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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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enlighten our minds to give us tenderness and lowliness of mind that we be not led aside with the errour of the wicked for errour and heresie will break out into enmity and make men think they do God good service while they destroy you Thirdly Then we regard Religion after a carnal manner When we make parties in it when we promote factions and divisions and such as do so are filled with much spite and malice against those that are contrary to them This is a sinne the members of the Church are prone to and nothing inclineth more to oppositions and contentions then such a frame upon mens spirits The Apostle speaketh very clearly to this 1 Cor. 3. 3. Whereas there is among you envying and strife one is for Paul another for Apollo are ye not carnal And vers 4. Again are ye not carnal So that this doth plainly discover men not to be led by divine and holy principles who are apt to foment differences who are ready to set up one Minister against another to admire the gifts and abilities of one to the contempt of others This was the great sinne of these Corinthians that as they discovered much pride and ambition in the names which they gave persons Capellus Histor A. M. 3168. sometimes delighting in words which signified power and principality as Hegemon c. Or such as denoted victory as Nicolaus c. Or such as declared glory as Polycletus c. Thus such a carnal ambition did still remain in them though made Christians setting up and admiring mens persons looking after gifts which brought applause more than grace and sanctification Now those that are thus carnally affected they do continually throw balls of fire into the Church and make it a Babylon in stead of a Jerusalem Jude speaketh vers 16. Of having mens persons in admiration because of advantage It is some carnal advantage or other that maketh them advance this and that man against others What the issue of such divisionsis appeareth Jam. 3. 14 15 16. viz. To bring in all confusion and every evil work As also he sheweth the nature and cause of this It is earthly sensual and devilish though men may judge it zeal and think they are active for Gods glory yet it 's sensual and cometh from the Devil and it is good to observe how largely the Apostle expatiateth about the sinfulnesse of the tongue That a world of evil is in it and from that exhortation Be not many Masters that is do not take upon you to be Teachers and so to reprove and censure others in a carnal and sinfull way It is this that maketh not only the tongue but the pen also to be full of gall and wormwood it maketh the pen to be an unruly evil that none can tame Take we heed then of minding Religion onely to make parties and different wayes therein for this will at last break into an open enmity against the truely godly Fourthly Then we look after Religion in a carnal way When we make use of the Doctrine thereof onely to shew our parts or learning when we earnestly contend about it as it is our opinion not as it is Gods truth For this reason the Apostle doth so frequently exhort Timothy To take heed of disputes and vain janglings 1 Tim. 1. 6. where the end of the preaching of the Gospel is said to be Charity out of a pure heart and a good conscience with faith unfeigned but from these some did swerve by turning aside unto vaine jangling Here you see that those who have not pure and unfeigned hearts in the things of God they fall into vain disputes and quarrels So 2 Tim. 6. 4. it is called Doting about questions and strifes of words whereof cometh envy railings and evil surmises And he addeth their character Supposing that gain is godlinesse Here you see that in all these disputes and controversies there is no pure heart no good conscience all is to advantage themselves by it yea if this be not discovered in any sordid or worldly manner yet if thy pride the loftiness of thy spirit be hereby advanced and thou doest not mind Religion to exercise thy self to godlinesse but to have men admire thy gifts and to wonder at thy abilities Thy heart is a corrupt heart and thou wilt manifest thy enmity against the wayes of Christ when opposed therein Thy wit thy parts thy applause thou mayest make thy great Diana and oppose all that would destroy this Goddesse Lastly That we may conclude all and leave nothing out Whosoever doth not own the Christian faith from divine principles and holy pure motives this man is but a titular and a false Christian and so cannot but when occasion serveth manifest his opposition to Christs wayes And therefore it is that as amongst the people of Israel there was an irreconcilable division between Israel and Judah and a great opposition between Davids house and Sauls though all pretending to the onely true God So it is in the Church of God though there may be an agreement in the same Doctrine in the same Profession of faith come to the same Ordinances together yet because one hath not a supernatural life of grace within hath no experimental feeling of the power of sanctification upon his soul hence it is that he hath a spirit of antipathy and contrariety to those who are indeed born of God and walk in wayes of mortification So that we may conclude Whosoever is not regenerated regardeth Religion no further than carnal and earthly respects let his pretences be never so high and plausible And therefore there is no unconverted man though he hath never so high an Office never so great repute in the Church of God but he serveth Christ for loaves some insincere and insufficient motive or other worketh upon him he hath his shrines that he liveth by And therefore as it was with that rich man who boasted He had kept all Gods Commandments from the youth when he was tryed in one instance where his heart was greatly affected viz. To part with all and follow Christ it is said He went away exceeding sorrowfull Thus when any such empty nominal Christians are put upon such duties and wayes which are contrary to their lusts they will go away not it may be exceedingly grieved but greatly enraged and disquieted This will be like the jealousie-water to discover the adulteresse To pull out their right eyes and to cut off their right hands will be like the pronouncing of Shibboleth to discover what they are And the ground of this whole truth is from the exceeding great purity and exactnesse that is in the word of God truly preached it cometh to new mould and change the whole man All old things must passe away This will not abide either a corrupt mind or a carnal heart and therefore one being contrary to the other as light to darknesse and fire to water No wonder if then the hypocrite be
in this it was a temporal Kingdome that he aimed at and the earthly advancing of himself And the third kind of hearers they did not apostatize but the love of the world and the deceiveablenesse of riches these things like weeds did grow up with the good corne It was Simon Magus his hainous transgression to desire the Holy Ghost for money And hath not this been as wickedly practised sometimes to make use of the gifts of the Holy Ghost or at least the pretence of them for earthly gaine To be religious for gaine to make a profession for earthly advantages what is this but to make use of God and his wayes for money And if you say These are base and unworthy ends indeed this is to be a Judas to sell Christ for money an Esau to sell our birthright for pottage Therefore you must know that if we could as the Peripateticks enjoyne do virtuous actions for virtues sake yet this were too low an end for a sincere Christian when men do righteous actions for the publick good when men performe religious duties meerly to please and content their consciences These that are good as proxime and secondary ends being made the ultimate do deprive the duties of their true proper sincere Christianity This is to take John Baptist for Christ or as some did to take Christ onely for some great Prophet This is to judge sincerity and godlinesse a lesse thing than it is to take a counterfeit for a precious pearl And therefore the motive of duties in Popery is wonderfully short of true spiritual ones even as their faith of true divine motives as they resolve their faith into the Authority of their Church so their religious duties into their own power and merit Whereas to be holy so as to rest in our holinesse and to make that our utmost end is to unthrone Christ and to put our graces in the room of Gods grace So that we are not onely by sincerity to overlook all earthly objects but even all duties and inherent graces joyning with Christ onely as the beloved of our souls This sincerity is that which maketh the way to Heaven so narrow This is the reason why many are called but few chosen If the external performance of duties were enough many thousands would go to Heaven more than do but sincerity is that which makes every holy duty so difficult SERM. XCII A further Discovery of the Nature and Effects of Godly Sincerity 2 COR. 1. 12. In godly sincerity GOdly Sincerity you heard did raise up the heart of a man above all low and inferiour ends fixing it upon God only Now because I have spoken much of this upon other occasions I shall briefly dispatch this subject at this time laying down several Propositions which will partly be descriptive of the nature of this sincerity and partly manifestative of what are the effects of it And First This sincerity doth comprehend an Universality in it Hypocrisie dealeth in pieces and parcels it doth many things and it omitteth many things whereas sincerity comprehendeth all the essential parts of Religion it is not defective in necessaries though it hath not perfection of degrees yet it hath of parts Therefore sincerity is the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 compleatnesse of all parts and limbs when a man hath every part of the body that is his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lot or condition or portion to have 1 Thess 5. 23. Hence Jam. 1. 4. it is called entire that ye may be entire wanting nothing It was the fault that Christ found with the Church of Sardis Revel 3. 2. That he had not found her works perfect before God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filled up There were many empty hollow places and vacuities as it were wanting this grace and that duty which would have made her compleat Now there are several kinds of Universalities wherein this sincerity doth discover it self There is an universality of the Object matter about which it is exercised It maketh a man carefull to performe the greatest duties and the lesse duties It accounteth nothing little wherein the command of God is concerned that is a great God It abstaineth from great sinnes and little sinnes It accounteth no sinne little which cannot be purged away but by the blood of Christ Again it doth faithfully respect all the Commandments of God such as are terminated upon God himself or such as relate to man Paul expressed this sincerity when he called it A conscience void of offence both towards God and man Act. 24. 16. He knoweth true Religion cannot be without righteousnesse nor godly righteousnesse without the duties of Religion Furthermoee there are duties of suffering for Christ as well as of doing for him Sometimes it is farre more unpleasing to flesh and blood to suffer for Christ then to be doing for him But the sincere heart is prepared for both he doth not capitulate with Christ about what he shall be put upon Therefore it is that he is willing to take up the crosse and to follow Christ he accepteth of those duties where self-denial and self-mortification are requisite as those which may be more gratefull and acceptable unto a man Oh how much easier is it to preach these things and to hear these things then to practise them As there is an universality of the Object so also of the Subject where this is every part of the soul is sanctified There is not illumination without sanctification gifts without grace but the whole man is rightly constituted Hence we told you sincerity is not properly a grace but it 's the modification of grace every grace is to be sincere 1 Tim. 1. 5. There is a pure heart a good conscience and faith unfeigned So that sincerity is a property and an affection of every grace it 's not repentance unlesse sincere it 's not faith except sincere Again There is an Universality of time and place A sincere man is godly in times of prosperity as well as of adversity in times of health as well as of sicknesse on the week day as well as the Sabbath And so for places Paul saith in the Text it was in the world as well as at Corinth At some times in some places and with some company to pretend onely for God this discovereth hypocrisie in the bottome Secondly Sincerity is herein remarkable That it goeth to the bottome and root of sinne It doth not onely take away the external acts and so make a smooth skinne but it giveth good vitals and inwards especially it setteth against that rotten core that is in every man viz. a deceitfull and false heart towards God and man It is knowne what the Psalmist concludeth of every man Psal 116. 11. which the Apostle maketh use of Rom. 3. 4. Every man is a lyar that is of himselfe and in his owne nature otherwise David and Paul were not lyars in delivering of this truth neither are regenerate men lyars so farre
is it How slavish and unbelieving Hence is it that the people of God need so many instructions and informations Hence is it that they are often in prayers and groans unutterable ere they can truly and cordially call God Father They fear him as a Judge and flie from him rather as an enemy Even as if there be never such glorious and delightfull objects to refresh the eyes with yet if a man be in the dark he cannot take any pleasure therein Thus many of Gods dear children who walk with a tender conscience who are diligent in all the wayes of holiness yet have not this testimony of conscience to comfort them it is hid from their eyes only because the Spirit of God doth not enable them thereunto Now the Apostle telleth us 1 Cor. 2. 17. It is the Spirit of God whereby we know the things that we have freely received of God 2. The Spirit of God doth witness unto us Objectively as I may so call it and that is by some effects and fruits of his grace upon our hearts by which we gather as by so many sure signes that we are in the state of grace and not hypocrites But because this will come in more fully in the ensuing particulars I shall only touch upon those effects by which the testimony of our conscience is rightly guided in witnessing to us And First By having a full and serious purpose to avoid all sinne as it shall become manifested to us As David professed That he did hate every evil way Psal 119. 104. He that doth allow and indulge himself in any known sinne cannot have the testimony of this good conscience It is true as is to be shewed there is no man living though never so holy but his conscience convinceth him of much sinne and many infirmities and this maketh him so highly esteem Christ and a Gospel-righteousness but yet it doth not witness to him that he liveth in the customary acting of grosse sinnes if it doth the Spirit of God never witnesseth with such a mans conscience that he is the child of God No if thou livest quietly without the smitings and condemnations of conscience it is because it is stupid and the Devil hath deluded and hardened thee for Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience and by this effect that we have a tender respect to avoid all known sinne Secondly Another effect is A zeal for the glory of God to honour him to magnifie Christ and to set up his Kingdome as much as we are able The more zeal and fervency men have had for Gods honour the more powerfull testimony of a good conscience they alwayes enjoyed As we see in this Paul in his whole ministerial course with what burning zeal did he flame forth continually and on the contrary so much remisness so much negligence and lukewarmness so much is the abating of consciences testimony Thirdly An holy confidence and boldnesse in our approachings to God And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. The Spirit of Adoption removing our fears our unbelief and dejection raising us up also with an holy confidence and humble boldness doth hereby testifie with our consciences that we are the children of God Hence the more distrustfull fears the more tormenting doubts that we groan under the weaker and more feeble is the witness of our conscience yea if those prevail and are predominant then our conscience is set against us and witnesseth against us and then the child of God is in sad desertions when his heart witnesseth against him that he is an hypocrite that he did serve the Lord without integrity For though this be false yet till Gods Spirit remove this darknesse and fill thee with an Evangelical confidence thou art not able to hold up thy head Fourthly Another effect by which Gods Spirit witnesseth with our conscience is An unfeigned love to the brethren a delight in all those that love God Where this is that thou lovest godly men for their godliness sake this demonstrateth thou art born of God and hast the same Image in thee as they have And if thy love also extend to thy enemies if thou findest that thou canst pray for them that curse thee do good to them that revile especially thou pitiest their souls and wouldst be helpfull to them in the way to Heaven though they are enraged adversaries to thee and that without cause By this frame of heart the conscience doth give a full and precious evidence Fifthly In daily and faithfull exercises of self-denial in the wayes of God doth the Spirit of God greatly assure the conscience In sufferings for Christ in enduring the losse of name liberty and li●e it self for Gods cause is the clearest testimony of our conscience Hence the Martyrs had so much serenity of spirit such unspeakable consolations because they found they loved Christ better than all things As they gave a testimony to the word of God called therefore Martyrs so God also gave them a testimony within whereby they did glory in tribulations and triumph over all aduersaries We see that if men suffer in false wayes if they be Martyrs for the Devil if they die for that which is highly offending God they many times glory in the comfort they have from the testimony of their conscience Now if a deluded conscience if deluded joyes can do so much what shall not the Spirit of God do sealing and confirming his love to us by our patient sufferings for him Thus when happily the world doth witness against thee wicked men they condemn thee and lay many heavy accusations against thee as the false Apostles did here concerning Paul yet this testimony with in will answer all and God doth come in with fuller evidences of his love in such passages of self denial Lastly The Spirit of God doth witness to our spirit in this blessed effect viz. When we do with delight and joy meditate think and speak about heavenly things when the Ordinances of God are matter of pleasure to us David doth often pro●efs what delight he had in the Ordinances of God how the word of God was more precious than gold more sweet than the honey-comb Now when the heart is thus affected to holy things that they find more joy as David professeth Psal 4. in the things of God then worldly men do in their corn and wine when these increase By this excellent heavenly temper the Spirit of God witnesseth with our conscience that we are the children of God But I shall enlarge no more on this because the Doctrine of Assurance will follow upon the next words We shall now lay down some distinctions to clear this truth to you because it is plain That many times the people of God being cast down with black thoughts that cannot say with Paul The testimony of our conscience is our rejoycing And on the other side many heretical pharisaical and self-deluded persons will at least outwardly boast
for the future Considerations clearing the truth 1. Though we have oft had experience of Gods goodness yet every new trouble is ready to startle us 2. Though the promises be sufficient grounds for our trust yet experiences do much promote faith 3. 'T is a good way to keep the heart calme even to exercise trust in God for the future 4. The future good things that we are to trust in the Lord for are both spirituall and temporall Object Answer 1. There are motives to trust in God from both the personal and general priviledges of believers 2. What are the opposites to trusting in God 1. Presumption Signs of presumption 1. When we walk not by Scripture-light 2. When we are confident without a promise 3. When we separate the means from the end 4. When we use false means 5. When we think by our own strength to obtain grace and glory 2. Despair Whence despair arises 1. From low thoughts of God As 1. The power of God 2. The goodness of God 3. Of the merits of Christ 2. From wrong apprehensions about our sins 3. This grace of trusting in God cannot be expected to be perfect here 'T is our duty not to separate Gods power and goodnesse from the means required How God and the creature work together 1. All Gods spiritual mercies have many things concurrent before they be accomplished 2. The opposing of these requisites one against another hath bred much confusion and errour How we should relie wholly upon Christ and yet make use of the means and how we may know whether we do or no. 1. When we acknowledge whatsoever we have to come from Christ 2. When we attribute no merit or causality to the means 3. When we rest upon Christ onely for our justification 4. When we put no trust or confidence in the means 5. We dishonour God in the use of the means when we think we profit him thereby The most eminent in gifts and graces need the prayers of their inferiours Reasons 1. Because there is a more peculiar promise made to the prayers of many then one 2. Because the Church in Scripture is called a body whose parts stand in need one of another Use People ought to pray for their spirituall guides Considerations explaining the truth 1. 'T is an errour of the Socinians to say God commands prayer only in the New Testament 2. No merit or confidence to be put in our prayers 3. Ministers are to pray for their people and people for their Ministers 4. This supposeth the people to be both gifted and gracious 5. Many things there are which people are to desire of God for their Ministor 1. That they may be preserved 2. That their word may be suceesfull 3. That their gifts and graces may be quickned 4. That they may be saved Whensoever we have received mercies from God we are by praise and thankfullness to acknowledge then to him What is required to the praising of God 1. An acknowledgement that God alone is the Authour of all our mercies 2. Both the generall and particular acts of faith 3. Love to God 4. Heavenly mindedness 5. Chearfulnes Motives to praise God 1. 'T is an excellent duty in that we are so backward to it 2. It is called a Sacrifice 3. 'T is a debt due to God 4. The chief motive is thankfulnesse 5. A thankfull heart is the most proper disposition to Gospel dispensations 6. The neglect of this duty is an argument of a rotten heart Our ordinary temporal enjoyments are the gifts of God 1. The effects of natural causes are still the gift of God 2. The comforts that flow from moral causes are still the gifts of God 3. What we receive from men 't is still the gift of God 4. Whatsoever we have by the art and skill of others 5. Such things as come upon us without our care Reasons Why these are all Gods gifts 1. God is not necessitated to give them 2. We have oft forseited them by our sins 3. We are to pray to him for them Not only personal but publick prayers and praises are acceptable to God Reasons 1. Hereby the honour of God is more promoted 2. Hereby our love to one another is much quickened 3. God in a more especial manner present there 4. Herein the lively may prevail for the dull and indisposed Mercies vouch safed to the Ministers are to be accounted as Church mercies An holy rejoycing and glorying in the graces of God is lawfull What is required to our glorying in the gifts and graces we have received from God 1. An high esteem of our graces 2. A certain perswasion that we have them 3. Good grounds and Scripture-demonstrations thereof 4. The Spirit of God In what respect 't is lawfull thus to rejoyce and glory 1. As they are the fruits of Gods favour 2. As they bear up our hearts against all accusations either external or internal Wherein this rejoycing is unlawfull 1. When we rejoyce in our graces as if they were perfect 2. When we so rejoyce in them as so rest upon them 3. When we rejoyce in them as coming from our selves not God The witnesse of a good conscience is great ground of comfort What is required to a good conscience 1. That it witness according to the word of God 2. The help of the Spirit to instruct us in the true meaning of the Word 3. Pure aims and intentions 4. Inward sanctification What else is requisite to a well-regulated conscience 1. The witnessing and sealing power of the Spirit with our consciences How the Spirit of God doth not witness with our consciences How it doth 1. Effectively 2. Objectively What are the effects of the Spirit by which our consciences are rightly guided in witnessing to us 1. A purpose to leave all known sin 2. A zeal for the glory of God 3. An holy confidence in our approachings unto God 4. Love to the Brethren 5. Self-denial 6. Delight in heavenly things Distinctions concerning the testimony of our conscience 1. 'T is either particular or general 2. It witnesseth either perfection or sincerity 3. Conscience is either habitually enabled or actually prepared to testifie 4. The testimony of conscience is either alone or relating to Christ A believer may be assured he performeth duties with an upright heart What is required to a certain knowledg of our being in a state of grace 1. A firm assent to the truth of Gods promises and Word 2. A particular application of the promises to themselves What is required to an experimental discerning of our graces 1. An humble heart 2. A regular disposition in the soul 3. An holy fear 4. The help of Gods Spirit What are the hinderances which keep men from looking after an assurance of their sincerity 1. Self-fulness and presumptuous security 2. A prophane careless spirit 3. Carking carefulness 4. Despairing and discouraging thoughts Of Gods commands to get assurance The effects of our souls 1. A quiet heart 2. Spiritual
for Christ SERM. XLVII What Qualifications they must be endowed with who suffer in a right manner for Christ SERM. XLVIII How many wayes and by what means Christ comfortteh those who suffer for him SERM. XLIX How and why God alwayes proportions a Saints comforts to his sufferings and often makes them to overflow And why he often denies comforts to his People in their troubles SERM. L. 2 Cor. 1. 6. And whether we be afflicted it is for your consolation and salvation which is effectual in the enduring the same sufferings which we also suffer or whether we be comforted it is for your consolation and salvation The Saints sufferings are for the Churches good SERM. LI. The Afflictions which others suffer for Christ make much for our comfort and salvation SERM. LII How salvation is promoted and advanced by our sufferings for Christ SERM. LIII Afflictions not in themselves but as improved by patience conduce to our salvation What goes to the producing of patience SERM. LIV. Motives exciting us to a patient submission unto God under all the Afflictions he layes upon us SERM. LV. All the Dispensations of God carry on and further the salvation of his people SERM. LVI 2 Cor. 1. 7. And our hope of you is stedfast knowing that as you are partakers of the sufferings so shall ye be also of the consolation Of Paul's hope and perswasion of the Corinthians with the Reasons and Grounds of it SERM. LVII Of our partaking with others in their suffering for Christ and how this is a way to interest our selves in the joy and glory which such sufferers enjoy SERM. LVIII 2 Cor. 1. 8. For we would not brethren have you ignorant of our trouble which came to us in Asia that we are pressed out of measure above strength insomuch that we despaired even of life How usefull it is to the children of God to know the Afflictions which the Saints suffer for Christs sake And why the preaching concerning the Saints afflictions even from Heathens is necessary to Christians though for the present they be in peace and quietness SERM. LIX The Ministers of the Gospel finde much opposition from the carnal and worldly Professors Who are these carnal and worldly Professors SERM. LX. A further Discovery of such who take up Religion meerly from carnal motives and worldly respects SERM. LXI Of the different judgment that Faith and Flesh passe upon Afflictions SERM. LXII How the voice of the Spirit and the voice of the Flesh differ in Afflictions And why it is necessary a man should know them asunder SERM. LXIII What is to be understood by Paul's being pressed above measure as likewise how neither natural nor moral strength can carry us through troubles in a gracions manner SERM. LXIV The natural fear of Death is not taken away by Graces What are the Uses of it SERM. LXV Of the natural and sinfull fear of Death How to discern between them and from whence the sinfulnesse of that fear proceedeth SERM. LXVI 2 Cor. 1. 9. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead The truly godly may sometimes passe false sentences upon their own Persons and Actions and Gods Dispensations towards them SERM. LXVII The People of God often passe false judgement upon the Dispensations of God towards them The Reasons from whence the false judgement proceeds with Rules to prevent it SERM. LXVIII Of humane and divine Trust and of the true and proper Objects of our confidence SERM. LXIX What are those secret and inward objects that men are apt to place their confidence in and wherein even the Saints themselves may be guilty of that sinne SERM. LXX Whether Paul speaketh these words in his own person and wherein the sinfulness of Self-confidence appears SERM. LXXI Of the Nature Object and Matter of our Divine Trust or Dependance upon God SERM. LXXII What is required in our trusting in God ex parte subjecti And of the excellency of this grace SERM. LXXIII Of the Expression God who raiseth the dead how it is to be understood and what it implyes SERM. LXXIV 2 Cor. 1. 10. Who delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us We are not to consider Gods Mercies in general only but their several aggravations also SERM. LXXV Privative and preventing Mercies are to be accounted of as Positive SERM. LXXVI Of the Necessity of Gods continuing his Mercies to us as well as his conferring Mercies upon us SERM. LXXVII Former Experience should be a sufficient Argument for future confidence SERM. LXXVIII Of Motives to trust in God and the Opposites to it Presumption and Despair SERM. LXXIX 2 Cor. 1. 11. You also helping together by prayer for us that for the gift bestowed upon us by the means of many persons thanks may be given by many on our behalf How we are to relie upon God and yet make use of requisite means too SERM. LXXX The highest in gifts and graces should desire the prayers of the meanest And People ought to pray for their Ministers as well as Ministers for their People SERM. LXXXI How and why we should praise God for all his mercies vouchsafed to us SERM. LXXXII God is the fountain of all our mercies they are his gifts and why SERM. LXXXIII Of the Necessity and Usefulness of publick Ordinances and of the Churches Interest in its Ministers mercies SERM. LXXXIV 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world and more abundantly to you-wards SERM. LXXXV What is required to a good and well-ordered conscience SERM. LXXXVI Further Discoveries of what is required to a well-regulated conscience with Distinctions concerning it SERM. LXXXVII A Believer may be assured of the uprightness of his heart in the performance of Duties What is required to such an Assurance SERM. LXXXVIII Of the Impediments which keep us from Assurance commands for it and Cautions about it SERM. LXXXIX Of the true Nature of godly Simplicity and singleness of Heart SERM. XC A further Discovery of the true Nature of godly Simplicity both towards God and man SERM. XCI Of the true Nature of godly Sincerity SERM. XCII A further Discovery of the Nature and Effects of godly Sincerity SERM. XCIII Of fleshly Wisdome with some Principles of it SERM. XCIV Principles of fleshly Wisdome used in the Propagation of the Gospel SERM. XCV Of the grace of God which Paul exalteth above fleshly Wisdome and ascribeth all unto SERM. XCVI Wherein the grace of God appeared towards Paul in his Ministerial Labours SERM. XCVII Of a good and godly conversation in the world SERM. XCVIII Of Gods Presence with the Ministry how it renders the People inexcusable SERM. XCIX 2 Cor. 1. 13. For we write no other things
