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A35583 Movnt Pisgah, or, A prospect of heaven being an exposition on the fourth chapter of the first epistle of St. Paul to the Thessalonians, from the 13th verse, to the end of the chapter, divided into three parts / by Tho. Case ... Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1670 (1670) Wing C837; ESTC R10699 286,764 418

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scil Non implent plenum postulatum legis justitiae neque super impios neque super pios Streso in Act. 17.31 exemplary Vengance to shew there is a Providence that God is not an idle Spectator in the world And somtimes it is let alone to tell the world that there is a Judgment to come the full punishment of sin is not till then Thus Reason says He may Come But now Faith goes further and says He must Come He shall Come The Lord Himself shall descend from Heaven It is a truth not only which God can make good but a truth which God cannot but make good Witness Christ must come 1. His Purchase says so 1. His Purchase would Christ buy a people at so dear a rate and then go away and come no more at them Nay 2. Witness also his promise And if I go John 14.3.2 His Promise I will come again He will especially considering the design of his leaving them for a time it was but to go and prepare a place for them and he hath done it the place is prepared Mansions in his Fathers house are made ready for them ver 2. Why now Christ being gon to this very end and all things prepared for their entertainment if he should not come again he should certainly fail not his promise only but his project too this cannot be He that never yet failed his own promise Fidelis Deus in Omnibus in extremo non desieret nor his peoples expectations will not now do it No I will come and receive you He that went from them only to prepare the place for them will certainly come again to receive them into that place now it is prepared He loves them so well that he will not he cannot be without their company I will come and receive you that where I am there you may be also Heb. 11.11 Faithful is he that hath promised who also will do it 3. Witness The Sacrament of his last Supper 3. The Sacrament of his last Supper 1 Cor. 11.26 which is nothing else but a pledg and seal to keep alive the memorial of his second Coming As oft as ye eat of this bread and drink of this cup ye do shew the Lords death till he come Now when the Lord Jesus Christ hath engaged the expectation of his people by so solemn a Covenant if he should fail their expectation this Grand Institution had been in vain Nay surely He never said to the Seed of Jacob Seck ye my face in vain He speaketh Righteousness Isa 45.19 4. And lastly Witness his Resurrection that is 4. His Resurrection the Assurance given in the Text Act. 17.31 He will judge the world by that man whom he hath appointed How may we be sure of that why he hath given the world assurance of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Non quod omnibus fidem in Christum dederit Sed quod omnibus argumentum dederit Streso in loc what assurance in that he hath raised Christ from the dead He hath given assurance Gr. he hath offered Faith the meaning is God could not have confirmed his purpose and promise of sending Christ to Judge the world at the last day by a more firm and solemn Argument than by raising him from the dead after he had paid the debt made satisfaction to divine Justice upon the Cross Partly in as much as Jesus Christ was hereby openly declared to be the Son of God with power To judg the world is an act of divine Power and Authority and what fitter person in the Trinity is there to judg the world righteously than He that was unrighteously judged by the world put to death in the Flesh but quickened in the Spirit raised by his own divine power Partly because that after his Resurrection God the Father took him up into Heaven Vid. Strev in loc and placed him at his own right hand A certain evidence that when the whole number of his Redeemed shall be accomplished he will send him the second time to take Vengeance in his own Person on the Shedders of his Blood and the Oppugners of his Gospel Else it had been all one as if Christ had been left to lye still in the Grave Thus you see Christ his personal Coming at the last day established upon its four-fold Foundation 1. Use His Purchase 2. His Promise 3. His Supper 4. His Resurrection Now therefore O ye Saints of God cast not away your Confidences either in respect of your selves or of your sweet Relations which have out-run you to the Sepulcher He that shall come will come and will not tarry In the mean time let the just live by their Faith keep up your Faith and your Faith will keep up your hearts from sinking 2 Cor. 4.16 for this Cause we faint not c. I proceed to the third Circumstance The manner