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A15738 Sermons vpon a part of the first chap. of the Gospell of S. Iohn. Preached by Antony Wotton, in the parish church of Alhallowes Barking in London, and now by him published Wotton, Anthony, 1561?-1626. 1609 (1609) STC 26008; ESTC S120315 346,604 476

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was in Christ indeede because no man euer had it that was not in him many haue had haue it in abundance by depending wholy vpō him The principal point is yet behind cōcerning the life of glory Which though it properly belong to the world to come yet there is one chiefe thing apperteining therunto which is to be had in this world as an entrance to the other The death that insued vpon the breach of that charge * Gen. 2. 17. Thou shalt not eat of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good euill was the estate of mortalitie to the body and of condemnation both to body and soule Therefore the life that was in Christ must needs affoord vs remedy against both these Let vs take them in their order And first that by death the separation of the soule and body was signified it may euidently appeare as by the words themselues in their proper sense so also by the sentence of the Lord pronounced after the sinne according to the penalty before threatned In a Gen 3. 19. the sweat of thy face shalt thou eate bread till thou returne to the earth for out of it wast thou taken because thou art dust and to dust thou shalt returne Adam indeede liued many hundred yeeres after this sentence but at last the execution of it came b Gen. 5. 5. All the daies that Adam liued were 930. yeeres and he died But this is so well knowne and generally confest that it needs no furder proofe Let vs shew that there is life in Christ to destroy this death Ne ther neede wee goe farre to seeke for that matter Remember c G●n 3. 15. what was threatned the diuell that the seed of the woman should bruse his head d Heb. 2. 14. If the diuell bee subdued who hath the power of death as the Apostle tells vs what shall become of death that is vnder his power The Lord himselfe tells thee by e Heb. 2. 14. his Prophet e Ose 13. 14. where he triumpheth ouer death trampling him vnder his feete O death I will be thy death Oh graue I will bee thy destruction But this was rather a discouragement of death then a destruction Heare f 1 Cor. 15. 54. the Apostle proclaiming the victory after the fight was ended Death is swalowed Verse 55. vp in victory He proceeds to insult ouer him O death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victory The Verse 56. 27. sting of death is sin and the strength of sinne is the law But thanks be vnto God who hath giue vs victory through I. Chr. Verse 21. 22. our Lord. Giuē vs victory How doth that appear For since by man came death by man also came the resurrection of the dead For as in Adāal mēdy so in Christ shal albe made aliue 2. Tim 1. 10. through Christ I say gwho hath abolished death hath brought life immortalitie to light through the Gospell I wish it were so may some men say that death were indeede destoried that we need no longer stand in feare of him But what credit may be giuen to that which is refuted by sense in daily and hoverly experience Did not A●ā die Are not Abraham Isaak Iacob al the prophets and Patriarchs dead Is not there proofe enough in the scripture that euery man must die h Psal 89. 48. What man liueth and shall not see death The Apostle seconds the Prophet i Heb. 9. 27. It is appointed to men that they shal once die What say you to that great conquerour of death himselfe The two tneeues that were executed with him withstood death longer thē he did The Souldiers came k Ioh. 19. 32. Ver 33. saith the Euangelist and brake the legges of the first and of the other which was crucified with Iesus But when they came to Iesus and saw that he was dead already they brake not his legges See I pray you the champion that should ouercome death is sooner subdued by death then either of these two ordinarie fellowes It was no wonder though the Iewes vpbraided him when he hung vpon the Crosse He saued others quoth they but he cannot saue himselfe Is it possible l Mat. 27. 42. to beleeue that there was life in him whose death his best friends cōfesse Doth this seeme vnpossible to thee What wilt thou say then if I tell thee of a greater matter Hee ouercame death by dying The same stroke that tooke life from him through him m Heb. 2. 14. slew death himselfe him that had power over death euen the diuell Would you know more particularly how that could bee I may not enter into any large discourse of the point In one word it was thus The sting of death as the Apostle taught vs is sinne By which the diuell preuailed to the destruction of them that had sinned This sting was not onely blunted and rebated but pluckt out and cast away by our Sauiour For his death being a sacrifice for sin tooke sinne quite away n Iob. 1. 29. Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world So that now the name of death is more terrible then the thing there is more feare then hurt in it Tell me what it could indanger or indamage thee to haue a snake creepe vpon thee yea if it were into thy bosom so the sting teeth and whatsoeuer els it hath power to hurt withall were first pulled out It might perhaps scarre thee or make thee start as a litle cold water will doe if it be cast vpon a sodaine in thy face but that is all the harme thou couldest haue by it Death then is thus disarmd by our Sauiour Christ but the destructiō of him is by his resurrection If thou wouldest see death dead indeed look into the graue where Iesus thy sauiour was laid There shewd death the vttermost of his power He thought himselfe sure enough of the victory when he had shut him vp without life in the sepulchre rolled a great stone to the mouth of it and saw a guard of souldiers set to watch him well there hee keeps him in that estate the same day he was crucified all the next and the beginning of the third What ensued Surely if hee had bin put in aliue hee would haue bin dead by that time There is no question then but that wee shall finde him dead in the graue So though his disciples Who the next day after the Iewes Sabboath o Luke 24. 1. Early in the morning came vnto the Sepulchre and brought the odors which they had prepared to embalme his body withall They made no doubt but they should finde him p Mark 16. 1. Mark 15. 47. where they had seene him laid For dead men are no starters Onely their feare was that they should not be able to roule away the stone from the doore of the Sepulchre
that is in Christ hath quickened thee Thou art questionless inlightened Shall I make bold to aske thee a ●ew questions concerning the mysterie of thy redemption the roote whereon the life thou talkest of groweth Wilt thou not abide to be questioned with of these points Heare me a little I doe it not to appose thee but to instruct thee At the least if thou wilt not answere mee yet giue mee the hearing while I open this great secret vnto thee Not that neither Shall thy pleasure lull thee a sleepe that thou canst not heare Shall thy profit carry thee away that thou wilt not see I were as good hold my peace as speake and not bee heard All men are willing and ready to conser of that whereof they haue skill and experience Thou canst not doe a souldiour a greater pleasure then to put him into some discourse of warre How gladly doth a Mariner take occasion to intreat of nauigation So all professions and trades easily fall into speech of that wherein they haue best knowledge Onely in the profession of christianitie the case is otherwise You shall finde many a one I would I might not truely say very many I am sure I may say ouer many that can not indure to speake themselues or heare other men enter into any discourse of life in CHRIST Tell me I pray you what is the reason why other sorts of professions are so forward in talking of their artes and trades Is it not because they make account they haue some good skill in them Could Christians be so backward to reason of matters touching their saluation but that they are priuie to their owne ignorance in such cases Shall a smith or a shoomaker delight to speake of his craft because he is skilfull in it and shal we hold off and shunne speech of our glorious redemption because but I will say no more for very shame of the world It were not possible we should auoide such communication if we knewe how to carry our selues in it without bewraying our ignorance How then stands the case with vs Are wee not inlightened Then are we not quickened If wee bee in darkenesse we are in death too This this it is be feared is the case of many of vs. There is no life in vs because there is no light in vs With this light wee may search our hearts and discerne whether we be indeede aliue or dead What know I concerning mine owne naturall estate What haue I learned of my first transgression in Adam What feeling am I come to of the horrible corruption where with my soule and body are defiled What vnderstand I of Iesus Christs natures and offices Haue I considered the infiniteness of the loue of God in sending his owne and onely sonne to be my sauiour Am I well instructed in the doctrine of his sufferings Is the value of his inualuable sacrifice magnified by me though not comprehended Let me yet come a little neerer How many are there that do not so much as know what Iesus Christ was what it is to bee iustified what it is to beleeue We are buried in the darknesse of death hauing nothing in vs but the bare conceipt of life I appeale to thine owne soule whosoeuer thou art that wouldest be saued I desire thee not to let mee see the light that is in thee but to looke into thine owne heart whether therebe any there or no. The triall is betwixt God and thee It is in vaine to say thou art inlightened For he knows what is in thee better then thou doost thy selfe And there is no greater argument of thy blindnesse then that thou doost not see it He that begins to see perceiues hee wants a great deale of seeing perfectly But he that was borne blind and continues so knows not that there is any such thing as sight to bee had but onely as hee heares other men talke of it Such is the estate of many professed Christians They haue heard I know not what rumours of Adam and his fall of CHRIST and his death and such other matters But they know no one point or other soundly and throughly either to their humiliation or consolation And yet for I must repeate it againe and often without light there is no life to be had in Iesus Christ How long then will you wander in darknesse When will you approche to life Let it suffice vs that we haue hitherto continued in ignorance yet the light shines vnto vs. Who can tell how soone the Lord will bee weary of waiting on vs and holding out the light of saluation to them that will not see Deceiue not your owne selues with a vaine hope of life as if it could be seized on by groping in the darke Be not wanting to your selues and assuredly yee shall be saued Christ Iesus hath prouided life sor you The same Christ Iesus is ready to shew you the way to it nay hath shewed it to you already if you would haue vouchsaf't to looke toward it And because you are not blind onely but dead also he hath sent vs his seruants and ministers to call vpon you to cry out vnto you to intreat you that you would open your eies and see the light It lies shining vpon your eie-liddes do but lift them vp and it will enter What shall you lose by receiuing sight What will it hurt you to be saued Is any man so hardly intreated to his owne good You shall not trauaile alone in the way to life Behold heere is company on euery side I and my brethren the Ministers will carry the light before you do but follow it and the light will bring you to life If any man for all this will roust in darknesse though hee refuse to see the light yet shall that discouer him both to God and men Art thou not ashamed to know that so many see thy blindnesse Art thou not affraid that the Lord himselfe will cast thee into eternall darknesse since thou takest no pleasure in light Rowse vp thy selfe and shake off this drowsinesse that CHRIST IESVS may giue thee light If thou wilt not neuer presse into this and the like places God is not deceiued Thou makest a shew of loue to the light when thou comest hither where it shines Is thy sight dim The light will cleere it Hast thou no sight at all The light will giue thee eies to see withall The light of the sunne appeares not but where there are eies alreadie and those open too But the light of life which is in CHRIST makes eies where it is desired and causeth life in all that are willing to haue it Whereof if any man doubt let our Euangelist resolue him who proceeding to shew vs the effect of the light tells vs that it shines in darknesse as it were offring it selfe to disperse and scatter whatsoeuer hindereth or staieth our full inlightning For though it follow in the later part of the verse that the darknesse comprehends it
heape vp any more testimonies in a matter nothing doubted of we haue found that we sought that life is to bee had in Iesus Christ See I pray you consider a little with me how many greate reasons we haue to bee inflamed with the loue of Iesus Christ If we regard excellency of nature in which respect e Velleius Epi cur apud Cicer. de nat deor l. 1. the graund Atheists of the worlde thought the heathē imagined Gods worthy of honor seruice behold he is God If length of yeers he is eternall without beginning or ending But these things rather cause admiratiō then moue affection which is then most effectually stirred vp when the sense of some benefit receiu'd hath taken ful possession of our hearts If there be any man with whom these respects canot preuaile what is he but meerely senslesse neither knowing what he hath nor feeling what hee wantes What said I Not knowing what hee hath There needes not so much If no man can bee ignorant that hee is all men must need vnderstand that they are beholding to him by whome they are Looke not vpon the goodly feature of thy body think not on the excellency of thy soule vnderstand not that thou hast vnderstāding forget that thou canst remember only deny not that thou art because thou prou'st it by denying it and thou has● cause enough to loue the author of thy being Doth this benefit of thy naturall being somewhat affect thee Oh how wouldst thou bee rauisht if thou couldst see the blessednes of thy supernaturall estate I will not goe about to shew thee the misery in which thou art now by the corruption of thy nature I will not so much as say thou art miserable I reserue those points for some other opportunity the next verse will giue mee occasion to speake somewhat of them Only giue meeleaue to proclayme life in Iesus Christ Doost thou heare what I say I wil repeate it againe and that as loud as I can that all may heare it The Word the promised Messiah Iesus Christ the Sonne of God hath life in him for all that will be partakers of it Dost thou sit still at the hearing of this proclamation No maruaile How should a dead man stit Wouldest thou haue a better proofe that thou art dead indeed Well if there be no remedy but that thou wilt continue stil in death I wil leaue thee in it turne to them whom I see running vp and downe to seeke out this life Why do you vexe weary your selues with seeking that which is vnder your noses f Rom 10. 6. The righteousnesse of Verse 7 this faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thy heart who shall ascend into heauen That is to bring Christ from aboue Or Verse 8. who shaldescend into deepe That is to bring Christ againe from the dead But what saith it The word is neere thee euen in thy mouth and in thy heart g Gen. 21. 15. 16. When Agar being turned out of Abrahams house with her Sonne Ismaell had spent the bottle of water that she brought from home heleft her Sonne vnder a tree and went a bowe shoote off that she might not see him dy And yet as it appeared afterward she might hard by a well of water though shee knewe it not God opened her eies saith the text and she Verse 19. saw a well of water This is the case of those men to whō I now speake Are yee turned out of doores from God your heauenly Father Doe you finde your selues out of all hope to recouer his fauour Are you dead and would you liue but that you can see no meanes of life Be of good comfort and cheere vp your selues The water of life is neerer then you are aware of You are in it and knowe it not It comes vp to your very lips Doe but open your mouths and it will run in Agar sate her downe and did not so much as looke about her to see if Verse 16. she could light vpō any spring or pit of water to maintaine life in her Sonne and the Lord himselfe cald vnto her and fhew'd her where she might fill many bottels And will he suffer thee thinkst thou to wander from place to place to seeke life Behold it is in his Son Thou shalt not need to climbe vp to heauen h lib. 3. 