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A46526 Compunction or pricking of heart with the time, meanes, nature, necessity, and order of it, and of conversion; with motives, directions, signes, and means of cure of the wounded in heart, with other consequent or concomitant duties, especially self-deniall, all of them gathered from the text, Acts 2.37. and fitted, preached, and applied to his hearers at Dantzick in Pruse-land, in ann. 1641. and partly 1642. Being the sum of 80. sermons. With a post-script concerning these times, and the sutableness of this text and argument to the same, and to the calling of the Jews. By R.J. doctor of divinity. R. J. 1648 (1648) Wing J27; ESTC R213600 381,196 433

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is a new Creation it is either a Being of nature or a Being of grace each respectively of nothing as it is taken negatively But man and before it we the best are nothing both negatively in respect of his Being of grace since the fall through sin in which he is dead and that in all powers and faculties is nothing First negatively I mean not in regard of substance either of soul or of faculties but of the qualities of those faculties according to which he was at first made after the Image of God in knowledge righteousness holiness and in the truth of them all Col. 3.10 Eph. 4.24 so that before his calling he is a meer Non-ens and hath no being for God is said to call those things that are not 1 Cor. 1 28. So the heathen before their calling were no people and 2. privatively not before but after the habit of grace lost both in act and power Rom. 10.19 Deut. 32.21 Hos 1.10 And 2. privatively not in a physicall sense as Philosophers speak of privation who make it a principle of generation and to include in it a disposition to the habit which it precedes but in the logicall and more proper sence as it implieth a deprivation of some former habit as in our case of the image of God and that not such as sleep is but such as death is being a privation not of the act and exercise onely of the faculty as in sleep but of the faculty and power it self we being dead in sin and not made alive with respect to spirituall and supernaturall objects of which the rule holds that from the privation to the habit as from death to life thore is no return that is ordinarily and by naturall causes Otherwise if we speak of an extrordinary regresse and miraculous none who is not an Atheist makes any question Only we may grant a remote possibility and capability especially in man as also in the lapsed angels so farre as Gods most holy and just will puts no bar but we must deny all disposition in the instruments and of the subject it self to the habit but by the effectuall power of Christ and so must exclude all active power in man to his own conversion which is not by Gods grace newly infused into him who works not only the will or power to will but the deed and act of will Phil 2.13 And so Christ becomes the cause and fountain of new life unto his elect who by his mercy and power are ingrafted into him as into a new stock from whom we receive new life being as dead and buried so also risen and quickned with him Col. 2.12 13. and from whom we receive forgivenesse of sin redemption and life whereby our youth is renued like the Eagles Psal 103.3 4 5. And we return to the daies of our youth Job 33.24 25. Which change being by the renuing of our mind Rom. 12.2 is wrought by the Holy Ghost Tit. 3.5 and is continued and wrought by degrees daily whereby such as wait on the Lord renew their strength and mount up with wings as Eagles c. Isai 40.31 SECT 3. Use 1. Of Instruction and Exhortation to deniall of our selves as in other things so particularly in duties concerning Conversion Vse 1 WEe To deny our selves and to acknowledge who would shew our selves true converts and such as truly hope to be saved must hence learn in all things to deny our selves especially in this great business of our salvation and indeed to see and acknowledge our selves to be nothing in our selves at best but as a rude lumpe and Chaos like the earth at the first creation our selves to be Nothing which being made of nothing was it self then without form void and dark Gen. 1.2 We must ever acknowledge that without Christ and faith in him which in in its own nature implieth and includes selfe-deniall all our gifts of nature or of common grace are nothing so that as Paul said concerning one grace 1. In regard of gifts charity so I may say of Christ and of faith in Christ without Christ and true justifying faith in him though I had the gift of prophesie and understood all mysteries and all knowledge though I spake with the tongues of men and Angels and though I had all miraculous faith 1 Cor. 13.1 2 3. and had not Christ and true justifying saith in him I am nothing All knowledge is nothing 1 Cor. 8.1 1 Tim. 6.3 4. And as all our gifts 2. In regard of priviledges without Christ so all priviledges without Christ must be accounted nothing That of a Jew or Circumcision Gal. 6.15 and 1 Cor. 7.19 3. Of our Confidences As riches Idols Isai 44.10 1 Cor. 8.4 strength of kingdomes power of will That of the Gentile which was wisedome as we have heard is nothing All our Confidences or things which men trust in are nothing as Riches Prov. 23.4 5. with Psal 37.16 Idols in which the Gentiles trusted and Idolaters now are nothing All the strength of Kingdoms and nations with God Nothing less then nothing Isai 40.15 17. All power of will or other wise in man nothing Without me ye can do nothing Joh. 15.5 All our own endeavours like those of Peters who fished all night and catched nothing till Christ came Luke 5.5 Joh. Indeavours righteousnesse 21.3 In a word all confidence in the flesh Phil. 3.5 6 7 8. all our legall righteousnesse Phil. 3.9 Yea Christ himself Christ himself if he be not all to us if he be not all to us shall profit us nothing Gal. 5.2 Though in nothing we be behind the best yet we must say as Paul did that in and of our selves we are nothing 2 Cor. 12.11 All without Christ must be accounted but as cyphers and that is nothing So that if any man thinke himself to be something when he is nothing and that is the state of us all he deceiveth himself Gal. 6.3 We must then see and acknowledge our own nothing The knowledge hereof is rightly made the fountain of all other vertues The knowledge of our own nothingness is the beginning of all goodnesse He only that knowes what this nothing or his nothingness is First how inconstant and vain all earthly things are Secondly how weake his own nature is Thirdly how base and vile sin is and how of no reckoning evill and sinfull men are he will 1. Not set his heart on earthly or transitory things but on heavenly and divine things 2. He will be humble and distrust himselfe and set his rest and put his trust only in God his mercy truth and power 3. He will avoid sin and sinfull company as vile and as finding no content therein In a word he will love desire affect and admire nothing but that which shall be judged something and that is nothing in or of himselfe as the new creature 1 Cor. 7.19 2 Cor. 5.16 17 2.
