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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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was the Sanctum Sanctorum and in it the Oracle called the inner house of God into which only the High Priest went alone once a year and that in the Feast of expiation wherein all the Jews must fast and afflict themselves A most notable type of Christ for as it was called an Oracle because God thence gave answer in doubtful cases so who is the Fathers Oracle but his Son who is the word of his Father by whom he speaks to us by whom we speak to him and through whom the Father heareth us In this Holy of Holies was the Ark of the Covenant and in this holy place stayed the Ark almost four hundred and thirty years signifying Christ the author of the Covenant between God and us In which Ark or Chest were kept three things 1 The Tables of the Covenant written with the finger of God signifying Christ who is the fulfilling of the Law 2 The Rod of Aaron which had budded a type of the Priesthood of Christ who in the world seemed a dead branch and dry but after his Death and Resurrection began again to flourish and bring fruits of life to Jewes and Gentiles 3 The Pot having Manna a holy type of Christ the bread of life and that Manna that came down from heaven Joh. 6.35 In this Holy of Holies over the Ark was the holy cover called the Propitiatory prefiguring the Lord Jesus whom the Father hath made our Propitiatory by faith in his bloud Rom. 3.25 Here also were the two glorious Cherubims set like Angels on either side the Ark looking upon the Ark figuring the holy Angels ministring to Christ and earnestly desiring to look into the mystery of our salvation 1 Pet. 1.12 These were the chief holy things established in the Temple at Jerusalem but not all for there were besides these the observation of all holy Rites appointed by God the Chair of Moses and in it the Law read and expounded there were the holy persons the High Priest with all his holy garments with Urim and Thummim and on his fore-head Holiness to the Lord there were other the holy Ministers of the Lord who had the Lords holy Oyl upon them of Gods own composition with straight charge that no other should make or use it out of this use Yea here had lived the ancient Kings and Prophets David Salomon Josiah Hezekiah who were special types of Christ In which regard Ierusalem the seat of God and Gods worship is called the City of perfect beauty the joy of the whole earth 3 It is called an holy City by comparison unto other great Cities of the neighbour Countries wherein Idols and Devils were worshipped in stead of God as Babylon or whose worship was the devise of mans brain and no institution of God as Samaria Cesarea and others 2 King 17.33 4 It is called holy in type two waies 1 As it was a type of the Church militant of which the members are holy in part at least in profession For the whole Church of God was gathered together three times every year before the Lord at the feasts of Passeover Pentecost and Tabernacles Psal 122.4 Thither the Tribes of the Lord go up and appear before the Lord. 2 As it was a type of the Church triumphant even that Celestial Jerusalem which is above that new Jerusalem into which no unholy thing can enter but is the eternal habitation of the holy God the Holy Angels and Saints 5 It was called holy or the holy City because it was the fountain of Gods holy Religion which being first seated there by God must be derived thence and sent out to all other Nations Micah 4.2 The Law shall go out of Sion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem Therefore was it the Metropola and mother City the heart of the earth placed in the midst of Nations by Gods own confession Ezek. 5.5 Nay there must the pretious blood of the holy Son of God be shed which must stream and run out to the salvation of all Nations and himself Preached the King of the Jews upon the Cross as upon the theater in Hebrew Greek and Latine and that in the time of the Passeover when there was a concourse of all the people of Jews and other Nations There the Apostles must give their first witnesse of Christ and thence must carry it into Judea Samaria and all nations to the utmost parts of the earth Act. 1.8 And 8.1 the Church of the New Testament was first gathered at Jerusalem and thence by persecution scattered into all Nations In this regard it was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holy City for all the holinesse of all other Cities was derived thence Doct. 1 Wee learn out of this title what it is that makes places and persons holy even the presence of God of his word and worship Thus the ground was called holy Exod. 3.5 and the place where Joshua stood when the captain of the Lords Host appeared unto him chap. 5.15 1 Whatsoever was in the Law separated to God and his service was called holy the Sabbath was holy the Priests Garments holy Exod. 28. Thou shalt make holy Garments for Aaron thy brother Holy both because they were peculiar to the holy Priesthood for none else might put them on and because they were to bee used in the holy place for when they came forth of the Tabernacle they must put them off and thirdly consecrate to holy uses and to bee an holy type of Christs righteousnesse a precious robe wherein all our Sacrifices are offered The flesh was holy which was offered to the Lord in sacrifice Hag. 2.13 For places Bethel was an holy place when Jacob saw the vision of the Ladder there and the Temple was holy For people the Jews were called an holy Nation and Christians an holy Priesthood and Saints by calling 1 Pet. 2.9 For persons some are sanctified in the wombe to some special service as Jeremy chap. 1.5 and John Baptist Yea every faithful mans heart is as it were an Ark of God in which are kept the Tables of the Law yea the Tabernacle of God and the Temple of the Holy Ghost where hee pleaseth to dwell And thus was Jerusalem an holy City so long as it continued in the true worship of God 2 This appears by the contrary seeing his holinesse was no further annexed to this place than God tyed his presence to it for when as the Jews had crucified the Lord of glory both the Temple and City as prophane were destroyed and delivered into the hand of the Romans and are now in the hands of the Turks a nest of unclean and Idolatrous beasts most savage enemies of Christ and Christian profession 3 That place must needs bee holy where the Lord dwelleth as a master in his house teaching ordering and supplying all necessaries where Christ the Holy Son of God walketh in the midst of the seven Golden Candlesticks being conversant among the flocks of Shepheards where the Holy
it is but an infirmity what need a man bee so precise and scrupulous as to stand upon such small trifles all which is but to plead for Satan against our own safety He was afterwards an hungry In these words is set down the effect of Christs fast After he had fasted forty days and forty nights he began to be hungry all the while before he was not hungry neither did he want power to have fasted longer and by his Divine power upheld his human nature if hee pleased but now the miraculous fast being finished he begun to hunger Quest How could Christ be hungry seeing he was able to feed so many thousands with seven Leaves and two Fishes Besides Joh. 4.34 he saith My meat is to doe the will of him that sent me and to finish his work Or if he could be hungry why would he Ans Some have thought that Christ needed not to eat sleep c. as wee need when our bodily strength is exhaust by labour by fasting and watching And some of the Fathers as Ambrose and Theophylact upon Mar. 11.12 hold that Christ only by dispensation gave his body leave to be hungry when he pleased as though he neither was wont nor could nor ought to bee ordinarily hungry as other men nor necessarily forced to eat But wee must know that Christ took upon him a true human body and the form of a Servant in which he was obnoxious to all our infirmities only sin excepted And the infirmities which he undetook not are these What infirmities our Saviour took and took not in three propositions 1 He was not to take any which might hinder