13 Iesus Christ of his owne accord without thy desire or thought of any such matter came downe from thence brought life with him Sound not the depths to fetch it out from below i Luk. 24. 6. Euen from thence also the same Iesus Christ came vp with life Art thou dead There is life in him If thou wert not dead neither couldst thou receiue nor he bestow life vpon thee k Mat 9. 12. Can a whole man be cured or l Ioh. 8. 33. 34. a free man set at liberty Was m Ioh. 11. 6. 39. not Lazarus dead before he could be raised againe to life Therfore did our Sauiour stay in the place where he was 2. dayes after he had word of his sicknes that he might be dead and buried ere he should come to restore him to life againe Tell me not how long thou hast bin dead The strength of death growes not by continuance as sicknesse doth He that hath bin dead but one hower is as void of life as he that died a yeere ago When our Sauiour came to raise Lazarus he had bin dead 4 daies Lord said Martha he stinks by this time There wanted life and when that came neither continuance of time nor noysmnes of ●a●or nor the bands at his hands and feete were able to make any resistance for the detayning of the prisoner If the force of life be so greate that no contrary power is of strength to make head against it may it not well seem exceeding strange that so few recouer life or once looke after it n Ioh. 5. 39. 40. Our Sauiour complaines of the Iewes that although they search the Scripturs with an opiniō that euerlasting life was to be had out of them those Scriptures testified of him that he was the autor of that ●ife yet they would not come to him that they might haue life There is no reason that we should expect better intertainement then he found Hee that will not beleeue that the light shines when it is plaine to be seene wil hardly giue credit to him that tels him afterward it did shine Yet me thinks I cannot chuse but wonder that this life which is in our Sauiour should so generally be neglected I am loth to say despised or refused b●● I must of necessity cō●ess it is not embraced as it sh●u●d be Would you know what the reason of it is what ●●e we vnwilling to haue life That is not possible seing our chiefest care is to maintaine life Doe wee despaire of means to come by it The least shew of
vs. Hee is the husband we are the wife Eue was bone of Adams bone not Verse 30. he of hers Yet when they were ioined together in marriage they were both but one flesh It is then apparant verse 31. by this similitude that we being thus spiritually become one with Chr. haue the same life which is in him as the Verse 32. wife hath the same flesh or rather is the same flesh with her husband The other similitude is of the head body which liue by the same spirit of life resting originally in the head and from thence dispersing it selfe into all the members of the body This also the same Apostle setteth forth in the same Epistle It will be sufficient to rehearse his words Let vs y Fph 4. 35. 16 saith he follow the truth in loue and in all things grow vp into him which is the head euen Christ By whom at the body being coupled kint together by euery ioynt for the furniture thereof according to the effectuall power in the measure of euery part receiueth increase of the body vnto the edifying of it selfe in loue Therefore doth he often call the Church the body of Christ * Fph. 1. 22. 23. God hath appointed him ouer all the head to the Church which is his body a Fph●● 5 23. Christ is the head of the Church the same is the Sauiour of his body b Col. 1. 18. He is the head of the body of the Church Giue eare now with attention and take knowledge of the assurance of your life Why do you shrinke and quake at the mention of death Euen when your are dead you are still aliue Are you not one with Iesus Christ Are you not bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh Are not you and he one flesh Doth not euery man nourish cherish his owne flesh And will Christ thinke you suffer his flesh to be destroied by death What dost thou tell me of the decay of thy strength that thy sight waxeth dimme thy leggs feeble thine armes weake and all thy senses begin to fayle thee Is not Christ aliue Or canst thou dy as long as hee liues Thou art but the least part of thy selfe thy husband is thy head and thy life And whereas thou art now a-dying it is not for thy destruction but for the abolishing of that which makes thee subiect to dy Christ thy husband doth not meane to forgoe thee but to ioyne thee neerer to him Wouldst thou bring a mortall carcase into heauen Wouldest thou bee continually in danger of dying Is it not better once to endure it then alwaies to feare it A quarter of an howers worke will rid thee of all paine for euer How wilt thou wonder at thy selfe when thou shalt behold the glory of that body which thou left'st naked and miserable Shal I need to put thee in minde of thy happinesse Dost thou remember that thou art a part of Iesus Christs body Hath he any dead part trow'st thou Thou canst not imagin that any man of reason would suffer his enimies to dismember his body or to depriue the least finger he hath of life or sense How then should Christ endure such a mayme But what talke I of bereauing his members of life As if it were any way possible that deathshould be in that part in which life is continued Wait the time that God hath appointed for thy quicking Thou art but dressing attiring that thou mai'st be a fit Bride for an immortal Bridegrome As for condemnation to hel fire the second death be not so iniurious to the Maiestie of Christ as once to think that any member of his body can bee lyable to damnation c Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ VVho shall laye anything to the charge of Iesus Christ Canst thou bee condemned and hee acquited Can the head bee in heauen and the members in hell Father d Iohn 17. 24. saith our Sauiour I will that they which thou hast giuen me be with me euen where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast giuen me Can the first fruites bee holy and the lumpe vncleane Can the head raigne in glory and the members bee plunged in the pit of damnation Assure thy selfe if there bee life in Christ thou one of his members thy part is in it He bought thee too deare now to lose thee or let thee be taken from him Besides hee hath openly confest that hee receiued a charge from God his Father to see that none shoulde perish that belieu'd in him and e Ioh. 6 40. hee hath profest that hee will discharge the trust reposed in him I will raise him vp at the last day Hee that eateth my flesh and Verse 54. Ver. 56. drinketh my bloud hath eternall life and I n will raise him vp at the last day In him as it followeth Christ dwels and he in Christ Then must hee needs be sure of euerlasting li'e that lodgeth such a guest A guest that hath life in him as in the fountaine therof from whence it floweth to al those that are io●ned to him For although our Euangelist say In him was life not Is life yet he may no more be thought once to haue had it now to be without it thē once to haue bin God now not to be so But that all doubt of this matter may be taken a way we must call to minde that which we heard before of the reasons why this maner of speech is vsed First then for I will now sett it in the first place because it is the plainest hath least need of any explication we may well reasonably imagine that the Evangelist continues his former kind of speech The word was in the beginning was with God was God All things were made by him nothing was made without him was it not fitter then to say In him was then in him is life that the whole description of him may bee deliuered in the like tearmes This might serue in my poor opinion to satisfy any man concerning the worde Yet because there are some other reasons of it alleaged those both true for the doctrine they teach not vnfit for the text it selfe I will make bold to stand a little vpon them the rather because I perceiue I shall not end these 2 verses in this one exercise as I purposed and desired to do The former reason of the word was depends vpon the like course the Euāgelist takes in the rest of his description those that now I am to handle concerne the time either before our Sauiours being in the world or while he was in the world The time before either reaches to eternity before all beginning or at the least makes it self equall to the continuance of the world after the fall of Adam til the cōming of Christ in the flesh If wee apply it to eternity who
the other three Euangelists euen to the height of the Godhead and that vnsearchable mystery of the most glorious and blessed Trinitie There is indeede some diuersitie of opinions amongst the Latin Fathers to which of the Euangelists the other 3. beasts ſ Ezech. 2. 5 Reuelat. 4. 6. Ezech. 2. 5. Reuel 4. 6. should be seuerally referred but it t Although Irenaeus lib. 3 cap. 11. makes Iohn the Lion and Marke the Eagle is generally agreed vpon that the Eagle belongs to Iohn for the reason aboue named Art thou then desirous ro vnderstand the great high points of diuinitie Cast thy selfe vpon the wings of this Eagle who wil cary thee vp as it were into the bosome of God and acquaint thee with such matters as but by reuelation from God himselfe could neuer possibly haue bin discouered or imagined And that we may the more be rauisht with the loue of this holy Gospell let me put you in minde of that variety the mother of delight which is easie to bee seene therein How sweetly hath our Euangelist tempered and as it were allayed the hard points of profound knowledge with enterlacing of delightfull Histories If at any time he soare aloft that he may seem to be almost out of sight for the height of those admirable mysteries of our Sauiours diuinity he comes down againe ere long and feedes our eyes with making vs see the vse and comfort of those glorious instructions And besides this varietie of matter which shineth in comparing one part of this Gospel with another there is yet a farther consideration to the singular commendation thereof Who is there if hee haue anie sense of Gods mercy in Christ but takes great pleasure to reade one and the same thing diuersly recorded by the other three Euangelists And what meruaile Seeing it is euen in prophane histories a matter of no small vse and delight to haue the memorie renewed and the affection quickned by the varietie of discourse as it vvere by the diuerse cooking of some one daintie kinde of meat But our Euangelist to the diuersitie of handling hath added also great store of newe matter not once touched by any one of the other the LORD hauing reserued for him the perfecting of that knowledge which the rest did beginne and further Manie excellent things are recorded by Saint Mathew Saint Marke S. Luke concerning the Sermons and miracles of our Sauiour yet are there but fewe of these proper to any one of them Only S. Iohn affords vs as in so short a Treatise great plenty of new and vnknowen variety u Piscator in prooem ad Ioan. 10. Sermons fowre miracles and that zealous prayer full of loue and comfort The sermons that I may speake a word or two of euery one of them in particular are these First x Iob. 3. 1. 2. c that kinde dialogue with Nicodemus and those worthy instructions concerning regeneration whereby wee are taught that our naturall estate is fleshly and vncapable of grace and glorie till the spirit of God by the waters of the Scriptures haue bredde in vs a newe and heauenly conception In the second place followeth y Ioh. 4. 7. 8. c. that sweete and comfortable discourse with the Woman of Samaria concerning the water of life which beeing once receiued into the soule turnes into a spring that can neuer bee dryed vp but sends forth continually aboundance of fresh liquor to coole and moysten the heart in all heate of tentations * Ioh. 5. 19. 20 c. The next Chap presents vs with the third Sermon wherein vpon occasion of the stiffe-necked Iewes murmuring against our Sauiour for willing the man whom hee had cured hauing beene thirtie-eight yeares bed-rid to take vp his bedde and walke though it were the Sabbath daie wee haue a glorious assurance of our Lords eternall God-head and equalitie with God his Father But that which exceedes in all heauenly comfort is a Ioh. 6. 26. 27. the fourth Sermon in which our blessed Sauiour as it were thrusts himselfe into our mouthes to bee eaten and drunke giuing vs full assurance that the eating of his flesh and drinking of his bloud that is belieuing in him shall feede vs without hungring or thirsting any more to euerlasting life which he according to his Fathers will and charge shal most certainely bestowe vpon all them that by true faith become one with him The b Ioh. 8. 3. 4. c. fift Sermon affordes vs a worthie example of our Lord and masters wisedom and authoritie to discerne and confound the subtill malice of his wilfull enemies With what diuine iudgement dooth hee looke into the depth of the Pharisies deceite who sought to entrappe him about the woman taken in adulterie With what admirable discretion dooth hee driue them away to their perpetuall shame and dishonour With what a maiestie doth he a little after conuince and reprooue them for their wilfull blindnesse and proude conceit of the knowledge they bragged of but had not Let vs come c Ioh. 10. 1. 2. c. to the sixt of those Sermons which our Euangelist only hath recorded In no place doth our Sauiour more plainly avow himselfe to bee the Messiah where haue wee the like certainty of his care and loue deliuered Hee giues his life for his sheep and casts himselfe into the very iawes of the Wolfe that his mouth might be stopped And to the singular comfort of vs that are not by nature Iews hee tells vs that wee also belong to his sheepfold Into which when wee once are receiued and acknowledged for sheepe no power of sinne Satan or death shall bee able to wring vs out of his hands because the Father with whom he is in nature all one is stronger then all The former sixe Sermons containe especially those benefites whereof wee are made partakers by our Sauiour Christ in this life but d Ioh. 11. 25. 26 c the seauenth expresseth our finall triumph ouer our last and greatest enemie Death himselfe Those helpe both to arme vs to the fight and to encourage and further vs in fighting but this crownes vs after victory If the body shall rise againe to glorie we may truely and safelie challenge Death and sa●e e 1. Cor. 15. 55 Oh Death where is thy sting oh Graue where is thy victorie For if our bodies bee made immortall where is the power of Death become Who then can faint in a battaile the issue whereof will bee so certaine and happy especially if hee remember what gracious promises he hath from God in f Ioh. 14. 15. 16. the eight Sermon of the continuall assistance of the holy Ghost For howsoeuer those glorious matters principally concerne the Apostles yet hath euery Christian his interest in them according to a certaine proportion The Apostles coulde not erre in anie matter of Doctrine No true Christian shall so erre in matters necessarie to his saluation that hee shall
