Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n body_n good_a sin_n 4,688 5 4.5398 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A19474 A hand of fellovvship, to helpe keepe out sinne and Antichrist In certaine sermons preached vpon seuerall occasions: by Robert Abbot ... Abbot, Robert, 1588?-1662? 1623 (1623) STC 59; ESTC S100379 198,722 312

There are 16 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the good Word of God which is able to saue our soules As wee doe wry our mouthes with the new borne babe after the dugge of Gods Word so with the growne man we haue a good stomacke and appetite vnto it The huskes of mans wisdome and humane traditions are hunted after of those of whom the Apostle saith Beware of dogges Phil. 3.2 but the man of God hungreth to heare God speake And because he knowes that he is borne againe for the kingdome of God therfore though when he meets with the things of this world he doth thankfully embrace them vse them as if he vsed them not yet he seekes after the things aboue Col. 3.1 aboue the world the Church aboue nature grace aboue the fauour of Princes the grace of God aboue sinne a Sauiour aboue earth heauen If therefore it be thus with our soules that as all creatures do seek their meats sutable to their natures the Lion flesh the Horse grasse the Fowles Wormes the Catts Mise and the Bees hony so we doe hunt after these things then haue we entred into this life Secondly Those helpes that doe respect our enemies are our naturall vigilancy and watchfulnesse against that which doth thwart and oppose life And from this head I shall commend vnto you two signes of life The first is Sensiblenesse of the least degree of death or opposition of life He that is in an irrecouerable estate 2 Sensiblenesse of death findes not the least degrees of death creeping vpon him and when hee is readie to die saith He is well whereas he that is well is sensible of the least distemper but if a man be dead he doth not feele death it selfe he heares no alarum to battaile sees not the approach of any enemy nor smels the stinke of any wound So if we be in a spiritually-dead estate we feele not killing sinne to approach Prou. as Solomon saith of the foole Hee casteth fire-brands arrowes and mortall things and saith I am not in iest So we make sport vnto our selues in the committing of sinne and say Doe we not liue Yea if we be dead let God send one letter of defiance vnto vs after another for our sinnes we heare and heare not we know and vnderstand not and though from ●he crowne of the head to the sole o● the foot there be no part whole 〈…〉 nothing but botches and blaines full of corruption yet wee smell not the stinke of the corruption of our wounds we runne not to the b●lme of Gilead wee desire not the good Samaritane to helpe vs but if wee are aliue oh how doe we scud from death as the fearfull Hare from the greedie Hound How doth the least approach of this death by the least sinne make vs cry out with Paul Wretched man that I am Rom. 7. who shall deliuer mee from the bodie of this death Poore Christians who are deiected and cast downe at the fearefull fight of their owne guiltinesse the more sensible they are of the death of sinne the more they cry out of themselues as of dead men whereas if they would passe righteous iudgement they should conclude that the spirit of life is in them 3 Fi●hing against death The next signe of life is fighting against that which would take it away The liuing worme being trod vpon will turne vp the taile Heare O worme Iacob so wilt thou if thou haue any life in thee When the worme feeleth the earth to be shaken presently it commeth running out of the earth fearing the approach of the mole so if thou liue when thou feelest the shaking of the cabbin of thy ease and securitie thy bodie I meane by paine● ache● and diseases then thou dost presently startle come to the doore to see what newes meet thine enemy death disarme him and pull out his sting that at the last ●he conquest may bee thine Againe is there life in vs then the Spirit of life doth fight against the flesh ●om ● ● lest wee liuing after it do die Oh how doe liuing men striue against the whole bodie of sinne and death How doth the spirit lust aga●nst the flesh Yea Gal. 5.17 how doth the liuing spirit get the vpper hand and sight more manfully euery day than other especially against that sinne which doth most crosse it I haue kept me from my wickednesse saith Dauid that is P●●l 18.23 that sinne whereunto hee was most inclined euen so must we if we haue this new life This is the way to finde all liuing gr●●es to increase all sin to be in a decaying estate For we know that there is no equall match betweene the old man the new as God smites the enemies of his people on the checke bone that is Ps●l 3.7 hee deales not with them as with men but as with boyes in stead of opposing them with swords and stau●● hee sends them away with a boxe on the eare so will the liuing spirit deale with the dying flesh it will master it at the last as a growne man would a childe and ouercome it with lesse difficultie though not without all danger to it selfe Secondly Where there is the life of grace there will be an imployment of our strength in the acts of life The actions of liuing men are proper to men that are aliue so are they to these new men From this head therefore I shall giue you further two sorts of signes either such as doe concerne a mans owne indiuiduall person or those which are shewed for succession in propagating their kinde They which doe concerne a mans person are two 4 The breath of the new man First if we can freely draw the breath of the new man It is a signe of life to men of the world if wee can freely draw that breath which God doth offer for the prolonging of naturall life so likewise is this a signe of this new life if wee can freely draw the breath of Gods mouth which God doth breathe vnto the hid man of the heart And what breath is this but the Spirit of the Lord in the Scriptures Marke therefore if wee can draw in the Word of God to the cooling comforting and refreshing of our weary hearts which pant vnder the burden of sinne and if we can put it out againe both to coole the violence and fierie courses of sinfull men and to heat and warme the lukewarme and frozen hearted sonnes of men this will assure vs that we liue the life of God 5 Seruice of God The second signe which doth concerne our persons is this If wee doe put ouer our whole bodies and soules to the seruice of God For as then wee doe liue a naturall life when we doe imploy all our strength to the seruice of nature and as then wee doe liue a loyall life to our Soueraigne when wee are wholly taken vp for his honour and maintenance in good so then wee liue the life of
as the Apostle saith God hath put all things vnder his feet and hath giuen him to be the head ouer all things to the Church which is his body Secondly Christ hath most perfectly whatsoeuer may be most necessary for the life and saluation of his Church It pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1.19 2.9 Iohn 1.16 and out of his fulnesse we all receiue grace for grace he being made of God vnto vs wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1.30 Apoc. 9. Ioh. 10 27 28. Eph. 5.26 Rom. 8. He doth redeeme the Church by his bloud preserue it by his power instruct it by his Word renue and lead it by his Spirit Thirdly in all the controuersies betwixt God his creatures and the Church shee hath none to answer for her to pleade her cause and procure her peace Es 9.6 Eph. 5.23 but onely Iesus Christ the Counsellor and Prince of peace as the wife her husb●nd Fourthly Christ doth the duty of a Head that is giue spirituall sense by the sauing vnderstanding of spirituall things and motion by giuing strength and power to walke in them Yea he doth knit and ioyne the parts together to him by merit and spirit Eph. 4.16 and giue effectuall power to euery p●rt to doe its office Yea he so farre doth these good offices for his Church as her Head that as the head cannot be taken from the body without the certaine death and ruine thereof so as it is well said without Christ the Church is nothing else but as a dead carkasse Thus Christ being the vndoubted Head of the Church we may be sure that that is the true Chruch whereof hee is the Head Secondly wee cannot bee assured that that is the true Church whereof the Pope is the head and that vpon these grounds First we haue no assurance that Iesus Christ requires a Deputy in this world to wit as Mediatour for wee know that a Deputy serueth to supply the absence of the principall whereas Christ is alwaies present by his word spirit Mat. 28.20 Ioh. 14 16. Totum Christi secu●●●m esse essent a●c Act. 3.21 Totu● Christus secundum ●s●● p●rson●e Act. 2● 28 Io●●●● If you say that he is absent in respect of bodily presence I confesse that if you respect the whole essence of Christ his body is in Heauen and the Heauens must containe him till his comming againe but if you doe respect the whole person of Christ of whom when the Scripture doth speak● it doth attribute that vnto whole Christ which is proper to either nature so we say that Christ is present with vs though his body be in Heauen because we are not without the blessed communion and fellowship of the diuine nature Neither to his sufficient presence doe we neede his body now for though the Kings body bee onely at the Court yet is he a sufficient head for gouernement vnder God of his whole Kingdomes as his body politike Secondly we cannot be sure if Christ were altogether absent that any man in the world by vertue of any coined diuine anointing is able to supply his place For though as God the Kings and Princes of the earth are his Deputies to see his lawes obserued and to execute his iudgements because he hath made them so yet as Mediatour and Head of the Church he hath none partly because he hath made none Heb. 7.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and partly because his office is such as passeth not from one to another For euery worke of a Mediatour is a compound worke issuing from two natures concurring in the same action as the carued worke of Aholiab and Bezaleel was the issue of their bodies and soules in which respect there is required a strength aboue any created power Thirdly because the Papists say that the Pope is not the head of the Church in such a soueraigne and principall manner as Christ but the Ministeriall Head ouer the whole Church vpon earth therefore I adde this that we cannot be sure that a deputation of any inferiour gouernment and ministery is put ouer to any one man whatsoeuer For there are three things which doe hinder our through perswasion in this point First that Christ doth reserue euen outward administration in his owne power For it is he which sendeth forth his word and spirit which hath ordained a ministery fitted Euangelists Pastors Doctors whence he is called the Arch-shepherd It is he who assisteth his ministery with power and hath prouided the trumpet and sword of the magistracy to call and to dissolue counsels to summon and to disparcle armie● to defend his Church so farre as it is good for her from Satan the liar by heresie and Satan the murtherer by persecution Therefore what need haue we of a ministeriall head Secondly that there is no ministeriall head but must worke ministerially that which the principall head doth principally For else it is but a rotten head such as the Wolfe found in the caruers shop without wit or braines But no mortall man nor Angell can doe that which Christ our head doth because the office of his headship is executed by two natures concurring in one person Christ as I said before Thirdly Christo s●cluso that then there should be a Lordlike power ouer the whole Church vpon earth out of Christ in some creature which cannot be For ye know what Paul saith There are many diuisions or diuersities of ministeries 1 Cor. 12.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or administrations but the same or one Lord. So that as it is with Kings who are neuer out of their kingdomes though there are diuers officers vnder them yet there is but one in whom there is Regall power and that is the king himselfe so in this kingdome of heauen vpon earth the Church I meane though there are diuers offices yet hee keepes the royalty in himselfe which if he haue put ouer vnto another it must either fasten vpon him sloth or at the least ease to put the burthen of gouernment vpon a weaker persons shoulders or it must make vs say that hee hath done a needlesse thing to make a substitute in his own presence to doe that which is impossible 4. Lastly if Iesus Christ were absent and it were possible that there could be a deputy yet wee cannot bee sure that the Pope is he And of this I shall giue you foure grounds of suspicion First because it standeth vpon improbable interpretations such as can neither arise properly nor figuratiuely such as cannot be deriued by any succession to confirme the doctrine which they now hold concerning their great head They say that God said to Peter Thou art Peter and vpon this rocke will I build my Church and to thee will I giue the keies of the kingdome of heauen and againe feede my sheepe Therefore they say he said to Peter as their new doctrine concludeth I make thee Vicar and
