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A39663 The fountain of life opened, or, A display of Christ in his essential and mediatorial glory wherein the impetration of our redemption by Jesus Christ is orderly unfolded as it was begun, carryed on, and finished by his covenant-transaction, mysterious incarnation, solemn call and dedication ... / by John Flavell ... Flavel, John, 1630?-1691. 1673 (1673) Wing F1162; ESTC R20462 564,655 688

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equivalent to a universal and is as much as if he had said to all and every Saint from the beginning to the end of the world Lastly He commends it from its perpetuity It perfects for ever That is it is of everlasting efficacy It shall abide as fresh vigorous and powerful to the end of the world as it was the first moment it was offered up All runs into this sweet truth DOCT. That the Oblation made unto God by Iesus Christ is of unspeakable value and everlasting efficacy to perfect all them that are or shall be Sanctified to the end of the world Out of this fountain flow all the excellent blessings that believers either have or hope for Had it not been for this there had been no such things in rerum natura as Justification Adoption Salvation c. peace with God and hopes of glory pardon of sin and divine acceptation These and all other our best mercies had been but so many entia rationis meer conceits A man as one saith might have haply imagined such things as these as he may golden Mountains and Rivers of liquid gold and rocks of Diamonds but these things could never have had any real existance extramentem had not Christ offered up himself a Sacrifice to God for us It is the blood of Christ who through the eternal spirit offered up himself without spot to God that purges the Conscience from dead works Heb. 9.14 That is from the sentence of condemnation and death as it is reflected by Conscience for our works sake His appearing before God as our Priest with such an offering for us is that which removes our guilt and fear together He appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself Heb. 9.26 Now for as much as the point before us is of so great weight in it self and so fundamental to our safety and comfort I shall endeavour to give you as distinct and clear an accompt of it as can consist with that brevity which I must necessarily use And therefore Reader apply thy mind attently to the consideration of this excellent Priest that appears before God and the Sacrifice he offers with the properties and adjuncts thereof The Person before whom he brings and to whom he offers it The Persons for whom he offers and the end for which this Oblation is made First The Priest that appears before God with an Oblation for us is Jesus Christ God-man The dignity of whose person dignified and derived an inestimable worth to the offering he made There were many Priests before him but none like unto him either for the purity of his person or the perpetuity of his Priesthood They were sinful men and offered for their own sins as well as the sins of the people Heb. 5.3 But he was holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners Heb. 7.2 He could stand before God even in the eye of his Justice as a Lamb without spot Though he made his soul an offering for sin yet he had done no iniquity nor was any guile found in his mouth Isa. 53.9 And indeed his offering had done us no good if the least taint of sin had been found on him They were mortal men that continued not by reason of death Heb. 7.23 But Christ is a Priest for ever Psal. 110.4 Secondly The Oblation or offering he made was not the blood of beasts but his own blood Heb. 9.12 And herein he transcended all other Priests that he had something of his own to offer He had a body given him to be at his own dispose to this use and purpose Heb. 10.10 He offered his body Yea not only his body but his soul was made an offering for sin Isa. 53.10 We had made a forfeiture of our souls and bodies by sin and it was necessary the Sacrifice of Christ should be answerable to the debt we owed And when Christ came to offer his Sacrifice he stood not only in the capacity of a Priest but also in the capacity of a surety and so his soul stood in the stead of ours and his body in the stead of our bodies Now the excellency of this Oblation will appear in the following adjuncts and properties of it This Oblation being for the matter of it the soul and body of Jesus Christ is therefore First Invaluably pretious So the Apostle stiles it 1 Pet. 1.19 Ye were redeemed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the pretious blood of the Son of God And such it behoved him to offer For it being offered as an expiatory Sacrifice it ought to be aequivalent in its own intrinsick value to all the souls and bodies that were to be redeemed by it And so it was and more also for there was a redundancy of value an overplus of merit which went to make a purchase for the redeemed as will be opened in its place So that as one rich-Diamond is more worth than a thousand Pebbles one piece of Gold than a many Counters so the soul and body of one Christ is much more excellent than all the souls and bodies in the world And yet I dare not affirm as some do that by reason of the infinite pretiousness of Christs blood one drop thereof had been sufficient to have redeemed the whole world for if one drop had been enough why was all the rest even to the last drop shed Was God cruel to exact more from him than was needful and sufficient Besides we must remember that the passions of Christ which were inflicted on him as the curse of the Law these only are the passions which are sufficient for our redemption from the curse of the Law now it was not a drop of blood but death which was contained in the curse This therefore was necessary to be inflicted But surely as none but God can estimate the weight and evil of sin so none but he can comprehend the worth and pretiousness of the blood of Christ shed to expiate it And being so infinitely pretious a thing which was offered up to God it must Secondly Needs be a most compleat and alsufficient Oblation fully to expiate the sins of all for whom it was offered in all ages of the world The vertue of this Sacrifice reacheth backward as far as Adam and reacheth forward to the last person of of the Elect springing from him That the efficacy of it thus reached back to Adam is plain for on the account thereof he is stiled the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world Rev. 13.8 And to the same sence a Judicious Expositor understands those words of Christ. Joh. 8.58 before Abraham was I am And look as the Sun at mid-day extends his light and influence not only forward towards the West but also backward towards the East where he arose so did this most efficacious Sacrifice reach all the Elect in the vertue of it who died before Christ came in the flesh It is therefore but a vain cavil that some make against the
sinners such a fair Foundation to rest their trembling Consciences upon While poor distressed Souls look to themselves they are perpetually puzled That 's the cry of distressed natural conscience Mica 6.6 Where with shall I come before the Lord the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how shall I prevent or anticipate the Lord and so Montanus renders it in quo preoccupabo Dominum conscience sees God arming himself with wrath to avenge himself for sin crys out O how shall I prevent him If he would accept the fruit of my body those dear pledges of nature for the sin of my Soul he should have them But now we see God coming down in flesh and so intimately uniting our flesh to himself that it hath no proper subsistance of its own but is united with the Divine person hence it 's easie to imagine what worth and value must be in that blood and how eternal love springing forth triumphantly from it flourishes into Pardon Grace and Peace Here is a way in which the sinner may see Justice and Mercy kissing each other and the latter exercised freely without prejudice to the former All others Consciences through the world lie either in a deep sleep in the Devils arms or else are rouling Sea sick upon the waves of their own fears and dismal presages O happy are they that have dropt Anchor on this ground and not only know they have peace but why they have it Vse 5. Oh how great concernment is it that Christ should have Vnion with our particular persons as well as with our common nature For by this Union with our nature alone never any man was or can be Saved Yea let me add that this Union with your natures is utterly in vain to you and will do you no good except he have union with your persons by faith also It is indeed infinite mercy that God is come so near you as to dwell in your flesh and that he hath fitted such an excellent Method to save poor sinners in And hath he done all this Is he indeed come home even to your own doors to seek Peace Doth he vail his unsupportable glory under flesh that