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A62634 Several discourses viz. Proving Jesus to be the Messias. The prejudices against Jesus and his religion consider'd. Jesus the Son of God, proved by his Resurrection. The danger of apostacy from Christianity. Christ the author: obedience the condition of salvation. The possibility and necessity of gospel obedience, and its consistence with free grace. The authority of Jesus Christ, with the commission and promise which he gave to his apostles. The difficulties of a Christian life consider'd. The parable of the rich man and Lazarus. Children of this world wiser than the children of light. By the most reverend Dr. John Tillotson, late Lord Arch-Bishop of Canterbury. Being the fifth volume; published from the originals, by Ralph Barker, D.D. chaplain to his Grace. Tillotson, John, 1630-1694.; Barker, Ralph, 1648-1708, 1698 (1698) Wing T1262A; ESTC R222204 187,258 485

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to us Pardon of Sin in the Blood of his Son and Eternal Life and Happiness in another World This is a short Sum and Abridgment of the Christian Religion and there is nothing of all this that can reasonably be excepted against 4. God considering the Prejudice of the Heathen against Christianity by reason of their Education in a contrary Religion was strong and violent was pleased to give such Evidence of the Truth of Christianity as was of proportionable Strength and Force to remove and conquer this Prejudice He was pleased to give Testimony to the first Founder of this Religion by mighty Miracles and particularly by his Resurrection from the Dead But because the Report of these things was only brought to the Heathen World and they had not seen these things themselves therefore he enabled those who were the Witnesses of these Things to the World to work as great Miracles as he had done And when they saw those who gave Testimony to our Saviour's Miracles do as great and strange things themselves as they testified of him there was no Reason any longer to doubt of the Truth of their Testimony So that though the Prejudice of the Heathen against Christianity was very great yet the Evidence which God gave to it was strong enough to remove it The Doctrine of Christianity was such as might have recommended it self to impartial Men by its own Reasonableness But meeting with violent Prejudices in those to whom it was offer'd God was pleased to give such a Confirmation to it as was sufficient to bear down those Prejudices Secondly Another Objection against Christianity was the Plainness and Simplicity of the Doctrine They expected some deep Speculations in Natural or Moral Philosophy they made full Account a Teacher sent from Heaven would have instructed them in the profoundest Points and discoursed to them about the first Principles of things and the Nature of the Soul and the chief end of Man with a Subtilty and Eloquence infinitely beyond that of their greatest Sophisters and able to bear down all Opposition and Contradiction But instead of this they are told a plain Story of the Life and Miracles of Jesus Christ and of his dying upon the Cross and rising from the Dead and ascending into Heaven and a few plain Precepts of Life and all this deliver'd without any Ornaments of Art or Insinuation of Eloquence to gain the Favour and Applause of those to whom they related these Things But now this truly considered is so far from being any real Objection against the Christian Doctrine that it is one of the greatest Commendations that can be given of it For matter of Fact ought to be related in the most plain and simple and unaffected manner and the less Art and Eloquence is used in the telling of a Story the more likely it is to gain Belief And as for our Saviour's Precepts how plain soever they might be I am sure they are a Collection of the most excellent and reasonable Rules of a good Life and the freest from all Vanity and Folly that are to be met with in any Book in the World And can any thing be more worthy of God and more likely to proceed from him than so plain and useful a Doctrine as this The Language of Law is not wont to be fine and perswasive but short and plain and full of Authority Thus it is among Men And surely it is much fitter for God to speak thus to Men than for Men to one another Thirdly It is objected that the Doctrine of our Saviour and his Apostles wanted Demonstration they seemed to impose too much upon the Understandings of Men and to deliver things too Magisterially not demonstrating Things from Intrinsical Arguments but requiring Belief and Assent without Proof This the Apostle St. Paul readily acknowledgeth that in preaching the Gospel to the World they did not proceed in the way of the Heathen Orators and Philosophers 1 Cor. 4. 4. My Speech and my Preaching was not in the enticing Words of Man's Wisdom but in Demonstration of the Spirit and of Power that is they did not go in the way of Human Eloquence and Demonstration but yet their Doctrine did not want its Evidence and Demonstration though of another kind They did not go about to bewitch Men by Eloquence nor to entangle their Minds by subtil Reasonings the Force of which very few are capable of But they offer'd to Men a sensible Proof and Demonstration of the Truth of what they delivered in those strange and miraculous Operations to which they were enabled by the Holy Ghost And this was a sensible Evidence even to the meanest Capacity of a Divine Assistance going along with them and giving Testimony to them I appeal to any Man whether the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the Dead and his Ascending into Heaven be not a clearer Demonstration of another Life after this and more level to the Capacities of all Mankind than the finest and subtilest Arguments that can be drawn from the immaterial Nature of the Soul its power of Reflection upon it self and Independency upon the Body as to some of its Operations which yet are some of the chiefest Arguments that Philosophy affords to prove the Immortality of our Souls Fourthly The Heathens objected that the low and mean Condition of our Saviour was unsuitable to one who pretended to be the Son of God and to be appointed by God to be a Teacher and Reformer of the World This to the Heathen Philosophers did not only appear unreasonable but even ridiculous So St. Paul tells us 1 Cor. 1. 23. We preach Christ crucified to the Jews a stumbling block and to the Greeks Foolishness To think that a Man who appeared in such mean Circumstances should be fit to reform the World and one who himself was put to Death should be relyed upon for Life and Immortality This Objection I have heretofore considered at large and therefore shall now speak but very briefly to it Besides those excellent Reasons and Ends which the Scripture assigns of our Saviour's Humiliation as that he might be a Teacher and Example to us that he might make Expiation for our Sins that by suffering himself he might learn to commiserate us that by Death he might destroy him that had the Power of Death that is the Devil and might deliver those who through fear of Death were all their lives subject to Bondage I say besides these it was of great use that he should live in so mean and afflicted Condition to confront the Pride and Vanity and Fantastry of the World and to convince Men of these two great Truths that God may love those whom he afflicts and that Men may be innocent and virtuous and contented in the midst of Poverty and Reproach and Suffering Had our Blessed Saviour been a great Temporal Prince his Influence and Example might possibly have made more Hypocrites and servile Converts but would not have perswaded Men one jot more
