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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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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
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
of much encouragement to all that see their Brethren sin a sin not unto death to pray for them be it a sin of covetousnesse nay be it a sin of frowardnesse which is of a deep nature yet the Lord promiseth to hear us for them Isa 57.17 18. Motives 1. The Lord will be angry with you if you neglect it Is it nothing for you to see your Brethren be under the burthen of sin 2. It will encrease your comfort if you pray heartily for them God will return all your calamities Job 42. 3. None can help but God therefore pray to him 4. This is a mavellous benefit that thy prayers shall be an instrument to raise the dead to life Obj. Many pray for their Brethren yet full short of giving them life What say you to Abrahams prayer for Ishmael Gen. 17.18 and Samuels for Saul 1 Sam. 15.11 31. 16.1 Ans 1. It would be considered whether he be a Brother thou prayest for Abraham prayed for such a one as was neither yet gracious nor belonged to the election of grace as is likely for that is prerequired Samuel prayed for Saul but God tells him he had rejected him 2. Consider whether you use the other means that God requires in your places David no doubt prayed for his Sons yet he neglected other means as it s said of Adonijah that his Father never displeased him at any time saying Why hast thou done so 1 Kings 1.6 3. A man may pray but it may be without faith or fervency for that 's required James 5.17 If we be wanting in none of these God will make good undoubtedly that which he hath here promised Verse 16. latter part There is a sin unto death c. These words contain an exception from his former direction that in case we see our Brother sin a sin unto death I doe not say he shall pray for it There is therefore a sin unto death Indeed every sin is mortall no sin veniall Rom. 6.23 There is no sin but deserves death but yet there is a sin unto death that is there 〈◊〉 no ordinary sin but may be forgiven that therefore is a sin unto death that not onely deserves death but doth certainly and inevitably procure death Doct. There is a sin that not onely in it selfe is deadly but that irre●●●rably procures everlasting death Mat. 12.31 32. Mark 3.22 What is this sin unto death Two thing concur to the composition of it 1. Illumination in the minde 2. Malice in the heart The Apostle joyns them together Heb. 10.26 If they sin wilfully maliciously after they have received the knowledge of the truth which is called inlightning Heb. 6.4 then there remains no more sacrifice for sin First Such a knowledge of the truth is required as comes from the illumination of the holy Ghost when he is clearly let to see the truth of Gods Word and the goodnesse of his grace if after this they sin wilfully there is no more hope of mercy Secondly There is malice in this sin that is included when it s called the sin against the holy Ghost Mat. 12.31 32. which partly expresseth the object against which they sin which is the Spirit of grace and the manner it is done with spight and malice against the know truth That malice concurs to it its evident Heb. 10.29 they are said to despight the Spirit of God now this is not onely contempt and despising but its joyned likewise with malice and scorn That it is unpardonable our Saviour testifies Mat. 12.32 Mark 3.22 Heb. 6.4 5 6. Why is this sin so unpardonable 1. From the mighty strong power of Satan in such a man because it s ever committed when seven worse then himselfe worse then the former have entred in after the knowledge of the truth and reformation of many things Luke 11.24 to 27. When a man hath been so inlightened and convinced that he hath cast out many sinfull lusts if he shall make way for Satan again by voluntary and wilfull commission of sins then Satan enters with seven other spirit worse then before 2. Some yeeld a reason from the order of the Persons in the Trinity If we sin against the Father the Son may intercede for us if we sin against the Son the holy Ghost may intercede for us but if we sin against the holy Ghost there is no other Person to intercede for us but I rest not in that for it is certain this sin trespasseth against all the three Persons 3. From the nature of this sin It s not a sin of ignorance for want of knowledge not a sin of infirmity nor is it onely a sin of presumption for that may proceed from boldnesse rather then malice but a sin of malice far worse than any of those He that despised Moses Law dyed without mercy under two or three witnesses that is that sinned presumptuously and out of boldnesse for sins of ignorance and infirmity there were sacrifices ordained in the Law but if a man sinned wilfully he dyed without mercy though his sin were never so small as gathering of sticks now therefore if there was no pardon for such a sin of presumption How much sorer punishment is he worthy of that tramples under foot the blood of the covenant and doth despight to Spirit of grace 4 From the glory of Gods grace It 's the glory of grace that it extends to the pardoning and healing of all sins besides no sin of ihnorance or infirmity but grace can heal the most presumptuous it can humble but if a man man maliciously despise the Spirit of grace God that is most jealous of the glory of his grace will never have it abused by them Vse 1. Of refutation of some ancient tenets about this sin The Schoolmen say it is one of those siv sins as Aquinas reckons them up either despair or presumption or opposing the known truth or envying the graces of others or obstinate purpose in sin or finall impenitency but many of those may be found in those whom God afterwards receives to mercy There hath been found despair even in Gods owne servants Psal 31 22. And as for presumption Nathan chargeth David that had despised the commandement of the Lord. And that was a sin of presumption Num 16.30 31. for oppugning the known truth Herod put John in prison and to death Darius cast Daniel into the Lyons den both against their conscience and yet neither of them sinned against the holy Ghost because they were both sorry for it Afa put the Prophet in prison For envying the graces of others it was found in Joshua Num. 11.28.29 For obstinate purpose in sin it s found in every one that sins presumptuously 2 Sam. 24.1 to 4. For finall impenitency that it is not the sin against the holy Ghost because St. John then would not have given order not to pray for them for finall impenitency cannot be discerned till death and so St. Johns direction had been but frivolous St.
suffer death for us Heb. 2.9 which God could not doe Fourthly That he might be the better compassionate of our infirmities Heb. 2.17 18. The Reasons why Christ became not an Angel which the Schoolmen render are divers principally these First Angels being created all at once and not propagated one from another by generation though many of them fell yet God lost not the whole kind because many of them stood but men proceeding all from one stock or root he being corrupt all his Off-spring were in the same Estate so that if God had not provided this means of Christs incarnation for him he had lost the Creature wholly But to this I answer God might have made many men once as well as Angels and so might have provided another means of saving some of them as he did the Angels but that he would set forth the abundant riches of his love to man in saving them by giving of his own Son Again though all men had perished they had had but their desert and God might have had more service by one Angell redeemed than by many millions of men Secondly The Angels fell of themselves but man by their procurement To this also I say That the greater the Angels sin was the greater is their misery and the greater their misery is the greater mercy had God shewed to have redeemed them Thirdly The Angels conceiving things not by discourse but by a present view of all things that any way pertain to those things they turn themselves unto they doe all things with so full resolution that they cannot alter their mind or repent but man conceiving things by discourse findeth them in the event many times to prove otherwise than he expected and so may come to alter his mind and be fit to be brought to repentance To this take this answer That the Angels being of a finite nature must needs conceive one thing after and upon another which is discourse and so subject to error and so of themselves capable of repentance was not the Devill deceived in Job Job 1.11 Fourthly The Angels being pure immateriall intellectuall Spirits dwelling in the presence of God and in the light of his countenance could not sin by error or mis-perswasion but of purposed malice which is the sin against the Holy Ghost irremissible but man fell by error and mis-perswasion For answer hereunto take this That though the Devills dwelt in the presence of God which cannot be proved yet they received no more light than God would communicate to them and who can say that God communicated so much to them but that upon wilfull not attendance to him they might be deceived Fifthly As men have a time after which there is no place left for helping or altering their Estate so was it meet Angels should have the like that time to men is bodily death which because Angels are not subject to it was not unmeet their time should be their first spirituall death their first sins hence Damascen saith Hoc est Angelis casus quod hominibus mors To this I say That the Angels might have had another time beyond which there hath been no place for repentance namely not their first sin but their wilfull rejecting of a Saviour if he had pleased to have offered them any Thus you see that all these and so are the rest but mens devices and conjectures the true reason you have John 3.16 Gods love to us which also causeth the Lord to say as Jer. 8.4 God neither turneth nor returneth Angels turn but return not men both turn and return through this unspeakable love of God Vse 1. To confute the Heresies of Eutiches and the Maniches who taught Christ had no true but a phantasticall body Secondly To stir us up to some duties 1 of Meditation 2 of Practice First Of Meditation and that 1 Concerning God and 1 Concerning his Justice so severe against sin as all the meer men in the world could not satisfie for it and therefore Christ became man and that is the reason why the damned are tormented because they cannot satisfie Secondly His mercy and and love to us the Father to abase his Son the Son to abase himselfe for us Thirdly His Wisdome to find out such a means to save us when he passed by the more glorious Angels Secondly Concerning our selves who were in so wretched a condition as the blood of Bulls and Goats could not save us men and Angells could not help us onely the Son of God must empty himselfe of Glory and Majesty and become man for us if therefore thou hast not part in Christ Jesus the same sins which plucked Christ from Heaven to Earth will pluck thee from the Earth to Hell Secondly It may stir us up to some duties of practice 1. To teach us Humility Phil. 2.6 7. Psal 22.6 1. By Considering our own Estates and the misery thereof which caused him to take upon him the form of a servant 2. By Considering his example who took upon him the form of a servant to be serviceable to us so ought we to abase our selves to be serviceable to our Brethren Secondly To stir us up to labor to be united to his nature as he was to ours 2 Pet. 1.4 he became the son of man that we might become the sons of God we cannot answer the intent of his incarnation better Thirdly To move us to an holy thankfulnesse and joyfullnesse in the Lord as 1. Zachary blessed the Lord in this behalfe Luke 1.68 2. Mary magnified him Luke 1.46 3. John leaped at it for joy in his Mothers belly Luke 1.41 4. Abraham long before John 8.56 he saw it in the promise and laughed Gen. 17.16 17. and hereupon called his Son Isaac 5. The Angels who have lesse benefit than we hereby Luke 2.14 And sure if John wrote every Doctrine in this Epistle that our joy might be full as chap. 1.4 then hence also let us raise up our hearts to this holy affection this is the fittest exercise for Christmas otherwise usually spent in carnall delights because men have no part in this joy Doct. If the Apostles saw and heard these things of the word of life then blessed were they Luke 10.22 23. Why Because of his comely beauty and goodly proportion no Isa 53.2 and then Judas had been an happy man as happy as the rest of the Apostles But the Reasons are these First By this means they had a greater measure of knowledge Luke 10.22 23. he expounded to them the secrets of the Kingdome of God Mat. 13.11 16. Mark 4.34 hence is that of the Samaritan woman John 4.34 hence it was that John Baptist was more excellent than others Mat. 11.11 So that as Solomons servants were happy 1 Kings 10.8 so much more Christs Disciples who saw and heard a greater than Solomon Secondly Their Faith also by this means was more strengthned in the truth of this great promise of the Messias which had been deferred so long John 20.29
It is many times an exercise to Faith to be commanded to believe what we see not but to see what we belive not is a great strengthning to a weak Faith Again a greater measure of knowledge is a notable means of a greater measure of Faith And if you object against this Heb. 11.2 I answer That the meaning of the place is this that though things be not seen yet Faith maketh them evident not that whatsoever we believe by Faith is not seen Stephan saw and believed the same Acts 7.55 There is a threefold light of Sense of Reason of Faith when a thing is obscure to both the former Faith will make it evident Thirdly Their Peace of Conscience also hereby was more setled and established Luke 2.29 30. for he saw now Christ was come to accomplish that work of reconciliation which before was promised and to make up our Peace with God In these regards the glory of the second Temple was greater than that of the former Hag. 2.10 the second Temple wanted five things of the former Aarons Rod the Pot of Manna Vrim and Thummim fire from Heaven and yet it was greater than the former because these three Knowledge Faith and Peace of Conscience were so much increased not to a few as it was before but generally even to the simple Vse 1. Hence we have just occasion to meditate of our blessednesse also above that of the old Church for all those grounds of the Apostles blessednesse by seeing and hearing Christ remaine to us as 1 Means of Knowledge clearer to us than to the old Church by the Apostles preachings and writings we even see Christ crucified Gal. 3. 2 Means of stronger Faith 1. Because of greater means of Knowledge 2. Because that is already accomplished to us which they hoped for 3. Means of setling greater Peace seeing Christ is not onely come to make our Peace as he was to Simeon but hath already done it And therefore a shame it were for us to be more Ignorant Faithlesse perplexed in conscience than they were and therefore for 1. Knowledge let us be no longer babes 1 Cor 14.20 the times require it Heb. 5.12 Isa 11.9 2 Faith let us strengthen it First For Promises past we have not now received them Secondly For Promises to come of the resurrection he so long foretold was at last seen and then belongs to us that 1. Blessings John 20.29 2 Joy 1 Pet. 1.8 3 Peace let that possesse and rule us Col. 3.15 in life and death as it did Simeon Vse 2. To Stir us up to pity the Estates of such poor people as sit still in darknesse and in the shadow of death having no means of Knowledge of Faith of Peace John 7.49 Vse 3. How great then is that blessednesse prepared for us in Heaven where we shall see Christ as he is and then 1. Our Knowledge shall be perfect 1 Cor. 13.12 2. Our Faith shall be joyned with Fruition yea we shall see what we believe 1 Cor. 12.12 3. Our Peace shall be passing understanding Phil. 4.7 unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.8 á fortiori It is good to feed on these spirituall joyes and then these carnall delights will soon grow out of tast and relish Doct. Christ in himselfe and to us is the word of life Here is to be shewed in what respects he is called 1 A word 2 A word of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here is a metaphor and every metaphor is a short similitude and it must not be expected that any similitude should agree in all poynts But Christ is called the word of God in four respects as he is the wisdome image interpreter and promise of the Father First The wisedome of the Father as reason floweth from the soul or minde of man and is not any accident to it but of the same nature with it though there is an accidentall wisdome in us which is habituall yet there is also an essentiall wisdome in us namely our Reason which is naturall so Christ who is the reason and wisdome of the Father flowed from the Father was begotten of him and is of the same nature with him hence he is called the wisdome that dwelleth with God Prov. 8.1 22 24 25. 1 Cor. 1.24 and the Holy Ghost may seem to have reference to this place John 1.1 2 3 4 5. because the description which he maketh of the world it seemeth he took from that description of wisdome if you compare these places Prov. 8.1 with John 1.1 Prov. 8.3 with John 1.2 Prov. 24. to 30. with John 1.3 Pro. 8.34 with John 1.4 Prov. 8.35 with John 1.5 and chap. 1.22 24 c. Secondly As the words or speech of the man is a character of his minde for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh a rotten heart begetteth and streameth forth unsavoury speeches an holy heart breatheth out gracious words so is Christ the character or engraven forme of the Fathers person Heb. 1.3 Thirdly As the speech or word of a man doth declare the will and meaning and Counsell of the speaker so doth Christ of the Father John 1.18 Mat. 11.27 Fourthly Christ may very well be called the word of God or the speech of God because he it was of whom the Lord spake from the beginning that is the word of promise which he made to Adam to Abraham to Isaac to Jacob to David c. hence Christ is called the Promise Heb. 11. hence he who is called a Servant 1 Chron. 17.19 is called the word 2 Sam. 7.21 that is a servant spoken of or promised Secondly Christ is called a word of life 1. Because he hath especiall life in himselfe John 1.4 John 5.6 2. Because he communicateth life and he communicates 1 Naturall life which to us men is the light of Reason Joh. 1.4 this former we have from him as an author these following as an head or root 2 He communicates spirituall life and that he doth 1. By dying for us for his death is our life as by his wounds we are healed Isa 53.5 so by his life we live now the life we live by Christs death is 1 Justification that is forgivenesse of sins Col. 1.14 Ephes 1.7 therefore he is called the justification of life Rom. 5.18 we without his death were dead meer Children of death as condemned persons and Christs death procuring us pardon procured us life 2 Mortification it is the first part of spirituall life inherent in us to die to sin and that was procured by Christs death Rom. 6.6 Gal. 2.19 2. He communicates spirituall life to us by rising for us for as we have been like him in dying to sin by his death so doe we live to God by his life Rom. 6.5 10 11. now the life we live by his Resurrection is 1 Vivification or newnesse of life Christ now living in us by his Spirit Gal. 2.20 1 Cor. 6.17 Hence as living trees of Righteousnesse we bring forth fruit unto God
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.