he might treat thee more familiarly And yet do you refuse him and shut your hearts against him Then hear one word and let thine ears tingle at the sound of it thy sin is hereby aggravated beyond the sin of Devils who never sin'd against a Mediator in their own nature who never despised or refused because indeed they were never offered terms of Mercy as you are And I doubt not but the Devils themselves who now tempt you to reject will to all Eternity upbraid your folly for rejecting this great Salvation which in this excellent way is brought down even to your own doors Vse 6. If Jesus Christ have assumed our nature Then he is sensibly toucht with the infirmities that attend it and so hath pity and compassion for us under all our burdens And indeed this was one end of his assuming it that he might be able to have compassion on us as you read Heb. 2.17.18 Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren that he might be a merciful and faithful High-Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people For in that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them hat are tempted O what a comfort is this to us that he who is our High-Priest in Heaven hath our nature on him to enable him to take compassion on us Vse 7. Seventhly Hence we see To what an height God intends to build up the happiness of man in that he hath layed the Foundation thereof so deep in the incarnating of his own Son They that intend to build high use to lay the Foundation low The happiness and glory of our Bodies as well as Souls is founded in Christs taking our flesh upon him For therein as in a Model or Pattern God intended to shew what in time he resolves to make of our Bodies For he will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transform our vile Bodies and make them one day conformable to the glorious Body of Jesus Christ Phil. 3.21 This flesh was therefore assumed by Christ that in it might be shewn as in a Pattern how God intends to honour and exalt it And indeed a greater honour cannot be done to the nature of man than what is already done it by this grace of union Nor are our persons capable of an higher glory than what consists in their conformity to this glorious head Indeed the flesh of Christ will ever have a distinct glory from ours in Heaven by reason of this Union For being the the Body which the word assumed it is two ways advanced singularly above the Flesh and Blood of all other men viz. Subjectively and Objectively Subjectively it is the Flesh and Blood of God Acts 20.28 And so hath a distinct and incommunicable glory of its own And Objectively it is the Flesh and Blood which all the Angels and Saints adore But though in these things it be supereminently exalted yet it is both the Medium and Pattern of all that glory which God designs to raise us to Vse 8. Lastly How wonderful a comfort is it that he who dwells in our Flesh is God! What Joy may not a poor believer make out of this What comfort one made out of it I will give you in his own words I see it a work of God saith he that experiences are all lost when Summons of improbation to prove our Charters of Christ to be counterfeit are raised against poor Souls in their heavy Tryals But let me be a sinner and worse than the chief of Sinners yea a guilty Devil I am sure my well beloved is God And my Christ is God And when I say my Christ is God I have said all things I can say no more I would I could build as much on this My Christ is God as it would bear I might lay all the world upon it God and Man in one Person Oh thrice happy conjunction As Man he is full of experimental sence of our Infirmities Wants and Burdens and as God he can support and and supply them all The aspect of Faith upon this wonderful Person how relieving how reviving how abundantly satisfying is it God will never divorce the believing Soul and its comfort after he hath marryed our nature to his own Son by the Hypostatical and our persons also by the blessed Mystical Union The SIXTH SERMON JOH VI. XXVII For him hath God the Father Sealed YOU have heard Christs compact or agreement with the Father in the Covenant of Redemption As also what the Father did in pursuance of the ends thereof in giving his Son out of his bosom c. Also what the Son hath done towards it in assuming Flesh. But though the glorious work be thus far advanced yet all he
do your souls good Psal. 4.4 Commune with your own hearts Thirdly Labour to see and ingenuously confess the insufficiency of all your other knowledge to do you good What if you had never so much skill and knowledge in other mysteries What if you be never so well acquainted with the letter of the Scripture What if you had angelical illumination this can never save thy soul. No all thy knowledge signifies nothing till the Lord shew thee by special light the deplored state of thy own heart and a saving sight of Jesus Christ thy only remedy Inference 4. Since then there is a common light and special saving light which none but Christ can give it 's therefore the concernment of every one of you to try what your light is We know saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 8.1 that we all have knowledge O but what and whence is it Is it the light of life springing from Jesus Christ that bright and morning star Or only such as the Devils and damned have These lights differ First in their very kinds and natures The one is Heavenly supernatural and spiritual the other earthly and natural the effect of a better constitution or education Iam. 3.15 17. Secondly They differ most apparently in their effects and operations The light that comes in a special way from Christ is humbling abasing and soul emptying light By it a man sees the vileness of his own nature and practice which begets self loathing in him but natural light on the contrary puffs up and exalts makes the heart swell with self conceitedness 1 Cor. 8.1 The Light of Christ is practical and operative still urging the soul yea lovingly constraining it to obedience No sooner did it shine into Pauls heart but presently he asks Lord what wilt thou have me to do Act. 9.6 It brought forth fruit in the Collossians from the first day it came to them Col. 1.6 but the other spends it self in impractical notions and is detained in unrighteousness ● Rom. 1.18 The light of Christ is powerfully transformative of its subjects changing the man in whom it is into the same image from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3. ult but common light leaves the heart as dead carnal and sensual as if no light at all were in it In a word All saving light endears Jesus Christ to the soul and as it could not value him before it saw him so when once he appears to the soul in his own light he is appreciated and endeared unspeakably then none but Christ. All is but dung that he may win Christ. None in Heaven but him nor on earth desirable in comparison of him But no such effect flows from natural common knowledge Thirdly They differ in their Issues Natural common knowledge vanisheth as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 13.8 It 's but a May flower and dies in its month Doth not their excellency that is in them go away Job 4.21 But this that springs from Christ is perfected not destroyed by death It springs up into everlasting life The soul in which it is subjected carrys it away with it into glory Ioh. 17.2 this light is life eternal Now turn in and compare your selves with these rules Let not false light deceive you Inference 5. Lastly How are they obliged to love serve and honour Iesus Christ whom he hath enlightned with the saving knowledge of himself O that with hands and hearts lifted up to Heaven ye would adore the free grace of Jesus Christ to your souls How many round about you have their eyes closed and their hearts shut up How many are in darkness and there are like to remain till they come to the blackness of darkness which is reserved for them O what a pleasant thing is it for your eyes to see the light of this world but what is it for the eye of your mind to see God in Christ To see such ravishing sights as the objects of faith are And to have such a pledge as this given you of the blessed visions of glory for in this light you shall see light Bless God and boast not Rejoyce in your light but be not proud of it And beware ye sin not against the best and highest light in this world If God were so incensed against the Heathens for disobeying the light of nature what is it in you to sin with eyes clearly illuminated with the purest light that shines in this world You know God charges it upon Solomon in 1 King 11.9 that he turned from the way of obedience after the Lord had appeared unto him twice Jesus Christ intended when he opened your eyes that your eyes should direct your feet Light is a special help to obedience and obedience a singular help to increase your light The ELEVENTH SERMON HEB. IX XXIII It was therefore necessary that the partners of things in the Heavens should be purified with these but the