weaknesse and knowing that if we had such an abundant measure of grace and gifts as we desire we would stand in less need of him and be prouder of the gift then of the giver and not rest in him as alone all-sufficient and better then many graces to us Which I say provided we truly thirst and labour after more grace not that upon this pretence any careless liver should take up with any measure of grace or please himself with his infirmities as he will call his grosser and more willfull sins such an one I shall discard from the number of true Christians and genuine sons of God and babes in Christ who will ever out of a true sence be crying for more food and grow by it too but that we all should labour for true grace in sincerity and comfort our selves therein and in Christ our sanctification whilest we strive but cannot attain to that strength and measure of grace which we truly and from the heart desire 2. In our having of the gifts of grace all which without Christ are but glistering sins Secondly then make we Christ sanctification to us not onely in the want but in the having of any gift of grace whatsoever without whom all our gifts and graces are but dead carkases liveless pictures meer formalities yea like the vertues of the heathen who knew not Christ glistering sins Christ is the very life and soul of all graces and must be all to us in them all as our knowledge as what is knowledge of all things else but heathenish science if we know not God in Christ All other knowledge puffeth up 1 Cor. 8.1 2. and if any man teach otherwise and consent not to the words of our Lord Jesus Christ he is proud knowing nothing at least as hee ought to know zeal 1 Tim. 6.3 4. What is our zeal if it be not according to such knowledge its rather fury and madness What is our faith faith hope if Christ dwell not in our hearts by it Eph. 3.17 What is our hope if it be not in Christ 1 Cor. 15.19 but a comfortless and ungrounded presumption What is love or charity if it be not out of a pure heart charity 1 Tim. 1.5 Eph. 5.2 and if we doe not walke in love as Christ also hath also loved us and if our love be not in Christ Jesus 1 Tim. 1.14 it s but a fained love patience 1 Thes 1.3 What is patience but a Stoicall blockishness if our labouring and not fainting and so our patience be not for Christs names sake Rev. 2.3 What are our sufferings and bonds but a thankless bearing of deserved evill Our sufferings if they be not in Christ and for Christ Phil. Our good works 1.13 What are all our good workes almes fasting prayer and generally all our wayes if they be not in Christ and living godly and what is all our godly living if it be not in Christ Jesus 2 Tim. 2.12 but a death whereby we have a name that we live and spirituall life but are dead Revel 3.1 What is our spirituall life if we be not made alive in Christ 1 Cor. 15.22 and quickned together with him Eph. 2.5 and if Christ live not in us Gal. 2.20 What is it but an artificiall and forced motion such as is in walking engines and in pictures and Images with artficiall rolling eyes or otherwise drawn or carved to the life Our mortification In a word what is mortification but a monkish holiness and apish imitation if we be not dead with Christ Rom. and humility 6.8 or our humility in worshipping of Angels or Saints as not daring come so boldly into Gods immediate presence but pride and a being puft up in our fleshly minds Col. 2.18 and the punishing not sparing or neglecting of the body and hard usage of the body but only a shew of wisedome in will-worship and humility Col. 2.23 What 's sanctification then out of Christ Why should we not deny our selves in all these and in like things further then we do suffer them in Christ In all these wee are to deny our selves that wee may be them all only in Christ 4. Make wee Christ to us Redemption in all the parts of it or why should we be discouraged in some sense of our own wants and imperfections in these when we do and suffer them in Christ in whom they are accepted and accounted sufficient Now lastly considering this Alsufficiency of Christ we have reason to make him and him onely or God in him as God hath made him to us Redemption In which benefit is included salvation from first to last not onely freedom from the guilt of sin by pardon and power over it by the Spirit and so a freedom both from the damnation Luke 1.68 69 71 c. and also domination and power thereof together with finall perseverance in grace to the end by vertue of Gods new covenant with us in Christ Jer. 32.40 but also protection and defence by the ministry of Angels Hebr. 1.14 and otherwise yea and consolation in troubles and a blessing of curses or crosses and afflictions to us in this life Let him be our Consolation 1 In all our Crosses at the end thereof a blessed death and after death a joyfull and blessed resurrection to life and glory for ever And what needs more All this and more then I can expresse to you or you and I conceive within our selves is Christ to us if once by denying our selves in all power of our own whether over sin or other enemies or in all earthly comforts we can seek to be All in all these and that onely in him Let us make then Christ all to us in these things that All in him may be ours whilest he is ours and we his 1 Cor. 3.21 22 23. And so let us make him more specially in all our losses 2 and Losses in the losse of goods name friends and what else in all which we lose nothing if we lose not Christ who is all in all these to us Have we lost our goods as 1 Of goods say we with Paulinus Bishop of Nola when the City was sackt by the Barbarians Lord let me not be troubled for the gold and silver for thou art all to me Are we disgraced 2 Name or is a fools cap in disgrace put upon us as once upon one Alexander Cane say we as he Can I have a greater honour done then to be served as my Lord Christ before Herod Have we lost our friends 3 Friends Senec in Consolat ad Polyb. who seemed to be a staffe and a stay unto us what Seneca said in the comforting in such a case of his friend Polybius a Courtier may fitlyer be applyed to a Christian concerning Christ So long as Cesar lives and is thy friend thou oughtest not to complain of thy condition whilest he is safe thou hast
armes did they thus go forth conquering whithersoever they came yea and subduing spirituall and infernall power 2 Thess 2. Their weapons were not carnall but spirituall yet mighty not of themselves but through God c 2 Cor. 10.4 5. Thus Christ came to be set up in his throne and thus in after times after that great defection foretold Antichrist began to be cast out in many Kingdomes by the preaching of Luther in whom God shewed his mighty power and of whom one writes thus saying Vir sine vi ferri vi verbi inermibus armis Vir sine re sine spe contudit orbis opes He was one who without sword or speare by the onely power and weapons of the word of God without strength wealth and hope in himself overcame and subdued the power and strength of the world Alexander was renowned admired because with so few he subdued so many but here are conquests more admirable then his whereby moe and greater enemies even the powers not of the world only but of hell are subdued and that by fewer and to outward seeming weaker means Vse 1 Vse 1. This power of God in his word by which he then did and doth still goe on triumphing It s for terrour to the opposers of the word as he will till he have brought the necks of all his enemies in subjection to him one way or other is to be admired and acknowledged and we thence assured that the Lord Christ and his cause and Gospel shall in his good time prevaile against all opposition of men devils and Antichrist and that it howsoever supprest sometimes yet shall not be wholly oppressed it is like fire Which to them will prove like fire which though kept under and halfe smothered down yet will worke it self free having a consuming power in it to devour all combustible matter which stands in its way The word cannot be restrained as the Arke detained by the Philistines wrought it self out and as the people of Israel in Egypt by strong hand delivered it self and made the enemies weary of it Which may be terrour to all enemies of the Gospel and of the sound preaching and Preachers yea and Professors of it And a fair caveat to all that they meddle not with such edge-tooles the word will prove a sharp sword to them as a mall hammer or as a burthensome stone to crush such as heave at it or are enemies to it or yet do resist it in themselves Vse 2 2. For Confutation we hence conclude To confute first the errour of Vniversall grace and of free-will in man to accept of grace And secondly of mans power to resist Gods grace that to the conversion of a sinner there is more required then the hearing of the same word or the same common-motives and in a word then common and universall grace there must a speciall and an effectuall power go along therewith but that is no power of mans free-will but of Gods free and powerfull grace which therefore would be begged so oft as we heare Gods word Secondly That where God will convert any indeed it is not in the power of man to resist finally