of Christ his coming In the Description whereof we find a three-fold Summons or Citation to all the world to make their appearance at this great Oecumenical Assize 1 Summon● A Shour sc 1. A Shout 2. The Voyce of an Arch-Angel 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hortatorius clamor The Trump of God The first solemn summons is a Shout the Lord shall descend from Heaven with a Shout The word in the Greek signifies such a Shout as is to be heard amongst Marriners and Seamen when after a long and dangerous Voyage they begin to descry the Haven crying with loud and united voyces a shore a shore as the Poet describes the Italians when they saw their Native Country lifting up their voyces and making the Heavens ring again with Italie Italie Italiam Laliam laeto clamore salutani Virg Aeneid Irgenti Angelorum jubile acclamatione Atetius Or as Armies when they joyn battail rend the air with their loud Acclamations In like manner shall the mighty Angels of God with united clamour proclaime the Advent of their Lord crying aloud with a voyce that shall be heard from one end of the Heavens to another the Earth and Sea and Hell it self shall hear and tremble Behold the Lord cometh Jud. v. 14. Jud. v. 14. Math. 25.5 Behold the Bridegroom cometh Math. 25. v. 6. The second Summons is the Voyce of the Arch-Angel Expositioric vice Calv. This clause some take to be Exegetical to the former expounding that hortatory clamour or shout mentioned before q. d. with a shout i. e. with the voyce of the Arch-Angel Arch-Angelus praeconts fungetur officio citet vivos mortues ad Christi tribunal Others conceive it to be added by way of eminency All the Angels shall shout for joy but the Voyce of the Arch-Angel shall be heard above all the rest The greatest Angel hath the greatest voyce lowder and shriller than all the other Angels as Captain General to them all The third Summons is the Trump of God Great Trees Trees of God High
conjecture that we should not too soon forget the Affliction and the Misery the Wormwood and the Gall but that our Souls having them continually in remembrance might be humbled in us Lam. 3.19 20. Possibly that the Children being every way alike both in Person and in Disposition one and the same Plaister might give ease and cure to the wound and one and the same Monument perpetuate their Memorial unto Posterity Truly they were a pair of lovely Babes Babes in Age though men in knowledg and understanding of whom we may in their Capacity sing as David once in his Funeral Elegies of Saul and Jonathan They were pleasant in their lives in their death they were not divided Their lives indeed were short so it seemed good to the Divine Wisdome after He had shewed two such excellent pieces in the Light for a while timely to lay them up amongst his Jewels lest they should receive hurt or stain from a present evil world But although their lives were short yet verily they were precious such as allowing them this Abatement that they were Children neither Parents nor Standers-by could rationally have wished they had been otherwise then they were And though there were some distance of years yet there was the greatest parity of Persons observed between them that though they were but the Brother 's and Sister 's Sons you could not had they been together have distinguished them from natural Brethren or Tynnes rather of the same Birth For Elegancy of Person Loveliness of Countenance Solidness of Judgment Acuteness of Wit Tenaciousness of Memory Sweetness of Disposition Vniversal Innocence and Modesty in behaviour Obedience to Parents Next or Remote Submission to Governours Observance to Superiours Love to Equals Condescention to Inferiours and candor to all And that which deservedly is of higher value with God Reverend Attention to his Word Read or Preached together with some suitable ability to give a methodical repetition of both Studious in learning Catechisms of which they were able to give such a rational account as if they had been Candidates for the Vniversity as many both of the Nobility and others in the Parish of Giles 's in the Fields can at this day witness Love to the best things and a due respect to the best men with a more then a Childish dislike of and adversness to what they understood to be evil c. These Desirablenesses according to yea and above the rate of Children rendered them so like one another as if one Soul had animated two bodies or one and the same Conception had been formed up into two Patterns though reserved to be seen successively to the end as it were that the Elder might out-live himself in the Younger Aut Utrumque putabis esse verum aut Utrumque putabis esse pictum You would have deemed them to be either the same Person or two Pictures one the Original the other a Copy Sic oculos sic ille manus sic ora ferebat He that had seen one might have known