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A34689 A practicall commentary, or an exposition with observations, reasons, and vses upon the first Epistle generall of John by ... John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652.; R. D. (Roger Drake), 1608-1669.; Scott, Chr. (Christopher), fl. 1655. 1658 (1658) Wing C6452; ESTC R5113 587,691 443

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when other mens hearts shall quail and tremble for fear and shake like the leafs of a tree Isa 7.2 then a loving Christian may lift up his head with joy because then he knows his love shall be consummate and when others are ashamed of their riches learning and honors he is not ashamed of his love a loving Christian is safe and bold both in life and death look at all the straights of a Christian if they be upon any ground it s for want of love he that neglects this duty of love God and his conscience will take him by the throat and exact the due debt because he walked with a private spirit in the publique world whereas if we doe but walk in a spirit of love and helpfulnesse to our brethren and learn to walk with a publique spirit neglecting private respects the Devill and thy conscience shall find nothing to accuse thee of but thou shalt meet death and judgement in the face without fear or shame 1 JOHN 4.18 There is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear because fear hath torment he that feareth is not made perfect in love VErse 17. he ●roved that such as love one another may have boldnesse in the day of judgement this he proved 1. From the likenesse to God v. 17. 2. He proves it from the contrariety that is betwixt fear and love There is no fear in love which he proves by an effect of love perfect love casteth out fear and therefore perfect love and fear cannot stand together this he proves by a double argument 〈◊〉 fear 1. Fear hath ●●●ments therefore love a peaceable grace casts out fear 2. Because he that feareth is not perfect in love therefore he that is perfect in love fears not In this 18. verse 1. Observe the estate of a soul troubled with fear and that is a state of torment 2. The unsound and uncomfortable condition of such a soul he is not perfect in love 3. The remedy of this estate perfect love casts out fear 4. The exemption of perfect love from all fear or the comfortable condition of a soul so healed by love There is no fear in love Doct. A fearfull conscience lies in torment Fear hath torment and he speaks of the fear of death but specially of judgement where that fear is there is torment the word translated torment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is elsewhere so translated Mat. 25. ult The torment here spoken of is such a kinde of torments as hell is not for measure but for kind For the handling of this we may see what the Scripture speaks of this torment in the severall descriptions and metaphors First This torment is sometimes called pricking of conscience Acts 2.37 they were pricked at their hearts with fear and shame for sin though but a little before they scoft at the Apostle v. 13. yet now they were struck with such torments as they knew not what to doe Secondly It s called a wounding of the spirit Prov. 18.14 which wounding is a larger gash then pricking and so implyes more anguish fear and shame Thirdly It is compared to the sting of a Scorpion Rev. 9.5 the Jesuites doe so sting men with torments of hell and horrour of conscience and God gave them not power to heal themselves again hence they thought every thing little enough to satisfie their conscience and so they suck out their estates in building Hospitalls and bestowing on their Cloysters Fourthly The wrath of God in the soul is compared to venomed arrows Job 6.4 Fifthly This torment is called the rending of the heart Joel 2.13 Rend your hearts and not your garments the heart and thoughts are so rent and distracted that one thing will not hang by another David calls this melting of spirit Psal 119.28 as if the heart were like wax and Gods wrath like burning fire therefore a man in this case is in a bitter estate Job 13.26 Thou writest bitter things against me Isa 38.15 I shall goe mourning in the bitternesse of my soul for this the soul is troubled Psal 77. and sorely vexed Psal 6.3 Why doth a soul lying in fear lye in torment Reas 1. Consider this fear in the effects of it this fear sometimes brings men into trembling of body so that all the spirits flie inward 2. If it continue it leads oft times to inward Consumptions of body or burning Agues Hab. 3.16 Psal 30.4 5. 3. Sometimes it causeth terrible dreams which doe amaze and affright us Job 13.14 4. It causeth wearinesse of life so that a soule long exercised with this kind of fear cryes out in bitternesse and heartily wisheth for death Job 7.15 My soul chooseth strangling rather then life if he might have his choyce he would rather choose strangling then life there are worse effects then those proceeding from this fear when Satan sets on withall against us 1. Sometimes Satan so follows us with fears and horrours that though a man be o● a large measure of patience yet he is able to bear no longer but breaks out in impatience Cursed be the day that ever I was born Job 3.1 2 3. and this is a sinfull effect 2. It breeds in some a flying from the presence of 〈◊〉 that they dare not read or pray they are afraid the earth should swallow 〈◊〉 up and God suddenly consume them so Cain when he was pursued wit●●orror of conscience he fled from the presence of God from Adams family from the Church 3. This fear sometimes brings destruction when the soule is so wearied with sence of horrours with cares and watchings that the brain growes frenzy so that you can be able to doe them no good till God puts in his help Psal 88.15 16. This was Hemans case through the terrours of God he was distracted yet when God healed his spirit he grows one of the wisest men upon the earth except Solomon 4. Sometimes upon this fear follows despaire the soul is perswaded it shall never see the light of Gods countenance again but that its utterly cast off Psal 3.6 7. Psal 77. but this was but for a time but sometimes this despair is finall as Judas his was 5. From hence followes sometimes selfe-murther as in Judas Mat. 27. Reas 2. From the properties of this fear its incomprehensible when Job would expresse it he could not tell how to set it forth but O that my afflictions were laid in the ballance Job 6.2 3. Lam. 1.12 13. Is there any sorrow like my sorrow 2. It s insupportable A wounded spirit who can bear Prov. 18.14 the stoutest heart is not able to stand under it 3. It s immoveable nothing in the world is able to remove it no balm can cure the conscience but the bloud of Christ Reas 3. From the causes of this fear which are two 1. The sence of Gods wrath here and the expectation of greater hereafter Psal 90.11 Who knows the power of thy wrath 2. A terrible expectation of violent fire to consume
stand out against him God hath not given him liberty to pursue us unto death but if we stand out against him he will fly from us So it was with our Saviour first he tempted him about his Son-ship If thou be the Son of God command that these stones be made bread then he tempted him to presumption to cast himselfe down from the Pinacle of the Temple and then he tempted him with the glory of the World All these will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship me but because our Saviour still resisted his temptations and Satan could not prevail he departed if a man stand out strongly Satan flies indeed if a man yield never so little he makes use of the least advantage and will presse it but if you stand fast and yield not he will be gone from you his very pride and insolency makes him scorne to trouble himselfe with any Creature he disdains to be overcome by him therefore he will depart Thus Joseph was strongly assaulted Gen. 39.9 but he resists and answers with much affection How can I doe this great wickednesse and sin against God He had long resisted and stood out against the temptations of his Mistresse and therefore she no more solicites him with that thing but takes another course falsly to accuse him to his Master and so caused him to be cast into prison 2. A Young-man may not onely put him to flight but he may also spoyl Satan that is he may take advantage by his assaults to grow more wary more holy more obedient more fruitfull and so he spoils Satan if a Christian enrich his spirit by the temptations he meets with he makes a spoile of Satan the riches of the Souldier is the spoil of the Enemy when young men stand fast and make a spoil of Satan and grow more humble and meek and obedient they shall so much the more overcome Satan Job was strongly tempted by Satan to blaspheme God but yet he stands fast and not onely so but takes occasion to blesse God Job 1.21 so when Satan tempts him by his wife see how he answers Job 2.10 Michal tempts David by deriding him when he danced before the Ark but he grew more zealous by it 2 Sam. 6.20 21. so John 3.26 They would have stirred up John to emulate Christ but that stirred him up to magnifie him more than ever he did before and give the most honourable Testimony of him Q. How come young men to overcome Satan 1. By the bloud of the Lamb his power is queld by the death of Christ 2. By the power of the Word that dwells in them v. 14. 3. By the power of the Spirit that is stronger in them than he that is in the world 1 John 4.3 4. Vse 1. Since young men may and doe so overcome the World it must teach young men to make this their glory to be fighting this spiritual battell there is no gifts they should so much please themselves in as in this Prov. 20.29 What a shame is it for young men to shew their strength in powring down strong drink and spend their strength upon women what a pittifull thing is it for young men to strive to overcome one another in drinking and gaming c. nay were they valiant in war yet how much more honourable is it to fight the Lords battells to over-wrestle our lusts when a young man shall single out that grand Captain the Devill and foil him in war that is truly honourable if Satan in a speciall manner strive to overcome you then strive you most against him stand out against him resist him and yield not to him and examine what spirituall battells you have had with Satan if none then your case is not good Vse 2. May hearten the feeblest Christians not to be discouraged with conflicts many a soul saith my corruptions are so strong and my lusts so powerfull I shall never be able to stand out against them and overcome them why St. John writes here to young men whose corruptions were strong and violent and yet he saith You have overcome the wicked one Vse 3. Of reproof to old men and children if they doe not overcome children are not come to and old men are past the dints of lusts therefore they may be the more ashamed if they be given to voluptuousnesse and gluttony and gaming and lying and company-keeping Children and old men their bodies are dead to such lusts Vse 4. It exhorts all though we cannot put Satan to death or captivate him yet what we may doe let us doe in every temptation let us stand fast and put him to flight and labour by temptations to spoil him let his temptations make you more humble and fruitfull and obedient this is the greatest honour of a Christian thus to put Satan to flight and spoil him 1 JOHN 2.13 The latter end I write unto you Babes because you have known the Father WE have heard of old men and young men now we come to his Apostolical writing to Babes Doct. Little Children even Babes may know God as their Father For the proof of this 1. I will shew it by Examples 1 Sam. 3 1. though at first he knew not yet from that time forward he knew God 2 Chron. 34. see it in Josiah so Timothy it is said that he knew the Scripture of a childe 2 Tim. 2.15 Luke 1.15 and our Saviour bears testimony of little children Suffer little children to come unto me for to such belongs the Kingdome of Heaven Mark 10.14 and that they were little ones we may see in that he took them in his armes as we use to doe infants and whereas the Anabaptists say he means not of these but of such as are of years but little children in grace this cavill is vain for otherwise his reason had been in vain for he might have said it as well of Sheep as little Lambs for such are Gods Servants but yet he never mentions such but onely these little ones that is little children There are Three grounds of the Regeneration of little children 1. From the Originall Sin that they are born in for they that are capable of sin are also capable of grace for no subject is capable of sin but it is capable of grace and the greatest part of their sin is the privation of grace which they are capable of Luke 1.15 Psal 58.3 2. From their interest in the Covenant they enter into a Covenant with God even from their childhood as we may see they brought their young Babes to enter into a Covenant with God Deut. 29.10 to 14. and so are capab●e of grace Joel 2.15 16. In times of great dangers in the Land God required little children and B●bes to humble themselves for breach of the Covenant which implies they were in a Covenant indeed the Ninivets made their Beasts fast and their Children but they were Heathen and were not within the Covenant 3. Children are capable of the seals
