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A29371 I. Scripture-light the most sure light ... delivered in three sermons on 2 Pet. I. 19 : II. Christ in travel ... in three sermons on Isai. 53. 11 : III. A lifting up for the down-cast ... delivered in thirteen sermons on Psal. 42, 11 : four several sermons ... / preached by William Bridge ... Bridge, William, 1600?-1670. 1656 (1656) Wing B4462; ESTC R34370 561,325 608

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for them for whatever God gives in time he gives upon the account of Christs Merit but in time he doth give Grace and Holiness for he doth bless us with all spiritual blessings in Christ Now Grace and Holiness are Spiritual blessings and therefore God doth bless us therewith in Christ 2. Look what the Father promiseth that he doth give out upon the account of Christ for all the Promises are Yea and Amen in Christ Grace and Truth comes by Christ the fulfilling of the Promise is truth but God the Father hath promised Grace as wel as Glory I will write my Law in your heart I will take away the heart of stone and give you an heart of flesh I will give you a new heart saith God 3. Wha●ever Grace is derived from Christ and communicated by him to us he merited for us But of his Fulness we do al receive even Grace for Grace 4. We pray to God for the Conversion and Regeneration of sinners and we beg this in the Name of Christ there●ore Christ hath merited not only Glory but Grace and Holine s. And 5. The Apostle tels us expresly in 2 Tim. 1.9 That we are called with an holy Calling in a●d by Jesus Christ W●o hath saved us and called us with an holy Ca●ling not according to our Work● but according to his own purpo e and G●ace whi●● he hath given us in Christ Je●us before the Wo●ld began As God doth work al Na●ural things by Second Cau●es so he doth work al Supernatural things by Christ By C●rist ●e d●d make the old Creation as he was the Ete●n●l Son of God and by Christ he makes the new Creation as our Mediator Now look what the Father worketh by him that did he merit for us but our new Creation is wrought by him and theretore he did not only merit Heaven and happiness but al our Grace and Holiness for us 2. He did not only merit the impetration of our Redemption but the application of it also the application of the means of Grace and the application of his own Merit for his Death is made the Reason of this application Meritum Christi sufficienter operatur ut causa universalis salutis humanae sed oportet hanc causam applicari per scripturam et per fidem formatum et ideo requiritur aliquid aliud ad salutem nostram praeter meritum Christi cujus tamen meritum Christi est causa Tho. Aquin. quest 29. de gratia Christi art 7. Esai 53.11 By his knowledg shal my righteous Servant justifie many for he shal bear their iniquities so again Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternal Spirit offered up himself purge our Consciences from dead Works to serve the living God and for this cause is he the Mediator of the new Covenant Now if Christ shal therfore justifie many because he did bear their sins then he did merit this application for al those whom he died for 2. If Christ did not merit this application then there is some Grace which is not from Christ Haec applicatio est maximum Dei donū et maxime necessaria ad salutem sed Christus meruit nobis omnia Dei dona et omnia media necessaria ad salutem ergo haec applicatio est ex meritis Christi Suarez disput 41. sect 2. Nemo propter solum peccatum originis damnatur Armin. contr Perk. Arnold Corvinus contra Tilen p. 391. or this application is no Grace but the application of Grace and of Christs Merits and Redemption is Grace and there is no Grace which we have but is al from Christ 3. Our other Adversaries tel us that no Child perisheth or is damned only for Original sin but that sin is taken off from al by the Death of Christ therefore the death of Christ and his Merits are applied unto al Infants and if so then he hath merited the application of Redemption for al or else he did not die equally for al as they say 4. Look what God hath promised that Christ hath merited but he hath promised the application of Christs death Merits for saith he My Servant shal deal prudently he shal be exalted so shal he sprinkle many Nations Alias non perfectius meritum Christi esset causa salutis p●aedestinatorum quam non p●aedestinatorū quia quod attinet ad sufficientiam meriti aequaliter respicit omnes homines sed differentia est in ho● quod quibusdam applicatur illud meritum quibusdam non ergo si haec applicatio non cadit sub merito Christi meritum Christi ● qualiter r●spice●et praedestinatos et non p aedestinatos Zumel quest 23. art 5 Isa 52.15 And 5. If he did not merit the application as wel as the impetration of our Redemption then he merited no more for those that are in Heaven than for those that are in Hel no more for those that are saved than for those that are damned For he merited the impetration of Redemption for al the particular men of the World say they But he did merit more for the saved than for the damned else those in Heaven have no more cau e to praise God and to be thankful unto Christ than those that are in Hel. Surely therefore our Lord and Savior Christ when he died did not only merit the Impetration but the Application also of our Redemption 3. He did not only merit a sufficiency of Grace for us but the efficacy of Grace also Hoc etiam salubriter profitemur et credimus quod in omni opere bono nos non incipimus et postea per Dei miserecordiam adjuvamur sed ipse nobis nullis praecedentibus meritis et fidem et amorem sui inspirat Concil Araufican 2. can 25. For look what Grace the Father gives in time that the Son merited for he blesses with al spiritual blessings in him but the Father doth not only give forth a sufficiency of Grace but the efficacy of it for saith the Apostle he worketh in us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wil and the deed 2. Look what Grace the Father promiseth us that Christ merited for us but the Father promiseth not only a sufficiency but the efficacy of Grace I wil put my Spirit into you and cause you to walk in my waies saith God 3. Christ is the Mediator of the new Covenant upon the account of his Death Heb. 9.14 15. therefore whatever Grace is promised in the New Covenant his Death is the meritorious cause of but the efficacy of Grace is promised in the new Covenant I wil write my Law in your hearts Heb. 8. 4. The Death and Obedience of Christ is more meritorious for us than the Sin and Disobedience of the first Adam was against us Rom. 5. But the Sin and Disobedience of the first Adam did not only merit a sufficiency of evil but the efficacy of evil upon our Nature and therefore the Death
give unto man what Law he pleased which Liberty or Power of God say they was the next effect of Christs Death But this cannot be for then Christ died to redeem the Power of God out of the hand of his Justice for that which is delivered by the Death of Christ is redeemed but where do we find in Scripture that Christ is said to redeem God or any thing of Gods 2. This doth suppose that God was willing to shew mercy to man and to do that for man which he could not do but that cannot be with God man may be willing to do that which in Justice he cannot do because his wil may be unjust but Gods wil cannot be unjust and therefore he cannot wil that which he cannot do in Justice 3. This makes void the death of Christ Si potestas et jus salvandi in Deo consideretur absolute Deus si voluisset potuisset nos salvare citra satisfactionem Christi sed non voluit id facere Cornivus contra Molin p. 436. Deus potest de suo jure quantum vult dimittere instar Regis creditoris Matth. 18. nisi velimus Deo minus quam nobis licere Sorex Vorstianus pag. 4 5. according to the Maintainers of this Opinion for they say That God could pardon the sin of man without the death of Christ and therefore if Christ died to procure such a power and liberty to God then he died for nothing for according to themselves he had this power before 4. This Opinion doth suppose that there is a velleity and voluntas in God an half and a ful Wil and if Gods Wil may be imperfect and perfect then his Knowledg also may be Plena et Semiplena Perfect and Imperfect and so Imperfection wil be charged upon God 5. The Apostle Paul tels us Heb. 9. That Christ died as Mediator of the New Covenant therefore not to set God free to make what Covenant he pleased with the Children of Men. Mirabilis ille status in quem homines restitui dicunt per Christum neque est status gratiae Evangelicae quae non fluit ex faedere gratiae neque potest esse status legis neque ullus alius status in quo homines stare solent Ames Antisynodal de morte Christi Cap. 4. p. 149. 6. What state shal redeemed man be in presently upon this account not under the Gospel for God is left free by the Death of Christ they say to appoint what Covenant he pleases and not under the Law for he was by Christ redeemed from the Law 7. If the Confirmation of the New Covenant were the next Effect of Christs death as appears by Heb. 9.14 15. then Christ did not die to procure such a power and liberty to God that he might appoint what Covenant he pleased Surely therefore this power or liberty in God is not an effect of Christs Death much less the next effect of it Fourthly Some think that the next and immediate effect of the death of Christ Remonstrantes sic declaratio sent circa 2. Artic. Acta Synod 286. Sociniani sic Crellius contra Grotium p. 304. is the forgiveness of original sin unto al the World none say they are damned only for original sin this by the death of Christ was immediately forgiven to al the Children of Men. But this cannot be for then al the World should be actually reconciled unto God and justified for according to their own Opinion Justification and forgiveness of sin are one and the same thing but the Apostle tels us that whom God justifies them he also glorifies Rom. 8. 2. Then also there should not only be an impetration of Redemption and Grace for al but an application unto al which they deny 3. Then the Children of Heathens and Pagans should be in a better state and condition than the Godly who live under the Gospel for according to their Opinion the Godly living under the Gospel may fal away and be damned and so though they be Godly they have no assurance of their Salvation but if a Pagans Child die he is sure to go to Heaven because his sin is pardoned and he is justified 4. The Apostle Paul tels us 2 Cor. 7. That the Children of Beleevers are clean and holy and upon the account of the Parents Faith but if original Sin be pardoned to al the World then the Children of Infidels and Unbeleevers also are holy and if so why doth the Apostle tel us that our Children are holy upon the account of the Parents Faith 5. The Apostle Jude tels us That the Sodomites endured the Vengeance of Hel surely there were some Children in the Town and place The Wages of sin is Death saith the Apostle Paul and Death reigned from Adam to Moses even upon them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams Transgression And if the Wrath of God do abide upon al til they do beleeve then surely original sin is not forgiven unto al the World by the Death of Christ Fiftly Others think that the obtainment of this Decree viz. Whoever beleeves shall be saved and whoever beleeveth not shal be damned is the next and great effect of the Death of Christ Answ But this cannot be the Effect of Christs Death For 1. We read of no such general Decree of God in the Scripture We read of this Gospel Truth Whoever beleeves shall be saved and whoever beleeves not shall be damned but every Gospel Truth is not a Decree of God Christ is the Son of God is a Gospel Truth The Lord wil write his Law in your hearts is a Gospel Truth and Promise but this is not called Gods Decree Electio est alicujus particularis cum rejectione alterius hoc sit●ante jacta mundi Fundamenta ergo datur aliquid plusquam Decretum generale Ames Antisin 2. Such a General Decree doth exclude and deny Election of particular Persons The Scripture tels us plainly of the Election of particular Persons Ephes 1. Who hath chosen us Rom. 8. Whom he hath predestinated them he hath also called the Foundation of God standeth sure he knoweth who are his but now if there were such a General Decree as this Whoever beleeves shal be saved and whoever beleeves not shal be damned there would need no Election of particular Persons but only an Execution of that general Decree Decreto isto generall Deus nihil magis velit uni quam alteri sed Rom. 9. magis vult uni quam alteri Ames Antisyn 3. By that general Decree God doth wil no more to one than to another but Rom. 9. God doth wil 〈◊〉 more to one than to another for Jacob beloved and Esau be hated 4. If there were such a general Decree Totum et integrum predestinationis decretum Act. Synod pag. 48. none else as some say then the wil of God should be undetermined as to the Salvation of this or that particular Man until he beleeved and so should
Savior give this as a Reason why they did not beleeve because they were not of his Sheep 5. The Apostle Paul saith Rom. 10.14 How shal they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard and how shal they hear without a Preacher and how shall they preach except they be sent But now al the particular men in the world have not heard of a crucified Christ by the preaching of the Gospel And if it be said Yes but the Sun Moon and Stars do preach Christ as the Apostle saith in the same Chapter Their sound and words is gone forth into all the Earth I answer It 's true indeed that the Apostle doth here allude to that 19. Psalm where it 's said that the Voyce of the Sun Moon and Stars is gone forth unto al the Earth but the Apostle doth not contradict himself for he saith How can they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard and how can they hear without a Preacher and a Preacher sent If men can hear of Christ by the Preaching of the Sun Moon and Stars then they can hear of Christ without the preaching of one sent which he denies ver 14 15. And if the Sun Moon and Stars do preach Christ crucified then is the Matter of the Gospel no Divine Revelation And then why might not Adam beleeve in Christ in the state of Innocency the Sun Moon and Stars preach the same Doctrine now that they preached then and then the same that they preach now if therefore they do preach Christ crucified now then also they preached him in the state of Innocency and so Adam in the state of Innocency had a power to beleeve on Christ which the Maintainers of this Opinion deny Neither can it be said That if al men have not a Power to beleeve Quando homo non potest si volit propter voluntatem impossibilitas non imputatur si autem non vult propter impossibilitatem voluntas non excusatur Hugo de St. vict L. 2. de Sacr. part 14. Cap. 6. Cornel. Jansen August lib. 3. de gratia Christi salvatoris then God should be unjust in punishing so many for Unbelief for besides that al had a Power in Adam God doth punish and damn men for their will not for their want of Power for as Hugo observes wel when a man cannot if he wil for the wil the impossibility is not imputed but if he wil not for impossibility the wil is not excused Eightly Some again do think that Christ died to obtain a Power Dominion Smalcius Cateches Racov. de officio Christi Regio Theses Francis Davidis Thes 5. and Lord-ship over al things especially a power to forgive sins which he had not before his Death and that the next Effect of his Death was the obtainment of this Power and Dominion But this cannot be for if Christ had this Dominion Power and Lordship over al by vertue of the Hypostatical Vnion then it was not meri ed by his Death but this he had by that mysterious Union and therefore as soon as he was born the Angel said unto the Shepheards For unto you is born this day in the City of David the Savior which is Christ the Lord Luke 2.11 2. Christ did not merit for himself as the Protestants speak against the Papists for if Christ should merit such a glory and Dominion for himself then the Love of Christ to man in his Death would be much lessened it 's said indeed Dio non causam sed ordinem et consequentiam notat Acts 20.26 Heb. 3.7 2 Pet. 1.10 sic Luc. 24 26. oportuit illum pati et sic intrare sic sancti per multos tribulationes debent regnum ing●odi quae tamen hujus non sunt Causae Quistorp Annot. Bibl. in Psal 110. that upon his Suffering as a Consequent thereof or by way of Declaration say some God gave him a Name above every Name c. Phil. 2. but that relates to the former words also Who thought it no robbery to be equal with God yet took on him the form of a Servant verse 7. which notes the Hypostatical Union 3. If Christ bought in this Power and Dominion by his Death then he purchased it with his blood but his blood i● propitiatory and satisfactory not procuring Lordship and Dominion 4. The Power Lordship and Dominion which Christ hath is either Essential or Dispensatory and ●ediatorian His Essential Power and Lordship was not merited by his Death for he hath that as he is God and he had it before his Incarnation for Esaiah saw his Glory and did see him chap. 6. verse 5. For mine Eyes saith he have seen the King what King Even the Lord of Hosts verse 5. the holy holy holy Lord of Hosts which the Evangelist John doth apply unto Christ and tels us plainly that this Lord whom Esaiah saw was Christ Chap. 12.41 These things said Isaiah when he saw his Glory and spake of him His Mediatorian Power and Lordship could not be merited by his death for he was Mediator before he died and therefore had his Mediatorian Power before his Death 5. We find him actually possessed of this Power and Lordship over al before his death witness his casting out of Devils commanding Winds and Seas which obeyed him and his answer to the Owner of the Ass which he sent for Say the Lord hath need of him And 6. As for his Power to forgive sins as if he would on purpose obviate the Doctrine of the Socinians he doth declare it in so many words But that ye may know that the Son of man hath power on Earth to forgive sins c. Matth. 9. Now if he had this Power on Earth then the obtainment of it was not the great and next Effect of his Death no nor any thing which his Soul travelled for in his Death Quest If these things be not the next and immediate Effects and Fruits of Christs Death and Sufferings what are and what is that Issue of his Death which he did presently see and was possessed of Answ Affirmatively Look what the first Adam destroyed that the Second Adam did build up again for his Seed the Second Adam recovered and gained that in a better Edition for his Seed which the first Adam lost from his Seed Therefore First As the first Adam by his Sin and Disobedience did break the Law of God affront his Justice and provoked the Anger and Wrath of God against his Posterity so the Second Adam did by his Obedience and Death satisfie the Law and Justice of God for al his Seed whom he died for which Satisfaction he did perform immediately For 1. When he died our sins were imputed to him and laid and charged on him for he was made sin for us who knew no sin 1 Cor. 5.21 that is the guilt of our sin was imputed to him The meaning of the words is not He was made a Sacrifice for it 's said that he knew
the Body of Christ and again verse 14. For by one Offering he hath perfected that is consecrated saith Calvin for ever them that are sanctified And saith our Savior Omnes prorsus authores quos ego legerim interpretantur pro iis ego me in sacrificium offero et cum dicit ut sint ipsi sanctificati in veritate significat initiari consecrarique sacrificio Maldonat in Joan. 17. Calvin in Heb. 10. For this cause do I sanctifie my self that is saith Maldonate according to al the Authors that I have read I do consecrate and offer up my ●elf a Sacrifice that they also may be sanctified or consecrated in Truth and not in Ceremony as the People were by the Sacrifices of the old Testament which were but a shadow of the great and true Sacrifice Christ on the Cross And if our Lord and Savior Christ when he died on the Cross was then offered unto God as our first Fruits then al the crop and lump must be sanctified thereby but when he died he was offered up unto God as our first Fruits and therefore saies the Apostle Heb. 2.11 For both he that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are of one as the first Fruits and the Crop or Lump were of one plainly therefore when Christ died for us he did then sanctifie and set apart al those whom he died for and so the consecration and sanctification of his Seed is another Fruit and immediate Effect of his Death Thirdly As he did consecrate al his Seed by his Death so he did merit Heaven and Eternal Salvation for them opening the Gates of Paradice I mean the Coelestial Paradice for them again for as the first Adam by his Sin and Disobedience did bring Death and Eternal Condemnation upon al his Seed Humilitas passionis Christi meruit nobis apertionem januae quod per eam datum est sufficiens pretium redemptionis nostrae quia tanta fuit humilitas in redemptore quanta fuit superbia in prevaricatore Altissiodor Lib. 3. Tract 1. c. 7. and did cause the Gates of Paradice to be shut against him and al his Posterity so the Second Adam did by his Death and Obedience open the Gates of Paradice and Salvation for al his Seed and therefore when he was on the Cross he told the Thief This day shalt thou be with me in Paradice why did he not rather say This day shalt thou be with me in the third Heavens for our Paradice is the third Heavens as appears plainly by comparing the 2d and 3d Verses of the 12. Chapter of 2 Cor. But because as I conceive he was performing his Obedience on the Tree as our Second Adam and so opening Heaven and our Paradice in opposition to that hurt and mischief the first Adam did by his Disobedience in eating of the forbidden Tree and if ye look into Heb. 10.19 20. ye shal find that the Apostle Paul saith thus Having therefore Brethren boldness to enter into the Holiest by the Blood of Jesus by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the vail that is to say his flesh So that the opening of this way to Life for his Seed was the proper and immediate Effect and Fruit of Christs Death and Sufferings Fourthly As he did merit Eternal Life and Salvation for his Seed opening the Gates of Paradice again for them So he did by his Death recover the Image of God unto al his Seed For as the First Adam by his Sin and Disobedience did then lose the Image of God which loss he saw as an immediate Fruit and Effect of his Sin so the Second Adam Christ did by his Death and Obedience merit the repair and recovery of the Image of God 〈…〉 for his Seed which Purchase he did then obtain presently and did see the right thereunto immediately setled upon his Seed and Children whom he died for for saith the Apostle Heb. 9.12 But by his own blood be entred in once into the holy place having obtained Eternal Redemption for us So that before he entred the holy place he had obtained our Redemption look therefore what that is which we in Scripture are said to be redeemed from that he obtained presently for his Seed Now we are not only said to be redeemed from the Wrath to come but from all Iniquity Tit. 2.14 or from our vain Conversation and that by his blood 1 Pet. 1.18 19. Qiemadmodum non transit Adae damnatio nisi per generationem incarnaliter ex eo generatos sic non transit Christi gratia et peccatorū remissio nisi per regenerationem spiritualiter per ipsum regeneratos sicut delictum Adae non nocet nisi suis in eo quod sui sunt sic nec gratia Christi prodest nisi suis in eo quod sui sunt Parisiens de causis cur Deus homo Cap. 9. This purchase therefore he obtained presently by his Death Neither can it be said that then al his Seed should be immediately freed from their vain Conversation For as Parisiensis doth observe wel As the sin of the first Adam doth not hurt his Seed but in that they are his so the Grace of the Second Adam doth not actually profit his Seed but in that they are his But the Seed of Adam are his as they receive Flesh from him when they are born so the Seed of Christ are not his but as they receive the Spirit from him and when they are born again but though the Seed of Christ have not this Image actually stamped on them til they do beleeve yet they have a right both to Salvation and Sanctification immediately setled on them by the Death of Christ as a Child may have a right to a Land by the Purchase of his Father before he comes of Age though he be not actually possessed of the Land til he do come of Age This Right therefore and the Settlement of it upon the Seed of Christ is another fruit and immediate Effect of his Death and Sufferings Fiftly As he did recover the Image of God by his Death Nunc judicium est mundi nunc princeps hujus mundi e●icietur foras Joan. 12. justitia Dei hoc efficere dehuit ut ab eo pateretur Diabolus quod ille inique intulerat scil ut ab eo ligaretur quem inique ligaverat seu ligari procuraverat ab eo ejiciretur de mundo quem ipse et spiritualiter et corporaliter injuste ejecer●t Paris cap. 9. so he did spoil and destroy the Power of Satan which Satan had over al his Seed For as by the Sin and Disobedience of the first Adam Satan got a Power over al his Posterity so by the Death and Obedience of the Second Adam this Power was broken in reference to the Seed of Christ for saith the Apostle Heb. 2.14 He also himself took part of the same that through Death he might destroy him that had the power of