But these being points of Controversie I list not to insist upon them Onely for them both Know that conversion of soules and faith is made the affect as of the word preached The power of God in working faith Ephes 1.13 20 so of the power of God the greatnesse of his power yea the exceeding greatnesse of his power yea of the might of his power even effectually and actually and therefore irresistibly working as it is there also said according to the working of his mighty power even the same power by which he raised Christ from the dead i. e. the power of the Godhead Therefore as a man conferres nothing of his own to his bodily raising to life The same by which Christ was raised from death or to his own creation so he hinders it not when God will raise him up as we see in Lazarus he rose not of himself neither could he hinder his own rising he arose not by his own power and yet it was he even Lazarus who did rise Even so is it in our spirituall resurrection from the death of sinne which is wrought by the power of Christs word Ephes 5.14 saying Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead And we do so but then it is Christ who by his word which is operative gives us light and life Yet we must know that man in his conversion though it be thus both infallibly and powerfully wrought Yet man is not compelled is not forced or compelled to it but according to Gods wisedom as well as power is first made willing so Gods works though powerfully yet sweetly he so draws us as that wer un willingly after him Which teacheth us to live to Gods glory This overthrowes the contrary errour of Jesuites Lutherans and Arminians and teacheth us to give the whole glory of our conversion to God from whose mercy and power it is to depend on him for a continuall supply and influence of his grace to live wholly to him whose creatures we are both by nature and grace c. 3Vse Of comfort and Encouragement 1 To Preachers having a refractory people 3. It is a point of comfort and encouragement and that both to Ministers and to people 1. Ministers are hence encouraged to preach the word with power and with authority as knowing whose Ministers they are and that they have their Commission from him whose is all power and who according to that power calls and sends them forth promising to be with them to the end of the world so though they meet with opposition in their Ministery Neither to be daunted or otherwise have a refractory people of hard hearts and necks to deal withall opposing deriding and mocking them so that through discouragements they be ready with Jeremiah Jer. 20.8.9 who so found it to resolve to give over preaching or at least such plain and home-teaching yet ought they not to be discouraged but at Christs bidding to cast in their net again Not to despair of them otherwise we disobey yea and distrust the power of our Master Christ whose word if with Jeremiah we offer to shut up we also finde it in our heart as a burning fire shut up in our bones which will make us weary with forbearing that we cannot hold In case then that with Peter wee fish all night and catch nothing yet at Christs bidding let us cast in againe as he did and we shall in his time catch and make a great draught Joh. 21.11 as Peter did of an hundred fifty three great fishes thereby was but foresignified to him this great conversion of so many thousand soules by his Ministery whereby Christs promise to him at his calling to the Apostleship was made good unto him I will make
be plyable and yielding both to God and man 1 It stands not out against or resists Gods word but quakes at threatnings melts at promises is humbled at judgements as 2 Chron. 30.10.11 not such as was in Zedekiah 2 Chron. 36.12 of whom it is said he did evill in the sight of the Lord his God and humbled not himself before Jeremiah the Prophet speaking from the mouth of the Lord or in Belshazzar framing to his will Dan. 5.21.22 who did not humble his heart though he knew all such evils and judgements as befell his father for hardening his mind in pride verse 20. In a word the soft heart yields like soft wax to the impressions of Gods grace word and spirit and like molten metal frames to the form and obeys that form of Doctrine whereto it is delivered as the phrase is Rom. 6.17.2 The tender heart shews it self also towards others by shewing forth bowels of pity to men in misery and man by pity and kindnesse Heb. 13.3 and of kindnesse and forgivenesse to such as do it wrong Ephes 4.32 2. This heard heart I speak of as it is stiffe stony and unpliable so it is also insensible void of all spirituall sense especially that of feeling this is through want of spiritual life 2 unsensible and without life where no life is there is no sense at all and where life is though other senses may be wanting yet not that of feeling that sense though it be not the most noble for so is the sense of sight and hearing yet it is the most necessary sense there being no life without it where it is wholly wanting or lost it of all senses alone is diffused throughout all parts almost of the whole body and it being lost there is no more intercourse of vital and animal spirits or influence of them by the nerves into other parts and consequently no longer any proportion or harmony of qualities or of temperament in which proportion the native moysture and heat is founded and consisteth So that feeling and sense of pain is needful to the very being of every creature spiritu- arguing spiritu-spiritu-death and so is spiritual feeling as necessary to the being of the new creature so that we may conclude that the heart which is an insensible heart is a dead heart Eph. 4.18.19 alienated from the life of God at least and that is bad enough possessed with a spirit of slumber and dead sleep whilest not one but all the senses of the soul are holden in it as the bodily senses in and by bodily sleep and that through a kind of dregginesse which stoppeth the passages of the spirits Or at least a dead sleep depriving men of their spiritual senses by which the whole heart and soul is made unsensible for hereby men are without 1 Hearing Isa 6.9 2 Seeing Isa 6.9 Ephes 4.18 3 without all spiritual Tast Rom. 8.5 4 Smel 2 Cor. 2.16 Lastly without feeling Ephes 4.19 having their hearts fat and insensible Isa 6.10 yea in a dead sleep and sleep of death and therefore insensible insensible of good and evil of mercies and of judgements of grace and sin without true love desire and joy in the one and without Fear Being contrary to the sensible heart 1 Kings 3.9 shame anger and godly sorrow in the other contrary to which heart is that which having a new life put into it and it awakened out of the Lethargie or rather death of sin begins spiritually and savingly 1 to hear for so we read of an hearing heart for which Solomon prayed 2 to see Ephes 1.18 1 Cor. 2.14.15 3 to tast 1 Pet. 2.2 3. with Psal 34.8 Cantic 4.11 4 to smel Cantic 1.3.13 16. 4.10 11. 2 Cor. 2.14.16 and 5 lastly to feele when by self-denial the fat of this grosse heart as it is called Mat. 13.15 which makes it also without sense Psal 119.70 Mat. 13.15 is consumed and offered in sacrifice to God according to the type Levit. 3.3 such a sensible heart was in these converts here who being self convinced self condemned and denying themselves were pricked in heart and through sense of pain cried out and sought help elsewhere then in themselves and accordingly found it I have thus set the benefit of the tender sensible heart against the other that by the opposition I might better shew the wofull condition and miserable estate of such as who being past feeling The miserable condition of senselesse and hard-hearted sinners give themselves over whether unto Laciviousnesse or to any other sensual and sinful course of life and who accordingly are given over in Gods most terrible but just wrath to this the worst of all evills on earth even the judgement of an hard and senselesse heart and all with this further aym that hereby the sinner that would attain to true compunction and pricking of heart for his sin and so to true conversion and salvation would above all be most afraid of this heavy judgement of hardnesse of heart and of whatsoever may cause or procure the same Such as are given over to it are irrecoverably left to the judgement of the great day seeing their judgement here is to be denied all sense of their dangerous and damned condition into which they have voluntarily brought themselves and so being left to themselves and to their own lusts as incorrigible Psal 81. and to Satan Hardnesse of heart the greatest Let to saving pricking 2 Pet. 2 4. and most to be laboured against as his prisoners to be reserved in chains of darknesse of mind and dedolent and final impenitencie kept and brought forth to that judgement wherein their case is now become like that of the devil and his angels whose judgement that is Of all lets then to this pricking of heart take heed of this of hardnesse of heart for where it is the judgement is to be deprived of all sense of sin and feeling of wrath till the soul be plunged into hell and become irrecoverably miserable and then lie under the sense of Gods severest wrath and eternall displeasure not to fear it is a signe of it Oh therefore get your hearts possessed continually with fear of this dismal evil and ever be afraid to be given over to it Now let me tell you not to fear it when you hear so much of it is a signe it hath already seazed upon you and benummed your spirituall senses especially if you have any long while lived fruitlesly or presumptuously under the means Young men especially to take heed of it and therefore especially it belongs to young men to take notice hereof who by reason of their age are not yet perhaps so hardened in sin through the deceitfulnesse of it There is a naturall tendernesse in us whilst we are young or a lesser degree rather of hardnesse which gets strength and proves habituall through use and age if it be not in time prevented Let such then