which they took against him upon account of his Extraction and Original Secondly At the Meanness of his Condition contrary to their Universal Expectation Thirdly As to his Miracles Fourthly His Conversation Fifthly The Prejudice that lay against him from the Opposition that was made by Persons of greatest Knowledge and Authority among them And Lastly That the Religion which he endeavour'd to introduce did abolish and supersede their ancient Religion as of no longer Use and Continuance though it was plain it was at first instituted by God First The Exceptions which they took at his Extraction and Original In relation to this they were offended at three Things 1. That his Original was known among them This you find urged against him John 7. 27. We know this Man whence he is but when the Messias comes no Man knows whence he is This to be sure was no just Exception in reason against him For what if his Extraction were known might he not be from God for all that They owned Moses for the greatest Prophet that ever was and yet it was very well known from whence he was But they seem to refer to some Prophecy of the Old Testament which did seem to assert so much If they meant that his Extraction should be altogether unknown they knew very well and believed the contrary that he was to be of the Line of David and to come out of Bethlehem If they referr'd to that Prophecy that a Virgin should conceive and bear a Son and so understood that he should be without Father this was really true tho' they thought that he was the Son of Joseph And if he affirmed that he had no Father he did sufficiently justifie it by his Miracles that being as easie to be believed possible by a Divine Power as the Miracles which he wrought which yet they could not deny because they saw them 2. Another Prejudice against his Extraction was the Meanness of his Parents and Breeding This you find mentioned Matth. 13. 54 55. Whence hath this Man this Wisdom and these mighty Works Is not this the Carpenter's Son is not his Mother called Mary and his Brethren James and Joses and Simon and Judas And his Sisters are they not all with us Whence then hath this Man these things And they were offended in him And so likewise John 7. 15. How knoweth this Man Letters having never learned A strange Prejudice and most unreasonable They could not believe him to be an extraordinary Person because his Parents and Relations his Birth and Breeding were so mean He had been brought up to a Trade and not brought up to Learning whereas in Reason this ought to have been an Argument just the other way that he was an extraordinary Person and Divinely assisted who all on the sudden without the help and assistance of Education gave such Evidence of his great Wisdom and Knowledge and did such mighty Works This could not be imputed to his Breeding for that was mean therefore there must be something Extraordinary and Divine in it Thus another Man who had been free from Prejudice would have reasoned 3. The most unreasonable Prejudice of all in respect of his Extraction was grounded upon a spiteful and malicious Proverb concerning the Country where our Saviour was brought up and they supposed him to be born and that was Galilee John 1. 46. Can any good thing come out of Nazareth And John 7. 41. Shall the Messias come out of Galilee And v. 52. Search and look for out of Galilee ariseth no Prophet But it seems Nathanael who was a good Man was easily taken off from this common Prejudice when Philip said to him come and see He bids him come and see the Works he did and then refers it to him whether he would believe his own Eyes or an old Proverb However it seems the Jews laid great weight upon it as if this alone were enough to confute all his Miracles and after they had shot this Bolt at him the Business were concluded clearly against him But prudent and considerate Men do not use to give much Credit to ill-natur'd Proverbs the good or bad Characters which are given of Countreys are not understood to be universally true and without Exception There is no place but hath brought forth some brave Spirits and excellent Persons whatever the general Temper and Disposition of the Inhabitants may be Among the Grecians the Beotians were esteemed a dull People even to a Proverb and yet Pindar one of their chief Poets was one of them The Scythians were a barbarous Nation and one would have thought no good could have come from thence and yet that Country yielded Anacharsis an eminent Philosopher The Idumeans were Aliens and Strangers to the Covenant and yet Job one of the best Men that ever was came from thence God can raise up eminent Persons from any place Abraham from Vr of the Chaldees and an Idolatrous People Nay as our Saviour tells us he can out of Stones raise up Children unto Abraham The wise God in the Government of the World does not tie himself to our foolish Proverbs It is not necessary to make a Man a Prophet that he should be bred in a good Air. If God sends a Man it matters not from what Place he comes Secondly Another Head of Exception against our Saviour was the meanness of his outward Condition so contrary to the Universal Expectation of the Jews The Jews from the Tradition of their Fathers to which they as the Church of Rome does at this Day paid a greater Reverence than to the written word of God were possest with a strong Perswasion that the Messias whom they expected was to be a great Prince and Conqueror and to subdue all Nations to them so that nothing could be a greater defeat to their Expectations than the mean and low Condition in which our Saviour appeared so that upon this Account they were almost universally offended at him But this Prejudice was very unreasonable For neither did their Prophets foretel any such thing as the Temporal Greatness of the Messias But on the contrary most expresly that he should be despised and rejected of Men that he should be a Man of Sorrows and Sufferings and at last be put to death which was directly contrary to what they expected from their ill grounded Tradition Thirdly Against his Miracles they made these two Exceptions 1. That he wrought them by Magical Skill and by the Power of the Devil Which was so exorbitantly unreasonable and malicious that our Saviour pronounceth it to be an unpardonable Sin and for Answer to it appeals to every Man's Reason whether it was likely that the Devil should conspire against himself and assist any Man to overthrow his own Kingdom For it was plain our Saviour's Doctrine was directly contrary to the Devil's Design and therefore to assist him to work Miracles for the Confirmation of it must have been apparently against his own Interest and to the Ruin of
concluded that if he were permitted to go on and work Miracles he would draw all men after him What do we say they for this man doth many Miracles if we let him thus alone all men will believe on him This they said upon occasion of the great Miracle of raising Lazarus from the Dead And in Reason Miracles are the highest Attestation that can be given to the Truth and Divinity of any Doctrine and supposing a Doctrine not to be plainly unworthy of God and contrary to those natural Notions which Men have of God and Religion we can have no greater Evidence of the truth of it than Miracles they are such an argument as in its own nature is apt to perswade and induce belief All Truths do not need Miracles some are of easie belief and are so clear by their own light that they need neither Miracle nor Demonstration to prove them Such are those self-evident Principles which Mankind do generally agree in others which are not so evident by their own light we are content to receive upon clear demonstration of them or very probable Arguments for them without a Miracle And there are some Truths which however they may be sufficiently obscure and uncertain to most Men yet are they so inconsiderable and of so small consequence as not to deserve the attestation of Miracles so that there is no reason to expect that God should interpose by a Miracle to convince Men of them Nec Deus intersit nisi dignus vindice nodus Inciderit But for such Truths as are necessary to be known by us but are not sufficiently evident of themselves nor capable of cogent Evidence especially to prejudiced and interested Persons God is pleased in this Case many times to work Miracles for our Conviction and they are a proper Argument to convince us of a thing that is either in it self obscure and hard to be believed or which we are prejudiced against and hardly brought to believe for they are an Argument à Majori ad Minus they prove a thing which is obscure and hard to be believed by something that is more incredible which yet they cannot deny because they see it done Thus our Saviour proves himself to be an extraordinary Person by doing such things as never man did he convinceth them that they ought to believe what he said because they saw him do those things which were harder to be believed if one had not seen them than what he said Miracles are indeed