Heavenly things themselves with better Sacrifices than these SAlvation as to the actual dispensation of it is revealed by Christ as a Prophet procured by him as a Priest applied by him as a King in vain is it revealed if not purchased in vain revealed and purchased if not applied How it is revealed both to us and in us by our great Prophet hath been declared And now from the Prophetical Office we pass on to the Priestly Office of Jesus Christ who as our Priest purchased our Salvation In this Office is contained the grand relief for a soul distressed by the guilt of sin When all other reliefs have been essayed 't is the blood of this great sacrifice sprinkled by faith upon the trembling conscience that must cool refresh and sweetly compose and settle it Now seeing so great a weight hangs upon this Office the Apostle industriously confirms and commends it in this Epistle and more specially in this ninth Chapter Shewing how it was figured to the world by the Typical blood of the sacrifices but infinitely excels them all And as in many other most weighty respects so principally in this that the blood of these Sacrifices did but purifie the Types or patterns of the Heavenly things but the blood of this Sacrifice purified or consecrated the Heavenly things themselves signified by those Types The words read contain an Argument to prove the necessity of the offering up of Christ the great Sacrifice drawn from the proportion betwixt the Types and things Typified If the Sanctuary Mercy-seat and all things pertaining to the service of the Tabernacle was to be consecrated by blood those earthly but sacred Types by the blood of Bulls and Lambs c. much more the Heavenly things shadowed by them ought to be purified or consecrated by better blood than the blood of beasts The blood consecrating these should as much excel the blood that consecrated those as the Heavenly things themselves do in their own nature excel those earthly shadows of them Look what proportion there is betwixt the Type and Anti-Type
So that no man can be his own Priest to reconcile himself to God by what he can do or suffer And therefore one that is able by doing and suffering to reconcile him must undertake it or we perish Thus you see plainly and briefly the general nature and necessity of Christs Priesthood From both these several useful Corollarys or practical deductions offer themselves Corollary 1. This shews in the first place the incomparable excellency of the reformed Christian Religion above all other Religions known to or professed in the world What other Religions seek the Christian Religion only finds even a solid foundation for true peace and settlement of conscience While the Iews seek it in vain in the Law the Mahumetan in his external and ridiculous observances the Papist in his own merits the Believer only finds it in the blood of this great sacrifice this and nothing less than this can pacifie a dis●●●●sed conscience labouring under the weight of its own guilt Conscience demands no less to satisfie it than God demands to satisfie him The grand inquest of conscience is Is God satisfied If he be satisfied I am satisfied Woful is the state of that man that feels the worm of conscience nibling on the most tender part of the soul and hath no relief against it That feels the intollerable scalding wrath of God burning within and hath nothing to cool it Hear me you that slight troubles of conscience that call them fancies and melancholly whimsies if you ever had had but one sick night for sin if you had ever felt that shame fear horror and despair which are the dismal effects of an accusing and condemning conscience you would account it an unspeakable mercy to hear of a way for the discharge of a poor sinner from that guilt You would kiss the feet of that messenger that could bring you tydings of peace You would call him blessed that should direct you to an effectual remedy Now whoever thou art that pinest away in thine iniquities that droopest from day to day under the present wounds and dismal presages of conscience know that thy soul and peace can never meet till thou art perswaded to come to this blood of sprinkling The blood of this sacrifice speaks better things than the blood of Abel The blood of this sacrifice is the blood of God Act. 20.28 invaluably pretious blood 1 Pet. 1.18 one drop of it infinitely excels the blood of all other creatures Heb. 10.4 5 6. Such is the blood that must do thee good Lord I must have such blood saith conscience as is capable of giving thee full satisfaction or it can give me no peace The blood of all the Cattle upon a thousand Hills cannot do this What is the blood of beasts to God The blood of all the men in the world can do nothing in this case What is our polluted blood worth No no it 's the blood of God that must satisfie both thee and me Yea Christs blood is not only the blood of God but it 's blood shed in thy stead and in thy place and room Gal. 3.13 He was made a curse for us And so it becomes sin pardoning blood Heb. 9.22 Eph. 1.7 Col. 1.14 Rom. 3.26 And consequently conscience pacifying and soul quieting blood Col. 1.20 Eph. 2.13 14. Rom. 3.26 O bless God that ever the news of this blood came to thine ears With hands and eyes lifted up to Heaven admire that grace that cast thy lot in a place where this joyful sound rings in the ears of poor sinners What had thy case been if thy mother had brought thee forth in the desarts of Arabia or in the wastes of America or what if thou hadst been nursed up by a Popish father who could have told thee no other remedy when in distress for sin but to go such a pilgrimage to whip and lash thy self to satisfie an angry God! Surely the pure light of the Gospel shining upon this generation is a mercy never to be duly valued never to be enough prized Corollary 2. Hence also be informed of the necessity of faith in order to a state and sense of peace with God For to what purpose is the blood of Christ our sacrifice shed unless it be actually and personally applyed and appropriated by faith You know when the sacrifices under the Law were brought to be slain he that brought it was to put his hand upon the head of his sacrifice and so it was accepted from him to make an attonement Lev. 1.4 Not only to signifie that now it was no more his but Gods the propriety being transferred by a kind of manumission nor yet that he voluntarily gave it to the Lord as his own free act but principally it noted the putting off his sins and the penalty due to him for them upon the head of the sacrifice and so it implyed in it an execration as if he had said upon thy head be the evil So the Learned observe the Ancient Aegyptians were wont expresly to imprecate when they sacrificed If any evil be coming upon us or upon Aegypt let it turn and rest upon this head laying their hand at these words on the sacrifices head And upon that ground saith the Historian none of them would eat of the head of any living creature You must also lay the hand of faith upon Christ your sacrifice not to imprecate but apply and appropriate him to your own souls he having been made a curse for you To this the whole Gospel tends even to perswade sinners to apply Christ and his blood to their own souls To this he invited us Matth. 11.28 Come unto me ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest For this end our sacrifice was lifted up upon the Altar Joh. 3.14 15. As Moses lifted up the Serpent in the wilderness so must the son of man be lifted up that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life The Effects of the Law not only upon the conscience filling it with torments but upon the whole person bringing death upon it are here shadowed out by the stingings of fiery Serpents and Christ by the brazen Serpent which Moses exalted for the Israelites that were stun● to look unto And as by looking to it they were healed so by believing or looking to Christ in faith our souls are healed Those that looked not to the Brazen Serpent died infallibly so must all that look not to Jesus our sacrifice by faith It 's true the death of Christ is the meritorious cause of remission but faith is the instrumental applying cause and as Christs blood is necessary in its place so is our faith in its place also For to the actual remission of sin and peace of conscience there must be a co-operation of all the causes of remission and peace As there is the grace and love of God for an efficient and impulsive cause and the death of Christ our