their hearts melt in true sorrow and their tongue and outward behaviour expresse a great change wrought in them Note 1. Corversion brings a sensible change Hence note first briefly That Conversion where it is in truth breeds and brings with it a sensible and great change not only in the state and condition of sinners who formerly were not a people but now are the people of God and which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy 1 Pet. 2.10 but in their hearts tongues and lives It being indeed a change from darknesse to light Why Ezek. 26.26 1 Cor. 15.51 52 Ephes 5.8 yea of stones into bread shall I say yea into flesh which is softer being a greater change then our last change shall be which is from grace to glory that is from one degree to another this being from sin to grace from nothing to something that is from one kinde to another Example in Paul and An instance of this change may be given and seen in Paul who once a child of wrath was made a vessell of mercy once ignorant Rom. 7.17 1 Tim. 1.13 but after not rude in knowledge 2 Cor. 11.6 12.14 In a word changed first in his judgment and in his estimation of things see Phil. 3. vers 4 5 6 7 8. and so secondly in his affections of love hatred 1 Tim. 1.13 c. and thirdly in his practise once a persecutor of Christ now a preacher once injurious to the Saints now ready to dye for them once a blasphemer of God and his people now a blesser of them The like in the Jailor in the Jaylour Act. 16.24 with 29 30 31 32 33 34. even now thrusting Paul and Silas into an inner prison making their feet fast in the stocks presently after being humbled by an earthquake and so prepared and withall hearing the word of the Lord preached to him he beleeved was baptized he and all his washed their stripes brought them out of the stocks into his own house set meat before them and rejoyced beleeving in God with all his house Vse Of triall wheth●r we be converted or no. Vse Though the change in all be not alike palpable and sensible yet if we would approve our selves true Converts our own consciences at least must be able to witnesse with us and for us and to say with that young man in S. Ambrose newly converted and afresh tempted by an old acquaintance of his to return to former lusts she saying Know you not me It is I yea but said he Ego non sum Ego I am not the man I was And with S. Paul of Onesimus Once unprofitable Philem. 11. 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. now profitable and of others Such were some of you that is Fornicators Idolaters Theeves Covetous Drunkards Revilers Extortioners But now yee are washed sanctified and justified When thus we finde it we have a blessed and comfortable testimony of the truth of our conversion if especially the change hath been wrought by the preaching of the word pricking the heart as here Whereas profane and civill men who can shew no such inward and outward change can have no such comfort as being the same now after so many yeeres profession if not much worse then they were ever still profaine formall resting in the bare outward performance of duty and so children of wrath Hence note God hath his times for the conversion of sinners Some he sanctifieth in the womb Note 2. God hath his times for the conversion of the Elect. some he calls at the last houre but all that belong to his Election shall at length be converted most certainly but when who knowes Joh. 6.37 SECT 2. Why Christ converted not so many as Peter Quest WHy did not Christ himselfe when he preached convert so many Question 1. or so visibly and miraculously Ans I answer Answer 1. first this was more for the glorifying of his grace and power which he reserved till after his death to make it manifest in by and after his resurrection and ascension for till then Jesus was not said to be glorified he was here on earth to execute his kingly office only moderately and not to put forth his divine power so fully till afterward to the end that he might be put to death which was the chief end why he came into this word which else they would not have done 1 Cor. 2.8 His power was thus more magnified after a seeming weaknesse if they had known him to be the Lord of glory It made more then for his glory now by his servants weake instruments and by an apparent signe from heaven yea and after a seeming weaknesse in dying to shew forth his power and grace then if he had done it formerly for it shews in what favour he was with God now who had been so despised of men and that though he died it was not of weaknesse but of will seeing he could have saved himself from death who gave life not only to the thiefe but now to so many Conversion is a glorious work This shews that conversion of souls by the ministry of men is a glorious worke in and by which the glory of Christ God-man doth wonderfully appear which seeing it tendeth also to the glorifying of the creature should by the converted be ever acknowledged Ephes 1.2 to magnifie the ministry of the Word by man not in word only but in deed to the glory of the praise of his grace c. 2 This was also done and thus referred that he might magnifie the Ministry of the Word and Gospel by man as he had said greater works then those shall ye doe Thus he was pleased yea is still pleased to do greater works by an instrument then immediately by his own sole and only power As we see his like providence wisedome and power in the Load-stone a darke dull and heavie stone which though he have imparted to it an attractive power yet that power is not put forth by the Load-stone it self alone which alone or unarmed drawes but a little but is as it were communicated to the steel or iron with which it is capped so that the same stone which alone could scarce take up seven ounces waight being capped with iron hath very easily and strongly taken up two and twenty pound waight saith he that saw it and hath written of it Mr. Samuel Ward in Magnet is Reductorie Theologico cap. 8. Thus Christ is willing to communicate the glory of this great worke of mans conversion to the weake Ministery of men telling us Whosoever receiveth them receiveth him and whosoever beleeveth in me he shall do greater works then I have done He converted not by any one Sermon that we read of an hundred yet by Peter he at once converted three thousand Thus we again see what a glorious worke the Ministery of the Word by man is what a glorious calling it is Vse 1. To
little time may seeme to be left unto us and accordingly labour and see that what we want in time we may redeeme by our zeale that as Peter directs 1 Pet. 4.2 3. we should live no longer the rest of our time in the flesh to the lusts of men but to the will of God That the time past of our lives may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles Especially considering our many sinnes so long continued in and the great dishonours done to his name thereby together with the greatnesse of Gods love in pardoning and receiving us at length to mercy Let this enflame our love and zeale to him let this love of God constrain us and teach us to love him much Luke 7.47 with that repenting woman that is zealously because much or many sinnes are forgiven us Vse 5 5 Lastly Let this teach us all now living in this our Nation to admire Gods goodnesse to us and ours To be thankful for being kept to these blessed times yea to all converted or not converted and to be thankfull that God at length hath had mercy on us and reserved us to these blessed times of the Gospel and peace withall 1 Tim 1.17 Rom. 11.30 33. c. Let us make use of this blessed time or otherwise this great mercy will turne to our greater condemnation CHAP. 2. Concerning the persons converted their quality number SECT 1. That some devout men need conversion 2 The persons coverted They. For quality 2 THe persons who They When they heard this they were pricked They are not named but onely noted generally and indefinitely first for quality to be some of them devout men vers 5. that is 1. Devout men such as generally acknowledged they expected the Messias promised but knew not neither were convinced that Jesus whom they persecuted and put to death was he Others to be meere scoffers and deriders of the Apostles vers 13. however generally to be such as by wicked hands took crucified and slue the Lord of life verse 23. 