the perfection of his soul or body Of his soul as vices sins proneness to evil heaviness to goodness Christ took miserable infirmities in his soul as Augustine saith such as are natural negative ignorance as of the day of Judgement and the time of figges fructifying but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Damascene saith damnable and detestable Of his body because it was extraordinarily conceived and created of the Holy Ghost who being of infinite wisdome and power could not e●re or not bring his body to perfection Therefore he was not to bee blind lame deaf c. which are infirmities in many other men 2 Christ was not to take all infirmities in general Christ took not all infirmities of every particular man for three causes for 1 Some arise of particular causes which could not be in Christ as namely some hereditary infirmities and diseases as the Leprosie Falling-sickness Stone c. some from redundance of matter in generation have some monstrous or superfluous part some from defect want some part or have some part withered or scanted None of this can agree to Christs most perfect conception of the Holy Ghost 2 Some infirmities are acquisite as by Surfeits Feavers and Gouts by fulness These could not befall Christ who never exceeded the mean his whole life being a continual exercise of sobriety neither had hee ever any acquisite infirmity but voluntarily undertaken 3 Some defects and infirmities are the fruit of some special judgement of God as Uzziah his Leprosie was a special stroke of Gods hand for a special sin so some are born fools and simple Neither could these belong to Christ who had no sin nor cause of judgement in him 3 Christ was to take upon him all natural and indetractable infirmities as the School-men call them and only them Natural that is such as follow common nature infirmities common to all men And indetractable or inculpable which detract not from the perfection of his person nor of his grace nor of the work of our redemption Of this kinde are hunger thirst labour weariness sleep sorrow sweat and death it self all these are common to all men Now hunger being a common infirmity incident to all men yea to Adam in innocency who was hungry and did eat as Gen. 1.39 every tree bearing fruit shall be to you for meat and slept chap. 2. vers 21. a heavie sleep fell on the man yet without molestation therefore Christ did necessarily hunger as other men do not by an absolute necessity for 1 he needed not have taken our nature or been incarnate 2 As he was God he could have exempted himself from all the abasement and miseries that he suffered neither by a coacted necessity for he willingly submitted himself to this necessity But by a necessity ex hypothesi or conditionate having taken our nature to redeem it he was necessarily to take on him all our weaknesses sin only excepted for these reasons Reasons why Christ took on him our infirmities five Mans nature is known by defects Gods by perfection 1 He was not only to be like a man and in the shape of a man but also a very true man like unto his brethren in all things except sin therefore it is said Heb. 2.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to assure the truth of his incarnation against all Anthropomorphites and such like Hereticks 2 This was a part of his obedience and consequently of our redemption that he suffered the same thing as we do both in body and in mind Vere pertulit lang●ores nostros he hath truly born our infirmities Isa 53.4 3 That he might sanctifie unto us these infirmities and take away the sting of them lest we should be wearied and faint in our mindes Heb. 12.3 and that we might have an example in suffering 1 Pet. 2.21 4 That he might be a compassionate High Priest Heb. 2.17 18. touched with infirmity yea cloathed with our frail nature that we should not doubt of his grace who vouchsafed to be so abased for us 5 Himself confirmeth the same in that he took not on him such a body of ours as Adam had before sin but such a one as he retained after his fall so far as it was obnoxious to all incriminal pains of sin namely such as was subject to weariness Joh. 4.6 to sorrow tears and weeping as over Jerusalem Luke 19.41 and at the raising of Lazarus Joh. 11.35.38 and in his Agony when he shed tears and used strong cries Heb. 5.7 to sweating water and bloud in the garden yea to death it self from all which Adams body was free before the fall And by these his body was by a true necessity overcome as ours are and this not for a short time or space at his pleasure but all the time of his life till he breathed out his holy spirit yea thirsting upon the cross it self John 19.28 Neither was this onely to confirm the truth of his humane nature but to fulfill all righteousnesse and carry away all the punishment of our sinnes and so work a perfect salvation for us Therefore Christ truely and necessarily was hungry as wee use to be Obj. Christs meat was to do the will of his father As for that place in Joh. 4.34 I answer 1 It must bee meant comparatively in that the execution of his
bring light out of darkness as once hee did in the Creation Rom. 8.28 we know that all things are turned to the best to them that love God His wisdom and power turns things not only good into good nor only afflictions and trials but even their sins and infirmities like a good Physician that tempers poyson to a remedy and of the Vipers skin makes a remedy to heal the Vipers sting 2 This is the godly mans priviledge above wicked ones to find God sweet to their souls either in afflictions or in the ending of them 1 Because their persons whatsoever their estate is are accepted with God whereas the other are rejected 2 They are sealed with the earnest of Gods Spirit and can goe unto God in fervent prayer whereas the other want the Spirit and cannot pray to be heard Psal 18.41 They cried but there was none to save them even to the Lord but he answered them not 3 They have the grace of repentance which removeth sin the cause of affliction and are come out of Babylon though they live in Babylon being as so many Lots in Sodome Whereas the other are impenitent and never removing the cause the effect lies ever upon them and grows every day heavier than other 4 They have peace of conscience and can sing the new song to God and the Lamb having a set of sweet Musick in their souls and with peace they have patience supporting them unto Gods seasonable deliverance Whereas the wicked are as the raging sea and hath no peace nor patience but a sensless unfeelingness of his estate their hearts being either ignorant ascribing all their smart to Fortune or Constellations or fatal necessity or secundary causes being not able to ascend so high as God the Auhor or descend so low as their own sins the just meritorious causes of their evils or hardned and feared or sensless as Nabals whose heart was as a stone dead within him 3 It is one end of Gods extream humbling and afflicting his children not to sink or forsake them but that at the last the powerful work of God may bee shewed on them both for his glory and for theirs The poor blind man Joh. 9.3 carried his misery a great while from his birth to his mans estate and yet our Saviour witnesseth that it was neither for his sin nor his parents but that the work of God might be shewed upon him in the miraculous cure of him when all the power of Nature and Art could doe him no good Lazarus was extremely humbled dead buried lying in the grave stinking who would have thoughr beyond Mary that he should ever have been raised till the last day and yet our Saviour saith that even that death of his was not unto death but for the glory of God Yea the Lord never bringeth any evil upon his children wherein he intendeth not in the end to shew them some great good as Deut. 8.16 The Lord tryed humbled and proved his people in the Wilderness that he might doe them good at the latter end Job 23.10 Hee knoweth my way and trieth me and what was the issue I shall come forth like the gold And the Apostle affirmeth that the trial of our faith which is much more precious than gold shall be sound to our praise and honour and glory as t● appearing of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.7 