Selected quad for the lemma: conscience_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
conscience_n heaven_n hell_n worm_n 1,015 5 11.0094 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 30 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

be opened therefore when we are about to do any thing unworthy say as he Acts 19.40 We are in danger to be called to an Account for this day uproar there being no Cause whereby we may give an Account of this Concourse so should you We that are to give an Account how careful should we be how we use our Time Health Strength Understanding Authority Wealth and other Blessings of God The commonness of these Notions maketh them to lose their Life and Influence Therefore we should especially act Faith in Believing and urging the Soul with this Account Secondly 'T is particularly described and there 1. Of the Servants Allegation 2. The Masters Approbation 1. The Servants Allegation vers 20 and 22. The two first Servants came chearfully to their Account as having discharged their Duty faithfully and with all diligence improved the Talents received Not that in the day of Judgment good men shall make any Narrations of what they have done they need not for Christ shall do it for them they rather wonder that any thing that they have done is taken notice of as in the 37 th verse of this Chapter but all this is spoken after the manner of men and to keep up the Decorum of the Parable if it signifieth any thing it signifieth the Confidence of a good Conscience and what Comfort and boldness it breedeth in the day of our Accounts Doct. That a faithful Discharge of our Duty will give us Comfort and Boldness when our Lord cometh to reckon with us 1. There is a Confidence and Comfort that ariseth from a good Conscience or from Sanctification as well as Justification In the inward Court Conscience is one of the Witnesses as well as the Spirit of God Rom. 8.16 and much Comfort ariseth from its Testimony 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing the Testimony of our Conscience A Carnal man is ashamed of the Grounds of his rejoycing and what it is that keepeth his Heart merry but a Godly man can own the Causes of his joy which are in the first place the Blood of Christ Rom. 5.11 We joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ by whom we have received the Atonement next the Testimony of his Conscience concerning his sincere walking But if a man can live with these Comforts can he dye with them 2. The Review of a well-spent life is a great Comfort in Death Our Lord Jesus at the end of his days when he was to go out of the World John 17.4 saith I have glorified thee upon Earth and finished the Work thou gavest me to do Hezekiah when that sad Message was brought to him that he must die and not live Isa. 38.4 that comforted him upon his Death-bed Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done what is good in thy sight So the Apostle Paul when he drew nigh his end 2 Tim. 4.7 8. saith I have fought a good fight I have finished my Course I have kept the Faith Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day Oh 't is a blessed thing if we can have this Comfort when Conscience puts off all Disguises and the everlasting Estate is at hand and we are immediately to appear before the Lord to remember then that we have been careful to please and honour God and done his work how sweet is it 3. In the Day of Judgment their works follow them into the other World Rev. 14.13 Their Wealth doth not follow them but the Conscience of having done well abideth with them Conscience is Heaven or Hell to us in Hell it maketh up a part of the Worm that never dyeth so in Heaven it giveth us Confidence 1 John 2.28 and 1 John 4.17 That we may have boldness in the day of Judgment Works are not Meritorious and have no causal influence upon our Salvation yet they have the full place of an Evidence and so may wonderfully Comfort and embolden our Hearts VSE Let us labour to get this Evidence The time of Death is a time that will rifle all our false Hopes You are in your Health and Strength now but how soon you may shoot the Gulph you know not we are hastening into the other World apace When you are immediately to appear before God you will have other thoughts of the World to come and the necessity of Preparation for it than you have now that which will comfort you now will not comfort you then you must look that the Devil will then be most busie to tempt and trouble you and as now he prejudiceth you against the Precepts of the Gospel so then against the Promises of it all your worldly Comfort then will fail and have spent their Allowance and become to you as unsavoury as the white of an Egg. Will this Comfort you that you have sported and gamed away your precious time that you have fared of the best and lived in Pomp and Honour Oh no But this will comfort you I have made it my business to glorifie God I have been Faithful in my place have gotten some Evidence of the Love of God It is not Riches or Greatness or any Earthly Advantage will do you good Oh 't is a Cutting Thought to the Careless and Negligent Now I must give an Account of every day and hour I have spent in this World The Improvement of every Opportunity will be called for Then all your Vanities and carnal Pleasures will be smart upon you and vex your Souls with the grievous Remembrance of them Well then can you in any measure look back upon the Discharge of your Duty There are two Extreams First Some are Presumptuous and Confident because they are not gross Sinners but what have they done for God The sluggish and unprofitable Servant was cast into utter Darkness he did not mispend his Talent but yet he did not improve it The Tree that bringeth forth no Fruit is hewen down though it did not bring forth bad Fruit. 'T is not a Negative Religion will comfort thee but a Positive and a Fruitful one You are no Drunkard no Adulterer no Prophane Person but have you been at work for God Secondly Others are Pusillanimous and Diffident because they do not arrive at the Eminency and Perfection of the highest David had other Worthies besides the first three There were two faithfull Servants one brought five Talents the other two Now the middle is of those that can see in themselves more Zeal than Formality more Grace than Corruption that for the main have made it their business to Honour God though conscious to many Weaknesses and Defects yet throughout Grace gets the upper hand according to the degrees of Grace received they are faithful with God 2. The Masters Approbation Well done thou good and faithful Servant The Faithful Servants are well accepted by Christ. First He entertaineth them
before him Conscience is privy to their constant uniform self denying obedience and this Testimony is of greatest stead to them at the last Isa. 38.3 Remember Lord how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect Heart He dareth appeal in a dying hour for his sincerity and care to please him A good or a bad Conscience is the beginning of Heaven or Hell The checks of an accusing Conscience are the first bitings of the worm that never dyeth And the approbation of a sincere Conscience a preface of the Joy of the Blessed 3dly They know it shall go well with them in that day There are two causes of fear and shame knowing for certain that it shall go ill with us or not knowing it shall go well with us Now they that are under any of these Conditions cannot groan cannot desire a change of state Did you ever know a guilty malefactor long for the Judges appearance and send to him to hasten his coming Indeed those who are confident it shall go well with them they desire the Assizes and are weary of lying in prison and long to be delivered Now those that are absolved from guilt and have sin weakned in their Hearts they know it shall go well with them in the other world Partly by the promise of God who hath assured the Justified and the Sanctified of an Heavenly Inheritance That 's the drift of the whole Gospel For to this end Christ dyed that he might first reconcile them to God and then present them holy and unblameable and irreproveable in his sight Col. 1.21 First sanctifie and cleanse them from the stain and guilt of sin and then present them to himself Clothe them with the fine Linnen which is the Righteousness of the saints Eph. 5.26 27. The Justified and Sanctified may draw near to God in Heavenly Glory Partly by the earnest of the Spirit in their Hearts Eph. 1.13 14. 2 Cor. 1.21 22. Sealing up to them their own Interest to the promise or their right to the Heavenly Inheritance and that in due time they shall possess it Use Is to press us to get ready and to be Clothed that we may with comfort expect and long for the day of our translation The first motive is in the word found 'T is often used with respect to the day of Judgment Found naked And in 2 Pet. 3.14 Matth. 24 46. Blessed is that Servant whom when his Lord cometh he shall find so doing 't is a Blessed thing for a servant to be found at his work So Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him not having my own Righteousness which alludeth to the day of our general or particular doom Now this word implieth three things 1. That there will be an exact search and scrutiny after every one of us Wrath maketh inquisition for sinners and every man will be found out naked or Clothed There is no hiding in the throng of mankind In a particular Judgement God said he would search Jerusalem with Candles Zeph. 1.12 Drag sinners out of their lurking holes Much more in the general Judgment we shall be found 2dly The word found intimateth a surprize God may break in upon us sooner than we are aware of as usually he cometh to the greatest part of mankind unthought of unexpected 2 Pet. 3.10 The day of the Lord will come as a Thief in the night They do not look for such a day or not prepare for it but are found by it 3dly We remain in the state wherein we are found They that are found naked at their Death shall remain naked to all Eternity There is no change of Condition in the other world as Death leaveth us Judgment findeth us Luke 2.14 On earth peace Now you may be reconciled to God you may agree with your Adversary quickly while you are yet in the way But in the other world Men are in Termino in their final Condition Well then gather up this first motive escape the knowledge of God you cannot You will be found to be what you are Naked or Clothed And you may be sought after and found sooner then you are aware And when Christ hath found you in an unprepared Condition what will you do How will your naked trembling Soul dread to depart out of the Body into an unknown world Secondly My next motive shall be from the words Naked and Clothed Other qualifications than Christs renewing and reconciling grace will not serve the turn 'T is sin which rendreth us odious to God 'T is sin that keepeth us out of Heaven 't is sin that makes us uncomfortable in our selves and hinders our own Joy and peace The Condition of one that is yet in his sins is represented by nakedness upon a Twofold Reason Because it rendreth us loathsome to God and ashamed of our selves Well then will you be naked remain in your natural deformity how then can you appear before the bar of your Judge or look God in the face with any confidence Joseph washed himself and changed his garments when he was to appear before Pharaoh And is there not a greater reverence due to God Oh! Therefore since you are blind and miserable and naked get Clothing That is get the spots of sin washed off by the frequent application of the Blood of Christ your polluted natures changed by the Spirit of Christ. This is the Clothing which must render you acceptable to God and will make you comfortable in your selves so that you will not shun his presence but desire it 'T is said of the Spouse Psal. 45.14 15. Her Clothing is of wrought Gold she shall be brought unto the King in raiment of needle work and then with gladness and rejoicing shall she be brought into the Kings Palace The more we get rid of sin and are beautified with holiness the more amiable and lovely in his Eyes And because of likeness and suitableness the more we delight to come to him yea the more we shall long to be admitted not only to present Communion but to constant habitation with him and when we are brought into the presence of God 't will be a welcome day to us at the death of every particular Saint or at the day of our Lords second coming when we shall have no imperfection spot or wrinckle or want of any thing which may perfect our Glory Then we shall put on immortality and incorruption and this Body of flesh shall be like to Christs Glorious Body and then there will be great rejoicing Oh then see that you be Clothed What must we do That we may not be found naked but Clothed 1. We must humbly seek Reconciliation with God by Christ when the Prodigal came humbled himself to his Father presently Luke 15.22 Bring ●orth the best Robe put it on him Then his nakedness is covered with the Robe of Christs Righteousness and the poor penitent believer is received into Gods Family and injoys all the Priviledges thereof and
brake in pieces the Image and cut down the Groves and defiled their Places with the bones of Men. Infants were burnt there with horrible Cries And Screeches and sound of Drums and Tabrets and other Instruments to drown the Noise And those that were condemned were burnt in that Valley as also the Bones of Malefactors Now to the Piles of Wood and the Piles continually burning there doth the Prophet allude This was represented in Sodom's Burning as a Type as the Drowning of the World was a Figure of Christ's coming to Judgment The Burning of the Sacrifice which in the Interpretation of the Law was the Sinner himself was the Figure of it 2. Now come we to the New-Testament There are Places without number 'T is sometimes represented by Fire where we read of a Furnace of Fire Matth. 13.42 And shall cast them into a Furnace of Fire there shall be weeping and gnashing of Teeth God's Wrath is compared in the Old-Testament to a fiery Oven where the contracted Flame appeareth most dreadful Sometimes to a Lake of Fire Revel 19.20 And the Beast was taken and with him the false Prophet that wrought Miracles before him with which he deceived them that had received the Mark of the Beast and them that worshipped his Image both these were cast into a Lake of Fire burning with Brimstone At other times 't is compared to a Prison 1 Pet. 3.19 By which also be ●●nt and preached to the Spirits that are in Prison Or to a Bottomless Pit Revel 9.11 And they had a King over them which is the Angel of the Bottomless-Pit There is Darkness and Chains and Gaoler and Judge The Chains of Invincible Providence and their own horrible Despair There is no making an Escape But of this more hereafter So that unless we will count God a Liar there is such a Place of Torment provided 2. Ask Men. The blind Nations had a Sense of Eternity and Fancies of an Heaven and Hell Elizian Fields and obscure Mansions and Places of Torment There are some Relicks of his Truth in the corrupt Doctrine of the Gentiles But we need not go so far back as Tradition look to Conscience Wicked Men find in themselves an apprehension of Immortality and Punishment after Death R●● 1.32 Who knowing the Judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of Death Reason sheweth that he that perfectly hateth sin will perfectly punish it not in this life for abominable sinners are many times prosperous here Justice is not discovered to the utmost therefore guilty Conscience presageth there is more evil to come There is much in these presages of Conscience especially when we are more serious however they dissemble the matter when well Heb. 2.15 And deliver them from the fear of death who all their life-time were subject to bondage Yet when they come to die when they are entring upon the confines of Eternity then they cannot hide their fears any longer Oh! the horrours and terrours of wicked men when they lie a dying if ever men may be believed 't is then 3. The Devils are Orthodox in this point for Jyudges There are no Atheists in Hell Matth. 8.29 And behold they cryed out saying What have we to do with thee Jesus thou Son of God art thou come to torment us before the time They know there is a time when they shall be in greater torment than now they are therefore if we will take Gods Word or Authentick Record for it or Mans word when he is not in a case to Dissemble or the Devils word there is a Hell or everlasting Torments prepared for the wicked Obj. 1. But is it not an everlasting abode under Death and to make it the more terrible to vulgar capacities expressed by Eternal Fire I Answer This were to make Christ a Deceiver indeed and to publish his Doctrine with a lye or an handsome fraud But clearly 1. There is a state of Torment as well as a state of Death 'T is true 't is called the Second Death because deprived of Eternal Life which is the only true Life and because 't is worse than the temporal Death better never been born Matth. 26.24 It had been good for that man he had never been born He doth not say It had been good but it had been good for that man If only Death and Annihilation were in it what sense would there be in this Speech Therefore there is a lively and effectual sense of the Wrath of God Besides the Consciences of wicked men feareth and presageth other kind of Punishment from Gods Wrath or else why are they most troubled when they come to dye why is it so dreadful a thing to fall into the hands of the Living God Heb. 10.31 We are mortal Creatures but God is a living God why should the Eternity of God make his Wrath terrible but that there is a fear of an eternal subsistence on our part also we read of many and fewer stripes Luk. 12.47 48. Math. 11.22 It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the day of Judgment than for you If it be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon than for you torments are measured out by proportion according to our sins and means of Grace that we have enjoyed but not improved 2. There is a place of Torment a local Hell 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk. 16.28 This place of torment And Judas went to his own place Acts 1.25 As in all Common-wealths the Prince hath not only his Palace but his Prison it must be somewhere for the wicked are somewhere God keepeth it secret with wise Councel because he will exercise our Faith and not our Sense Job 38.17 Have the gates of Death been opened to th●e or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow of Death This is one of the secrets of Providence Obj. 2. But how can it stand with Gods Love and Mercy to punish his Creature for ever Our Bowels are troubled if we should hear the howling of a Dog in a fiery Furnace for a small space of time Now God is Love its self 1 Joh. 4.8 therefore surely he will not damn his Creature to everlasting torments I Answer Man is not fit to fix the bounds of Gods Mercy but the Lord himself therefore take these considerations 1. Gods Punishments may stand with his Mercy 'T is very notable in one place 't is said Heb. 10.31 'T is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God But in another place 't is said 2 Sam. 24.14 I am in a great strait let us fall now into the hands of the Lord for his Mercies are great The one noteth God Angry the other God Appeased When God hath been long upon a treaty of Love Patience abused is turned into Fury The one sheweth what God is in himself Love Sweetness Mercy the other what he is when provoked The Sea in its self is smooth and calm but when the Winds and Tempests arise how dreadfully
to them that is keep close to it they must expect troubles Christ's Subjects are the World's Rebels and if they will not forfeit their Allegiance to Christ the World will fall upon them You must not expect Friends in the World your great Friend and Patron is in Heaven John 16.33 In me ye shall have Peace in the World ye shall have Tribulation he propoundeth it disjunctively we have seldom both together Christ leaveth his Subjects in Satan's Territories and Dominions that he might try their Allegiance 2 Tim. 3.12 All that will live Godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer Persecution he doth not say that profess Christ but that will live godly in Christ that are strict holy true to their Principles And it is not an Observation proper to that Age As long as the Enmity lasts between the two Seeds Opposition will continue Satan never wanted a Party to support his Empire The Persecution of the Church began in Abel and will not be finished till the Day of Judgment and it is a wonder to see an Abel without a Cain Afterwards in Abraham's Family Gal. 4.25 As then he that was born after the Flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit So it is now and still we may say So it is now So it hath been and so it will be So afterward Jacob and Esau strugled together in the Belly and the Quarrel began before the Birth And so it is in all Ages Satan hath not changed his Nature nor the World left its Wont Emperors and Kings have become Christian but Satan never yet became Christian and there never wanteth a strong Faction in the World to abet him against the Church In our Times we had great Hopes but still the Spirit of Enmity continueth tho under other Forms and Appearances We see there is a quick Conversion from a Malignant to a Sectary the Term is changed but not the Person I would not be mistaken by a Malignant I mean that which the Scripture meaneth not one that dissents from others in Civil Matters but one that is an Enemy to the Power of Godliness And by a Sectary I mean one that is so in the Scripture Notion a Party-maker in the Church a Carnal Man under a plausible Form opposing the holy and strict Ways of God I tell you this Conversion is easy A piece of soft Wax that was but now stamped with the Shape of the Devil may be easily stamped again with the Seal that is carved into the Shape of an Angel the Wax is the same but the Impression is different It is no new thing for the Saints of God to be in peril of false Brethren as well as of open Enemies nay rather than sit out the Devil can make use of one Saint to persecute another as Asa a good Prince put the Prophet in the Stocks and Christ calleth Peter Satan The Devil may abuse their Zeal and this is strange that a Lamb should act the Wolves part Usually indeed he maketh use of the World it is the Providence of God that the Wicked hate Christ and his Messengers Christ doth usually reveal his Ways to the World by the Quality of the Men that rise against them it must needs be good what such Men hate their very Respect would be a Suspicion and their Approbation a Contumely and Disgrace a Man would have some cause to suspect himself if he had their Favour Thus you see Christians tho in a private Sphere that would live godly in Christ must expect their share in the World's hatred Now the Lord permits it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for a Testimony for a Testimony to his Servants for a Testimony against his Adversaries for a Testimony to the Ways of God all these will be gathered out of the same Expression as it is recited by several Evangelists Mark 13.9 They shall deliver ye up to Councils and in the Synagogues ye shall be beaten and ye shall be brought before Kings and Rulers for my sake for a Testimony against them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that by your zealous Defence they may have a sufficient knowledg of the Ways of God and so be convinced or confounded by them Luke 21.13 It shall turn to you for a Testimony 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a Proof of your Loyalty And Mat. 24.14 it is only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the World for a Witness implying to the Truth God chuseth his eminent Servants to be his Champions that the World may know that there is somewhat excellent in their Principles worth the suffering for God will not have his Servants to go to Heaven without a Testimony nor his Enemies to go to Hell without a Testimony and a Sting in their Consciences nor any Age to pass away without a Testimony 2. Ministers This is usually their Portion few of the Apostles and Prophets came to a natural Death As their Calling is eminent so are their Sufferings James 5.10 Take my Brethren the Prophets who have suffered in the Name of the Lord for an Example of suffering Affliction and of Patience He doth not say Take them for an Example of Holiness but of Suffering and Patience They were the Worthies of God eminent for Holiness yet chiefly for Sufferings The Prophets that were God's own Mouth sheltered under the Buckler of their special Commission and the singular Innocency and Holiness of their Lives and yet they suffered what Recompence did they receive for all their Pains but Saws and Swords and Dungeons Now the Ministers of all Ages are mustered and enrolled for the same War with the Prophets and Apostles we maintain the same Cause tho with less vigor and strength and we expect the same Crown why should we grudge to drink of the same Cup In these latter Times God hath reserved the Ministry for all the Contempt and Scorn that Villany and Outrage can heap upon their Persons But why should we look for better Entertainment You would think the World should hate false Teachers surely they have most cause but if they slight us and neglect to provide for us remember it is a wonder that they do not persecute us But this falleth out partly by the Malice of Men partly by the Providence of God 1. By the Malice of Men. To preach is to bait the World Praedicare nihil aliud est quàm derivare in se furorem Mundi We are to cross carnal Interests to wrestle with vile Affections to pull the Beast out of Mens Hearts and we are like to be bruised in the Conflict 1 Cor. 15.32 I have fought with Beasts at Ephesus most probably the rude Multitude that were ready to tear him in pieces when he cried down the Worship of Diana Carnal Interests are very touchy worse than vile Affections The Doctrine of the Gospel cannot be preached in power but it draweth hatred upon the Person that preacheth it John 7.7 The World cannot hate you but me