them both And as they were alike in their Lives so in their Death they were not divided or if a little in time not at all in the manner and Circumstances They both Lived with us but died with you they lived with the Divine but died with the Physitian to shew that neither Religion doth kill nor Physick can keep alive Nevertheless though they died with you they came not to dye any further than the hidden Decree of the Divine will had before determined They died alive as it were Death gave them so little warning Neither Parents or Children understood wherefore they came until within a very few days Death shewed his Commission and as soon Executed it They died both of them in the absence of their Trustees who though one step higher in the Parental line were not I am sure half a step lower in Parental affection which the Divine eye Saw and pittied and therefore out of Compassion hiding from us what he was about to do As he snatched us from the Elder by sending us abroad So He snatched the Younger from us by sending him Home to his Fathers House So pittying our Infirmity who otherwise possibly might not have parted with them so willingly nor have born their loss so patiently The loss of two such choyce Patterns of Divine workmanship could not but have been an heart-breaking object to us as it was to you but that their constant absence from you was a preparative whereby the terrour of death was somthing abated their very absence so long before was a little death That which sweetneth it to us all is that God hath not left us to mourn as men without hope that in the Context before us The Children are not dead but sleep they sleep in Jesus If any Stander-by shall judg possibly that my affection hath transported my Charity into their excess my Apology is this that I had rather be guilty of an Excess in Charity than a Defect in thankfulness I know we cannot expect such rational accounts of Grace in Children as may be found in Adult Saints but that that doxologie out of the mouths of Babes and Sucklings thou hast ordeined strength Psal 8.2 doth not exclude Children though not confine the meaning of the words so narrow is the judgment of the old St. Ignatius who from those Scripture instances of Samuel Josiah and others denieth not but that the Spirit of God working in young ones doth many times give out early discoveries of the Grace of the Covenant when Elder Persons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Epist ad Magn. do only carry their Gray-haires as a badg of their Ingratitude to God As for your dear Children God hath not left himself without fu●ther witness in their death of an interest in them Those heavenly whispers which the tender Aunt laying her ear to the pale lips of her dying Nephew as he lay upon his back with eyes fixed Heaven-ward when he wanted strength to make his heart audible God Christ Grace c. And her own dear Childs delight in that little Book A Guide to Heaven a book little in bulk but great in Excellency which as it caused him to make it his Vade Mecum while he lived his Golden Cup out of which he drank his Mornings draught every morning in his Bed So it caused him to take it with him as his Viaticum to Heaven when he came to dye For it was found with him when dead These I say are overplusses of Divine Grace and witnesses of Divine Love to those dying Babes from their Heavenly Father Wherefore Dear Children let not the Consolations of God seem small unto you but improve them for your own Comfort and quickning in the holy Education of the surviving Treasures of your Blood that if they live you may have comfort in their Lives or if they dye you may have hope in their Deaths Be steadfast and immoveable and always abounding in the work of the Lord for as
marg for Acts 13.19 read 3 19 page 145 marg for Matt. 5.27 read 5 17 page 155 marg for Psa 30 3. read 130 3. PART 3. page 2 marg for Luke 21 46 read 21 36 marg for Rev. 3 2 r. 14 4 page 8 line 16 for Mat. 24.21 read 24 51 page 29 marg for Matt. 8 10 read 18 10 page 30 marg for Joh. read 1 Joh. page 31 marg for Gen. 13 24 30. read 32 24 30 page 34 marg for Psal 48 2 read 84 2 page 38. marg for 1 King 4 25 read 4 29 page 46 marg for Ma● read Matth. page ●● marg for Mark 12 32 read 13 32 page 60 line 31 for Matr. 25 24 r ad 25 34 page 62 marg for Matt 18 1. read 8 11. page 79 marg for Rom. read Revel page 81 marg for Eph. 5 1. read 4 24 page 110 marg for 2 Thes 1 9. read 2 Cor. 4 4. page 125 marg for 2 Cor. read 1 Cor page 132 line 13. for Cant 6 12 read 7 12 page 135 marg for 1 Cor 9 52. read 9.25 page 150. marg for 1 Pet. 1 18. read 1.8 page 153. line 1● for Psal 94.10 read 94.19 p. 164. l. 20. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the first Epistle Dedicatory p. ● l. 6. for weak r. mean In the second Epistle Dedicatory are these 3 pages mistaken in the Title v●z p. 7 p. 10 p. 11. for The Epistle to the Reader read The Epistle Dedicatory And in the same Epistle page 9. l. 9. for their excess read this excess page 10. line 3. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 MOVNT PISGAH OR WORDS of COMFORT OVER THE Death of our Gratious Relations 1 Thes 4.18 Wherefore Comfort one another with these Words THese words what words are these Scripture words in their general Nature more particularly the Words of Comfort conteyned in this Context from v. 13. I would not have you to be ignorant Brethren c. down to my Text. For therein doth the Apostle by the dictate of the Holy Ghost lay down a model or platforme of Consolatory Arguments as so many soveraign Antidotes against immoderate sorrow for our pretious Relations which are departed And with these words the Apostle would have Christians be able to comfort themselves and one another Comfort one another with these words For the handling of the Text I will do these two things 1. I will shew you what these words are and open the sense and meaning of them as they lye in the order and method of the Context 2. I will improve them for 1. Comfort 2. Counsel For the first of these The words of Comfort laid down by the Apostle in this model 10 Words of Comfort may be reduced unto 10 Heads some of them very comprehensive and all of them like mother of Pearl dissolved exceeding Cordial and Restorative The first word of Comfort is this The first word of Comfort namely That our pretious Relations over whose departure we stand mourning and weeping are but fallen asleep I would not have you ignorant Brethren concerning them which are asleep We may say of departed Saints as our Saviour said concerning the Damsel Math. 9.24 They are not dead but sleep the same phrase he also used to his Disciples concerning Lazarus John 11.11 our Friend Lazarus sleepeth A notion which the Disciples at first understood not because their understandings were not yet inlightened they dreamed of a natural sleep saith the Text of taking Rest in sleep And yet as men in their sleep do somtimes dream true so did they in this dream of theirs speak truer than they were aware of they said Lord if he sleeps he shall do well it is true indeed the Saints of God do but sleep when they lye down in the Grave that which we call death in such is not death indeed It is but the Image of Death the shadow and metaphor of death deaths younger Brother a meer sleep and no more The Holy Ghost who best knoweth what things be hath phrased it so and that not so little as twenty times in Scripture to shew that it was not a sudden expression incautelously dropt from the Pen of any one of the Secretaries of Holy Writ but the true proper and genuine notion of death suggested to them by the infallible dictate of the Spirit of God they do but sleep and if they sleep they shall do well their sleep shall be sweet unto them as sweet as once the Prophets was Jer. 31.26 I shall not follow the Analogy that is between Death and Sleep in the latitude of it sufficient to our purpose it will be to take notice of two main properties of Death which do carry in them a lively resemblance of sleep The first is Is● Ligath su●●● That sleep is nothing else but the binding up of the senses for a little time a locking up of the Doores and shutting of the Windows of the body for a season that so nature may take the sweeter Rest and Repose being freed from all disturbance and distractions Sleep is but a meer Paerenthesis to the Labours and Travels of this present life Secondly Sleep is but a partial privation a privation of the Act only not of the Habit of Reason They that sleep in the Night do awake again in the Morning then there is a regress or return of the habit to its Act again The Soul returneth to the discharge of all her Offices again In the internal faculties to the act of Judging and discourse in the Intellect to recalling things for the present and recording things for future use in the memory It returns to its Empire and command in the will to its judicature in the Conscience Excusing Accusing Condemning Et sic in caeteris So likewise the soul returns again to the execution of all her functions in the external senses to seeing in the eye to hearing in the ear to tasting in the pallate as also to working in the hands to walking in the feet and so in the rest In a word the whole man is Redivivus restored again to its self as it were by a new * Providentia est continuata Creatio Creation that which lay as senseless and useless tantum non dead all the night is raised again more vive and fresh and active in the morning than it lay down at night Such a thing as this for all the world is that which we commonly call Death but with this considerable advantage that in the interim of Death the soul acts more vigorously than before as being released from the weights and intanglements of the body First It is but a longer and closer binding up of the senses Nature's long vacation The Grave is a bed wherein the body is laid to Rest with its Curtains drawn close about it that it may not be disturbed in its repose so the Holy Ghost pleaseth to phrase it Isa 57.2 He