as David when banished from the publick Ordinances lamented it more than banishment from his own house and land and native countrey Thus they cryed out with him As the Hart panteth after the water brooks so pant our souls after thee O God You see then it 's a duty to be of a Church Hence because a Church is a company we are diligently to attend to what is our duty as we are a Church and this you had need hear of often For you must know you are under a two-fold consideration One Absolute as a private and single person and so you have several duties to attend unto 2. Relative as you are a member of a Church or part of such a Society and so there are choice and special duties Your solemn Church-duties such as hearing praying and all other publick worship are to be preferred above all private He can never be a good Christian that is not a good member of that Church he is of As in Politicks it's acknowledged he cannot be bonus vir which is not bonus civis not a good man that is not a good Citizen Now certainly here is a wonderfull neglect and general fault in all our Congregations we attend not to our Church-duties to our Church-communion what God doth require of us as a Society as a spiritual Company there would not be that neglecting of the Assemblies those wicked and ungodly meetings to be drunk to be carnally merry and jolly which are directly contrary to Church-meetings Nothing doth so resemble Heaven as the Church Assemblies spiritually performed and to such meetings God hath promised his more peculiar presence and assistance But of this more in its time In the next place there is added in the Doctrinal Description That it is a Company of persons called of God by the preaching of the Word Wherein are considerable the Efficient Cause and the Instrumental The Efficient is God Called by God And first In that they are said to be called by God This implieth these things 1. That it 's the meer goodness and grace of God that makes a people to be a Church Therefore they are thus named Ecclesia The Grecians called their Assemblies so because of some humane Authority gathering them together but the people of God are called a Church because God calls them So that as there is a difference between a garden and a wilderness the one is naturally so but the other is planted by art and industry nature doth not of it self especially since mans fall bring forth gardens and choice flowers but there is great art and culture required thereunto Thus it is with the Church men are made the Church by Gods grace but they are the world of themselves The world and the Church are two opposites God makes the one and is present in a special manner there but sinne and Satan make and rule in the other When the Psalmist said It is he that hath made us not we our selves we are the sheep of his pasture Calvin understands it of their Church making it was the goodness and power of God that made them so Hence it is that it is often compared to and called the Kingdom of Heaven because it's original is from Heaven and their Laws and Ordinances are heavenly Thus you see to be made a Church is not by our humane will and power as men make themselves Cities and Corporations but by a special grace of God 2. When therefore we are said to be called by God that doth necessarily suppose a terminus from which we are called It 's a company of persons called out from the world wherein once they were Hence the Apostle 1 Cor. 5. doth oppose the world and the Church together and the world is said to be without God then when he gathers a Church He calls them out of the world as Lot was called out of Sodom which was ready to be destroyed with fire and brimstone or as a man is called out from an house that is ready to fall into its fulnes and this it is that makes it to be such an admirable priviledge and blessedness to be of the Church For the world is sure to perish is sure to be damned there is no abiding therein as if an Israelite had continued in an Aegyptians house when the destroying Angel passed by he was sure to be killed Thus there is no way but of damnation in the world without this Ark of the Church every one must necessarily perish But this is that which should make all our hearts ake and tremble at to consider That though the Church be called out of the world yet it 's almost degenerated into the world again Look over the face and conversation of all Churches Are they not become the world Is not a garden made a wilderness Is not the lusts the prophaneness the ignorance the impieties that are in the world to be found in the Church like wise And what hath been the sad occasion of so many to say Our Congregations are no Churches that a man cannot with a good conscience stay amongst you or have communion with you Is it not because of the universalimpiety they see amongst us As if the Church of God which is like the Ark in other things were in this also that all kind of things unclean as well as clean swine as well as sheep vultures as well as doves were to be taken into it We see as it hath been Gods work to turn the world into Churches so it hath been the Devils work to turn the Churches into the world again But wo be to the wicked man that is so in the Church of God God will be sure to punish you A nettle or weed in the garden is sure to be plucked up whereas in the wilderness it may grow and never be medled with SERM XIII Concerning the Efficient Instrumental Formal and Final Cause of a Church 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church at Corinth VVE are describing the nature of a particular visible Church and in that have discussed the Efficient Cause with the manner of his efficiency expressed in those words Called of God what is implied in that hath been examined only there remaineth a necessary distinction to be attended unto of Gods call that it is two-fold either External only or External and Internal also or an Effectual and Ineffectual Calling For though this distinction be hated by some men yet the Scripture is very clear That there are many called who yet are not chosen and when he saith called it is not meant only actively on Gods part as some were called but yet refused and would not so much as outwardly profess obedience but called is to be understood passively on mans part so that he giveth some outward conformity to Gods call There is an external reception and submission to it but yet there is no true inward sanctification Insomuch that some who are called the children of the Kingdom shall be cast forth and they
a little yet inflaming and increasing the disease more So that these worldly joys being not universal nor pure and unmixed yea being the seed of eternal grief and torment therefore they may be well excluded from the name of joy and the Doctrine be truly asserted That God is a God of consolation onely to believers Let us explicate this truth And First We are to know That God doth not only vouchsafe grace but comfort also and delight to his people in the exercise of those graces He doth not only give bread that strengthens but wine that makes the heart glad Grace that carrieth us out to honour God to love him and live to him but comfort that is for our encouragement that is to sweeten and facilitate the heart in doing so So that if a man have never so much grace and holiness yet if he want this conlation as you see it was with Job with Jeremiah with David when Psal 51. he prayed so earnestly for the restoring of it again to him all his desirable things perish Christ himself under those agonies he conflicted with had an Angel to comfort him So that you see they are two distinct gifts of God to give Grace and to give comfort therefore the holy Ghost hath a two-fold work both to sanctifie and also to comfort yet though distinct God doth many times joyn them together yea there is some unusual impediment if joy doth not alwayes follow grace and that like Castor and Pollux they do not alwayes appear together Therefore Godlinesse is comprehended under the name of gladnesse in that expression Ps l. 45. 7. applied to Christ Heb. 1. 9. Thou hast anointed him with the oyl of gladness as Christ was so also are his members thus anointed with the oyl of gladnesse God then doth not only sanctifie and make his people holy but he also doth fill their hearts with joy and gladness Thus Acts 9. 31. They in the Churches walked in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the holy Ghost Only when we say That God giveth his people comfort as well as grace You must know the comforts are of two sorts Sometimes they are concomitant so that even in the very exercises of grace they find unspeakable joy and sweetness The very Heathens had some glimmering of this when they said Virtus was sibi ipsi praemium Virtue it self was a reward as well as duty because of the great tranquillity and contentation of mind that it brought to the soul Even as wicked actions have an immediate horrour and remorse of conscience accompanying them And then 2. There are consequent joyes which follow after the work is done as Paul found at the 12th verse This is our rejoycing the testimony of a good conscience So that a man of an ill conscience who hath stings from that though all the world applaud him yet he cannot have any true solid joy Quid proderit tibi non habere conscium habenti conscientiam The Martyrs they found concomitant joyes in their most dreadfull sufferings Act. 5. 41. The Apostles went away rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer for Christs Name They minded not their stripes nor their reproach and disgrace but they went away rejoycing not from hearing the Word from prayer from such holy Ordinances but even from scourges and stripes But in many other duties and services for God though for the present we may feel no joy yet there are subsequent joyes that may arise long after For as sinne may not sting for a while as we see in Joseph's brethren the guilt of their conscience awakened them many years after So the comfort of holy duties though for the present thou mayest not apprehend them yet sometimes or other God will revive them Secondly Although God giveth not only grace but comfort to his people yet we are not to serve him onely for comforts sake but for his own sake and that while he denieth us the brests of consolation to suck on yet we are as fervently and zealously to obey him as ever It is many times the sad complaint of Gods children that they want comfort and thereupon are dejected and discouraged they care not for praying for hearing they have no heart for the Ordinances and all because they find their hearts like a barren wildernesse full of howling beasts Oh when they have comfort then they can runne the way of Gods Commandments then they have fire in their bosome But when this is gone they become like a stone or a lump of earth But although it be true That the joy of the Lord is our strength Nehem. 8. 10. yet for all that it is too low and mercenary to serve him onely for comfort This is Amor concupiscentiae not amicitiae towards God The grace of love carrieth us to God so that we choose him and delight in him above all things that though he should not give us Heaven and everlasting glory yet we were to love him because he is the supream and most excellent good How much more than are we to serve God to be diligent in his work though we find not those experimental suavities upon our souls for the present Therefor thou art to deny thy self in this matter of joy when God dispenseth it to thee walk thankfully humbly and fruitfully under it And when in darkness in desolateness of soul yet let not thy soul abate in love and service to God The Stoick was so severe that he thought he could not be virtuous who did any virtuous action for the delight and sweetness that followeth it They would not have Virtus propter voluptatem but voluptas propter virtutem How much more should our Christianity teach us to preferre Gods will and his honour above all consolations If Job said Though he kill me yet I will trust in him then do thou though when thou askest for bread he give thee a stone when thou askest for fish he give thee a serpent yet still say I will own him as a Father honour him as a Father Christ when he was in those agonies and destitute of all comfort yet he did not refuse to accomplish the will of God Thirdly As God giveth comfort to believers so he doth it proportionably and sutably to their tryals necessities and wants Greater tryals need greater comforts greater temptations need greater consolations Thus the Apostle at the next verse As our sufferings abound so our consolation also aboundeth through Christ One drop of honey is not enough to sweeten the salt waters of the sea neither can small consolations equal great afflictions Hence the wisdome and goodness of God is most remarkable that he reserveth his comforts for such times and seasons when the soul doth most want them Now if ever the Lord must comfort else they shall be overwhelmed as in the time of our first conversion to God when our sins lie with all their weight upon our backs when we see nothing but terrour which way soever
one way or other Every Abel will have a Cain every Isaac an Ismael What though you do not suffer from the Pagans or heretiques without yet how greatly do ye suffer from the prophane and ungodly within Every prophane man though he shrowd himself under the name of Christ yet he is of an Antichristian spirit if not doctrinally yet practically and in deed Bernard speaking of the bitter times by Paganish persecution and then of more bitter by hereticall maketh the third and most bitter of all to be in the evil and ungodly manners of those who are within the Church Heu domine saith he qui sunt in Ecclesiâ primi sunt in persecutione primi There is then a suffering for Christ though not to blood and if every godly man do not thus suffer let him fear whether he be not a man pleaser whether he fear not man more then God whether therefore he be not applauded as a wise man as a moderate man because he is not indeed a zealous godly man against sinne in his place The very Heathen could say How is he a good man who is not trouble some to and hated by an evil man Therefore saith our Saviour Wo be to you when all men speak well of you Luk. 6. 26. Some observe the connexion the Apostle useth 1 Pet. 4. 11 12. for having in the 11 verse exhorted to a faithfull and diligent discharge of those Offices we are betrusted with presently exhorts to patience about afflictions because one will necessarily cause the other So Mat. 10. when Christ giveth his Apostles Commission to preach he doth withall admonish them of the hatred they shall meet with Light will be offensive to sore eyes and salt will make wounds to smart Thirdly To suffer for Christs sake is very tedious and grievous to flesh and blood It 's because of those reproaches and many times dangers which accompany the way of Christ that it is such a stumbling block to many They like the Crown of Glory well but they like not the Crown of Thornes If Christs way was a broad way they might have Christ and their honours Christ and their lusts Christ and their advantages then they would be as forward to runne out and meet Christ as they did from Jerusalem crying Hos●nna to him Therefore howsoever men have thousands of pretences to keep off from the way of godlinesse and the faithfull owning of Christ they have many wide gates of distinction to go out at when danger is at hand yet it is fear of suffering that keepeth most off their duty They like Christ well till it cometh to be said as she did to Moses Thou art a bloody husband to me So Christ will have thy good name thy estate thy life this makes thee prove an Apostate and turn hypocrite Oh the gulf of misery yea sometimes of despair that this fear of suffering hath put men upon Therefore afflictions for Christs sake are so often called temptations because they will discover whether a man be ●ound for God or not whether they love Christ more then the creatures Oh then pray to God that he leave thee not to this snare to be afraid to suffer for doing what is good This will prove bitter at the latter end Do you not see among Officers how fearfull to punish the drunkard the Sabbath-breaker they shall loose their good word they will do them despite and malice afterwards Art not thou all this while afraid to suffer for Christ He that suffers for doing that which is righteous for punishing offenders he suffers for Christ as is to be shewed Remember then it 's better suffering for Christ which is our Crown and Glory then suffering in Hell for ever because thou wouldst not do the will of God SERM. XLVI The same Doctrine prosecuted shewing the Object for which Christians are to suffer if they would suffer for Christ 2 COR. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us c. THe Doctrine that hath in part been treated on is That a true and faithfull owning of Christ is accompanied with sufferings and persecutions Some Particulars have been given in to clear this We proceed to adde more and the first in order shall be That although it is very difficult to flesh and blood to own Christ so farre as to suffer for him yet the Scripture represents it as a most blessed and glorious thing howsoever the world judge it reproachfull I shall not here enlarge my self about the encouragements to suffer when Christ calls for it it is enough at this time in the general to inform That God will not honour every one with persecutions for himself It is a great expression of his grace and favour Hence some Confessors have desired to be Martyrs but God by his providence preserved them they have been greatly humbled and dejected under this as if it were for some special sinne and unworthinesse in them that God would not in that manner dignify them These are not words and meer oratory the Scripture is clear in proclaiming this for a title of favour to be a sufferer for Christ Act. 5. 41. The Apostles rejoyced that they were accounted worthy to suffer shame for his Name That they might have shame and reproach for Christ this they rejoyced in as a great matter of honour Who were they that the Lord should so exhalt them So Phil. 1. 29. To you it 's given not only to believe but to suffer By this you see that every one to whom God doth give to believe he doth not also give to suffer for him It 's a gift then and where this is bestowed they ought to rejoyce and to be exceeding glad Yea 1 Pet. 3. 14. They are happy And 1 Pet. 4. 16. Thy are to goorifie God in that behalf If we could believe these Scripture truths so much sinfull fear and pusillanimity in the cause of Christ might not be charged upon us as too often it may be we would not run from a duty accompanied with sufferings as Moses did from the rod turned into a Serpent neither should we with Simon the Cyrenean be compelled to bear the crosse That is observeable 1 Pet. 2. 19. If a man suffer for conscience towards God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We translate it this is thankworthy But happily that is not so proper for if a man should suffer all the Martyrdomes that have been in his own body yet God is not to thank him he hath not suffered more then he ought to do Neither do I know that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used in such a sense Therefore it 's better translated This is a favour this is grace if God bring us to suffer for a good conscience towards him If then thou art to suffer either verbally by mocks and slanders or really by miseries and persecutions set the Crown of Glory to the Crown of Thornes set the honey to the gall set the honour with God to
high rebellions and treasons So that this alwaies falleth out as men are perswaded of their way so they judge it true persecution or false Hastia did truly call the Donatists persecutions Persecutiones steriles ●barren and fruitlesse as losing the crown of glory though they boasted of them On the other side the rigid Lutherans did condemn our Martyrs in Queen Maries daies because they dyed against that error That Christ was bodily present in the Sacrament yea and called them Martyres Diaboli The Devils Martyrs This I confesse is more grievous many times then all the persecutions of the adversaries when those who are of the same general profession yet for some particular differences shall so uncharitably censure one another But this is no new thing in the Church of God The Socinians though they blaspheme the Deity of Christ and their doctrine is not simply heresie but blasphemy also yet they will admire their sufferings as if for Christ also The Polonian Gentleman that writ Socinus his life would preferre him above Luther and Ignatius As for Ignatius the Father of Jesuites we have nothing to do with him but that he should preferre him above Luther for the greatnesse of his faith Because saith he Luthers Doctrine at the first had many to applaud it but Soci●ius had few or none to encourage him Though we might say Luthers was universally hated the whole world being then subject to the Pope yet that can be nothing with that writer who confesseth that pride and vain-glory may make all a mans sufferings to be fewel to it Thus you see how that all suffering parties in Religion will pretend to Christ and plead they suffer for him but as Christ is Christ though there have risen many false Christs so suffering and persecution for Christ is truly so and some there are and they only who can claim this honour though others do gloriously pretend to it It is a true rule of Austins Causa non paena facit Martyrem Not the punishment but the cause makes a Martyr Even as Causa non separatio facit schismaticum It must be indeed the Doctrine of Christ not our opinions and presumptions we suffer with Thirdly The Scripture expresseth this Suffering for righteousnesse sake He that suffereth for doing that which is righteous suffereth for Christ Mat. 5. 10. If ye be persecuted for righteousnesse sake blessed are ye This is made the same with suffering for Christs sake This is good to observe lest we should think that then we only suffer for Christ when the matter we are troubled for is either Christ himself or his truth and ordinances something that is immediately terminated upon Christ No this is to be extended farther For when a Magistrate is zealous to rebuke sinne and put it to shame if he be maligned for this he suffereth for Christ So if a private Christian set himself in a lawfull way against all the impieties that abound where he liveth and thereupon all his neighbours hate and oppose him he suffers for Christ And all because it 's for righteousnesse Insomuch that thou maiest take much comfort herein as one Martyr did That it is not for any wickednesse of thine any wrong or injury thou hast done them only because thou hast had a zeal for God and his glory therefore it is that they rise up with such malice against thee And let this encourage all such who desire to have all ungodlinesse and dishonour to God by sinne be wholly rooted out though in this labour they have many oppositions and much hatred yet remember it is for Christ It is true indeed that besides meer righteousnesse there must be also a knowledge of Christ For without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 3. And therefore though Aristides the just was banished for righteousnesse and Socrates put to death for maintaining there was but one God yet these cannot be said to suffer for Christ because they had no knowledge of him Seeing Christ is only in the Church therefore there cannot be any true suffering for him but in the Church Lastly In respect of the object matter Then we suffer for Christ when we are persecuted for keeping a good conscience and will not break the peace thereof for all the advantages in the world Thus the Apostle Peter 1 Pet. 3. 16. maketh the having of a good conscience to be equivalent to suffering for righteousnesse sake and also for the Name of Christ This good conscience consists in this That whereas the enemies and persecutors speak all evil of us as evil doers they may at last be ashamed for such false accusations Here you see none ever persecuted the Church of God but they laid foul things to their charge That as they did put the Christians sometimes in Bear-skins to make the dogs tear them with the greater rage so also they have turned their names into Heretiques Schismaticks and every odious title that so they might be the more justified in their cruel waies Now then to suffer with and for a good conscience is to be innocent from all these calumnies that we dare appeal to God as Christ said For which of the good works do ye stone me So for what good is it that I have done you reproach you revile and persecute me But when we say a good conscience we mean that which is truly so and informed out of Gods Word otherwise as Paul said he had a good conscience while he was a Pharisee and thought he was bound to do against Christ what he did So many deluded consciences may indure much misery yea death it self with a good conscience thus farre that they do not go against any light thereof They are not as some Heretiques 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-condemned as it is commonly expounded No they may think they are bound to suffer as they do Yea if they should recant their errors though never so damnable while their conscience is perswaded to the contrary they would sinne against God not because they renounce an error materially but because they do that which formally appeareth a truth to them and it may be bring much horror and teror upon their own consciences It is not enough therefore to make a man a sufferer for Christ if in a false way because he is perswaded so his conscience doth not tell him to the contrary he hath much comfort doing as he doth whereas if he should do otherwise he should have no peace For conscience is but an inferiour Judge and is no further to command then guided by the Word of God and when it is so then whosoever will not please men but indure all hardship rather then wound this conscience this man suffers for Christ Thus you see what it is to suffer for Christ in the Scripture expression and let it be thy earnest prayer to God to have a preparednesse of heart thus to suffer Oh consider how much Christ suffered for thee both from God and