of Arms. I remember in Ecclesiastical History when Valens the Emperor railed against all the Defenders of the Godhead of Christ they did not meddle with Polinus out of Reverence to him for he was a very holy strict Man none durst lay Hands upon him 3. Many times they profess and join to the Church and so we have benefit by their Gifts and Abilities Authority and Power for God doth his Church a great deal of good by carnal Men. Conviction may bring them as far as Profession and the temporary Faith of a Magistrate tho carnal may be a Protection to Christianity as an Hedg of Thorns may be a good Fence about a Garden of Roses If they are Men of Parts they may help to defend the Christian Doctrine as a living Tree may be supported by a dead Post and the Gifts of carnal Men are for the use of the Body as the Gibeonites joined to Israel and were made hewers of Wood and drawers of Water or as the Carpenters who helped to build Noah's Ark perished in the Flood or as Negroes that dig in the Mines of Knowledg God may imploy them to bring up that which may be of great use and profit to the World they may help to build an Ark for others tho they themselves perish in the Water We would not refuse Gold from a dirty Hand neither are we to slight the benefit of carnal Men's parts for the common Profession of Christianity that they are under tho they are Slaves to their Lusts yet it is a real benefit and help to the Saints 4. They serve for a Warning to the Saints When this Conviction is strong upon them and grows to an height by the Stings of Conscience and Horrors of them that die in despair God warneth his People tho we would bear off the Stroke yet God knows how soon this Fire may be kindled in our own Breasts when Men see what Convictions will do being stifled and not complied with and Men live not according to their Light it is a warning to others As a Slave is many times beaten to warn a Son of his Father's Displeasure and Naturalists tell us a Lion will tremble to see a Dog beaten before him so do the Children of God tremble at the Convictions of wicked Men. Oh the Horrors of their Conscience declare what God hath wrought upon them tho few take little notice of it Thirdly In respect to the World it self this Conviction serveth both to lessen and encrease their Judgment The Terms seem to be opposite 1. Sometimes to lessen their Judgment Certainly the degrees of eternal Punishment are not equal there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 23.14 a greater Judgment there is a hotter and a cooler Hell there are few Stripes and many Stripes In the World to come it is more tolerable for some than for others Mat. 12.41 The Condition of the Ninevites was made more tolerable by the Conviction wrought by Jonah's Preaching because there was a temporal Repentance they humbled themselves for a while tho they were frighted to this Religiousness Aristides Cato and other moral Heathens their Condition will be more tolerable than those Men that live in a way of brutish and filthy Excess So there are many convinced that have helped the Church and been friendly to Religion when others have oppressed and opposed the Ways of God they have been a Hiding-Place a Shelter a Countenance a Protection to the People of God these shall not lose their Reward they have many Blessings in this World tho they continue Carnal and live and die in their Sins I suppose the more they comply with these Convictions their Condemnation shall be lessened tho not taken away This Advantage they have ut mitiùs ardeant they shall have a cooler Hell 2. Sometimes to increase their Judgment Those that maliciously oppose this Conviction they hasten their own Condemnation and heighten it Then it will be a Sin to them with a Witness when they knew their Master's Will and did it not James 4.17 Therefore to him that knoweth to do Good and doth it not to him it is Sin They carry this Conviction to Hell with them and it is a part of their Torment this is the Worm that never dies Oh what a Terror will it be for them to think I had a better Estate discovered to me I knew somewhat of the Ways of God and now I am shut out for ever and ever There is a Worm that never dies as well as a Fire that shall never be quenched Mark 9.44 There may be a Conviction so much as to enable a Man to speak to others yet he may be a worker of Iniquity and cast out of Christ's Presence How will this encrease their Torment their Knowledg serveth but to damn them the more The Characters are indelible and are not extinguished by Death To all other Torments there is added the gnawing of Conscience Look as in the Elect there is such a Spark kindled as shall never be extinguished their Knowledg they get here is not abolished but perfected and the Joys of the Spirit begin their Heaven a witnessing excusing Conscience to the Elect is the beginning of Heaven So in Hell Conscience will be always raging and expostolating with you Oh Fool that I was to neglect so great Salvation which others enjoy If I had lived civilly at least it had been better with me than now it is As they know more of God than others do so their Judgment will accordingly be greater And you know not how soon God may kindle this Fire in your Bosoms who for the present steep on carelesly in your Sins Vse 1. This may serve to perswade us that the Conviction of the World is a great Blessing and conduceth much to the advancement of Christ's Kingdom without any visible force with meer Spiritual Weapons in despight of all opposition which can be made thereunto The corrupt and ill-principled World cannot stand out against the Evidence of the Truth when it is soundly preached and in the Demonstration of the Spirit We have too slight an Opinion of the Weapons of our Spiritual Warfare 2 Cor. 10.4 The Weapons of our Warfare are not carnal but mighty through God for the pulling down of strong Holds Surely they are more mighty to pull down strong Holds than we are aware of The Spirit of the Lord tho he will not convert yet can so put to silence and bridle the Opposition that carnal Men make that it shall be ineffectual It concerneth God in Honour to go thus far on with the World for the promoting of his Kingdom and that they may not go on with an high Hand to oppose and crush it And this doth also evince the Truth of the Christian Religion such Convictions accompanying the preaching of it And God doth not wholly discontinue this Dispensation now There are ordinary Operations of the Spirit where the Gospel is preached which do convince the World The careless Professor
Government than reward we owe much of our safety to Prisons and Executions so in Gods Government tho love be the mighty Gospel Motive yet fear hath its use at least for those who will not serve God out of love slavish fear tieth rheir hands from mischief 3. For the converted they find all help in this part of the spirits discipline to guard their love When their minds are in danger of being inchanted by carnal delights or perverted by the terrors of sense when the flesh presents the bait Faith shews the hook Matth. 10.28 Or are apt to abuse our power because none in the world can call us to an account Job 3.23 Destruction from God was a terror to me He stood in awe of God who is a party against the oppressor and will right the weak against the powerful 2. Secondly Since 't is threatned we may conclude the certainty of its accomplishment The world will not easily believe that none shall be saved but the Regenerate and those that live not after the flesh but the spirit and love God in Christ above all the world even their own lives that besides these few all the rest shall be tormented in Hell for ever flesh and blood cannot easily down with this Doctrine but Gods threatnings are as sure as executions 1. Because of the holinese of his nature Psal. 11.6 7. Vpon the wicked he will rain snares fire and brimstone and horrible tempest this shall be the portion of their cup for the righteous Lord loveth righteousness But men feign God as they would have him to be and judg of Gods holiness by their own interest Psal. 50.21 Thou thoughtest that I was altogether such a one as thy self As if God were less mindful because he is so holy and will not be so indulgent to their flesh and sin as they are themselves and would have him to be 2. His unalterable truth God cannot lie Tit. 1.2 Tho the threatning in the present judgment doth not always shew the event but merit yet it follows afterward for the Scripture must be fulfilled or else all Religion will fall to the ground he cannot endure any should question it 't is not a vain scare-crow Deut. 30.19.20 I call Heaven and earth to record this day against you that I have set before you life and death blessing and cursing therefore chuse life that thou and thy seed may live that thou mayest love the Lord thy God that thou mayest obey his voice and that thou mayest cleave unto him for he is thy life and the length of thy days 3. His all-sufficient Power 2 Thes. 1.9 Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and the glory of his power and Rom. 9.22 What if God willing to shew his wrath and to make his power known indureth with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction If God will do so surely he can there is no let there Heb. 10.29 30. Vengeance belongeth to me and I will recompence saith the Lord and again the Lord shall judg his people He liveth for ever to see vengeance executed if it seem co be so terrible to you God knoweth 't is with a design of love to awaken those that are carnal What a case am I in then And to make the converted more cautious that they do not border on the carnal life God maketh no great difference here between the righteous and the wicked hereafter he will SERMON XVII ROM VIII 13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall die 1. USe is Information 1. To shew the lawful use of Threatnings 2. The folly of two sorts of people 1. Of those that will rather venture this death than leave their sinful pleasure 2. Those that would reconcile God and flesh God and the world c. 1. The lawful use of threatnings 1. Threatnings are necessary during the law of Grace Two Arguments I shall give for the proof thereof 1. If Threatnings were needful to Adam in the State of Innocency and Perfection much more are they useful now when there is such a corrupt Inclination within and so many Temptations without in the best there is a double principle and many inordinate lusts that we need the strongest bridle and curb to suppreis them 2. If Christ eame to verifie Gods threatnings surely God hath some use of them now But so it is the Devil would represent God as a lyer in his comminations Gen. 3.4 Ye shall not surely die Christ came to confute the Tempter and would die rather than the Devils reproach of Gods threatnings should be found true surely this is to check thoughts of iniquity 2. The folly of two sorts of people First Of those that will rather venture this death than leave their sinful pleasures and live an holy life carnal men think no life so happy as theirs being escaped out of fetters of Religion and bonds of Conscience in the Apostles Expression Free from righteousness Rom. 6.20 Whereas the truth is none are more miserable for they carry it so as if they were in love with their own death Prov. 8.36 He that sinneth against me wrongeth his own soul and they that hate me love death You hazzard soul and body and all that is near and dear to you for a little carnal satisfaction for the present you get nothing but the guilt of conscience hardness of heart and the displeasure of the eternal God and for the future everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord when the body and soul shall be cast into Hell Fire Consider this before it be too late there is no man goeth to Hell or Heaven but with violence to conscience or lusts those that go to Hell offer violence to their conscience 2. Those that would reconcile God and flesh God and the world and secure their interest in both that hope to please the flesh and yet to be happy hereafter for all that would keep up a profession of Godliness while they live in secret league with their lusts God will not halve it with the world nor part stakes with the flesh you cannot please the flesh and enjoy God too for you have but one happiness if you place it in contenting the flesh you cannot have it in the fruition of God Their end is destruction whose God is their belly and who mind earthly things Phil 3.19 Wordly pleasures will end in eternal torments and so much delight so much more will your torments be for contraries are punished with contraries Rev. 8.11 How much she hath glorified her self and lived deliciously so much sorrow give her Therefore so much as you gratifie the flesh so much you endanger the soul Will you for a little temporal satisfaction run the hazzard of Gods eternal wrath 2. USE is to disswade you from this course To this End I shall lay down some Motives and some Means Motives are these 1. You think the flesh is your friend do all that you can to
that please me and take hold of my covenant They thankfully accept the offered benefits and resolve by the strength of the Lords grace to perform the required duties 3. That our hearts be set to fulfil our covenant vow For otherwise we double and deal unsincerely with God Heb. 13.18 We trust we have a good conscience willing in all things to live honestly The habit and bent of the heart is for God and obedience to him 4. That there be some answerable endeavours and pursuance of this resolution and care to please God in all things Acts 24.16 And herein do I exercise my self to have always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men 5. That these endeavours be uniformly carried on that our sincerity may be evidenced to conscience For then 't is matter of Rejoicing and assurance to us 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoicing the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversations in the world 1 John 3.19 And hereby we know we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him Grace constantly and self-denyingly exercised hath an evidence in the conscience and conduceth also to give liberty and boldness before God 2. The witness of the spirit Because this is often mistaken I shall the more distinctly lay it before you 1. The spirit layeth down marks in Scripture which may decide this question whether ye are the children of God yea or no. As for instance 1 John 3.10 In this the children of God are manifested and the children of the Devil whosoever doth not righteousness is not of God neither he that loveth not his brother And again Rom. 8.14 As many ●● are led by the spirit are the sons of God So every where in the Scripture God expresly telleth us who shall go to Heaven and who shall go to Hell and that there is no neutral and middle estate between the Holy and Carnal all are of one sort or other Now if we should go no further the Text would bear a good sence The spirit beareth witness with our spirit when our conscience can witness our sincerity in a course of obedience unto God The spirits witness in Scripture that this is a sound so a true evidence and the Testimony of conscience confirmed by Scripture for whatever is spoken in Scripture 't is supposed to be the very voice and Testimony of the Spirit as Acts 28.25 Well spake the Holy Ghost by Isaiah the prophet unto our fathers so Heb. 3.7 Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith To day if ye will hear his voice So the spirit speaketh or witnesseth to our spirits namely in the word supposing what is to be supposed this must not be slighted yet this is not all for the context speaketh not of a witness without but motion within whereby we are restrained from sin and inclined to cry Abba Father 2. He worketh such graces in us as are peculiar to Gods children and evidences of our interest in the Favour of God as when he doth Renew and Sanctify the Soul and so many of the choicest Divines take the word witness for evidence or the objective Testimony namely that the presence and dwelling and working of the Sanctifying Spirit in us is the Argument and matter of the proof upon which the whole cause or traverse dependeth That it is so to be taken is clear in that exclusive mark Rom. 8.9 But ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so be the spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his And in that positive mark 1 John 3.24 And he that keepeth his commanments dwelleth in him and he in him and hereby we know that he abideth in us by the spirit which he hath given us and again 1 John 4.13 Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he is us because he hath given us his spirit That Holy and Charitable spirit The gracious operations of his presence are the Argument whence we conclude 3. He helpeth us to discern this work in our souls more clearly Conscience dothits part to discover it and the spirit of God doth his part namely as he helpeth us to know and see that Grace which he giveth and actuateth in us for he revealeth the things given us of God 1 Cor. 2.12 not only in the Gospel tho chiefly but also in our hearts The workman that made a thing can best warrant it to the buyer First he Sanctifieth and then he certifieth sometimes we overlook our Evidences through the darkness and confusion that is in our hearts Hagar saw not the Fountain that was near her till God opened her eyes Gen. 21.19 There is a misgiving in the conscience we cannot see grace in the midst of weakness and imperfections Mary wept for the absence of Christ when yet he stood by her John 20.14 15. The spirit dwelleth and worketh in their hearts but they know it not 4. He helpeth us not only to see grace but to judg of the sincerity of grace 'T is more easie to prove that we believe than to know that our faith is saving to love Christ than to know that we love him in sincerity because of the deceitfulness of the heart and the mixtures of unbelief self-love and other sins and some degrees may be in hypocrites as temporary faith tasts imperfect love partial obedience and besides Grace where it is weak is hardly perceived the air will shew it self in a windy season the fire when 't is blown up into a flame 't is no more hidden grace strengthned increased acted is more evident to conscience habits are discerned by acts and exercise and God is wont to reward the faithful soul with his assuring seal of light and comfort 1 John 3.18 Love not in word or in tongue only but in deed and in truth The less we are Christians in shew and the more in sincerity the more joy and peace 5. He helpeth us with boldness to conclude from these evidences Many times when the premises are clear the conclusion is suspended we find in case of condemnation 't is suspended out of self-love many know that they that live after the flesh shall die yet they will not judg themselves and the same may be done in case of self-approbation out of legal fear or jealousie for persons of great fancy and large affections are always full of scruples or loathness to apply the comforts due to them the spirit concludeth for them that they are the children of God 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death to life 1 John 2.3 And hereby we know that we know him 6. He causeth us to feel the comfort of this conclusion Rom. 5.13 Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing 'T is an impression of the comforting spirit and Acts 9.31 They walked in the fear of the Holy ghost The spirit is necessary to