poenal evil and part of the curse so God inflicts it not upon believers but they must dye for other ends viz. to be made perfectly happy in a more full and immediate enjoyment of God than they can have in the body and so death is theirs by way of priviledge 1 Cor. 3.22 They are not deaths by way of punishment The same may be said of all the afflictions with which God for gratious ends now exercises his reconciled ones Thus much may suffice to establish this great truth Inference 1. If the death of Christ was that which satisfied God for all the sins of the Elect then certainly there is an infinite evil in sin since it cannot be expiated but by an infinite satisfaction Fools make a mock of sin and there are but few souls in the world that are duly sensible and affected with its evil but certainly if God should damn thee to all eternity thy eternal sufferings could not satisfie for the evil that is in one vain thought It may be you may think this is harsh and severe that God should hold his creatures under everlasting sufferings for sin and never be satisfied with them any more But when you have well considered that the object against whom you sin is the infinite blessed God which derives an infinite evil to the sin committed against him and when you consider how God dealt with the Angels that fell for one sin and that but of the mind for having no bodily organs they could commit nothing externally against God you will alter your minds about it O the depth of the evil of sin If ever you will see how great and horrid an evil sin is measure it in your thoughts either by the infinite holiness and excellency of God who is wrong'd by it or by the infinite sufferings of Christ who dyed to satisfie for it and then you will have deeper apprehensions of the evil of sin Inference 2. If the death of Christ satisfied God and thereby redeemed the Elect from the curse then the redemption of souls is costly souls are dear things and of great value with God Ye know saith the Apostle that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver and Gold from your vain conversation received by tradition but with the pretious blood of the Son of God as of a Lamb without spot 1 Pet. 1.18 19. Only the blood of God is found an equivalant price for the redemption of souls Gold and silver may redeem from Turkish but not from Hellish bondage The whole creation sold to the utmost worth of it is not a value for the redemption of one soul. Souls are dear ware he that paid for them found them so Yet how cheaply do sinners sell their souls as if they were but low priz'd Commodities But you that sell your souls cheap will buy repentance dear Inference 3. If Christs death satisfied God for our sins how unparallel'd is the love of Christ to poor sinners It 's much to pay a pecuniary debt to free another but who will pay his own blood for another We have a famous instance of Zaleucus that famous Locrensian Lawgiver who decreed and Enacted that whoever was convicted of Adultery should have both his eyes put out It so fell out that his own Son was brought before him for that crime hereupon the people interposing made suit for his pardon At length the Father partly overcome by their importunities and not unwilling to shew what lawful favour he might to his Son he first put out one of his own eyes and then one of his Sons and so shewed himself both a merciful Father and a just Law-giver So tempering mercy with justice that both the Law was satisfied and his Son spared This is written by the Historian as an instance of singular love in this Father to pay one half of the penalty for his Son But Christ did not divide and share in the penalty with us but bare it all Zaleucus did it for his Son who was dear to him Christ did it for enemies that were fighting and rebelling against him Rom. 5.8 while we were yet sinners Christ died for us O would to God said an holy one I could cause Paper and Ink to speak the worth and excellency the high and loud praises of our brother-ransomer Oh the ransomer needs not my report but oh if he would take it and make use of it I should be happy if I had an Errand to this world but for some few years to spread proclamations and out-crys and love-letters of the highness the highness for evermore of the ransomer whose cloaths were wet and dyed in blood how be it that after that my soul and body should go back to their mother nothing Inference 4. If Christ by dying hath made full satisfaction then God is no loser in pardoning the greatest of sinners that believe in Iesus and consequently his Iustice can be no bar to their Iustification and Salvation He is just to forgive us our sins 1 Joh. 1.9 What an Argument is here for a poor Believer to plead with God! Lord if thou save me by Jesus Christ thy Justice will be fully satisfied at one round payment but if thou damn me and require satisfaction at my hands thou canst never receive it I shall make but a dribling payment though I lye in Hell to eternity and shall still be infinitely behind with thee Is it not more for thy glory to receive it from Christs hand than to require it at mine One drop of his blood is more worth than all my polluted blood O how satisfying a thing is this to the Conscience of a poor sinner that is objecting the multitude agravations and amazing circumstances of sin against the possibility of their being pardoned Can such a sinner as I be forgiven Yes if thou believest in Jesus thou maist for so God will lose nothing in pardoning the greatest transgressors Let Israel hope in the Lord for with the Lord there is mercy and with him is plenteous redemption Psal. 130.7 i. e. a large stock of merit lying by him in the blood of Christ to pay him for all that you have done against him Inference 5. Lastly If Christ hath made such a full satisfaction as you have heard how much is it the concernment of every soul to abandon all thoughts of satisfying God for his own sins and betake himself to the blood of Christ the ransomer by faith that in that blood they may be pardoned It would grieve ones heart to see how many poor creatures are drudging and tugging at a task of repentance and revenge upon themselves and reformation and obedience to satisfie God for what they have done against him and alas it cannot be they do but lose their labour could they swelter their very hearts out weep till they can weep no more cry till their throats be parched alas they can never recompence God for one vain thought For such is
Iudas his Tomb-stone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. let every one that beholds me learn to be godly indeed to be sincere in his profession and love Christ more unfeignedly than I did O Professors look to your foundation and build not upon the sand as this poor creature did That 's sound advice indeed which the Apostle gives 1 Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinks he he standeth take heed lest he fall O beware of a loose foundation If you begin your profession as Iudas did no wonder if it shall end as his did 1. Beware therefore you hold not the truth in unrighteousness Iudas did so he knew much but lived not up to what he knew for he was still of a worldly spirit in the height of his profession His knowledge never had any saving influence upon his heart He Preacht to others but he himself was a cast-away He had much light but still walked in darkness He had no knowledge to do himself good Secondly Beware you live not in a course of secret sin Iudas did so and that was his ruine He made a profession indeed and carried it smoothly but he was a thief Ioh. 12.6 He made no conscience of committing the sin so he could but cover and hide it from men This helped on his ruine and so it will thine Reader if thou be guilty herein A secret way of sinning under a covert of profession will either break out at last to the observation of men or else slide thee down insensibly to Hell and leave thee only this comfort that no body shall know thou art there Thirdly Beware of hypocritical pretences of Religion to accommodate self ends Iudas was a man that had notable skill this way He had a mind to fill his own purse by the sale of this costly ointment which Mary bestowed upon her Saviours feet And what a neat cover had he fitted for it to do his business clearly Why saith he this might have been sold for three hundred pence and given to the poor Here was Charity to the poor or rather poor Charity for they were only a blind to his base self ends O Christian be plain hearted take heed of craft and cunning in matters of Religion This spoil'd Iudas Fourthly Beware of self confidence Iudas was a very confident man of himself Last of all Iudas said Master is it I Matth. 