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A52249 An exposition with notes, unfolded and applyed on John 17th delivered in sermons preached weekly on the Lords-day, to the congregation in Tavnton Magdalene / by George Newton. Newton, George, 1602-1681. 1660 (1660) Wing N1044; ESTC R29244 715,417 610

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AN EXPOSITION WITH NOTES Unfolded and Applyed On JOHN 17 th Delivered in Sermons Preached Weekly on the LORDS-DAY to the Congregation in TAVNTON MAGDALENE By GEORGE NEWTON Minister of the Gospel there LONDON Printed by R. W. for Edward Brewster and are to be sold at the Crane in Pauls-Church-yard 1660. To the Honorable Colonel JOHN GORGES Governour of the City of London-Derry and the Castle of Cullmore in IRELAND My duly honoured and dearly beloved Brother SIR NOW you have wrested the following Lectures out of my hands I do but fairly leave them there whence I cannot recover them So that this which I prefix is not so properly a Dedication as an Abdication I must confess I never knew you guilty of Extortion but in this Act. I loath their Cunning who by debasing and disabling secretly design to raise the price of their own labours And do it this way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Oratour speaks though somewhat in another case with much more Artifice then professed Hucksters do But verily these Sermons being preached by such an one as I do really account and know my self to be in my constant weekly course upon the Lords Day and indeed a great part of them twice a day when I had no Assistant with me having besides the Wednesdays Lecture on my weak shoulders and many other Ministerial Employments not without frequent Avocations and diversions which in so great a place are unavoidable will be adjudged by discerning men unfit to have appeared to the world in such a way as this is And herein I shall heartily agree with them Now seeing you alone are faulty here I Dedicate the Book and Blame to you And if the Sword of wounding tongues be bent at me as being troubled with the Epidemical distemper of the Times an itch of being seen in publick you ought in justice to step in between and say as Nisus in the Poet Virg. lib. 9. Aeneid●s Me me adsum qui feci in me convertite ferrum And I am confident you will be my Compurgatour in this that no Opinion of any thing in these poor labours worthy of the Press hath had any Influence on this Publication There is besides an apparent disadvantage which I am very sensible of Mr. A●th B●rges viz. That in this Tract I follow One of so great Accomplishments who being next the Light and of a far more perfect Stature then my self must needs cast back a shadow on me Unless I be so far behind him that his shadow will not reach me But if it do I shall as Ionah in another case rest very quietly in that shadow The Subject handled is a choice and precious One as any in the Book of God without Exception This Prayer being as it were a little piece that dropt off from the heart of Jesus Christ as once Eliahs Mantle from his body as he was taking leave of his Apostles and the World together When He was even going forth to suffer He Swan-like sung this dying Song and poured out this precious Prayer being about to pour forth his very blood and life with it And this he did not for his Apostles only then about him but for us also even for us who should in after-times believe through their words A man would think our blessed Saviour when He had such a Task to undergo and such a business to dispatch should have been wholly taken up with the preapprehension of his instant Death and Passion That this should have detained or diverted Him from other thoughts especially from taking care of such poor Worms as we are But that when he was drawing neer to such a Conflict with the Wrath of God and the Indignities and Wrongs of men He should have us in his heart That our dear Friend who loved us and gave Himself for us should think of us and pray for us and speak of us to God the Father with so high affection when his own Soul was heavy to the very Death Such a Prayer made by such a Mediatour at such a time as that was must needs be worthy of the choicest and exactest Observation of the Church in every Age to the end of the world Some Antiquaries tell us of the Diptyches Lindan Annot. in Liturg. S. Petri. pag. 39. much in use in the Primitive Church Which were two leaves or tables bound together on the one of which was a Commemoration of divers famous and renowned Worthies departed in the Faith of Christ and on the other a Commemoration of the like Personages yet alive Much Honoured Sir Joseph Vicecom Obfervat Ecclesiae Dae Missae Apparatu Tom. 4. lib. 7. cap. 17. I shall present you here with a new sort of Diptyches the Tables more exactly answering one another The one containing a Commemoration of a dying Christ and shewing how He pray'd on Earth In which you may also see what is contained in the other Table and how he prays for us in Heaven who ever liveth to make Intercession for us So that if you desire at any time to know how Christ persues the business and pleads the causes of his poor Church at the right hand of his Father you shall do well to have recourse to this Chapter which may be very fitly called a Counterpart of our Saviours Intercession And truly for my own part I must freely and ingenuously profess that I had never known so much of Christ and of his tender Care and Love of poor sinners had I not studyed these Emanations and Effluxes of his precious Soul had I not seen his Breast open in this Chapter and the Names of the twelve Tribes transcribed out of the Breast-plate of the Typical into the heart of the Typified High Priest Fox Act. Mon. ad Annum 1558. And as the Queen of England sometimes said That if they opened her when she was dead they should find Calais written on her heart So when I had the happiness to open Christ in this Prayer though with a most unskilful hand I found the Church engraven deeply on his Heart and saw such things as cannot be uttered The Lord give you and me to know more of that Love which passeth knowledge and to return more Love to Him who pray'd for us and dyed for us We may easily exceed in loving other things and persons We may love more then we are loved we may love more then we should love But here our hearts may take their full swing there is no fear of over-loving Jesus Christ For as Bernard sweetly speaks of our Love to God Bern. De diligendo Deo Modus Deum diligendi est sine modo diligere The same may I as truly say of our Love to Christ The measure of loving Christ is to love him out of measure So hath he loved us ☞ and so should we love him There are especially two great Boons which Jesus Christ begs of his Father for Believers in this