the greatest external confirmation and evidence that can be given to the truth of any Doctrine and where they are wrought with all the advantages they are capable of they are an unquestionable demonstration of the truth of it and such were our Saviour's Miracles here in the Text to prove that he was the true Messias here are Miracles of all kinds the blind receive their sight and the lame walk the lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear and the dead are raised up For the nature of them they are such as are most likely to be Divine and to come from God for they were healing and beneficial to Mankind Our Saviour here instanceth in those things which are of greatest benefit and advantage and which free Men from the greatest miseries and inconveniencies the restoring of sight to the Blind and hearing to the Deaf soundness and health to the Lame and the Leprous and life to the Dead And then for the number of them they were many not one instance of a kind but several of every kind and great multitudes of most of them and for the manner of their operation they were publick in the sight and view of great multitudes of People to free them from all suspicion of fraud and imposture they were not wrought privately and in corners and given out and noised abroad but before all the People so that every one might see them and judge of them not only among his own Disciples and Followers as the Church of Rome pretends to work theirs but among his Enemies to convince those that did not believe and this not done once and in one place but at several times and in all places where he came and for a long time for three years and a half and after his death he endowed his Disciples and Followers with the same power which lasted for some Ages And then for the quality of them they were Miracles of the greatest magnitude those of them which in themselves might have been performed by natural means as healing the Lame and the Leprous and the Deaf he did in a miraculous manner by a word or a touch yea and many times at a great distance But others were not only in the manner of their operation but in the nature of the thing unquestionably miraculous as giving of sight to those that had been born blind and raising up the dead to life as Lazarus after he had lain in the grave four days and himself afterterwards the third day after he had been buried which if there ever was or can be any unquestionable Miracles in the World ought certainly to be reputed such So that our blessed Saviour had all the Attestation that Miracles can give that he came from God And this is the first Evidence of his being the Messias The Jews acknowledge that the Messias when he comes shall work great Miracles and their own Talmud confesseth that Jesus the Son of Joseph and Mary did work great Miracles and the History of the Gospel does particularly relate more and greater Miracles wrought by him than by Moses and all the Prophets that had been since the World began so that we may still put the same question to the Jews which they did in our Saviour's time to one another when Christ cometh when the Messias whom ye expect comes will he do more Miracles than these which this Man hath done But Secondly this will yet more clearly appear by the correspondency of the things here mentioned with what was foretold by the Prophets concerning the Messias Not to mention innumerable Circumstances of his Birth and Life and Death and Resurrection and Ascension into Heaven together with the success and prevalency of his Doctrine in the World all which are punctually foretold by some or other of the Prophets I shall confine my self to the particulars here in the Text. First It was foretold of the Messias that he should work miraculous Cures Isa 35. 4 5 6. speaking of the Messias he will come and save you then the eyes of the blind shall be opened and the ears of the deaf shall be unstop'd then shall the lame man leap as an Hart and the tongue of the dumb sing this you see was fulfilled here in the Text. 'T is true indeed the Text mentions another Miracle which is not in the Prophet that he raised the dead but if God did more than he promised and foretold this is no prejudice to the argument if all that he foretold was accomplish'd in him
to be inwardly good and virtuous The great Arguments that must do that must be fetched not from the Pomp and Prosperity of this World but from the Eternal Happiness and Misery of the other Besides had he appeared in any great Power and Splendor the Christian Religion could not have been so clearly acquitted from the Suspicion of a worldly Interest and Design which would have been a far greater Objection against it than this which I am now speaking to Add to all this that the wisest of the Heathen Philosophers did teach that Worldly Greatness and Power are not to be admired but despised by a truly wise Man that Men may be virtuous and good and dearly beloved of God and yet be liable to great Miseries and Sufferings and whoever suffers unjustly and bears it patiently gives the greatest Testimony to Goodness and does most effectually recommend Virtue to the World That a good Man under the hardest Circumstances of Misery and Reproach and Suffering is the fittest Person of all other to be the Minister and Apostle and Preacher of God to Mankind And surely they who say such things which the Heathen have done had no reason to object to our blessed Saviour his low and suffering Condition As to that part of the Objection that he who promis'd Immortality to others could not save himself from Death and Suffering considering that he who was put to Death rescu'd himself from the Power of the Grave it is so far from being ridiculous that nothing can be more reasonable than to rely upon him for our hopes of Immortality who by rising from the Grave and conquering Death gave a plain demonstration that he was able to make good what he promised I have done with the Exceptions which were made against our Saviour and his Doctrine at their first Appearance in the World I proceed in the II. Place to consider the Prejudices and Objections which Men at this day do more especially insist upon against our Saviour and his Religion And they are many First Some that relate to the Incarnation of our Saviour Secondly To the Time of his Appearance Thirdly That we have not now sufficient Evidence of the Truth of Christianity the main Arguments for it relying upon Matters of Fact of which at this distance we have not nor can expect to have sufficient Assurance Fourthly That the Terms of it seem very hard and to lay too great Restraints upon Human Nature Fifthly That it is apt to dispirit Men and to break the Vigour and Courage of their Minds Sixthly The Divisions and Factions that are among Christians Seventhly The wicked Lives of the greatest part of the Professors of Christianty In answer to all which I do not propose to say all that may be said but as briefly as I can to offer so much as may if not give full Satisfaction yet be sufficient to break the Force of them and to free the Minds of Men from any great Perplexity about them As to the First which relates to the Incarnation of our Saviour and the Second to the Time of his Appearance I know that these and most of the rest I have mention'd were urged by the Heathen against Christianity But they are now more especially insisted upon both by the secret and open Enemies of our Religion The Objections against his Incarnation I have elswhere consider'd And therefore shall proceed to the John 1. 