Death that is the Devil and again Col. 2.15 And having spoiled Principalities and Powers Dicitur Diabolus duas habuisse manus unam attrahentem qua trahebat omnes ad infetos quae amputata est et ei quantum ad bonos per passionem Christi et manum flagellantem quae debilitata est quae vexat tamen bonos ad exercitium Altissiod Lib 3. Tract 1 cap. 8. he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it that is the Cross So that when Christ died on the Cross he did then break and rout the Forces of Satan insomuch as al the Forces that he can draw up together against the Seed of Christ are but some rallied Troops then was his Field-Army broken and Christ triumphed over them al upon the Cross Surely therefore this breaking of the Power and Force of Satan is another Fruit and immediate Effect of the Death of Christ Sixtly As Christ did break the power of Satan by the power of his Death so he did thereby also sanctifie al things to his Seed insomuch as when they should come of Age al things should be then clean unto them For as the First Adam by his Sin and Disobedience did defile al things insomuch as al things were to be unclean and accursed to his Posterity so the Second Adam did by his Death and Obedience sprinkle clense and sanctifie al things to his Seed for saith the Apostle Heb. 9.19 When Moses had spoken every Precept to the People he took the blood of Calves and Goats and sprinkled both the Book and all the People Moreover he sprinkled with blood both the Tabernacle and al the Vessels of the Ministry and almost al things are by the Law purged with blood but the Heavenly things themselves with better Sacrifices than these verse 21 23. that is with Christs own Blood And if you ask why the Law Non quod prophanum in se quicquam haberet faedus sed quod nihil tā sanctum est quod non homines sua immunditi● prophanent nisi Deus ipse facta omnium innovatione occurrent omnes cultus vitiosi sunt ac impuri nisi Christus sanguinis sui aspersione eo● mundet Ubi Christus cum sanguine non apparet nihil nobis esse cum Deo sic neque Doctrina ipsa nobis ac in nostrum usum efficaverit nisi sanguine dedicata Calvin Heb. 9.20 21. Tabernacle and the Vessels of the Ministry which were holy should be thus sprinkled with Blood Calvin gives Two Reasons namely Because though these things were in themselves holy yet being used by man in regard of that pollution that is in him they might be prophaned and though the Book and Word of the Lord be holy yet it wil not it cannot be efficacious and profitable to us Nisi Sanguine Christi dedicata unless it be sprinkled by the Blood of Christ Now this sprinkling of the Vessels Book and al things was performed when the Sacrifice was offered and when the Testament was dedicated but the new Testament was confirmed by the Death of Christ his Blood being the Blood of the New Testament and he was sacrificed on the Cross and therefore though his Seed are sanctified with inherent Holiness when they do beleeve yet there was a sprinkling of al things Ordinances Afflictions Dispensations and al Conditions to them by the Death of Christ so that this Sanctification or sprinkling of al things in reference to his Seed was another Fruit and immediate Effect of the Death of Christ Seventhly As Christ did sanctifie al things to his Seed so by his Death he did confirm the Covenant of Grace For as the first Adam did break the old Covenant by his Sin and Disobedience so the Second Adam by his Death and Obedience did confirm the new For saith the Apostle Heb. 9.16 Where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the Death of the Testator for a Testament is of force after men are dead otherwise it is of no strength at al whilst the Testator liveth verse 17. And again Gal. 3.15 Brethren I speak after the manner of men though it be but a mans Covenant yet if it be confirmed no man disanulleth or addeth thereto and this I say that the Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ c. ver 17. So that the Covenant of Grace was confirmed by Christ in his Death Quest Qui vero sanguis aut mors Christi nobis voluntatem Dei confirmavit Resp Duplici ratione primum quod nos manifeste de ingenti in nos Del charitate certus reddiderit idque adeo quod Deus volit nobis id donare quod in N. Foedere promittat unde sanguis novi Faederis est dictus et ipse Christus testis verus et fidelis Cateches Racoviae de Prophetico Christi munere cap. 8. Socinus de Christo servatore pars prima de justif Synops 2. Volkillius de vera Religione Lib. 3. Cap. 18. Crellius ad Librum Hug. Grot. respons ad cap. 1. partic 26. Only the Question is How this Covenant was confirmed by the death of Christ The Socinians say That Christs death did confirm the Covenant by way of Testimony or Declaration of the Truth of the Gospel the Lord say they hath promised in the Gospel that al those who repent and beleeve shal be justified and saved Now Christ preaching this Truth and dying in it hath confirmed this Truth and the Gospel and therefore say they Christ is called the true and the faithful Witness 1. But though Christ by his death did bear his Testimony to the Truth of the Gospel yet where do we find in Scripture that his death did confirm the Covenant by way of Testimony 2. Where doth it appear that the Covenant which he confirmed by his death was this If you repent and beleeve you shal be saved and justified The thing is true and a Gospel Truth but the Covenant which Christ confirmed ye read of in Heb. 8. where the Lord doth promise both Faith and Repentance also 3. If the death of Christ did confirm the Covenant by way of Testimony testifying the Truth of the Gospel then the death of the Martyrs should confirm the Covenant more than the death of Christ for the Socinians deny the Deity of Christ and if Christ were only Man then the death of thousands some dying more painful deaths than Christ did should give a greater Testimony to the Truth of the Gospel and so confirm the Covenant more than the death of Christ but where do we find in al the Scripture that the death of the Martyrs is said to confirm the New Covenant Vide Essenii Triumph Crucis pag. 353. Lib. 2. Sect. 1. Cap. 1. Sib. Lubbert de Jesu Christo servatore contra F. Socinum Lib. 1. Cap. 3. Nicol. A●nold de morte Christi Cap. 8. The death of none but of the Testator can confirm the Testament but Christ only and not the Martyrs is the
in due season to this poor wounded and wearied soul Thus go to Christ Only in your Addresses to Christ Be sure that ye go in Uprightness Take heed that you do not desire peace meerly for the comfort of it but as an help unto your Grace He will give Grace and Glory and no good thing will he with-hold from him that walks uprightly Good men seek Peace for Grace sake but wicked men and Hypocrites seek Grace for Peace sake When you do make your Addresses for Peace be sure you come to Christ in uprightness and take heed that you do not desire peace only for the Comfort of it but as an help unto your Grace 2. And when you go unto Christ for peace Carry the Promise with you go in the way of the Promise 3. Go and waite long on Christ wait upon him onely and k●ep his way Some say they do wait on God but they do not keep his way they throw up their Duty if they have not comfort presently but in your addresses to Christ go and wait long on him and in case that peace and comfort doth not come presently lay by that great question a little Whether you be in Christ or no whether you be the child of God or no. The great trouble is this O! I am affraid I am not the child of God if I did but know that I am the child of God I should have peace If peace and comfort therefore do not come presently lay that question aside a little and in due time Christ wil answer that question too onely now for the present wait on him and keep his way But because it wil be said should not we be humbled for sin committed Oportet te saepe agere quod non vis et quod vis oportet relinquere and is not Humiliation a good means to get peace within therefore in the Third place In al your Humiliation carry Christ along with you When you go to mourn for sin begin aloft with Christ and do not alwayes think to begin below with sin and so to come up to Christ but begin aloft with Christ and so by your Humiliation fal down upon sin You say O! but I would be first Humbled before I do go to Christ but I pray tel me Can ye be Humbled and not see your sin and where can ye have such a prospect of sin as in the death of Christ is there any thing in the world that can shew you the misery ugliness and damning nature of sin as the death of Christ If you begin with Christ then you wil certainly come down to your sin and be Humbled for it but if you begin with sin you wil not certainly come up to Christ There is many a poor soul that hath said I wil be first humbled for my sin and then I wil go to Christ but he hath stuck so long in the legal work that he hath never come at Christ And if you be humbled before you do come to Christ you wil have no great peace and comfort in your Humiliation but if you first come to Christ and then carry Christ along with you to your Humiliation then you wil have much comfort and peace therein would you therefore be so Humbled as you may have peace thereby Be sure of this that you carry Christ with you unto that work do not begin alwayes with sin to go up to Christ but rather begin at Christ and so fal down upon sin In the Fourth place labor to Mortify your affections and to get your will melted into the wil of God As the winds are to the Sea so are the affections to the soul of man so long as the Sea is hurryed with the wind it hath no ●est or quiet and what is the reason that our hearts are no more calmed and quieted but because wee have not yet resigned up our wils to the wil of God t is our own wil that troubles our peace Propria voluntas turbat pacem get but your wil Mortifyed into the wil of God and you 'l say Lord I would fayn have peace yet not my wil but thy wil be done I would have peace presently yet I have no wil but thine therefore Lord when thou wilt and as thou wilt not my wil but thine own wil be done Thus do and you are at rest presently Fiftly Doest thou want peace and comfort and quietude of soul Take heed how you walk with doubting company take heed how you walk with those that are ful of fears and doubtings As one drunkard doth make another and one swearer doth beget another and one opposer of Godliness doth draw on another and one adulterer doth make another So one doubting Christian doth make another You that are weak and ful of doubtings should go and lean upon those that are strong and have ful assurance and you that have assurance should give the shoulder to those that are weak and say come and lean upon me and I wil be an help unto you You know how it is with the Ivie and the Vine the Ivie leans upon the Oak and the Vine upon the Posts or the house-side the Ivie and the Vine do not lean one upon another if the Ivie and the Vine should come and lean one upon another what twisting would there be and both would sal to the ground but the Ivie leans upon the Oak and the Vine upon the Posts or the house-side So a weak Christian should go and lean upon a strong Christian but if one doubter leanes upon another doubter both wil fal to the ground I have read of a woman that was under great temptations and meeting with another in the same condition said to her I am affraid I shal be damned so am I too said the other O but said she again I do not onely fear but I am sure of it certaynly I shal be damned I but said the other yet my condition is worse for I am damned already Here was damned and damned O! said one I shal certainly be damned O! said the other I am damned already O! what communion is here is this to build up one another Do you therefore want Comfort and peace You that are weak go and lean upon those that are strong and have ful assurance and you that have assurance be not unwilling to give forth your shoulder unto those that are weak and are ful of doubtings And to end al. Doest thou want peace and inward quietude of soul Whensoever the Lord then doth but begin to speak the least peace unto thine heart take heed that you do not refuse it but rather improve it and stir up your selves then in a way of beleeving praise God for every smile and rejoyce in the least If a bowed sixpence as it were be sent you from Heaven lay it up even every love-token Peace is a tender thing Doth the Lord begin to speak peace to any of your souls now stir up your selves in a
I. SCRIPTURE-LIGHT THE MOST SURE LIGHT In compare with 1. Revelations and Visions 2. Natural and Supernatural Dreams 3. Impressions with and without the Word 4. Light and Law within 5. Divine Providence 6. Christian Experience 7. Humane Reason 8. Judicial Astrologie Delivered in Three Sermons on 2 Pet. 1.19 II. CHRIST IN TRAVEL Wherein 1. The greatness of his Travel both in Soul and Body 2. The first and after Effects of his Death 3. His Assurance of Issue 4. His Satisfaction therein Are opened and cleered in Three Sermons on Isai 53.11 III. A LIFTING UP for the DOWN-CAST In case of 1. Great Sins 2. Weakness of Grace 3. Miscarriage of Duties 4. Want of Assurance 5. Affliction 6. Temptation 7. Desertion 8. Vnserviceableness 9. Discouragements from the Condition it self Delivered in Thirteen Sermons on Psal 42.11 Four several Sermons concerning 1. The Sin against the Holy Ghost 2. Sins of Infirmity 3. The False Apostle tryed and discovered 4. The Good and Means of Establishment Preached by VVilliam Bridge somtimes Fellow of Emmanuel Colledg in Cambridg and now Pastor of the Church of Christ in Great Yarmouth in Norfolk Sine gratia sordet Natura London Printed by Peter Cole in Leaden-Hall and are to be sold in his Shop at the Sign of the Printing-Press in Cornhil neer the Royal Exchange 1656. To the Worshipful Maurice Thompson Esquire George Thompson Esquire William Thompson Esquire Sheriff of London Robert Thompson Esq S R John Wittewrong Knight William Ofield Esquire Samuel Champnes Elias Roberts and William Hawkins Esquires With their Wives and Children Grace and Peace Honored and Beloved in our Lord Jesus IT is not want of respect that I seem thus to crowd your Names together I owe more than an Epistle to each of your Names but because God hath made you one though branched into several Habitations I take the boldness to present this work to you as unto one Family It is written of the Stork Ciconiae mos est unum è pullis relinquere Domui qua nidulata est Ludo Vives that she useth to leave one of her Young ones to the House where she made her nest and upon that account some of my labors do belong to your Family where I studyed and from whence I Preached them some of you and yours have often desired the Publishing of these Notes and being Printed whither should the Press send them but to your Door you are the Family with whom I have had the honor to converse much whilst living and now the Blossoms of the Grave are upon me I dedicate these Notes unto you that by them I may live and speak with you when my Head shal lie under the Clods you are a Family whom the Lord hath blessed and raysed not only to a great estate in the world but to the saving knowledg of his Son our dear Savior and whom should I serve and honor but those whom God honors and blesseth 1. That Family is not far from blessing which hath Godly Children Children trayned up and seasoned with the Grace of Christ from the Cradle The Lord blessed the House of Obed-edom and wherein did that blessing consist the Scripture tells us 1 Chron. 26. That some of his Children were Porters in the House of God others were mighty Men of Valor able Men for strength and service and the reason is given ver 5. For the Lord blessed him So that Children useful and serviceable both in Church and State are a great blessing unto a Family 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia filius est aedificium patris The Hebrews say that Children are the Fathers building and indeed he builds wisely that doth lay the Foundations of his House in a Godly Seed Loe Children saith the Psalmist are an heritage of the Lord and the fruit of the Womb are his reward as Arrowes in the Hand of the mighty so are Children of the youth blessed is the Man that hath his Quiver ful of them Especially where these Arrowes are wel headed wel hearted too And upon this account it is good for great Families to have good Servants For corrupt Servants do debauch Children and debauched Children do scatter Brimstone upon the House of their Fathers 2. Neither is that Family an unblessed Family which is strict in the observation of the Sabbath or the Lords day God hath blessed that day that he might bless them who do keep that day hereby England hath been blessed with the power of godliness more than other Nations My Sabbath saith God shall be a sign between me and thee Servasti diem Daminicam Christianus sum ' intermittere non possum And in the Primitive times when a Christian was asked whether he had kept the Lords day his answer generally was I am a Christian I cannot neglect it as if the observation of the Lords day were the badg of a Christian this is the Girdle of al our Duties and in respect of this Girdle I may say Ungirt unblessed the vallies of the week day are blessed by the upper springs of this day and as the Commandement doth especially poynt at and look wishly upon the Master of the Family saying Neither thou nor thy Son nor thy Daughter c. So doth the blessing also 3. Blessed is that Family which doth industriously seek to build the House of God and the House of the Poor David did but intend to build Gods House and the Lord promised him to build his House The Egiptian Midwives spared the Israelites Children whereby the Poor Families and Houses of the Israelites were built And the Lord dealt wel with the Midwives and made them Houses Exod. 1.20 4. Neither is that Family far from blessing which is a friend to the Ministry Receiving hiding and refreshing the paynful and faithful Ministers and Preachers of the Gospel The Lord give mercy saith Paul to the House of Onesiphorus for he hath refreshed me Not once and no more but he hath oft refreshed me nor did he do this because I followed him and sought him out but he sought me out very diligently and found me And in the day of my greatest affliction he was not ashamed of me for he was not ashamed of my Chains wherefore the Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy in that day and give mercy unto the House of Onesiphorus 2 Tim. 1.16.17.18 He that receiveth a Prophet saith our Savior in the Name of a Prophet shal receive a Prophets reward and what is the reward of a Prophet but to profit by the Prophet and to have a share in his Venture and in al that good which he doth by his Ministry 5. A praying Family also is a precious Family and blessed Nisi Dominus aedificaverit domum frustra laborat quisquis eam aedificat Psal 127. Non enim dicit Dominus aedificat domum nomine scilicet laborante sed ita nisi Dominus aedisica verit frustra laborat perinde ac si diceret labore