4 God hereby manifests his care and faithfulness in his promises for hee hath promised how ever he suspend his comfort for a time to return in due season neither can his mercies come to an end nor himself leave his mansion finally Therefore it is that sometimes he fore-tells his children of evils to come that they should not come suddenly on them neither distrust his care in them nor be ignorant of a good issue out of them Sometimes he numbers them out and tells how many and how long they shall be Dan. 9.25 There shall be seven weeks that is thirty nine years and there shall bee sixty two weeks that is four hundred thirty four years and then the Messiah shall come c. And always he that setteth the setting of the Starrs and the bounds of the Sea setteth much more the period of our troubles and the furthest limits of his childrens trials which suppose they reach even to death it self they can follow them no further but then is a rest from their labour a reaping of the fruits of their sufferings a joyful harvest of a sorrowful seed-time wherein the Lord meets them with a full and final deliverance and putteth them in full possession of all his most glorious promises Vse 1. Let the godly consider of their priviledge to provoke their patience and constancy in their greatest trials which cannot make them unhappy For 1 The godly mans present estate is the best for him bee it what it can be the Furnace is the fittest place for gold 2 His trial shall bee turned to good because God hath the disposing tempering and moderating of it 3 His trial shall be but light and momentany not in respect of the present sense but because the time of temptation shall be swallowed up by the time of victory 4 The end of it shall be happy and all is well that ends well here shall be a most blessed issue And therefore let drossie Christians fear the fire who are sure to be wasted in it whilst the godly rejoyce in tribulation and with David walk fearlesly in the valley of the shadow of death because God who led him in was with him to lead him out Vse 2. Let the godly judge of themselves not always according to their present estate or feeling which may occasion their feet almost to step but look to the happy end of their trials And though the smart continue long yet let them be assured that the Lord keeps all their bones so that not one of them shall be broken Neither let us be weary and faint in our mindes for although God seemeth not to hear us yet he hears us well enough And though he seem to stand afarre off us it is but a delay no denial of our request And though he seem to neglect us let us not neglect him but hold on in the prayer of faith V●e 3. Let this serve as a ground of comfort and encouragement to us that when with Israel we stand as it were on the Sea-brink beset with dangers then we may be still and expect the salvation of the Lord. For as the Prophet speaketh Hab. 2.3 The vision is yet for an appointed time but at the last it shall speak and not lye if it tarry wais for it shall surely come and shall not stay Let us not make haste nor limit the Lord in prescribing him a time and means but leave all that to his wisdome lean upon his arm relye upon his word he hath a mind to doe us good and that when it shall be most for his glory and our salvation We are not yet perhaps
of God which is the curse of the Law and not onely Ceremonially and typically as they were This the Apostle Paul teacheth Gal. 3.13 that Christ was not onely dead but made a curse for us his reason is because hee dyed on a tree and therefore are wee admonished Phil. 2.8 to consider not only that Christ was obedient unto the death but to the death of the Cross for any other death had not so much concerned us Fourthly This death which so much concerned all the Church of the Jews and Gentiles must not bee obscure and therefore the Lord would not have Christ to dye in a tumult or in secret but most conspicuously and apparently at Jerusalem the great City of the Jews but tributary to the Romans as it were upon the Theatre of the World at a solemn feast when all the Males out of all quarters must appear before the Lord upon a Cross high erected that all might see him and on the Cross himself proclaimed King of the Jewes in three several Langages the Latine Greek and Hebrew that all sorts of men might come to the knowledge of it and further because in his death standeth our life hee must bee thus lifted up that all men might see him certainly dead and that he dyed not in shew and appearance only but in deed and in truth really and perfectly for which cause also our Apostle doubleth his affirmation they slew him and hanged him on a tree which most necessary ground of Faith and Religion Satan hath mightily by many Hereticks sought to overthrow the Turks at this day are held off from the faith in this Messiah by that Diabolical suggestion that not Christ himself but Simon the Cyrenian was miraculously crucified in his stead And therefore because the assurance of the death it self assureth us more fully of all the fruits and benefits of it the Scripture is careful so pregnantly to confirm it as that it cannot be denied not only that he was in the sight of a number of thousands dead on the Crosse but by his three days burial by the peircing of his side out of which came water and bloud by which was manifest that the very Call of his heart was peirced by the confession of his very enemies who would beleeve nothing but their own sences and lastly by the fact of the Souldiers who whereas they hastened the death of the Theeves by breaking their leggs they broke not his because the text saith they saw that he was dead already The fourth point is the use of Christs Crucifying First in Christ on the Crosse take a full view of the cursednesse and execration of sin and consequently of thine own wretchednesse both in regard of thy wicked nature and cursed practices every sin being so loathsome and odious in the eyes of God as the least could never be put away but by such an ignominious death of the Son of God himself If thou lookest at sin in thy self or in thy sufferings yea or in the sufferings of the damned in Hell it will seem but a slight thing but behold God comming down from Heaven and him that thought it no robbery to bee equal to his Father in glory taking flesh in that flesh abasing himself to the death of the Crosse on that Crosse sustaining the whole wrath of his Father and so becoming accursed for it and thou shalt see it in the native face of it And indeed this one consideration setteth a more ugly face upon sin than the Law possibly can for that sheweth our sins to bee a knife to stab our selves withall The most ugly visage of sin that can be but this to be the very spear that went to Christs heart which is the most odious apprehension in the world all the sin that ever was committed on the earth could not bring a man so low suppose one man had committed them all as the least sin of the elect brought the Son of God seeing he that falleth lowest falleth but from one degree in earth to another but Christ falleth from the glory of Heaven into the very sorrows of Hell whosoever thou art then that makest light account of sin and pleadest that God is merciful look a little in this glasse wherein behold Gods Justice and sins desert in the Fathers just indignation against his wel-beloved Son whom nothing but the cursed death of his only Son in whom he professed himself well pleased could appease Secondly seeing all the knowledge of Christ profitable to salvation is of Christ crucified let us desire to know nothing in comparison but Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 seeing such a great Apostle as Paul was desired to know nothing else Now to come to the distinct knowledge of it we must consider these three points 1 The vertue and power of this death in it self 2 The application of it unto our selves 3 The fruits which must appear in us by such application For the first Look upon this death of the Son of God not as of another dead man neither think or speak of it as of the death of another ordinary felon executed but as of a death which slew all the sins of all the beleevers in the world and