36. at least to be impenitent persons unbeleevers and in state of damnation as may be gethered from verse 38 39 40 47. Whence we first observe as concernes those devout men That Note Many devout men stand in need of repentance Ioh. 4.27 Outward profession of Christ devotion and formes of godlinesse are not enough to mens salvation or to make men true Christians Such may and usually doe worship they know not what as the Samaritans Athenians Acts 17.23 as the Jewes to this day who professe Faith in a Messias yet acknowledge him not but serve God as they think and are devout in their kinde Blinde devotion is not to be rested in Yea Papists generally adoring Christs body in the Sacrament which they know not to be present And common Protestants who seem to shew much devotion in frequenting the Church in publick prayers and hymnes and hearing yet rest in the outward performance and take up with the duty done though it be in them only a lip-labour without true knowledge faith humility and obedience 2 Tim. 3.1 2 3 4 5. as Isa 1.12 66.3 Jer. 7. having only a form of godlinesse but denying the power of it as being still lovers of themselves and of pleasures more then of God without all life of Religion or power of godlinesse standing in as much need of true conversion nay it may be more then open deriders and persecuters of Gods truth and people who will sooner be convinced then they To these I commend the care of attending diligently to the word of God preached in power peradventure with these here they may be wrought upon and be convinced of their sinnes of unbeleefe impenitency yea of hatred of Christ and his people c. as being yet wi●h these devout Jewes till now in a damnable condition even as the Pharisees persecuting Christ ignorantly Acts 26. Phil. 3.9 2 Scoffers Secondly As concerning the rest or themselves it may be who some were scoffers all persecuters and crucifiers of Christ we observe from their attentive hearing now and conversion The power and wonderfull efficacy of the word of God faithfully and wisely taught Note The power of Gods word 1 Sam. 19.28 Acts 9.20 preached and applied Here we see how men are changed by it of Wolves made sheep of persecuters true penitents even as King Saul intending to take and kill David fell a prophesying and was changed or as that other Saul hastening to persecute the Church by Christs voyce was made a preaching Paul or as those stout Souldiers who were sent to apprehend Christ Joh. 7.45 46 47. But of this anon when we speake of the act of hearing as also the duty of good hearers SECT 2. God freely singles out some of many of whom his Church consists 2 They for number 1 Many And those of all sorts of men 2 THey are noted from their number or quality discrete to be of the multitude verse 6. and those of every nation under heaven vers 5. Parthians and Medes c. vers 9.10 11. they were both of Israel and Judah who by Gods providence were gathered together to that gerat feast of Pentecost out of all nations or who dwelt in Jerusalem of these three thousand now and afterwards many more Acts 4.1 2 3 4 were converted by the Apostles preaching Whereby might seeme in part at least fulfilled the prophesie and type concerning the two sticks VVho make one Church for Judah and for Joseph joyned together Ezek. 37.16 17 19 20 21 c. noting that the effectuall calling of Jewes and Israelites as also Gentiles and their union in Christ or in the hand of the Lord Christ being the Fathers hand and arm whereby they became one Kingdom under Christ or David their King partaking of the same benefits by vertue of the communion of Saints as in the following verses in Ezekiel may be seen So that there is but one only Catholick Church not many and Christ the onely King Pastour and Head thereof 2 Yet not all having no generall Vicar here on earth Now to this Communion none belongs or yet truly come but such as the Father drawes who though here they are many yet all that heard beleeved not they were but some of the whole multitude who received the word gladly vers 41. yet those were gathered out of all sorts without difference of sex age calling countrey and nation or condition And this notes the Freenesse of Gods grace As he excepts not any one sort or calling of men so hee by effectuall calling Note The Freenesse of of Gods grace in singling out some from among all 2 Thes 2.12 13. singles out from the universality of men and sinners and adds to his Church such as shall be saved as here verse 47. Who are those Onely such as he hath elcted from eternity unto salvation through sanctification of the spirit and beleef of
they heard this Where is first the Act of hearing VVhere 1 The Act of hearing which implyeth preaching Rom. 10.14 15. Secondly The Object what they heard First Hearing implyeth teaching and preaching as here Peter preacheth and they hear and how shall men hear without a Preacher saith Paul and how shall they preach except they be sent first of God So that we have here to note Note 1. The power and efficacy of Gods VVord First the power and efficacie of the Word of God preached Secondly the profit and good fruit of hearing it aright Peter speaking onely in the outward eare they that heard are pricked in the heart and by further hearing are fully converted 1. The word of God is a powerfull word because soundly taught and wisely applyed as here we see where not onely for number three thousand but for quality scoffers mockers yea persecuters were converted by it so the like afterwards and in some measure to the end of the world No word of man no not in the mouth of the most eloquent Oratour can worke such effect as this doth In changing the effections and verting soules Acts 26.18 this hath a power on the soule not onely to move the affections but to change them to renew them to convert them and turn the soule to God from death to life from darknesse to light by opening of the eyes yea from the power even of hell Psalm 19.7 of the very Devill himselfe of Satan unto God The law of God converts soules and changeth stones into bread yea flesh base metall into pure gold beyond all Chymicall transmutation turning beasts into men yea beasts into men in which regard the Church differs from the Arke of Noah a type of it in other things for there the beasts that entred into the Arke received no chainge nor alteration but if they went in uncleane wilde and savage they also came out uncleane wilde and savage but in the Church of God where Gods word is powerfully taught it is not so with every one we come in unclean but go out clean we come in wilde we go out tame we come in wolves lions vultures we goe out lambs deere and doves we come in beasts and go out men yea new men regenerate as one well noteth Here it might be shewed how that by the power of one text only some hath been converted Iun. in vita as Junius reclaimed from Atheisme by casting his eye on Job 1.1 Saint Austin See Dr. Featlyes sermons on this text by taking up the Bible and reading the first place he lighted on which was Rom. 13.13.14 not in gluttony and drunkennesse not in chambering and wontonnesse c. was fully converted from his wantonnesse yea his friend Alypius desiring to peruse that place and reading the next words Rom. 14.1 Him that is weake in the faith receive you besought Saint Austin to strengthen him in the faith and he became a Convert also And I beleeve if every one would tell their experiences in this kind and how the word either at first or since in their anguish distresse temptations hath strengthened comforted and upheld them we should ●eed no other proof of this truth But whence hath the word this power Not from it selfe 2 VVhence hath it this efficacy from God and his spirit Psal 149.6 7 8 9. but from the Author which is God who when and where he pleaseth maketh it powerfull and effectuall by his spirit accompanying the same It is a two edged sword and cuts both wayes as God shall please to weild and use it either to wound or prick savingly like the Surgeons lancing-knife or to wound to death like the sword of an Enemy but we speake especially of the former work of it whereby it shewes it self quick and powerfull Heb. 4.12 whose instrument it is sharper then a two edged sword piercing even to the deviding asunder of soul and spirit and of the joints and marrow being a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart And so it is called the power of God to salvanion to every one that beleeveth Rom. 1.16 that is Gods powerfull instrument by which he worketh faith in men and converts their souls Now as the instrument hath no power of or from it self but onely a fitnesse thus or so to be used and workes in and by the power of the chief workman working in the power of him the principall Agent as the steele with which the Load-stone is capped so it is here The sword cuts not without a hand to weild it and then it cuts according to the power strength and will lesse or more of him that useth it so the word or words of the Preachers being quantity have no efficacy of themselves or considered as a sound or beating and dividing of the ayre but as it is an instrument of God appointed and sanctified to produce such great effects so that