together 2 Cor. 4.17 This light affliction which is but for a moment They are light just so they are short in comparison of eternal Glory as of short continuance if compared with eternity so of small weight if compared with the reward eternity maketh them short and the greatness of the reward maketh them easie There are degrees in our troubles some of the Saints get to Heaven at a cheaper rate than others do but yet the afflictions of all are light if we consider the unspeakable Glory of the world to come indeed we do but prattle when we presume fully to describe it for it doth not appear what we shall be and it hath not entered into the heart of man to conceive the great things which he hath prepared for them that love him But the Scripture expressions every where shew it shall be exceeding great and also by the beginnings of it the world is ignorant and incredulous of futurity therefore God giveth us the beginnings of Heaven and Hell in this world in a wounded spirit and the comforts of a good Conscience these things we have experience of we know not exactly what our future condition will be but the hopes and fears of that estate are very affective the fears and horrors of eternal torment which are found in a Guilty Conscience do in part shew what hell will be or the nature of that wo and anguish which abideth for the impenitent Prov. 18.14 The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity but a wounded spirit who can bear The Salve for this Sore must come from Heaven only so the joys of a good conscience which are unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.8 shew that the happiness appointed for the Saints will be exceeding great for if the foretast be so sweet the hope and expectation be so ravishing what will the injoyment be Besides God moderateth our sufferings that they may not be overlong or over grievous 1 Cor. 10.13 But God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that ye may be able to bear it If the trial be heavy he fortifieth us by the comfort and support of the spirit and so maketh it light and easie to us To a strong Back that Burden is light which would crush the weak and faint and cause them to shrink under it but tho God moderateth our afflictions he doth not abate our Glory that is given without measure A far more exceeding weight of glory 5. The sufferings are in our mortal bodies but the glory is both in soul and body 'T is but the flesh which is troubled and grieved by affliction the flesh which if delicately used soon becometh our enemy the Soul is free and not liable to the power of man now it becometh a man much more a believer to look after the Soul Heb. 1● 39 We are not of them who draw back to perdition but of them that believe to the saving of the soul. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Implying that they that are tender of the flesh are Apostates in heart if not actually and indeed so yet in practice But those which will purchase the saving of the Soul at any rates are the true and sound Believers The World which gratifieth the bodily life may be bought at too dear a rate but not so the Salvation of the Soul they that are so thrifty of the Comforts and Interests of the Bodily Life will certainly be prodigal of their Salvation But a Believer is all for the saving of his Soul That is the end of his Faith and labours and sufferings and his Self-denial The end of his Faith is to save his Soul 1 Pet. 1.9 So much as God is to be preferred before the Creature Heaven before the World Eternity before Time the Soul before the Body so much doth it concern us to have the better part safe But yet this is not all that which is lost for a while is preserved to us for ever if the body be lost temporally 't is secured to all eternity If we lose it by the way we are sure to have it at the end of the journey when the body shall have many priviledges bestowed upon it but this above all the rest that it shall be united to a Soul fully sanctified from which it shall never any more be seaprated but both together shall be the eternal Temple of the Holy Ghost 6. Sufferings do mostly deprive us of those things which are without a man but this is a glory which shall be revealed in us By sufferings we lose estate liberty comfortable abode in the world among our Friends and Relations If life its self which is within us 't is only as to its capacity of outward injoyments for as to the fruition of God and Christ so 't is true he that loseth his life shall save it Matth. 25.16 and shall live tho he die John 11.25 'T is but deposited in Christs hands But this Glory is revealed in us in our Bodies in their Immortality agility clarity and brightness in our Souls by the beatifical vision the ardent love of God the unconceivable joy and everlasting peace and rest which we shall have when we shall attain our end now if we be deprived of things without us for such things within us if we be denyed to live in dependance on the creature that we may immediately enjoy God should we grudg and murmur 7. Our sufferings dishonour us in the sight of the world but this glory maketh us amiable in the sight of God For having such a near relation to God and being made like him we are qualified for a perfect reception of his love to us we love God more in the glorified estate and God loveth us more as appeareth by the effects for he communicateth himself to us in a greater latitude than we are capable of here now is the hatred of the world worthy to be compared with the love of a Father Or should their frowns be a temptation to us to divert us from that estate wherein we shall be presented holy and unblamable and irreprovable in his sight Col. 1.22 When perfectly sanctified we love God more and are more beloved by him 8. The order is to be considered for look as to the wicked God will turn their glory into shame so as to the godly he will turn their shame into glory 'T is good to have the best at last for 't is a miserable thing to have been happy and to have had experience of a better condition and to become miserable Luke 6.20 Wo to you rich for you have received your consolation and Luke 16.25 Son in thy life time thou receivedst thy good things and Lazarus evil things but now he is comforted and thou art tormented The beggar had first temporal evils and then eternal good things but the rich man had first temporal good things and then eternal evil
of our conversations for such is the excellency and honour of religion and godliness that when it shineth in its strength it dazleth the eyes of beholders even of wicked men and maketh them wonder at it and stand in awe of it And where 't is evident and eminent it will do so indeed where Christians are Christians in a riddle shew forth more of the flesh than of the Spirit there is no such thing but where religion is in life and vigour it will discover its self As Johns sanctity extorted reverence and regard from Herod Mark 6.20 Herod feared John knowing that he was a just and strict man Holiness is the Image of God and so far commendeth its reverence and esteem as the Image of God in Adam was a terrour to the beasts and when nothing but the natural Image was left Gen. 9.2 The fear and dread of you shall be upon every beast of the field So much more the Spiritual Image of God Ahab stood in fear of Elijah Certainly a godly life is convincing and darts awe into the conscience 'T is convinceing either potentially or actually Potentially such as is apt to convince and of its own nature tendeth thereunto as Christ saith John 7.7 The World hateth me because I testify of it That is that their works were evil Not only by reproofs but conversation the World would not acknowledge it but they felt it so those that bear witness against the evil courses of the World either by the holiness of their Doctrine or innocency of life do convince others they have a testimony in their Consciences though they will not acknowledge it Or actually which doth so convince that it draweth out an acknowledgement The former may be without the latter as the Sun is apt to inlighten but it cannot make a blind man or one that winketh hard see But however Christians should live convincing lives as pure streams run though none drink of them they may convert others for conversion is facilitated by good conversation yet religion is honoured by the testimony in their consciences though they will not acknowledge it at least it will be a testimony at the day of Judgment against Impenitent sinners 3. All these we should look after The Approbation of God the Testimony of Conscience a Testimony in the consciences of others In a Moral consideration there are three beings God neighbour self and therefore we should approve our selves to God and look after this threefold approbation 1. The Approbation of God must be chiefly sought after first We cannot be sincere without it For sincerity is a streight and right purpose to please God in all things and this should be our aim to approve our selves to God in all that we do and therefore should do all things as in his eye and presence Gen. 17.1 Walk before me and be thou upright And Luke 1.75 In Holiness and Righteousness before him all the days of our lives This is it which maketh men conscientious in all their actions when they remember that they are now acting a part before the great God who looketh on either to reward or punish it checketh sin though never so secret and though it might be carryed on with security enough from men yea when we may sin not only securely but with advantage and profit Gen. 39.9 How can I do this great wickedness and sin against God So Job 31.4 Doth he not see my ways and count all my steps Therefore he durst not give way to any sin So Psalm 44.21 Shall not God search this out for he knoweth the secrets of the heart Secondly It maketh us faithful in all our Duties and Services When we s●rive to approve our selves to God and do all as in his presence to the praise and glory of his name and can appeal for our fidelity to no other judge but the great searcher of hearts from whom we cannot be concealed The Apostle Instanceth in two callings one of the highest and one of the meanest One of the highest and of most Importance to the other World that of a Minister 2 Cor. 4.2 Commending our selves to every mans conscience as in the sight of God And 1 Thes. 2.4 So we preach the Gospel not as pleasing men but God which tryeth our hearts A Minister will never be Faithful unless he first study to approve himself to God and behaveth himself as in Gods eye and presence and one that is to give an account to God So in the lowest a christian servant Eph. 6.6 7. Not with eye Service as men pleasers but as the Servants of Christ doing the will of God from the heart With good will doing service as to the Lord not to men So Col. 3.22 Not with eye Service as men-pleasers but in singleness of heart fearing God So Titus 2.10 Not purloining but shewing all good fidelity that they may adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things A Christian Servant useth all diligence in his masters business whether he be absent or present and fidelity in all things committed to his trust though he might be false with secresy enough because he fears God and would approve himself to him Well then we must study to approve our selves to God and be alike in all places and companies for all things are manifest to him 2. The Testimony of conscience must be regarded First Because it is matter of true joy and comfort to a Christian 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our Rejoycing the Testimony of our conscience I prove it from the Office of conscience 't is both Judge Witness and Executioner Conscience is the judgment that every man maketh upon his actions morally considered As a man acteth or doth any thing so he is a party as he loveth to view or censure it so he is a Judge the morality considered as to their good or evil rectitude or obliquity in them with respect to praise or dispraise reward or punishment Now joy is one part of execucuting the sentence of conscience as fear is the other Conscience is usually more felt after the act is over than before or in it For during the action the judgment of reason is not so clear and strong the affections raising mists and clouds to darken the mind in the act we feel the difficulties or the pleasure of sin but after the act the violence of the affection ceaseth and then reason taketh the throne and doth affect the mind with joy or grief according as a man hath done good or evil with grief and terrour if the sensual appetite have been obeyed before its self with delight if he hath denyed himself and been faithful with God Rewards and punishments are not altogether kept for the life to come Hell is begun in an ill conscience and a good conscience is Heaven upon Earth Secondly this joy that cometh from the Testimony of conscience is very strong it will fortify us against false Imputations When Christians can say we are not the men you
quick and the dead to him gave all the Prophets witness that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins And Acts 17.3 He Commandeth all men to repent because he hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the World in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained And Acts 3.19 20 21. Repent therefore and be converted that your sins may be blotted out when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. And he shall send Jesus Christ which before was preached unto you whom the Heavens must receive until the times of restitution of all things Why doth the Scripture suggest this Meditation Partly because our pardon is not compleat till that day now we have it under his hand in the Word under his seal by the Spirit then from his Mouth And Partly because of the strictness of that day Now to consider that our case must be reviewed that by our works and words we must be justified or condemned Matth. 12.36 37. Surely we should make our peace and be more watchful and serious for the future And partly considering who is Judge 't is a strong Motive to press us to receive his Person embrace his Doctrine and to put our selves under the Conduct of his Spirit and depending upon the merit of his Sacrifice to use the Appointed Means in order to our full recovery and return to God The Third working Consideration is Conscience which anticipateth the Judgment and taketh God's part within us rebuking us for sin A secret Spy that is in our bosoms which handleth us as we handle it Rom. 2.14 15. Before the Action Conscience sheweth us what is to be done in the Act it correcteth after alloweth or disalloweth As a man acts so he is a Party as he censureth the Action so a Judge After the Act the force of Conscience is most usually seen more than before the Fact or in the Fact because before or in the Action the Judgment of Reason is not so clear and strong the Affections raising Mists and Clouds to darken the Mind and trouble i● and draw it on their side by their pleasing violence but after the Action the violence of these things ceaseth and is by little and it ●e allayed Guilt flusheth in the face of Conscience Judas Mat 27.4 said I have si●ned in b●traying Innocent blood Reason hath the greater force doth more affect th● mind with grief and fear When a man hath sinned against his Conscience when the act is over and the affection satisfied and giveth place to reason that was before con●temned when it recovereth the Throne it striketh through the heart of man with a sharp reproof for obeying appetite before its self bringeth in rerrour and contest unto the mind and the soul ●its uneasie Now then because of this Conscience of sin let us sue out our pardon and discharge Conscience may be choaked and smothered but the flame will break forth again it is not quietly settled but by Reconciliation with Jesus Christ they shun it all that they can but cannot get rid of it John 3.20 For if our hearts condemn us c. There is an hidden fear in the heart of man not always felt but soon awakened usually it speaketh out mens condition to them when their hearts are unfound with God Job 27.6 My heart shall not reproach me all my days The heart hath a reproaching condemning power against a man when he goeth wrong None of us but feel these heart-smitings and checks therefore we should consider of them Now these should be noted partly because to smother and stifle checks of Conscience produceth hardness of heart if not downright Atheism And partly because Conscience if it speaketh not it writeth and where 't is not a Witness 't is a Register And partly because 't is God's Deputy 1 John 3.20 21. And partly because Heaven and Hell is often begun in Conscience Heaven in our Peace and Joy which is unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.8 and 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing the Testimony of our Conscience Sometimes Hell in our grief and fears as appeareth in Judas Matth. 27.4 5. I have sinned in betraying Innocent Blood and he went forth and hanged himself A good Conscience is sweet company as a bad is a great wound and burden Well then be settled upon sound terms if you will not have your Consciences upbraid you Thus to the sleepy sinner 2. To the broken hearted I shall speak of God's readiness to pardon and to forgive 'T is his Name Neh. 9.17 But thou art a God ready to pardon 'T is his Glory Exod. 33.18 compared with Exod. 34.7 'T is his Delight Micah 7.18 The case of any sinner is not desperate a Pardon may be had Isa. 55.7 8. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon For my thoughts are not as your thoughts nor my ways as your ways saith the Lord. A sensible sinner his condition is hopeful Matth. 9.13 with 28. Christ came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance And Come unto me all you that are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest To a repenting sinner it is conditionally certain 1 John 1.9 If we confess and forsake our sins he is just and faithful to forgive us our sins To those who seriously address themselves to this work God sometimes vouchsafeth notable Experiences Psal. 32.5 To those who have verified the sincerity of their Faith and Repentance 't is actually certain evident and comfortable Prov. 28.13 He that confesseth and forsaketh his sins shall have mercy If they fulfil their Covenant Consent confess sin so as to hate it and leave it 't is certain to them in Foro Caeli and in Foro Conscientiae and the more they come to God by Christ and acquaint themselves with him it groweth more firm Job 22.1 For I know that my Redeemer liveth And Rom. 5.1 Being justified by Faith we have peace with God Then their Reconciliation is secured to them by renewed Evidences and Assurances habitual and familiar converse with him as one friend doth with another maketh it grow up into an holy security and peace For the good and advantage of waiting upon God is better discerned when men have persevered in it than when they first begun 3. The excellency of the priviledge let me speak to the actually pardoned to admire the priviledge and get their hearts more affected with it 1. In the general This way of reconciling us by Christ that our trespasses may not be imputed to us was the product of Gods Eternal Wisdom and Goodness As when there was a search for wisdom the depth saith 't is not in me the sea saith it is not with me Job 28.14 So when there is an enquiry for a satisfactory way of reconciling the Creatures to God so
against it Methinks it looks like going to the Day of Judgment Here we receive the Pledges of our Salvation or Damnation 3. We should come with Oyl in our Vessels as well as in our Lamps 1. Our Lamps should be kept burning bright If you are sluggish now 't is a sign you are slight in the whole Surely now the King sitteth at his Table Cant. 1.2 our Spicknard should send forth the smell thereof a lively exercise of Grace Now we come for meat which perisheth not now is our familiar converse with Christ and near Communion with him now we come to our Legal Investiture Christ and all his benefits are delivered by these signs which he hath instituted As if a man should say Here is my House when a Deed is delivered and you give up the Key or give possession of Land by a Turf This is our solemn taking possession of him and all his benefits We receive Christ in the Promises of the Covenant but here is a particular close Application In the Word Christ is offered and exposed to all as the Brazen Serpent that whoever looked upon him might be healed But this Supper is like the Blood sprinkled upon the Door-posts In the Word Christ and Immortality are brought to light now Christ is slain before our eyes The Bread is put into our hands and mouths 2. We should come with Oyl in our Vessels Would we have the Spirit blow upon a dead Cole He findeth nothing in us to work upon We are bidden to examine and what must we examine 1 Cor. 11.28 The Apostle will tell you Whether you be in the faith or no 2 Cor. 13.5 But to speak to this case I confess that in Foro Ecclesiae in the Court of the Church all are Virgins that take their Lamps that do profess to believe all these must be admitted But in Foro Coeli in the Court of Heaven none but Converted ones are admitted But in Foro Conscientiae in the Court of Conscience I dare not discourage those that have the grace of the second or third ground 'T is a means to strengthen them in Faith Hope and Love and make them more firm in the Covenant of God And the difference is too nice between temporary Grace and saving Grace for any to exclude themselves I am bound to come with Grace but I am not bound to come with Assurance Besides in the Kingdom of Grace Christ will not shut them out They that have good affections should come but with this caution I would press them to mind the renouncing and engaging part of the Covenant and earnestly to break the League between themselves and their own wayes and engage themselves more firmly to God for time to come that you may not think as you have done or speak as you have done nor behave your selves in your Relations as you have done but throw sin out of doors I would press you in the Apostles words Heb. 10 22. Let us draw near with a true heart having our Hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience and our Bodies washed with clean water The one relateth to the Duty-part Let us draw nigh with a true heart the other relateth to the Promissory part Though your Grace be common Grace 't is this way moulded into special 2 Doct. That this will be found to be true Wisdom and the other Folly For Wisdom to begin with that Wisdom is Index sui obliqui Wisdom lyeth 1. In proposing a right End 2. In the Choice of fit Means And 3. In an earnest Prosecution of the End by these Means This is the property of Wisdom in the General and it holdeth true in Godly Wisdom The wise Virgins did so Their End was right to be admitted in to the Nuptial Feast or everlasting enjoyment of God And then they use right Means such as will bring them to the end We do not use to draw Ships in the Sea with Horses nor draw Wagons with the Wind. We must not use contrary means nor insufficient means We cannot go to to the bottom of a Well that is thirty foot deep with a line that is but ten foot We must use such as will certainly do The Wisdom of God hath fixed Means for us and we are doubly Fools if we will not use them opportunely carefully and constantly Else 't is a Prize put into a fools hand Prov. 16.17 The Wise Virgins did all this sought Oyl in time both for their Lamps and Vessels Luk. 13.24 On the contrary he that contents himself with a profession of Christ without a work of Grace upon his Heart is a Fool he is not a Profane Fool that doth the contrary but a Professing Fool that sort of Profession is better than Prophaneness so far 't is a degree of Wisdom but rested in 't is Folly it faileth in all the points of Wisdom in the end they do not esteem the Lord as the chief good for they think a little ease of the Flesh or a little sensual Liberty or a satisfaction of a Lust to be better or Honour or Pleasure or Gain this quiets them in the neglect or want of God they see some good in Christ offer fair for him but take him not as the chiefest good they are willing to part with something but not with all for his sake SERMON IV. MATTH XXV v. 5. While the Bridegroom tarryed they all Slumbred and Slept WE have seen wherein they differed now we shall see again wherein they agree In the words observe 1. What happened to the Virgins They all slumbred and slept 2. The Occasion of it I do not say the Cause While the Bridegroom tarryed The Cause of sleeping was Infirmitas humana the Occasion of it Mora Sponsi In the first of these 1. Who They all 2. What slumbred and slept First Who They all 'T is no wonder to hear it of the foolish Virgins but that the wise should do it there is the difficulty Therefore some of the Ancients understand it of Death which is called sleep in Scripture but that is improbable and suiteth not with the frame and drift of this Parable Some would understand it distributively not conjunctively that the wise slumbred and the foolish slept but 't is not said slumbred or slept but slumbred and slept The meaning is all of them were not so diligent in their Duty as they should have been even the good are in part negligent as well as the foolish though they alwayes keep a good Conscience and an heart in some measure alwayes prepared to meet Christ. Secondly What Slumbred and slept Wherein the degree of their security is set forth they did not only slumber which is a less failing but Slept Thirdly The Order First slumbred and then slept Doctrine That the Foolish and Wise both Slumber and Sleep I shall First enquire What this Slumbering and sleeping is Secondly How far it may befall the Children of God or the Wise Virgins Thirdly The Causes and Reasons of it First What