as a destroyer of all destroyers a death wherein was more power than in all the lives of all Angels and Men that ever were or shall bee More power in Christs death than in the lives of all men and Angels yea such a death as hath life in it quickning all the deaths of all that have benefit by it Here we have a mighty Sampson bearing away the gates of his enemies by death killing death by suffering his Fathers wrath overcoming it by entring into the Grave opening it for all beleevers by his Bloud shedding upon the Crosse reconciling all things Col. 1.20 never was there such an active suffering of any man which tormented and crucified the Devils themselves when the Devils instruments were tormenting and crucifying him it is peerlesse and unmatchable no Martyr ever thus suffered though Popish doctrin would match as Corrivals some of their Saints sufferings with it the most faithful Martyrs suffered but dissolution of soul and body but Christ besides suffered the whole Wrath of God due to mans sin they suffered in way of Christian duty and service but he to make a sacrifice of expiation of sin they having their sins removed and taken off from them but he bare all theirs and all beleevers sins in his body upon the tree 1 Pet. 2.24 Howsoever therefore Humane wisdom stumbleth at this death of Christ yet must we by the eye of faith labour to espy glory in ignominy esteem of the Crosse as an honourable Chariot and rejoyce in a triumph made as the Jews scoff by an hanged man thus shall we see the foolishness of God wiser than man and the weakness of God stronger than man thus also shall we imitate the holy men of God who looking back to the Cross of Christ could
see him thereon triumphing spoyling Principalities breaking down partitions reconciling God and man Coloss 2.14 yea man and man both Jew and Gentile into one body upon his Crosse Ephes 2.15 slaying hatred and procuring perfect peace Secondly seeing it is clear in the text that Christ dyed not for his own sins it is clear that he dyed for the sins of his elect unto whom this vertue of his death must be applied and this two waies 1 To their Humiliation 2 To their Consolation Both of them grounded hereupon that Christ was thus Crucified for thee without which application the knowledge of Christ crucified excelleth not that in the Devils themselves For the former if Christ dyed for thee then wast thou the cause of his death thou crucifyedst him thou art as faulty and blame-worthy for his death as ever was Judas Pilate the Jewes or the Souldiers thy sins were the Nails and the Spear and thy self wast one of them that peirced him Christs humiliation must humble Christians and how it doth so which consideration seriously thought of will be forceable to cast down the proud conceits of those for whom Christ must be thus humbled and cannot but bring bitterness of spirit to him that truly conceiveth that himself deserved that death which Christ not deserving indured for him yea and to have been held under the wrath of God for all eternity if Christ had not freed him urge this point upon thy Conscience to bring thy self to the bewayling of thy sins Oh it was my pride that stript Christ stark naked it was the sin of my soul that made his soul heavie unto the death my corruptions were the cords that bound him my malice my contempt of God my ignorance my woful courses were the thorns and nails that wounded him he all this while standing in my room and stead Thus is it prophecied of beleevers in the New Testament that when the Spi●it of grace shall be poured upon them Zach. 12.10 they shall look on him whom they have peirced and lament for him that is by faith they shall look to Christ whom by sin they have peirced and th●s shall bee an effectu●l means to lead them further in●o the practice of repentance Thus Peter when he would bring down the stiffness of the Jews told them that they crucified the Lord of glory Acts 2.37 which when they heard they were pricked in their hearts and said Men and brethren what shall we doe to be saved Popish Preachers so handle this matter as to stir up compassion towards Christ hatred of the Jews and Judas and the Souldiers but wee must labour by it to come to the hatred of our own sins or else wee shall come behind the Jewes themselves For the latter If Christ was thus crucified for thee then also bee thou of good comfort for many things were nailed on the Cross with him even all thy Inditement all thy sin original and actual the Curse Hell and Death it self dyed with him if thou beest a beleever the same nails which were driven into his hands and feet were driven into thy sins so as thou maist look upon the Cross as the Israelites did upon the Brazen Serpent and thereby be cured of all the sting of sin and deadly sickness of thy soul Christ his abasement is the advancement of every Christian thou maist behold his ignominy as thy glorious robe his arraignment thy absolution his binding thy freedome his abasement thy advancement his nakedness the cover of thy shame his death thy life and his Fathers forsaking of him an assurance that thou shalt never be forsaken Only this knowledge of Christ crucified in special for thee is it that can settle the Conscience in peace when thou knowest and beleevest that all thy personal and particular sins were hung on the Cross with Christ and that hee in thy room suffered for them that which in Gods acceptation was as much as if in thine own person thou hadst borne the Curse of the Law for all eternity The most content themselves generally to know that Christ dyed for Sinners but never care to know what this particular application meaneth The Popish doctrin also is an open adversary to this most comfortable perswasion of justifying faith but it behooveth him that would have the right use of this Doctrine never to be at rest till he can come to say with the holy Apostle who loved me and gave himself for me Gal. 2.20 and with Thomas after hee had seen the impressions of the Wounds in his hands and side my Lord and my God Thirdly seeing that of the two main things in this death 1 Merit 2 The efficacy none shall have his part in the former that hath not in the latter our care must be if we would find life in this death of Christ never to be at rest until we find the fruit and effect thereof in some sort in our selves The most powerful fruits of it are reduced to two Heads the former is an ingrafting of us into the similitude of his death for he dyed that we after a sort should dye with him The latter is a framing in us the quality of his life for therefore he dyed for us that we should live unto him both of these are required to the right knowledge of Christ crucified joyned Ephes 4.24 and enjoyned him that would know Christ as the truth is in Christ called the casting off of the old man and the putting on of the new What it is to bee planted into the similitude of the death of Christ the Apostle sheweth namely when our old man is crucified with him Rom. 6.6 but when is that done the next words answer when the body of sin is destroyed that is not when sin is restrained or some sins cut off but when original sin that is the old man is killed in all the parts and members of sin when men hate abhorre and groan under their corruptions yea even their smallest and sweetest sins this is a fruit of Christs death and noted to be in all those that are Christs when it is said that they crucifie the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 Quest But how are these lusts crucified by the death of Christ How Christ his c●ucifying crucifieth the lusts of Christians Ans Not only by that deadly blow which Christ hath given them by his death but also by setting often before thine eyes this death of his especially in the time of temptation For example being tempted to impatiency in sustaining wrongs look upon Christ on the Cross what sharp things he suffered the thorns the nayls the spear and all this while as a sheep dumb before his shearer in motions to pride look to Christ on the Cross thus farre humbled for thy sins if to revenge behold Christ on the Cross praying and dying for his deadly enemies if to oppresse the poor and innocent see Christ on the Crosse suffering his bloud to be sucked out for those whose bloud thou