that make us more sufficient but we above all things are to desire and strive with God for the annointment of his Spirit mentioned 1 John 2.27 And Again the Apostles being such simple men were fitted to deliver it so as might be most for Gods glory not in excellency of words but in evidence of the Spirit 1 Cor. 4.5 and therefore Paul though otherwise a learned man imitated their simplicity 1 Cor. 2.12 13. And here Chemnitius his modesty is to be commended who when he cometh to speak of some points of Divinity carved out by the School-men too curiously is wont to say Hac non sapiunt Piscatoriam sapientiam Vse 1. Behold then the great and fearfull unthankfulnesse of the World who put most of these men to death who did declare unto them Eternall Life Vse 2. If the Apostles shew unto us Eternall Life it is easie to discern how far they be from Eternall Life who doe not receive their Witnesse alas how many poor souls through the greatest part of the World Jewes Turks all the rest of the Pagans and Infidells are by this means cut off from all hope of Eternal Life how true alas is that speech of our Saviour Mat. 7.13 14. many there be who go in the broad way to destruction Vse 3. Then how much to blame are the Wolves rather than Shepheards of the Church of Rome who shut and lock up from the people in a strange Tongue the Writings of the Prophets and Apostles is not this one way to barre them from Eternall Life how truly upon them is that verified Luke 11.32 Vse 4. Then we all of us are to be exhorted diligently to be conversant in the Writings of the Apostles John 5.39 where what our Saviour spake of the Writings of the Prophets my Text speaketh the very same of the Writings of the Apostles they bear witnesse of Christ and shew unto us Eternall Life and as the Apostle spake unto our Saviour so may we to them John 6.68 Ministers most of all are to be conversant in their Writings because they succeed the Apostles in bearing witnesse unto Christ and declaring of him so little differing from that of theirs else we bring a curse upon our own heads Gal. 1.8 which if the Church of Rome had remembred they would never have thrust out the Apostles from the Chairs of their Professors and brought in the Sentences of Peter Lombard but we are to follow Timothies example 2 Tim. 3.15 16 17. and all Christians are to imitate the forwardnesse of Christians in Chrysostoms time Vse 5. Then we are to praise the Lords goodnesse unto us who hath granted unto us their Writings Consider the like example Psal 147.12 19 20. It was a great preferment to the Jewes to have the Writings of the Prophets Rom. 3.1 2. but their witnesse of Christ is much more dark and obscure than this of the Apostles without their Writings we should but have groped after God Acts 17.27 and as for Christ this Eternall Life we should never have dreamed of him the Lord make us more thankfull and more carefull to walk more worthy of them lest he take them from us 1 JOHN 1.3 4. That I say which we have seen and heard declare we unto you c. IN these two Verses we have of the Apostles Doctrine 1. The subject repeated That which we have seen and heard 2. And declared 3. The end 1 Subordinate fellowship with the Apostles 2 Supream fulnesse of joy The subject is repeated 1. For Explication or plainness sake for the Parenthesis of the second verse would otherwise by interrupting the course of speech have obscured the sentence 2. For confirmation of what he had said before he thrice repeateth that which we have seen and doubleth that which we have heard to shew that he doubted not of what he spake but was most confident and resolute therein Obs Observe hence the certainty and undoubted truth of the Doctrine of the Apostles Reas 1. The Apostles taught nothing but what was manifest to their senses See 2 Pet. 1.16 Compare with him his Successor who seeing great sums of Money brought in by Indulgences Pardons c. said to one of his Cardinalls O quantum fabula ista de Christo nobis proficit Again sense took away doubting even from unbelieving Thomas John 20.25 27 28. 2. The Apostle again and again ingeminates here that what they taught was manifest to their sense now ingeminations are for confirmations Gen. 41.32 Gal. 1.8 9. Ezek. 7.6 this therefore doth shew again how confident he was of it himselfe i. e. therefore no marvell of that speech John 21. penult We know c. For 3. The efficacy of that Doctrin or the power of it argueth the certainty of it for that Doctrine which giveth us union with God communion with the Saints of God fulnesse of joy in our selves must needs be a most certaine Doctrin of heavenly truth there is no perswasion to settle a mans own Conscience answerable to this 4. And for a fourth Reason consider another Branch of the power of this Doctrine the Apostles that declared it were for the most part poor and simple men and unlearned men the Doctrine taught was but of a Crucified Saviour harsh to carnall ears 1 Cor. 1.23 the times were such wherein it was not onely every where spoken against Acts 28.22 but also grievously persecuted throughout the Roman Empire and that with exquisite Torments and yet it did so powerfully work Plut in Apop Pris Regum that in Tertullians time which was the next Age after Christ there were more Christians every where than of all other Professions besides Cyrus indeed allured many to be his followers but he sent out great men to make another kinde of Proclamation Whosoever will come and follow after me if he be a Foot-man I will make him a Hors-man if he be a Hors-man I will make him a Rider in a Coach if a Farmer a Gentleman if he posesse a Cottage I will give him a Village if he have a Village I will give him a City and if he be Lord of a City I will make him Prince of a Region or Country and as for Gold I will pour it out to him by weight and heaps and not by number But Christs Proclamation is contrary Luke 9.23 14.26 and yet had he infinitely more followers All other Reasons as the testimony of the Church c. are but like the woman of Samaria preparing us to believe John 4.29 this convinceth us so strongly that in comparison we reject other Reasons moving us to believe as they did John 4.41 42. How true is that of Picus in his Conclusions as Faith which is but a bare credulity is in a degree of perfection inferior to science so that Faith which is wrought in us by the work of the Holy Ghost is greater and more certain than any science gotten by demonstration Vse 1 If the Apostles Doctrin were so certain that
spring from common Graces such as may be in Hypocrites Matth. 7.22 23. they wondered why they were not received because they had done many good works and Prophesied in his Name and cast out Devils c. therefore they doubted not of acceptance so from these common Gifts it often falls out that we have a good conceit of our selves that God will accept us And for carriage a man may so carry himself as if he were a good Christian 1 A man may professe Religion for worldly respects as many became Jewes H●st 8.17 it may be for fear of the Lawes or Friends many love Christ for Loaves for Profit because there is fullnesse in Christ Joh. 6.16 2 Common Graces may make us professe Religion as a man that hath been enlarged at the word he is willing to come to it as those Joh. 5.35 and yet were but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 4.20 and the stony ground 3 Some are drawn on through meer compulsion of conscience and yet live in darknesse some have gifts in prayer and preaching and zeal as Jehu had and joy in the word as Herod yet because they walked in darknesse they had no Fellowship with God Vse 1 A ground of comfort to such as are afraid that they are Hypocrites and are much discouraged and think they have no fellowship with God why this may comfort them if there be some that say they hav Fellowship with God and have not so contra some may think and say they have no Fellowship with him and yet may have Vse 2 It confutes the Papists that say we teach that mens opinion is Faith and a man is justified by persuasion but we do not say that every opinion and persuasion is a good argument of justifying Faith but that kind of persuasion and opinion that is built upon Gods Testimony upon the Testimony of the Word and Spirit that is a divine justifying Faith otherwise we say many a mans persuasion is built on self-love or some Common Graces Vse 3 It may exhort such as have a good opinion of their own estate and make a profession of it it may teach all such seriously to consider whether they be well grounded for a man may be deceived in it if we say we have fellowship and yet walk in darnesse we lye a man would be loath to be cozened in a piece of gold why what are thousands of gold and silver to have all his estate and body current and strong and to have his heart unsound and counterfeit all current but his own soul what greater confusion than the cutting off a mans hopes for a man to live all his dayes in a good hope and at death to have his hopes to fail him this confounds his Spirit therefore take not all for gold that glisters Vse 4 It teacheth us not forthwith to be deluded with the opinion of others but consider whether they be not deceived that hee takes for good or they be not sound whom he takes for Hypocrites do not easily take them for our Brethren and Sisters that carry a shew the Church had never more wrong than by false Brethren that have spyed out their liberty and informed against them take not every Professor for a Brother men may say they have fellowship with God and yet walk in darknesse therefore take heed of entertaining such into thy good opinion and fellowship 1 It will dishonour God when such have been imbraced by such and such people of God and now what is become of them 2 It will bring prejudice to Gods Saints many times they are more wronged by them than any that carry it closely and at length break out 2 Cor. 11.26 so David complains Psal 55.12 13 14. it was a commendable practice of the Apostles Acts 9.26 they would not easily admit of Paul and it is commonly said if a man or woman carry a Bible or come to good duties why they begin to be esteemed but others that make not such a shew are lesse respected Doct. A life led in ignorance and uncleannesse is a certain signe of Hypocrysie to live so and professe Religion or profession of Religion joyned with a life led in ignorance and ungodlynesse is a sure signe of Hypocrisie Darknesse implyes both ignorance and ungodlinesse darknesse hath a four-fold signification sometimes it is put for Ignorance the people that sat● in darknesse c. Mat. 4.16 2 It is put Prophanenesse and Ungodliness every sin is called darkness 2 Cor. 6.14 Ephes 5 8. 3. Sometimes it is put for horror of conscience and confusion of Spirit Isa 50.10 4. For obscurity and dishonour confusion and desolation Pro. 20.12 for as light is took four wayes so is darknesse Light is put sometimes for Knowledge sometimes for Grace sometimes for Comfort sometimes for Glory Col. 1.12 13. so contrary darknesse is sometimes put for darknesse of ignorance of ungodlinesse of discomfort and of dishonour and obscurity The two last are not here meant a man may walk in much discomfort and yet have fellowship with God Isa 50.10 Matth. 12.20 the bruised reed will he not break c. a man in such a condition walks in darknesse and yet God will not break and quench fuch 2 Many a Child of God walks in much dishonour and basenesse and yet have fellowship with God 1 Cor. 4.13 Psal 22.6 David complains he was a worm and no man a reproach and scorn of men and yet was a good man and had fellowship with God therefore it cannot be meant of these two for those that are in such a condition are ordinarily most sound and sincere whereas others having more comfort walk more loosely and carelessely but if we live in Uncleannesse or Ignorance we have no Fellowship with God Prov. 19.2 God is a God of Light omniscient and how can he have fellowship with God that hath no light in him Hos 4.6 my people perish for want of Knowledge Ignorance is a certain note of destruction Prov. 29.18 where no vision is the people perish that is where there is no means of seeing Matth. 15.14 Reas Why Ignorance cannot stand with the fellowship of God because where there is no knowledge the light of the Word is wanting the Word is a light and a lanthorn now as one in an house cannot do work without light especially a stranger he knowes not what to do so a man is a stranger within himself that hath no light and how can he order himself tell what to do if he hath no light in him He that knowes neither himself nor Christ nor the way to him how shall he be saved by him many do think their estate good but if they had light they would not think so others think their estate bad but cannot get out of this they have no light to get out of it and therefore cannot have fellowship with God 2 For Uncleannesse and Ungodlinesse that cannot stand with Fellowship with God 2 Cor. 6.14 implying an impossibility Psal 94.