delivered us from death and from him Heb. 2.14 1 Thes 1.10 that had the power of death which is the Devil Jesus who delivered us from the wrath to come Thirdly Jesus rose again it implieth his right to us 3ly His right and interest and interest in us He rose as our Jesus i. e. as a publick Head in whom all believers are considered Jesus Christ as he died not in a private capacity for he had no sin of his own Goel in the Hebr. signifies both a Redeemer and the next of Kin because the right of Redemption belonged to the next of Kin. for which death might have any dominion over him so neither did he rise again in a private capacity but in a publick capacity as he was our Goel our next of kin unto whom the right of Redemption did belong He rose as our sponsor and surety yea as our Husband and Bridegroom having espoused us to himself on the Cross He rose as the Captain of our Salvation the publick Head and Representative of all the Elect of God And this consideration layeth another foundation for our Triumph in Christ his Resurrection Christs Resurrection our Triumph On a two sold accompt 1. Account all the Saints are risen in Christ already judicially legally And that upon a twofold account 1. In as much as Christ being a publique person all the Saints of God are risen already in Christs Resurrection that is to say judicially legally as in their Sponsor and in their stead In the sense of the Law what the sponsor or surety doth the principle debtor is said to do also when the surety is laid in prison the principle is laid in prison also when the surety payeth the debt the principle is accounted as if he had paid the debt himself when the surety is discharged the debtor is discharged also because in the sence of the Law the principle and surety are but one person Thus the Lord Jesus as our Sponsor and Representative having paid the debt we are reputed as if we had paid it our selves he being discharged we are discharged he rising from the dead we also rise in him and with him So speak the Scriptures Dead with Christ R●m 66. Ephes 2.5 Quickned together with Christ raised up together and made to sit together in Heavenly places in Christ Jesus Whatsoever he doth as our Mediator we are said to do the same in a juridical sence Hence our Blessed Saviour calls Himself Iohn 11.25 the Resurrection I am the Resurrection and the Life c. He doth not say egoresuscito c. It is Tertullian his observation but ego sum Resurrectio not I raise the Dead but I am the Resurrection to shew that as in Adam all dye so in Christ the second Adam all his spiritual seed shall be made alive that as the first Adam was puteus mortis a pit of sin and death to all his natural posterity so the second Adam is fons vitae a Well-spring of Righteousness Life to all his believing seed So again He saith not I give Life but I am the Life to shew that it is but one and the same Life which Christ and Believers Live Col. 3.3 that his Life he being their Representative is their Life When Christ who is our Life c. This is a word of Comfort indeed The Saints of God are risen already in Christ their Head those precious pieces of beauty and delight the loss of whom we lament with brinish tears and sighs dipt in blood they are risen they are not here they are quickned together with Christ raised up together and made to sit together with Christ in Heavenly places I say in a forensical or Court-sence reputed so in Christ their Head and Surety This is much but this is not all there is yet a second accompt and that is Secondly Second Accompt The Saints shall use with Christ really The Saints shall arise again in their own persons Jesus his rising again gives us infallible assurance of their and our future Resurrection As they are risen with Christ legally so they shall rise with Christ really and personally God in the Resurrection of Christ hath given to the world an instance and a pledge of the Saints Resurrection in the last day There is an inseparable connexion between the Resurrection of Christ and the Resurrection of the Saints and it is fourfold scil A Connexion of 1. Merit A sour-fold Connexion between Christ's Resurrection and the Saints Resurrection c 1. Connex of Merit 2. Influence 3. Design 4. Union The first Connexion that is between Christ's Resurrection and the Saints Resurrection is a Connexion of Merit The Lord Jesus by his Death purchased both the Persons and the Priviledges of the Elect of God Rom. 14.9 To this end Christ both died and rose again that he might be the Lord both of the dead and the living In the former verse the Apostle asserts