the godhead that there is but one God Secondly of the Trinity of the persons Where the first poynt must be to proue that there are three persons the second to shew how they are distinguisht one from an other And because there is in our Church seruice a treatise to this purpose knowne in part to all that are present commonly called the Creed of Athanasius who like a valiant champion maintein'd the godhead of Christ against the Assaults of Arius I will referre you from point to point to that discourse That there is but one God the same one God witnesseth himselfe in scripture o Exod. 20. 2. 3. I am the Lord thy God thou shalt haue none other Gods but me Which is not ambitiously spoken as if some one God would haue the honor frō all the rest but enioyned with authority by him who onely had right to claime such preheminence Els neither had he done done iustly that gaue this charge and how should he be conceiu'd to be God that is knowne to be vniust and the Iewes to whom he gaue it should haue hurt themselues as much by displeasing all the other Gods whom they refused to acknowledge as help themselues by pleasing that one whome they did acknowledge Vnlesle perhaps wee may ridiculously think that for quietnes sake the other Gods were content to put vp this iniury or that they were all agreed to part stakes as the heathen absurdly feyne of their three Gods Whereof Iupiter the eldest took heauen for his share Neptune the second got the gouernment of the Sea and Pluto the yongest rather then he would sit out quite was content to play small game as we say and to take Hell for his part rather then nothing These are liker fancies of men in a dreame then discourses of learned writers And yet neither could these three brothers well agree at all times and to say the truth Iupiter whom the other two aknowledged for their Soueraign was the onely God in the Iudgement of the heathen But whatsoeuer they imagined wee are sure our God doth so speake of himselfe p Deut. 32. 39. Behold now for I am he and there is no Gods with me That appeares by the effects I kill saith he giue life I wound and I make whole Are not these the works of god In whose hāds are death life but in Gods But hath this God only that power Are there not other that haue it aswell as he No sure as himselfe addeth There is none that can deliuer out of my hands Thus he speaketh of himselfe thus the prophet Moses q Exod. 33. 11. that talked with him face to face speaketh of him Vnto thee it was shew'd r Deut. 435. saith Moses to I srael that thou mightst knowe that the Lord hee is God and that there is none other but hee alone And afterward Vnderstand v. 39. therfore this day and consider in thy heart that the Lord he is God in heauen aboue and vpon the earth beneath there is none other I might recken vp many like testimonies But whom will not these content if enough will content him Will any foolish blasphemer now except against these proofes as if they were to be vnderstood of the general nature of God not of any one who onely is God how fond and absurd must such an exception needs bee seeing all men know by reason that generalls haue not any reall being diuers from the specials or species nor can be said to perform any particular action For example to make the matter as plaine as I can Man as it signifieth that nature which is common or generall to euery seuerall man is not any thing subsisting by itselfe but hath it whole being in the particulars of that kind Therefore also it cannot be said that the generall nature of man doth reason or speake but that this or that man doth so But God saith I kill giue life neither can the general nature which is leudly absurdly conceiv'd say truely of itselfe Behold I am hee and there are no gods with me neither were such a speech to any purpose or of any vse as if it were to bee thought that any man could imagin that there are more then one general nature of any one kinde There is then but one God only For if there were more God could not say there are no more euen as Adam after Caine and Abel were borne could not affirme That he alone was man and that there was none beside him The same trueth is confirmed in the new Testament by the ſ 1. Cor. 8 4. Apostle Paule We know saith he that an Idol is nothing in the world and that there is none other God but one As if he should haue said Howsoeuer there are diuers idols of this and that shape men idols and women Idols yet we know there are no such diuine powers in the world as these according to the fancy of men represent yea we are are sure there is but one God The heathen indeed haue many whom they call God and Lord but to vs that vnderstand the truth there is but one Ver. 6. God So doth the Scripture euerie where speake of God as of one t Rom. 1. 21. 23. When they knew God they glorified him not as God The glorie of the incorruptible God What shal I need to heape vp many testimonies in a case that is not doubtfull All the wise and learned both Christians Iewes Heathen agree with one consent that there cannot be any more then one God All this notwithstanding wee finde that in the Scrip●ure there are more then one that are sayde to bee God First there is one called the Father whom al men acknowledge to be God u Rom. 1. 7. Grace be with you and peace from God our Father x 1 Cor. 8. 6. To vs there is but one God which is the Father y Eph. 1. 3. Blessed bee God euen the Father of our Lord Iesu Christ Secondly as I shewed before Iesus Christ or the Word is also vouched to bee God In the former verse The word was God * Rom. 9. 5. Christ is God ouer all belssed for euer Thirdly it is manifest in the same Scripture that the holy Ghost in like sort is God For although there be no● one place wherein hee is so tearmed by name yet the comparing of one text with another puts the matter out of question The Lord saith to the people of Israell that if a Num. 12 6. there be a Prophet amongst them he the Lord wil appear to him in a vision he will talke with him in a dreame It was the Lord therefore that spake in and by the Prophets This Lord saith b 1. Pet. 1. 11. Saint Peter was the spirit The spirit testified before of Christ c 2. Pet. 1. 21. Prophecie came not in olde time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they
him and the sonne of man that thou visitest him That his gratious reguard of man whom the Lord sets in the next place to himselfe may the better appeare as the first worke of Creation was for his seruice so the second of Regeneration was for his saluation This wee learne of our Euangelist q Ioh. 20. 31. who tels vs that the ende of writing the Gospell was That wee might beleeue that Iesus is the Christ the Sonne of God and that by beleeuing wee might haue life through his name See I pray you how Saint Iohn hath loyned these two endes together the former is the glorifying of Iesus Christ as the Sonne of God the later the procuring life to men by faith in him According to these two endes the Euangelist hath framed this beginning of his Gospell First r Ioh. 1. 1. 2. he describes Iesus Christ vnto vs as hee is in himselfe God euerlasting Then hee shewes what hee is to vs. A creator of vs when wee were nothing a Sauiour to vs when Ver. 3. wee were worse then nothing Of the former points we haue heard out of the three former verses now of the Ver 4. 5. later out of these two that follow Whereof wee may sitly make these two parts a description of the Messiah as the a●tor of Life in the fourth verse and the former part of the fift His intertainment by men in the later part of the same verse In the description o●r Euangelist declareth first what hee was in the nature of his mediation verse 4. then what in regard of the effect verse 5. Concerning the nature of that his office two points are to bee considered First that In him was life 2. that That life was the light of men The effect is that The light shineth in darkenesse But how was this light intertaind Or rather this light found no entertainement The darkenesse comprehended it not Now for the better vnderstanding of these points First according to my custome I wil examine the words then expound the meaning of the Text. For the wordes in the first clause for I will take euery one seuerally by it selfe we must consider both what life the Euangelist speaks of and why hee speakes in that manner saying In him was life Why hee sayth In him was life rather then He was life why was rather then Is seeing it is as true and plaine that Hee is life as that life was in him But what is this life hee speakes of Looke not that I should trouble you or my selfe with refuting or so much as reciting the diuers strange interpretatiōs of Heretickes foolishly grounded vpon that manner of reading which couples the former part of this verse with the later ende of the third That which was made was life in him I shewed in my last exercise that if this had beene intended by the Euangelist hee would rather haue said All things that were made were life in him Surely the manifold and different expositions that so many heretickes haue made of these wordes so read and the absurd errors and blasphemies they haue gathered from them may well seeme a sufficient reason to discredite such a kinde of reading as hath no better warrant then the coniectures of men Howsoeuer the vulgar Latine retaine it with the mislike of many learned Papists ſ August in Ioa. tract 1. Ambrosde fide lib. 3. cap. 3. and in Psal 36. Theophyl ad Ioa. 1. The Manichees deuis'd two senerall and almost contrarie interpretations of them The Arians a third The Macedonians a fourth Heracleon a fist and euerie one of these an erroneous doctrine sutable to his exposition Yea t Origen lib. 3 in Ioan. the best sense that is giuen of the words so read is so curious and sub till that it rather shewes the witte and learning of the Interpreters then the meaning of the Writer And perhaps it were but lost labor for the greatest part of this auditorie to take paines and spend time in striuing to make them vnderstand it Wherefore leauing those nice points to another kinde of exercise and auditorie let vs take the wordes plainely and simply as they offer themselues to bee conceiv'd of all men Who if they haue any knowledge at all of the Scripture or of religion by reading or hearing by this word life vnderstand one of these two things Either the naturall life whereby all liuing creatures are sayd to liue or the spirituall life by which they that are regenerate by the spirite of God liue spiritually in this world by grace and in the world to come by glorie Let vs see some examples of the word in these senses out of the Scripture For the naturall life wee haue the very beginning of it in Moses u Gen. 1. 20. God saide Let the waters bring foorth in abundance euerie creeping thing that hath life And afterward Let the earth bring foorth euerie liuing thing according Ver. 24. to his kinde Of man it is particularly written that x Gen. 2. 7. The Lord God breathed in his face breath of life and the man was a liuing soule So sayth y 1. Cor. 15. 45. the Apostle alluding to that place The first man Adam was made a liuing soule This is that life which the Lord threatned hee would take away by the floud Behold * Gen. 6. 17. sayth hee I will bring a floud of waters vpon the earth to destroy all flesh wherein is the breath of life vnder the heauen In this sense the word is not so common in the newe Testament I thinke not once in this whole Gospell in other places some times a Luk. 8. 15. Though a man haue abundance his life standeth not in his riches b Act. 17. 25. God giueth to all life and breath in all things c 1. Cor. 15. 19. If in this life onely wee haue hope in Christ And as this signification of life is rare in the new Testament so is the other for spirituall life in the old yet now and then vnder the title of this present life the life to come is also implyed Behold d Deu. 30. 15. 19. 20. sayeth Moses I haue set before thee this day life and good death and euill Afterward life and death blessing and cursing And in the next verse The Lord thy God is thy life and the length of thy dayes In the Psalme oftner and playner e Psal 16. 11. Thou wilt shewe mee the path of life f Psal 36. 9. With thee is the well of life So in g Pro. 2. 19. the Prouerbes All they that goe vnto her returne not againe neither take they hold of the wayes of life h Pro. 6. 23. Corrections for instruction are the way of life That one booke affordes vs more examples of this kinde then all the olde Testament beside But the new is full of them euery where i Mat. 7. 14. 18. 8. The way is narrow
He that beleeueth in him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life And in the same Chapter afterward hee Ver. 40. reproues the Iewes because they would not come vnto him that they might haue life Whereas the ende of his comming was ſ Ioh. 10. 10. That they might haue life and haue it in abundance Therefore doth t Act. 3 15. the Apostle Peter call him the Lord of life But whome shoulde wee rather heare in this case then u 〈◊〉 the Euangelist himselfe expounding his owne meaning The life appeared and wee haue seene it and beare witnesse and shew vnto you that eternall life which was with the father and appeared vnto vs. Can any man doubt but the Euangelist speaketh of the same life in the beginning of his Epistle whereof he intreateth in his Gospell Compare them together and see if you can perswade your selues otherwise Will you heare him speake yet more plaine x 5. 11. This is the recorde that God hath giuen vnto vs eternall life and this life is in his Sonne This later is called Eternall life in the wordes before Then surely the Euangelist speaketh in the Gospell also of eternall life which the Sonne of God bringeth as mediatator not of this transitorie life which hee giueth as Creator Now because this supernaturall life is double either of grace in this world or of glorie in the world to come I should farther inquire whether of these two is here meant or whether both be not meant But of that as also of the reason why our regeneration saluation is tearmed life I wil speake when I come to giue the meaning of the place In the meane while let vs goe forward in examining the words and first let vs see why he vseth this kinde of speech In him Why doth he not rather say as before by him doubtlesse hee might well haue sayde so For it is by him indeede that wee haue life y Rom. 5. 1. 2. By him wee haue peace toward God By him wee haue accesse through Ver. 11. faith vnto this grace wherein wee stand By him wee haue receiued the attonement But this manner of speech though it bee as true as the other yet it is not so fitte in this place nor so significant Not so fitte because the Euangelist would put a difference betwixt the Creator and the Mediator All things were made by him not in him though * Origen hon 2. ●n ●●uers some would haue without to imply as much whome I aunswered the last day But our spirituall life is as by him so in him The things that are made by him howsoeuer they alwayes depend on him for the continuance of their being yet they are not one with him Is it so with them that receiue the life of grace from him No no They are ioyned close vnto him and the life that they haue is from that spirit by which hee liues Therefore is a Eph. 5. 3● the Church flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone yea all the faithfull are members of his bodie himselfe being the head This neere coniun●ction with him could not bee exprest so significantly if the Euangelist should say By him was life as it is when hee sayth In him was life yet doth not say Hee was life which also is true because he● speakes of it not as it rests in him but as it is communicated by him to vs. But why sayes hee was and not rather Is in him Is there no life nowe to bee had Or is there any to bee had nowe but in hi● No surely There is no saluation in any other b ●● 4. 12 For amonge men there is giuen no other name vnder heauen whereby ●ee must bee saued How then sayes the Euangelist that l●●e was in him c Tolet. in ●●● innot 13. Wee may not imagine that ●ee meanes to shewe vs anye other way of attayning to life as if was excluded is No more then wee may conceiue that the Word is not GOD nowe because hee sayeth of him The Worde was God What may then bee the reason of this manner of speech It is thought to bee double either in re●uard of Gods eternall purpose or in respect of the ●mes before the comming of the Messiah The former wee must thus vnderstand that the Lorde God fore-seeing the fall of his creature man decreed in himselfe to recouer him by sending his Sonne to make satis●action for sin by sacrificing of himselfe vpon the altar of the crosse Of this saith d 2. Tim. 1. 9. the Apostle He hath saued vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his owne purpose and grace which was giuen vs through Iesus Christ before the world was Therefore also sayth our Euangelist e 1. Ioh. 1. 2. other where that this life was with the Father and appeared vnto vs. When the fulnesse of time was come sayth Saint Paul God sent his Sonne What fulnesse of time was this but the very hower appointed by God So that Saint Iohn may well say In him was life Because euen before the foundations of the world were layd life was setled and shut vp in the person of the Sonne who was in due time to become the mediator of mankinde by taking the nature of man vpon him If there bee any man whome this aunswere doth not content it may bee the other coniecture will satisfie him Let vs not wearie our selues with looking so far as to the eternall decree of GOD but keepe our sight within the compasse of the worlde within that time also wee shall finde some reason of this speech When was life in him euer since there was any to whome that life might appertaine it was ready for him in the Sonne of GOD the promised Messiah f Gen. 3. 15. Where had our first parents Adam and Eue their spirituall life after the Curse but in him In whom was the couenant established with g Gen. 12. 3. Gal. 3. 8. Abraham but in his seede Iesus Christ What name I some speciall men Did not this life offer it selfe generally vnto all that came of Abraham Brethren I would not that you should bee ignorant sayeth h 1. Cor. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. the Apostle that all our fathers were vnder the Cloude and all passed through the Sea And were all baptized vnto Moses in the Cloud and in the Sea And did all eate the same spirituall meate And did all drinke the same spirituall drinke For they dranke of the same spirituall Rocke that followed them and the Rocke was Christ What though many thousandes dyed before the Sonne of God became men were they therefore without meanes of life and saluation Nothing lesse i Heb. 13. 8. Iesus Christ yester-day and to day and the same for euer They beleeued in Christ to come wee beleeue in him being come