comparatively to the cause and glory of Christ And this makes it so difficult to suffer This hath made the Apostates that have many times been in the Church This hath filled the hearts of many with woe and wounds implacably For their childrens sake for their lives sake they deny Christ and a good conscience and how can it be otherwise while Earth is dearer than Heaven when we esteem the favour of men more than the favour of God This hath proved bitter wormwood to many at last Lastly To suffer for Christ there is required pure and holy motives To lose all for Christs sake out of meer conscience that this is the only cause why we are in any trouble We may read both in sacred and prophane Histories how men have suffered even death it self only for vain-glory All Aristotles vertuous men they were ambitious and vain-glorious men The very Heathen could make it Laudum immensa cupido as well as Amorpatriae We would think it a madnesse to lose comforts and life for an airy bubble of windy glory yet many have been thus transported not only Philosophus but Haereticus est animal gloriae vanissimum If then it 's not Scripture-grounds but ambitious vain-glorious principles that make thee to suffer Christ doth not will not provide sugar for thy bitter pils Thus have we seen what is required to suffer for Christ Oh the difficulty of this duty No wonder so much seed hath withered away when the scorching Sunne of persecution did arise No wonder Christ hath many Swallow-friends that endure with him the Summer time onely No wonder few are lovers of Christ for Christs sake As Alexander had more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These are the Bees that follow for the honey-pot only Now to all these we must adde this Caution A Christian that suffereth for Christ though he have not those qualifications in a perfect degree but find corruption opposing every one of them He must not therefore cast away his confidence for we can no more suffer perfectly for Christ then do perfectly for him and if our gracious works cannot justifie us no more can our gracious sufferings Martyrdom is not meritorious Though we shed our bloud for Christ yet the blood of Christ must cleanse that duty also The Martyrs died only in resting upon Christ for salvation and no wonder the godly heart finds more imperfections in his sufferings more carnal fear and impatience then in other duties because this is the hardest service Christ doth ever put his upon What else is to be said in this point will come in in the next particulars SERM. XLVIII How many wayes and by what means Christ comforteth those who suffer for him 2 COR. 1. 5. So our consolation aboundeth by Christ THe second absolute Proposition in the Text is That our comfort aboundeth by Christ. The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rendred by some Exhortation but more generally and fitly Consolation Though this be spoken in the singular number and afflictions in the plural yet this is to be understood collectively as a treasure that hath all kind of comforts in it not one or two but all Therefore the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here repeated again aboundeth which is to be understood partly repletively it filleth the hearts of those that do suffer for Christ and partly diffusively it extends also to the comfort of others And then you have the cause of all this By Christ Christ who is the cause of their sufferings is also the cause of their comfort As from the same root proceedeth both the Rose and its pricks Thus from Christ the same Fountain cometh both bitter and sweet Were not this added who would suffer for Christ who would lose all for him but Christ hath so ordained it that these sufferings are advantagious to us and though we lose in the retail yet we gain in the bulk and whole Observe That as our sufferings are for Christ so by the same Christ are our comforts Though he strike with one hand yet he supporteth with the other If David said to the Priest who fled to him many of them being slain at No● by the bloudy cruelty of Saul Stay with me I am the occasion of your deaths thou shalt fare as I fare How much more will Christ own such who suffer for him saying Depend upon me for I am the cause of all the reproaches and cruel usages you meet with in the world But to explain this Let us consider In what respects comforts may be said to abound by Christ And First Efficiently He being the same with God is therefore a God of all consolation Yea Christ as a Mediator he is sensible of our temptations knoweth our need and wants and therefore the more ready to comfort Christ that wanted comfort himself and therefore had an Angel sent to comfort him is thereby the more compassionate and willing to comfort us Thus you may read Christ and God put together in this very act 2 Thess 2. 16 17. Our Lord Jesus Christ himself and God even our Father who hath given us everlasting consolation comfort your hearts Paul here prayeth that both Jesus Christ and God the Father would comfort them Christ therefore not only absolutely as God but relatively as Mediator is qualified with all fitnesse and fulnesse to communicate consolation he is the fountain and head as of grace so of comfort Secondly We are comforted by Christ Meritoriously he hath merited at the hands of God our comfort for without Christs death and atonement we were no more subjects prepared for comfort then the damned Angels Had all mankind with Dives begged but for a drop of comfort such was the gulph between God and us that it could not be obtained So that by Christ a way is made for our consolation Christ did not only obtain the communication of the holy Ghost in the gifts and graces thereof So that as by Christ the Spirit of God is given to the Church as a guide to teach and lead into all truth as the sanctifying Spirit and use of all holinesse So he is also as the Comforter who giveth every drop of consolation that any believer doth enjoy Though therefore joy and comfort be in Scripture attributed to the holy Ghost as the appropriated and applying cause thereof yet this is wholly because of the merits of Christ And therefore we may pray for comfort upon the same grounds as we doe for holinesse They are both the fruits of Christs death Lastly We are comforted by Christ Objectively that is in him and from him we take our comfort As Christ is called Our righteousnesse because in and through his righteousnesse we are accepted of in him we are compleat So Christ is our comfort because in him we find matter of all joy though there be troubles and vexations from the creatures though the Sunne and Moon be turned into bloud all powers
and profits than future glory then thou proclaimest thy exceeding great folly and madnesse If then thou love thy self thy soul thy salvation be patient in enduring all that God layeth upon thee Fifthly Be patient under such sufferings Because hereby thou promotest the good of others the salvation of others And certainly this should much prevail with us These sufferings of mine these patient endurings for the cause of Christ may provoke and encourage many others This did greatly induce Paul and animate him in all his reproaches and difficulties he met with for the Gospel because that hereby the Church was more propagated With what joy Phil. 1. 13. doth he speak of this That his bonds were made manifest every where and many of the brethren waxed more confident and bold than before As on the contrary we see the impatience worldly fears and Apostasie of some have done a world of hurt to others not only falling themselves but making others also to tumble down with them This is a sad thing to consider of If the Apostle Rom. 14. speaks so dreadfully about a strong Christian abusing his liberty that thereby he is a stumbling block and on his part destroyeth him for whom Christ died How much more will this hold true on him who shall perfidiously forsake Christ rather than suffer for him And although some of these have recover'd again and manifested as much faithfulnesse as they had formerly falshood yet those that did wholly fall off their fall was great making the adversary to rejoyce and animating others to do the like Therefore on the contrary if thou endure with constancy and patience under all opposions in nothing being dismayed this will imbolden others thou mayest prevent the backsliding of others Insomuch that to suffer for Christ is a great act of love not only to Christ but to the Church when with Paul we shall be willing to be sacrified for the good of other mens souls Now this duty of love we owe to the Body of Christ we are bound in conscience to suffer reproaches and all manner of trials for righteousnesse sake not only because Christ requireth it and with reference to him but also out of love to the souls and salvation of others When we suffer we do not only suffer as private Christians but as members of the body and therefore the concernment of the whole body is in the suffering of every member This then should greatly encourage us in all our afflictions for Christs sake It is not I alone it 's not my salvation only but the salvation of many others is carried on in this businesse Hence some have thought more implied in that expression then ordinarily is conceived 1 Cor. 4. 13. where the Apostle saith We are made as the filth and off-scouring of the world they say the words are not to be understood only of dishonour and reproach but because they were applied to such Sacrifices and devoted things in the offering whereof common judgements were removed piacula therefore they inferre That the Apostles sufferings did conduce to the whole Church of God Others come to obtain mercy by following them for an example I shall not plead for this interpretation onely this is a truth in the general That many have been converted and so saved by beholding the courage and patience of godly Confessors and Martyrs It 's then a duty we owe to the Church of God to suffer when Christ requireth And if we read of Heathens the Curtii and Decii who have devoted themselves to present death to remove some publick calamity what shame will this be to Christians if they shall not in a regular way shew such zeal for the Church of God We have a notable passage 1 John 3. 16. We ought to lay down our lives for the brethren What Christ did for us we are to do for the Church So that from this Text it is plain there are cases and instances wherein a man is bound to lose not only wealth and estate but even life it self for others Hence there is a distinction of Martyrium charitatis and Martyrium fidei A Jesuite Raynardus de Martyrio doth industriously endeavour to maintain That if a man having a call from God doth venture his life by visiting some infected with the plague doing this out of love to God and peoples souls such a man is as truly and properly a Martyr and that in a strict sense as one who dieth for witnessing the faith I shall not here examine this point only in the general we may conclude That he who layeth down his life for the brethren for the spiritual good of others having a call thereunto he he is a Martyr and may encourage himself with all those promises that those who died for the faith have done Yea such a suffering and Martyrdome may be called Martyrium fidei as well as charitatis or misericordiae Faith having imperate acts as well as elicite Hence the Apostle Heb. 11. attributeth divers worthy actions and atchievements unto Faith By this you see in any suffering whereby the Church of God is edified wherein we demonstrate our love to the salvation of others we may greatly encourage our selves Hence also it is observed by one of the Ancients That he who shall suffer to prevent schisms and breaches in the Church of God is more to be honoured than he who suffereth because he would not offer to an Idol because here is more love to the Church of God Let this then in all sufferings whether verbal or real mightily support thee that not my own salvation onely but the good and salvation of all those who shall come to hear or know this will also be furthered To be a meanes of conversion by suffering is in some respect greater than by preaching SERM. LV. All the Dispensations of God carry on and further the Salvation of his People 2 COR. 1. 6. Or whether we be comforted it is for your consolation and salvation THe first part or member of that distribution which the Apostle here useth hath been dispatched For as to the last particular observed in the illustration which the Apostle useth viz. The object matter of their patient enduring which is said to be the same sufferings which we also suffer If any new matter shall present it self it will be more fitly considered in the next verse I proceed therefore to the second part of the distribution used here by the Apostle In that we may observe The Condition supposed If we be comforted Here is light as well as darkness Summer as well as winter The godly are not alwayes afflicted but they have also their seasons of comfort It is not an impossible thing here supposed but what God doth ordinarily bring about for those that fear him So that in the time of adversity thou art to remember the time of thy consolations also whereas the people of God in their distress are apt with David to cry out Hath the Lord cast
it was with Paul this trouble though so exceedingly presting though for the present above his strength yet see how much strength he feeleth at the latter end This trouble did not overcome him but he overcame by the trouble by the grace of God For by this he was brought not to trust in himself but in God who did deliver him and thereupon he concludeth he doth and will deliver him So that God never suffereth any trouble though it be for the present never so heavy and burdensom totally and finally to overcome a man but at last he proveth even more than a conquerour These things thus explained Observe That it 's not the natural strength of any man no not of Paul that is able to carry a man through such afflictions that God may exercise him with Paul saith here It was above his strength not to complain not to accuse God as if he were too severe but thereby to debase himself and to give all glory to God Thus Isai 40. 28 29. when the Church began even to despair under her long calamities saying Her way was hid from God he took no notice of her condition With what incouragement doth God speak and that from this property in him The Creator of the earth fainteth not neither is weary God sinketh not under the government of the world nor the preservation of the Church For if the Sunne that hath runne its course so many years is not weary but can perform it as swiftly as ever Do we think God will be weary But this is not all the comfort As he hath this power so he communicateth it to his weak people To them that have no might he increaseth strength So that the more sensible we are of our own impotency the more ready is God to put forth his power To explain this Let us consider First That the sense of the Doctrine is That no man can bear any burden of affliction in a gracious manner without divine assistance from Christ Men may be naturally patient under great troubles yea they may have that fortitude as to be able to despise death it self but all this is not done in a godly way There is not the least temptation or affliction that cometh upon thee but if God should leave thee to thy self thou wouldst be broken under it nothing but sinne and corruption would manifest it self therein Peters case is abundantly known a temptation did befall him that was more than he could bear for the present though he had a good issue out of it Now this was a very little one in it self Peter had not yet resisted to blood It was but a Damsel and some others that told him he was of Christs company Here was no arraigning of him no impleading of him Here is no sentence of death pronounced against him and yet for all that he falls under it and in a most dreadfull manner denieth Christ What will any one say here Peter was pressed above measure No but from hence we may gather That there is not the least or most inconsiderable trouble that is but falling upon thee in thy own strength as Sampson with his hair cut off but it is able to overwhelme thee Therefore in all thy exercises consider thy infirmity Know that to bear the least burden as a Christian thou canst not do it unlesse it be given thee from above For if Iohn 15. We are not able to do any good separated from Christ if we cannot performe any holy action without the help of grace then much lesse are we able to bear any affliction graciously Conclude then on this That so great is thy sinfull infirmity and impotency that thou canst no more in a godly manner bear thy burden then the lame Cripple could rise up and take his bed and walke till Christ bid him and gave him power to do it Hence in the second place All those opinions which hold That a man is able to resist the tentations of sinne whether by prosperity or adversity so that they be not very extream and grievous without grace and strength from Christ are very injurious to the glory of God though never so much coloured with specious distinctions A man cannot do the least good or beare the least evil without Gods power in an holy manner And besides many Texts in Scripture the reason is plain Because the power of man and supernatural objects have no proportion or habitude between them Ordo Naturae and Ordo Gratiae differ as much as Heaven and Earth For this reason the people of God are so earnestly to pray to God that they be not lead into temptation For let what temptation soever arise if God leaveth thee to thy self it will be to thy ruine Therefore in the third place Experience doth confirm it That many men through the natural strength they have are able to beare up themselves under extream troubles Therefore we must acknowledge a vast difference between a Natural bearing and a Spiritual bearing of troubles And it is the duty for every one to examine whether Nature or Grace doth support Rom. 4. 18. it is there said of Abraham That against hope he believed in hope against natural hope he believed in divine and supernatural hope Thus the godly they do above strength with strength endure afflictions above natural strength with divine But because many men naturally have patient dispositions others stout and strong stomacks it is good to know whether Nature or Grace support thee When Solomon saith Prov. 18. 14. The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmities but a wounded spirit who can bear He doth by that give us a distinction of two sorts of troubles The former External such as fall upon our Body Estate or good Name And now under these many a man hath so much natural courage and boldnesse that he will not shrink under them But then The second sort is Internal because of the guilt of sinnes when the wrath of God falleth upon the conscience being now awakened and made tender this he calleth a wounded spirit and concerning this he saith None can bear it So that although for outward troubles many men do with their natural power and strength go through them yet a troubled conscience no humane power is able to bear if God withdraw his helping hand Cain cried out It was greater than he could bear Iudas was so overwhelmed with it that he destroyed his own self Oh then take heed of bringing a burden upon thy conscience that is heavier than any weight Poverty may be borne misery and streights may be borne but a wounded conscience who can beare In the fourth place There is not only a great difference between the natural spirit of a man to bear infirmities and a gracious but also that moral vertue called Fortitude by Philosophers which is so commended by them They make Fortitude as a vertue to lie in attempting difficult things or bearing great evils for vertues
sake The Romans boast of many such virtuous persons amongst them and for patient enduring of bitter torments what expressions do the Stoicks delight in They make all Philosophy to be in these two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sustine and abstine Now although by their rules they would teach a man to bear afflictions yet this is but a splendid sinne It 's from Christ onely we can be strengthned to such things And Paul Phil. 4. 12. saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am instructed as in a secret mystery to know how to abound and how to suffer need Wonder not then if you read of what fortitude and patience even to admiration Heathens have excelled in who yet were not strengthned by Christ for vain-glory and corrupt aims may make men contemn their lives yea and the Devil many times filleth such with boldness and presumption as we see in blasphemous Hereticks who have shewed great confidence in their death For as the Devil when he possessed the bodies of some persons filled them with more strength than naturally they had so that they have been able to break iron chains in pieces thus when he filleth the hearts of men by Gods just judgement with impudency and mad undaunted boldness they will willingly adventure any danger whatsoever The Devil hurrieth such into danger yea death it self as he did the swine into the sea Use of Instruction to all that fear God to humble themselves under every trouble God brings upon them to go out of themselves to acknowledge Gods strength onely Say O Lord if I had no more power than my own there is no cross I could bear I am such a bruised reed that I could not stand under any tribulation Therefore I cast my burden upon thee thou canst make me bear it though of my self I cannot urge God When thou feelest thy infirmities with that gracious promise Isai 40. 30 31. All shall lose their strength rather than the people of God What hath God given thee strength to love him to believe in him and hast thou no strength to suffer afflictions Be strong in the power of the Lord Ephes 6. 10. SERM. LXIV The natural fear of Death is not taken away by Grace What are the Uses of it 2 COR. 1. 8. Insomuch that we despaired even of life THis last clause in the Text is a further Aggravation of the greatness of this trouble which came upon him in Asia and it is from the Event or Consequent It was so great that he could not escape death The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath an emphasis in the Preposition and so is more than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for that doth properly signifie When a man is indeed doubting and full of debates within himself not well concluding what to do Joh. 13. 22. Gal. 4. 20. but when this Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is added it denoteth such a perplexing that a man cannot any way evade out of it Therefore the Apostle you would think speaketh the contrary to this passage as we shewed he did seemingly to the former For 2 Cor. 4. 8. there the Apostle doth expresly say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This word is used only there and in my Text. It may seem then a contradiction for the Apostle here to say He was without all help or means and there to say The godly never are But the answer is easie For when in the Text Paul saith He was without all help or means he meaneth natural and visible There was no outward way to help him Not but that God might deliver him in a way he did not see or apprehend and so indeed God did deliver him as appeareth afterwards Therefore when in that fourth Chapter he saith The godly are never so destitute as to be without help he meaneth so as to have neither divine or humane help Even as in the same place Paul saith of the godly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are not distressed yet 2 Cor. 6. 4. he saith He was in necessities in distresse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so 2 Cor. 12. 10. The word thus explained the summe of his meaning is That this trouble was so great that it brought him into such a straight that in respect of any humane help there was a necessity of his death and this fear of death did much afflict and assault the spirit of Paul Some render the word taederet so that Paul was even weary of his life as if he desired to die his trouble was so great Some with our Translators We despaired of life But Beza doth willingly abstain from that word therefore that which doth most express the significancy of the word is such a perplexity and doubting in his mind about his life that he could not see any wayes to escape he was like Jonah in the Whales belly out of which there was no visible way to be delivered So that the word implieth these two things 1. That Paul was very anxious about his life and was afraid of death 2. That flesh and blood did conclude there was no help for him because outwardly there did not appear any From whence we may observe this Doctrine That Grace though it be never so lively and active yet doth not remove the natural fear of death Grace doth not destroy nature This holy Apostle who is so confident of the love of God and can triumph in all distresses is yet afraid of death is yet very solicitous about the preserving of his life There is a natural fear of death because there is implanted in a man a desire of self-preservation so that to be without it would be a sinne And then there is a sinfull fear of death which ariseth from sinne or tendeth to sinne Now the grace of God doth at least in some measure conquer the latter but it cannot overcome the former Hence Jacob for fear of death we see him in a great straight upon his meeting with his brother Esau greatly praying to God to turn the heart of his brother and also studying to mollifie his spirit with presents he sent to him David likewise was very sollicitous in the preservation of his life when Saul did so bitterly pursue him Yea Hezekiah though he had the testimony of a good conscience and could appeal even to God That he had served him with an upright heart and in truth yet when the Prophet Isaiah declared to him that he must die it is said He wept sore Isa 28. 2 3. and at the ninth verse we have a description of the bitterness of his soul under those fears Yea the Lord Christ himself In whom was found no sinne yet we find him greatly affected with the fear of death And although he had a peculiar reason because he tasted of death for our sake and so did therein bare our sinnes conflicting with the wrath of God due to us yet there was included in this a natural fear of death They that
Christ what would become of a poor humbled sinner What terrour would compasse him about This powerfull effect of Christs death for death overcometh death is notably spoken of Heb. 2. 14. That through death he might deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage A learned man Cocceius understands this of the Jewes especially who because of those many Ceremonial Lawes they were in bondage to were in continual fear of death because the transgressing of many of those Lawes God made capital they were to die for it hence they could not be but in constant fear of death But it seemeth more genuine to interpret more largely as an effect of Christs death to believing Gentiles as well as to the Jewes It is from Christ only that the terrible thoughts of death can be mitigated otherwise to a man not in Christ it is the beginning of hell But in the fourth place Though to the godly thus death is changed in its Nature The Serpent hath its sting taken out Moses need not runne from it it is only turned into a rod of a fatherly chastisement yet Nature cannot but tremble at the approaches of it The heart of that man who is most heavenly though he would gladly be in Canaan yet he is not willing to passe through this wildernesse to it he would be cloathed with immortality but is unwilling to put off this garment of the body We would be happy but we would not die As children cry for a new garment to have it on and yet cry while it is putting on so greatly is the love of life and the fear of death engraffed in the very heart of a man And so farre as this fear of death is only natural not immoderate it is of great use For First Hereby men do more patiently abide under their afflictions As long as it is not death they do the more willingly bear it Lament 3. 39. Wherefore doth a living man complain If a man be greatly punished for his sinnes yet if God keep him alive he hath cause to be more patient Thus Satan thought Job 2. 4. Skinne for skinne and all that a man hath he will give for life Therefore he would have Job tryed in that Fear then of death is a mercy because hereby men may the more readily sit down under other afflictions that are not so bad as death When therefore men come to such high discontents as Ahitophel because his counsel was neglected or such despairing terrours of conscience as Judas did that they choose to die yea to make away them selves This as it is an heavy temptation and desertion from God so it argueth that by the fear of death men do patiently abide under their distresses but when they care not for this they voluntarily throw themselves into the flame of hell Secondly The natural fear of death is of great use in this respect That it doth keep men from the committing of many sinnes which otherwise they would securely offend in Hence God appointed in the Law the punishment of death for many sinnes And Rom. 13. the Apostle biddeth him that doth evil be afraid of the powers Because they bear not the sword in vain It is therefore the fear of death that maketh men keep within bounds of righteousnesse and honesty It is not the fear of God nor the fear of hell nor the fear of sinne it self but a bodily corporal death that restraineth men from sinne So that if men come to that height of obstinacy as not to fear death they are prepared for any impiety Vitam qui contempsit suam tuae Dominus est When the Devil would perswade Eve to sinne he telleth her She shall not die he giveth her hopes of life Thirdly The natural fear of death is thus farre advantagious That it maketh a man more thankefull for the mercies of his life for his food and raiment which go to the preservation of his life Therefore a godly man doth make advantage of this fear of death to stirre up himself to all thankfulnesse to look up unto God as knowing That in him onely we live move and have our being It is also from this fear of death that the godly are more quickned to improve the day of grace to be working while it is called to day Those that had made a Couenant with death they grew desperate Let us eat and drinke for to morrow we shall die whereas rather to have concluded Let us pray mourn rnd repent lest to morrow we die If therefore the godly are at any time greatly dejected with the fear of death the thoughts of it are a great temptation they sadly complain that they cannot conquer those slavish thoughts the memory of death is bitter to them they cannot take any joy when they think of it Let them among other things remember to turne this water into wine by faith Let them make an advantage of this natural infirmity Doest thou fear to die Then be more thankfull to God for the dayes and years he hath given thee in this world Doest thou fear to die Oh then be fruitfull live holily make a good use of thy health that so when death shall come it may be only death thou shalt grapple with not death and sin also death and the anger of God with it Death enough is terrible do not thou make it fuller of horrour Fifthly This natural fear of death is very difficultly kept from being a sinfull fear It is very hard to regulate and order it aright so that in some respect or other it doth not go beyond its bounds It 's hard so to fear and not to over-fear Even the most godly have found this fear of death to be a great snare to them They have not done the good they should have done because of this fear They have gone against conscience wounded their spirits because of fear Abraham though he was the Father of the faithfull yet did use sinfull equivocation with Abimelech about Sarah from which many sad evils might have been committed and all was this sinfull fear of death Though a godly man be allowed to have a natural fear of death yet he must take heed of a sinfull fear This hath brought many into such grievous sinnes that the fear of their consciences about Gods anger about hell and damnation have quite swallowed up the fears of death at last the greater fear hath devoured the lesse To whom are woes and wounds of conscience by apostasie and forsaking of Christ but to those who have too excessively been afraid of death As we see in Peter and many others Our next work therefore is to shew when the natural fear of death goeth beyond its bounds and becometh sinfull SERM. LXV Of the natural and sinfull fear of Death How to discern between them and from whence the sinfulness of that fear proceedeth 2 CO● 1. 8. So that we despaired even of life THis last aggravating