read Eph. 5.20 that no man ever yet hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it Oh that we could say so in this case that no man ever hated his own Soul 'T is no less monstrous and unnatural not to take care of our Souls than not to take care of our Bodies The Soul is the man the nobler and better part that should be first cared for therefore if you love your selves you should look after your personal Interest in Christ. 2. Your Happiness is left meerly as on your own Consent God offereth his Grace to you as well as to others Isa. 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come to the waters and drink Revel 20.22 Whosoever will c. If you refuse it you wrong your own Souls Pro. 8.36 forsake your own Mercies Jonah 2.8 And if you miss of Christ and be shut out of Heaven 't is by your own default You have none to blame but your selves if you do not enter into Covenant with God and so qualifie your selves for the great blessings and favours thereof 3. Consider how much others have done for you in a way of Means though they can do nothing in a way of merit You have received as much benefit by others as can rationally be expected you were born of Christian Parents by them dedicated to God and trained up in his fear and now after all this when you come to stand upon your own bottom you wrest your selves out of the arms of Grace your obstinate refusing seriously and heartily to enter into personal Covenant with God will exclude you out out of Heaven You are not moved by the examples of the word and self-denying Christians If you never try to bring your Heart to consent to the Lords terms you will find your Oyl to seek when you should use it at the Bridegrooms coming Secondly I now come to the Reason alleadged lest there be not enough for us and you 2 Doct. They that have most Grace have none to spare 1. With respect to our great hopes all our endeavours are little enough for Heaven we cannot be at more cost and pains than our blessed hope is worth Phil. 2.12 Work out your own Salvation with fear and trembling Work because 't is for Salvation 2 Thes. 2.12 Walk worthy of God who hath called us to his Kingdom and Glory That is the worthiness of Condecency walk suitable to your high and holy Calling walk as those that expect such a Kingdom and Glory walk as those that are contented with a little here Heb. 13.5 A little here should serve our turn but in heavenly things 't is otherwise there should be an holy covetousness and an insatiableness of desiring more and a suitableness in our walking to that State of Life which we expect But alas 't is otherwise with most for the Comforts of this Life which are but as a vapour they are insatiable as the Grave but in Grace every little yea a bare nothing is thought sufficient surely these men have not a true sense of Gods Punishments and Rewards nor what preparation is necessary for that heavenly Happiness they expect 2. With respect to our great Temptations not a jot of Grace can be spared We are told that the righteous are scarcely saved 1 Pet. 4.18 There are so many tryals by the way and our folly and weakness is so great that 't is no easie matter to get safe to Heaven If we have strength to carry us through our present Condition yet we know not what we may meet with before our service be over a day may come when all the Grace we have may be thought little enough and too little for the Tryals we may be put upon Little Grace is as no Grace when a Temptation cometh Luk. 8.25 Where is your Faith But Mark 4.4 How is it that ye have no Faith And Matth. 8.26 't is said Why are ye fearful O ye of little Faith Little Faith in some cases is as if they had no Faith Faith in the Habit they had but they could not put it into Act in that suddain and great Tryal Eph. 6.10 Be ye strong in the Lord and the power of his might 3. With respect to our Comfort a large Measure of Grace is necessary we are bidden to give all diligence that we may enter abundantly 2 Pet. 1.11 Not only make a hard shift to get to Heaven but to get thither with full Sails of Comfort now this will never be unless we have much Grace and that kept in lively action for otherwise it will not come into the view and notice of Conscience to make up an Evidence there 1. I do suppose that Conscience hath a Vote in the matters of our Peace Rom. 8.16 In the matters of our sense Rom. 9.1 The bosom witness is Conscience the knowledge of our Estate is not intuitive but discursive 2. That small things are inconspicuous and not easily to be discerned especially by weak eyes therefore 't is an hard matter for Conscience to discern a little Grace in a great heap of Corruption Mans Heart is not watchful nor so tender nor are things in such order there as that every lesser thing should be taken notice of though Conscience be a secret spy yet small things escape its view and notice both in a way of Sin and Grace in a drowsie and unattentive Soul it cannot be imagined therefore there must be a great deal of Grace before it can be seen and distinguished from a common work for the Heart of man is deceitful The Woman was forc't to light a Candle and search diligently before she could find her lost groat so hard will it be to discover that in the Soul which is small and little 3. The Testimony of the Spirit is usually given in upon the greatest exercise and abounding of Grace for the Oyl of Gladness followeth the Oyl of Grace and Comfort is dispensed according to the rate of Obedience Joh. 15.10 If ye keep my Commandments ye shall abide in my love and Joh. 14.21 He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and is loved of my Father and I will love him and manifest my self unto him Therefore out of all this it followeth that if we would maintain any comfortable and delightful sense of our Interest in Christ and the glory of the World to come we should not be contented with a little Grace 4. With respect to the nature of Grace 'T is a sign we have no Grace when we think we have enough and to spare surely they that have tasted that the Lord is gracious 1 Pet. 3.2 they are not cloyed but will long for more that man that doth not desire to be better was never good As the little seed works through the hard and dry Clods that it may grow up to stalk and flower so is Grace it is working and increasing to perfection therefore 't is an ill sign to be satisfied with small measures of Grace
to say I have enough every degree of Grace is as desirable as that we have attained to and those whose Hearts God hath touched they earnestly desire more 5. All is too little to stand before the Lord and therefore none have any surplusage of Grace or more than will serve their own turn As in the gathering of Manna he that had much had nothing over If we consider the glorious and holy Presence of Christ we have all little enough Psa. 143.2 Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant Non dicit cum hostibus tuis sed cum servo tuo He doth not say O Lord enter not into Judgment with thine Enemies but enter not into Judgment with thy Servant 6. Every one is to be considered according to his advantages and opportunities of growth and improvement less may be sufficient to Salvation but not to them to whom more is given as they distinguish of a fundamental in se and quo ad nos God may accept of an implicit Faith in some but not in others so 't is true of Grace that rule Luk. 12.48 He that knew not and did things worthy of stripes shall be beaten with few stripes God may accept that from others which he will not from us and we are to be answerable for our means of growth we expect he should come sooner that rideth on horse-back than he that travelleth on foot and therefore we must not be contented with a bare competency but labour for abundance 7. The greatest Graces have many times the greatest Corruptions and Temptations to wrestle with God doth not call every one to such a tryal as he called Abraham but as Jacob drove as the little ones were able to bear so doth God proportion Temptations according to the measure of Grace and strength that every one hath and therefore he that hath most Grace hath but enough for that condition of life wherein God will exercise and try him 8. You may easily have too little you cannot have too much There are many come short none over you never read of any that had too much Faith too much of the Love of God and the fear of God In the Internals and Essentials of Religion there is no nimium a man may spend too much time in Praying and Hearing when it incroacheth upon other Duties but he cannot fear God too much with a filial fear or love God too much many love him too little and therefore are kept so doubtful all their dayes that they cannot tell whether they love God at all or no. 9. Because of that Conformity that should be between us and Christ who is our glorious Head and all the Heirs of Glory are destinated to be conformed to the First-born Rom. 8.24 chiefly in Grace Purity and Holiness indeed this cannot so full and exactly be 'till we see him as he is but the present sight that we have of him by Grace should make some change in us 2 Cor. 3.18 In Heaven we shall be holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners as he Heb. 7.26 above the reach of Temptations as he Joh. 10.30 Our vile Bodies shall be changed Phil. 3.21 and both Soul and Body conformed to that glorious Estate as he Rom. 6.9 but it must be begun here the very hopes of it should put us upon purifying our selves 1 Joh. 3.3 He that hath this hope in him purifieth himself as Christ is pure You are to do so that there may be some proportion between Head and Members 10. Because a little Grace is not so honourable to God John 15.8 Herein is my Father glorified in that ye bring forth much fruit and Phil. 1.11 Being filled with the fruits of Righteousness which are by Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise of God 2 Pet. 1.8 If these things be in you and abound you shall not be barren or unfruitful in the Knowledge of Christ. 'T is not a naked and empty Profession 't is not sleepy habits or a little Grace but when Grace hath a deep power and soveraignty over our Hearts and Lives that bringeth God into request and commendeth him to the Consciences of men The Knowledge of Christ is reproached as a low Institution by carnal men but to the truly wise no such excellent and noble Spirits as they that are bred up under him 1 VSE Of Reproof to those that think we make more ado than needeth When we press men to a constant watchfulness and serious diligence in the spiritual Life no wonder that every sleight thing seemeth enough so the foolish Virgins Give us of your Oyl the wise Virgins are more cautious their saying is Not so lest there be not enough for us and you What thoughts have you of Christ when you think every sleight Preparation enough for him what sense of the world to come when you do so little in order to it what is it that you call Grace that you do so easily come by it and maintain it upon such cheap terms Surely men have no sense of the End or else mistake the Way that think so little will serve the turn Indeed a little in the world will serve the turn if men had sober and moderate desires and did not increase their necessities by the largeness of their affections A man may have Estate enough for ten men yea twenty men and yet not be satisfied but the best hath scarce Grace enough for one but alas how soon are men satisfied such is their indifferency about spiritual things instead of hungering and thirsting after Righteousness a little or none contents them here only they are for Sobriety and Moderation all is too much and too easily passed over that seemeth to awaken them to a lively sense of that Religion they do profess Christ saith Except your Righteousness exceed the Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees you cannot enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Matth. 5.20 What do ye more than they And Luk. 11.24 Strive to enter in at the streight gate They cannot endure that Christs Authority should be urged upon the Conscience can you hope to be saved upon easier terms without all this ado a little time will determine whose word shall stand Gods or yours you cannot do too much as long as you do but what God bids you Certainly if you judge by that Rule which God hath given to try by no man on earth is as good as he should be and he that is best is too bad and he that doth most cometh unspeakably short of what he should do All the holy ones of God complain of their naughty Hearts that they cannot do the things that they would they groan under the Body of Death and cry out Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this Body of Death And will they then obtrude this sorry perfunctory Obedience upon God as a full satisfaction of his Gospel-law 2. It is to Reprove those that think they have Grace enough to bring them to Heaven Now they may
1 Thess. 1.10 because there was never such Wrath before The Holy Ghost useth such Expressions as we are acquainted with 1. The Extremity of these Pains cannot be told us Fire is an active furious Elemen● the Pain most searching and no Fire more scalding than Brimstone to Sense that 's most grievous and bitter But the Pains of Hell surpass all that is spoken Look as when Heaven is set out by Gold and Pearls and precious Stones the Joyes there are much above these shadowes so all Notions come short of Hell 2. The whole Man is under the Pains of it both body and soul Both are fellowes in Sin and both are punished It appeareth partly from Scripture Matth. 10.28 Fear not him that can kill the Body but fear him that can destroy both Body and Soul in Hell Mark not only the Soul but the Body The Body is not only the Instrument but the Occasion of many Sins the Law in the Members bruitish motions of Lusts the Eye is fed with Lust Therefore the body hath its share 1. For the Body what the Torment shall be we cannot tell the Scripture is silent only in the general that it shall have its share of Punishment is certain and not only by the Grief and Anguish of the Soul but by Pain residing in the Body As the Saints have not only an Happiness for their Souls but their Bodies their vile Bodies shall be changed At the day of Judgment when their Bodies are united to their Souls their Torments are increased Here in the Text 't is said Depart ye the whole Man no part free There is a Place of Torment as we proved before as well as a State of Torment therefore the Body hath its Inconveniences their Eyes meet with nothing but affrighting Spectacles the Devils and the Damned Every time they look on their Tempter it revives their Guilt as the Saints when they look on their Redeemer it filleth their Hearts full of Love and Adoration What see they but Devils to torture them or other Damned tormented with them Wives and Children through their negligence or Neighbours by their cursed Example brought into this place of torment Their Ears are filled with nothing but Yellings and Howlings and hideous Outcries More particularly I shall not define 2. For the Soul The Souls Evils arise from a lively and effectual Sense of the Wrath of God and the gnawings of Conscience There is a Fire and a Worm Mark 9.44 the Wrath of God and the Horrors of Conscience There is an Allusion to the Worms that breed in dead Bodies and the Fire wherewith they were burned I. Let us speak a little of the Worm that breedeth within the Worm of Conscience consisteth in three things There is 1. Memoria praeteritorum 2. Sensus praesentium 3. Metus futurorum All the Periods and Distinctions of Time yield matter of Sorrow and Anguish to them past present and to come 1. Conscience worketh on what is past the remembrance of their former enjoyments Miserum est dixisse fuisse Beatos 'T is the miserablest thing that can be to outlive our Happiness to think of what we once enjoyed but now want Luk. 16.25 Son remember that thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things Thy day is past now no more Pleasures now all thy Carnal Delights are spent The Riches of Gods goodness that I despised I shall enjoy no more The reflection on past Comforts I was thus and thus but where hath sin brought me The very remembrance will aggravate their present Misery especially when the memory shall be quickened by Conscience to consider their Ingratitude their carnal Confidence how they neglected God in the abundance of all things and nothing remaineth but the sin of their Comforts and the Curse Where now are all your stately Houses pleasant Gardens costly Tables furnished with delicious Meats your gorgeous and pompous Apparel your merry Meetings These things I have enjoyed but now they are come to their full and final Period 2. The Time wasted this is a Commodity never valued 'till it be lost and then it cannot be recovered in Hell they see the folly of it the mispence of time is a killing circumstance experience maketh us value time The horrours of the Damned may be guessed at by the Complaints of the dying Oh! for a little time if they had but one year one month more here men are Prodigal of nothing so much as time as if they had more than they could tell what to do with but when they come to die Oh if God would spare them a little longer 3. Especially Opportunities of Grace sleighted God reckoneth to a day how long how often he hath warned them Luk. 13.7 These three years came I seeking fruit from this Fig-tree but behold I find none cut it down Here is Christs righteous expectation These three years came I seeking fruit their ungrateful frustration But I find none and then his final denunciation Cut it down Whenever God reckoneth with a People he reckoneth with them for time and opportunities of Grace Did not I warn you What means we have had and offers of Grace Gods drawing nigh to us in an acceptable time every Sermon will sting our Conscience There was a fair advantage 't is good to feel the Worm while it may be killed to take notice of Checks of Conscience for the present and the motions of Gods Spirit This is a spark that will not be quenched 4. The Folly of their own Choice Men will not see now but they shall see Isa. 26.11 Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see but they shall see and be ashamed Their Understandings are cleared to know the worth of things and their Eyes opened when 't is too late Jer. 17.11 At his latter end he shall be a Fool. He was a Fool all his Life-time to neglect God for a Trifle but now he is a Fool in the Judgment of his own Heart If I had been as active for God as for my Lusts it would have been otherwise with me Temptations are gone Lusts are gone the World passeth away and the Lusts thereof There is no relish of Pleasures in Hell if they could have them they have now the bitter experience of the cost they have been at therefore sadly reflect upon their folly Conviction heightens their torment Jer. 2.17 18 19. Hast thou not procured this unto thy self in that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God when he led thee by the way And now what hast thou to do in the way of Aegypt to drink the Waters of Sihor Or what hast thou to do in the way of Assyria to drink the waters of the River Thine own wickedness shall correct thee and thy Backslidings shall reprove thee Know therefore and see that it is an evil thing and a bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God This is your way in the Valley As when Children burn and feel the gripes of a Disease we
unless thou bless me There is an obstinate purpose Job 13.15 Tho he stay me yet will I trust in him So they will have Christ whatever it cost them Phil. 3.8 9. I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledg of Christ Jesus my Lord for whom I have suffered the loss of all things and do count them but Dung that I may win Christ And be found in him not having mine own Righteousness which is after the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the Righteousness which is of God by Faith Faith may be shaken but it will not lose its hold as a Tree-groweth tho it be bended with the Wind. Thus you see what it is to receive the Word with our whole Heart not only to acknowledg the Truth of it but to chuse and accept it as our Direction with all chearfulness and accordingly make out after the Hopes of Christianity resolving not to be discouraged whatever entertainment we meet with from God and the World Secondly There is a receiving Christ with the whole Heart Art thou willing to take Christ upon these terms Yes saith the Soul with all my Heart This Answer were enough if it were simple and genuine But because we prophane and prostitute these words to every slight Matter the Deceit is not so easily discovered We are wont to say of every Trifle I love such a thing with all my Heart I will do it with all my Heart Whereas these words are of a sacred sound and importance and did not we adulterate them so often as we do but keep them consecrate to God to whom alone they are proper the very pronouncing of them would awaken Conscience we could not give such an Answer but Conscience would give us the lie Let us then enquire into the Thing and see a little into the nature of the Thing for there is no trust in the Expression What this believing in Christ with all the Heart or receiving Christ with all the Heart doth imply I Answer 1. It implieth that your whole and sole dependance must be intirely carried out to him God will have no Rivals in the trust and confidence of the Creature A King in his Progress that takes up an Inn will have it wholly to himself much less will he have any to share with him in his own Bed-Chamber So here you must trust Christ alone with your Welfare We believe with our whole Heart when we have such a perswasion of his Sufficiency that we durst venture all in his Hands in matter of Remission of Sin we mind no confidence but in his Grace Heb. 10.22 Let us draw near with a true Heart in full assurance of Faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Heart that doth not secretly run out to other Props and Confidences Truth and Sincerity in Believing is there intended not in Obedience Faith is a simple single trust in God's Mercy the Heart is very deceitful Christ beareth the Name but the Confidence is secretly built on our own Merits as those Women in Isaiah Isa. 4.1 We will eat our own Bread and wear our own Apparel only let us be called by thy Name People will say they trust in Christ alone and yet secretly rest on their own Innocency and good Meanings But most sensibly this perverseness of Trust is discovered in Matters of Providence those that put half their Trust in Christ and half in the World do not believe with their whole Hearts They pretend they can trust Christ for Pardon Grace and Glory and yet cannot trust him for a morsel of Bread they find no difficulty in believing in Christ for Salvation and Remission of Sins and yet cannot believe that he will give them daily Bread What should be the Reason Heaven and Pardon of Sins are greater Mercies and if Conscience were opened we should see the difficulty to obtain them to be greater There are more natural Prejudices but bodily Wants are more pressing to a Conscience not sufficiently convinced And here Faith is presently to be exercised with Difficulties In Matters of Grace Men are more slight and inconsiderate and content themselves with some general cold Perswasions and therefore do not believe with their whole Hearts Alas temporal Salvation is more easy Can you look for Heaven who cannot trust him for a Crust of Bread Do you know what it is to venture your Souls in Christ's Hands notwithstanding Sins notwithstanding Death and yet soon despond in time of Danger and when outward Means of Preservation fail 2. To receive Christ with the whole Heart is to receive him as an Allsufficient Saviour when every Faculty seeketh contentment in Christ. We ought not only to acknowledg him to be the true Mediator but to chuse and receive him for our Allsufficient Portion Worldly Men look to Christ as fit for their Consciences but look to the World as an Object for their Affections Now Christ should not only pacify the Conscience but satisfy the Heart We should come to him not only as a Physician to heal our Wounds but as a Husband to satisfy and content our Love as a meet Object for our Affections The whole Soul is to clasp about him He is not only good in a way of Profit but amiable in a way of Excellency therefore the whole Heart is to be given him The things of the World are good but for one thing Food is good to satisfy the Appetite yet we must have Cloaths to warm the Back But Christ is good for all things he is not only the Physician of the Soul but the Beloved Psal. 73.25 Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none on Earth that I desire besides thee since there is none so fit to match and wed their Affections 3. To receive him with the whole Heart is to make after him with the earnest Motions and lively Affections of the Soul as Desire and Delight Carnal Men have a naked imaginary Perswasion but no lively Affections to Christ unless it be for a very small while They never felt the bitterness of Sin and so have not such vehement and strong motions of Heart towards Christ. Conviction of Conscience differeth much from literal Assent Carnal Men have a literal Assent and a speculative Delight in Contemplation but not such labour and travel of Soul to get an Interest in Christ. Swimming is for Life and Death it is not a Work proper for him that standeth on firm Land but for those that are ready to be swallowed up of the Waves Nor have they such Delight a Stomach always full knoweth not the sweetness of Bread Christ relisheth only with troubled Consciences Vse of the whole Well then you see that there is required to Faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowledg and Receiving 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowledg There is a Knowledg before Faith in Faith and after Faith Before Faith a Man must know what he believes or else he cannot believe See Scriptures John