suckest so in temptation to any other sin deny it and say Oh no I see Christ on the Crosse made a curse for my sins already I have done him wrong enough already I will not adde this to the former I see rather an infinite debt due from me towards him and I must rather think of the payment of that than offer to run in further Thus we see both the duty and the means neither of them both are regarded by many some would fain see Christ on the Crosse for the remitting of their sin but not for the crucifying of it their lusts are as strong as ever be-before pride contention hastinesse voluptuousnesse worldlinesse live and thrive in them and yet they say Christ was crucified for them whereas if Christ be crucified for thee the world is crucified unto thee and thou unto the world Others because Christ is come and dead for sinners make a clean contrary argument Christ dyed for sinners and therefore they will live in their sins as though that were the work of Christ upon the Crosse to maintain sin and Libertine courses and not rather to abolish the same what a fearful thing is it that men dare make the death of the Son of God as a common pack-horse to lay all their sins upon while yet hereby they embolden themselves in the multiplication of them Many will not endure to have their lusts pricked in the Ministery and much lesse crucified Others are so farre from crucifying their lusts as they will not endure to have them prickt or touched in the Ministery Oh meddle not with mine eyes I can not endure it or if they endure to crucifie many yet some sweet sins shall be spared they are sweet morsels or fat morsels profitable or pleasurable sins and they must not be let goe but never a one of all these ever tasted in truth the least fruit of the death of Christ The second fruit that must appear in us is the life of Christ 2 Cor. 5.15 He dyed for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which dyed for them and rose again Rom. 6.11 12. Likewise think yee also that yee are dead to sin but are alive to God in Jesus Christ 12. Let not therefore sin reign in your mortal body In which places this life of Christ is opposed to the course of our lives framed of our selves and is nothing else but to depend upon Christ in all things to give up all our thoughts words and actions to be guided by his word and directed to his glory and so to order our whole course as his blessed Spirit may appear to breath lead and live in us Now that this fruit should be added to the former is evident 1 Pet. 2.24 He bare our sins upon the tree that we being dead to sin should live in righteousnesse Thus therefore help thy self by this meditation shall my Lord Jesus so willingly forsake his glory for me and shall not I forsake my sin and shame for him shall he contentedly dye an accursed death for me and shall not I as contentedly dye to an accursed life for him Shall he dye to glorifie me and shall not I live to glorifie him Shall not he think his heart-bloud too dear for me and shall I love any thing better than him Thus to behold Christ on his Crosse will help thee forward in this fruit also To which purposes the Lord in wisdome hath instituted the Ministery of the Word and Sacraments No marvel seeing the Papists shu● out the preaching of Christ crucified that they must see him in Crucifixes and such Idolotrous representations that wee might have Christ crucified Gal. 3.1 continually as it were hanging before our eyes which ordinance of preaching Christ crucified were it in request in the Church of Rome they should not need their manuary Bables Crosses Pipes Crucifixes their Agnus Dei and the rest neither would they with religious adoration honour the Wooden Crosse to the dishonour of him that dyed upon it but accursed be all such dead and Idolatrous representations against the word let it bee our happinesse with care and reverence to frequent the Word and Sacraments which are blessed means ordained of God not only to set Christ on the Crosse before our eyes but to bring into possession those happy fruits formerly described Vers 40 Him God raised up the third day and caused that hee was shewed openly THE Apostle having delivered the Doctrin of Christ his death hee orderly descendeth to instruct his hearers also of his resurrection without which his death had never been beneficial unto them And the words in general imply one point not to bee omitted For howsoever the Apostle expresseth nothing between Christ his hanging on a tree and his raising again yet because it cannot bee properly said that hee was raised from the Tree or from the Cross which was a kinde of exaltation and lifting up necessarily must bee included a lower estate than that was namely that condition of the dead under which hee lay for a certain time as it were cast from the face of God his Father and of men yea from the face of the earth Christ submitted to the lowest estate of death why when death and sin seemed to triumph over him all the while of his burial when they had him in the grave the house of death This was the low estate from whence hee rose the which hee willingly submitted himself unto for a time 1 That the faith of his Church might bee confirmed in that hee was truely and certainly dead and not in shew or appearance 2 That his victory and conquest over death might bee more glorious in that hee could not hold him down when hee had him in his own house but like a mighty Sampson hee carried away the gates of his enemies 3 To remove by undergoing for us that fearful state of death and damnation which we had otherwise for ever lain under to sanctify unto us our estate under temporal death which is sweetened by his death to make our graves as so●t and perfumed beds of rest by his lying in the grave and that wee also therein by being subdued under corruption might put it off and so bee sitted to immortality and glory 4 To teach us that our head being of power to rise from the power of death when the bands of it wrapped him round about can now much more being in glory draw us his members out of the deepest pits of danger or thraldome spiritual or temporal and will in his time set us free This time wee must wait but not appoint it neither distrust his power and grace when wee are in the deepest of our distress 5 That seeing it was his pleasure to submit himself to the lowest estate of humiliation before his exaltation wee might also with more cheerfulnesse content our selves to suffer even any abasement with him and for him before wee look to reign
the dead 1 Pet. 1.3 and for this cause our Saviour was careful after his departure hence to send out his Spirit in more plentiful and abundant manner than before that hee might continually inspire his people with ardent desires after the beginnings of that life eternal unto which Christ himself is risen who then manifest themselves members of such an advanced head when this new life manifesteth it self in them Thirdly our perfect salvation is also hence fully assured us for if our Lord Jesus hath soyled all the powers of Hell Death and Darkness in himself when hee was yet dead how much more doth hee it for us his members being now alive if hee could drive back and disperse all spiritual enmitles even when hee was in Hell it self after a sort how much more now being ascended far above all moveable and aspectible Heavens Eph. 4.10 for wee must not behold the victory and triumph of Christ What or who sh●ll separate us from the love of God seeing it is Christ that is dead or rather risen from the dead as performed onely in and for himself but as the ground and pledge of the victory and conquest of all the Beleevers in the World Look upon this Son of David prostrating the great Goliah of Hell for all the Israel of God casting out the strong man not only out of his but of our possessions that he might take us up for his own use spoyling him of his kingdome and weapons for us yea and in us And hence as out of a well of consolation wee shall draw this comfort to our selves that look as the gates of Hell could not prevail against him our head no more shall they ever be able to prevail against us his members although they never so