particular in the description of Paul's trouble in Asia hath been explained and in some measure enlarged The summe whereof was That grace even in a Paul doth not wholly remove the natural fear of death Grace doth regulate and direct Nature but not extinguish it Stoicism and Christianity differ as much as Heaven and Earth Not to fear not to grieve about due objects in a due manner is a sinne not a vertue But though grace doth not extirpate this natural fear of death yet it subdueth and conquereth the sinfull fear of death Our natural fear doth quickly become immoderate and so offensive unto God Therefore the proper work of grace is to mortifie this that it may not be over-fearing that this fear may not prove a temptation to sinne Our work therefore in the next place is to direct a Christian in the discerning between a Natural fear and a Sinfull fear that he may know what is of meer nature and what is of corrupt nature Only it is good to take notice of this 1. That a natural fear of death may be in some more and in some lesse from the very constitution and temperament of their body Some are very fearfull by their very natural complexion and to such death is more dreadfull than to others who are of a more bold and stout constitution Even as some are more prone to anger than others so some are more prone to fear than others and this being a natural passion they cannot conquer it no more than grace can change the temperament of the body Onely to the godly such a natural fear is sanctified They go out of themselves they depend much upon God And therefore some who have been assaulted exceedingly with fears in the times of persecution suspecting their own selves that they should prove perfidious to Christ and Apostates have found unexpected courage and boldness because they have gone out of themselves and trusted in God only These Lambs have proved Lions Hence the Scripture antidotes and comfortable promises against this fear Isa 53. 4. Say to them that are of a fearfull heart Be strong feare not Yea we have a precious promise to the godly that under Christs government and protection over them Ier. 23. 4. They shall fear no more nor be dismayed If then the godly find himself of a fearfull disposition that it is a natural passion tyrannizing over him let him pray for the sanctification of it that God would turn it to his good and many times such are preserved from those wounds of conscience and those sad falls which those that are more presumptuous and self-confident do fall into As there is thus a natural passion of fear about death in some more than in others so also sometimes by Gods permission the children of God have been assaulted by it as a peculiar temptation and that improved by Satan So that whereas there are several kindes of temptations whereby the Devil doth molest and disquiet the godly sometimes by blasphemous thoughts sometimes by fear of committing that unpardonable sinne against the holy Ghost c. So sometimes it is by a daily and constant fear of death such a perswasion of death doth fall upon them and that accompanied with much distracting fear and tembling that it takes away the comfortable enjoyment of all those mercies God bestoweth upon them This hath been the case of many of the children of God and the Devils designe is by these unprofitable and needlesse feares to keep them from that service which otherwise they might do for God For as Timber too moist and not well dried will deceive the builder and not support the house as it is expected so neither can a Christian amazed with such dividing fears do God that service in his place as he ought to do These are like wormes in the wood that at last eat up the heart of it Such therefore that are buffeted with these temptations they have no other wayes to take but to flie unto God He is the Jehovah who can give power and strength to them as was done to Daniel in his great amazement and unto the Scripture as a directive Rule from whence he may wisely observe many remedies against such preposterous feares Let him also possesse his soul with this as an undoubted principle That the Lord bindeth him in this chain as it were to prevent other sinnes that he may boldly venture upon and that these feares con●inually annoying are a meanes to keepe off some great sinnes or others They are like barking curres that keepe off thieves when they heare such a noise within These things premised Let us now consider When and wherein the fear of death doth manifest it self to be sinfull And First When it becometh a snare to a man so that by it he either commits some sinne or omits some duty When the fear of death hath this influence upon thee then know it exceedeth its limits Thou fearest men more than God thou fearest death more than hell and damnation Prov. 29. 25. The fear of a man bringeth a snare When it bringeth a snare upon thee conscience saith Doe not this the Word of God saith Doe not this but fear of death saith Doe this then this becometh very sad in the issue as you see it was in Peter fear made him deny his Master So in Abraham and Isaac though so great examples of holinesse yet fear of death put them upon lying and dissimulation Now to sinne for fear of death is a most absurd and irrational fear to fear the lesse and not to fear the greater Thou doest not fear to be damned yet thou fearest to die How fully doth our Saviour convince us of the folly of this fear Luk. 12. 4 5. I say to you my friends Though the Disciples had this comfortable title and encouraging relation upon them what could be greater than to be Christs friend Will Christ forsake his friend in adversity Shall any have cause to say to Christ as Absolom to Hushai Is this thy kindness to thy friend Yet how ready are they to fear men and death immoderately Therefore he exhorteth them Not to be afraid of men who can kill the body and after that have no more than they can do but I will forewarne you whom you shall fear They need premonitions about it the object whereof is God who hath power to cast into hell which he redoubleth yea I say to you fear him So that by this place we see that it is a most and unreasonable fear to venture the damnation of our souls for fear of death Yet how often hath this been done but sometimes it hath proved so dismall as in Spira and others that the guilt of sinne and the terrors of Gods wrath falling upon their conscience have so greatly overwhelmed them that the fear of death hath been quite put out by a greater fear They have desired death yea they have hastened to it by offering violence to themselves As the fear
sinfull It is a fundamental qualification required in every Disciple of Christ he cannot be Christs unless he be above the love of all things Matth. 10. 37. He that loveth father or mother or life it self more than me cannot be my Disoiple Why then art thou so afraid to die Is it because thy heart is so dearly engaged in such relations to such creatures Be humbled for this and reform A second sinfull cause which floweth from the former is The want of love to God and to Christ Thy desire is not with Paul To be with Christ thou doest not judge this best of all Not to be willing to die upon this account must also be very sinfull Do we not pray for the Kingdome of God Are we not to look for and hasten the coming of Christ Are we not to be as pilgrims and strangers in this world Now if these things were real upon thee though thou couldst not avoid a natural fear yet thou wouldst greatly subdue a sinfull fear 3. There is a sinfull cause of the fear of death When we produce those actions and live such a life which will justly make death terrible Thou complainest I am afraid to die I dare not think of death and why Thou doest put stings into death thou increasest the guilt of thy conscienne by living without repentance and reformation and then it is no wonder if such a sinfull cause make a sinfull effect Sinne less keep thy conscience clear and then thou wilt fear death less The last sinfull cause of the sinfull fear of death is Want of faith in Christ and this even the godly are subject to though they live holily and unblameably though they have kept a good conscience towards God and men yet they have sometimes uncomfortable fears about death because they do not look upon Christ they consider not that Christ hath conquered death So that now every Christian may with Paul triumph Death is swallowed up in victory O death where is thy sting 1 Cor. 15. 54 55. but want of faith depriveth of this holy comfort and boldness See then if thy want of faith maketh thee fear death and consider that if so this is very injurious to Christ as if still death were not subdued as if death had conquered Christ and not Christ death Faith will make thee see a loveliness and another nature in death than what it had at first SERM. LXVI The truly godly may sometimes passe false sentences upon their own Persons and Actions and Gods dispensations towards them 2 COR. 1. 9. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead THe second Doctrine remaining from the clause of the former verse viz. That the children of God judge otherwise while they attend to second causes and humane helps then they do while they look to the power and promise of God will come in very seasonably as a branch of that general usefull matter which this Text will afford us Come we therefore to the consideration of it 1. It is a further amplification of this trouble which came upon him in Asia and that is the most extream and highest aggravation that yet hath been used which is expressed in the beginning We had the sentence of death in our selves 2. It is illustrated from the wholsom and saving end of this trouble laid on him It was not brought upon him by God for his destruction but his spiritual good His soul might have been in danger if his body had not been He might have perished spiritually if he had not been in danger of perishing temporally Now this blessed effect of his trouble is set down 1. Negatively That we might not trust in our selves 2. Positively But in God Described by a sutable property Who raiseth the dead Let us begin with the aggravation his trouble was so great That he had received the sentence of death in himself This is more than the clause in the precedent verse for there it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He was in such a doubt and perplexity about his life that he did not see any way to evade but here he is positive he comes now to make resolute conclusions He must die He had received the sentence of death The Greek word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used here in this place onely in the New Testament The Verb from whence it cometh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Budeus sheweth to have two more eminent significations the one is to separate and secerne one thing from another in which sense I do not observe it used in the New Testament It useth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that sense even as humane Authours also do most frequently 1 Cor. 1. 15. The spiritual man judgeth all things by searching and judging he cometh to discern the truth from errour The other signification is to answer in which sense it is alwayes used in the New Testament Favorinus in his Lexicon maketh this difference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The former is a bare simple Answer made to any Question the later is an Answer by way of defence against some accusation The proper word for an Answer is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Luke 2. 47. Luke 20. 26. Joh. 1. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is seldome used for an Answer yet Stephen sheweth out of Suidas an expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like that à secretis one whose office was to answer requests Hence some translate it answer as it is in the margin But the most genuine translation is sentence for so Hesychius expounds the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whom Favorinus followeth verbatim in this as in many other particulars It is true Heinsius on the place maketh the word in a contrary sense to signifie an answer or inspiration from God secretly assuring of him that he should not die like that Act. 24. 24. Fear not Paul such answers were by the Urim and Thummim So that in his sense it should imply Gods suretiship or undertaking for his preservation But the other is more generally received and the following words argue such a sense The word then doth signifie a sentence passing upon him That he must die This he had received but from whom Not from God for God delivered him nor from the Magistrate there was no such Decree that we read of against him Therfore it was onely from his own feares his own thoughts which maketh him say He had received it in himself You see then that Gods thoughts were others then Paul's Paul absolutely concluded he should die but God had purposed the contrary From whence observe That the godly themselves are sometimes greatly deceived about Gods administrations to them They are apt to erre in their judgements about Gods dispensation They gather such conclusions and make such inferences as are wholly opposite to Gods intentions Though it
the most believing Christian is the least erring As the Astronomer judgeth not by sense but his Artificiall Instruments of the celestiall bodies and that maketh him not deceived Thus judge by faith speake by faith conclude by faith and then thou wilt not fall into the Ditch SERM. LXVIII Of humane and divine Trust and of the true and proper Objects of our Confidence 2 COR. 1. 9. That we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead THe trouble which came upon Paul in Asia being described in severall aggravating particulars the next thing he intends is to informe us about the holy and gracious end which God intended in all this The Lords purpose was by this heavy exercise to bring Paul off from all self-confidence to weane him from all humane props to teach him to depend upon God alone Even Paul though so great a proficient in holiness who doth propound himself a patterne for others to follow yet he needeth this self-emptying he is prone to have some secret confidence in himself and therefore God as the wise physician provideth some bitter pils to kill such Wormes as these The last spirituall enemy which grace is to destroy in a regenerate man is self-dependence so hard a matter is it to be wholy wrought out of our self that God may be all and we nothing The finall cause therefore of this trouble we have here most divinely described by Paul which is set down first Negatively That we might not trust in our selves Then Positively but in God with the reason of it he raiseth from the dead Let us consider the Negative that we may not trust in our selves The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used sometimes in Scripture of a divine trust and sometimes of an humane of a divine trust Heb. 2. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will trust in him Eph. 3. 12. In whom we have access 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with confidence In the Old Testament the expression of trusting in God is often used so that by this word is excellently described one act of faith whereby the soul sinking as it were under difficulties doth firmely and powerfully lay hold on Christ Thus the grace of faith putteth us upon the renouncing of all the wisedome power and excellency of Men and Angels to judge every Creature but an easie shadow in comparison of God This fiduciall resting of the soul on God by faith is constantly to be put forth in all spirituals and temporals of the soul it is indeed à spirituall and supernaturall lesson very hard for flesh and blood to learne which useth to swim with bladders to walk with clutches to have alwaies some humane and earthly prop or other but yet God doth teach his people this mystery and acquaints them with this Heavenly art to trust in him only and not in any Creature This ●iduciall resting of the soul is made by some Learned Men to be only an effect of ●aith The papists make it an act of divine hope But the most Orthodox do maintaine that this is an essentiall thing in faith yea that the greatest perfection of faith lyeth not in knowing or giving firme assent but in confidence and therefore by this they do chiefly define it although it may be granted that there is also a confidence or trust which is produced by faith as that place Ephes 3. 12. seemeth to intimate where we are said to have confidence by faith There is then a divine trust which is nothing but faith whereby the heart of a godly man is inabled under all discouragements though the Fig tree faile though the Olive tree blossome not to depend upon the Lord yea with Paul to know how to abound and to want because it is not Creatures not this or that condition which supports him but God alone and therefore the goodness and power of God being alwayes the same his heart is the same This is like an Ark to him in the midst of waters This trusting in God must be while we have meanes as well as when we have them not so when we have outward supports its hard to know whether the heart doth rest on them or God only But of this more in the Positive part 2. There is an humane trust on confidence and that is either in a good sense or a bad sense A good sense as when the Apostle writing to believers doth often profess his considence in them concerning their faithfullness and perseverance Gal. 5. 10. 2 Thess 3. 4. Which confidence unless Paul spake as having the gift of discerning of spirits was within the bounds of humane principles and so not like that confidence which a man may have about his own estate as when Paul saith of himself Heb. 13. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we trust we have a good conscience for this confidence is either an act of faith or the sense of it in the soul In the next place the Scripture speaketh of an humane confidence but in an ill and sinfull sense as Luke 18. 9. When the Pharisees are said to trust in themselves and Rom. 2. 19. some were confident they were leaders of the blind and yet lived in evill wayes so Phil. 3. 3. There is a putting confidence in the flesh which was a sinne that Paul was highly guilty of while a Pharisee and that which did chiefly keep him off from faith in Christ Now it is this humane sinfull trusting in our selves that the Apostle here speaketh of and which God would prevent in Paul From the end of God then so graciously intended in Pauls trouble two things are observable 1. That selfe confidence or trusting in our selves is a sinne so highly displeasing to God that he doth often chastise his people in an heavy manner to prevent it 2. That even the most eminent of the Children of God are very prone to trust in themselves Concerning the first it will be very usefull to open the nature of this self-trusting it being a sinne secretly involved and latent in our breasts that without much spirituall illumination and sanctification we are not able to know when we are guilty of it To cleare therefore the nature of it we are to consider 1. That a man being a very infirme and weak miserable thing is therefore necessitated to trust in some thing or other Our very trusting doth denote our great impotency for God because he is omnipotent wise alsufficient● and happy in himself therefore he cannot trust in any he is able to bring about what he willeth but the rationall Creature even because a Creature whether Men or Angels do necessarily put their trust some where so that what the center is to the stone in its motion it is restless till it come thither Thus the soul of a man is in restless motions and constant trepidations till it fix it self upon that object it trusteth to and when it is there the soul is no longer in motu
this limited sense as it is a deprecation against some evill rather then a petition for some good and in this sense it may very well be used here But because we see the Scripture commonly using it in a more large sense neither will we restraine it in this place From the former part then of this Verse there remaine further Doctrines observable As First Those that are the most eminent in gifts and office yea and grace also do need the Prayers of those who are farre inferior in the Church of God No eye in this spirituall body is so perfect that it may say to the foot I have no need of thee When the Apostle doth thus desire the Prayers of the Corinthians he doth it not in a complement neither doth he speak it for modesty and humility sake but cordially and really as finding the want of them Christ indeed being God and Man though as Man he prayed to God yet he needed no mans prayer for him neither did he ever require his Disciples to pray for him no not when he was in the greatest agonies He blamed them indeed for their dullness and that they could not watch with him one hour but he did not require their prayers for him But there is no godly man though a Paul though never so eminent but as he is to pray for others so also he needeth that others should pray for him Hence you have this eminent Saint often desiring the prayers of others his interest in God alone will not do it Though he be a favourite in the Court of Heaven yet others also must intercede for him Job Daniel and others though they be instanced in as such who can greatly prevaile with God in prayers for others as if the eare of God were open to them more than to others yet they themselves did want the prayers of others for them And thus we have Paul again and again desiring the prayers of others for him 1 Thes 1. 17. when he had delivered many short and excellent Aphorismes more necessary to the soules health then those of Hippocrates for the body and having also prayed for them he requireth the same duty for himself Brethren pray for us That as the Clouds drop upon the earth to refresh that and that sends up vapours again which are congealed into Clouds thus it should be with Pastors and People a mutuall and a reciprocall praying for each other will greatly advantage and promote their spirituall good Thus the same Apostle to the same people 2 Thes 3. 1. saith in a concluding way Finally Brethren pray for us In the like manner also Heb. 13. 18. he desireth they would pray for him giving his reason because of the good conscience he had in his work So that where there is godliness and holiness we ought to be so farre from neglecting prayer for them thinking they do not need it that we are the rather to be incouraged in that service for them And if you say these instances are of whole Churches Paul may well desire the prayers of Churches Assembled together but doth he need the prayer of a particular person Yes this you will also find Phil. 2. 2. I trust through your prayers I shall be given to you Thus you see the most eminent desiring the prayers of those that are inferiour to them and there are good grounds for this First Because there is a more particular promise made of Gods presence and power to many gathered together than to one to the prayers of more then one as more coales together do the more easily inflame What Solomon saith of two that they are better than one is true also in respect of prayer You have this notably affirmed by Christ himself Matth. 18. 19 20 If two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall aske it shall be done for them This is so remarkeable that our Saviour useth that expression Again I say to you and then giveth the reason For where two or three are gathered together in my name there I am in the midst of them By this it is plain that vis unita est fortior the united force of believers is stronger then single and alone Hence our Saviour in his Forme of Prayer directeth to say Our Father not my Father because of the Communion the godly have in this duty Seeing then there is a more peculiar presence of God in the midst of his people Assembled together then when alone no wonder if Paul desire their prayers Thus it was in Peters case the whole Church met together to pray for his deliverance which prayer was so prevalent that it broke open the Prison doores and made every thing yield to it It is mentioned as a speciall priviledge by the Psalmist to be vouchsafed to Solomon Psal 72. 15. Prayer also shall be made for him It is of great consequence to be remembred in the Assembly of the Saints as on the other side when the Church following Scripture-Rules have cast some persecuting Emperours out of their Prayers this hath been the greatest evill that could befall them a forerunner that God also would cast them out of his favour One occasion which made Licinius to oppose Constantine was because the Christians in their meeting prayed for Constantine but not for him though happily he regarded more the dishonour he thought put upon him than any esteem he had of their Prayers Secondly Another Reason is From the similitude which the Scripture delighteth much in when it speaketh of the Church of God that it is a body and every particular Christian is a Member thereof now in any naturall body though the noble and eminent parts thereof be never so sound and able for their particular operations yet there is not the most ignoble part in the body but they want the help thereof and therefore nourishment is carefully distributed to every part as having its respective necessity Thus it is also in the spirituall body the Church of God only Christ the head needeth not the Members but they him As for the rest there is a mutuall help of every part so that unless Paul were not of the body unless he were not of this spirituall union he must need the prayers of others The Communion then that the body hath in this life is the ground of praying for one another and that is the reason why though we pray for others though alive yet not when they are dead It is absurd to pray for such who are deceased because they are now no longer in this Church-communion The eye doth not now need the feet all want is removed and that visible union of believers in Church-administrations is now quite dissolved What else may be added in this particular shall be suggested in the next Only the Use of this is to admonish the most excellent and choisest Christian of humility and modesty though thy gifts and graces though thy office and place be farre
that is not probable It is then for that deliverance vouchsafed to Paul that they are to be thankfull and the reason is clear because mercies vouchsafed to Paul were their mercies also From whence observe That the mercies vouchsafed to the pastors and guides of the Church are to be accounted the Churches mercies What advantage comes to the shepherd it redounds to the sheep The rain that fals upon the mountains descendeth to the benefit of the valleys Your life your comfort is bound up in theirs Paul indeed said We live if you stand fast It was his comfort his life to see them preserved from Apostasie by persecution 1 Thess 3. 8. And on the contrary the Church may say of her guides We stand fast if you live As mercies to the publick Magistrates are to be accounted the peoples mercies so the mercies of Church-officers are to be reckoned the Churches If the Pilotes be in danger it can never be well with the ship When Elijah was taken away the cry was The chariots of Israel and the horsemen thereof So great a mercy was one Prophet accounted to be We have a notable instance of the holy care of the Philippians about their Pastor Epaphroditus Phil. 2. 26 27. when he was sick unto death how heavily did they lay it to heart Insomuch that Epaphroditus was exceedingly grieved that they had heard of his being sick he knew it would so greatly afflict them Yea Paul accounted it a mercy to him also that God did heal him For though Paul did recover many out of their diseases yet this gift was not when they pleased and it was least of all extended to those that were of their intimate acquaintance but rather to such as were brought to them that so the truth of their miracles might be more manifested Use of Instruction How happy and blessed a thing it is when people are able to do their duty herein To look upon all the favours and good providences of God to the Ministers of the Gospel as their own mercies their health encouragements preservations as their owne but how bitterly doth Satan fill the hearts of some men who out of love to their lusts and their errours look upon their godly guides as the greatest burthens and would heartily rejoyce in any evil that should befall them This is clean contrary to those gracious loving and indeared affections which ought to be in people to their spiritual shepherds SERM. LXXXIV Of our Glorying and Rejoycing in our Gifts and Graces Why and how it is lawfull and how not 2 COR. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world and more abundantly to you-wards THis verse as appeareth by the raciocinative particular or note of inference For is brought in as a reason of something which went before But Interpreters do differ about the coherence thereof Some make this to be a reason of that hope and trust he formerly spake of which he had in God Though he did trust in Gods mercies yet not in them alone but in his own endeavours also Hence Aquinas from this saith That hope doth arise from the mercy of God and mans merits But this doth not consist with Scripture Others do make it part of his Apologetical Narration defending himself as against that crime of inconstancy and levity which was cast upon him because of his promise to come to them which yet he did not and therefore they think these words look backward and not forward Calvin and others which is most probable referre it to the words immediately preceding viz. their prayers and praises to God in his behalf This is given as a reason why they should be thus tender about him because he had obtained grace to be faithfull he had not sought himself or his own glory he had not walked in hypocrisie and fraud but had been kept by the grace of God in all sincerity in his conversation in the world not only at Corinth but every where else Now it is a great motive and encouragement to pray for such The Apostle useth this argument Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience in all things The connexion then being thus discovered we come to the Text absolutely considered and therein we may consider 1. The ground and reason it self 2. That which is affirmed and predicated of it And this is set down in the fore-part of the verse and therefore we shall begin with it The words are This is our rejoycing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is rendred by most our glory or our boasting The Apostle doth very often use the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it seemeth to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the neck and so is a metaphore signifying for the most part pride and loftinesse taken from horses whose pride will be discovered by their neck and therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as Homer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So that for the most part it is taken in an ill sense Hence Hesychius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and with Budaeus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a proud boaster and bragger but with Paul it is used sometimes in a good sense as here For the word is used in a three-fold sense gradual to one another 1. To rest and relie upon a thing 2. From thence to rejoyce and to be glad in it 3. From thence to declare and publish this with boasting Now though Paul did not put confidence and trust in his good and sincere conscience yet from the perceiving of that he did rejoyce Whereas then we see Paul rejoycing and glorying from the testimony and evidence of that grace he had in him We may observe That an holy glorying and rejoycing in the graces of God we perceive in us is allowed and lawfull I say an holy glorying for the heart may quickly degenerate into a proud sinfull boasting Therefore this truth must be warily bounded So that the dejected and tempted soul may be quickned to its duty of comfort and not to deny the work of grace that it may feel and the proud pharisaical spirit may be debased The valley must be exalted and the mountain made low It is true indeed we have the Scripture saying Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord. Let not the wise man glory in his wisdome 1 Cor. 1. 31 And if Abraham had not wherewith to glory who can have Yea the Apostle saith expresly Rom. 3. 27. That glorying is excluded by the law of faith But in what sense this is to be understood will appear when we come to manifest how many wayes it is not lawfull to glory or to rejoyce no not in our gifts and graces Only this Text maketh it plain that in some sense our graces may be matter