in the State of his Exaltation Our Lord would be ours not only in Love but Duty that so we might have the greater Assurance Till all the Saints come to Heaven Christ looks upon himself as bound in point of Office they are his Charge he cannot be loving to the Church nor faithful to the Father if he should do otherwise 4. His Experience Heb. 4.15 He is touched with the feeling of our Infirmities was in all points tempted as we are yet without Sin Pray mark in all points Christ hath had Experience of all Trials whereinto any of his Servants can fall Poverty forsaking of Friends Exile Imprisonment Hunger Nakedness Watching Weariness Pain of Body Heaviness of Heart Desertion as to Sense Wrath and Curse of God Christ hath carried his feeling with him into Heaven he knew what Poverty meaneth what trouble of Conscience what heaviness of Spirit meaneth Christ could not so experimentally pity us so feelingly pity us if he were not like us in all things his Heart was intendred by Experience as a Man that hath felt the Gout and felt the Stone Israel knew the Heart of a Stranger Christ knew the Heart of a Man that is left to the World's Frowns and Snares He took a Communion of our Natures and Miseries as a Pawn and Pledg that he will pity us and help us Heb. 2.10 The Captain of our Salvation was made perfect through Sufferings Christ tho he was perfect he received the Spirit without measure yet he lacked one thing which his Office required to be a perfect Mediator till he had an experimental feeling So Heb. 2.18 In that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted Christ was able as soon as he came from Heaven as God what could he not do But there is an Ability of Sufficiency and of Idoneity an Experimental Ability Christ had Experience tho not of Sin yet of Temptation to Sin he is not only able but willing he knoweth what it is Christ would borrow our Nature to make Experiments Vse 1. To teach us to walk with Caution and in a continual dependance upon God We are continually assaulted and live in the midst of Snares A Man that cometh into the World saith Luther is like a Traveller that cometh into an Inn where there dwell none but Thieves Now he that carrieth Jewels about him had need to take heed the diversity the frequency the continuation of Temptations should make us wary The Diversity there are Baits for every Temper Honours for the Ambitious Wealth for the Covetous and Pleasures for the Sensual The Devil hath a Diet to feed every Distemper some are fullen not bent to Pleasures but Satan is not at a loss to fit them with a Temptation there are Profits for them Others are facile and more easy they have Pleasures Others would be great they have Honours And when Satan knoweth the Lust he suiteth the Bait he is an old Sophister well skilled in the Tempers of Men. Therefore seeing that in every Business in every bit of Meat in every Recreation there are Snares we had need feed with fear and trade with fear When there is an Enemy in the Country we keep constant Watch and Ward Then for the frequency and continuance of Temptations they are always about us Long Suits prevail at last From the first use of Reason till the hour of Death as long as God continueth our abode in the World we are in danger There are many Baits Satan is cra●●y and the World is spightful and our Hearts are naught We are now upon our Trial the great Work of Religion is to walk in a constant watchfulness and dependance Alas many are as if they were in the Haven already so negligent so careless as if they were in the midst of Paradise out of Temptations Vse 2. To press us to grow weary of the World it is a place full of Snares here we have many Snares and many Enemies If we have a mind to sin no longer why should we desire to live in the World The World is a Step-mother to the Saints why should we desire to hang upon the Dug He that would always live here is like a Scullion that loveth to lie among the Pots In Heaven we have pure Company and are out of the reach and danger of Temptations The Devil when he was not fit for Heaven was cast out into the World a fit Place for Misery Sin and Torment it is Satan's Walk and Circuit Here is Antichrist the Devil 's eldest Son here are Terriculamenta Irritamenta Fears and Snares It is a dirty odd Corner of the Universe we can hardly walk up and down but we shall defile our Garments Here are Briars to hitch us Snares and Baits to intice us There is a more excellent Country above where we shall have the Company of God and the Fellowship of the Saints Saints without Corruption other manner of Saints than here There is no Tempter there there should be your Country In a pet we long for Heaven but it should be out of a resolved Judgment Men fight in the World as long as they are able and then make Heaven their Refuge It should not be a melancholy wish We should desire Heaven not as weary of Work and Service but as weary of Temptation Vse 3. Examination What kind of Temper have we There are Children of this World Luke 16.8 The World is their own Mother they love to lie hanging on the Dugs and Teats And there is a Spirit called the Spirit of the World 1 Cor. 2.12 A Genius that suiteth with present Conveniences there is their Portion Psal. 17.14 Their Names are written in the Earth Jer. 17.13 that is their Happiness The Nature of the World's Sons is all for the Lusts of the Flesh the Lusts of the Eye and the Pride of Life to go fine to feed high to shine in worldly Pomp affect Honours and great Places Too many Christians are baptized into this Spirit There is an use of the Things of this World but we should use them with fear they cannot smell the Rose of the Field Christ hath no scent or savour Oh it is a sad Character to be a Child of this World one that hath the Nature of the Mother in them one of the World's breed A Child of God is a Pilgrim and Stranger Psal. 119.19 I am a Stranger in the Earth Abraham purchased but a Sepulcher that is all the Faithful can lay claim to on Earth He looketh on himself as born and bred in another Land his Mother is a Princess the Bride the Lamb's Wife and his Father is in Heaven he is in the World but not of the World Vse 4. Comfort Christ is apprehensive of your Danger All Trials you meet with do either better your Hearts or hasten your Glory Christians must expect Danger but need not fear it Formido sublata est non pugna You are not absolutely freed from
without Purse and Scrip and Shoes lacked ye any thing And they said Nothing God sendeth abroad his Servants many times to make experiments of the care of his Providence they are helpless and shiftless but did ye lack any thing The Lord can wonderfully incline the Hearts of Men and dispose of the Creatures for the Supply of his People he cometh in by wonderful and unexpected ways of Supply It were easy to give Instances if my intended Brevity would permit Merlin was hid in a Hay-mow in the Massacre of Paris and an Hen came constantly and laid an Egg every day for a Fortnight 4. Observe That Christ's keeping extendeth to corporal Safety So it is quoted John 18.8 9. If ye seek me let these go their way that the Saying might be fulfilled which he spake Of those which thou gavest me have I lost none God is in Covenant with both Body and Soul and he looketh after both for the Body as far as it is necessary for his Service and for our Profit and Salvation as well as for the Soul therefore it is but reason we should depend upon him for both It is a pretty Question Which is more difficult to believe in Christ for Temporals or Spirituals The Reason of doubting is because Promises for Temporals are not so express and so exactly accomplished in the Letter as they are in Spirituals But certainly Heaven and Pardon of Sins are greater Mercies and if Conscience were opened and the Heart serious we should see the difficulty to obtain them to be greater There are greater and more plausible Prejudices against Pardon of Sins than against daily Bread God feedeth all his Creatures even the young Ravens but he pardoneth but a few and blesseth them with all spiritual Blessings But here is the Mistake Bodily Wants are more pressing and here Faith is presently to be exercised with Difficulties and Men are careless of their Souls and so content themselves with some general desires and loose hopes of Ease and eternal Welfare which Hopes import their Security and Presumption not their Gospel-Faith But certainly he that durst venture his Estate into Christ's hands by a genuine Act of Faith doth a less thing than he that by a genuine Act of Faith ventures his Soul They say they find no difficulty in believing in Christ for Salvation and Pardon of Sins and yet cannot trust him for daily Bread for Maintenance which God giveth to the Ravens and bestowed upon them when they were Children of Wrath. Well then trust Christ for these common Mercies You shall have temporal Safety as long as God hath a mind to employ you in his Service and as much as is necessary to glorify him and keep your Hearts good In other things we must moderate our desires God is a better Judg than we are our selves and then by an undisturbed Faith without doubts and carkings wait upon him When you cark and run to unlawful Means you take Christ's Work out of his hands and put it into your own yea you put your selves out of Christ's keeping and put your Safety into the Devil's hands O the Children of God should consider this Do you expect God should give you spiritual and eternal Safety and not temporal Shall he give the greater and not the less Martha was of this Temper John 11.23 24. Jesus saith to her Thy Brother shall rise again O saith she I know he shall rise again at the last Day as if it were an easier matter to raise him up after so many Years than after four Days If you put your Souls which are the more excellent part into Christ's hands will you not put your Bodies Will you not trust him with all that you have You should make Experiments this way How are you temporally kept It is good to be acquainted with God by little and little to trust him with smaller Matters and then with greater And what is this Trust Leave all to God's disposal having served Providence in the use of Means It is a shame to see Christians prole and shift as if they had no Father in Heaven no Mediator to take care of them Secondly Now I come to the Success and Fruit of Christ's Care I. As to the Elect. II. As to Judas I. As to the Elect I have kept those whom thou hast given to me and none of them is lost None of the Elect can be lost God's Election cannot be weakned by the falling of Hypocrites Christ may lose Members as he is Head of a Visible Church but not as he is Head of a Mystical Body One of you shall betray me but I know whom I have chosen John 13.18 As if he had said this will not defeat my purposes of Grace So Rom. 11.7 The Election hath obtained it and the rest were blinded God's Election worketh through all Prejudices wicked Parents bad Education a dumb Ministry and others are hardned notwithstanding all Advantages as Judas tho of the Seed of Abraham tho an Apostle tho under Christ's Inspection The Fathers compared Paul and Judas Paul an open Enemy Judas a seeming Friend 1 Tim. 2.18 19. Who concerning the Truth have erred saying that the Resurrection is past already and overthrow the Faith of some Nevertheless the Foundation of God standeth sure having this Seal The Lord knoweth them that are his As those that build a Palace are wont to lay a firm Foundation so God in building a heavenly City he hath laid a Foundation by which is meant God's Election which is the great Ground-work of Salvation whoever fall God's Elect stand sure Vse Let us not be troubled at the Defection of Hypocrites let it not shake our Belief of the Doctrine of Perseverance be not offended as if the Salvation of the Elect were not sure Tho glorious Luminaries are quenched and those that seemed to be Stars leave their Orb and Station God's Election standeth sure When a Tree is shaken rotten and unsound Fruit comes clattering down The Devil never had such a season to set Men on work to broach the Doctrine of the Apostacy of the Saints because of the general Defection and Miscarriage of eminent Professors In this case let us run to the Scriptures The Defection of one from the College of the Apostles was a great Scandal but Christ saith That it might be fulfilled which was written So when any Scandal falleth out thus should we run unto the Scriptures II. As to Judas who is here called the Son of Perdition 1. Observ. In the General That there are some Persons that are so wilfully set to destroy and damn themselves that they may be called Sons of Perdition As here is one that perisheth in Christ's own Company a Prey taken out of his Hands one that was never the better for all the care of Christ for seeing his Holy Life and for the excellent Discourses that he heard from him for all the Kindness that he had shewed to him in taking him into a near Office and
Joy will be fulfilled John 16.22 Ye now have Sorrow but I will see you again and your Heart shall rejoyce and your Joy no Man taketh from you If we lose it our selves it is not utterly lost The Sun is always moving but it doth not always shine and display his Rays with a merry Countenance So a Christian meeteth with many Rubs but still he holdeth on his course to Heaven and therefore where Sense faileth Faith should make Supply 6. The Nature of Man is more acquainted with Sorrows than with Pleasures Men naturally are more susceptible of Sorrow than of Joy Partly because of the Presages of a guilty Conscience Heb. 2.14 Through fear of Death they were all their Life-time subject to Bondage Men are more ingenious and inventive to torment themselves than they are to find out Arguments of Joy Partly out of Ingratitude Mal. 1.2 I have loved you saith the Lord yet ye say Wherein hast thou loved us We grieve more for a mean Affliction than we rejoyce in many great Blessings As if the Humors of the Body be out of order or one Joint break this is enough to make us sink and ill at ease so one light Affliction sinks us Partly because God hath laid this Burden of Sorrow upon us to make us long for Heaven Few and evil are the Days of the Years of my Life Vse 1. To shew us the Goodness of God who hath made our Wages a great part of our Work and our Reward our Service The Lord doth not require of us to lance and gash our selves his Ways are not sowre Ways he hath made it a part of our Duty and Homage to rejoyce in him O that he should deal so bountifully with us in this Life The World might be a Bochim and it is a Beracha it is indeed a Vale of Tears But yet the Sun shineth sometimes when it raineth O how should this make us in love with the Service of God! They are happy that minister in his presence It is a Request Psal. 90.14 O satisfy us early with thy Mercy that we may rejoyce and be glad all our days Certainly God alloweth us to come with such Requests for he commandeth us to rejoyce 1 Thess. 5.16 Rejoyce evermore We might weep evermore yet he saith Rejoyce evermore Vse 2. To take off the Slander brought on the Ways of God as if they were dark and uncomfortable as if we should abandon and renounce all Delight O that wicked Men would but make experience God doth not require that you should renounce Delight but change the Course of it Joy is not abrogated but preferred Do not think the Practice of Religion is full of sadness and heaviness Will you believe the Spies that have been in the Land of Promise The Righteous are only fit to give Testimony to the Comfort of a converted Estate a Stranger intermeddleth not with their Joys If any of God's Children be uncomfortable it is because they have not tasted deep enough of the Promises the Comforter suffereth some contradiction from their Hearts and Lusts but what is this to your Estate The Souls of wicked Men are still under Bondage in the midst of their greatest Joys their Pleasures are mixed with Fear as Belshazzar was soon put out of his Mirth Vse 3. Let us despise the dreggy Delights of the World We are empty by Nature and worldly Joy filleth not but with Wind. Since Christ hath made such Provision for our Consolation why should we seek it elsewhere God hath forbid no Joy but what is hurtful Outward Mercies bring in some Joy but not a full Joy Godliness doth not unman us and hinder the Course of any true natural Affection But no outward thing should be our chief Joy a light Touch is best 1 Cor. 7.30 They that rejoyce should be as if they rejoyced not First we have an Interest then a comfortable Use of the Creatures Hast thou Wealth Power Greatness Do not bind up thy Heart with these Things they will be gone and then thy Joy will be gone too When they take up too much of our Affections they are Curses and will prove our Sorrow Eccles. 7.6 As the crackling of Thorns under a Pot so is the Laughter of the Fool This also is Vanity a slight superficial thing Vain 〈◊〉 are catched with every light Pleasure as a Fire soon taketh in Thorns Thorns 〈◊〉 under a Pot make a great Noise and so carnal Mirth maketh much Noise Worldly Men promise themselves a great deal of Pleasure and Contentment but this Fire is soon out so worldly Joy is soon gone Let ●s not delight in fleshly Liberty the Pleasures of Sin are short-lived and carnal Pleasures leave bitterness and remorse behind them Prov. 14.13 Even in Laughter the Heart is sorrowful and the End of that Mirth is Heaviness As Laughter through dilatation of the Spirits make●h us sad afterwards The Fuel of carnal Pleasures is gross burdensom oppressive to Reason it hindreth the free Contemplation of the Mind and lasteth but for a little while we need to be refreshed with other Pleasures But God in Christ is full and fresh to all Eternity Angels are not weary of him Besides carnal Mirth is but Madness Eccles 2.2 I have said of Laughter it is mad and of Mirth what doth it It is good for no serious Purpose Solomon challengeth the Masters of Mirth what doth it but displace Reason and give way to Vanity and Lightness I know there is a lawful use of inoffensive Mirth but when we take Pleasures they should not take us Eph. 5.4 Neither Filthiness nor foolish Talking nor Jesting which are not convenient but rather giving of Thanks Verse 19. Speaking to your selves in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs singing and making Melody in your Hearts to the Lord. There is a Mirth becoming the Gravity of a Christian. Vse 4. Reproof to two Sorts 1. To those that are always sad Christians do not live up to that Care and Provision which Christ hath made for them In Scripture it is Rejoyce evermore 1 Thess. 5.16 And they live as if God had said Weep evermore It is verily a Fault however disguised in some it deserveth Pity in others Chiding and Rebuke In some Pity that are under penal Disturbance when God putteth any into the Stocks of Conscience they cannot come out at pleasure These are irresistible Chains a poor Creature lieth bound till God saith Go forth Those Chains of Darkness in which the Devils are held are their own everlasting Horrors It is God's Prerogative to create the Fruit of the Lips Peace Peace Isa. 57.19 Joy is his immediate Dispensation We wonder considering the Comforts of the Gospel that there should be any such thing as Trouble of Conscience because we know not what it is to lie under God's mighty hand to be cast into the Prison shall I say or the Hell of our Consciences Alas poor Creatures we cannot break Prison when we will It is easy for
he will worship God and report that God is in you of a Truth In converting Sinners to God James 1.18 Of his own Will begat he us with the Word of Truth In building up them that are sanctified Acts 20.32 And now Brethren I commend you to God and to the Word of his Grace which is able to build you up and to give you an Inheritance among them that are sanctified This is no sluggish idle Power that may be hid and obscured but manifests it self by sensible Effects it is lively and operative not only to change Men's Lives but Hearts Psal. 19.7 8. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the Soul the Testimony of the Lord is sure making wise the Simple The Statutes of the Lord are right rejoicing the Heart the Commandment of the Lord is pure enlightning the Eyes This the Apostle makes to be a sensible proof of Christ speaking in him 2 Cor. 13.3 Since ye seek a proof of Christ speaking in me which to you-ward is not weak but is mighty in you Object But this is an Argument to those that have felt it How will it perswade others Answ. 1. It is an Argument to others also for this mighty Operation is sensible to others they may see the change wrought in them and wonder at it 1 Pet. 4.4 Wherein they think it strange that you run not with them to all excess of Riot 2. There are publick Effects of the Power of the Word besides private Instances Wherever the Word hath been Satan vanished where formerly he tyrannized and his Deceits are of no more force Oracles ceased at Delphos the Devils howled Where the Gospel is preached there are less Witchcrafts and Diabolical Delusions they are not so frequent where the Gospel has had a free passage 3. Those that have felt no experience of this Power have a secret fear of it John 3.20 Every one that doth Evil hateth the Light neither cometh to the Light left his Deeds should be reproved Conscience is afraid of the Majesty of God shining forth in the Scriptures Men dare not pause upon and consider the Doctrine therein contained Atheism lieth in the Heart the Seat of Desire Psal. 14.1 The Fool hath said in his Heart There is no God Men question the Word because they would not have it true When Men give leave to Lusts they are afraid the Word should prove true and therefore would rather accuse the Word of Falsity than their own Hearts as Ahab was loth to hear Micaiah because he prophesied Evil. Strong Lusts make the Soul incredulous they fear the Scriptures and then question them They know there is Power in them to astonish them and therefore as Malefactors desire to destroy the Records and Evidences that are against them so do wicked Men they are Antiscripturists in Affection rather than Opinion Fifthly By the Spirit 's Testimony That it is so is clear 1 John 5.6 It is the Spirit that beareth witness because the Spirit is Truth The Doctrine of the Gospel is there called Spirit because he is the Author of it 2 Pet. 1.21 For the Prophecy came not in old Time by the Will of Men but Holy Men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost Or because the Spirit is Truth therefore he is the Supreme Witness He is of God's Privy Council 1 Cor. 2.11 For what Man knoweth the Things of a Man save the Spirit of Man that is in him Even so the Things of God knoweth no Man but the Spirit of God Now the Spirit witnesseth from Heaven or on Earth 1 John 5.7 8. For there are three that bear record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are One. And there are three that bear witness in Earth the Spirit and the Water and Blood and these three agree in One. From Heaven in Miracles and so Christ as God might be a Witness in his own Cause On Earth so in an Association and Conjunction with Water and Blood when we feel the Effects of it in ease of Conscience or Sanctification of Heart And over and above the Spirit 's Testimony there is an inward Testimony 1 John 5.10 He that believeth in the Son of God hath the Testimony in himself But what is this inward Testimony a Witness to the Truth of Scripture by the certainty of our own Thoughts it is not that which every one's Mind and Fancy suggests to him but the Light of the Holy Ghost leading us into the acknowledgment of the Truth the same Holy Ghost which inspired the Penmen of the Scriptures inclines our Hearts to believe them 1 John 2.27 But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any Man teach you but as the same Anointing teacheth you all things and is Truth and is no lie and even as it hath taught you ye shall abide in him Faith cannot be wrought by Humane Authority or more rational Inducements it is the Work of the Spirit We may plead and urge but the Heart closeth not with what is represented till the Spirit worketh Isa. 53.1 Who hath believed our Report and to whom is the Arm of the Lord revealed There is an outward Report and an inward Revelation This Testimony of the Spirit may be thus discerned 1. It is affective Truth represented in the Light of Reason leaveth a weak Impression but Truth represented in the Evidence and Demonstration of the Spirit 2. Cor. 2.4 worketh after another manner sees another manner of excellency and beauty in Christ another manner of vanity in the Creatures 2. It draweth to Admiration Psal. 119.18 Open thou mine Eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law A Man never wondreth so at the dreadfulness of God's Wrath at the sweetness of God's Mercy in Christ at the Evil of Sin the strictness of Duty till the Spirit opens his Eyes Acts 13.12 Then the Deputy when he saw what was done believed being astonished at the Doctrine of the Lord. 3. It begets more certainty Till we have the Spirit 's Light we have but a trembling wavering Opinion but then we have that which the Apostle calleth The Fulness of the Assurance of Vnderstanding Col. 2.2 Tho we have no other Arguments yet we see by another Light As Gerson reporteth of a devout Man that doubted of an Article of Faith and came to be setled not by any new Demonstration but by the humiliation and captivation of the Understanding to see more by former Arguments As Hagar's Eyes were opened to see the Fountain by her Gen. 21.19 The Spirit taketh away the Vail of Ignorance the Pride of Reason and by an over-powering Force maketh the Soul stoop to the simplicity of the Gospel 4. It is a transforming Light 2 Cor. 3.18 We all with open Face beholding as in a Glass the Glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of our God A Man