fiercely and forcibly assayl us And it spiritual enmities shall not be able to cut us short of our Salvation much less shall temporal dangers for by vertue of this resurrection also even in the most troublesome deeps when the waves of sorrows overtake one another and go over our souls when with Jonas we are ready to say We are cast from the face of the Lord Jonah 2.4 even then we have hope to rise out of such evils and because out head is above in short time comfortably to swim out Adde hereunto that death itself nor the grave shall stand between us and home for this rising of Christ is both the cause and confirmation that we shall rise again If the head bee risen so shall also the members if Christ the first fruits of them that sleep be raised so shall also the whole bulk and body of beleevers if we beleeve that Christ is risen from the dead even so them which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him 1 Thess 4.14 and if the same spirit which raised Jesus from the dead dwell in us then he that raised Christ from the dead shall also quicken our mortal bodies Rom. 8.11 for Christ hath not redeemed the soul alone from death but the body also else had this second Adam been interiour to the first if not able to save by his rising all that which was lost by the fall of the former Oh how would this meditation well digested sweeten the remembrance of death and the grave when a Christian shall consider that look how it was with Christ when his soul and body were separated yet both of them were united to the Deity which brought them together again even so I am taught by the Scriptures that when my soul and body shall bee separated yet shall neither of them be sundred from Christ my head but he will reunite them like loving friends that they may participate in his own glory How would this meditation bring the soul not only to be content but to desire to bee dissolved and bee with Christ accounting that the best of all Phil. 1.23 III. The third benefit befalling us by the resurrection of Christ i● that because Christ is risen we know it shall not only goe well with us but with all the Church of God the prosperity of which so many as would prosper must rejoyce in for hence it is that Christ calleth a Church out of the world which after a sort riseth even out ot his own grave hence is it that being ascended on high he gave gifts to men for the gathering and preserving of his Church hence is it that the Church shall alwaies have the light of the Gospel Pastors Teachers and the Ministry till we all meet to a perfect man hence is it that this Church shall bee defended from Wolves and Tyrants seeing ●one is stronger than he nor able to pluck any ot his sheep out of his hands Let the Church be pressed it shall never be suppressed Let the Kings of the earth band themselves and forces against it the Lord hath set his Son upon his holy Mountain and he shall crush them like a Potters vessel Let Hereticks and Antich●ist send armies of Locusts Jesuites and seducing vagrants to waste the Church and bereave it of the truth and light leading to life they shall only seduce such as whose names are not written in the Book of life and of the Lamb for seeing Christ is risen so long as hee who can dye no more liveth he will preserve his darling he will send out the Stars that are in his right hand for her relief who like Davids Worhies shall break through the Hosts of the enemie and bring the pure waters of the Well of Life as we are for ever thankfully to acknowledge in those worthy restorers of our religion Lastly let flouds of persecution rise and swell so as this Dove of Christ cannot find rest fo the sole of her foot one means or other Christ will use for her help for he will either send her into the Wildernesse or the earth shall help the Woman and drink in the waters that they shall not hunt her or he will provide for her one of the chambers of his providence as he did for Joash against the rage of Athaliah wherein she shall be safe till the Storm bee blown over These are the principal benefits procured us by Christs resurrection which belong not unto all but only to such as are risen with him Quest How shall we know that we are risen with Christ How to know that we are risen with Christ that they mat assuredly belong unto us Ans The Apostle setteth himself to resolve this question Col. 3.1 where he maketh the seeking of things above where Christ is and infallible mark of our rising with him for as when Christ was risen he minded not things below any more but all his course was a preparation to his ascension to which all things tended so now if thou be risen with him Heaven will be in thine eye and thine affections are ascended thither where Christ is if Christ were on earth thou mightest fix thy soul and senses here on earth and yet be a Christian
Family the next of our Kindred and therefore of right belongeth to him to recover our weak estate as was figured in that Law Levit. 25.25 If thy brother be impoverished and sell his possession then his redeemer shall come even his near kinsman and buy out that which his brother sold 3 He only was deputed of God to derive life and grace into us as the head into the members and therefore most meet it is that whosoever would suck and draw of his fulnesse should beleeve in his name Now from these words we learn two instructions 1 What is the chief thing which every Christian must strive to obtain while hee liveth in his world namely remission of sins 2 What a his estate and condition that hath attained it The chief duty of every Christian while he is in this world For the first it is grounded in the text because howsoever rem●ssion of sins is here only named yet in it are included all the other gracious mercies of God not only all deliverances and freedom from the evils and punishments that attend upon sin but even all our redemption and salvation with the means of it and blessings accompanying the same And indeed this is the sum or epitome of all Gods mercy in which the Lord crowneth his Saints with compassion a mercy which reacheth up to heaven and draweth them out of the most miserable thing in all the world which is to lye under the curse and danger of sin and consequently under the endlesse displeasure of the Almighty Which point being even as the one thing necessary to be known and attained I will stand a little longer upon it hoping to spend my time well in setting down these five points 1 The necessity of remission of sins 2 The benefits of it 3 The Letters of it 4 The helpes to it 5 The companions of it by which as by so many notes we may know we have it and so we will adde the use of the whole doctrin 1 Necessity of remission of sins in three points First the necessity of it will appear if wee consider 1 The multitude and abundance of our sins which are to bee remitted being for number as our hairs and as the sand of the Sea which is numberlesse which cannot bee other seeing we drink in sin as the Fish doth water Job 15.16 that is incessantly for the Fish ceasing to drink in water ceaseth to live neither can we cease to sin till we cease to live Nay seeing our very best actions hold no correspondence with the Law of God and in strict justice are no better than so many sins this consideration exceedingly multiplieth our sins in that not only in fayling in but in doing of our duties wee sin incessantly against our God 2 If we look upon the danger of sin we shall better see the necessity of remission It is a filthy Leprosie which infecteth the body and soul the thoughts speeches and actions it maketh a man a loathsome creature in the eyes of God it maketh God our enemy who is the fountain of life and whose lightsome countenance is better than life yea it maketh God depart from his Creature and destroy the works of his own fingers it layeth the sinner open and naked to all the wrath of God to all the Curses of the Law in this life and in the life to come It setteth him as a butt against whom the Lord in anger shooteth out of his quiver all the arrows of his displeasure It is the only thing which unremitted maketh the sinner absolutely unhappy and every way most accursed Neither doth the whole heap of sin only make the sinner so