the power is from Gods Ordinance and not from the word of the Preachers who by the sounding of rams hornes made the walls of Jericho fall down ●nd by vertue of ●is ordinance as did the rammes horns of old Moses rod in dividing the sea which sounding was rather a signe at which then any cause by which the walls fell even as Moses his rod by which he smote the Sea had not that power in it selfe but by vertue of Gods appointment Moses smote with it because God had so commanded but God did the worke And though the Word preached work after another manner yet the worke done by it whether it be conversion comfort pricking melting bruising c. is from the effectuall power of God and of his Spirit who doth the deed 1 Cor. 3.6 so that Paul may plant Apollos may water but it is God that gives the increase and so the Word is compared to a sword and hammer which bruiseth Jer. 23.29 Isa 55.10 Acts 2.1 3. to a nayle which pierceth and to fire which melts and mollifieth to a mighty winde and thunder which shakes the heart of the stoutest Thus here Gods Spirit being like water both for abundance and strength poured out in the signes of a rushing mighty wind and of fire makes the word of Peter and others thus powerful the power of which spirit shewed it selfe not onely in the tongues of the Preachers but in the hearts of the hearers so afterwards the Apostles being armed with the promise of this power Mat. 28.18 19 20. are sent out to all Nations to convert them which thing they also did but who a few men of no account of no learning some of them of no authority or state whom Kings of the earth whom with these chains comming out from their mouth as is fabled of Hercules Celticus they did binde and bring into subjection under Christ Bodin de rep lib. 4. cap. 7. So wise Philosophers and the learned the proud and refractory but by what meas and
suppose beginning in the hand or foot if it be suffered further to spread will be their death when Zipporah saw her husbands life endangered if not her own she circumcised her son and cut off his foreskin which otherwise she was loath to do Thus God presents sinners with a true apprehension of his eternall wrath due unto them for their sinne and sets hell-gates open before them in the way of their lusts and fills their hearts with such terrours and horrours that they see no safety to their souls in the ways of sin and so as Pharaoh by strong hand at length did let the people go and the Philistines sent home the Ark so God if he love us especially makes us weary of sin and saves us even by fear not to say that such as have most smarted for sin at first in the pangs of their new-birth are not so easily drawn back to such or any other sins Again the spirit of bondage becomes to them a spirit of sanctification and it may be observed that such of all others as have been deep liest wounded at the first prove the holiest Christians afterward throughout the whole course of their lives 2 As the spirit of bondage proves a spirit of liberty freeing men from sin 2 God doth this to the increase of their joy and of Sanctification delivering from the power of sin so also it leads men to sound and solid joy and true comfort there is no comfort but to such The first work of the Comforter even when it is sent by that name and to that intent is first to convince of sinne so Habbak 3.16 and Psalm 94.12 13. Ease to sores which being whole do throb and rage is got by pricking lancing searching sleep is sweetest after labour and a pardon from the King most acceptable when after judgement passed the head hath been laid on the block and joy follows the labour of child-bearing 3 as also for their greater honour Rom. 8. 3 I might adde that God takes this course with such as he will convert to glorifie them the more thus to sanctifie them and to make them the more glorious in holinesse and holinesse we know or sanctification is the beginning of our glorifications Yea it is their glory thus to be made vessels to bear the name and glory of Christ before men which none do more then such as have been deepliest humbled Such of all other are fittest and ablest to glorifie God as having most experience of his justice mercy wisdome goodnesse and can best speak to his praise which to do is our glory more then his God gets nothing by us our acknowledgement of him makes him no wiser juster holier happier then he ever was even before any creature was made when he then sets and imprints on us the stamps of his glory and shews forth in us his justice mercy goodnesse c. That is in deed and for substance our gloglory not his There is somewhat excellent truly added to us nothing to him 2. God takes this course with converts for his owne honour And yet we may truly say God takes the aforesaid course with those he means to convert for his own glory that is for the further manifestation of the same and for this main end that the whole worke of conversion may appear to be his not ours 1. That of his Justice 1. His very Justice manifests its selfe in and by these terrours of conscience whilst the convicted sinner is made to see the depth of his own ill deservings is presented with the sight of hell which by such is acknowledged and made inwardly to acknowledge that it were but justice in God to cast him into the same yea so strong is this apprehension in some that for a long time they can see nothing but justice Howsoever this makes them at first and ever after to confesse and give the glory of justice to God acknowledging how just their condemnation should be if God did deal with them according to their deserts being ready ever to justifie God as cleer whensoever he judgeth Psal 51 4. Rom. 3.4 Thus all by sin are brought under the Law and the Law is let loose upon sinners threatens damnation and nothing but justice appears and vers 19. that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God God will not in this work of conversion suffer his justice to be swallowed up of mercy he must and will be acknowledged just before mercifull taking us as it were by the throat Mat. 18.28 bidding us pay all we owe when indeed with that poor woman 2 King 4.1 we have nothing at all to pay And so in every convert he takes away all matter of glorying letting them see the depth of their desert and their own both unworthinesse of mercy and inability and impotency to make themselves any help Is● 66.2 Job 9.13 2 His mercy which thus is more felt And by so doing whilst the best are made to tremble before him and that the proud helpers do stoup under him he makes way for his mercy that he may be the more glorified both by shewing mercy and by the acknowledgement of mercy by those that finde mercy as it is Gal. 3.22 The Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that beleeve or as Rom. 11.32 God hath shut up or concluded them all i. both Jew and Gentile in unbeleef that he might have mercy on all For so by shuting all up under sin and wrath his mercy is more felt and admired by such as finde mercy and thankfully acknowledged The foregoing terrours of justice in the converted which makes them smart makes mercy relish better with them and be more esteemed by them yea all the world may now see and that acknowledge the receiving and conversion of sinners is meerly of mercy None derogate more from Gods mercy and the freenesse and power of his grace then such as not sensible enough of their wounds and misery by sin ascribe somewhat in their conversion to themselves neither can they be so truly thankfull as others And by thanks or offering praise unto God God professeth himself to be glorified So that God by thus humbling men Pal. 50.23 as is said with terrours doth but make way and prepare matter of praise and thanksgiving to himself in due time which accordingly we see given unto him by Paul even upon this ground 1 Tim. 1.13 14 15 16 17. I saith he being before a blasphemer and persecuter and injurious obtained mercy And the grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant Christ came to save sinners of whom I am chief howbeit for this cause I obtained mercy that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering Now unto the King eternall c. be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen So elsewhere crying out in a sence