14. Serm. III. next viz. Secondly As to the Time of our Saviour's Appearance it is objected if he be the only Way and Means of Salvation why did he come no sooner into the World but suffer'd Mankind so long without any Hopes or Means of being saved This was objected by Porphyry of old and still sticks in the Minds of Men. To this I answer I. It is not fit for Creatures to call their Creator to too strict an Account of his Actions Goodness is free and may act when and how it pleaseth and as God will have Mercy on whom he will have Mercy so he may have Mercy at what Time he pleaseth and is not bound to give us an Account of his Matters This is much like the Objection of the Atheist against the Being of God That if there were such an Infinite and Eternal Being he would surely have made the World sooner and not have been without all Employment for so long a duration Such another Objection is this against our Saviour That if he had been the Son of God he would have begun this great and merciful Work of the Redemption of Mankind sooner and not have delay'd it so long and suffer'd Mankind to perish for four Thousand Years together But it seems in the one as well as the other God took his own time and he best knew what time was fittest The Scripture tells us That in the fulness of Time God sent his Son when things were ripe for it and all Things accomplisht that God thought requisite in order to it In judging of the Actions of our Earthly Governours those who are at a distance from their Councils what Conjectures soever they may make of the Reasons of them will neverthe less if they have that Respect for their Wisdom which they ought believe that how strange soever some of their Actions may seem yet they were done upon good Reason and that they themselves if they knew the Secrets of their Counsels should think so Much more do we owe that Reverence to the infinite Wisdom of God to believe that the Counsels of his Will are grounded upon very good Reason tho' we do not see many Times what it is 2. It is not true that the World was wholly destitute of a Way and Means of Salvation before our Saviour's coming Before the Law of Moses was given Men were capable of being received to the Mercy and Favour of God upon their Obedience to the Law of Nature and their sincere Repentance for the Violation of it by virtue of the Lamb that was slain from the Foundation of the World Men were saved by Christ both before and under the Law without any particular and express Knowledge of him There were Good Men in other Nations as well as among the Jews as Job and his Friends also seem to have been In all Ages of the World and in every Nation they that feared God and wrought Righteousness were accepted of him The Sacrifice of Christ which is the Meritorious Cause of the Salvation of Mankind looks back as well as forward and God was reconcileable to Men and their Sins were pardon'd by Virtue of this great Propitiation that was to be made In which Sense perhaps it is that Christ is said to be the Lamb slain from the Foundation of the World Heb. 9. 25 26 the Apostle intimates to us that if this Sacrifice which was offer'd in the last Ages of the World had not been available in former Ages Christ must have often suffer'd since the Foundation of the World but now hath he
appeared once in the Conclusion of the Ages to put away Sin by the Sacrifice of himself 3. He did appear at that Time in which the World stood most in need of him when the whole World both Jews and Gentiles were sunk into the greatest Degeneracy both in Opinion and Practice and the Condition of Mankind seemed to be even desperate and past Remedy This was the needful time when it was most seasonable for this great Physician to come and show his Pity and Skill in our Recovery God could have sent his Son many Ages before but he thought fit to try other ways first and to reserve this powerful Remedy to the last last of all he sent his Son 4. The Time of our Saviour's Appearing was of all Ages of the World the fittest Season for his Coming Whether we consider 1. That the World was at that Time best prepared and disposed for receiving the Christian Religion Or 2. That this was the fittest Season that ever had been for the easie diffusing and propagating of this Religion I assign these Reasons as tending to give Men some Satisfaction why this great Blessing was delay'd so long it being rather an Argument of Wisdom and Goodness than of the want of either to defer Things to that time in which they are most likely to have their effect Not but that perhaps other and better Reasons may be given To be sure God had very good Reasons for this Dispensation whether we can hit upon them or not In the mean Time these seem not to be altogether inconsiderable 1. That the World was at that time best prepared and disposed for receiving the Christian Religion All the while our Saviour's Coming was delay'd God's Providence was disposing things for it and training up Mankind for the entertaining of this great Blessing The Jewish Religion was always very burdensom but much more so towards the Expiration of the Jewish State partly by the Intolerable Multitude of external Observances which were daily multiplyed upon them under Pretence of Traditions from their Fathers and partly by reason of their Subjection to the Romans which made the Exercise of their Religion in many Respects more difficult And the Heathen World was in a very good Measure prepared for Christianity by being civilized About the time of our Saviour's coming into the World Philosophy and Learning had been so diffused by the Roman Conquests as had brought a great part of the World from Barbarism to Civility Besides that their Philosophy had this Effect upon Men to refine their Reason and in a good Degree to detect the Follies of the Heathen Idolatry and Superstition 'T is true indeed Learning and Philosophy flourisht a great while before in the Time of the Grecian Empire and perhaps before that in some other Nations and the Conquests of the Grecians were very speedy and of vast Extent But yet they were neither so Universal nor so well settled nor did they propagate their Philosophy and Civility together with their Conquests as the Romans did So that there was no Age of the World wherein Mankind were so generally prepared and disposed for the receiving of the Gospel as that wherein our Saviour appeared 2. This was likewise the fittest Season for the easie diffusing and propagating of the Christian Religion The Romans together with their Conquests did very much propagate their Language which made the ways of Communication far more easie And by the long and frequent Correspondence of the several Parts of that Empire one with another the ways of Travel and Passage from one Country to another were more ready and open So that no Age can be instanc'd in all Respects so convenient for the speedy propagating of a new Religion as that wherein our Saviour appear'd viz. when the Roman Empire was at its height And it was very agreeable to the Goodness and Wisdom of the Divine Providence that the bravest and most virtuous People in the World infinitely beyond either the Persians or Grecians should be chosen by God as one of the chiefest Means for the spreading of the best and most perfect Revelation that ever God made to the World Thirdly It is objected that we have not now sufficient Evidence of the Truth of Christianity the main Arguments for it relying upon matters of Fact of which at this Distance we have not nor can be suppos'd to have sufficient Assurance To this I answer 1. That Men not only may have but have an undoubted Assurance of matters of Fact ancienter than these we are speaking of and the distance of them from our Times creates no manner of Scruple in the Minds of Men concerning them That there was such a Man as Alexander the Great and that he conquer'd Darius and the Persians That Julius Caesar invaded our Nation and in some measure subdued it and that he overcame Pompey in the Battel of Pharsalia and innumerable other Things which I might instance in that were done before our Saviour's Time are firmly believed without any manner of Doubt and Scruple by Mankind notwithstanding they were done so long ago So that ancient matters of Fact are capable of clear Evidence and we may have sufficient Assurance of them And where there is equal Evidence if we do not give equal Belief the fault is not in the Argument but in the Passion or Prejudice of those to whom it is proposed 2. We have every whit as great Assurance nay greater if it can or needed to be of the matters upon which the proof of Christianity relies as of those which I have mentioned The matters of Fact upon which the Truth of Christianity relies are that there was such a Person as Jesus Christ that he wrought such Miracles that he was put to death at Jerusalem under Pontius Pilate that he rose again from the dead and was visibly taken up into Heaven that he bestowed miraculous Gifts and Powers upon the Apostles to make them competent Witnesses of his Resurrection and of the Truth of that Doctrine which they publisht in his Name that accordingly they preached the Gospel to the World and in a short space without any Human Advantages did propagate it and gain Entertainment for it in most parts of the then known World Now these matters of Fact have the same Testimony of Histories wrote in those Times and conveyed down to us by as general and uncontroled a Tradition as the Conquests of Alexander and Julius Caesar So that if we do not afford equal Belief to them it is a sign that we have some Prejudice or Interest against the one more than against the other though the Evidence for both be equal Nay I go further that the Evidence for these things which are the Foundation of Christianity is so much the greater because that which depended upon it was of far greater Concernment to the World and consequently Mankind were more obliged to search more narrowly into it For our Saviour's Life and Death and Resurrection we have the