walks will you judge a man to be good that is good in good company Many a man for company sake will go out of his way so we must not judge what they do by a start but what is their constant voluntary growing course what way they hold to that is their way a good man in evil company his heart is not quiet it is no voluntary motion and so contra we often fail in judging some men by some few steps but observe what is his voluntary constant course ad what doth he thrive and grow upon if a mans Christian course be voluntary constant and growing it is not the going out a step or two that will condemn us the wise men they came a long journey to seek Christ and they went out of their way to Jerusalem to enquire but then the Star left them but they staid not there but went into their way again and then the Star appeared to them again so a godly man goes to seek Christ and God gives him the light of his Word yet upon some error he may turn out of the way and then they leave Gods Word but they stay not there but go into the way again and then they have the light of Gods Word to direct them Vse 3 May teach men not to content themselves in any Ignorance or Uncleannesse or Wicked course you cannot walk in Darknesse and have Fellowship with God therefore as you would claim Fellowship with God disclaime Fellowship with sin you cannot continue and grow up in any sin voluntarily but you disclaim Fellowship with God yea and with the blood of Christ no Fellowship with Christ as long as you have any Fellowship with sin Vse 4 To teach Christians that it is not enough to be holy and true but God requires you should walk in Light and holinesse Ephes 5 8. Gal. 5.25 if you would be men of Knowledge and Piety it is needful that you walk in that course it is not enough to set an instrument in tune but it must sound forth it is not enough to have our hearts in a good frame but we must walk in that frame Psal 119. Thy Word is a light unto my feet and a Lanthern to my pathes Gods Word was a light to his feet what to look on No but to be a guide to his steps we should order our steps according to his Word the Church is compared to a Garden Cant. 4.14 full of spices and flowers is she content that she hath these No but verse 16. awake O North-wind and blow upon my Garden that my spices may flow forth and yeild a fragrant smell a Christian must not only have gifts and Graces but walk accordingly a Christian that hath good parts and gifts if he doth not walk according thereunto what good doth he It is a gouty foot that dares not walk so he is a distempered Christian that hath the feet of a Christian and yet walks not he is only the image of a Christian an image hath the exact parts of a man but makes no use of them it hath eyes and sees not ears and hears not feet and walks not Psal 115.4 so he is but the image of a Christian that hath parts and gifts and walks not accordingly therefore whatsoever Spirit God hath given thee walk in it if thou hast a Spirit of Meeknesse use it if a Spirit of Humility Patience c. use it if a Spirit of Prayer use it walk in it else you are but images and no true Christians The more you walk in good duties and a Christian conversation the more you feel Fellowship with God otherwise if you go out of the way you lose the Light the Star as the wise men did when you walk in the wayes of Pride and Impatience and Covetousnesse and Uncleannesse you lose your way and your light too which should direct you therefore what gifts you have walk in them Vse 5. Of comfort to such Christians as are walking and doing though they cannot go on so fast as they would a man that walks goes not so fast as he that gallops but yet if you do but walk in a good way you make a progress and shall come to your journeys end at last What if Judas gallop faster than the rest of the Apostles as it is likely because they did least suspect him he gallopped but he soon stopped his course and turned into the way of perdition Therefore it is no discouragement if in a Christian course you be but going on though you go on but slowly yet if you rid ground and stand not at a stay nor go backward that is comfort for you surely have Fellowship with God 1 JOHN 1.7 THe main Scope of this Epistle is to comfort tender consciences that their joy may be full for this end he tells them certain messages which he heard from Christ the first message is verse 5. whereupon he inferres a note of Fellowship with God Negatively verse 6. Affirmatively verse 7. If we walk in the light c. Doct. Such as walk in the light the blood of Christ purgeth them from all their sins The Verse sets down two Priviledges of them that walk in the light they have not onely Fellowship with God but with Christ and that in his mediation and that in cleansing them from all their sins Quest 1. What is meant by the blood of Christ A. The blood of Christ is here put not onely for that blood shed on the Crosse but for his whole death set out by blood which was the effect of his death for blood powred out after his death John 19.33 34. for it is said of the death of Christ Rom. 5.8 And the death of Christ is not all for he suffered many things beside so that it comprehends all his sufferings 1 Pet. 3.18 yet there is a further Synecdoche sometimes his passion is put for his whole obedience Rom. 5.18 19. Luke 22.44 for that is attributed to his obedience that it makes us righteous that is free from sin all his Spirituall desertions were sufferings of Christ tending to cleanse u● from sin bloud includes all his sufferings and obedience And indeed the very bloud of Christ had it not been done in obedience and humility it would have done no good for the promise is to him that doth something Doe this and live John 10.18 his passion was done in obedience Phil. 2.7 8. Quest Why is our cleansing from sin ascribed most to his blood seeing it reached to his whole death and passion and obedience why is his bloud most instanced in Mat. 26.28 Rom. 3.35.5.9 Heb. 9.14 1 Pet. 1.19 why is it most attributed to his bloud Ans It was meet 1. Because death was the wages of Sin Rom. 6. ult Gen. 3.17 therefore we must satisfie that or our Surety for us 2. His death is most stood on because the whole Covenant stands in that the Legacy is of no force without the death of the Testator Heb. 9.17
3. Bloud is most mentioned because it is an evident Testimony of death because in bloud is life 2 because it accomplished all the legall types Heb. 9.22 Quest 2. Why is it called the blood of Jesus Christ his Son Ans Because that Christ that shed his bloud was the Son of God and that added efficacy to it Heb. 10.4 not the bloud of sinfull man Heb. 2.26 27. it must be therefore the bloud of an infinite power Acts 20.28 Quest 3. How is this blovd said to cleanse Ans 1 As it Justifies 2 As it Sanctifies 1. As it Justifies us by his bloud are we cleansed Rom. 5.9 Ephes 1.7 we are justified by it because it frees us from the guilt and punishment of sin 1 From the guilt of Sinne guilt is that whereby we are liable to the Curse 2 It frees us from the punishment of sin so that now there is no condemnation to us Rom. 8.1 Rom. 4. ult 1 Pet. 2.24 2. We are cleansed from Sin by a sactifying power in the death of Christ that is it whereby our Consciences being sprinkled we are freed from the stain and lust of sin Heb. 10.29 and are endued with supernaturall grace so that we are afraid to commit any sin Q. What is meant by all Sin A. That is from original and actual sins from sins of Omission and Commission it cleanseth us from the sins of our Birth and of our Life of Youth and of riper years Rom. 5.9 now we could not be justified if any sin were unpardoned Heb. 9.14 if it be a dead work or sin of Omission our Conscience is purged from it for if the bloud of Bulls and Goats cleansed from all sins of the flesh much more the bloud of Christ from all sin no sin but we are cleansed from by Christs bloud except the sin against the Holy Ghost Heb. 10.26 because v. 29. they tread under foot the bloud of the Covenant For the proof of this point see Rom. 8.1 2. Rom. 6.6 Reas 1. From the wonderfull efficacy of Christs bloud in respect of the Divinity of his Person the reason why it is so effectuall is because it is the bloud of the Son of God Heb. 9.14 Reas 2. Because he stood in our Persons on the Crosse through the acceptation of God God accepted him as a Surety for us Heb. 7.22 Isa 5. ult 1 Pet. 2.24 therefore it is as much as if we had done it in our own persons John 10.11 He had no need to shed his Blood for himselfe for he had never sinned Vse 1. To reprove the Papists who teach that the Masse being celebrated for the dead and living justifies from sin but if the bloud of Christ cleanse us from all sin there is no need of the Masse to cleanse us from any sin and they teach that the Masse is an unbloudy Sacrifice now it must be a bloudy Sacrifice that must cleanse Heb. 10.10 14. but if it be often offered it doth not exceed the Sacrifices of the Law Heb. 10.1 to 5. Vse 2. To refute the Popish Purgatory if Christs bloud cleanse us from all sin what need a Purgatory to expiate any sin This is a Blasphemy against Christs bloud Q. Do not Temptation and Affliction and Word and Sacraments and Faith and other Graces purge us from sin and purifie us It is said of Afflictions Heb. 12.11 A. It is true there are many means to purge us from sin but no efficacy in any of them except by virtue of Christs Blood therefore those in Hell have no benefit because Christs bloud reacheth not thither so that if any be bettered by Afflictions or Word or Sacraments it is from the virtue of Christs bloud and if Christs bloud be sprinkled on Purgatory we will not reject it Vse 3. Of refutation of the opinion of many godly Divines that hold we are purified from the sinne of our Birth by the purity of Christs Birth from Sinnes of Omission by his active obedience from Sinnes of Commission by his passive obedience but we must know there is thus much in the purity of his Birth in his Obedience in his Passion that it makes us fit to be cleansed but yet we must hold the Bloud of Christ cleanseth us from all sin that brings this fitnesse to perfection A Lamb defiled in the old Law was never accepted though it were slain for a Sacrifice and if it had been without spot and blemish yet if it had not been slain it would not have been accepted neither so had not Christ been a Lambe spotlesse and undefiled his death would not have cleansed us from our sins and though he were spotlesse and undefiled yet he must be slain or else we could not be cleansed neither the purity of Christs Nature doth not cleanse us from sin but we must take all joyntly together all his active obedience was passive and all his passive obedience was active Gal. 4.4 5. that he was obedient to the Law was part of his Passion and by the obedience of Christ to the death we are cleansed from all sin Vse 4. To refute some that say we are justified by faith as it is a work in us they say we are justified not by the works of the Law but by faith Rom. 11.5 6. but if we be justified by faith as it is a work in us how doth the bloud of Christ cleanse us from sin but it is faith as it lays hold on the bloud of Christ Vse 5. For comfort to all such as walk in the light let them not be discomforted you will say your hearts are full of impatience and coveteousness and uncleannesse these are great sins indeed but the bloud of Christ cleanseth from all sin there is no number nor measure limited Object He cleanseth not all men how shall I know whether my sinnes be cleansed A. Why do you walk in the light as God is in the light if you do then his Bloud cleanseth you from all sin therefore if a man would have comfort he must consider whether he live in any sin voluntarily and walk in darknesse if he doe he hath no part in Christs Bloud but if there be no sin but he is willing to avoyd it no duty but he desires to perform it and amend all it is a signe he walks in light if you see what is amisse and labour to mend it then you walk in the light and then assure your selves the bloud of Christ will cleanse you from all your sins Vse 6. For instruction if Christs bloud cleanseth from all sin then no sin is venial is that sin venial that cannot be cleansed but by Christs bloud Vse 7. To shew us the reason why the bloud of Christ is called precious 1 Pet. 1.19 it is more precious than the bloud of Bulls and Goats c. so all silver and gold in the world cannot remit one sin or save one soul from Hell Psal 49.6 7 8. Heb. 12.24 Vse 8. To teach Christians notwithstanding all
former sins to walk boldly in a Christian course we are much troubled in our spirits by reason of our sins the multitude and greatnesse of them why in consideration of this let us be bold Heb. 10.19 to 23. we may be bold to approach to Gods Throne bold to enter into Heaven let no sin discourage us for his bloud cleanseth from all sin Vse 9. If his bloud cleanse from all sin let us make use of his bloud Zech. 13.1 it is even this Fountain of Christs bloud let us therefore bath our selves often in this Bloud that we may be thorowly purged from all sin from the stain and guilt of sin Vse 10. All Ordinances Word Prayer Sacrament Communion of Saints all holy duties will doe no good without his bloud therefore desire God that every Ordinance may be sprinkled by his bloud as Water alone cleanseth not without Sope so it is not all the waters of Jordan that can cleanse us from dead works without the bloud of Christ strike in with it let us not rest in any Ordinance or performance in any Prayer or Fast or in all of them if you would spend your bloud to cleanse your Souls from sin all will be in vain except it be mixt with Christs bloud therefore pray that the Word and Sacrament and every Ordinance may be sprinkled with Christs bloud to justifie and sanctifie the bloud of Christ hath procured sentence of absolution from God and vertue from the Spirit of Grace to wash away all our sins therefore lay hold on it this is to lay hold on the Horns of the Altar therefore in all Christian consideration and duties look chiefly and principally to him or else all will be in vain 1 JOHN 1.8 9. If we say that we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us c. FRom the former Verse S. John gathers a two-fold mark of our estate First in this verse If the bloud of Christ cleanseth us from all sin then they are lyars that say they have no sin If we say we have no sin we deceive our selves c. The second mark is verse 9. If we acknowledge our sins c. The first in this Verse It is a dangerous signe of an evill estate if we say we have no sin for we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us Doct. Opinion and Profession of perfect Holinesse is an error wilfull pernicious and dangerous If we say 1. In heart Psal 14.1 where such a thought is 2. To speak such a thing to say is to professe so to carry our selves so as may manifest our opinion Rom. 1.22 That we have no sin that is that we are perfectly holy and righteous 1 It is an errour And 2 Wilfull errour for he saith so himselfe 3 It is a pernicious and dangerous errour it roots out all grace First It is an errour and delusion for it is contrary to Gods expresse Word Prov. 20.9 Who can say he is clean Eccl. 7.22 1 Kings 8.46 James 3.2 In many things we sin all both in matter and manner Secondly It is a wilfull errour a man doth not learn it from others but he perswades himselfe so 1. Because if any read the Scriptures he shall find it contrary Psal 130.3 Psal 143.2 2. Though a man never read the Scriptures he shall meet with daily crosses now a mans own heart will tell him it is for his sin Job 14.1 3. None but findes he hath need of craving pardon for sin Zech. 11.4 John 16.9 he shall convince the world of sin not a man in the world but he is convinced to be a sinner therefore none can say he hath no sin but it must be wilfull Errour Thirdly It is a dangerous Errour 1. Because it evacuates all truth of Grace where this conceit is there can be no truth of grace because all truth of grace expresseth it selfe in Three things 1 In something about sin every godly man first renounceth all his own righteousnesse Phil. 3.7 8. 2 He complains bitterly of sin Rom. 7.24 3 He fights against sin to the death Heb. 12.4 Now if every godly man doe thus how can any truth of grace be where a man either thinks or professeth he hath no sin 2. Where there is truth of Grace it expresseth it selfe in some things that respect the bloud of Christ 1 He prizes it above all blessings in the World Gal. 6.14 1 Cor. 2.2 now what need he prize it so much if he have no sin 2 Every godly man desires to bath himselfe daily in that bloud Zech. 13.1 now what need that if he had not sin 3 Take a Christian mans carriage towards perfection of holiness He strives after perfection earnestly every day Phil. 3.12 13 14. what need Mortification if there were no sin or vivification Vse 1. It convinceth many sorts of people to be in a dangerous estate devoyd of grace 1 Such were the Pharisees that counted themselves just and holy Such were the Essaeans that counted themselves strict observers of the Law of Moses Such a one was that young man that came to Christ Mat. 19.20 but Christ convinces him that he was not perfect Such were the Catharists of old a sect in the Church that thought themselves pure from all sin It reproves likewise the Libertines that counted themselves perfect keepers of the Law Such are the Papists that say the Virgin Mary was without sin she doth not say it her selfe she acknowledgeth a Saviour and therefore had sin And so all they are deceivers of themselves that so live as if they were free from sin that conceive well of themselves in a carnall Estate and such is the body of the World they will it may be say they are sinners but why then doe they not repent and mourn for sin why they see no need of that I have lived honestly all my life and I hope my Estate is good and so deceive themselves Vse 2. Hence we see a necessity laid on Ministers to peeach the Law or else how shall people see their sins by the the Law comes sin to be revived Rom. 7.7 Vse 3. If it be so wilfull and dangerous an Errour then it behoves contrary judgements to carry themselves as those that are of another opinion doe you believe you are guilty indeed of many sins why then professe it and carry your selves so and that by an inward renouncing of all your sins mourn for them strive against them otherwise you do not professe your selves to be sinners unlesse your hearts prize the bloud of Christ desire to be bathed in it and if you doe think your selves to be sinners daily get more hold of Grace you are yet sinfull and miscrable therefore need more Grace Vse 4. If we be all sinners then let us learn to bear Gods hand patiently Micah 7.9 is any froward and impatient in affliction he professeth he is no sinner he that practiseth Impatience professeth Innocency for if a man be Innocent