who heard them Preached raised them from that Death Mine own Notes were not legible enough for the Press In answer therefore to their desires I have corrected these some things I have altered some things added and some Repetitions fit enough for the Pulpit I have filed off what is wanting let thy goodness supply I have also joyned with them some other Sermons of more doctrinal concernment these being mostly practical that so thy mind and Heart may be at once exercised wherein I have rather applyed my self to the Jnstructive part of Preaching than to Scholastical disputation For I know the Universities have able and faithful Men more fit for that work Neither have I undertaken any English Adversary and if I have troaden upon any Mans Toes I hope he wil excuse me for I can say truly Sir I saw you not And if any Man shal say to me as Davids Brother Eliab spake to him 1 Sam. 17.29 I know thy pride and Malice of thine heart that thou art come down to see the battle I might answer as David did Is there not a Cause When strange Opinions and Errors are dayly Published is there not a Cause that every man who loves the truth should bear his Testimony for it In performance therefore of mine own Duty and for thine Establishment I have spoaken somthing to many truths which are now questioned Hold fast what thou hast lest another take thy Crown And the Lord Jesus Christ and our God even the Father which hath loved us and hath given us everlasting Consolation and good Hope through Grace Comfort thine heart and Stablish thee in every word and good work Thine in the Service of the Gospel WILLIAM BRIDGE The Names of several Books Printed by Peter Cole in Leaden-Hall London and are to be sold at his Shop at the sign of the Printing-press in Corn-hil neer the Exchange Nineteen several Books of Mr. William Bridge Collected into two Volumns Viz. 1 The Great Gospel Mystery of the Saints Comfort and Holiness opened and applied from Christs Priestly Office 2 Satans Power to Tempt and Christs Love to and Care of His People under Temptation 3 Thankfulness required in every Condition 4 Grace for Grace or the Overflowing of Christs Fulness received by all Saints 5 The Spiritual Actings of Faith through Natural Impossibilities 6 Evangelical Repentance 7 The Spiritual Life and In-being of Christ in all Beleevers 8 The Woman of Canaan 9 The Saints Hiding-place in time of Gods Anger 10 Christs Coming is at our Midnight 11 A Vindication of Gospel Ordinances 12 Grace and Love beyond Gifts 13 Scripture Light the most sure Light compared with 1. Revelations and Visions 2. Natural and Supernatural Dreams 3. Impressions with and without Word 4. Light and Law within 5. Divine Providence 6. Christian Experience 7 Humane Reason 8. Judicial Astrology Delivered in Sermons on 2 Pet. 1.19 14 Christ in Travel Wherein 1 The Travel of his soul 2. The first and after effects of his Death 3. His Assurance of Issue 4. And His satisfaction therein Are opened and cleered in three Sermons on Esay 53.11 15 A Lifting up for the Cast-down in case of 1. Great sin 2. Weakness of Grace 3. Miscarriage of Duties 4. Want of Assurance 5. Affliction 6. Temptation 7. Dissertion Unserviceableness 9. Discouragements from the Condition it self Delivered in thirteen Sermons on Psalm 42.11 His Four Sermons concerning 16 Sin against the Holy Ghost 17 Sins of Infirmities 18 The False Apostle tried and Discovered 19 The Good and means of Establishment Eleven Books of Mr. Jeremiah Burroughs lately published also the Texts of Scripture upon which they are grounded 1 The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment on Phil. 4.11 Wherein is shewed 1 What Contentment is 2 It is an Holy Art and Mystery 3 The Excellencies of it 4 The Evil of the contrary sin of Murmuring and the Aggravations of it 2 Gospel Worship on Levit. 10.3 Wherein is shewed 1 The right manner of the Worship of God in general and particularly In Hearing the Word Receiving the Lords Supper and Prayer 3 Gospel Conversation on Phil. 1.17 Wherein is shewed 1 That the Conversations of Beleevers must be above what could be by the Light of Nature 2 Beyond those that lived under the Law 3 And sutable to what Truths the Gospel holds forth To which is added The Misery of those men that have their Portion in this Life only on Psal 17.14 4 A Treatise of Earthly Mindedness Wherein is shewed 1 What Earthly mindedness is 2 The great Evil thereof on Phil. 3. part of the 19. Verse Also to the same Book is joyned A Treatise of Heavenly Mindedness and Walking with God on Gen. 5.24 and on Phil. 3.20 5 An Exposition on the fourth fifth sixth and seventh Chapters of the Prophesie of Hosea 6 An Exposition on the eighth ninth and tenth Chapters of Hosea 7 An Exposition on the eleventh twelfth and thirteenth Chapters of Hosea being now compleat 8 The Evil of Evils or the exceeding Sinfulness of Sin on Job 36.21 9 Precious Faith on 2 Pet. 1.1 10 Of Hope on 1 John 3.3 11 Of Walking by Faith on 2 Cor. 5.7 Ten several Books by Nich. Culpeper Gent. Student in Physick and Astrology 1 The Practice of Physick containing seventeen several Books Wherein is plainly set forth The Nature Cause Differences and Several Sorts of Signs Together wtth the Cure of all Diseases in the Body of Man Being chiefly a Translation of The Works of that Learned and Renowned Doctor Lazarus Riverius Now living Councellor and Physitian to the present King of France Above fifteen thousand of the said Books in Latin have been Sold in a very few Yeers having been eight times printed though all the former Impressions wanted the Nature Causes Signs and Differences of the Diseases and had only the Medicines for the Cure of them as plainly appears by the Authors Epistle 2 The Anatomy of the Body of Man Wherein is exactly described the several parts of the Body of Man illustrated with very many larger Brass Plates than ever was in English before 3 A Translation of the New Dispensatory made by the Colledg of Physitians of London Whereunto is added The Key to Galen 's Method of Physick 4 The English Physitian Enlarged being an Astrologo-Physical Discourse of the vulgar Herbs of this Nation wherein is shewed how to cure a mans self of most Diseases incident to Mans Body with such things as grow in England and for three pence charge Also in the same Book is shewed 1 The time of gathering all Herbs both Vulgarly and Astrologically 2 The way of drying and keeping them and their Juyces 3 The way of making and keeping al manner of useful Compounds made of those Herbs The way of mixing the Medicines according to the Cause and Mixture of the Disease and the part of the Body afflicted 5 A Directory for Midwives or a Guide for Women Newly enlarged by the Author in every sheet and Illustrated with
is not the time of the Dragon but the red Dragon that is the Heathen Roman Emperor did persecute the Woman Rev. 12. standing before her to devour the man Child the Seed of the Church as soon as she was delivered verse 2 3. Yet this good and holy man thought that that must needs be the meaning of the forty two Months because the Interpretation came to him with such an impression Possibly therefore a good man may be much deceived by Impressions especially when they come with a particular word But where do we find in al the Scripture That we are to judg of Doctrines by Impressions No but by the written Word of God that is the only Rule whereby we must judg comparing Spiritual things Foxus in Apoc. 13. p 216. with Spiritual things and one Scripture with another Though there may be much comfort found in the way of Impressions especially coming with a word yet if the word be not set upon the heart according to the true sense and scope of it we have cause to fear that the Impression is not of God but an illusion of Satan For where do we find in Scripture That ever God did set a Word upon the Soul but in the true sense and scope of it The Devil brought a word to Christ and applied it not according to the true Scope thereof Cast thy self down saies he he shall give his Angels charge over thee this was not according to the Scope of the Scripture But if God set on a Scripture with a deep Impression it was alwaies according to the true sense and scope of the Scripture For example Nehemiah being at Prayer as ye read Chap. 1. God gave him a word with a sweet Impression and it was according to the true sense thereof So Acts 4. the Apostles were at Prayer and God gave a word to them out of Psal 2. and it was according to the true scope thereof Where do we find that ever God did set on a particular Word but according to the true meaning of it Have I therefore an Impression with a Word yet if the Word be not set on my Soul according to the true meaning and scope of it then have I cause to fear that it is rather a delusion of Satan than the Impression of God Though the Impression be of God yet if the Application be beyond the Impression I am stil in an Error There is an Impression of a Word and there is the Application of it the Impression may be Gods and the Application may be mine own The Lord gave Abraham a Word that his Seed should be as the Stars but he made a false Application thereof when he went unto Hagar for the fulfilling of that Word So the Lord gave a Word to Eliphaz Job 4.12 Now a thing was secretly brought to me and mine ear received a little thereof fear came upon me and trembling verse 14. Then a Spirit passed before my face it stood still but I could not discern it then I heard a Voyce saying Shall mortal man be more just than God verse 15. Here was an Impression with a Word and this was from God but he applies this to and against Job Chap. 5.1 the Impression was of God but the Application was his own Possibly then a man may have an Impression from God with a Word yet the Application may be his own but though the Impression be never so ●ul and deep yet if the Application be beyond the Impression he is stil in an Error And therefore seeing that it is an easie thing and usual even for the Children of Abraham to make Application beyond the Impression the safest sure I way is to keep clo●e to the written Word of God which is both the Judg of al our Doctrin●s and the only Rule of al our Practices and therefore above and beyond al Impressions whether with or without a Word And thus I have done with the Third Instance Instance 4 As for that Light and Law of Grace which is in the Saints the Light of the Scripture is beyond and more excellent than that For The Light and Law within us here is imperfect for we see but in part and know in part 1 Cor. 13.9 Now we see through a Glass darkly And lest any man should think that Paul spake this only of some Babes in Christ he speaketh out yet more expresly putting himself into the number ver 12. Now I know in part and this in part is set in opposition to what is perfect for saies he verse 9. We know in part and prophesie in part but when that which is perfect is come c. verse 10. So that whatever Law or Light or Knowledg is within us now is imperfect but the Word of God written the Scripture and the Light thereof is perfect for saies the Psalmist The Law of the Lord is perfect Psal 19. The Law of Grace within and the Light within is not able to convince others If I feel a Light and Law within me and say this must needs be so for I find it thus within me I have a Light within me for it this wil not convince another But the Scripture by the breathing of the Spirit of God with it wil convince another and is able to convince another Tit. 1.9 Holding fast the faithful Word that he may be able by sound Doctrine both to exhort and convince gain-sayers How are gain-sayers to be convinced then what by the Light or Law within No but by sound Doctrine fetched from the faithful Word Quest Is there then no use of the Law and Light and Spirit within us doth not God speak and direct thereby Answ 1 Yea The Spirit of a man saith Solomon is the Candle of the Lord searching al the inward rooms of the Belly When God doth set up a Light or Candle in the Soul he may thereby go into al the inward Chambers of the Soul discovering those heaps of sin that are in the Soul Answ 2 Yea This inward Law and Light doth not only discover evil but it doth incline to good and strongly incline the Soul thereunto therefore it is called a Law not because it is a Rule to us for the body of death and sin is called the Law in your Members but because of its power and force to incline the Soul unto what is good Answ 3 Yea It doth not only incline a man unto what is good but it enables him thereunto It is that Principle upon which al his good actions grow and from whence they spring All true good must proceed from a good Principle and this Law and Light and Spirit within is that Principle whereby a man is enabled unto what is good But Secondly Though the Law and Light and Spirit within us be a Principle of good yet it is not the Rule of our Goodness or Lives For If the Law and Light and Spirit within be our Rule then what need the Scripture or the Word without any longer
in this sense say they God is said to be wroth with Christ But I rather chuse to say that Christ is considered two waies 1. Either in regard of his own Person or as he did stand for us being our Surety 2. There is a difference between the affection of Gods Wrath and the Dispensation of it Now Christ standing for us and in our room and stead did suffer and conflict with the Wrath of God that is the Vindicative Dispensation of it for he was made a Curse for us and a Curse is a Vindicative Dispensation of Wrath. It may be the Socinians and their Friends wil say that he was made a Curse for us because he died that cursed Death on the Cross for our good but if ye look into the words ye shal find that he was made a Curse for us so as that there was a Translation of the Curse from us unto him which Curse was due for our Sin for saies rhe Apostle Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a Curse for us as it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree for it is written again verse 10. Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written the Book of the Law to do them verse 10. Which Curse saith the Apostle Christ is made for us we being thereby redeemed from it verse 13. Now is it possible that Christ should thus be made a Curse for us but he must suffer and conflict with the Wrath of God which was due to us and if he were smitten of the Father then did he bear the Dispensation of the Fathers Wrath and Anger Now it is said expresly in Isaiah 53. It pleased the Father to bruise him verse 10. He was smitten of God and afflicted verse 4. Prop. 4 As our Lord and Savior Christ did suffer and conflict with the Wrath of God so he did endure the torments of Hell whilst he was in this Life Christus mortem gehennalem pro nobis sustinuit Calvin in Matth. 26. ver 39. in cap. 27.46 Institut Lib. 2. 16. Chamier Tom. 2. l. 5. Cap. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20. Sib. Lubbertus contra Socinum lib. 1. c. 1. Jon. Piscator contra vorstium notae ad Amic duplicat Sect. 1. 24. Amos Bellarm. enervat Lib. 2. de Christo Maccovius de Mediator Disp 17. Willet Synops part 4. quest 3. Cartwright Harmon pag. 985. 988. Nico. Arnold Relig. Socinian pag. 502. I do not say with the Papists that he descended into Hell after his death nor that whilst he lived here he was damned for us that were Blasphemy for a man is said to be damned that doth for ever bear the weight of his own sins nor do I say that Christ did bear al that misery of Hel which we should have born and which the Reprobates do and shal bear in Hel for they lie blaspheming and despairing But though Christ was in a great Agony yet he did not despair for said he My God my God and though God did forsake him yet that was not in regard of Vnion as it is with the damned in Hel but only in regard of Vision yet he did endure and suffer for us the very torments and misery of Hel for there are two things concurrent to the misery of Hel the punishment of loss and the punishment of Sence now both these did our Savior bear whilst he was in this Travel The punishment of Loss for he did lose Est genus paenarum quod patiuntur damnati in inferno qui omni solatio carent quidam huic simile Redemptor noster sustinere dignatus est qui omni à se solatium et consolationis remedium in passione abdicavit Medina in Thom. part 3. q. 46. a. 6. and was for a time suspended from that sweet and comfortable Vision and Fruition of God therefore he cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me which cannot be understood of his outward Afflictions as being left to the violence of men for saies Paul 2 Cor. 4.9 We are persecuted but not forsaken they were left to the violence of men and persecutors yet they were not forsaken and therefore when Christ saith Why hast thou forsaken me Videmus alios homines non tamen sine dolore et motu sed etiam cum magno gaudio et laetitia mortem obire ex quo sequitur aut Christum qui est Dominus caeli et terras minus animi minus roboris minus fiduciae minus fortudinis et minus constantiae tabuisse quam gregarios homines aut sustinuisse mortem multo acerbiorem et ho●●ihiliorem quam qu●mvis martyrum sed illud dicere est impium sustinuit itaque aliud genus mortis quam alii homines et atrocius et sita fuit illa atrocitas in sensu irae Dei in propossione execrationis Sib. Lubbert contra Socinum Lib. 2. Cap. 1. p. 115. he doth not mean so as to be left to the Persecution of men for thus saies the Apostle We may be and yet not forsaken And as he did bear the punishment of Loss so of Sense also for he sweat drops of blood not Blood only but drops of Blood nor a few drops only but many insomuch as they fel to the ground in so great a quantity as ran through his Cloathes as some conceive to the ground Now can we imagine that he should be in this Agony sweating these drops of Blood heavy in his Soul unto death and to sore amazement crying out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me only from the fear of death what was our Savior more afraid of death than the Martyrs They went triumphing and some of them singing to their more cru●l death and clapped their hands in their flames had they more Courage Faith or Resolution than our Savior If it were only a Corporal Death that Christ thus feared then they should suffer with more boldness and courage than our Savior but come Gerard Harm Quod autem ad pios attinet sciendum est longe alia in arena versari quam Christus nam rem habent cum morte et inferis devicti et profligatis Christus autem cum illis jam vegetis et armatis ira divina luctatus est Cartw. Harm p. 985. saies Gerard and I wil tel you what is the Reason that our Savior was thus afraid and they so bold Our Savior saith he drunk of the Brook in the way but their drink was sweetened with his Death Christ did conflict with Sin Satan Death and Hel Enemies whose force was never broken before but the Martyrs only grappled with death a broken Troop of Sorrows that rallied again but was broken and overcome before Christ did sustain the Malediction and Curse of the Law There was a Curse in his Death but the Curse was taken out of the death of Martyrs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in mortibus suis Esai
53.9 Christ did not only conflict with a temporal but Eternal Death but the Martyrs knew that they were free from eternal Death Christ bare al their sins But when they came to suffer the sting of Death which is sin was taken out and upon this account one of the Martyrs said Christus dolebat ut ego esse hilaris et laetus ille habebat mea peccata et ego vere illius merita et Justitiam Essen de Satis Christi p. 56. when he came to suffer Christ grieved at his Death that I might rejoyce in mine he had my sin on him and I have his Righteousness and Merits on me Yea he did then endure the torments of Hel in his sufferings that by our sufferings we might go to Heaven Quest But is it possible that one may endure the very torments of Hell in this Life Answ Yes For as a man may have a tast of Heaven before he come there so possibly a man may have a tast of Hell even in this Life also The Wrath of God in Scripture is compared to and called Fire Psal 84.46 And if ye look into the Parable of Dives and Lazarus ye shal find that Dives cries out to Abraham to send one with a drop of water to cool his Tongue Why but saies Austin the body of Dives is not yet in Hel what fire therefore is this that doth so torment him to which he answers Quali● lingua talis flamma as the Eyes wherewith he sees Abraham afar off such is the Fire and as his Tongue such is the Fire that he is tormented in the fire of the Wrath of God this Fire of Gods Wrath was our dear Savior scorched with whilst he was in his Arg. 1 Travel For by way of Reason and Argument whereby the former Propositions also shal be the more fully proved if Christ did bear our Griefs then whatever miseries were inflicted upon us and our Nature by vertue of the Threatening it self under which we were those Christ did bear and endure for us But he did bear our Griefs I do not say that he did bear and endure al that we should have done Whatever misery or punishment we should have born or the Reprobates do or shal bear in Hel doth either proceed from the Threatening it self as the proper effect thereof or it doth proceed from the disposition and condition of the Person whom the execution of the Threatening doth fal upon the threatening it self doth produce death The day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death Therefore death evil and the Wrath of God for sin doth proceed from the Threatening it self Now when this fals upon man he despairs and blasphemes and lies under the Wrath of God for ever yet despair and eternal blasphemy is not the punishment of the Threatening it self proceeding from the Threat in it self considered but proceeds from the disposition of Man upon whom the execution of the Curse fals for no sin comes from Gods Threatening in it self considered Punishment properly is satisfaction for injury done but sin is a continuing of the injury Desperatio non est de essentia paenae infernalis paenae author est Deus Diabolus et peccator desperationis paena est hominis passio desperatio est hominis actio Ames Bellar. enervat Lib. 2. de Christo cap. 2. Despair Blasphemy and death in sin is an action the action of man but punishment is the passion and suffering of man so that death in sin despair and blasphemy are not of the essence of the Punishment threatened but the wrath of God death and Gods withdrawing of himself from man are of the essence of the Punishment proceeding from the Threatening in it self considered Now look what the Threatening in it self doth produce that Christ suffered for us but it wil not therefore follow that he should despair blaspheme or die in sin because these do proceed from the condition and disposition of our Persons that the Curse of the Threatning fals upon as ye see it is with the beams of the Sun if they fal on Wax they soften that but if they fal on the Clay they harden that So the wrath of God and his withdrawance falling upon us there doth ensue despair blasphemy and dying in sin but falling on Christ it is not so Why because these do not proceed from the threatning in it self considered Now I say look what we should have born as due to us from the threatening it self that Christ did bear for us For saith the Prophet Isaiah chap. 53. Quod enim nos pro nostris debebamus sceleribus sustinere ille pro nobis passus est c. Ut quod propter imbecillitatem virium ferre non poteramus pro nobis ille portaret Hieron in Esai cap. 53. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quidam codices in plurali legunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut sit castigatio retributionum nostrarum uti illud plurale nomen usurpatur Psal 69.23 h. e. castigatio quae peccatorum nostrorum est justa retributio seu quae justae retributionis ac paenae loco ob peccata nostra-super nos venire debebat venit super eum scil Christum Glass philolog sact Lib. 3. tr 1. p. 107. Disciplina retributionis nostrae super eum id est supplicium quod nos retribuere ac rependere debuimus pro peccatis nostris super eum imposuit Deus id est quicquid paenarum Deus à nobis exigere debuit pro peccatis id ab innocente Filio Pater exegit Sanctius in Esai 53.5 He hath born our Griefs that is those griefs that were due to us from the threatening in it self considered But if we had perished and gone to Hel our selves we should have suffered in our Souls and in our Souls immediately the wrath of God and the very torments of Hel upon the account of the Threatning and therefore al these things did Christ suffer for us Arg. 2. Look what Christ delivered us from that he endured for us for he delivered us by suffering he delivered us from death and he endured that he delivered us from Satan and his Temptations therefore he endured them he delivered us from the Law therefore he was made under the Law he delivered us from sin and he bare our sin he delivered us from the wrath of God therefore he did conflict with that and from the torments of Hel therefore he did suffer them Arg. 3. Our Lord and Savior Christ did establish the Law by his Death So saies the Apostle speaking of Christs death in his being made a propitiation for sin We do establish the Law Rom. 3.31 Look therefore whatever the Law did require of us for whom he died that hath Christ done and performed and suffered for us but according to the Law we were to suffer in our Souls and that immediately yea the wrath of God with the torments of Hel and therefore herein and thus hath Christ suffered for us Arg. 4