displease God as God and doth carrie the Deuils stampe vpon it though it were neuer so small though neuer so profitable or pleasurable vnto vs though God did not see and iudge and the Deuill would not execute wee would not willingly commit it Behold this is our cutting off without hands Oh my beloued Christians now enter into your hearts and I hope that by this signe you shal see your selues to be in Christ If when you compare your selues with them that walke in naturall courses and see that you are cut off from them in iudgement in heart and in conuersation you can in simplicitie and godly purenesse say Lord thou knowest that our care hath not beene only to haue holinesse to the Lord without but to reforme our hearts and to dresse them vp for thee according to those spirituall abilities which thou hast giuen vs. Thou knowest Lord that we haue complained sighed and prayed vnto thee against the bodie of sinne and death and because thou louest the soule best we doe account all the sinnes of the soule most fearefull and therefore haue laboured against the blindnesse vanitie and carnall wisdome of our minds against the deadnesse and securitie of our hearts and the like It is not hid from thee our God that we haue beene and are vpright with thee Psal 18.23 and haue kept vs from our wickednesse not so much because it hurt vs as because it dishonoured thee not so much because it displeased vs as because it displeased thee and was contrary to thy most holy Law and Nature in the in●oyment of the communicable glorie whereof standeth our ioy and happinesse If it be thus with our soules at the least according to the desires purposes and endeuours of our hearts and if we doe groane vnder the want of that full measure of it which we might attaine vnto then we may comfort our hearts with this perswasion that we are in Christ The second Signe of our being cut from the first Adam is taken from the effect of it which is tendernesse of heart and conscience We know that a thing newly cut is tender as we may see in the example of Sychemites Gen. 34. newly circumcised And this was the reason why the Israelites were not circumcised in the wildernesse because through tendernesse they might not be vnfit for warre or trauell Now you must know that this our cutting off from Adam which being so done as it is alwaies doing till death is still fresh and bleeding new doth breed a double tendernesse First an inward tendernesse which is discouered by a sensiblenesse of our owne estate Secondly an outward tendernesse which is manifested by our sensiblenesse of anothers touch Wee are inwardly tender ouer our owne estates when with quicknesse we can apprehend the sinfulnesse of our natures Thus it was with Paul Rom. 7.18 when he professed to know that in him that is in his flesh dwelt no good thing This will fill vs with godly sorrow with a base opinion of our selues with Christian watchfulnesse and with a care to our power and in our places to preuent sinne in others and not willingly to admit of any thing that may kindle any lust or increase the practise of any sinne We are outwardly tender vnder anothers touch either in respect of euill or good In respect of euill when it is death and daggers to our soules that God should be dishonoured As in respect of our selues if sinne doe but touch our eares eyes tongues hands or thoughts we doe speedily turne them ouer to Gods vses desiring God to protect them and make them weapons of righteousnesse vnto holinesse so in respect of others like Iosephs irons it entereth into our soules that God should be dishonoured by them It was thus with Moses who Exod. 32.32 when he saw how greatly God would be dishonoured if hee should destroy a people whom he had so newly deliuered by his mightie power was so tender of that euill that he desired God rather to rase him out of the Booke of life You can parallele this with Paul his example also Rom. 9.3 Oh how excellently had they profited in Gods Schoole and learned to manifest their cutting off from the old stocke by their tendernesse vnder the touch of sinne Wee shall well imitate them when we can make all the rest of the petitions in faithfulnesse and truth to follow Hallowed be thy name In respect of good also wee are tender vnder anothers touch when we startle at the touch of God If God touch vs with his threatnings we must be as sensible as hee that said Psal 119. My flesh trembleth for feare of thee and I am afraid of thy iudgements If he touch vs with his promises we must hide them in our hearts and be so rauished with them that wee can feelingly say How sweet are thy promises to my mouth Psal 119. 1 Sam. 3. yea sweet●r than honey to my mouth If he touch vs with his precepts we answer with Samuel Speake Lord for thy seruant heareth and our hearts can eccho as Dauids did to this precept Psal 27.8 Seeke yee my face saying Thy face Lord will I seeke What shall I now say I will call vpon all our soules to apply this signe Let vs examine our owne hearts vpon our beds Psal 4. and be still Assure our selues of this that if we would fi●de our selues to be cut off from Adam wee must finde our selues tender Psal as I haue said Me thinks I heare you say that your sinfull estate is a burthen too heauy for you to beare that daily you groane to God vnder the sense of it as Paul Rom. 7. Wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death That you are grieued when God is dishonoured and because he is dishonoured daily therefore the very thought of it doth daily make you sigh Me thinks you say that you heartily desire that your eyes could gush out riuers of waters because men keepe not Gods law Psal 119. and that you quickly apprehend the touch of God in all his word or at the least if you cannot that your soules are filled with godly sorrow and that you doe desire God to circumcise the fore-skin of your hearts Deut 30.6 If it be thus then feare not but that you are in an vndoubted way to your being in Christ But if otherwise that our hearts are hard and senselesse of our owne miseries and Gods touch then woe woe woe vnto vs we are farre from being new creatures and so farre from Christ and so farre from heauen and happinesse T he second generall way whereby we may proue our selues to be new creatures We must be grafted into the new stock is by our ingrafting into the new stocke for before we are in Christ we must be grafted in Now in this ingrafting which is by the power of faith whereby we are through Gods ordinance made one with
Christ The dead shall heare the voice of God and shall arise Both which places doe speake of a gracious arising from sinne As therefore the holy Ghost saith All must first die and then comes the resurrection to iudgement So all must first die to sinne or they shall neuer arise to liue godlily Sometimes againe it is called a Quickning Psal 119.25 as when Dauid saith Quicken me according to thy Word As therefore the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15. O foole that which thou sowest is not quickned except it die So neither are our soules quickned except they thus die Secondly if we respect the malice of sinne it is such a deadly aduersarie that we cannot be deliuered from death in sinne but by the death of sinne if we doe not kill sin sinne will kill vs. As AZahel pursued Abner like a swift Roe so doth sinne vs euen vnto the graue and will neuer giue vs rest till it be quite vanquished in the perfect mortification of the bodie against the day of the Resurrection As therefore wee doe desire that grace may liue so wee must striue that this deadly enemie of grace may die Vse 1 We hauing thus considered the truth of this point may deriue from it both matter of doctrine and matter of exhortation As for doctrine it learneth vs that there must be a thorow change in all the children of God before they can be termed gracious Iohn 11. As when Lazarus who stunke in his graue was raised from death to life there was a thorow change in him a change in his parts essentiall and a change in his parts integrall in which respect a man might well haue said here is not the same man euen so is it with euerie one of vs when God makes vs gracious which change that we doe not conceiue to be substantiall we must marke as we are often taught that as there are three things to be considered in an instrument the bodie the strings and the harmonie wrought by the skill of the player So in man there is the bodie and soule the faculties and the worke of them Now touching this change the bodie soule and faculties remaining intire the change is made in the last when discord thorow the whole man is changed into concord and anomie in all the powers of man into conformitie to Gods will For this cause sanctification may be compared vnto our sense of touching If of blinde wee are made seeing there is a change but in the eye if of deafe wee are made hearing there is a change but in the eare if our smelling be restored there is a change but in the nose if our tasting be brought to vs againe there is a change but in the pallat but if our feeling be lost and restored there is a change in the whole bodie So is it with this spirituall Resurrection and quickning which worketh a change in the powers of the whole bodie and soule in putting them ouer to Gods vse There must be a new vnderstanding quickned to know Gods will a new heart quickned to incline vnto it and imbrace it new bodily instruments quickned to be weapons of righteousnesse vnto holinesse yea and the whole man 2 Cor. 5.17 or a new man or a new creation both in the whole soule and bodie and spirit to be kept blamelesse vntill the comming of our Lord Iesus 1 Thess 5.23 Thus in the first place let vs take notice of this point that so we entring into our selues and viewing the whole man may discerne by a change or no change whether we are sanctified and quickned yea or no. Vse 2 Secondly this point serueth also to exhort euery one of vs to a conscionable care to trie whether we haue life in vs yea or no. If we liue we can say as the father of his prodigall sonne This my sonne was dead and is aliue So I was dead yea I am dead vnto sinne and am aliue Wee haue no more assurance that we are aliue than we haue certaintie that we are dead If England and Ireland lay claime to one peece of ground the triall must be this Put a snake into it if it liues it belongs to England if it dieth it is Irish ground Right so if there be a controuersie betweene God and the Deuill whose possession man shall be the triall shall be thus Put the Serpent sinne into him if it liue he is the Deuils if it pine away and die he is part of Gods heritage Will you inquire then how we shall know whether sin die in vs yea or no I answer as a man may know whether another be dead vnto nature by the antecedent of death to wit sicknesse by the concomitants of death namely the decay of senses and pangs of death and by the consequents which are coldnesse and putrefaction So answerably we may know whether we are dead vnto sinne these three waies First by this antecedent which goeth before it namely See these three more largely in my Sermon on 2 Cor. 5.17 if we be sicke of sinne If as a man surcharged with grosse humours is neuer at ease till he haue abated them by vomit or purge so we oppressed with our sinnes can haue no rest in our soules till wee haue discouered sinne to our selues by examination opened it to God by confession executed reuenge vpon it by godly sorrow and purged it by faith in Christ then sinne is in a good degree to death Secondly by these two concomitants which goe with it First the sense of sinne must decay If therefore our eyes doe feebly behold vanitie and not with that vigour and content as before if our eares cannot endure to heare of it if we flie from the garment spotted of the flesh as from a Serpent if we finde no rellish and sauour in it but with an honest heart can say to it as to an vnprofitable thing Get thee hence then are wee in a second degree in the death of sinne But if secondly wee are come to the pangs of this death and doe finde that our sins through our lothnesse to forsake them haue striued and struggled as for life haue disturbed the peace of our soules haue sadded the flesh as those that mourne for the death of their friends haue comforted the spirit as those that reioyce at the death of enemies and so haue made the paines of the new birth the greater then are we a degree further in the death vnto sinne Thirdly we shall know it by these consequents which follow vpon it to wit coldnesse and putrefaction If therefore the heat of sinne be ouer Esay ● and the spirit of burning doe by degrees take possession of the place to consume it and if it rot and stinke in our account and make vs a burthen to our selues so long as it retaineth liuelihood in any corner of our bodies or soules then this is a fourth degree in the death of sinne and that which may assure vs of
