He that hath this hope in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purifying himself Hope is in the soul as lightning is in the Aire it clears the Air he who hath hope in Christ sets himself against all sin both in purpose and practice he is a consecrated person there is engraven upon his heart Holiness to the Lord hope is a Virgin-grace it lives in the soul tanquam scintillatio in fomite tanquam ramus in radice * O quam multi cum vanaspe descendunt ad inferos Aug. St. Bernard compares holiness to the Root and hope to the Branch true hope flourisheth upon the root of holiness now then try your hope by this Scripture Touchstone The hypocrite saith he hath hope but is he a purified person what an unclean person and hope to go to heaven nothings enters there which defileth Rev. 21.27 what a drunkard and hope to be saved dost thou think to go reeling to heaven what an Apostate and yet hope to be saved as if there were any going to heaven backward * O quam multi cum vanaspe descendunt ad inferos Aug. The wicked man is not sure of happiness but secure 3. A true hope is a good hope 2 Thes 2.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who hath given us good hope through grace A wicked mans hope is as far from being good as his heart the Hebrew word for hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies both confidence and folly it is fitly applyed to a wicked mans hope his confidence is folly the hope of a godly man is compared to an Anchor Hebr. 6.19 the hope of a wicked man to a Spiders Web Job 8.14 And the sinners hope is fitly resembled to a Spiders Web three wayes 1. The Spiders Web hath no foundation such is the hope of the wicked it is a pleasing thing but it hath nothing to rest upon A godly mans hope is built upon a double Basis 1. The Word of God Psal 130.5 In his word do I hope The Word saith Let the sinner forsake his way and the Lord will abundantly pardon The Word saith Hereby we know that Christ abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us 1 Joh. 3.8 Now a child of God finding these qualifications wrought in him he builds his hope for heaven upon them In his Word do I hope 2. The hope of a godly man is built upon experiences Rom. 5.4
not the Divel dispute you out of your hopes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Souldier that hath the higher ground and is gotten upon an hill he will not let the enemy beat him off his ground but will keep it to the last breath Hath God set you on the higher ground hath he raised your hopes as high as heaven be not beaten off your ground maintain your hopes to the last pray to God that he would further clear your Title to heaven that you may be as Mount Sihon which cannot be moved 3. How should this make us abound in the work of Branch 3 the Lord. Spes sulcis credit aratis Semina quae magno foenore reddet ager He who hath a well-grounded hope of heaven how fervent should he be in duty how zealous in the cause of God! the hope of glory should spirit and animate a Christian If there could be grief in heaven sure it would be that we have done God no more service what an infinite disproportion is there between our work and reward Let Divine Hope be as Oyle to the Lamp as Wind to the Sailes to excite and to blow us forward in holy activity for God we sow in hope Gal. 6.9 Let us not b● weary in well-doing for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in due season we shall reap if we faint not Branch 4 4. Let us live suitable to our hopes in an holy Angelical walking They who have heaven in their hopes should have heaven in their lives let us walk after that golden pattern whith Christ hath left us 1 Joh. 2.6 As we hope to have Christs death for our justification we must have his life for our imitation I will conclude with that Philip. 1.27 Only let your conversation be as it becometh the Gospel of Christ The trees of Righteousness blossoming and bringing forth fruit Phil. 1.11 Being filled with the fruits of Righteousnesse which are by Iesus Christ unto the glory and praise of God THE blessed Apostle in this Chapter makes a solemn Prayer to God for these Philippians and among the rest he puts up two rare Petitions for them 1. That they might be sincere Ver. 10. 