called the Son of God St. Luke most expresly tells us Luke 1. 35. where the Angel tells the Virgin Mary that the Holy Ghost should come upon her and the Power of the Highest should overshadow her and therefore that Holy Thing which should be born of her should be call'd the Son of God And this our Saviour means by the Father's sanctifying him and sending him into the World For which Reason he says he might justly call himself the Son of God John 10. 35 36. If he call them Gods unto whom the word of God came and the Scripture cannot be broken Say ye of him whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the World Thou blasphemest because I said I am the Son of God If there had been no other Reason this had been sufficient to have given him the Title of the Son of God that he was brought into the World by the Sanctification or Divine Power of the Holy Ghost 2. Christ is also said in Scripture to be the Son of God and to be declared to be so upon Account of his Resurrection from the Dead by the Power of the Holy Ghost His Resurrection from the Dead is here in the Text ascribed to the Spirit of Holiness or the Holy Ghost And so in other places of Scripture Rom. 8. 11. If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the Dead dwell in you And 1 Pet. 3. 18. Being put to Death in the Flesh but quickned by the Spirit that is he suffer'd in that frail mortal Nature which he assumed but was raised again by the Power of the Holy Ghost of the Spirit of God which resided in him And upon this Account he is expresly said in Scripture to be the Son of God Psa 2. 7. I will declare the decree The Lord hath said unto me thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee to which perhaps the Apostle alludes here in the Text when he says that Christ was decreed to be the Son of God by his Resurrection from the Dead To be sure these Words this day have I begotten thee St. Paul expresly tells us were accomplisht in the Resurrection of Christ as if God by raising him from the Dead had begotten him and decreed him to be his Son Acts 13. 32 33. And we declare unto you glad Tidings how that the Promise which was made unto the Fathers God hath fulfilled the same unto their Children in that he hath raised up Jesus again as it is also written in the second Psalm Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee He was the Son of God before as he was conceived by the Holy Ghost but this was secret and invisible and known only to the Mother of our Lord And therefore God thought fit to give a publick and visible demonstration of it so as to put the matter out of all question he declared him in a powerful manner to be his Son by giving him a new Life after Death by raising him from the Dead and by this new and eminent Testimony given to him declared him again to be his Son and confirmed the Title which was given him before upon a true but more secret Account of his being conceived by the Holy Ghost And as our Saviour is said to be the Son of God upon this twofold Account of his Conception by the Holy Ghost and his Resurrection to Life by the Spirit of God So the Scripture which does solicitously pursue a Resemblance and Conformity between Christ and Christians does likewise upon a twofold Account answerable to our Saviour's Birth and Resurrection call true Believers and Christians the Children of God viz. Upon Account of their Regeneration or new Birth by the Operation of the Spirit of God and upon Account of their Resurrection to Eternal Life by the Power of the same Spirit Upon account of our Regeneration and becoming Christians by the Power and Operation of the Holy Spirit of God upon our Minds we are said to be the Children of God as being regenerated and born again by the Holy Spirit of God And this is our first Adoption And for this Reason the Spirit of God conferred upon Christians at their Baptism and dwelling and residing in them afterwards is call'd the Spirit of Adoption Rom. 8. 15. Ye have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby you cry Abba Father And Gal. 4. 5 6. Believers are said to receive the Adoption of Sons God having sent forth the Spirit of his Son into their Hearts crying Abba Father That is all Christians for as much as they are regenerated by the Holy Spirit of God and have the Spirit of God dwelling in them may with Confidence call God Father and look upon themselves as his Children So the Apostle tells us Rom. 8. 14. That as many as are led or acted by the Spirit of God are the Sons of God But though we are said to be Children of God upon account of our Regeneration and the Holy Spirit of God dwelling and residing in Christians yet we are eminently so upon account of our Resurrection to Eternal Life by the mighty Power of God's Spirit This is our final Adoption and the Consummation of it and therefore Rom. 8. 21. this is called the glorious Liberty of the Sons of God because by this we are for ever deliver'd from the Bondage of Corruption and by way of Eminency the Adoption viz. the Redemption of our Bodies We are indeed the Sons of God before upon account of the regenerating and sanctifying Virtue of the Holy Ghost but finally and chiefly upon account of our Resurrection by the Power of the Divine Spirit So St. John tells us that then we shall be declared to be the Sons of God after another manner than we are now 1 Jo. 3. 1. Behold what manner of Love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sons of God Now we are the Sons of God that is our Adoption is begun in our Regeneration and Sanctification but it doth not yet appear what we shall be we shall be much more eminently so at the Resurrection We know that when he shall appear we shall be like him But the most express and remarkable Text to this Purpose is Luke 20. 36. where good Men after the Resurrection are for this Reason said to be the Children of God because they are the Children of the Resurrection But they who shall be accounted worthy to obtain that World and the Resurrection from the Dead neither marry nor are given in Marriage neither can they die any more for they are equal to the Angels and are the Children of God being the Children of the Resurrection For this Reason they are said to be the Children of God because they are raised by him to a new Life and to be made Partakers of that which is promised to them and reserved for them For all that are raised by the Power of God out of the Dust of the Earth are not therefore