risen with Christ Col. 3.1 Eph. 2.6 and wee sit with him in heauenly places His debased estate also is ours as his birth suffering vnder Pontius Pilate his crucifying his death his descension into hell For hence is it that we are said to be buried with Christ Rom. 6.4 5 6. and to be grafted with him into the similitude of his death yea and to haue the old man crucified with him as in this Text. If now you will inquire Why wee are said to haue fellowship in his death I answer For three causes especially First Because of that sacramentall vnion which wee ha●e with Christ Rom. 6. Wee are baptized into the death of Christ We are buried with Christ in Baptisme Baptisme doth seale vnto vs and giue vs interest in that communion which we haue in his death For as the dipping in the primitiue Church so the sprinkling of the water now doth signifie and seale our death and buriall with Christ Secondly Because what Christ did as Mediator of the Church hee did it not as a priuate person but as the head of the Church and in the roome and stead of all his elect Hence is it that hee is called our sponsor or suretie Heb. 7.22 For as the debt which a suretie payeth hee payeth not onely for himselfe because hee hath willingly made himselfe a debtor but for the partie also for whom hee is bound so Christ payeth for vs. Thirdly Because when wee truly turne from all sinne vnto God as we do with all our hearts make a deed of gift to conueigh our selues vnto God that so in all distresse we may plead as Dauid Psal 119. I am thine saue mee for I doe put my trust in thee Esa 9.6 so God doth make a deed of gift of whole Christ to conueigh him vnto vs. As therefore we account to haue right to that which is giuen vs as freely and as fully as if wee had purchased it or had it by inheritance euen so wee ascertaine and assure our selues of Christ crucified with all his benefits Vse 1 This therefore being a truth that we haue fellowship in the sufferings of Iesus Christ is of excellent vse both to procure the hatred and the mortification of sinne For the first we should grow in eternall enmitie with it when we doe but thinke that the Lord of life was crucified for it but if we set our selues in Christs roome and feelingly apprehend his paine as ours when hee conflicting with his Fathers wrath cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee When his soule was heauie vnto death and he being rosted with the fire of Gods wrath did in a cold season sweat drops of blood if wee shall account his inv●terable losse to be ours to wit that our sinnes made God to withdraw his louing countenance from vs good men to flie from vs our friends to deny vs our enemies to insult ouer vs the earth to quake the sunne to hide her light and the rockes to rent in sunder who will not now gnash his teeth at sinne and cry ouer it with a holy indignation as the Edomites ouer Ierusalem Downe with it downe with it euen to the ground Vse 2 As to the second to account our selues as crucified with Christ 1 Pet. 4.1 is an excellent meanes of mortification For he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sinne and if wee are dead to sinne Rom. 6.2 how shall wee yet liue therein Wee know that when a felon is executed hee is not onely freed from the imputation of sinne because he hath satisfied the law but from the practise of sinne also The same minde must be in vs that wee may mortifie the deeds of the flesh by such spirituall reasons as these are What am I not crucified am I not dead doe I yet worke the workes of darknesse as if I liued in sinne what is it that should make me rake together the dead bones of sinne to put new life into them I know that it is death to heare of such a dying Ah it is too true that wee loue our sinnes too well to let them be crucified with Christ But shall I tell you what we may doe to helpe all I remember that it was a law in Israel D●ut 21.11 12. that if a beautifull woman should be taken captiue in warre and any man should desire her as his wife hee must shaue her head pare her nailes put off the garment wherein hee loued her that is take away all her ornaments and if hee then liked her let him take her into his house Oh that we could be wise to deale thus with sinne It hath many ornaments sutable to our corrupt natures which doe beguile the seduced and deceiued eyes of our soules Some sinnes are clad with profit some with pleasure some with honour and other some with fauour but shaue off this alluring haire fling away these tempting garments and then yee shall see that it defaceth Gods image dishonoureth God grieueth and quencheth the spirit woundeth the conscience and presseth to hell Now tell me whether ye like sinne yea or no Oh that this might be a forcible inducement vnto vs to let our crucifying with Christ haue its diuine force It may be you will inquire for some plaine direction for the crucifying of sinne If you doe I shall soone say by Gods blessi●g much in a little See these things more largely in my Sermon on 2 Cor. 5.17 Marke the degrees of Christs crucifying for vs and wee must imitate it in our crucifying of sinne for Christ Christ was apprehended put in hold indited condemned and executed so must we deale with sinne Wee must apprehend it by a through examination put it in hold by godly sorrow indite it by a heartie confession condemne it by a seuere iudging of our selues and execute it by faith and a good conscience The longer we delay the stronger sinne is and the harder to kill Heare therefore that your soules may liue Let not the deuill seduce you with vaine hopes of long life or time enough to repent in Fishes will not be caught with a bloudy net why will yee Remember when one commended the Popes Legate at the Councell of Basil Tamen Romanus est Sigismond the Emperour answered Yet hee is a Romane So let the flesh commend Satan in all his sugred allurements neuer so much yet let the spirit answer Yet hee is a deuill Let vs neuer forget and God giue vs vnderstanding in all things that he is the roaring Lion seeking whom he may deuoure Hauing thus led you through the fellowship of Christ in his death wee are come to that pipe which by the force of this our communion doth conueigh life through this death and that is Faith Touching which wee ar● to obserue from hence That by vertue of this our communion with Christ wee liue by Faith It is not our faith absolutely considered that is our
A HAND OF FELLOWSHIP TO HELPE KEEPE OVT SINNE AND ANTICHRIST In certaine Sermons preached vpon seuerall occasions By ROBERT ABBOT Preacher of Gods Word at Cranebrooke in KENT LONDON Printed by John Haviland for Nathaniel Butter 1623. DAVIDS DESIRES THE ASSIZE AT HOME VPON PSALME 27.4 By ROBERT ABBOT LONDON Printed by John Haviland for Nathaniel Butter 1623. ¶ The principall Contents of the Booke following are 1 DAVIDS Desires from PSALME 27.4 wherein we are perswaded to desire the ordinary means of saluation and to be true members of the true Church wherein we may vse them 2 The Assize at Home from IAMES the 2.4 wherein all are perswaded to hearken to the voice of Conscience that all things may go well both in the Church and Common-wealth 3 The hid man of the heart from the 2 COR. 4.17 wherein we are directed in the triall of our spirituall estates that so we finding our death to sinne and life in grace may assure our hearts that we haue right in Christ 4 A preuenter of Securitie from 1 PETER 4.7 wherein we are perswaded to watch both against Popish doctrine and wicked liuing in these last and perillous times 5 The new mans new life from GAL. 2.20 wherein both our cursed death in sinne is discouered that we may be wounded for it and our life in grace is opened that we may reioyce in it and seeke to nourish it 6 The triall of True Religion from IAMES 1.27 wherein we are perswaded to be of a Religion and are taught by easie triall to see the truth of our Religion and the falshood of the Romish Apostasie TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL SIR THOMAS ROBERDS Knight and Baronet and to the Lady FRANCES his faithfull yoke-fellow Grace mercy and peace from God our Father and our Lord Iesus Christ by the Holy Ghost RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL IF I may be bold to looke so high I dare looke no higher than your selues in this my dedication Were I able to bring forth a birth worthy of a higher countenance to whom should I offer it but vnto my Lords Grace of Canterbury from whom I haue receiued all my worldly maintenance vnder whom I doe enioy all my best earthly countenance and at whose lips I haue receiued such most fatherly incouragements both to take heed to reading and to doctrine and also to pray to God morning and euening that God may be my God when I least dreame of him as I hope I shall neuer be backward to acknowledge alwaies ready to make vse of to the improuement of those spirituall graces wherewith through Gods gracious gift I came into this Country But I neuer yet could so ouerweene my owne abilities as to thinke their fruit worthie of such a patronage If I seeme not too presumptuous in what I doe I hope I neuer shall in what I might doe It is my ioy and my reioycing that within mine owne circle God hath raised me vp such friends as will not easily take in ill part my louing rudenesse towards them Some few yeeres experience makes this good of your worthy selues who haue so faithfully shewed your selues friends so cheerefully auditors and so patiently giuen me leaue both publikely and priuately to stirre vp your willing minds that I cannot entertaine the least doubt of your kinde embracings of this poore acknowledgment of my thankfulnesse vnto you I remember what Socrates did reply to Aeschines his scholler when being poore he tooke it to heart that he was not able to gratifie him his Master as others did Annon intelligis quàm magnum munus mihi dedisti nisi fortè teipsum parvi aestimas Doest thou not know saith Socrates how great a gift thou hast giuen me belike thou accountest thy selfe little worth Implying that he accounted his gift though poore more precious than theirs who were rich because they had giuen him of theirs he had giuen him himselfe Right thus doe I iudge the case to be betweene your Worships and my selfe It may trouble me that I haue no better to giue but I know it contents you that I giue my selfe to wit my presence to your persons my prayers for your estates and my vttermost abilities in the execution of my weake ministerie for the eternall good of your with all my deare peoples soules A taste of this I offer vnto you in these two Sermons which were first made publike at two Assizes by the ioynt request of you both next are made publike in Print by mine owne offer desire of the good of Gods Church God giue them acceptance in the eies of his people I doe not looke that they should finde a like entertainment amongst all My aime is to warme the hearts of my deare Countrymen whereto if the force of my poore sparke will not extend my neerer aim● is to doe good vnto my flocke which yet if I cannot reach my neerest aime is to shew my selfe thankfull vnto you both and aboue all to set forth the honour of God in awaking conscience and wooing and winning desires to this his true Church Busie are the aduersaries of our common mother the Church of England to gaine appetites and affections to Rome Many words are thought too few much eloquence too little and the rowling of all stones not enough to this end If therefore Croesus his dumbe sonne could speake when he saw one offering violence to his father Homo ne intersicias Croesum saying O man kill not Croesus then no maruell if we that are speaking sonnes of our deare Mother doe plead her cause and redeeme her credit from the slander of strangers yea of her vnnaturall children It was a militarie law of old that the souldiers who had not killed an enemie should not be girded with a girdle but with an halter and surely me thinks the law were good to be executed vpon them who haue not maintained the Church their mother as they are able To auoid this censure I haue done my best as I could in a word and if I meet with a heauier censure for doing what I haue than if I had done nothing my comfort is that I haue vsed my talent with an honest heart and therefore am not altogether out of hope that I may be a little blast in Gods mouth a little to consume the Man of Sinne in them that cannot search either more large or learned bookes There is but one thing aboue the rest which breedeth preiudice in mens minds and keeps them from making vse of our writings and that is this A politike perswasion by cunning leaders that we preach a new doctrine and walke not in the traces of our forefathers But if either of these could be iustly fastned vpon vs we should hate our selues our doctrine our course As for our doctrine we heartily confesse that it is impossible that sauing truth should be kept vp in a corner and not disclosed till latter dayes It neither stands with Gods loue who willeth that all men should be saued and come to the