They saw him not but were perswaded hee should bee seene at the time appointed Neither haue wee seene him but are out of doubt that hee was seene while he liued here vpon the earth They trusted in him as the onely and all-sufficient meanes of life Is not our faith the same Therefore least any man should imagine that the Fathers which died before our Sauiour Christ was born were destitute of spirituall life our Euangelist assures vs that there was euen then life in him These reasons may giue some good satisfaction to them who desire rather to informe themselues to edification then to aime themselues for contention Giue me leaue also I pray you to propound to your consideration meditation at your better leasure what it hath pleased God I should conceiue of this matter would any man knowe of me why the Euangelist saith In him was rather then In him is life I think he may be fully satisfied if he do aduisedly consider that hee continueth the course which he begun in the first verse followed in the second and third In the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the word was God The same was By him were without him was Do not meruaile thē that the Euangelist sayth here In him was life Tell mee how hee could haue spoken more fitly Hee proceedes in the description of the Messiah touching his mediatorship whose Godhead he had before declared Could he doe better thē to hold on the same manner of speech But will you see yet a farther reason that nothing may be wanting which may helpe vou forward in the vnderstanding of this scripture Who knowes not that the Euangelist according to the ordinary course which they take that write the hystories of famous men settes downe in the beginning a briefe description of him of whom afterward hee is to intreat at large by shewing that in particular which was at the first deliuered in a generall sort This being so let vs remember that the historie is of him that is not now liuing amongst vs but departed out of this life from vs. Therefore it was necessarie for our Euangelist to speak of him as of one that had beene and now was not Not as if hee were not now at all but because hee is not now aliue in the world as hee was when those things were done the historie whereof is written in this Gospell So then we must conceiue that Saint Iohn in saying was hath respect to the time of our Sauiours being herein our nature and therefore not only might but ought also to say In him was rather then In him is life because he is totel vs what he did here in the world and not what hee doth now he is out of the world This the holy Ghost teacheth vs when he saith k Ioh. 20. 30. toward and l Ioh 21. 25. in the end of this Gospell Many other signes also did Iesus and there are also many other things which Iesus did Yet the ende of all is m Ioh. 20. 31. that wee might beleeue that Iesus is the Christ and so that life is in him now for vs as well as it was for them that liued in his time The excellent comfort of this doctrine drawes mee to it with both the hands but that my promise holdes mee backe very strongly Let me first discharge this then I will bestowe my selfe wholly vpon the handling of that more at large I vndertooke to shewe these two thinges what spirituall life is here signified of grace or of glorie or of both why the tearme life is applyed to note that holinesse and happinesse I doubt not but euerie man perceiues already that by life I vnderstand as well our liuing righteously in this world as our liuing gloriously in the world to come How else could it note such holinesse and happinesse The reason perhaps is not so apparant I will doo my best endeuour to giue you satisfaction touching that also It is verie fitte if not necessarie to giue as large an extent to all texts of Scripture as the circumstances of the present place and the ordinarie vse of the wordes will beare least wee seeme to restraine the meaning of the holy Ghost more then wee are warranted by him to doe And therefore I could haue beene contented to haue stretched the worde euen to note the preseruing of naturall life but that I can finde no such vse of it in the Scripture neither will that sense well agree with that exposition which the light in the second clause seemes necessarily to require as I hope to make it appeare anone if God will But neither any circumstance of the place tieth life to the one or to the other and the word is diuers times taken in both senses Of eternall life what shall I need to bring many examples This Gospell is full of them I will giue you a taste by one or two Yee search the Scriptures n Ioh. 5. 39. 40. sayth our Sauiour to the Iewes for in them yee thinke to haue eternall life and they are they which testifie of mee Yet yee will not come to mee that yee might haue life That which in the former verse hee nameth eternall life in the later hee calleth simply life The Ver. 24. like wee haue in the same Chapter not very many verses before Hee that beleeueth in him that sent mee hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life To what life Euen to euerlasting life which he was sayd before to haue The other life grace in this world both is implyed oftentimes in the life of glorie whereof also it is a part the Image of God in vs being renewed by it and is manie times spoken of by it selfe as I shewed at large before out of o Eph. 4. 24. diuerse places of Scripture It is needlesse to repeate them or to adde more to them What should hinder vs then frō expounding this life so largely as wee haue done Nave might wee not be thought iniurious to the holy Ghost if wee should leaue out either of them By life then wee vnderstand that spirituall estate of righteousnesse and glory of which all that beleeue in Christ are made partakers by beeing ingraffed into his mysticall bodie Would any man knowe why this estate into which wee are restored by our Sauiour should be tearmed life I aunswere him in a word because the miserable estate into which wee fell by sinne was called by the name of death It will not bee vnworthy our labour to consider this point a little When the Lord God had made our first parents and placed them in that palace of pleasure the garden of Paradise p Gen. 2. 8. Hee charged them to forbeare to eate of the Tree of the knowledge of good and euill threatning them that if they brake his commaundement that day that they ate thereof Ver. 17. they should dye the
death Do you perceiue that the Lord himlelfe hath giuen that condition of ours the name of death The olde Testament furnish ●th vs with many examples to precue the first sinne com●itted by vs in Adam cast vs all into the state of death ●ut this death so often there spoken of is partly the mortalitie of the body and partly the eternall punishment of the soule in hell fire the other death of sinnei ●eldome or I thinke neuer mentioned in any of those books The new Testament supplyes vs with very great plentie of example of both kindes Of the one I will say nothing at all because euery man continually obserue● them Of the other I must needes speak because perhaps they are not so ordinarily markt of all men q Mat. 8. 22. Let the dead bury their dead saith our Sauiour The dead to be buried are they whose carcases are left without life by the departure of the soules frō thē as the historie that place manifestly sheweth But who bee the dead that must bee the buriers of those corpses Who else bu● they that are dead in sinne dead to righteousness● and so looke after nothing that concernes euerlasting life any more then men naturally dead doe after the things of this present life So saith r Luk. 15. 32. the kind Father of the prodigal Sonne This thy brother was dead Dead The parable had said no such thing of him What thē was that death the Father speaks of Questionles the death of sin whereby he had liued lewdly wasted his goods with verse 13. riotousnesse and as his brother angerly obiected had deuoured them with harlots This the Apostle expresseth Verse 30. when speaking of vs all in our naturall estate before grace he f Epb. 2. 5. 7. saith that we were dead in sinnes and trespasses This may yet farder be manifested by the title that is giuen to that condition into which wee enter by regeneration First t Ioh. 3. 5. our Sauiour saith we must be borne againe what needs that if we were neuer dead And u Rom. 6. 2. the Apostle S. Paul affirmeth that they which are so borne againe are dead to sinne Then till they were so borne againe they liu'd in sinne The life of the one is alwaies the dea'h of the other If thou liue to sinne thou art dead to righteousnes If thou liue to righteousnes thou art dead to sinne Therefore x 1. Pet. 2. 24. S. Peter ioynes them both together That we being dead to sinne might liue to righteousnesse S. Paul hath the like speech in vnlike tearmes When y Rom. 6. 20. saith he yee were the seruants of sinne yee were freed from righteousnesse But now being freed from sinne Verse 22. made seruants vnto God Marke I pray you how one of these as it were destroies the other A naturall man without grace is free from righteousnesse yea as free as a dead man is from all matters of this worlde A spirituall man indued with grace is free from sinne yea as free as Lazarus was from all the cares of this worlde while he lay in his graue without life or breath But I may not forget my selfe too much The summe of all is this that our Sauiour Christ himselfe and by his example our Euangelist describeth the estate into which we are brought by becomming members of his body by the tearm of life because ourformer estate out of which he deliuered vs was in name nature an estate o● death Now hauing examined the words let vs come to the doctrine it selfe In him was life which is all one as if the holy Euangelist should haue said This word or promised Messiah of whom I haue begun to intreat and intend to write this story not only was eternall hauing his being before any thing created ever began to be that with God euen then when there was nothing beside God but was also himselfe very God From him al things that are or euer were had their whole being in him the spirituall life both of grace and glory was so plāted that who soeuer desires to be partaker of it must haue it only as in him being come into the world This is that which we are to learne out of this place In the handling whereof I will first deliuer the doctrine that our spirituall life is by Christ then I will speake of the manner how it is by him Concerning the former point first I wil propoūd it in general then I wil shew it in those particulars of holynes happynes The manner also hath 2. things to bee considered That this life was in Christ that it was in him euē while he liued here vpō the earth Touching the first point that our estate is to be recouered by our Sauiour Christ let me put you in mind of those places which I once before alleag'd which are indeed the very foundation of the Gospell By sinne the diuell got dominion ouer vs God in iustice leauing vs when we had forsaken him Satan iniustly seizing on vs as it were intruding himselfe into a house void of any owner to keepe possession But the Lord God though he would not presently thrust out by the head shoulders or pluck out by the eares that presumptuous intruder yet tels him that he should not imagin he had gotten or should hold quiet possession for euer I will put enmity * Gen. 3. 15. saith the Lord betwixt thee the woman between thy seed her seed What shall be the euent of this long doubtfull contention He shal breake thy head thou shalt bruise his beele Though Satan be strong armed by that meanes may seeme to keepe his palace without disturbance yet there comes a Luk. 11. 11. 22 a stronger then he that ouercomes him takes from him al his armo● wherin he trusted diuides his spoils This shews manifestly that the deuill shall lose his possession but perhaps he may reenter or if he do not yet are wee by this meanes rather freed from misery then restored to felicity Let vs go forward therfore and heare the promise that God makes to Abraham the Father of the faithfull b Gen. 12. 3. In thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed c Gal 3. 16. S. Paul thus expounds To Abraham and his seedwere the promises made He saith not to the seeds as of many but to thy seed as of one which is Christ And this promise thus made the same Apostle cals the preaching of the Verse 8. Gospell The Scripture saith he foreseeing that God would iustifie the Gentiles by faith preached before the Gospell vnto Abraham saying In thee shall al the Gentils be blessed This belssing our Euangelist describes where setting downe the end of the Gospel he tels vs that d Ioh. 20. 31. by beleeuing we shal haue life through his name What shall I need to
hath ouer night emptied the sinke in the morning she findes it full againe What may wee say to comfort one so distressed Our Euangelist shall speake for vs In him was life Art thou dead to righteousnesse There is life in him Dwelles there no good in thee In him there is nothing but good Neuer amplifie the strength of thy corruption as if the life that is in him could not ouercome it Thinke not thy death can be stronger then his life Consider with thy selfe that it is no easie matter to dispossesse him that hath so long a time binne willingly enterteyned Thy corruption is of long continuance and growth the grace that must cure it newly planted in thee and tender If thy not beeing could not withstand thy naturall life neither shall thy being naught be able to keepe away from thee the supernaturall life But many occasions will be offred vs in the whole course of this Gospell to comfort and strengthen all them that feele themselues to bee spiritually dead and desire to haue life in Iesus Christ Giue me leaue therefore now in the beginning to discouer the heretickes and idolaters their erronious opinions and conceiptes of our Sauiour and of themselues The heretikes that denied his diuinitie neuer suffi●iently waighed the poize of our Euangelists speech In him was life For if they had aduisedly considered that all spirituall life was shut vp in him so that none at all was to be had either without him or out of him they woulde easily haue discerned that hee must needs bee very God Can not naturall life bee setled in any creature as in the fountaine thereof and can spirituall life trow yee spring in him that hath not so much as his naturall beeing from himselfe Let vs imagin the greatest power of this kinde that possibly can bee in any creature The most he can doe is to offer the consideration of spirituall matters to our meditation to make cleere in some measure the truth of that hee saith to perswade and vrge vs to beleeue and like of that which hee deliuers Alas all this comes very short of the helpe wee neede Can he withdraw our minds from the cares and pleasures of this world that wee may giue our selues to the meditation he exhorts to Can hee giue vs spirituall eies to see the truth of that he teacheth Can he incline our vnwilling hearts and make them willing to embrace the life he so commends vnto vs Dares hee say there is life in himselfe otherwise then by his depending vpon him of whom our Euangelist saith In him was life The most excellent creatures for their natures are the Angells yet had not they life in them as the fountaine thereof For many of them are spiritually dead hauing no true holinesse or righteousnesse in them and as for them that continue in life what haue they that they haue not receiued If it were possible to digge a new chanell for the sea and to empty that wherein now the water runnes into that new one so prepared stopping vp the passage betwixt them might wee account of this as of the spring of waters Let the breadth length and depth of it bee neuer so great as long as the springes are not there it may bee a lake or poole and that a great one but the sea or beginning of waters it cannot bee So it is with all creatures whatsoeuer If the life of righteousnesse like