power We have the instance of Moses who refused to be called the son yea the heir of King Pharaoh's daughter or to enjoy the pleasures of sin in that Court yea and made light of the treasures of Egypt preferring the reproach of Christ with a good conscience before them all And he lost not by it Hebr. 11.24 25 26. SECT 5. Shewing secondly in what things otherwise lawfull we are to deny our selves And first In things naturall of three sorts 2 We are to deny our selves in things lawfull in case of competition with better things NOw secondly we are to deny our selves not onely in things evill and sinfull which we are to do absolutely but also in such things as are not in and of themselves evill or sinfull but onely comparatively and with respect to a greater good as some one or moe of the aforesaid things which wee should more principally respect And so in case of competition comparison and subordination of the one to the other we are though as is said not absolutely yet in such case resolutely to deny our selves Now these things are both naturall spirituall and eternall Which because they are many I will rather here point at them then handle them And these are of three sorts 1 Naturall First The things naturall are 1. The powers and faculties of the soul and body 2. The comforts and contentments of this life as first In the naturall powers of our soul 3. Life it self 1 In our Reason 1. Naturall Reason so far as there is no carnality in it is not simply to be denyed And it were much to be wished that men lived more according to right reason then they do for so their courses would not be so absurd and unreasonable as they are 2 Thess 3.2 whereby they can give no reason of their doings of their neglect of life and salvation How far natural reason may and should be used impenitency Jer. 8.6 of their persecutions and hating of Gods people without cause c. nay nor of their faith and hope which they are bound to do 1 Pet. 3.15 being able also to examine doctrines to judge of consequences and inferences in Scripture to search the Scriptures whether the things taught us be so or no that so they may not blindly either beleeve or obey any but God alone and in God Yet thus far we are to deny naturall Reason as not to stand upon it in things above the reach of it How and in what denyed as to say I see no reason for this or that or how it can stand with Gods justice or with the liberty of mans will c. therefore I will none of it it s too harsh and hard a saying I cannot admit of it In such case reason must submit it self and give way to faith The mysteries of faith as that of the Trinitie of the subsisting of our nature in the second Person of the Godhead the resurrection of the same individuall bodies of ours and such like are not unreasonable onely our reason cannot reach so high as even in innocencie Adam saw not the reason of divers things as the mystery of the Trinitie c. which yet he believed We must then so far deny our naturall reason It must 1 Stoup to supernaturall Truths 2 It must not judge of points of Faith as 1. To acknowledge it not able of it self to reach unto or dive into the deep things of God 2. In sight of its shallownesse not to take upon us by it to judge of the mysteries of faith not to make it a ground of faith or to go before it but onely an attendant and waiter upon faith to follow it and to acknowledge that to be reasonable which God doth or which he makes known to be his will and a truth 3 Nor must it make new Articles though by reason we understand it not 3. Not to frame points of Doctrine or Articles to be imbraced as truths according to our understanding judgement and reason as do some in the point of Free-will and otherwise who shew themselves more Philosophers then Divines and better read in Aristotles Ethicks then in the holy Scriptures of God We must take things as we finde them though we can see no other reason of the same then this God saith it therefore I have reason to beleeve it 2 In our natural Will Which must not oppose Gods will but deny it self in regard of any p●wer it hath in supernaturall things either to will 2 Our naturall Will which inclines naturally to good in the universall we must be content to submit the same so far to God as in the particular wherein true happiness doth consist and in the way to it which is onely faith in Christ to be directed onely by him without opposing his will made known to us and without chusing our own ways So also though it have some power naturally and in naturall and morall things yet to deny it self in regard of any ability it hath of it self either to will super naturall good things especially upon the conditions and as they are promised unto us in the word or to chuse aright by its own power or chuse and when the same objects and motives are propounded to many to difference it self from others either in good or evill either by accepting as of it self that good as suppose the saving grace of God which others refuse or by refusing and resisting that effectuall grace or yet to resist Gods grace and it must submit to corrections by the acceptance whereof others come to be converted and saved So in our Tryals and sufferings when we are crossed in some particulars which we might lawfully desire we must deny our own wil as our blessed Saviour did and say Not my will but thine O heavenly Father be done and so possesse our souls by faith and patience without murmuring or repining 3 In our natural Affection 3. Our naturall Affections especially those whose object is good In these we must be content also with respect to Gods will and glory to deny our selves as 1. as 1 In our Love In our Love suppose to children wife husband friend c. in which we must be content to be crossed and patiently endure the losse of them by death or otherwise the losse of their love for our love to Christ and his truth of which afterwards 2 Desires 2 In our Desires as David refused that water of Bethlehem which he so much formerly desired And we are not to desire any thing of this life in particular but herein so far to deny our selves as to be content to be denyed be it children office preferment c. yea to account such denyall a blessing in hope God hath some greater good in store for us or that God wil sanctifie that crosse and make it a blessing to us seeing we are all apt to abuse good things to our own hurt
and to say Why doth he yet find fault For who hath resisted his will he by his Apostle stops their mouth and calls them to the consideration of his greatness and soveraignty as also of his glory in the riches thereof on the vessels of mercy v. 20. saying Nay but O man who art thou that repliest against God or who so saucily answerest again or disputest with God c. See also vers 21 22 23. It becomes us in such case as in all such common destructions as of the people of the wilderness and the like as now of late in Ireland where many savagely have perished by the sword of the bloody Papist some of them perhaps not so well prepared but taken suddenly in their sins to say Thou turnest man to destruction and who knoweth power of thine anger Psal 90.3.11 and Psal 145.17 The Lord is righteous in all his waies and holy in all his works But not for tender Infants dying in their Infancy and others whose good estate after death is only doubted of Or only that we are not assured otherwise of their salvation if and when all other arguments of hoping well of them for whom yet and their good estate in Christ their godly and beleeving parents and friends have formerly in their life time both often and seriously prayed do not fully satisfie them as indeed the certain salvation of other men is revealed but to few 〈◊〉 in the death of young children much lesse the reprobation of any unless God hath specially so marked and branded them which is not in this case yet I say it is enough to stay us and in self-deniall herein it should stay us and here should we rest and cast anchor that God in all things seeks his own honour and so should we he doth all for his own glory and cast the worst which yet in this case we are not to beleeve for certain yet if God please to glorifie himself in their damnation which is ever just with him it becomes us to say His will be done and so far to deny our own natural yea Christian affections otherwise as in a zeal of and with respect to Gods glory to say The name of the Lord be hallowed and glorified at least in that respect to moderate our sorrows lest by honouring our children or others so doubtfully dying more then God we provoke God by greater and sorer crosses in the same or other kinds to tame us and teach us by self-deniall to submit our selves to him in one thing as well as in another 2. Living whose conversion we seek and by all good meanes would procure 2. So for others yet living whose conversion and salvation wee both pray for and seek by all good and possible meanes to procure whether they be our friends kindred children parents or our hearers or otherwise under our charge or howsoever in our hearty love out of the former ground we are so far to deny our selves in our respect to them as according to the order in the Lords Prayer First to pray that God would glorifie himself then if so it may stand with his glory That his Kingdom may come to them and that by making them heires of his grace here and glory hereafter he would be pleased to glorifie his mercy on them but if not His will be done thus denying our own wills and desires whilest otherwise we are not wanting by our constant and continued indeavours to further our own desires and so suffering God and his Son Christ to glorifie himself a he pleaseth For thus the Prophet Isaiah As Ministers and others not seeing the fruit of their labour must rest speaking to his son in our nature as also in his Ministers Isai 49.1 2 3 4 5. Thou art my servant O Israel in whom I will be glorified yeaChrist himself there saith That though he hath laboured in vain and though Israel be not gathered yet saith he of himself shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord Now Christ would have