passe to the matter propounded pawse wee a while vpon the two phrases in the Text. First Doe yee not or haue yee not iudged in your selues say some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doe or haue yee not discerned or put a difference in or with your selues say others Let euery man abound in his owne sense where faith is not impeached or destroyed and the Scripture wilfully wronged and neglected The Word is knowne to be passiue and is deriued of a word that signifieth to iudge And whereas iudging doth imply foure acts in it that is hearing inquiring conuicting the wrong doer and passing sentence some doe vnderstand it of the act of all foure when they expresse it thus Are yee not iudged in your selues Others vnderstand it of the sinne against all foure or at the least against the last vpon the abuse of the three former when they expresse it thus Are yee not partiall in your selues Others vnderstand it of the act of conuicting which I am the more willing to follow because of that apt addition In your selues 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Implying that though they would not passe righteous iudgement yet by diligent inquisition and knowledge of the cause they were conuicted in the Court within As for the second Phrase how shall I expresse it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shall I say Iudges of vniust cogitations as if I meant to vaile and obscure it Or Iudges of euill thoughts in more plaine and popular termes Or ●udges wickedly deliberating It may be the words may more fully be expressed That which is translated Thoughts doth signifie a secret reasoning about or discussing of a thing within a mans selfe as with another whereby he doth argue the case and debate the matter both by asking and answering and so resoluing within a mans selfe And therefore as sometimes it is translated thoughts as when Christ saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 15.19 Out of the heart come euill thoughts so as aptly is both the word from whence it commeth rendered to reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 5.22 Matth. 16 8. and the word it selfe reasonings as when the Scribes and Pharisees thus argued Christ forgiueth sinnes therefore he blasphemeth Iesus perceiued their reasonings and said What reason you in your hearts Now these reasonings debatings dialogues and discourses are called Thoughts which are the meanings of the minde to and fro about those things which it apprehendeth and are of two sorts For either they are about the nature essence excellencie and vses of things in generall which may be called Theoreticall thoughts or about the same things as they are to be apprehended approued disallowed practised or disauowed of vs in particular which may be called practicall thoughts because by them the soule viewing and staying vpon it selfe and comparing it selfe with the first patterne doth shape a course for the owner to walke in so farre as it apprehendeth and doth comfort and confound accordingly So that indeed these thoughts are only the worke of the conscience vpon the ill cariage whereof in corrupt reasonings the same conscience doth play the corrupt Iudge in withholding the truth in vnrighteousnes as we may see in this particular For the question lying whether a rich man were to haue respect meerely for his riches sake before a godly poore man and their thoughts beating vpon it and chewing it vp and downe by varietie of motion because they saw more outward glory comming by the one than the other and mo●● danger preuented they did imprison the ●ruth and 〈◊〉 ●orrupt Iudges concluded gaue sentence against ●he poore Saints and so they became Iudges of euill reasonings Now you see in this Verse the ground of my parable where I would consider two things First the power of practicall conscience Secondly the abuse of that power For as it is with most power it is abused vnto sin namely to serue mens owne turnes and the like so the power of our consciences which is to reason it out and conclude accordingly is abused to iudge wickedly euen against conuiction To speake first of the power of our consciences you must know as I haue said that to dialogue in our selues is to aske and answer in our selues The power of our Consciences and to giue iudgement according to reason And to Reason is vpon two premises to inferre a conclusion and this is a iudiciall proceeding The Proposition like the Iudge doth open the truth and like a witnesse doth beare witnesse vnto it The Assumption like the Iurie doth apply it to the parties to be tried The Conclusion like the Iudge doth giue and passe the sentence This is the summe of what I haue to say from hence For the more cleare deliuerie whereof that we may as fully as we can comprehend the vertue of these reasoning thoughts lay we downe first these two propositions in generall and so we shall fall to the particulars The first generall proposition is this that God hath established an assize for iudgement within our selues Hence is it that we are said to be Iudges To conceiue therefore aright of it consider that there is the Iudgement seat or Court Hall within a mans selfe An Assize within vs. the partie to be tried man himselfe the Iudge witnesse Iurie the conscience which shall proceed according to true allegations and proofes and all these sweetly inwrapped in these reasoning thoughts Yea and that all things may be carried the more fairely there is the law imposed vpon the reasonable creature as apprehended by him to be the rule and records The causes and grounds of this Assize are these two First in respect of God that God may haue an account of the state of man from himselfe and man may be brought to liue in holinesse and righteousnesse vnder God For looke as a King of a country doth ordaine Assizes to be kept in his seuerall Shires and Counties that hee may haue an account of the iustice of his Magistrates estate of his country liues of his subiects and that he may preserue them in peace and loue in their seuerall places so God hath appointed this petty Assize that he may haue an account of the conscience how the minde doth rule and gouerne how the whole man is gouerned in righteousnesse holinesse and sobriety how the state of the body and soule stands before God in the case of life and death and that the desires and affections may be kept from mutinie and rebellion and the whole man may be brought vnder the subiection of Gods will Vel medio huminis naturalis vel medio luminis fidei Our vnderstandings either by the light of reason or by the light of faith should haue the law of God presented vnto them whereby they should suruey both morall duties and the mysticall points of Diuinitie our inuentions should finde out variety of dutie for vs our memories should keepe the records our wils should chuse and command all good actions our
that we may be afraid to abuse our consciences for this we may be assured of that though our consciences be calmed for a time yet as Nycippus his sheepe brought forth a Lion which portended to tyrannie so our consciences which seeme to be as quiet as lambes will at the last bring forth roaring as a presagement of our eternall thraldome Soli Deo gloria THE HID MAN OF THE HEART VPON 2 CORINTH 5.17 By ROBERT ABBOT LONDON Printed by John Haviland for Nathaniel Butter 1623. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL SIR HENRY BAKER Knight and Baronet and to the Lady KATHERINE his religious and louing Wife Grace in this world and glory in the world to come through CHRIST our LORD RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL The rule is not more old than good Ingenuum est fat●r● per quem prof●●cris That it is an ingenuous thing to confesse by whom we reape profit Hauing therefore by good proofe found your hands not to be sealed vp to me though I beg no new fauours because through Gods mercy I haue learned to want and to abound and in all estates to be content yet I humbly beseech you to giue me leaue freely to acknowledge your loue vnto me It was not wi●hout your charge that I came first to settle in this Cou●●ry neither haue I here continued without the inlargement of my Librarie by your Bookes bestowed vpon me What therefore can I render vnto you besides my publike Ministerie but some such poore acknowledgment as this is A plaine Sermon I confesse it is yet such an interpreter of my heart that I hope you shall plainly see my honest desires to lay before you a picture of your together with the rest of Gods peoples gratious estates It was a vse in rich mens feasts Herodot lib. 3. amongst the Aegyptians of old to appoint one who should shew a wodden carkasse of a man liuelily cut out to euery guest and to say to this effect So eat drinke and delight thy selfe as withall thou cast thy eye vpon this which sheweth thee what thou shalt be when thou art dead It may be this spirituall anatomie which I offer vnto you may haue as good a vse to call backe our ouer-lauish loues from the delights of this world by shewing vs either what we are or what we should be What though it be rudely cut yet when I remember a worthy speech of your owne What care I for a young man who can talke of genus and species and other logicall and philosophicall subtleties giue me an experienced Preacher who can speake to the heart I cannot doubt of your louing entertainment of this my homely worke I know you neglect not any humane Arts prouided they doe prepare and not imprison our wits from more noble imployments Modo praepareat no● detinc●●t ingentum it hath beene your glory to be well seene in some of them yet when I doe consider what S. Augustine saith if my memory faile not Surg●●● 〈…〉 〈…〉 〈◊〉 ●●●or●● tr●●●●●● 〈…〉 The vnlearned arise and take heauen by violence whereas great Doctors are thrust into Hell and when I see that many thriue in grace who haue no learning but Scripture and no eloquence but what conscience doth dictate I cannot but humbly pray to God that you may alwaies be of that minde which you d●e d scouer in that gratious speech I know right well that they are to be found in the world who will lay other draughts of holinesse before you than you shall here finde They will tell you of Masses of haire-cloth of whippings of pilgrimages and other penances and were it not that God hath taught you already to discouer the hypocrisies of these and to see that to stop the mouth of conscience for a time they may be practised by the wickedest wretches they might haply preuaile with you being gilded ouer by the subtleties of Antichrist But blessed be God your soules are from amongst Lions and I hope you haue beene longer trained vp in Christs schoole than to be so gulled with such impostures My care and prayer to God for you shall rather be that yee may adorne the profession of the Gospell which yee haue vndertaken There are too many in the world who with Caius Curio are singularly eloquent Lin. vitae ex vell Pat●r● lib. 2. and wittily wicked but how much better is it to haue a flower tongue and a duller braine with more true godlinesse and honestie Goe on I humbly beseech you to be recluses from the world and from the wickednesse of it And because there are many who are like Copronimus of whom it is said Ne● Christianū nec Iudaeum nec Paganum fu●sse sed colluui●m quandam impietatis that though he would be called a Christian yet he was neither Christian nor Iew nor Pagan but a very sinke and puddle of sinne th●refore how will it honour such persons as yee are to redeeme the c●edit of the Gospell f●om obloquie and to honour God by sincere and constant practises of pietie They lay a kinde of disgrace vpon God as well as vpon the Gospell that would be accounted Christians and yet are not good If a King should send with instructions for the presenting of his person and will to another Prince such a messenger as could not execute it did it not lay this disgrace vpon him that he is not able to chuse a fit person to doe his businesse So is it disgracefull to God to send such an one into the world in his name and with the honourable title of his seruant yea Sonne who doth the errand of the world the flesh and the deuill rather than of him whose name he beareth That therefore the censure of the Cynick vpon the common people who did highly extoll those that contemned money and yet were very money-mongers themselues may not fall vpon you let it be your glory and your reioycing not onely to praise and countenance the vertuous but also as you haue begun to be of the same knot and blessed societie I know that this must be effected by a spirituall death vnto the world and sinne but if it were a comfort to be put to death with Phocion 〈…〉 because Phocion was innocent and well-deseruing of the Common-wealth then how much comfort may it be vnto vs to haue fellowship in the death of Christ to our death vnto sinne and in his resurrection to our rising vnto newnesse of life This Sermon shall through Gods blessing a little helpe you forward in this gracious worke in which respect my humble suit vnto you is that you would be pleased to vse it as your owne I was loth to let you passe amongst my publike acknowledgments of others loues though I cannot at thi● ti●e giue you what place you haue and I would be lot● that now I doe shew my selfe vnto you I should not giue you that content which I desire To end in a word SIR let me put you