the water of the sea could be conceiued to be in them and they not in Christ yet were not this the life wee speake of which is the well-spring of life and feeds all riuers with a continuall supply of liuing water Of his fulnesse saith S. Iohn haue wee receiued and so receiued that as the sunne beame hath all his light by continuing ioined to the body of the sunne from which if it should bee separted it would bee wrapped vp in darkenesse so haue wee life in Christ who could not so largely impart it to all his members if it were not his owne by nature and in him as in the first breeder of it How can hee then bee any lesse then perfite God Shall I now compare him with the Idolls of the Heathen the auncientest and principallest of whome were at the most but men as I shewed in my former exercicises The comparison would be too base and labour lost to proue them to bee without life whose murders adultries and thefts are recorded by the chie●est of their owne followers I cannot choose but wonder that the heathen who worshipt such vncleane vniust intempera●e and euery way wicked wretches for Gods could haue any conceipt of their owne vertues Doubtlesse if the report they make of their God be true and the commendation they giue to many of their philosophers Sta●es men and Captaines true also there was more reason to honour the●●a Gods that liued vertuously then to account of them as the fountaines of vertue that poured out such flouds and seas of all manner of viciousnes Is not this sufficient to roote out that vaine conceipte of the Heathen Philosophers and other who are lrangely proud of I know not what vertue they dreame of that should be in them Let vs conferre a little if not as learned yet as reasonable men Art thou so conce●pted of thine own vertues I maruaile whence thou shouldest haue that thou so much bragst of Thou wilt not for shame say that the fountaine of all vertue is in thy selfe For then how should other men haue any that neuer fetcht drop at thy spring or streames How should the world haue done for a new supply when thou dyedst Me think it is against sense for any of the Heathen to boast of vertue seeing it is more then apparant that their Gods the fountaines of it were so dry empty But I will deale with them more kindly and not call them to account where they had it but onely make a little triall whether they had it or no. The triall is soone made Take the opinions of the best and most vertuous that euerliued without the life of righteousnesse in Christ and you shall finde them full of error I will not say in matter of religion without which there can bee no holines but in iudging of ordinarie duties betwixt man and man If I should rehearse some maine grounds that the wisest and iustest of them deliuered vpon ripe and See Plato de Republ Aristo tel politia aduised deliberation in the greatest points of the gouernment of states you would hardly indure the hearing of them But I will not enter into particulars whereof there would bee no end What life of righteousnesse could there be amongst them which alwaies allowed reuenge to bee most lawfull I will onely say thus much in one worde that they laboured to cleanse the outside of the vessell but within were full of all vncleannesse It shall suffize then for the conclusion of this point that the life of holinesse and righteousnesse
But that feare lasted not long q Luke 24. 2. 3 When they looked they saw that the stone was rolled away And they went in but found not the body of the Lord IESVS What should they now thinke Or how should they come to learne what was become of him Sure they were that there hee was laid and being dead had no power to conuay himselfe away from thence The likeliest was that some body had taken him vp and caried him away to some other place Sir r Ioh. 20. 15. saith Mary Magdalen to one who shee thought had bin the Gardiner If thou hast borne him hence tell mee where thou hast laide him and I will take him away Thou shalt not neede to bee in feare of hauing thy garden annoyed or troubled with him any further ſ Ioh. 20. 2. His Apostles were informed of this doubtfull matter To Ver. 6. assure themselues the better they runne to the sepulchre they find the linnen clothes in which hee was wrapped the Ver. 7. kerchiefe that was vpon his head not lying with the linnen clothes but wrapped together in aplace by it selfe Hauing Ver. 17. seen this they return back whēce they came Mary staies to her Iesus discouers himselfe What should I make many words The proofe of this point belōgs to an other place Death had done his worst in despite of him the Lord Iesus is risen again leauing him ashamed cōquequered To e Luk 24. 5. 6. this the Angels beare witnes Why seeke yee him that liueth among the dead He is not here n but is risen I speake of knowne things it is enough to name them Wee see for all this goodly discourse that death still seizeth vpon all men let them be neuer so well setled in Iesus Christ he plucks them vp carries them away with him into the graue What is become of the holy Apostles where is his blessed mother the virgin Is there life in the head when the members of the body die so fast euery day And not one or two a ioint or a finger or a limme but the very principall parts yea all one other Doost thou doubt whether there bee life in him or no who hath wrastled with death and ouerthrowne him Can death preuaile against him now he liueth whom he could not keepe in subiection when he had him dead buried u Rom. 5. 9. 10. Christ being raised from the dead dyeth no more death hath no more dominion ouer him For in that hee died he died once to sinne but in that be liueth hee liueth to God Sinne had his due a sacrifice of infinit worth to pay the price of mans redemption now must God also haue his due that hee that liueth to him may liue for euer But I would not haue any man so much deceiue himselfe as to imagin that the dying of them which are in Christ is an argument of the continuance of the authoritie or power of death No no beloued there is an other reason of this dissolution Alas alas death doth not aduance his owne estate and kingdome by this meanes but serues the Lords turne to bring his purpose to effect It fares with him in this case as it did in the death of our Sauiour That which hee thought to establish his power by by that he destroied it So is it in the death of those that are Christs The body as now it is is neither capable of immortalitie and fit for the seruice of sinne How shall it be prepared to receiue the one how purged and clensed from the other but by death Flesh bloud x 1. Cor. 15. 50. saith the Apostle can not inherit the kingdome of God neither doth corruption inherit incorruption Wouldest thou haue part in our Sauiour Christs immortalitie that thou mightest bee free from death Die then that thou maiest be ridde of mortalitie Art thou affraid Of what Least death should be too strong for thee if he once ger thee into his clouches Hast thou not an example in Christ I am aliue y Reuel 1. 18. saith he but I was dead and beholde I am aliue for euermore But thou fearest because thy body shall be turned into dust O foole * 1 Cor. 15. 36 saith the Apostle that which thou sowest is not quickened except it die Keepe thy corne aboue ground because if thou put it into the earth it will consume that thou shalt neuer finde it againe Where then shall the fresh greene blade appeare When shall the stalke grow vp When shall it eare When shall it flower Shall not all this glorie bee lost if the graine bee not sowed in the furrowes of the earth And art thou so I will not say fearefull but foolish and childish that thou darest not die once that thou maist liue for euer Plucke vp thy spirits and bee no longer a childe but a man were it not better for thee to die a thousand deaths then to bee continually disquieted with the motions of thy corruption Thou hast now some life of Christ in thee by the power of his spirit which inables thee to fight against sinne and to preuaile But there is no finall subduing of it till the body be destroied which doth so incline draw thee to the seruice thereof Neither hath the spirit of God quiet or full possession of thy soule as long as that corruption abides therein And that as it was bred with thee must die with thee there is no other course appointed by God to rid thee of it I doubt not but thou art now resolu'd to desire death whē it shall please God seeing there is no way to life but by it with this resolution I leaue thee that I may speak a word or two to thē that are yet out of Christ And how shall I addresse my speech vnto them It is needlesse to inflame them with a desire of life For they are wholly possest with that already It is in vaine to perswade them they shall neuer die if they be in Christ For all experience teacheth the contrary Shall I exhort them not to feare that which they cannot auoide They may learne that in the schoole of reason what remaines then At the least giue mee leaue to aduise you how you may make the best of that which can by no meanes bee escaped You are resolued there is no way with you but one Die you must and it is vncertaine how soone Yet if you may die so that you may be sure to liue againe that for euer what hurt can there be in death what feare should there be of it A crab stock that hauing his head boughts armes cut off is graffed with a pippin or some other dainty fruit can not reasonably complaine of hurt but rather hath great cause to reioice and glory Hath hee any wrong done him that hauing his cottage of clay pulled downe hath a goodly palace of stone built for his dwelling
But these mē will not beleeue that there is any such life in Christ I would to God I were able to perswade thē but to make som litle trial O! if they would be cōtented but to rest vpō him for life how quickly should they find his promise true certain Be perswaded be intreated I beseech you by the loue of life which you so desire what shall you lose by it If that we preach be false yet shal the rest of your yeers be spent in more hope cōfort If you know any better waie to prouide for your selues in kindnes humanity impart that at knowledge to vs. If you do not in quilitie good manners cōdemne vs not till vpon triall you can disproue vs. Life you earnestly desire euen bodily life refuse it not when it is oftred you without any danger of losse if you should be deceiued I am come now at the last to the chiefe point of all which is life euerlasting begun as I said ere-while in this world by the forgiuing of sin perfited in the next by the giuing of glory Of which notwithstāding I intēd not to say much because being the maine matter of the Gospell euery chapter almost will afford me necessary occasion to intreat therof Shortly for the proofe of the point that eternall death and condemnation are compriz'd in that threating a Gen. 2. 17. Thou shalt die the death I appeale to the whole course of the scripture and the ioint consent of all that euer profest true religion Iewes Christians But it is manifest enough by the deliuerance wee haue through Christ that I may make one labour of two b Iob. 3. 17. God sent not his Sonne into the world that he should condemne the world but that the world through him might be saved He Ver. 18. that beleeueth in him shall not be condemned but he that beleeueth not is condemned already Yea such is the redemption which we haue by Iesus Christ c Iob. 5. 24. that he which beleeueth hath passed from death to life What is this passing from death to life but obteining forgiuenes of sinnes being reconciled to God whose wrath otherwise abideth in vs to condemnation God hath set forth Iesus Christ d Rom. 3. 25. saith the Apostle to bee apropitiation through faith in his bloud to declare his righteousnesse by the forgiuenes of sinnes that are past e Rom. 5. 10. If when wee were enemies wee were reconciled to God by the death of his sonne much more beeing reeonciled we shall be saued by his life But I forget my selfe in staying too long in this discourse wherein the new Testament is so plentifull and easie to bee vnderstood Neither is the point of euerlasting life either harder or rarer This one Gospell of S. Iohn hath not so few as twenty seuerall places to that purpose f 10. 3. 16. God so loued the world that hee gaue his onely begotten sonne that who soeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue life euerlasting This is the will of him that sent me that euery man which seeth the son beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life g Ioh. 6. 40. I will raise him vp at the last day Look not that I should go forward in this course or spēd time in amplifying the vnspeakable glory of that life For the one I refer al men to the reading of this gospel especially the chapters I named before and concerning the other all I can possibly say of it is lesse then nothing in comparison of the thing it selfe Therefore also I hold it in a manner needlesse to enter into any course of exhortation For who can hear of these kindes of life in our Sauiour and not be carried to him for the enioying of them with all speed and means he can possibly make Let it be a small thing for a man to bee dead in sinne because perhaps he feeles it not Let the life of righteousnesse be little accounted of ov reason of the pleasure we take in sinning Let vs despie bodily death as a common matter Let vs not reguard the resurrection of the flesh as long as the soul is immortall Shall not feare of damnation for euer in hel fire affright vs Shall not hope of eternall ioy in heauen delight vs Is it nothing to indure most horrible torments without ease or ende Is it nothing to be partaker of such pleasure as cannot be conceiu'd without danger or feare of change What is the immortality of the soule of which thou bragst but an immortall miserie The more thou art perswaded of the euerlasting continuance thereof the greater knowledge thou hast of thine owne endlesse calamitie Whereas if once thou come to bee ioined to Christ the farderthou seest into the continuance of thy life the more thou art inflamed with a delight to liue But now I haue brought thee where this life is to bee had I will shew thee how it is to bee attained In him was life Where though it may seeme that the Euangelist sayes no more but he is life or life is by him yet indeed the speech is more significant First in respect of life the manner of speaking makes difference in the thing For when the scripture saith that Christ is life the word is to be taken for the cause of life h Iohn 11. 25. I am the resurrection and the life saith our Sauiour and again I i Ioh. 14. 6. am the way the truth the life So speakes k Col. 3. 4. the Apostle of him When Christ your life shal appear Who see not that by life in these places the author of life or life as it is in the cause thereof is vnderstood But in the other phrase the same thing is noted as it is imparted by him to vs. l 1 Ioh. 5 11. God hath giuen vs euerlasting life and that life is in his sonne Wee haue example of both these in one place yee are dead saith m Col. 3. 3. 4. the Apostle and your life is hidwith God in Christ What life That same life which Christ hath communicated to you and by which you liue What followes When Christ your life shall appeare How is Christ their life By giuing them life And as in this kind of speech wee may easily discerne some reason of the difference that the scripture obserueth so may wee also in the other Sometimes n Cor. 1. 30. the holy Ghost saith that Christ is made vnto vs wisedome righteousnesse c. What is this els but that wee receiue these things from Christ as the autor and cause therof Somtimes life is said to be in him so we are said to bee in Christ Iesus o 1 Ioh 5. 11. yee are of him in Christ as in the place I named before p Rom. 8 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Now in these speeches and the like not onely