gathered the Jewes and lost sheep of the house of Israel himself but they would not Mat. 23. yet he glorified himself and his wisedome and justice in their rejection in that God glorifieth himself thereby and accepts their indeavours So now he would gather others by us the Ministers of the Gospel and thereby he seeks his own glory whether men be converted by the word or no and our labour whilest we do our best indeavour to save our souls and our persons are accepted as a sweet savour of Christ unto God 2 Cor. 2.14 15.16 in them that perish as well as in them that are saved and why because God even in the death and damnation of the wicked glorifieth himself So that we as other zealous and godly Christians having done our indeavour and shewed our earnest desires of the good the conversion and salvation of such sinners are in submission to Gods will and glory yea and with our subscription and approbation of his work to rest yea so far to thanke God with Paul in the quoted place for glorifying himself and his own mercy on us yee thanke God for his mercy to themselves whilest he passeth by others even as Christ himself on our behalf for hiding saving truths from the wise of the world and revealing them to babes Mat. 11.25 26. even because it so pleased him to glorifie himself I will only add this word more In some case men by Gods prophets and in zeal of his glory have been devoted to destruction Psal 69.28 though I will not say or determine what we may do yet in some case others setting aside respects of humanity yea and as it may seem of brotherly and godly affection therein denying themselves have in great zeal of Gods glory even devoted their enemies to eternall destruction saying Let them be blotted out of the book of the living and not be written with the righteous SECT 9. Secondly That in some case we should be ready to deny our selves in our own Salvation SEcondly for our selves and our own salvation we are so far to deny our selves A second inference concerning our own salvation as not only to acknowledge and that from the heart our selves unworthy of that mercy pardon and salvation which in and by Christ we are assured of yea worthy to be cut off for ever and that Gods judgement if he should damn us for our sins not only to confess our selves worthy of damnation but to redeem Gods glory to be content to suffer with it as we may see in Moses his wish were most just and righteous but which more is if it might redeem Gods glory and further the eternall salvation of many to be content at least if not to wish that our selves for our particular might perish eternally This was the desire of Moses who when God threatned to consume the people for making and worshipping the golden Calf as he
lost nothing in him thou hast all he to thee is in stead of all I am sure such a one is and will be Christ unto us if once we make him ours 3 In all our Wants And as in our losses so in our wants on earth all which are supplyed unto us from Christ and his fulnesse so that with one Attalus we may oppose the name Christian to all things else and with him say whilest others brag of their wealth honour friends c. But I am a Christian and with Paul in want I have learned in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content c. I can do all things both be full and hungry abound and suffer need through Christ which strengtheneth me Phil. 4.11 12 13. 4 In Death Yea and as in life so in death we by denying our selves may and should seek to be gainers by gaining him as Paul Phil. 1.21 For me to live is Christ and to die is gain Christ takes away the sting of death and of most terrible makes it desirable and changeth the condition of it so that one in Christ may desire with Paul to depart and to be with Christ and having once truly by faith seen Christ with Simeon say Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seen thy salvation Luke 2.29 30. In which regard death when especially we are called to suffer it for his Names sake should be no death to us so that by it we may more fully and immediately enjoy Christ and in death truly say 1 Cor. 15.18 1 Thes 4.16 as Peter of old and one Lambert of later times None but Christ Nothing but Christ For blessed are they that die in the Lord nay blessed are they being dead from henceforth saith the Spirit that they may nest from their labours and their works do follow them 5 After death where our gain is Glory Revel 14.13 Then our gain is glory and an eternall retribution then do wee enter into our Masters joy which like a sea is so great that it cannot enter into us Who need now fear who can but deny himself for such a Christ And if thus we can once truly conceive of Christ as these young converts in my Text began to do It will be no hard matter to us to deny our selves for him SECT 13. Shewing we are Thirdly to deny our selves in other things for the eternall good of our souls 3 Our souls are to be thought more precious then the whole world NOw in the third place Next after Gods glory and Christ our own Souls compared with all things of this life would be thought on and respected as more excellent then them all which all of them even the whole world it self must be denyed and lightly esteemed and accounted of in comparison of it which is to be denyed for it The world and things of it being unworthy that the soul should either be hazarded for them All things of this life are nothing to it for worth and price seeing Christs blood and not the world or ought in it could redeem it 1 Pet. 1.18 19. And therefore it should not either be hazarded or so much as imployed seriously about the things of this world and life which are not worth a mans labour Prov. 23.4 or that especially the soul being a spirituall and immortall substance should be made a drudge to earth or seek any happinesse from things mortall and momentany Man and the powers of his soul are made and redeemed by Christ as for other ends even for God and his glory who made man for himself and not for the world to love follow seek and serve it so for higher objects and that is himself too that the end of his labours might be the fruition of God himself in glory and of his own eternall happinesse in God or that either the noble faculties of it should be much imployed about worldly things as the Vnderstanding Memory How unworthy a thing then is it how dissonant and disproportionable that the faculties of the soul should be seriously imployed about the world or the best things in it that either the understanding and thoughts and so mans head should plot or be filled with cares of this life Luke 12.22 or that the memory should be so burthened that with the thought thereof a mans heart taketh not rest in the night Eccles 2.23 Or that the Conscience should be defiled therewith Conscience yea galled and secretly nipped in the guiltinesse of goods ill gotten and not by right or of our precious time mis-spent about earthly things with neglect of better Will Or that the Will of man whose object should be God should so absolutely and so resolutely propend and lean to such things 1 Tim. 6.9 Or that his Affections of Love Affections Desire and Delight should be so intensive towards and in the same 1 Tim. 6.10 Psal 4.6 Or or yet our Labour All which being rightly imployed would bring us to better things that the Heart should be set thereon Psal 62.10 Or lastly that a mans labour should so much be imployed about them Psal 127.2 when especially the things of this life so impensively sought and the Soul cannot both be enjoyed or had together each requiring the soul especially the whole man Matth. 6.24 33. 1 John 2.15 16 17. with Jam. 4.4 Yea and considering that the noble powers of mans soul being rightly imployed and mans labour and pains wisely ordered would with much lesse adoe bring him to much better riches honours happiness even to true wisdom and saving knowledge to righteousnesse joy in the holy Ghost and at length to eternall life and salvation Why then should we so over-value the world and under-value our precious souls as not to deny our selves in all things of this world rather then either mis-imploy our chief care or hazard the life of our souls for the gaining of the world This was the care of these self-denying Converts and should be ours who should ever oppose the excellency and preciousness of our souls against all worldly allurements temptations and offers which the world can make us But of our care of it I have spoken but lately SECT 14. Shewing Fourthly that the publick good of others of Church and Common-wealth is to be preferred before our own 4 The publick good of Church Common-wealth and publick persons is to be preferred before all private respects all which are to be denyed for the other FOurthly and lastly We are much to propose unto our selves the publick good of others especially of the true Church of God on earth which should of us in our thoughts and affections be preferred above our chief joy Psal 137.6 in respect to which all the enemies of it and of Gods people should be basely accounted of though otherwise and in other respects and references neer and deer unto us yea and prayed against as there ver 7. Nay our