the absolute dominion which the Lord Jesus hath over us whether we live or dye we are the Lords Here he tells us what right or title that is whereby he holds that dominion scil by the right of purchase For this end Christ both died and rose and revived Rose and Revived that is rising again he did revive by his death he merited of the Father that both in death and in life both dying and rising again he might dispose of the Saints to his own advantage Why now the Lord Jesus having bought his Elect at so dear a rate if the Saints should not rise again he should lose his purchase there were no more Merit in the death of Christ than in the death of any of the Sons of Adam and even in this respect Christ had died in vain and risen in vain A second Connexion between Christs Resurrection 2 Connexion of Influence and the Resurrection of Believers is a Connexion of Power and Influence There is power in the Resurrection of Christ for the quickning of the dead Psal 110.2 This is that which the Psalmist calleth the dew of Christs Youth from the womb of the morning thou hast the dew of thy Youth In the Hebrew it is more than the dew of the morning thou shalt have the dew of thy Youth The Resurrection of Christ is called his Youth wherein he did as it were spring and grow forth again and the quickening influence of his Resurrection is compared to the morning dew to shew that what vertue there is in the dew of the morning to cause the languishing plants of the Earth to revive and flourish that and much more power and efficacy there is in the Resurrection of Jesus to quicken and revive all his Saints after they have lyen all the night of their separated state in the Grave So the Prophet Isaiah interprets it in words at length Isa 26.19 thy dew is as the dew of herbs to what end it follows and the Earth shall
an earthly inheritance to run from Lawyer to Lawyer to attend eary in the morning and late at night to give see upon fee to spend half a patrimony or an estate to secure the rest and as if heaven and the beatifical vision were the only trivial worthless thing a meer accident that might adesse or abesse sine subjecti interitu be present or absent without the least prejudice at all to a mans happiness I say to take up that upon trust and to leave this ever with the Lord upon a peradventure Oh unspeakable folly and madness Oh that the sons of the earth should thus shame the heirs of heaven Hab. 2.6 that an earthly inheritance should be more valu●d by sense than the heavenly is by faith more care taken to be sure of dirt and dung thick clay than of that which is infinitely more valuable than c●ral or pearls whose price is above rubies 1 Pet. 1.18 19 as bought not with silver and gold but with the precious blood of Jesus Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot Were this errour the fruit only of incapacity as it is in little Infants that cannot judge what belongs to their present or future good verily it were a thousand pities an infelicity upon the humane nature to be lamented with tears of blood but that rational Creatures furnished with such noble faculties for such divine and heavenly purposes should through a mere brutish sensuality be so willingly content to remain at such uncertainties is the most dreadful prodigy that can possibly enter into the heart of man That adult persons grown up to maturity should despise their birth-rights and desperately neglect to look into their writings which relate to such an immortal estate argues not only the woful degeneracy of the humane nature how rife and pregnant the seeds both of ignorance and atheism are therein but even a judicial blast upon their understandings as if the God of Heaven had given them up to the God of the world 2 Thes 1.9 to blind the eyes of them which believe not lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ who is the Image of God should shine unto them Oh that men would consider seriously what avail will it be at death and judgment to have had assurance of many large earthly possessions while they lived and then to have neither scrip nor scrol as we say to shew for heaven that blessed inheritance of the Saints in light when they come to dye to be able to say now my house and my land and my silver and my crown and my kindom but not then my Lord and my God my heaven and my inheritance I have bestowed all my time and strength to assure my earthly possessions but now I can keep these no longer and can call nothing mine own but the dungeon of darkness there to be staked down to easeless and endless torments or at best to cry out with that heathen Emperour Animula Adrianus Imp. blandula vagula quo vadis nescio I know not whither thou art going O my precious darling my never dying soul Confident and presumptuous supposals may quiet and satisfie the sleepy and slothful Conscience in fair weather but in