the effect but also the manner of our comming by it is signified Will you haue a plaine example of it q 1 Cor. 15. x1 Since by man came death by man also came the resurrection of the dead We haue here the effect of Adams transgression and of Christs resurrection The next verse shewes the maner of both more Ver. 22. euidently For as in Adam saith the Apostle all men die euen so in Christ shall all bee made aliue How die all men in Adam but r Rom 5. 12. as beeing one with Adam in whose loines they were when he sinned ſ Heb. 7 9. 10. as Leui was in his father Abrahams when he paide tithes to Melchisedech So are all raised againe in Christ Not simply all but all his t 1 Cor. 15. 23. The first fruits is Christs then they that are Christs at his comming Wouldest thou then bee made partaker of this life of which thou hast heard so many admirable and glorious things This life is in Christ How wilt thou do to fetch it out of him Deceiue not thy selfe it is not so to he had Hee that will enioy the life which is in Christ must not thinke to come to him and take a snatch and carry it away with him He keepes it close shut vp within himselfe Not refusing to impart it to other but desiring to ioine other to him that they may bee sure to holde fast for euer that hee giues them If hee should commit it to thy custodie and let thee depart from him with it what wouldest thou doe or what meanes couldest thou vse to keepe it safe Satan is craftie and mighty It is a great venture but either hee would cosin thee of it by deceipt or robbe thee of it by force What say I a venture It is out of question thou wouldest neuer be able to keepe it from him If thou haue any experience of his vndermining and assaulting thee thou knowest how hardly and with what adoe it is now held when yet thou art knit by faith to him in whom the very fountaine of it is Doost thou not feele how strongly he pulls to rent thee from him that sometimes thou canst scarce tell whether hee haue seuered thee from him or no If thy experience bee small in thy selfe didst thou neuer see a poore soule stand quaking and trembling looking ruefully about on euery side shrieking and crying out for feare least hee should bee separated from Iesus Christ At the least perswade thy selfe it is not for nothing that our Sauiour himselfe when hee labours to assure his sheepe that they shall neuer bee wrung out of his hands puts them in mind of his fathers Almigh ●ie power u Ioh. 10. 27. ver 28 My sheepe heare my voice and I know them ind they follow mee And I giue them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hand Is not here assurance enough They know his voice that they may not bee deceiued by harkning to a stranger They follow him hauing him stil in sight least they should mistake some other for him Hee giues them eternall life How shall they die that haue life euerlasting He secures them in saying they shall neuer perish They haue life and shall hold it fast to the end Is there yet more None shall take them out of his hand This confirmes all the rest What though the deuill be haling and drawing of them continually Hee shall not preuaile How shall wee bee assured of that For then wee are safe indeede Heare what followes My father which gaue them mee is greater then all and none is able to take ver 29. them out of my fathers hand What needed all this if it bee so easie a matter to keepe life when once thou hast it Thou makest account to take life of our Sauiour and when thou hast it to be gone with all speed Alas poore man thou wilt keepe it but a little while lwis if thou haue no better help then thine owne But if thou cleaue fast to Iesus Christ and stirre not an inch or an hayres bredth from his side thou maist perhaps heare the diuell roaring at thy backe or see him running vp and downe prying and seeking some aduantage to seize vpon thee it may bee hee will offer to snatch at thee and lay holde vpon thee cling to rhy Sauiour as the childe dooth to the mother when hee is in feare and then doubt not but he that is greater then all will keepe thee out of Satans iawes maugre all his power and malice Beare with mee I pray you if I seeme to be ouer-large in this point I feele such an increase of comfort and assurance in the meditation of this matter that I can not leaue it till I haue lookt a little neerer into the particulars thereof especially those that concerne the temporall death of the body and the eternall both of it and the soule Now the life whereby wee are deliuered from the one and the other death as it hath oft bin said is in Christ For the better and fuller conceiuing whereof wee must remember that faith whereby we are ioined vnto Christ that wee may partake of that life which is in him maketh vs al one with him There are a similirudes by which the Scripture expresseth this spirituall coniunction the one is that bond which is betwixt man and wife by which they that were two become one flesh This is most excellently set out by x Eph. 5. 23. the Apostle S. Paul where he shewes that Christ is the head of the Church as the husband thereof that the Lord nourisheth cherisheth it as his owne flesh And no maruaile though he do so For as it followes we are members of his body of his flesh of his bones Yea so members of them that wee are one flesh with him by reason of this bond of marriage that so chaynes links vs together No man can be so fond as to vnderstand this of our humane nature as if therefore wee were said to bee one flesh because hee wee are of the same nature For neither are all men one flesh though they be all of the same nature if the Apostle had intended to speake of that point he would not haue said that wee are bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh but rather that he was bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh For it is well knowne to al men that in regard of the nature of man they that are the Church I meane a great part of them euē al that died before our Sauiour and were partakers of the life we speake of had it before he was made man but for their sake some others hee had not taken that nature vpon him But the mysticall coniunction whereof x Eph. 5. 23. 29 the Apostle professeth to speak in that place hath the beginning and ground in Christ not in
can doubt but life was always in him who only liues of himself giues life both tēporal spiritual to al euē to euery one that hath it But because this maner of giuing life is an effect of Godhead so common to him with the Father and the holy Ghost and not a matter belonging properly to his person nor any worke of his mediatorship I will leaue it as not intended in this place and come to a second consideration of life being in him from all eternity as in the mediator betwixt God and man In what respect then may it be truly and fitly said that life was in him from all eternity In respect of the eternall decree of God whereby he determined to restore to life those whome hee chose therevnto by the mediation of his Sonne the word of whom we speake Of this f Rom. 8. 29. 30 the Apostle speaks Those whom he knewe before he did also predestinate to bee made like to the image of his Sonne that he might bee the first borne among many children Vpon this predestination as the Apostle adds followeth calling iustifying and at the last glorifying which is the highest degree of the life that is in Christ But in g Eph. 1. 3. 4. an other place hee speakes more plainely Blessed be God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which hath blessed vs with all spirituall blessings in heauenly things in Christ As he hath chosen vs in him be-before the foundation of the world Therefore doth the Apostle Peter ascribe the appointing of the meanes and the execution of it according to the appointment to the foreknowledge of God h Act. 2. 23. Him haue ye taken by the hands of the wicked being deliuered by the determinate counsaile and fore knowledge of God The same is acknowledged by the ioynt confession of the Apostles where they say that Herod Pontius Pilat the Gentiles and the people of Israell gathered them selues together against the holy Sonne of 4. 27. 28. God Iesus whom God had annointed to doe what soeuer the hande and counsaile of the Lorde had determined afore to bee donne VVorthily then doth Saint Iohn avouch that life was in him yea before any time was life was in him i Gal. 4. 4. VVhen the fulnesse of time was come God sent his Sonne Life did not then begin to be in him but to shew it selfe to be in him k Rom 3 25. God set him forth by his incarnation to be apropitiation Life was in him before in regard of Gods eternall counsaile but not discouered nor manifested to the world no nor those works of his which were to bring life performed Yet euen thē was life in him If it seeme to any man somewhat ouermuch to go so far for the Euangelists meaning let him shorten his iorney containe him selfe within the compasse of the world created Shal we not find sufficient reason of this speech In him was life though wee goe not out of the world yes out of doubt very sufficient For seeing many worthy Patriarchs and holy Prophets many true Israelits Sonns of Abraham by faith as well as by nature departed out of this worlde before our Sauiour came into it to performe the foreappointed worke of redemption either these must haue died without life so alwaies continue dead or there was life in him before he was incarnat l Luk. 10. 24. Many Prophets and Kings desired to see and heare him at the Apostles while hee liued heere saw and heard Surely then they were not ignorant of him and that life was in him But did they not see him By one iudge of the rest Your Father Abraham m Ioh. 8. 56. saith Christ reioyced to see my day and hee saw it and was glad And yet what name I one seeing wee haue a cloud of witnesses that compasseth vs round about n Heb. 11. 1. 2. 3. c. sounding out the same assurance of fayth that we now haue and looking for the same promises to bee fulfilled which wee beleeue and knowe to haue beene performed to the vttermost Was not our God o Mat 22. 32. the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob Was not our Sauiour their Sauiour p Rom. 4. 11. Gal. 3. 16. Dooth not our interest wee haue in Christ depend vpon our being the children of Abraham q Heb. 13. 8. VVas not Iesus Christ yester-day is hee not to day shall hee not bee the same for euer Then may wee safely and truely conclude that there was life in him before he was in the nature of man But howsoeuer it be true certaine that life was in him both from all eternity in regard of the counsaile of God which is as ancient as himselfe in effect in respect of them that from time to time were partakers of it euen from Adam to Iohn Baptist yet it was then most properly in him when hauing taken our nature vpon him he ouercame death and him that had power ouer it the Deuill This was that which those Kings Prophets desired and longed to see This was that which good olde Simeon so reioyced at that he was ready to depart out of this life with full satisfaction and contentednesse when he had seene the promised Messiah in the nature of man Lord r Luk. 2. 29. 39 saith he now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace according to thy word For mine eies haue seen thy saluation The holy man had a long time beleeu'd by faith that saluation was to come and in hope with patience waited for the comming of it but he neuer saw it til that time Indeed how should he For it was neuer to be seene till then How could it be For it neuer was fully perfitly till then It was not enough for the Son of God that he had infinite power as God to giue life to whom he would to repair the ruins of his image in man by clensing him frō sin cloathing him with righteousnes by raising him frō death as he first breath ed the soule of life into him by vouchsafing him a place in heauen which was at his command that had made it Al this I say would not serue the turne that the Euangelist might say as he doth In him was life For the Lorde God Father Son Holy ghost had appointed another course of giuing life another meanes of saluatiō not to be perform'd by the Son of God sitting in heauē but to be wrought here vpō earth in the same nature that had sind was dead He that made mā holy righteous at his creatiō could by the same powr haue restord to him his original righteousnes in a momēt But it pleas'd him to doe it after an other maner wherof more hereafter in due place To say al at once seing by man cam death God would haue life to come by mā no otherwise Let it be graunted may some man say that
there was no possibility of life but by the death of the Sonne of God and that the Sonne of God could not dye vnlesse he became man yet might the Evangelist haue wel said In him is life For since it is confest that hee tooke the nature of man and continues still in heauen in that nature surely life was no more in him while hee was heere then it is in him now he is gone from hence Why then saith S. Iohn In him was life I answere in one word though life be still in him yet it is in respect of that which he performed when he was here on the earth Here he tooke and sanctified our nature here hee bare the chastisement of our peace here he offred vp that invaluable sacrifice for the purging of our sinnes Here hee triumphed on the Crosse ouer all principalities and powers Heere hee rose out of the graue from death to life Only one thing which here possibly could not be don he hath done being gon from hence that is he hath taken possessiō of our inheritance in heauen waites there to receiue vs into his owne glory The Euangelist therefore writing the history of his life death while he was here in the world speaks of him as of one that was is not But of this enough before I should now proceed to the later part of this fourth verse And that life was the light of men But I find my self so much ouertaken by the time that it is in vain to meddle with it I will I therefore content my selfe with some word of exhortation whereby wee maie bee stirred vp to the embracing of that life which was in Christ To which purpose what shal I need to say much The mat ter dooth so highly commende it selfe that it refuseth to be entreated for Looke not therefore that I shoulde desire you to bee willing to liue Nay bee vnwilling if you can Doe but propound the matter to your own hearts and you will not choose but like of it And yet mee thinkes I see no man make any great haste Shall I wonder or complayne It is strange that life life euerlasting should bee so little set by It is lamentable that death eternall death should so little bee feared If it were any long Iorney or daungerous way if hard to come by or soone lost againe there might bee perhaps some colour of excuse for this backewardnesse But when the thing it selfe is neere at hand the way to it safe the meanes of attaining to it easie and the possession of it sure who can excuse himselfe to himselfe I say not to God if hee fayle of so glorious a treasure Do wee not beleeue the Euangelist that there is life in him Doe wee flatter our selues with a conceite that there is life in vs Why come wee to heare that which when wee haue heard wee will not credite why make wee a shew as if wee stood in need of life from Christ when wee thinke our selues sped of it already Perhaps it seemes the lesse worth because it is offered Who euer thought that the kindnesse of the giuer should abate the valew of the gift Condemne thy selfe for not seeking to him not him for seeking to thee That hee reueales to thee hee conceales from many That which thou vnthankefully refusest many thousandes would most thankefully receiue O the frowardnesse of the hearts of men O the blindnesse of their minds If this life were in God they would tremble to come neere him for it because of his dreadfull maiestie Now it is in a man least happely they should be too much afrayd they disdaine to take it of him by reason of his meanenesse ſ Mat. 11. 19. But wisedome is iustified of her children He is both God and man that thou maist neither feare nor despise him If thou wilt not liue to shew his mercie thou shalt die to set foorth his Iustice For to him belongeth all glorie both of mercy and Iustice for euer and euer Amen THE FIFT SERmon vpon the first Chapter of IOHN Verse 4. And that life was the light of men And the light shineth in darknesse and the darknesse comprehended it not THey that take vpon them to write the liues of famous men such as the world admires either for their goodnesse or greatnesse ordinarily deliuer some generall description of them in the beginning of their histories These descriptions vsually containe either a rehersal of their pedegree and descent together with the place time and other matters concerning their birth and such like or a commendation of them for some especiall vertues Wee haue examples of both these kindes in the Scripture t 1. ●●● 1. 1. 2 He that was the holy Ghosts Secretarie in penning the historie of Samuell begins his booke with a recitall of his genealogy a description of his parents and diuers other points touching his conception birth and education u Iob. 1. 1. 2. Another whome it pleased the same spirit of God to imploy in writing the life of Iob makes the entrance into his historie by commending him for an vpright and iust man one that feared God and eschewed euill Our Euangelist intending to set forth the life and death of our Sauiour Iesus Christ as the partie he writes of was extraordinarie so doth he extraordinarily ioyne both together And because two other Euangelists x M●● 1. 1. 2. 3. c. Saint Mathew y Luk. 3. 50. 31 c. Saint Luke had already set out his humane pedegree both for succession in the kingdom fornaturall descent Saint Iohn leauing them vntoucht betakes himself to the declaring of his diuine estate First what he was in himself eternall with God the Father himselfe very God Secondly what he was to vs a Creator in making all things for vs a Sauiour in giuing life euen spirituall life life of grace pardō life of immortality glory So that whether we respect his greatnes or his goodnes neuer was any mā so worthy the writing of neuer any mā so worthy the knowing following His greatnesse was magnified in the power of creation his goodnesse shewes it selfe especially in the work of regeneration Wherein first the Euangelist declares what he is and doth then how he is intertaind In him was life and that life was the light of men What doth hee According to the nature of light Hee shines in darkenes But the darkenesse will not bee inlightned Of the first of these points concerning life in him I spake in my last Sermon now let vs proceede to that which followes touching light And therein keeping our former course of handling the Clauses seuerally as they lye wee must first labour to vnderstand the words then seeke out the Euangelists meaning The wordes direct vs to inquire what life it is that is heere spoken of to consider what is saide of it that it is light and the light of men For the first worde a little