the chief Object and Center of our Rest Otherwise we are troubled with divers Cares Fears and Desires Thus Grace worketh upon us But the distance lieth not only on our part but God's Before God and the Creature can be brought together Justice must be satisfied Christ came to restore us to our Primitive Condition 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the World unto himself The Merit of Christ bringeth God to us and the Spirit of Christ bringeth us to God It is as necessary Christ should be united to us as we to God 5. Our Happiness in God is compleated by degrees In this Life the Foundation is laid we are reconciled to him upon Earth But the compleat fruition we have in Heaven there we are fully made perfect in one Here there is weakness in our Reconciliation we do not cleave to him without distraction there are many goings a whoring and wandring from God after our return to him And here on God's part our Punishment is continued in part God helpeth us by Means at second and third Hand We need many Creatures and cannot be happy without them we need Light Meat Cloaths House Our Life is patched up by Supplies from the Creature But there God is all and in all 1 Cor. 15.28 We find in God whatever is necessary for us without Means and outward Helps There God is all and in all he is our House Cloaths Meat Ordinances We have all immediately from God and in all all are made perfect in one We cannot possess any Thing in the World except we encroach upon one anothers Happiness Worldly Things cannot be divided without lessening and we take that from others which we possess our selves Envy sheweth the narrowness of our Comforts But there the Happiness of one is no hindrance to another all are gratified and none miserable As the Sun is a common Privilege none have less because others have more All possess God as their Happiness without Want and Jealousy Vse If to be drawn into Unity and Oneness with God be our Happiness and Perfection then take heed of two Things 1. Of Sin which divides God from you 2. Of doting upon the Creatures which withdraweth you from God 1. Of Sin which maketh God stand at a distance from you Isa. 59.2 Your Iniquities have separated between you and your God and your Sins have hid his Face from you As long as Sin remaineth in full Power there cannot be any Union at all What Communion hath Light with Darkness And the more it is allowed the more it hindreth the Perfection of the Union What is the Reason we do not fully grow up to be one with God in this Life that our Communion with him is so small Sin is in the way the less Holy you are the less you have of this Happiness such unspeakable Joys lively Influences of Grace and immediate Supplies from Heaven In bitter Afflictions we have most Communion with God many times that is nothing so evil as Sin as Afflictions abound so do our Comforts 2. Of doting upon the Creatures which withdraweth your Heart from God The more the Heart is withdrawn from God the more miserable Let the Object be never so pleasing it is an Act of Spiritual Whoredom Sin is Poyson Creatures are not Bread Isa. 55.2 Why do you spend your Mony upon that which is not Bread and your Labour for that which satisfieth not It cannot yield any solid Contentment to the Soul These things are short uncertain things beneath the Dignity of the Soul there is a Restlesness within our selves and Envy towards others they are not enough for us and them too Not for us if enough for the Heart not for the Conscience If God do but arm our own Thoughts against us as usually he doth when the Affections are satisfied with the World he will shew you that the whole Soul is not satisfied therefore he awakeneth Conscience As Children catch at Butterflies the gawdy Wings melt away in their Fingers and there remaineth nothing but an ugly Worm Desertion is occasioned by nothing so much as Carnal Complacency Many times the Object of our Desires is blasted but if not God awakeneth Conscience and all the World will not allay one Pang You may understand this Oneness with respect to our Fellow-Members and so you may understand it jointly of the compleatness of the whole Mystical Body or singly of the strength of that brotherly Affection each Member hath to another There is a double Imperfection for the present in the Church every Member is not gathered and those that are gathered are not come to their perfect growth So that let them be perfect in one is that the whole Body may attain to the integrity of Parts and Degrees First Let us take it Collectively that they may all be gathered together into a perfect Body and no Joints lacking Observe That all the Saints of all Places and all Ages make but one perfect Body In this sense the glorified Saints are not perfect without us Heb. 11.40 God having promised some better thing for us that they without us should not be made perfect It is no derogation for Christ is not perfect without us The Church is called the Fulness of him that filleth all in all Ephes. 1.23 They are as to their Persons perfect free from Sin and Misery made perfect in Holiness and Glory but not as to their Church-Relation So Ephes. 4.13 Till we all come to the Vnity of the Faith and of the Knowledg of the Son of God unto a perfect Man unto the measure of the Stature of the Fulness of Christ. All the Body must be made up that Christ Mystical may be compleat Now there are some Joints lacking all the Elect are not gathered Vse 1. See the Honour that is put upon the Saints The Saints on Earth and the Saints in Heaven make but one Family Ephes. 3.15 Of whom the whole Family in Heaven and Earth is named In a great House there are many Rooms and Lodgings some Above some Below but they make but one House So of Saints some are Militant some Triumphant and yet all make but one Assembly and Congregation Heb. 12.23 We are come to the General Assembly and Church of the First-Born which are written in Heaven we upon Earth are come to them Our Christ is the same we are acted by the same Spirit governed by the same Head and shall be conducted to the same Glory As in the State of Grace some are before us in Christ so some are in Heaven before us their Faces once as black as yours We have the same Ground to expect Heaven only they are already entred Vse 2. It is a ground of Hope we shall all meet together in one Assembly Psal. 1. 5. The Vngodly shall not stand in the Judgment nor Sinners in the Congregation of the Righteous Now the Saints are scattered up and down where they may be most useful then all shall be gathered together
any man among you seem to be wise in this world let him become a fool that he may be wise he cometh to himself again and when sensible of his filthiness and loathsomness it is a sign he hath some love and liking to the pure and holy ways of God as there is more light and love infused into the heart so do men more loath themselves for their filthiness Ezek. 36.31 Then shall ye remember your own evil ways and doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and abominations To be truly and really ashamed of sin is the effect of saving Grace Ezra 9.6 I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God There are two sorts of Shame the shame of a guilty stormy Conscience and the shame of a tender Conscience there is a confounding shame and a penitential shame the one breedeth trouble of Spirit and is the fruit of Sin the other an holy Self-loathing and is the fruit of Grace the first may be in carnal men the other is only in Gods Children The differences between these two sorts of shame may be these 1. The Penitential Shame continueth and increaseth under the greatest assurance of Forgiveness and dieth not when we think we are out of danger the other is presently after the commission of sin and while the guilt remaineth As David grew shy of God Psal. 32. after he got his discharge and his sins were pardoned Ezek. 16.63 That thou mayest remember and be confounded and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified towards thee for all that thou h●st done saith the Lord God There is a dislike of sin when they are upon the surest Terms with God 2. The first sort of Shame considereth Sin as it damneth or destroyeth not as it defileth but the second as it is an act of Filthiness and Folly of Folly as David Psal. 73.22 So foolish was I and ignorant I was as a beast before thee of Filthiness Ezra 9.6 O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God for our iniquities have increased over our head and our trespass is grown up unto the heavens They loath sin as sin because they love Holiness as Holiness Psal. 119.140 Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it Conscience keepeth its own Court medleth not but for moral evils is ashamed not of calamities and infelicities but crimes or sins which are hateful to God and therefore to the new Creature for it hateth and loveth on Gods grounds and reasons 3. The first sort of Shame is accompanied with slavish fear shunneth the presence of God as Adam did Gen. 3.10 I heard thy voice in the garden and I was afraid because I was naked and I hid my self or David Psal. 32.3 4. When I kept silence my bones waxed old c. The other is accompanied with Love and causeth the Godly to come into Gods presence but with self-loathing and reverence Prov. 30.2 Surely I am more brutish than any man and have not the understanding of a man Luke 18.13 The Publican standing afar off would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven but smote on his breast saying God be merciful to me a sinner The one causeth us to hate God the other to loath our selves for our unkindness to him and unworthy dealing with him The one is our torment the other our cure 4. The trouble and shame of Hypocrites is because of the World the shame of the Godly is because of God Saul was not ashamed of his sin but ashamed that Samuel should reprove him before the people 1 Sam. 15.30 So the thief is ashamed when he is found Jer. 2.26 But a Child of God is ashamed before God and of sins which the world cannot see Psal. 69.5 6. O God thou knowest my foolishness and my sins are not hid from thee Let not them that wait on thee O Lord God of hosts be ashamed for my sake let not those that seek thee be confounded for my sake O God of Israel As if he had said Sure I have just cause to be ashamed c. 5. The effect sheweth a difference the true shame quickeneth the Soul to more resolution vigilance earnest striving against sin so that our Life Trade and principal Business in the World is to avoid it Psal. 119.6 Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy commandments But in the other it prevaileth no further than that they may avoid the present trouble and get a little ease The Reasons and Causes of this Shame 1. A new and heavenly Light to see those things which others see not and which themselves saw not before Jer. 31.19 Surely after that I was turned I repented and after I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth Rom. 7.9 I was alive without the commandment once but when the commandment came sin revived and I died They see more of sin and more evil in sin than ever they saw before as light discovers what lay hid before in the dark 2. A lively sense and taste of Gods Mercy and Goodness of his forbearing Mercy that he did not strike assoon as the offence was committed Rom. 2.4 The goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance Redeeming Mercy by Christ 1 Joh. 3.5 Ye know that he was manifested to take away our sins Covenanting Mercy or the offers of Pardon and Life in the new Covenant Acts 17.30 The time of this ignorance God winked at but now he commandeth all men every where to repent His healing Mercy Tit. 3.5 According to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost To offend so good a God or sin against the Lord of Love and Mercy is a great crime 3. The new Nature which is contrary to Sin Psal. 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate evil there is Odium offensionis odium inimicitiae a hatred of offence and a hatred of enmity 4. Their seriousness before the deluded Soul is so taken up with fleshly Pleasures and deluding Objects that they had no time nor room to consider of their ways what with business and sensual delights and the crowd of worldly cares and the noise of foolish sports and sensual passions their hearts were diverted from observing things of the greatest and everlasting consequence they did in effect forget they had Souls to save or lose or a God to serve or a Glory to look after but now they remember and loath themselves Vse 1. To shew how much they differ from the People of God that wallow in all manner of filthiness and know no shame Impudency is a great note of Obstinacy and Impenitency Zeph. 3.5 The unjust knoweth no shame By long custom in sinning they lose the sense of the filthiness and odiousness of it and
them so as to affect and esteem them and esteem and affect them so as to seek after them and so to seek after them as to seek after them in the first place 1. We must know them For the Things of the Spirit must be understood before they can be chosen and desired John 4.10 If thou knewest the gift The brutish world know not the worth of spiritual and heavenly things therefore mind them not 2. Believe them None will seek after that which they judg to be a fancy or of the certainty of which they are not perswaded especially when they must forgo present delights and contentments to obtain it such is Salvation by Christ 2 Pet. 1.5 10 16 And besides this giving all diligence to add to your faith virtue and to virtue knowledg Wherefore the rather brethren give all diligence to make your calling and election sure 3. Affect and esteem them above all other things Heb. 11.13 Being perswaded of these things they imbraced them So esteem them that your desires may not be checked and controled by other things Heb. 11.26 By faith Moses when he was come to years refused to be called the Son of Pharoahs Daughter 4. To pursue after them with all diligence Phil. 2.10 Working out your salvation with fear and trembling and John 6.27 Labour not for the meat that perisheth but that which endureth to everlasting life 5. Seek them in the first place that you may not only make it your business but the chiefest business of your lives to obtain these Things Mat. 6.33 First seek the kingdom of God This is to set your faces heavenward when you make it your great business to please God and save your souls 2. This is Life and Peace By Life and Peace is meant Eternal Blessedness he addeth to the Word Life the Term Peace because in Eternal Life there is freedom from all evil and the presence of all good for there can be no true solid peace where there is the fear of any evil or a want of any good but here being neither the Soul is fully at peace and rest therefore 't is said that God will give glory honour and peace to every one that doth good Rom. 2.10 Heaven is the new Jerusalem the City of Peace where we converse with God who is a God of Peace and enjoy full peace and rest from all our Molestations but tho it be meant of Heaven yet peace of Conscience is not excluded partly because 't is the beginning and earnest of it that peace which we now have in the Kingdom of the Messiah by our Reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God and the testimony of a good conscience 2 Cor. 1.20 This is a continual feast Now the fruit of righteousness is peace Peace in Heaven and peace on earth Luke 2.14 and Luke 19.38 Blessed be the king that cometh in the name of the Lord. Peace in Heaven and Glory in the highest 'T is begun here and perfected there And partly because whatever the Spirit worketh tendeth to our Peace and Blessedness not only hereafter but now Rom. 15.13 Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing The Reasons are in common 1. With respect to Gods Justice God who is the most Righteous Governour of the world will make a just difference between the Righteous and the wicked by rewards and punishments it belongeth to his general Justice ut bonis bene sit malis male that it should be well with them that do well and ill with them that do ill Psal. 11.5 6. Vpon the wicked he shall rain snares fire and brimstone and an horrible tempest shall be the portion of their cup for the righteous God loveth righteousness his countenance beholdeth the upright Surely God is not indifferent to good and evil to them that will please the flesh and obey the Spirit his Justice will not permit that the carnal and the regenerate who are so different in their lives should meet together in the end no surely the end of the one will be death and the other life and peace 2. To suit his Motives to the profit of Men. 1. There needeth something frightful to make sin a terror to us therefore doth he counterballance with advantage the pleasures of sin that are but for a season we are vehemently addicted to carnal delights therefore to check this inclination God ballanceth the choicest and highest pleasures with eternal pain that by setting one against the other we may be deterred from pleasing the flesh Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall die 2. To encourage the godly in their self-denying Obedience The godly quit and forgo many pleasures which others enjoy Now to restrain and deny the flesh seemeth a pain and trouble therefore to encourage them to continue in an holy course tho it be distastful to the flesh and to renounce worldly pleasures and sensual delights while they may injoy them God hath told them of life and peace they shall have joy enough 1. VSE is Information To shew us the folly of wicked men who are self-destroyers and wrong their own souls while they despise the ways of Wisdom and prefer carnal satisfactions before the pleasing of God All that hate me love death Prov. 8.36 Not formally but consequentially a wicked man sinneth not purposely that he may be damned but that is the issue 2. It sheweth us the security of the wicked they sleep most soundly when their danger is nighest as Jonah in the storm that was raised for his sake they are upon the brink of Hell yet they go on merrily lulling their Consciences asleep with outward and vain delights but tho they sleep their damnation sleepeth not it were better to waken and escape the danger Prov. 27.12 A prudent man foreseeth the evil and hideth himself but the simple pass on and are punished A little sober Consideration of this truth may be of use to them VSE 2. Is Admonition Oh let this stop us from going on in a flesh-pleasing course Consider whither it will lead you what followeth upon this 1. 'T is Death If it were a small thing you might bear it but 't is a case of Life and Death eternal Life and Death This will be the eternal ruin of your precious and immortal souls The more you please the Flesh the more you add Fuel to that Fire which shall never be quenched and provide matter for that never-dying Worm or eternal sorrow and confusion of face to your souls Those things that now please the Senses will one day sting the Conscience We should not affect that which will be Death to us Remember the Hook when the Flesh looketh only to the Bait. 2. T is Death threatned in the Word of God and therefore certain as well as dreadful Rom. 6.21 The wages of sin is death and Rom. 7.5 The motions of sin did bring forth fruit unto death If a man warn