Faith may be established and your Hearts comforted and setled when you have come to Christ for the more fully the suffering of Christ which is the Object of your Faith is spread before your Eyes the more wil your Faith be raised and established and if Christ have suffered such great things for you even the very Wrath of God and torments of Hel then you may be assured that he wil never forget you Can a Woman forget her Child No Why but because she hath travelled for it But behold here is a Travel beyond al Travels Christ travelling in the greatness of his Love for poor sinners travelling under the Wrath of God his Father and wil he forget you that are his Seed Though a Woman forget her Child yet will not I saith the Lord. O! what Comfort is this for all the Seed of Christ Christ hath had a sore travel for you therefore assure your selves he wil never forget you And thus I have done with the First Argument of this Doctrine Christ in Travel CHRIST IN TRAVEL AND His Assurance of Issue Sermon II. ISAIAH 53.11 He shall see of the Travel of his Soul and be satisfied HAving spoken to the first Argument Christ in Travel we are now to proceed to the Seccond His Assurance of Issue though he had an hard Labor of it in the day of his Sufferings yet he was sure and certain that he should not miscarry many Women do miscarry in travel few or none have Assurance that they shal not miscarry but before our Savior Christ fel in Travel the Father did assure him that he should see his Seed and be satisfied accordingly he hath seen the Travel of his Soul for saith he Heb. 2.13 Behold I and the Children whom God hath given me and he shal yet see his Seed he did not lay down his Life at uncertainties neither was it left in suspense whether he should have Issue or not but was assured of it and so he died for sinners For the opening and cleering whereof we must enquire 1. What this Issue is which Christ did travel for 2. What Assurance he had of it First As for the Issue of Christs Travel which he travelled for it is al that fruit and effect of his Sufferings which he did travel for There are some immediate next effects and fruits of Christs Death and Sufferings which I may cal the first Birth of the Death of Christ There are other effects which are more remote and I may cal them the latter Birth of the Death and Sufferings of Christ But look whatever fruit or effect that is which Christ did travel for that he was assured of The first he did see presently and the latter he doth and shal see dayly Quest What are those first next and immediate effects and fruits of the Death of Christ which he presently saw Answ Those are many and because there are so many Opinions of Men about them I shal answer to this Question both Negatively and Affirmatively 1. Negatively First Some think that the first and immediate effect of Christs Death was to make God reconcilable to Man-kind for God was in Christ reconciling the World unto himself but the world was not actually reconciled at his Death and therefore say they the first effect of Christs Death was to make God reconcilable But this cannot be the next and immediate effect of the Death of Christ for God was reconcilable before Christ died and had not only a velleity but a ful wil to shew mercy to us for John 3. God so loved the World that he sent his only begotten Son Now if the Love of God to Man-kind were the cause of Christs coming into the World then he was reconcilable before the Death of Christ Secondly Others think that our actual Reconciliation is the next and immediate effect of the Death of Christ But this cannot be for our Savior tels us That he which beleeveth not abideth under wrath The Wrath of God doth abide on him Now if the Wrath of God do abide upon a man so long as he abideth under Unbelief then is he not reconciled to God actually til he beleeveth 2. When a man is actually reconciled to God then he is justified but we are justified by Faith Rom. 5.1 and therefore a man is not actually reconciled til he doth beleeve actually 3. Those that are without Christ being Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and strangers from the Covenants of Promise having no hope and without God in the World cannot be actually reconciled to God but so were the converted Ephesians before their Convertion Ephes 2.12 4. The Apostle Paul saith expresly that whilst the Corinthians were unrighteous and wicked they were not justified 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God be not deceived neither Fornicators nor Adulterers nor Theeves nor Covetous nor Drunkards c. shall inherit the Kingdom of God and such were some of you but ye are sanctified but ye are justified c. therefore they were not justified and so not actually reconciled unto God before their Conversion 5. As Glorification follows our Justification so our Justification follows our Vocation Rom. 8.30 actual Reconciliation therefore and Justification is not the next effect of Christs Death Object But we are then discharged from our Sins when they are charged on Christ and they were charged on Christ when he died for them Answ True when Christ died then were our sins charged on him but it doth not follow that we were then discharged For there is a great difference between a mans paying of his Debt himself and the payment of the Surety If a man be arrested for a Debt of his own and do pay it himself he is then discharged from the Debt but if the Debt be charged on the Surety and he pay it the Debtor is not presently discharged from the Debt in regard of the Surety but to be discharged when the Surety pleaseth Now our sins were charged on Christ as our Surety and he did pay our Debt look therefore when he pleases we are discharged from them and that saith he is upon your beleeving not before being justified by Faith ye have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Rom. 5.1 Thirdly Some think that Christ died to reconcile Man to God so far as that Salva Justitia Christum merito mortis suae Deum Patrem universo generi humano hactenus reconciliavit ut Pater propter ipsius meritum Salva justitia et veritate sua novum gratiae saedus cum peccatoribus inire et sancire potuerit ac voluerit Sententia Remonstrantium circa secundum Articul Act. Synod 280. Armin. Perkins oper Arm. pag. 675. or noti obstante Justitia Divina God might have a power to shew mercy to the Children of Men which he was willing to do but was bound from it by his Justice and that by the Death of Christ he was free to
willingly accept of this great charge bearing our sins for us So when he died on the Cross he did stand in our room and stead not only dying for us that is for our profit good and benefit but for us that is in our room and place and stead for he laid down his Life for us as a Ransom Now when one dies for another in way of Ransom he doth not only die for the benefit and profit of the Ransomed but in the place and room and stead of the Ransomed So did Christ die for us as himself speaketh Matth. 20.28 Mark 10.45 The Son of Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 came to give himself a Ransom for many and if Christ did die for us as only for our profit then why should Paul say 1 Cor. 1.13 Was Paul crucified for you or were you baptized into the Name of Paul It seems by this Speech that none can die for us in that sense that Christ died for us but such as whose Names we may be baptized into but one man may die for anothers profit and benefit as the Martyrs have done and yet the other may not be baptized into his Name and the Apostle Paul saith in Rom. 5. Christ died for the Vngodly verse 6. scarcely for a righteous man wil one die yet peradventure for a good man some wil even dare to die verse 7. Now Christ did so die for us and in that sence that he saith scarcely for a righteous man wil one die and in that sense did Christ die for the ungodly that he saith peradventure for a good man some wil even dare to die But when the Apostle speaks of a mans dying for a righteous man and for a good man he doth not mean that one wil scarce die for the benefit or profit of a righteous or good man but he speaks of dying in their place and stead and therefore when he speaks in the former Verse Nullus alius fult competentior modus quia nullus morbus competentius curatur quam per suum contrarium oportuit enim quod sicut purus homo voluit ascendere ad excelsa Dei per superbi●m suam ita purus et verus Deus ascenderet usque ad infima hominis scil usque ad mortem Crucis et sic per contrarium facta est perfectio curationis humanae Altissiod in Sent. Lib. 3. Tract 1. Cap. 8. Sicut ergo Adam per furtum et rapinam factus est quasi dives cum nihil haberet sic oportuit ut Deus fieret quasi pauper cum omnia haberet Et videtur justa compensatio per ad aequationem contrariorum complexorum ut mois aeterna ejus qui temporalis erat morte temporali ejus qui aeternus erat redimeretur Parisiens de causis cur Deus homo Cap. 7. of Christs dying for the Ungodly he must needs mean for them as in their room and stead else he had not spoken ad idem in verse 6. to what he had spoken in verse 5. But the Apostle did certainly speak ad idem and therefore when our Lord and Savior Christ died for us he did not only die for our good and profit but in our room place and stead And 6. As when he died for us he did give himself a Ransom for us so that price and Ransom was most sit and suitable being in it self sufficient to pay al our debt a price beyond al compute for saith the Apostle Peter We are not redeemed with Silver and Gold but with the precious blood of Christ as if he should say with such a price as is beyond al compute in respect whereof al the Silver and Gold in the World are of no value a price in it self infinite and of infinite value not only satisfying the debt by way of acceptation but by that intrinsecal worth and value that was in it self for if Christs Death and Obedience should only satisfie God for our sin by way of Divine Acceptation then it should satisfie no more than the Blood of Buls and Goats might have done for such Blood might satisfie by way of Acceptation Christi satisfactio non solum ex Divina acceptatione sed ex proprio valore quam habebat ob dignitatem personae satisfacientis aequalis fuit Divina offensae compensandae Aquinas 3. part qu. 48. art 2. Altissiodorens Lib. 3. Tract 1. cap. 8. Patisiens lib. cur Deus homo Asturicens de Christi gratia sect 3. dub 3. Abulens in Exod. cap. 37. q. 7. p. 277. Anselm cur Deus homo lib. 2. c. 14. Ruiz de voluntate Dei disput 53. s 5. Greg. de valent de Christo mediatore cap. 4 5. Bart. Medina in part 3. Thom. 1. q. Art 2. Conclus 3. Vasquez disput 5. cap. 2. in 3. part Tho. Tom. 1. Suarez disput 4. sect 3. ubi ait conclusio haec certa est et contraria nee probabilis nec pia nec fidei consentanea Quo spectat etiam illud Apostoli ad Hebr. impossibile est sanguine taurorum auferri peccata ubi ex antithesi apparet sermonem esse de aequali satisfactione nam per modum satisfactionis imperfectae adeoque ex acceptatione Divina etiam sanguis hircorum et taurorum satisfacere poterat ad auferenda peccata Tannerus de incarnar quest 2. dub 2. in 3. partem Tho. Tom. 4 Chrysost hom 10. in Epist ad Roman Cyprian de ascens pretii magnitudo superat negotium But the Scope of the Apostle in Chap. 9. of the Hebrews is to shew that the Blood of Christ is more efficacious in it self than the blood of al the Buls and Goats and therfore it was not satisfying in a way of Divine Acceptation only but in a way of intrinsecal worth and merit Now if the price that Christ laid down for us was in it self sufficient to satisfie and this was not wrested from him but he did freely offer it up unto God for us and he did pay and suffer al this in our room and stead as a punishment due to us and inflicted on him by the hand of the Father then God the Father must needs be satisfied with this great payment which indeed he was as appears by that entertainment which he gave unto Christ when Christ came into Heaven saying Sit thou on my right hand Surely therefore the Satisfaction of Divine Wrath and Justice was an immediate effect of the Death of Christ which he saw presently Secondly As he did satisfie the Law and Divine Justice for al his Seed so he did by his Death sanctifie and set them apart for God consecrating them even al those that he travelled with to the use and Service of the Lord for as the first Adam did prophane debauch and defile al his Seed by his Disobedience so the Second Adam did by his Obedience consecrate sanctifie and set apart his Seed for God for saies the Apostle Heb. 10.10 By the which will we are sanctified through the offering of
Testator Heb. 9.17 4. Then also the Miracles that Christ wrought and the Apostles preaching with the Gifts that Christ gave to them upon his Ascention should confirm the Covenant for saith the Apostle Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation which at the first began to be preached by the Lord and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him God also bearing them witness both with signs and wonders and with divers Miracles and Gifts of the Holy Ghost verse 4. It seems then that the Truth of the Go●pel was confirmed to us by Miracles and the Apostles preaching yet the Miracles and preaching of the Apostles are not said in Scripture to confirm the Covenant which yet might very wel be said if Christs Death should confirm it by way of Testimony 5. If the Death of Christ doth confirm the Covenant by way of Testimony then the blood of Buls and Goats might have confirmed the Covenant for when God testified the Truth of his Promise to Adam Gen. 15. He said to him Take thee an Heifer of three years old and a shee Goat of three yeers old and a Turtle Dove and a yong Pidgeon and he took them and divided them in the mid'st ver 9 10. But the Apostle tels us plainly Heb. 9. That the blood of Buls and Goats could not confirm the Covenant 6. The Ordinance of the Lords Supper doth testifie Gods willingness to forgive sinners That Cup is the New Testament in Christs blood shed for many for the remission of sins But though the Lords Supper be a Seal of the Covenant sealing to us evidencing testifying and assuring us of Gods Love b● Christ yet it is not a Seal of the Covenant as Christs blood was which did not only ●eal to us but was a Seal of the Covenant it self as it lay between God the Father and him But if Christs death did only confirm the Covenant by way of Testimony then the Lords Supper might as wel be said to confirm the Covenant which is no where affirmed in the Scripture But 7. Look how the Obedience of the first Adam should have confirmed the Covenant in case he had stood and look how he broke that Covenant by his Disobedience so did the Death and Obedience of Christ the Second Adam confirm the new Covenant Now if the first Adam had stood and confirmed that Covenant he had confirmed it by performing the Condition of it and he brake it by not observing and not doing the Condition of it so the Second Adam Christ did confirm the new Covenant by his Death and in that by his Obedience he did perform the Condition of the New Covenant for his Seed Thus I say he confirmed the Covenant of Grace even by performing the Condition of it and this confirmation of the Covenant was the next and most immediate Fruit and Effect of his Death And thus you have seen both Negatively and Affirmatively what are not and what are the next and immediate Effects of the Death of Christ Secondly As for the remote Effects of the Death of Christ they are many As 1. Freedom from the Law Curse and the Wrath of God Gal. 3.13 1 Thes 1.10 2. Our Effectual Vocation or Calling 2 Tim 1.9 3. Our Justification and actual Reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 Ephes 1.8 4. Our Sanctification and holiness of Soul and Life Ephes 5.25 26 27. Heb. 9.14 1 John 1.7 5. Our Adoption and al those Spiritual Priviledges wh●ch belong to the Sons of God Gal. 4.4 5. 6. Our Peace Comfort and Freedom from Fears 1. Luk. 74.2 Heb. 14 And to name no more but this 7. Our Salvation in the World to come Heb. 9.15 Al which I cal the more remote Effects of the Death of Christ which though he did not presently see the obtainment of yet he shal surely see them And so I come to the Second thing propounded to be cleered and evidenced Viz. The Assurance of his Issue and the sight thereof Quest Having therefore seen what are the Fruits and Effects of the Death of Christ How may it appear that Christ shal certainly see the obtainment of these last Effects and what assurance had or hath he thereof Answ He had the Assurance of the Pre-salvation of many thousand Souls for when Christ died on the Cross many thousands were in Heaven upon the account of his Death God the Father took Christs word promising to die for sinners and so saved many aforehand As the Son died and took the Fathers Word for the Salvation of many after his Death so the Father took the Sons Word and saved many before his Death upon the account thereof Now when Christ died this pre-salvation of so many thousands was a great Assurance to him of the accomplishment and obtainment of al those things which he travelled for Secondly He had the Assurance also of his own Merit and his Fathers Faithfulness Merita Christi sunt causae omnium auxiliorum et totius gratiae quae in Natura lapsa conferuntur hominibus et idem dicendum de omnibus dispositionibus tam proximis quam remotis justificantem gratiam antecedentibus et de augmento gratiae Meruit gratiam et gloriam Thom Aquin. quest Q. 29. de gratia Ch●isti art 7. ad arg 8. Scotus Lib. 3. dist 19 qu. unica Altissiod Lib 3. Tract 1. quest 7. A●uarez de anxil disput 29 Conclus 1. Molina de Lib art 6. concord qu. 23. ar 4 5 disp 2 conclu Vasquez in 3 part Thom. Tom. 1. disput 77. cap. 2. 3 4. Suarez in 3. part Thom. disput 41. Sect. 2 3. Astunicens de gratia Christi q. 5. 2 conclus R●ph Aversa pars prima qu 23. sect 15. Aureolus Lib. 3. in sent dist 20 q 1. Roder. de Ariaga in part 3. Thom. T●● 6 477 Zumel in 1 part Thom. qu 23. art 5. B●nner in 1 part Thom. qu 23 art 5. T●nnerus disput de incarnat q. 6 dub 5. Tom 4. T B Medina in 3. part Tho. 9. q 19 art 4. ●●r●a●iens in ● qu. contra Gent. Lib. 4 Cap. 55. Si q●is dix●●it eandem gratiam D●i ●e● J●●um Christum Dominum nost●um propter hoc ta●ū nos acjuva●e ad no● peccandum quod p●r ips●m nobis revelatur ●t ●pe●●tur intelligent●a m●nd●to●um●●● sciamus quid appe●●re quid vitare d●bean●us non autem per iliam nobis pr●sta●i ut quod f●ciendum cognov●timus etiam facere diligamus atque valeanius anathema ●it cum enim dicit Apostolus scientia ●●slat charitas vero edificat valde impium est u●c●edamus ad eam quae inslat nos habere g●atiam Christi ad eam quae edificat non habere cum sit utrumque donum Dei et scire quae facere debeamus et diligere ut faciamus Concil Milevitan 2. can 4. Bin. Tom. 1. For 1. He did not only merit Heaven and Salvation for those whom he died for but he merited Grace Holiness and Regeneration
his heart is at rest and he is fully satisfied And thereby also he obtains the ends of his Sufferings as it is a dis-satisfaction to a man to miss his ends so it is satisfaction to a man to obtain the end of his Labor Now the effects of Christs Travel are the ends which he aimed at in his Travel and therefore when he sees the Travel of his Soul in the Effects thereof he must needs be at rest in his heart and be fully satisfied Quest But how may it appear that Christ shall certainly obtain all those Ends which he travelled for and aimed at Answ 1 This hath been cleered already yet further thus The Will of Christ and the Wil of the Father are one I and my Father saith he are one they are one in Nature and therefore there is but one wil between them Finis à Deo destinatus semper attingitur Now God the Father cannot be frustrated of his Ends for he is a simple being and a pure Act nothing can come between his Executive Power and his Wil. The Soul of Man is a compounded Being Dr. Preston on the Attrib the simplicity of God his Faculties differing from his Essence and his Acts differing from his Faculties and therefore somth ng can come between his Wil and the Execution of it but the Executive Power and the Wil of God being one and his Wil and Act being one nothing can come between his Wil and his Act and therefore look whatever he wils he shal certainly obtain and cannot be frustrated of his Ends. Answ 2 If you look in●o the Scripture you shal find that the same things which are the Effects of Christs Death were the Ends of his dying and the same things which were the e●ds ●hat he ai● ed at in his Death are the effects of his Death For example Did he aim at the Remission of our sins by his Death Matth. 26.28 Remission of sin is the effect of his D●ath Ephes 1.7 Did he aim at the washi●g and sanctifying of the Church by his Death Ephes 5.25 26. This clensing washing and sanctifying as the Effect of his Death 1 Cor. 6.11 The Ends and Effects of his Death are the same why so but to shew that he shal certainly obtain al those gracious ends which he travelled for Answ 3 If there be nothing tha● can keep our Lord and Savior Christ from the obtainment of his Ends then he must needs see the same Now the Ends of his Death and Sufferings are many he did not only die and suffer to deliver us from the Wrath to come and to reconcile us to God but he di●d and suffered to bring us to God and to deliver us from this present evil World 1 Gal. 4 he died to sanctifie wash and clense those that he died for Ephes 5.25 to destroy him that had the power of death the D●vil Heb. 2. and to redeem us from all Iniquity Tit. 2.14 Now what can h●nder him from the obtainment of the●e his Ends Can the Devil he came to destroy him Can the World He came to deliver us from this present evil World Can our Sin or Unbelief hinder him he came to clense us and wash us and to redeem us from al Iniquity why then are not those redeemed from al Iniquity that he died for Wil ye say because they wil not or because they do not beleeve he came to redeem us from those unbeleeving won'ts for that Unbeleef and that won't is a Sin and Iniquity and he came to redeem us from al not from some but from all Iniquity Surely therefore if he did die for al particular men he should redeem them al from al Iniquity and so from their Unbelief Object But when the Apostle saith that Christ came to redeem us from all Iniquity by that US we are to understand Beleevers only and not all the particular men in the World Answ Very true But if he came to redeem Beleevers only from all Iniquity and not others then he did not die equally for al men for he died to redeem some from all Iniquity and not others But those that say Christ died for al say also that he died equally with equal Intentions of Love and Mercy for al and if he did die to redeem al particular men from al Iniquity why are not al particular men redeemed from al Iniquity Wil it yet be said because they wil not why that wil not is an Iniquity Wil it be said Because of their Unbelief why that Unbelief is an Iniquity and a Soul-disease Now if a Physitian come to cure al Diseases and he doth not cure the most because they have Diseases is this a good reason why he doth not cure them You send a Servant to wash and clense a pot from its filthiness and he returns with it unwashed unclensed and he tels you that he did not wash it because there was filth in it wil you take this for a good reason from him Surely no. Now Christ came to wash us and clense us from al Iniquities and wil he not do it because of our Iniquity Surely this can be no reason and seeing these are the Ends of his Death and Sufferings there is nothing that can hinder him from the obtainment of them Therefore he shal certainly see the Travel of his Soul in the obtainment of al those Ends which he suffered for Delectatio oritur ex adeptione boni convenientis et cognitione hujusmodi adeptionis Aquin. Now two things there are which do give ful contentment and satisfaction to the Soul The obtainment of ones End and The knowledg of that obtainment for though I have obtained my End yet if I do not know that I have obtained it I have not satisfaction but where fruition and knowledg of that fruition do meet there is ful contentment and satisfaction Now Christ shal not only obtain his Ends but he shal know and set the Travel of his Soul and therefore he shal have ful delight contentment and satisfaction therein And so the main Doctrine is now cleered in al the three Parts thereof Vse 1 If Christ shal thus see the Travel of his Soul Applicat and be satisfied then here you may see the Reason why we cannot be satisfied with that Doctrine of Universal Redemption Quare cum talis fuerit satisfactio Christi ut ea posita liberum fuerit Deo obtinendae salutis eam conditionem ponere quam vellet ipse vero Deus posuerit conditionem fidei sequitur quandoquidem salva justitia per eam Dei voluntatem fidei ad salutem necessitus ponitur eorum respectum pro quibus Christus satisfecit eandem justitiam non l●di cum damnantur increduli licet pro ipsorum peccatis sit satisfactum Corvin contra Molin cap. 23. pag. 442. How can we be satisfied with that which is dis-satisfying to the heart of Christ Now according to that Doctrine Christ shal see men damned for