the hour of temptation Mat. 7.27 when the rain shall descend and the floods come and the winds blow then these foolish confidences will fall because they were built upon the sand and great will be the fall thereof Then when in hell the miserable soul made now as sensible as formerly it was secure shall from thence lift up its eyes and see Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the Prophets in the Kingdom of God and it self thrust out what furious and fiery reflexions will then rend and vex the Conscience and the sinner cry out with horrour O damned wretch that I am I might have had pardon and glory as well as others I had as many means and motives I had as much need as they it was as much my concern as any others but I trifled and took up all upon trust and would not give diligence to the full assurance of hope to the end oh now a thousand worlds if I had them for a may be which once I had oh for one of those dayes of grace which I then sinned away and idled out in the pursuit of vanity for one of those tenders and offers of salvation which then pursued me and I would not hearken but thought I might have had heaven time enough when I had done with the world but now I see how miserably I have mocked God and deceived my self the day of grace is now gone and the time of peace is at its full stop and period and instead of ever with the Lord here I must lye and boil and broil in these flames with the Devil and reprobate spirits for ever Oh that sinners would therefore in this their day be wise As I In●ew a prophane wretch in Kent who lived in all kind of wickedness and debauchery against the most passionate and compassionate cautions and expostulations of his godly Minister and would not hearken to him when he came to dye he sent for his Minister who coming and asking him why he had sent for him replyed only this Oh Sir my time is done and my mork a not begun and so died and know the things which belong unto their peace before they be hid from their eyes Consider as Motives Motives to labour for Assurance 1. It may be attained First Heaven way be made sure assurance may be attained 1. God commands it Phil. 2.12 2 Pet. 1.10 Heb. 6.11 Work out your salvation with fear and trembling Give all diligence to make your calling and election sure We desire that every one of you do shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope And God doth not command impossibility the Law indeed did but he giveth more grace Jam. 4.6 God in the Gospel giveth what he commandeth To which end 2. It is observable that what is a precept in one place is a promise in another that if the command find work the promise may find strength Hence His Commandments are not grievous 1 John 5.3 Phil. 4.13 and I can do all things through Christ that strengtheneth me So run the promises Mat. 7.7 Augustine desired no more of God but d● Domini quod jubes jube quod vis Ask and it shall be given you seek and ye shall find knock and it shall be opened unto you A multiplied use of Gospel means will bring in a multiplied increase of Gospel grace and strength 3. Many of the Saints of God have attained assurance of their salvation holy Paul in the name of himself and his fellow Saints 2 Cor. 5.1 could say We know we have an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens not we hope only but we know So the Disc●ple of love 1 John 3.14 We know we have
bondage come hither I say and set your feet upon the neck of this King of terrors and fear not to make that triumphant challenge of the Apostle Oh death 1 Cor. 15.55 where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Death is swallowed up in victory and being conquered serves to that high and honourable end scil to be the Saints Vsher of State to bring them into the presence of the King of glory to behold his face and to hear his wisdom from thenceforth for ever to be with the Lord Death serves the Saints now for no use but to kill mortality and to extinguish corruption This corruptible must put on incorruption ver 33. and this mortal must put on immortality i. e. We shall ever be with the Lord a in perfect incorruptible state of glory and this must be effected by means of death Oh what were ten thousand deaths ushering in the Soul into so much glory The glimmering presence of God with a believer here below may conquer the fear of death Psal 23.3 Though I walk in the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me How much more may the hope of a full fruition of God in glory deliver the Saints from the bondage of fear Ever with the Lord This puts Lillies and Roses into the ghastly face of Death and makes the King of terrors to out-shine Solomon in all his glory Ever with the Lord this makes death not only tolerable but amiable desirable For we know 2 Cor. 5.1 that if the earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens and for