when 't is cross to our carnal interest his favour must be valued as our happiness and the pleasing of ●im made our greatest work and for his sake we must be content to s●ffer any thing tho never so hard and difficult and contrary to our nature Let not such s●y they l●ve God that cannot deny a lust for him nor will not for his sake venture the loss of any thing that is dear to them either goods or liberty or favour of men or preferment or credit Pilate was loath to venture the Jews displeasure the Gaderenes would part with Christ rather than their swine Surely if we put the love of God to hazard upon light occasions we do not love him nor count his favour our supream happiness 2. Others have a deliberate resolution and seem for the present absolutely and seriously to please God in all things and keep his commandments but they do not verifie it in their conversations Their purposes and resolutions are not dissembled for the present but yet soon changed they neither keep the commandments of God nor study to please him there is a moral sincerity in them but not a supernatural sincerity Wherein differ they The moral sincerity is a dictate of conscience but the supernatural sincerity is a fruit of heart-changing grace What shall we do then Beg such an heart of God Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart within them that they would fear me and keep my commandments always God sheweth what we should do convinced conscience sheweth what purposes and resolutions we should make but a converted heart is only able to keep them That must be sought of God and all good means must be used that these purposes that we conceive to be sincere may be found to be so And God will not fail the striving and indeavouring soul that seeketh to persevere in its holy will and purpose to obey and please God but by internal grace and external providence will help us onward in our course to Heaven But if we depend upon our purposes and resolutions made in solemn duties with a clear conscience and with a deliberate and seemingly resolved will without those subsequent indeavours which evidence they come from a renewed heart alas they will soon come to nothing 2. VSE To exhort us to the love of God The more you love him your title is the clearer experience greater hopes of eternal life stronger 1. Consider these two things God is lovely in himself and hath love us 1. That God is lovely in himself because of his Wisdom and Greatness as well as because of his Benignity We are or may be soon perswaded that we ought to love him as the fountain of all goodness but the other Attributes should attract and draw our hearts also I shall add this argument to all the rest Whatever ingageth us to adhere to God as an all-sufficient portion that is certainly a motive of our love for love is nothing else but a delightful adhesion to God Now his infinitely glorious essence dominion and power ingage us to adhere to him Therefore we must press you to consider the excellency of his nature evidenced in the absolute dominion of his providence and holiness of his laws We would have you consider neither with the exclusion of the other nor his greatness without his goodness nor his benignity and goodness without his greatness neither of both without his holiness all maketh our love more strong and regular 2. He hath loved us in what he hath done already in what he hath prepared for us 1. In what he hath done already in Christ which sheweth that God is love John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son 1 John 4 10. Herein is love not that we loved God but he loved us and sent his Son to be a propitiation for our sins 2. In what he will do he hath greater benefits to give us than what he hath already given James 2.5 God hath chosen the poor of the world rich in faith and heirs of a kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him not to learned rich benefactors but to them that love him and are willing to do and suffer any thing for his sake 1 Pet. 2.9 But ye are a chosen generation a royal Priesthood an holy nation a peculiar people that you should shew forth the praise of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light 2. That love runneth a wasting on the creature That is ruitions and destructive This conduces to our good if we suffer loss here 't will be recompenced by a greater benefit I come now to the last clause who are called according to purpose Doctrine The effectually called are those that love God and are beloved by him Let me speak 1. Of the several kinds of calling 2. The properties of effectual calling 3. The ends of it 1. Let us distinguish the several kinds of calling 1. There is a twofold calling proper and improper First the improper call is the general and common invitation of all men in the world by the works of Creation and Providence by all which God inviteth men to seek after him The work of Creation Acts 17.27 all Gods works have a tongue and a voice proclaiming and crying up an infinite and eternal power who is the fountain of our being and happiness So Rom. 1.20 The invisible things of God from the creation of the world are clearly seen being understood from the things which are made Psal. 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy-work No man can look seriously upon the works of Creation but this thought will arise in his mind That all this was made by a powerful wise and good God he telleth us verse the 3 d. There is no speech and language where their voice is not heard Though it be not an articulate yet it is a very intelligible voice They in effect speak to every Nation in their own language that there is an eternal God who must be sought after and worshipped and served And as the works of Creation so the works of Providence whether for good or evil Good Acts 14.17 Nevertheless he left not himself without witness in that he did good The comfortable passages of providence are a pregnant full and clear testimony that the government of the world is in the hands of a good God So afflictive providences some of Gods works have a louder and more distinct voice than others Micha 6.9 The Lords voice cryeth unto the city and the man of wisdom shall see thy name hear ye the rod and who hath appointed it Or if you suppose that concerneth the Church take Rom. 1.18 For the wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men God doth discipline and instruct the world by his judgments that he is holy just and true Gods works speak to us only we must take heed
Justice of God Rom. 1.32 They knew the just judgment of God that they that do such things are worthy of death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His righteous dealing He hath revealed his wrath from Heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men Men are convinced in their own consciences that they are liable to his condemnation and judgment The barbarous people of Melita had a sense that divine vengeance followed sinners Acts 28.4 He is a murderer whom tho he hath escaped the sea vengeance suffereth not to live Therefore till Gods Justice be appeased a man can have no satisfaction in him 2. The next reason Because of the deepness of the impression the conscience of sin is not easily blotted out man is conscious to himself that he hath offended God and deserved his wrath and this trouble and fear is not easily appeased nor the wounds of conscience healed The Apostle still goeth upon this argument against the Jews that the Sacrifices could not make the Worshipper perfect as appertaining to the conscience Heb. 9.9 That is perfectly remove the guilt or the fear of condemnation and punishment Heb 10.2 The worshippers were never so purged as to have no conscience of sin so that the expiation and purging out of sin is no slight thing 3. After grace received much of our old bondage remaineth with us for all their life time they are subject to bondage Heb. 2.15 We carry these shackles with us to Heaven Gates Which cometh to pass partly through the imperfection of our graces 1 John 4.17 18. Herein is our love made perfect that me may have boldness in the day of judgment because as he is so are we in the world There is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear because fear hath torment he that feareth is not perfect in love 'T is possible a man may be justified but because his love doth not prevail to a greater obedience to God or conformity to Christ therefore some of that fear which hath torment in it yet remaineth and we have not that confidence which may imbolden us against the fears of condemnation or the terrors of the judgment As faith worketh by love and love produceth its effect which is obedience to God and conformity to Christ the fear of being condemned is cast out and the conscience is more soundly established and partly because God seemeth to revive these condemning fears by many harsh corrections which look very wrath-like an instance we have 1 Kings 17.18 The Woman of Sarepta when her only Son died she said to Elisha What have I to do with thee thou man of God art thou come to call my sin to remembrance to slay my son She thought that that Providence intimated that God began to reckon with her about her sins this may be a mistake for Gods Providence must be expounded by his word The grievous bitterness is intended for good not for evil to prevent condemnation not establish it as the concluded determination and sentence of our Judg 1 Cor. 11.32 We are chastned of the Lord that we may not be condemned with all the world However you see these fears are soon revived in us by bitter and grievous providences which make us unravel all our hopes and question whatever God hath done for us and partly too God may do it by some judicial impression on the conscience Job 13.26 27. Thou writest bitter things against me and makest me possess the iniquities of my youth Thou puttest my feet into the stocks and lookest narrowly unto all my paths thou settest a print upon the heels of my feet He speaketh there as if God did pursue him as one that was not justified the wounds of an healed conscience may bleed afresh and sins long ago committed may be raked out of their graves and like walking Ghosts stare in the face of conscience and they may be apt to suspect all is wrong and that they are still liable to the condemnation of God God may permit this upon new provocations when we walk not humbly and cautiously with him and do not cherish the fervency of our love to him and the tenderness of our consciences Now all this sheweth how hard a matter it is to get rid of the fear of condemnation before justification there is guilt law conscience against us the law condemneth hearts condemn and God himself seems to condemn us after justification imperfection of grace sharp afflictions and sad thoughts about past sins these seem to condemn us 3. The sure and solid grounds of a believers peace Before our conscience can be established these three things must be done 1. Gods Honour secured 2. The Law satisfied 3. The conditions of the Gospel fulfilled 1. Gods honour secured by a fit demonstration of his Justice and Holiness which are the two Attributes which do revive our guilty fears His justice concerneth the rewarding of the obedient and punishing the transgressors according to his law The government of the world is secured by keeping up the honour of his justice Gen. 18.25 Shall not Judge of all the earth do right And Rom. 3.5 6. Is God unrighteous who taketh vengeance God forbid How then shall God judge the world Certainly the government of the world is not provided for if there be not a means to keep up the honour of his justice for God is not to be looked upon as a private party wronged but the Governor and Judge of the world who must have satisfaction or declare his righteousness His holiness must be demonstrated also or his displeasure against sin which is sufficiently done by the sufferings of Christ which put an everlasting brand upon sin Rom. 8.3 God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh At Golgotha we have the truest sight of sin 2. His law satisfied and the authority thereof kept up Gal. 4.5 6. Christ was made under the law to redeem them that were under the law that we might receive the adoption of Sons Christ was made under the law moral which all are subject unto as obedience unto natural parents Luke 2.51 Positive and Ceremonial which the Jews were bound to obey Matth. 3.15 More particularly the law of a Redeemer and Saviour so he was obliged to die for us Psal. 40.6 7 8. Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire my ears hast thou opened burnt-offering and sin-offering hast thou not required Then said I Lo I come in the volume of the book 't is written of me I delight to do thy will O my God yea thy law is in my heart This was the noblest piece of service or the highest degree of obedience that ever could be performed to God Rom. 5.19 By the obedience of one shall many be made righteous Phil. 2.8 And being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself and became obedient unto death the death of the Cross. And Heb. 5.8 9. Though he was a Son yet learned he
our selves And partly because of its relation to God 't is called the candle of the Lord Prov. 20.27 'T is in the place of God to us and therefore if it condemn us may not God much more its checks and reproaches are a warning from God it acteth in his name and citeth us before his Tribunal and therefore we must not smother and put off troubles of conscience till God put them away partly because of the rule it goeth by which is the law of God evident either by the light of nature Rom. 2.15 Which sheweth the work of the law written in their hearts their consciences also bearing them witness and their thoughts in the mean while either accusing or else excusing one another Or by the light of Scripture Prov. 6.22 Bind my Commandment on thy heart when thou goest it shall lead thee when thou sleepest it shall keep thee when thou walkest it shall walk with thee It doth but repeat over the law of God to you it will be heard once better hear it now while you have opportunity to correct your error 2. The matter must be discussed that you may resolve to do as the case shall require 1. In some cases there is an appeal from Court to Court In what Court doth conscience condemn you In the Court of the Law you ought to subscribe the condemnation is just to own the desert of sin and if God should bring it upon you he is righteous Nehem. 9.33 Thou art just in all that is brought upon us for thou hast done right but we have done wickedly But there is a liberty of appeal from Court to Court you may take Sanctuary at the Lords Grace and humbly claim the benefit of the New Covenant Psal. 130.3 4. If thou Lord shouldest mark iniquity O Lord who shall stand but there is forgiveness with thee that thou shouldest be feared And Psal. 143.2 And enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified Deprecate the first Court and beg the favour of the second 2. In other cases there is an appeal from Judge to Judge Suppose conscience condemn you in the Gospel Court that you are not a sound believer the case must not be lightly passed over but you must examine whether there be a sincere bent of heart in you towards God yea or no When others question or impeach your sincerity you appeal to Heaven as Job did My witness is in Heaven The case is somewhat different when your own hearts question it but yet you must see whether the judgment of conscience be the judgment of God Conscience is a Judge but not the supream Judge It may err both in acquitting and condemning in acquitting when from a Judge it becometh an Advocate excusing the partialities of our obedience So in condemning when from a Judge it becometh an Accuser and exaggerateth incident frailties beyond measure God may sometimes speak peace in the sentence of his word when he doth not in the feeling of conscience Beg of God to interpret your case our sincerity is best interpreted by a double testimony 't is well if it be so clear that a single one serveth turn Rom. 9.1 I say the truth in Christ I die not my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost And Rom. 8.16 And the spirit its self bearing witness with our spirits that we are the children of God 3. Suppose the worst that you have no relief by an appeal from Court to Court or from J●dge to Judge yet there is a passing from state to state still allowed us John 5.24 And shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life You are in a state of co●demnation but you must get out of it as fast as you can take the same course that a condemned man would What is that 1. Acknowledge the Justice of it see you be affected with it Christ justifieth none but the self-condemned for he came to seek and to save that which was lost Luke 18.13 14. God be merciful to me a sinner I tell you this man went down to his house justified rather than the other for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted You have no plea but that of a sinner 2. Take heed of resting in this estate or going on in your sins There is sententia lata but dilata Eccles. 8.11 Because sentence against an evil doer is not executed speedily therefore the hearts of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil There is nothing but the slender thread of a frail life between you and execution get it repealed quickly or you are undone for ever Their damnation slumbereth not 2 Pet. 3.3 God is slow in executing the sentence as being willing that men should repent yet it will be executed 't is every day nearer and nearer 3. Embrace the offer of the Gospel and set your selves in the way of your recovery Christ hath delivered us from wrath to come but you must upon warning flee from wrath to come Matth. 3.7 And then that sentence of death which you have received n your selves will be repealed The door of grace is always open to those Heb. 6.8 who have fled for refuge to lay hold of the hope set before them 4. Make your qualification more explicite by an holy and Heavenly life 1 Thess. 5.8 9. But let us who are of the day be sober putting on the breast-plate of faith and love and for an helmet the hope of salvation For God hath not appointed us to wrath but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ. The more you live upon the other world and in a strict obedience to God the sooner you will make out your qualification 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity we have had our conversations in the world I now proceed to the 2. Doctrine That our triumph over the fear of condemnation mainly ariseth from the several acts of Christs mediation 1. His death is mentioned it is Christ that dyed that is he hath expiated our sins by his death and obtained release and pardon for us and then who shall condemn This will appear 1. By the notions by which it is set forth a ransom a Mediatorial Sacrifice and a propitiation a ransom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 20.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 2.6 A ransom is a price given to a Judge or one that hath the power of life and death to save the life of one capitally guilty and by law bound to suffer death or some other evil of punishment This was our case God was the supream Judge before whose Tribunal man standeth guilty and liable to death and condemnation but Christ gave himself as a ransom in our stead to save us from the condemnation which we had deserved Job 33.24 Deliver him from going down to the pit I
Excellencies of this inheritance Page 177 178 Holiness distinct from Godliness Page 16 The better part of our deliverance Page 38 Holiness and Goodness is the very nature of God Page 38 Holiness compleated ere we enter Heaven Page 38 Holiness visible to be charitably judged Page 77 Wherein it now consisteth Page 300 Honesty binds us to obey God Page 104 Hope and fear motives to duty Page 105 Saving Hope Page 230 Twofold of expectation and experience Page 165 Great and glorious Page 202 Saveth Page 222 What 't is Page 223 Its object Page 223 Ground Page 224 Very necessary Page 225 Vanquishes Page 225 Respect between Faith and Hope Page 226 May every one Hope for Salvation Page 227 Distinguisht into its kinds Page 229 May be interrupted Page 232 Mercy object of Hope Page 232 So is the promise Page ib. 233 How we brought to Hope Page 233 234 How increased Page 234 235 Brings Heaven to us on earth Page 235 Proper object Page 237 Built on promises Page 238 These confirmed sufficiently Page 239 How far seen Page 239 Real Page 240 Should over-rule our Hearts Page 241 Its qualifications Page 242 Humiliation what where begins and ends Page 145 I IGnorant we may be of some thing without danger Page 201 Incarnation of Christ with the ends and frui●s of it Page 28 29 30 Immunnities we have by Christ Page 205 Inclination of the flesh what Page 41 Not alike to all sins Page 121 Indulgence to the flesh what Page 43 44 Image of God None so fit to restore as Christ Page 300 301 Image of God Must be restored ere we can have communion with God Page 34 35 It is mans glory Page 300 Immensity of God thence Omniscience Page 257 Immutability of God and eternal merit of Christ foundation of our eternal glory Page 183 Immortality known or guessed at by nature Page 141 Impotency of mind is from unmortified heart Page 130 To prayer without the spirit Page 251 Impeccable no Saint on earth is Page 148 Infirmities in Believers and occasions to the World to misjudge them and the spirit Page 77 They sin but design it not Page 103 Innocent Creatures punisht for mans sin and why and how Page 198 Impossibilities may be imagined not hoped Page 237 Interests of flesh what Page 41 Prevails in some without any controul Page 103 Our true Interest by God made motive to our duty Page 140 Intercession of Christ and of the spirit Page 244 How these differ Page ib. Invisible World to be sought Page 241 Joys of good conscience are foretasts of Heaven Page 148 Judgment to come not so generally known as Immortality and a state of Eternity Page 141 Yet known and own'd by some Page ib. Presag'd by fears of guilty conscience Page 240 Justice of God joins sin and punishment Page 22 60 Justification excludes not Mortification Page 125 What it implyeth Page 333 How many ways this done Page 334 How consistent with Gods Justice c. Page 334 335 336 Sinner Repenting and Believing is justified Page 335 336 Shall not be reversed Page 336 And why Page 336 337 Justified ones are Sanctified Page 335 K KIndness to be shewed to the creature subjected to vanity by our sin Page 199 Kingdom of God some far off Page 47 Knowledge of our selves and our state how to be obtained Page 43 44 That carnal men have of God is cold and lifeless Page 55 Knowledge of sin by the spirit necessary to mortification Page 133 L LEadings of God by which Saints are kept in their way Page 146 147 To be Led what Page 148 Its branches Page 148 149 Great mercy Page 151 It is through all duty Page 152 Legality partial or predominant and what each is Page 158 Law of spirit of Life what Page 8 Of sin what Page 9 Why so called Page 9 Its effects Page ib. Of God constitutes and directs duty Page 11 Given to man in innocence Page 11 And what Page ib. Of nature left in fallen man Page 11 Its effects Page ib. 155 Of man what tends to Page 11 Law what it includes Page 12 The New Covenant or Law of God and man differ and in what Page 13 Law could not put away sin Page 26 Nor justifie us ib. and Page 27 Was next to Christ and the Gospel most Divine Page 26 Cannot sanctifie us Page 28 Nor save Page 154 Irritates sin Page ib. Is not abrogated Page 35 36 37 Hath twofold office Page 154 Continues in force in Heaven Page 37 How fulfilled by a Believer Page 37 Law pretended against persecuted Christians Page 363 Law ceremonial what Page 206 Law-giver God Page 101 Legal spirit what and its operations Page 154 155 158 'T is timerous towards God and for truth Page 158 159 How removed Page ib. Liberty from sin and death by Christs merit and intercession Page 23 On what terms to be had Page 24 These terms cannot by man be changed Page 24 Of Gods children what now Page 201 Liberty mistaken Page ib. 'T is not to live as corrupt nature listeth Page 204 205 Liberty future glorious what Page 206 207 Compar'd with our present Liberty Page 207 Light and Life brought to Light by the Gospel Page 360 Life natural Beast-like Rational Spiritual Page 75 What this is Page ib. Of Grace vigorous as sin languisheth Page 126 Grieved with opposite sins Page 133 Spiritual both beginning and pledge of Life eternal Page 139 What it is Page ib. Natural and eternal compared Page 144 Eternal and Spiritual compared Page ib. Life must be ventured for Christ and why Page 363 Love of God to Believers engaging motive to love him and obey Page 330 To suffer also Page 369 Love of God to what Page 36 Lesser love to God is accounted hatred Page 62 And why Page ib. Love or hatred as we respect Gods Law Page 63 Love to God is principle of mortification Page 128 Surest way to assurance Page 160 Love that you may Live Page 140 And go possess the blessed hopes Page 242 Longings spiritual shall not be frustrated Page 140 For God giveth them that he may satisfie them Page ib. The objects of them Page 219 Lusts contrary to each other Page 48 Love to God what Page 280 281 282 Its properties Character of such as God will benefit by all and why Page 284 285 Best seen in sufferings for God Page 285 Twofold sincerity of Love and what each is Page 286 God Lovely for himself Page 286 For his Love to us Page 286 M MAn subject to God and on what grounds Page 10 11 Owes him a voluntary obedience Page ib. and 71 Men are of two sorts different in original principles c. Page 39 Discover what they are by respect to different objects Page 42 Three sorts of Men in the World Page 46 Mankind fallen under Gods displeasure Page 69 Corrupted wholly Page 106 Of two sides Page 314 315 Man pleasing what c. Page 72 Master sins like great diseases