us so we should cleanse our selves from all sin because it is a remnant of filthinesse Vse 6. It may shew us the wonderfull preciousnesse of the bloud of Christ and the no lesse wonderfull favour and love of God towards us were not Christs bloud of wonderfull efficacy it could not cleanse such base filthy sinfull lusts so Gods favour were it not wonderfull he would not take upon him such an homely office Women if they were not Mothers would not take such homely offices up as to cleanse their Children from their filth why if God were not of the like affection to us he would not cleanse us from our filthinesse we count it an homely office to sweep sincks and scum pots c this is Gods office if he did not sweep the Sinck and scum off the scum of our hearts it would never be done and therefore it shews the tender affection of God towards us in that he is willing to take such an office upon him to cleanse us from our filthinesse he poures clean water upon us all other means will doe no good without him it is with us as it is with young Infants that would lie in their defilements if their Mothers did not make them clean and so would we even wallow in the defilements of sin if God did not cleanse us therefore admire Gods love and mercy towards us Vse 7. It is a good help to mortification if we consider what a loathsome thing sin is and what pure eyes God is of it would be an antidote against sin shall we commit such filthinesse in Gods sight to make our selves so base and loathsome before him Doct. All sin is unrighteousnesse and cleanse us from all unrighteousnesse that is from all sin Sin and unrighteousnesse the one explains the other Rom. 6.13 yeild not your Members weapons of Unrighteousnesse that is weapons of sin sometimes Unrightnesse is properly confined to the sins of the second Table as unholinesse to the first but sometimes righteousnesse comprehends the whole course of a Christian and Unrighteousness comprehends all sins 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reas Because every sin doth either God wrong or others or our selves Righteousnesse gives every one his due if we sin in temperance we debase and defile our selves if we sin in theft or slander we wrong others in their goods or good names if we worship not God as God if we keep not his Sabbaths or prophane his name we wrong God Vse 1. Shews the Error of those who think if they pay every man his own they are righteous men why doe you no wrong are you not sinners yes they will say why then you are not righteous for every sin doth wrong to God our selves or others Others say if they wrong any it is themselves why it is unrighteousnesse to wrong your selves 2. As you love innocency live righteously doe God no wrong others no wrong your selves no wrong otherwise you are unrighteous 3. For Comfort to any that have their souls cleansed by the bloud of Christ from all filthinesse we are holy set at liberty from all filthinesse and all unrighteousnesse Doct. Sin pardoned is ever cleansed sin pardoned is sin cleansed what sin God pardons the same sin he cleanseth Heb. 9.14 The same bloud that pardons cleanseth us from sin Reas From the power of the death of Christ which serves not onely to procure pardon of sin but likewise healing of sin for his bloud is offered up as a ransome for sin well then it is pardoned but it is not onely so but it is a means to kill and mortifie sin Rom. 6.6 there is a destructive power to kill sin as well as meritorious power to pardon sin now his death is said to mortifie sin in us 1. Exemplariter For if Christ be dead we also shall die with him to sin Rom. 6.9 11. 2. It hath a natural Efficacy as it is an object for us to look at as fearful and formidable when sin presents it selfe we look at it as crucifying Christ and shall we look on it without mourning Zech. 12.10 shall we wrong him so much as to crucifie him again 3. His bloud cleanseth sin in obtaining at Gods hand a Spirit of Sanctification which makes the death of the Head reach to the lowest Members of the body as when the head dies all the Members die so the death of Christ having obtained the Spirit of God from him if he our head die then we shall die to sin as the resurrection of Christ procures vivification so the death of Christ mortification Gal. 4.4 5. Obj If sin be always mortified where it is pardoned how comes it to passe that godly men fall so often into the same sin Doth not David confesse that there was a way of lying in him Psal 119.29 Remove from me the way of lying which implies it was not one act but a way a course that he walked in sometimes so Isaac Gen. 26. told the same Lye both to the Philistims and Abimelech so it was with Jonah he was froward before he went to Niniveh and froward afterward how is it then that sin may be cleansed and yet renewed and if renewed how cleansed Ans It is with Sin in this respect as with Sampsons Hair it may be cut but it will grow again Sin may be mortified in some kinde and yet renewed again because Sin in this Life is mortified but in part Pride Wantonnesse Coveteousnesse in part are mortified but in part alive and if we neglect the practise of mortification that sin we had got some mastery of we shall fall into again if Sin break out again it is because we neglect those means we should mortifie Sin by he doth not say the bloud of Christ hath cleansed us but cleanseth Doth cleanse implying that cleansing is a continued Act the bloud of Christ is a notable Medicine to heal Sin and purge from filthinesse but if a man neglect to apply this Plaister to his Soul it may not be so effectuall as it would Vse 1. For tryall whether our Sins be pardoned or no would you know whether your Sin be pardoned why then it is also cleansed if your Sin be not cleansed in some measure it is not pardoned at all therefore look at your Sins if they be healed then they are certainly pardoned for it is the same bloud of Christ that both heals and pardons Sin Hos 14.4 God doth not onely love freely and pardon graciously but he heals them also therefore consider doe you finde your Sins healed that is that they have not that power they had before doe they seem loathsome to you whereas before you delighted in them now in heart you hate them and in practise avoyd them then those Sins are pardoned and if he pardons one Sin he pardons all his pardons are universall but if a man live in Sin still and love it as well and is no more ashamed than formerly he had been but goes on in the same
of Christs propitiation that we shall see Gods face with joy we shall pray to him with comfort Joh. 14.21 He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father c. which shews that he will bring rhem together and there shall be a mutuall expression of love to one another and ref●●shment in one another God shall take comfort in us and we in him Rev. 3.20 for that Christ goes further in this case than any man can Absolom had offended his Father in slaying his brother Ammon well he flyes away from his Fathers Court Joab procures a Reconcilement but yet he could not satisfie for the blood he had shed he procured indeed so much that he was sent for home by the King but yet saith the King Let him returne to his own house he shall not see my face 2 Sam. 14.24 Joab could not satisfie for his blood and the King would not see his face so there wanted satisfaction and manifestation of the Kings favour well afterwards manifestation was procured but yet there wanted Propitiation because satisfaction could not be made but Christ hath not only procured favour but satisfaction and hath declared his favour towards us Now further Christ hath done this not only for the believing Jewes but all Christians all the World over for to whom doth he speake here why to little Children and what were they why they were Jewes as appears vers 7. who from the first giving of the Law were commanded to love one another now besides these weak Jewes the Apostle saith He is our propitiation including the Ministers of the Gospel and not only so but for the sins of the whole World Now the World is diversly taken in Scripture 1 World is sometimes put for the frame of Nature as Act. 17.24 2 It is sometimes taken for the pleasure and profits of the World as 1 Joh. 2.16 3 It is sometimes put for the wicked of the World Joh. 15.19 4 It is sometimes taken for the Gentiles in opposition to the Jewes Rom. 11.12 5 It is sometimes taken for the Believers of the World 2 Cor. 5.19 though it may have further extent but here it is taken in opposition to Christian Jewes he is not only a propitiation for the Jewes but also for the believing Gentiles But further Christ is not only a Propitiation for his children but for the whole World that is the whole body of the Creation for as by Adams fall the whole World was cursed Christ by his death renewed the blessing to the World again the whole body of the Creation Rom. 8.20 therefore it is said the whole body of the Creation waites for the liberty which the Sons of God have A type of this we have in Noah Gen. 8.20 21. Noah being a Type of Christ and making attonement for the World by Sacrifice God smelt a sweet favour and doth promise that he would no more curse the earth for mans sake and that which was done by Type in him is perfectly procured by Christ all the creatures are encouraged to rejoyce in his Redemption because they are Redeemed in him Isa 44.23 All the creatures are become the servants of Christ subject to the dominion of Christ he hath bought them all Rom. 14.9 Christ is now Lord of all he hath bought not only us but our Ground and Cattle and Houses and our Children and he hath so purchased it that the world shall be a blessing to the Church the Tumults and Agitations and Disorders shall be for the good of his people Quest Whether hath Christ made any propitiation for the wicked for Reprobates how else for all the World Ans You must distinguish between such and the rest of the World in this they all agree that Christ is Lord over all wicked and good he hath bought all 2 Pet. 2.5 so that they are vassalls to be ruled by Christs Dominion he hath bought them for the Churches service to doe them good 2 I say that Christ hath laid down a sufficient price for all and thus much he hath procured Gods patience to forbeare them and his bounty to lead them to Repentance Rom. 2.45 yea he hath procured for them not only gifts fitting them for Magistracy and Ministry and the common Gifts and Graces of his Spirit but many sanctifying Gifts see Heb. 10.29 Quest Is Chri●● then a propitiation for them Ans To make● propitiation is required not only that such a satisfaction and reconciliation be propounded but that they lay hold on it as the sacrifices in the old Law who are they that had an attonement made by the sacrifice they offered only those that laid their hands on the head of the sacrifice Lev. 1.4 so then this is nothing for the propitiation of the Wicked they do not lay hold on the head of Christ they doe not take hold on him as an Advocate and propitiation therefore they are left inexcusable This point is likewise handled by Paul Rom. 3.25 2 Cor. 5.19 the whole world was out with God he purchased something for all Vse 2. It shews that it is a wicked opinion of the Papists that say the bread in the Sacrament is a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of the World as they wrong Christ in his Advocation so also in his propitiation Heb. 10.10 if there had been need of another propitiation his had been insufficient but they ascribe this to the sacramentall bread to purgatory and they say afflictions are satisfactions for our sins and their own voluntary devotions are satisfactory as whippings and pilgrimages and fastings why if Christ be the propitiation there needs no more but him So also they wrong him in adding other Advocates as Angels and Saints especially the Virgin Mary Object You will say you allow one friend to pray for another here on Earth and to intreat God for him and may not Saints in heaven pray for us as well as Saints on Earth Ans 1. We have both commands and examples for the one Jam. 5. and Paul often desires the prayers of the church but we have none for the other 2 We desire none but such as know our cases to pray for us but it is uncertaine whether the Angells or Saints in Heaven knows us or our wants it is cartain they know not our thoughts 3 And when we desire other men here on Earth to pray for us we doe not make them Advocates as they do Angels and Saints 1 We do not desire them to pray in their own merits and name as they doe the Angels and Saints in Heaven 2 They pray to the Virgin Mary for graces miserere peecati c. and command thy Son to grant such and such things so they ask spirituall gifts of the Saints which is peculiar to God 3 They doe herein ascribe to them certain proper works make them Patrons of severall Countryes and part among them severall offices they pray to one for healing of one disease and to another for another Vse 2 If Christ be
reasons and such intentives as draw on a lust woe be to them that put away all feare of judgement and so draw on lusts with the cords of vanity Vse 4. To teach us all to wean our selves from these lusts Young men I write unto you love not the World nor the things of the Werld and old men have nothing to doe with them refrain from them apply such corrosives such threatnings such promises Christs death and cut off all occasions of sin root it out challenge your hearts arraign them before God bring them as enemies to your souls and labour to cut them off utterly If any man love ●he world the love of the Father is not in him Doct. It is not the having but the love of the world that keeps our hearts from the love of the Father It is not the having of the World for Davids mountaine was strong Joseph had his will in Aegypt Abraham was rich but though they had the World yet they had not the love of the World Jam. 4.3 4. whosoever is a friend to the World is an enemy to God it is not the Lordship of the World but the friendship of the World that is enmity against God for the time shall come that they that take the Lambs part shall be Princes of the World and Saint James calls the love of the World Adultery as a woman that makes her selfe a friend to another man and bestows that love upon him which her Husband only should injoy is an enemy to her Husband so a man that is a friend to the World or to the lusts of it is an enemy to God alienated from him and he would have them know that there is no worldly covetous man but he knows that his love of the World is enmity against God it is the World that hinders you from the Word and Prayer and good duties Reas 1 From the amplitude of that love which we owe to God which cannot therefore be divided to others Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy soul and minde and strength Mat. 22.37 then we must love the World no further than it may help us in his service and we may imploy it to his advantage if we love it more we sin against the great Commandement if we must love the Lord with all our heart and mind and strength then what sorry weake affection is due to the World even an heartless faint love all our love and vigour of our spirits is to be set on God now if a man love the World he cannot thus love God for if he love the