shal see their perseverance and Salvation Vse 3 But more practically This Doctrine looks wishly upon both Godly men and Ungodly It cals upon those that are ungodly to delight themselves in the Lord and to satisfie themselves in Christ in the things of Christ and in the Seed of Christ Doth Christ delight in his Seed and wil you hate despise and scorn his Seed Is he satisfied in seeing the Travel of his Soul in the saving effects of his Death justifying sanctifying and comforting the Children of Men and wil you be displeased therewith Wil you be pleased and satisfied in your sins and vain Conversation when Christ is satisfied in the Redemption of Men from their Iniquity and vain Conversation The Conversion of a Sinner is the Fruit of Christs Travel wherein he rejoyces and is delighted with a great delight and doth it grieve you to see a sinner turned from the evil of his waies Take heed how you walk contrary to Christ for if you walk contrary to him he wil walk contrary unto you and either he wil rejoyce and be satisfied in your Conversion or he wil be satisfied in your Damnation and if you do not convert and turn unto God how can you think that you are the Seed of Christ whom he hath travelled with But This Doctrine looks wishly also upon the Godly such as are the visible Seed of Christ and to you it saith 1. Why should you not be contented and satisfied with Christ alone al his delights are in you why should not al your delights be in him Is he satisfied in you why then should not you be satisfied with him and with that Condition which he carves for you Through him the Father is satisfied for your sins and he is satisfied in your person why then should not you be satisfied about your Condition 2. Why should you not labor to convert and draw others unto Christ Thereby he sees the Fruit of his Travel which is his delight wil you not do what you can to advance Christs delights And 3. If Christ be satisfied and delighted in you why should you not improve his Affection for the good of the Church King Ahasuerus was taken with and did delight much in Esther and she improved his Affection for the good of the Church have you gotten the heart of Christ the affections of Christ and will not you improve them for the good of the Church surely it is your Duty And 4. Upon this account why should you not labor to excel in Vertue his delights are in his Seed and they are such saith the Psalmist as do excel in Vertue Psal 16. Now therefore that you may in some measure answer the delights of Christ O labor more and more to excel in Vertue Quest What excellent things shall we that are the visible Seed of Christ do that we may answer the delights contentments and satisfactions which he doth take in us Answ 1 Many First in reference to Christ himself and his Service It is an excellent thing to have and bear the same mind to Christ that he had and bare unto us he did neglect his own Glory to procure our Comfort so for us to neglect our own Comfort to procure his Glory is excellent in time of Temptation to look upon Christ as our Gift and in time of presumption to look upon him as our Example to trust in Christ as if we had no works and yet to work as if we had no Christ I mean for a man to be so obedient to the Commandement as if he would be saved by the Law and yet to rest on the Promise as if he would be saved by Grace and in al our Service to God in Christ to walk by a Law without us and yet by a Law within us by a Law without us as our Rule and by a Law within us as our Principle These are excellent things in regard of Christ and his Service As for the Ordinances and means of Grace It is an excellent thing so to use the publick Ordinance as we may be more fit for private Exercise and so to use our private Exercise as we may be the more fit for publick Ordinances to wait upon God in the use of al means yet not to tie the workings of the Spirit unto any one particular to observe what that Ordinance is that is most decried and dispised by the World and to advance and honor that to worship Christ in a Manger These are excellent things in regard of the Ordinances and Means of Grace As for your Graces Gifts and Comforts An excellent thing it is for a man so to exercise one Grace as he may be fit for another so to exercise his Faith as he may be fit for Repentance and so to exercise his Repentance as he may grow up into more Assurance to make al your Graces Parents to your Comforts and your Comforts Hand-maids to your Graces that your Gifts may beautifie your Graces and your Graces sanctifie your Gifts to be of high Parts and a low Spirit to know much and yet to love respect and honor those that know less These are excellent things in regard of our Gifts Graces and Comforts As for your Condition It 's an excellent thing for a man to be thankful for his present Condition and yet not to be in love therewith nor to live thereon it 's ill to murmur in any Condition it 's good to be content in some but in every Condition to be thankful is excellent To fear the Lord in Prosperity and to love him in Adversity never to think that my condition is extraordinary to trust God with my condition by Experience and yet to trust in God for my condition over and beyond al experience These are excellent things in reference to our Condition As for your Converse and dealing with men An excellent thing it is to use no Company but such as you may receive s●me good from or communicate some good unto to take no offence and to give none being very unwilling to give offence and very back●ard to take it to rejoyce in anothers Graces and to grieve for anothers sins to be a Lamb in ones own Cause and a Lyon in Gods of a sweet and meek disposition yet zealous and active for God and in al our dealings with men to deal with God through men saying if they curse or bless God hath bid them do it and in case that any man offend you to be more ready to forgive than he is to acknowledg his offence that your forgiveness may rather draw out his acknowledgment than his acknowledgment draw out your forgiveness These are excellent things in regard of our converse or dealings with men As for your Callings and outward Estates It is an excellent thing for a man so to use his particular Calling as he may be fit for his General and so to use his General as he may be fit for his particular To make your Sail fit for your
Christ be our great High-Priest and it be the Office of the High-Priest to bless and to give Peace then Christ by vertue of his Office also is engaged to give Peace unto his People Take all these Three together Christ the Second Person is engaged By his Endowments he received from the Father By his own Disposition By his Office And it appears plainly that there is a great engagement upon Jesus Chri●t to give Peace unto his Servants III. As the Father and the Son are engaged to give Peace and quietude unto the Saints and People of God So also the Spirit the Holy Ghost is engaged to give peace unto them For as I may so speak with Reverence he is as it were the great Executor of Jesus Christ When Christ died he made his Will and gave a Legacy to his Disciples My Peace I give unto you and then he sent the Comforter the Spirit from Heaven on purpose to beget peace within their souls Yea The Holy Ghost is not only this Executor to see this Will of Christ fulfilled but he is as it were our Advocate Indeed we have but one Advocate that is Christ But I say we have as it were two Advocates One in Heaven above and one in our bosom When a man sins a godly man sins Satan accuses him in Heaven And therefore saies John If any man sin 1 John 1.2 we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the Righteous But if a godly man sin Satan doth also accuse him to himself And therefore saies the Apostle We have the Spirit within us making intercession John 14.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Et sic translat Syriac And saies our Savior Christ I will send another Comforter So ye read it but it is the same word that is translated Advocate I wil send you another Advocate Yea the Spirit of the Lord is our Witness also For the Spirit shall bear witness with our Spirits that we are the Children of God Now when the Spirit bears witness with a mans spirit that he is ●he child of God then he hath peace and quiet So that if you consider al the●e Ingagements the Father ingaged the Son ingaged the Holy Ghost ingaged for the peace and quiet of Gods Children Must you not needs conclude this Point and Doctrine and say Sur●ly there is an inward peace and quietness of soul which ordina●ily Gods People are endued withal Object But our Experience seems to speak the contrary for ●here are many of Gods own People that have not Peace and Quiet within them but are full of Doubts and Fears about their everlasting condition Answ The Second Doctrine therefore speaks to that It is possible this peace may be interrupted Object But some never had Peace all their daies O! saies one I have been a long while afflicted troubled two four six yeers and never yet had Peace and quiet within me Either therefore this Doctrine is not true or else I am not Godly Answ All that may be which you speak of and yet this Doctrine may be true General Rules have alwaies some exceptions Though the Garment that the Saints do ordinarily wear be white yet here and there some do go in black and go so a great while But that there may be no stumbling concerning this matter I shall desire you to consider with me some few Distinctions First Ye must know That there is a Fundamental Peace which the Saints and People of God have and there is an Additional Peace A Fundamental Peace which does Naturally arise and slow from their Justification Being justified by Faith we have Peace with God Rom. 5. And then there is an Additional Peace which arises from the sence of their Justification Possibly a Child of God may for a long time lose the latter but the former he shal never lose As a Woman that hath a great Joynture goes abroad some Journey and meets with Theeves and they take away all the money that she hath about her but yet saies she though they have taken away my spending Money they cannot take away my Joynture I have not lost my Joynture So now the Saints somtimes may lose their spending money they may lose the peace that arises from the sence of their Justification but as for the Peace that ariseth and issues from their Justification it self the first Peace that they shall never lose Peace is the Churches Joynture and that Peace they shal never lose Secondly Ye must know That there is a great difference between Peace Comfort and Joy A man may have Peace that hath no Comfort a man may have Comfort that hath no Joy one is beyond the other one a degree above the other As now it may be day-light and yet the Sun may not shine forth the Sun may shine forth and yet not noon-day Possibly a man may have Peace and yet not much Comfort only stayed upon God possibly a man may have Comfort and yet not much Joy But now many a poor soul thinks because he hath no Joy therefore he hath no Comfort and because he hath not much Comfort therefore no Peace Labor to know the difference between these Thirdly Ye must know That there is a Peace which lies in opposition to what one hath been and a Peace that is in opposition to what one would be A godly man a weak Christian when he considers what he would be and what he would have he hath no rest nor quiet But now come unto the same man and say thus You remember what a wicked life once you led ye were a Drunkard or ye were a Wanton What say ye would you be in that condition again Oh no saith he then I would not be in that condition for all the world Here now the Soul hath Peace in opposition to what it hath been though it hath not Peace and Quiet in opposition to what it would be Fourthly Ye must know That there is a Secret Dormant Peace and there is a wakened and Apparent Peace Peace in the Seed and Peace in the Flower As it is with many a wicked man for the present he hath great Comfort but when affliction comes and the day of death comes then he hath trouble trouble in regard of sin Why the sin and guilt was in his heart before only it lay sleeping there but now it is risen So with a Godly man in regard of his Peace possibly for the present he may be full of trouble but when affliction comes and the hour of death comes then he hath Peace and Comfort Why it was there before it was at the bottom only he was not aware of it he did not know of it For now ask such a weak Christian who is thus full of fear for the present ye see there is a Drunkard a Swearer a Wanton Would you be in his Condition would you be contented to be in that mans condition O no saies he I would not be in such a condition for all the world
that came at the latter end he did not murmur nor say surely my penny is naught because I have a penny given me as wel as he that hath born the heat of the day If any should complain those that have born the heat of the day that have been so much troubled should in reason be the persons but hath the Lord taken you and given you a penny the same peace with him who bare the heat of the day and wil you complain and say surely my penny is fal●e coyn and my peace naught because I have not born and indured so much trouble as another hath you know some children are born into the world with more pain than others some with less pain should the Child that is born with less pain say I am a Bastard because I was not born with so much pain as the other was When Christ is formed in the souls of men women some are regenerate and born again with more pain some are regenerate and born again with less pain should he that is born with less pain say I am a Bastard and not a true Son because there was not so much pain at my first regeneration as such a one had you know how it was with Zacheus Christ comes unto his house and the same day that he came he said to Zacheus This day it Salvation come to thy house He had assurance the first day But Paul is converted and he lyes troubled and is three dayes blind Should Zacheus now say Surely I am not Converted for I never lay three dayes blind nor was so much troubled as Paul was No surely no more may you say that your Peace is false because you have not such abundance of trouble as others have you are not to make anothers Measure your Rule God goes several waies with his People as well in regard of Peace as in regard of Grace This therefore I say unto you Look unto your Peace it self Have you peace and quietness of soul Then bless and praise the Lord for that peace of yours Yea do not only praise the Lord for your peace and quiet but praise the Lord that ye came so sweetly by it in a way of Free-grace and if for any thing you are to be troubled it is for this That you should nick-name the Grace of God and call it little or false Christ calls it free and you call it false O be humbled for this and praise the Lord for any measure of quiet and peace that he hath given unto thee Object But wil another say All this doth not come up to my case for I have no Peace nor Quiet in my soul to be thankful for Some there are that have Peace and Quiet indeed and they no question ought to be very thankful for it but my poor soul hath been long afflicted troubl●d and I never yet had assurance of Gods Love in Christ I have not this Peace and Quiet within What shall I d● that I may attain unto it or what should a poor soul do to get and attain this Peace and Quiet within Answ Ye know what the Psalmist saies I will hear what the Lord will say for he will speak Peace unto his People Psal 85.8 It is not in my power or in the power of any poor Creature to speak Peace unto you but it is the Lord only that must speak Peace unto thy soul and the Lord speaks Peace in the way of an Ordinance Quest But what does the Lord say what does the Lord speak from his Word in the way of an Ordinance that I who was never yet setled may attain unto this inward Peace and Quietude of soul Answ 1 First He wills you to study and consider much the Death Sufferings and Fulness of the Satisfaction made by Jesus Christ Go down into the Grave of Christ Christs Blood is the Object of Faith and Faith brings Peace Unbelief is a painful sin and Faith is an easing and quieting Grace Being justified by Faith we have Peace c. Rom. 5.1 The more you see the free and infinite Love of God the more will your heart be at rest and quiet within you And where shall you see the Love of God but in the Death of Christ By seeing Christ on the Cross you see Divine Love in triumph All true Peace within arises from sight of Peace made without Where shall you read of that but in Christ's Death And therefore saies the Prophet The Chastisement of our Peace was upon him In Psal 41. ye have a Promise made of great Blessing unto him that considereth the Poor Blessed is he that considereth the poor Who is this poor Tarnovius tels us from the 10. verse That it is Christ in his Sufferings for as he observes this Psalm is a Psalm of Christ verse 9. Yea mine own familiar friend in whom I trusted which did eat of my bread hath lift up his heel against me They are the words of Christ and Christ speaks this Psalm and this poor to be considered is Christ in his Sufferings Saies he I will not here debate the truth of this Interpretation but if true the Lord promised here a blessing to him that doth wisely consider the Death and Sufferings of Christ And wherein doth that blessing he and consist Pauper hic Christus est et beatos istos predicat qui dolores et cruciatus ipsius quos pro nobis sustinuit grato et fideli animo recte considerant Tarnovius in Psalmum 41. The Lord will deliver him in the time of trouble 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the evil day or in the day of evil saith the Chaldee Paraphrase In the day of vexation saith Symmachus Now the day of Temptation Doubts and great Fears is an evil day and a day of vexation This Day will God deliver him from who doth wisely ponder on the death of Christ Could we see the heart of Christ we should doubt no more and in his death you may see his heart in his Blood you may see his heart Ye know what the Prophet Isaiah saies Lord wilt thou not ordain Peace who hast wrought all our works for us And where shall ye find that God hath wrought all our works for us but in Christs Grave and Death Secondly Ye must not only go unto the Grave of Christ and study his Death but you must go unto Christ Himself for Peace He is the great Peace-maker hath a Commission to take up all Differences without us and within us Ye know his words The Lord God hath given me the Tongue of the Learned saies he that I may speak a word in due season to him that is weary Go then to Christ and press this engagement and say Lord thou hast therefore received the Tongue of the Learned that thou mayest speak a word in due season to him that is weary And O Lord I am one of those wearied souls wearied with my Temptations wearied with inward trouble now Lord speak a word
if you ask him why do not you sow your ground and repair your houses his answer is ready I dare not lay out much cost because my title is in question So here so long as a mans title to Christ is in question he cannot improve Christ as he should If a man be going a journy and know not his way he loseth much of his way and of the comfort of it in inquiring after the way and thinking whether he be right or wrong when he comes at three or four turnings there he stands whilst he might ride a mile and when he comes above in the field and sees a shephard at a distance from him he rides up to him to inquire whether he be in his way or not yea and al the day long he is thinking of his way whether he be right whereas if he knew his way he might have many precious thoughts of God and of the word So in this case while a man is doubting and fearing and knows not whether he be in the way to Heaven or no how much precious time is lost thoughts of Christ lost thankfulness for Mercy lost of al hearts the scripture saith an unbeleeving heart is an evil heart and when mens hearts are discouraged and cast down are they not unbeleeving Who would not therfore take heed of these discouragements and of the interruption of their peace Quest 4 But suppose now that I have lost my comforts times were heretofore when my soul was ful of joy but now I am quite discouraged what should a poor soul do to recover his peace and comfort again that interrupted peace may be restored Answ 1 Some things by way of Question some things by way of direction First Hast thou quite forgot the yeares of the right hand of the most high hast thou lost al thy former experiences too I know that usually when our comforts fail our former experiences fail yet not alwaies for the Psalmist saith here my soul is cast down yet at the same time vers 6. he saith Therefore I wil remember thee from the land of Jordan and of the Hermonites from the hil Missar So Psal 77 The Psalmist having said at the 7. vers Wil the Lord cast off for ever and wil he be favorable no more is his mercy clean gon for ever and doth his promise fail for evermore hath God forgotten to be Gracious c he addeth in the same breath but I wil remember the years of the right hand of the most high Ye know what the disciples said Did not our hearts glow within us while he opened the scriptures to us Luk. 24.32 Beloved you have no comfort now wel but you remember at such a time when you were al alone in your chamber and no soul was near you how the Lord came and opened the scriptures the promise to your soul wherewith your heart did glow within you Have you quite forgotten the openings of those scriptures to you I speak not of the Glowings for I suppose they are now gone but are the scriptures gone that were then opened to you did not you say in your last trouble and down-cast condition if ever the Lord appear to me again I wil never doubt of his mercy more And did he not appear unto you and open the promise unto your heart and have you now forgotten these things this is your infirmity why should you not remember the days and times and workes and experiences of the right hand of the most high Answ 2 Secondly Do you not use the means for the restoring of your comforts in such a manner as thereby you do lose them more A man may have great desire after some preferment and place which many ride for but one is so hasty that he rides over hedg and ditch and thereby fals and hurts himself so others get before him and by his too much hast he doth lose his place Thus it is sometimes with good people they make so much hast to their comfort that they lose it by their hast they would have it sooner if they went on in an ordinary way of waiting on God without such posting hast but they must have it to day O! let me know my interest in Christ to day saith one or else I am undone for ever Thus by stinting and limiting God to a time they tempt the holy one and so are more distant from their comfort the more the child cries and is froward under the rod the longer is the rod continued Some seek comfort in a way of reason and think to reason out their temptation and to reason in their comfort but as one saith wel dispute not with God lest you be confounded dispute not with Satan lest you be deceived Some again tire themselves in duty neglecting of their calling the truth is prayer is a friend to comfort and more than ordinary time is to be used in prayer for those that are troubled in conscience but when men under temptations and without comforts throw up their callings thinking that nothing is to be done but prayer by throwing aside their calling they lay themselves open to more temptations of Satan they do so tire out their natural spirits in duty that they are flat and dead in duty so their temptations are the more increased and their comforts more distanced Wherefore consider if you would have comfort restored again whether you do not use the means of comfort in such a manner as to set you at a further distance from it Answ 3 Thirdly Whether have you not strained and reached for some outward comfort so far as to lose your inward comfort I read of Francis Spira that when he was in horror of conscience he could not with peace and quietness behold his wife and children for to get an estate for them he denyed the truth and therfore when they came before him in his trouble he cryed out in much horror How terrible is the sight of these to me they had been comforts to him before yet now he could not away with the sight of them O! thought he for your sakes and for your provision I have denyed the truth and yeilded to these superstitions and therefore sayes he How terrible is the sight of these unto me What peace or comfort had Judas in the sight of his thirty pence look what outward comfort a man strains his conscience for that wil be death unto him to behold We read of David that when his men had ventured for the waters of Bethlehem he would not drink of it but poured it out before the Lord for saith he why should I drink the bloud of these men he did not sin in desiring of it nor did he command his men for to venture through the enemies quarters for those Hebrew words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quis dabit who wil give me are but words of wishing who wil give me to drink of the waters of Bethlehem that is O! that I had the waters of