26.25 But he that was last in the suspicion was first in the transgression He that trusteth his own heart is a fool saith Solomon Prov. 28.26 such a fool was this great Professor It will be your wisdom to keep a jealous eye upon your own hearts and still suspect its fairest pretences Fifthly If you will not do as Iudas did nor come to such an end as he did take heed you live not unprofitably under the means of grace Iudas had the best means of grace that ever man enjoyed He heard Christ himself Preach he joyned often with him in prayer but he was never the better for it all it was but as the watering of a dead-stick which will never make it grow but rot it the sooner Never was there a rotten branch so richly watered as he was O 't is a sad sin and a sad sign too when men and women live under the Gospel from year to year and never the better I warn you to beware of these evils all ye that profess Religion Let these footsteps by which Iudas went down to his own place terrifie you from following him in them Corollary 2. Learn hence also that eminent knowledge and profession puts a special and eminent aggravation upon sin Judas Iscariot one of the twelve Poor wretch better had it been for him if he had never been numbred with them nor enlightned with so much knowledge as he was endued with for this rent his Conscience to pieces when he reflected on what he had done and presently run himself into the gulf of despair To sin against clear light is to ●in with an high hand It 's that which makes a sad waste of the Conscience That without doubt which now torments this poor soul in Hell is that he should go against his light against his profession to gratifie a base lust to his eternal ruine Had he known no better it had been more excusable Those that had a hand in the death of Christ through mistake and ignorance were capable to receive the pardon of their sin by that blood they so shed Act. 3.17 19. compared Take heed therefore of abusing knowledge and putting a force upon Conscience Corollary 3. Learn hence in the third place That unprincipled Professors will sooner or later become shameful Apostates ●udas was an unprincipled Professor and see what he came to Ambition invited Simon Magus to the profession of Christ he would be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some great one And how quickly did the rottenness of his principles discover themselves in the ruine of his profession that which wants a root must needs wither as Christ speaks Matth. 13.20 21. that which is the predominant interest will prevail and sway with us in the day of our trial Hear me all you that profess Religion and have given your names to Christ if that profession be not built upon a sollid and real work of grace upon your hearts you shall never honour Religion nor save your souls by it O 't is your union with Christ that like a spring maintains your profession So much as you are united to Christ so much constancy steadiness and eavenness you will manifest in the duties of Religion and no more O Brethren when he that professes Christ for company shall be left alone as Paul was When he that made Religion a stirrup to help him into the sadle of preferment and honour shall see that he is so advanced to be drawn forth into Christs camp and endure the heat of the day and not to take his pleasure in a word when he shall see all things about him discouraging and threatning his dearest interest on earth exposed for Religion sake and he hath no faith to ballance his present losses with his future hopes I say when it comes to this you shall then see the rottenness of many hearts discovered And Iudas may have many fellows who will part with Christ for the world as he did O therefore look well to your foundation Corollary 4. Moreover in this example of Iudas you may read this truth That men and women are never in more eminent danger than when they meet with temptations exactly suited to their master-lusts to their own iniquity O pray pray that ye may be kept from a violent suitable temptation Satan knows that when a man is tried here he falls by the root The love of this world was all along Iudas his master-sin and some conjecture he was a married man and had a great charge but that is conjectural it was his predominant Lust. The Devil found out this and
unrighteousness And over these Caiphas a head fit for such a body at this time precided And though there was still some face of a Court among them yet their power was now abridged by the Romans that they could not hear and determine judge and condemn in Capital matters as formery For as Iosephus their own Historian informs us Herod in the beginning of his reign took away this power from them and that Scripture seems to confirm it Joh. 18.31 It is not lawful for us to put any man to death And therefore they bring him to Pilates Bar. He also understood him to be a Galilean and Herod being Tetrarch of Galilee and at that time in Ierusalem he is sent to him and by him remitted to Pilate Thirdly As he was at first heard and judged by a Court that had no authority to Judge him so when he stood at Pilates bar he was accused of perverting the Nation and denying tribute to Caesar than which nothing was more notoriously false For as all his Doctrine was pure and heavenly and malice it self could not find a flaw in it so he was alwaies observant of the Laws under which he lived and scrupulous of giving the least just offence to the civil powers Yea he not only paid the Tribute himself though he might have pleaded exemption but charged it upon others as their duty so to do Matth. 22.24 give unto Caesar the things that are Caesars and yet with such palpable untruths is Christ charged Fourthly Yea and what is most abominable and unparallel'd to compass their malitious designs they industriously labour to suborn false witnesses to take away his life not sticking at the grossest perjury and manifest injustice so they might destroy him So you read Matth. 25.59 Now the Chief-Priests and Elders and all the council sought salse witnesses against Iesus to put him to death Abominable wickedness For such men and so many to complot to shed the blood of the innocent by known and studied perjury What will not malice against Christ transport men to Fifthly Moreover the carriage of the Court was most insolent and base towards him during the trial For whilst he stood before them as a prisoner yet uncondemned sometimes they are angry at him for his silence and when he speaks and that pertinently to the point they smite him on the mouth for speaking and scoff at what he speaks To some of their light frivolous and ensnaring questions he is silent not for want of an answer but because he heard nothing worthy of an answer And to fulfil what the Prophet Isaiah had long before predicted of him he was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his mouth He is brought as a Lamb to the slaughter and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb so he opened not his mouth Isai. 53.7 as also to leave us a president when to speak and when to be silent when we for his name sake shall be brought before Governours for such reasons as these he sometimes answers not a word and then they are ready to condemn him for a mute Answerest thou nothing saith the High-Priest what is it that these witness against thee Matth. 26.62 hearest thou not how many things they witness against thee saith Pilate Matth. 27.13 And when he makes his defence in words of truth and soberness they smite him for speaking Jo● 18.22 And when he had thus spoken one of the Officers which stood by stroke Iesus with the palm of his hand saying answerest thou the High-Priest so And what had he spoken to exasperate them Had he spoken impertinently Not at all What he said was but this when they would have had him insnare himself with his own lips Iesus answered I spake openly in the world I ever taught in the Synagogue and in the Temple whither the Iews alwaies resort and in secret have I said nothing Why askest thou me ask them that heard me behold they know what I said q. d. I am not obliged to accuse and ensnare my self but you ought to proceed secundum allegata probata according to what is alledged and proved Did he deserve a blow on his mouth for this O who but himself could have so patiently digested such abuses under all this he stands in perfect innocency and patience making no other return to that wretch that smote him but this if I have spoken evil bear witness of the evil but if well why smitest thou me Sixthly Lastly To instance in no more He is condemned to die by that very mouth which had once and again professed he found no fault in him He had heard all that could be alledged against him and saw it was a perfect piece of malice and envy When they urge Pilate to proceed to sentence him why faith he what evil hath he done Matth. 27.23 nay in the preface to the very sentence it self he acknowledges him to be a just person Matth. 27.24 When Pilate saw he could prevail nothing but that rather a tumult was made he took water and washed his hands before the multitude and said I am innocent of the blood of this just person see ye to it Here the innocency of Christ brake out like the Sun wading out of a cloud convincing the conscience of his Judge that he was just and yet he must give sentence on him for all that to please the people Inference 1. Was Christ thus used when he stood before the great Council the Scribes and Elders of Israel then surely great men are not alwaies wise neither do the aged understand Iudgement Job 32.9 Here were many great men many aged men many politick men in Council but not one wise or good man among them In this Council were men of parts and learning men of great abilities and by so much the more pernicious and able to do mischief Wickedness in a great man in a learned man is like poyson given in wine which is the more operative and deadly Christs greatest enemies were such as these Heathen Pilate had more pity for him than superstitious Caiphas Luther tells us that his greatest adversaries did not rise out of the Ale-houses or Brothel-houses but out of Monasteries Convents and Religious-houses Inference 2. Hence also we learn That though we are not obliged to answer every captious idle or ensnaring question yet we are bound faithfully to own and confess the truth when we are solemnly called thereunto It 's true Christ was sometimes silent and as a deaf man that heard not but when the question was solemnly put art thou the Christ The Son of the Blessed Iesus said I am Mark 14.61 62. He knew that answer would cost his life and yet he dare not deny it On this account the Apostle saith he witnessed a good confession before Pontius Pilate I Tim. 6.13 Herein Christ hath ruled out the way of our duty and by his own example as well as precept obliged us to a sincere confession of