2. That they might be fruitful in the words of the Text Being filled with the fruits of Righteousness c. Where is observable 1. The Matter being filled with fruits 2. The Manner of Production by Jesus Christ 3. The End which are to the glory and praise of God Doctrine from whence this great truth doth result Doctr. That Christians should above all things endeavour after fruithfulness The Saints are called trees of Righteousness Isa 61.3 These rational trees must not only bring forth leaves but fruit Being filled with the fruits of righteousness For the further amplifying of this there are two things to be enquired into 1. How a Christian brings forth fruit 2. What is the fruit he brings forth 1. How a Christian brings forth fruit I answer he brings forth fruit in the Vine by nature we are barren there is not one good blossome growing on us but when by faith we are engraffed into Christ then we grow and fructifie Joh. 15.4 As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself except it abide in the Vine no more can ye except ye abide in me Jesus Christ is that blessed Root which shoots up that sap of grace into his Branches The Pelagians tell us we have sufficiency of our selves to bring forth good fruit but how improper is this doth not the Root contribute to the Branches is it not of Christs pretious fulness that we receive Joh. 1.16 Therefore it is observable Christ calls the Spouses grace his grace Cant. 5.1 I have gathered my Myrrhe with my Spice Christ saith not thy myrrhe but my myrrhe Emissiones istae bone Jesu sunt emissiones tuae Bern. in Cant. If the Saints bear any spiritual fruit they are beholding to Christ for it it is his wine it is his myrrhe Hose 14.8 From me is thy fruit found 2. What that fruit is which a good Christian brings forth Answer it is 1. Inward fruit 2. Outward fruit 3. Kindly fruit 4. Seasonable fruit 1. A Christian brings forth inward fruit Love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith c. Gal. 5.22 This fruit is sweet and mellows growing under the Sun of Righteousness this is that ripe fruit God delights to taste of Micah 7.1 2. A Christian brings forth outward fruit 1. The fruit of good discourse Prov. 15.4 A wholesome tongue is a tree of life Gracious speeches fall from the lips of a godly man as fruit from a tree 2. The fruit of good works Col. 1.10 God will say at the last day show me thy faith by thy works Jam. 2.18 A true Saint doth all the good he can honouring the Lord with his substance he knows he is to be in the world but a while therefore lives much in a little time and crowds up a great deale of work in a little room it was Christs speech not long before his suffering I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do Joh. 17.4 How can they be said to finish their work that never yet began a good work 3. A Christian brings forth kindly fruit The godly man bringeth forth his fruit Psal 1.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is he brings forth that fruit which is proper for him to bear But what is this kindly and proper fruit I answer when we are good in our Callings and Relations In a Magistrate Justice is kindly fruit Deut. 16.19 in a Minister Zeal Acts 17. ●6 In a Parent Instruction Deut. 4.10 in a Child Reverence Ephes 6.1 in a Master good example Gen. 18.19 Ephes 6.9 in a servant Obedience 1 Pet. 2.18 in the Husband Love Ephes 5.25 in the Wife Submission Ephes 5.22 in a Tradesman diligence Exod. 20.9 in a Souldier innocence Luke 3.14 A tree of Gods planting brings forth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his fruit that which is suitable and proper I shall never believe him to be good that doth not bear kindly fruit a good Christian but a bad Master a good Christian but a bad Parent doth not sound well That Minister can no more be good which wants zeal than that wine is good which wants spirits that Magistrate can no more be good which wants Justice than that Pillar is good which is not upright * Remota justitia quid sunt Regna nisi magna latrocinia Aug. That Child can no more be good who doth not honour his Parent than a Traitor can be said to be loyal When Absalom did rise up in rebellion against his Father the Mule which he rode upon as if she were weary of carrying such a burden resigns up her load to the great thick Oak and there left him hanging by the head betwixt Heaven and Earth as neither fit to ascend the one nor worthy to tread upon the other Let Christians be perswaded to bring forth proper and genuine fruit and shine forth in