either sin or the Law or Satan or our own consciences can plead against us Heb. 12.24 His blood speakes better things then the blood of Abel that cryed for condemnation this for absolution 3 He pleads for us in giving us leave to use his name for our helpe and his Spirit to plead for our selves he sends his Spirit to draw our petitions for us and helpe us in his name ro plead for our selves he is our chiefe Advocate he sends the Spirit Joh. 16.23 24. and he promises Zach. 12.10 so that though the Spirit be an Advocate yet he is sent by Christ Joh. 14.16 17. 4 He plays the Advocate in our behalf by expressing his good will towards us to his Father he declares his will to be that we may be cleared from all doubts and be where he is to behold his glory this he did upon earth Joh. 17.24 and this very same doth he expresse for us in Heaven and the reason of it is from Rom. 8.34 where his mediation is made a distinct worke from his death and resurrection and ascention and sitting at his Fathers right hand besides all these he makes requests for us in his own person pleading to God for us for good things as Moses did oft for the people Exod. 32.31 32. and as it was with Moses so it is said it should be with Christ Deut. 18.18 as Moses being a Mediatour put in a word of Peace for the people so doth Christ But doth he thus intercede for every sinner no he doth not say every man hath an Advocate but we have he did not intercede for all when he was upon the Earth I pray not for the World Joh. 17.9.20 for if Christ should have prayed for all men God would have heard him for all men and then his death had been effectuall for all men for he saith thou hearest me alwayes Joh. 11.42 Christ is not an Advocate for all but only for the Children of God Vse 1 Of direction to a Christian that doth sin what course to take for his peace and pardon to look up to Heaven for an Advocate that may stand to plead for him when sin and when Sathan and the Law and conscience plead against him many a poor soul hath his conscience pleading horror against him that he is proud and uncleane and Hypocritical c. why look up to Heaven now for an Advocate to plead for rhee first get into the estate of the children of God My little Children if we sin we have an Advocate it is not any man but we that are as little children lay down all pride and emulation and labour to frame our selves to holy obedience If we sin we have an Advocate c. therefore labour to become little children begotten to God by the Ministers of his Word 2 Cor. 8.5 give up your selves to God and to his Ministers to be taught of them according to his Will and if we be such we have an Advocate Vse 2. Of consolation to all whose consciences strike and gall them and they are disquieted with the bitternesse of their sins when sin accuseth and the Law accuseth and Sathan and conscience accuseth what should comfort a poor soule in this case why consider we have an Advocate with the Father so that though the Law and conscience tell us we have been disobedient yet Christ our Advocate hath fulfilled all obedience though we sin and our sins plead against us yet Christ pleads for us his blood cries for us and speaks better things than the blood of Abel and he sends his Spirit to helpe us to put up our petitions and he himselfe puts in for us and performs our prayers for us Rev. 8.3 by the Angel there is chiefly meant Christ he sweetens them takes all the corruption out of them so that they are a sweet smelling savour to God let us accuse our selves to the lowest acknowledgment of our own unworthinesse and then let us with comfort look up to our Advocate that pleads for us How shall I know that he prays and pleads for me 1 If you be little children to God give up your selves to him and to his Ministers to be obedient to his Ordinances 2 If he send his Spirit into your hearts and that helps you to draw your Petitions it is a sign that he himselfe is about the work by our sins we dampe his Spirit but if God renew his Spirit in us it is a sign that Christ hath our cause in hand 1 JOHN 2.2 And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole World IN these words we have Christ described by his function external 1. Advocate 2. Propitiation for our sin and secondly by his inward qualification righteous Jesus Christ the righteous We have done with his office of Advocation we come now to the second He is the propitiation for our sins and not ours only but the sins of the whole World Doct. Jesus Christ is the propitiation for the sins not only of beleeving Jewes but likewise of beleeving Christians all the World over He is the Reconciliation as some translations render it but that expresseth not the full meaning we must know therefore that Propitiation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 includes Three things 1 That he should expiate our sins that is make satisfaction for our Sins a man may be a means of Reconciliation without satisfaction but he cannot be Propitiation without offering satisfaction for the wrong done now Christ did make satisfaction for our sins Heb. 2.17 and to make satisfaction he did offer a satisfactory sacrifice for our sins 1 Pet. 2.24 he bearing the sin and punishment due thereunto it is as much as if we had done it 2 To be a Propitiation it is required that he make peace and reconciliation for though a man sometimes recompence and satisfie a wrong yet the Party wronged will not be at peace with him and reconciled to him but Christ hath taken upon him to reconcile God to us so as that his wrath is turned from us and favour restored to us Col. 1.21 now this reconciling implies Three things 1 That sometimes we were friends with God 2 That we fell out with God 3 Being fallen out we are reconciled again and made at peace with him Now this is procured by Christ whereas we were once friends with God in Paradise and fell from him and his favour Christ hath come and made up that breach and reconciled us again Thirdly When Christ is said to be a Propitiation for our sins it implies that he hath procured the manifestation of Gods favour to us for suppose a Friend make satisfaction for another and reconcilement with another with whom he is fallen out yet if he know it not his heart is as loose as ever but Christ hath not only procured us Gods favour but he tells us his Father is reconciled with us and at peace with us Job 33.23 and 26. there is the effect
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
is such a Fountaine set open let us draw at it for our selves and for our children let us teach our children that Christ is made a propitiation for their sins We have heard Christ described from his externall Offices 1 He is an Advocate 2 A Propitiation We come now to his internal vertue or qualification Jesus Christ the righteous Doct. Jesus Christ is the righteous Lord or Jesus Christ either in his Office of an Advocate or Reconciler is Jesus Christ the righteous The Scripture much testifies this Heb. 4.15 1 Pet. 3.8 1 Pet. 2.22 and Pilate that condemned him gave him this testimony I am innocent from the blood of this just man Mat. 27.24 yea from his birth he had this testimony that holy thing Luke 1.33 in opposition to all others who are sinners from the very Wombe he was holy in his Birth in his Life in his Death 2 Cor. 5. ult He knew no sin that is he had experience of none but the Father made him sinfull by imputation that we might be just by imputation It was meet that he should be righteous without sin 1. That he might be our Reconciler 2 That he might be our Advocate if he had had any sin he could have been neither of these 1 For the first had he been sinful himself he could not have made attonement for sin it was required that all the Sacrifices should be without blemish Lev. 3. and 10 else it had not been accepted as the Lord tells them Mal. 1.8 all things defiled with sin are abominable to God Heb. 7.25 26. unlesse some attonement be made now had he been sinfull he had stood in need of Sacrifice for himself and could not have been an attonnment for our sins 2 Cor. 5. ult he that knew no sin was imputed a sinner for us that we might be imputed righteous for his sake 2 It was meet that he should be righteous that he might be our Advocate God hears not sinners Joh. 9.31 the blind man was not so blind but he could say so much but God hears Christ alwaies and we should have such an Advocate as should continually prevail with God look at all the parts of his advocation for us and it is meet that he should be righteous 1 He appears for us in the sight of God and had he been a sinner his person would have been odious in Gods sight 2 He Advocates by pleading the merits of his own death now how could it have been meritorious had he dyed as a malefactor 3 He gives us his name and his Spirit to use in our Prayers now to use his name had been of no effect if he had been a sinner 4 He prayes for us makes known his will to his Father concerning us but this would do no good had he been a sinner 3 It is meet he should be righteous that he might be our justifier our justification is by his obedience his righteousnesse is imputed to us now his righteousnesse could not have been imputed to us had it been imperfect 1 Cor. 2.3 Vse 1 It is a ground of much consolation to such as lay hold on Christ and have him for their Advocate and Reconciler for he is one that is just and righteous and therefore fit to prevail for us what hinders the joy of a Christian Object 1 I much doubt the pardon of my sins if I could be sure of that I should be joyfull Ans You have such a Reconciles as is Just and Righteous and therefore will procure pardon for you Object 2 But I am still unjust and unrighteous Ans But your Reconciler is Just and Righteous and it is not required that the reconciled should be righteous but he that reconciles us it is meet that he be righteous Object 3 I cannot pray my prayers are heartlesse and faithlesse c. Ans Well but we have an advocate that is holy and just and that prayes and intercedes for us and we shall find the benefit of his Righteousnesse though we fall daily into much unrighteousnesse yet Jesus Christ our Mediator is righteous Vse 2 To teach us to be Righteous as he is Righteous God would have us conformable to the image of his Son Rom. 8.29 and that consists in Holinesse and Righteousnesse God would have us so to walk that our Sir-name may be Justus Righteous towards God to give him his due Righteous to others to give them their due and Righteous to our selves To be called Christians and yet not to be righteous is to be called Christians and yet to be no Christians Why are we called Christians but because we are anoynted with the Unction of Christ If a man professe himself to be a Christian and is not Righteous he is not a Christian for he hath not the Spirit of Christ and therefore is none of Christs not but that we may fail but it is required that the stream and bent of our hearts and wayes be to walk Righteously we aim at Righteousnesse though sometimes we misse the mark Vse 3 May quiet us if we fear evil in well doing why Because Christ was most Righteous yet he suffered much unrighteous dealing in a Righteous cause we think we have much wrong if for righteous dealing we meet with unrighteous dealing if in innocency we meet with crosses and Fire and Faggot we cry out O tempora O mores but it was the case of Christ and therefore we must not think it strange to suffer ill for well-doing not only to be reviled but to loose our goods and our lives if we should meet with them it is no more than Christ suffered it was the ground of Atheists in old time if they did see Bona maelis maela bonis evenire why is there a God that doth govern the earth But we must consider God is patient as well as just and therefore many times forbears punishment 1 JOHN 2.3 And hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments THe Apostle St. John having shewed in the former Verses that Christ is our Advocate and Propitiation here might his little Children reason But how shall I know that Christ is my Advocate and Reconciler though he be both yet how shall it appear that it is so to me Why hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments Saint John here speaks of such a knowledge as we call acquaintance and familiarity and fellowship I know you not Matth. 7.23 that is I have no acquaintance and fellowship with you hereby we know we have fellowship with Christ if we keep his Commandments you may know whether you have fellowship with Christ or no by this This third Verse therefore shews our fellowship with Christ in his mediation Doct. 1. A man that knows Christ may and ought to come to know that he doth know him or hath fellowship and communion with him Doct. 2. Such as do keep his Commandments may ceme to know that they do know Christ that they have
13.10 1 Tim. 1.5 and so hope 1 Joh. 3.3 patience is joyned with obedience and meeknesse springs from obedience and from the spiritual experience of a mans weaknesse and experience of Christs power in him springs humility so that all graces either spring from obedience or serve to it or accompany it so that even these very graces that are more in the understanding and speculation they either spring from obedience or help to obedience the Knowledge of a Christian is not unfruitful 2 Pet. 1.8 which shews that a Christians Knowledge brings forth fruits of obedience no gift a Christian hath but he considers what good he may do with it and if he see it not serviceable he regards it not so that if every grace do breed or nurse or accompany obedience then whosoever professes he knows God and doth not keep his Commandments there is no truth in such a man no true grace Vse 1 For tryal of the truth of our profession would you know the truth of your Grace of your Repentance of your Faith of your Humility You shall know it by your fruitfullnesse what use do you make of your Graces would you know whether your Repentance bee sound or your Love c. sound would you know this Why consider do they make you obedient and carefull to keep Gods Commandments as your Way your Treasure your Ornaments your Eye your Life if any grace bee fruitfull make you conscionable in the keeping of Gods Commandments that is a witnesse of the truth of that Grace a painted Tree bee it never so fair yet it bears no fruit but a living Tree brings forth fruit you have cause to suspect your Grace if it make you not fruitfull and carefull to please God if Grace make you obedient it is sincere but if a man hath never so many Gifts and Graces if they lead him not to obedience truly they are but counterfeit and there is no true Grace in him Isa 47.10 if they caused them to rebell there is no truth in them if any Grace leave you more corrupt or lesse fruitfull there is no truth in you Vse 2 It exhorts us to a conscionable diligent keeping of Gods Commandments hereby we shall keep our profession true our Consciences void of offence and shall have an evidence that we know Christ if a man say he knows God and yet keep not his Commandments his profession is not true but he that both saith so and doth so his profession is sincere 2 It will keep your Consciences in Peace when your Conscience checks you not but bears you witnesse that you desire to do Gods will in truth this brings great Peace 3 It keeps your Grace sound the more fruitfull and the more obedient the more doth Grace increase a Christian that lets his Grace lye at rest it grows rusty and hee may doubt of the truth of his Grace if any mettal lye up and rust we may suspect whether it be right or no but if it be kept with continual use we suspect it not take a Christian that doth not exercise himself in Grace he grows so rusty that he suspects the truth of his Grace but put thy grace to employment let it be in continual use and thou shalt easily see it is good metal and currant the employment of Graces proves the truth of them therefore as we desire to keep our profession true or our conscience clean or our graces sound keep in a daily course of obedience always be doing good and that from Gods Commandment Vse 3 Of Consolation to all such as take a good course and labour to keep Gods Commandments who may sometimes suspect all their grace is counterfeit and there is no sincerity in them why if there be no sincerity in you you do not keep Gods Commandments as your way but you cannot say but you would gladly finde your hearts keeping them as your way and you endeavour it and it is the grief of your souls when you go out of the way do you keep them as your treasure and ornament and apple of your eye and life Why then there is truth of grace in you truth of sincerity though not of Perfection you must not look to keep them without sin but if you desire to keep them as the most precious thing as your treasure your ornament your life the apple of your eye though a man may sometimes have a moat fall into his eye but in this case do not say your Graces are counterfeit for if they were counterfeit you would not keep Gods Commandments Psalm 36.1 Wickednesse saith to the wicked there is no fear of God before his eyes how doth that appear to David vers 4. he sets himself in no good way he is in a bad way and goes on therein and such a one it is plain he hath no fear of God before his eyes by their fruits he knows them if you set your selves in no good way your profession cannot be true but if the way you take be good and if not thou dost not take it up why if it be thus your profession is true and your grace sound it is a question whether Solomon fell finally or his graces were true or no you may know his repentance was true because he found his lust to women as bitter as death Eccles 7.6 7. well then if an Adulterous or Idolatrous Wife were as bitter as death to him then it is an evident sign if he looked at his transgression as death he looked at the Commandment as life and therefore his repentance was sincere so then if a man finde his sin as as bitter as death it is a sign his repentance is true But yet we must here distinguish between the horror of sin and sin it self the horror of sin may be as bitter to us as death but not the sin it self as Judas the horror of sin was so bitter to him that for it he hanged himself but had Judas been troubled with the sin of his conscience as he was with the horror of his conscience he would not have gone about to help one sin by another had he hated sin for it self he would have hated Murther as sin So would you know whether it be horror of sin or sin that troubles you If it be horror you will seek to drive it away by sin as some do by merry company and merry Books this is a plain signe that sin troubles them not for then they would not seek to help one sin by another but if a man look at the breach of the Law as the losse of his way it troubles him as much as the losing of his Treasure it is as a moat in his eye he had as lieve part with his life if it bee thus with thee thou mayest have comfort thy profession is true thy conscience clear thy profession sound and sincere 1 JOHN 2.5 6. But he that keepeth his Word in him is the love of God perfect indeed c. THe words