World his first and chiefest care is for wealth and riches and then it may be he will a little look towards God first let me bury my Father first let me stock my Farm and try my Oxen and then if I have any time I will come to the Feast 2 A covetous or a lustfull or a proud man when he hath the World and the lusts thereof he is fully satisfied with his portion without God Psal 17.8 so Luk. 12.19 Soul take thine ease thou hast goods laid up for many years he wraps up the comforts of his soul in these outward things if he have wealth or pleasure he is content without God the more he hath of the World the lesse he cares for God as the Moon when it is at the full it is most opposite to the Sun so is it with a worldly man 3 The love of the World will make a man part with God rather than with the World he will rather part with Grace and Heaven too than leave the World he will rather part with eternal life than his wealth as the young man in the Gospel Mat. 19. from 16. to 22. he had rather part with Christ and an expresse promise of heaven than part with his possessions so we see how the love of the World keeps us from the love of God Notable is that speech of Christ Mat. 6.24 No man can serve two Masters c. God and this World are as two Masters such is the amplitude of Gods service that he that serves God as he ought hath no time to serve the World No man that hath a servant but he looks that his whole time should be spent in his service so if we spend any time in the service of the World we cannot be servants to God Indeed if services be subordinate we may serve many so we may seek and take pains for the World but be sure it be in subordination to Gods service look that it may make you more free to Gods service Vse 1. To discourage any man from the love of the World there is no greater discouragement than to say If we love the World the love of the Father is not in us As if a Father come to a childe and say if you love such a young man or woman you cannot love me and I shall take you for my utter enemy and you shall never make it up againe would not any ingenuous childe rather than he would be an enemy to his Father part with any so when God saith If you love the World you cannot love me I shall look at you as my enemies were not this enough to make any christian out of love with the World therefore chuse whether you will love God or the World if you love the one you cannot love the other therefore it is not a matter of frugality or providence to love the World for I say If any man loves the World he makes the World his God therefore covetousnesse is called Idolatry Col. 3.5 a mans belly may be his God the love of the World is directly against God the love of God requires all your hearts souls and strength therefore no part to be set on the World Vse 2. It may exhort Christians to mortifie their love to the World you must either crucifie your love to the World or to God If you love the world you cannot love God if you love God you cannot love the world you cannot serve God and Mammon Motives 1 If a man can but withdraw his mind from the World he may be Master of the field in any temptation that befals him what is the World all that is in the world is either profit or pleasure or credit and we regard the World no further so that if thou beest weaned from thy profit or pleasure in meat or drink or Pastime if thou beest weaned from credit thou shalt bereave Satan of the weapons he fights against thee with for how doth he keep men back from Religion but that it will not stand with his credit and applause in the World what hinders them from holy duties but love to their profits and pleasures therefore could but a man wean himself from them he might easily overcome the wicked one how did Josephs Mr. work on him was it not from pleasure and if Joseph be content to leave the lusts of the flesh he
accompanying of their preaching of the Gospel with mighty signes and wonders but we never read that God accompanied any of their writings with miracles their writings laid upon any disease healed none but their presence healed many and did many wonders Heb. 2.2 3 4. 1 Cor. 5.22 tongues are not for them that beleeve but them that believe not that is the miracle of speaking with divers tongues is not for them that beleeve but for them that beleeve not therefore we never read in any History that their writings did work any miracle and so he never intended that they should convert Obj. What then is their writings in vain seeing they are of no use to convince A. No there are singular uses of their Writings 1 Sometimes to put men in remembrance of what they have heard Rom. 15.14 2 Pet. 1.15 2 That they may be established in the truth and confirmed in the knowledge thereof 2 Cor. 13.1 Phil. 3.1 To write the same things to me it is not grievous but for you it is safe 3 To stir them up to the exercise of such truth as they knew but were slack in performing thereof sometimes in liberality slack sometimes in dispencing of the Ordinances 2 Pet. 2.13 1 John 1.4 2 John 8. Revel 2.4 5. to stir them up to their first Love to stir them up to take heed of false Doctrin 4 To informe them in some particular truth which they were ignorant of some were afraid that the Day of the Lord was so nigh that they neglected their particular Calling 2 Thes 2. so some were ignorant of the Resurrection so he tells Timothy how to behave himselfe 1. Tim. 3.15 so he informs the Corinthians how Husbands ought to carry themselves towards their Wives in case of desertion or present persecution Vse 1. It shewes a reason of that little good which hath been done among the Papists by any Writings that have been writ in defence of the truth they have been means of much good to them that have known the truth but amongst Millions of Papists it is hard to know whether any have been converted to the true Religion after such evidet demonstration and conviction the reason is because Writings do not profit them that know not the truth but such as know the truth for else why did not Saint John write to Cerinthus or other Heretiques in that time but he tells them I write to you because you know the truth had he writ to Cerinthus or Menander his labour would have been lost not but that it hath done much good not only to them that have known the truth but those that have not known the truth it hath stirred them up to like the truth better and some to seek out the truth in other Writings but never to convert them to the truth God hath many times blessed sudden speeches to convert some that have come to hear the truth but it hath never been so effectual to them that have only read it in writings for God never sanctified the Apostles Writings to the conversion of the unbeleeving Gentiles Obj. Why then do not our Divines spare their labour in writing A. Though they do not prosper to conversion yet to establishment of many in the truth and to stirre them up to stick closer to the truth Vse 2. You may hence see the reason why such as read the Word of God diligently it may be once or more every day yet notwithstanding not being accompanied with the preaching of the Gospel few or none such as are converted and brougt to the true knowledge of the truth but such people are fit to be led into Popery or Heresie no wonder for God never blessed the Apostles Writings while they were living to the conversion of unbeleevers therefore we see the necessity of preaching to every Congregation or else the body of the pleace will sit in darknesse and shadow of death therefore it is a false Assertion of those that say Reading and Preaching are of like efficacy for it is certain had the Apostles Writings been as effectual to conversion as their presence in preaching they would have wrot most to such Churches as were most remote 2 Chron. 15.3 a long time they were without a God and without a Teaching Priest implying they that are without a Teaching Priest are without God 1 King 13.33 the reason because he set up base fellows that wanted both learning and grace and so only read but they had not a Teaching Priest and therefore lived without God Obj. But you will say what can be more said of pagans 2 And what then will you judge that all such as live under dumb Ministers are cast a-wayes A. Whether do you think it greater charity to tell them that they may be without a Teaching Minister or to tell them that without a Teaching Minister they live without God and without the Law we know that many that live in such places go abroad and light on good Sermons and to Christ is found where he was not sought and then they either remove themselves or go many miles to hear the Word abroad and God often blesseth private conference and helps to do much good Neh. 8.12 but men that go home from bare reading their hearts go home as dead as their Minister was dumb so that you shall finde many people as ignorant as Pagans and Turks V 3. It may serve for direction to such as God hath given a gift of writing unto to know where their Writings may be of most use if you writ to some thinking to convert them it will be labour in vain but to writ to them that know the truth may be of much use to informe them to reprove them to stir them up and so you may write with comfort to them Vse 4. May serve to encourage all Christians to be frequent in reading to what purpose did the Apostles write if others read not it is good to be reading put more fuel to fire and it grows hotter so let people read after they have heard and it will be very profitable therefore we see the great abuse of the Papists that deny the reading of the Scriptures in a Vulgar Tongue Let us therefore be stirred up not to forbear the reading of the Scriptures though you do know the truth Deut. 17.19 if Kings might not be excused much lesse private men Doct. 2. Such as have received from Christ the anoyntment of the Spirit they know the truth You that have received the Unction of the Holy one I write to you not because you know not the truth but because you know it 1 Tim. 4.3 where he puts Beleevers and knowers together now Beleevers are anoynted with the Spirit of faith John 8.31 32. so much sincerity of truth so much Discipleship the stronger faith the stronger knowledge of the truth the weaker our faith the weaker our knowledge For Explication Q. 1. What is the truth A. The truth might be taken for the Lord Jesus Christ and
but the spirit of the old Adam the spirit of pride and malice and covetousnesse truly this is not the Spirit of Christ that makes us like him this is not that Spirit that Christ purchased for us by his Death and Ascension but suppose we had some of the Spirit of God the spirit of Wisdom as Achitophel the spirit of joy as Herod the spirit of Zeal as Jehu the spirit of fear as Felix had yet we have not this Unction of the Spirit unlesse it dwell in us What is it to be wrapt with a spirit of a Balaam or a Saul it was only for a fit and what comfort was it to them it was a shuttle spirit by starts and did not abide in them therefore let us try whether we have received the Spirit if we have received a dwelling spirit it is a true spirit Obj. But some may say Alas what then will become of me it may be now I pray but ere night wholly unabld now inlarged then straightned I have now a spirit of zeal and courage soon after all cold and weak and dead wonderfull was the zeal and courage of Elias in slaying four hundred of Baals Prophets openly 1 Kings 18.40 he went through it with such zeal and speed as if he had been sent from Heaven yet Cap. 19.1 2. when Jezabel sent to him he fled for his life and was so weary of his life that he wished death now his Spirit was cold and discontent aad weary of his life So David Psal 119.24 David said he had made the word his delight yet ver 25. he saith his soul cleaves to the dust and prays to God for quicking A. This Spirit that is so to abide doth not always abide in the same measure nor in the same measure of expression but we must know though there be several garments yet the Soul is never naked a man hath not always his Holy-day garments sweetly perfumed but sometimes homely mean garments so Elias when he slew Baals Prophets was cloathed with zeal and Holy-day garments afterwards he remitted of it and yet had he the Spirit of God on him he was not naked though he was not cloathed with the Spirit in such a measure even so sometimes we have even poor ragged homely garments and much of our nakednesse appears and sometimes again may be when God hath greater businesse for us to do cloathes us with better richer garments a greater measure of the Spirit but yet consider though we have not the same measure yet always some garment of the Spirit rests on us be it but the spirit of love to our Brethren or grief for the want of it yet we are not left naked Vse 2 May exhort su if we have this Spirit dwelling in us then let us use him honourably and courteously as an in-dweller he is come from farre even from Heaven sent from our Father and he brings joy and comfort with him therefore let us give him honourable entertainment he is sent to guide us in all our ways to be a pledge of our eternall inheritance therefore let us not entertain him like some guest that we are weary of in two or three days you must know this guest came not for a day but to dwell with us for ever John 14.16 therefore take heed of grieving him Eph. 4.13 he comes for your good and benefit for your redemption When a man keeps a Ward and for keeping him keeps a great estate a Kingdome he would be very carefull so the Spirit is such a Guest that if you keep him you keep Life and Salvation you keep an eternall Kingdom by him therefore take part with Gods Spirit joyne with the Spirit of God quench it not what an heavie complaint made Stephen Acts 7.51 Isa 63.10 the Spirit may be so grieved and vexed by men that he will depart from them Q. How shall we keep our selves from grieving the Spirit A. As God hath given him to guide you so look that you be guided by him if you entertain him kindly he will comfort you if you grieve him he will grieve your spirits 2 Be carefull to nourish him do not strave this Guest neglect not the Word and Ordinances which are the food of the Spirit Quench not the Spirit despise not Prophecie 1 Thes 5. as if the despising of Prophecy were the quenching of the Spirit therefore feed the Spirit of God with-draw not food from it prefer not outward things before it it is a wonder how leane our souls will grow if we do not nourish the Spirit 3 Take heed especially of living in any known Sin for that damps and deads the Spirit therefore David wofully camplains Psal 51.8 to 12. Restore c. as if it were quite gone his very bones were broaken that is not of his body but his soul i. e. the strength and staff of his spirit the Spirit is like fire every grosse sin is like water cast on it it quencheth it Vse 3 A ground of much consolation to Gods servants you can never say you dwell alone and want company you cannot want good company if the holy Spirit dwell in you I am not alone saith Christ but the Father is with me so may a Christian say I am never alone the Spirit of God dwells in me he is an in-dwelling and abiding Spirit Doct. 3 The annoynting of the Spirit teacheth us all things of which you heard verse 20. It teacheth all things needfull to salvation needfull to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. 1.3 and not only so but needfull to our places and callings and ages Doct. 4. The anonytment of the Spirit is so plentifull and sufficient that we need not be taught better things nor in a better manner than the Spirit teacheth Jerem. 31.32 not that we need not Magistracy or Ministry but he speaks comparatively you shall not be so helped by any Instuctions without the Spirit as with the Spirit the Spirit shall declare the Truth in Jesus For Explication 1 The Holy Ghost teacheth fully 1 Cor. 3.9 10 11. the spirit of a Christian is inquisitive concerning all things now the Spirit helps him to search even into the deep things of God so that the Spirit is a full teacher 2 The instruction of the Spirit is plain and clear 1 Tim. 4.1 Joh. 16.25 Christ spake in parables but after his ascension the Spirit revealed things clearly Three things go to clear discerning the object must be clear the medium clear and the eye clear and then we may clearly discern now the Holy Ghost plainly reveals the Counsells of God and then opens our judgements to discern it and then cleares all the mediums so that a Christian may plainly discern so that the Tpirit is a clear Instructor no men need be taught more clearly 1 Cor. 2.4 5. 3 The Instruction of the Spirit is a certain Instruction scarce any truth but a Christian can tell it by experience as a woman that is breeding a Child feels such qualmes and