in minde of that Axiome which was registred amongst the Ciuilians in the daies of Iustinian 〈…〉 That it wa● n●t conuenient for any man to looke after what was done at Rome but to examine iustly what ought there to be done Th●s politike rule was ma●e to vphold Romes cre●it 〈◊〉 Rom●s villanies I would a little alter it vnto your Worship and say that it is conu●nie●t for you to looke after what is done am●n●● vs and to examine iustly what ought to be done This is the next way to giue you to see the idlenesse drunkenn●sse and o her d●sorders that doe abound through Ale-houses those cursed nurseries of villanie which doe compass● vs in on euery side and prouoke you to vnsh●ath the sword of iustice which God hath put into your hand C●ra ●●●●●●nte● nem●●● 〈◊〉 D●● 〈…〉 ●●st●● a●●●●●●●●quam induc●re Oh how well would it become you how much would it honour God and how would it cheere the spirits of the good who are sadded with this burthen vpon vs MADAME let me put you in minde of that speech of Iohn to the elect Ladie If there come any vnto you and bring not the doctrine of our Lord Iesus receiue him not to house neither bid him God speed and let your speciall care be that your children be found walking in the truth To you both I haue as a Minister of the Gospell Onus vel ipsis A●g●● so●m●o●●● a fearefull burden which lieth v●on me God is my ●ortion if I shall vnder goe it with an honest heart This shall also adde vnto my reward if in your places you shall still carry your selues as the beloued of God This therefore he prayeth for who desires for euer to remaine Your Worships poore friend and carefull Shepherd ROBERT ABBOT THE HID MAN OF THE HEART 2 CORINTH 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new creature NOT to stand vpon the coherence of these words there is decided in them a case of conscience which being well conceiued will giue great satisfaction to a tender soule The case is this How I may know my selfe to be in Christ The resolution is this If any man be in Christ he is a new creature Which resolution that we may conceiue and apply I shall take this course First I shall open the doctrine of it and secondly apply it 1 Explication The doctrine of it is this He that is in Christ is a new creature For the opening whereof consider two things First the subiect or party spoken of that is he that is in Christ secondly the predicate or thing spoken of him to wit that he is a new creature To conceiue aright of the party spoken of consider three points First what it is to be in Christ Secondly the necessitie of it And thirdly how many waies we may be in him As to the first To be in Christ is to be in the state of grace Wh●t it is to be in Christ that is to be conuerted from sinne to be glewed by faith vnto Iesus Christ and so to haue fellowship with him in righteousnesse and holinesse As to be in the Lord Apoc. ● ●● is to b● in a gratious estate cut off from th● old man and grafted into ●esus Christ so is it likewise to be in Christ Rom. ● There is no cond mnation to them that are in Christ saith Paul tha● is to them tha● are in the ●ta●e of grace And no other thing doth Paul ●ignifie by sleeping in ●esus 1 Thess 4.14 16. and dying in Christ but dying in a conue●ted and gratious estate Now secondly for the necessitie of our being in Christ it shall appeare three waies It is necessarie that we b● i● Christ First because if we be not in Christ we shall perish for euer for which cause the Apostle chiefly desired to be found in him as he saith I haue accounted and I doe iudge all things to be losse and dung Philip. 3.9 that I might winne Christ and that I may be found in h m. Why shall we perish if we be out of Christ I answer secondly because if we be our of Christ we haue no sauing right either to our naturall ciuill gratious or glorious liues All our sanctified right is by purchase all our purchase comes from our price and all our price from the God-Man Iesus Christ who hath giuen himselfe for vs. But why doth all our sauing right to all things come from Ch●ist our price I answer thirdly Because all the true good we haue comes vnto vs by couenant Be it spirituall things I●●●● 3● God puts the law in our inward parts for our illumination he writes it in our hearts for our sanctification he taketh charge of vs for our protection he manifesteth the inward graces of the Spirit in vs by his knowledge and worship he forgiueth our iniquities and remembreth our sinnes no more for our iustification Ier. 32.40 41. he will delight to doe vs good and neuer depart from vs for our perseuerance and all this comes to vs by couenant Be it temporall an● bodily things Hosea 2.21 22. I will heare the heauens saith God and they shall heare the earth and the earth shall heare the corne and the wine and the oyle and they shall heare Israel ●hat is they shall haue plentie of the things of this world and all this comes vnto vs by couenant and by Gods mariage of himselfe vnto vs as the Prophet speaketh Now then seeing ●ll things come vnto vs by couenant let mee a●ke you what difference is there betweene comming to vs by couen●nt and comming to vs by Christ Surely no●e at ●ll For therefore the Prophet calleth Christ Esay 42.6 Esay 49.8 The Couenant of his people that is of the Iewes the seed of Abraham according to the flesh first because to them belong the Promises and to their Children next and in reuersion to vs who are Abrahams seed ac●ording ●o the Spirit If you a k●●e why Christ is called the Cou●nant of the people I answer First because he doth re●●iue the Promises from God in Abraham Isaack and Iaacob in the behalfe of the Church In which respect the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 1.20 Which as I ●●ke it may be ●xt●nd●d ●oth to the ●●●●●t and to the ac●omplishment of ●he● Gal. 6.15 that in him that is in Christ are all the Promis●s yea and in him they are Amen Secondly because in him the Church doth bend her selfe to performe couenants yea and doth it in him and as his bodie In which respect the Apostle saith In him a new creature a●aileth So that not onely the promises o● God are in him but our performances also Thirdly because as Christ ●ade this Couenant so he confirmed it by his death In which resp●ct his bloud euen in the shadow is called the bloud of the Couenant Heb. 9.20 and the remembrancer and seale of it is called the New
without it Thus we shall resemble that man after Gods owne heart Psal 84. whose soule longed and fainted for the Courts of the Lord. Fourthly we must desire the word by supernaturall instinct By instinct Babes in desiring the dugge doe not respect the profit the pleasure the goodnesse and nourishment of it but are carried vnto it by a naturall instinct so we must be addicted vnto the word not for eloquence learning law or times sake but by a supernaturall instinct and spirituall inclination to seeke nourishment from thence from whence we receiued our being in grace Let these foure be tokens of our n●w ●irth which if wee finde in our soules yea but in desire prouided there be a purpose and endeuour to increase let me then say vnto vs all with ioy that if we care a while we shall be for euer safe Secondly we may know that we receiue motion from Christ our head How wee may know that wee receiue motion from Christ our head if our heads and hearts be not moued to the world as the world but as it may be in any of the kindes of it a testimonie of Gods loue and a necessarie supply for our pilgrimage in this vale of teares It is true ●hat Agar may be in the familie for seruice but Sarah must be mistresse Abraham may build a Groue for his delight Gen. 21.33 ●ut hee must not forget God but call vpon the Lord the euerlasting God there The things of this world are but left-hand blessings and they must be vsed accordingly We all feele to our griefe that naturally we are carried to the earth but Christ swayeth his members another w●y For as it is wi●h the waters of the Sea though by their naturall course they follow the Center yet by obedience to the Moone they are subiect to her motion As it is conceiued and resolued by the wise men of nature and so turne and returne ebbe and flow and are kept in continuall motion to keepe them from corruption so is it with Christs members though by their owne motion they are carried to the ear●h yet by obedience to Christ their first mouer they seeke the things that are aboue to keepe themselues from corrupting Lastly we may know that we as members doe worke for Christ How wee may kno● that wee worke for Christ our head if we seeke to aduance the honour of Christ in all things but especially in our selues If we looke into our owne soules wee shall finde that there is a cursed carnall wisdome which will worke a glorying in our worldly happinesse and an aduancing of our owne righteousnesse and moralitie together with a drawing vs to pride our selues in the many graces which God hath giuen vs. But if wee can wisely separate the worke of Christ from our owne working and when we feelingly consider our selues cry out with that holy Martyr Gehennah sum Domine I am hell Lord I am hell and with the blessed Apostle I am the least of Saints I am the chiefe of sinners and notwithstanding all the graces that are in vs to say in humble wise with the same Apostle I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord Rom. 7.25 and againe thanks be to God for his vnspeakable gift then with a holy confidence in the merits of our Sauiour wee may write our selues members of Christ Thus I hope that through Gods goodnesse I haue in some measure satisfied the first demand and made it appeare vnto vs how wee may discerne our selues to be the members of Christ What are those gifts of members which we doe receiue in our ingrafting into Christ The second question may be this What are those gifts which we doe receiue in our ingrafting into Christ by which it may be manifested vnto vs that we are new creatures and in Christ I answer that there are many gifts which God bestowes vpon vs at that time but I shall onely speake of those that are most sensible in their working as being most manifest discouerers of our new estates in Christ These gifts are two The first is the death of sinne the second is the life of grace Sinne must die and by degrees perish Grace must liue and by degrees flourish in vs if we be new creatures in Christ First sinne must die in vs. This the Apostle expresseth by mortifying our earthly members Mortification by crucifying the old man with the lusts thereof and by casting off concerning our conuersation in times past Col. 3.5 Gal. 5.24 Eph. 4.22 which is corrupt through the deceiueable lusts For the effecting whereof I would haue you distinctly conceiue these two points First what we must doe against sinne Secondly what we must suffer for the death of sinne As for our doing against sinne we must imitate the crucifying of Iesus Christ What we must doe against sinne which is an exact patterne of Gods iustice against sinne First wee must attache sinne by not suffering it freely to doe that mischiefe which it hath done It hath conuersed formerly in our soules without controll but now we must begin to thinke that it is possible for sin to be our enemie We must suspect it of felonie and treason against God therefore we must lay hands vpon it and resolue that it shall not haue that liberty to play its prancks as it hath had This counsell Paul giues to the Romanes when he saith Let not sinne reigne that is Rom. 6.12 13. call the authoritie of it into question giue not your members as weapons vnto it call in your forces from it and put it in hold that it may be forth-comming to answer that which shall be laid vnto its charge Secondly We must arraigne sinne by bringing of it vnto a iudiciall triall before the barre of our consciences as before Gods deputie We must examine it vpon the dishonour which it hath done to the God of mercy the wounds it hath made in our soules and the hurt it hath done to all which wee are and haue want of this it was that God complained of by Ieremy when hee hearkened and heard and no man spake aright saying What haue I done That is Ier. 8.6 no man betweene God and his owne soule called his sinne to an account Thirdly wee must indite sinne by making the accusation of it as large as the flying booke of Zacharies curses As if we should say O my God Zach. 5.2 this rebell sinne dishonoureth thee defaceth thy image makes me like the deuill hides thy fatherly countenance from me grieues thy spirit and wounds my conscience Luk. 15.17 18 19 and the like Thus the prodigall laid to the charge of sinne that he died for hunger that he had sinned against heauen that he departed from his father and that he was not worthy to be his sonne 1 Cor. 11.31 Fourthly we must condemne sinne by iudging of it out of measure sinfull and our selues for it worthy of