laid the main stress as being a thing that would condemn him by their Law They charged him with this in his life-time as appears by those Words of our Saviour John 10. 36. Say ye of him whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the World Thou blasphemest because I said I am the Son of God And when he was arraigned before the Chief Priests they accused him of this and he owning this Charge that he call'd himself the Son of God upon this they judge him guilty of Death Matth. 26. 65 66. Then the High-Priest rent his Cloaths and said He hath spoken Blasphemy what further need have we of witness Behold now ye have heard his Blasphemy What think ye They answered He is guilty of Death And when Pilate told them that he found no Fault in him they still instance in this as his Crime John 19. 7. We have a Law and by our Law he ought to die because he made himself the Son of God Now this being the Crime which was charged upon him and for which he was crucified and put to Death God by raising him up from the dead and taking him up into Heaven gave Testimony to him that he was no Impostor and that he did not vainly arrogate to himself to be the Messias and the Son of God God by raising him from the dead by the Power of the Holy Ghost gave a mighty Demonstration to him that he was the Son of God For which Reason he is said by the Apostle 1 Tim. 3. 16. to be justified by the Spirit The Spirit gave Testimony to him at his Baptism and by the mighty Works that appeared in him in his Life time but he was most eminently and remarkably justified by the Holy Ghost by his Resurrection from the Dead God hereby bearing him Witness that he was unjustly condemned and that he assumed nothing to himself but what of right did belong to him when he said he was the Messias and the Son of God For how could a Man that was condemned to die for calling himself the Son of God be more remarkably vindicated and more clearly proved to be so than by being raised from the dead by the Power of God And 2dly God did consequently hereby give Testimony to the Truth and Divinity of our Saviour's Doctrine Being proved by his Resurrection to be the Son of God this proved him to be a Teacher sent by him and that what he declared to the World was the Mind and Will of God For this none was more likely to know and to report truly to Mankind than the Son of God who came from the Bosom of his Father And because the Resurrection of Christ is so great a Testimony to the Truth of his Doctrine hence it is that St. Paul tells us that the belief of this one Article of Christ's Resurrection is sufficient to a Man's Salvation Rom. 10. 9. If thou shalt confess with thy Mouth the Lord Jesus and shalt believe in thy Heart that God hath raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved The Reason is plain because the Resurrection of Christ confirmed the Truth and Divinity of his Doctrine so that the belief of our Saviour's Resurrection does by necessary Consequence infer the belief of his whole Doctrine That God raised him from the dead after he was condemned and put to Death for calling himself the Son of God is a demonstration that he really was the Son of God and if he was the Son of God the Doctrine which he taught was true and from God And thus I have shewn you how the Resurrection of Christ from the dead is a powerful Demonstration that he was the Son of God All that remains is briefly to draw some practical Inferences from the Consideration of our Saviour's Resurrection 1st To confirm and establish our Minds in the belief of the Christian Religion of which the Resurrection of Christ from the Dead is so great a Confirmation And therefore I told you that this one Article is mentioned by St. Paul as the Sum and Abridgment of the Christian Faith If thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus Christ and believe in thy heart that God hath raised him from the Dead thou shalt be saved The belief of our Saviour's Resurrection doth by necessary consequence infer the belief of his whole Doctrine for he who believes that God raised him from the Dead after he was put to death for calling himself the Son of God cannot but believe him to be the Son of God and consequently that the Doctrine which he delivered was from God 2dly The Resurrection of Christ from the Dead assures us of a future Judgment and of the Recompences and Rewards of another World That Christ was raised from the Dead is a demonstration of another Life after this and no man that believes the immortality of our Souls and another Life after this ever doubted of a future Judgment so that by the Resurrection of Christ from the Dead God hath given assurance unto all men of a future Judgment and consequently of the Recompences and Rewards of another World The consideration whereof ought to have a mighty influence upon us more especially to these three purposes 1st To raise our minds above the present Enjoyments of this Life Were but men convinced of this great and obvious Truth that there is an infinite difference between Time and Eternity between a few days and everlasting Ages would we but sometimes represent to our selves what thoughts and apprehensions dying Men have of this World how vain and empty a thing it appears to them how like a Pageant and Shadow it looks as it passeth away from them methinks none of these things could be a sufficient temptation to any Man to forget God and his Soul but notwithstanding all the present delights and allurements of Sense we should be strongly intent upon the concernments of another World and almost wholly taken up with the thoughts of the vast Eternity which we are ready to enter into For what is there in this World this vast and howling Wilderness this rude and barbarous Country which we are but to pass through which should detain and entangle our Affections and take off our Thoughts from our Everlasting Habitation from that better and that heavenly Country where we hope to live and to be happy for ever 2dly The Consideration of the Rewards of another World should comfort and support us under the troubles and afflictions of this World The hopes of a blessed Resurrection are a very proper Consideration to bear us up under the evils and pressures of this Life If we hope for so great a Happiness hereafter we may be contented to bear some Afflictions in this World because the Blessedness which we expect will so abundantly recompence and outweigh our present Sufferings So the Apostle assures us Rom. 8. 18. We know that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the Glory that
a very sad and desperate Condition the very nature of whose Disease is to reject the Remedy that should cure him And this the Apostle tells us was the Condition of those who apostatized from the Gospel Chap. 10. 26 27. For if we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for Sin but a certain fearful looking for of Judgment and fiery Indignation which shall devour the Adversary The great Sacrifice and Propitiation for Sin was the Son of God and they who renounce him what way of Expiation can they hope for afterward what can they expect but to fall into his Hands as a Judge whom they have rejected as a Sacrifice and a Saviour And then 3dly Those who are guilty of this Sin provoke God in the highest manner to withdraw his Grace and Holy Spirit from them by the Power and Efficacy whereof they should be brought to Repentance so that it can hardly otherwise be expected but that God should leave those to themselves who have so unworthily forsaken him and wholly withdraw his Grace and Spirit from such Persons as have so notoriously offer'd despite to the Spirit of Grace I do not say that God always does this he is sometimes better to such Persons than they have deserved from him and saves those who have done what they can to undo themselves and mercifully puts forth his Hand to recover them who were drawing back to Perdition especially if they were suddenly surprized by the violence of Temptation and yielded to it not deliberately and out of choice but merely through weakness and infirmity and so soon as they reflected upon themselves did return and repent This was the case of St. Peter who being surprized with a sudden fear denied Christ but being admonish'd of his Sin by the signal which our Saviour had given him he was recovered by a speedy and hearty Repentance And so likewise several of the Primitive Christians who were at first overcome by fear to renounce their Religion did afterwards recover themselves and died resolute Martyrs but it is a very dangerous State out of which but few recover and with great difficulty And thus I have done with the five things I propounded to make out for the clearing of this Text from the mistakes and misapprehensions which have been about it I shall now draw some useful Inferences from hence by way of Application that we may see how far this doth concern our selves and they shall be these 1st From the Supposition here in the Text that such Persons as are there described namely those who have been baptized and by Baptism have received remission of Sins and did firmly believe the Gospel and the Promises of it and were endowed with miraculous Gifts of the Holy Ghost that these may fall away this should caution us all against Confidence and Security when those that have gone thus far may fall let him that standeth take heed Some are of opinion that those whom the Apostle here describes are true and sincere Christians and that when he says it is impossible if they