to live to him daily mercies bind us to sweeten our service God being so good a Master 4. The new nature is requisite that we may in all things mind Gods Glory 'T is more easie to convince us of our obligations to live unto God than to get an heart and a disposition to live to God The new creature which is created after God ever bendeth and tendeth towards him As the flower of the Sun doth follow the Sun and openeth and shutteth according to the absence of the Sun so doth the heart of a Christian move after God We say aqua in tantum ascendit c. Nature riseth no higher than its spring head and center self is our principle and end Hosea 10.1 Israel is an empty vine He bringeth forth fruit to himself We live to our selves and seek after our own interests till God give us another heart when the heart is changed a mans felicity and last end is changed And therein the new nature doth most bewray its self 5. The more our lusts are mortified the more sincerely shall we aim at the Glory of God That which is lame is easily turned out of the way And if we have not a Command over our affections they will be interposing and perverting all our actions and when God should be at the end of all our actions the idol that our lust hath set up will be at the end of them We will subordinate them to our pleasure honour and profit any lust is a great ingrosser The belly will be God and honour command us as a God and Mammon will be God our hearts are corrupted and some created thing is set up in stead of God Therefore mortification is the guard of sincerity Otherwise we shall love the Creature for its self alone or for our selves alone and so be turned from God whom alone we should honour please and obey USE 2. Is this the temper and disposition of our Souls Do we make the glory of God our great end and scope If it be so then 1. We will prefer Gods honour above our own Interests though never so dear to us A notable Instance we have in our Lord Jesus Christ who came as Gods Servant in the work of Redemption and we read of him in the general Rom 51.3 That he pleased not himself That is he did not gratify his own natural and humane will More particularly Phil. 2.6 7 8. That he emptied himself and made himself of no reputation and humbled himself to the death of the Cross. To promote his Fathers glory he willingly submitted to all manner of indignities for this end purpose more expressly we have the workings of his heart set forth John 12.27 28. Father save me from this hour but for this cause came I to this hour Father glorify thy name and there came a voice from Heaven saying I have glorified it and will glorify it again His desires of his own safety were moderated and submitted to the conscience of his duty and he preferreth the honour of God and seeks to advance it above his own ease for Christ endeth all debates with this Father glorify thy name Now certainly all that have the Spirit of Christ will be tender of Gods glory and account that dearer to them than any thing else and submit to the bitter cup so God may have honour thereby You will think Christs example too high who submitted the sensible consolations of the Godhead to the respects of Gods glory and this is not possibly practicable by any creature 'T is true every ordinary Christian doth not come to this height but the thing is imitable witness Paul who valued the glory of God above that personal contentment and happiness that should come to him by his own Salvation Rom. 9.3 For I could wish that my self were accursed from Christ for my Brethren and kinsmen according to the flesh 'T is not an hasty speech he calleth God to witness that this was the real disposition of his heart he speaketh advisedly and with good deliberation But how then can it be made good There is an holy part and an happy part in religion he did not wish less love to Christ nor to be less beloved of him But you will say a regular love beginneth at home true but 't is not his Salvation and their Salvation that cometh in competition but his Salvation and the glory of God and he was much more affected with Gods glory then his own good This should shame us that stand upon our petty Interests We are not called to such self-denyal Surely we should be contented to do any thing and be any thing so God may be glorified poor or rich so God may be glorified by our poverty or riches As travellers take the way as they find it so it will lead to their journeys end Decline no service nor suffering for Gods sake when he calleth us to it Phil. 1.20 So also now Christ shall be magnified in my Body Whether it be by life or by death So Christ be glorified in his Body That is a lower and more moderate Interest the suspension and delay of Salvation laying it at Gods feet the glorifying of God in his calling was more welcome than his present entrance into glory So Acts 20.24 I count not my life dear to me so I may finish my course with joy When they told him of dangers he went bound in the Spirit to Jerusalem Well then an heart that is truely affected with Gods glory standeth upon no temporal Interests and concernments and preferreth Gods honour before its own ease honour pleasure esteem yea life its self 2. If tender of receiving honour from men to Gods wrong The Apostles did not set up a trade for themselves Acts 14.15 They rent their Clothes and said what do ye do we are but men of like passions So Acts 3.12 Why gaze ye upon us as if by our power and holiness we had made this man to walk Herod received Applauses and was therefore blasted Act. 12. The concealer is as bad as the stealer to affect or admit Divine honour or too much attributing to our selves any good effected by us as Instruments as we must not assume so we must not re●eive honour when 't is ascribed to us by others The Apostles would not suffer the admiration and praise in the people to rest upon themselves Thy pound hath gained ten pounds Matth. 25. And 1 Cor. 15.10 Not I but the grace of God that was with me And I live but not I Gal. 2.20 3. If affected deeply with Gods dishonour though done by others Psa. 69.9 The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up and the reproaches of them that have reproached thee have faln upon me Vehement passions waste the Body affected more with Gods dishonour than our own personal injuries On the other side when we rejoyce in his glory though we our selves be lessened Phil. 1.18 Whether in pretence or in truth Christ is preached and I therein
sacrifice and the power of his Spirit we come to God and by a thankful sense of his love we are incouraged and inabled to our duty Well then when in a broken hearted manner we confess our sins and own our Redeemer and devote our selves to God and resolve to walk in Christs prescribed way then are sins pardoned and we accepted with God 2. This Faith and repentance is wrought in us by the word and mainly acted in prayer First 'T is wrought in us by the word wherein God is pleased to propound free and easie Conditions of pardon and mercy praying us to be reconciled and to cast away the weapons of our Rebellion and submit to the Law of grace For here in verses 18 19 20. He doth not only reveal the mystery but beseecheth us to enter into Covenant with him and to yield up our selves to his service Secondly Prayer by which in the name of Christ we sue out this benefit This is the means appointed both for regenerate and unregenerate The unregenerate Acts 8.22 Repent therefore of thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thought of thine heart be forgiven thee The regenerate 1 John 1.9 If we confess our sins he is just and faithful to forgive us our sins Believing broken hearted prayer doth notably prevail the publican had no other suit but Lord be merciful to me a sinner Luke 18.13 The Lord describeth the poor sinners that came to him for pardon Jer. 31.9 They shall come with weeping and supplications 5. We are sensibly pardoned as well as actually when the Lord giveth peace and joy in believing and sheddeth abroad his love in our hearts by the Spirit We must distinguish between the grant and the sense sometimes a pardon may be granted when we have not the sense and comfort of it We may hold a precious Jewel with a trembling hand as the waves roll after a storm when the wind is ceased God may keep his people humble as a Prince may grant a pardon to a condemned malefactor but he will not have him know so much till he come even to the place of execution Davids heart was to Absolom yet he would not let him see his face There are two Courts the Court of Heaven and the Court of Conscience The pardon may be passed in the one and not in the other and a man may have peace with God when he hath not peace of Conscience To assure our hearts before him and know our sincerity 1 John 3.9 is a thing distinct from being sincere and a man may be safe though not comfortable Every one that believeth cannot make the bold challenge of faith and say Who shall condemn Rom 8.33 6. The last step is when we have a compleat and full absolution of sin that is at the day of Judgment Acts 3.19 Your sins shall be blotted out when days of refreshment shall come from the presence of the Lord when the Judge pro tribunali shall sententionally and in the audience of all the World pronounce our pardon To make title to pardon by Law is comfortable but then we shall have it from our Judges own mouth Here we are continually subject to new guilt and so to new sins whereby arise new fears So till our final absolution we are not fully perfect not till the day of redemption Eph. 4 30. When the evils of sin do fully cease then is our Adoption full Rom. 8.23 Then will our Regeneration be full Matth. 19.28 Then all the effects of sin will cease Death upon the body will be no interruption of pardon we shall be fully acquitted and never sin more 3. That 't is a branch and fruit of our reconciliation with God the other is the gift of the Spirit or all things that belong to the new nature for God giveth sanctifying grace as the God of peace But this also is a notable branch and fruit of reconciliation 1. Because when God releaseth us from the punishment of sin 't is a sign his anger and wrath is appeased and now over Isa. 24.7 Fury is not in me God hath been angry for a little moment but when he pardoneth sin then he is pacified for sin is the make-bate between us and God 2. That which is the ground of reconciliation is the ground of pardon of sin Eph. 1.7 In whom we have redemption through his blood the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his grace viz. the price paid by the Mediator to his Fathers Justice and therefore a principal part of our reconciliation and redemption is Remission of sins in Justification 3. That which is the fruit of reconciliation is obtained and promoted by pardon of sin and that is fellowship with God and delightful Communion with him in a course of obedience and subjection to him Heb. 10.22 Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of Faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience and our bodies washed with pure water Our general pardon at first is to put us into a state of new obedience our particular pardon ingageth us to continue in a course of acceptable obedience that we may maintain a holy Commerce with God 1 John 1.7 If we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another and the Blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin VSE 1. is to inform us That all those that seek after reconciliation with God or would take themselves to be reconciled to him should be dealing with God about the pardon of sins and suing out this priviledge which is of such use in their Commerce with God But here ariseth a doubt What need have those that are reconciled to God to beg pardon Ans. very great Matth. 6 12. Our Lord hath taught us so we pray for daily pardon and daily grace Against Temptations as well as for daily bread I prove it 1. From the Condition of Gods people here in the World we are not so fully sanctified here in the World but there is some sin found in us original sin remaineth with us to the last and we have our actual slips Paul complaineth of the body of death Rom. 7.23 And the Apostle telleth us 1 John 1.8 If we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us And verse 10 th If we say that we have not sinned we make him a liar and his word is not in us And Eccl. 7.20 There is not a just man upon earth that doth good and sinneth not Either omitting good or commiting evil They do not love God with that purity and fervency nor serve him with that liberty delight and reverence that he hath required 'T is the happiness of the Church Triumphant that they have have no sin of the Church Militant that their sin is forgiven Sometimes we sin out of ignorance sometimes out of imprudence and inconsideration sometimes we are overtaken and sometimes overborn now these things
must be heartily bewailed to God While a ship is leaking water we must use the pump and the room that is continually gathering soil must be daily swept the stomach that is still breeding ill humours must have new physick We still make work for pardoning mercy and therefore for repentance and faith 2. From the several things which we ask in asking a pardon 1. For the grant that God would accept of the satisfaction of Christ for our sins and of us for his sake Christ was to ask and sue out the fruits of his mediation Psal. 2.8 And we are humbly to sue out our right For notwithstanding the condescensions of his grace God dealeth with us as a Sovereign and doth require submission on our part Jer. 3.13 Only acknowledge thine iniquities that thou hast transgressed against the Lord thy God The debt is humbly to be acknowledged by the Creature though God hath found out a means to pardon it 2. We beg the continuance of a pardon as in daily bread though we have it by us we beg the continuance and use of it so in sanctification we beg the continuance of sanctification as well as the increase because of the relicks of corruption God may for our exercise make us feel the smart of old sins as an old bruise though it be healed yet ever and anon we feel it upon change of weather accusations of Conscience may return for sins already pardoned Job 13.26 Thou writest bitter things againt me and makest me possess the sins of my youth Sins of youth may trouble a man that is reconciled to God and hath obtained pardon of them Gods Children may have their guilt raked out of its grave and the appearance of it may be as frightful as a Ghost or one risen from the dead the wounds of an healed Conscience may bleed afresh Therefore we need beg as David Psa. 25.6 7. Remember thy mercies which have been of old remember not the sins of my youth nor my transgressions When we are unthankful unwatchful or negligent God may permit it for our humiliation 3. The sense and manifestation Few believers have assurance of their own sincerity God may blot sins out of his book when he doth not blot them but of our Consciences God blotteth them out of the book of his remembrance assoon as we repent and believe but he bloteth them out of our Consciences when the worm of Conscience is killed by the application of the blood of Christ through the Spirit Heb. 10.22 Sprinkled from an evil Conscience David beggeth the sense when Nathan had told him of the grant Psa. 51.12 Restore unto me the joy of thy Salvation Forgive it in our sense and feeling 4. The increase of our sense For it is not given out in such a degree as to shut out all fear and doubt 1 John 4.18 There is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear because fear hath Torment he that feareth is not made perfect in love 5. The effects of pardon or freedom from those evils which are the fruits of sin We would have God to pardon us as we pardon others fully and intirely forgive and forget that he would not execute upon us the temporal punishment farther than is necessary for our good Compare 2 Kings 23.26 with Ezek. 33.12 13 14. Either he will not chastise us or if he doth he will sanctify our afflictions when God remits the eternal punishment yet he inflicteth temporal evil not to compleat our justification but to further our sanctification If we knew only the sweetness of sin and not the bitterness we would not be so shy of it Jer. 2.19 Know therefore and see that it is an evil and bitter thing that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my fear is not in thee faith the Lord God of Hosts Chastened of the Lord that we may not be condemned 1 Cor. 11 32. 6. A renewed pardon for every renewed sin which we commit 1 John 2.1 My little Children these things write I unto you that ye sin not And if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the Righteous And 1 John 1.9 If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness Assoon as we repent and believe there is a general pardon the state of the person is changed he is made a child of God 1 John 12. To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the Sons of God even to as many as believe in his name John 13.10 He that is washed needeth not to wash save his feet Because by going up and down in the World we contract new defilement He is translated from a state of wrath to a state of grace all sins past are remitted God doth not pardon some and leave others Though Gods pardon be not antedated Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his Righteousness for the remission of sins that are past And such an one hath free leave to sue out pardon for future sins and so have a greater hold-fast upon God they have a present certain effectual remedy at hand for their pardon that is the merit of Christs blood the Covenant of grace in which they have an interest Christs Intercession and the Spirit to excite them to Faith and Repentance Well then let us fly to Christ for daily pardon as under the Law there were daily sacrifices to be offered up Numbers 28.3 God came to Adam in the cool of the day Gen. 3.8 Reconciliation with man is to be sought speedily Eph. 4.26 Let not the Sun go down on your wrath The unclean person was to wash his clothes before the Evening Our hearts should be humbled within us to think that God is displeased 7. We pray for our pardon and acceptance with Christ at the last day of general Judgment Luke 21.36 Watch and pray that ye may be accounted worthy to stand before the Son of man Some effect of sin remaineth till then as death on the Body So that whil'st any penal evil introduced by sin remaineth we pray that God will not repent of his mercy VSE 2. It sheweth how much we should prize pardon as a special fruit of the Love of God and Christ Rev 1.5 To him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his blood 1 John 4.9 10. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his only begotten Son into the World that we might live through him Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins If we be serious we will do so Those that have felt any thing of the burden of sin will entertain the offer of pardon with great thankfulness It is a priviledge welcome to distressed Consciences What man in chains would not be glad
these do not consider the strictness of the Law Covenant nor the purity of God nor themselves or their own defects A Broken hearted sense of sin would make us prize Christ 1 Cor. 4.4 I know nothing by my self yet am I not thereby justified but he that judgeth me is the Lord. FINIS ERRATA Page 3. line 8. read shed p. 7. l. 2. r. speaketh of it as already past p. 15. l. 14. r. He hath p. 16. l. 53 54. r. Is it not strange Things that are afar off and about which they have no present exercise They strongly believe p. 18. l. 2. r. Surety p. 19. dele 1. p. 23. l. 23. after long r. In the Lord's Supper we have a foretast of that New Wint that is in our Fathers Kingdom p. 26. l. ult p. 27. l. 1. r. T is our Ornament a beautiful Vesture to the Soul p. 43. l. 14. after comfort add is p. 47. l. 24. r. Therefore p. 53. l. 1. r. go p. 58. l. 41. r. Here is neither all evil p. 59. l. 39. r. worketh upon p. 60. l. 26 27. r. and be like him p. 61. l. 38. r. on our part l. 44. for of our way r. of Faith p. 62. l. 16. after self-denying r. r. or having and p. 65. l. 14. dele and report dele This p. 67. l. 7. r. when the body is weakest p. 73. l. 27 28. r. The being reconciled to him is his great care the pleasing of him his most industrious Imployment His life is nothing else c. p. 74. l. 215. a Carnalist p. 76. l. 39. dele is p. 107. l. 1. dele cheap p. 118. l. ult r. hating p. 121. l. 18. r. the difficulties of Obedience p. 151. l. 40. dele our p. 154. l. 43. r. intensivè l. 44. r. appretiativè l. 54. for secure r. severe p. 156. l. 25. for air r. awe l. 30. for alter r. of p. 159. l. 51. r. degree p. 163. l. 27. r. partialities p. 175. l. 9. r. increase of grace p. 177. l. 29. after nakedly add sin p. 181. l. 12. r. for sincers p. 187. l. 32. r. But according p. 188. l. 54. for men r. way for seek r. check l. 55. for his r. our for he r. we p. 203. l. 3. r. his Soul p. 207.l 40. for neither r. will then p. 211. l. 16. r. unregenerate p. 223. l. 57. for profess r. propose p. 232. l. 12. after with add God by p. 241. l. 20. for Abner r. Hanan A TABLE OF THE Principal Matters contained in the SERMONS On 2 CORINTH 5. A. ABsent how ae Believer is absent from the Lord in this World Page 54 Acceptation with God must be our great scope Page 72 And our great work Page 74 It will be our advantage and comfort Page 72 73 To be laboured after not only when we die but in this life Page 75 Why we should labour after it Page 76 v. Pleasing of God Afflictions why a burden Page 32 Approbation of God how Believers come to have it and why Page 119 Why it should be lookt after Page 120 Approbation of God to be lookt after before the Approbation of Conscience and the Approbation of Conscience before the Approbation of Men. Page 122 Assurance may be had Page 6 Why we should look after it Page 12 How it is wrought Page 7 v. Confidence Certainty Authority of Christ. Page 85 B. BOasting what the false Apostles boasted in Page 116 Body of Man compared to a House Page 2 Why called an Earthly House Page 3 Boldness holy wherein it appears Page 46 Boldness in Expectation of Heaven the grounds of it Page 29 Burden of Believers in this World for Sin and Misery v. Affliction and Sin Page 21 32 Burden of Sin felt by a tender and by a wounded Conscience Page 233 v. Sin C. CErtainty of Heaven the grounds of it Page 17 25 The degrees of it Page 11 How it is confirmed to us Page 37 Change there is a great Change wrought at Conversion Page 201 The Change that Grace makes in a Man Page 130 Moral Change what it is Page 201 This doth not amount to the New Creature Page ib. Sudden Changes may be soon worn off Page ib. Outward Change may be without change of heart Page 202 Partial Change not sufficient to denominate the New Creature Page ib. Christ delights to be with Men. Page 54 Christ Spirit Ministry must not be separated Page 239 Christ was made Sin and a Curse for us Page 171 Though he was made Sin yet not a Sinner Page 252 What in the punishment due to Sin Christ was freed from Page 172 Commendation how Paul commends himself to the Corinthians Page 118 Communion with Christ difference between it here and in Heaven Page 54 64 Confession of Sin hath a promise of pardon Page 96 Confidence of Heaven both of the Thing and of the Person Page 8 44 Of Faith and of Assurance Page 63 The Nature of it Page 45 The Kinds of it Page ib. The Opposites of it Page 46 The Properties of it Page 47 The Effects of it Page 46 The Force and Vertue of it Page 12 How it ariseth from the Earnest of the Spirit in our hearts Page 48 Conscience its Work and Office with respect to Sin Page 231 Checks of Conscience to be regarded and why Page 232 Believers have a Testimony in their own Consciences of their Sincerity Page 119 This must be regarded and why Page 121 They have a Testimony in the Consciences of others Page 120 This is to be regarded and how far Page 121 Consideration sets home Spiritual Truths on the Soul Page 175 Conversion Power of Man to convert himself the Absurdities that follow it Page 210 God's working all in Conversion is no ground for looseness or laziness to the Regenerate or to the Vnregenerate Page 211 212 Yet Exhortations to press us to become New Creatures are not in vain Page 212 The true Vse of this Doctrine of Man's Insufficiency to convert himself Page ib. Why the actings of Love are more vigorous at our first Conversion Page 157 Conviction How a good Life convinceth wicked men Page 120 How the Creature shall be convinced at the day of Iudgment Page 99 Covenant why we should often renew Covenant with God Page 250 Curse Christ was made a Curse for us Page 171 Objections answered Page 171 What there was in the Curse or Punishment due to Sin that Christ was freed from Page 172 D. DEath no Extinction Page 36 Desire of Death v. Desire Death of Christ. Christ died as a common Head or publick Person Page 179 Christ died as a Surety Page ib. Christ died not only for our good but in our stead Page 170 How the Love of Christ appeared in his dying for us Page 173 The End of Christ's Death Page 174 The Consequent Benefits of it Page 148 Death of Christ discovers the heinousness of Sin Page 174 181 What use the Death of Christ hath to make us die to