and wil no bread down with you but leavened bread sowr bread the bread of mourning wil you thus keep your passover your christian feast some of you have been doubting fearing trembling cast down discouraged many years and is it not yet time to bewail your unbelief to honor free Grace what wil you alwaies grieve the Spirit the Father and Christ alwaies be frustrating of Christs work wil ye alwaies be eating old leaven is it not yet time to say why art thou cast down O my soul and why art thou disquieted within me hope in him for I shal yet praise him who is the health of my countenance and my God Quest I know indeed that I have no just and scripture reason for my discouragements but I see there is much reason against it yet I am one of a troubled spirit I would fain have it otherwise that at last I might glorify free Grace what should I do that I may bear up against al discouragements that I may not be discouraged whatever my condition be Answ The onely way which the Psalmist useth here is to hope trust beleeve in God and how we should use our faith in Christ as that we may not be discouraged followes after for the present take these directons First If we would not be discouraged in any condition Then never lay your comforts upon your condition nor be in love with any condition for it self let not your condition it self be the cause or bottom of your incouragements Hang a cloak or garment upon a rotten peg and that wil break and the garment fal down now there is no condition but is a rotten peg every condition is alterable no condition so firm and fast but is exposed to many changes it is a rotten hold God is Pillars his name is Adonai which signifies so much and in Isa 26. we are commanded to trust in the Lord for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength or the rock of ages And saith the Psalmist my flesh faileth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 73.26 and my heart faileth but God is the rock of my heart for ever so the Hebrew Lay your comforts upon your own condition and you do but build on the sand which wil be carryed away with every wind and storm and tempest but if upon Christ himself upon God himself ye build upon the Rock and though the flouds and stormes and winds do rise and beat upon you yet you shal not lose your comforts because they are built upon a rock Secondly Be sure that you think of Christ in a right way and manner Christus titulos ●ibi sumit qui presenti rerum conditioni conve●iant unde varium suae gloriae radium in singuli● Epistolis ad Ecclesias spargit pro va●ia fortuna qua sunt Ecclesiae quo docet illud immensae divinae majestatis inprimis esse mente contemplandum quod in rem preseniem maxime conducat Bright●n in Apocal. 2. P. 43. as he suteth with your condition and as he is held forth in the Gospel We are very apt to have mis-thoughts of Christ as Satan doth transform himself into an Angel of light so he would transform Christ before you into an Angel of darkness But the scripture holds him forth under such Relations as do make him very amiable unto poor sinners Are you accused by Satan world or your own conscience He is called your Advocate Are you ignorant He is called the Prophet Are you guilty of sin He is called A Priest and high Priest Are you afflicted with many enemies inward and outward He is called a King and King of Kings Are you in streights He is called your way Are you hungry or thirsty he is called bread and water of life Are you affraid you shal fal away and be condemned at the last He is our second Adam a publick person in whose death we dyed and in whose satisfaction we satisfyed As there is no Temptation or affliction but some promise or other doth especially sute there withal So there is no condition but some Name some Title some Attribute of Christ doth especially sute with it and as you do not look on Christ but in reference to your condition so you are not to look upon your condition alone but with Christs Attribute sutable thereunto if you look upon Christs Attribute of love without your condition you may presume if on your condition without Christs Attribute of love you may despair think on both together you wil not be discouraged Thirdly If your discouragements begin to arise and press in upon you check your self and say why should I multiply thoughts without knowledg why should I tire out my soul with these thoughts am I able to ad one cubit to my spiritual state am I by al my thoughtfulness able to alter my condition yea doth not my thoughtfulness set me at a farther distance from the mercy desired The truth is the only way to lose the comfort desired is to be sollicitous about it as the only way to have an outward blessing is to be content to go without it So the only way to have a spiritual or outward affliction removed is to be contented that it should be continued if God and Christ wil have it so But you wil have your affliction presently removed and you must presently know that you are in the state of Grace and the child of God or else you wil be discouraged and as the bird in the net the more it strives the more it is intangled so with you also Wherefore do temptations afflictions desertions come and Satan joyn with them and say unto thy soul this wil ever be answer wel but I therefore beleeve the contrary because thou sayest so Satan who art a Lyar yet if God wil have it so I am contented I leave it to him whether I shal ever be in this condition or not is not my question but now O Lord let me serve thee that is al my desire let me see thee as thou pleasest when thou pleasest I have done Lord I have done I have been questioning and questioning my condition these many years I see there is no end of that yea the more I do the more I may I get nothing by it why therefore O my soul should I tear out my self with this kind of thoughtfulness thus check your selves Fourthly When ever you think of any thing which is in it self terrible or matter of discouragement be sure that you mingle the Consideration thereof with those sweet things which God hath given and prescribed to you There is nothing terrible but God hath joyned some comfortable thing with it the Name of God is terrible he is called the great and dreadful God but to sweeten this he is called the God of all Consolations Death is terrible it 's called the King of Terrors but to sweeten this it is called a Sleep The day of Judgment is terrible but to sweeten that our present Advocate shal
of God more they are more against the Love and Grace and Favor of God than other mens sins are And the Lord doth see the sins of his own People yea so far he sees sin in them that he doth chastise and afflict them for it not only from their sin but for their sin and therefore saith the Apostle in 1 Cor. 11.30 speaking of the unworthy receiving of the Lords Supper For this cause many are sick and weak among you And he doth not speak only of Saints in Appearance and in Church-Estate but of such also as were Saints indeed and therefore he saith We are judged we are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world He puts himself in We are judged that we may not be condemned with the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Revel 3.19 Our Savior Christ saith Revel 3. As many a● I love I rebuke and chasten be zealous therefore and repent it seems then it was for sin committed else why should he say Repent and repent therefore Repentance is for sin committed already and these were such as he loved too whom he threatens thus to rebuke and chastise and doth any Father rebuke chastise or correct his Child only from sin and not for sin Was not Moses a gracious and an holy man and yet for his unbeleef and sin he lost the Land of Canaan Was not Sampson a good man and yet by his sin he lost his Eyes and his Life too Was not David a gracious and a holy man and yet for his sin the Lord said The Sword should never depart from his house and yet Christ had made satisfaction for his sin too as well then as for the Saints now But now though there be never so much evil in the sins of Gods People yet they have no reason no just cause or Scripture reason to be cast down and to be discouraged in that respect Quest But how may this appear That notwithstanding the sins of Gods own People do grieve the Spirit of God are a dishonor to Jesus Christ and do wound the Name of God and the Profession of Christ so much That yet the Saints have no reason to be discouraged or cast down Answ 1 First They know or they may know that they shall never be condemned for their sin whatever it be There is no Condemnation to those that are in Christ Jesus saith the Apostle Christ was made sin for them and if Christ be made sin for me then my sin shall never hurt me Luther is bold here Fateor me peccasse sed peccatum meum damnatum in Christo est qui est peccatum damnans est autem peccatum illud damnans fortius peccato damnato Luther for saith he Christ is made sin damning our sin is sin damned I confess indeed said he that I have sinned but sin damning is stronger than sin damned and Christ was made sin damning for me The thing is true though the expression be strange Christ was made sin for Saints therefore their sin shall not hurt them It stands not with the Justice of God to exact the payment of one debt twice Now the Lord Jesus Christ hath not only been arrested but in Goal for the debt of the Saints and People of God and he hath paid it to the utmost farthing he hath paid it better than they could have paid it themselves if they had gone to Hell for if a Godly man had gone to Hell and been damned for ever he would have been alwaies paying but the debt would never have been paid Christ paid it all down for the present And if you look into Scripture you will find That the Lord doth not condemn a man no not a wicked man barely for the act of his former sin but because he wil not turn from it Psal 7.11 The Lord is angry with the wicked every day verse 12. If he turn not he will whet his Sword he hath bent his bow and made it ready he hath prepared for him the Instruments of death he ordaineth his Arrows against the Persecutor The Lord hath prepared Instruments of Death against every wicked man but yet notwithstanding though a man be never so wicked if he turn unto the Lord God will not discharge those Instruments of Death upon him yea though his sins have been never so great but saith the Text If he turn not not because he hath sinned before only but because he turns not from his sin he will whet his Sword he hath bent his Bow and made it ready Now there is alwaies in the Saints and People of God a turning disposition although they do sin against God there is alwaies I say a turning disposition in them and therefore the Lord will not discharge the Instruments of death upon them surely then they have no reason to be quite discouraged in this respect Answ 2 Secondly As Godly men shall never be condemned for their sins so their sins shall never part God and them What is the s●eming Reason why some are so discouraged about their sins but because they think they shall not only lose the face and presence of God by their sins but that they shall lose God himself But now I say the sins of the Godly shall never part God and them their sins may hide Gods Face But as their sins did not hinder God and their coming together at first so their sins shall never part God and them their sins may cause a strangeness between God and them but shall never cause an Enmity their sins may hide Gods Face from them but shall never turn Gods back upon them those whom God Loves he loves unto the end I am the Lord that changeth not saith he And as the Prophet Isaiah speaks As the Covenant that the Lord made with Noah such is the Covenant that he makes with his People Now look into Genesis Chap. 8. and you shall see what the Covenant is that the Lord made there with Noah and with the World by Noah When Noah came out of the Ark he built an Altar and Sacrificed verse 21. And the Lord smelled a sweet savor and the Lord said in his heart I will not again curse the Ground for mans sake Why For the Imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth You would think this were a reason why God should curse the Ground again for the imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth man is wicked therefore surely God will curse the Ground again nay saith the Lord but though you that are poor Creatures think so yet I that am the God of all Grace I make this Covenant with the World by Noah That I will not curse the Ground any more for mans sake Because the Imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth continually Sensus enim et cogitatio humani cordis c. Hierom. I confess indeed the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies Quamvis Although as well as Quoniam
a fault and a man takes the one and correct him and let the other go it argues rather that he is his Father than not So though Chastisements do not alwaies argue God to be our Father yet it doth rather argue his Fatherly Love than not Answ 2 And is there any thing in God that is not a friend to all the Saints When a man is a friend to another not only his Purse is his Friend his Estate is his Friend his Staff is his Friend but his Sword is his Friend So if God be a Friend to a man then not only his Love is his Friend and his Mercy his Friend but his Sword is his Friend his Anger is his Friend Now God is a Friend to all the Saints and therefore his very Anger and Justice is a Friend too But Answ 3 In the third place What are those visible Characters of Love which are engraven upon an Affliction First If Affliction be a blessing to one then it doth come from Love and if a man can bless God under Affliction then it is a blessing to him Jobs Affliction was a blessing to him Why Because he blessed God under it The Lord gives and the Lord takes away blessed be his Name c. Secondly If an Affliction do end in our Love to God then it comes from Gods Love to us for our Love is but a reflection of Gods Love and it doth flow from his and if I can say I love God never the worser for this Affliction then I may say God loves me never the lesser notwithstanding this Affliction Thirdly If an Affliction teacheth the mind of God then it doth come from Love As many as he loveth he chastiseth And blessed is the man whom thou chastiseth and teachest out of thy Law So that if Affliction be a teaching Affliction then it doth come from Love Fourthly If it be laid on in measure and imposed in due and seasonable time so as a man may grow thereby then it doth come from Love When a man intendeth to kill and destroy a Tree or to bring it unto the fire he cuts it at any time so as it shal grow no more but if he cut it in a due time it argueth that he intendeth it for growth So when God pruneth and cuts by Afflictions in such a time as men may grow in Grace it argues his Love Fifthly When God is especially present in Affliction and more present in an Affliction than at another time it argues that the Affliction doth come from Love Now whoever you are that make this Objection and fear the Affliction doth not come from Love are you not able to say Thus I find it indeed though I have been much afflicted yet through Grace I have b●en able to bless the Lord under my Affliction and to say The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away c. I love the Lord never the lesser for mine Affliction and the Lord hath taught me much in this mine Affliction I have gained more by my sickness than by many a Sermon yea and he hath cut me in due time for if I had not met with such an Affliction at such a time I did not know what evil I should have fallen into and this I must needs say I have had more of Gods Presence in my Affliction than ever I had before Well then be of good Comfort though your Affliction be very grievous yet it doth come from Love And thus it is with all the Saints and People of God and therefore why should they be discouraged whatever their Affliction be Object 8 But though a Christian have no reason to be discouraged in regard of his own private Affliction yet hath he not reason to be discouraged when it goes ill with the Publick And thus it is now with us we see how it is with this poor Nation Troubles and Calamities from every Part therefore I am thus discouraged and have I not cause to be cast down and to be much disquieted now Answ Indeed this is a sad thing and O! that we could weep day and night and pray too for this poor bleeding Nation If ever Gods People here in England had cause to be afflicted troubled and humbled under the hand of the Lord and to run together in Prayer surely they have reason now yet saith the Scripture Say to the Righteous in evil times it shall go well with him Did ever any Calamity come down like a storm upon a Kingdom but God did provide some hiding for his own Children Did he not provide an Ark for Noah in the time of the Flood and a Mountain for Lot in the time of the fire of Sodom The worst that man can do is but to kill his neighbor Death is the worst that can fall and what is death but an in-let to Eternal Life unto the People of God When the Saints in the Primitive Times came to bear witness by their deaths unto the Truth of Christ then they said Now we begin to be Christians indeed now we begin to be like to Christ There is a Three-fold Death Spiritual Death in sin Eternal Death for sin And Temporal Death which came in by sin If God spare me from the two former Deaths the Spiritu●l Death and Eternal Death and only inflict the Temporal Death have I any cause to complain Thus it is with the Saints though they die Temporally yet they are free from the Spiritual and Eternal Death and what Godly man may not say I could not live long in Nature and shall I now bear witness unto the Truth with this little spot of time that remains Christ died for us the Just for the Unjust and shal not I that am unjust be willing to die for the just The worst of all is Death the worst of Death is gain When my Body is broken may I not say if Godly now a poor Pitcher is broken and shall go no more to the Well now a poor Prisoner my soul is delivered and I go home unto my Father But if you look into Rev. 7. you shal ●ind what a glorious issue God doth give unto al his People in the times of publick troubles ver 9. After this I beheld and so a great multitude which no man could number of all Nations Kindreds and People stood before the Throne and before the Lamb cloathed with white Robes and Palms in their hands A Robe is a Garment of Majesty Palms are an Ensign of Victory and saith he I saw them with Robes and Palm● The world looks upon my Servants as poor and of low spirits but saith Christ I look upon them as under a royal Princely Garment in Robes and of a Princely spirit And though the world look upon them as discomforted yet saith Christ here they shal overcome for they have Palms in their hands but who are these This Scripture tels ver 14. These are they which come out of great Tribulations and have washed their Robes and made them
of this speech is given at verse 30. Because they said he hath an unclean Spirit And indeed if these men did not sin the Sin against the Holy Ghost our Lord and Savior Christ should tel us that there is an unpardonable Sin and not tel us what it is for unless it be in this Scripture you shal not find either in the Gospel or in the Epistles That the Sin against the Holy Ghost is any where mentioned in express words Now our Lord and Savior would not tel us that there is an unpardonable Sin and not tel us what it is but he saith expressly That whoever doth blaspheme or speak against the holy Ghost shal never be forgiven And he chargeth those Jews that they blasphemed and spake against the Spirit of God or that work which was done by the Spirit and therefore without doubt they did then sin the unpardonable Sin the Sin against the Holy Ghost Quest 2 But Secondly Why is it here said That he that sinneth this Sin shall never be forgiven either in this world or in the world to come is there any forgiving of sins in the world to come Answ Chrysostom saith As men are punished in this world and in the world to come so they are pardoned in this world and in the world to come Pardoned in this world when any temporal Affliction for sin is removed So I also understand that Parable in Matth. 18. at the latter end and pardoned in this life when a man is justified Rom. 4. pardoned and forgiven in the world to come So saith the Apostle in Acts 3.19 That your sins may be blotted out in the day of refreshing Which day of refreshing compared with the Speech which you have in Heb. 2. speaking of the World to come shews that the day of Refreshing is the time of the World to come but it is an usual phrase with Scripture noting the eternity of misery and therefore if you look again into Mark 3. you shal find That whereas here in Matthew the words run thus Shall not be forgiven either in this World or in the World to come Mark hath it thus He shall never be forgiven that Never being the Explication of this not in this World nor in the World to come The Words being thus far opened the Doctrine then will presently be this That the Sin against the Holy Ghost Doct. is the Unpardonable Sin That whosoever sins against the Holy Ghost shall never be forgiven either in this world or in the world to come For the opening of this great Truth which I shal the rather desire you to hearken unto because as it lies out of the ordinary Road so it makes your way clear to the laying hold of the former words of Gods Mercy I say for the opening of this Truth we must enquire into two Things First What this Sin against the Holy Ghost is for people are very ignorant of it Secondly How and in what respect this Sin against the Holy Ghost is above all other sins the Unpardonable Sin First If you ask What this Sin is I Answer both Negatively and Affirmatively First Negatively It is not that sin whereby men do barely deny the Personality or the Deity of the Holy Ghost possibly a man may deny the Personality or the Deity of the Holy Ghost and yet not sin the Sin against the Holy Ghost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostom in Math. 12. For as Chrysostom observes in his time there were divers Hereticks that did deny the Personality and the Deity of the Holy Ghost and yet afterwards repented and were received into the bosom of the Church And ye do not find that these Pharisees who are here charged with this sin did either deny the Personality or the Deity of the Holy Ghost So that plainly then the Sin against the Holy Ghost doth not consist in this The meer and bare denying of the Personality or the Deity of the Holy Ghost Secondly As it doth not consist therein so neith●r doth it consist in every opposition or in a bare opposition unto the work of the Holy Ghost as distinct from the Father and the Son Unto God the Father belongs Power unto the Son Wisdom unto the Spirit Holiness The Work of the Father is to Create the Work of the Son to Redeem the Work of the Spirit or the Holy Ghost to Sanctifie A●d hereupon some hav● thought That opposition unto Holiness is the Sin against the Holy Ghost But you find here it is a blasphemy therefore not every opposition And if you look into Acts 7. you find that Stephen speaking of the Jews saith at verse 51. Ye stiff necked and uncircumcised in heart and ear ye do alwaies resist the Holy Ghost yet they did not sin this Sin against the Holy Ghost Why for Stephen praies for them at the last verse Lord lay not this sin to their charge But now saith the Apostle John in 1 John 5.16 There is a sin unto Death I do not say that ye shall pray for it Had they in Stephens account sinned this Sin unto Death he would not have prayed for them but he did pray for them So that this Sin against the Holy Ghost doth not consist in every opposition unto the Work of the Holy Ghost as it is distinct from the Father and the Son Thirdly As it doth not consist therein so it is not necessary that every man that sins the Sin against the Holy Ghost should be an Universal Apostate back-sliding from the Profession of the Gospel and the Power thereof I know it is ordinarily thought so but I say it is not necessary that whosoever doth sin the Sin against the Holy Ghost should be a Gospel Apostate back-sliding from the Gospel and the Power thereof once profest for these Pharisees who sinned against the Holy Ghost never profest the Gospel neither do we read of any back-sliding in them from the Power of the Gospel once profest and yet they sinned against the Holy Ghost Surely therefore such a Gospel-Apostacy is not of the essence of the Sin against the Holy Ghost Only here I must distinguish concerning the word Apostacy A man may be said to be an Apostate two waies either because he doth decline and fall away from the Profession of the Truth and Power of Godliness once profest or else because he doth rebel against Truth revealed and the Will of God manifested and wil go no further I wil express it thus Five or six men go a great Journey suppose to Wales or into the North to Scotland when they come about the middle of the way two or three of them say these waies are dirty and longer than we intended and therefore we wil go no further but say the other Let the way be as dirty and as long as it may be we wil go on and on they go Which of these men do depart one from the other do those that go on depart from them that stay No those that wil