of glory and rejoycing to us So likewise Gal. 6. 4. the Apostle pressing every man to try his own works to examine his intentions therein giveth this as the consequent fruit thereof That then he shall have rejoycing in himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a kind of glorying and boasting in himself To clear this truth let us first shew what is required to this glorying and then in what respects it is lawfull and allowed us And for the former First It is necessary to this rejoycing and glorying in the first place That we have an high esteem of the excellency and worth of that grace we discover to be in us If so be we are to rejoyce in these outward mercies which yet are only for the body what matter of joy should it be to find those spiritual workings of Gods Spirit in us which are of eternal concernment What Solomon saith concerning the esteem of wisdom which is indeed nothing but grace we should all make good Prov. 2. 4. If thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures That soul then which can rejoyce in the discovery of grace must esteem of it more than all the treasures of the world To say O Lord I had rather find my self sanctified I had rather see the powerfull workings of grace upon me then to be made the greatest or richest man in the world we have many exhortations to examine our selves and try our hearts to see if we can find this precious jewel in our souls Now none will be cordial to examine and search herein but those who look upon it as the greatest treasure Did the woman in the Gospel make such diligent search for a lost groat only and call her neighbours to rejoyce with her when she had found it How large and boundless then should our thoughts be about the excellency of grace And indeed to the godly soul this is the great question it labours to study and to resolve Whether it be in the state of grace or no knowing that this onely is the most blessed and happy estate in the world Secondly As we must highly esteem this work of grace so we must have a Certainty and perswasion that we have obtained it Had not Paul known that his heart had been sincere that he was not acted by carnal wisdome he could never have rejoyced For Philosophers make joy to be in that good thing we do possesse and also the knowledge thereof This Text then doth abundantly declare that the people of God may have a certain knowledge of the work of grace So that although the heart be indeed deceitfull and full of hypocrisie yet when sanctified it hath some measure of truth and sincerity in it and so far doth not deceive us He then that would rejoyce in the grace of God wrought in him must presse after assurance must endeavour after a certain perswasion of the truth of grace in him And although this perswasion be not justifying faith yea it is separable from it A man may be justified may be sanctified and not know it yet it is such a priviledge yea and duty also that we should diligently take heed of all those things that may weaken our assurance that may make us to doubt and question whether Jesus Christ be in us or no. Thirdly A sure perswasion of the goodnesse and integrity of our hearts is not enough but it must be upon right grounds and in a Scripture-demonstration For if it be a false perswasion it may produce indeed a rejoycing but a false rejoycing also It is more than probable that Paul while a persecutor being zealously affected to the tradition of his fathers and thinking himself bound as he professeth to do what he did against Christ and his members could then say His rejoycing was the testimony of his conscience being perswaded that in those wayes he glorified God And therefore some do extend that profession of his before the Council That he had lived in all good conscience before God untill that day And if this be so then we see plainly That every perswasion though never so confident is not enough to make us rejoyce but we must look to Scripture-grounds Doth not experience confirm this Take any heretical person any erroneous person though it be to the destruction of the very fundamentals of Religion yet he will proclaim a rejoycing in his heart from the good testimony of his conscience So that an erroneous conscience satisfied doth bring peace and rejoycing but it is an erroneous joy It is either from meer humane principles or from diabolical delusions But this will come in more properly when we come to the ground or reason it self of Paul's rejoycing Fourthly To this rejoycing there is required The Spirit of God enabling us thereunto So that the same spirit which doth seal to us the assurance of our estate doth also cause comfort in us The Spirit of God doth enlighten and sanctifie after this it doth seal and comfort And this latter work of Gods Spirit is necessary as well as the other For we see it lieth not in the power of Gods people to have comfort when they will Hence Gal. 5. Joy is the fruit of the Spirit and it 's called Joy in the holy Ghost not only objectively because it is a joy in spiritual objects but also efficiently because it is wrought by him Hence it is that the Spirit of God mouldeth the heart for comfort removeth fears and doubts restraineth and keepeth off Satan whereby no sinne no Devil is able to deject and cast down because God comforteth ●Thus you see what goeth to rejoycing in the graces of God and thereby an holy glorying in them Now let us see in what respect it is lawfull thus to rejoyce And First It is lawfull to rejoyce in them as they are the effects and fruits of Gods favour and love as they signifie the cause from whence they come Rahab could not but rejoyce to see the thread that was a signe of such a great mercy designed for her If then the godly man have that spiritual skill as to difference between trusting in his graces as any way causes of his salvation and thankfully receiving them assignes from which he may be perswaded of it then doth he hit the mark It is usually said from Luther That we are to take heed not onely of evil deeds but of good and holy works also because the heart is apt to be carried away with pride and self-confidence insensibly yet this much not so deterre the people of God that they may not take comfort from their graces For how can they see them and not rejoyce because they are the pledge of Gods favour it self and of an interest in Christ So that though their graces be weak and full of imperfections yet they manifest that to be ours which is fully perfect and hath no fault at all in it Imperfect graces do manifest Gods perfect grace to
us Secondly We may rejoyce in them so farre as thereby to bear up our hearts against all accusations whether internally from Satan or externally from the malice of men Is there any greater temptation in the world then that when Satan accuseth the children of God that they are hypocrites that there is no truth of grace in them that what they do is not from a right principle but sel●seeking Even as he accused Job to God that he served God for carnal ends because God had hedged him about but if he were touched in these things and stript of them then he would betray his hypocrisie Now it is lawfull for the children of God to defie these accusations of Satan to rejoyce in the sense of their uprigtness though the Devil rage at it While he roareth do thou be glad and praise God Oh how often are believers shaken in this very particular They are afraid to own what God hath done for them they think it their humility and lowliness thus to be in doubts and to be perplexed with fears not remembring how necessary it is to acknowledge thankfully what God hath done for us and to walk with joy triumphing over all the fiery darts of Satan It is the great blame of Christs Disciples that they do not more glory and rejoyce in this respect And then 2. This rejoycing is lawfull when we have to do with malicious enemies that are ready to charge us with hypocrisie and self-seeking that for all our religious pretences we have rotten and earthly hearts then is a time for thee to make use of rejoycing in the sincerity of thy soul And this indeed is one great part of the Apostles meaning The false Apostles they calumniated him they made the cause of all his afflictions and troubles to be his evil life and Gods displeasure upon him Now the Apostle hath this brazen wall within as the Heathen called it He hath the witnesse of a good conscience As Austin to Secundinus Senti de Augustino quid velis c. Think of Austin what you will so that my own conscience doth not condemn me This rejoycing therefore is necessarily seen in this particular In the third place Let us see wherein this rejoycing in our graces may be unlawfull And 1. It is when we dare rejoyce and that in the sight of God as if there were no blemish or damnable matter in them To rejoyce as Perfectionists do in their holiness daring to hold it up to God himself in his strict justice this is highly provoking God Hence this Apostle 1 Cor. 4. 3 4. Though he regarded not mens judgement concerning him because he knew nothing by himself yet he saith He was not thereby justified because it was God that judgeth God that knew more evil and saw more sinne in him then he could do in himself Therefore though we may rejoyce in them yet take heed of opposing them to the strict and righteous judgement of God And it is in this sense that Paul Rom. 3. saith All boasting is excluded and that Abraham in the matter of justification had not wherewith to boast 2. It is not lawfull to rejoyce in them as if they had any inherent dignity or worth to rest upon When we approach to God we must rest alone upon Gods grace as the efficient cause and Christ as the meritorious cause These are the only foundation we can build upon When therefore we have given Gods grace and Christs merits their full due then may we rejoyce in our holiness It is true we read of Hezekiah David Nehemiah and Paul here as also in other places pleading even in prayer their righteousness and desiring God to remember them and not wipe out their good deeds But these instances are partly in some particular wherein they were innocent as in David Or else they onely plead these as the qualifications in them to which Gods promises are made they are such to whom God hath vouchsafed his promises and therefore they may plead them in their prayers in this sense otherwise to urge them as having dignity they could not For at that very time Nehemiah prayeth God would spare him and have mercy on him 3. We must not rejoyce in these graces as if we had them of our selves as if they were not the gift of God Therefore Chrysostom's note upon the place is dangerous saying The reason why this good conscience is called glorying is because we obtain it by our own strength otherwise it would not be our glorying But the Apostle directly opposeth this 1 Cor. 4. 7. Why doest thou glory as if thou hadst not received But you may then say The Papists are not to be found fault with in their rejoycing in their good works for they make them the gifts of Gods grace and presuppose Christs merits But this will not acquit them For the Apostle maketh that a contradiction If of grace then not of workes It cannot be of grace and works together Besides they make grace only an universal cause and our own will to be the particular determining cause and thereby give much more to that then the grace of God If then we take heed of these three rocks we are allowed to rejoyce in our graces Use 1. Of severe and sharp reproof to such who do indeed rejoyce but it is in their lusts in the pleasures of sinne which is to rejoyce in their shame and that which will be terrour and torment to them What can these wretches say But our rejoycing is an evil and a seared conscience that we have lived in all prophaneness and impiety Oh remember into what howling and gnashing of teeth these short pleasures will at last be changed Use 2. Of Admonition to the godly to take this rejoycing which God doth allow them Why do they stand aloof off and trembling Why do they nourish doubts and fears Why will ye not own what God hath done for you Take an holy boldness call that grace which is grace Let not the Devil and thy fears dispute thee out of what thou art Be not so easily baffled and driven out of thy integrity Because hypocrites do deceive themselves do the sincere also Because Copper may appear splendidly is there therefore no gold Because a dreamer deceiveth himself shall he that is awakened SERM. LXXXV What is required to a good and well ordered Conscience 2 COR. 1. 12. The testimony of our conscience THe second particular which is also the ground of that rejoycing which Paul had doth in the next place come to be treated of and that is said to be The testimony of his conscience The object matter whereof is afterwards declared Let us consider this as it is in the general set down Concerning the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 also the nature of the conscience what it is I have elsewhere at large shewed It is enough to re-mind you of thus much That in the Old Testament it is generally called the heart
as it is said Davids heart smote him that is his conscience did witnesse against him and condemn him And because of that remorsus that regreting and displicency which conscience putteth forth Durand is singular in his opinion holding that the practical understanding is not the conscience only but the will likewise is included in it The Hebrew word Leb signifying the Heart doth also originally denote the sprinkling of the meal with leaven Thus the heart hath naturally some principles in it which are like leaven to it as speculative and practical axiomes concerning God and just and unjust In the New Testament likewise it is called the heart 1 John 3. 20. If our heart condemne us that is our conscience God is greater than our heart But no more of this here This conscience is here described by one special act it hath and that is To bear witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word in the Scripture is commonly used for that publick testimony and witness which either God did give unto the Gospel by miracles and signes or men by their publick profession and attestation Hence 1 Cor. 2. 1. the Gospel is called the testimony of God because so wonderfully confirmed by him So to men it is applied Act. 4. 3. The Apostles with great power gave witnesse of the Resurrection of Christ and because believers by their deaths did give the greatest testimony to the truths of God hence they are called Martyrs and their death is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Martyrdome in a principal sense Hence some have expounded that place Heb. 11. 4 39. where we render it The Elders obtained a good report of their Martyrdome They were made Martyrs because it is the passive sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes the word is used metaphorically as James 5. 3. the rust of covetous and wicked rich mens gold and silver is said to be a witnesse against them But here it is used concerning the work of conscience within a man and is in other places compounded denoting some joynt-witnesse with another Romans 2. 15. Their conscience bearing witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Rom. 9. 1. My conscience also bearing me witnesse The Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though some think is not to be regarded yet it doth denote as most say a respect to God who is our Superiour and to whom our conscience doth attend and therefore called not Science but Conscience So that Gods witness and the witness of conscience are both conjoyned together yea seem to be but one testimony as it were Hence the very Heathens could say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conscience is a God to every man Therefore Paul useth an equivalent expression in other places Rom. 1. 9. Phil. 1. 8. God is my witnesse Salmeron out of Bernard speaks of a two-fold testimony of the conscience Testimonium conscientiae perhibentis that which the conscience doth actively exhibit and Conscientiae percipientis that which it doth receive from the Spirit of God of which we read Rom. 8. 16. and in this later sense he understands it But we take both in viz. that witness which the conscience did actually give of Paul's sincerity But because this could not be done without the Spirit of God inabling thereunto therefore it is a witnesse received from Gods Spirit first and from that conscience is enabled to deliver it to us Now when so much rejoycing is attributed to the testimony of conscience you must take along with you who it is that speaketh thus The testimony of our conscience of Paul who was sanctified enlightned and guided by the Word otherwise there is a testimony of a deluded conscience of a secure conscience that speaketh peace when there is no peace and this doth not afford any true or solid ground of rejoycing it must be therefore the testimony of such a conscience which Paul had And so observe That the witnesse of our conscience rightly guided in acquitting of us is a ground of unspeakable comfort He that hath his conscience rightly clearing of him he need not care for all the accusations of the Devils in hell and wicked men upon the earth It breedeth confidence both towards God and towards men Towards God 1 Iohn 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not we have confidence towards God and whatsoever we aske we receive of him This encourageth and imboldeneth in prayer And towards men As you see Paul justified himself by this when called before the Council and made to plead for himself Act. 23. 1. Yea the Heathens though they could never attain to a true spiritually sanctified conscience yet not to live according to the natural dictates thereof they accounted the only happinesse Nil conscire sibi was the onely thing that made happy And Hic murus aheneus esto Pindar called it The good nurse in our old age So great a matter is it to have the testimony of a good conscience void of offence for that is Mille testes more than all the testimonies in the world Seeing therefore men have such constant recourse to this witnesse within and their comfort is true or false according as that is guided Let us enquire first into the constituent or ingredient qualities of a rightly guided conscience And First There is necessarily required to a good and true testimony of our conscience That it take the word of God as a Rule to judge by to witnesse by to accuse by and to acquit by The conscience of a man is not the supream rule but an inferiour and therefore is Regula regulata as well as Regula regulans a rule to be ruled by an higher rule which is the Scripture To the Law to the testimony if they speak not according to this it is because there is no light in them Isa 8. 20. If a man pretend to never so much light within if he rejoyceth never so much in the light that he hath yet if it be not from the light of the Word if it be not examined tried and judged to be according to that it is but a false light a light that will end in darkness So then though conscience be a testimony yet you see that bath another testimony to be guided by though it be a Law in a man yet there is a superiour Law to that which is the word of God By this you may see what a rotten foundation they have to build their comforts upon who take up other rules for their conscience besides the Scripture These joyes are all but like the morning-dew Some make their rule in Religion to be the tradition of their Fathers The Papist doth so extoll tradition that they think that alone without Scripture is starre bright enough to guide us Paul's zeal while a persecutor seemed to be grounded much upon this because they were the traditions of his fathers And truly tradition is the greatest reason of most mens faith whether it be in a right way or a true But this
other helps no more than he will make you understand Greek and Hebrew Know then it is a very sad and almost incurable condition when the holy Scriptures do become a snare to us when we suck poison out of these sweet herbs Although indeed we cannot from the Scripture get any hurt but our own corruptions procure it to us because we bring the Scripture to our ends and affections not them to the Scripture Thirdly To the having of a well-ordered conscience There is greatly required pure aims and intentions For although a good intention cannot sanctifile an unlawfull action yet corrupt intentions will blast and defile the best actions Insomuch that if we had the gifts and parts of the ablest men yea of Angels themselves yet sinfull aims would be like Locusts and Caterpillars to devour this hopefull fruit But oh the unsearchable hypocrisie and deceitfulness of mans heart even in this very respect How ready is every Pharisee every Heretick and Papist to appropriate this to themselves How often do we find them professing to the whole world that it is not any outward advantage any temporal emolument that they look at or regard but the glory of God and that therefore they have much rejoycing because of this But if the counterfeit will bring such peace what will the real and sincere intentions of a man do And certainly though a man be cloathed with never so much glory in the Church of God so that we are ready to say not only a greater than Austin or Chrysostome but even than Paul or Peter For some have cried up the heads of their parties as having greater gifts than the Apostles themselves Yet without sincere intentions they are but as a tinkling cymbal This therefore is the life soul and the all in a good conscience But that will come in more seasonably afterwards Fourthly To a right ordered conscience whose witness may be received and comfort taken thereby That there is required the inward sanctification and effectual renovation thereof So that till this be every mans conscience is like a man himself a meer liar There is no believing of it no trusting of it When it is said Jer. 17. That the heart of a man is deceitfully wicked or crafty and supplanting a man This comprehends conscience as well as any part else For you have heard that original sinne is in this as well as in other powers of the soul So that in these two respects the natural conscience doth alwayes fail For either it doth not witness that which is right or not to a right end Insomuch that though a natural man is not to gainsay or contradict his conscience yet nothing lieth upon him more than to have his conscience rightly informed or regulated by Gods word What is the reason you see every civil man every formal man so applauding himself in his good condition It is because his conscience is not a spiritual conscience a Scripture-conscience for that would make him abhor himself and flie out of the Sodome he was in For in most things the conscience doth not witness the truth at all but it doth fl●tter and deceive thee How seldom doth it tell thee thou art the drunkard the hypocrite the neglecter of private duties c Or if it doth then it is to a false end either to drive to despair and to flie from Christ whose blood only can cleanse the conscience or else to quiet it again by some superstitious usages and non-instituted remedies And this is the reason why so few are brought out of the troubles of their conscience into an Evangelical and Gospel way Know then here is the root of all thy misery thy conscience being unsanctified lulleth thee asleep whereby thou rejoycest in thy condition when thou hast cause to fear and tremble SERM. LXXXVI Further Discoveries of what is required to a well-regulated Conscience with Distinctions concerning it 2 COR. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience THere remain more particulars to be insisted upon which are requisite to make a well-regulated conscience whose testimony you heard is the cause of such unspeakable comfort And First There is in a peculiar manner necessary the witnessing and sealing power of the holy Ghost to and with our consciences The illumination and sanctification of Gods Spirit is not enough to make our consciences speak fully and clearly so as to have rejoycing thereby unlesse the Spirit of God doth also bear witnesse with it Hence we have them both put together Rom. 8. 16. The Spirit it self beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God And therefore you heard that Bernard understood this testimony of conscience in the Text of a Testimonium percipientis not Perhibentis but they are both included For our conscience cannot give any eviden●e and sure testimony of the grace inus unlesse inabled thereunto by the Spirit of God and this is called The work of Gods Spirit sealing and witnessing with our spirits The Text is very famous and greatly agitated in the controversie about the assurance of our sanctification and salvation Grotius and some others neglect the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and would have it no more than simply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the word is not any where so used the instances of Grotius are against him Rom. 2. 15. For Conscience there is said to bear witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of God and so doth relate to his testimony We therefore conclude That the Spirit of God is here said to bear witnesse with our spirit only the difficulty is How this is done And 1. It is not done by any external voice and sound made in the air as Christ had when it was said This is my beloved Sonne Neither may we apprehend any immediate testimony by an extraordinary revelation as some have pleaded for but in a mediate way partly by exciting and inabling of our spirits to call God Father against that slavishness and servility which is apt to bear us down and partly by working in us those heavenly and holy qualifications by which we do certainly gather that we are the children of God Indeed the Papists make the testimony of Gods Spirit to be no more as applied to particular subjects though in it self they say it is infallible then a moral certainty by probable conjectures and signs But this is derogatory to the Spirit of God and taketh away all that Evangelical joy and holy boldness which we are allowed to have at the throue of grace This witnessing then of Gods Spirit is two wayes 1. Effectivè When it doth enable the conscience of man to cast off all legal terrors and tormenting fears and so in serenity of spirit to believe God is our Father And for this end it is called The Spirit of Adoption For alas take the conscience of the most holy man without this Spirit of Adoption How legal and timorated
of this Therefore First We may take notice That there is a two-fold testimony of our conscience which doth afford matter of rejoycing either particular as to some matter of fact or one particular business especially when calummated by adversaries Or secondly General which is to the whole frame of our heart and our whole conversation These two are greatly to be distinguished For we see David in many places praying to God That he would reward him according to his innocency and deal with him according to the righteousnesse of his hands and he doth many times appeal to God concerning his integrity Now this was from a testimony of his conscience to a particular fact Saul and others did maliciously accuse him laying to his charge things that he never did Of this Paul speaketh also 1 Cor. 4. 2. I know nothing by my self He did not matter those crimes that the false Apostles burdened him with because his conscience did clear him as to any grosse neglect in his ministerial course Now you must know that many a natural or moral man may have in some cases this particular testimony of his conscience and receive comfort from it and yet be farre enough from the state of grace How many persons in the world are slandered by some malicious adversaries as guilty of such crimes which are altogether false Now happily thou art pure and free from them thy conscience justifieth thee and thou hast comfort from this but this is not all which God requireth Therefore there is a second testimony of the conscience which is General and that speaketh to the whole man witnessing that thy whole conversation is unblameable and that thy heart in the universal inclination thereof is wholly for God and against sinne It is this general testimony that is the foundation of true comfort A man may be free and innocent as to some particular sinnes and yet the state of his soule be in gall and bitternesse Secondly This testimony of the conscience even in general witnessing unto thee thy state of grace may be considered two wayes For either it may be supposed or expected that it should testifie unto thee an heart and life free from all sinne failing in nothing at all Or else To witnesse sincerity and uprightnesse for the main though failing in many things If then a Christian should resolve to take no joy unlesse his conscience can witness perfection and an immunity from any failings such an one must resolve to have no comfort all his life time but if it witness the main bent and frame of thy heart to be for God though carried aside often through the violence and deceitfulnesse of temptations from this thou mayest rejoyce This is much to be observed for why are the discouragements and disconsolateness of Gods own children so great but because their conscience telleth them of several failings and they desire some testimony of a perfection Satisfie your selves therefore and regulate your thoughts in this particular And thus we must expound that place 1 John 3. 20 21. which at first appearance seemeth to speak very terribly If our hearts condemn us God is greater than our heart and knoweth all things This Text if not rightly understood is enough like Belshazzars writing in the wall to strike us with trembling For is there any man living whose heart doth not condemn him for sinne Doth not this very Apostle say 1 John 1. 8. If we say we have no sinne we deceive our selves and no truth is in us If then we have sinne how can our hearts but condemn us And then God knowing our hearts and seeing more evil and errour in us then we can understand must condemn us much more What is this then but to fill every godly man with despair But that the Apostle himself may not speak a contradiction we must have recourse to the mentioned distinction viz. That our hearts condemn us justly for the main that our foundation is rotten that we love sinne more than God then we have cause to be wholly cast down but if our hearts do not condemn us for the main only for those imperfections and frailties which we cannot perfectly be purged from in this life then we may have confidence towards God Thirdly Our conscience may be considered as Habitually able to testifie or as Actually and immediately prepared This is necessary to be observed For every regenerate man having his conscience sanctified is thereby habitually able to give a good testimony but many things may intervene that hinder it in its actings Even as the Sunne is able to give a clear light to the whole world but clouds and mists may hinder the actual communication of it And thus it is often with the children of God their conscience is sanctified but many doubts arise many scruples and fears do interpose so that they have not that actual witness in their conscience which they might have So that as in sanctification there are the principles of grace though the exercise of them may be stopt So it is in matter of consolation there is the foundation and fountain of it though the stream may be troubled And this should make us wary so to walk as not to put stops and checks in the way of conscience especially to labour for a sound judgement and a full perswasion in things to be done For the more doubtfull and scrupulous we are the less firm and clear is the testimony of our conscience as appeareth Rom. 14. 22 23. Fourthly We are to distinguish of the testimony of conscience as alone and separate or relating wholly to the blood of Christ in whom alone all our acceptance and cause of comfort is contained Whereas if a man should attend to the testimony of conscience alone though to his best actions he would have more cause to fear and tremble from that then rejoyce Therefore the Scripture attributeth the purging of our conscience to the blood of Christ there is no mans conscience can be good and truly peaceable that doth not look to Christ that saith not with John Behold the lamb of God that taketh away thy sinne as well as behold the holy duties thou hast lived in Heb. 9. 14. How much rather shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from dead workes Let conscience then alwayes eye Christ look to him as well as to our graces For the goodness of an evangelical conscience lieth not in this to testifie thou hast not been such a sinner or thou hast not such failings but though thou hast been such yet repenting and believing through the blood of Christ thy conscience is not to condemn thee for them because pardoned Now the conscience of a civil and pharisaical man which comforts from works done doth not at all relate to Christ and by this thou mayest find the deceitfulness of it seeing that by Christs blood alone it cometh to be truly purified Use 1. Of Instruction How few they are that have this