this we groan carnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with our house ver 2. which is from heaven For in this we groan i. e. in this tabernacle for this is earthly earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven the reason is because that house is eternal in the heaven A Saint looks out of the windows of this earthly Tabernacle and cryeth out as the Mother of Sisera Why stay the wheels of his Chariot thus long When shall I be carried to those eternal Mansions where I shall ever be with my Lord and Bridegroom Is any thing sweeter than life Yes death to a believer That of Solomon holds best in this case the day of death is better than the day of birth It is transcendently so to a Child of God who is conveighed by death into his Fathers presence where he shall dwell for ever The passage is dark Psal 16.1 but it shall be quick and speedy Thou wilt shew me the path of life the path of life lieth through the grave but Christ hath gone it already and will take the believer by the hand and lead him through it into the Presence-chamber of the King of glory where he shall hear the Bridegrooms voice and his joy shall be fulfilled then tremble thou not believer at the approach of death but go forth and meet him with this friendly salutation Come in thou blessed of the Lord Art thou come to fetch me to my Father Welcome death thou art my best friend next to Jesus Christ Death is only my passage into a blessed eternity Death is Joseph's Chariot not to carry the Saints down into Egypt but up into Canaan and how quickly doth he carry a believer thither It is but winking and he is at home as soon as the eye of the body is closed here the eye of the soul is open there O blessed vision to behold at once all the glories of eternity Say then with Jacob Jesus my Lord and Redeemer is yet alive and seated on the Throne at the right hand of the Majesty on high there proclaiming in the cars of all his trembling followers Rev. 1.18 I am he that liveth and was dead and behold I live for evermore Amen and have the keys of hell and death Fear not O thou believer to say with Jacob I will go and see him not before I dye but I will dye that I may go and see him Death is but the flames that must singe asunder the cords of thy mortality the hand that shall open the Cage that thy soul may get loose and take her flight for the Mountain of Spices the glorious immortality and liberty of the Sons of God Be of good chear Believers thou shalt dye but once and then ever be with the Lord with whom is the fountain of life life bubbling up unto all eternity The damned are alwayes dying repeating death every moment their flames only serve them to read over the black lines of death which have neither Full-point or Comma But death enters not into the borders of the heavenly Canaan they say there is no Spider in Ireland it is certain there is no putrid matter in heaven to breed the vermin of mortality in heaven only death cannot live when thou dyest thou shalt rise again and dye no more but death shall dye and shall rise no more thy grave shall be the eternal grave of death It is appointed for all men once to dye and for believers to dye but once Do but clear up thine interest in the death of Christ and thou mayest bid farewell to the fear of death for ever for the worst thing that death can do to thee is thee best thing that can be done for thee even to guide thy poor straying soul home to thy Fathers house and so shalt thou ever be with the Lord. Wherefore comfort one another with these words Lastly It may teach us how to prize Christ Vse 6 that triumphant Grace a Grace that hath eternity stampt upon it it out-lives Faith for faith gives way to vision and it doth out-last hope for hope is swallowed up in fruition what a man seeth why doth he yet hope for Whether there be prophesies they shall fail whether there be tongues they shall cease whether there be knowledge it shall vanish away but charity never fails but as long as God lives it lives for God is love and they that love dwell in God and God in them I have finished I cannot say perfected the main work intended seil the opening of the ten words or Arguments of Comfort here laid down in this model or platform by the Holy Ghost as so many soveraign Cordials to revive disconsolate and fainting Christians over the death of their hopeful Relations with the several improvements which each word by it self may afford unto us But before I do Manum de tabula tollere dismiss this discourse I do observe divers useful Corollaries and Instructions lye couched in the general improvement of these words Comforting one another which will serve as so many branches of information which without guilt I cannot omit and they are ten 1. Several branches of Information arising from this general exhortation Comfort one another 1. Branch of Information Sorrow