themselves with his blood and satiate their revengeful hearts with such a spectacle of misery For lo as soon as these Wolves had griped their prey they were not satisfied with that cursed cruel and ignominious death of the Cross to which Pilate had adjudged him but they are resolved he shall die over and over they will contrive many deaths in one Now they say as a Tyrant did once moriatur ut sentiat se mori let him die so as he may feel himself to die i. e. let him die by inch-meal To this end they presently strip him naked scourge him cruelly array him in scarlet and mock him Crown him with a bush of platted thorns fasten that Crown upon his head by a blow with a cane which set them deep into his sacred Temples Sceptered him with a reed spet in his face strip off his mock-robes again put the Cross upon his back and compel him to bear it All this and much more they express their cruelty by as soon as they had him delivered over to their will So that this was a cruel sentence Thirdly As it was a cruel so it was a rash and hasty sentence The Jews are all in haste consulting all night and early up by the break of day in the morning to get him to his trial They spur on Pilate with all the arguments they can to give sentence His trial took up but one morning and a great part of that was spent in sending him from Caiphas to Pilate and from Pilate to Herod and then back again to Pilate so that it was a hasty and headlong sentence that Pilate gave He did not sift and examine the matter but handles it very slightly The trial of many a mean man hath taken up ten times more debates and time than was spent about Christ. They that look but slightly into the cause easily pronounce and give sentence But that which was then done in haste they have had time enough to repent for since Fourthly As it was a rash and hasty so it was an extorted forced sentence They squeeze it out of Pilate by meer clamor importunity and suggestions of danger In Courts of Judicature such arguments should signifie but little not importunity but proof should carry it but timorous Pilate bends like a Willow at this breath of the people He had neither such a sence of Justice nor spirit of Courage to withstand it Fifthly As it was an extorted so it was an Hypocritical sentence masking horrid murder under a pretence and formality of Law It must look like a legal procedure to paliate the business Loth he was to condemn him lest innocent blood should clamor in his Conscience but since he must do it he will transfer the guilt upon them and they take it His blood be on us and on our children for ever say they Pilate calls for water washes his hands before them and tells them I am free from the blood of this just person But stay free from his blood and yet condemn a known innocent person Free from his blood because he washt his hands in water No no he could never be free except his soul had been washed in that blood he shed O the hypocrisie of Pilate Such juggling as this will not serve his turn when he shall stand as a prisoner before him who now stood arraigned at his Bar. Sixthly and Lastly As it was an Hypocritical so it was an unrevoked sentence It admitted not of a reprieve no not for a day nor doth Christ appeal to any other Judicature or once desire the least delay of the execution But away he is hurried in haste to the execution Blush O ye heavens and tremble O earth at such a sentence as this Now is Christ dead in Law now he knows whither he must be carried and that presently His soul and body must feel that the very sight of which put him into an Agony but the night before Fourthly and Lastly In what manner did Christ receive this cruel and unrighteous sentence He received it like himself with admirable meekness and patience He doth as it were wrap himself up in his own innocency and obedience to his Fathers will and stands at the Bar with invincible patience and meek submission He doth not once desire the Judge to defer the sentence much less fall down and beg for his life as other prisoners use to do at such times No but as a sheep he goes to the slaughter not opening his mouth Some apply that expression to Christ Jam. 5.6 Ye have condemned and killed the just and he resisteth you not From the time that Pilate gave sentence till he was nailed to the Cross we do not read that ever he said any thing save only to the women that followed him out of the City to Golgotha and what he said there rather manifested his pity to them than any discontent at what was now come upon him Daughters of Jerusalem said he weep not for me but weep for your selves and for your children Luk. 23.28 c. O the perfect patience and meekness of Christ The Inferences from hence are Inference 1. Do you see what was here done against Christ under pretence of Law What cause have we to pray for good Laws and righteous executioners of them O 't is a singular mercy to live under good Laws which protect the innocent from injury Laws are hedges about our lives liberties estates and all the comforts we enjoy in this world Times will be evil enough when iniquity is most discountenanced and punished by Law but how evil are those times like to prove when iniquity is established by Law As the Psalmist complains Psal. 94.20 It was the complaint of Pliny to Trajan that whereas crimes were wont to be the burden of the age now Laws were so and that he feared the Common-wealth which was establisht would be subverted by Laws 'T is not like that vertue will much flourish when Iudgement springs up as hemlock in the furrows of the field Hosea 10.4 How much therefore is it our concernment to pray that Iudgement may run down as a mighty stream Amos. 5.24 That our Officers may be peace and our Exactors righteousness Isai. 60.17 It was not therefore without great reason that the Apostle exhorted that supplications prayers intercessions and giving of thanks be made for all men For Kings and all that are in authority that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty 1 Tim. 2.1 2. Great is the interest of the Church of God in them They are instruments of much good or evil Inference 2. Was Christ condemned in a Court of Judicature How evident then is it that there is a Iudgement to come after this life Surely things will not be alwaies carried as they are in this world When you see Iesus condemned and Barrabbas released conclude that a time will come when innocency shall be vindicated and wickedness shamed On
God and plenteous redemption for the greatest of Sinners that by Faith apply the blood of the Cross to their poor guilty Souls So speaks the Apostle Col. 1.14 In whom we have redemption through his blood even the forgiveness of sins And 1 Ioh. 1.7 The blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin Two things will make this demonstrable First That there is sufficient efficacy in this blood of the Cross to expiate the greatest Sins Secondly That the efficacy of it is designed and intended by God for believing sinners How clearly do both these propositions lie in the Word First That there is sufficient efficacy in the blood of the Cross to expiate and wash away the greatest sins This is manifest for it is pretious blood as it 's call'd 1. Pet. 1.18 Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver and Gold but with the pretious blood of the Son of God This pretiousness of the blood of Christ rises from the union it hath with that person who is over all God blessed for ever And on that account is stiled the blood of God Acts 20.28 And so it becomes Royal Princely blood Yea such for the dignity and efficacy of it as never was created or shall ever run in any other veins but his The blood of all the creatures in the world even a Sea of humane blood bears no more proportion to the pretious and excellent blood of Christ than a dish of common water to a Riv●r of liquid Gold On the account of its invaluable pretiousness it becomes satisfying and reconciling blood to God So the Apostle speaks Col. 1.20 And having made peace through the Blood of