right testimony of conscience within them they have seared stupid consciences or they have deluded ones that make them trust in other things then Christs blood Do not most men rest in this that their conscience telleth them they are baptized they are made partakers of the Ordinances of God and this is all the witness they have But the Apostle Peter layeth an Axe to the root of this 1 Pet. 3. 21. Baptisme saveth but then by a rhetorical correction addeth Not the putting away of the filth of the body but an answer of a good conscience It is generally thought to be an allusion to a Covenant or contract for so Baptism is wherein the person is asked Do you take God for your God Renounce the Devil and all the lusts of the flesh Now if a man can unseignedly and with a good conscience answer that he keepeth to baptismal ingagements this will save SERM. LXXXVII A Believer may be assured of the Uprightness of his Heart in the Performance of Duties What is required to such an Assurance 2 COR. 1. 12. That in simplicity and godly sincerity THe third part of the Text as it stands divided cometh under our consideration and that is the Declaration in particular of what was spoken in the General The General was The testimony of his conscience Now he sheweth the Specials wherein this is manifested and that is set down Positively and Negatively and Oppositely 1. Positively In simplicity c. 2. Negatively Not with fleshly wisdome 3. Oppositely But by the grace of God Before we come to the particulars and open the Greek words we must take notice of the certainty and sure knowledge Paul had of his sincerity For how could Paul glory and rejoyce in his sincerity if he did not know it yea so know it that his conscience with the Spirit of God did witness it to him And therefore this is one of those places that is brought in the controversie between Papists and us about the certainty of our being in the state of grace which Bellarmine indeed would enervate But his labour is in vain For what can be clearer then that Paul had a certain knowledge of his upright heart seeing he did make this publick testimony of it and take so much joy therein Neither doth Paul in this pretend to any extraordinary revelation as if he had some peculiar priviledge in this above others as when he was rapt up into the third Heavens but he avoucheth the testimony of his conscience which must be in an ordinary way From this we observe That a Believer may have a certain knowledge not only that he performeth those gracious duties God requireth but that he doth them with an upright and sincere heart Paul did not only know that he was diligent in preaching of the Gospel that he was faithfull in dispensing of the word of God but also that all this was done with faithfull and sincere respects We do not only know that we believe that we repent but that we do these things in the uprightnesse of our souls Bellarmine urgeth this much Though we do discharge the duties God requireth yet how can we know that we do them with an whole heart with a sincere spirit Many hypocrites say they are sure Yea saith he among the Protestants one is assured of his way and another of another Sect but we are assured that they are all deluded So that he concludeth Seeing all the Hereticks of this age boast of this certainty yet saith he even in their opinion many are deceived and in ours all are But we are to walk by the Scripture-light in this case And indeed this being a truth the knowledge whereof is obtained both by Scripture and experience the savoury work of grace and sense of Christs Spirit dwelling in us doth more to perswade of this truth then voluminous controversies This Question is best answered by diligent prayer and an heavenly life and therefore practical experimental Christians can speak more to this point then the most learned speculative Doctors unless they have a gracious broken heart as well as a learned profound head That a believer may be assured of the truth of grace appeareth by several examples and general assertions of Scriptures Examples as Hezekiah Remember O Lord how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart 2 King 20. 3. In Job who though under sad temptations both from God and his dear friends who charged upon him hypocrisie yet he would never let go the perswasion of his integrity David how often doth he professe his love of God with all his heart Peter when Christ asked him again and again he answered Thou knowest Lord I love thee John 21. 17. As for those places which affirm this truth I shall name one or two John 14. 17. Ye know the Spirit for he dwels with you and shall be in you And vers 20. At that day ye shall know that I am in my Father and you in me and I in you What is clearer then As where the Sunne is there is light to see it so where the Spirit of God dwelleth and worketh in a man there is an evident discovery of it 2 Cor. 2. 11 12. What man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of man within even so the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God that we might know the things freely given to us of God By this we see that as the soul by its rational powers doth discover and feel the workings of reason and understanding within it self so also by those supernatural principles of grace infused into it it is able to discern and feel the divine and heavenly motions of a supernatural life within him The first Epistle of John doth in many places speak of this knowledge whereby we perceive that God is in us and we in him But I intend not to enlarge on this subject Let us explain this truth and consider What is required to cause this certain knowledge in us that we are sincere and in a state of grace and so by consequent that we are justified elected and shall assuredly be saved And First There is required A firm assent and faith of the truth of Gods promises which are in the general revealed in the Word as such as these He that believeth hath passed from death to life By faith we have remission of sinnes through the blood of Christ Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of Heaven The promises also to such as do confesse and forsake their sinnes we are strongly to assure our souls of Yea not only the promises but the whole truths revealed in Gods word we are firmly to assent to by a vigorous faith For the lively actings of faith to its general objects do wonderfully conduce to the application of it to particular and special objects As men of quick animal actions are thereby more enabled to rational for seeing what is in
Godly sincerity The grace or rather the gracious modification of Paul's life is said to be in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in sincerity The word as Lexicographers observe cometh of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Sunne-beams and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to judge Now in them there are two things The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lustre and light and so it is the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which is clear transparent and manifest Thus 2 Pet. 3. 1. it is called your sincere mind 2. In the Sunne-beams there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heat whereby heterogeneals are separated and homogeneals congregated and then it is the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unmixt as the word sincere is pure honey sine cerâ without wax So that in this expression is denoted the purity of the heart in all its aims and intentions not mingling other things of a contrary nature with holy actions and then such an open clear and diaphanous frame of soul that it hideth not or covereth any thing but delighteth to have all things open and naked to the eyes of God Hence in the next place you have the limitation or amplification In the sincerity of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we render it godly sincerity Now this may be thus understood 1. By way of opposition to that Natural or Moral Truth and Ingenuity which may be in men destitute of grace The Romana fides was proverbial because of the truth and sincerity that was in all their dealings but because they did not know God or look up to him referring their actions to lower and more inferiour ends therefore it was not godly sincerity Thus many civil men have an honest upright heart to doe truly and righteously in all things relating to men but they want the soul of all which is to referre this to the glory of God and to eye him principally in their actions 2. It may be called The sincerity of God effectivè because it is that which is wrought in us by God The heart naturally is full of guile and hypocrisie never performing holy things upon holy motives So that it is the grace of God which putteth truth in the inward parts and maketh us Sheep of Foxes Doves of Kites 3. It is the sincerity of God by way of direction and command because he hath commanded that with a pure and upright heart we are to serve him in all our wayes And this our Translators seem to aim at rendring it godly sincerity that is such which is according to the rules of Gods word And this excludeth that sincerity of conscience which many heretical and deluded persons may have in their zealous prosecution of their false wayes Paul had a good conscience and a sincere heart while a Pharisee that he did not go against the dictates of his conscience yea he thought himself bound to doe what he did But this is not enough to godly sincerity this is humane sincerity thou hast a clear perswasion in thy own heart of the goodnesse of thy wayes but if it be godly it must be according to the rule of godlinesse and that is the Scripture A mans own conscience or heart is not the supream rule of sincerity but the Scripture And this is very necessary to be observed because we are apt to rest in our hearts the sincerity we feel there the comfort and quietnesse we have from thence as if they were the utmost rule we were to resolve all into whereas it must not be what say our hearts but what say the Scriptures informing and regulating our hearts 4. It may be called sincerity of God finaliter because whatsoever a man doth that is thus sincere he doth it to the glory of God that is his mark if he falleth short of that if he findeth his own glory his own applause his owne advantages interposing this doth exceedingly grieve and trouble him he accounts that as drosse and not gold he saith This duty I have lost Lastly It is called sincerity of God objectivè because he that is sincere doth all things as in the presence of God knowing that God beholdeth him that he trieth the reins and searcheth the hearts of all men And this is principally meant in this place though the other be not excluded And so we have Paul explaining himself in the next Chapter vers 17. As of sincerity as of God in the sight of God speak we in Christ These things explained Observe That godly sincerity carrieth a man above all self-respects in religious wayes even to God himself It is not man either glory or praise from him but God alone that his heart is fixed upon As those that did runne in a race such is our Christianity did not matter the acclamations of spectators but the judgement of him who was the Moderator to judge on whose side the victory was Thus Paul 1 Cor. 4. It is a very small thing with me that I should be judged of you or of mans judgement but he that judgeth me is the Lord. It is a miserable bondage to please men and to be like a looking-glasse to every one seeming to be what he is that he talketh with such a man is inconstant hypocritical changeth the wayes of Religion often according as humane advantages do intervene whereas the sincere man like Christ himself is the same yesterday and to day and for ever Like those fishes Nazianzen in his contemplations by the Sea side observed that keeping close to the rock were not moved but the rest were cast out and are fetched in again according to the ebbing and flowing of the waters but he that walketh with sincerity as God is the same the Scriptures the same godlinesse is alwayes the same so also is he the same As the Pilot hath his eye alwayes to the Starre in the Heavens not regarding the tempests or tos●ings of his ship Thus it is with the sincere man To work this upon our hearts let us consider First What are those things in God that the sincere man doth thus fix himself upon living as if there were none in the world but he and God alone And First The Omniscience of God that all-seeing eye of his whereby he knoweth every secret turning and winding of the soul yea our thoughts afarre off while they are but in the minting and womb and thereby seeth that in us which we cannot our selves This is that which is often in the thoughts of a sincere man This all searching knowledge of God David largely celebrateth Psal 139. 1 2 3 c. Thus God commandeth Abraham To walk before him and be perfect Gen. 17. The consideration of Gods presence that he is with us that he knoweth every thought and every word this will make us perfect and upright Had Gehezi thought that Elijahs spirit would have gone along with him as it were and taken notice of the actions he did he would not with such confidence have come into the
the property of those who are godly to take nothing to themselves but to give all to the grace of God You see here though Paul was so eminent for godlinesse and so admirable for gifts yet he maketh the grace of God to be alone the sole Authour of all spiritual successe This subject the Apostle doth very willingly enlarge himself upon wheresoever he hath occasion Hence in the fore-mentioned place 1 Corinth 15. 10. he saith By the grace of God I am what I am The grace of God made him an holy man The grace of God made him an eminent Apostle he had nothing as a private Christian or as an Officer but by the grace of God and because many may have grace in a common way bestowed upon them that yet abuse it as Judas he addeth This grace was not in vain Yet lest it should be thought that it was his improvement of the grace bestowed that made it so effectual he presently correcteth his expression Yet not I but the grace of God which was with me As it is not the pen but the Writer that is a cause of fair Characters Let us discover this Doctrine And First We see the Apostle rejoycing in the sincerity of his heart and yet acknowledging all to the grace of God so that these two may well stand together to take comfort from our holinesse yet to put our trust in nothing but the grace of God It is true this is a very hard lesson to performe there is required much skill and prudence herein for we are apt to runne into extreames Either through unbelief and peevishnesse we nourish doubts and perplexing thoughts in our selves not taking notice of the grace of God in us Or else if we doe behold it and rejoyce in it we are presently in a secret manner lifted up and confident thereby But we see by the Apostles practice both are consistent together So that the people of God are diligently to labour after this heavenly frame of heart To be in doubts and fears about thy condition is to live in the jaws of hell and to be presuming or carnally confident of thy graces is the next door to a sad and miserable downfall Secondly It is not enough to acknowledge the grace of God in the general but so to set up grace as to give all to it The Apostle maketh an immediate opposition between grace and workes Rom. 11. 6. there cannot be a reconciling of grace and workes together This hath been often attempted but as unhappily as the building up the walls of Jericho again The Pelagian Arminian the Socinian and Papist all these doe acknowledge grace but when we come to the root of the matter it 's nothing at last but the free-will and workes of a man It is his good use of grace that doth determine and make all things effectual not grace it self And this is the rather to be noted because Stapleton would antidote against Calvin's poison as he speaketh from this Text. For whereas Calvin taking notice of the Apostles glorying in the testimony of his conscience concernin his sincerity doth shew that Paul hereby doth not oppose that command Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord because Paul giveth all to the grace of God and resteth alone upon that From this Stapleton would excuse the Papists also because they acknowledge all good workes to come from grace Their merits are founded onely upon Christs merits Even as it doth not derogate from the power of God that he useth second causes in natural things because they are subordinate to him both in their being and operation but it doth illustrate as his bounty so his power the more to make other things powerfull Thus saith he it is not injurious to the grace and merits of Christ if we attribute merit to our workes seeing this cometh onely from Christ but it argueth his fullnesse and rich grace the more that communicateth of it to us So that saith he to put trust in the workes of grace as the proxim and immediate cause but in the grace of God as the chiefe and universal cause is no derogation to the honour and glory of Christ But that of the Apostle must be alwayes remembred If of grace then not of workes otherwise grace is no more grace It is not grace unlesse it be grace every way And therefore to make our workes the second causes to trust in though it be not so high a wickednesse as to exclude Christ throughly yet it doth in part and therefore as in the matter of worship we admit of no primary and secondary worship no more than a primary and secondary God So it is in matter of trusting we must depend only upon Christ not but that holinesse and godly works are necessarily required but not as causes under any subtil distinctions whatsoever These two things premised let us now consider What is that grace which the Apostle doth here exalt against all fleshly wisdome And First As the ground-work of all there is to be understood That grace of God whereby he was called out of that pharisaical estate and condition of enmity against Christ to be a faithfull and ready servant to him This wonderfull grace of God to him doth often melt the heart of Paul he speaketh of it with aggravating particulars as much as may be Thus Galat. 1 15. When it pleased God who called me by his grace to reveale his Sonne in me c. And therefore 1 Tim. 1. 15 16. he acknowledged himself an instance Because the chiefest of sinners of the long-suffering of Christ In Paul's conversion there were no preparations no merits of congruity there was no docible and fitted dispositions Insomuch that the adversaries to Gods grace do acknowledge Paul's conversion to be an extraordinary thing In the midst of his persecuting sury when God might have struck him dead with thunder and lightnings from Heaven and so send him quick as it were to Hell God did visit him with his grace and give him another heart to his own amazement and of all those who heard of it So if you look upon Paul in a single capacity as a private person in the whole course of his life he giveth all to the grace of God Secondly The grace of God which Paul doth also greatly exalt is In the setting of him apart to be an Apostle and an eminent Officer in the Church of God This crooked and rough timber that was onely fit for the fire God doth not onely polish and smooth by grace but advanceth it to be an eminent part in the building notwithstanding all Paul's former unworthinesse God doth not onely by his grace call him but maketh him an honourable vessel in his house This our Apostle doth likewise with great enlargement in many places take great notice of See how emphatically is he affected with this grace of God towards him Ephesians 3. 7 8. Whereof I was made a Minister according to the gift of
salvation which at first began to be spoken by the Lord and afterwards was confirmed by others God bearing them witnesse by signes and many wonders So that now the things of Religion cannot be more abundantly confirmed to you than they are you are not to expect more powerfull means to convert you than have been used and this will make Hell seven times hotter for all ungodly and prophane persons who are so under these Gospel-dispensations SERM. XCIX Of the convincing Nature of Godliness in Ministers and private Christians 2 COR. 1. 13. For we write no other things unto you then what you read or acknowledge and I trust that you shall acknowledge even to the end THe Apostle having formerly asserted the sincerity and holy simplicity of his conversation and that more abundantly to the Corinthians lest this should be a vain boasting of himself and that in giving testimony of himself that would not be valid or sufficient He doth in this verse appeal to the very consciences of the Corinthians likewise So that not only the testimony of his own conscience but of their consciences also must needs justifie him And indeed this is a good demonstration of that uprightness which is within us when we can appeal to the consciences of others For although men especially such as are prejudiced and alienated from us may suffocate and smother as much as lie in them that they have any such convictions of our integrity yet secretly their consciences cannot but bear witness to us The matter then wherein he doth appeal as it were to their own consciences is set down in the beginning of the verse For we write no other things unto you c. There is one expression in this passage that hath much perplexed Interpreters and made them go different wayes it is that we write no other things unto you then what you do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read so we translate it and likewise many others Now this is wondered at by some yea by Calvin accounted Nimis fligidum ne dicam ineptum saith he in loc It is too frigid and absurd to make this the sense I write to you no other things then what you read c. For who doubted of that And how could any man read otherwise than he wrote saith Musculus Estius also doth confess that the rendring the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ye read did cause great perplexity to Expositors and therefore sheweth that Theophylact when he could not satisfie himself about that sense of the word did runne to another Yet there are learned men that endeavour to make a good sense of it though it be translated Ye read For Beza though he taketh notice of what Calvin saith against it yet followeth this translation and would make this Paul's meaning That he did not write cunningly artificially what they did read in the plain letter of the words that he did write he had no equivocations nor intended any delusions by his words Cajetan in loc he maketh this expression to referre to the former Epistle and also to this part of the second which we are now upon We write no more now then what ye have read formerly Therefore some render it in the preterperfect tense Others they make the general sense to be this Our words and our actions do agree we write no more than what may be read and acknowledged by all Though these interpretations may passe very well yet because the expression is not so full and proper to say We write no other things then what you read I shall rather go with those who say the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though it many times signifieth to read yet it doth also to take notice of to know to remember c. Indeed I find it not in this sense used in the New Testament but constantly for to read yet Varinus he maketh it to signifie as well 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To know to call to mind to remember to be convinced of a thing So that the meaning is We write to you no other things then what you know what you remember yea what ye are experimentally convinced of And thus it differeth from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which followeth and signifieth more For a man may know and remember yea and be convinced of many things which yet through some corruption within he will not acknowledge for that is when we do with a ready and willing consent approve and own such a thing The Pharisees were often convinced about Christs Doctrine yet they would not acknowledge it But the Apostle attributeth both these to the Corinthians for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendered Or Erasmus suspects it crept in for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which things Vorstius preferreth that reading which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so paraphraseth If so be you do acknowledge but there is no necessity of this From the words thus explained we observe That a godly convincing life in a Christian especially in a Minister is of special advantage for many excellent effects Every Christian and much more every Minister are by their lives and examples so to convince that others may acknowledge verily God is with them verily the Spirit of Christ dwelleth in them This is no more then what our Saviour expresseth Let your light so shine before men Mat. 5. 16. that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in Heaven Some make this exhortation given to Christians in the general Others to the Ministers of the Gospel in particular However by this we see that God cannot bear meer titles names and opinions unlesse there be an holy life accompanying of them he saith That they may see your good works not titles not professions not your ceremonious and instituted worship but good works good works then are necessary but such as flow from men enlightned by the Gospel-truth Many mistake about good works not knowing what the nature of them is and then Christ sheweth the end of these good works That they may glorifie your Father which is in Heaven not that they may glorifie you and honour you We are not to do good things for applause and esteem neither doth he say that ye may merit a reward in Heaven Vain-glory and merit with self-confidence are the end why pharisaical men cause their light to shine before others but the Evangelical Christian he doth it That God may be glorified But let us cause the light of this Doctrine also to shine before you And First We are to know That godlinesse and exact holinesse hath a convincing and converting effect with it The sincere practice of it doth awe and conquer the conscience even of the vilest men Godliness is the image of God Now when God created man in that he gave him dominion over all the beasts of the field they stood in awe of him And thus where the image of God is repaired there it hath a convincing work upon the conscience of the