fall away to renew them again to Repentance he means that they cannot fall away totally so as to stand in need of being renewed again to Repentance But this is directly contrary to the Apostle's design which was to caution Christians against Apostacy because if they did fall away their recovery would be so exceeding difficult which Argument does plainly suppose that they might fall away On the other hand there are others who think the Persons here described by the Apostle to be Hypocritical Christians who for some base ends had entertained Christianity and put on the Profession of it but not being sincere and in good earnest would forsake it when Persecution came But besides that this is contrary to the description which the Apostle makes of these Persons who are said to have tasted of the Heavenly Gift and to have been made partakers of the Holy Ghost by which if we understand Justification and Remission of Sins and the Sanctifying Virtue of the Holy Ghost which in all probability is the meaning of these Phrases these are Blessings which did not belong to Hypocrites and which God does not bestow upon them I say besides this there is no reason to imagine that the Apostle intended such Persons when it is likely that there were very few Hypocrites in those times of Persecution for what should tempt Men to dissemble Christianity when it was so dangerous a Profession or what Worldly Ends could Men have in taking that Profession upon them which was so directly contrary to their Worldly Interests So that upon the whole matter I doubt not but the Apostle here means those who are real in the Profession of Christianity and that such might fall away For we may easily imagine that Men might be convinced of the Truth and Goodness of the Christian Doctrine and in good earnest embrace the Profession of it and yet not be so perfectly weaned from the World and so firmly rooted and established in that Perswasion as when it came to the Tryal to be able to quit all for it and to bear up against all the Terrors and Assaults of Persecution so that they might be real Christians and no Hypocrites though they were not so perfectly established and confirmed and so sincerely resolved as many others They were not like St. Paul and those tryed Persons whom he speaks of Rom. 8. 35 37. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword Nay in all these things we are more than Conquerours They had been try'd by all these and yet had held out upon which he breaks out into those triumphant Expressions I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. They might not I say be like those and yet for all that be real in their Profession of Christianity and no Hypocrites In short I take them to be such as our Saviour describes him to be who received the seed into stony places namely he that heareth the word and anon with joy receceiveth it yet hath he not root in himself but dureth for a while for when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word by and by he is offended This is no description of a Hypocrite but of one that was real as far as he went for he is said to receive the word with joy but was not well rooted and come to such a confirmed State as resolutely to withstand the assaults of Persecution So that tho' we have truly embraced Christianity and are in a good degree sincere in the Profession of it yet there is great Reason why we should neither be secure nor confident
Lives remembring that it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God I will conclude with the words of the Apostle immediately after the Text The earth which drinketh in the rain that cometh oft upon it and bringeth forth herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed receiveth blessing from God But that which beareth thorns and briars is rejected and is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned And how gladly would I add the next words But beloved we are perswaded better things of you and things that accompany salvation though we thus speak SERMON VI. Christ the Author and Obedience the Condition of Salvation HEB. V. 9. And being made perfect he became the Author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him THIS is spoken of Christ our great High Priest under the Gospel upon the Excellency of whose Person and the Efficacy of his Sacrifice for the Eternal Benefit and Salvation of Mankind the Apostle insists so largely in this and the following Chapters but the Summ of all is briefly comprehended in the Text that our High Priest being made perfect became the Author of eternal salvation to them that obey him In which words we have these four things considerable 1st The great Blessing and Benefit here spoken of and that is Eternal Salvation and this implies in it not only our Deliverance from Hell and Redemption from Eternal Misery but the obtaining of Eternal Life and Happiness for us 2dly The Author of this great Blessing and Benefit to Mankind and that is Jesus Christ the Son of God who is here represented to us under the notion of our High Priest who by making Atonement for us and reconciling us to God is said to be the Author of Eternal Salvation to Mankind 3dly The Way and Means whereby he became the Author of our Salvation being made perfect he became the Author of Eternal Salvation The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 having consummated his work and finish'd his Course and receiv'd the Reward of it For this word hath an allusion to those that run in a Race where he that wins receives the Crown And to this the Apostle plainly alludes Phil. 3. 12. where he says not as though I had already attained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not as if I had already taken hold of the Prize but I am pressing or reaching forward towards it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or were already perfect that is not as if I had finish'd my Course or had the Prize or Crown in my hand but I am pressing forward towards it In like manner our blessed Saviour when he had finish'd the Course of his Humiliation and Obedience which was accomplish'd in his Sufferings and had receiv'd the Reward of them being risen from the Dead and exalted to the Right Hand of God and crown'd with Glory and Honour he is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made perfect and therefore when he was giving up the Ghost upon the Cross he said John 19. 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is finish'd or perfected that is he had done all that was necessary to be done by way of suffering for our Redemption And the same word is likewise used Luke 13. 32. concerning our Saviour's Sufferings I do cures to day and to morrow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the third day I shall be perfected this he spake concerning his own death And therefore Chap. 2. 10. God is said to make the Captain of our Salvation perfect through Sufferings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And thus our High Priest being made perfect in this Sense that is having finish'd his Course which was accomplished in his Sufferings and having received the Reward of them in being exalted at the Right Hand of God he became the Author of Eternal Salvation to us 4thly You have here the qualification of the Persons who are made Partakers of this great Benefit or the Condition upon which it is suspended and that is Obedience He became the Author of eternal Salvation to them that obey him These are the main things contained in the Text. For the fuller Explication whereof I shall take into consideration these five things 1st How and by what means Christ is the Author of our Salvation 2dly What Obedience the Gospel requires as a Condition and is pleased to accept as a Qualification in those who hope for eternal Salvation 3dly We will consider the possibility of performing this Condition by that Grace and Assistance which is offer'd and ready to be afforded to us by the Gospel 4thly The necessity of this Obedience in order to Eternal Life and Happiness And 5thly I shall shew that this is no prejudice to the Law of Faith and the free Grace and Mercy of God declared in the Gospel 1st We will consider how and by what means Christ is the Author of our Salvation and this is contain'd in these words Being made perfect he became the Author of Eternal Salvation that is as I told you before having finish'd