restrained it from any fellowship with them 2 As Chirurgions apply Corrosives so Christians to mortifie their lusts apply such Corrosives may subdue their lusts Rom. 8.13 If ye walk after the flesh ye shall dye but if ye through the Spirit mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live either kill your lusts or else you will kill your souls therefore mortifie your lusts through the Spirit that you may live which is a notable Corrosive to mortifie them by the Spirit of God so another Corrosive is when a man applies the threatnings of God to his soul and against his Lusts if you shall lay to heart all the dangers of your lusts it will eat out the corruption of the flesh Another special Corrosive is the Death of Christ when we consider Christ dyed for us and we are dead in him how then should we live any longer to sin Rom. 6.1 to 6. 3 As Chirurgions cut off that Member that is thus mortified so Christians that they may not love their lusts must cut off those lusts and cast them away Matth. 18.8 9. were our lusts as near and precious to us as our right eye were they never so convenient or necessary even as our right hand though we should dis-inable our selves in our Callings yet cut them off it is better you should be lame in your businesse better you should goe with reproach and shame in the world than at length be cast body and soul into Hell fire cut off the members of sin which are as near and dear and necessary unto you as right eyes and hands in regard of your worldly employments yet away with them mortifie them Like to this phrase of Mortifying is the Crucifying of the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 they that are in Christ have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts they have crucified the whole body of sin partly in the affections which are not sinful in themselves but as they are inordinate but they keep in their affections and passions in such order that they sinne not in anger or joy or love c. and partly their lusts of the flesh also covetousnesse pride vanity wantonnesse they are crucified they look at all their lusts as Crucifying Christ and they look up to Christ for the pardon of sin and so also for the healing of sin for pardoning and healing goes together Hos 14.3 4. 1 Joh. 1.7 8. they that are Christs looking up to the vertue of Christs Death they find their lusts not only pardoned but healed crucifying of our lusts hath some resemblance with Christs Death as 1 They attach Christ seek him out and are content to give money rather than to find him so will a Christian doe in regard of his lusts 2 He layes them open as enemies to Caesar to the great God and desires vengeance on them 3 He considers that Christ is dead for him and he is crucified with Christ therefore what hath he to doe to live to the world or the lusts thereof Reas 1. Why all should be weaned from lusts from the enmity which these lusts have against God which is a sufficient motive to weane us from the world Gal. 5.17 if they be enemies to God then a Christian hath reason to hate them as enemies to his best friend and indeed he cannot love God and those lusts too He that loveth the world the love of the Father is not in him he is not fit for any duty he that loves the world cannot accomplish the will of the Father every lust hinders spiritual duties hearing of the Word Prayer receiving of the Sacrament any one lust tolerated or lived in hinders all Spirituall duties Reas 2. From the enmity they have against our souls 1 Pet. 2.11 Dearly beloved as strangers and pilgrimes abstain from fleshly lusts which fight against your souls they fight against your souls and so fight that either you must kill them or they will kill your souls either mortifie them or they will mortifie your souls either captivate them or they will captivate your souls Therefore seeing they are so contrary to God and any Spiritual life and our own souls as we would not have our lusts hinder our peace with God and eat out our grace as we would maintain our communion with God and the life of our souls Love not the world nor the lusts of the world Vse 1. To teach us it is not enough for us to abstaine from outward gross sins but love not your lusts thou mayest refrain from the outward acts of sin but yet thy heart may be strongly affected towards sin and thou mayest delight therein if thou dost thou lovest the world and the things of the world therefore labour to cleanse your selves from secret lusts Circumcision was the cutting off the fore-skin of a secret member and yet God would have another Circumcision more secret and that is of the heart we must not content our selves with outward reformation but circumcise our hearts Levit. 3.3 4. God took speciall care that he might have all the Kidnies and Fat the Kidnies and Fat are our strongest desires and lusts why when we come to offer Sacrifice we must bring them before the Lord and burn them there is no savour so sweet in Gods nostrils as the burning of our strongest lusts the more our lusts stink in our nostrils the more sweet smelling savour it is to God so long as our lusts smel sweet in our nostrils so long we are loathsome to God Vse 2. It must teach us it is not enough to cut off some lusts but those that we love most a good husband that hates prodigality you shall not need to exhort him to frugality so prodigality cannot endure covetousnesse it hates basenesse and pinching he cannot abide it it is not his own lust so another he cares not for this pride and bravery so he may ly close at the pot or an Harlot why this is no great matter to cry out against those lusts that are not ours but it is a Christian duty not to love our own lusts covetousnesse is not thy lust but if prodigality be thy lust doe not thou cry out against covetousnesse and thou which art covetous doe not thou stand out against another mans prodigality but strive against thy own covetousnesse there are lusts which are to us as Eves apple fair to the eye such lusts as our souls lust after Rev. 18.14 look thou to these lusts which thy soul lusts after let them depart from thee Vse 3. This reproves our aptnesse to cherish and nourish our own lusts when we are commanded not to love them to mortifie them not to make provision for them if we then provide for them we are justly to be reproved Job 24.15 Prov. 7. Woe be to them that draw iniquity with the cords of vanity and sin as it were with Cart-roaps Isa 15.18 that take occasion to fulfill their sins that draw them on with Cart-roaps that give way to such
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
and favour shall follow them all their dayes and therefore they are confident 2 Tim. 4.7 8. what makes Paul thus bold because he knows he shall receive a Crown of Righteousnesse at his appearing Secondly From the effects of their confidence 1. They love the appearing of Christ and therefore manifest they look for it with confidence 2 Tim. 4.8 2. As they love Christs appearing so they pray for it Cant. 8. ult and therefore it is a sign with confidence they expect it Rev. 22.20 Did you ever know any Malefactor write to the Judge to hasten his coming to the Assizes No but they would rather prevent his coming but if they hasten his coming they are confident it shall go well with them the Prison is a burthen to them and at his coming they are confident to be freed Many Afflictions as so many bolts lie on Gods children many vexations therefore they desire the Lord to hasten his coming to rid them out of all their misery and revenge them of their enemies 3. As they are confident so they are not ashamed they professe his name here without shame and therefore Christ will not be ashamed of them at that day Vse 1. It reproves and refutes a Popish Doctrine of uncertainty of Salvation how could Christians love and pray for Christs coming if they did not know it should be well with them at that day this love and desire after it shews they are confident of their good estate Vse 2 Of tryall whether you abide in Christ or no why see how thou standest affected to the coming of Christ art thou bold and confident at the hearing of the last day art thou reverently bold and lolvest and prayest for his coming then it is a sign thou abidest in Christ but if the hearing of it strikes terrour into thee and thou wouldest gladly put it off surely thou art not in Christ the Day of Judgement to the Godly is a day of Marriage and therefore the Spouse longs for it to the wicked it is a day of Execution and therefore they tremble at the thought and hearing of it it is a day when he will shew himselfe marvellous in mercy to every Christian and in flaming fire to the wicked and ungodly consider then how thou art affected to this Day is it a day thy soul desires Come Lord Jesus come quickly even so Amen But is the consideration of it dreadful to thee that thou knowst not how to meet it then thy spirit is corrupt and not upright before God Obj. How comes it to passe that many a godly soul fears and trembles at death was not Hezekiah and David afraid of it Psal 30.9 Did not he say that though he walked in the shadow of death he would not be afraid and he is now afraid A. In two cases Gods children may be afraid to die 1. When they have loosly and negligently laid up the evidences of their estate as a man at the Assizes that is to try his Evidences if he have them to seek he desires the Assizes were put off 2. Sometimes he is fearfull when he knows he had lived somewhat loosly and his heart hath run a Whoring from God by some carnall delights so that he would gladly gather up himself better before he go hence and be no more seen because our hearts have gone whorishly from God we are affraid not that he will cast us off but that we shall not find that welcome which otherwise we should if we had time to recover our selves So David Psal 39. ult he was in some grievous Disease and somewhat conscious his spirit was not perfect but he had much weakned his grace therefore he prayes O spare me a little that I may recover my selfe before I go hence and be no more seen Hence oft Christians at their conversion are afraid of Death and Judgement because their Evidences are not so good and others afraid because they have blurred their Evidences by some sinfull delight and sitting loose from God but yet their fear differs from wicked mens wicked men tremble because they have no evidence at all but a godly man knows he hath evidences but he hath them not so ready and therefore desires to be deferred Vse 3. It may stir us up all as ever we desire to live comfortably and dye gloriously so to have a care to abide in Christ otherwise you will dye both with fear and shame but if you abide in Christ you may with boldnesse look Death in the face therefore abide not in your Naturall estate Civil honesty but abide in Christ It is a prophane and false speech of some Politicians that say Religion makes men cowards and never famous Warriors no doth that make us cowards that makes us look Death in the face and Judgement also were those cowards that have lookt Fire and Faggot and Torments in the face therefore it is not Religion but want of Religion that makes men cowards therefore strengthen your Faith and so you shall expect Christs coming with confidence and boldnesse and courage 1 JOHN 2.29 If ye know that he is righteous ye know that every one that doth righteousnesse is born of him IN the former Verse he had exhorted all to abide in Christ and that from an Argument of boldness and confidence at the day of Death and Judgement In his Verse he proves that such may have boldnesse they that are born of Christ are children of God may lift up their heads with joy at his coming a Childe is not afraid but glad of his Fathers coming but such as abide in Christ are born of God Ergo. But how doe they know they are born of God why they that doe Righteousnesse are born of God but those that abide in Christ doe Righteously how appears that they that know that Christ is Righteous they know that such as doe Righteousnesse are born of God Doct. 1. Jesus Christ is Righteous Isa 53.11 Mat. 27.19 24. That just one Acts 22.14 1 Pet. 3.8 Reas 1. From his Righteousnesse and innocent Conception and Birth he was not begot as other men but the Holy Ghost over-shadowed the Virgin 2. From his innocent Life he fulfilled all Righteousnesse Mat. 3.15 Heb. 4.15 John 14.30 Sathan could finde no sin in him to take advantage of 3. From the necessary use of his Righteousnesse he must be Righteous 1. To overcome the sorrows of Death one sin would have kept him under death Acts 2.24 25. but by his innocency he overcame death 2. That he might be an holy High Priest to us and a perfect Sacrifice for us Heb. 7.26 27. had he not been innocent and harmlesse he could not have been so the Priests in the Law were to be without blemish Lev. 2.17 to shew that the great High Priest should be so so was the Offering to be without blemish Lev. 27.7 and therefore requisite Christ should be so Heb. 9.4 3. It was needfull he should be righteous for the use and end of his
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
Sin is called errour from the Law Isa 63.17 Jam. 5.20 Prov. 21.16 He that wanders out of the way of righteousnesse shall rejoyce among the dead Vse 1 Of refutation of the works of Popish supererogation which are held forth as better and more perfect then the Law for the Law never commands such things such are those monkish vows of perpetuall virginity and voluntary poverty if these be above the Law then they are transgressors of the Law Isa 1.12 13. Will a man be wiser then his maker holyer then the Law-giver Josh 1.7 8. To devise a worship better then God hath appointed is worse then to faile in breaking Gods Law This is meer impotency the other is arrogancy casting aspersion on Gods wisdome 2. They further hold some sins to be veniall in themselves some mortal If they be sins then they fall under the curse The wages of sin is death 3. That originall sin in the regenerate is no sin but David saith that he was conceived in sin and original sin in whomsoever it is found it is a transgression of the tenth Commandement 4. They say that mans Law doth binde the conscience and the transgression of mans law is sin We answer and grant when these laws are grounded on Gods Laws they binde not otherwise If the breaking of mens lawes is a sin then the keeping of them were a virtue but this is hypocrisie Isa 29. We must be subject for conscience sake 2 Against those that hold that infants are without original sin but the Scripture saith they are conceived in sin 3 To reprove the familists who hold that godly and regenerate men are in no wise subject to the Law but are freed from the condemning and commanding power of it But if they sin then certainly they are transgressors of the Law Vse 2. Of instruction 1. That all the sins and good things found in the whole Bible are to be ranked within the compasse of the ten Commandements 2. That all nations are under the Law 3. That the Law and Gospel mutually thus agree That the Law of Moses is included in the Gospel and yet the Law and Gospel are not confounded founded together The Gospel requires that in the way of thankfulnesse we should keep the Commandements of God Ezek. 36.27 3 This should discourage us from all sin and encourage us to labour to purge our selves from all sin All sin is the transgression of the Law of God Let not pleasures profits or credit allure us to sin against God Shall we for our own ends sin against God and so transgresse his holy good and righteous Law we must take heed how we meddle with that we have no Law for We must prove all our paths by the stony Tables of Gods Law Psal 119.105 Obedience is the fulfilling of the Law and hath great recompence of reward 1 JOHN 3.5 Christ was manifest to take away our sins and in him is no sin THese words containe in them the second and third reason why every hopeful Christian should purge himselfe as Christ is pure The second reason is taken from the end of Christs coming into the world and that was to take away our sins The third argument is taken from the pattern of Christs righteousnesse for in him is no sin From the second reason which is the ends of Christs coming into the world Doct. That the end of Christ coming into the world was to take away our sins By the manifestation of Christ we must understand the coming ●f Christ in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 He came for this end to take away our sins Joh. 1.29 Q. But what did Christ for us to take away our sins Answ He became our surety he willingly took upon him the burthen of our sins 1 Pet. 2.24 Isa 5.44 2. As Christ took the burthen upon him so God laid it upon him 3. Christ did take away our sins by imputation as in the old Law every man was to lay his hand on the head of the burnt-offering and to confesse their sins and so by that means their sins were taken away So now in this time of the Gospel we must lay hold on Christ by a true and lively faith challenging Christ to be our Saviour Lev. 16.21.22 2 Cor. 5. ult Thus Christ taketh away our sins by justifying us from the guilt and by sanctification he cleanseth us from the spot and staine of them Ezek. 36.25 1 Joh. 1.8 This he doth three wayes 1. By his death he overcame the principall enemies of our salvation as the Devil Heb. 2.14 and he hath overcome the world which was strong to carry us captive by flattery and fear Gal. 6.14 He hath crucified the body of sin and corruption in us Kom 6.6 2 By sending such ordinances into the Church as might cleanse us Ephes 5.36 Prov. 13.20 Isa 27.9 The fruit of afflictions is to purge away sin 3 He hath sent his holy Spirit into our hearts to change us A Spirit of faith purifying Act. 15.9 and of hope and love 1 Joh. 3.3 Gal. 3.14 We receive the Spirit of grace which makes Gods ordinance effectuall to eleanse us Vse 1. Of instruction to every one that is afflicted in conscience for sin and knowes not how to be eased and purged It is not fair buildings musick and merry company that will take away sin This course will make thee worse But this thou must doe consider to what end Chtist was manifested and sent into the world was it not to take away our sins But I finde not this wrought in me I find the world and lusts of my heart prevaile against me Christ takes away the burthen and debt of sin by undertaking to accept and bear them 1 Joh. 2.2 Mat. 11.28 The Father hath laid on Christ the iniquity of every weary and broken soul Now we must get to Christ and confesse all our iniquities and leave them upon him calling upon him for grace and mercy 2. To comfort those that depend upon Christ for mercy and have confessed their sins to him If he have taken away sin it is done effectually Heb. 10.1 to 10. 3 To teach every soul that believes that Christ came to take away our sins to renounce and abhorre all sin and to cleanse themselves from all filthinesse of slesh and spirit Let us not take Christs coming into the world in vain but give all diligence to purifie our selves as Christ is pure And in him is no fin This is the reason which is taken from the spotlesse innocency of Christ Doct. That Christ is spotlesse and pure from sin Luk. 23.22 41. Pilate and the Centurion acknowledged him to be so Heb. 4.15 Joh. 14.30 1 Pet. 2.21 22. 1.19 20. Reas 1. In regard of the purity of the divine nature If there had been sin in the humane nature of Christ it might have been said that God was a sinner 2. That he might fulfill all the legal types and sacrifices which were to be without blemish 3. From