the admirable gifts and efficacious parts of a Ministry but the powerfull grace of God alone is that which doth open the doors of mens hearts Not any tractableness in people therefore the Socinian and Arminian Doctrine is with indignation to be excluded who speak of a probitas naturalis and ingenium docile a natural teachableness in some persons which doth prepare them for the Gospel and that is the reason why some are converted by the word and not others yea they are not afraid to offer violence to that Text which doth so evidently witness against them Act. 13. 48. As many as were ordained to eternal life believed The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they would wrest to signifie some inward Disposition and Qualification men that had fitted themselves But certainly If God so often tell the Israelites that he gave them not that rich Land of Canaan because of their Righteousness or for that they were better than others can we think Heaven and Salvation which was typified by that Canaan shall be obtained by our own worth Nay experience telleth us that sometimes the most prophane have received the Gospel when others more civilized and moralized have been great enemies to it If any have Humility and Meckness which is necessary for the success of the Gospel in his heart that is the gift of God it floweth not from nature Neither Secondly is it any thing in the excellent gifts of any men though they could preach with the tongue of Angels Though the Apostles were designed by Christ to be leaven to leaven the whole World to be salt to season all people yet too many here as the favour of death and some were the more enraged and made more obstinate in fin by how much the more affectionate he was to do them good Yet the Ministry though of it self it cannot roll away this stone or open this door of mens hearts is not therefore useless God hath appointed to convert by it We must not out of Pride refuse to wash in this Jordan as Naaman at first did thinking other waters as good I mean to think that stayiug at home and reading of good Books is as profitable because this is to neglect the instituted means by God and it is just that it thou do not seek God where he is to be found that thou shalt never finde him there where thou seekest him Though this be so yet it is God that openeth the door of mens hearts Paul said An effectual door was opened in a passive fear he doth not say I have opened it Hence Christ speaketh from heaven to the Church of Philadelphia Rev. 3. 7 8. I have set before thee an open door and no man can shut it When Christ will open the hearts of people as he did Lydia's all the rage and violence of the Devil cannot hinder it How many men are wrought upon that of all in the world you would not have exspected it who would have thought such bears should be turned into sheep Thus God sometimes continueth a Ministry to a people which doth a world of good when there are many persecutors many enemies men that have used all their fraud and power to remove it and could not any more stirr it then they could mountains While God hath converting or saving work to do by a Minister though it be but for one soul though all the rest should maliciously conspire against him yet they do imagine things in vain Observe that I place already mentioned 1 Cor. 16. 9. An effectual door was opened and their were many Adversaries There was a large door opened for all that It is true we have that Expression even in the same Chapter Rev. 3. 20. Behold I stand at the door and knock and if any man open unto me c. But that place onely implyeth our duty what we are bound to do not our ability He that knocketh must also open the door although the will is not forced in this but God hath insuperable power over it whereby he can make it of unwilling willing 3. It may fall out sometimes that God calleth a man to preach to a people concerning whom their is none or little hope of doing any good Now such who are thus called must continue in their slation obeying the will of God though they see they labour in vain This was Isayes case Ch. 6. when he is commanded by his preaching to make the eyes of the people blinde their hearts heavy It was also Ezekiels case Cha. 3. 7. But the house of Israel will not hearken unto thee for they will not hearken unto me for all the house of Israel are impudent and hard hearted so Cha. 2. 7. Thou shalt speak my words to them whether they will hear or whether they will forbear Thus a Minister lawfully called to a people must not presently think of departing from them because of the little hope that he hath to do good but must patiently and constantly wait upon the Lord in his way The case of a Ministers removeal from a people is of great difficulty and tenderness The causes of his departure may be either Internal which God onely knoweth as Whether it be a pure Zeal to Gods glory or some carnal and sinister respect or External and those externally may be either by some powerfull and cogent Providence of God as some think in the Plague or personal Persecution of the Minister or by the command of Superiours or for want of Maintenance or where he cannot have his health or hy a voluntary dismission of the people or Lastly when there is a manifest Opposition generally against the Ministry so that the madness and malice of the people force him away Thus our Saviour commandeth Matth. 10. 14. Whosoever shall not reteive you when ye depart out of that city shake off the dust of the feet Thereby to signifie say some so God would at last cast off such a people with as much abhorrency as we do the dust of our feet or else thereby to declare that all the labour and pains they had been at should one day give in Testimony against them Thus we read Act. 13. 21. Paul and Barnabas shook off the dust off their feet against the persecuting and unbelieving Jews And Verse 46. Paul speaketh boldly to them Seeing ye put the word of God from you and judg your selves unworthy of Eternall life lo we turn to the Gentiles Thus You see there may be weighty Causes of a Ministers Removeal For they are two rigid who think the Union between Pastor and people is indissoluble like that of marriage Yet among all the Causes nothing is so clear as when a when a people by their wickedness and Opposition do persecute and drive him away or when they are too refractory to the Orders of Christ that he cannot with a good conscience exercise all Ministerial duties amongst them But though this be so The frowardness and unprofitableness of a people must not
whereas this inconstancy may be discovered either in our civil and moral conversation or in our religious and holy concernments I shall begin with the first Let us consider the sinfulnesse of inconstancy in civil respects which may be manifested in these particulars First When we are not consistent with our selves in our assertions and affirmations This is a great dishonour to God and our selves when we will say and unsay things affirme one thing at one time and the contrary at another And in this case Inconstancy is the same with lying Thus it argueth a light vain heart to talke one thing one time and another thing another time Hence the Rule is Oportet mendacem esse memorem A liar must have a good memory and as others say A liar must have a good pair of legs that he may runne away for he will quickly be discerned if he stay long in one place Now we may not wonder if Paul would not be thought guilty of a lie For the way of lying is inconsistent with the state of grace as Colos 3. 9. Lie not one to another seeing ye put off the old man with his deeds and have put on the new man Observe the Apostles argument you that are made new creatures you that have the Image of God repaired in you how can you lie to one another Hence you have David praying for the grace of God herein Psal 119. 29. Remove from me the way of lying And vers 163. I hate and abhorre lying but thy Law do I love Mark the opposition no man can love God and his Word but he must abhorre lying But how little do people generally take heed to themselves herein They think not their gracelesse and unregenerated hearts may be discovered by such inconstant lying words as well at by grosse enormities Oh therefore look upon it as a very hainous sinne not to be a person of gravity consistency and harmony in thy words Can there be a greater reproach then to say of a man he will say and unsay there is no heed to be given to his words We are not to believe all things they say if this were onely thy dishonour it were not so much matter but it cometh from a corrupt heart within Now the people of God above all persons are to look to their words in this respect because with Paul they have their enemies to observe them And we see how prophane persons are apt to charge them with this that though they will not swear yet they will lie This indeed they do because of their enmity and malice to such as feare God but be thou sure to give no occasion herein for them to blaspheme We see this holy Apostle in a solemne sacred manner sometimes calling God to witnesse That he speaketh the truth and lieth not 2 Cor. 11. 31 Gal. 1. 20. Secondly This inconstancy and mutability in civil respects is discovered in our promises Yea when it becometh a crimson sinne then it is manifested in our promissory oaths lightly and perfidiously breaking of them Now as to abstain from all lying and to speak the truth to every man is made a property of a godly man So also it is a character of a godly man to keep his promise to be faithfull to that though it should be to his own damage Psal 15. 4. He that sweareth to his own hurt and changeth not Though his Word and promises prove afterwards prejudicial to him yet he preferreth truth above all earthly respects whatsoever It is true Divines have a Rule In malis promissis rescinde fidem A sinfull promise is not to be kept for that would be to adde iniquity unto iniquity and to double thy sinne But in things that may be inconvenient to thee thou art not to use lightnesse and easily break thy word Thus then it is a character of a godly man to look to his promises to be very carefull to observe them It 's unjustice to break them because by a promise thou becomest a debtor to another And do you see Paul so carefull lest he should be thought to be yea and nay And art thou carelesse about thy word Oh you must know that true Religion and godliness doth not consist in the duties of the first Table but of the second likewise Do not think that this is godlinesse enough to pray to perform holy duties to be often in religious Ordinances No but thou art to abound in all truth and faithfulnesse towards man to avoid all lying all falshood in promises and so to have truth both towards God and man But how apt are our hearts to deceive us in this kind Some think their righteousness towards man because their words are as good as oaths that therefore they shall go to Heaven though they be not forward in religious duties they have no family-worship of God they do not walk singularly to the course of the world and others again they are ready to think that their religious duties their forwardnesse and zeal therein though they regard not words and promises though they neglect the duties of righteousnesse yet their condition will be good enough Oh but remember this passage of Paul for ever Be not hasty to promise labour not to forget what thou hast promised which will be if thou hast a conscientious regard unto thy self herein For when thou doest not think it matter of conscience when thou thinkest godliness is not much concerned herein no wonder then if thou art so often found faulty herein The Scripture is very frequent in pressing these duties of truth and righteousness between man and man Thirdly This mutability in civil affairs is seen in our affections our love and respect to men It is a mans duty to be a faithfull friend to such whom he hath cause to respect and therefore of a friend suddenly to become an enemy for one while to love and another while to hate this is to be yea and nay Men may be unfaithfull two wayes 1. When all the love and respect they professe is in hypocrisie Their tongues and their hearts doe no wayes agree Joab's Ave and Judas his Salve when they intended destruction is famous even to a Proverb David often complaineth of such deceitfull men but then there are unfaithfull men who once did love and were real for the time in their respects but then 2. Upon carnal sinfull grounds alter their affections again Such perfidious and inconstant dealings are abominable to God and man It is one great part of David's complaint that maketh him so solemnly cry unto God for help even becavse the faithfull fail from among the children of men Psal 12. 1. It is true a man of no godliness may be a faithfull friend there are great instances of such friends amongst Heathens and the wisest Writers amongst them have serious Discourses about Friendship But godliness only doth rightly order and regulate this faithfull friendship That is a Rule to be abhorred by all
go rather than peace and quietness of a good conscience A Second Principle of the flesh which maketh men inconstant is An inordinate desire of Greatness and Honour above others They that walk by this must be black and white now say and than deny according as those are affected from whom they exspect Advancement This secret Ambition is accompanyed with a vehement heat and drought of the soul making a man restless till their desires be accomplished Neither may we think the Heathens onely to be blamed for these proud affectations We see even the Apostles twice contending about Primacy and Superiority which is the greater wonder if we consider the meanness of their own condition they were in as also of Christ their Master and yet more wonder it is if we remember how frequently our Saviour did inform them of Persecutions and saddest Calamities for his sake We read likewise of Diotrephes 3 John 9. who loved to have the preheminence and would not own no not the Apostle John himself Now those that walk by such Principles of pride and ambition they must needs be like a materia prima ready to receive any form They flatter they dissemble they commend they dispraise and thus debased they are that afterwards they may be exalted Now nothing is more odious and abominable to a sincere man than such mutability and uncertainty Hence Christians of old were called the just and holdfast men It was not thus with John Baptist of whom saith our Saviour What went ye out to see a read shaken with the winde No he did faithfully and constantly discharge his duty without any fear of men But how many may we go out to see as reeds shaken with every winde And as the reed must grow in some mire so must such mutable persons have some carnal respect to encourage them Those that climbe up to high places are apt to have their heads grow giddy and to be unsteadfast so that when men lay this as a foundation I will have Preferment I will have Honor and greatness though it damn me this man walketh upon slippery ice and no wonder if he often fall 3. Another carnal Principle which maketh Inconstancy in all our wayes is Pleasing of men When a man maketh this his Rule he must change often and be as a shadow which moveth whoily according to the motion of the body stoopeth when that stoopeth and is upright when that is upright The Apostle doth notably disclaim such a sinfull distemper saying Galat. 1. 10. If I should please men I could not be the servant of Christ Man is a mutable creature subject to different apprehensions to different affections loving one thing one day and hating it at another Then must they also who would please men be prepared for all formes and postures insomuch that a man cannot live in greater bondage and slavery tan to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a peoples ape or to study the humouring of those we have to deal with If thou art guilty of this man-pleasing thou art never able to do thy duty thou canst not reprove and punish sin thou canst not be just and righteous in thy place Our Saviour said to his Disciples How can you belive which receive glory of one another John 5. 44. and do not seek the glory of God only Certainly till we study to please God alone in our lives and aim at his glory who is alwayes the same we must be unstable as water and be a lyar to every man We read of some who did believe in Christ yet dared not to make Profession thereof for fear of the Jews Here was a desire to please men rather than God But can the good word and favour of men deliver thee from the wrath of God in thy conscience and eternal torments hereafter When Judas pleased the Chief Priests in betraying of Christ could they comfort him in the Agonies of his conscience yea when he bewailed his sin They say What is that to us look thou to that Mat. 17. 4. Such miserable tormentors instead of comforters will all those men be whom thou hast pleased to displease God 5. Time-serving is a Principle which whosoever walketh by must be as a weather-Cock that is turned with every winde The people of Israel are remarkeable for this Inconstancy under wicked and Idolatrous Kings then they erected Altars they adorned Images and then immediately under Religious and Reforming Kings they would destroy the Idolls and deface the Images they had set up It is true all change and alteration in Religion is not to be blamed yea sometimes it is to be encouraged When Luther and Melancton gave over their former corrupt Doctrines and superstitious Practices the Papists condemned them for Turn-coats and Apostate persons when yet this change was necessary So that as they say in Philosophy there is alteratio corruptiva and perfectiva a destructive change and a perfective change thus it is also in Divinity and the Latter is absolutely commanded by God when Errors or Prophaneness have like a gangrene spread over the whole Church but of that in its time We are now speaking of that sinfull change whereby people accommodate themselves to the times they live in and therefore judg of truth judg of the holy things of God as Jeroboam did with subordination to State-Interests This is the great carnal Policy that the Wise-men of the world admire as if the true Doctrines of Christ were not alwayes the same as if a thing might be the worship of God one time and Idolatry at another as if the same thing might be the Doctrine of Christ at one time and Heresie at another as if that of Cusanus were true though otherwise not a very bad man That the Scripture is to be understood according to the present state and Affairs of the Church and therefore saith he We are not to wonder if at one time some Customes and Usages be exacted in a Church which at another time are to be decryed and refused But certainly the Scripture is a Rule of Faith and Manners in all Ages in all Changes and Revolutions Though Kingdomes and States may alter yet the Scriptures are the same still and what was once the Doctrine Worship and Order of Christ is still the same Lastly That all Particulars may be comprehended in one To live according to the Principles of the Flesh is To set up our selves as the Alpha and Omega to enjoy our selves and to use all things yea God himself in subordination thereunto Thus this love of a mans self even to the hatred of God is that which maketh us put on multiform shapes it is that which maketh us bend and bow and comply in all things For if we did love the Honour and glory of God more than our own selves as we ought to do then we should not attend to self-advantages but Gods glory and honor So that we may say This Self-love is the Beelzebub sin it
too light and wanting But oh the horrible neglect herein who mattereth what the Scripture saith Who ordereth his life according to that Canon What art thou a drunkard by Scripture a swearer by Scripture Know assuredly that he which learneth not holinesse from the Scripture shall never find comfort from the Scripture that hath precepts as well as promises and without obedience to one we cannot reap any comfort from the other Secondly The other principle of a godly mans but efficiently is the Spirit of God enlightning and sanctifying by the Scripture The Word is the Rule the Spirit of God is the efficient cause The Scripture is like Christs garment the Spirit is the virtue and power of God communicated to the soul thereby Hence are those descriptions of a godly man that he is in the Spirit that he liveth in the Spirit walketh in the Spirit is led by the Spirit which must not be wrested to any immediate Revelations and Enthusiastical motions and thereby opposed to the Word but the Word is subordinate to the Spirit This is the pool wherein the Spirit of God descends and vouchsafeth healing to the soul therewith Now Chrysostome maketh this a great part of Paul's meaning he did not purpose according to the flesh that is he could not dispose of himself and his journeyes to come and go whither he desired because he was wholly at the command of the Spirit to be directed thereby For we read when Paul had a mind to preach the Gospel in some places he was hindered by the Spirit and so could not go but those directions of the Spirit and Revelations were extraordinary and for that present age of the Church and are not now to be expected The Spirit doth now enlighten sanctifie direct and guide us by Scripture-rules And hereupon it is that the godly are said to be led by the Spirit and to walk by the Spirit and this should provoke the godly to all holiness Oh is pride from the Spirit of God Is worldliness is envy is passion from the Spirit of God Remember alwayes from what Spirit it is that thou doest things The Apostles thought it a good zeal when they would have fire from Heaven to come and destroy the Samaritans Luk. 9. 55. but Christ rebuked them saying Ye know not what manner of Spirit ye are of Take heed then thy own Spirit or a deluding spirit be not the principle that moveth thee instead of Gods good Spirit Thus you see the two general Rules that we should order our lives by the Word and the Spirit whatsoever is not according to these is not suitable to Christianity Besides these general principles we may instance in some particulars that a godly man doth walk by and against which he dare not sinne As 1. To keep a good conscience towards God and man Paul professed he exercised himself herein Act. 24. 16. towards God therefore he taketh heed of any thing that may make his heart smite him he had rather have his peace of conscience than all the advantages in the world Hence in all things his Question is Will not this trouble my conscience Will not this disturb the peace of my conscience This is a blessed principle he keepeth close unto And then again in respect of man he keepeth an inoffensive conscience he lieth not he defraudeth not he injureth not he looketh to righteousness as well as Religion his principle is to be holy towards God and just towards man and in following this principle he aboundeth with joy in his heart he liveth chearfully and fruitfully and withall doth awe the hearts of the most desperate enemies to the wayes of God 2. Another principle is To make sure of his ultimate end for which God made him and the necessary means conducing therunto His end is glory and salvation hereafter The necessary means therunto is grace and godlines here while we are in this world so that while other men walk according to their several principles some will be rich some will have their honours others their profits his principle is to be godly here and saved hereafter Hence he giveth all diligence to these two things So that if you ask him Why are you sollicitous Why are you so carefull Why so often in praying so often in hearing It is he saith to obtain grace here and glory hereafter This I must have I dare not live and die without it for want of this principle men have such sluggish and dull affections to heavenly things A third principle is To live and walk with daily expectations of death and the day of judgment as if he heard alwayes that voice sounding in his ears Arise and come to judgement He desireth to have such thoughts of sinne as a man dying as a man arraigned at Gods tribunal would then have Death is certain nothing can exempt him from it and therefore he desireth to die daily to be preparing for these great changes In morte solâ non est fortassis as Austin observed In all things in the world there is a fortasse a may be Thou mayest be a rich thou mayest be a great man but we cannot say It may be thou mayest die it may be the time will come when thou shalt fall into the grave No this is without all doubt hence the godly mans principle is so to live that death and the day of judgement may be no new thing or terrible dreadfull thing to him A fourth principle is To judge sinne the onely or the greatest evil and godlinesse the greatest good If this were a principle in mens hearts to live by what reformed persons should we see every where This principle in thy heart would be like fire there if sinne be thought worse than any evil then poverty shame misery yea and hell it self better be any thing than a sinner How couldst thou give thy self up a servant thereunto Though it were a pleasing sinne a profitable sinne yet because it is a damning sinne thou wouldst runne from it thou wouldst say Oh this sinne though I love it though I am used to it yet it can never be good for me it will be the poison of my soul And then on the other side a godly mans principle is That godlinesse is more worth than all the great and glorious things of the world His soul longeth for it more than silver and gold he thinketh every rich man every great man a miserable man if he be not godly As Rachel cried Give me children else I die so give me godlinesse Lord else I am damned As Abraham did not so much rejoyce in his wealth and outward mercies because he was still childlesse so saith this man It is not earthly comforts Lord but grace that refresheth my heart let me be poor contemned rather than not godly Use of Exhortation To examine what are the principles you walk by There are but these two and they are contrary one to the other the principle
affirme things to be so and so There are also Promissory lyes whereby we doe promise to doe such and such things but afterwards breake these engagements And the Apostles speech may relate to both these kinds of lies and both these are sinnes against the second Table either when we affirme any thing falsly or perfidiously breake our promises For seeing words are instituted to signifie our sense and minde to others if we abuse them to other ends we doe hereby destroy the end of speech and so as much as lieth in us overthrow all humane commerce and society But in a Promissory lye there is a further aggravation of the sinne because hereby the rules of justice are broken for by promise another man cometh to have a right to the thing promised The Corinthians in this Text had a right to Paul's presence when he had promised them Now where grace is in a man that doth so sanctifie him that he taketh heed of every way of lying whether in words or promises It is true Aristotle speaketh of this verity as a moral vertue And there are some who have as it were a natural justice their words are as good as oaths their promises are as good as bonds and bils Some Heathens have been famous for such a truth in their conversation but yet godlinesse maketh a man keep from lying and falshood upon other grounds then such natural just men which is good to be observed because many are so apt to build the comfort of their souls upon it For 1. Such natural true men they are so onely from the Principles of a natural conscience not from the principles of sanctification within them If you ask them Why they doe it or observe the ground you shall see it is onely because the light of Nature instructeth them herein And although this be commendable yet it is not enough to make it godlinesse in them for what is done in a godly manner ariseth from a principle of godlinesse which is the new nature within a man So that it is one thing to abhorre lying from a meer natural conscience and another thing to do so from a supernatural light within them 2. You may observe a difference in the motive The godly man dareth not lie because God forbiddeth because it 's a sinne that he abominateth whereas the natural true man never minds the Scripture it is not from the word of God that he doth it but because it is a laudable thing amongst men They will greatly praise such a man that is so constant It 's the glory of men they look at not the command of God 3. That such men are true and just but not from a godly principle is plaine Because they doe not receive all other holy duties The same God that hath commanded thee not to lie not to deal falsely hath also commanded thee not to be drunk he hath commanded thee to sanctifie the Sabbath to keep up Family-duties to love those that are godly and to delight in such whereas many times none are more bitter enemies to the power of godlinesse and the beauties of holinesse then such natural just and true men Oh therefore that such would not stay in that Thou doest well that thy words are sure that thy speeches and actions are just but doe not stay here doe not thinke thou hast enough for Heaven For though you doe all these yet if you delight not in godlinesse if you love not those that are holy men if you cannot abide this strictnesse and precisenesse in religious duties know that thou art but half a Christian yet there are duties of the first Table as well as the second and how greatly mayest thou charge thy soul with such sins didst thou not put thy trust and hope in thy true and just dealings Thirdly Divines do usually speak of a three-fold kind of lying There is a pernicious lie a sporting lie and an officious lie 1. A pernicious lie is when we speak that which is false to the hurt and damage of another 2. A sporting lie is when we do in merriment affirm things that are false only to please and delight 3. An officious lie or mendacium misericors as some call it a mercifull lie is when we tell a lie but it is for the good of another to save him out of danger or death such was Rahab's lie and the lie of the Midwives For though God rewarded them for the maine yet it doth not follow he allowed their lie but pardoned it It is disputed by some Whether this be a sinne or no And Luther is so farre from making it a sinne that he speaketh of it as a duty in Genes And Musculus also alloweth of it Yea Comment in Johan cap. 8. he hath this strange division Mendaciorum quaedam fuit licita bona quaedam excusabilia quaedam levia quaedam vitiosa quaedam diabolica But certainly though sporting and officious lies are not so great sinnes as pernicious yet they are all intrinsecally evil and so cannot be made good for any advantage of the world To lie that thou mayest deliver a man from death is not lawfull because of the Apostles Rule We must not doe evil that good may come thereof Rom. 3. 8. Even as adultery and fornication may not be committed under any pretence whatsoever no not by a woman to save the life of her husband of which case some speak of So it is also with a lie being a sinne intrinsecally and of its own nature and therefore can never be made good Hence it is that it is forbidden without any limitation to this lie rather than another Levit. 19. 11. even as stealing and dealing falsly are Therefore Cassianus is of opinion That it is lawfull to use a lie as we doe Hellebore to depell some grievous danger and that the Patriarchs for this end did sometimes use lies is wholly to be exploded Plato was first the authour of this opinion That Magistrates might use Mendacio ut medicamento from whom Origen and his followers were infected in this point But as we heard every lie is of its own nature a sinne because as the Schoolmen say It 's Actus cadens supra indebitam materiam For words are naturally the signe of our meaning and to use them otherwise is unnatural And this should make us be the more wary in our ordinary sporting discourses For how few do attend to this sinfulnesse of the tongue herein But if of every idle word a man shall give an account then much more of every lying word though it may seem no such great matter to us It is certaine the Martyrs thought no such lies lawfull no though thereby they might have escaped cruel torments Yea they are blotted with ignominy in Antiquity who either by favour or money would accept of a Certificate or Testimonial that they had sacrificed at the Altar when indeed they had not and thereby preserving themselves But what gain is this to save a