go no further depart they are the forsakers So in the way to Heaven Professors let out together and some find the way long further than they thought of we wil go no further say they and we wil have no more Light but say the other God willing we wil on and on they go Which of these two sorts are the Apostates Those that wil go no further they think not so but the Lord knows the truth that those that wil go no further are they that leave and forsake the other I wil give you one Scripture for it it is in Numbers 14. there were certain Spies went into the Land of Canaan and they brought an il report upon the good Land And the Children of Israel murmured against Moses verse 2. whereupon Moses speaks unto them and saith at verse 9. Only rebel not against the Lord the words in the Septuagint which Greek the new Testament follows are Only be not Apostates against the Lord. So that in Septuagintal Language those that rebel against Light revealed and wil go no further are called Apostates Now indeed this kind of Apostacy alwaies goes with the Sin against the Holy Ghost but not the former alwaies for we do not find that the Pharisees were guilty of the former for they did not profess the Gospel So that the Essence of this sin doth not consist in Apostatizing or back-sliding from the Profession of the Gospel and the Power thereof Fourthly Some think that this Sin doth consist in final Unbelief and impenitency But final Impenitency and Unbelief Altissiodorensis Lib. 2. Tract 30. in Sentent Desperatissimos convertit Deus August Sic homo potest penitere de finali impenitentia Altissiodorensis ibid. is not the Sin against the Holy Ghost for by final Unbelief and Impenitency they either understand that Impenitency and Unbelief which a man lives and dies in or that which he purposeth to continue in to the last The latter cannot be the Sin against the Holy Ghost for many have purposed to continue in their Unbelief to their death and yet have been converted and pardoned And the first cannot be the Sin against the Holy Ghost For 1. The Jews whom Christ spake unto did then commit this Sin and yet they had not continued in it to their death 2. Final Unbelief is rather a Sin against the Son but the Sin against the Holy Ghost is distinguished from that 3. Our Savior saith Those that commit this sin shall not be forgiven in this world nor in the world to come Not in this world If therefore final Unbelief or Impenitency be this sin then Christ should threaten that he that dies in his sin shal not be forgiven whilst he lives 4. If a man sin against the Father or Son and die impenitently in that sin he shal not be forgiven either in this Life or in the Life to come but herein the Sin against the Holy Ghost is worser than the Sins against the Father or the Son and therfore it cannot consist therein 1 John ● 16 5. The Apostle saith There is a sin unto death I say not that you pray for it Doth he say that we must not pray for a man and for the forgiveness of his sin when he is dead 6. It is that sin for which there lies no remission but a man may sin such a sin whilst he lives for if any man sin wilfully there remaineth no sacrifice for sin and wilfully a man may sin before his Death 7. It is such a sin as a man may know anoth●r man is guilty of whilst he lives for saith the Apostle There is a sin unto death I say not that you pray for it but final Unbelief and Impenitency is not known til death 8. Our Savior saith He that speaketh a word against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven but a word may be spoken against the Spirit long before a man dies and therefore surely this sin against the Holy Ghost doth not consist in final impenitency and unbelief final unbelief and ●mpenitency is not this Sin against the Holy Ghost 9. For then al wicked men living under the Gospel and dying impenitently should sin the Sin against the Holy Ghost Blasphemia in spiritum sanctúm ca ●se vid●●● qua quis destin●ta malitia contra proprium animi sui sensum spirit● sancti gratiam et virtutem deique gloriam oppugnat Luc. Brugen in Math. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostom in Math. 12. which is false You wil say then What is this Sin against the Holy Ghost and wherein doth it consist Secondly Affirmatively It is that wilful sinning against God whereby a man doth maliciously oppose and bla●pheme the proper and peculiar work of the Holy Ghost and that after he hath been convinced thereof by the Holy Ghost 1. I say It is a wilful sinning against God and so the Apostle speaks saying If any man sin wilfully after he hath received the knowledg of the Truth there remains no more sacrifice for sin Heb. 10.26 So that the sin for which there is no sacrifice and of which there is no remission is a wilful Sin Now a man is said to sin Wittingly Willingly and Wilfully Wittingly in opposition to Ignorance Willingly in opposition to Force and Constraint Wilfully in opposition to Light Knowledg and Reason and so he that sins against the Holy Ghost doth sin for saies the Apostle If any man sin wilfully after he hath received the knowledg of the Truth or after the acknowledgment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 2. He that commits this Sin doth also oppose and blaspheme the proper and peculiar Work of the Holy Ghost for it 's called here Dicere verbum contra spiritum sanctum est verbis impugnare Deum sanctificantem Cajet in Math. 12. vide sixt Senens in locum a blasphemy and a blaspheming of the Spirit as distinct from the Father and the Son Now the Work of the Father is to Create the Work of the Son to Redeem the Work of the Holy Ghost to Sanctifie and therefore he that sins this Sin doth oppose and blaspheme Holiness and Goodness and so these Jews did for when our Savior Christ did cast out the Devil that unclean Spirit they said he did it by the power of the Devil calling the work done a work of the Devil and did oppose him therein Yet this is not all For 3. It is that Sin whereby a man doth maliciously oppose Peccatum in spiritum sanctum dicitur illud quod ex certa malitia sit quod solent distingui tria genera peccatorum peccatum in patrem ex infirmitate humana peccatum in filium ex ignorantia quod patri app●opriatur potentia filio sapientia peccatum in spiritum sanctum ex malitia quia bonitas attribuitur spiritui sancto Altissidorens Lib. 2. Tract 30. in Sent. Scot. in Sent. Lib. 2. Quest 2. and blaspheme and so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 10.26
into it after I have been admonished of the evil of it Answ To that I say no more but desire you to consider the Instance that is here before you The Disciples slept our Lord and Savior Christ comes and wakens them yea and he chides them too what saith he cannot ye watch with me one hour watch and pray and yet they slept again and he comes and wakens them again and admonishe●h them again and yet they slept again Possibly therefore a man may fal into the same Sin again and again yea even after Admonition and yet it may be a Sin of Infirmity Yet how many poor souls are there that are mistaken here on the right hand and do think that their Sins are no Sins of Infirmity when indeed they are Quest But if there be such mistakes how shall we then know whether our Sins be Sins of Infirmity Answ 1 First Negatively That is no Sin of Infirmity which is a gross foul scandalous Sin committed with deliberation and consultation It is said of David that he turned not aside to the right hand or to the left save only in the matter of Vriah It seems then that in this matter he did turn aside but why is it said that he turned aside here and not in other things did he not Sin at other times Yes very often but there is a difference between missing ones way and turning aside out of ones way a man may ignorantly miss his way or unadvisedly but he that turns aside out of his way doth it voluntarily and deliberately and so did David here in this case and not in others this act was a foul fact which he was able and had strength to avoid committed with much deliberation and therefore it was no Sin of Infirmity So that if a mans Sin committed be a gross foul scandalous Sin committed with deliberation and consultation this is no Sin of Infirmity Answ 2 Secondly If the Sin be a Ring-leader unto other foul Sins it is no Sin of Infirmity the Ring-leading Sin is the most hainous Sin you shal observe therefore that when Samuel was raised up whether it was true Samuel or false I wil not now debate when he was raised up by the Witch of Endor in 1 Sam. 28. the only Sin that Samuel laies to the charge of Saul is this at verse 18. That he obeyed not the Voyce of the Lord in executing his fierce wrath upon Amalek Because thou obeyed'st not the voyce of the Lord nor executed'st his fierce wrath upon Amalek saith Samuel therefore hath the Lord done this thing unto thee this day Moreover the Lord wil also deliver Israel with thee into the hands of the Philistims If you read this story you shal find that this only Sin Samuel doth instance in Saul had committed other Sins Saul had persecuted David and out of malice and had committed great Sins why doth Samuel instance in this Sin above al other Sins but because this Sin was the Ring-leading Sin unto al the Sins that Saul did commit and therefore this is charged upon him especially as a great and a hainous Sin And you see how it is amongst men if there be a rebellion or insurrection they take the Ring-leader and hang up him for say they this is the great Transgressor for he is the Ring-leader So amongst Sins the great Sin is the Ring-leader and therefore if your Sin be a Ring-leader unto other soul Sins it is not a Sin of Infirmity That 's the Second Answ 3 Thirdly A Sin of Presumption is not a Sin of Infirmity Sins of Presumption and Sins of Infirmity are set in opposition one to the other in Numbers 15. and Psalm 19. Now I pray when doth a man sin out of Presumption but when he sinneth because God is merciful when he sinneth because his Sin can and may stand with Grace when he sinneth because the Sin is but an infirmity when he sinneth because he shal repent afterwards Now this is ordinary I have read of a certain yong man who being admonished of the evil of his way and course and pressed to leave his wickedness by the consideration of Judgment Eternity and Death a coming that he said Why tel ye me of these things I wil do wel enough for when Death comes I wil speak but three words and wil help al and so he went on in the way of his Sin but in the end coming to a Bridg on Hors-back to go over a deep Water the Horse stumbling and he laboring to recover his Horse could not but at last he let go the Bridle and gave up himself and Horse to the Waters and was heard to say these three words Devil take all Here was three words indeed Diabolus capiat omnia and an Example for all men who think to repent with a three-word Repentance at last viz. Lord have mercy to take heed by Miserere mei Deus Such is the end of Presumption and when a man doth therefore sin the rather because God is merciful or because the Sin is but a Sin of Infirmity or because he hopes to repent afterward or because his Sin may and can stand with Grace this is a Sin of Presumption and is no Sin of Infirmity Sins of Presumption are no Sins of Infirmity Answ 4 Fourthly If the Sin be a reigning Sin Potest autem dici infirmitas in anima ad similitudinem infirmitatis corporis dicitur autem corpus esse infirmum quando debilitatur vel impeditur in executione propriae operationis propter aliquam inordinationem partium corporis ita Scil. quod humores et membra hominis non subdantur virtuti regitivae et motivae corporis unde et membrum dicitur infirmum esse quando non pòtest perficere operationem membri sani unde et infirmitas animae dicitur quando impeditur anima in propria operatione propter inordinationem partium ipsius partes autem corporis dicuntur esse inordinatae qu●ndo non sequuntur ordinem naturae ita et partes animae dic●ntur esse inordinata quando non subduntur ordini rationis c. Tho. Aquin. 12. Quest 77 Art 3. then it is no Sin of Infirmity for when Sin reigns Grace doth not therefore saith the Apostle Rom. 6. Let not Sin have dominion over you for ye are not under the Law but under Grace and when Sin reigns it is in its ful strength Now a Sin of Infirmity is not therefore called infirmity because as the School-men would it doth make a man infirm by impeding and hindering the vital operations of the Soul for then al Sins and especially the greatest should be Sins of Infirmity But it is said to be a Sin of Infirmity because it doth arise from weakness the strength thereof being taken out and mortified and therefore a reigning Sin can be no Sin of Infirmity Now Sin reigneth in a man 1. When it hath the command of his Duties his Spiritual Duties When a Master commands a
Though there be much evil in this Sin Christ will not cast you off for it For It is an honor to a man to pass by infirmities saith Solomon much more is it for the honor of Christ to pass by the infirmities of his People The Saints and People of God are in Covenant with God by Jesus Christ Hos 2. and that Covenant is a Conjugal Covenant but what Husband will put away his Wife for her infirmities That Covenant is a Paternal Covenant and what Father wil thrust his Child out of doors for his infirmities A Child though deformed is more pleasing to the Father because the Child is his own than another beautiful Child that is not his own Yea that Covenant is a Covenant of Grace now in the Covenant of Works the least sin breaks the Covenant but in the Covenant of Grace the greatest sin doth not break the Covenant between God and the soul in the Covenant of Works the least sin provokes God to hatred in the Covenant of Grace the greatest sin provokes and moves God to pity If a Master should turn away his Servant for every failing and weakness who would serve him But God hath many Servants in the world who do serve him with cheerfulness surely therefore he doth not and he will not cast men off for their Infirmities The Saints and People of God are the Body of Christ and every one a Memb●r of that mystical Body whereof our Lord Christ is the Head Now saith Luther What man will cut off his Nose because there is filth in it Nemo nasum ideo abjicit quod impuro phlegmate abundat et quasi cloaca cerebri ita etiam i●firmi temporis infirmitatis sunt pa●s Regni Christi qui non ideo abjici●ndi sed so vendi sanandi et erigendi sunt Luther yea though the Nose be the sink of the Brain yet because it is a Member a man wil not cut it off And wil Christ cut off one of his Members because there is filth in him or some weakness and infirmity in him No surely What Woman wil cast away the Morter because it favors of the Onions or Garlick which hath be●n beaten in i● What Father wil knock his Child on the Head b●cau●e a Wart grows on his Forehead These Infirmiti●s in the Saints and People of God are their Wa●ts Ego non possum excusare Patres ut multi faciunt nec volo imo libenter audio lapsus et infirmitates sanctorum non quod laudem c. sicut non excuso Apostolos fugientes à Christo Petrum negantem et alias eorum infirmitates stultitias et ineptias nec scribuntur ista propter duros superbos et obstinatos sed ut ratio Regni Christi ostendatur qui in grege suo pusillo habet pauperes et infirmas conscientias est Rex fortium pariter et infirmorum c. in Gen. 26. Scio ego me saepe multa stulte et temere admodum egisse adeo ut cogitatem cur Deus vocavit me ad predicandum c. in Cap. 27. Gen. Luth. which grow in the Face of their Conversation the blessed Martyrs themselves had these Warts Hierom of Prague had a great Wart upon him Cranmer another Jewel another yea if ye look into that little Book of Chronicles I mean the 11. Chapter of the Hebrews what Saint is there mentioned upon Record but had one Wart or another Had not Abraham his Wart in saying that Sarah was his Sister Had not Sarah hers in laughing Had not Jacob Isaac and Joseph theirs Moses Rahab Sampson Jepthah and David theirs Luther had his and our Reformers theirs yet God owned used and honored them Surely therefore though there be much evil in a Sin of Infirmity especially if a man fal into it again and again yet Christ wil not leave a man or cast him off for it Object But Solomon tels us that the back-slider in heart shal be satisfied with his own waies Answ True But there is much difference between the back-sliding of an Hypocrite and the Relapses of Gods own Children into their Infirmities a back-slider loseth that power which once he had but a good man relapsing into his Infirmities doth stil keep that power of Godliness which he had before a back-sliders Judgment and Principles crack and alter in so much as he doth bless himself in his Apostacy but the good man relapsing into his Infirmities stil doth retain his Judgment keep his Principles and doth groan under his Relapses Possibly a man may fal into the same sin again and again yet he may be no back-slider nor called a back-slider in Scripture Language But in the Second place A man may be said to be satisfied with his own waies either because he is given up to his sins so as to be glutted with them finding all delight and contentment in them or he is said to be satisfied with his own waies in regard of that sorrow and affliction which he doth reap by them in this sense a good man may have enough of his sin and be said to be satisfied with his own waies Thus it was with Jacob he deceived his Brother Esau and he deceived his Father Isaac afte●wards he was deceived by Laban and by his Children as he d●ceived his own Father so was he deceived by his Father in Law and as he deceived his Brother so was he deceived by his Children in the reports of Joseph's death here was he satisfied in a way of sorrow with his own waies he deceived others and was deceived by others he had enough of it But though a good man may be thus satisfied with his own waies yet he is never satisfied with them so as to be given up to them Possibly he may fall into them again and again yet saith the Lord Esai 57.17 For the iniquity of his covetousness was I wroth and smote him I hid my face and was wroth What then And he went on frowardly turning aside again so the Hebrew in the way of his heart But saith the Lord I have seen his waies and will heal him and wil lead him also and restore comforts to him and his mourners So that though a good man may have enough of his sin in regard of sorrow that may come thereby yet he shal never be satisfied with his own waies or sins so as to be given up to them Christ wil not cast him off if he sleep Christ wil waken him and if he sleep again Christ wil wake him again Christ wil not leave him in it nor cast him off for it Applicat If these things be true then what necessity is upon us and what great cause have we to examine our selves and to consider seriously what sort of sins those sins are which we labor under We do al sin that is most cert●in but there is a great difference between sin and sin There is a sin unto death and there is a sin not unto