miserable but any one sin even the least unpardoned would for ever hold the sinner under perdition And more all the men that ever were or shall be in the world were never able to rise from under the burthen of one sin if it were imputed unto them and yet the most of the world see no part of this danger of sin and therefore no such necessity of the remission of it 3 Consider thy own insufficiency if thou hadst the strength and power of all men and Angels to satisfie for the least sin and if we cannot satisfie for any what remaineth but a fearful perdition from the Lord and from the glory of his power if all be not remitted In one word the sinner who hath not got his discharge sealed is without all safety in his life all sound comfort in his death and at the Judgement Day shall have the sentence of everlasting torment with the Devil and his Angels awarded him before men and Angels The second point is the benefits issuing from it and these are Benefits flowing from remission of sin four 1 Peace of conscience an immediat fruit of our justification by faith and reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God and it was ordinary with our Saviour to joyn them together as Luk 7.47 Thy sins are forgiven thee goe in peace This benefit the most know not what it meaneth but he that hath the feeling of the wrath of God against his sin and seeth nothing but an angry face of God burning like a consuming fire hee that is so straitned as hee can think no other thing but that the Lord in his just judgement hath cast him quite away this man as of all other torments that can be suffered in the world he lyeth under the greatest so nothing in the earth can content or comfort him but only the sence and perswasion of Gods favour Now the conditions of peace with his God are the most joyful tidings in all the world as is the unexpected news of a Pardon to a Malefactor ready to execution for high Treason against his Prince 2 The right and possession also of life everlasting For if wee bee estated unto life eternal by our justification and righteousnesse before God then are we so also by remission of sins because these two are confounded in the Scriptures and are the same Whence it is that the Apostle Rom. 4.7 being to prove the point of justification of a sinner before God without the works of the Law citeth the text Psal 32.1 Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered And further If our whole redemption put us in possession of everlasting happinesse so doth also remission of sin seeing the Apostle in sundry places confoundeth these two and expoundeth one by the other Ephes 1.7 By whom we have redemption through his bloud even the forgivenesse of our sins Col. 1.14 In whom we have redemption through his bloud that is the forgivenesse of sins And it must needs follow that if they who are justified and sanctified are also glorified then they have attained the beginnings of their glory who have attained remission of sins 3 The benefit of Christs intercession which meriteth all our good for hee prayeth not for the world but those that
are given him out of the world Joh. 17.19 and this is no small benefit seeing no part in the prayer of Christ no part in his death he will not endure death for him for whom he will not vouchsafe to pray 4 Consolation in affliction strength in temptations and assured comfort in life and death are the sweet fruits arising from remission of sin For 1 Although afflictions entred with death into the world by sin and in their nature are testimonies of Gods wrath yet sin being remitted they proceed no further from God as a just Judge revenging sin but from a merciful Father either for trial of us and our graces or for chastisement to keep us from perishing with the world to make us hate sin the more to draw us nearer him in invocation and prayer to force our affections out of this present world to fray others from sin by our example to conform us to the image of his Son and to shew his mighty power in our weaknesse by turning them to our best And thus from the former consideration ariseth to the beleever even in darknesse a great light Satans temptations foyled by this assurance 2 From hence obtaineth the beleever notable strength and sence against the fiery darts of Satans temptations For Satan urgeth the poor sinner sundry ways as 1 By the multitude and vilenesse of his sins with which his conscience telleth him he is covered and thence inferreth that because the wages of every sin is death and because he hath deserved eternal death he must needs perish he can expect no other But now can the beleever stop his mouth and say I grant Satan all thy premises no sinner is worthy of or can expect salvation in or by himself or so long as he continueth in sin but my sins are remitted by means of Christs satisfaction and though in my self I am worthy to perish yet in Christ I have a worthinesse to bring me to salvation I continue not in my sinful estate but am drawn out of the guiltinesse the filthinesse the service the love and liking of my sins through the grace wherein I stand and therefore thy consequent is false I fear it not being so forcelesse 2 From the Justice of God who cannot but reject whatsoever and whosoever is not fully conformable to his righteousnesse but here the beleeving heart is quieted in that through remission of sins the Justice of God is fully satisfied though not by the person offending yet in his pledge and surety Jesus Christ who being just dyed for the un●ust that we might be the righteousnesse of God in him And hence the justice of God is a matter of most comfort to the poor sinner in that this righteousnesse cannot suffer him to demand satisfaction twice for one and the same sin for this directly fighteth with justice and equity And if Satan be still instant and say But what shall anothers righteousnesse avail thee if thy self bee not a keeper of the Law for the soul that sinneth that soul shall dye the beleeving heart will readily answer That although the Law require proper and personal obedience yet the Gospel translateth it to the person of ou● Surety who being God and man not only paid the whole debt but performed all righteousnesse absolutely fulfilling the whole Law whence it is that his obedience is called the fulfilling of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth Rom. 10.4 and himself was made under the Law that hee might redeem from it those that were under it Gal. 4.4 And whereas the Tempter will alleadge But for all thy righteousnesse thou hast innumerable sins original and actual which the Lord hateth and every day addest to the huge heap of them The heart which holdeth this article of remission of sins abideth undaunted for though it feel a body of sin dwelling with it yet is it not reigning sin it is not sin at quiet but daily battail is maintained against it it is sin weakned and in daily consumption and therefore shall never be laid to the charge of him that is in Jesus Christ Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Jesus Christ for the law of the spirit of life which was in Jesus Christ hath freed me though not from all molestation and presence yet from the Law that is the service and slavery of sin and of death vers 2. But numbers will he say who make account to partake in the death and righteousnesse of Christ are damned and have no benefit by it and numbers have revolted and fallen away and why maist not thou to which the beleever will readily answer that those that were thus plucked up were never of the Fathers planting only infidels and unbeleevers have fallen away and withered for want of rooting and moysture but I beleeve the remission of sins not by any ungrounded perswasion but with a sound lasting and unfayling faith resting it self wholly upon Christ so as I am perswaded neither death nor life can separate me from his love the work of whose spirit maketh me bold to call upon God as my tender Father and produceth the fruits of true faith and conversion into my whole life whereby I know as infallibly the truth of my faith as I know the presence of the Sun by his light or of Fire by his heat Finally he that hath begun to make mee good will make mee also persevere in