our necessity to have such a Saviour Heb. 7.26 27. If he had offered sacrifice for himselfe he had needed a Saviour to have redeemed him If he had not been without sin he had been swallowed up of death Obj. How could he be clean that was born of a woman Job 25.4 Ans He was not born by carnal generation after the manner of men Vse 1 To shew a difference between the first and second Adam The first Adam was a sinner and propagated sins The second Adam was without sin and propagated righteousnesse Rom. 5.19 We must not rest in a carnal generation for our natural birth is polluted untill we be born of him in whom is no sin we cannot be blessed 2. It is a ground of consolation to such as feel themselves burthened and pressed down with sin though we be sinfull and laden and compassed about with it yet in Christ is no sin or spot in nature heart or life He came to fulfill all righteousnesse and paid all to God to the utmost farthing Righteous is Christ both in life and death what is wanting in us is supplyed in him 3. Hence we must learn all not to judge our selves more sinfull and miserable then others because we are evill intreated in the world and afflicted of God Thus it was with Christ it is our happinesse to doe well though we suffer evill 1 Pet. 2.21 22. Doct. The spotlesse innocency of Christ is and ought to be an effectual motive to every hopefull Christian to purge himselfe as Christ is pure 1 Pet. 1.16 Mat. 5. ult Reas 1. From the ends of Gods predestinating us Rom. 8.28 29. and God worketh all things according to the counsell of his will Ephes 1.11 2 From the end of Christs spotlesse life and death leaving us an example to follow his steps 1 Pet. 2.21 22. To justifie us from the guilt and to purge us from the blot and staine of sin If we sin we sin against Gods predestination and the end of Christs coming 3 From the neer fellowship between Christ and us he is our head and husband we must labour therefore to be suitable and conformable unto him Eph. 5.26 4. Christ taketh paines to cleanse and heale us that so he might present us without blemish to God This is the scope of all his holy ordinances and of Christs shedding his blood Vse 1. To reprove such as take pleasure in sin and being reproved justifie themselves in saying all are sinners we must purge our selves as Christ is pure in whom is no sin 2. To stirre up all the children of God to conforme themselves to Christ in life and death 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us not sin against Gods predestination and Christs blood Let us not be a dishonour and griefe to our head and take Gods ordinances in vain How shall we doe this 1. Beleeve stedfastly in the Lord Christ for justification and get his blood sprinkled upon us to cleanse us for sanctification 1. Set the pattern of Christ before thee and wisely behold it and view it This will be effectuall to mould and fashion thee according thereunto 1 Joh. 1.16 There is a supernaturall power in Christ lookt upon by the eye of faith to transfigure us into his likenesse 2 Cor. 3.18 There is a power in the sight of Christ to convey his Spirit to transforme us 2. Deale effectually with thine own heart and pray to God for grace that thy soule may abhor and disallow and condemn all sin in thee Rom. 7.12 13. Let thy judgment disallow it and thy will abhor and hate it and then it is not we that do it but sin that dwels in us God looketh at sin as thy enemy and pityeth thee 1 JOHN 3.6 Whoso abideth in him sinneth not THe fourth reason why every hopefull christian purifieth himselfe is taken from the constant practise of every hopefull christian that he abideth in Christ amplified by the continuance Doct. Every hopefull Christian that hath constant fellowship with Christ doth constantly avoyd sin To abide in Christ implyeth communion with Christ Continuance in it First we have fellowship with Christ by the free donation of God we are by Gods counsel and purpose by imputation members of Christ our sins are imputed to Christ his righteousnesse imputed to us Joh. 16.16 Secondly by a communication of his Spirit causing us to receive him and cleave unto him by faith and love 1 Cor. 6.17 2. And thus this communion with Christ is indissolvable and everlasting Joh. 8.31 32. Such as continue not had never fellowship with Christ as his Disciples Jer. 31.40 Such doe not sin Psal 119.2 Psal 1.1 2 3. Mat. 12.35 Isa 61.3 Whoso is born of God sins not 1. He never sins to death 1 Joh. 5.18 He commits not the sin against the Holy Ghost 2. He liveth not in sin he makes not that his course and imploymen● he may slip and goe astray but he turneth into the way again Rom. 6.2 Living in sin is made all one with continuing in sin 3. Because his judgment and conscience alloweth not sin but abhorreth it It is not his sin but the sin of his rebellious and carnal part Rom. 7.14 15. He judgeth and condemneth himselfe and grieveth for and hateth what he doth and therefore is said not to sin 1. In a regenerate christian there is the flesh and the Spirit his will and conscience is more sanctified then corrupt In the state of innocency the will was the weakest but in regeneration God hath made it the firmest and best God hath provided that the hedge should be stronger where it was broken 2 The will and judgment being the most predominant faculties doe lead and rule the whole man A cleer fountaine will purge it selfe to a clean stream so will the will and judgment being the fountaine of all our actions 3. If these faculties be for God God accepts the whole man according to these If there be a league between two Kings though there be offences committed by some Subjects yet if the Rulers doe punish such the league is not broken So is it with the godly 1. The godly resolve against all sin 2. They labour to mortifie all sin and quicken all grace in them and use all good means to that purpose In the commission they are unwilling and after the commission they are grieved and ashamed and take an holy revenge on themselves 2 Cor. 7.10 11. Thus they shew themselves to be clean from the sin committed denomination is taken from the best and greatest part Obj. Who doth God bitterly and sharply reprove his people for sin Ans God doth this to bring them to better sight of sin and judgement and sense of it in their hearts to shake us out of a lethargy and benummednesse But when he hath awaked us and caused us to judge and loath our selves for our sins God looks at us as righteous Thus the diseases and distempers of judgment and heart are pityed and healed As rhe stone in
the reins distempers men so the stone in the heart distempers the heart and judgment God looks at this as the disease of his children Vse 1. To shew a broad difference betwixt those that are born of God and those that are not 1. Those that sin unto death are not born of God God keepeth his from that sin 2. They that take pleasure in sin and make a trade of sin Gods children doe not so 3. If men live in secret sins against knowledge and conscience they are not as yet born of God their will and affections are not with God but against him Vse 2. To teach us all to make a favourable construction of the failings of Gods people we must not beleeve every one that reports evill of them Those that are born of God when they commit any great sin their repentance is as exemplary as that sin as is seen in David and Peter 3. For comfort to such christians as finde their judgments and wills upright hating and abhorring the sins they commit complaining and shaming themselves for them If the judgment and heart be with God and against sin God looketh at them as not sinning But this must not make us secure and carelesse of repenting and being grieved for sin From the scope St. John aimeth at in this discourse to wit that he that is born of God sinneth not and therefore this ought to be a motive to such as hope to see Christ and to be like him to purge themselves note thus much Doct. That the exemplary walking of the children of God ought to be an effectuall motive to every Christian not to walke in the wayes of sin but to purge themselves 1 Cor. 11.16 When the Apostle dehorts men from wearing long hair and women from shearing their hair the argument he useth is We have no such custom which argument were of no force except the examples of Gods servants were an effectuall motive to stir us up to the same wayes 1 Cor. 14.33 There is a decency in all churches of God therefore he pleads against their confusion Let all things be done with decency comely and without confusion Psal 52.9 This is a reason why we should wait upon God because it is good in the eyes of his Saints Reas 1. God commands it God hath set this as the royall way Phil. 3.17 This is the high-way to heaven God would have all to walke in the trodden path of his people 2. It is a matter of comfort to our souls it will excuse us from many doubts of our own hearts and many slanders which might be cast upon us If a member have a motion not guided by the body you look at it as a Palsie distemper that we have 3. From a discomfort we put upon our Brethren when we Walke in such wayes as are contrary to them they walke in a blamelesse course if we shall walke in sinfull wayes we put upon them breaking of heart Philip. 3.17 18. When the Apostle saw men walke in wayes contrary to Gods it was the griefe of his heart Vse 1. This is a notable comfort to every soule that stands in a mammering what way to take Walke in holy wayes like Gods people think not they are solitary wayes and singular ones no if you walke in good wayes you shall not goe alone all good company have gone this way some will goe out of their way for good company Walke in a way free from sin so shalt thou have good company and in this only 2. It disswades from sin gird up thy loyns from it When we walke in the wayes of sin none goe that way but had company and it will be a shrewd argument against you Mar. 7.23 3. To guide us to a wise observation of the wayes of godly men Though there be no godly man but hath his failings for which he blusheth before God yet none of them but have something in their wayes whereby you may purge your selves None of them but come nearer Christ in something then you there is something wherein they purge themselves more then you Have respect to the generality of their wayes God hath been alwayes wont to guide his servants into wayes of innocency If God guide them into good wayes then follow them Obj. May I not be deceived Answ True sometimes generally Gods people goe wrong Exod. 32.19 Aaron and most of the people dance about the Calf The people of God took up a custome of carrying the Ark in a cart from the Heathen the shoulders of the Levites should have carried it 1 Chron. 13.5 6 7. When David saw his error for he was troubled for Vzzah his death he said 2 Chr. 15.2 none should carry the Ark of the Lord but the Levites So true it is the generality of Gods people might goe wrong if they were all met together in a counsell but though they may goe astray yet take them not at the●r starts their ordinary courses are good David and his people though they went wrong yet presently after they saw their errour 2. Look at the pattern of Gods people so as that thou weigh them in the ballance of the Sanctuary Have your wits excercised in the Scripture that so you may discern of their wayes and that you may so far follow them as they goe right Doct. Whosoever sins had never any clear sound knowledg of the Lord Christ hath not seen him Sight implies cleernesse certainty know him he speaks of such a knowledg whose ground is experience Word Spirit Phil. 3.10 whose fruit is obedience 1 Joh. 2.3 whose end salvation Joh. 17.3 Reas 1. Men that have had an experimentall knowledge of God they have a spirit within them that they cannot sin Gal 5.17 If they doe their conscience will so smite them as that they shall be glad to be rid of it the Spirit keeps possession for God 2. From the perseverance of Saints or else they should never have fellowship Vse 1. To refute the doctrine of the Papists who say that a man that is in Christ may fall away St. John here refutes them If they sin they never knew him Stella cadens nunquam stella cometa fuit 2. As we would rivet this comfort in our soules that we have knowne and seen Christ let us keep our hearts innocent from sin 3. Of consolation to such a soul as hath formerly seen Christs death purging sin in him Though we be weak and think we shall not hold out yet God will keep us from sin and comfort us against the aspersions cast upon Religion by the sins of professors Whosoever sins never knew nor saw Christ 1 JOHN 3.7 Little children let no man deceive you he that doth righteousnesse is righteous even as he is righteous THE Apostle had shewed that all hopefull Christians do cleanse themselves from sin It might be objected We have false Teachers that teach otherwise as Simon Magus was let loose at that time and taught the free use of women The Apostle meets
not onely receive the Word but conceives of it and is framed to the will of God and being born of God he is alwayes his childe When a man is transformed into the image of God his judgement and heart stampt with the image of God he delights in God and his wayes and children his judgement and heart are carryed that way they are all for God repentance is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his minde is then changed Prov. 23.26 My Son give me thy heart his heart is given to God The seed of Gods Word was not in Herod John 2.24 Psal 119.11 1 John 2.27 The seed of God remains in the children of God both Word and Spirit Reas 1. From the mighty power the Word hath had in his soule when he was first begotten and born of God It was such as did so affect and terrifie as no earthly comfort was able to satisfie his heart he hath been so overwhelmed with fears and doubts as that he will be afraid to sin as long as he lives 2. From the strong possession that the Word and Spirit have in the heart as they doe abide in the whole man so especially in the conscience and will I doe not allow what I doe but what I hate that doe I which shews that the Word hath taken such fast hold of his judgement and will that both are for God Jer. 32.40 Psal 119.161 3. From the great change this seed makes in the heart of a childe of God It makes him from a wilde olive to be a sweet olive A good tree Mat. 18 cannot bring forth evill fruit Every thing brings forth fruit according to the seed Obj. There is a seed of corruption cannot a man bring forth according to that Answ There is an old man but he is crucified if we sin we doe not trade in sin our judgements and hearts are against it When some lawlesse lusts have carryed us captive and we complain of them to God and desire that they were cast out God looks at them not as ours Rom. 6.14 Psal 110.28 Vse 1. To refute all such doctrines as teach the apostasie of Saints They say such as are born of God may come to sin totally and finally This errour fights against a double doctrine of the Apostle He saith Whosoever is born of God the seed remaineth in him If a man can shake out the Spirit how doth it remain 2. The Text saith there is no possibility of sinning they say he may sin Obj. They say Whilest he is a childe of God he cannot sin but he may cease to be a childe of God Answ 1. He cannot sin whereby he should be made no childe of God 2. There is a doctrine of the Papists and their Divines that teach liberty of will cannot be nisi ad opposita that a man may will a thing or not I ask whether a childe of God forbears a sin willingly or not We say willingly If a childe of God walk in innocency from sin he can doe no otherwise Whereas their doctrine is a mans will is not free unlesse a man may doe a thing or not to doe it What doe they think of Saints and Angells in Heaven or God himselfe whether have they free-will or no I hope none of them can sin yet doe they good most freely Wherein stands liberty Not onely that a man doth a thing without constraint but that he follows the counsell of his own will he follows his own judgement and reason 2. For tryall of our own hearts whether we be born of God or no. If we be our ordinary course is good we dare not sin know not how to go about it that seed which is in us sets our hearts and judgements aright Gen. 39.9 Other men may think it strange that we cannot doe as they doe This is a good evidence that thou art born of God 3. See what to judge of those that have made a profession and yet fall away They were never born of God for then they could not have sinned 4. This may be a ground of much comfort to every childe of God He will preserve us spotlesse and blamelesse Here is a double comfort 1. He looks not at thy course as sin if thou be humbled for it and he will take a course to mortifie it 2. You can never lose the favour of God because if you be once begotten you can never be unbegotten You are begotten of an immortall seed and therefore cannot die Obj. This may seem to be a doctrine of presumption for then a man may live as he list Answ Suppose a Physitian could give us the apple of the tree of life that so we should never die but yet bids us take heed to a diet for although we could not die yet we should have such pangs stone gout strangury as that we would wish death rather then life So God will make the best of his servants know what it is to wax wanton against him and make them curse all the occasions that lead them to sin 5. This should teach us that have received any seed of God to take heed that we sin not and therefore inform the judgement aright out of the Word of God 2 Tim. 1.3 that so you may come to sound judgement and wisdome One errour of judgement will shake you much in your way 1 John 5.18 1 JOHN 3.10 In this the children of God are manifest and the children of the Devill whosoever doth not righteousnesse is not of God neither he that loveth not his Brother HErein is a manifest difference between the children of God and the children of the Devill The signes of difference are twofold 1. Generall doe not righteousnesse 2. Particular doe not love the Brethren Doct. The children of God and the children of the Devill are not so alike one to another but that there may be found a manifest difference betwixt them even in this world Gal. 5.10 Mat. 7.20 Were there not a manifest difference it were not so necessary for God to charge his Ministers Jer. 15.19 to walk with a divided affection towards them Ezek. 13.22 If a difference had not been so manifest God had not so justly blamed them If you say this is peculiar to Ministers Levits they must judge who are clean who are not and not private Christians Answ That God makes it a badge of them that shall inherit Heaven and have fellowship with God there Psal 15.4 Jude v. 20 21 22 23. which shews we should put a signe of difference not onely between good and bad but even between bads Some sin ignorantly others more absolutely How doth this manifest difference apear A double signe of it 1 Cor. 12.10 It is a spirituall gift of discerning He speaks of discerning what gifts and what measures a man hath and wherein the strength of a mans gifts lies 1 Cor. 2 15. Although he cannot discern every mans speciall gifts what he is most fit for yet plain and manifest things he discerns and
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
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.