to be gray-headed in Religion what a credit when it shall be said of him His last works are better than his first Revel 2.19 A good Christian is like wine full of spirits which is good to the last drawing A Limner makes his last work more compleat and curious blessed is that man who the nearer he is to death moves swifter to the heavenly Center FINIS THE TABLE Alphabetical A. ABusers of their souls page 462 Acceptance through Christ 422 Adoption wherein it consists 291 Afflictions no sign of Gods anger 321 322 Afflictions light 395 Angels in some sence inferiour to Saints 319 Anger opposite to meekness 133 Appearance of sin to be avoided 242 Appearing of Christ 579 Arguments to brotherly love 618 Assurance to be laboured after p. 437 Assurance though feisible yet difficult to be attained 440 It is useful 441 How this jewel of assurance may be had 442 B. BAlm of Gilead 490 Beauty of grace 511 Blessedness in reversion 17 Wherein blessedness doth not consist 18 Wherein it doth consist 24 Believe a blessedness to come 27 The godly in some sense blessed in this life 31 32 Blood of Saints pretious 317 C. CHearfulness 588 Childship a state of freedom 332 Children of God 290 291 They labour to make others Gods Children 310 They have boldnesse in Prayer 331 All things turn to their gaod 335 They shall never finally perish 338 They should endeavour to carry themselves as Children 343 Christ the best of Preachers 2 Christ our Righteousness 421 Christ a most transcendent blessing 432 Christ a soul-Physitian 485 Why a Physitian 486 The best Physitian 493 Christs love to his Patients 495 Christ can cure a relapse 504 Christianity no disgraceful thing 60 The nature of Christianity 363 Christians should shine forth in their Relations 594 Comforts belonging to mourners in this life 108 111 In the life to come p. 125 Commands of God not grievous 402 Concatenation of the Graces 38 Conversation must be pure 246 Covetousness a multiplying sin 234 235 D. DAnger of despair 98 99 Dangerous to phancy sin less than it is 101 Deceit of the heart 538 539 Dead in sinne healed by Christ 498 Debt of love differs from other debts 624 Degrees of fruit 607 Deriding holiness a fatal sinne 237 Desertion 323 Differences between true and false desires 194 195 Differences between the Christian race and other 559 Divisions dangerous 626 E. EMissaries of Satan 8 Examples of meekness 143 Excellency of grace 516 Excellency of the mourners comfort 113 Exhortation ton to mutual love p. 627 F. FAith in our heavenly Physiitian 505 Faith makes us Children 952 Faith a suffering grace 381 How faith enables to suffer 382 Fences about the heart 550 Fear an enemy to suffering 370 Fickleness of the heart 540 Flesh not to be listned to 371 Forethoughts of sufferings 366 Forgiving of injuries 138 Forsaking of sinne may have its deceits 241 Fruitfulness 591 Fruit in the season 595 Exhortation to fruitfulness 604 Fulness of Christ 417 G. GOod Conscience 373 Glory proportioned to the service we do for God 65 Godly have cause to long for death 61 Gospel-precepts facill compar'd with the severity of the Law 409 Grace severally taken in Scripture 512 Grace not bestowed on all p. 514 Grace quickneth the soul 516 Grace enricheth 517 Grace adorneth 518 Grace a Spiritual perfume 520 Grace the ballast of the soul 523 Grace fits for glory 523 524 How grace is to be obtained 526 H. HArdness of heart dangerous 87 Heart-custody 529 Heart kept with all kind of keeping 531 At all times 534 Heart the Fountain of our actions 541 Motives to heart-custody 552 Hindrances of the successe of the Word 9 10 Honour of Gods children 315 Honour to suffer for Christ 391 Hope of a Christian 576 Hope and Faith differenced 577 Signs of a true hope 583 How Christ heals 489 Hunger of the soul described 153 A reproof of those who have no spiritual hunger 156 Who hunger after unrighteousness 160 Signs of Spiritual hunger 162 Helps to spiritual hunger p. 170 Hungry shall be filled 172 173 I. IMpure hearts deciphered 229 230 Interest in Christ to be laboured after 431 Joys of heaven resembled to a feast 116 K. KEeping the heart 531 Kingdom of heaven excells other Kingdoms 56 57 How we may know we belong to it 62 Thoughts