God may forsake gradually that thereby he may not forsake totally and finally Such desertions that are for a season are sometimes mercies and very usefull being a substraction of grace in order to fill us with more grace And the end of such providential administrations is to convince us fully of this truth that we do not settle our selves but it is God that doth it for us Lastly This truth may be demonstrated from the nature of that grace which is habitual and permanent in us For though that there be in us as a principle qualifying of us to work holy things with delight joy and content yet it cannot put us upon working without a further actual efficacious work of grace upon our souls which you heard the Apostle calleth Working in us both to will and to do Phil. 2. 13. So that although there be never so much grace planted in us yet that lieth asleep as it were and worketh not till this efficacious grace actuate it and put it into motion neither ought this to be any wonder to us For we see in natural causes it is not enough to have a principle of life unless God also enable us to move For in him we live and move and have our being much more then must this be in supernatural things where the Actus primus and secundus is of God Not but that in the progresse of grace we act and move but Acti agimus moti movemus It is the grace of God that doth efficaciously incline the sanctified will to spiritual operation then the North-wind and the South doe as it were blow upon the spiccs that they may send forth their fragrant smell It is true at the first work of grace there we are meerly passive but God doth not then force our will he only changeth it as water which naturally descends when made air doth naturally ascend upwards Thus the will of a man which was depressed to earthly things by sinne when sanctified and made heavenly ascendeth up towards God and heavenly objects By these discoveries it is manifest that the best Saint in this world is setled by the grace of God alone Those corruptions within him are treacherous and would betray him into the hands of Satan did not Christ corroborate him And is this any wonder of man fallen seeing Adam fell for want of this confirming grace and the elect Angels do therefore not leave their habitation as the Apostate have because the grace of God doth confirm them So that the good use we are to make of this Doctrine is to be exceeding watchfull and tender about all sinne lest thereby we provoke God to leave us How terrible do such desertions many times prove To whom are woes to whom are wounds and gripes of conscience but many times to those who being left of God have thereby ingaged in sinfull wayes and so having lost an holy frame of heart have thereby deprived themselves likewise of an Evangelical comfortable one Take heed through thy lazinesse negligence pride or some other sinne God forsake thee and thou become worse than Nebuchadnezzar of a godly man made like a beast This will be bitternesse in the latter end As for the second Doctrine I shall not say much to that because it hath been in part already spoken unto it is That in Christ alone we are established That as in the building other stones are strengthened because of the corner stone or the foundation stone or as the branch in the Vine doth therefore live and flourish because in the Vine so it is with us because in Christ we are setled with Christ in Christ we are confirmed with Christ which made Austin say In Christo sumtis Christus extra Christum nihil In Christ we are even like Christ out of Christ we are nothing at all To consider this we are to know First That all the godly through the efficacy of Gods Spirit are united to Christ and so become his mystical and spiritual body By reason of this it is that Christ dwelleth in them and they in Christ Christ actively communicating of his goodnesse and virtue to them and they passively receiving influences of grace from his fulnesse This union is represented in Scripture by many similitudes of a building of a vine and branches of an husband and wife but none so expresly as that in the Sacrament of bread and wine denoting us those elements are naturally turned into our nourishment and made one with us so we are in a spiritual and mystical manner made one with Christ This being laid as a foundation then Secondly From this our establishment and settlement followeth whereby we are sure to persevere and nothing shall be able to dissolve this union whence once made a true member of Christ there cannot be any separation made so as ever such a person should at last be damned in hell for that would redound to the highest dishonour of Christ the Head as could be imagined The reason why Adam fell though without any inherent corruption in him was partly because he was not united to Christ in that manner as the weakest believer is now under the Covenant of Grace And although these things are derided by the Arminian yet this Doctrine of spiritual union with Christ may compell every one to believe the truth thereof so that if we now fall Christ must fall with us we are not to be considered as single persons standing upon our own bottome but as united to Christ Therefore Thirdly Being thus in Christ our stablishment ariseth two wayes from Christ 1. By meritorious impetration Christ as our Mediatour hath deserved this through his propitiatory death that we should alwayes be kept his and therefore when we have a thousand times over deserved that God should leave us yet because Christ hath deserved that God should alwayes love us therefore it is that we stand faster than Mount Zion which yet is said not to be moved The second way is by efficient application for he doth communicate of his power and strength to us whereby when we are ready of our selves to fall yet he doth prevent it So that our being in Christ is the foundation of all strength and all comfort and therefore this discovereth the wretched estate of such who can claim no interest in Christ these are tossed up and down from one lust to another they roll from one iniquity to another the Devil doth what he pleaseth with them he throweth them sometimes in the fire and sometimes in the water and all this is because not in Christ If at any time through the common graces of Gods Spirit they are got up to the pinacle of the Temple they are eminent for gifts and place in the Church of God all the godly have admired them for a while yet at last you find them blasted and cursed in this way you find them like swine wallowing in the mire that were judged to be the sheep of
some by election also and that there are persevering sons and apostatizing wherein election maketh the difference which opinion some attribute to Austin is wholly inconsistent with Scripture and Austin himself in other places if that were his opinion The godly then are to look upon the grace of God wrought in them as the effect of Gods immutable and unchangeable love which will certainly obtain its end Secondly Their certainty of salvation and so of perseverance therein is built upon the many promises of God which are made to this very end as that famous one Jer. 32. 40. I will make an everlasting covenant with them that I will not turn away from them to do them good but will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me What can be more pregnant than this God covenants he will not turn from them and withall to put such fear in their hearts that they shall not turn from him So also Phil. 1. 6. being confident of this very thing that he who hath begun a good work in you will also finish it His confidence was not in them for alas we should prove the prodigals and lose all but it is in Gods grace and that because he had begun for none shall say of him he began to build and could not finish So that the wisedom mercy and glory of God is interested in our perseverance and indeed if our sinnes should hinder him from continuance of his grace why did they not from the beginning at first were we not then objects of his displeasure So that in our conversion the greatest work was done then we had as Chrysostome saith upon the place the beginning and root of what was to come Lastly The union that is between Christ and a beleever being indissoluble doth necessarily infer the certainty of his salvation a member of Christs body shall not be taken from him and thrown into hell for from this union as their bodies shall necessarily rise to glory so their souls also shall be prepared for the same SERM. CXL Of Swearing 2 COR. 1. 23. Moreover I call God to record upon my soul that to spare you I came not as yet to Corinth THe Apostle having made a short but happy and admirable digression occasioned from his discourse vers 17. about the calumny of levity and carnal reasonings and motives concerning his promise to come to them doth in this verse return to that matter again plainly informing of them that it was not any inconstancy or carnal respect in himself that made him delay his coming but the fault was wholly in themselves they were not yet prepared for his coming which for the greater confirmation and authority he doth attest with a solemn and sacred Oath It is true Chrysostome doth beginne the second Chapter at this Text and so the Syriack Yea Beza saith We ought to beginne the second Chapter here In which respect Calvin and Musculus comment upon it accordingly but the matter is not worth a contest In the words you may observe 1. An Oath And 2. The Matter of an Oath 1. The Oath is a very compleat and perfect one I call God to witnesse upon my soul Of the Oath first As for Pelagians and others who affirm an Oath to be unlawfull under the Gospel at least and that in these or the like expressions Paul doth not swear because he doth not use the Preposition per or by or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek it 's an absurdity afterwards to be refelled The Oath in the Text is an Assertory Oath wherein God is expresly called upon as a witnesse and withall an Execration is added Upon my soul that is Let God damn my soul if it be not true he doth not mention his soul as part of the Oath as if that were a witnesse as well as God but he mentioneth it as a pawn or pledge and so it is lawfull to name some creatures that we love or are dear to us in an oath not that we may swear by them but as pledges So that this Oath is both Assertory and Execratory not that these make two distinct kindes of Oaths for one doth necessarily imply the other He that calleth upon God as a Witnesse doth thereby imply him a Judge and an Avenger if he swear falsly Onely I call it an Execratory Oath as well as an Assertory because the Execration is mentioned whereas for the most part in Oaths it is not expressed If you say What reason or urgent necessity was here for Paul thus to make such a deliberate and solemn Oath I answer Very great The adversaries of Paul did accuse him and traduce him for a vain and inconstant person which hereby did redound to the dishonour of the Ministry the hinderance of the Gospel the destruction of Christs Church therefore it was necessary for him to take this Oath That no carnal motive made him delay his promise but a wise and spiritual consideration of their good Thus at another time speaking of his earnest affections to his brethren after the flesh Rom. 9. 1. he sweareth after this manner I speake the truth in Christ I lie not my conscience also bearing witnesse in the Holy Ghost So in this Epistle again 2 Corinth 11. 20. As the truth of Christ is in me Rom. 1. 9. For God is my witnesse that I make mention of you alwayes in my prayers Gal. 1. 20. The things that I write unto you behold before God I lie not Thus you see by many instances the holy Apostle making use of an Oath but alwayes upon necessary occasions for Gods glory and the edification of others From whence observe That it is lawfull even under the Gospel to swear after a right and godly manner upon necessary and urgent occasions I say under the Gospel for some have granted it lawfull under the Old Testament as they say to circumcise to sacrifice was but under the Gospel they hold it absolutely forbidden So that the handling of this truth about swearing or a lawfull oath is of great importance both for doctrinal information against Pelagians Socinians some Anabaptists who hold it unlawfull under the Gospel As also of direction to know wherein an Oath doth consist and whether many formes used commonly by people are oaths or no. And then withall it is of great practical use if possible to remove that ungodly and wicked custome of ordinary swearing without any due consideration of the nature of an oath For how general and epidemical is this sinne Old and young yea little children can swear as soon as speake rich and poore yea men glory in their oaths and deride at the strictnesse of such who will be so precise as to abstaine from them They looke upon oathes as the glory of their speech and becoming a Gentleman But Solomon's description of a godly man will abide good when such prophane miscreants shall lie for ever roaring in hell
to be known ibid. All are not of equal necessity ibid. A latitude to be granted in the application of them 60 Of the twofold form of the Church internal and external ib. The marks of the visible not to be confounded with the properties of the invisible Church 61 Why Paul writeth to the Church and not to the Churches of Corinth 63 A Church is Gods people in a more peculiar manner 64 Seven things implied in the Churches being said to be of God 64 65 66 67 A Church sometimes gathered amongst the most prophane people 69 A Church may be a true one though defiled with many corruptions 70 Three propositions clearing it 73 Three reasons demonstrating it 76 What corruptions were in the Church of Corinth 71 72 The soundnesse and purity of a Church admits of degrees 73 The Church of God as 't is a Church doth farre surpasse all civil societies and temporal dignities 77 Three propositions clearing it 78 79 The grounds of it 79 80 'T is hard for Churches to keep within their proper bounds about Church administrations 80 'T is a Ministers duty by all lawfull means to promote the Church he is related to 81 All that are in the Church are Saints by profession 83 What is comprehended under Church-Saintship 84 85 All Saints ought to joyn themselves to Church communion 91 Yet some causes may excuse them 91 92 What are those sinfull grounds why many do not joyn themselves to Church communion 93 94 The best Churches changeable in their affections to their guides 464 Propositions clearing it 464 465 The causes of it 466 467 The Church esteems many things which the world despises 31 32 Church-officers Church-officers appointed by Christ as the head 28 Propositions clearing it 29 30 Two things Church-officers are to take heed of pride and idlenesse 30 31 How it concerns Church-officers to agree in matters of Religion 46 Three propositions clearing it 46 47 Three things conducing to that happy agreement 47 48 Comfort God a God of all Comfort to his 148 What is implied in that expression 149 What in the word Comfort 150 151 Propositions about the Comforts of God 152 It is so to be managed as to be made an antidote against despair and yet a curb to presumption ib. Comfort not to be judged of without Scripture-light 153 God actually Comforts his people 157 How God comforts his people 158 159 160 God a God of Comfort only to believers 161 Six propositions clearing the truth 162 163 164 165 God Comforts his people in all afflictions 166 167 No Philosophers ever had the true art or grounds of Comfort 169 God Comforts onely by the Scriptures 170 What are the grounds of Comfort in Scripture 171 172 173 How God is said to Comfort his people in all their afflictions notwithstanding they are oft disconsolate 174 175 176 177 Comfort not absolutely necessary to salvation 175 These only are fit to Comfort others who have the experimental work of Gods grace upon their own hearts 182 Four propositions clearing it 182 183 184 Four reasons confirming it 184 185 186 It is a special duty to Comfort the afflicted 187 Propositions clearing it 187 188 189 190 Two things required to the Comforting others in a right manner 190 191 The same grounds of Comforts which revive one may revive another also 191 What are the general grounds of Comfort in afflictions 192 193 Reasons of it 193 194 195 Our Comforts are and abound by Christ 209 210 How Christ makes our Comforts to abound in our sufferings for his sake 210 211 212 God commonly proportions our comforts to our sufferings 214 And sometimes makes them to exceed 215 The reasons of it 216 217 Why God often denies Comfort in trouble 217 218 Our Comfort is promoted by others suffering for Christ 223 224 225 226 227 'T is universal holiness that is the ground of Comfort 443 Communion Two sorts of Communion 251 Communion with the sufferers for Christ a good way to interest us in their glory ibid. Confidence self-confidence Self confidence a great sin 302 Propositions clearing the nature of Self confidence 302 303 304 A godly man sometimes guilty of it 309 310 Of the sinfulnesse of it 313 314 315 Confirme vide Establish Conscience Of the Conscience 384 The witness of a good Conscience a great ground of comfort 385 What is required to a good Conscience 385 386 387 388 389 How the Spirit witnesses with our Consciences 389 What are those effects of the Spirit by which our Consciences are rightly guided in witnessing to us 390 391 Distinctions concerning Conscience and its testimonies 392 393 Consolation vide Comfort Conversation Of a twofold Conversation 443 What is required to a good Conversation 445 446 Conversion A great deal of difference in the persons the Converted 42 And in the manner of their Conversion 43 The reasons of both 44 Corinth Of the City Corinth 68 D Day CHrist hath a solemn Day wherein great changes will be made 479 Wherein these great changes will be 479 480 481 482 c. Dead Of Gods raising the Dead 326 What it implies 328 329 Death The natural fear of Death not removed by grace 284 Propositions clearing it 285 286 Of what use the natural fear of Death is 286 There is a natural fear of Death in all though in some more in some lesse 288 When the fear of Death is sinfull 289 290 291 Deliverance Deliverance both temporal and spiritual from God 341 342 Despair Whence Despair arises 352 Dispensation All Gods Dispensations further the salvation of his people 242 c. Two sorts of Dispensations which conduce to that end 244 Vide Administrations E Earnest GRace the Earnest of glory 651 How grace and an Earnest differ 652 653 What is implied in the Earnest of Gods Spirit 654 655 656 They who have the Earnest of the Spirit cannot fall away 657 658 Education Education not to be rested upon 44 45 Ends. What are these inferiour Ends interposing betwixt God and us which we are apt to look upon 416 417 Enjoyments Temporal Enjoyments as well as spiritual mercies are the gift of God 369 Propositions clearing it 370 371 372 Reasons for it 373 Establish Wherein the Establishing worke of Gods grace lieth 607 608 609 610 611 612 Arguments proving all Establishing to be from God 613 The most eminent need Establishment as well as the we●kest 614 Demonstrations of it 615 616 617 'T is in Christ alone that we are Established 617 618 Reasons why we cannot Establish our selves 636 637 Experience Experience in former should encourage to trust in God for future mercies 345 Propositions clearing it 346 347 F Faith OF the different judgements which Faith and flesh put upon afflictions 274 c. The division of Faith as to the object 638 Whether in Faith and by Faith be oaths 665 Ministers have no power over a Christians Faith 684 A Christians Faith relates onely to God 694 Propositions clearing it 696 697 Father
weakest believer as well as the strongest Christ to be prayed to for grace and peace Jesus Christ is a Lord. Of a threefold blessing spoken of in Scripture It is a Christians duty to be much in praising God What goeth to the making up a thankfull spirit Motives to be more affected with spiritnal mercies than temporal Motives to bless God for all his mercies God is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Propositions explaining how Christ is the Son of God How Christs being the Son of God is the foundation of a Christians comfort God is a mercifull Father to all his children What is implied in Gods being called the Father of mercies Of the multitude of Gods mercies Of the variety of Gods mercies Of the Properties of Gods mercies Who are the fit objects of Gods mercies God is a God of all comfort to all his children What is comprehended in that expression God is the God of comfort What is implied in the word consolation How he is a God of all consolations Propositions obviating practical and doctrical objections about the mercy or comforts of God Of the Calvinists Doctrine concerning Gods absolute Decrees and how they stand with the mercy of God God not only can but doth comfort his children How God comforteth his people God is a God of comfort only to believers God will comfort his children in all their affliction whatsoever Propositions explaining the Observation Several sorts of soul or spiritual troubles in all which God comforts his children How God comforteth his people in outward tribulations No Philosopher ever had the true grounds of comfort Gods children deficient in a two-fold respect concerning Gods comforts What are these good things that God hath prepared for those that love him to comfort them What grounds of comfort the Scriptures afford unto us Psal 102. 13. How God comforreth his children in all their tribulations though they often may be disconsolate Comfort not absolutely necessary to salvation There is a two-fold joy direct and reflex Joy is either spiritual or sensitive and corporeal Gods spiritual works upon his people are not only for their own but for others spiritual advantage Of the distinction of the Schoolmen of spiritual Gifts 1. Gratiae gratis datae 2. Gratti● gratum facientes The Gifts of Gods Spirit are better distinguished into Dona Ministrantia and Sanctificantia Gifts are encreased by being improved What are those ●…ice things wherein more particularly we are to be serviceable to others 1. Humiliation 2. The Knowledge of God and true saith 3. Temptations 4. Consolations Those only can make fit applications to others who have the work of Gods Spirit upon their own souls A two-fold knowledge of spiritual things 1. Speculative and Theoretical 2. Practical and experimental This speculative and practical knowledge of spiritual things differ in the whole kind All knowledge that is accompanied with some kind of affections is not an experimental knowledge All experimental workings upon the soul are to be tryed by the Scriptures How our experiences are to be judged by the Word 1. Are they from Scripture rightly understood 2. Are they from the Spirit of God 3. Do they make thee more holy and humble Reasons confirming the Doctrine 1. They that have not this experimental knowledge they have no skill to cure others 2. They can have any sutablenesse of of pity and compassion 3. Because such only are found reall and in earnest 4. Because such alone are faithfull It is a special duty in a right manner to comfort the afflicted Propositions clearing the truth 1. There are two sorts of troubles 1. Spiritual and inward 2. Outward 2. The afflicted need the help of others to comfort them though themselves be never so skilfull in the comsorting others Reasons 1. Because remptations darken the judgement 2. Because the sense of their grief doth wholly possesse them 3. Because the most eminent when in troubles are subject to much unbelief and frowardness 4. Because the Devil is then most busie Lastly God hath appointed Ministers and Christians as a means to comfort others 3. The dispensation of comfort to the afflicted is either Charitativè or Potestativè 4. What is required to the comforting others in a right manner 1. Knowledge of the temptation and disposition of the person 2. The discovery of sin and then the application of comfort The same grounds of comfort that revive the heart of one godly man may do so to another too 1. There are both general and particular grounds of comfort What are the general grounds of comfort 1. All afflictions come from a Father 2. The end is good 3. The advantages that come from Christ Of the special and particular grounds of comfort The grounds of the point 1. Because all godly men are of the same nature 2. Because all have the same spirit 3. Because promises are made alike to all The sufferings of Christ abound in us What is meant by the sufferings of Christ What is meant by the sufferings of Christ abounding What be these sufferings abounding in us The true and faithfull owing of Christ is sometimes accompanied with great sufferings Propositions declaring the truth of the Doctrine 1. A Saints sufferings may be as extensive as his comforts 2. At some time their sufferings abound more then others 3. To suffer for Christ is very grievous to flesh and blood 'T is a glorious and blessed thing to own Christ in the midst of sufferings What it is to suffer for Christ 1. Ex parte Objecti 1. It must not be for any sin 2. It must be for the name of Christ 3. For righteousnesse sake 4. For a good conscience What are the qualifications of those who suffer truly for Christ 1. Faith 3. Spiritual ●ortitude and heavenly courage 4. Holy wisdom and prudence 5. Patience 6. An heart mortified to all earthly comforts 7. Pure and holy motives As our sufferings are for Christ so are our comforts by him How our comforts abound by Christ 1. Efficiently 2. Meritoriously 3. Objectively How many wayes Christ makes his comforts to abound to those that suffer for him 1. By perswading them of the goodness of the cause why they suffer 2. By sorewarning of their sufferings 3. By informing us of his Sovereignty and conquest over the world 4. By vertue of his prayer put up in that very behalf 5. By instructing them of the spiritual advantages which come from such sufferings God doth proportion our comforts to our sufferings Christ alwaies accommodates himself to the capacities of his people The mercies of God do often overflow Reasons 1. Because God in all his administrations doth still regard his own glory not our desert 2. Because of Gods faithfulnesse to his Promises 3. Otherwise God in his expressions of mercy would be exceeded by man 4. Because otherwise Gods glorious and in his afflicting could not be obtained Object Answ Why God often denies comfort in trouble 1. To teach us that comforts are his gifts 2.
against Christ 2. T is the grace of God● alone that can open this door 3. Sometimes Ministers are called to a people of small hopes 4. A Ministers hope of doing good should be guided by the Word Reasons why a Ministers hope of doing good should be matter of of joy to him 1. The End of his Ministry is accomplished A constant Ministry is necessary to every Church And that for these Ends 1. To informe against Errors 2. To reform the corruptions that are in mens lives 3. To comfort the godly 4. To edifie and strengthen them How believers may and are to grow 1. In knowledg 2. In the experimental power of their knowledge 3. In Faith 4. In Grace 'T is the duty of all Christians especially Ministers to lay out themselves for the glory of God 1. For all Christians 1. There is none but have talents to be improved 2. All lawfull actions may be improved for Gods glory 3. Christians should often meditate upon the ultimate end of all their actions 2. Especially it belongs to Ministers What is required to enable us to do all things for Gods glory 1 A converted soul 2 A publick spirit 3. Heavenlyn indedness 4. Fervency and zeal The office of the Apostle and ordinary Pastors differs in that the one had an universal the other a particular charge 1. The Apostles had commission to preach to all Nations 2. Yet the office of the Apostles did virtually contain all other 3. The Apostles had in their office something ordinary and something extraordinary 5. Though a Pastor is ordinarily to reside amongst his flock yet he is a Minister of the whole Church of God Where the Ministry hath wrought spiritually the Minister is esteemed highly Lightness and inconstancy is a great sinne and reproach to all much more to Ministers Of the sinfulness of inconstancy in civil respects As 1. When we are not consistent with our selves in our assertions 2. In our promises 3. In our affections Of the aggravations of this sinne 1. 'T is contrary to the nature of God 2. 'T is a reproach to men 3. Hereby a man makes himself unfit for Gods service 4. 'T is an abuse of our tongue 5. God threatens lying but encourageth sincerity Of the sinfulness of Inconstancy in spiritual things as in 1. Faith 2. In our Conversion and Repentance Motives against this Inconstancy 1. There is the same Reason at all times against sin 2. Sinnes after Convictions are the greater 3. This Inconstancy is a mocking of God and a dallying in soul-matters 4. It may justly cause God for ever to forsake thee 3. This Inconstancy is a great sin in Promises and Resolutions Of the Phrase according to the flesh which is taken for 1. The humane Nature 2. External Priviledges 3. Corrupt Principles Walking by carnal Principals makes men unstable and inconstant Principles of flesh 1. Covetousness 2. Ambition 3. Pleasing of men 4. Time-serving 5. Self-pleasing Of Principles 1 Herein men differ from bruit beasts because they act from inward principles beasts by instinct 2. Principles are either speculative or practical 3. All the principles of natural men are sinfull and carnal 3. Principles are oft hidden 5. There are principles of flesh even in our holy duties 6. The principles of the carnal and of the spiritual are contrary Of the principles of a godly man There are two general principles 1. There is a principle of knowledge viz. the holy Scriptures 2. The principle of his acting viz. the Spirit of God Particular principles 1. Alwayes to keep a good conscience towards God and man 2. To make sure of his ultimate end and the necessary means to it 3. Daily to expect death and judgment 4. To judg sin the greatest evil and godliness the greatest good Lying is not consistent with godliness 1. There is a material and a formal lie 2. There are assertory and promissory lies 3. There is a pernicious sporting and officious lie 4. Lying is a sinne of the tongue 5. They that would not lie must study the government of the tongue He that would govern his tongue must first cleanse his heart The causes of lies 1. Natural inclination 2. Want of dependance upon God 3. Our captivity to Satan 4. Covetousnes 5. Fear God is true God is true 1. There is a Metaphysical and a moral Truth 2. There is an increated and created truth 3. In that God is true he differeth from men and devils 4. 'T is because of Gods truth that we are commanded to believe and trust in him 5. The truth of God is the Foundation of all Religion and godliness Wicked men usually cast the Imperfections of the Minister upon the Ministry 1. A people may have an holy Zeal againg a loose scandalous Minister 2. A people are oft prone to take offence at the Ministers when yet 't is their sin 1. When they dislike that which may be of great use 2. When they are offended at his reproveing sin 3. When they cast the saults of the persons upon their Office and Doctrine 4. When they refuse the Ministry upon false Rumors and Surmises 'T is a great reproach for a Minister to be mutable and contradictory in his doctrine 1. All changes are not bad 2. But 't is a sin and reproach to change from the truth 3. Even such a change supposeth imperfection 4. No man but may know more than he doth 5. We must distinguish betwixt what is and what is not fundamental 1. We must distinguish betwixt constancy and pertinancy 2. Then is it a reproach to change when we change from truth The causes of inconstancy 1. Ignorance 2. Affectation of singularity and vain-glory 4. Examples We must distinguish betwixt essentials and circumstantials in Religion Christ only is to be the subject of our preaching When is Christ preached 1. When he is declared to be the Messiah 2. When preached as God-man 3. When preached in his person and his offices 5. When he is set up as the head of his Church The Lord Christ is the son of God 1. He is truly God 2. He is not the son of God as others are called his sonnes as 1. By Creation 2. By Regeneration 3. Because of their dignity 3. He is therefore called the Son of God because begotten from eternity of the Father 4. He was begotten of the Father 5. In these Mysteries we must adhere wholly to the testimony of the word 6. He is Antichrist that denies the Son to be God 7. The spirit of giddiness hath justly fallen upon these that deny Christ to be God Christ is a Saviour to his people What is implyed in Christs being a Saviour 1. That all mankinde was lost 2. What kinde of Saviour is Christ Even a spiritual one 3. He is an effectual Saviour Who is Christ a Saviour to 1. Some of mankinde 2. The repenting believing sinner 3. They are saved from 〈◊〉 and the world 4. Christs people 5. The saved are but few in comparison of the