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
Why do you think this a safe condition Would you not think him an infidel that would not believe that Jesus is the Son of God If a man be overcome of the world truly he believes it not that Jesus is the Son of God and can such a man be a Christian Obj. What say you Were there never any good men overcome of the world What say you to those that recanted in Q. Mary's dayes for fear and after repented and were burnt for their profession What say you to Peter Answ A godly man in a combate may be overthrown yet not overcome as it is in wrestling a man may get the foyl and yet afterwards rise up and get the victory so oft-times a foyled Souldier gets the day So Peter though he were foyled at that day and yet when he got up again and afterward was charged not to preach in the Name of Jesus he overcame all Whether it be meet to obey God or man judge ye Acts 4.19 Indeed if a man be thrown down and there he lyes and takes no care to get up again look at him as no true believer therefore look not at these as things that may stand together to serve God and man and the world too So respect the world as that you ever look at Christ to have incomparably more worth then all the world and let your chiefest love and endeavour be towards him Vse 3. Of consolation to them that maintain this principle that Jesus is the Son of God Why you may assure your selves that the world shall never overcome you Look up to him as your Saviour for your salvation Look so on him as to mourn for your sins and obey him as the eternal Son of God Keep this faith in exercise and you shall not be overthrowne or if you be it will so raise you up and recover you that you shall overcome at the last 1 JOHN 5.6 This is he that came by water and blood even Jesus Christ not by water onely but by water and blood and it is the Spirit that beareth witnesse because the Spirit is truth IN the former vers he had shewed that faith overcoming the world is faith in the divinity and Sonship of Christ Now in these words he describes Christ the object of our faith 1 By his manner of coming This is he that came by water and blood 2 By the witnesse that is born of him 1 In generall the Spirit v. 6. Then 2 In heaven and 3 On earth v. 7 8. 1 For the furniture of his coming He came fully addressed for the works of our redemption he came by water and blood By water is not meant their legal oblations for he speaks of such a water as bears witnesse that Christ is the Son of God to this day which they do not By this water therefore is meant the clear water of sanctification spoken of Ezek. 36.25 26. wherewith our Saviour Christ came abundantly furnished fit to be our redeemer By blood is meant the blood of his sufferings Doct. That Jesus Christ came to execute his office by the water of sanctification and by the blood of redemption It is he that came to overcome the world to redeem us How By water and blood Why by water and blood both 1 From the end of his coming that he might fulfill the types of the Law In the old Law no Priest might enter upon his office upon pain of death but he must first wash his hands and feet Exod. 30.19 20. Which shews how carefull we should be to come with clean hearts and hands to Gods service and it typed out that when the Lord Christ should take upon him his Priestly office he should come free and spotlesse from all sin and he did so so that ● guile was found in his mouth Pilate himselfe testified of him I finde no evill in him 2 As they came by water so they might dot enter into the holyest place except they were first sprinkled with blood Which signified that it was needfull that Christ should come by his own blood to exp●ate our sins Heb. 9.7 to 12. More particularly Q. 2. Why shoald he come by water that is throughly watred from all sin Answ 1. It was fit he should be such a one that he might not expiate for his own sins Heb. 2.25 to 29. Had there been found the least sin in Christ all the blood he spilt would have been little enough for himselfe 2 That his sacrifice might be available for us Had he been unjust himself he could not have redeemed us 1 Pet. 3.18 But being just himselfe there was no need he should dye for himselfe but for us Q Why was it needfull he should come by blood Answ Had he come never so purely sanctified yet this would never have made attonement for without shedding of blood is no remission Heb. 9.22 He came by blood therefore 1 That by his blood and sufferings he might purchase out of his Fathers wrath a Church unto himself Acts 20 28. And by that blood not onely the elect but all the creatures are purchased at least to be serviceable to the Church Christ bath bought all things quick and dead either for his Churches comfort or affliction 2 Cor. 3.22 23. All power in heaven and earth is given into his hand Psal 2.8 2 That he might make at onement for our souls It was impossible that the blood of Buls and Goats should expiate for our sins but as they look at Christ his blood is given to be an atonement for our sins Heb. 9.12 13. And it makes an atonement not only between God and us but also between Jews and Gentiles Eph. 2.17 18 19. Whereas before the Gentiles would not become Jews by reason of their hard ordinances now Christ took away that wall of separation 3 That he might procure not only Gods favour but this fruit of it the remission of our sins Mat. 26.28 4 That by the price of his blood he might purchase the inhabitation of his Spirit to us that he might procure it for us that our consciences might be purified Heb. 9.14 This blood purifieth our consciences The blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin 1 John 1.9 And that is done by putting in us a a Spirit of grace which purgeth us from all uncleannesse and sin and adorning us with the contrary graces of piety humility patience Christ by his cursed death for us hath procured a Spirit of ●race for us which purifies our consciences from the guilt and from the stain of sin Heb. 9.14 5 That he might confirm his new covenant the New Testament to us Mat. 26.28 This is the blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins Now without the death of the Testator no Testament is in force Heb. 9 1● to 21. It 's accounted a sacrilegious thing to violate the Testament of the dead So it is with Christ for a man to call any of his promises into
the claim of eternall life is wholly in him for though God hath promised all those kindes of life its onely in Christ Secondly As he reserves the claim of it in his own hands so he reserves the security of it in his own hand even as a Father doubting how his son will spend his estate he puts not into his hands the writings or evidences but he keeps them in his own hands so God saw the life he communicated to our first parents they prodigally wasted it away and therefore never since would he put it into our own hands but reserved it in the hands of Christ Rom. 4.16 Therefore it is faith that the promise might be sure If our salvation had stood upon our own works the promise had been sure onely so long as we kept our obedience but we are unsetled sometimes inlarged and sometimes straightned so that we should have been at a stand oftentimes not knowing whether we had life or no therefore he hath laid it up in Christ that it might be sure Thirdly The possession of this life is reserved for us in Christ our justification is complete in Christ here never increased though the sence of it may the first day we are regenerate we are fully justified the justification of all Christians is equall though their sanctification be not alike our life of justification is compleat but yet our life of holinesse is but imperfect We know but in part and believe but in part but it s fully laid up in Christ so for the life of consolation we have some beginnings of it here Phil. 4.7 1 Pet. 1.8 But sometimes all our comforts are lost and where then lies it but in Christ as the sap doth in the root in winter time so that in him we rejoyce alwayes Phil. 4.4 and so our eternall life is reserved in him John 14.2 3. Eph. 2.5 Fourthly In regard of the glorious manifestation of this life at the last day 2 Thes 1.10 when he shall come to be admired of all his Saints this life is now laid up for his Saints which at that day he will dispense to his servants to the admiration of all men Quest Why hath God laid up this life in his Son Reas From the impossibility of laying up life for us in the law or in the first Adam Gal. 3.21 If the Law could have given us life verily righteousnesse had been given us by the law No the law that Adam had given him in Paradise could not have secured our life but that we might forfeit it by our own fall nor could Adam himselfe give us this life for in Adam all dyed 1 Cor. 15.22 and therefore its Christ alone that hath restored as to life and glory Vse 1. Hence learn the order of all that life and grace and salvation that is derived to us God did not first give us life and then provide Christ to maintain it in us but he first appointed Christ that in him we might have life Eph. 1.3 4. He hath chosen us in Christ Christ is the first fruites of all that life that we enjoy he loved Christ and in him loved us he first gave him eternall life that he might give it to whom he would John 5.26 he poured this life first on his head and from him this life runs down to the lowest skirt of his garment to the meanest member that belongs to him he poured on him the oyl of grace and from him it drops down upon us he first crowned him with glory that he might glorifie us Vse 2. It teacheth us the dead estate of all men by nature if all our life be laid up in Christ then such as want this life they want pardon of sins and want holinesse and want comfort and want eternall life Eph. 2.11 12. Eph. 4.19 We by nature are aliens from the life of God strangers from the Covenant that as strangers neither meddle nor make with that which is none of theirs so we have nothing to doe with the promises of life till we be in Christ let naturall men goe look at themselves as dead men all their best comforts are but as the crackling of thorns they may warm themselves a while with the sparkles of their own fire but this they shall have at length They shall lie down in sorrow Isa 50.11 Nay by nature we have no hopes of eternall life we must be regenerate to this hope 1 Pet. 1.3 4. Vse 3. May teach all such as live in a dead estate to look out where they may have life look into your own hearts there you shall not find life look into the world that is not able to give you life but get Christ and then you get life as Jacob said to his sons Why stand ye gazing one upon another have ye not heard there is corn in Egypt why go up go and buy it that we may live Gen. 42.2 3. So the Spirit saith to us when we find our hearts ready to starve for want of this life for want of pardon of sin of grace of comfort why stand ye gazing upon the profits and pleasures and contents of this world none whereof can give you life doe you not hear that there is life laid up in Christ goe and buy of him it s the speech of Wisdome even of Christ the wisdome of his Father Prov. 3.85 Who so findeth me findeth life and all that hate me love death Vse 4. Of consolation to all those that have found their parts in the Lord Christ if you have found him you have found life pardon of sin peace of conscience and life eternall Rom. 5.1 If you have found him your sins are done away and no Saint under heaven is justified more then you 2. Having found him thou hast a life of holinesse said up in him so that though we want zeal wisdome patience we may fetch it from him and though we find our hearts sometimes drooping under heavy discouragements and afflictions yet in him thou mayst rejoyce alwayes and what though our life here be poor and base yet there is an eternall life said up for us in him and when he appears we shall appear with him in glory Col. 3.3 4. And the more we may comfort our selves in that our life is not laid up in Satans hands for then we should never finger any of it nor in our own hands for we should lose it at every hand but this is our comfort that our life is laid up in Christ and reserved safely for us in him and therefore it may teach Gods people that if our life be laid up in Christ we must be dayly spinning out life from him what ever we doe let us doe all in the Name and power of Christ 1 Thes 5.9 10. all the peace and comfort we find in our selves or families let us derive it from him live not upon the stock of your own graces but fetch your dayly supply from him Gal. 1.20 I live yet not I but
fear Luke 1.74 75. Such a man is not afraid what flesh can doe unto him Psal 3.5 6. I will not be afraid though ten thousand shall compasse me about I will ly me down and sleep quietly the fear of men shall not break his sleep so Psal 56.3.10 11. this holy tranquility frees us from all fears and this liberty is proper to a Son he fears not others so he may please his father he knows his Father will give him protection and provision Rom. 8.37 2. He hath a liberty from the dominion of sin sin hath not that power to carry him captive Rom. 6.4 Rom. 8.2 The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death that is the Spirit of grace that commands and rules me like a law hath freed me from the law of sin and of death that a Christian is now but a beginner of sin sin hath not that power over him that formerly it had time was when I could not break off from evil company but now the Law of the Spirit of life hath set me free from them many a valiant spirit fears not death many a souldier venters upon a Canons mouth but yet I presume he is captivate to many a base lust but a Christian is not only freed from the fear but the bondage of sin 3. He hath liberty from being servant unto men 1 Cor. 7.23 Ye are bought with a price be not servants of men he doth not mean that they should shake off all obedience and subjection but though they should be subject to their Masters ye now they should not serve them in a slavish manner but with freedom of Spirit in obedience to Christ heartily and readily 1 Cor. 7.22 he that is called in the Lord being a servant is the Lords freeman he doth his Masters work with a free spirit and withall he doth the work of Gods service with much more freedom and when they come to their own liberty they will be inclined to good duties strive to gain opportunity for prayer and reading and hearing whereas others though they have much more outward liberty yet they have far lesse inward 4 The Spirit of God that sets me free from the service of men makes me free to every duty of God to have free access to him the Spirit that set me at liberty from Satan will make me run the wayes of Gods Commandements with an inlarged heart Psal 119.32 Ps 110.3 Gods people are a willing people and as he is free from the bondage of men so he is Lord over them he can make them all serve him Gen. 25.23 God told Rebecca there were Nations in her womb and the elder should serve the yonger how was that fulfilled seeing Jacob cals Esau Lord and himself his servant Gen. 33. Why as some say that must be understood of the Nations not of the persons but it may be Esau's Lordship and roughnesse did Jacob more real service then ever Jacob did him whence was it that he went out of his Fathers house met with so glorious a vision the first night whence was it that he made such a vow to God that if the Lord would be with him and blesse him in that countrey then the Lord should be his God whence was it that he returned with such a blessing whence was it that he so wrestled with God and obtained a blessing was not this from Esaus bitternesse and for fear of him which shews that every fury and persecution of wicked men do Christians the truest service as it was with the Tyrants in Syria and Egypt all the tyranny did but purifie the people of God and make them white Dan. 11.35.46 they are but as scullions to scour and rinse Gods people they are but as servants or like house-wives they lay them in soap and dung and sharp lee but it is but to make them white Try therefore whether you have the spirits of sons Doe you find in you the nature of Christ do you find your selves invested with a Kingly Royall spirit doe you find in you the spirit of prophesie doe you find in you the state of Christ that in the meanest condition you have a mighty power of Christ breathing in you why then it is evident you have the Spirit of God but if we find we are not like him in his nature we cannot pray or prophesie then we have none of Gods Spirit Do we finde our selves still in bondage to sin lying under the fear and dominion of it then we have not Gods Spirit in us Gods Spirit would set us free from all bondage 3 We are said to have the Son when we have Christ not onely for our Saviour but for our Prince Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted to be a Prince and Saviour To whom he is a Saviour to them he is a Prince It were dishonour to God to save those whom he cannot rule to deliver them from sin and Satan and yet leave them in their sins God hath sent his Son not only to save but to rule us Two things here are to be opened 1 That he that hath Christ hath him for his Saviour 2 That he that hath him for his Saviour must have him for his Prince likewise We are ready commonly to conceive that every one would have Christ for his Saviour but indeed they are but rare that would have a Saviour indeed To have Christ for our Saviour implyes two things 1 He that hath Christ for his Saviour looks up to him for salvation in all his distresses Isa 45.22 Look unto me and be saved all ye ends of the earth He that looks for any other Saviour denyes Christ He that hath Christ for his Saviour in what coasts soever of the world he lives he must look up to him for salvation as they that look'd towards the Temple had their petitions heard So wheresoever we are in what condition soever we must look towards Christ and long after him for salvation not onely from Gods wrath and hell but even from whatever distresses we are in torment of conscience sicknesse imprisonment we must wait upon him for deliverance Isa 8.17 I will wait upon the Lord that hideth his face from the house of Jacob and I will look for him The Church was then in grievous distresse both in regard of sin and calamity there were none for her to look unto either Princes or Priests to redresse the matter all had been in vain but there was no hope in them yet I will look unto the Lord and wait on him that hideth his face Isa 17.7 Speaking of such times wherein only a few gleaning grapes should be left In that day shall a man look to his Maker and his eyes shall have respect to the holy one of Israel We cast respect or disrespect upon one with our eye whilest our eyes are upon the creature and turned away from God we disrespect God but when our eyes are toward him set on