righteousnesse his righteousne is imputed to us for righteousnesse 4. That he might work inherent righteousness in us that we might do righteousnesse had Christ been blemished in one sin he could not have begot us righteous to God Q. What is it to be righteous A. Holinesse gives God his due Righteousnesse man his due but righteousnesse put alone implies both giving due to God and man so Christ he gave to Caesar what was his due to the Pharisees their due and every one their due Vse A ground of wonderfull consolation to every poor soul that is burthened with his own unrighteousnesse though we are unrighteous yet Christ is righteous and what is wanting in our parts is supplyed on his this comfort Elihu gives to a man in extreamity of body and soul Job 33.23 to declare where his righteousnesse is to be found that is it is not to be found in himselfe God will say of such a soul deliver his soul from going into the pit for I have received a recompence what though we have cause to complain as the Church Isa 64.6 yet if we know Christ is innocent and pure and holy why then his righteousnesse is imputed to us what though we were born sinfull yet Christ was born without blemish what though our lives be unclean and wicked yet Christs life was innocent and harmelesse what though we should have dyed for our iniquities as the good Thiefe said Luke 23.41 yet this man hath done nothing worthy of death verse 47. certainly this is a righteous man so every soule that is sensible of his own unworthinesse as the good Thiefe said verse 40. Fearest thou not God c. if a man fear before God and tremble at his wrath in such a case Christ will say as he did to the good Thiefe this day shalt thou be in Paradice or at least have right to it Obj. Christ is righteous but what is that to me doe all wicked men receive righteousnesse from him alas I have nothing to move God to impute his righteousnesse to me Ans If thou canst but find this in thine heart that thou fearest God because of thy sins and art humbled why then if Christ be righteous thou needest not fear his coming for his righteousnesse shall veil thy unrighteousnesse and thy estate shall be happy Obj. Was not Judas afraid of the horrors of Hell when he had betrayed Christ did not he fear sin and it was a ●●rror to his soule Ans Judas was afraid of that sin but he was not afraid of all sin for then he would have been as much afraid of hanging himselfe as betraying his Master therefore he feared the horror of that sin but not of all sin but take a man fearing God for all sin and fearing other mens sins as the good Thiefe afraid least Children and Servants should sin and looks at Christs righteousnesse this is a supersedeas of all danger at death we may expect death and judgement with comfort and joy 2. It is a ground of comfort likewise to such as having found comfort heretofore in the righteousnesse of Christ are now in that case that they doubt of their Estate why what though you faile in many things yet look up to Christ he is pure and righteous and so being cloathed with his righteousnesse we may lift up our heads with comfort and this Paul comforted himselfe in Phil. 3.7 8 9. in that he counted all dresse and dung in respect of the righteousnesse of Christ here is the comfort of a Christian he should not look to his own righteousnesse never think to get any thing by your own works but if you lay hold on Christs righteousnesse you may know that you are born of God and so may expect the last day with joy and comfort Doct. 2. Such as work righteousnesse are born of Christ 1 John 3.10 The manifest difference between the children of God and of the Devill is working of righteousnesse Reas 1. From the weaknesse and impotency of nature to bring forth a righteous work Rom. 8.3 4. Rom. 7.18 3.10.12 none of the famous Heroes among the Heathen but their best actions were splendida peccata Deut. 32.32 33. Gods people had corrupted themselves and the Spirit of God was not upon them their sweetest works were like the Grapes of Sodom and Gomorrah which are fair to the eye but if touched vanish away there is a fair outside but no nourishment none so opposite to Christ as men of best naturall abilities Acts 17.32.19.20 Rom. 11.17.20 Phil. 3.6 though Paul was clean in his own and others eyes yet did he persecute the Church of God there is no power of nature can reach to a supernaturall work Rom. 6.16 17 18 19.20 2. From the impotency and weaknesse of common Graces Mat. 12.33 Heb. 9.14 untill Christs blood hath sprinkled our consciences all our works are but dead works every work that is spirituall must 1. Spring from Faith Gal. 3.14 Rom. 14. ult 2. The end must be the glory of God 2 Cor. 10.13 nature never works higher then its own glory Brutus when he heard his Sons conspired with the Tarquins he sent for them and cut off their heads whereof the Poet spake thus Vivit aemor patriae laudumque immensa cupido had this been bounded in Gods glory it had been good let Saul Prophesie let Jehu set upon reformation with great zeal let Herod hear John Baptist gladly yet all these detain the truth in unrighteousnesse 3. From the necessity of abiding in Christ to the performing of every duty John 15.5 he doth not say without me ye can doe no great matter but without me ye can doe nothing 4. From the resemblance that is between Christ and such as work righteousnesse there is such a resemblance as is between Father and Son John 3.2 we are the seed of Christ and are made like him as a child is known to be born of such a man by his look speech carriage such as work righteousnesse their works will own them Isa 61.1 2 3. Isa 9.6 Q. How are we said to be born of Christ A. He is sometimes though he be our elder Brother called our Father we are born of his Seed his Word and Spirit and we resemble Christ as well as the Father Rom. 8.29 Vse 1. This reproves the Jesuits and Franciscans Doctrine that hold that by strength of common graces a man may receive justifying grace when it is offered a man must be born of God that will doe so good a work it is therefore a Doctrine contrary to the Word of God Vse 2. Those that are in state of nature or common grace should not rest there Vse 3. Such as are born of God should make use of their new birth walk in the life of the new birth else thou dost nothing Gal. 2.20 we must doe all out of the strength of the new birth if the Sun should shine into our houses and we shut up all the doors and windows to keep
sure hope never was any man disappointed and yet hope though it be sure it is not without all doubting No true Christian but hath this hope Reas That Gods children might not be tossed and hurryed up and down the world A childe of God is never carryed far an anchor sticks in the foundation Heb. 6.18 19. While he hold on our hopes and they are fastned to Christ we have strong cansolation hereby are we kept from dashing against rocks and sands and shoars here is the difference between an anchor and hope an anchor is fastened in the earth and hope in heaven Vse 1. This may shew you the dignity and honour of a Christian He is a man of great hopes he will not give his hopes for the best mans estate in the world he hath a stedfast hope of being like Christ when he sees him though the cloathes he now wears be mean yet he hopes to be clad with Christs righteousnesse and though his house be mean yet he hopes for an house not made with hands this is his anchor and this will hold whithersoever we sail 2 This may be a ground of tryall What be the hopes you build upon There is a double difference between the hopes of a godly and wicked man 1. The wicked mans hopes are groundlesse he hath no grounds but hopes 2. It is fruitlesse Job 8 11. The hope of an hypocrite that is without ground is like a rush or flag without water or mire Grasse if it have got head will do well enough without much moysture or water Hope without a promise wants water to nourish it A spiders web looks like a curious work but it 's drawn out of its own bowels and is soone swept away so a hypocrite hath no hope but what he spins out of his own bowels he builds upon present or future duties his hope is fruitlesse it neither yeelds comfort nor selfe-purging A true Christian rejoyceth in tribulation but an hypocrite is overthrowne with it Rom. 5 2 3. The hope of an hypocrite makes him carelesse he takes no pains with his heart Prov. 14.23 Take an hypocrite while he is in prosperity and he hath great hopes takes away prosperity and perhaps it may hold still for he may hope that friends will do something when he is sick he hopes to recover when he fears death he hopes for another life but when death comes all his hopes are crusht But a godly man he hopes in death he hopes for Gods goodnesse his hope will never fail him nor make him ashamed 3. Hence learn that hope and knowledge of the same thing may well stand together In the former verse he saith We know here he hopes A mans hope ceaseth not in order to another world for do not the Saints beleeve that their bodies shall rise again and do not they hope for it They know the perperpetuity of their estates and they hope for it 2 Cor. 13.13 4. This should stir us up as we would have a comfortable death and safe not to goe to Sea without this anchor of hope The world is full of perplexities carry your anchor about with you see your hope well wrought and you shall be safe Mariners goe not to Sea without an anchor but perhaps sometimes though they have pitched their anchor in the bottome of the Sea yet the storms may be so great that they may be forced to cut the cable woman in childebed may be put to distresse but hope in heaven will carry her through Q. How may we get this hope Answ 1. We can never come to it till we be out of hope of any goodnesse in our selves 2 We must attend upon God in his ordinances that so he may work faith in us and where there is faith there will be strings of hope hope is built upon faith Q. How shall we carry it about with us Answ Look at it as a mercy that you have it stay your selves upon your anchor look afresh at the promises and believe them then thou shalt have hope enough That which makes unquiet is because we have not visited the promises many a day nor renewed our faith in them Doct. 2 That every Christian man that doth hope to be like Christ in glory hereafter doth purge himselfe to be like Christ in grace here The lively hope of a Christian here is set forth by the lively fruit of selfe-purging 2 Pet. 3.12 13 14. Titus 2.11 12 13 14. How doth this hope thus purifie us 1 By the holy meditations it doth suggest into the heart of every hopefull Christian 1. A Christian that knows he hath long been imprisoned in the fetters of corruption and knows he shall shortly be called to appear before God it makes him to put off all superfluity of uncleannesse and to put on the garments of holinesse Shall I come before Christ invested in pride and wantonnesse This makes him carefull to purifie himselfe Jer. 2.32 Can a Maid forget her ornaments when she is to be married and can a Christian forget such ornaments as may befit him for such a Kingdome 2. A second meditation which provokes a hoping Christian to purifie himselfe is this He considers the more he is purged and purified the more he is cleansed the greater shall his glory be 2 Pet. 3.10 11 12. 2. Hope purifies by setting some graces on work which doe cleanse and purifie As 1. Repentance is a grace that purgeth us from sin Psalm 130.1 2 3 2. Faith purifies our hearts Acts 15.9 If God stir but up our hearts to wait on him we may certainly know that he will do so as we have desired else our hope would make us ashamed Psalm 119. 49. Remember thou the word unto thy servant in which thou hast made me to trust 3 The meditation of the graces in Christ transform us into their image 2 Cor. 3.18 There is such a power in the promises of God that they fashion us like unto Christ 4. Hope cleanseth us by giving us hearts fastening on the Word and applying it and the Word applyed hath a strong power to cleanse even young men Psal 119.9 5. This hope hath a power to stir us up to faithfulnesse which hope perswades us our labour shall not be in vain in the Lord and this faithfulnesse sets God on work to purge us Joh. 15.2 that we may bring forth more fruits When God seeth us to stand at a stay and to wax b●rren then he is ready to cut us down that we cumber not the ground 3. Hope to be made like to Christ in glory hereafter makes us to abandon such impediments as hinder our purification 1 Cor. 5.6 When he saith that every one that hath this hope purifies himself it implyes it is a continued work he makes it a part of his daily work 2. He purgeth himselfe he doth not say from what from wantonnesse and leaves covetousnesse behinde he leaves it indefinitely he includes all and excludes none James 1.21 This hope purgeth