to his beeing or well beeing here which receiues not end with this present life Health wealth friends beauty wisdome learning valour and whatsoeuer els belongeth to the comfort or ornament of man in this world is bounded on euery side with the limits of this naturall life Therefore is the commandement of not killing set in the first place of all matters that concerne ordinarie men because hee that taketh away life spoiles a man at one stroke of all things appeartaining to this present world Yet many a man enjoyeth life who hath little ioy of any thing in life and to speake according to the point in hand who lackes a chiefe comfort of life the sight either of bodie or of minde or of both Therefore although the Euangelist had told vs before that life was in CHRIST then which nothing is more excellent yet hee truely conceiued that a farther benefit might be added namely light So doth our Sauiour sometimes speake of himselfe heaping vp as it were one bounty vpon an other and setting forth in diuers similitudes the blessings wee receiue by beleefe in him I am the way the truth and the life And in one place to amplifie Ie● 14 6. the greatnes of the blessing hee ioineth light and life together I am the light of the world hee that followeth 8. 12. mee shall not walke in darknesse but shall haue the light of life It is much to haue light whereby a man may bee guided in his ordinarie course of trauarle and hee that wants it wandring in the night is in the danger of stumbling 11. 9. 10. and falling But it is a blessing aboue the conceit of man to haue such a light held out vnto him as shall direct him to euerlasting life that shall not onely make him able to see the way that lies before him but shall goe before him as a guide in the way to the end of so happie a iourney This is that then which Saint Iohn instructeth vs in that our Sauiour Christ is not onely the fountaine of life which streameth and ●ssueth forth to all them that by faith cleaue vnto him but that hee is also the light that leades and vsners vs as it were into the palace of heauen Thou liuest in him and by him Thou hast thy vnderstanding inlightned with the true knowledge of God and cleere sight of the certaine way to saluation I can hardly stay my selfe from falling into some earnest exhortation when I consider these wonderous blessings that are to bee had in Christ But I must of necessitie forbeare it till I haue ended the exposition Which may reasonably bee thus deliuered that the Euangelist in these words giues vs to vnderstand that the life which hee said was in CHRIST is conueyed to men by a certaine inlightning of them with the sauing knowledge of GOD in CHRIST As if hee should haue said Whereas all men naturally are dead in sinne and by reason of sinne liable to eternall damnation and also are farder ouerwhelmed with the mist of ignorance in darknesse that they cannot discerne of the way that leads to true happiness He that first created the world and all therein of nothing hath taken a second paines to reuiue them that are voide of life and to inlighten them which are couered with darknesse that as hee hath prouided meanes of life for them so they may see what those meanes are and seeing attaine vnto them So that whatsoeuer may bee needefull to the obtaining of euerlasting life all that our Sauiour hath gratiously a●d bountifully prouided Art thou dead In him is life Art thou ignorant that thou canst not descerne of the way to life That life which is in him is the light of men If hee had not brought the former it would neuer haue come If he had brought it and not seconded that faucur with a farder kindnes to make vs see our owne death and life in him all had bin to no purpose For who will seeke for that whereof in his owne conceit he hath no neede not vse who will spend his time about the seeking of that which he hath no po●sibility to find or ghesse at Therefore although the maine blessing end of all be life in Chr. yet the discouering of this life is so necessary that without it we should be neuer a whit the better for the other thē we are for those riches tresurs which are hid in the fardest parts of the world vnseen vnknown to vs. Hence it is that our Euangelist addes light to life following the example of his Lord and maister who makes so often and so honorable mention of the light This is Ioh 3 19. condemnation that light is come into the world men loued darknes better then light Marke I beseech you the refusall of the light is the great cause of damnation to the world Therefore doth he exhort thē To belecue in the light 12. 36. while they haue the light And least this same light should seeme vnto them a matter of small account hee tells them both that he himselfe is the light and that they shall not alwaies haue it shining to them as they had then when perswaded them to make a right vse of it I am saith he the light of the world he that followeth 8 12. mee shall not walke in darknes but shall haue the light of life As long as I am in the world I am the light of the world walk ● 9. 5. while yee haue light least the darknes come vpon you For hee that walketh in the darke knoweth not whither he goeth ● 11. 35. This is the commendation of the light not much inferior to that of the life it selfe For it little auailes a man to haue an earnest desire to go to any place if he know not nor can learne the way that should bring him thither The Athenians had an altar built and dedicated to the vnknowne God Were they ought the better for it They A●● 17. 23. worshipt they knew not what as our Sauiour saith of the ● 4. 22. Samaritans The Apostle brings them light Whom you ignorantly worship him I shew vnto you But they loued darknes better then light and so came not to life Now that wee may not bee guiltie of the same sinne and fall into the same damnation Let vs stirre vp our dead hearts by the consideration of the doctrine herein deliuered That life was the light of men that is according to the former exposition The same worde or Messiah that is the autor of life is also the fountaine of light vnto vs. Without life what are wee but dead carkasses without light what are we but blind beetles Light without life can no more quicken vs then the fish in the sea or the beasts in the forrest nourish vs. Life without light can no more guide vs to happiness then a good appetite without meate feede vs. If either faile
neither auailes But if that life be the light of men both the end and the way are ready for vs and open to vs. Refine thy thoughts to meditate on so high a fauour Inlarge thy heart to conceiue so great a kindness Was it not enough for IESVS CHRIST to bring life into the world but that hee must also light vs the way to finde it Had it not bin more then extraordinary loue to lay it before vs though hee had not as it were thrust and forced it vpon vs Must hee giue thee both meate to feede thee and stomack to eat it O incredible fauour O more then admirable kindness Hee offers thee life Thou neither regardest it nor seest it I would we did not turne away our faces from it He opens thine eyes and makes thee see it Wilt thou shut them againe and bee wilfully blind S●y not in thy wretched vnthankfull heart Who will shew me the way to life Behold the autor of life spreads the beames of light round about thee The darknes is great and thick but the light doth pearce and scatter it There is nothing wanting but a willingnes to see What if it were farre off that it could hardly bee discerned Couldest thou reasonably excuse thy selfe by a feare of ouer-strayning thy sight It is life thou lookest at If thou shouldest breake thine eye-strings with thy earnestness in looking would any man say it was not worth the venturing It is better to goe blind into heauen then hauing full sight of both eyes to be cast into hell fire I was purposed to haue spent this exhortation in kindling or inflaming our affection if I could with the loue of him that hath so carefully gratiously and bountifully prouided for vs and must I bee faine to bestow my time and paines in perswading you to accept of so rare a courtesie But what say I curtesie Kindnes fauour loue the most affectionate and forcible words that can be deuised are too cold and weake to signifie I will not say to expresse such vnspeakable bounty But let vs make as light reckoning as possibly we can of being inlightened Let vs account it a small fauour to see that wee are guided in the way to happiness Let vs despise the pleasure we may take by knowing what wee haue escap't and what wee shall come too At the least though we care not to know our happiness ver let vs not bee so senseless as not to care whether we be hap●ie or no. The life which we can not choose but desire is not found but by the light which we looke not after He that walkes in the darke knowes not whither he Ioh. 12. 36. goes Yet perhaps he may light vpon the place hee seekes ●or O miserable hazard will any man so aduenture his eternall saluation How shall hee know it when hee comes to it Hee may ouer-shoote his Port. Hee may fall short of it Hee may bee caried captiue into samaria ● King 6. 13. 19. while hee puzzles in the darke to beleger Dothan Beside if hee were sure to arriue at the place hee goes for he may haue exceeding much foule wether that hee shall neuer know where is nor beleeue that which at his first putting to Sea hee seemed to bee assured of If a man walke in the night saith our Sauiour hee stumbleth Well let all this bee nothing though hee can be no wise man that will beare such an aduenture when he need not But let it as I said be nothing It is somthing to lose or misse of felicitie and life howsoeuer the danger of losing or missing it may be thought a matter of small importance So a man haue it at the last it skills not perhaps how hardly or slowly he come by it Be it so But what if it will not bee had at all without light While ye haue light beleeue in the light that ye may be Ioh. 12. 35. the children of the light Marke ye what he saies that hath life in him Ye must be children of the light by beleeuing in the light how shall that bee if yee despise the light Would you attaine to life Take the light with you that may shew you where it is The first step to life is turning from darknes to light The Lord sends the Apostle Paul to the Gē●ils that by his ministery they may be brought ●o life How is the course of this work described He must Act. 26. 18. open their eies that they may turne from darknes to light from the power of Satan to God While we are in darkness we are also in the power of Satan when we approche to God we come out of darknes After that followes forgiuenes of sinnes that is life in this world and in heritance among them which are sanctisied by faith in Christ that is glory in the world to come Knowledge enters vs into the way of life faith settles our steps in it that we neither turne aside out of it nor run backward whence we came He that neuer sets foote in the way can not goe forward in it He that knowes not what is to be beleeued can not beleeue Let a man runne neuer so hard if he be out of the race he shall neuer come to the gole Look vpon the Apostle Phil. 3. 5 6. Paul see what paines he takes how temperately he liues how religiously he worships how zealously he pursues Act. 26 9. 10. 11. persecutes thē whō in his ignorance he took to be enemies to God At your leasure consider his behauiour as himselfe hath set it out What was he the neerer to true happiness for al this adoe He found at the last that his best righteousnes was no better thē dung al the reward his zelous persecuting could procure him was faine to be giuē ouer for the purchase of the pardon therof So little can it auaile a mā to make al the speed that may be whē he is out of the way Therfore if any man be desirous to become partaker of the life which is in Christ he must of necessity be directed guided by the light that from him shines vnto vs. If thou wilt liue thou must be inlightned Will life think'st thou be found in darknes no more thē light is in death Is it not strange then yea admirable incredible that they which professe they seeke for life should wilfully cōtinue in darknes And yet me thinks it is more strange if more may be that those mē should perswade thēselues they are in possessiō of life who feel thē selues shut vp fast in darknes Who is ther in this cōgregation I had almost said in this whole nation that doth not flatter his own hart with an opiniō of life by Christ That life is the light of men Giue me leaue now after lōg time of error to aduise with thee of that which thou shouldest haue bin fully resolvd of a gret while since Thou saist the life
from the East by whome Herod and all Ierusalem might bee informed that hee was come shewing himselfe by the space of three yeeres and an halfe to al his country-men in those partes with such a grace and autority in his teaching that the Pharises Mat. 7. were nothing to him with such power and commaunde in working miracles that the windes and Seas obayed him sicknesse at his worde gaue place to health blindnesse to sight yea death was forced to resigne vp his possession to life VVee haue seene his comming Lette vs take a view of his intertainement His owne receiued him not Perhaps not with such signes of ioy shewes of triumph and significations of obedience and subiection as in such a case it was fit necessary they should haue done There might haue bin some excuse for them if they had fayld in the manner of his intertainement only They were vnder the Romans gouernment and durst not be knowne of any other King they lookt for till they might see him in the field with banners displayed professing himselfe to bee in armes for their deliuerance But they would not at all receiue him This behauiour cuts off al excuse and laies them open to a iust imputation of rebellion But heere wee must first call to minde that by His owne not the place as in the former part of the verse but the persons to whome he came are signified Secondly let vs in a word or two consider their refusall of him What is meant by not receiuing him why the holy Ghost vseth this word of the Iewes whereas he had said no more of the world in generall but that they knewe him not The Iewes receiued him not Did they not receiue him They flockt after him in multitudes they came to him far neere to be cured by him of al kind of diseases they acknowledg'd the power of God in his miracles yea so highly did they esteem of him and so greatly affect him Ioh 6. 