eternall wrath Ezek. 36.31 Marke the words of the Prophet Yee shall remember your wickednesse and your deeds which were not good and shall iudge your selues worthy to haue beene destroyed for your iniquities and abhominations Thus the Prodigall iudged himselfe not worthy to be called his fathers sonne Luk. 15.19 Most of vs iudge our selues better than we are because we compare our selues with our selues and with them that are worse some iudge themselues worse than they are as some few poore afflicted soules who being ouer-borne with the violence of temptation cannot see themselues in Christ but in the Law but we must passe righteous iudgement and that without repeale Fiftly we must execute sinne and to this end we must doe three things First wee must make a crosse for it by crossing and thwarting all the slights and fetches of sinne whereby it would gaine vpon vs. And this must be by caring and speedy paines-taking in our soules both after the pardon of sinne 2 Co● 7.11 and after power against it by apologie or clearing of our selues and vomiting the poyson of sin vp by hearty confession so soone as it is committed by indignation in renouncing all friendship with sinne and being angry with our selues that we should be such varlets as to commit it by fearing lest we should fall into it againe by desiring spirituall communion and fellowship with God in Christ in the vse of such meanes as God hath appointed for our strengthning by Zeale burning vp and consuming all fleshly loue and desire after sinne and all sluggishnesse to the practise of contrary graces by reuenge depriuing it of that which doth maintaine it that is not onely the lusts of pleasure and profit but the garment spotted by the flesh together with all occasions which may either draw on sinne or incourage it to be the more bold or take new hold vpon vs as excesse in our Christian libertie either in the vse of our meats drinks or cloathing Of these parts is the crosse of sinne excellently framed to bring it vnto death Secondly wee must number sinne amongst theeues before wee will execute it Wee vse not to execute any but those which are malefactors to this end therefore wee must account sinne so and reckon it to be as odious as may bee For thus wee shall both keepe our selues from danger when the very thought of the greatnesse of it doth affright vs as also we shall manifest our hatred of sinne when all the rhetoricke and eloquence we haue is little enough to set out the deformitie of it Thirdly for the executing of sinne wee must die with Christ for by faith we must set our selues in his roome and feele so neere an vnion betwixt him and vs that his death may really be ours and wee virtually die in him Then shall we haue our iust plea against all allurements to sinne How shall we that are dead to sinne liue yet therein Rom. 6.2 We cannot and be in Christ too for he that hath suffered in the flesh saith Peter hath ceased from sin 1 Pet. 4.1 2. that he hence-forward should liue as much time as remaineth in the flesh not after the lusts of men but after the will of God Thus deare Christians haue I taught you what wee must doe against sinne that sinne may die which because it cannot be without our passion and suffering therefore in the second place consider what wee must suffer for the death of sinne My hope and desire is that as your soules haue gone along with me hitherto so they shall still hold out vnwearied in such sauing points of diuinitie We must suffer for the death of sinne some things that goe before it some things that come with it and some things that doe follow after it First yee know that ordinarily sicknesse goeth before death so we must be sicke of sinne As a man that is stomack-sicke can haue no ease till the humors be abated one way or other so must it be betweene vs and sinne till sinne be abated Looke vpon Dauid 〈…〉 and you shall see that his bones were troubled his soule was vexed his heart fainted his eies were dimmed his bed was washed his couch was watered and all because he knew his iniquities and his sinne was euer before him P●●l ●1 ● When Dauid was thus sicke of sinne there was hope that the graue should be digged for it ere long meane while the spirit within him compelled him to goe to the Physitian of his soule and say O Lord heale mee for my bones are vexed And againe O Lord deliuer my soule that the bones which thou hast broken may reio●ce Secondly yee know that two things come with death namely decay of senses and pangs of death so these two things also we must suffer for the death of sin Our sense of sinne must decay our eies must feebly behold the obiects by which ●inne is nourished See ●y S●r●on vpon Gal. ● ● We must turne them away from beholding vanitie with pleasure our eares must not endure to heare of it as I haue said before Our senses abused are the Deuils cinque-ports both to let out that wickednesse which is bred in our hearts M●●●m 〈◊〉 〈…〉 and to let in that which by the aduersarie is sowed in the field of Gods creatures when therefore we doe challenge them from the Deuill I●b 31.1 and sense them for Gods vses as Iob when he made a couenant with his eyes and Dauid when hee would hearken what the Lord will say and the like then doe ●hey decay and perish from sinne and from vncleannesse Againe we must finde to the griefe and v●x●tion of our naturall estate that our sinnes doe struggle and striue as for life and are vnwilling to die The Deuill finding his kingdome in sinne to be diminished must then or neuer bestirre himselfe as a she Lion robbe● of her whelpes We know by common experience that the birth of a childe naturall cannot be without paine so neither can the birth of the new man that hid man of the Heart Was it not a paine to the Israelites to be called out of Aegypt and in the wildernesse to be fitted for fellowship with God by thunderings lightnings earthquakes and the like It is no lesse to all Gods Sonnes whom he calleth out of the Aegypt of sin whereof Pharaohs Aegypt was but a type and shadow Therefore was Dauid cast into the deepe Psal 130.1 out of which hee called vnto God and when Ionas was of a prodigall to become a conuert he cried vnto God out of the belly of hell Ionas 2.2 Thirdly yee know that two things also follow after death to wit coldnesse and putr●faction euen so these two things also we must suffer for the death of sinne for first sinne must be cold in vs Before it was as it were our life bloud in our account without which we could not liue If euer we shewed any
actiuitie it was in sinning we rushed into wickednesse as a horse into the battaile we drunke iniquitie like as the wilde Asse doth water But now our heat is much abated As it was with Iob when God had brought him to see himselfe hee was cold in his pleadings against God and said Once haue I spoken but I will answer no more Iob 39.38 yea twice but I will proceed no further so it is with all Gods people so that if euer they fall into sinne againe they are very bu●glers at it they cannot hide it and colour it as they did before they cannot giue it the full strength and force of will and affections yea as there is great difference betwixt the naturall worke of a childe and of a man so is there no lesse difference betwixt sinne in the childe of God in whom it waxeth more cold euery day than other and in the wicked who is a man in sinning and in whom it is vigorous and like the Leuiathan in the sea in its owne proper element Secondly sinne must as it were stinke in our nostrils It must be like Lazarus in the graue Iohn 11. of whom it was said he stinketh alreadie As therefore Dauids enemies said to him Fie vpon thee fie vpon thee so must we with loathing say to sinne The Prophet speaking of those that should be true conuerts from Idolatrie Esay 30.22 saith Yee shall pollute the couerings of the Images of siluer and the rich ornament of thine Images of gold and cast them away as a menstruous clout and thou shalt say vnto it Get thee hence Thus mu●t all true Conuerts deale with all sin If the righteous man can smell sin and iniquity euen in his holy offerings Exod. ●8 38 ●●a●●4 ● in which respect our righteousnes is as a menstruous and polluted cloth how much more must a penitent man smell hell in his sinne to make him to abhorre it for euermore Me thinkes now my beloued I haue laid a glasse before you wherein you may view your soules God make it to cause a comfortable ●eflexion vpon you that yee may see your owne pictures My hope is that the more yee view it the more yee shall see that it is none other but what yee feelingly and from experience finde to be wrought in you alreadie towards the eternall death of your cursed enemie 2 Viuification Yet yee must goe one step further as I haue told you for as sinne must die and perish so grace must liue and florish The second gift therefore which we doe receiue in our grafting into Christ 2 Cor. 4.10 ●phe● 4.18 1 Pet. 4.2 is a new life This is called the life of Iesus and the life of God and liuing after the will of God and Christs liuing in vs liuing vnto God ●al 2.20 Rom. ● ●7 and obeying from the heart vnto the forme of doctrine to which we are deliuered and the like Looke as when there shall be a new heauens and a new earth wherein righteousnesse shall dwell as Peter speaketh there shall be a new life ● Pet 3.13 and a new m●nner of liuing for wee shall not need the ordinarie supplies in this world for our necessities or infirmities when the Lambe shall be all in all vnto vs so when wee are new creatures in Christ Iesus wee doe receiue a new life and a new manner of liuing The old course of sinning cannot agree with this estate Rom. 8.1 He that is in Christ must not walke after the flesh but after the spirit Hence is it that Christ saith He that abideth in mee and I in him Iohn 15.5 the same bringeth forth much fruit And Iohn doth strongly second it saying If we say that we haue fellowship with him 1 Iohn 1.6 and walke in darknesse we lie As therefore when we looke vpon the Impes which we haue grafted and see them bring forth bud leafe and fruit we reioyce in the worke of our hands and say they take well so when we looke vpon our selues who are grafted into Christ Philip. 1.11 and see that wee bring forth the fruits of r●ghteousnesse which are by Iesus wee may reioyce in the worke of Gods hands who hath wrought all our workes for vs and say that we take well Esay 26.12 The Spirit of Christ which in our grafting into him he conueigheth vnto vs is a Spirit of life it is an actiue and operatiue Spirit Rom. 8.2 in which respect the second Adam is called a quickening Spirit What must we doe now I will tell you 1 Cor. 15.45 Seeing those that are new creatures in Christ must liue a new life therefore euery one of vs must trie whether we haue this new life in vs yea or no. I know that the newest life wee can procure cannot deserue Gods presence and fauour yet by Gods gratious acceptation it giues a fit qualification for the entertainment of such a guest as God is For if to bring vs vnto Kings we must not be base and sordid in our persons and conuersations yea we must be acquainted with fit complements for such a presence for Mordecai might not enter into the Kings gate when hee was clothed with sackcloth Host 4.2 much more must we be furnished with fit complements and qualities for the presence of God in Christ and to haue communion and fellowship with him How wee may discouer this new li●e Lift we vp our hearts then and let vs consider whether we haue this life in vs yea or no. It may be you will say How shall we know whether we haue this new life of the new creature I answer that this may be discouered vnto vs two waies 1. By our aptnesse in procuring the helps of life 2. By our imployment of our strength in the acts of life First Where there is the life of grace there is an aptnesse to preserue it selfe by procuring the helpes of life Now these helpes doe either respect our selues Helpes of a new life or our enemies That which respects our selues is fit maintenance for grace Fit maintenance Grace thriues not where it cannot bee maintained and wheresoeuer it is it will seeke for more As I said before that in the very entrance of our new birth We will as new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the Word so at that time when our ingrafting into Christ is more manifested vnto our consciences wee still ayme at meanes to maintaine and preserue it Oh how doe we pray to God That God would stablish vs by his free Spirit Psal 51. and not take his holy Spirit from vs How doe we pant vnto God That hee would grant vs according to the riches of his glory ●●hes 3.16 17. that wee may be strengthened by the Spirit in the inner man that Christ may dwell in our hearts by faith and that wee may bee rooted and grounded in loue How doe we hunger and thirst after