extreame and deadly 3. It is new and rare because they have been wonted to no such thing Vse Let the world know that Gods people have more cause to think strange of the world then the world of them they give the world no cause to hate them Acts 17.6 Doct Gods children are not to marvell at the worlds hatred 1 Thess 3.3 Reas 1. God hath appointed you to it you must take notice of it God hath done it for many ends How else should you shew forth your patience how should you be kept off from bad company God will lay bitter pills to the breasts of the world that so you may be weaned from it Psalm 119.115 2. The world many times doth it out of ignorance The world knows it not therefore we may take it the better that we are ill dealt withall A King takes it not ill to be badly dealt withall at strangers hands 3. The world hated Christ therefore no marvell if it hate us 4. It is no new thing it hath continued from Cain 5 From the inclination of your own hearts if you were in the worlds case you would doe the like Therefore marvell not Tit. 3.2 3. Vse 1. Of instruction to such as live in places of Religion If we be hated wonder we not at it We shall condemne the generation of Gods people The cause is partly from the tempter partly from the wickednesse of the world Vse 2. Do not lay down Religion for fear of the worlds hatred This is not the way fear not the hatred of the world Some Subjects will not feare the body of a State so they may have the Kings favour Much lesse should Gods servants fear though the whole body of a Countrey should fall foule upon them 3. This should teach Gods servants to walk so much the more circumspectly humbly lovingly If a man were to walk amongst his friends he would care the lesse but if he live among his enemies he will looke to every step so soon as you trip you shall have mouthes enough open against you Therefore Daniels course was notable he so walked that they could not taxe him Daniel 6.1 to 7. 1 JOHN 3.14 We know that we have passed from death unto life because we love the Brethren he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death THe Apostle layes down this as a second reason why they should not marvell implying that they that know they have passed from death to life need not marvell though the world hate them Doct. Gods people have passed from death to life Gods people are opposed to the world they are translated out of the world John 5.24 They are redeemed out of the world by death he means a contrary state to life Death and Condemnation are Synonymaes By death is meant death for sin and death in sin the naturall estate in which a man lives whilest he is in this world which is called a state of death in a fivefold respect 1. All death presupposeth life to go before We do not say that a stone is dead Death is a privation of life A man that hath no life but what the world gives he is dead because he had a life at least in possibility in the loyns of Adam Ephesians 2.3 2. Death in the proper notion of it is a separation of the soul from the body We are said to be dead Gal. 2.20 because our souls and bodies which are capable of life are separated from the Lord Jesus the fountain of life Eph. 4.17 18 19. 2.12 3. From the definition of life which is a power to move it selfe in it's owne place When we see a thing to move it selfe in it's owne place we say it is quick and hath life A man may do many things yet not from an inward principle as Judas and Jehu Matth. 27.18 19. 2 Kings 10.15 16. is this life There are some motions from common grace but it is not spirituall life unlesse it aim at spirituall ends and upon spirituall grounds As if a man be humbled for sin because it is displeasing to God Judas was troubled in his conscience not for sinning against God for then he would not have grieved God by hanging himselfe It was not an inward motion and voluntary so Jehu he did it to establish his owne Kingdome he regarded not the commandements of the Lord 1 Kings 10.30 31. 4. In regard of the binding over to eternall death as a condemned man is counted a dead man John 3. ult 5. From the power required to make such a man alive 2 Cor. 5.17 There must be a new a breathing power The state of grace is called life 1. Because we have received fellowship with Christ he lives in us and we in him Gal. 2.20 John 15.1 2. We have an inbred power in our selves to move upon spiritual grounds and for spiritual ends Rom. 8.2 Mat. 5.3 to 10. Passed from death to life from the hatred of our Brethren to the love of them There are these steps of it from one to another 1. A man is a poor man and that 1. In debt 2. Hath nothing 3. An hard creditor 4. No surety 2. He begins to mourn bitterly for this his estate 3. He becomes meek 4. He hungers and thirsts and prayes for grace and cannot be satisfied without it 5. He begins to be mercifull he pities every soul that is in a state of nature and under a spirit of bondage 6. He is pure in heart abstains from sin doth Gods commandements 7. He is a peace-maker he is at peace with God and with his own conscience and now he labours to make others at peace 8. He will now suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake Vse 1. This convinceth all the works of the Heathens as dead works Some are famous for courage justice c. But all these are but dead works Gods pure Martyrs have suffered not for any glory of theirs but Gods glory 2. It refutes a main ground of Popery the doctrine of Free-will which gives a man power to be converted when he will If a dead man can rise from death to life then may a dead man in sin come to the life of grace 3. Gather hence how our estate stands We come to Church it may be repeat Sermons and do many good duties Would we know whether our life be a dead life or no Consider we upon what principles we do good duties if we do good duties because they are pleasing to God if we have respect to all Gods commandements if there be a change in our hearts which makes us willing this is a signe we are passed from death to life 4. To teach us not to rest in our naturall condition for then thou art but a dead man although thou hast all morall grace 1 Cor. 13.2 3. 5. This may be a comfort to every soul that hath passed from death to life God is his God and he shall never come into condemnation Math. 22.23 John 5.24 Doct. The love of our
Brethren is a known and undoubted evidence that we are passed from death to life What is it to love our Brethren Love is an affection whereby we desire communion one with another and communication of good one to another A man in nature prizeth his Brethren and will do more for them then any other So it is in grace Acts 4. ult 2.42 44. Phil 1.2 We must affect to be of one heart Eph. 3.3 4. There must be brotherly equality if we be Brethren You are of the same Father Gal. 6.26 one Mother one Seed 1 Pet. 1.23 one Inheritance 1 Pet. 1.4 We will desire to communicate brotherly offices to the inward man Rom. 2.11 12. and to the outward man if need be Acts 2 44. Reas 1. From the naturall pronenesse which is in our nature to strangenesse envy c. We doe not naturally seek any mans good but our own or so far forth as reacheth our own ends 2 From the affection of every mans heart to liberty Now a man delights onely in such company as are like himselfe because otherwise he is restrained If Gods people be the men of your delight and counsell you were never so well as wirh them Psal 115.115 16.3 This is a sign we are passed from death to life 3. From a mans backwardnesse of communication of brotherly offices Gal. 6.10 4 From the great distance that is between us and the love of our Brethren and how many steps there are before we come to it Matth. 5 3. to 9. Vse 1 Of tryall of our own estates whether we are in a state of death or life It is one of the plainest notes in Scripture and most evident Gal. 6.10 If our love run in an equall channell to all men if we know not Gods people we know not Christ 1 John 3.1 2. If you know them how doe you affect them Do you think it were good if the Town were cleansed of them Gen. 49.4 5 Psal 101 we are not as yet born of God Obj. Doe not many love Gods children and honour them and yet are not the children of God Gen. 27.29 Acts 5.13 That they did not joyn with them was a signe that they were not born of God Gen. 39.1 2 3. 2 To convince the doctrine of doubting Papists who say a man cannot know himselfe to be in a state of grace Eccl. 9.1 2. No man can know it by outward things They say here by knowledge is meant conjecturall knowledg not certain knowledge Answ This is a contradiction A man lyes if he saith he knowes a thing and is not certain of it There is no peace of conscience in this Religion 3 To exhort such as know not yet that they are passed from life to death to labour to love the Brethren Prov. 13.20 4 Of consolation to every soul that hath nothing in this world but this they love the Brethren This is such a thing as upon which thou mayest build a certain knowledge that thou art passed from death to life and therefore thou mayst take comfort He that loveth not his Brother abideth in death The Apostle in the former words did imply the world was in death for want of love And left any should think that he did but imply it and not directly expresse it he sets it down expresly Here is a description of a man that loves not his Brother 1 He is in death 2 Abides in death By death is meant the same that was meant in the former part of the verse Abiding implyes not only a being in that estate but continuance and residence in it Doct. The want of love to any of our Brethren is a sign of abidance in the state of damnation or in an unregenerate and carnall estate And he saith not he that hates but he that loves not and he saith not brethren but brother any or every brother Mat. 18.6 Offend not one of these little ones Christs little ones are such as have but little grace and great corruption Reas From the want of love that is found in such a one towards God and that is an argument of being in a state of death If a man love God in obedience to his commandements he should love his brother by the same commandement That commandement which requires me to love one Brother requires me to love all Jam. 2.10 11. Breake one commandement break all for who gave one gave all whoso neglects offices of love to one performes none to any nor to God It is a note of sincerity that a man hates all sin as well as one Psal 119.101 104 For it is an argument of love when there is no Brother or Sister but we enlarge our affections towards them Gal. 3.28 So much want of love so much hypocrisie 2. From the bitter or deadly root of want of love to this or that Brother It springs from two occasions 1. Either from his infirmities in himselfe Or 2. From spirituall injuries to our selves True a man will say such Christians I would away with but they have such unsavoury corruptions The first root of this is the condemnation of the generation of Gods people If a man may condemn this or that man for this or that corruption he may come to condemn the best of Gods servants because the best of Gods servants may be in the same failings for which thou hatest such a Brother Prov. 30.12 The greatest of Gods servants have shamefully faln David Peter Lot Noah The second root is from the enmity against Gods free justification of sinners Take away this and you take away all Christian religion If you love not a Brother because of some infirmities you doe overthrow the free justification of Gods grace of a sinner For God that hath justified the greatest hath justified as well the least as freely and as fully and wilt thou justifie some and condemn others God condemns none Rom. 8.1.33 34. If Christians doe beleeve the free justification of sinners then let us imitate our Father which is in heaven justifie whom he justifies The third bitter and deadly root If there be the least sparke of grace in his heart all his corruptions are his enemies and he but a shrimp in grace and hath many enemies What good nature is this when a man would love a man if he had no enemies but when he hath enemies and such as are ready ever and anon to beat him down he cannot love him The fourth want of a member like spirit for the more naked unseemly or deformed any member is the body is the more carefull of it if it may be it shall be healed if not it shall be covered 1 Cor. 12.23 24. If we want this it flowes from want of a member like spirit 2 Somtimes neglect of our Brother springs from some personall injury done to our selves We cannot love them This springs from this root want of forgivenesse of our own sins for we pray for forgivenesse upon this ground Mat. 6.12 15. Our Saviour
to expresse and abound in love taken from the great love of God to us Doct. The death of Christ for us is the manifestation of his love to us Such a manifestation as makes it a certain and known truth that he loves us Rom. 5.10 1 Joh. 4 10. He gave his Son to be a propitiatory sacrifice Eph. 4.5 Gal. 2.20 Reas 1. From the greatnesse of Christs self-deniall That which commends love is this to bestow so great matters and to come off freely with it Joh. 15.12 Greater love then this can no man expresse then to lay down his life for his friend But Christ did it for his enemies 2 Cor. 3.8 2 It farther magnifies his love if we consider the great benefit we receive as reconciliation pardon of sins 1 Joh. 4.10 Secondly adoption of Sons Gal. 4.4 5. Such favour as to be accepted as his Sons and Daughters 2. Our corruptions are deaded and mortified Heb. 9.14 Gal. 1.14 Wc are crucified to the world to all objects that draw us to sin temptations and snares 4 Christian liberty that by virtue of Christs death we should be delivered from the curse of the Law Col. 2.13 from the enmity we stood in against the Church Eph. 2.14.15 16. from hell and feare of death Heb. 2.14 that we should have liberty to call God Father enter into his Sanctuary have confidence our prayers are heard have assurance when we dye that we shall enter into the holy place that we shall have right and liberty to the Creation Rrm. 5.1 2 3. Heb. 12.19 This benefit will appear if we consider how miserable our estate had been If Christ had not done this we had been in our sins under the guilt of them and in horror and anguish of spirit 5 How freely hath God done it We gratified God with no kindnesse Some will recompence a small kindnesse with a great reward Rom. 11.35 But all we have done hath been to abuse every mercy of God to his dishonor Col. 1.10.20 Vse 1. It reproves such weaknesse of Gods servants in time of temptations that can see no love of God because he doth not gratifie them with something in this life Gods servants many times doe want necessaries the world abounds withall therefore David hath cleansed his heart in vain Psal 73. But what though Gods servants never see good dayes Yet here is abundant rich and inestimable love that when you were enemies strangers children of wrath Christ dyed for you God hath shewed you more love then the Angels for he laid not down his life for the Angels Heb. 11.14 And if he had done so he had laid down his life for his friends who never displeased him 2 To teach such as abound in outward things not to content themselves therein Eccl. 4.2 We can perceive neither love nor hatred by those outward things Psal 17.14 Labour you to say that God hath laid down his life for you ●●se you cannot say he loves you 3 It teacheth us that the death of Christ was not the cause of Gods love Gods love is more antient then the death of Christ Where shall we lay the foundation of Gods love but in eternity He hath loved me and given himself for me Gal. 2.20 Gal. 3.16 Obj But doth not God attribute his love to the death of Christ 1 John 4.10 Rom. 3.24 25. Eph. 2.14 15 Col. 2.21.27 Answ In a double respect Christs death is said to make this reconciliation Hereby he hath slain the enemy and hatred on our part that we might be no more enemies to him Obj. But Christ is sent not only to make reconciliation on our part but propition on Gods part Answ 'T is true Christ by his death hath made a way whereby God might shew his love to us whilest sin was in the way he could not shew it Many a Father bears a tender affection to a childe yet will not seem to regard him shuts him out of doores and though he be intreated yet he thinks it not meet for him to expresse his love he will have his childe humble himselfe acknowledge his faults and will send some body to perswade his Son to humble himselfe So God sends his Son out of love to take a course that he might shew us favour notwithstanding his justice 4 Of exhortation to take a view of Gods love that we may be able to say freely We perceive the love of God Rest not in any spirituall duty nor in any common gift till you know that Christ dyed for thee How shall I know this Some will say that Christ dyed for all and so all may know True the sufficiency of Christs death reacheth to all but none can say Christ dyed for him till he find in his soul some fruits of the death of Christ 5 To encourage Gods servants to expect offices of love from God to us and ours all his dayes He hath given his Son what would you have more Psal 84.11 Lay hold on this love of God and plead with him upon his love All blessings are wrapt up in his Son Gal. 4.4 As God in fulnesse of time sent his Son so will he every other mercy 6. To teach us to abound in love to God and to his children hatred against sin Give up all to God work for him suffer for him he loves us being strangers and enemies Doct. Christian men ought to be ready to lay downe their lives for their Brethren The exemplary love of Christ in laying down his life for us ought to provoke us in like sort to lay down our lives for our Brethren Rom. 10.3 4. The Apostle doth extoll the love of Aquila and Priscilla as if all the Church and himselfe were bound to them that were so ready to lay down their lives Phil. 2.17 If I be poured out as a drinke-offering R●as From the example of our blessed Saviour He laid down his life for us This is an imitable practice of Christ this is none of his miraculous works but one wherein he sets forth himself as a pattern to us 2. To this add Christs command which binds us to the imitation of this John 13 34. 