15. that they would needs haue made him a king How thē is it said that they would not receiue him To receiue a messenger that comes from a Soueraigne Prince to his subiects is not only to suffer him to come a-shore to let him haue entraunce into the Citty to entertaine him with good cheere to Iodge him well to giue him some present to honour his person but especially to accept of his message and to performe that which he requires of them in his Lord and masters name If they be wanting in these later duties let the former be done in neuer so good sort they may iustly bee charg'd with not receiuing him that comes Shal I make it plaine by an example of the like nature Iohn Baptist as our Euangelist hath taught vs was sent to beare witnesse of the light that all by him might beleeue Was he receiued by the Iewes or no If you looke to his outward entertainement you shall find that hee had all the kindnesse shewed him that hee woulde admitt of and might haue had much more but that he continually refused it Neither was this from the teeth outward in shewe without substance but from the very affection of their heartes which were sette on him so that hee might haue ledde them like children whithersoeuer hee woulde But what say you to the ground of his message the ende of his embassage from God to them Did they receiue him or no Did they beleeue by meanes of him If they did not howsoeuer they accounted of his person they receiued him not For the receiuing of him was the entertaining of his message that hee brought by beleeuing that Christ was the light and resting vpon him to bee inlightned It is not hard now to vnderstand what is meant in this place by not receiuing And if it were the Euangelist makes it plaine and easie in the next verse where Ver. 12. hee expoundes receiuing to bee beleeuing in his name So that not to receiue Christ with which fault the Iewes heere are charged is not to beleeue in him VVhat that is I haue already shewed in parte and must handle it againe when I come to the expounding of those wordes In the meane while lette vs holde this for a certaine truth that to receiue Christ is to beleeue in his name and that the Iewes are challenged for not beleeuing therein The world was accused of ignorance by our Euangelist The worldknewe him not The Iewes his owne people haue a farder matter layed to their charge that They beleeued not in his name whence ariseth this difference VVas it enough for the worlde to haue knowne him VVere the Iewes free from ignorance of him Neither of both For they only haue the prerogatiue to bee the sonnes of GOD that beleeue in his name The Deuills knewe him to bee the holy one Luk 4. 34. Mark 3. 11. of GOD yea the Sonne of GOD and made open profession of that their knowledge as Saint Iames also Iam. 2. 19. testifies of them They beleeue and tremble to their farder condemnation And for the Iewes the Apostle Peter giues this testimony of them That Hee knewe Act. 3. 13. 14. 15. their betraying and denying of Iesus in the presence of Pilat their preferring a murderer before him and their killing of the LORD of life proceeded from ignorance both in the common sorte and in their gouernours Then it coulde not haue auayled the Gentiles to haue knowne him without they had also beleeued in him and the Iewes not beleeuing was of ignorance Yet of the former the Euangelist saith They knewe him not of the later They beleeued not in his name In both hee speakes most wisely and fitly The very first steppe to belieuing in Christ is the acknowledging of him to be sent from God Of this his many and glorious miracles gaue so manifest and certaine proofe that the mouths of children were filled with his prayses Hosanna to the Mat. 25. 15. 16 Sonne of Dauid Therefore if the world would not take knowledge of our Sauiour what excuse remaines there for them How can they bee charged with any lesse How could they be ignorant of so much Now the Iews were faulty in an higher degree They knewe of olde that there was a deliuerer to come that the time appointed for his commong was expired they heard euery day the Sermons of ● Baptist who assured them that the kingdome of God was at hand that hee whom they and their Fathers had so many yeeres lookt for and longed for was in the midst of them and that nothing might be wanting to their full instruction hee pointed out the person with his finger This is he Behold Ioh. 1. 26. 29. the lambe of God But what belongd to the matter that they might haue benefit by this deliuerer I see the man I heare great commendation of him I find my selfe wel ●ffected to him but what is all this if I know not how to make vse of him of
of the sonnes of the Diuell his owne children and giuing vs a sound and certaine title thereby to the inheritance of his glory in heauen And shall I neede to vse many words in amplifying so rare a kindnes in setting out so inestimable a benefitte Small fauours require inlarging infinite blessings will not admitte it They by amplification may bee made greater then they are these the more you speake of them the lesse you make them For what is it but a diminishing of that which is infinite to attēpt in any kind of manner I say not to inlarge but euen to expresse it He that striues to speake much and almost makes no ende of commending that which is excellent seemes to haue perswaded himselfe and to desire that other men should beleeue that hee hath spoken all that can be said in the matter As for me I professe the contrary assuring my selfe and you that when I haue said all that possibly I can deuise I shall be as farre from the infinitnesse of the benefit as when I first began to speake of it Yet may it somewhat helpe our conceyt of the matter though it cannot come neere the excellency of the thing And with this perswasion let vs a little consider the prerogatiue of this Son-ship There is a great opinion and not without good cause of the estate of our first pa●●nts Adam and Eue while they were in Paradise before their fall They had the image of God wherein they were created shineing Gen. 1. 26. in them so gloriously that all the fishes in the sea the foules in the aire the beasts in the earth and euery thing that moueth and creepeth on the earth were subiect and obedient to them What adoe haue wee in our estate as now it standeth to make not Beares or Lions but those of whome we haue necessary and continuall vse horses and other cattle to performe any kind of seruice to vs The whip the goad the wand the spur the yoke the bit all the meanes of terror and extreamity that wee can possibly deuise cannot preuaile so much against these tame creatures as autority and maiestie did in them with those beasts that are now most fierce and cruell The Prophet Dauid though he were a King of great command ouer Gods owne free people yet when he considered those little poore seruices which the creatures in our present estate such as it is ordinarily doe vs and the gouernement wee haue ouer them breaks out into an exclamation of wonder What is man saith he to the Lord that thou art mindfull of him and Ps 8. 4. the Sonne of man that thou visitest him How would hee haue esteemed Adams rule ouer the creatures that values our gouernement of them so highly What should I speake of their familiarity with God who vouchsaf't himselfe to talke with them to informe and direct them It is recorded as a singular fauour and honour done to Moses that the Lord spake vnto him face to face as a Exod 33. 11. man speaketh to his friend How were our first Parents fauoured honoured that were to haue ordinary conference with him from time to time But to come to the point for which al this is alledg'd what was their estate for all these honors fauors but the condition of seruants They were threatned with death death both of body and soule if they transgrest the bounds that were set them Of the tree of knowledge of good and euill thou shalt not eate of it for in the day thou Gen. 2. 17. eatest thereof thou shall dy the death Put case they had cōtinued in obedience to God their Creator according to their allegeance duty What could they haue lookt for but either a confirmation of that estate which they then inioyed or at the most the reward of their seruice the wages for their worke They could neuer haue attained to this dignity To be the Sons of God And is it not a prerogatiue trowe you to be brought by Christ into a more excellent estate then that which Adam in his innocency and glory had iust cause to wonder at Blessed may we say was the day and houre Oh the goodnesse power of God that brings light out of darknes that euer Adam harkened to the voice of his wife perswading him to eate of the forbiddē fruit Not that either the sin was small to transgress the commandement of God or that it was the purpose of Adam in sinning to be occasion of so great a blessing But for that the Lord of his meere affection loue according to his owne former counsaile predestination turned misery to happines death to life We were seruants to a bountiful and gratious Lord we are made Sons to a most kind louing Father Our seruice if it had beene neuer so good could haue procured no more but wages Our Son-ship conveies vnto vs assurance of a goodly inheritance There is no seruant though hee bee put in neuer so great trust haue neuer so much autority bee neuer so highly in the Princes fauour like Daniell in the prouince Dan. 2. 48. of Babell or Ioseph in the Kingdome of Aegypt but is many degrees inferiour to the Kings Sonne Gen. 41. 40. Moses was a most faithfull seruant in the house of the Lorde and disposed of all things after the direction and to the especiall liking of his master Such as his seruice was such was his honor He had the gouernmēt of the people of God committed to him no man might refuse Heb. 3. 5. to yeeld obedience or demaunde a reason of that which hee commaunded VVas hee therefore comparable to Christ who ruled as the Sonne ouer his owne Verse 6. house VVhat was Abrahams eldest seruant to his youngest Sonne VVhat was Ioab to Salomon Dauid was a man of no meane imployment vnder Saul of no small desert toward him and his whole estate yet when he was earnestly perswaded by his fellow seruants to enter into the Kings alliance by marriage what answere made hee Seemeth it to you a light thing saith Dauid to bee a Kings Sonne in lawe Did it seeme so 1. Sam. 18. 23. great a matter to so worthie a seruant to become Son in law to a King and can wee thinke it a little honour to bee made the Sonnes of God Saul though hee were a King was but a man Dauid though hee were a seruant in condition was a King in true vertue Wee are men nay wretches wormes nothing Hee that will adopt vs is God most mightie most glorious euen Iehouah himselfe Dauid though hee should become Sonne in lawe to the King could haue no title to the Kingdome by that aduancement Our Son-ship makes heauen Gauel kind giues euery one of vs a ful intrest to the inheritāce If yee bee Sonnes yee are heyres Moses could not looke for any Rom. 8. 17. such preferment though Pharaohs daughter tooke him for her Son And yet it is
bee ignorant that hath had any desire to learne vnlesse like a man that lyeth in a ditch and stre●cheth out his hands calling for helpe to all them that passe by hee refuse to set one finger to the ground for the raysing of himselfe Doo wee then despise so great an happinesse Though wee could bee so vnthankefull to God and yet that were monstrous yet howe canne wee bee so iniurious to our selues What shall I say Or vpon what shall I lay the blame It would bee verie strange and ha●sh to most men if I should accuse them of not beleeuing Who would not be foreman of the Iurie to finde him guilty who would make daintie to giue sentence against his life that doth not beleeue whatsoeuer is deliuered in the Gospell Not beleeue sayeth one Hee is worse then a Turke or a Iewe that beleeues not I confesse it seemes scarcely credible to my selfe that any man professing religion should not beleeue But I holde it altogether vnpossible that a man should indeede bee per●waded in his heart that by beleeuing in Christ hee shall become the sonne of God and yet should bee altogether carelesse of beleeuing It is not vnlikely that wee haue a generall opinion of the ●uth of the Scripture but either wee neuer markt or neuer considered this and such like points that we might be throughly rooted and grounded in the bleefe therof O that I might intreat so much of you all and euery one as that you wold be pleased to bestow a little time ●n the meditation of this prerogatiue I make no question but if once you did stedfastly beleeue it you would neuer giue ouer till you had made your selues sure of so happy and blessed an estate The Prophet Esay considering a little the backewardness of the Iewes in receiuing saluation by the promised Messaih and a great forwardness to other matters reproues them for it in this sort Wherefore doe yee lay out siluer saith hee and not for Isay 55. 2. bread And your labour and are not satisfied May not we ins●ly take vp the like complaint against the peruersenesse and vnto wardnesse of this age Doe not men beate their braines spend their spirits breake their sleepe wast their time shorten their liues by carking caring for the momentary trash of this world We rise erly we go late to bed we fare hardly we cloth our selues simply we toile moile like horses al for nothing What is all the wealth in the world to the riches in heauen What are all the possessions of the earth to the inheritance of that kingdome What is all the honor that the world can heape vpon a man in comparison of being the Sonne of God If it continue with thee as long as thou continuest aliue yet leaues thee when thou diest whereas that heauenly preferment abides with thee attends vpon thee after death or rather lifts thee vp and carries thee aliue to heauen For what though this sinfull earthly carcasse be destroyed yet the soule mounts immediatly vp to heauen taking possession of that inheritance and inioying it with al freedome comfort in assured expectation of proportionable glory wherewith the body in due time shall be clothed and beautifyed And doe wee still lie groueling vpon earth Wee shewe thereby whose children wee are vpon thy belly shalt thou goe said the Lorde to the olde serpent the Diuell and dust shalt thou eate all the daies of thy life See Gen. 13. 14. if wee doe not as much as may bee resemble him in this curse Wee roote and digge into the earth like Moles and feed vpon the white and yellow clay which with infinite labour and no small daunger we rent out of the very bowells thereof yea a shame to bee spoken though wee are not ashamed to doe it our immortall soule that hath nothing in it of any affinity with earth imploies her vnderstanding bestowes her affections perswades incourages strengthens thrusts forward her seruant body to so wearisome and so fruitlesse a labour Think you that a miserable wretch whē he sits in his counting house looking ouer his bonds when his vsury mony will come in let them be as many thousand poūds as they are hundred pence can take half that comfort in his trash that a poore Christian doth in his meditation when hee finds himselfe to be the Sonne of God Set thy selfe vp to the chin in the heapes of thy gold tumble and wallow in the midst of all thy pe lfe shouell it vp by bushells into quarter sacks stuff thy chists as full as thou canst till the sides and bottome are ready to fly out reccon vsury vpō vsury to the vtmost farthing but heark doost thou not heare a fearfull voice that cries out vnto thee O foole this night they shall fetch away thy soul from thee then whose shal these Luk. 12. 20. treasures be that thou hast prouided What a man of thy state and aboundance in a moment come to nothing quaking and trembling at the very thought of it in the midst of al thy wealth Wouldst thou do so couldst thou do so if thou knew'st thou wert going to a most glorious kingdome in heauen Is it possible any man of indifferent discretion should be loth to change a Chamber in an other man● house for a royal palace in his own Realme and gouernment But why should I so much distrust your capacities or suspect your aflections I see you are able to compass great matters and haue strong desires to those things you like if I may but entreate so much of you as to vouchsase a little time to the meditation of this prerogatiue I make no doubt but you will both conceiue and affect it I doe not goe about to depriue you of any naturall faculty but as it were to lead you to the right vse of it I seeke not to roote out your affections but to grift vpon them such seions as may bring forth pleasant and lasting sruit Is thy vnderstanding great Here are greate mysteries in the search whereof thou maist imploy it For what wit what iudgement what conceit is able to sound the depth or valew the worth or comprehend the extent of this honour To bee the Sonne of God Is thy capacity but weake What is plainer what is easier then to vnderstand that by beleeuing in Christ thou shalt bee made the Sonne of God and ioynt heire of heauen with Christ Yea this doctrine wil teachthee how to satisfy thy most insatiable desires Doth ambition prick thee forward with loue of honour Why wilt thou not set thy minde on that which is true honour indeed The foolish vanity of men hath bewrayed itselfe that the conquest of the whole world would not suffice them All the autority and glory that the Emperours of Rome attain'd to could not quench their thirst of honour but that some of them would needes be worship● as Gods If they could once haue attained the dignity of being the