and faggot If it be thought that yet this need not bee feared amongst vs I know it well yet we may see by the former considerations what is like to be the successe and we are not quite without experience in those disputes betwixt Mounsieur de Moulin and the Iesuites of France with whom he had to doe who had still the vpper hand in the report of their faction when time soone after hath brought other truth to light Fourthly though they dispute not by proclamation yet they dispute by print for their bookes doe daily flie abroad and they are occasioned in this kinde to doe more than they doe As B. Abbot D. Whit● Par●r● c. while they suffer themselues to be beaten backe after their first assault and leaue our champions triumphing in the field Thus we must watch for those things which they plead against vs that so we may preserue our doctrine next wee must watch for those things which they plead for themselues which otherwise may shrewdly shake vs and moue vs in our minds before we are aware But what are these Marke I pray you They will tell you of their Scripture What the Papists plead for themselues Walsingh search out of the defence of the censure holinesse humilitie learning miracles dangers and other wonderfull conueniences of their religion And oh how plausible are these in the sight of a naturall man First they w●ll tell you that they haue expresse Scriptures for a great number of their doctrines which they hold against vs which wee cannot auoid without glosses Scriptures and wee haue no expresse Scripture against them And how faire doth this appeare to him that is willing to rule his conscience by the word of God therefore watch I pray you Concerning the supremacie of Peter and so of the Pope they will tell you that Christ said to Peter Marth 16.18 Thou art Peter and vpon this rocke I will build my Church But these words are not plaine to that end for hee doth not say Thou art rocke and vpon thee rocke I will build my Church but Thou art Peter and answerable to thy name which signifieth a stone thou hast made a confession of Christ which shall be and is a rocke whereupon I will build my Church But as for vs we haue plaine Scrip●ures against that proud supremacie 1 Cor. 3.11 for other foundation can no man lay than that which is laid which is Iesus Christ And if it be said that Peter and the Pope are successiuely ministers and supporters in the same foundation then the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 12.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that there are diuersities of administrations but the selfe-same Lord and for matter of ministerie wee haue it plainly that the Church of God is built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Ephes 2.20 as well as vpon Peter that is vpon their doctrines and confessions Iesus Christ himselfe being the chiefe corner stone For their breaden-god in the Sacrament they will tell you that they haue expresly the words of Christ Matth. 26. saying This is my bodie Yet our Sauiour doth not say This is my naturall bodie which was borne of the Virgin Marie or This is my bodie as it shall be when I am glorified because we know that he had his mortall bodie sitting at the table with his Disciples which had not yet suffered death But as for vs though we need not any such phantasticall place as should say This is the signe of my bodie because we doe beleeue that in those words of promise Christ doth expresse his plaine meaning according to the nature of the thing that he hath in hand which is the Sacrament and that hee had not spoken so plainly and so fitly if hee should haue said This is a signe of my bodie because he was to represent in those words vnto his Church that in the faithfull receiuing of those signes and seales they should haue whole Christ with all his merits conueyed and setled vpon them Yet this wee haue in plaine words against Christs corporall presence that the heauen must containe him till the time that all things be restored Act. 3.21 Againe for their iustification by works they will tell you that they haue expresly the words of Iames which say that of workes a man is iustified Iam. 2.24 and not of faith onely Which yet are not so expresse as they dreame for by works the Apostle must needs vnderstand the cause with the effect or a liuing and working faith made manifest by works both because otherwise the Apostle would neuer bring in the Scripture which proueth iustification by faith and say Vers 23. that the worke of his offering vp of his sonne was the fulfilling of that Text which speaketh of faith as also Gen. 15.6 because otherwise it would be an absurd inference to say that because Abraham beleeued God Vers 24. therfore ye see that man is iustified of workes and not of faith onely Any man may see that the Apostle to cut the combes of Securitanes who rested in a naked idle and vnprofitable faith saith that we cannot be saued but by that faith which worketh out our saluation Phil. 2. or proceedeth in the way to heauen by loue because it is onely such a faith that iustifieth vs which of necessitie goeth before saluation But for vs wee haue plaine words which tell vs euen when the Apostle speaketh of purpose of iustification that a man is iustified by faith without the workes of the Law therefore by faith onely Rom. 3.28 Rom. 4.5 and that we must renounce in this case euen the works of righteousnesse which we haue done Tit. 3.5 Ephes 2.9 10. and those workes whereunto we are built in Christ Iesus that we should walke in them Againe for the keeping of the Law they will tell you that they haue the plaine words of Paul which say Rom. 2.13 that the doers of the Law shall be iustified which yet are not so plaine as they pretend because they speake no other but with vs that the Law containeth a patterne of perfect righteousnesse and that if we could doe it we should be iustified by the deed Suppositivè But for vs we heare the Scriptures speake plainly that in many things we sinne all Iam. 3.2 1 Iohn 3.4 and that if we sinne we doe transgresse the Law Againe for that proud and cursed doctrine of merit they will tell you that the Scripture often saith plainly Rom. 2.6 that God will reward euery man according to his works Rom. 4.4 yet we see plainly that there is wages counted by fauour as well as by debt in which respect Gods reward may argue Gods free loue and mercy and promise and not our desert especially considering what Christ who teacheth vs not to lie doth teach vs to say that when we haue done all things Luk. 17.10 which are commanded
in dressing What euer they be the defects are mine what euer it be the good is Gods and for your with other of Gods peoples goods Let God haue your praise to whom it is due let me haue your prayers who need and craue them that I may still continue Your faithfull Shepherd wishing and striuing for your eternall good ROBERT ABBOT THE NEW MANS New Life GALAT. 2.20 I am crucified with Christ neuerthelesse I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in me and the life which I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God WE reade that the tombe wherewith the carkasse of proud Sennacherib was couered had this inscription Jntuens me aliquis discat ess● piu● Let him that lookes vpon me learne to be godly Much more may a spirituall eye see this ingrauen vpon this golden saying of the Apostle Let no man dare looke vpon me except he resolue to be godly For the Apostle presenteth vs himselfe and all the children of God in his person vnder such an one as is dead vnto the world and sinne and liueth not the life of nature but of grace and godlinesse Neither is it needlesse for vs to behold such draughts in these dayes we being not onely cast asleepe through our securitie but dead in sinnes and tresp●sses and buried vnder the clots of this world to the wofull miserie of our soules and the dishonour of our Maker How needfull therefore is it for vs to vse all meanes for a ioyfull resurrection and amongst the rest deeply to consider this speaking patterne of Paul in these words which in the naturall language of them doe make some such out-cry as this Lift vp your heads yee gates and be yee lift vp yee euerlasting doores that the King of glory may come in and dwell in your hearts by faith To which that we may haue the more hearing eares and from which that by the blessing of God wee may reape the more comfort let vs with humble hearts carry along with vs the context sense and seuerall obseruations setled by application vpon our soules Context As for the context and coherence with the words foregoing conceiue it thus The Apostle being to dispute against the Galatians Galat. 1.6 who had made a defection from the doctrine of the Gospell to iustification by works doth plainly set downe this proposition That we are not iustified by the works of the Law Galat. 2.16 but by the faith of Iesus Christ Which being proued by a reason drawne from the feeling iudgement and conscience of the best Iewes in these words we know as also as it is thought by this testimonie Psal 143.2 that by the works of the Law no flesh shall be iustified in Gods sight he fore-seeing that this doctrine of free iustification without our works might by false Apostles be charged with carnall libertie doth propound an obiection to that purpose Is Christ the minister of sinne and doth with a secret detestation answer it God forbid As if he should say Farre be it from the doctrine of the Gospell to giue libertie vnto sinne for as I will at no hand build againe iustification by workes which I haue destroyed because I can finde no comfort in the Law I being dead vnto it and it driuing mee to Christ so I doe know that Christ is not onely my price but my purger that Christ doth not onely say Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee but sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee For I account my selfe crucified with Christ neuerthelesse I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in mee and the life which I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God Thus I haue brought you vnto the Text. Sense In the consideration whereof I would next intreat you to stay a while vpon the meaning of the words lest the hard and difficult phrases thereof like Asahels body 2 Sam. 2.23 doe hinder the passing of the people by The hard phrases are fiue The first is when he saith I am crucified with Christ for how can this be true when hee was not conuerted to Christianitie before Christs ascension was past For the opening of this you must know that th●re is a double crucifying spoken of in the Scriptures The first is Actuall and so according to a double custome it may signifie two things for according to the custome of the Iewes it is to be stoned to death Alsted in Theol. Catech. and a●terwards with cords to be bound vnto a crosse and to be set vp as vpon a gibbet for a terrifying example to the like offendors but thus neither Paul nor Christ was crucified Ioh. 18.31 for it was nor lawfull for the Iewes at that time to put any man to death But according to the custome of the Gentiles it is to bee racked and fastned to a crosse with nailes driuen through the hands and feet of a liuing man and so to continue vnto death Thus Christ was crucified but not Paul or we The second is a virtuall crucifying and thus the children of God are said to bee crucified with Christ when they by vertue of that communion and fellowship which they haue with him in his sufferings and death as the members of him their head doe behaue themselues as those that are dead to their corruptions and finde no sauour in the courses of sinne and vanities of this world but spend all their liuelihood in denying vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and liuing vnto God And of this crucifying doth the Apostle speake in this place The second phrase or manner of speech is in these words I liue I liue not How can both these bee true I answer they may both be true in diuers respects I liue the life of grace and godlinesse I liue not the life of sinne and corrupted nature As if hee should say It is true indeed I haue the same naturall organs or instruments the same head tongue hands and feete but as there is great difference betweene a well-tuned Cymball and a loud Cymball so is there betweene all my parts when they doe receiue actiuitie from God and from nature As the gracious life is a death in respect of the glorious life which is the cause that that life which wee shall haue in glory is for excellencie sake called Life so the naturall life is no better than a death in respect of the life of grace The third phrase is in these words Christ liueth in me that is Christ is my life If you aske me how that can be I answer that it is by vertue of that communion and fellowship which we haue with him For as wee haue a naturall fellowship with him by his assuming and sanctifying our natures and becomming flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone and as we haue a sacramentall fellowship with him when in the Sacrament Christ is exhibited and giuen to the faithfull receiuer as he