of this Kingdom sweetens poverty 66 Knowledge alone will not make a man happy 633 634 L. LIfe to be denied for Christ 377 Loss of the soul foolish 464. Fatal 465 Love of God in making us his children 313 Love to be centred on Christ 445 Love to Gods Children 307 Love of the world an enemy to suffering 369 Love among Christians 616 617 M. MAlice mental murder 134 Manner of the Spirits comforting p. 111 112 Manner of our seeing God in heaven 259 Means of a Spiritual cure 507 Meekness what it is 132 Motives to meekness 145 146 Directions for meekness 152 Mercifulness 180 Mercifulness to mens souls 183 Names 188 Estates 193 Offences 194 Wants 195 Exhortat●●n to mercifulness 206 Motives to mercifulness 210 Rules about showing mercy 218 Ministers must take all opportunities for soul-service 6 Ministers Seedsmen 7 Their dignity 12 Ministers under the torrid zone of persecution 354 What need there is of Ministers in the Church 477 Misery of a Christless person 428 Mourners are blessed 67 Sin the object of mourning 69 What is not the right mourning for sin 70 What is the right mourning p. 72 Mourn for the sins of others 80 For the miseries of the Church 82 Seasons of mourning 83 Degrees of mourning 85 Motives to mourning 91 Hinderances of mourning 98 Helps to mourning 106 N. NAmes of others not to be wronged 188 189 Nicities in Religion too much minded 159 This discovers want of appetite ibid. O. OBjections of sinners answered 501 502 Opposites to meekness 133 Opposite to mourning 86 Ordination needful for Preachers 4 5 6 Outward things not suitable to the soul 20 Not durable 21 P. PAssions to be watched over 548 Patience abused grows furious 105 Patience a Christians Armour of proof p. 386 Peaceable mindedness 269 Motives to it 277 Peace-makers blessed 285 People to encourage their Ministers 14 15 Persecution 347 VVhy it must be 351 352 What that persecution is which will not make a man blessed 358 What that is will make him blessed 359 A reproof to such as refuse to suffer persecution 364 To such as inflict persecution 365 How to prepare for persecution 368 Persecution cannot hinder blessedness 397 Poverrty of spirit 41 How poverty of spirit differs from humility 42 How from self-denial ibid. Why Christians must be poor in spirit 43 Signs of poverty of Spirit 47 Practice of Religion makes us happy 638 What it is hinders practice 642 Pretiousness of the soul 451 Pride of spirit dangerous 45 Priviledges of Gods Children 320 Procrastination dangerous 103 Promises made to suffering p. 388 Purity of heart 222 Why we must be pure 224 Why the heart must be 226 Purity the souls beauty 227 Signs of a pure heart 238 An exhortation to peart purity 248 Means for heart purity 254 R. REasons why mourners want comfort 122 123 Reasonings of the flesh dangerous 379 Recompencing good for evil 140 141 Regarding iniquity what it is 231 Regeneration 301 Rejoycing in Christ 448 Religion a Race 554 Reproof to be taken kindly 479 Reverence in Gods worship 245 Rewards for Christs Martyrs 399 Righteousness what it implies 154 Righteous person who 368 S. SAints perseverance 524 Saints glorified are Kings 53 Scandals p. 415. Self-denial needful for suffering 375 Scripture to be resorted to 374 Signs of Gods Children 298 Signs of sincerity 238 Sins commands grievous 411 Sin a deadly evil 106 Sin a soul desease 469 How resembled to sickness 469 470 Sin the worst sickness 475 Sick souls think themselves well 481 The reasons of that mistake 482 Sin spreads over the whole soul 470 471 Sin a spiritual sleep 545 Soul more precious than a world 458 Spirit of Adoption a Spirit of supplication 302 303 Sufferings of Christ 392 Suffering-graces 381 T. TEaching 330 Tears pretious 92 Tenderness of heart 299 Thankfulness for Christ 450 Thoughs to be watched over 549 Tongue-persecution 350 Torments of the damned unexpressably grievous 412 Trial of grace p. 526 Truth to be prized 373 V. VAnity of the Creature 425 Vindication of the Church of England 200 Vision of God in heaven glorious 260 It will be speedy 264 Unbelief how great a sin 233 Unfruitfulness 600 Unmercifulness reproved 203 Unworthiness should not keep us from Christ p. 501 W. WAant of love reproved 625 Watchfulness needful in prosperity 537 Witness of the Spirit 305 Word of God healing 489 Works commendable 201 Z. Zeal 305 FINIS