his Cross by him to reconcile all things to himself by him I say whether they be things in earth or things in heaven The same blood which is Redemption to them that dwell on earth is Confirmation to them that dwell in Heaven Before the efficacy of this blood guilt vanishes and shrinks away as the the shadows before the glorious Sun Every drop of it hath a voice and speaks to the soul that sits trembling under its guilt better things than the blood of Abel Heb. 12.24 It sprinkles us from an evil i. e. an unquiet and accusing conscience Heb. 10.22 For having enough in it to satisfie God it must needs have enough in it to satisfie conscience Conscience can demand no more for its satisfaction nor will it take less than God demands for his satisfaction And in this blood is enough to give both satisfaction Secondly As there is sufficient Efficacy in this blood to expiate the greatest guilt so it 's as manifest that the vertue and efficacy of it is intended and designed by God for the Use of believing sinners Such blood as this was shed without doubt for some weighty end That some might be the better for it Who they are for whom it is intended is plain enough from Acts 13.39 And by him all that believe are justified from all things from which they could not be justified by the Law of Moses That the remission of the sins of believers was the great thing designed in the pouring out of this pretious blood of Christ appears from all the Sacrifices that figured it to the ancient Church The sheding of that Typical blood spake a design of pardon And the putting of their hands upon the head of the Sacrifice spake the way and Method of believing by which that blood was then applyed to them in that way and is still applyed to us in a more excellent way Had no pardon been intended no Sacrifices had been appointed Moreover let it be considered this blood of the Cross is the blood of a surety that came under the same obligations with us and in our name or stead shed it and so of course frees and discharges the principal offender or debtor Heb. 7.22 Can God exact satisfaction from the blood and death of his own Son the surety of Believers and yet still demand it from Believers It cannot be Who saith the Apostle shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect It is God that Iustifieth Who shall condemn It is Christ that died Rom. 8.33 34. And why are faith and repentance prescribed as the means of pardon Why doth God every where in his word call upon sinners to repent and believe in this blood Encouraging them so to do by so many pretious promises of remission and declaring the inevitable and eternal ruine of all impenitent and unbelieving ones who despise and reject this blood What I say doth all this speak but the possibility of a pardon for the greatest of sinners and the certainty of a free full and final pardon for all believing sinners O what a Joyful sound is this What ravishing voices of peace pardon grace and acceptance come to our ears from the blood of the Cross The greatest guilt that ever was contracted upon a trembling shaking Conscience can stand before the efficacy of the blood of Christ no more than the sinner himself can stand before the Justice of the Lord with all the guilt upon him Reader The word assures thee what ever thou hast been or art that sins of as deep a die as thine have been washt away in this blood I was a blasphemer a persecutor in urious but I obtained mercy saith Paul 1 Tim. 1.13 but it may be thou wilt object this was a rare and singular instance and it 's a great question whether any other sinner shall find the like grace that he did No question of it at all if you believe in Christ as he did for he tells us vers 16. For this cause I obtained mercy that in me first Iesus Christ might shew forth all long suffering for a pattern to them which should hereafter belief on him to life everlasting So that upon the same grounds he obtained mercy you may obtain it also Those very men who had an hand in the sheding of Christs blood had the benefit of that blood afterwards pardoning them Act. 2.36 There is nothing but unbelief and impenitency of heart bars thy soul from the blessings of this blood Inference 2. Did Christ die the cursed death of the Cross for believers then though there may be much of pain there is nothing of curse in the death of the Saints It still wears its dart by which it strikes but hath lost its sting by which it hurts and destroys A Serpent that hath no sting may hiss and affright but we may take him in our hand without danger Death poured out all its poison and lost its sting in Christs side when he became a curse for us But what speak I of the innocency and harmlesness of death to believers It is certainly their friend and great benefactor As there is no curse so there are many blessings in it Death is yours 1 Cor. 3.22 Yours as a special priviledge and favour Christ hath not only conquered it but is more than a conqueror
in the earth by an earthquake and the Oracle was consulted how it might be closed this answer was returned that breach can never be closed except something of great worth be thrown into it Such a breach was that which sin made it could never be reconciled but by the death of Jesus Christ the most excellent thing in all the Creation Inference 2. How sad is the state of all such as are not comprized in the Articles of peace with God! The impenitent unbeliever is excepted God is not reconciled to him and if God be his enemy how little avails it who is his friend For if God be a mans enemy he hath an Almighty enemy in him whose very frown is destruction Deut. 32.40 41 42. I lift up my hand to Heaven and say I live for ever If I whet my glittering sword and my hand take hold on judgement I will render vengeance to my enemies and I will reward them that hate me I will make mine arrows drunk with blood and my sword shall devour flesh and that with the blood of the slain and the Captives from the beginning of revenge upon the enemy Yea he is an unavoidable enemy Fly to the utmost parts of the earth there shall his hand reach thee as it is Psal. 139.10 The wings of the morning cannot carry thee out of his reach If God be your enemy you have an immortal enemy who lives for ever to avenge himself upon his adversaries And what wilt thou do when thou art in Sauls case 1 Sam. 28.15 16. Alas whither wilt thou turn To whom wilt thou complain But what wilt thou do when thou shalt stand at the Bar and see that God who is thine enemy upon the throne Sad is their case indeed who are not comprehended in the Articles of peace with God Inference 3. If Christ died to reconcile us to God give diligence to clear up to your own souls your interest in this reconciliation If Christ thought it worth his blood to purchase it it 's worth your care and pains to clear it And what can better evidence it than your conscientious tenderness of sin lest you make new breaches Ah if reconciled you will say as Ezra 9.14 And now our God seeing thou hast given us such a deliverance as this should we again break thy Commandments If reconciled to God his friends will be your friends and his enemies your enemies If God be your friend you will be diligent to please him Iohn 15.10 14. He that makes not peace with God is an enemy to his own soul. And he that is at peace but takes no pains to clear it is an enemy to his own comfort But I must pass from this to the third End of Christs death End 3. You have seen two of those beautiful births of Christs travail and lo a third cometh namely the sanctification of his people Typical blood was shed as you heard to purifie them that were unclean and so was the blood of Christ shed to purge away the sins of his people so speaks the Apostle expresly Ephes. 5.25 26. Christ gave himself for the Church that he might sanctifie and cleanse it And so he tells us himself Joh. 17.19 And for their sakes I sanctifie my self i. e. consecrate or devote my self to death that they also might be sanctified through the truth Upon the account of this benefit received by the blood of Christ is that Doxology which in a lower strain is now sounded in the Churches but will be matter of the Lambs song in Heaven Rev. 1.5 6. To him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood be glory and honour for ever Now there is a twofold evil in sin the guilt of it and the polution of it Justification properly cures the former Sanctification the latter but both Justification and Sanctification flow unto sinners out of the death of Christ. And though it 's proper to say the spirit sanctifies yet it is certain it was the blood of Christ that procured for us the spirit of sanctification Had not Christ died the spirit had never come down from Heaven upon any such design The pouring forth of Christs blood for us obtained the pouring forth of the spirit of holiness upon us Therefore the spirit is said to come in his name and to take of his and shew it unto us Hence it 's said 1 Joh. 5.6 he came both by blood and by water by blood washing away the guilt by water purifying from the filth of sin Now this fruit of Christs death even our sanctification is a most incomparable mercy For do but consider a few particular excellencies of holiness First Holiness is the Image and glory of God His image Coll. 3.10 and his glory Exod. 15.11 who is like unto thee O Lord glorious in holiness Now when the guilt and filth of sin is washt off and the beauty of God put upon the soul in sanctification O what a beautiful Creature is the soul now So lovely in the eyes of Christ even in its imperfect holiness that he saith Cant. 6.5 Turn away thine eyes from me for they have overcome me So we render it but the Hebrew word signifies they have made me proud or puffed me up It 's a beam of divine glory upon the Creature enamouring the very heart of Christ. Secondly As it 's the souls highest beauty so it 's the souls best evidence for heaven Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God Matth. 