is able to receiue it for the nourishment of his soule which communion doth in this differ from a bare spirituall communion Signis adhibitis vel non that all sacramentall communion is spirituall but all spirituall is not sacramentall because this is in the lawfull vse of Gods signes to this purpose So we haue a spirituall fellowship with Chirst when the spirit of God doth apply Christ vnto vs by faith and doth so bring home and concorporate him vnto vs that from the fountaine of his holinesse in whom all fulnesse dwelleth we finde our selues inclined and quickned to all holy obedience and can feelingly say That in that we forsake sinne it is from the power of Christ and in that wee purpose and endeuour good it is by the same power also And of this spirituall communion doth the Apostle speake in this place The fourth phrase is in these words I liue in the flesh He doth not say that he liued of the flesh or after the flesh as if he danced after natures pipe but In the flesh As all are not Israel that are in Israel so all are not of the flesh or after the flesh that are in the flesh What therefore is it to liue in the flesh It is to liue in the body for as flesh is taken for corrupted man when the Apostle saith That flesh and bloud cannot inherit the kingdome of heauen and for the corruption of man as when the holy Ghost saith The flesh lusteth against the spirit so is flesh taken for the body of man by an elegancy of speech when a member is taken for all the parts integrall or for the whole And thus it is taken in this place I liue in the body The fifth hard phrase is in these words I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God What doth he meane by this I liue by faith which doth its right office to spie out to run vnto and to receiue the Sonne of God For whereas vpon the former speech that Iesus liued in him it might be said Must not the heauens containe him Yes saith the Apostle for he liueth in me by faith not by sight But you will say why is it called the faith of the Sonne of God Not because wee should conceiue that faith which Iesus Christ had in himselfe but that faith in vs whereby he is had and possessed of vs and is so called for three reasons First because the Sonne of God hath purchased it for vs. The Father would not haue willed it vs the Holy Ghost would not haue wrought it in vs if Christ had not bought it for vs. Secondly because only the Son of God in Christ doth make our faith to be lawfull and laudable As Christ is man he is a creature and we must not flie to any creature for life and saluation and therefore not beleeue in him This then is it which makes our faith in him to be warrantable that hee is the onely Sonne of God Thirdly because it is not beleefe in any other person in the diuine nature that doth conueigh life vnto vs. As veines arteries sinewes muscles and the like doe not conueigh life sense and motion into the parts of a mans body but as they doe receiue them from their owne proper head and heart from whence they are shot so faith doth not conueigh spirituall life but as it doth receiue it from our spirituall head Christ Iesus Thus you may see our faith Relativè Obiectivè Instrumentalièr called the faith of Christ in respect of that relation which is betwixt him and it he being the sauing obiect of it and that being the instrument to conueigh life from him to euery beleeuer Thus we haue the seuerall phrases of the Text which in their totall sum make vp the Apostles meaning to be thus much Summe of the Text. Doe not thinke that by the doctrine of Iust●fication by faith alone in Christ I doe abolish the doctrine of Sanctification by the same Christ for by vertue of my vnion with Christ by faith I doe finde that from the fountaine of his holinesse out of whose fulnesse I doe receiue grace for grace my sinful lusts are crucified and I perceiue my selfe so quickned in the inner man translated from one glory to another into the Image of God that I dare say It is not I that now liue but my Sauiour who liueth in me by faith whereby hee purifieth my heart to make mee a peculiar Christian to himselfe chosen vnto good workes We hauing now stayed long enough vpon the sense may it please you from the seuerall deductions to desire further benefit And to this end in these words let vs consider two things First Paul his method which is this He was first killed and then he was made aliue Secondly Paul his matter in which he doth in his owne person set downe a double estate of ours First our estate in nature which is implied and may ●e thus expressed that vntill we haue faith we are but dead men For if wee liue only by faith in Christ then before we haue it we are but dead men Secondly our estate in grace which is expressed and may be set downe in three chiefe points of doctrine First that wee haue communion in the death of Christ Secondly that by vertue of this communion we liue by Faith Thirdly that it is from the vertue of Christ that we are quickned vnto all holy obedience To come first to Pauls method we are to obserue that as Paul saith He is crucified before he liueth So We must die before we can be made aliue I might here distinguish betwixt death naturall death ciuill as it is termed in Law death spirituall and death eternall that so I might signifie what death I meane but that it is plaine enough without that labour Only remember that it is one thing to die for sinne as malefactors who are put to death another thing to die in sinne as finally impenitent sinners and another thing to die vnto sinne as the godly In which sense we must die before we can be made aliue As it is with the bodie we must all die or all be changed 1 Cor. 15. before we must liue for euer which the holy Ghost maketh plaine by the similitude of Wheat or some other graine so is it with the soule Hence is it that God doth both exhort vnto this death Coloss 3.5 when he saith Mortifie your earthly members and also promiseth life vpon that death when hee saith Rom. 8.13 If yee mortifie the deeds of the bodie by the Spirit yee shall liue Neither may we wonder at this truth whether we consider the goodnesse of grace or the malice of sinne First if we respect the goodnesse of grace it is expressed by two effectuall words for this purpose For sometimes it is called a Resurrection Apoc. 20.6 Iohn 5.25 as Iohn saith Blessed are those that haue part in the first Resurrection And
a good measure of attainment to the crucifying of sinne and liuing vnto grace and godlinesse In the feare of God let vs now returne into our owne hearts and examine our selues when we are still by these signes to see what proceedings we haue made in passing from death to life that so if we finde our selues to haue part in the first Resurrection we may be assured of our portion in glory to come Hauing thus brought home Paul his method vnto our consciences and knowing that these two things are speciall meanes vnder God to worke it vpon vs to wit the knowledge of our danger and the knowledge of our deliuerance therefore let vs goe on to consider Paul his matter in this Text. In which concerning our miserie implied we are to obserue That without faith we are but dead men If faith in Iesus Christ be our life then without it wee must needs be dead That which God said to Abimelech when he had taken away Sarah Gen. 20. Abrahams wife Thou art but a dead man may be said of all men before their conuersion to God Hence is it that Paul telleth the Ephesians That till Christ came they were dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephes 2.1.5 And the Colossians Col 2 13. That till God quickned them with Christ they were dead in sins and in the vncircumcision of the flesh In this respect those Hypocrites who neuer cast their natural hackle Iude vers 12. are said to be twice dead and plucked vp by the roots yea and for this cause Christ accounteth such no better than dead Iohn 8.24 both when he saith Except yee beleeue that I am he yee shall die in your sinnes As also when hee chargeth Sardi to be dead Apoc. 3.1 and biddeth that cold disciple to follow him Matth. 8.22 and let the dead burie the dead that is let those who for want of faith are spiritually dead in sinne attend vpon the funerals of those who are corporally dead for sinne Neither is this obscurely signified by the Ancients when they doe compare a sinner who goeth on in his naturall course to Lazarus who had beene dead foure daies The first by the lust of sinne the second by consent to sinne the third by the practise of sinne and the fourth by custome in sinne Consuetudo peccandi tollit sensum peccati when vse in sinning doth take away the sense of sinne as in a starke dead man We will not wonder that without faith we should be in no better case if we shall consider the fit resemblances betweene faithlesse and dead men which may be set downe as so many reasons in forcing this truth First because as in dead men naturall heat is extinguished so that if you bring them to the fire put strong waters into their mouthes rub them chafe them yet no heat appeareth so where there is no faith there is no zeale for heauenly things In their owne quarrels they doe with Nebuchadnezzar heat the fornace seuen times hotter but in the quarrels of God they are key-cold as we say and are frozen vpon the dregs of their owne secure hearts as vpon the Icie Sea Secondly because as dead men are so senslesse that their eyes see not their eares heare not their hands touch not their pallats taste not and their nosthrils smell not so in them who are void of faith their eyes see not from whence they are fallen or into what miserie and danger by sinne and punishment their eares heare not the voice of God that they may be saued God calleth out Awake thou that sleepest stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue thee light but they heare not the voice of this charmer charme he neuer so wisely Thirdly because as dead men smell earthly and are carried downeward to the center without any aptnesse to rise and eleuate themselues so where there is no faith men sauour of nothing but the earth according to that of the Prophet O earth earth earth heare the word of the Lord and are carried downeward like moles and muck-wormes and would be beholding to God if they might alwaies liue here in ease singing Peters song vpon the Mount Master it is good for vs to be here Fourthly because as dead men though they haue no life or sense or motion in them yet they haue their eyes looking vp to heauen except as in Iaacobs case some Ioseph close them so faithlesse men will haue an eye to heauen and lookes to that purpose as Balaam when he desired to die the death of the righteous though they are like the writings of liuing men vpon dead mens tombes or a scrole of Scripture going out of the mouth of a man painted in a Church window or on a wall Fiftly because as dead men are subiect to corruption which made Augustine when he beheld Caesars corps in his sepulchre at Rome say to his mother Monica Behold Caesar fallen to rottennesse his belly burst with swarmes of wormes in the hollow of his head where his christ all eyes stood two hungry toads are feeding his teeth appeare for want of lips to couer them and then he crieth out Where is thy magnificence O Caesar so the faithlesse are corrupt like an apple rotten at the coare like an old doating tree perished at the heart Psal 14. according to that of the Psalmist Corrupt are they and are become abhominable in their wickednesse there is none that doth good no not one Vse 1 Thus we haue taken a view of our miserie in this point and may easily receiue from it both matter of doctrine and practise First for doctrine wee may learne three points First what is the reason that so many heare the word and so few are benefited Truly herein lieth the cause because men want faith and so are dead Call and hollow and whoope in the eare of a dead man pinch and pull him yet he ariseth neuer the sooner and we doe not wonder because he is dead so neither can we wonder that those who are dead in sinnes and trespasses doe not heare the voice of God and liue because they are dead Secondly we learne that we haue no disposition in our selues to faith and goodnesse Alas wee thinke that wee haue faith to please God withall at an houres warning therefore we presume to goe on in sinne till the houre of death But can a dead man command faith in the houre of need I know that when God hath inlightned the vnderstanding and reuealed Iesus Christ the obiect to be receiued and rested in and sanctified our soules by giuing vs the spirit of faith which taketh away our naturall death then we are co-workers with God according to that old and true saying The will being first wrought vpon Voluntas acta agit doth together worke with the first mouer but take a man in his first abilitie and possibilitie to helpe himselfe and the bodie is not lesse able to helpe it selfe without