of a promise which is fed by a promise Many times a word of grace and wise admonition sinks so deep into the heart as that it makes many a one amend his wicked wayes and take better courses and reform his life but this is no evident signe of spirituall life So an hypocrite may be so far convinced as to turn the stream of his life and yet without all power of godlinesse and the ground is we cannot receive life from the words or works of the Law it 's altogether impossible Gal. 3.21 All true spirituall life is from some word of promise that hath been dispen●ed to us in the Word The word of the Law may reclaim us from giving outward offence but yet without all respect or obedience to God But when we are quickened by a word of promise then the love of God constraineth us Obj. Is it not ordinary for the word of the Law to cast down and humble us before we can lay hold on a promise Answ True Yet this is not that which makes a man a new man this may reach to the reformation of many outward sins but yet it gives not spirituall life till we begin to think of and long after Christ and meditate and talk of him till at length the sight of Christ doth so work on us that we do not only long after him but we so receive him and imbrace him that we are inlightned by him A third cause of life is the Spirit of God John 3.6 There is a shedding abroad of the Spirit into the heart of every regenerate man that he hath not the same spirit he had before Now a mans spirit is the bent and inclination of the soul Eph. 4.23 Be ye renewed in the spirits of your minds The soul and the body is the same But there is another spirit they see other things they never saw before judge otherwise then they did before now they have new thoughts and judgements and affections so that their heart is far off from earthly things and let on spirituall things All things are become new A new heart new conference new imployment new company the whole man hath another frame of spirit in him He that finds it thus hath life For application Consider therefore how you finde your hearts speaking concerning your estates Do you finde indeed that sometimes you have had good motions cast in but before God was pleased to call you to his grace nothing did you good Doe you finde your life wrought by a spirit of promise Do you finde that you are renewed to a new inclination and frame of spirit then you have life Your life springs from true causes if not you have not life A second sort of signes of life is from the effects of spirituall life And 1 Justification or pardon of sins is a principall part of our spirituall life Psal 32.2 3. And this is called justification to life Rom. 5.18 Even as a condemned mans pardon is the life of the man so is the pardon of our sins the life of our souls Now the first effect flowing from the pardon of our sin is 1 Some inward peace of conscience some inward satisfaction that he never found before My sin is not pardoned at least not manifested so to be till I finde some measure of inward peace Rom. 5.1 What was it that burthened thy conscience but guilt of sin If therefore God say to my soul Son thy sins be forgiven thee upon this follows the tranquility of the mind and sometimes in that unspeakable manner that passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 Though this be not so ordinary yet they alwayes finde a secret peace and ease as if you had cast off milstones from the heart Isa 32.17 The effect of righteousnesse is quietnesse and assurance for ever if sin be pardoned peace and everlasting assurance follows A 2. effect of this life of Justification is that look as you see in a morall life no man hath received life but he strives to maintain it so that all that he hath will he give for his life So if thou hast received the life of the pardon of thy sins thou shalt finde a serious and constant care of preserving that life and peace so that you will let all go rather then the peace of your conscience Thy loving kindnesse is better then life Psal 63.4 And therefore if I finde a tender care in me to maintain my peace it 's a signe I have received life seeing I am so carefull to maintain it A man that hath been in a great debt and lately paid it he is carefull to run on the score no more so when God hath blotted out the score of our sins a Christian is very sollioitous to sin no more but that he may live an holy and spotlesse life all his dayes Notable is the example of Joseph Gen. 39. How shall I commit this great wickednesse and sin against God How shall I break my peace of conscience and run on a new score Sometimes indeed Gods children have received pardon of sins and yet afterwards turned Gods grace into wantonnesse but withall observe if they have been overtaken with some grievous lusts the losse of their peace and favour of God hath been more bitter to them then death it self and if the Lord give us hearts follicitous to maintain our peace it is a sign that he hath given us peace those sins are pardoned which we abhor it 's the nature of life to preserve it self and to expell what may be an enemy to life And this is a signe our peace is not counterfeit but sound if we be carefull to preserve it A 3. effect of our life of Justification is that which our Saviour gives Luke 7.47 Her sins which are many are forgiven her because she loves much He that loves much hath much forgiven him The love of God in some measure proportionable to the sin pardoned is a good evidence of the pardon of our sins Gods pardons are lively pardons they leave not a man as he was but whom he pardons them he heals This woman was a notorious Harlot her loving much shewed that her many sins were forgiven her according to the multitude and measure of sins pardoned such is the measure of our love to God and his Saints And indeed there is none hath so little forgiven him but he thinks it a great deal as indeed well he may and thinks himselfe bound to love God abundantly For application Consider therefore what peace thou hast Perhaps thou wilt say I have had peace all my life long but such peace is ill rooted it springs not from a word of God And 2 It 's fruitlesse Thou sayst thou hast peace but what care hast thou to maintain it and to expell thy sins which hinder thy peace And again if thou hast such peace where is thy love If that be wanting pardon of sin is wanting If thou wouldst have good ground of the pardon of thy sins try thy self
both sensible and experimentall knowledge of Gods favour and breeds certain knowledge of the hearing and having our petitions granted hearing that is of Gods accepting them Verba sensus cum affectu effectu sunt intelligenda and having that is of the performing and fulfilling of our desires chiefly of the ends and aims of our prayers Vse 1. Serves to take off our hearts from confidence in any worldly thing and incourages them to believe on the name of Jesus Christ why because hence you shall not only be assured of salvation which yet is more then all the travails and p lgrimages and devotions of our Fore-fathers could reach unto but by believing on the Name of Christ you shall have confidence that all your prayers are heard Vse 2. For them that doe believe in Christ here is a method whereby they may be assured of the granting their petitions 1. Make sure your adoption for that breeds much assurance in prayer 2. Meditate much on Christ that Christ is your Advocate and atonement for your sins 3. Labour for a Spirit of faith and hope and fear and obedience and so you shall grow up to confidence and knowledge that your prayers are granted Many a Christian falls short of this confidence because he considers not who helps him to make his prayers who makes intercession for him or else he is wanting in some of those graces and so his prayers are full of doubtings Vse 3. Of consolation to all that believe on Christ why This is our confidence that whatsoever we ask according to Gods will he heareth us How comfortable then is the condition of a beleever Be his estate never so miserable his wants never so great if he can but pray well he may goe on comfortably 1 JOHN 5.16 16. If any man see his Brother sin a sin which is not unto death he shall ask and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death There is a sin unto death I do not say that he shall pray for it All unrighteousnesse is sin and there is a sin not unto death THese words contain a third motive to stir us up to believe on Christ and that is from another benefit we shall thereby be enabled to bestow on our Brethren and that is our prayer for him shall give him life Observe in them 1. A promise to such as shall pray for their Brother that sins a sin not unto death he shall give him life 2. An exception or restraining a mans prayer There is a sin unto death I do not say he shall pray for it 3. The prevention of an objection vers 17. All unrighteousnesse is sin and the wages of all sin is death Kom 6. ult And therefore this promise is of none efect for every sin is unto death Unto this St. John answers vers 17. 1. By granting all unrighteousnesse is sin yet there is a sin not unto death not but that every sin deserves death but every sin doth not cut off all hope of recovery but as Christ said of Lazarus his sicknesse Joh. 11.4 it was not unto death yet he dyed but he means it was not irrecoverable because he was raised to life again so every sin is unto death but every sin is not irrecoverable but that a man may be raised up out of it into life Doct. A beleeving Christian is not to hide his eyes from beholding and observing the sins of his Brethren If any man see his Brother sin he may see it and ought to see it Gal. 2.14 St. Paul did not turn away his eyes from seeing Peters dissembling but took notice of it and reproved him Heb. 3.12 13. Take heed lest there be in any of you an evill heart of unbeliefe He speaks not only of a mans selfe but of his Brother that ye have not an evill heart and therefore he propounds a means to help them and that is exhorting one another This the Apostle exhorts us to Heb. 10.24 Reas 1. From the love we owe to our Brethren God requires larger love towards our Brethren then towards our Oxe or Asse and yet God requires that if we see them lying under their burthen we should help them up Deut. 22.4 Now if God require so much help to their beast much more to our Brethrens souls that if we see them going astray or sinking under the burden of sin we should raise them up again 2. From the love we owe to our selves this benefit we shall reap by it we shall learn to keep better watch our selves when we see our Brethren fall Rom. 11.20 We must not by their falls grow high-minded and pride our selves that we are not so bad as they but their falls must be our fears Q. With what eyes should we look at the falls of our Brethren Answ 1. Look not at them wirh a partial or hypocriticall eye Mat. 7.3 4 5. But we must so look at the mote in their eye as to see a beam in our own we should see as great sins in our selves or greater if God did not restrain us for we all have the same root of evill and should break out into as bad distempers as any if God did not hold us back 2. We must not observe them with a curious and censorious eye for that is an imbred curiosity in us that we love to be prying into other mens sins not to heal them but to censure them This St. James reproves ch 3.1 2 3. Be not many M sters that is be not of a Master-like spirit be not busie in every mans matters and censorious of them 3 Look not at them with an envious malicious eye This Jeremiah complains of ch 20.10 All my familiars watched for my haltings That 's an envious eye when a man watches for an advantage to undermine his Brother 4. There is a wanton eye 1. When a man is not humbled at the sight of his Brothers sins but puft up by it like the proud Pharisee Luk. 18.9 10. he built his comfort on the falls of others This the Apostle reprehends in the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 5.2 That there was fornication among them and yet they were not humbled but puft up they magnified themselves that they were honester men 2. A man sees his Brothers sin with a wanton eye when he thereby grows to imitate him if such a man venture into such a course I hope I need not stick at it This God gtievously complains of in the Church of Judah that though she saw what her treacherous Sister Israel had done and that God had therefore cast her off yet she feared not but went and played the Harlot also Jer. 3.7 8. Now all those heads of seeing our Brothers sins ought to be far from us Vse 1. Hence learn not to neglect the falls of our Brethren as if they belonged not to us and we would neither meddle nor make with them This was Cains spirit Am I my Brothers keeper Gen. 4.9 We should look at