3. From the neer fellowship of our brethren with Christ We fulfill the sufferings of Christ for his Body Col. 1.2 4. He calls them Christs sufferings Christ suffered in him and he for Christ in his Saints 4. From the subordination of Gods eminentest servants to the Church of God as Christ is for God so Paul and Cephas for the Church God hath subordinated the life of his servants to the Church and the Church to Christ and Christ to God Christ the head of the Church the Church the head of the Members Phil. 2.17 5. From the rule of love God hath given in ancient time Levit. 19.18 We must love our neighbour as our selves Many a christian will lay down his life for himselfe therefore must in some cases lay down his life for the Church A man will lay down his life for his
in the throne of a mans heart Conscience is our companion God much more Psal 139. Reas 2. God is our witnesse therefore when we speak soberly we call God to witnesse He is a Judge Heb. 10.3 an Executioner and therefore if Conscience sees cause to condemn us God much more if Conscience see cause to acquit us God much more Psal 139.2 3. Vse 1. A signe of our present estate and what God will doe concerning us if we live and die thus What saith thy Conscience if thy heart assure thee thou lovest thy Brother 2 Cor. 1.12 That thou savourest not sin that thete is no good duty but thou wouldst doe thou hast been humbled for thy sins Conscience hath been an Executioner and yet hath come with pardon sealed to thee with the broad seal of Heaven If thou seest one spark of sincerity in thee God sees more Obj. May not a mans conscience be deceived Rom. 3.17 Luke 18.9 to 14 May not a man say I have no guilty conscience Answ Conscience sometimes bears false witnesse Tit. 1.15 16. If a man have a defiled conscience it will deal falsly A mans conscience through ignorance and partiality doth bring a false verdict As it is many times with a Jury ignorance of law and false evidence makes them bring a false verdict but then send them back again and shew them better evidence and the law c. So Conscience doth oft-times bring a false verdict but its thorough ignorance of the Law of God or partiality Doth thy conscience speak bitter things Consider what the grounds are If such as doe argue thee dead in trespasses and sins then know that God doth call thee from heaven to repentance If it tell thee thou art an hypocrite consider what grounds it hath Conscience may be muzled by ignorance and partiality the Devill puts false glasses before our eyes 2. A ground of serious humiliation to every mans heart whose conscience upon due examination doth accuse him 3. To teach every Christian which hath found that he hath passed from death to life to be afraid to commit any sin And comfort thy soul if Conscience do acquit thee then will God much more 4. Labour we always to be doing some good for we have a companion that hears and sees all and a register that notes every good word or work The Apostle in stead of telling us If our hearts condemn us God will condemn us much more He gives a reason of it describing God 1 From his greatnesse 2 Knowledge Doct. God is better acquainted with our hearts and wayes then our selves Psal 19.12 He means sins not onely secret and hidden from others but from our selves Psal 139.12 Thou Lord knowest my thoughts afar off they are ever before thee 2 Kings 8.11 12 13. Reas 1. From Gods omnisciency his all-sufficient knowledge Heb. 4.13 They are anatomized before him as if every vein and sinew were laid open he divides between the marrow and the bone John 21.12 Rom. 15.11 Job 26.6 Though hell and destruction be both covered yet before the Lord they be both open Whether Hell be in the waters or on the earth they cover not from God Hell and destruction are before the Lord how much more the hearts of the children of men 2. From the creation God made our hearts gave us power to affect think purpose He knoweth what is in us Job 38.36 If God give understanding to the heart he knows much more what is in the heart Psal 33.13 God hath fashioned our hearts therefore he knows them Psal 99 10. 3. From the providence of God We have our motion in God A Mill moves from the Miller because he hath caused it so to doe but the motion of the Mill is not in the Miller it can move without him We move in God as a supportant conservant cause as a Mill moved by the breath of the winde so we by the breath of the Lord as there is not a turning in the Mill but from the winde so not a turning of our hearts without him Our hearts are in the hands of the Lord Prov. 21.1 4. From the unsearchable depth of the deceitfulnesse of mans heart Jer. 17.9 10. Prov. 3.17 Our hearts make us believe we are rich and have need of nothing when indeed we are wretched and miserable poor blinde and naked Prov. 30.2 3. Sometimes that we are more foolish than any man and have not the understanding of a man while we walk in a sinfull way they make us believe we are in Gods favour Luke 18.9 When we are in a good estate and God would have us walk chearfully in him our hearts will cast a thousand discouragements upon us we cannot pray or profit by the Word of God or doe any good duty our hearts will few pillows under our elbowes that so we may sleep quietly but when we go to try our hearts by the Word of God then they will fall out with us indeed 2 Sam. 15. the beginning Vse 1. Take heed of all secret sins Not onely such as may be hid from men but of such roots of sin as are hid from thy selfe yet cannot be hid from God Take heed of such sins as are so subtle that thou knowest not whether they be sins or no sins which our own soules know not of If a man would be kept from presumptuous sins he must cleanse the inward and hidden frame of his heart Q. How shall we cleanse our hearts A. 1. Pray to God with David Psal 19. to cleanse us from such sins which we know not We have confessed such sins as we know by our selves and those which the world knows by us but we must make a new reckoning for such sins as we know not 2. Not to trust our own hearts but the Word of God Psal 119.9 The Word of God saith there are such sins in every age therefore we must pray to God to help us against them 3. Keep our hearts with all diligence observe every winding and turning and take heed of occasions that provoke our hearts any way to sin Prov. 4.23 2. This shews the impossibility of their good estates that look to be justified by habits and works It is the happinesse of Gods servants in that they look not to be justified by the perfection of their hearts 3. Ground of tryall If we finde that our hearts doe not condemn us let us trust our hearts no farther then we prove them by the rule of Gods Word If God hath helped you to look up to Christ for the pardon of your sins and you now sit loose from sin it is an argument that your sins are pardoned because we could not else hate sin Psal 119.6 But on the contrary if we finde our hearts condemning us our hearts are full of selfe-love Parents are full of partiality as that they can scarce see any evill in their children If they see cause of death in them much more God the righteous Judge If they see cause of
The Sun is the life of many Vermine take away the Sun and they dye as flyes but when the Sun shines in its season they live let God take away the Sun-shine of his favour from us we can neither pray nor preach we live a life of grace of holinesse Prov. 16.14 15. Rom. 8.2 Ephes 2.4 5. there is life enougst in Christ to procure us life 2 There is a life of glory of which it is said John 10.27 28. That Christ gives to his sheep eternall life 1 Cor. 15.4 5. John 5.24 28 29. so many whose souls receive life by the Word of the Gospel their bodies shall rise to eternall life How did Christ procure us this life He procured this by his death Rom. 5.9 10. while we were yet enemies we were yet reconciled by the death of Christ We received life of grace and holinesse by his means I will pour out my Spirit of grace upon all flesh Reas 1. It was unpossible our corrupt nature should fulfill any law of God Rom. 8.4 Gal. 3.21 2 The glory of Christ requires that as the Father quickneth so he also John 5.21 Vse 1. This shewes us what our condition is without Christ if God send Christ that we might live through him then in Gods fight without Christ we are dead as dead flyes dead wormes in a cold frost we are utterly dead without true peace we are like thorns that give a blaze but we lye down in sorrow Isa 50.11 Christ is our life without him we can doe nothing we are not able to put forth any spirituall action 2 Let us try our estates Whether can we say that God sent his Son into the world and hereby manifested his love to us Doe you live in Gods sight without him we are but dry bones untill we can say we live in Christ we cannot say we have any sense of Gods favour 3 It teacheth such as have any evidence of life in Christ Joh. 10.10 to come into Gods presence as dry bones intreat God that he would so speake the word as that those dry bones may live 4 To teach all such as have received this manifest token of Gods love to acknowledge the Lord Christ to be their life Phil. 1.21 For me to live is Christ and to dye is gain now Paul is crucified with Christ Gal. 2.20 and now for him to live is Christ now every day he lives he doth the more expresse Christ 1 JOHN 4.10 Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins Doct. THe love of God to us was not procured by our love to him but his own good pleasure he therefore loved us because it pleased him So that in these words we have the freenesse of Christs love he loved us freely because he loved us when we loved not him we did not begin in love to him but he to us and this is set out by the effect and end of it the pardon of our sins What is that love God bare to us before we loved him Answ There is a threefold principle of love which God magnifies and manifests to his people before they love him 1 That love whereby he chose us to life and to redeem us by Christ 2 Tim. 1.9 and the choyce to life was not according to workes but free grace 2 Gods love in redeeming us by Christ was before any love of ours to God Joh. 3.16 3 His love prevented us by effectually calling us drawing implies unwillingnesse therefore it prevented all good affections in us he must draw us out of presumption then out of despair Reas From the difference between the care of Gods love and of our love self love is so ●iveted in our hearts that we cannot love any unlesse it be for some cause concerning us a natural man loves none any further then tends to profit or pleasure but a Christian is inlarged to all Gods children he loves them all and the ground of this is because we know such to be incorporated into the same body with us and so as we see them in some kind our own and so we should never have loved God unlesse we had found his love to us Object A christian comes off freely to many ●ffices of love to them that love not him Answ True but it is because he knows God can abundantly recompence it they sometimes may lay down their lives for their brethren and for the Truth but they know that Christ hath done it for them before 2 From the eternity of Gods love now Jer. 31.3 an everlasting love can have no cause the cause is alwayes before the effect no temporall thing can be the cause of an eternall love 3 From the end of Gods love that he might bring us to walke in love Ephes 1.4 Tit. 2.14 The love of God to his people of old is a fir president to all his children Deut. 7.8 9. compared with Deut. 9.4 5 6. Vse 1. Refutes a popish and Arminian conceit that God chooseth none to life but out of foreseen faith and good works else he had chosen none to life but this is a mercenary love let a servant labour never so hard yet he knows he shall be well paid at the years end and therefore it is servile love this is that love which they would put upon God 2 It exhorts all to begin betimes to love God begin never so soon God hath prevented us Rom. 11.35 it was an early love of Josiah at twelve years of age when he sought after God but Gods love was up before him you cannot be in your love before him though you begin as soon as you are warm in the womb John Baptist was very early when he leaped for joy in the womb yet Gods love was before him an Angel had appeared to his Father and had promised a blessing before John was begotten 3 To teach old people if God have prevented them with love long before how should this stir them up to love God and to be humbled for the want of love to God that hath loved them so long Shall we be to seek in our love to God and cleave to worldlinesse in our old times and let God stay till our children be provided for What an unworthy dealing is this with God This should exhort all Gods servants that have had experience of Gods love to acknowledge the freedome of Gods love Job by Gods testimony was a man that feared God and eschewed evill What saith the Devill Doth Job serve God for naught No but though God had stript him of all as he did yet he had shewed such marvellous love to his soul as that he had just cause to love God for ever if God should not have bestowed on him one dram of wealth 4 This should teach Gods children to be as observant in love to Gods children as God is to them to love them freely to doe kindnesse to them freely Psal 16.2 3.