goodness 3 This assurance of remission of sins yeeldeth most assured comfort in life The sound comfort of this article and in death the goodnesse of Pauls conscience was his comfort when hee stood at the barre Acts 23.1 and 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing even the testimony of our conscience and in the agony of death this is the Christians comfort that his sin being remitted the sting of death is gone the locks of this strong Sampson wherein his great strength say are clipped off and hee is disarmed of his weapons which are our own sins So as a Christian may challenge him into the field and say O death where is thy sting which because he is bereaved of when he intendeth to kill he cureth when hee doth his worst which is to separate soul and body he can sever neither from Christ nay rather he sendeth the member of Christ and setteth him nearer to his head which is best of all The third point propounded Three lets which hinder men from seeking so precious a grace is to consider of the Le●s which hinder men from seeking the assurance of the remission of their sins which is indeed their true happinesse if they could so esteem of it some of which I will set down 1 An erroneous judgement that no man can attain certainly to beleeve the pardon of his sins for the common Protestant is a very Papist in this opinion who hold that to doubt of this point is a vertue and to beleeve it is presumption because no man can certainly know
Christ who 361 Comfort of the godly who meet with strange entertainment in the world where they are strangers 293 Comfort that Christ is stronger than all 327 Common Protestant beleeveth not the Article of free remission of sins 414 Communication in sin sundry waies but all to be avoided 330 Companions of remission of sins 412 Consent of the Church to any Doctrin to be required and received with five several cautions 389 Conditions of reconciliation two 347 Consideration of the last Judgement a ground of the godlies patience 379 Consolations from Christs Resurrection 348 Co●solation of Gods children that their Saviour shall be their Judge 376 Consolation issuing from pardon of sinne 409 Cros● of Chri●t an honourable chariot of our triumph 334 Crosses some more smart and durable why 357 D DAnger of sin 406 Davids sin and punishment both forgiven though the child must dye 404 Death of Christ after a special manner infamous 332 Death of Christ hath more power in it than all the lives of Men and Angels 334 Death of Christ a destroyer of death and all destroyers 342 Death though it remain after sin is pardoned both the fault and punishment 〈◊〉 notwithstanding removed 333 Degrees of blessedness 415 Devil not cast out but by Christs power 324 Differences between Christian and worldly peace 265 Differences between Christs annointing and all other 308 Differences between Christs miracles and miracles of the Prophets and Apostles 313 Difference between the miracles of the Prophets and Apostles and those wonders wrought by Satan in three things 314 Difference between the life of the natural and regenerate man in matters both civil and religious 349 Difference between Civil and Ecclesiastical power 363 Difference between the kingdome of Christ and Antichrist 364 Divinity of Scripture proved 298 E ENemies even spiritual not only foyled by Christ but made after a sort friendly 345 Essential properties of Faith three 395 Evangelists all large in the Article of Christ his resurrection Why. 339 Every thing must bee esteemed in the measure and degree of the goodness of it 410 Examination of heavenly life 352 F FAith what it is 391 Faith is not of all reas 391 Faith never lost reas four 392 Faith commendeth every thing 394 Faith of most not rightly qualified 399 Faith seateth it self in an humbled soul 395 Faith in the resurrection an hard point 366 Faithful are seasonably remembred of God at least on the third day 357 Fame of Christ begun in Galilee why 303 And why after Johns preaching 305 Fear of God what and wherein it consisteth 288 Fearers of God must bee accepted of us 293 Few men see the necessity of preaching why 372 Five deadly enemies foyled by Christ 1 Sin 2 Death 3 Hell 4 The Devil 5 The World 344 Five excellent fruits of saving faith 393 Five sorts of men all boast of faith and yet all of them want it 399 Freedom by Christ 302 Fruits of faith four 397 Fruits of Christs death reduced to two heads 335 Force of consent in doctrin wherein it standeth 390 G. GAlilee of the Gentiles why so called 304 Glory of the last Judgement described 378 Glory of God in his children turned into shame 416 God no accepter of persons why 284 Gods providence over-ruleth every special event with the special circumstances 306 God was with Christ how and how with his servants 322 Gods wisdome and power most seen in chusing the most weak things 364 God only properly forgiveth sins why 402 God forgiveth sins not only properly but perfectly that is both the guilt and punishment 4●7 Godly must enquire of the truth of Doctrin delivered by the Scriptures 363 Godly enter not into the judgement how 377 Godly must lift up their heads in expectation of the day of their redemption 383 Godly who have all hard sentences passe against them shall have justice at the last day 379 Godly must addresse themselves to the Judgement Day two ways 384 Godly life must not bee shunned for the crosses that attend it 411 Graces in the soul of Christ after his resurrection were incomprehensible by all Creatures but in respect of God finite as the soul it self is 343 Guilt of sin is wholly abolished in beleevers although not the whole corruption of it 344 H. HAppinesse how it standeth in remission of sins 415 Hearers how to know they have heard aright 374 Heavenly life discerned by the notes of it 349 Helps to attain the grace of remission of sins 411 Hope is Faiths hand-ma●d 396 How the Lord of life could be subdued of death 328 How God can be just in punishing Christ an innocent and letting the guilty go free ibid. ●ow an infinite Justice could bee satisfied by so short a death ibid. How the jews are said to put Christ to death seeing they had no power to doe it 329 How Christs crucifying crucifieth the lusts of Christians 335 How Christ can bee said to rise ag●●n seeing neither his Deity nor the soul of his Humanity did 337 How Christ is said to rise seeing God the Father and the Holy Ghost are said also to raise him 339 How Christ hath slain our sin which yet is so stirring in the best 344 How beleevers may know they are risen with Christ 349 How the Apostles were furnished to their witnesse 361 How Christ could eat and drink after he rose again seeing he rose not to natural life 365 How preaching could bee Christs ordinance being so long before his incarnation 367 How Christ is ordained Judge seeing the Father and the Holy Ghost judge as well as he 375 How Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to his Father 375 Humiliation of Christ must humble Christians and h●w 334 I IEsus of Nazaret why so called 306 In Gods udgement wee must stand naked 288 In all spiritual captivity hasten to Christ 324 In cases of sor●ery what to do ibid. In all divine things wee must lean on a sure ground 302 In reading the Prophets wee must still be led to Christ. 390 Ingratitude of the Jews most extream 330 Joshua in many things a singular type of Christ. 333 Judging of our selves standeth in four things 385 L LAw of perfect righteousnesse is the charter of heaven 351 Life of Faith wherein 393 Lets which hinder men from seeking the remission of their sins 409 Love of God expressed in three things 397 Love of men wherein chiefly descerned ibid Love and thankfulnesse to God attendeth the remission of sins 413 Lowest degrees of murther condemned as murther 329 M MAgistrates must not accept of persons 286 Mallice of the wicked against the godly never wanteth matter to w●rk upon 331 Many men bodily possessed by the Devil in Christs time above all other times before or since why 308 Manner of Christs resurrection in three things 34● Map of humane frai ty in Peter 283 Means by which quick and dead shall bee presented before the last judgement 377 Means to increase the stock of Faith 398 Men