Austin taught this sin to be envy and finall impenitency Origen any sin after Baptisme The Novatians took up the same tenent but that it was an error is evident for Peter sinned after Baptisme and so are all the sins of Gods children if these were sins against the holy Ghost who should be saved 2. Of refutation of Bellarmine and Suarez that say Therefore this sin is said to be unto death not that it is never pardoned but not without much difficulty Whereas it s said to be impossible Heb. 6.4 They answer 1. Impossibile in Aristotle is the same with difficile 2. It s impossible with men not with God But were it a sin that might be pardoned though with never so much difficulty yet we ought to pray for it and so much the more earnestly therefore seeing St John disswades us from the usuall remedy against sin viz. prayer therefore certainly its a sin unto death that cannot be pardoned 3. A third errour hence refuted is of those that conceive this sin is very rarely found and more hardly to be discerned but why doth St John write to common Christians not to pray for them a signe they may be found and discerned Vse 2. To teach all that would live long and see good dayes to take heed of opposing and maligning the known truth Many have conceived that this sin hath hardly been found in the world except in Julian the Apostate and such open enemies of Christ I wish it were so rare but are there not too many in the world that have been enlightned and convinced of the truth of God that those are the wayes and servants of God and yet rise up against them with open spight and disdain and persecute them with malice and scorn Is not this sin found too often in the Church Many indeed of our Saviours persecuters did it out of ignorance and our Saviours prayer was effectuall for them Father forgive them they know not what they doe But there were of them that knew him to be the heir and said Come let us kill him Mat. 21.38 And for such as those there remains no more sacrifice It was Davids prayer Psal 57.5 Be not mercifull to any malicious offenders that transgresse without a cause Psal 25.5 Vse 3. It may teach all the servants of God to strengthen themselves against this sin and to use all good preservatives against this sin unto death 1. Keep constant fellowship with Gods servants and forsake them not for that is the rise of the sin Heb. 10.25 As long as God keeps in thy heart a love to Gods people and a reverent esteem of his grace its impossible thou should fall into this sin 2. Be diligent to adde one grace to another for so thou shalt make thy calling and election sure and shalt never fail 2 Pet. 1.5 10. Psal 73.27 28. 3. Deck thy heart with an humble and awefull respect towards God and his wayes Prov. 28.14 Jer. 32.40 4. Take heed of turning aside to crooked wayes Psal 125.4 5. One sin will draw another Heb. 12.13 Make straight steps to your feet lest that which is same be turned out of the way Sauls once straining his conscience brake the back of his profession Vse 4. To such as fear they have commited this sin which is the case of two sorts of Christians 1. Of such who having found much inlargement after fall into deadnesse and slack-heartednesse and all is dampt and therefore they fear they have sinned against the holy Ghost 2. It is the case of such as have sinned against their consciences For the first sort its true a man may sin against the holy Ghost by vexing and despising and damping the Spirit but yet this is not the sin against the holy Ghost unlesse it be done with spight and scorn against Gods Spirit For the second sort such indeed as have sinned against their consciences they have wronged their own souls and brought much mischiefe upon themselves but yet a man may sin against his conscience and not sin against the holy Ghost for it may either be done out of infirmity or boldnesse as Peters and Davids sins were they sinned not out of spight and malice if therefore thou fear thou hast committed this sin this fear argues thou hast not committed it because thou art afraid and sorry for it Again some answer thus and say it s not a sin against the holy Ghost unlesse it be joyned with an universall apostasie from the whole Gospel of Christ Indeed that was a good mark in the primitive Church when the Church censures were so hot that such were cast out and so being cast out turned open Pagans and enemies to Christ being admitted into the Common-wealth but now this is not so sure a mark in our times wherein such a man should not onely be excluded from the Church but from the Common-wealth too and therefore now they keep themselves from open blaspheming Christ and so would those former Apostates had they lived in our dayes and others would doe as they did fly out as openly had they lived in their dayes and therefore judge not so much by that as how thy heart stands affected to Christ This is certain they that are born of God sin not this sin for they that sin this sin cannot avoid everlasting death whereas they that are born of God shall live for ever Verse 16. last part I doe not say you shall pray for it Doct. The sin unto death or the sin against the holy Ghost we have no warrant to pray for it I doe not say that is I give you no warrant nor any other of the Apostles to pray for it that is for the good or salvation of them that have sinned this sin Though Paul bide us pray for all men 2 Tim. 2.1 yet St. John excepts them that have sinned this sin and Paul himselfe is so far from praying for them that he prays against them 2 Tim. 4.15 Alexander the Coppersmith hath done me much harm the Lord reward him according to his works No more dangerous curse then to be dealt with according to our works Indeed David sometimes desires to be dealt with according to his works Ps 18. but he means according to the innocency of his cause not of his person in case of some particular action he may plead so but if it be spoken at large in generall that the Lord would reward us according to our works no more heavy curse therefore when he prays so against Alexander 2 Tim. 4.14 he means that God would confound him whatever he was no doubt he was a member of the Church for Paul judged not them that were without 1 Cor. 5. ult Whether it were that Alexander spoken of Acts 19 that bec●●ed with the hand as if he would have pleaded for Paul and the people esteemed him an enemy to their superstition or whether it were that Alexander 1 Tim. 1.20 whom Paul delivered to Satan as is likely certainly he had
formerly been a professor of the truth who afterward made shipwrack of faith and a good conscience and withstood Paul and therefore Paul prays against him Some think he did it as discerning by extraordinary revelation that he was in a state of reprobation but that is not likely he leaving his prayer as exemplary to all after comers Gal. 5.12 I would that even those were cut off that trouble you that subvert or unddermine you those he wisht they were utterly cut off from Church and Common-wealth Those false Apostles they would have overthrown the Gospel of Christ and brought in another Gospel and because those false Apostles were all alike the Apostle discerned them to be in a state of damnation as being enemies to the Crosse of Christ Phil. 3.18 19. At the first they preached the Gospel but afterwards turning aside to earthly things they began to magnifie themselves and vilifie the Apostles and so hindered the preaching of the Gospel and therefore he looks at them as deserving to be cut off he looks at them as dogs Phil. 3.2 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be anathema maranatha that is the greatest curse that can befall a man There was a threefold Excommunication in the primitive Church 1 A mere restraint from the Sacrament of the Lords Supper of such as were ignorant till they were better instructed 2 There was Excommunicatio major when they cut them off from all fellowship with the Church from the Word and Sacraments and Christian communion and from eating with them This ought to be inflicted upon notorious scandalous sinners 3 Let him be Anathema Maranatha was a greater curse then any of those for in the former Excommunication though they excluded them from their fellowship yet they ought not to count them as enemies but might admonish them and bring them on to repentance that they might recover themselves 2 Thess 3.14 15. There was hope of such for they did therefore excommunicate them that they might be saved 1 Cor. 5.5 And when it was rightly dispensed it was a notable means to humble them when they considered that if the Church saw cause to banish them from their society God might see much more cause to banish them from heaven But yet there was a greater Excommunication Let him be Anathema Maranatha that is let him be accursed untill the coming of the Lord surely then their sin is a sin against the holy Ghost Obj. Some will say Paul loved not Christ at first Answ True He speaks not of men without the Church but within the Church Obj. Why are there not many carnall men in the Church that love not Christ that desire him not that never look towards him Answ I take it to be a kind of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this slender expression he intends much more then he expresseth If any man love not that is if any man hate the Lord Jesus Christ if he have partaken in the gifts and graces of Christ if he have received nor onely Baptisme but tasted of the sweetnesse and goodnesse of his grace if after he come to oppose and maligne Christ and his wayes Let such a man be Anathema Maranatha Reas 1. From the despight such persons doe to the chiefe means and help of prayer one is the Spirit of grace for the Spirit of grace is the Spirit of supplication Zech. 12.10 Now they that despight the Spirit of grace the Spirit is so grieved that it will not assist us in any prayer we make for such Heb. 10.29 Reas 2. From the like despight they offer to the other principall help of prayer that is asking in the name of Christ upon those two wings our prayers fly up to heaven viz. upon the mediation of Christ and the Spirit of grace with these two they prevail now these men that sin against the holy Ghost they make a scorn of Christ Heb. 10.29 They trample under foot his blood and put him to open shame Heb. 6.6 that is they put him to open and exemplary punishment as the most notorious malefactor Now if a man shall know Christ and afterwards hate him what doth he but shew that Christ was a notorious malefactor and suffered not for other mens sins but his own Therefore there is no hope Christ should lend his Name to be a Mediator Reas 3. Where Christ is not a sacrifice of propitiation for sins there be cannot be expected to be an intercessor for such Now there remains no more sacrifice for such Heb. 10.27 If the sacrifice of Christ reach not to such then he will never make intercession for them 4. From the incouragement God is wont to give his servants in their prayers He will fulfill the desires of them that fear him Psal 145.19 And this is their confidence that whatsoever they ask in the Name of Christ they shall receive and therefore God will not so much dishonor his promise nor discourage us as to give us hearts not to pray when we shal be answered we may pray for wicked men whom we know not in what condition they are but then our prayers shall return into our own bosomes Psal 35.13 But if men be profest enemies to Christ then we doe not shew our selves to be Gods friends if we shew friendship to them or pray for them and therefore our prayers will doe them no good and our selves harm Vse 1. To teach us that sin unto death may be discerned even of common Christians for else why doth he write to common Christians to all believers in generall Verse 13. That if his Brother sin a sin unto death then he should not pray for him Vse 2. It may therefore teach Gods people to learn the nature of this sin left they pray unawares for such whom their prayers shall doe no good If therefore you see professors that have tasted of the grace of God if afterward they maligne and oppose those wayes and the servants of God in this case save your labour in praying for them your prayers will doe no good but harm But how shall we discern when they are inlightned and convinced We may indeed discern their malignity and opposition but it may be they doe it of ignorance In this case our Saviour and Stephen prayed for their adversaries because they knew not what they did therefore three thousand after they were convinced that it was the Christ whom they had persecuted they were pricked in their hearts and brought on to repentance Therefore if you discern they doe this out of ignorance pray heartily for them But how may we discerne they commit this against the light and knowledge of the truth Answ If they doe expresse in their speech and conversation that they are affected with Christ and the wayes of his grace and convinced that those are the right wayes and yet afterwards they maliciously oppose those wayes then pray not for them Mat. 21.28 The Pharisees knew Christ to be the heir
and yet said Come let us kill him and in the mean time they said he was a Conjurer and cast out devills through Belzebub the Prince of devills when as they knew he was the Son of God and did it by his own power therefore Christ tells them their sins should never be forgiven them But if they shall go further and affect the society of Christians delight to doe them good offices and take the like from them if such after fall off and maliciously oppose those wayes they more plainly manifest themselves to have sinned this sin and therefore pray not for them Vse 3. Shews us the desperate condition of all such as commit this sin and therefore to blesse our selves from it they are cut off from all means of salvation a man may neither admonish nor reprove them nor shew them any courtesie or doe any good to them for if I might I ought to pray for them for no office of love ought to be dispensed without prayer and therefore take heed of all sins against conscience of all presumptuous sins and sins of boldnesse for they lead to this great transgression Psal 19.13 And that you may be kept from presumptuous sins take heed of secret sins Vse 4. Of direction If we be Children to Parents or Wives to Husbands or Subjects to Kings and they sin against the holy Ghost yet they may do civill service and offices towards them as those that lived under Julian the Apostate he committed this sin therefore the Christians prayed against him but he had many Christians in his Army that doubted whether they might serve him or acknowledge him as their Emperor or depose him it was concluded they might serve him but yet they prayed that God would take a course against him as David said his day shall come on or he shall descend into the battle and perish which shews that if a Prince shall sin this sin his Subjects ought not to depose him but to doe him offices of service The like may be said of Children to Parents and Wives to Husbands if there be any tye of nature a may doe them civill offices which confutes that desperate doctrine of the Romish Church that whosoever denyes the Pope to be the Supreme head of the Church he is to be excommmunicated and then no man is bound in allegiance to him but that whosoever shall slay such an hereticall Prince shall merit salvation Vse 5. Learn hence to discern the nature of peremptory prohibitions When St. John would peremptorily forbid praying for such he saith I doe not say he shall pray for it Neither do you say he shall pray against it might some say St. John makes account this is a strong prohibition I doe not say that is you have no warrant from me I give you no commission such is the manner of Scripture prohibitions Isa 1.12 Who hath required this at your hands So Jer. 7.31 I commanded them not neither came it into my heart implying that it is a most peremptory prohibition if Gods Word give us no warrant of direction for if there be nothing for it there is enough against it for this is our direction that we are to doe onely what God commands in his Word to that we must add nothing nor take away any thing THE END THE TABLE The First Figure notes the Chapter the second Figure notes the Verse A Abiding in Christ is joyned with avoyding of sin 3. 6. Christ an Advocate for Gods Children yea a righteous Advocate 2. 1. Anabaptisme examined 2. 19. Why Christ was not an Angel 1. 1. Primary Antiquity a certain note of Divine verity 2. 24. True Antiquity fetches its Originall from the beginning 2. 7. The Antiquity of the Doctrin of imitating Christ 2.7 Ministeriall Application must be made to severall sorts and ages 2. 13. Antichrist foretold 2. 18. In Johns dayes there were many Antichrists nor can the last times be long without such Antichrists Ib. In petty Antichrists the praediction of the great Antichrist is in some measure fulfilled Ib. Antichrist denyes Jesus to be the Christ 2. 22. and how Ib. Antichristian Teachers deny the Father and the Son Ib. Every Antichristian doctrine is a lye 2. 21. Apostates are in the Church 2. 19. were never Members of the Church Ib. Apostacy is a note of a Seducer and of an Antichristian spirit 2. 19. It s the punishment of Hypocrisie Ib. B Beginning what it signifies 1. 1. Believers may be assured their prayers are heard 5.19 Blood of Christ how it cleanses 1. 7. For Christ came by Blood 5. 6. Boldnesse with God and peace of Conscience goe together 4. 3. Boldnesse mortifies fear and shame 4. 17. Perfect love assures of Boldnesse at the day of judgment Ib. The sight of our Brother is a stronger inducement to love him then any hater of his Brother can have to love God 4. 20. He that hates his Brother will find lesse cause to love God then his Brother Ib. C Cards and Dice unlawfull 2. 16. Certainty is a property of the Apostles Doctrine 1. 3. The Chiefest creatures may be wicked 2. 13. Gods Children must be as little Children 2. 12. It s comfortable to know we are Gods Children 5. 1. God hath his Children among all Ages of men 2. 13. Little Children may know that God is their Father Ib. note this against the Anabaptists How little Children must be trained up Ib. Christs active and Passive obedience must not be seperated in cleansing 1. 7. Christ pure from sin 3. 5. this should be an effectuall means to purge us Ib. Christ came to dissolve the work of the Devill 3. 8. Christs death the manifestation of Gods love 3. 16. Christians must be ready to dye for their Brethren Ib. True Church-members never depart from the Church 2. 19. Communion of Saints what it is 1. 3. The same Command that requires love to God requires love to our Brethren 4. 21. Confession to God not simply to the Minister the way to pardon 1. 9. Confession that Christ is the Son of God a sure note of Gods dwelling in us and our dwelling in him 4. 15. The office of Conscience 3. 20. according to the testimony of Conscience will God judge us Ib. A fearfull Conscience is voyd of true hearted Love 4. 18. Conversion why called a New-birth being but an alteration 2. 29. Converters are spirituall Fathers 2. 1. The Covenant of grace how without condition 2. 19. D As Darknesse-passing is the Estate of Gods Children in this life 2. 8. Difference between a sin unto death and deadly sins 5. 16. False Teachers must be looked at as Deceivers 2. 26. Sometimes they may be reproved and confuted but not named Ib. The desire and indeavour to deceive is deceit Ib. He that denyes the Son hath neither the Father nor the Son and contra 2. 23. The Devill sins continually 3. 8. of him sinners are Ib. Difference between the Children of God and the Children of the Devill 3.