death there is a sin which may stand with Grace and there is a sin which cannot stand with Grace there is the spot of the Godly and there is the spot of the Wicked there is a gross sin a reigning sin and there is a sin of infirmity there is a sin for which God wil leave and cast off the sinner witness Judas's sin the sin of the false Disciple and there is a sin for which God wil not cast one off witness the sin of these true Disciples O! then what cause have we to make it out to our own souls whether our sins be sins of infirmity or not Quest But it seems that all the sins of the Godly are not sins of Infirmity and God will not cast off a Godly man for any sin What advantage therefore hath this sin of Infirmity above other sins or what disadvantage do the other sins of the Godly labor under which this sin of infirmity doth not Answ 1 Much very much For though my sin be great yet if it be a sin of Infirmity it shal not hinder the present acceptance of my Duty Hezekiah and the People were not prepared according to the preparation of the Sanctuary that was his and their weakness but he prayed and the Lord heard his prayer So David said in his hast I am cast out of thy sight this was his infirmity yet he prayed withal and saith he N●vertheless thou heard'st the voyce of my supplication But if a man a good man do fall into a foul gross and scandalous sin though the Lord pardon it to him afterward yet it wil suspend his present communion with God Answ 2 Although my sin be great yet if it be but an Infirmity it shall not hinder the sence of my Justification A foul and scandalous breach upon our Sanctification wil make a breach upon the sence of our Justification but though the sin be great yet if it be but an Infirmity it shal not make a breach upon the sence of our Justification Answ 3 Though my sin be great yet if it be but an Infirmity there is a pardon that lies in course for it and though it be good to repent of every sin with a distinct and particular Repentance yet it is not necessary that there should be a particular Repentance for every sin of Infirmity If a man though a good man do commit a gros● foul and scandalous sin there must be a particular Repentance for it and without that there wil be no peace no true peace in his soul but if the sin be only a sin of infirmity a general Repentance may and wil serve for that Who knows the errors of his Life saith David Lord clense thou me from my secret faults Answ 4 Though a mans sin be great yet if it be but an Infirmity it shal never bring a scourge upon his Family It is a great misery to a good Parent to see his Family scourged for his sin Possibly the sins of a Godly man may bring a rod on his Family Because of this saith the Lord to David the Sword shall never depart from thine house But now if the sin be only a sin of Infirmity my Family shal never be scourged for that Answ 5 And though my sin be great yet if it be but a sin of Infirmity it shal never spoil my Gifts nor make them unprofitable If a man have great Gifts praying exercising Gifts and his Life be scandalous what saith the World I this man hath exceeding good Gifts indeed but do ye see how he lives A scandalous Life soils and spoils his Gifts and doth make them unuseful But now if my sin be only a Sin of infirmity it shal never soil my Gifts so as to make them unuseful and unprofitable unto others Surely then there is a great and a vast difference between this Sin of Infirmity and another Sin and therefore why should we not labor to make it out with cleerness to our own souls what kind of sins our sins are Every man almost thinks that his Sin is a Sin of Infirmity Come to the Drunkard Swearer Adulterer Opposer and these wil tel you that their Sins are but Sins of Infirmity they wil rail at and oppose the People of God and yet their sins are but Sins of Infirmity Swear and swear dayly yet their sins are but Sins of Infirmity go to the Tap-house Play-house Whore-house and yet their Sins but Sins of Infirmity the vilest of men think their Sins are only Infirmities But is there such a great difference between Sins and Sins this and the other Sins Then why should we not look wishly into our condition consider our waies and labor to make it out with cleerness to our own souls whether our Sins be Sins of Infirmity or not Quest But suppose that upon due search and examination I find that my Sin is no other than a sin of Infirmity which will not cast me off although through my weakness I do fall into it again and again what then Answ Then several Duties follow and accordingly you are to take up these and the like gracious Resolutions If my Sin be a Sin of Infirmity and no other then through Grace Deletur iniquita● manet infirmitas August Sed Quare Deus talia peccata sinit fieri à suis cur sic impingere eos permittit respondetur ex effectis ideo ita permittit Deus ut occasionem accipiat multarum bonarum rerum non enim labantur sancti ut pereunt sed ut copiose eis Deus benefaciat ut lapsus principio operetur humilitatem deinde invocationem ut nos excitet ut nobis ipsis irascamur et nos damnemus ut majori studio caveamus Luth. in Gen. cap. 20. wil I observe what Gods design is in suffering and leaving such Infirmities in me and wil labor what I can and may to promote and advance that design God could have freed me from all Sin these Infirmities as wel as the greater but God hath some great designs in leaving of these Infirmities as that I may be alwaies humbled that I may be alwaies upon the work of mortification that Jesus Christ may be the more sweet and precious to me that I may live in continual dependance on him that I may not gather up the assurance of my Salvation only from my Sanctification but from the free Grace of God and his absolute Promise that I may be weary of my present state and groan after Heaven where no imperfections are and that I may learn to pity others and therefore through Grace I wil do what I can to help on these Designs If my Sin be but a Sin of Infirmity and God will not cast me off for it then through the Grace of God wil I never beleeve these false reports of Christ and those misrepresentations of him which Satan would put upon him whereby he would perswade me and others that our Lord Christ is an hard Master as Satan doth labor
Deity was the Word of Christs Patience Ther● is alwaies some Truth or other the profession and owning whereof saith here is the Patience of the Saints Now if the Churches keep that word and overcome in the keeping of it the Lord Christ wil make every Member of them as a Pillar in the Temple of God that shal go no more out In case any Difficulty or Trouble do arise in a Church which is beyond their own Light and Strength they must cal in the help of other Churches For when there was such a knot as the Church of Antioch could not untie they sent to the Church and Apostles at Jerusalem Acts 15.16 who having setled the Matter they sent the result and Decrees unto other Churches concerned whereby they had Peace and Establishment But especially it is the Duty of al the Churches to pray and pray much for this great Mercy of Establishment for the Lord hath said Esai 62.6 Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence and give him no rest till he establish and make Jerusalem a praise in the Earth Such a time as this there is a coming we are commanded to pray and to pray earnestly for it and the Lord hath not only promised the Mercy but to give hearts to pray for it for saith he I have set Watch-men upon thy walls O Jerusalem which shal never hold their peace day nor night wherefore let us give him no rest So shal the Churches have rest and be established Thirdly As for Particular Persons Would'st thou be established in the Truth and good Waies of God Then observe what those things are which do make others unsetled and take heed thereof In case a man doth decay or break in his Estate some great Merchant Tradesman or Farmer break you wil diligently look into the causes of it and say this man lived at too high a rate beyond his Estate or he was bound for others or he kept ill Company or he did not keep his Accounts wel and therefore I wil take heed of these things Now wil ye observe the Causes of an outward Break and wil ye not observe what are the Reasons that so many are unsetled break and decay in the Trade of their souls Surely 1. Either it is because they do want primitive breakings for the stony Ground comes to nothing at the last though it hath much joy at the first because it wants depth of Earth The stick that is thrust into the Earth is more easily pulled up than the Plant which is rooted in the Earth So are al those who have no root in themselves 2. Or because they take up great Resolutions withou● answerable pre-deliberations whereas we know that the Needle must play about the Polar Point before it comes to stand and s●ttle he that would hit the mark must take his level before he parts with his Arrow And if men resolve before they have fully considered they wil ere long be unresolved again 3. Or because men do not walk by a setled Rule ●e can never be setled that doth not walk by a setled Rule A mans own thoughts and apprehensions are unsetled things the Hebrew word for Thoughts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cogitationes quae in corde sunt sicut ramus in arbore hinc inde diffusus comes from a Root which signifies to move as the tops of Trees because as the tops of the Trees waver and are in continual motion so are our Thoughts and Apprehensions But the Word of the Lord is setled as the Heavens Psal 119. Thy Word is for ever setled in Heaven So long as I want the Divine Counsel of the Word my heart is like a Vagrant that is most unstable said Bernard for whilst I am not subject to God I am contrary to my self 4. Or because they are divided in their own hearts a double minded man is unstable in al his Waies saith the Apostle and when men have an heart and an heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an heart for the World yet a good mind to Christ how is it possible but th●y should be most unsetled 5. Or because they are too confident of their own strength and Judgment whereas the only way to be firm and stedfast is to be sensible of ones own Infirmity We read of a two-fold Confidence in Peter a Confidence in Christ and a Confidence in his own strength when he was confident in Christ saying Master if it be thou command that I come unto thee he did not miscarry but when he was confident in his own strength saying Lord though all men forsake thee yet will not I then he sel and fel fouly Hold thou me up said the Psalmist and I shall be safe Psal 119.119 and I will have respect unto thy Statutes continually But if men lean to their own Understanding are confident of their own strength and think that they are able to deal with al gain-sayers and so wil try al things God leaves them to their own Opinions and they scrabble upon the door and do change their behavior 6. Or because men do forsake the Ministry which Christ hath given to the Churches for their Edification Perfection and Establishment Ephes 4.11 12 13 14.7 Or because they have too fair an Opinion of those that are erroneous thinking that they may be Godly though they be never so unsound in their Judgments whereby they are drawn into Society and Communion with them and so fal from their own stedfastness whereas the Apost e ●els us of the error of the wicked 2 Pet. 3.17 and that men may be wicked upon the account of their errors in Judgment James 5.19 20. B●●thren if any of you do err from the Truth and one convert him let him know that he which converte●h a sinner from th● E●ror of his way shal save a Soul from death and shal hide a multitude of sins And our Lord and Savior Christ calling upon us to beware of Fal●e Prophets Matth. 7 15. tels us That they are corrupt Trees and cannot bring forth good Fruit verse 16 17 18. As if he should say if you would take heed and beware of them you must know them and not think that they are good men for if you think that they may be good notwithstanding their Errors in Doctrine you wil be mis-led by them and removed from your stedfastness 8. Or because that men do not improve their Christian Communion for the Life and Power of Godliness but for Light only and Discoursing Notions whereas the Apostle Paul writing to Timothy saith Keep that which is committed to thy trust avoiding oppositions of Science falsly so called which some professing have erred concerning the Faith 1 Tim. 6.20 21. And what is the reason that not only some but many have now erred concerning the Faith and have fallen from their stedfastness but because they have been thus affected 9. Or because they have not been built on the Rock Christ but on some
it I. For understanding the Scripture ibid. Hold fast the Letter of it for if you deny the Letter how can you understand the true sense ibid. An Objection answered ibid. Quest How can we keep fast the Letter when there are so many Greek Copies of the new Te●●am●● Page 47 Answ 1 There is no material difference between them ibid. 2 You must diligently enquire out the true meaning of the Scripture ibid. Object One Scripture hath many Senses c. Page 48 Answ Negatively Nay one Scripture hath but one intire sense though it hath divers parts and applications ibid. 2 The Scripture is to be understood somtimes literally somtimes figuratively yet alwaies spiritually ibid. 3 For Direction Page 49 1 Al fundamental Doctrins of our salvation are laid down literally ibid. 2 When the literal sense must be lest ibid. 3 Mystery doth not destroy the History ibid. 4 Nothing in Scripture set down mystically but is literally expressed in another place of Scripture Page 49 50 Object When a Scripture lieth under con rov●●sie what must be done ibid. Answ Somthing by way of Observati●n somthing by Practice ibid. 1 Observation if you be able c●nsult the Original if not able consult those that are able ibid. 2 Coherence and Scope and Context good means to open the true sense Page 51 3 Compare one Scripture with another ibid. 4 S●ve●ve not from the proportion of Faith ibid. II. More Practically Page 52 1 Go to God for the spirit ib. 2 Take heed of a fleshly mind ibid. 3 Study your Condition by Scripture and the Scripture by your Condition ibid. 4 Be not too indulgent to your own Condition Disposition or Opinion ibid. 5 Joyn nothing in Commission with the Scripture for your Rule Page 53 2 You must keep the Scripture if you will attend to understand it ibid. Directions how to keep the Word Page 54 1 Observe the things whereby men have been drawn from it and those are chiefly three ibid. 1 The corruption of mans Nature ibid. 2 Corrupt Principles ibid. 3 Playing with the Scripture Page 55 2 Rules to keep particular Truths of Scripture in your heart are ibid. 1 Many Saints have suffered willingly the loss of all to maintain them ibid. 2 Consider that the Saints have generally ma●ntained these Doctrines in opposition to the world ib III. To take heed to the Scripture is to walk thereby Page 56 1 Therefore prize it much ib. 2 Love the truth you know ib. 3 Let it be your continual Companion ibid. Christ in Travel ON Isaiah 53.11 Sermon I. THe Text Opened Page 61 62 DOCT. Christ shall see the Travel of his soul and be satisfied Page 63 The opening of this by three Ar●uments ibid. 1 The Travel of Christ or Christ in travel 2 His assurance of Issue 3 The Contentment that he doth and shall find therein His travel was very painful For ibid. 1 It was a sore Travel 2 A long Travel 3 A helpless Travel ibid. I. It was a sore travel in regard of Soul and Body ib. 1 For his Body ibid. 1 It was universal in regard of the parts in which he suffered and persons he suffered from ibid. 2 It was most extream Page 65 3 They were long and lingering Page 65 2 For his Soul His was a sore Travel Page 66 Proved in four Propositions 1 Christ did truly suffer in his soul 2 That he suffered in his soul immediately 3 That he did encounter with the wrath of God 4 That he did suffer the very torments of Hell in this life ibid. The first Proposition proved ibid. The second Proposition proved Page 67 The third Proposition proved Page 68 The fourth Proposition proved Page 69 Quest Whether one can endure the very torments of Hell in this Life Page 70 Answ Affirmatively Christ did not endure al the misery we should have done ib. Arg. 1. He suffered al the threatening produced but not what proceed from the disposition of our persons Page 71 Arg. 2. What Christ delivered us from that he endured for us Page 72 Arg. 3. Christ established the Law by his death ibid. Arg. 4. Christ hath suffered Gods Wrath and Justice for the Elect ibid. Reasons 1 The Law is not satisfied unless the debt be paid ibid. 2 Christ satisfied the Law in his sufferings Page 93 3 No evil is equivalent to the wrath of God ibid. II. Christs Travel was long and tedious not only in his death but in his life all along ibid. III. It was a helpless Travel for he trode the Wine-press of his Fathers wrath alone Page 94 Quest Suppose Christ was thus in travel for us what then ibid. Answ Our duty is to come in and behold this hard labor he suffered ibid. Observations 1 All the Attributes and Perfection● of God are here in Commission in Christ crucified ibid. 2 We shall hence value and love Christ more Page 95 3 We shall hence prize all our enjoyments more ibid. 4 Men are hereby made more willing to suffer any thing for Christ his sake ibid. 5 We shall hereby be made more unwilling to put Christ to a new suffering ibid. 6 Hereby we are more enabled to overcome all our temptations and corruptions and to become more profitable and gracious in our lives ibid. 7 Hereby we are more enagaged to his Commandements and Ordinances ibid. 8 Hence conclude the willingness of God to save sinners Page 96 9 It is an encouragement for poor sinner● to come to Christ Page 97 10 Hereby our hearts are confu●ed and our faith confirmed ibid. Sermon II. Christs Assurance of Issue Page 99 The Introduction ibid. O●ening of the words ibid. 1 What this Issue is Page 100 2 What assurance he had ib. I. It is all the effects of his sufferings whereof some are immediate some remote ib. Quest What are the immediate effects ibid. Answ Negatively 1 Not to make God reconcilable to man-kind ibid. 2 That actual reconciliation and justification is not the next effect of Christs death is proved by five Reasons ibid. Object But we were discharged from our sins when they were charged on Christ Page 101 Answ Negatively 3 Christ died not to reconcile man to God proved by seven Re●sons ibid. 4 The next ●ffect of Christs death is not the forgiveness of original sin to all the wo●●d proved by five Reasons Page 102 5 The obtainment of this Decree that who●oever beleeveth shall be saved not the n●x●●ffect of Christs death proved by four Arguments ibid. 6 It was not to bring all the world unto the Covenant of Grace proved by three Reasons Page 104 7 Christ hath not by his death ob●ained sufficiency of Grace for all men proved by five Reasons Page 105 8 Christ died not to obtain a Dominion over all things proved by six Reasons Page 107 Quest What was the next effect of his dea●h Page 108 Answ affirmatively 1 He satisfied the Law and Justice of God for us learnedly proved by six Arguments ibid. 2 He sanctified
Doctrine Page 325 3 If you do beleeve then see that you walk answerable thereunto ibid. Sermon XIII Means against Discouragements Page 327 DOCT. Faith is the Help against all Discouragements Page 328 For your better understanding consider 1 What is Hope ibid. 2 That Faith quiets the heart in sad times ibid. 3 It is the day of all the Saints to trust in God especially at that time ibid. 4 What there is in faith and how faith can do it ibid. Quest 1. What is it to trust in God ib. Answ 1 To trust in God is to rely on God for help c. ibid. 2 He that trusteth in God doth trust unto him for some good thing that lieth out of sight Page 329 Quest 2. How may it appear that Faith will quiet the soul Page 330 Answ It is proved several waies out of Scripture ibid. Faith gives free access to God Page 331 There are three Vails in Scripture 1. Of Obscurity 2. The Vail of covering guilt 3. A Vail of shame Page 332 Quest 3. How may it appear that when discouragements arise Faith must then be exercised and then especially ibid. Answ It was Davids case and the Scripture is express for it ibid. Quest 4. What power hath Faith to allay discouragements what is in faith can do it and how doth faith do it Page 333 Answ 1 Faith gives a man the true prospect of things past present and to come And all Discouragements arise because men do not see things as they are ibid. 2 True saving Faith sees that in God and in Christ which answers all our fears Page 335 3 Faith puts the Soul under Gods Commandements to answer all Objections Page 336 More briefly of saving Faith 1 It is the proper work of Faith to resign our wils unto Gods wil. Page 337 2 It is the proper work of Faith to apply a suitable Promise ibid. 3 True faith will not venture without Gods Call Page 338 4 True faith sees the hand of God in every dispensation ibid. 5 True faith looks on both sides of Gods Dispensation and of our own Condition ibid. 6 Fath sees one contrary in another ibid. 7 It is the work of true faith to engage God to suffer ibid. Application Then if discouragements arise exercise your faith ibid. Quest Will every faith quiet a mans heart ibid. Answ Negatively For There is a feigned and uneffectual and there is an unfeigned and effectual faith A counterfet faith will not quiet a mans soul c. ibid. Quest How then shal a man exercise his faith that he may bear up against all Discouragements Page 339 Answ 1 You must be humbled for your unbelief c. ib●d 2 Go not to God without Christ Page 340 3 Trust in the Lord himself and not in your own duties ibid. 4 Trust in the Lord before you do act in your business ibid. 5 Trust in Jesus Christ before you trust in the Promise Page 341 6 If God give you a Promise never let it go though you see nothing but the contrary ibid. Object I fear I should presume and tempt the Lord ibid. Answ To doubt after so much experience were rather to tempt the Lord Page 342 Quest If God give me a Promise and I see no performance how shall I not be discouraged Page 343 Answ Either it is thy Duty to beleeve on Christ or not if not why dost thou beleeve at all If it be thy Duty why shouldest thou not rely on him ibid. Be of good comfort for 1 If you want assurance in God look on Christ Page 344 2 If you want assurance turn your eyes from those Objections that invade your faith ibid. 3 Beleeve that you do beleeve Helps for Faith Page 344 1 God never leads his People to any great mercy but he puts the sentence of death on all means that tend to it ib. 2 It is a great sin to limit Gods mercy as to limit his power ibid. 3 When God gives a Promise he somtimes trieth whether we will beleeve or not ibid. 4 God often times fulfils one Promise and denieth another ibid. 5 When we see nothing but what is contrary to help then is Christs time to help Page 345 6 Be your Affliction ordinary or extraordinary you must trust to God for mercy ibid. 7 Questions to ask a mans own Soul to encourage us Page 346 8 Consider frequently and seriously what a blessed thing it is to trust in God Page 347 It is reasonable to wait on God For 1 He waited on you for your Repentance ibid. 2 You have waited on men wil you not wait on God ibid. 3 When you give over waiting deliverance may come to your shame Page 348 4 If you give over waiting you lose all your former labor ibid. 5 If you wait on God he will not alwaies forget your work of Faith Page 349 The Sin against the Holy Ghost ON Matth. 12.31 32. THere are two Arguments in the words Page 353 1 The largeness of Gods heart in forgiving sins to men ib. 2 The unpardonableness of the sin against the Holy Ghost ibid. I had rather speak first to the former but to prevent Objections from some distressed soul I shal fi●st speak to the latter Page 354 For opening the words Quest 1. Whether the Jews our Savior spake then to did then sin against the Holy Ghost ib. Answ Some think No But I rather think Yes for the Reasons in the Text. ibid. Quest 2. Is there any so giveness of sins in the world to come ibid. Answ It is an unusual Phrase noting the eternity of misery Page 355 DOCT. The Sin against the Holy Ghost is an unpardonable sin Page 355 The Truth opened by the enquiry into two things 1 What the Sin against the holy Ghost is ibid. 2 How this sin is unpardonable beyond other sins ibid. For to say what this sin is ibid. I answer Nega●ively and Affirma●●vely ibid. 1 Negatively It is not that sin whereby men do barely deny the Deity of the Holy Ghost c. ibid. 2 Nor is it every opposition to the work of the Holy Ghost c. Page 356 3 It is not necessary that every man who sins against the holy Ghost should be an universal Apostate as i● is ordinarily thought ibid. There is a two-fold Apostate Either one that declineth from the profession of the Truth Or one that rebels against the T●uth revealed and wil go no further cleered by an example Page 357 4 Final Vnbelief and Impenitency is not the sin against the holy Ghost neither that a man lives and dies in nor that he purposeth to live in to the last for many have so purposed to live yet have been converted ib●d 1 The Jews did then commit this sin yet they had not continued in it to their death ibid. 2 Final unbelief is rather sin against God the Son ibid. 3 If final unbelief be this sin then Christ should threaten that he which dieth in his sin should not be forgiven