fear him but it casts out all tormenting fear it casts out the fear of the day of judgement and so consequently of Gods wrath 2 Thes 3.5 He prays that the Lord would direct their hearts into the love of God Why what is the fruit of that And into the patient waiting for of Christ when a mans heart is once directed to the love of God he is prepared to wait for the coming of Jesus Christ Jude vers 21. Keep your selves in the love of God looking for the mercy of the Lord Jesus Christ unto eternall life So much love as you keep in your hearts towards God so much expectation you keep in your hearts against the day of his appearing the like may be said of keeping our hearts in love to our brethren Jam. 2.13 Mercy rejoyceth against judgement Reas 1. From the proper nature and effect of love Love thinks no evill 1 Cor. 13.5 This is the work of love in the heart it bows the heart to take all in good part that God doth against it so that though we find much disquiet and anguish and torment yet love makes the soul take all in good part so that it thinks no evill of God For particulars 1 The soul thinks thus though I feel much smart and anguish yet I cannot but think it well that God should apply such corasives to my wrankled festered wounds 2 The soul takes it well that God shews him all the danger before times of sicknesse or death that he shews him this out of Hell and awakes him before he comes there it 's a great mercy that I have yet time of mercy that Hell hath not swallowed me up but that he hath given me so fair a warning to prevent it 3 A loving soule takes Gods dealing in this kind in very good part as being a notable preservative against many sinful distempers he should have fallen into by these anguishes he drives me from the world and putting off GOD for after-times this makes us seek God speedily there is no man when grace knocks at his heart that quite rejects the motion but defers it but these tormenting fears are like hooks in a fishes belly they draw us to God presently 4 The soule takes it in good part in that by these fears of conscience he is brought better to attend on Sermons to be conversant in the Scripture more to like good company better This though it quite casts not out tormenting feare yet it makes all to be taken in good part for that the soule hereby grows more meek and lowly and by this means he begins to find rest to his soule When a man begins to take Christs yoke and beare it patiently and learn of him to be meek and lowly he finds rest to his soul then he is not in torment 2 Effect of true hearted love it stirres up a man to seek him whom I ● soul loveth and the very seeking prepares the heart to rest for such a soule when he hath found Christ will not let him go till he be possessed of his love Cant. 3.4 Whereas the soul that wants love runs away from God as Adam and Cain Saul fled from God in their distresse but love is in the midst of all these tormenting feares gathers up the soul that it runs not to musick nor mirth or any evill means to quiet it but provokes the heart to seek God by all good means and so casts out fear 3 Love of God makes us afraid of all sin and conscionable to obey in all things All that love God hate sin love maketh us hate sin and affects us with a desire to keep Gods Commandements and to be doing good John 14.23 Now both these lead to tranquility Psalm 79.10 11. There is a double ground of comfort to those that begin to hate evill out of love to God First The Lord preserveth such a soul Secondly Light is sown for such which in time will sprout up to manifest comfort therefore Psalm 79.12 he saith Rejoyce in the Lord ye righteous Love likewise provokes us to be fruitful in goodnesse and if we be so Christ promiseth that he will manifest his favour and familiarity to such John 14.23 Reas From the object of love which is alwayes some good and if the soule love good God will be good to it Psal 79.1 Truly God is good to Israel In the midst of many fears and doubts and griefs in the midst of all like the Sunne through a cloud he breaks out yet God is good to Israel Now when a man in the midst of evill can looke at God as good this makes way to quiet all as he expresseth vers 24 25.28 29. When the heart conceives of God as good it scatters all doubts und fears wherewith the soule is possest that though his heart and flesh faile yet God is his portion for ever Vse 1. Of direction to them that have to deale with troubled spirits where they may apply comfort a man comes and complains bitterly of the burthen of his soule Why as yet there is no sure ground of applying of comfort but when you can discern any fruit of love in their expressions if you finde them taking all in good part and blessing God that by this meanes he is pleased to break them off from their owne sinful wayes and draw them closer to himself then you may safely apply comfort but otherwise if you see men murmuring against Gods hand why truly that feare hath torment and that soul is not sound-hearted This is true love to love God when he is angry and to take it in good part that God should deal frowardly and crabbedly with a froward and ●●ooked heart Vse 2. For them that find their hearts overwhelmed with fears doubts and yet are unwilling to come to his frame of spirit that think they have not lived so badly as some have done convince them they have deserved more then this that so they may take all in good part 〈◊〉 then if they be possest of Gods love in this and apprehend ●● there is way 〈◊〉 ●●mfort and peace Vse 3. For you that finde disturbance and anguish of soule it may be a ground of consolation and direction to you 〈…〉 heart pricked with the torment of sin consider how thou findest thy 〈…〉 to God doth thy soul say to God in 〈◊〉 deepest anguishes as 〈…〉 Thy● art just in all that is come upon us thou hast done righteously but we have done foolishly Dost thou take it in good part and blesse God that in very faitfulnesse to thy soul he hath afflicted thee If thou 〈…〉 thy self to God and puttest thy mouth in the dust willing to be turned any way so that he will set thee in a good way Why then there is a spirit of love in thee which in time will cast out all fear there are now 〈◊〉 of light and joy sown which ere long will sprout forth to thy endlesse comfort Vse 4. May teach them
fear in love then if there be no fear there is no fear of falling away Vse 2. Of direction to poor souls against those 〈…〉 and fears of their hearts if we would be quit● of all those cares and grie● 〈…〉 g●●p in love to God to your brethren for there is no fear in love 〈…〉 therefore from all hatred of God learn to take all Gods d●g● in good part as proceeding from his love to your souls Look at all th●se fears and anguishes he puts you to as wholsome for your spirits and the very apprehension of Gods love to you in these will quiet your consciences and scatter those fears Grow up likewise in love to your brethren lay aside all wrath and revenge be tender-hearted and merciful unto them and thus growing in love you shall grow in fearlesnesse Vse 3. Shews the fearful estate of a hateful heart as there is no fear in love so there is nothing but fear in hatred he that findes his heart estranged from God and 〈…〉 love to his brethren why when troubles comes fears increase What is 〈◊〉 reason natural men are so afraid of death and judgement Why because they have hateful spirits whereas a loving soule prays for the hastning of the day of judgement Come Lord Jesus come quickly But an hateful spirit knows the Lord Jesus comes to take vengeance on all his hateful carriages and hard speeches and therefore he trembles at judgement Yea this hatefull disposition is more dangerous to the soule then any sinne besides Let a godly man be defiled with many sins fall into divers weaknesses and frailties yet because he maintains a loving heart to God and his people they do not eclipse his boldnesse David confesseth That the iniquities of his heels compassed him about yet because he kept his heart sincere and upright to God he dares be confident wherefore should I be afraid whereas on the contrary let a man walk never so justly and honestly and do many good things yet if the heart be estranged from God have no fellowship with him nor his Saints let death and judgement come because his heart is not possest of Gods love therefore he is opprest with many fears and anguishes Vse 4. Of consolation to every loving heart if thou findest thy heart possest with love to God and his Saints that there is none in heaven or earth that thou desirest in comparison of him and for the Saints they are the ●ly men of thy delight if thou beest afraid thou art much too blame If thou discernest ●ods love in thy heart bid farewel to groundlesse fears Object But will a loving heart say Have not I just cause to fear do you not see how loosely I walke how often I trip and fall in my Christian course Answ There is no causes of fear Wherefore should I feare in the day of evill when the iniquities of my heels compasse me about These are causes to make me love love God the more that pardons these fallings and to hate sin the more but they ought to weaken thy confidence for there is no fear in love 1 JOHN 4.19 We love him because he first loved us THese words depend on the former words vers 17. he delivered this truth that those that are sound-hearted in love may have boldnesse against the day of judgement this he proves from the resemblance that is between God and a loving heart 2 from the contrariety betwixt fear and love there is no fear in love which he proves 1 From the eff●●● of love perfect love casts out fear 2 From the ●nct of fear Fear hath torment therefore love that is a quiet peaceable gr● cannot stand with it 3 From the ●oundnesse of fear he that fears is not perfect in love The fourth argument is taken from the cause of love which is Gods love to us if we love God because God loved us first then perfect love casts out fear but we do so Ergo. For this is the nature of love it makes us look at God as good and merciful to us and therefore love casts out all fear of evil from the hand of God In this 19 verse observe two parts 1 The freedom of Gods love to us he loved us not because we loved him but he first loved us 2 The root and spring of our love to God is Gods love first to us preventing us For the first part observe Doct. 1. The love of God to us is altogether free un-prevented and un-deserved on our part If the question be why God loved us it was not because we had done him any service of love but he loved us before we loved him 2 Tim. 1.9 He called us not according to our works but according to his free purpose and grace Deut. 7.7 8. The Lord did not set his love upon you because you were more in number then any people for ye were the fewest of all people but because the Lord loved you So Deut. 9.4 5. he loved them because he loved them and therefore surely without prevention or desert on our parts Reas 1. From the removal of such causes of love as might prevent God on our parts if there be any cause on our parts he loved us either out of foreseen faith or good works but from neither of these not from foreseen faith for it 's the love of God to us that produceth faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed so that our faith springeth from Gods love choosing us to life nor for our good works for we are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works so that good works did not cause Gods ordaining us to life but Gods ordaining us to life causeth good works so that faith and good works are not causes but fruits of Gods love to us Reas 2. From the eternity of Gods love to us Je. 31.3 I have loved you with an everlasting love Now if Gods love be eternal before the world was then it was not for our sakes who were made after Ephes 4.5 Nothing temporal can be the cause of that which is eternal our love and faith began in time his love was eternal Obj. Though our love and faith began but now yet he fore-saw it from eternity and therefore it might move him to set his love on us Answ It 's all one with God whether you have respect to that which is now or what he knows will be hereafter so a wise man serves a Prince not out of meer affection to the Prince but because he loved himselfe first for he fore-saw if he served him carefully he should have abundant recompence Now to the wise man it 's all one whether he have respect to the future foreseen recompence or to the present and therefore still his service is mercenary therefore when God loved us it was not for any thing we did or was foreseen to be done by us for then we had not loved him because he first loved us but he
Christ liveth in me and the life I now live I live by faith in the Son of God live upon Christ daily fetch all your help and comfort and life from him and for eternall life seeing it is laid up in him let us lay claim to it in his Name and lay up the security of all our life in him that so though it be unsetled yet in him it may be sure 1 JOHN 5.12 He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life THis Verse contains the third record God hath given us of his Son and that is the subject of this eternall life to whom this life is given and that is onely to the true believers He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life Doct. Vpon our having or not having of Christ depends our having or not having life Prov. 8.35 36. He that findeth me findeth life but he that hateth me loveth death Eph. 2.11 12. Without Christ we are aliens from life and strangers from the Covenant Quest Why doth our life depend upon the having of Christ Reas 1. From the insufficiency of all the creature to give life Heb. 10.1 4. For it is impossible that the bloud of Bulls or Goats should take away sin Besides should we die for our sins our selves yet we could not satisfie for our sins because we could never overcome death neither can our obedience to the law give us life Gal. 3.21 23. David speaks it fully in the Name of Christ Psal 22.29 No man can keep his soul alive he cannot keep naturall life much lesse a spirituall yea Adam in innocency was taught to look for the preservation of his life out of himselfe and therefore he was to eat of the tree of life implying that the maintenance of that life he then lived could not have been in himselfe but he must eat of the tree of life a type of Christ How much lesse could Adam fallen keep this life in him Quest Why is the creature insufficient to give life Answ 1. From the preciousnesse of that price which was to be paid for our life the matter of our justification is the price paid for our redemption Psal 49.8 The redemption of souls is precious and it is beyond the power of the creature it was onely the obedience of Christ as suffering to the death that could give a sufficient price for us and none but Christ could doe it because he thereby declared himselfe mightily to be the Son of God 2. For our life of Sanctification and Consolation that proceeds from the Spirit of God within us springing up in us to everlasting life John 16.7 John 4.10 Now its onely Christ that can give us this life it s he that must ascend up to heaven and send down the Comforter it s he that sets open this living Fountain 3. For eternall life that can onely be given by Christ in regard of the difficulty of it above all humane reach no man is able to deliver his soul from the grave Psal 49.7 8. Death is the passage to eternall life now for a man to die and aftewards to raise up himselfe is above created power John 11.25 Reas 2. From the good pleasure of God that hath appointed That in Christ should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1.19 Col. 3.4 All the springs of life flow from him onely there is no deriving of life from any other fountain Vse 1. From hence we may have an evident ground of tryall whereby we may know whether we be alive or dead why if we have the Son we have life if we have not the Son we have not life For the understanding of this we are to consider 1. What it is to have Christ 2. What it is to have the Son 3. Shew some signes of life For the first we are said to have Christ four wayes 1. By way of service 2. By way of purchase 3. By way of Covenant 4. By way of acceptance 1. By way of service or worship a man is said to have God that worships God as some Princes are chosen by the peoples adoration so by our adoring of God we have God Exod. 20.3 Thou shalt have no other Gods but me that is Thou shalt worship no other Gods but me if thou worship me you have me Psal 45.11 12. For he is the Lord thy God and worship thou him we receive Christ to be our Lord by worshipping him This Moses sang at the red Sea Exod. 15.2 3. to exalt and worship God makes him our God the worship of God is performed in our minds in our wills in our live● 1. In our mindes we then have Christ when we have him in high estimation Cant. 5.10 My Beloved is white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousand who is like unto thee among the gods Psal 8.7 Exod. 15.10 11. when the soul prizeth Christ above all then we have him this is the difference between spirituall and earthly things a man may prize gold and silver and riches and yet not have them but we never prize spirituall things especially Christ but we have them and this is worship for all worship stands in exalting another and debasing my selfe now if I give Christ divine esteem its divine worship now when the soul thus esteems Christ as the highest and debaseth himselfe to the lowest it hath Christ John 1.27 John the Baptist he so advanceth Christ that in comparison of him he thinks himselfe unworthy to loose the lachet of his shoe no mortall man so great but another may be worthy to loose his shoe but Christ is so highly advanced that we are not worthy to doe him the meanest service when a mans heart thus advanceth Christ and thinks himselfe most unworthy of the meanest service about him much more of having Christ himselfe when once we have Christ in such high esteem we have him indeed and this high prizing of Christ may a poor soul have when it can expresse little else and this is an evident argument of our having Christ when we can think the worst thing in Christ honourable and precious this was Moses his faith that he lookt at the very reproaches and afflictions of Christ as greater riches then the treasures of Egypt Heb. 11.25 26. 2. We honour Christ in our minds when we esteem nothing more worthy knowing then Christ 2 Cor. 2.2 For I determined to know nothing among you save Jesus Christ and him crucified John 17.3 and to know Christ is to know the vertue and worth of Christ as Paul knew him Phil. 3.7 8 9. that is to esteem all his best outward priviledges as base and filthy in respect of the knowledge of Christ an evident sign that Paul had him In Nature we never have a thing but we desire to know the worth and use of it Phil. 3.10 so every one that hath Christ desires to know what the power of his death is and the vertue of his Resurrection and