5.8 And without holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 No gifts no duties no natural endowments will evidence a righ● in heaven but the least measure of true holiness will secure heaven to the soul. Thirdly As holiness is the souls best evidence for heaven so it 's a continual spring of comfort to it in the way thither The purest and sweetest pleasures in this world are th● results of holiness Till we come to live holily we never live comfortably Heaven is Epitomized in holiness Fourthly And to say no more It is the peculiar mark by which God hath visibly distinguished his own from other men Psal. 4.3 The Lord hath set apart him that is Godly for himself Q. D. this is the Man and that the Woman to whom I intend to be good for ever This is a man for me O holiness how surpassin●ly glorious art thou Inference 1. Did Christ die to sanctifie his people how deep then is the polution of sin that nothing but the blood of Christ can cleanse it All the tears of a penitent sinner should he shed as many as there have fallen drops of rain since the Creation to this day cannot wash away one sin The everlasting burnings in Hell cannot purifie the flaming conscience from the least sin O guess at the wound by the largeness and length of this Tent that follows the mortal weapon sin Inference 2. Did Christ die to sanctifie his people Behold then the love
Vnion with the second Person p. 57. Adversaries to the Vnion of the two natures in Christ who and how p. 58 59. Affections how moved by remembring Christ. p. 270 271. Afflictions four things to be studied in them p. 220. how they provoke to holiness p. 622. Agonies of Christ in the Garden whether preternatural p. 288. the cause of it p. ibid. Amyntas his intercession for his Brother Aechylus p. 156. Appetite wanton Appetites reproved p. 473. Apollogy none left to them that perish under Gospel-offers p. 231. and p. 46 47. Apostolical dignity what it was p. 298. Aptitude of the Sacrament to refresh the memory of Christ. p. 272. Articles of peace with God what they are p. 532. how sad not to be comprized in those Articles p. 533. Arraignment of Christ at Pilats bar an evidence believers are never cast at Gods bar p. 324 325. Ascension of Christ to Heaven opened p. 563. the terms of Christs Ascension p. 564. the reason and ends of it p. 568 569. Ascriptions of Praise to Christ for all our mercies how reasonable p. 92 93. Assumption of our Nature opened p. 52. our nature was Assumed integrally p. 55. And with all its natural infirmities ibid. Reasons of Christs Assuming our Nature p. 58. B. BElievers are warranted and incouraged to commit their soul into Christs hands at death p. 493. Believers under highest obligations to set then selves apart for Christ. p. 75 76. Believers immediately received into glory upon their dissolution p. 437. Four Arguments to evince it p. 438 439. Blaspheamous suggestions and how best cured p. 246. Blood of Christ of infinite value p. 348. How it cools and cases a distressed Conscience p. 348. How sad to have it cry against us p. 160. Bodies of Saints intended to be made glorious pieces and how that appears p. 63. Bodies of Saints how to be disposed used and ordered p. 556. The due honour of our bodies to be preserved and why p. 556. Bosom of God what is and what is not there p. 19 20. Breach made between us and God by sin how dreadful p. 86. Bread the excellency of it p. 267. Burden of Christs sufferings how great it was p. 465 466 467. Burial Christs dead body had a decent though not a pompous Burial p. 506. Three Reasons why Christ must have a Burial p. 508. Christs Burial obscure as to the manner of its performance by his friends p. 509. Christs Funeral is adorned by several famous miracles from Heaven p. 510. Decent and mournful Burials laudable among Christians p. 514. C. CAre of Christ over his Church and Ministers p. 121. His Care for it manifest in Sacramental appointment many wayes p. 273. Care of Christ for his natural relations p. 418 419. Change made by death very great p. 495. Children how dear to Parents p. 420. Nothing of Christ in rebellious Children p. 424. Five Queries to convict such p. 425. Six Considerations to humble disobedient Children p. 426. And Chidren presented with a famous pattern p. 419. Conscientious Children to be incouraged p. 428 429. Christ an invitation to Study him p. 9 10. Christs delights in the Fathers bosom infinite p. 17 18. Christ had no sorrows or wants in the Fathers bosom p. 15 16. Christs self-denyal in leaving the Fathers bosom for us p. 20. Christs excellency p. 9. Christ made flesh what it imports p. 51 52. Christ is true God p. 100 101. Christ the Original of all light p. 101. The first receptacle of all power p. 101. The manner of his providential influence p. 214 215. Christ is most excellent soul-food p. 272. Christ and his blood never grow stale p. 278. His love beyond all comparison p. 274. Christ hath finished redemption work p. 482. How he hath wrought it out in six particulars p. 481 482. a Character of Christs excellency p. 512 513. Christs glorious Majesty p. 581 584. Church safe and why p. 583. Circumcision a great abasement to Christ and that two wayes p. 237 238. Comfortable indeed that he who assumed our Nature is God p. 63. Company the very best sometimes a burden p. 290. Commission of Christ great security to our faith p. 63. Committing the soul to Christ implyes six great things in it p. 494 495. Seven excellent grounds of encouragement to this last and great work p. 496 497 498. The Concourse or co-operation of both Natures in Christs Mediatory works p. 90. Confession when and why our duty p. 316 317. Confidence in men a folly p. 309. Conscience how overborn by fleshly interests p. 323. Rules to prevent it p. 323. It s inward troubles dreadful ibid. Consecration of Christ what it is p. 71 72. Constancy in Religion urged p. 363. Content with our present state how rational p. 188. Court that tryed Christ had no authority so to do p. 314. Covenant of Redemption p. 26 27. The Form Foederates and performance of that Cevenant opened p. 27 28. The new Covenant how Christs death confirmed and ratified it p. 536 537. Cross of Christ three sweet considerations to bear it cheerfully p. 351 352. The Cross of Christ a dignified Cross. p. 364. Cup What it signifies in Scripture p. 284. What the passing of it is p. 284 285. Curse that may prove the soarest curse from which men promise themselves much content p. 307. D. DEath fairly overcome and that in its own territories by the Resurrection of Christ. p. 553. Death of the Cross what it was opened in six properties p. 343 344 345. The manner of Crucifying p. 346 347. Why Christ was Crucified p. 347 348. Death Christ chose to meet it in a praying posture p. 281 c. Christs Death the worst death for kind p. 344. Death not to be feared by believers p. 555. Their duty to long for it p. 188. Souls not ordinarily wrought on at Death p. 442. Choice encouragements to believers against the fear of Death p. 518 519. Delight of Christ in the Fathers bosome how great pure and constant p. 17. How transcendent to all other delights in the World p. 18 19. Defect The finishing of Christs work how great a relief against the defects that attend our works p. 484. Deliverance from wrath obtained by Christ is free full peculiar wonderful p. 524. Three signes of a soul delivered from wrath to come p. 528 529. Desersion Christ deserted by his Father in time of greatest need p. 449. Desersions either absolute or respective ibid. Respective Desersions of four sorts p. 450. How Christ was not Deserted opened in six particulars p. 450. In what sense Christ was deserted opened in five particulars p. 451 452. Two special ends of Gods forsaking Christ p. 453. Christs Desersion more afflictive than all his other Sufferings five Reasons for it p. 455 456. Every time we sin we deserve to be eternally deserted p. 455. Desersion the greatest misery p. 456. Christs desersion the believers comfort p. 457. Despising Christ how intollerable to the Father p. 46