his Course which was accomplish'd in his last Sufferings and having received the Reward of them being exalted at the right hand of God he became the Author of eternal Salvation to us so that by all that he did and suffer'd for us in the days of his Flesh and in the state of his Humiliation and by all that he still continues to do for us now that he is in Heaven at the right hand of God he hath effected and brought about the great Work of our Salvation His Doctrine and his Life his Death and Sufferings his Resurrection from the Dead and his powerful Intercession for us at the Right Hand of God have all a great influence upon the reforming and saving of Mankind and by all these Ways and Means he is the Author and Cause of our Salvation as a Rule and as a Pattern as a Price and Propitiation and as a Patron and Advocate that is continually pleading our Cause and interceding with God on our behalf for mercy and grace to help in time of need And indeed our condition requir'd an High Priest who was qualified in all these respects for the recovery of Mankind out of that corrupt and degenerate state into which it was sunk an High Priest whose lips should preserve knowledge and from whose mouth we might learn the Law of God whose life should be a perfect Pattern of Holiness to us and his Death a propitiation for the sins of the whole World and by whose Grace and Assistance we should be endowed with Power and Strength to mortifie our Lusts and to perfect Holiness in the Fear of God and therefore such an High Priest became us who was holy harmless undefiled and separate from Sinners who might have compassion on the ignorant and them that are out of the way and being himself compast with infirmities might have the feeling of ours being in all points tempted as we are only without sin and in a word might be able to
Temptations of a wicked World and are possest of so great a Happiness by the free Grace and Mercy of God to do any thing whereby they may forfeit their Happiness or so much as to entertain a Thought of offending that God to whom they cannot but be sensible how infinitely they are obliged In this imperfect state few Men have so little Goodness as to sin without a Temptation but in that state where Men are perfectly good and can have no Temptation to be otherwise it is not imaginable that they should fall from that state 2. As to the state of the damned that that likewise is immutable the Scripture does seem plainly enough to assert when it calls it an everlasting Destruction from the presence of the Lord and uses such Expressions to set forth the continuance of their Misery as signifie the longest and most interminable Duration expressions of as great an Extent as those which are used to signifie the Eternal Happiness of the blessed and as large and unlimited as any are to be had in those Languages wherein the Scriptures are written Besides that wicked Men in the other World are in Scripture represented as in the same Condition with the Devils of whom there is no ground to believe that any of them ever did or will repent Not because Repentance is impossible in it's own nature to those that are in extream Misery but because there is no place left for it Being under an irreversible Doom there is no encouragement to Repentance no hope of Mercy and Pardon without which Repentance is impossible For if a Man did utterly despair of Pardon and were assured upon good ground that God would never shew Mercy to him in this case a Man would grow desperate and not care what he did He that knows that whatever he does he is miserable and undone will not matter how he demeans himself All motives to Repentance are gone after a Man once knows it will be to no purpose And this the Scripture seems to represent to us as the case of the Devils and damned Spirits Because their state is finally determined and they are concluded under an irreversible Sentence therefore Repentance is impossible to them Sorry no doubt they are and heartily troubled that by their own Sin and Folly they have brought this Misery upon themselves and they cannot but conceive an everlasting Displeasure against themselves for having been the Cause and Authors of their own Ruin and the Reflection upon this will be a perpetual spring of Discontent and fill their Minds with eternal Rage and Vexation and so long as they feel the intolerable Punishments of Sin and groan under the insupportable Torments of it and see no end of this miserable State no hope of getting out of it they can be no otherwise affected than with Discontent at themselves and Rage and Fury against God They are indeed penitent so far as to be troubled at themselves for what they have done but this Trouble works no Change and Alteration in them they still hate God who inflicts these Punishments upon them and who they believe is determined to continue them in this miserable state The present Anguish of their Condition and their despair of bettering it makes them mad and their Minds are so distracted by the wildness of their Passions and their Spirits so exasperated and set on Fire by their own giddy Motions that there can be no rest and silence in their Souls not so much as the liberty of one calm and sedate Thought Or if at any time they reflect upon the evil of their Sins and should entertain any thought of returning to God and their Duty they are presently checkt with this Consideration that their case is determined that God is implacably offended with them and is inexorably and peremptorily resolved to make them miserable for ever and during this Perswasion no Man can return to the love of God and Goodness without which there can be no Repentance This Consideration of the immutable state of Men after this Life should engage us with all seriousness and diligence to endeavour to secure our future Happiness God hath set before us good and evil Life and Death and we may yet chuse which we please but in the other World we must stand to that Choice which we have made here and inherit the Consequences of it By Sin Mankind is brought into a miserable State but our Condition is not desperate and past Remedy God hath sent his Son to be a Prince and a Saviour to give Repentance and Remission of Sins So that tho' our Case be bad it need not continue so if it be not our own fault There is a possibility now of changing our Condition for the better and of laying the foundation of a perpetual Happiness for our selves The Grace of God calls upon us and is ready to assist us so that no Man's Case is so bad but there is a possibility of bettering it if we be not wanting to our selves and will make use of the Grace which God offers who is never wanting to the sincere endeavours of Men. Under the Influence and Assistance of this Grace those who are dead in trespasses and sins may pass from death to life may be turned from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God So long as we are in this World there is a possibility of being translated from one state to another from the dominion of Satan into the kingdom of God's dear Son But if we neglect the oportunities of this life and stand out against the offers of God's Grace and Mercy there will no Overtures be made to us in the other World After this life is ended God will try us no more our final miscarriage in this World will prove fatal to us in the other and we shall not be permitted to live over again to correct our Errors As the Tree falls so it shall lie such a State as we are settled in when we go out of this World shall be fixt in the other and there will be no possibility of changing it We are yet in the hand of our own Counsel and by God's Grace we may mould and fashion our own Fortune But if we trifle away this Advantage we shall fall into the hands of the living God out of which there is no Redemption God hath yet left Heaven and Hell to our choice and we had need to look about us and chuse well who can chuse but once for all and for ever There is yet a space and oportunity left us of Repentance but so soon as we step out of this Life and are entred upon the other World our Condition will be sealed never to be reverst And because after this Life there will be no further hopes of Mercy there will be no possibility of Repentance This is the accepted time this is the day of Salvation therefore to day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts lest God